Scotty Joe Scaggs v. State of Arkansas

2020 Ark. App. 142, 596 S.W.3d 562
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 26, 2020
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2020 Ark. App. 142 (Scotty Joe Scaggs v. State of Arkansas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scotty Joe Scaggs v. State of Arkansas, 2020 Ark. App. 142, 596 S.W.3d 562 (Ark. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Cite as 2020 Ark. App. 142 Reason: I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II Date: 2021-07-01 11:51:44 Foxit PhantomPDF Version: 9.7.5

No. CR-19-607

OPINION DELIVERED: FEBRUARY 26, 2020 SCOTTY JOE SCAGGS APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE MARION COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO 45CR-17-61] V. HONORABLE JOHN R. PUTMAN, JUDGE STATE OF ARKANSAS APPELLEE AFFIRMED

ROBERT J. GLADWIN, Judge

Scotty Joe Scaggs appeals his conviction in the Marion County Circuit Court. A jury

found him guilty of sexual indecency with a child, sexual assault in the second degree, and

sexual assault in the first degree, and the court sentenced him to an aggregate term of twenty

years’ imprisonment. Scaggs’s appeal addresses the sufficiency of evidence regarding only

first-degree sexual assault, and he also challenges the circuit court’s admission of evidence

pursuant to Rule 404(b) of the Arkansas Rules of Evidence 2019. We affirm.

I. Facts

Scaggs was charged by information alleging that he caused a female child, less than

fourteen years old, to dance while naked and also engaged in deviate sexual activity with

her. Scaggs was also accused of engaging in deviate sexual activity with a fifteen-year-old

male. Before the jury trial on these charges, the State sought an evidentiary ruling on

testimony it wished to introduce about Scaggs’s prior acts of a sexual nature, arguing that

the evidence was admissible under Rule 404(b). J.T., age twenty-three, testified that Scaggs is her father. She described an escalation

of sexual contact with Scaggs that began when she was nine years old. She said that she was

age ten or eleven when he first penetrated her with his fingers and his penis. She described

Scaggs’s supplying alcohol to her during these years as well. She said that the last time

penetration occurred, she was fifteen and a half years old, and she thought that he had

impregnated her, but he had not. She said that she told her mother at that time, and law

enforcement interviewed her, but no charges were filed. The circuit court ruled that this

evidence was admissible under Rule 404(b).

At the jury trial, A.T., age eighteen, testified that when she was seven years old, she

stayed at Scaggs’s house one night. Scaggs is her great uncle, and her cousins had asked her

to stay there following a family gathering. She said that all the adults had left except for

Scaggs, and he asked them to play “Truth or Dare.” She said that Scaggs told the girls to

strip naked and run back and forth throughout the house in front of him and the boys. She

said that Scaggs “had us kiss our cousins and girls. And if the boys didn’t watch then they

were locked in the closets and bathrooms in the dark.” She said that Scaggs was drunk and

that he made the girls—her, J.T., S., and S.—go with him into the bedroom, strip naked,

and dance on top of the dresser. She said that he also made the girls sleep in the bed with

him that night, and he tried to put his fingers inside her vagina. She said that she got away

from him, told him no, and got “in the floor.” She said Scaggs told them if they ever came

forward that he would severely punish them.

D.M., age twenty-six, testified that he had been Scaggs’s neighbor, had been hunting

with Scaggs, and had dated J.T. He said that when he was fifteen years old, he stayed the

night at Scaggs’s house with J.T., her sisters, and Scaggs. He said that Scaggs had been the

2 only adult present and that they drank alcohol. He said after drinking for a couple of hours,

everyone went to bed. He said that J.T. called him to her room, where she and Scaggs

“announced the situation.” D.M. said,

[Scaggs] had J.T. ask me if I wanted her to give me an HJ, which I think she was using slang for a hand job. And then J.T. asked if I let him put his mouth on my penis and eat her out. And I panicked, of course, and didn’t know what to do. All of what I said ended up taking place, and I—halfway through I blacked out. And it’s just not something you forget.

D.M. said that when an investigator first asked him about this incident six or seven months

after it had occurred, he lied and said that nothing happened because he did not want anyone

to know. D.M. said that when he was contacted again in 2017, his perspective changed

because he felt bad about not coming forward a long time ago. D.M. said that after the

incident, he never went hunting with Scaggs or spent the night at his house again.

J.T. testified that Scaggs is her father and corroborated A.T.’s and D.M.’s testimony.

Before J.T. testified regarding the proposed Rule 404(b) evidence, Scaggs’s defense counsel

asked for a limiting instruction for the jury, and the circuit court agreed to instruct on AMI

Crim. 2d 203-A. The court and counsel settled on the following language as part of the

instruction: “This evidence is merely offered as evidence of motive and proclivity towards

a specific act with minor children.”

J.T. then testified that her sexual contact with Scaggs began when she was nine years

old, and it continued until she was fifteen years old. She explained that her mother worked

late nights and was not home and that Scaggs would be drinking. She described the

escalation of sexual contact with Scaggs, which began with him touching himself and playing

with her vagina and then progressed from oral penetration to vaginal and anal intercourse.

She said,

3 It happened until I was 15. It happened all the way through my parents’ divorce and through their separation. It happened at every house he lived in after that. It got to where it would happen every weekend, because we went over there every weekend. Every weekend he would buy alcohol and scary movies and things like that and we would all drink and party. I mean, nine, ten years old, we would all drink and party, and it would happen every time.

There were no adults in the house while anything was happening. And he was not always drunk when it happened. There was several times where he would go and take a nap and things would happen then. He would tell me to go lay down with him while he took a nap, and things would happen at that point.

J.T. said that when she was fifteen years old, she “told” because she mistakenly

thought she was pregnant. She said that she gave an “interview” and related the situation

with D.M., but she did not mention anything about the episode with A.T. On cross-

examination, she admitted that she first told the Child Advocacy Center that Scaggs had

been forceful the “first time” and that he had picked her up and thrown her on the bed.

She said that this was what she told herself for a long time because it was easier for her to

believe that “it was forced” than for her to accept that she just lay there and pretended like

nothing was happening. A video recording of her interview was played for the jury, and

she admitted that she had been untruthful in it.

At the close of the State’s evidence, Scaggs’s defense counsel moved for a directed

verdict. Counsel argued regarding first-degree sexual assault that the State had to prove

Scaggs was in a position of trust or authority over D.M. and that there had been insufficient

evidence to support that conclusion. Counsel argued that D.M. had been at Scaggs’s house

“hanging out with his girlfriend” and that D.M. testified that Scaggs was not his chaperone

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2020 Ark. App. 142, 596 S.W.3d 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scotty-joe-scaggs-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2020.