Shatwell v. State

2013 Ark. App. 568, 430 S.W.3d 142, 2013 WL 5556923, 2013 Ark. App. LEXIS 591
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 9, 2013
DocketCR-13-144
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2013 Ark. App. 568 (Shatwell v. State) 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
Shatwell v. State, 2013 Ark. App. 568, 430 S.W.3d 142, 2013 WL 5556923, 2013 Ark. App. LEXIS 591 (Ark. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge.

11 Savanna Dickinson’s life ended on a mid-November night in 2011. Harrison police officers responded to a call that Savanna had taken her own life in an apartment she shared with Jon Shatwell. With the help of the fire department, police officers entered the locked apartment. They found Savanna, alone, slumped on a couch by the front door. Her face and head were encased in blood. She was dead. A .45-caliber (1911 style) semi-automatic pistol lay near her right hand.

Savanna had been shot between her eyes. There was a live round of ammunition on the living-room floor and a spent casing next to the coffee table by the couch. Law enforcement secured the scene and began investigating Savanna’s death.

Shatwell became a person of interest because he and Savanna had fought at a party earlier the same evening over a personal matter. Not long after Savanna’s death, Shatwell | ¡.appeared at his mother’s house; he had blood on his jacket, hands, and face. He told his mother that Savanna had shot herself in the head, so his mother called the police to report what happened. Shatwell gave a voluntary statement to the police shortly after his mother called them. According to Shat-well’s first account to police, he found Savanna in the living room holding a gun and, despite his efforts to dissuade her, she shot herself. Shatwell said that he remained with Savanna, holding her for about ten minutes before going to his mother’s house. He told the suicide story to family and friends from November 2011 until April 2012, when the police interviewed him a second time; that’s when a different story about the cause of Savanna’s death emerged.

In his second interview, the police confronted Shatwell with forensic evidence and told him that they believed suicide was an unlikely cause of Savanna’s death. Shatwell then told the police that he had accidently shot Savanna. The State of Arkansas subsequently charged Shatwell with committing murder in the first degree, tampering with physical evidence, and using a firearm while committing a felony (sentencing enhancement). In October 2012 he was tried before a Boone County jury.

The jury convicted Shatwell of purposefully killing Savanna. It also found that Shatwell had used a firearm while committing a felony and tampered with evidence. The circuit court sentenced Shatwell to a total of 672 months’ (56 years) imprisonment in the Arkansas Department of Correction. Shatwell appealed his conviction and here argues the following points:

• The circuit court abused its discretion by denying a motion for a mistrial after his former girlfriend, Melissa Weaver, testified that he physically abused her.
• IsThe circuit court erred when it denied his motion in limine to exclude evidence of prior bad acts under Ark. R. Evid. 404(b) because Weaver testified improperly that he had threatened her with the same gun he used to kill Savanna Dickinson, and her testimony was solely offered to show that he would use gun violence against a subsequent girlfriend.
• The circuit court erred by concluding that the probative value of Weaver’s gun-related testimony outweighed its prejudicial effect.
• The circuit court should have granted Shatwell’s motion for a directed verdict on the first-degree murder charge.
• The circuit court should have granted Shatwell’s motion for a directed verdict on the tampering charge.

We treat motions for directed verdict as challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence. Tillman v. State, 364 Ark. 143, 217 S.W.3d 773 (2005). Shatwell’s two insufficient-evidence arguments come first. Boldin v. State, 373 Ark. 295, 297, 283 S.W.3d 565, 567 (2008).

I. The First-Degree Murder Conviction

Shatwell committed first-degree murder if, with a purpose of causing Savanna’s death, he caused Savanna’s death. Ark.Code Ann. § 5-10-102(a)(2) (Repl. 2006). In reviewing Shatwell’s challenge to the sufficiency of the State’s evidence, we ask whether the verdict is supported by substantial evidence; it does not matter whether the evidence is direct, circumstantial, or some combination of the two. Dunn v. State, 371 Ark. 140, 264 S.W.3d 504 (2007). For circumstantial evidence to be substantial, the evidence must exclude every reasonable hypothesis other than the accused’s guilt. The jury gets to decide whether the circumstantial evidence excludes every hypothesis consistent with innocence. Substantial evidence forces or compels a conclusion one way or the other so 14that the jury does not have to speculate to reach a decision. We will not overturn its determination unless the verdict required speculation and conjecture. The jury also weighs the evidence and judges witness credibility. Id.

A criminal defendant’s state of mind is seldom capable of proof by direct evidence and must usually be inferred from the circumstances of the crime. Leaks v. State, 345 Ark. 182, 45 S.W.3d 363 (2001). The existence of criminal intent or purpose is a matter for the jury to determine when criminal intent may be reasonably inferred from the evidence. McClard v. State, 2012 Ark. App. 573, 2012 WL 4832293.

In his directed-verdict motions, Shatwell argued that the State failed to prove that he acted with the intent to purposely cause Savanna’s death. Shat-well was alone in his apartment with Savanna the same night that the two had argued and Savanna was shot. Shatwell admitted at trial that he was holding a loaded .45 — with his finger on the trigger — when the gun fired. Detective Schaeffer testified that a safety release had to be disengaged at the same time the trigger was pulled for the gun to fire. The spray of gunpowder across Savanna’s forehead indicated a close-range shooting. The State’s forensic expert, Adam Craig, said the gun was three feet or less from Savanna’s forehead when it discharged. Craig also said that the bullet’s path through Savanna’s head was “suspicious” and “atypical for a suicide.” Detective Schae-fer told the jury how the blood patterns on the gun, and swiping patterns on Savanna’s body, did not match Shatwell’s suicide story. Shatwell’s fingerprints were on the gun’s magazine.

Shatwell also changed his story about what happened inside the apartment the night Savanna died. The jury could properly consider Shatwell’s vacillating stories as proof of a |fipurposeful mental state. Leaks v. State, 345 Ark. 182, 186, 45 S.W.3d 368, 366 (2001). The jury could also infer Shatwell’s intent from the circumstances surrounding the shooting. See Thompson v. State, 338 Ark. 564, 999 S.W.2d 192 (1999) (the natural and probable consequence of putting a pistol against another person’s neck and firing the gun is the death of the victim); Walker v. State, 324 Ark. 106, 918 S.W.2d 172

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Related

Stockstill v. State
2017 Ark. App. 29 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2017)
Thompson v. State
2015 Ark. App. 486 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2015)
Shatwell v. State
2013 Ark. App. 568 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2013)

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Bluebook (online)
2013 Ark. App. 568, 430 S.W.3d 142, 2013 WL 5556923, 2013 Ark. App. LEXIS 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shatwell-v-state-arkctapp-2013.