Tandi Speer v. State of Arkansas

2024 Ark. App. 473, 698 S.W.3d 683
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 2, 2024
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 Ark. App. 473 (Tandi Speer 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
Tandi Speer v. State of Arkansas, 2024 Ark. App. 473, 698 S.W.3d 683 (Ark. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Cite as 2024 Ark. App. 473 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CR-23-536

TANDI SPEER Opinion Delivered October 2, 2024 APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE CRAWFORD COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 17CR-22-529]

STATE OF ARKANSAS HONORABLE CANDICE A. SETTLE, APPELLEE JUDGE

AFFIRMED

WAYMOND M. BROWN, Judge

A Crawford County jury convicted appellant Tandi Speer of breaking or entering and

first-degree criminal mischief.1 She was sentenced to an aggregate term of four years’

imprisonment. She argues on appeal that the evidence was insufficient to support her

convictions. We affirm.

Appellant’s jury trial took place on May 5, 2023. The evidence shows that appellant

and James Dukes entered property belonging to James Richesin, Jr., located at 2927 Westville

Road in Van Buren, Arkansas, on June 2, 2022. The property is a defunct go-kart track that

housed cars and equipment. After noticing property missing, Richesin put up a game camera

to see who was taking items from the property. He received a notification on his phone on

1 Appellant was acquitted of an aggravated-assault charge. June 2 from the game camera showing a red Chevrolet Lumina near a building where

Richesin housed a lot of his things. He headed to the property after receiving the notification

and arrived approximately seven minutes later. Once there, Richesin noticed the Lumina as

well as a black truck at the property. The door to the building was shut, and Richesin called

out for anyone inside the building to come out. At that point, appellant and Dukes exited

the building. Richesin attempted to hold the two at gunpoint until police arrived, but they

subsequently went to their vehicles to leave the property. Richesin went to his vehicle and

attempted to back down the driveway so that he could block the gate; however, by this time,

appellant had driven her car around the black truck and was in front of Richesin’s car. As

Richesin was backing up, appellant hit his car and pushed it into a sixteen-foot utility trailer.

Appellant backed up and Richesin pulled forward. Appellant then hit the driver-side back

door of Richesin’s car and drove away. Richesin testified that appellant hit his vehicle a total

of three times. Richesin said that his car, a Honda Accord, was totaled and that he valued

it at $2,500, the price he would expect to pay for that make and year. He also stated that

appellant’s family had returned some of the items that had been taken from a building on

the property, including some die-cast cars and a “fire chief globe that sits on top of a gas

pump.”

Deputy Allison Testerman of the Crawford County Sheriff’s Office testified that she

answered Richesin’s call about trespassers on his property. She said that when she got there,

she noticed that Richesin’s vehicle had been damaged by another vehicle. She also noticed

that “some stuff sat outside, [and] some stuff [was] moved inside the building.” She

2 subsequently contacted appellant at her apartment, and appellant informed Deputy

Testerman that she had been to the property in question the night prior and on that day to

have sex with her boyfriend. Deputy Testerman testified that damage to appellant’s car

matched Richesin’s statement concerning the events of June 2. She testified that she

subsequently arrested appellant. She stated that she had worked approximately two hundred

vehicle accidents and that she estimated the damage to Richesin’s car to be $6,000.

James Dukes testified that he and appellant were “intimate friends” on the date in

question. He stated that he followed appellant to the property and that they were at the

property for “unlawful reasons”: they went to the property to steal things, and appellant was

going to get vehicle registrations. He stated that appellant thought he would be interested

in some tools that were on the property. He said that appellant brought black case that was

on top of a welding machine he wanted outside to him, but she threw the case down when

he said he did not want it. He testified that once someone showed up at the property, he

and appellant decided that they would tell the person they were there to have sex. He said

that appellant admitted to him that she had rammed Richesin’s car. He testified that he had

seen a plastic globe gasoline-pump topper and some matchbox cars at appellant’s apartment.

Dukes was currently incarcerated after pleading guilty to charges stemming from this case.

He admitted that he was ordered to pay restitution, jointly and severally, with appellant in

the amount of $5,000 due to “the damage done [to Richesin’s vehicle] and articles taken

[from Richesin’s property].”

3 Deputy Keith Smith of the Crawford County Sheriff’s Office testified that he

interviewed appellant, and the video from that interview was played for the jury. In the

interview, appellant denied taking anything from Richesin’s property. Appellant said that

she had been on the property many times to watch the sunset and sunrise and that she had

never seen any trespassing signs or purple markings. Appellant also said that she went to the

property on June 2 to have sex in a public place, which was on her bucket list. However, she

said that they went into the building because they did not want to be seen. Appellant claimed

that the gate and building were open and that she never broke into anything.

At the conclusion of the State’s case, appellant unsuccessfully moved for a directed

verdict, arguing,

On the charge of breaking or entering, the State has failed to meet its burden beyond a reasonable doubt, that [appellant] entered or broke into a building or structure, and that she did so with the purpose of committing a theft. There’s been no testimony as far as the purpose -- no credible testimony as far as the purpose of what she went in there for, even if she did enter. . . . Defense would move for a directed verdict on the charge of criminal mischief in the first degree, in that the State has alleged that she purposefully and without legal justification caused damage to the property of another person, and the value of the damage was more than $1,000.00 but $5,000.00 or less. The State’s failed to present evidence any other than through the testimony of their alleged victim as to the value of any of the damage that may have been caused, and therefore, we would move for a directed verdict on that[.]

Appellant rested her case without putting on any testimony. The directed-verdict motions

were unsuccessfully renewed at the close of all the evidence. The jury found appellant guilty

of breaking or entering and first-degree criminal mischief. Appellant was sentence to four

years’ imprisonment. She filed a timely notice of appeal.

4 Motions for directed verdict are treated as challenges to the sufficiency of the

evidence.2 Evidence is sufficient to support a conviction if the trier of fact can reach a

conclusion without having to resort to speculation or conjecture and is sufficient to compel

a conclusion one way or the other.3 It is not the appellate court’s place to try issues of fact;

we simply review the record for substantial evidence to support the jury’s verdict.4 When

the sufficiency of the evidence is challenged on appeal, we view the evidence in the light

most favorable to the State and consider only evidence that supports the conviction. 5

Arkansas Code Annotated section 5-39-202(a)(1)6 provides that a person commits the

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Related

William Mayfield v. State of Arkansas
2025 Ark. App. 577 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2025)

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2024 Ark. App. 473, 698 S.W.3d 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tandi-speer-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2024.