Tiffany Dawn Rogers v. State of Arkansas

2025 Ark. App. 192, 709 S.W.3d 59
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 2, 2025
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 192 (Tiffany Dawn Rogers 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
Tiffany Dawn Rogers v. State of Arkansas, 2025 Ark. App. 192, 709 S.W.3d 59 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 192 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. CR-24-384

Opinion Delivered April 2, 2025

TIFFANY DAWN ROGERS APPEAL FROM THE ASHLEY APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 02CR-23-140] V. HONORABLE ROBERT B. STATE OF ARKANSAS GIBSON III, JUDGE APPELLEE AFFIRMED; REMANDED TO CORRECT SENTENCING ORDER

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge

Tiffany Dawn Rogers appeals her conviction for Class C theft of property and court-

ordered restitution in the amount of $10,000. She argues that there was insufficient

evidence to convict her of a Class C felony and that the circuit court erred in determining

the amount of restitution. We affirm her conviction and the restitution amount but remand

for correction of the sentencing order.

In August 2023, the State charged Rogers with residential burglary (Class B felony),

breaking or entering (Class D felony), and theft of property (Class C felony). At a pretrial

hearing on 26 February 2024, it was agreed that Rogers would plead guilty to residential

burglary and breaking or entering. The court would hold a bench trial to determine

whether the theft-of-property charge would be Classified as a Class C felony or a Class D

felony and to determine the amount of restitution to be paid.

The circuit court convened the bench trial on 13 March 2024. The State’s evidence

1 consisted of the following. Josh Pollock, an investigator with the Ashley County Sheriff’s

Department, investigated a theft and break-in at a residence and shop belonging to Chad

Hudson. As part of that inquiry, Pollock spoke to Rogers, who stated that someone had

shown her the residence and told her it was a deer camp. She believed that it was abandoned

and that she could take whatever she wanted. Rogers told Pollock that she sold a large air

compressor from the property to David Hamm and arranged to sell a set of jet skis to him

as well. She also pawned multiple tools, including a Sawzall reciprocating saw, chop saws,

and a “JOBOX” full of tools. She did not dispute that she had taken things from the

residence and the shop and admitted working with others to take items off the property.

She also admitted stealing silverware from the house.

On cross-examination, Pollock agreed that some items that were listed as missing

were later recovered at Hamm’s house, including the air compressor, the two jet skis, and a

cutting torch. Pollock explained that the police had text messages between Rogers and

Hamm in which she told him how much she wanted for the jet skis and the air compressor

and where to pick them up. Rogers told Pollock that she could not remember everything

that she had taken from the shop, but she had “taken lots of stuff.” Pollock later stated,

“Everything that we found was associated with Ms. Rogers, you know, all the tools that

Mr. Hamm had.” Pollock also said that Rogers had admitted taking and selling the items

that had been pawned.

Tommy Sturgeon, the Ashley County sheriff, testified that he knows the

homeowner, Chad Hudson, and is familiar with the shop on his property. Sturgeon said it

is a large shop that was full of industrial tools, such as a welding machine, a chain hoist, and

2 “every kind of cutting tool.” He said that Hudson’s father had been a fabricator and welder

and that Hudson is also a fabricator and welder. The shop had been full—“wall to wall”—

but after the theft, there was “nothing there.”

Chad Hudson testified that he has a large shop on his property and verified that

Sturgeon’s description of the shop was accurate. He explained that he was on the road for

work when the theft occurred, but he had received a phone call from someone in his church

family who had spoken to Hamm, who said, “Well, tell Mr. Chad I’ve got a lot of his stuff.”

Hudson identified the restitution form that he had filled out for the prosecution, which

listed numerous items that had been taken from his shop, including a ratchet set; a thousand-

pound puller; a jigsaw; a seventy-two-inch industrial-finish mower; and a Lincoln 250

welding machine. He explained that he had looked online to estimate the value of the

items. The total value for the items that had not been recovered was $40,083.87. Hudson

estimated that there had been at least $8000 to $10,000 worth of tools in the toolbox that

was pawned.

On cross-examination, Hudson clarified that the items on the restitution form were

items that had not been recovered and that he did not include items that had been pawned

because police were already aware of those items. The court expressed its understanding

that Hudson had “made a list of items that he was—did not believe had been documented

as stolen or logged in at a pawn shop, and so it was a—it was not an all-inclusive list. It was

really a supplemental list.”

After the State rested, the defense argued, “[T]the only figure that we’ve been given

is that there were $40,000 worth of items, Your Honor, and we dispute that.” Defense

3 counsel acknowledged that Rogers was responsible for the theft of the air compressor, but

he did not know the value of the air compressor. Counsel asserted that Rogers was guilty

of “no more than a D felony on the theft.”

Rogers testified and did not dispute that she was responsible for the theft of some

items from Hudson’s property. She admitted going into his house once, and while she

disagreed that she went into the house to take things that did not belong to her, she did take

some silverware. She sold an air compressor to Hamm for $80, and she also removed a

toolbox from the shop and pawned it for $30 or $40. She denied responsibility for the theft

of any other items and assumed that Hamm had taken the other items from the shop. On

cross-examination, she claimed that the toolbox did not have any tools in it when she

pawned it. When examined by the court, Rogers explained that other items she had

pawned belonged to either her or her son. She had also pawned items recovered from some

abandoned mobile homes on property recently purchased by her daughter and son-in-law.

Jonathan Tanksley, Rogers’s son-in-law, confirmed that there had been a TV and

some tools on the property, which Rogers had pawned. Specifically, he said there was a

Sawzall and some Milwaukee tools on the property, but he was not familiar with a chop

saw or a Porter-Cable grinder.

Pollock was recalled to the stand and said that there had been tools in the toolbox

that had been pawned. According to Pollock, the pawn broker had paid $150 for the tools

in the toolbox and sold them for around $1000.

At the close of testimony, the defense renewed its argument that the State had not

proved that Rogers was responsible for the theft of over $5000 worth of property. The

4 defense acknowledged the $40,000 estimate but asserted that there was no proof that Rogers

had taken the bulk of the items from the shop. Counsel also asserted that any restitution

ordered should be less than $5000.

The court found that Rogers had committed a Class C felony, meaning that the

value of the property taken was less than $25,000 but more than $5000. Ark. Code Ann. §

5-36-103(b)(2)(A) (Repl. 2024). The court based its decision on Rogers’s lack of credibility

and said, “I can’t give the benefit of the doubt to an admitted thief. . . . I don’t buy that she

did not orchestrate the sale or the fairing [sic] away of other items.” The court also explained

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2025 Ark. App. 192, 709 S.W.3d 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tiffany-dawn-rogers-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2025.