TONY JAMES HARRIS v. STATE OF ARKANSAS

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 24, 2025
DocketCR-24-723
StatusPublished

This text of TONY JAMES HARRIS v. STATE OF ARKANSAS (TONY JAMES HARRIS 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
TONY JAMES HARRIS v. STATE OF ARKANSAS, (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 439 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CR-24-723

TONY JAMES HARRIS Opinion Delivered September 24, 2025 APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE GRANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 27CR-22-132]

STATE OF ARKANSAS HONORABLE STEPHEN L. APPELLEE SHIRRON, JUDGE

AFFIRMED

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge

A Grant County jury convicted Tony James Harris of rape, Ark. Code Ann. § 5-14-

103 (Repl. 2024), and second-degree sexual assault, Ark. Code Ann. § 5-14-125 (Repl.

2024). Two of his daughters, who were minors when the crimes occurred, were his victims.

They testified against him. Another daughter testified for him. We refer to them as Eldest

Daughter (ED), Middle Daughter (MD), and Youngest Daughter (YD). Because Harris

does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence, we abbreviate our discussion of the facts.

Grady v. State, 2023 Ark. 91.

The Grant County Sheriff’s Department learned in August 2022 that MD and YD

had told others that Harris had sexually abused them when they were children. Both had

since reached adulthood and moved out.

MD is the rape victim. She testified that Harris was controlling and physically

abusive. Even when she was young—before twelve or thirteen—physical punishment did not mean spankings; it meant punches, slaps to the face, or hitting the children with objects

anywhere from their ankles to the backs of their necks. He picked MD up by her neck.

When MD reached puberty, the abuse became sexual. Her mother made an appointment

with a primary-care doctor because MD had been cutting herself. She never learned of any

resulting prescription. But her parents started giving her two pills each morning. MD

refused to take them from her mother because they made her groggy. Harris began

administering them around 3:00 or 3:30 a.m. before he left for work.

MD and YD shared a bed. The jury heard that Harris would enter their bedroom

every morning under the pretense of giving MD her medication. After he gave her the

pills, he would wait. Then he would sexually abuse both of them. MD testified that he

would always move his hands “super slow, as if he was scared to wake me up.” She

continued, “I think he thought that I was asleep.”

Harris started with touching MD’s breasts under her clothing. As the girls got older,

he began touching YD’s breasts as well. His abuse of MD escalated after he heard her admit

to a doctor that she’d had sex with a peer. He had “a very big outburst” that left the doctor

concerned about what was going on. After that, Harris would digitally penetrate MD each

morning.

YD echoed MD’s testimony about Harris’s physical abuse and the sexual abuse of

both girls in the mornings. She also testified that Harris sexually abused her one time in his

bedroom. She had asked to use his phone. After praising her for losing weight, Harris slid

his hand under her shorts and touched her vagina over her underwear.

2 Although both girls knew about Harris’s abuse of the other, they never discussed the

abuse while it was going on. But without needing to say why, they began showering in

pairs, each girl standing guard while the other showered to make sure he couldn’t come in.

In December 2013, Judy Harris, their mother, was diagnosed with cancer. She

continued treatment until her death in March 2022. By then, all her children had married

and left home. And after YD left, she and Judy had become estranged. YD would not let

Judy be around YD’s child, and Judy wanted to know why. They met for coffee, and YD

told her about the abuse by Harris. Judy called ED. ED called MD. MD and YD testified

that they both went to ED’s house to discuss the disclosures.

Both issues on appeal relate in some way to that discussion, ED, and her testimony

for Harris. MD testified that when she disclosed the abuse to ED, ED told her that Harris

had molested her too, but that she was forgiving him because “family was what was

important,” especially with Judy dying. YD testified that she talked with ED on the front

porch about the abuse, and ED had “acknowledged that it had happened to her” as well.

But ED said her husband didn’t know, and she wasn’t planning to tell him.

Harris called ED in his defense. She denied having seen Harris sexually or physically

abuse MD or YD, or having suffered abuse of either kind herself. She denied telling her

sisters otherwise. In fact, she denied that YD disclosed sexual abuse to her at all. ED testified

that when she lived in the Harris home, she never witnessed worse than a normal spanking.

She was living in the Harris home again, it turns out. ED, her husband, and their

three minor children had moved in with Harris within a week of Judy’s death. After the

3 State charged him in this case, the Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS) opened

a protective-services case involving the minors. According to ED, it had since been closed.

Harris meant to establish through Evangela Jackson, his next witness, that DHS

closed the protective-services case because the abuse allegations against him were

unsubstantiated. His first point on appeal challenges the court’s ruling that she had no

relevant testimony to give.

After the State objected on relevance grounds, the court let Harris proffer testimony

the parties elicited without the jury present. Jackson testified that she worked for St. Francis

Ministries, not DHS, as a therapist, not an investigator. She provided mental-health services

to ED and other members of ED’s family from February to August 2023. Jackson did not

testify to anything she saw, heard, or learned at the Harris home, even through hearsay.

Nor did she explain why DHS closed the protective-services case.

MD testified that although Harris physically abused her and YD before they reached

puberty, the sexual abuse started afterward. All ED’s children were eleven or younger when

she testified. Assuming Jackson’s testimony would have tended to show that Harris did not

abuse his prepubescent grandchildren under DHS supervision while these charges loomed,

we agree with the State that it would not have made “the existence of any fact that is of

consequence” to determining whether he had abused his pubescent daughters years earlier

more or less probable. See Ark. R. Evid. 401. The circuit court could not have abused its

discretion by excluding her testimony. Moore v. State, 2023 Ark. App. 577, 680 S.W.3d

472.

4 Harris’s other point challenges the court’s decision to admit rebuttal testimony by

MD and YD over his objection. MD testified that she had seen Harris inflict physical abuse

on ED multiple times, contrary to ED’s denial that she had suffered any. She told the jury

Harris caught them fighting when ED was six or seven. Harris “began to punch [ED] in

the side of the head and said, ‘If you can fight like a man, I’ll punch you like a man.’” As

MD started to go further, Harris objected:

DEFENSE COUNSEL: Your Honor, I’m going to object to this testimony. What’s it got to do with what he’s charged here with. Here’s not charged with battery, he’s charged with rape and sexual assault second. And we’re talking about something that happened when they were five and six, way before these accusations.

THE COURT: Overruled. It goes to credibility.

Harris argues that the victims’ testimony did not respond to new matters presented

by the defense, so it was not proper rebuttal testimony. Gilliland v. State, 2010 Ark. 135,

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Related

Anthony v. State
967 S.W.2d 552 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1998)
Gilliland v. State
2010 Ark. 135 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2010)
Shanny Grady v. State of Arkansas
2023 Ark. 91 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2023)

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