Trimble v. State

986 S.W.2d 392, 336 Ark. 437, 1999 Ark. LEXIS 93
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1999
DocketCR 97-764
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 986 S.W.2d 392 (Trimble v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trimble v. State, 986 S.W.2d 392, 336 Ark. 437, 1999 Ark. LEXIS 93 (Ark. 1999).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Kenneth Thomas Trimble was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to a term of life imprisonment without possibility of parole. We affirmed the conviction and sentence in Trimble v. State, 316 Ark. 161, 871 S.W.2d 562 (1994). Trimble subsequendy filed a petition for postconviction relief pursuant to Arkansas Criminal Procedure Rule 37. After a hearing, the Circuit Court of Saline County denied relief. Trimble now appeals the denial of postconviction relief as well as the denial of his motion for the recusal of the circuit judge from his postconviction hearing. We find no merit to the appeal and affirm.

Trimble’s arguments for postconviction relief rely substantially on the same facts as the issues he raised in his direct appeal. For that reason, we now reiterate those facts. Raymond Jacobs raised hunting dogs at his home in Benton. On April 28, 1992, Young delivered four or five dogs to Jacobs, and Jacobs’s records indicate that Young sold the dogs to him. On the evening of May 8, 1992, Jacobs’s body was found in his barn at his residence. He had been stabbed multiple times with a pitchfork and bludgeoned with a hammer. Several of his dogs were missing.

Deputies from the Saline County Sheriffs Department eventually developed Young and Trimble as suspects in the murder. Pursuant to a grant of immunity, Young gave a statement about events surrounding Jacobs’s murder and stated that it was Trimble who killed Jacobs. Afterwards, Young took investigators to various locations in North Central Arkansas to recover physical evidence which included the blood-stained clothing of Young and Trimble, the collars of the stolen dogs, and the hammer used in the slaying. Young told investigators that he and Trimble purchased new clothing at a Wal-Mart store in Clinton.

Following Young’s immunity grant and statement, Trimble was advised by his attorney to give his own statement. On June 23, 1992, Trimble gave a videotaped statement to Saline County Sheriff s deputies in which he admitted going to the Jacobs residence with Young and that Young intended to steal the dogs. He further admitted registering in a motel under a false name. He denied, though, that he participated in the murder of Jacobs and claimed that the murder was committed solely by Young. Trimble said that Young had been in the barn alone with Jacobs and came out with blood on his clothing. He also said that he got blood on his clothes after Young grabbed him. On the drive back to Missouri, Trimble told the deputies that Young threw the bloody clothes, dog collars, and hammer out the window. Trimble said he bought new clothes at a Wal-Mart store.

Following a hearing on August 24, 1992, Young’s immunity was revoked by the circuit judge for inconsistent statements to the prosecutor and for failure to cooperate. Trimble then filed a motion to suppress his statement, claiming that it had been coerced because he only gave it after Young had been granted immunity and had made a statement impheating him. In the motion to suppress, Trimble also raised the issue of ineffective assistance of counsel.

Also at that hearing, the circuit judge brought up the matter of the State’s revoking the grant of immunity to Young. The prosecutor stated that Young would not be called as a witness against Trimble and that the State would not use any physical evidence recovered from Young after he was granted immunity on June 4, 1992.

The circuit judge then heard Trimble’s motion to suppress his statement on grounds of coercion effected by Young’s grant of immunity and statement by ineffective assistance of counsel. Trimble testified that under these circumstances his attorney advised him that he had no choice but to give a statement. The circuit judge found no coercion and denied the motion.

On the direct appeal of the judgment, Trimble raised seven allegations of error. Among those was a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, an allegation that the trial judge should have recused from the case, an allegation that the grant of immunity to Young was illegal, and an argument that the evidence derived from that grant of immunity was improperly used against him. Trimble also argued that the Trial Court should have suppressed his statement on ineffective-assistance-of-counsel grounds. On the ineffective-assistance-of-counsel issue, we concluded that the advice that Trimble received from his attorney, to go ahead and state his own version of the events surrounding the murder after Young was granted immunity, was a matter of strategy that could not be the basis for a finding of ineffective assistance of counsel. Trimble v. State, 316 Ark. at 172.

In his petition for Rule 37 relief, Trimble reiterated the ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim that he made in the motion to suppress his statement. He also alleged that his counsel was ineffective for failing to object when the State introduced witnesses whose identity was derived from the information relayed to police by Young pursuant to the grant of immunity. In his last claim, Trimble asserted that he was actually innocent of Jacobs’s murder.

Subsequent to the filing of his Rule 37 petition, Trimble filed a motion in which he requested that the circuit judge recuse from the postconviction hearing. The circuit judge was the same judge that presided over Trimble’s trial, where Trimble also sought a recusal on the basis that the judge’s son was employed as an errand boy by the prosecuting attorney’s office. Trimble sought the judge’s recusal from the postconviction proceeding because, in the period between Trimble’s trial and the filing of his Rule 37 petition, the judge had recused from unrelated criminal cases in which the former prosecutor for Saline County, Dan Harmon, was the defendant. Trimble argued that his petition, within the ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim regarding the alleged failure to object to the State’s use of witnesses derived from the grant of immunity to Young, contains an allegation of misconduct by Dan Harmon, who prosecuted the case. Specifically, that the prosecutor broke his promise to refrain from using evidence derived from Young’s immunity, and that Trimble’s attorney should have objected when this promise was broken. In the motion to recuse, therefore, Trimble asserted that in order to resolve the ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim, the circuit judge would have to judge Harmon’s credibility and make a threshold factual determination about whether there was prosecutorial misconduct. Trimble further argued that, since the judge recused from other cases involving alleged criminal misconduct by the prosecutor, recusal was also justified in the postconviction proceeding. The circuit judge denied the motion to recuse on the basis that his recusal from the unrelated criminal proceedings, without further evidence, was insufficient to justify his recusal from the postconviction matter.

For his first argument in this appeal, Trimble contends that it was error for the circuit judge to deny his motion to recuse. He only argues, however, that the circuit judge’s participation in this case had the appearance of impropriety. He has not pointed to, nor can we find, any exhibition of bias or prejudice by the circuit judge during the Rule 37 proceeding.

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Bluebook (online)
986 S.W.2d 392, 336 Ark. 437, 1999 Ark. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trimble-v-state-ark-1999.