Victoria Ann Dycus v. State of Arkansas

2019 Ark. App. 385
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 18, 2019
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2019 Ark. App. 385 (Victoria Ann Dycus 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
Victoria Ann Dycus v. State of Arkansas, 2019 Ark. App. 385 (Ark. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Cite as 2019 Ark. App. 385 Digitally signed by Elizabeth ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS Perry Date: 2022.07.25 13:19:03 -05'00' DIVISION I Adobe Acrobat version: No. CR-18-956 2022.001.20169 Opinion Delivered September 18, 2019 VICTORIA ANN DYCUS APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE STONE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 69CR-16-138]

STATE OF ARKANSAS HONORABLE TIM WEAVER, JUDGE APPELLEE AFFIRMED

N. MARK KLAPPENBACH, Judge

Victoria Ann Dycus appeals her conviction for first-degree murder in the death of

her four-year-old daughter, Skylar Shellstrom. On appeal, she argues that there was no

substantial evidence that she either struck the child herself or that she was liable as an

accomplice to her boyfriend, James Hagen Glenn. After having previously ordered

rebriefing, we now reach the merits of the case and affirm appellant’s conviction.

Skylar was brought to the emergency room on the evening of November 19, 2016,

where she died shortly after arriving. The emergency room doctor notified law

enforcement that he suspected she died from internal bleeding as the result of trauma and

that she had a significant amount of bruising consistent with child abuse. The autopsy

revealed that Skylar died from blunt-force abdominal injuries that resulted in peritonitis due

to duodenal rupture. Dr. Stephen Erickson, the deputy chief medical examiner at the state

crime lab, testified that Skylar had been struck in the stomach and that her duodenum was nearly transected in half. 1 He testified that she had been struck hours, not days, before she

died and noted that she would have thrown up any food or drink ingested after the blow.

In addition to this fatal blow, Dr. Erickson said that there was evidence of scarring and other

signs of the body’s healing response that showed Skylar had been struck in the stomach

before. He said that the blow may have been a punch, a kick, an elbow, or a knee to the

stomach.

Dr. Erickson testified that Skylar had been the victim of chronic child abuse as

evidenced by a multitude of aging bruises as well as burns, puncture wounds, and other

injuries. He said that the number, location, and severity of the bruises indicated child abuse;

they were not bruises a child might normally sustain. These included linear deep bruises

across Skylar’s buttocks and multiple bruises on the back of her legs and her elbows. She

had bruises on both ears indicating that she had been struck or grabbed as well as bruises on

her scalp, on her forehead, around her eyes, on her forearm, and on her labia. The tops of

Skylar’s feet had significant bruises, and the bottoms of her feet had multiple puncture

wounds—twenty on one foot and ten on the other. Dr. Erickson said that some of the

puncture wounds were older than others and that a sharp object had been pushed into her

skin enough to cause some bleeding. He said that the force used to cause her injuries would

have caused pain and likely crying from a four-year-old child. Skylar also had burn marks

on her nose that Dr. Erickson said would have left a disfiguring scar. He said that she would

have reacted and should have been seen by a doctor for the burns. Skylar also had a serious

1 Dr. Erickson did not perform the autopsy but testified that he had observed the case, reviewed everything, and agreed with the autopsy report. 2 injury to her mouth that Dr. Erickson said was characteristic of what happens when

someone punches a child in the mouth or shoves something into a child’s mouth. This

strike resulted in a large laceration of the upper part of Skylar’s lip and had destroyed the

frenulum. Dr. Erickson said that her lip would have bled a lot and been bruised and that

any reasonable person would have understood she was injured and needed attention.

Investigator Dennis Simons interviewed appellant on the night Skylar died.

Appellant told him that Skylar had been sick off and on for the past week and had been

throwing up, which she thought was caused from drinking too much soda. She denied that

anyone had hurt Skylar and claimed that Skylar had been hitting herself hard enough to

leave bruises on her belly and legs. Appellant told Simons that the burns on Skylar’s nose

were caused when Glenn was blow drying her hair, and Skylar got mad and jerked the blow

dryer down onto her nose. Appellant said that she did not witness this happen but Glenn

told her about it. Glenn had also told her that a bruise on Skylar’s head was caused by the

shower curtain falling on her.

Simons interviewed appellant again when she was arrested in December 2016, and

appellant still denied that anyone had hurt Skylar. Glenn was charged with first-degree

murder at the same time. A week later, appellant requested to speak with Simons again.

She told Simons that Skylar had initially really liked Glenn, but for the last week or two

before her death she did not want anything to do with him. Appellant said that while Skylar

was taking a bath one day, she told appellant that Glenn had hit her four times, but Skylar

later recanted when Glenn questioned her. Appellant said that she did not see Skylar’s

injuries because Glenn did everything for Skylar.

3 Appellant testified that on November 19, Glenn left their home at 6:30 a.m. to go

hunting. He came back around 9:00 a.m. and watched Skylar while appellant took a

shower. Glenn left again, leaving appellant home alone with Skylar, until he returned briefly

around 2:30 and then again around 5:30. Appellant said that Skylar watched movies all day

and had oatmeal, juice, and chips but threw up the juice. Appellant said that when Glenn

returned home that evening, Skylar told him that she was feeling better, but shortly

thereafter she slid out of a chair onto the floor and was unresponsive.

Appellant claimed that she was unaware of most of the bruises and marks on Skylar

because Glenn took care of her and Skylar usually bathed and dressed herself. She said that

Skylar never complained about being hurt, she never saw Skylar bleeding, and she never

saw Glenn strike her. Appellant said that on November 9, Skylar went to the store with

Glenn and defecated in her pants. Appellant then gave her a bath, and Skylar told her that

Glenn had hit her “really hard” four times in the stomach. When appellant told Glenn, he

asked Skylar when this happened, and she said it happened that day. Appellant testified that

he questioned her again after her bath, however, and she said it did not happen. Appellant

said that the blow-dryer incident also occurred on November 9 and that she was in the

bedroom while Glenn and Skylar were in the bathroom. She said that Skylar did not scream,

but she heard Glenn tell Skylar to “go show your mom.” Appellant said that on November

13, Glenn told her that Skylar had pulled the shower curtain down on herself and pointed

out the bruise near her eye. She claimed that on November 16, Skylar told her that Glenn

had said he was going to kill Skylar and appellant; appellant asked Glenn and he denied it.

Appellant said that Skylar had started biting Glenn and not letting him pick her up and had

4 started hitting herself and defecating in her pants. They gave her cold showers to deal with

this, but appellant said that she last bathed Skylar on November 13. Appellant testified that

she now believed Glenn had been abusing Skylar.

Appellant’s sister, Brandie Lee, testified that she last saw Skylar on November 11.

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2019 Ark. App. 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victoria-ann-dycus-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2019.