Vincent Tyler v. State of Arkansas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 22, 2026
StatusPublished

This text of Vincent Tyler v. State of Arkansas (Vincent Tyler 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
Vincent Tyler v. State of Arkansas, (Ark. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Cite as 2026 Ark. App. 248 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CR-25-388

Opinion Delivered April 22, 2026 VINCENT TYLER APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE JEFFERSON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 35CR-23-312] V.

HONORABLE ALEX GUYNN, JUDGE STATE OF ARKANSAS APPELLEE AFFIRMED

CASEY R. TUCKER, Judge

Vincent Tyler appeals his conviction of first-degree murder with a firearm

enhancement in the Jefferson County Circuit Court. On appeal, Tyler argues that the circuit

court erred in submitting a nonmodel jury instruction on flight when there was no evidence

he had fled and in denying his motions to instruct the jury on the lesser-included offenses

of second-degree murder and manslaughter. We affirm.

The State charged Tyler with capital murder, alleging that on May 18, 2023, he caused

the death of John Payne with premeditated and deliberated purpose. The State alleged that

Tyler was subject to a firearm enhancement. The trial took place on March 20, 2025.

John Payne was shot and killed on May 18, 2023. According to Dr. Adam Craig, who

performed the autopsy, Mr. Payne died of multiple gunshot wounds. Two bullets entered

the right back side of Mr. Payne’s scalp, traveled upward through his brain from right to left, and exited through a shared wound on the left upper part of his scalp. A third bullet entered

Mr. Payne’s head further down on the right side and traveled right to left and slightly upward

below his brain case before exiting his left cheek. The fourth bullet entered the right back

side of his neck, traveled slightly upward, also right to left, and exited through his left lower

cheek. A fifth bullet entered Mr. Payne’s upper right back, came out the top of his shoulder,

and entered his neck where it lodged underneath his skull. The sixth gunshot was to the

back of Mr. Payne’s right shoulder; this bullet traveled through the humerus before exiting

through the front of his shoulder. The two bullets that traveled through Mr. Payne’s brain,

alone, would have been fatal, and the two that exited his left cheek could have proved fatal.

Dr. Craig determined that Mr. Payne died as the result of multiple gunshot wounds and that

his manner of death was homicide.

Anthony Morehead, an armed guard for Valero, testified that he had just left work

and was walking home on May 18 when he heard gunshots. As he went in the direction of

the gunshots, a woman approached him and told him she needed to use a phone. A “guy”

on a bicycle passed between Morehead and the woman so closely that he almost hit the

woman. The person on the bicycle appeared to hand something to the woman, or vice versa,

then rode away. Morehead offered the woman his phone, but she did not reply, so he

continued walking. He then saw a truck in the middle of the street with its lights on. This

was when he called 911. When Morehead first saw the woman in the street, she appeared

to be coming from the truck. The woman turned out to be Melissa Colbert, Tyler’s mother.

2 Morehead’s recorded call to 911 was played for the jury. In that call, Morehead

identified himself then told the operator that as he was heading home from work and

walking down 23rd Street, he heard “a lot of gunshots.” Then he saw a heavyset woman in

a thin dress pacing back and forth. She would not answer him when he asked if there was a

shooting. Morehead told the operator that there was a truck sitting in the middle of the

street with its lights on, possibly still running, and he thought the driver had been shot and

was probably dead.

Colbert testified that she and Mr. Payne had dated for approximately ten years. Tyler

and Mr. Payne knew each other. Colbert never saw them have an altercation. Colbert

previously had given a sworn statement to the police, and the State played the recording for

the jury. In the statement, Colbert told the police that on the night Mr. Payne was killed,

she, Tyler, and Mr. Payne were in Mr. Payne’s pick-up truck together. Mr. Payne was driving;

she was in the front seat, and Tyler was sitting behind her in the back seat. A friend of

Tyler’s deceased brother, Paul Haltiwanger, Jr., had been in the truck, but they dropped him

off where he lived and then headed back to Colbert’s mother’s house where she was living.

Suddenly Colbert saw bright flashing lights, and the truck stopped. Mr. Payne slumped

forward, and Colbert exited the truck. She went to call for help and ran down the street to

her cousin’s house. She did not know where Tyler went but thought he also went to call

someone. Colbert called Mr. Payne’s aunt, who picked her up and took her to the hospital.

When they arrived at the hospital, they were told that Mr. Payne was not there. Colbert first

3 said she had not seen Tyler since Mr. Payne was shot, but she later changed her answer and

said Tyler had been by her mother’s house where they were staying.

After the audiotaped interview was played for the jury, direct examination continued.

Colbert denied that the recording refreshed her memory. She also denied having told the

police that Tyler always caried a gun. Colbert testified on cross-examination that she hears

a woman’s voice in her head and that she had been hearing it since she was in her early

twenties. She is on medication for bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. Colbert reluctantly

agreed with the State that she, Mr. Payne, and Tyler were the only ones in the truck at the

time of the shooting. She denied having shot Mr. Payne. Colbert testified that all her

children had a good relationship with Mr. Payne.

MD Shahriyar—the crime-scene technician for the Pine Bluff Police Department—

testified that when he arrived on the scene, Mr. Payne was already deceased. His body was

still buckled into the seatbelt of the driver’s seat of his truck. There was a bullet hole on the

driver’s side window and outside mirror. There were no bullet holes on the passenger side

of the truck. There were shell casings inside and outside the truck. Officer Shahriyar

observed and photographed the victim with gunshot wounds to the right side of his head,

neck, and shoulder. He also photographed the blood splatter on the inside of the driver’s-

side pillar of the truck. There was no blood splatter on the passenger side of the truck. The

casings were all the same caliber. Officer Shahriyar did not find a firearm at the scene.

Jennifer Floyd, who works at the Arkansas State Crime Laboratory, examined the bullets and

casings and determined that they had all been fired from the same gun.

4 Paul Haltiwanger, Jr., testified that he knew Colbert because he was friends with

Colbert’s younger son who recently had died. Colbert and Mr. Payne had given him a ride

home the night of the shooting. Haltiwanger was seated behind the driver, Mr. Payne. Tyler

also was in the truck, seated on the passenger side of the backseat, behind Colbert. Before

the truck reached Haltiwanger’s house, they stopped and picked up a man who smelled like

liquor. Haltiwanger got out of the truck at his house before the shooting took place.

Sergeant Chris Wieland of the Pine Bluff Police Department testified that he

investigated this shooting, beginning at the crime scene on the night it happened. He

observed the victim in the driver’s seat of the truck. He also observed a bullet hole in the

driver’s-side rearview mirror on the car door and in the door window. He concluded, from

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Vincent Tyler v. State of Arkansas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vincent-tyler-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2026.