Howard v. State , 2016 Ark. LEXIS 371 ( 2016 )


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  •                                     Cite as 
    2016 Ark. 434
    SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
    No.   CR-16-7
    TIMOTHY LAMONT HOWARD
    Opinion Delivered: December   8, 2016
    APPELLANT
    V.                                                APPEAL FROM THE LITTLE RIVER
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    STATE OF ARKANSAS                                 [CR1997-105]
    APPELLEE
    HONORABLE CHARLES A.
    YEARGAN, JUDGE
    AFFIRMED.
    COURTNEY HUDSON GOODSON, Associate Justice
    A jury in the Little River County Circuit Court found appellant Timothy Lamont
    Howard guilty of two counts of second-degree murder and one count of attempted second-
    degree murder for which he received consecutive sentences totaling thirty-eight years in
    prison. For reversal, he contends that the circuit court erred by failing to grant his motions
    for directed verdict. We affirm.
    This case involves the homicides of Brian Day and his wife, Shannon, and the
    attempted murder of their seven-month-old son, Trevor, which occurred in December
    1997. The prosecuting attorney initially charged Howard with capital murder for the deaths
    of Brian and Shannon and with the attempted capital murder of Trevor. A jury found
    Howard guilty as charged, and he received two death sentences for the capital murders and
    a thirty-year sentence and a $15,000 fine for the offense of attempted capital-murder. This
    court affirmed his convictions and sentences. Howard v. State, 
    348 Ark. 471
    , 
    79 S.W.3d 273
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    (2002).1 We also upheld the denial of postconviction relief. Howard v. State, 
    367 Ark. 18
    ,
    
    238 S.W.3d 241
    (2006). In 2012, this court granted Howard permission to pursue a petition
    for writ of error coram nobis in the circuit court. Howard v. State, 
    2012 Ark. 177
    , 
    403 S.W.3d 38
    . The circuit court subsequently found merit in Howard’s petition and ordered
    a new trial. The following facts are adduced from the record of this trial.
    On Saturday, December 13, 1997, Danny Russell, the Sheriff of Little River County,
    received a dispatch at 10:00 a.m. about a U-Haul truck that was parked in a field and backed
    up to a wooded area. This field was located off a county road and on a farm owned by the
    Howard family near Ogden, Arkansas, approximately three miles from the intersection of
    Highway 71 and East Ogden Road. The report, which was made by persons searching for
    their escaped horses, was that blood was dripping out of the back of the U-Haul. After he
    arrived, Russell saw what appeared to be blood on the left side of the bumper, and he used
    bolt cutters to remove the padlock on the U-Haul’s cargo area. Inside, he discovered the
    body of a deceased male.
    Although the lease agreement found inside the U-Haul stated that the vehicle had
    been rented by Brian, the identity of the body was not immediately known. Once the
    authorities confirmed that it was Brian’s body, they went to the Days’ home near Ashdown
    to notify Shannon of his death. The officers received no answer at the door, but they later
    returned and gained entry into the home with the aid of Brian’s brother, David Day. After
    hearing muffled cries coming from a bedroom, they found Trevor alive stuffed inside a
    closed Marlboro bag underneath clothing. He had a lamp cord wrapped tightly around his
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    It was a 4–3 decision.
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    neck. The officers also found Shannon’s body, who was naked below the waist, in the
    bedroom on the floor of a closet with clothing and other items stacked on top of her.
    According to the medical examiner, Brian had sustained a hinge-type injury to the
    skull, caused by a massive delivery of force and which accounted for the high volume of
    blood found in the U-Haul. He also had been shot in the back of the head. The medical
    examiner offered the opinion that the hinge fracture occurred while Brian lay on the ground
    after being incapacitated by the gunshot wound. He stated that the hinge fracture was
    consistent with Brian’s having been run over by the U-Haul while his head was wrapped
    in a piece of carpet found at the scene. The physical evidence at the site indicated that the
    assault on Brian had begun at an old cook shed in the field. The medical examiner estimated
    that Brian’s death occurred between the hours of midnight and 8:00 a.m. Expert testimony
    also established that the projectile recovered from Brian’s head was a .38-caliber bullet that
    had most likely been fired from a .38 Special or a .357 revolver. Vickie Howard, who was
    then Howard’s ex-wife,2 testified that Howard was in possession of a .38-caliber revolver
    on Friday, December 12, 1997, the day before Brian’s body was found.               Howard’s
    fingerprints were on the outside of the driver’s door of the U-Haul.
    That Saturday morning, Herbert Jones was walking home from his aunt’s house. At
    8:30 a.m., he found a pair of work boots sitting sixty feet off the roadway at the corner of
    Highways 71 and 380, a distance of three miles from the Howard field. Blood on the left
    boot matched Brian’s DNA. In her testimony, Vickie stated that the boots were the same
    2
    Vickie and Howard remarried in October 2010, while he was in prison.
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    size and style of boots she had purchased for Howard. Hairs found inside the boots were a
    match to Howard’s DNA.
    The medical examiner also testified that Shannon died as a result of strangulation and
    blunt-force trauma. When her body was discovered, she had a ligature tied around her
    neck and her wrists were bound in handcuffs behind her back. The handcuffs had black fur
    on them. Jennifer Stanley, one of Howard’s girlfriends, testified that the handcuffs were
    similar to those Howard had purchased at an adult novelty store.3 At the Days’ house, officers
    collected a Mountain Dew bottle with Howard’s fingerprint on it.
    By all accounts, Howard and Brian were long-time, close friends. One witness stated
    that “when I saw one, I saw the other. If one was into something, the other was into
    something.” The testimony established that they used and sold drugs together. According
    to Vickie, Brian and Howard’s friendship had cooled until two weeks before the murders.
    Lloyd Day testified that Brian suspected that Howard had stolen a rifle from him that Brian
    had borrowed from his brother and that Howard owed Brian a lot of money.4 There was
    also testimony suggesting that Howard and Shannon were having an affair or that Brian
    suspected they were. Witnesses also testified that Shannon believed she was pregnant with
    Howard’s child.        Nonetheless, Howard accompanied Brian to rent the U-Haul on
    Thursday, December 11, 1997. The testimony of several witnesses indicates that the two
    had deals arranged for Thursday and Friday that either involved drugs or stolen merchandise.
    3
    At the time of the murders and the first trial, Jennifer’s last name was Qualls.
    4
    Art Lamon testified that he purchased this rifle from Howard for $200 in October
    1997.
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    On Friday, Shannon confided in David that she and Brian were afraid of Howard because
    “he found out something.”
    Howard’s whereabouts that weekend were established primarily through the
    testimony of Vickie and Jennifer. Before her shift ended on Friday morning, December 12,
    1997, Vickie left work and drove to Ashdown because she was worried about Brian and
    Shannon. At around 4:00 a.m., she stopped at a café to eat breakfast while waiting for them
    to wake up. Howard also arrived at the restaurant. Howard told her that he had just left
    the Days’ house, and he discouraged her from visiting them because, he said, they were
    fighting. Instead, Vickie and Howard made plans to meet at the Motel 6 in Texarkana.
    Howard was driving a U-Haul truck, and at the motel, Howard told her not to tell anyone
    about the U-Haul because it would get her killed. Howard asked her to drive him to the
    family farm, and they arrived there before daylight. He told her to shine the headlights of
    her vehicle on the cook shed. Howard informed her that this was where Brian and Shannon
    were hiding their drugs, and Vickie testified that Howard went inside the shed and that she
    saw him bend down. Vickie then dropped off Howard at the apartment of Jennifer’s sister,
    Kimberly Jones, whom Howard was living with at the time.5 When Vickie returned to the
    motel, the U-Haul was still there.
    At approximately 5:00 p.m. on Friday, Vickie picked up Howard at a friend’s
    residence near Kimberly’s apartment. They returned to the motel. Vickie stated that
    Howard was carrying a black nylon camera bag. She asked him what was inside the bag,
    5
    Kimberly married Howard following his arrest and before the first trial. She died
    sometime after the first trial, and her testimony from that trial was presented by the defense.
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    and Howard replied that the bag contained “kinky stuff.” He did not allow her to look
    inside the bag, and he said that its contents included handcuffs, rope, and tape. Vickie
    testified that Howard went to Walmart and that when he returned, she saw a .38 revolver
    sticking out of his pants. She stated that he left the motel driving the U-Haul at 9:30 p.m.,
    wearing a black sweatshirt, jeans, and his work boots.
    At approximately 11:00 p.m. that night, Howard called Jennifer and asked her to
    pick him up at a rest area on Highway 71 near the Red River Bridge. When she arrived,
    Howard emerged from her sister Kimberly’s car and got into her vehicle. He told Jennifer
    he needed to rest. She testified that Howard was lying in her backseat and that his “body
    was just jerking and shaking and his eyes were all bugged out.” Jennifer believed that he
    had been awake too many days doing drugs and that she had never seen him in that
    condition. They went to bed when they arrived at her duplex, and she said that Howard
    continued to shake as he lay beside her. He woke up sometime between 1:00 and 1:30 a.m.
    and told Jennifer that he had to go “take care of some business” and to get his money. She
    saw him put on his clothes and his work boots. Howard left in her silver 1997 Honda Civic,
    and he returned between 3:00 and 3:30 a.m. He awoke Jennifer to tell her that Shannon
    and Trevor would be staying with her while he and Brian “took care of some business.”
    Jennifer saw Shannon, while she only heard Brian and Trevor. Jennifer went back to sleep,
    and she was alone when she awoke. Dale Fields testified that he was driving by the Days’
    home at 5:45 a.m. that morning and saw a small silver car sitting in the driveway.
    Jennifer got up sometime between 6:30 a.m. and 7:00 a.m. that Saturday morning,
    and she proceeded to get ready for work. Howard came into the bathroom while she was
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    bathing and told her that Brian and Shannon were “in hiding” and that he was the only
    person who knew where they were. Jennifer noticed that her purse and wallet had been
    disturbed, and she asked Howard about her money. She testified that Howard removed
    two $100 bills from his pocket and laid them on the counter, saying that the money “should
    cover it.” Jennifer further testified that Howard said he needed a truck and that he wanted
    her to ask her boss, Robin Jones, if he could borrow Jones’s truck, a black Ford Splash.
    Howard told her that he needed to move furniture for Brian. After this conversation,
    Jennifer agreed to drive Howard back to the rest area. When she got into her car, she saw
    in the backseat Howard’s black bag, some luggage, a jacket, and a purse. Upon inquiry,
    Howard stated that the luggage, the jacket, and the purse belonged to Shannon. When they
    arrived at the rest area, Howard left the black bag in Jennifer’s vehicle, but he placed the
    other items in Kimberly’s car, which was still at the rest area. Witnesses who were friends
    of Shannon’s testified that she did not go anywhere without her purse.
    Jennifer returned home to finish preparing for work. Howard came in fifteen
    minutes later.   Jennifer stated that during this time frame, Howard had stopped by
    Kimberly’s apartment and had given her $700. Jennifer said that Howard was angry at her
    because she would not call her boss about borrowing the truck. She testified that he said,
    “I need a God damn truck, and I gotta go.” Shortly after Jennifer arrived at work, Howard
    appeared there and asked whether she had contacted Jones about the truck. Jennifer
    arranged for Howard to borrow the truck, and Howard picked it up from Jones between
    9:30 and 10:00 a.m.
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    Howard went to Pro-Truck Outfitters in Texarkana between 9:00 and 10:00 a.m.
    There, he paid $140 in cash for the largest tool box the store had in stock. Testimony
    established that the tool box was large enough to hold an adult human body. Howard told
    the salesman, Eddie Scroggin, that he was driving a car and would have to return later in a
    truck to retrieve the tool box. Scroggin testified that Howard turned his back to Scroggin
    as he retrieved the cash to make the purchase. Scroggin said that Howard returned about
    an hour and a half later to pick up the tool box.
    Also in her testimony, Vickie stated that Howard had called her at 11:00 a.m. on
    Saturday and asked her to pick him up at Miller Bowie in Texarkana. She said that Howard
    was driving a black truck she had never seen before. Vickie testified that Howard was
    nervous and afraid that the police would see him in the truck, and she said that he wanted
    to leave the truck and get rid of the keys. Howard explained to her that he was on his way
    to the farm to meet Brian when he saw the police and an ambulance heading in that
    direction and that he turned around because he thought something had gone wrong.
    Howard told her that his part of the deal was $4,000. She also said that Howard was worried
    because his fingerprints would be on a .38 he had given to Brian. Vickie testified that
    Howard was wearing the same clothes she had last seen him in except that he had on tennis
    shoes. She also said that when he got into her car, he pulled his coat up around his neck.
    Howard asked her to take him to the Motel 6, and he gave her $120 for a $30 room, telling
    her she could use the excess money to buy a Christmas present for her son.
    Vickie contacted Jones and facilitated the return of the truck to him. Next, she took
    Howard to Kimberly’s apartment. Howard called Jennifer that afternoon and told her that
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    a body had been found in a U-Haul near Ogden and that the dead person might be his best
    friend. He told Jennifer to clean out her car because it had been in the area of the U-Haul.
    Howard also asked her if she was going to “turn him in.” When Jennifer arrived home
    from work, the tool box Howard had purchased was sitting in her front yard. The box was
    filled with cleaning supplies, which she discovered had been taken from her home. She also
    recalled that Howard had asked her to leave a key underneath her doormat.
    Meanwhile, Howard and Kimberly checked into a motel room upon learning that a
    body had been found in the U-Haul. According to Kimberly, Vickie called her and Howard
    at approximately 4:00 p.m. and told them that Brian and Shannon were dead. Howard and
    Kimberly appeared at Jennifer’s duplex at 5:00 p.m. They informed Jennifer of Brian’s and
    Shannon’s deaths. Jennifer said that she walked with Howard while he retrieved his black
    bag from her car. She asked him where he was going, and she said that Howard replied, “I
    don’t know” and that he said, “I’m getting out of here because I’m gonna be accused of
    killing Brian and Shannon.” The three left together in Jennifer’s Honda, and Jennifer stated
    that Howard returned the black bag to her car. Jennifer said that Howard was quiet and did
    not appear to be upset about the deaths of his best friend and his wife.
    Jennifer further testified that she, Howard, and Kimberly drove to Shreveport. On
    the way, Howard called Vickie, and she informed him that the police wanted to talk to him,
    but he told her that he did not want to speak to them right then. Jennifer said she asked
    Howard what had become of Shannon’s belongings that had been in her car earlier that day.
    He told her he had “gotten rid of” her things. Jennifer also overheard Howard asking
    Kimberly what she had done with the key to the padlock of the U-Haul, and Kimberly told
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    him she had thrown it away. In further conversations, Howard told Jennifer he had
    purchased the tool box for Brian. Jennifer was not aware that Brian owned a truck. Howard
    also told her that he and Brian were going to use the supplies she found in the box to clean
    something. In addition, Howard advised Jennifer that he had been at the Days’ house early
    that Saturday morning in her vehicle. He said that he had been waiting for Brian to come
    home and that Shannon wrote Christmas cards while he drank a Mountain Dew.
    The trio went to a Walmart in Shreveport, and Howard gave them $50 to buy
    toiletries because they had not had time to pack before they left. They did not stay the
    night in Shreveport because there were no hotel rooms available. The three then drove to
    New Boston, Texas, and rented a motel room there. Sunday, that next morning, Kimberly
    and Jennifer purchased a newspaper, and they read about the bloody boots being found.
    Howard commented that his boots had been in the U-Haul and that someone was “setting
    him up.”
    Sunday afternoon, Howard, Kimberly, and Jennifer went to the sheriff’s office to
    give statements. Howard instructed the sisters “not to say anything about the money.”
    After Jennifer had given her statement, Howard asked her if she had mentioned the tool
    box, and she told him she had not. Jennifer stated that she and Howard returned to her
    duplex after giving their statements. She said that she made a comment about calling the
    police and that Howard slung her across the room. On Wednesday, Jennifer decided to
    meet again with the officer who was investigating the murders. She met him at a lake
    because she was too frightened to be seen at the sheriff’s office. Jennifer gave the officers
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    permission to search her car, and they found Howard’s black nylon bag. It contained rope
    and a roll of tape, but no handcuffs.
    Based on the evidence, the jury adjudged Howard guilty of second-degree murder
    in connection with the deaths of Brian and Shannon and of attempted second-degree
    murder with regard to Trevor. As mentioned, he received a combined term of thirty-eight
    years’ imprisonment for these convictions. This appeal followed.
    As his sole issue on appeal, Howard contends that the circuit court erred by denying
    his motions for directed verdict because the evidence does not demonstrate that he was the
    perpetrator of the offenses. He argues that the State’s theories of the murders are not
    supported by the evidence. Howard points to testimony demonstrating that Shannon was
    not pregnant at the time of her death. He also maintains that there was no evidence as to
    how much money Howard owed Brian and that there was testimony that Brian owed other
    people money. Howard asserts that Brian did not name Howard as a suspect when he
    reported to the police that the rifle had been stolen, and he suggests that Brian knew what
    had happened to the gun and reported it as stolen when his brother pressed for its return.
    He also takes issue with the notion that Brian engaged in a drug deal on Thursday because
    witnesses stated that Brian had no drugs for sale on Friday. He also contests the State’s
    theory of how the blood got on the boots and how they came to be placed where they were
    found. Howard also disputes whether Brian was dragged across the field on a piece of carpet,
    and he posits that the hinge fracture Brian sustained might have been caused by his being
    stomped on with a boot. He notes that the boots that were found had no blood on the
    bottom of them and that unidentified Caucasian hairs were inside the boots. Howard also
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    points to evidence that unidentified fingerprints were discovered on the picture frames
    found on top of Shannon’s body. In addition, he notes that no fibers, blood, or DNA of
    his were on anything tested from Brian and Shannon. Howard asserts that none of his
    clothes had blood on them and that he had no scratches or injuries on his hands or face. He
    is also critical of the investigation conducted by the police. Finally, he relies on evidence
    suggesting that others had a motive to kill Brian and Shannon.
    On appeal, we treat a motion for directed verdict as a challenge to the sufficiency of
    the evidence. Brooks v. State, 
    2016 Ark. 305
    , 
    498 S.W.3d 292
    . The test for determining
    the sufficiency of the evidence is whether the verdict is supported by substantial evidence.
    Wells v. State, 
    2013 Ark. 389
    , 
    430 S.W.3d 65
    . Substantial evidence is evidence that is of
    sufficient force and character that it will, with reasonable certainty, compel a conclusion one
    way or the other, without resorting to speculation or conjecture. Sylvester v. State, 
    2016 Ark. 136
    , 
    489 S.W.3d 146
    . In reviewing a sufficiency challenge, we view the evidence in
    the light most favorable to the State, considering only evidence that supports the verdict.
    Mercouri v. State, 
    2016 Ark. 37
    , 
    480 S.W.3d 864
    .
    Evidence of guilt is not less because it is circumstantial. Chatmon v. State, 
    2015 Ark. 28
    , 
    467 S.W.3d 731
    . Circumstantial evidence may provide the basis to support a conviction,
    but it must be consistent with the defendant’s guilt and inconsistent with any other
    reasonable conclusion. Airsman v. State, 
    2014 Ark. 500
    , 
    451 S.W.3d 565
    . Whether
    circumstantial evidence excludes every other reasonable hypothesis consistent with
    innocence is for the jury to decide. Dixon v. State, 
    2011 Ark. 450
    , 
    385 S.W.3d 164
    . Finally,
    the credibility of the witnesses is an issue for the jury and not the court. Green v. State, 2013
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    Ark. 497, 
    430 S.W.3d 729
    . The trier of fact is free to believe all or part of any witness’s
    testimony and may resolve questions of conflicting testimony and inconsistent evidence.
    Conte v. State, 
    2015 Ark. 220
    , 
    463 S.W.3d 686
    .
    Also, efforts to conceal a crime and evade detection can be considered as evidence
    of consciousness of guilt. Barrett v. State, 
    354 Ark. 187
    , 
    119 S.W.3d 483
    (2003). False,
    improbable, and contradictory statements to explain suspicious circumstances may be
    considered by the jury in determining guilt. Hill v. State, 
    299 Ark. 327
    , 
    773 S.W.2d 424
    (1989).
    Howard’s arguments challenging the sufficiency of the evidence overlook the fact
    that our standard of review requires us to consider the evidence in the light most favorable
    to the State and to only consider evidence that supports the verdicts. 
    Mercouri, supra
    . When
    the evidence is viewed in that fashion, there is substantial evidence to support the jury’s
    findings of guilt. Brian was found in a remote field on property owned by the Howard
    family. His body was locked inside a U-Haul truck rented by Brian but driven by Howard
    before the murder. Howard’s fingerprints were on this truck. According to the testimony,
    his girlfriend Kimberly disposed of the key to the lock on the U-Haul. Boots like those
    worn by Howard were found a short distance from the field. Brian’s blood was found on
    one boot, and Howard’s hair was found inside the boots. Although Howard was wearing
    boots in the hours before Brian’s body was discovered, he was wearing tennis shoes
    afterward. In addition, Howard essentially admitted that the boots were his when he
    proclaimed to Kimberly and Jennifer that he was being set up when they read about the
    boots in the newspaper. Howard purchased a large tool box that morning, and the
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    testimony indicated that he was on his way to the field in a truck that he insisted on
    borrowing with a tool box filled with cleaning supplies. Upon seeing the police, Howard
    avoided detection and returned to Texarkana. Although Howard said he believed that
    something had gone wrong with Brian, he left rather than check on his friend. Howard
    was also afraid that the police had seen him in the truck, and he distanced himself from that
    vehicle. Howard had also been in possession of a .38-caliber revolver the day before Brian
    was shot with a weapon of that kind.
    The testimony also reveals that Howard was with Brian, Shannon, and Trevor in the
    wee hours of that Saturday morning. At that time, he was traveling in Jennifer’s vehicle,
    which contained Shannon’s purse, jacket, and luggage. Howard later told Jennifer he had
    disposed of Shannon’s belongings. He also advised Jennifer to clean out her car because it
    had been located near the U-Haul. A vehicle of this description was also seen at the Days’
    home that morning. Shannon’s hands were bound with handcuffs identical to those that
    Howard was known to possess. Although he had told Vickie that his black bag contained
    handcuffs, no handcuffs were found inside the bag when it was recovered from Jennifer’s
    car and searched.
    Howard’s actions and other statements also support the jury’s verdict. When he left
    Jennifer’s house at 1:30 a.m. on Saturday, he told her that he was going to get his money.
    Despite not having a job, he spent and dispensed a fair amount of cash that day. Howard
    instructed Kimberly and Jennifer not to mention the money when they gave their statements
    to the police. It is also telling that Howard left town Saturday night and did not wish to
    speak to the police. In addition, he made inconsistent statements to Jennifer. At first, he
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    told her that the Days were in hiding, but he later said that he had been at the Days’ home
    drinking a Mountain Dew with Shannon while she wrote Christmas cards. A Mountain
    Dew bottle with Howard’s fingerprint on it was found in the Days’ living room. Howard
    also told Jennifer that he needed Jones’s truck to help Brian move furniture, although the
    U-Haul had been rented.
    Citing Roderick v. State, 
    288 Ark. 360
    , 
    705 S.W.2d 433
    (1986), Howard maintains
    that evidence demonstrating that he was last seen with the victims is not sufficient to support
    a conviction. However, the evidence in this case demonstrates much more than that. It is
    our conclusion that the jury’s verdicts are supported by substantial evidence. Therefore, we
    affirm his convictions and sentences.
    Affirmed.
    Janice W. Vaughn, Arkansas Public Defender Commission, for appellant.
    Leslie Rutledge, Att’y Gen., by: Vada Berger, Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee
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