Jeffrey Haynes v. State of Arkansas ( 2022 )


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  •                                  Cite as 
    2022 Ark. App. 191
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION I
    No. CR-21-497
    JEFFREY HAYNES                                  Opinion Delivered May   4, 2022
    APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM THE FRANKLIN
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
    V.                                              NORTHERN DISTRICT
    [NO. 24OCR-18-210]
    STATE OF ARKANSAS
    APPELLEE HONORABLE JAMES DUNHAM,
    JUDGE
    AFFIRMED
    RAYMOND R. ABRAMSON, Judge
    Jeffrey Haynes appeals his conviction of possession of methamphetamine with the
    purpose to deliver from the Franklin County Circuit Court. On appeal, he argues that the
    circuit court abused its discretion by refusing to instruct the jury on entrapment. We affirm.
    On November 13, 2018, the State charged Haynes with possession of
    methamphetamine with the purpose to deliver. The State later amended the information to
    charge Haynes as a habitual offender. The court set a jury trial for July 15 and 16, and it
    ordered the parties to submit proposed jury instructions fourteen days prior to the trial date.
    At trial, Mike Hamilton testified that he works for the drug task force and that he
    received information that Haynes, who is an attorney, was a possible suspect. He stated that
    he arranged for an informant to trade methamphetamine with Haynes for legal services in a
    controlled buy.
    Hamilton then explained the details of the controlled buy. He stated that he reserved
    two motel rooms—one room for the confidential informant to meet Haynes and a second
    room for drug-task-force officers. He stated that he gave the informant a bag of
    methamphetamine to give to Haynes and that he placed drug paraphernalia and counterfeit
    methamphetamine inside the informant’s motel room to suggest drug activity. Hamilton
    testified that Haynes entered the informant’s motel room and that he was in the room for
    “just a few minutes.” He stated that after Haynes left the room, he approached Haynes at his
    car, arrested him, and located the bag of methamphetamine in his pocket.
    Hamilton testified that after the arrest, he interviewed Haynes. He recorded the
    interview, and the court played the recording for the jury. In the recording, Haynes initially
    stated that he told the informant on several occasions that he could not accept noncash
    payments for legal services; however, Haynes eventually acknowledged that he met the
    informant to retrieve methamphetamine. He also admitted that he wanted to “[t]ry to get
    some money” for the methamphetamine, and he referenced the individual to whom he
    planned to sell the methamphetamine. He said that he was in a “bad spot” and that several
    other clients owed him money. He denied accepting drugs for payment in the past, but he
    eventually admitted that he had done so “[a] long time ago.” Haynes also admitted that he
    used “dope every once in a while,” but he denied being under the influence of drugs during
    the interview.
    2
    At trial, Hamilton testified that Haynes’s demeanor during the interview—he was
    itching and in constant motion—made him suspect that Haynes had probably used drugs
    that morning.
    The informant testified that contrary to Haynes’s recorded statement, Haynes did
    not insist on money instead of methamphetamine. He explained that when he first met
    Haynes at his law office to discuss his criminal case, Haynes abruptly ended the meeting
    when he saw on the informant’s criminal record that the informant had been released on a
    signature bond. The informant explained that a person is generally given a signature bond
    when he is sick or “working with the police.”
    The informant testified that he later contacted Haynes for assistance with his
    girlfriend’s child-custody case and that Haynes agreed to exchange methamphetamine for
    legal services. He explained that drug-task-force officer Hamilton then formulated the plan
    for the controlled buy. He stated that Hamilton provided him the bag of methamphetamine
    and that he delivered the methamphetamine to Haynes at the motel. The informant testified
    that
    [Haynes] came in. I got the dope out from under the mattress, and we walked over. I
    kind of sat on the counter there where the mirror is at. We had a few words. I handed
    it to him. He asked what it was. I told him what the quantity was. I mentioned that,
    you know, further involved in the case, I had some more if we needed to; and he said
    right now that would be plenty.
    Mike Evans, a drug-task-force officer, testified that he accompanied the informant
    inside the motel room for the controlled buy. He stated that he saw the informant give the
    bag of methamphetamine to Haynes and that Haynes put it in his pocket. He further stated
    3
    that Haynes and the informant briefly discussed the custody case, and Haynes then exited
    the motel room. Evans testified that Haynes did not mention cash and did not refuse the
    drugs.
    After the State rested, Haynes testified on his own behalf that he is an attorney and
    that he previously had his own law practice.1 He stated that he developed financial issues
    because his clients failed to pay legal fees. He also stated that he suffers from health issues.
    He explained that the informant had requested legal services and that he had told the
    informant that he accepted only cash for payment. Haynes testified that on several occasions,
    the informant asked him about trading noncash items for legal services, but Haynes always
    said no. Haynes denied discussing methamphetamine with the informant.
    As to the motel incident, Haynes testified that he met the informant because the
    informant said that he had cash to pay his legal fees. He further explained that on that day,
    he needed money to see a doctor for a foot infection, that he was in immense pain from the
    infection, and that when the informant offered him methamphetamine, he accepted it “in a
    stupid moment.”
    At trial, Haynes asked the court to instruct the jury on entrapment. He argued that
    the evidence showed that law enforcement induced him to take the methamphetamine
    through the informant’s repeated requests to accept noncash payments. He also claimed that
    the informant lured him to the motel room by promising a cash payment.
    1
    Haynes stated that his law office had been closed and that his law license had been
    suspended.
    4
    The court refused to instruct the jury on entrapment. The court stated, “You haven’t
    offered an actual instruction, but and in terms of a written one. But in any event, I do not
    find that there is any evidence from which the jury could find that.” Thereafter, Haynes
    proffered an entrapment instruction.
    The jury found Haynes guilty of possession of methamphetamine with the purpose
    to deliver. Haynes was also found to be a habitual offender. He was sentenced to ten years
    in the Arkansas Department of Correction. This appeal followed.
    On appeal, Haynes argues that the circuit court abused its discretion by refusing to
    instruct the jury on entrapment. The circuit court’s decision to give or reject an instruction
    will not be reversed unless the court abused its discretion. Hundley v. State, 
    2020 Ark. 89
    ,
    
    594 S.W.3d 60
    . When there is no evidence to support the giving of an instruction, it is not
    error to refuse it. Blaney v. State, 
    280 Ark. 253
    , 
    657 S.W.2d 531
     (1983).
    Entrapment is an affirmative defense that “occurs when a law enforcement officer or
    any person acting in cooperation with a law enforcement officer induces the commission of
    an offense by using persuasion or other means likely to cause a normally law-abiding person
    to commit the offense.” 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 5-2-209
    (b)(1) (Repl. 2013). “Conduct merely
    affording a person an opportunity to commit an offense does not constitute entrapment.”
    
    Ark. Code Ann. § 5-2-209
    (b)(2). A defendant bears the burden of proving entrapment by a
    preponderance of the evidence. Smoak v. State, 
    2011 Ark. 529
    , 
    385 S.W.3d 257
    .
    When deciding whether a person was entrapped as a matter of law, the supreme court
    has stated that
    5
    more importance [is attributed] to the conduct of the law enforcement officers [and
    any people acting in cooperation with them] than to any predisposition of the
    defendant and the question is directed to the effect of that conduct on “normally law-
    abiding persons.”
    Baker v. State, 
    310 Ark. 485
    , 487, 
    837 S.W.2d 471
    , 472 (1992) (citing Spears v. State, 
    264 Ark. 83
    , 96, 
    568 S.W.2d 492
    , 501 (1978)). But the supreme court has also said that the
    defendant’s conduct and predisposition, both prior to and concurrent with, the
    transactions forming the basis of the charges are still material and relevant, on the
    question whether the government agents only afforded the opportunity to commit
    the offenses with which he is charged.
    Baker, 
    310 Ark. at
    487–88, 
    837 S.W.2d at
    472 (citing Spears, 264 Ark. at 97, 
    568 S.W.2d at 501
     (citations omitted)).
    In Baker, the supreme court held that a circuit court did not abuse its discretion by
    not instructing the jury on entrapment in a controlled-buy situation. 
    310 Ark. 485
    , 
    837 S.W.2d 471
    . The evidence showed that an informant had called the appellant on more than
    one occasion requesting cocaine and that the appellant had initially told the informant that
    “he never got any cocaine and did not know of anybody that had any to sell.” Id. at 489, 
    837 S.W.2d at 473
    . The supreme court explained that
    [t]he informant’s behavior in asking appellant if he could get some cocaine and calling
    him several times about getting cocaine, without more, is not enough to raise a fact
    question as to entrapment, especially coupled with appellant’s testimony that he had
    sold cocaine to the informant in the past and that he was willing to sell marijuana
    and mushrooms to the informant. Appellant, having the burden of proof, failed to
    present any evidence to indicate that he was induced by governmental conduct of a
    character likely to cause a normally law-abiding person to commit the offense.
    
    Id. at 489
    , 
    837 S.W.2d at
    472–73.
    6
    We find Baker instructive and hold that the circuit court did not abuse its direction
    by refusing to instruct the jury on entrapment in this case. Similar to the testimony in Baker,
    Haynes’s testimony about the informant’s actions is not enough to raise a factual question
    as to entrapment—especially given Haynes’s admission that he had used “dope,” that he had
    accepted drugs for legal fees “[a] long time ago,” and that he had planned to exchange the
    methamphetamine for money. Haynes, having the burden of proof, failed to present
    evidence to indicate that he was induced by governmental conduct of a character likely to
    cause a normally law-abiding person to commit the offense. Thus, we hold that the circuit
    court did not abuse its discretion by refusing to instruct the jury on entrapment.
    Affirmed.
    HARRISON, C.J., and GRUBER, J., agree.
    Terry Goodwin Jones, for appellant.
    Leslie Rutledge, Att’y Gen., by: Walker K. Hawkins, Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.
    7
    

Document Info

Filed Date: 5/4/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/4/2022