Shatwell v. State , 2013 Ark. App. LEXIS 591 ( 2013 )


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  •                                 Cite as 
    2013 Ark. App. 568
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION III
    No. CR-13-144
    Opinion Delivered   October 9, 2013
    APPEAL FROM THE BOONE
    JON AARON SHATWELL         COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    APPELLANT [NO. CR-12-95-4]
    V.                                             HONORABLE GORDON WEBB
    JUDGE
    STATE OF ARKANSAS
    APPELLEE AFFIRMED
    BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge
    Savanna Dickinson’s life ended on a mid-November night in 2011.                Harrison
    police officers responded to a call that Savanna had taken her own life in an apartment she
    shared with Jon Shatwell. With the help of the fire department, police officers entered the
    locked apartment. They found Savanna, alone, slumped on a couch by the front door.
    Her face and head were encased in blood. She was dead. A .45-caliber (1911 style) semi-
    automatic pistol lay near her right hand.
    Savanna had been shot between her eyes. There was a live round of ammunition
    on the living-room floor and a spent casing next to the coffee table by the couch. Law
    enforcement secured the scene and began investigating Savanna’s death.
    Shatwell became a person of interest because he and Savanna had fought at a party
    earlier the same evening over a personal matter. Not long after Savanna’s death, Shatwell
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    appeared at his mother’s house; he had blood on his jacket, hands, and face. He told his
    mother that Savanna had shot herself in the head, so his mother called the police to report
    what happened. Shatwell gave a voluntary statement to the police shortly after his mother
    called them. According to Shatwell’s first account to police, he found Savanna in the
    living room holding a gun and, despite his efforts to dissuade her, she shot herself.
    Shatwell said that he remained with Savanna, holding her for about ten minutes before
    going to his mother’s house.     He told the suicide story to family and friends from
    November 2011 until April 2012, when the police interviewed him a second time; that’s
    when a different story about the cause of Savanna’s death emerged.
    In his second interview, the police confronted Shatwell with forensic evidence and
    told him that they believed suicide was an unlikely cause of Savanna’s death. Shatwell
    then told the police that he had accidently shot Savanna.         The State of Arkansas
    subsequently charged Shatwell with committing murder in the first degree, tampering
    with physical evidence, and using a firearm while committing a felony (sentencing
    enhancement). In October 2012 he was tried before a Boone County jury.
    The jury convicted Shatwell of purposefully killing Savanna. It also found that
    Shatwell had used a firearm while committing a felony and tampered with evidence. The
    circuit court sentenced Shatwell to a total of 672 months’ (56 years) imprisonment in the
    Arkansas Department of Correction. Shatwell appealed his conviction and here argues the
    following points:
     The circuit court abused its discretion by denying a motion for a mistrial after his
    former girlfriend, Melissa Weaver, testified that he physically abused her.
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     The circuit court erred when it denied his motion in limine to exclude evidence of
    prior bad acts under Ark. R. Evid. 404(b) because Weaver testified improperly that
    he had threatened her with the same gun he used to kill Savanna Dickinson, and
    her testimony was solely offered to show that he would use gun violence against a
    subsequent girlfriend.
     The circuit court erred by concluding that the probative value of Weaver’s
    gun-related testimony outweighed its prejudicial effect.
     The circuit court should have granted Shatwell’s motion for a directed
    verdict on the first-degree murder charge.
     The circuit court should have granted Shatwell’s motion for a directed
    verdict on the tampering charge.
    We treat motions for directed verdict as challenges to the sufficiency of the
    evidence.   Tillman v. State, 
    364 Ark. 143
    , 
    217 S.W.3d 773
     (2005).          Shatwell’s two
    insufficient-evidence arguments come first.      Boldin v. State, 
    373 Ark. 295
    , 297, 
    283 S.W.3d 565
    , 567 (2008).
    I. The First-Degree Murder Conviction
    Shatwell committed first-degree murder if, with a purpose of causing Savanna’s
    death, he caused Savanna’s death. Ark. Code Ann. § 5-10-102(a)(2) (Repl. 2006). In
    reviewing Shatwell’s challenge to the sufficiency of the State’s evidence, we ask whether
    the verdict is supported by substantial evidence; it does not matter whether the evidence is
    direct, circumstantial, or some combination of the two. Dunn v. State, 
    371 Ark. 140
    , 
    264 S.W.3d 504
     (2007). For circumstantial evidence to be substantial, the evidence must
    exclude every reasonable hypothesis other than the accused’s guilt. The jury gets to
    decide whether the circumstantial evidence excludes every hypothesis consistent with
    innocence. Substantial evidence forces or compels a conclusion one way or the other so
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    that the jury does not have to speculate to reach a decision. We will not overturn its
    determination unless the verdict required speculation and conjecture.       The jury also
    weighs the evidence and judges witness credibility. Id.
    A criminal defendant’s state of mind is seldom capable of proof by direct evidence
    and must usually be inferred from the circumstances of the crime. Leaks v. State, 
    345 Ark. 182
    , 
    45 S.W.3d 363
     (2001). The existence of criminal intent or purpose is a matter for
    the jury to determine when criminal intent may be reasonably inferred from the evidence.
    McClard v. State, 
    2012 Ark. App. 573
    .
    In his directed-verdict motions, Shatwell argued that the State failed to prove that
    he acted with the intent to purposely cause Savanna’s death. Shatwell was alone in his
    apartment with Savanna the same night that the two had argued and Savanna was shot.
    Shatwell admitted at trial that he was holding a loaded .45—with his finger on the
    trigger—when the gun fired. Detective Schaeffer testified that a safety release had to be
    disengaged at the same time the trigger was pulled for the gun to fire. The spray of
    gunpowder across Savanna’s forehead indicated a close-range shooting.          The State’s
    forensic expert, Adam Craig, said the gun was three feet or less from Savanna’s forehead
    when it discharged. Craig also said that the bullet’s path through Savanna’s head was
    “suspicious” and “atypical for a suicide.” Detective Schaefer told the jury how the blood
    patterns on the gun, and swiping patterns on Savanna’s body, did not match Shatwell’s
    suicide story. Shatwell’s fingerprints were on the gun’s magazine.
    Shatwell also changed his story about what happened inside the apartment the night
    Savanna died. The jury could properly consider Shatwell’s vacillating stories as proof of a
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    purposeful mental state. Leaks v. State, 
    345 Ark. 182
    , 186, 
    45 S.W.3d 363
    , 366 (2001).
    The jury could also infer Shatwell’s intent from the circumstances surrounding the
    shooting. See Thompson v. State, 
    338 Ark. 564
    , 
    999 S.W.2d 192
     (1999) (the natural and
    probable consequence of putting a pistol against another person’s neck and firing the gun
    is the death of the victim); Walker v. State, 
    324 Ark. 106
    , 
    918 S.W.2d 172
     (1996) (gun
    fired at close range to victim’s head can be substantial evidence of defendant’s purposeful
    intent). The jury was ultimately allowed to accept or reject Shatwell’s story that he
    accidentally killed Savanna. See Williamson v. State, 
    2013 Ark. 347
    , at 6.
    The jury also heard testimony from a woman who had dated Shatwell before he
    reunited with Savanna. Her name is Melissa Weaver, and she testified that, about one
    month before Savanna died, she had broken up with Shatwell. But before she did so, he
    had held a gun to her forehead and threatened her. Weaver’s testimony, which we discuss
    in more detail below, is additional evidence that the jury heard when judging Shatwell’s
    accidental-shooting story.
    The jury’s guilty verdict on the first-degree murder charge was based on substantial
    evidence. We affirm it.
    II. The Tampering-with-Evidence Conviction
    Arkansas Code Annotated section 5-53-111(a) (Repl. 2005) provides that
    [a] person commits the offense of tampering with physical evidence if
    he or she alters, destroys, suppresses, removes, or conceals any record,
    document, or thing with the purpose of impairing its verity, legibility, or
    availability in any official proceeding or investigation.
    Shatwell argues that the State did not prove that he altered or removed anything from the
    crime scene with the purpose of impairing the investigation.           The same standard-of-
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    review points we applied to Shatwell’s challenge of his murder conviction apply here. We
    also reach the same result:       the jury’s conviction on this charge was supported by
    substantial evidence, so it is affirmed.
    This court and our supreme court have interpreted section 5-53-111(a) in cases
    where a defendant removes or conceals a murder weapon. Puckett v. State, 
    328 Ark. 355
    ,
    358, 
    944 S.W.2d 111
    , 113 (1997); Scott v. State, 
    1 Ark. App. 207
    , 210, 
    614 S.W.2d 239
    ,
    241 (1981). Here, there was no evidence that Shatwell totally removed the gun from a
    crime scene or concealed its presence from potential investigators. But having read the
    plain words of the statute—and being mindful that criminal statutes must be construed
    narrowly in favor of a defendant—we hold that the State produced substantial evidence
    that Shatwell altered the position of Savanna’s body and the murder weapon with the
    purpose of impairing the Harrison Police Department’s investigation into Savanna’s death.
    Puckett, 328 Ark. at 358, 944 S.W.2d at 113.
    Shatwell told investigators that Savanna had fallen on the floor after she shot herself
    and that he picked her up and placed her on the couch. Based on the placement of
    Savanna’s body and the location of the gun beside her, Detective Schaefer told the jury
    that he thought Shatwell manipulated the crime scene to make it look like Savanna had
    committed suicide. The detective said specifically that Savanna’s body had been moved at
    least 5 to 12 inches from where it lay originally. The State also presented evidence that
    the blood-swiping patterns on Savanna’s head and arms indicated that she was found in a
    different position from where she was shot.
    We affirm Shatwell’s conviction under section 5-53-111(a).
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    III. Prior Bad-Acts Evidence
    We collapse Shatwell’s first three points on appeal into this question: did the
    circuit court abuse its discretion and prejudice Shatwell’s case by admitting Melissa
    Weaver’s testimony? Some background is needed to understand the related points that
    touch on why we hold that the jury did not receive inadmissible and prejudicial bad-acts
    evidence about how Shatwell treated Weaver, a former girlfriend.
    Shatwell filed a pretrial motion in limine asking the court to exclude evidence of
    prior bad acts, including “threats with the use of a gun both to the victim and other
    persons.” Weaver testified at the second pretrial hearing on Shatwell’s motion. She told
    the court about her volatile relationship with Shatwell and how he had threatened her
    with his gun on more than one occasion. She also said that Shatwell’s abuse permanently
    damaged her neck.
    Weaver detailed several gun-related incidents with Shatwell. Weaver also provided
    a detailed description of the same gun that Shatwell admitted getting from his grandfather
    and with which he claimed to have accidentally shot Savanna. Weaver told the circuit
    court that, on one night, Shatwell forced her to her knees and placed his gun to the back
    of her head. Another time Shatwell became upset while they were watching a movie and
    fired the gun while inside the bedroom. He later apologized, claiming an accidental
    discharge. On cross-examination, Weaver said that she did not know if it was an accident
    but that is what she told the police.
    According to Weaver, another gun-related incident occurred within two months
    of Savanna’s death, after Weaver and Shatwell had argued for hours.        The fight got
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    “physical,” Weaver testified, and Shatwell told her to get on her knees; he then stood
    directly in front of her and put his gun to her forehead. Weaver testified that she was
    scared but looked Shatwell in the eyes and said, “They’re going to know you did this.”
    He then reportedly said, “You have so many problems [that] they’re going to think it’s a
    suicide.” Shatwell then set the gun down, according to Weaver, and she quickly hid it
    from him.
    Shatwell argued to the circuit court that Weaver’s testimony was impermissible
    character evidence meant only to portray him as a “bad person” and that “he is supposed
    to be tried on the merits of this case, not for allegedly bad stuff that happened in the past.”
    He contended that the incidents Weaver described—and the physical evidence at the
    crime scene—were too dissimilar, so Weaver’s testimony was irrelevant. The State argued
    that the past incidents with Weaver were independently relevant to show that Savanna’s
    death was not an accident or mistake and that the past acts tended to prove Shatwell’s
    criminal intent.
    The court seems to have orally granted in part and denied in part Shatwell’s motion
    to exclude Weaver’s testimony. The court’s ruling was not crystal clear, but the record as
    a whole shows that the parties understood that Weaver could testify about how Shatwell
    had threatened her with his gun during their relationship; but she could not testify about
    other physical abuse. The court also issued posttrial written orders denying Shatwell’s
    motion in limine and memorializing its oral ruling. We have not considered those orders
    because they were filed after the jury returned its verdict, meaning the parties did not have
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    the benefit of the written orders on the limine issue before the jury decided the case, just
    the oral rulings.
    After the trial began, but before Weaver told the jury her story, Shatwell again
    objected to her testimony, citing Ark. R. Evid. 404(b) and 403. The court permitted
    Weaver to testify. After establishing that Weaver had a past romantic relationship with
    Shatwell, and in the jury’s presence, the prosecuting attorney asked the following
    questions on direct examination:
    PROSECUTOR:          And when [was] your relationship terminated?
    WEAVER:              It was—it was October?
    PROSECUTOR:          Okay, of 2011?
    WEAVER:              Yes, ma’am.
    PROSECUTOR:          So about a month before Savanna was killed?
    WEAVER:              Yes, ma’am[.]
    PROSECUTOR:          Describe your relationship with Jon, was it a good
    relationship, bad, tell the Court and the jury about that?
    WEAVER:              The relationship—just the relationship standings.
    PROSECUTOR:          Yes?
    WEAVER:              It was good. There was a lot of—there wasn’t any problems
    at all in the beginning. And then the exact opposite when the
    conditions on a regular basis until the end of—
    PROSECUTOR:          All right. Tell the jury what you mean by things toward the
    end getting bad?
    WEAVER:              They started to become bad. It started with a lot of different
    variations of physical abuse.
    DEFENSE:             Your Honor, may we approach?
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    COURT:                You may.
    DEFENSE:              Your honor at this point in time, I’m going to ask for a
    mistrial because she is going into exactly what I filed the
    motion in limine about, about the prior bad acts. This Court
    ruled that she was not supposed to be talking about any acts of
    violence other than this deal with the gun. Now she is saying
    there was physical abuse.
    PROSECUTOR:           I can ask her to define that, Your Honor?
    COURT:                I think—I think all she said was verbal abuse, the Court is
    going to allow that. That’s not a prior bad act under the law.
    The Court’s finding—
    DEFENSE:              I just want to make sure—
    COURT:                I understand what you’re saying. You know, I am assuming
    the State has cautioned the witness about what can be talked
    about, so that’s what we’re going to—
    DEFENSE:              Thank you, Your Honor.
    The remainder of Weaver’s trial testimony mirrored that which she gave the court
    during the pretrial hearing on Shatwell’s motion in limine. Weaver did not subsequently
    mention physical abuse beyond the gun-related incidents.
    Shatwell argues here that the court erred by denying his motion for mistrial and
    allowing the State to present reputation and other bad-acts evidence. He specifically
    argues that Weaver’s testimony was so prejudicial that a new trial is due. The State argues
    that Shatwell failed to preserve his arguments on appeal, or alternatively, that the court did
    not abuse its discretion in admitting the testimony because any prejudice to Shatwell did
    not substantially outweigh the probative value of Weaver’s testimony, which was to help
    establish the required mental state.
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    We review the admissibility of Weaver’s testimony under an abuse-of-discretion
    standard. Flanery v. State, 
    362 Ark. 311
    , 314, 
    208 S.W.3d 187
    , 189 (2005). The circuit
    court also has wide discretion in granting or denying a motion for mistrial, and absent an
    abuse of that discretion, the court’s decision will not be overturned on appeal. Smith v.
    State, 
    354 Ark. 226
    , 243, 
    118 S.W.3d 542
    , 552 (2003).
    Character evidence is not admissible during the State’s case in chief if its only
    purpose is to suggest that a defendant is more likely to have committed the charged crime.
    Ark. R. Evid. 404(b) (2012). But a defendant’s prior bad conduct is admissible evidence
    if it tends to establish a specific point related to the current charge. Id. The “something
    specific” may include—but is not necessarily limited to—motive, intent, absence of
    mistake, identity, or common plan. Id. If the prior bad act is independently relevant then
    the State may use it as part of its case. Vance v. State, 
    2011 Ark. 243
    , at 8, 
    383 S.W.3d 325
    , 339–40. For example, any circumstance that links a defendant to the crime, or raises
    a possible motive for the crime, is independently relevant and admissible under Rule
    404(b). Id.
    But a 404(b) analysis is only half the process. Even if evidence of other crimes or
    bad acts is admissible under Rule 404(b), the court must then, under Rule 403, weigh the
    evidence’s probative value against its prejudicial effect. Considerable leeway is given to
    the circuit courts when determining if the circumstances of prior acts or crimes, and the
    crimes at hand, are sufficiently similar to admit them under Rules 404(b) and 403.
    Weaver testified that Shatwell told her, “You have so many problems, they’re
    going to think it’s a suicide.” She accurately described the gun that was used in the
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    murder, which Shatwell possessed, and recounted an incident where he put that same gun
    to her forehead. Weaver’s testimony was relevant and probative to Shatwell’s murder,
    tampering, and firearm charges because it concerned his defense that the shooting was
    accidental.
    The most recent gun incident between Weaver and Shatwell occurred a month or
    two before Savanna’s death. The close proximity of time between the Shatwell/Weaver
    incident and Savanna’s death also weighs in favor of admissibility. See Smith v. State, 
    90 Ark. App. 261
    , 268, 
    205 S.W.3d 173
    , 178 (2005). Weaver’s testimony is also sufficiently
    probative because it has a tendency to reveal Shatwell’s mental state when agitated with or
    by a girlfriend—that he might intentionally point a loaded pistol at or near a girlfriend and
    threaten to fire it. That Shatwell was arguably familiar with the gun, had placed it to a
    previous girlfriend’s forehead under similar circumstances as this case presented and not
    fired it, was highly relevant to the State’s effort to prove that Savanna was purposely, not
    accidentally, shot. See Stevenson v. State, 
    2013 Ark. 100
    , at 12. Simply put, the prior acts
    admitted in this case were similar enough to the current alleged unlawful conduct to be
    admitted under 404(b) and 403.
    Shatwell relies heavily on Green v. State, 
    365 Ark. 478
    , 
    231 S.W.3d 638
     (2006) for
    reversal on this point. There, our supreme court reversed a murder conviction in a death-
    penalty case and remanded for a new trial because of bad-act testimony that was
    erroneously admitted. The bad-act testimony portrayed the defendant as a “controlling
    abusive father.” Id. at 492–501, 231 S.W.3d at 650–56. The supreme court found that
    the testimony was related to the defendant’s credibility but was not independently relevant
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    to whether he murdered his neighbors. Id. at 497, 231 S.W.3d at 653. Unlike the
    testimony in Green, Weaver’s testimony was independently relevant to two material issues
    in the case: Shatwell’s mental state and whether an accidental shooting had occurred.
    The circuit court did not abuse its discretion in denying Shatwell the drastic
    remedy of a mistrial just because Weaver said the words “physical abuse” when testifying
    at trial. The State argues that Shatwell’s mistrial motion is not preserved because he failed
    to tell the court that it had misunderstood Weaver’s testimony and because Shatwell failed
    to request an admonition to the jury regarding physical abuse. That argument does not
    square with the caselaw in point; Shatwell properly preserved his argument that Weaver
    crossed the line to his legal detriment. See Russell v. State, 
    2013 Ark. 369
    , at 7 (a specific
    motion is required); Anderson v. State, 
    357 Ark. 180
    , 213, 
    163 S.W.3d 333
    , 353 (2004)
    (defendant must obtain a ruling from the circuit court on a mistrial motion when it
    appeared that the circuit court’s previous in limine ruling favoring the defendant was
    violated by the State).
    We agree that the circuit court misspoke when it said that Weaver mentioned
    “verbal abuse” while testifying before the jury. Weaver did say “physical abuse.” But no
    reversible error occurred during the court’s handling of Weaver’s trial testimony. Weaver
    never testified about specific acts of violence that were unrelated to the gun. And as soon
    as she mentioned the words physical abuse, Shatwell’s lawyer, alert to the problem,
    objected. Weaver did not subsequently speak of inadmissible past physical abuse after the
    court’s bench conference. Shatwell has not demonstrated “an error so prejudicial that
    justice could not be served by continuing the trial, or that the fundamental fairness of the
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    trial itself has been manifestly affected.” Tate v. State, 
    367 Ark. 576
    , 580–81, 
    242 S.W.3d 254
    , 259 (2006).
    We affirm Shatwell’s convictions in all respects.
    Affirmed.
    WYNNE and BROWN, JJ., agree.
    Rebekah J. Kennedy, for appellant.
    Dustin McDaniel, Att’y Gen., by: Eileen W. Harrison, Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.
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