Jayaun Durham v. State of Arkansas ( 2024 )


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  •                                  Cite as 
    2024 Ark. App. 154
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISIONS III
    No. CR-23-322
    JAYAUN DURHAM                                   Opinion Delivered February 28, 2024
    APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI
    V.                                              COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, FIRST
    DIVISION
    STATE OF ARKANSAS                               [NO. 60CR-18-2032]
    APPELLEE HONORABLE LEON JOHNSON,
    JUDGE
    AFFIRMED
    MIKE MURPHY, Judge
    A Pulaski County Circuit Court jury convicted appellant Jayaun Durham of first-
    degree murder, with a firearm enhancement, and first-degree assault. He was sentenced to
    fifty-five years’ imprisonment. On appeal, he challenges the sufficiency of the evidence of his
    murder conviction. We affirm.
    A review of the record reveals that on the evening of April 11, 2018, Durham arrived
    at James Rideout’s apartment. Rideout stepped outside with his stepson, Jeremiah Donahue,
    and Durham confronted them. There is conflicting testimony as to what Durham said to
    Rideout and Donahue, but he then fired two shots in the air. Donahue fled to attempt to
    call 911. Donahue could hear three more shots fired. When Donahue came back, Rideout
    was on the ground, and Durham was gone. Rideout eventually succumbed to his injuries.
    Security footage revealed that the interaction and shooting happened quickly. It caught two
    males entering the breezeway near the front door and then sprinting toward the parking lot
    to escape in a silver car. About twenty minutes later, Durham and two other men exited a
    silver sedan at a Taco Bell and went inside for a meal. Durham did not dispute that he was
    at Taco Bell that night.
    Initially, police developed three suspects: Kendrick Shepherd, Johnterrian Lowe, and
    Durham. Shepherd was quickly eliminated as a suspect because he was working at Popeye’s
    at the time of the shooting. Lowe was a suspect because Donahue told officers that while he
    was administering aid to Rideout immediately after the shooting, Rideout told him Lowe
    had shot him. Lowe is Durham’s older brother. He was also eliminated as a suspect based
    on his cell-phone records and a review of the video of the two suspects at the apartments,
    due to Lowe being “significantly taller” than his brother.
    At trial, the State argued that the two men depicted in the blurry security footage were
    Durham and another man named Cortez Carruthers. The State’s theory was that Durham
    was the gunman, and Carruthers, although present at the scene of the shooting, was not
    responsible for Rideout’s death. Carruthers testified at trial and confessed that he was
    present at the scene of the murder with Durham. He avoided criminal liability in connection
    with the murder, and he confirmed that he had not been offered anything by the State in
    exchange for his testimony. Carruthers had to be subpoenaed to appear for trial.
    Carruthers testified that prior to the shooting, Durham picked him and another
    friend up so they could purchase drugs. Once they received the drugs, Durham drove them
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    to the nearby apartment complex where Rideout lived. Carruthers testified that he did not
    know what they were going to do there and that the only thing Durham told him was that
    he needed to stop by the complex to look for something.
    Carruthers testified that upon seeing Rideout arrive at the complex and enter his
    apartment on the first floor, he and Durham got out of the car and approached the
    apartment. Carruthers testified that Durham ordered him to stand by the side of the building
    with his back against the wall where no one could see him, and he complied. At this point,
    according to Carruthers, Durham knocked on the door and Rideout exited. Durham said
    something to Rideout, and shots were then fired. Carruthers testified he did not see Durham
    holding a gun but instead saw him holding an item in a black, plastic sack. The two men
    then fled. Carruthers testified that Durham and his brother Lowe look alike, but that Lowe
    was not present that evening.
    Rideout’s stepdaughter testified. Her testimony conflicted at times with Carruthers’.
    She testified that she saw a gunman come around the corner and heard him state, “were y’all
    the people that shot at me.” She said she never observed anything wrapped around the gun.
    A few days after the shooting, she identified Durham in a photo lineup.
    Donahue was also called as a witness. Like Rideout’s stepdaughter, Donahue’s
    testimony also conflicted slightly from Carruthers’s. Donahue had identified Durham in a
    photo lineup. He testified that he recalled the gun being covered by a bag. He said that the
    shooter repeatedly asked, “Where [are] your brothers at?” At trial, despite previously stating
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    Rideout’s dying declaration was that Lowe shot him, he recalled that Rideout actually stated
    “John Lowe’s little brother shot me.”
    Following the State’s case, Durham moved for a directed verdict arguing that a
    “number of witnesses all testified to different things, none of which have been consistent
    about the appearance of the shooter that was involved in this matter.” The court denied his
    motion. Following the denial, Durham called additional witnesses. Upon resting, he
    renewed his motion for directed verdict. The court again denied the motion. After closing
    arguments, the jury deliberated and returned a guilty verdict against Durham on the charges
    of first-degree murder and first-degree assault. A sentencing hearing followed, and he now
    appeals.
    On appeal, Durham challenges only his first-degree-murder conviction, arguing that
    because of inconsistencies in the eyewitnesses’ testimony, there was insufficient evidence to
    identify him as the murderer.
    We treat a motion for a directed verdict as a challenge to the sufficiency of the
    evidence. Severance v. State, 
    2024 Ark. App. 87
    , at 10–11, ___ S.W.3d ___, ___. In reviewing
    a sufficiency challenge, we assess the evidence in the light most favorable to the State and
    consider only the evidence that supports the verdict. 
    Id.
     We will affirm a judgment of
    conviction if substantial evidence exists to support it. 
    Id.
     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. 
    Id.
     Whether
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    the evidence excludes every other hypothesis is left to the jury to decide. 
    Id.
     Further, the
    credibility of witnesses is an issue for the jury, not the court. 
    Id.
    A person commits the crime of first-degree murder if he purposely causes the death
    of another person. 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 5-10-102
    (a)(2) (Supp. 2023). As previously stated, this
    court will disturb the jury’s determination only if the evidence did not meet the required
    standards, thereby leaving the jury to speculation and conjecture in reaching its verdict. Ellis
    v. State, 
    2012 Ark. 65
    , at 9, 
    386 S.W.3d 485
    , 490. This court has held that the testimony of
    one eyewitness alone is sufficient to sustain a conviction. 
    Id.
    In the instant case, three eyewitnesses identified Durham as the shooter. Carruthers’s
    detailed account of the crime, alone, is enough as it was not “inherently improbable,
    physically impossible, or so clearly unbelievable that reasonable minds could not differ
    thereon.” Ellis v. State, 
    2012 Ark. 65
    , at 9, 
    386 S.W.3d 485
    , 490. The jury was also able to
    consider the inconsistencies of the other witnesses’ testimony and whether to credit
    Donahue’s testimony that Rideout’s dying declaration was changed to “John Lowe’s little
    brother shot me.” 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. Severance, supra.
    Further evidence was presented that Durham was the shooter. Durham was captured
    in photographs taken from a security video at a nearby Taco Bell minutes after two men
    bearing the same appearances were recorded arriving at the apartment complex in a silver
    sedan, approaching the victim’s residence where the shooting took place, and then fleeing
    the scene in the same car.
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    Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, we hold that there is
    substantial evidence to support Durham’s conviction. Accordingly, we affirm the circuit
    court’s denial of Durham’s motion for directed verdict.
    Affirmed.
    HARRISON, C.J., and WOOD, J., agree.
    William O. “Bill” James, Jr., and Drew Curtis, for appellant.
    Tim Griffin, Att’y Gen., by: David L. Eanes, Jr., Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.
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Document Info

Filed Date: 2/28/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/28/2024