Rodney Darrell Martin v. State of Arkansas , 2024 Ark. App. 489 ( 2024 )


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  •                                 Cite as 
    2024 Ark. App. 489
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION II
    No. CR-23-803
    Opinion Delivered October 9, 2024
    RODNEY DARRELL MARTIN
    APPEAL FROM THE JOHNSON
    APPELLANT        COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    [NO. 36CR-16-156]
    V.
    HONORABLE JAMES DUNHAM,
    STATE OF ARKANSAS                            JUDGE
    APPELLEE
    AFFIRMED
    STEPHANIE POTTER BARRETT, Judge
    Rodney Martin appeals the revocation of his suspended imposition of sentence (SIS)
    by the Johnson County Circuit Court. His sole argument on appeal is that there was
    insufficient evidence to revoke his SIS. We affirm the revocation.
    On August 11, 2017, Martin entered a negotiated plea of guilty to one count of
    delivery of methamphetamine and was sentenced to forty-two months’ incarceration to be
    followed by a seventy-two-month SIS. Conditions of Martin’s SIS included that he live a law-
    abiding life and not commit an offense punishable by imprisonment.
    The State filed a petition to revoke Martin’s SIS on September 26, 2022, alleging,
    among other things, that he had violated the terms of his SIS because he had failed to live a
    law-abiding life by conspiring to traffic controlled substances; fleeing in a vehicle or
    conveyance with substantial danger of causing death or serious physical injury; intimidating
    a witness; committing second-degree terroristic threatening and third-degree battery; and
    failing to appear in court. A hearing on the revocation petition was held on March 9, 2023.
    Prior to any testimony being taken, the parties entered two stipulated exhibits—the
    sentencing order in which Martin was placed on SIS and an order in case 24OCR 22-27,
    filed on July 8, 2022, forfeiting Martin’s cash bond when he failed to appear for court.
    At the hearing, James Yates testified that he owned a trash-removal service, which
    included renting trailers and dumpsters to people who needed a large on-site container for
    trash disposal. In mid-October 2021, Yates delivered one of his trailers, a twenty-six-foot
    triaxle gooseneck trailer, to a customer’s residence for a couple of weeks. Yates testified that
    the customer called him near the end of October and asked if he had come to get the trailer;
    when Yates told him no, the customer told Yates that the trailer was gone. The missing
    trailer was eventually located in some woods with duct tape placed over its reflective tape;
    the trailer was also missing two ramps and a deep-cell battery.
    Paula Kimbriel testified that she managed the Chateau Winery in Altus; that she had
    known Martin for ten or fifteen years; and that she knew he drove a loud white truck.
    Kimbriel testified that on October 30, 2021, while she was working in the winery’s
    flowerbeds, she heard a loud vehicle driving at an excessive rate of speed; when she looked
    up, she saw Martin’s truck pulling Yates’s trailer. She asserted that she knew the trailer
    belonged to Yates because she had been with the landowner who had used the trailer several
    days before it was stolen; she knew the trash that was in the trailer; and that the same trash
    was still in the trailer that was being pulled by Martin’s truck. Although she was unable to
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    see who was driving, Kimbriel stated that she had no doubt that the truck belonged to
    Martin.
    Heather Bonczyk testified that she knew Martin through a mutual friend. She stated
    that in October 2021, she was with Martin in his white diesel truck when he took the trailer;
    when Bonczyk asked what was going on, Martin told her to keep her mouth shut. She said
    that Martin took the trailer to his friend’s house and backed it up into the woods where it
    would be difficult to see. Bonczyk asked Martin again what he was doing, and he again told
    her to keep her mouth shut.
    Bonczyk said that a few weeks later, she spoke to investigators from the Johnson
    County Sheriff’s Office about the trailer incident; she cooperated with the investigation
    because she was being accused of the theft. She said that in December 2021, she had a
    conversation with Martin after he learned that she had made a statement to officers about
    the trailer; she said that he was angry and told her that she “wouldn’t make it to the stand”;
    she took that as a threat—meaning that she would not be at trial to testify. Bonczyk said that
    not long after Martin made that statement, she was staying at Martin’s house, and he “head
    butted” her, breaking her nose, after another woman accused Bonczyk of stealing money
    from her purse. Bonczyk had received phone calls from third parties she did not recognize
    warning her not to testify against Martin in court, and she did not want to testify against
    Martin because she was afraid of what might happen to her.
    Officer Bailey Hunstable of the Coal Hill Police Department testified that on the
    afternoon of June 14, 2022, he unsuccessfully attempted to stop a speeding motorcycle that
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    was reaching speeds of over ninety miles an hour in a twenty-five-mile-an-hour zone. When
    he found the motorcycle, it had been wrecked, and the driver was gone, but ten to twenty
    feet from the wreck location, he found an open lockbox containing digital scales and a glass
    smoking apparatus as well as a cell phone. The cell phone was unlocked, and it had Martin’s
    name, picture, and email address displayed.        Officer Hunstable testified that while
    authorities were searching for the driver, messages began coming in on the cell phone from
    a contact labeled “Shhh,” trying to arrange to meet the phone’s owner. Officer Hunstable
    responded to the messages and arranged to meet the person, later identified as Shannon
    Barkley-Frantz, at Westside High School. According to Officer Hunstable, Barkley-Frantz
    told him that she was there to meet “Darrell” for an exchange of drugs and money and that
    the drugs were in the glove box; she removed a large package wrapped in black electrical tape
    from the glove box and handed it to him; after the electrical tape had been removed, a
    transparent bag filled with what was later determined to be 450 grams of methamphetamine
    was revealed.
    Barkley-Frantz testified that she was originally charged with trafficking
    methamphetamine, a Class Y felony, but the State had offered her probation and a fine on
    a reduced charge of possession of methamphetamine, a Class B felony, in exchange for her
    testimony against Martin at his criminal trial and at his revocation hearing. Barkley-Frantz
    testified that she had known Martin for six or seven years; that on June 14, 2022, she was
    asked by a mutual friend to deliver a package to Martin; and that, while she did not know
    the package contained methamphetamine, in hindsight, she should have known. She
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    testified that she was told to contact Martin about where to meet; she texted the number she
    was given, and she was told to go to Westside High School; but instead of Martin, she was
    met by Officer Hunstable and other officers. She first told Officer Hunstable that she was
    supposed to deliver a package to a friend, but she then turned the methamphetamine over
    to Officer Hunstable.
    The circuit court revoked Martin’s SIS, finding that it was more likely than not Martin
    had committed the offenses of conspiracy to traffic controlled substances, fleeing,
    intimidating a witness, terroristic threatening, third-degree battery, and failure to appear,
    which was demonstrated by State’s exhibit 2. The circuit court sentenced Martin to fourteen
    years in the Arkansas Division of Correction to be followed by an additional thirty months
    of SIS.
    In revocation proceedings, the State has the burden of proving that an appellant
    violated the terms of his suspended sentence, as alleged in the revocation petition, by a
    preponderance of the evidence; we will not reverse the circuit court’s revocation decision
    unless it is clearly against the preponderance of the evidence. Hernandez v. State, 
    2024 Ark. App. 14
    . The State is required to show that the appellant committed only one violation in
    order to sustain a revocation. 
    Id.
     We defer to the circuit court on matters of credibility and
    the weight of the evidence. 
    Id.
     Evidence that is insufficient for a criminal conviction may
    be sufficient for revocation of a suspended sentence. Morgan v. State, 
    2024 Ark. App. 416
    .
    On appeal, Martin argues that the State’s evidence was insufficient to prove that he
    was the person driving the motorcycle or that he had threatened Bonczyk after she spoke to
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    law enforcement officers about Martin’s stealing James Yates’s trailer. However, Martin does
    not challenge the circuit court’s alternative bases for revocation—his failure to appear or
    Bonczyk’s testimony that Martin “head butted” her, breaking her nose, after she was accused
    of stealing money from another woman’s purse. These unchallenged bases for revocation
    allow us to affirm the circuit court’s decision without addressing the merits of Martin’s
    arguments. McClain v. State, 
    2016 Ark. App. 205
    , 
    489 S.W.3d 179
     (holding that failure to
    challenge alternative bases for revocation is sufficient to affirm). Nevertheless, Bonczyk
    testified that Martin had told her that she would not make it to the stand to testify about the
    trailer theft; although Martin attacks the credibility of her testimony, that determination was
    for the circuit court, not this court, and it is sufficient to affirm the revocation.
    Affirmed.
    WOOD and HIXSON, JJ., agree.
    Omar F. Greene, for appellant.
    Tim Griffin, Att’y Gen., by: Brooke Jackson Gasaway, Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.
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Document Info

Citation Numbers: 2024 Ark. App. 489

Filed Date: 10/9/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2024