Lewis v. State ( 2014 )


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  •                                   Cite as 
    2014 Ark. App. 730
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION II
    No. CR-14-222
    Opinion Delivered   December 17, 2014
    AKEEM ALLAJOWUAN LEWIS                             APPEAL FROM THE
    APPELLANT                       INDEPENDENCE COUNTY
    CIRCUIT COURT
    V.                                                 [NO. CR-13-139]
    HONORABLE JOHN DAN KEMP,
    STATE OF ARKANSAS                                  JUDGE
    APPELLEE
    AFFIRMED
    KENNETH S. HIXSON, Judge
    After a jury trial in Independence County Circuit Court, appellant Akeem Allajowuan
    Lewis was convicted of two counts of second-degree murder in the shooting deaths of John
    L. Weeams and Omar Scales. Appellant was sentenced to consecutive eight- and twenty-year
    prison terms, respectively. On appeal, appellant argues (1) that the State failed to negate his
    justification defense, and (2) that the trial court abused its discretion in running his sentences
    consecutively instead of concurrently. We affirm.
    Appellant’s criminal charges were the result of a shootout between John L. Weeams
    and appellant. The shootout happened at a night-time gathering on July 6, 2013, at Bennie
    Dodd’s residence located at 295 Dry Run Circle in Batesville, Arkansas. Appellant concedes
    on appeal that he shot both victims, although shooting Omar Scales was accidental because
    Scales was an innocent bystander. Appellant’s first argument is that he raised the defense of
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    2014 Ark. App. 730
    justification and that the State failed to carry its burden to disprove that defense beyond a
    reasonable doubt. We disagree with his argument.
    Justification becomes a defense when any evidence tending to support its existence
    is offered, and once raised, it becomes an element that must be disproved by the State
    beyond a reasonable doubt. Green v. State, 
    2011 Ark. App. 700
    . Whether one is justified
    is largely a matter of the defendant’s intent and is generally a fact question for the jury. 
    Id. A defendant’s
    intent is ordinarily not subject to proof by direct evidence but must usually be
    established by circumstantial evidence. 
    Id. Critical to
    this inquiry is the reasonableness of
    the accused’s apprehension that he was in danger of death or of suffering great bodily harm.
    
    Id. Also critical
    is whether the accused used all reasonable means within his power and
    consistent with his personal safety to avoid the use of deadly force. Id; see also Ark. Code
    Ann. § 5-2-607 (Repl. 2006).
    As requested by defense counsel, the jury was instructed on the justification defense
    as to the murder of Weeams1 based on Arkansas Model Jury Instruction–Criminal 705:
    Akeem Lewis asserts as a defense to the charge of second degree murder that deadly
    physical force was necessary to defend himself. This is a defense only if; First, Akeem
    Lewis reasonably believed that John Weeams was committing or was using or about
    to use unlawful deadly physical force; And second, Akeem Lewis only used such force
    as he reasonably believed to be necessary.
    A person is not justified in using deadly physical force if he knows that the use of
    deadly physical force can be avoided with complete safety by retreating. However, he
    is not required to retreat if he was not the original aggressor.
    1
    Defense counsel did not request a justification defense instruction with regard to the
    murder of Scales. The jury was, consequently, not asked to consider justification as to that
    count of second-degree murder.
    2
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    2014 Ark. App. 730
    Akeem Lewis is asserting this defense and is required only to raise a reasonable doubt
    in your minds. . . . Reasonably believes or reasonable belief means the belief that an
    ordinary, prudent man would form under the circumstances in question and one not
    recklessly or negligently formed.
    When reviewing the sufficiency of the State’s negation of a justification defense, the
    appellate court employs a substantial-evidence standard of review. Jones v. State, 2011 Ark.
    App. 92. Substantial evidence is evidence that is forceful enough to compel a conclusion
    beyond suspicion and conjecture. 
    Id. We view
    the evidence in the light most favorable to
    the State and consider only the evidence that supports the verdict. 
    Id. We will
    not reverse
    the jury’s decision in rejecting a justification defense unless the verdict required speculation
    and conjecture. Moody v. State, 
    2014 Ark. App. 538
    . The jury, not our court on appeal,
    weighs the evidence and judges credibility of witnesses. 
    Id. The fact-finder
    is not required
    to set aside common sense and need not view each fact in isolation, but rather considers the
    evidence as a whole. Williams v. State, 
    96 Ark. App. 277
    , 
    241 S.W.3d 290
    (2006). Flight is
    probative evidence of guilt. Gillard v. State, 
    366 Ark. 217
    , 
    234 S.W.3d 310
    (2006).
    Testimony at the jury trial revealed the following. There was a party at Mr. Dodd’s
    residence that night. Weeams and appellant were both outside, on or near Dodd’s porch,
    shortly before the shooting started. The men exchanged words; it was interpreted as “a verbal
    altercation” between the two.2 Moments later, the men started shooting at one another.
    Weeams fired his .38 revolver several times in appellant’s direction, and appellant fired his
    9mm semiautomatic weapon several times in Weeams’s direction. Appellant then fled on
    2
    Appellant allegedly said to Weeams just prior to the shootout, “I’m about what I’m
    talking about.”
    3
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    2014 Ark. App. 730
    foot. Weeams was struck by one bullet in the upper left chest; that bullet exited his back
    slightly lower and toward the right side. Weeams bled to death at Dodd’s house.
    Scales was nearby but not involved in this gunfight; he was struck in his torso near his
    pelvis. Although conscious at the scene, Scales was transported by ambulance to the local
    hospital, where he died. A 9mm bullet was removed from Scales’s body at autopsy.
    The jury had to decide, among other things, who drew his weapon and began firing
    first and whether appellant was justified in acting as he did. Datra Strickland testified that she
    and Weeams were living together at the time of his death, and she was with him at the
    gathering at Dodd’s house. She said that although she had been drinking at the gathering, she
    was clear on the circumstances of the shootout. She said that she and Weeams were on
    Dodd’s porch, about five feet away from appellant, when appellant made a comment to
    Weeams, pulled a gun from his pants, and started shooting. Strickland testified that Weeams
    fired many shots in return but that appellant’s gun fired a lot faster than Weeams’s gun. She
    saw appellant run away. When it was over, she and Weeams went inside Dodd’s house and
    sat on Dodd’s couch. Very soon she observed blood coming out of Weeams’s mouth.
    Strickland called 911, but Weeams died on the scene.
    Sergeant Shawn Stephens testified that in responding to the call just after 8:00 p.m.,
    and in speaking with Strickland, she described appellant as a lighter-skinned, tall, thin African-
    American man in his twenties. According to Stephens, Strickland told him that she did not
    know what happened.
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    2014 Ark. App. 730
    Another person at Dodd’s house that night was Robert Tosh Smith (a/k/a “Jukie”).
    Smith was interviewed by law enforcement officers three days after the shooting. In that
    recorded interview, Smith told officers that appellant was the first to pull his 9mm gun out
    and start shooting at Weeams. Smith described appellant firing his gun, running backward
    off the porch, and continuing to fire as he ran toward the street. Smith provided a
    handwritten statement the same day, reflecting this same course of events. Smith testified,
    however, that he later “made a correction” by telling law enforcement that Weeams was the
    first to pull his .38 revolver. Smith agreed that the recorded interview with officers was his
    “best recollection at that particular time,” but stated that he was pretty traumatized by the
    shooting. On the stand, Smith testified that he saw Weeams pull his gun first, but “I mean
    it seemed like it was at the same time.” Appellant did not testify at trial.
    Appellant argues that because these were the only two witnesses to the actual shooting,
    and because Strickland was not credible and Smith’s testimony at trial was that Weeams was
    the aggressor, the State failed to disprove the justification defense beyond a reasonable doubt.
    We disagree.
    The jury is free to accept or reject any part of a witness’s testimony, and credibility and
    the weight to give any evidence are issues left solely to the jury. Moody v. 
    State, supra
    . The
    jury decides whether the circumstantial evidence excludes every hypothesis consistent with
    innocence, and it turns largely on what the jury concluded regarding appellant’s intent. 
    Id. Because there
    was evidence from which the jury could find appellant not to be justified in his
    use of deadly force in this instance, we affirm on this point.
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    2014 Ark. App. 730
    Appellant’s other argument on appeal is that the trial court abused its discretion in
    ordering that the eight- and twenty-year prison sentences run consecutively instead of
    concurrently. The State contends that this issue is not preserved for appellate review, and
    alternatively, that appellant fails to demonstrate an abuse of discretion. We reach the merits
    of the argument and affirm.
    Prior to the pronouncement of sentence, appellant’s attorney requested that the trial
    court exercise its discretion and be merciful by running the sentences concurrently. The
    prosecutor asked that they run consecutively. The trial court ruled as follows:
    [H]aving heard all the evidence in this case and also the argument presented as to
    whether the sentences should run concurrent or consecutive, the Court will exercise
    its discretion and order that the sentences run consecutively for a total of twenty-eight
    years to serve in the Arkansas Department of Correction.
    This issue was preserved for our review.
    To the merits, when multiple sentences of imprisonment are imposed on a defendant
    convicted of more than one offense, the sentences shall run concurrently unless, upon
    recommendation of the jury or the trial court’s own motion, the court orders the sentences
    to run consecutively. Ark. Code Ann. § 5-4-403(a) (Repl. 2006). The question of whether
    sentences should run consecutively or concurrently lies solely within the province of the
    trial court. Throneberry v. State, 
    2009 Ark. 507
    , 
    342 S.W.3d 269
    . The exercise of that
    discretion will not be altered on appeal unless it is clearly shown to have been abused. Steele
    v. State, 
    2014 Ark. App. 257
    , 
    434 S.W.3d 424
    . The appellant assumes a heavy burden of
    demonstrating that the trial judge failed to give due consideration to the exercise of his
    discretion in the matter of consecutive sentences. Id; see also Bunch v. State, 
    344 Ark. 730
    , 43
    6
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    S.W.3d 132 (2001); Turner v. State, 
    2012 Ark. App. 150
    , 
    391 S.W.3d 358
    . The circuit court
    must actually exercise discretion in sentencing. Throneberry v. 
    State, supra
    .
    Here, the jury heard testimony from some members of the victims’ families that,
    although pained by their losses, they had forgiven appellant for killing their loved ones.
    Appellant took the stand and asked for mercy. The jury was not asked to, and thus did not,
    make a recommendation as to concurrent or consecutive sentencing.
    Appellant was exposed to six-to-thirty years, up to a $15,000 fine, or both on each
    count of second-degree murder. The jury sentenced appellant to eight years for the second-
    degree murder of Weeams and to twenty years for the second-degree murder of Scales. The
    trial judge sentenced appellant to consecutive sentences totaling twenty-eight years rather than
    concurrent sentences totaling twenty years. Appellant’s sentence is well within the statutory
    sentencing range, even for a single count of second-degree murder. The judge’s commentary
    demonstrates that he exercised his discretion in ordering consecutive sentences, and appellant
    has failed to demonstrate an abuse of that discretion. Thus, we affirm on appellant’s second
    point on appeal.
    Affirmed.
    GLADWIN, C.J., and WHITEAKER, J., agree.
    Morris Law Firm, P.A., by: Jimmy C. Morris, Jr., for appellant.
    Dustin McDaniel, Att’y Gen., by: Jake H. Jones, Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: CR-14-222

Judges: Kenneth S. Hixson

Filed Date: 12/17/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/14/2024