Cite as 2022 Ark. 46
SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
No. CR-19-901
Opinion Delivered: February 24, 2022
NICHOLAS MATTHEW
LEWONDOWSKI
APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM THE GARLAND
V. COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
[NO. 26CR-18-85]
STATE OF ARKANSAS
APPELLEE HONORABLE MARCIA R.
HEARNSBERGER, JUDGE
AFFIRMED.
ROBIN F. WYNNE, Associate Justice
Nicholas Matthew Lewondowski appeals from his convictions by a Garland County jury
on three counts of capital murder and felony-firearm enhancement, for which he was sentenced
to three consecutive terms of life imprisonment without parole. On appeal, he argues that (1)
the lack of a verbatim record regarding the court’s handling of a jury note and the replaying of
his interview requires reversal; (2) his defense counsel had a conflict of interest due to prior
representation of a State’s witness; (3) the trial court erred by denying his motions to suppress
his statements to police; and (4) the evidence was insufficient to support the verdicts. We affirm.
Lewondowski was charged with capital murder in the shooting deaths of Dory Power,
Brenda Lawson, and Paul Power. Before trial, the State waived the death penalty. The trial took
place April 22–26, 2019. The evidence showed that all three victims had been shot in the head
at Brenda’s house on Nevada Street in Hot Springs. They were discovered following a report
James Coble made to police on the evening of December 5, 2017. Coble, Lewondowski, and
Dory had been at Coble’s home, which he shared with his mother, on December 4. At some
point late that night, Lewondowski left with a woman named Morgan Berry. Coble and Dory
went to sleep, and when Coble woke up on December 5, Lewondowski had returned. Coble
testified that Lewondowski was agitated and angry at Dory because some of his belongings—a
lighter and a knife—were missing. When Dory and Lewondowski left Coble’s home, Dory
appeared to be frightened, and Lewondowski would not let Coble accompany them.
Lewondowski returned alone approximately an hour to an hour and a half later, still in
possession of a gun. He told Coble, “Jimbo, man, dude pulled a gun on me and it went bad and
I killed all three of them.” He enlisted Coble’s help to destroy evidence and to move vehicles
from Brenda’s house to make it appear that no one was home. Coble was scared of
Lewondowski, and when Lewondowski left his home, Coble took his mother to spend the
remainder of the day at various public places. He reported the shootings to police and was
interviewed that night. Coble led officers to evidence at his home that included a trash bag of
clothes Lewondowski had been wearing and various items belonging to the victims. In addition,
he told officers where to find Paul’s white Suburban and Dory’s black Pontiac. Physical evidence
found at Brenda’s home included a rifle, which was not the murder weapon, a spent bullet, and
a footprint that matched a pair of black boots located at Coble’s house that had Dory’s blood
on one.
Jason Murders, Brenda’s son, testified that his mother had kicked him off her property,
but he had been staying in a shed there when he heard gunshots in the distance. The following
morning, he approached the house to retrieve two jackets, but Lewondowski was coming out of
the house carrying a set of keys. He told Jason that no one was home but that “they don’t want
2
anyone on the property.” Lewondowski went back inside the house and obtained the jackets for
Jason. Other evidence included Lewondowski’s statement to the person he was staying with
when he was arrested that “after he killed the first one he had to kill ’em all.” Morgan Berry
testified to Lewondowski’s strange behavior on December 4 and 5. Another witness, Scott
Gilbert, testified that while both were in an Arkansas Department of Correction facility where
Lewondowski was awaiting trial, Lewondowski attempted to solicit him to kill Coble. The jury
also watched Lewondowski’s lengthy interview at the Hot Springs Police Department following
his arrest. During his interview, Lewondowski admitted using methamphetamine but denied
killing the three victims. The jury found Lewondowski guilty of three counts of premeditated
and deliberated capital murder, and this appeal followed.
I. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Although Lewondowski challenges the sufficiency of the evidence in his last point on
appeal, we must address it first for purposes of double jeopardy. See Sweet v. State, 2011 Ark. 20,
at 9, 370 S.W.3d 510, 518. We treat a motion for directed verdict as a challenge to the sufficiency
of the evidence. Gillard v. State, 372 Ark. 98, 100–01, 270 S.W.3d 836, 838 (2008). We have
repeatedly held that in reviewing a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, we view the
evidence in a light most favorable to the State and consider only the evidence that supports the
verdict. Id. We affirm a conviction if substantial evidence exists to support it. Id. Substantial
evidence is that which 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.
Lewondowski argues that the evidence that he was the perpetrator of the three homicides
was “underwhelming and missing.” He points to the lack of an eyewitness, confession, or
3
forensic evidence to directly tie him to the shootings. Furthermore, he seeks to cast doubt on
James Coble’s testimony tying him to the victims around the time of their deaths and concealing
the homicides by moving cars. He suggests that Coble had “an unusual amount of motivation
to point the finger at [him].” However, this court does not weigh the evidence presented at trial
or assess the credibility of the witnesses, because those are matters for the fact-finder. Halliburton
v. State, 2020 Ark. 101, at 7, 594 S.W.3d 856, 862. In this case, the circumstantial evidence
presented, along with the testimony from witnesses that Lewondowski confessed to killing
multiple people, constitutes substantial evidence supporting the jury’s verdicts of guilt. We hold
that the evidence was sufficient to support the verdicts and affirm on this point.
II. Jury Note
The record includes a note from the jury, identified as Court’s Exhibit 1, stating, “We
would like to watch the interview w/ Nick that Detective Fallice [sic] did after initially taken [sic]
Nick into custody.” Although included in the record, initially there was no indication how the
circuit court had responded to the note, if at all. After Lewondowski’s opening brief was filed,
this court granted the State’s motion to remand and settle the record surrounding the jury note.
The circuit court held a hearing to settle the record, and a supplemental record was filed. The
appeal was submitted to this court, and we remanded for another hearing to settle the record
due to Lewondowski being deprived of his right to counsel at the first hearing to settle the record.
Lewondowski v. State, 2021 Ark. 132. The circuit court held a second hearing to settle the record,
and the resulting supplemental record was filed on July 30, 2021. On appeal, Lewondowski
argues that the circuit court’s non-compliance with Arkansas Code Annotated section 16-89-
4
125(e) (Repl. 2005) and the lack of a verbatim record require reversal in this case. For the reasons
that follow, we disagree.
In its order settling the record, the trial court found:
The note from the jury marked at trial as Court’s Exhibit 1 stated, “We
would like to watch the interview with Nick that Detective Fallis did after initially
taking Nick into custody”. Jana Hawley, the certified reporter and keeper of the
record in this trial had possession of this evidence. Ms. Hawley did not send to
the jury room with the other evidence admitted at trial the evidence the note
referred to because it was a CD/DVD format and it required a computer/laptop
player and connection to a television screen to view.
When the jury presented its note, all the attorneys and the court agreed
Ms. Hawley would play the evidence in the jury room. Ms. Hawley followed the
same procedure she has followed during her forty-three year career as a court
reporter in hundreds of jury trials to play evidence in this format. She took the
laptop and the television into the jury room after knocking on the door of the
jury room and stating, “Please stop talking”. Ms. Hawley testified in her forty-
three years of reporting jury trials, no jury has ever continued to talk after she
asked them to stop deliberations and talking. Then she set up the video to play
the interview described in the note; played the video on the television screen;
took the CD/DVD out; disconnected the laptop from the television and took the
laptop out of the jury room. As she came out of the door, she told the jury “you
may resume deliberations”.
Ms. Hawley listened to and recorded the admitted CD/DVD interview
presented in full to the jury during the trial. She transcribed the CD/DVD
interview in full from the record for the appeal in this case. She stated under oath
that it did not contain any information other than the interview admitted at trial.
This was the recollection of all the attorneys involved in trial of the case, including
the defense attorneys.
The COURT FINDS the record, including the supplemental record
provided herein, demonstrate no violation of Ark. Code Ann. 16-89-125(e) in
this case because the jury asked for and received an admitted exhibit. The jury did
not indicate to the court by their note they had a “disagreement between them as
to any part of the evidence” or that they “desire(d) to be informed on a point of
law” A.C.A. 16-89-125(e). There was no interaction between the trial judge and
the jury during deliberations. The jury simply requested admitted evidence they
were entitled to view pursuant to A.C.A. 16-89-125(d)(3). No one contests the
Court admitted in full the CD/DVD requested by the jury during the trial on the
5
record and that the jury heard the entire taped statement during the trial, on the
record, in the courtroom with all parties present. After the request by the jurors
during deliberations to ‘watch the interview with Nick (Defendant) that Detective
Fallis did after initially taking Nick into custody’, the attorneys merely met and
queued the admitted evidence for the jury to watch again. All parties agree this
procedure was not on the record and that no one objected to it. With agreement
of all the attorneys involved in the case including Defendant’s attorneys and for
various reasons reflected in the Defense attorney’s testimonies, the parties allowed
Ms. Hawley to play the admitted evidence to the jury this way. Not a single witness
suggested, alleged or concluded the procedure regarding the jury’s note presented
new evidence for the jury to see. The attorneys at trial are all esteemed officers of
the court and there is no evidence of any improprieties on their part. This
procedure did not constitute a critical stage of the criminal proceeding. It was
merely a means of presenting the admitted evidence in electronic format to the
jury at their request.
We turn now to the authorities cited by the parties on appeal. Arkansas Code Annotated
section 16-89-125, Jury instructions and deliberations, provides in pertinent part:
(e) After the jury retires for deliberation, if there is a disagreement between them
as to any part of the evidence or if they desire to be informed on a point of law,
they must require the officer to conduct them into court. Upon their being
brought into court, the information required must be given in the presence of or
after notice to the counsel of the parties.
This court has stated that the purpose of section 16-89-125(e) is to protect against any further
steps being taken with respect to evidence unless done in open court with counsel present.
Anderson v. State, 367 Ark. 536, 242 S.W.3d 229 (2006). Also relevant is Ark. Sup. Ct. Admin.
Order No. 4, which requires a verbatim record of all proceedings in criminal cases, including
discussions concerning jury notes and audio contained in videos or other recordings that are
presented to the court or the jury, whether in open court or in camera. Ark. Sup. Ct. Admin.
Order No. 4(a).
On appeal, Lewondowski argues that additional content was on the four CDs containing
his interview with Detective Fallis, which were admitted as State’s Exhibit 28 and played on the
6
prosecutor’s computer. Lewondowski claims that the lack of a contemporaneous, verbatim
record means this court cannot be sure what the jury actually saw in the deliberation room.
Lewondowski relies on Davlin v. State, 313 Ark. 218, 853 S.W.2d 882 (1993). In Davlin, this
court reversed the judgment of conviction for rape and remanded for a new trial based on a
violation of section 16-89-125(e) and the defendant’s absence—over his counsel’s objection—
when a videotape of the victim’s statement to police was replayed in the jury-deliberation room.
Crucially, in that case, the record stated that the videotape would be replayed in the jury room
just as it was at trial, with certain prejudicial portions deleted. However, the record was silent
with respect to what actually occurred in the jury room. Therefore, this court found that the
State could not rebut the presumption of prejudice in the replaying of the tape.
In Anderson v. State, 367 Ark. 536, 242 S.W.3d 229 (2006), the appellant alleged that the
circuit court erred in allowing the deliberating jury to replay the tape recording of his statement
in the jury room because it was not in open court and was outside his and his counsel’s presence.
The audiotape of appellant’s statement had been admitted into evidence and was played for the
jury during the trial. The jury did not make a direct request for the tape; however, during
deliberations, the jury requested a paper exhibit. Consistent with the circuit court’s practice, all
exhibits, including the tape and a tape player, were sent into the jury room. On appeal, this court
rejected the appellant’s argument that allowing the jury access to the tape during deliberations
was a violation of Ark. Code Ann. § 16-89-125(e). This court distinguished Davlin, holding that
there was no violation of Ark. Code Ann. § 16-89-125(e) because the jury received an admitted
exhibit, and there was no danger of additional evidence being introduced by giving the exhibit
to the jury during deliberations.
7
This case falls somewhere between Davlin and Anderson. There was no verbatim record of
the discussion between the court and counsel about how to respond to the jury note. This was
error under Admin. Order No. 4. Furthermore, the requested portion of the interview was
played in the jury-deliberation room, outside the presence of the judge and the parties and
without the benefit of a verbatim record. Unlike in Anderson, we cannot say there was no danger
of additional evidence being introduced because there were additional items on the prosecutor’s
laptop and there was additional content on the CDs (chain-of-custody reports and intervals of
time when the detectives were out of the interrogation room) that the jury had not seen during
the trial. This was also error, and a presumption of prejudice arises. See Davlin, supra. However,
on this record, we hold that the State has rebutted the presumption of prejudice. According to
the testimony of the court reporter, defense counsel, and the deputy prosecutors, the parties
agreed to the procedure for replaying the interview. The video was set to the appropriate time
stamp at the beginning of the interview, which is what the jury asked to see. The circuit court
credited the testimony of the court reporter and found that she followed her established
procedure for playing evidence in this format. Replaying evidence that had previously been
admitted and made an exhibit during the trial is not error because there is nothing to indicate
that Lewondowski suffered any prejudice when the interview was replayed.
Finally, to the extent that Lewondowski argues error because he was not present when
the tape was replayed, we note that his counsel made a strategic decision to waive his presence
while the interview was replayed due to Lewondowski’s potential behavior during the video.
Lewondowski was not prejudiced by the replaying of the admitted interview or his absence from
the jury room during the replaying. We affirm on this point.
8
III. Conflict of Interest
Under this point, Lewondowski argues that his attorney, Tim Beckham, a public
defender, had a conflict of interest because he had previously represented State’s witness Scott
Gilbert. Lewondowski contends that Beckham should have been disqualified and that he was
prejudiced by the defense team’s “lackluster” cross-examination of Gilbert, which—notably—was
conducted by co-counsel Mark Fraiser. At a pretrial hearing, Beckham informed the circuit court
that he had represented Gilbert about ten years earlier and introduced a notarized statement in
which Gilbert waived any conflict of interest stemming from Beckham’s representation of
Lewondowski. The statement also noted that Beckham could not use or reveal information
known to him about Gilbert unless it was already in the public domain.
Here, there was no significant risk that Lewondowski’s representation would be
materially limited by Beckham’s responsibilities to Gilbert. Beckham represented Gilbert ten
years prior in an entirely unrelated matter. Lewondowski’s arguments focus on the alleged
“lackluster” cross-examination of Gilbert and his argument that Gilbert’s waiver should not have
been accepted by the circuit court. Lewondowski emphasizes the lack of his informed consent
in writing but fails to acknowledge that he clearly stated on the record that he wanted Beckham
to remain as his counsel: “I would like to waive that conflict, Your Honor. I just wanted to make
sure that without a shadow of a doubt that that does not in some way put the handcuffs on him
from being able to impeach Mr. Scott Gilbert in any way, Your Honor. . . . and I would like him
to remain one of my counsel.” In light of the tenuous argument that a conflict existed and
Lewondowski’s on-the-record statement that he wanted Beckham to remain as his attorney, we
affirm on this point.
9
IV. Custodial Statements
Before trial, Lewondowski filed a motion and an amended motion to suppress his
statement at the Hot Springs Police Department when he was initially taken into custody. At
the pretrial motion hearing, defense counsel argued that (1) Lewondowski invoked his right to
counsel in the police car on the way to the station, and he never should have been interviewed
without counsel present; (2) Lewondowski was intoxicated and could not knowingly and
intelligently waive his Miranda rights; and (3) there was a second invocation of his right to
counsel prior to statements made to Lieutenant Jessup. The trial court entered a detailed order
denying the motion to suppress in all respects except that Lewondowski’s statements to Lt. Jessup
were inadmissible. However, the circuit court later reconsidered this ruling and allowed the
entire statement into evidence.
On appeal, Lewondowski argues that the circuit court erred by denying his motions to
suppress his statements. He contends that questioning by Detective Mark Fallis of the Hot
Springs Police Department, after his waiver of Miranda rights, should have ceased when he
“invoked his constitutional rights to counsel during his interrogation” five separate times.
Lewondowski points to the following statements he made:
“I need to quit cause I don’t want to incriminate myself. I don’t want to sit here
and say something wrong, you know what I’m saying. I didn’t get much sleep
last night and I don’t wanna say anything that gonna incriminate myself.”
“I don’t even wanna say nothing else. I don’t wanna say anything else, Mike
cause I’m telling you, Man, this ain’t right. Jimbo’s setting me up.”
“I ain’t saying no names. I’ve gotta shut up. I’m just incriminating myself, Mike.
I’m making it worse on me and you’re getting me, while I’m high and I’m
f***ing---”
10
“I don’t even know why I’m here sitting here talking cause I should be f***ing
have a lawyer and I should be f***ing not incriminating myself.”
“I’m not trying to incriminate myself either though.”
Det. Fallis continued interviewing Lewondowski until, after approximately eight hours of being
in the interrogation room, Fallis stopped the interview because Lewondowski had unequivocally
invoked his right to counsel. The interview resumed at Lewondowski’s initiation.
On appeal, in reviewing a circuit court’s refusal to suppress a statement, this court makes
an independent determination based upon the totality of the circumstances. Grillot v. State, 353
Ark. 294, 309, 107 S.W.3d 136, 144 (2003). The circuit court’s ruling will be reversed only if it
is clearly against the preponderance of the evidence. Id. Any conflict in the testimony of the
witnesses is for the circuit court to resolve. Id. When an accused has invoked the right to counsel,
he “is not subject to further interrogation . . . unless [he] himself initiates further
communication, exchanges, or conversations with the police.” Osburn v. State, 2009 Ark. 390, at
10–11, 326 S.W.3d 771, 779 (citing Edward v. Arizona, 451 U.S. 477, 484–85 (1981)). “While
the accused may initiate further contact with the police, the impetus must come from the
accused, not the police.” Id. at 11, 326 S.W.3d at 779.
On appeal, Lewondowski focuses on several statements he made to Det. Fallis concerning
his desire to stop talking, i.e., invoke his right to remain silent and one time mentioning a lawyer.
None of these statements were brought to the circuit court’s attention for a ruling. At the pretrial
hearing and the renewal of motions at trial, the defense pointed to Lewondowski’s statements
in the police car on the way to the station and on the statement unequivocally invoking his right
to an attorney. He never argued to the trial court that he had invoked his right to remain silent.
11
On appeal, an appellant is limited to the scope and nature of the arguments he or she made
below that were considered by the circuit court in rendering its ruling. Barker v. State, 2014 Ark.
467, at 3, 448 S.W.3d 197, 199. We will not consider new arguments raised for the first time
on appeal or consider factual substantiation added to bolster the allegations made below. Id.
Therefore, we affirm on this point.
V. Rule 4-3(a)
Because Lewondowski was sentenced to life imprisonment, the record has been
examined for all objections, motions, and requests made by either party that were decided
adversely to Lewondowski in compliance with Arkansas Supreme Court Rule 4-3(a). No
prejudicial error has been found.
Affirmed.
WOOD, J., concurs.
Hancock Law Firm, by: Sharon Kiel, for appellant.
Leslie Rutledge, Att’y Gen., by: Pamela Rumpz, Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.
12