Cite as 2022 Ark. App. 234
ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
DIVISION III
No. CR-21-429
Opinion Delivered May 18, 2022
DAVID RAY PARRET
APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE WASHINGTON
COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
V. [NO. 72CR-19-2790]
STATE OF ARKANSAS
APPELLEE HONORABLE JOANNA TAYLOR,
JUDGE
AFFIRMED
RITA W. GRUBER, Judge
Appellant David Ray Parret was convicted by a Washington County jury of second-
degree sexual assault and sentenced to ten years’ imprisonment. Appellant raises two
arguments on appeal: (1) that the circuit court erred in denying his pretrial motion to
exclude the testimony of an Arkansas Rule of Evidence 404(b) witness and (2) that the court
erred in allowing the members of the venire and jurors to wear face masks during voir dire
and trial proceedings in violation of his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. We affirm.
In March 2019, Detective Autumn Holland with the Washington County Sheriff’s
Office interviewed sixteen-year-old CP in response to a report received by the child-abuse
hotline. CP alleged that she was being sexually abused by appellant, who is her father. She
recalled a night when she was in the third grade that appellant came into her bedroom while
she was sleeping; he inserted one hand underneath her clothes and touched her vagina; and
he used the other hand to touch her breast over her shirt. During the investigation of CP’s
allegations, Detective Holland learned there had been a 2011 investigation involving sexual-
abuse allegations against appellant by BW, his older daughter and CP’s sister.
On October 24, 2019, the State filed a felony information charging appellant with
two counts of second-degree sexual assault—one based on BW’s 2011 allegations and the
other on CP’s 2019 allegations. An amended information was filed on May 22, 2021, which
dropped the count related to BW. A second amended information was filed on May 24,
2021, which contained one count of second-degree sexual assault and specifically referenced
CP as the alleged victim.
The circuit court held a pretrial hearing on May 24, 2021, at which time it denied
appellant’s motions to bar BW’s testimony and to order that members of the venire and
jurors be unmasked during voir dire and trial. The denial of these motions are the subject
of appellant’s arguments on appeal. A jury trial took place May 26–27, 2021. Because
appellant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence, a detailed explanation of the
testimony presented at trial is unnecessary. The jury found appellant guilty of second-degree
sexual assault and sentenced him to ten years’ imprisonment. The sentencing order was
entered on June 1, 2021, and a timely notice of appeal was filed on June 8, 2021.
In his opening brief, appellant first argues that the circuit court erred in denying his
motion to bar the testimony of a Rule 404(b) witness due to a pertinent discovery request
not being received until the middle of trial. However, in reply to the State’s argument that
the issue is not preserved because he failed to seek relief at trial, appellant contends that he
is challenging only the pretrial denial of his motion to exclude. At the pretrial hearing,
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appellant moved to exclude the testimony of BW, whom the State intended to introduce
as a Rule 404(b) witness after dropping the count related to her. Appellant first argued that
BW’s testimony should not be allowed under a Rule 404(b) analysis because of the eight-
year time span between the victims’ allegations and that the allegations were significantly
different. Appellant further argued that the “biggest problem” with allowing BW to testify
was that the trial was set to begin in two days, and the State had yet to disclose information
from the 2011 investigation relating to BW. Specifically, appellant argued that the State had
not provided a statement given by appellant in the 2011 investigation related to BW; that
charges were never filed against appellant, and the detective involved in the 2011
investigation had died; and that the State had not provided BW’s statement from the 2011
investigation. The State responded that BW’s testimony fell within the pedophile exception
to Rule 404(b) of the Arkansas Rules of Evidence. In regard to the discovery issues, the
prosecutor argued that BW was not a surprise witness, and her statements were not a
surprise; BW was interviewed in the 2019 case, and a detective summary of her 2011
interview and a copy of her 2019 interview had been provided to the defense. Appellant’s
counsel responded:
I will admit that under the traditional 404(b) case law that our argument may be a
lot different, but here we have an issue where we can’t prepare for these 404(b)
allegations because the State has been sitting on the recordings, specifically of our
client, for two years since the case was opened. And those recordings are about the
2011 case. They are not about the 2019 case. And, so, there’s really not a case that’s
going to meet those facts, but I think the issue here is that - - I mean, we wouldn’t
have this problem if they had left [BW] as a charged alleged victim. But if we want
to proceed with trial in two days, now we know that they’ve been in possession of
these recordings, the simplest - - or one of the simple, I guess, solutions is to bar
[BW’s] testimony. And we would certainly be moving for a continuance on the
State’s time if she was still a charged alleged victim. And, so, I think that the
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exclusion of her testimony under 404(b), but because of these discovery issues as
well, is one remedy that he Court has available apart from a continuance on the
State’s time due to not complying with discovery rules.
After the prosecutor indicated that there was no record of BW’s statements from
2011, the court granted a short recess for the prosecutor to return to their office to see if
any information from the 2011 investigation had been received. Upon returning, the
prosecutor informed the court that a disc containing appellant’s 2011 recorded interview
had been received but not BW’s statement. Thereafter the following colloquy took place:
THE COURT: [Defense Counsel], I’m going to give you all until tomorrow
morning to review that disc and if you have additional motions
that you want to make with regard to the disc, to anything on
the disc or how it should be used or could be used, obviously,
I will allow you to make those -- I would prefer that they be
made before noon tomorrow so that we can address them either
by telephone or an impromptu hearing during our criminal day
tomorrow.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: So, Your Honor, I guess to go back to the 404(b) issue whether
the Court would allow [BW] to testify, we do have our client’s
statement from 2011, that is good, but we’re still missing, and I
don’t think we will ever get a copy of [BW’s] recording because
that has been destroyed, and we won’t be able to clarify
anything in the detective’s summary of her statements because
he is no longer with us. So I think we would still ask that the
Court bar her testimony.
THE COURT: Her testimony about the allegations from the 2011 allegations?
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Yes, Your Honor.
THE COURT: Any reference to them is what you are asking for?
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Yes, Your Honor.
THE COURT: [Prosecutor]?
PROSECUTOR: Your Honor, I don’t have anything to add to my argument
prior. This is squarely within the pedophile exception in 404(b)
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and there are many, many case examples where this exact
testimony has been allowed and should be allowed.
THE COURT: Yeah, I am inclined to agree with the State on this and here is
why: If no investigation had ever been done in 2011 we would
be in the same situation that we are in now. Which is, there
would be no prior statement made by [BW], with which to --
with which to try to trip her up or impeach her testimony or
find prior inconsistencies or there would just be nothing there.
But that doesn’t mean that she wouldn’t be able to testify as to
what she says happened to her to show absences of mistake, to
show motive, to show opportunity, to show plan or
knowledge. So I’m not going to exclude [BW’s] testimony
altogether. She may testify as to her life experiences, just like
any witness could, and the fact that there is no record of her
prior disclosures does not inform my decision on that. Have I
addressed that adequately?
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Yes, Your Honor.
PROSECUTOR: Yes, Your Honor.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: So, I would ask the Court for a moment to confer with co-
counsel --
THE COURT: Sure.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: -- on the issue of asking for a continuance at this time.
THE COURT: Okay. Go ahead.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Your Honor, barring anything that comes up in reviewing the
disc tomorrow, I do believe we have prepared that [BW] would
probably be allowed to testify, so we will be prepared to go
forward with that, unless there’s anything new that comes up
here.
The jury trial began on May 26. During the middle of the second day of trial and
prior to BW’s testimony, the State informed the court that an email had just been received
from the Arkansas State Police Crimes Against Children Division (CACD) that included a
report from the 2011 investigation. The State asserted that until receiving the email that it
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was their understanding that they did not have the report and it could not be located, which
was what had been previously reported to the court and the defense. After a short recess to
allow the parties to review the report, the following colloquy occurred:
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Your Honor, I’m not sure. I’m still processing. I’ve discussed
this with Mr. Parret and [co-counsel]. I think this -- this is a
24-page report that says Arkansas State Police on the top of it,
and it is pertaining to a witness who is about to come in here
and testify and her dad might go to prison. There’s a witness in
here that we’ve never seen his name before and he’s a potential
impeachment witness for [BW]. And we’re getting it the day -
- just hours before she’s going to testify. There’s no contact
information for him. I need an investigator to track him down
or try to track him down, if I wanted to use him to impeach
[BW]. And so, I don’t know if I want to ask for a mistrial trial,
but this is not how cases should be tried. This report knowledge
of -- I understand the State thought this didn’t exist, but it’s
Arkansas State Police. Knowledge of this report is imputed to
the Prosecuting Attorney’s Office. And this is not the first time
in this case that this has happened. So, what [co-counsel] and
Mr. Parret and I have discussed is -- I don’t know if I want to
move for a mistrial. I don’t know if I want to come back here
and go through all of this again, but I also don’t want to come
back here in three years and have another attorney ask me why
I went ahead and tried a case without contacting a potential
impeachment witness. And my answer will be, “Well, I thought
the trial was going okay.” I guess that’s what I have to say, Your
Honor. I don’t want to ask for a mistrial. I think the only other
option is to see what [BW’s] testimony is and if she doesn’t
testify to what Eli Stokes claims she said to him back in 2011
then we just have to mis-try the case.
THE COURT: So what I’m hearing you say is that you are not moving for a
mistrial at this point, that you want us to proceed with [BW’s]
testimony and then, depending on her testimony, if you would
need to call Eli Stokes as a witness, then you would move for a
mistrial.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Your Honor, that’s my position. But I just want to make it clear
that we can’t try cases like this where we’re getting state police
reports, multiple reports.
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THE COURT: I can only rule on the motions that are before me, Mr.
Lammers.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: That’s my position, Your Honor.
THE COURT: Thank you.
After this colloquy, the State called BW to testify.
Appellant argues that the circuit court erred in denying defense counsel’s pretrial
motion to bar BW’s testimony when the State “failed to disclose vital discovery until the
second day of trial.” He further argues that although he submitted a request a week before
trial for all Rule 404(b) evidence the State intended to use, he was presented with this crucial
discovery during the middle of the second day of trial and had only fifteen minutes to review
it. He states that the disclosure was not sufficient to allow him to make beneficial use of the
information.
The State responds that appellant’s argument is not preserved because an argument
that BW should not be allowed to testify was not made at the trial but occurred pretrial
when appellant argued that the court should bar her testimony because the State had failed
to disclose her 2011 statement. The State asserts that when the CACD report became
available during trial, appellant did not argue that the court should bar BW’s testimony
because of its late disclosure. However, in his reply brief, appellant argues that “non-
disclosure of discovery before trial is the specific point on appeal” and explains that the
“mid-trial disclosure of said discovery is presented . . . to relay the full narrative of trial
proceedings.” Alternatively, the State contends that appellant’s argument lacks merit.
Clearly, the record fails to establish that appellant made an objection or requested
any relief as a result of the midtrial disclosure of BW’s 2011 statement. However, as appellant
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contends in his reply brief, he is challenging the circuit court’s denial of his request to
exclude BW’s testimony on the basis of the State’s failure to disclose the 2011 interview
before trial.
The standard of review for imposing sanctions for discovery violations is whether
there has been an abuse of discretion. Hicks v. State, 340 Ark. 605, 12 S.W.3d 219 (2000).
It is within the circuit court’s discretion which sanction, if any, to employ. Barrow v. State,
2010 Ark. App. 589, 377 S.W.3d 481. Rule 19.7(a) of the Arkansas Rules of Criminal
Procedure provides that in response to a violation of a discovery rule, the circuit court may
permit the discovery or inspection of materials not previously disclosed, grant a continuance,
prohibit the party from introducing in evidence the material not disclosed, or enter such
other order as it deems proper under the circumstances. Our supreme court has said that
“the key in determining if a reversible discovery violation exists is whether the appellant
was prejudiced by the prosecutor’s failure to disclose.” Bray v. State, 322 Ark. 178, 180, 908
S.W.2d 88, 89 (1995). In order to show prejudice, an appellant must demonstrate a
reasonable probability that the result would have been different had the information been
disclosed. E.g., Lee v. State, 340 Ark. 504, 11 S.W.3d 553 (2000). Under these standards,
appellant has the burden to show that the omission was sufficient to undermine the
confidence in the outcome of the trial. Id.
Rule 17.3 of the Arkansas Rules of Criminal Procedure requires the prosecuting
attorney to “use diligent, good faith efforts to obtain material in the possession of other
governmental personnel which would be discoverable if in the possession or control of the
prosecuting attorney, upon timely request and designation of material or information by
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defense counsel.” At the time of the pretrial hearing, the report related to the 2011
investigation could not be found. As acknowledged by the defense, there was no indication
that it was still in existence; it was thought to have been destroyed; and the detective
involved in the 2011 investigation had died. At the hearing, defense counsel indicated there
was no “ill intent” on the part of the State. Defense counsel had a detective summary of the
2011 statement, and BW was not a surprise witness. In denying the motion to exclude, the
circuit court reasoned that if no investigation had been done in 2011, BW would be allowed
to testify, but there would be no prior statement with which to impeach her. The court
stated that BW would be able to testify to her life experiences and the fact that there was
no record of her prior disclosure did not affect the court’s decision.
Even though a discovery violation may have occurred, appellant has failed to show
the prejudice necessary to reverse. Barrow, 2010 Ark. App. 589, 377 S.W.3d 481. Appellant
asserts he was prejudiced because he was unable to adequately prepare for BW’s testimony;
BW was a vital witness whose testimony was used to show appellant’s alleged proclivity
towards the illegal acts for which he was charged; and BW’s testimony enhanced the State’s
case because there was no direct physical evidence and consisted of the testimony of the
victim only.
Appellant makes no argument as to how the contents of the statement would have
been used had it been provided earlier. Appellant received during trial what he requested
before trial. During the colloquy before BW’s testimony, appellant made no mention of
how the newly discovered statement differed from what was previously known except that
it identified a possible witness who could be used to impeach BW. Although appellant’s
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counsel reserved the right to seek a mistrial depending on BW’s testimony, counsel made
no objections or motions with respect to BW’s testimony. It is worth noting that the
defense used the 2011 statement to impeach BW’s testimony. Appellant has failed to
demonstrate prejudice. We hold that the circuit court did not abuse its discretion, and in
the absence of prejudice, we affirm the circuit court’s refusal to exclude BW’s testimony.
For his second point on appeal, appellant argues that the circuit court erred in
allowing the jurors the choice to wear face masks during voir dire and trial proceedings in
violation of his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights under the United States
Constitution. During the pretrial hearing, defense counsel stated that it was his
understanding that jurors would not have to wear masks. The court responded that the
jurors would be socially distanced and would be allowed to do what they are comfortable
with but stated that it was not going to hold anyone in contempt or disqualify anyone for
not wearing a mask. Defense counsel then stated as follows:
Just for purposes of the record, I think there may be an issue if we’re not able to
observe the jurors and whether they are -- you know, what their attitudes are, if
they’re listening, if they -- how their faces are if the faces are blocked, if they are
reacting to us, that could negatively our ability to represent Mr. Parret. I just want
to put that on the record in case this case comes back on appeal. I think that may be
an issue.
The prosecutor responded that they were proceeding by the rules set by the supreme
court, and it would be for supreme court to decide whether their rules were incorrect. The
court agreed and denied the motion, stating, in part, that everyone involved was working
under the same “disability” but that they had to operate within the framework provided.
The State responds that appellant’s argument is not preserved because he failed to
raise a constitutional argument. We agree that appellant has failed to preserve the argument.
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In criminal cases, issues raised, including constitutional issues, must be presented to the
circuit court to preserve them for appeal; the circuit court must have the benefit of the
development of the law by the parties to adequately rule on the issues. Gooch v. State, 2015
Ark. 227, 463 S.W.3d 296. We will not consider an argument raised for the first time on
appeal or that is fully developed for the first time on appeal. Id. Furthermore, a party cannot
change his or her grounds for an objection or motion on appeal but is bound by the scope
of arguments made at trial. Id.
Even if appellant had preserved this argument on appeal, we would affirm on the
basis of this court’s recent decision in Cooper v. State, 2022 Ark. App. 25, 638 S.W.3d 872,
where a similar argument was raised. In Cooper, we affirmed the circuit court’s decision
requiring jurors to wear face masks, holding that appellant’s argument was without merit in
light of our supreme court’s per curiam opinion that was in effect at the time of appellant’s
trial. Id. (citing In Re Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020 Ark. 249 (per curiam)).
Affirmed.
WHITEAKER and HIXSON, JJ., agree.
Nicole Gillum, Esquire, PLLC, by: Nicole C. Gillum, for appellant.
Leslie Rutledge, Att’y Gen., by: Rebecca Kane, Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.
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