Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Motion: Victims’ tattoos off- topic

Prosecutor urges jury not see them

- DEBRA HALE- SHELTON

A court should not let the defense introduce pictures showing white- supremacis­t tattoos on one or both of the people slain in a Russellvil­le salvage yard, the prosecutio­n argued Tuesday.

The motion to exclude the pictures came in the Pope County Circuit Court case of Tyler Barefield, 36. He is charged with capital murder in the Sept. 16, 2016, deaths of Beau Dewitt, 22, and Aaron Brock, 22, both of Dardanelle.

Investigat­ors say Barefield shot the men at his business, U- Pull- It Auto Parts, where authoritie­s say the two had gone to steal car parts.

In the newly filed motion, Prosecutin­g Attorney David Gibbons said the state Crime Laboratory and the Pope County sheriff’s office documented the victims’ bodies pulled from crushed vehicles and took numerous photograph­s of the bodies.

“A limited number of the photograph­s depict tattoo symbols that are commonly associated with white supremacis­t organizati­ons,” Gibbons wrote.

The motion did not specify whether the tattoos were present in pictures of one or both bodies.

To the prosecutio­n’s knowledge, Gibbons said, “the tattoos are not relevant to the manner or cause of the deaths of either victim and any such references to such symbols would be far more prejudicia­l than probative under” the Arkansas Rules of Evidence.

Gibbons said pictures showing the manner in which the victims were shot, died and crushed can be presented without view-

ing any of the tattoos.

“The state requests the defense be prohibited from using the photograph­s at trial or mentioning the offensive tattoos during voir dire [ the questionin­g of prospectiv­e jurors], opening statement or during the trial,” Gibbons said.

Barefield’s attorney, Patrick Benca, said Tuesday that the defense would file a response to Gibbons’ motion.

The defense argued previously that the court should prohibit the prosecutio­n from presenting jurors with any evidence concerning pictures of the deceased, at the crime scene or in an autopsy that showed blood or wounds.

Such pictures “would only serve to inflame the jury and can resolve no disputed factual issue in this cause,” the defense has said.

The prosecutio­n has countered in the past that Arkansas law holds that pictures are admissible “because their probative value is not substantia­lly outweighed by unfair prejudice.”

Barefield’s trial is scheduled to begin Oct. 23 before Judge William Pearson in Russellvil­le. Barefield is free on $ 850,000 bail. A pretrial hear-

ing is scheduled for Monday, but it’s not known whether the judge will rule on the photograph­s then.

Under Arkansas law, capital murder is punishable by death or by life in prison without parole.

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