Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Suspect facing forgery case, too

Man also charged over 2016 slaying

- JOHN LYNCH

A 20-year-old Little Rock murder suspect has been charged with 141 counts of forgery after Hope police reported finding him with $2,850 in counterfei­t $20 bills.

After his arrest, Randtrel Kendri Carruthers was subsequent­ly charged with furnishing prohibited items when Hempstead County deputies recorded him on video hiding marijuana in the county jail.

He is due to be arraigned on the Class C felony charges, which together carry the possibilit­y of up to 1,420 years in prison, on Dec. 11 in Hempstead County Circuit Court. He was arrested in September, but charges were filed last week.

In Little Rock, Carruthers is accused of the September 2016 slaying of Malik Mumit. The 45-yearold Mumit was found shot in the front yard of a home in the 1700 block of Pinewood Drive by Little Rock police investigat­ing reports of gunfire.

Carruthers was arrested that night after running from detectives who wanted to question him about Mumit’s slaying. Police caught him about three blocks away, and he subsequent­ly pleaded guilty to misdemeano­r fleeing after spending 11 days in jail.

But he was not arrested in Mumit’s death until August, when the Little Rock Police Department’s cold-case squad took over the investigat­ion. Pulaski County prosecutor­s are reviewing the evidence to decide whether to file formal murder charges.

Carruthers was jailed for three days in Pulaski County after his arrest in Mumit’s death; he was released after posting $500,000 bond on Aug. 24, court records show.

Hope police reported that they encountere­d Carruthers about 3 a.m. on Sept. 23 near the Southview Apartments at 1307 E. Third St. while investigat­ing a complaint about drug dealing involving a white BMW and a dark Chevrolet Impala at the apartments.

Police pulled over the Impala for having a defective license-plate light, the arrest report states.

Smelling marijuana in the vehicle, police searched the car and its occupants. Carruthers, the front-seat passenger, was found to have 141 obviously bogus $20 bills in his pants pocket, the report stated.

“Immediatel­y upon touching the money, Officer [Hunter] Halliday knew the bills to be counterfei­t due to the texture of the bills not being consistent with U.S. currency,” the report stated. “Officer Halliday also observed the bills to not be cut properly and the ink used was of low quality.”

Police also found 60 grams of suspected marijuana, about 2 ounces, in the car along with a loaded .380-caliber pistol and a loaded 9mm pistol, apparently belonging to another passenger, Finus Brown, according to the report. Brown was arrested, but the report does not say whether he was charged.

Carruthers was cuffed with his hands behind his back and placed in a patrol car while police searched the Impala.

But he was seen to be making “furtive movements” in the back seat, which concerned officers that he might be trying to hide something, the report states. Carruthers was found to have moved his restrained hands in front of him.

Officers again put his hands behind him and searched the patrol car but found nothing. The car was searched again after Carruthers was taken to jail, but again nothing was found.

But the smell of marijuana in the car led to a third search hours later after police reviewed video surveillan­ce that showed a squirming Carruthers moving his hands to his front then leaning “for several minutes” against the partition separating the front and back seats of the patrol car. This led police to look under the front passenger seat of the patrol car where they found a bag containing 62 grams, about 2 ounces, of suspected marijuana, the report states.

Carruthers was subsequent­ly charged with misdemeano­r marijuana possession and obstructin­g government­al

operations.

After Carruthers was booked into jail, deputies in the booking section started smelling marijuana and searched the area and found suspected marijuana hidden beside the booking bench, the second arrest report states. A review of surveillan­ce video from the jail showed Carruthers on the bench appearing to stuff something into the area where the suspected contraband was discovered, the report states.

In a subsequent interview with deputies, Carruthers was said to have admitted to hiding the drugs there.

When he was arrested in Hope, Carruthers initially told police his name was Dedrick Jones, the name of a cousin that Carruthers has used as an alias before, according to court filings.

Hope officers were able to determine his true identity through a background check. Court records show that Carruthers is on probation for trying to pass himself off as Jones to police in Saline County.

In September 2015, Carruthers, claiming to be Jones, was arrested on a shopliftin­g charge in Bryant. He was subsequent­ly charged with forgery after Bryant police learned his true identity from Jones’ mother and confirmed Carruthers had signed jail papers portraying himself as Jones.

Carruthers pleaded guilty to forgery in October 2016 in Saline County in exchange for three years on probation.

Three months later, in January, Carruthers was placed on five years’ probation in Pulaski County after pleading guilty to possession of drug parapherna­lia, methamphet­amine and alprazolam, the generic version of the prescripti­on anti-anxiety medication Xanax. The plea and charges resulted from a June 23, 2016, traffic stop in the 4400 block of Lara Lane in Little Rock.

After Carruthers’ arrest in Hope, Pulaski County prosecutor­s had his bond revoked, and he was returned to jail, where he is being held without bail. and daily report in the safe.” According to the report, Johnson said she then spent 10 minutes in the same room with the safe as she changed for her job at Wal-Mart, then left the office. She told police she was informed about the theft after going in for work days later, on that Monday.

A police officer noted in the report that there did not appear to be any forced entry.

In a written statement, Hardin said it is the understand­ing of the Department of Finance and Administra­tion that the funds were placed in the safe that Friday.

“We can’t imagine a situation where this was misplaced,” he said in an interview.

The department, he said, contacted customers who wrote checks to the department and told them to cancel them. He said the department would not require people who paid in cash to repay.

“We are trying to make this as easy and smooth for those customers who were affected,” he said.

Hardin declined to discuss any personnel issues when asked if anybody at the office had been fired in relation to the theft.

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