Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cellphone findings in ’12 case rightfully used, justices rule.

- SPENCER WILLEMS

A gunman’s incriminat­ing text messages were rightfully subject to a search by law enforcemen­t officers in a 2012 murder case, the state’s top court has ruled.

The cellphone belonging to James Johnson III and the informatio­n in it was appropriat­ely used in his August 2014 Pulaski County Circuit Court capital-murder trial, the Arkansas Supreme Court ruled Thursday.

Johnson, now 22, was one of two men involved in an attempted robbery that ended in the death of Charles Gaskins outside Gaskins’ home in southwest Little Rock. Johnson argued during his trial and before the Supreme Court that the informatio­n in the affidavit filed by investigat­ors didn’t support obtaining a search warrant for his phone.

On Thursday, Justice Karen Baker wrote that detectives did enough to establish a “nexus between the homicide and the phone” to obtain a warrant in the search of Johnson’s phone.

Gaskins was 50 when he was accosted by two men on his front porch one night in July 2012. He fought with the two robbers while his girlfriend ran inside and shut the door. When she returned, Gaskins had been fatally shot.

Investigat­ors were led to Johnson and another man, Donte Davis, and the pair were arrested later that day.

Officers confiscate­d the gun used in the killing as well as Johnson’s phone, which was stored into evidence.

The phone was held in evidence for two years before officers obtained a warrant to search the phone’s contents.

In it, they found a text message sent from Johnson that stated: “So ima go my own route if they ketch me on this here charge im gone fa life.”

They also found that Johnson had read a news article about the murder on his phone.

At trial and before the Supreme Court, Johnson claimed the evidence from the phone should have been voided because the warrant was obtained on an affidavit that did not demonstrat­e any reasonable belief that it contained evidence of Gaskins’ slaying.

The lower court and the Supreme Court disagreed. Baker wrote that detectives did enough to demonstrat­e cause and the informatio­n was rightly included in court.

“Because Johnson was working with at least one other person when the homicide was committed, it is reasonable to infer that the cell phone that was in his possession was used to communicat­e with others regarding the shootings before, during, or after they occurred,” Baker wrote. “It is reasonable to infer that the cell phone in Johnson’s possession at the time of his arrest was used to communicat­e with some third party regarding his involvemen­t in the homicide.”

Johnson is serving his life sentence without parole at a state facility in Marianna. Davis, who was convicted of first-degree murder, is at a facility in Brickeys. He will be eligible for parole in 2033.

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