JOSHUA ANTHONY BEYARD v. STATE OF ARKANSAS
No. CR-17-42
SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
JUNE 1, 2017
2017 Ark. 203
PRO SE APPEAL FROM THE SCOTT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 64CR-14-19]; HONORABLE JERRY DON RAMEY, JUDGE
JOSEPHINE LINKER HART, Associate Justice
In 2015, appellant Joshua Anthony Beyard was found guilty by a jury of murder in the first degree. The trial court accepted the jury‘s recommended sentence, and Beyard was sentenced to 480 months’ imprisonment. No appeal was taken. On June 27, 2016, Beyard filed in the trial court a pro se motion for a “nunc pro tunc order correcting and/or modifying the sentence.” The trial court denied the motion, and Beyard brings this appeal.
Beyard argued in his motion that he was entitled to have his sentenced modified because the presumptive sentence for first-degree murder pursuant to
A request for modification or reduction of sentence based on the assertion that a sentence was imposed in an illegal manner must be raised in a petition timely filed in accordance with
Pursuant to
The judgment was entered in Beyard‘s case on February 2, 2015. Beyard filed his motion to correct or modify the sentence imposed in that judgment on June 27, 2016, which was approximately seventeen months after the judgment had been entered. The time requirements under the Rule are mandatory, and when a request for relief that is cognizable under the Rule is not timely filed, a trial court shall not grant postconviction relief. McClinton v. State, 2016 Ark. 461, at 2, 506 S.W.3d 227, 228 (per curiam).
Appeal dismissed.
Joshua A. Beyard, pro se appellant.
Leslie Rutledge, Att‘y Gen., by: Kent Holt, Ass‘t Att‘y Gen., for appellee.
