An unpublished opinion of the North Carolina Court of Appeals does not constitute
controlling legal authority. Citation is disfavored, but may be permitted in accordance
with the provisions of Rule 30(e)(3) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure.
NO. COA14-207
NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
Filed: 16 September 2014
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
v. Mecklenburg County
No. 11 CRS 246140
KEVIN CELLENT
Appeal by defendant from judgment entered 12 April
2013 by Judge C. Thomas Edwards in Mecklenburg County
Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 5 June 2014.
Roy Cooper, Attorney General, by Narcisa Woods,
Assistant Attorney General, for the State.
Staples Hughes, Appellate Defender, by David W.
Andrews, Assistant Appellate Defender, for defendant-
appellant.
DAVIS, Judge.
Kevin Cellent (“Defendant”) appeals from his
conviction for first-degree rape. On appeal, he contends
that the trial court (1) abused its discretion by limiting
the scope of his cross-examination of the victim; and (2)
committed plain error by admitting into evidence unredacted
police reports concerning the investigation of the crime
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for which he was charged. After careful review, we
conclude that Defendant received a fair trial free from
prejudicial error.
Factual Background
The State presented evidence at trial tending to
establish the following facts: On 1 August 2011, Jennifer
Lambert1 (“Ms. Lambert”) met her Social Security
representative, Debra Green, at approximately 3:00 p.m. in
front of a CVS store located on the corner of Mallard Creek
Road and Sugar Creek Road in Charlotte, North Carolina and
received payment for disability benefits. Ms. Lambert then
proceeded to spend the remainder of the afternoon playing
Internet sweepstakes at the Sugar Creek Business Center —
which was in the same strip mall as the CVS store at which
she had met Ms. Green — and at the AA Business Center
directly across the street.
Around 9:00 p.m., Ms. Lambert called her mother and
several friends in an unsuccessful attempt to obtain a ride
home. She ultimately decided to take the bus home. While
she was waiting at the bus stop on Mallard Creek Road by
the CVS store, she saw a white SUV with two male occupants
drive past her. The SUV then turned around and drove past
1
To protect the identity of the victim, the pseudonym
“Jennifer Lambert” will be used throughout this opinion.
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her again.
Several minutes later, Ms. Lambert saw Defendant
walking down the sidewalk towards her. Defendant
approached her and inquired when the next bus was arriving.
Ms. Lambert indicated to Defendant that there was a nearby
sign with the bus schedule on it. Defendant then walked
directly up to Ms. Lambert, pressed a pistol against her
stomach and said: “You know what it is.” At that point,
Defendant grabbed Ms. Lambert’s arm and forced her into a
wooden enclosure directly behind the bus stop.
Defendant ordered Ms. Lambert to get on the ground in
front of him. He took Ms. Lambert’s purse and emptied its
contents onto the ground. Defendant then commanded Ms.
Lambert to perform oral sex on him and she complied.
Defendant picked up Ms. Lambert’s debit card and ordered
her to give him her personal identification number.
Defendant then called the phone number printed on the card
and was told that the account number linked with the card
had a net balance of zero.
Defendant told Ms. Lambert to get on her hands and
knees and proceeded to have vaginal intercourse with her.
While doing so, Defendant hit her forehead, kicked her back
and shoulders, and stepped on her fingers.
Ms. Lambert then saw the white SUV she had previously
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observed pull up to the bus stop. She heard the driver
yell to Defendant to hurry up because the SUV was running
low on gas. Defendant responded: “[A]ll right, man, I’m
coming.” He then got into the SUV, taking Ms. Lambert’s
phone with him.
Ms. Lambert gathered her belongings and ran to the
Sugar Creek Business Center. Upon her arrival, she
encountered Deann Gordon (“Ms. Gordon”) who observed that
Ms. Lambert was shaking uncontrollably. After going
inside, Ms. Lambert told Ms. Gordon that she had been raped
and robbed and asked in a “frantic voice” for someone to
call the police and her mother. Ms. Lambert then suffered
a seizure, so an employee called 911.
Officer N. Gould (“Officer Gould”) with the Charlotte-
Mecklenburg Police Department (“CMPD”) was the first
officer to arrive on the scene, and Officer Kirsten Bartsch
(“Officer Bartsch”), also employed by the CMPD, arrived
approximately fifteen seconds later. Ms. Lambert told
Officer Bartsch that she had been raped by a man who had
fled in a white SUV. Shortly thereafter, emergency medical
personnel arrived to assist Ms. Lambert.
Ms. Lambert was transported via ambulance to
Presbyterian Hospital at approximately 11:00 p.m. She was
examined the following morning by Nurse Heather Waleski
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(“Nurse Waleski”), a sexual assault nurse examiner. Nurse
Waleski performed an examination of Ms. Lambert and used a
rape kit to collect a DNA sample as well as other forensic
evidence.
Detective Christopher Rush (“Detective Rush”) with the
CMPD’s Sexual Assault Unit was assigned to investigate the
case on 2 August 2011. Detective Rush met with Ms. Lambert
on 11 October 2011 and showed her a picture of Defendant.
Ms. Lambert identified Defendant as her assailant. On 14
October 2011, Detective Rush met with Defendant, and after
interviewing him, he obtained two DNA samples from
Defendant.
Shereen Elghamrawi (“Ms. Elghamrawi”), an expert in
forensic serology and DNA analysis with the CMPD Crime Lab,
analyzed the evidence obtained from the rape kit used on
Ms. Lambert. Ms. Elghamrawi developed a DNA profile from
the rape kit samples and compared them to the DNA samples
obtained from Defendant by Detective Rush. Using
statistical analysis software, she formed the opinion that
the DNA profiles were a match and that “[t]he probability
of selecting an unrelated person at random who could be the
source of this DNA profile is approximately 1 in 16.5
quadrillion for Caucasians; 1 in 121 trillion for African-
Americans, and 1 in 21.1 quadrillion for Hispanics.”
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On 24 October 2011, Defendant was indicted on (1) one
count of first-degree rape; (2) one count of first-degree
sexual offense; (3) one count of first-degree kidnapping;
(4) one count of robbery with a dangerous weapon; and (5)
one count of communicating threats. A jury trial was held
in Mecklenburg County Superior Court on 8 April 2013.
Nurse Waleski testified at trial and stated that Ms.
Lambert suffered an acute break in the skin of her fossa
navicularis in her vaginal area that, in her opinion, was
caused by blunt force trauma. Nurse Waleski also stated
that during her examination of Ms. Lambert, Ms. Lambert
related the manner in which the incident occurred, telling
Nurse Waleski that she had been hit on her forehead, back,
and shoulders and that her fingers had been stepped on.
Nurse Waleski testified that Ms. Lambert’s injuries were
consistent with her account of the incident.
Defendant was convicted of one count of first-degree
rape and was acquitted of first-degree sexual offense,
first-degree kidnapping, and robbery with a dangerous
weapon. The trial judge dismissed the communicating
threats charge. Defendant was sentenced to 220-273 months
imprisonment and ordered to register as a sex offender and
to enroll in satellite-based monitoring for the remainder
of his natural life. Defendant gave notice of appeal in
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open court.
Analysis
I. Cross-Examination of Victim
Defendant’s first argument is that the trial court
abused its discretion by limiting the scope of Defendant’s
cross-examination of Ms. Lambert pursuant to North Carolina
Rule of Evidence 611(b). Specifically, Defendant contends
that the trial court erred by prohibiting his trial counsel
from fully cross-examining Ms. Lambert, and attempting to
impeach her credibility, by questioning her about (1) a
bottle of pills found in her purse; and (2) the fact that
prior to this incident she had committed a probation
violation by failing to provide an accurate address to her
probation officer.
At trial, Defendant’s counsel was able to elicit
testimony from Ms. Lambert that at the time of the 1 August
2011 incident, she was on probation for a felony. However,
when Defendant’s counsel attempted to question her about
the conditions of her probation, the State objected, and
the trial court proceeded to conduct a voir dire
examination outside of the presence of the jury. During
the voir dire hearing, Ms. Lambert testified, in pertinent
part, as follows:
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THE COURT: All right. Mr. Loven, what
is it that you think is relevant to
this inquiry.
VOIR DIRE BY MR. LOVEN:
Q. Didn't your probation have a curfew?
A. Not at this time, no, it didn't.
Q. Did they have any conditions upon
not being in the possession of any
controlled substances outside of your
prescription bottles?
A. I believe so.
Q. Isn't it true that one of those
bottles from your purse is not in a
prescription bottle?
A. All of them are prescription
bottles.
Q. Isn't the Abilify in a bottle that
does not have a prescription on it?
A. This is the way the prescriptions
come in the Abilify bottle.
Q. Didn't you just previously testify
that it came in a box and that the box
had a label?
A. The box is sealed when you get your
medication, so you can't open the box
and put the label on it.
Q. Does that bottle contain a
prescription label on it?
A. It says —
Q. Does it have your name on it?
A. No, it's the label.
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Q. So that bottle is not a bottle with
a prescription label on it, is it?
A. The bottle itself, no.
Q. And that would have been a violation
of a condition of your probation?
A. Absolutely not. Absolutely not. My
medical records show that I'm on
Abilify. It was prescribed from all of
my doctors.
Q. Isn't it true that you were
subsequently violated for probation
violations?
A. In the past.
Q. Right after this?
A. I was already in violation of the
probation.
Q. I'm sorry. Why where you in
violation?
A. It could have been fines. I don't
recall because I'm no longer on
probation.
Q. At the time you were on probation;
correct?
A. I was on probation and I was also
displaced, meaning homeless, so it was
possible that I was in violation
because I didn't have an address or I
hadn't paid the fines in a timely
fashion.
Q. Didn't you testify you were living
with your mother?
A. I was staying with my mother. You
can't live in a senior citizen
building.
-10-
Q. Had you given an address to your
probation officer?
A. Yes. My probation officer had that
address where I could be located.
Q. So are you saying you were in
violation of the terms of your
probation by where you were living?
A. I don't know what the terms of the
violation were at the time because at
the time I did not violate.
Q. Okay. Did you have to give the
probation officer an address?
A. They always had an address. They
came and visited me at my mother's.
Q. Okay. And that's where you told
them you were living?
A. At the time of the rape I was
staying at my mother's. A few weeks
prior I was kind of in between houses
and did not have an address. That may
have caused an issue.
Q. Well, did it cause an issue? You
said you were in violation of
probation.
A. Now that I think about it, because I
haven't thought about this, Mr. Loven,
in two years, the time the probation
officer did violate me because he did
not know the address for which I was
living because I had no contact for the
two weeks before I was able to get
permission to stay in my mother's
senior citizen building.
Q. Okay. Weren't other conditions of
your probation that you not test
positive for drugs?
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A. That's true.
Q. Okay. Had you been given any tests
ever while on probation?
A. Sure.
Q. Had you ever failed any?
A. Previously.
Q. Didn't you testify — excuse me.
Didn't the records you gave to the
hospital say you never used drugs?
A. No. They asked me did I use any. I
said no.
Q. You said you tested positive. Are
you saying those tests were incorrect?
A. Say that again.
Q. You just testified that you used
drugs.
A. I take prescription medication. The
drugs in question are illegal street
drugs. I was not taking them at that
time. I had been on probation for
almost seven, eight years. Over the
course of that eight years I hadn't.
Q. You had previously tested positive
for street drugs?
A. In the past.
Q. And that was a violation of your
probation?
A. That violated me, it did.
Q. And if you were to test positive for
street drugs again that would also have
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been a violation of your probation at
that time; correct?
A. If they came to test me on one of my
appointments, yes, I would have been
violated.
MR. MERRIWEATHER: I ask that she be
allowed to answer.
THE COURT: Sustained.
BY MR. LOVEN
Q. And you still had a probation
officer at this time?
A. That's correct.
Q. Who could have tested you?
A. That's correct.
. . . .
Q. One last question. You were
subsequently violated on this
probation; correct?
A. Yes, I was.
Q. What was the reason for that
violation?
A. Because they had not been able to
locate me in the past. They did not
know my mother's address, so he said,
and if you further continue to
question, my probation was released and
I was not punished any further.
Q. You were found to be in violation of
probation?
A. The probation officer violated me
but the judge released me.
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Q. Did the judge terminate your
probation or find no violation?
A. Terminated probation.
Q. So there was no finding one way or
the other, was there?
A. Termination. I don't know what the
terms mean. It was terminated.
Defendant’s trial counsel then made the following
argument to the trial court:
MR. LOVEN: Your Honor, we would contend
as far as motive here, somebody to
claim — make a false accusation under
these circumstances, she would have
potentially have been in violation of
probation had the police searched her,
so this would be a motive for her to
give a description of something else
and, therefore, goes to her credibility
as a witness.
Also, although this is out of the
presence of the jury, I think some
questions as to her ability to recall
these events and relate to — saying
what she's done previously has come up
yet again, but, of course, this was out
of the presence of the jury.
THE COURT: All right. So your request
to examine further into the probation
violation is denied. The Court will
find that the questions posed do not
address the issues of truthfulness of
this client [sic] and will not allow
you to examine her further with regard
to that.
Rule 611(b) of the North Carolina Rules of Evidence
provides that “[a] witness may be cross-examined on any
matter relevant to any issue in the case, including
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credibility.” N.C.R. Evid. 611(b). Rule 611(a) restricts
the scope of subsection (b), however, by providing that
“[t]he court shall exercise reasonable control over the
mode and order of interrogating witnesses and presenting
evidence so as to (1) make the interrogation and
presentation effective for the ascertainment of the truth,
(2) avoid needless consumption of time, and (3) protect
witnesses from harassment or undue embarrassment.” N.C.R.
Evid. 611(a).
While it is axiomatic that the cross-
examiner should be allowed wide
latitude, the trial judge has
discretion to ban unduly repetitious
and argumentative questions, as well as
inquiry into matters of tenuous
relevance. Moreover, the trial judge
retains the discretion to prohibit
cross examination that is intended to
harass, annoy or humiliate a witness.
The trial judge's rulings in
controlling cross examination will not
be disturbed unless it is shown that
the verdict was improperly influenced.
State v. Hatcher, 136 N.C. App. 524, 526, 524 S.E.2d 815,
816 (2000) (internal citations, quotation marks, and
brackets omitted).
A. Possession of Pills
Defendant contends that the trial court abused its
discretion in refusing to allow Ms. Lambert to be cross-
examined about her possession of the pills contained in her
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purse because “[Ms.] Lambert had a motive to lie to police
officers about what happened with [Defendant] in order to
avoid having her probation revoked because she possessed
controlled substances.” We believe the trial court acted
within its discretion in barring cross-examination on this
topic for two reasons.
First, Ms. Lambert testified that the bottle of pills
she possessed contained Abilify — a mood stabilization drug
that had been prescribed to her by a physician. She
explained that the pill bottle did not have her name on it
because the Abilify bottle came packaged in a box with her
name and prescription listed on the box itself instead of
on the bottle. Defendant failed to offer any evidence
rebutting Ms. Lambert’s testimony that the pills had been
prescribed to her by a physician such that her possession
of them would not have constituted a violation of the
conditions of her probation.
Second, and more basically, it was Ms. Lambert who
requested that the police be called in the first place.
Upon reaching the Sugar Creek Business Center and
encountering Ms. Gordon, Ms. Lambert frantically told her
to “[p]lease call my momma. Please call the police.” As
such, Defendant’s contention that she had a motive to
fabricate the allegation of rape to distract police
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officers from finding the pills in her possession is
undermined by the fact that she was the one who requested
that law enforcement officers be called. Accordingly, the
trial court did not abuse its discretion in barring cross-
examination about this subject.
B. Failure to Provide Accurate Address to Probation
Officer
Defendant further argues that the trial court abused
its discretion by not allowing his trial counsel to cross-
examine Ms. Lambert about the fact that she had previously
violated the terms of her probation by failing to keep her
probation officer continually advised of the address at
which she was living during her probation period. During
voir dire, Ms. Lambert testified that she “was kind of in
between houses and did not have an address” for a short
period of time during her probation period because she was
homeless but that she subsequently moved in with her mother
and advised her probation officer that she could be reached
at her mother’s residence.
Ms. Lambert’s voir dire testimony did not clearly
establish that she had actually lied to her probation
officer about her address. Rather, it suggested that she
had failed to make him aware of a two-week period during
which she was homeless while she sought permission to live
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in her mother’s building. Given the tenuous relevance of
this testimony to Ms. Lambert’s truthfulness, we believe
the trial court acted within its discretion in refusing to
allow cross-examination on this subject.
II. Admission of Unredacted Police Reports
Defendant’s final argument is that the trial court
erred in admitting into evidence two unredacted police
reports indicating that investigating officers found Ms.
Lambert’s allegations to be credible. Because Defendant
did not object at trial to the admission of these reports,
we review this contention solely for plain error.
For error to constitute plain error, a
defendant must demonstrate that a
fundamental error occurred at trial.
To show that an error was fundamental,
a defendant must establish prejudice —
that, after examination of the entire
record, the error had a probable impact
on the jury's finding that the
defendant was guilty. Moreover,
because plain error is to be applied
cautiously and only in the exceptional
case, the error will often be one that
seriously affects the fairness,
integrity or public reputation of
judicial proceedings.
State v. Lawrence, 365 N.C. 506, 518, 723 S.E.2d 326, 334
(2012) (internal citations, quotation marks, and brackets
omitted).
The two reports at issue are preprinted forms
containing statements made by Ms. Lambert and Ms. Gordon,
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respectively. Defendant does not contest the admissibility
of the witness statements themselves that are contained on
these forms. Rather, he challenges the failure to redact
notations made by officers on these forms before the forms
were admitted into evidence.
The first report was a statement provided by Ms.
Lambert to Officer M. Bell (“Officer Bell”) on 1 August
2011. Ms. Lambert dictated her account of the subject
incident, and Officer Bell transcribed her account on the
report form which Ms. Lambert subsequently reviewed and
signed.
The first page of this report contained a box titled
“Original Offense/Charge.” Next to this box, Officer Bell
wrote: “Sexual Assault/1st Forcible Rape.” Officer Bell
also checked “Open” in connection with the box on this
report which was titled “UCR Clearance Status” and also
checked “Active” as to the box titled “Investigative
Status.” On the second page of the report, in the third
box titled “Original Offense/Charge,” Officer Bell wrote
“1st Rape (Forcible)” and wrote “1st Degree Forcible Rape”
in a subsequent box titled “Correct Incident
Classification.” Officer Bell also checked “Open” and
“Active” in two additional boxes on that page titled “UCR
Clearance Status” and “Investigative Status,” respectively.
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The second report was a statement provided by Ms.
Gordon to Officer Gould on 1 August 2011 at the Sugar Creek
Business Center shortly after Ms. Lambert had been taken to
the hospital. Ms. Gordon dictated the account of her
interaction with Ms. Lambert from the time Ms. Lambert ran
up to her in the Sugar Creek Business Center parking lot
until the time the 911 call was made. Officer Gould
transcribed her account on the report form, and Ms. Gordon
subsequently signed it.
On this report, Officer Gould wrote “Forcible Rape (1st
Degree)” in connection with a box titled “Original
Offense/Charge” and wrote “Forcible Rape (1st Degree)” in a
subsequent box titled “Correct Incident Classification.”
Officer Gould also checked “Open” with regard to a box
titled “UCR Clearance Status” and checked “Active” in
connection with a box titled “Investigative Status.”
Defendant argues that these notations on the two forms
conveyed to the jury the notion that the police officers
believed Ms. Lambert’s account of the incident. Even
assuming, without deciding, that the trial court erred in
allowing these unredacted reports to be admitted, we
believe any such error does not rise to the level of plain
error.
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The evidence against Defendant at trial was
overwhelming as to the rape charge. Ms. Lambert identified
Defendant as her assailant in a photograph shown to her by
Detective Rush. DNA analysis matched Defendant’s DNA with
the semen found in Ms. Lambert’s body. At the time Ms.
Lambert reported the rape, she was shaking uncontrollably
and speaking in a “frantic” tone of voice. She
subsequently suffered a seizure. Nurse Waleski’s
examination of Ms. Lambert confirmed the presence of the
injuries to her forehead, back, shoulders, and fingers that
corroborated Ms. Lambert’s account of the incident. In
addition, Nurse Waleski testified that the injuries to Ms.
Lambert’s genital area, notably a break in the skin of her
fossa navicularis, were caused — in her opinion — by blunt
force trauma and were consistent with the types of injuries
commonly suffered in cases of sexual assault.2
Thus, we conclude that Defendant has failed to meet
his heavy burden of demonstrating plain error. See State
v. Ross, 207 N.C. App. 379, 396, 700 S.E.2d 412, 424 (2010)
2
While Defendant points to a statement made by Nurse
Waleski on cross-examination that she could not say whether
Ms. Lambert’s injuries came from consensual or
nonconsensual intercourse, there was no evidence offered at
trial regarding a consensual sexual encounter. Moreover,
as noted above, Nurse Waleski’s opinion was that the injury
to Ms. Lambert’s vaginal area was the result of blunt force
trauma.
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(“Even assuming arguendo that it was error for the trial
court to allow the introduction of the detective's
[hearsay] testimony . . . we conclude that it did not rise
to the level of plain error, as the record in the case sub
judice contains overwhelming evidence of defendant's
guilt.”), disc. review denied, 365 N.C. 346, 717 S.E.2d 377
(2011); see also State v. Johnson, 203 N.C. App. 718, 723,
693 S.E.2d 145, 147-48 (2010) (declining to decide whether
trial court erred in admitting statement in computer-
generated police report summarizing actions police officer
took on morning of defendant’s arrest because even if
admission of document was erroneous, its admission was not
prejudicial).
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we conclude that
Defendant received a fair trial free from prejudicial
error.
NO PREJUDICIAL ERROR.
Judges HUNTER, JR. and ERVIN concur.
Report per Rule 30(e).
Judge HUNTER, JR. concurred in this opinion prior to 6
September 2014.