IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. COA 16-365
Filed: 6 December 2016
Cleveland County, Nos. 12 CRS 51546-48
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
v.
DEVONTE SHAWMAR LYONS
Appeal by Defendant from judgment entered 30 July 2015 by Judge Forrest D.
Bridges in Superior Court, Cleveland County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 19
September 2016.
Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Assistant Attorney General Sonya Calloway-
Durham, for the State.
Glover and Petersen, P.A., by Ann B. Petersen and James R. Glover, for
Defendant.
McGEE, Chief Judge.
Devonte Shawmar Lyons (“Defendant”) appeals his convictions for first-degree
murder under the felony murder rule, attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon,
and conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon. Defendant contends he
was prejudiced by the trial court’s failure to exercise its discretion pursuant to N.C.
Gen. Stat. § 15A-1233(a) to permit the jury to review certain witness testimony. We
find no prejudicial error.
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I. Background
The evidence at trial tended to show the following: Defendant, Aryka Roberts
(“Roberts”), Rashad Schenck (“Schenck”), and Jessica Edwards (“Edwards”) gathered
at the residence of their mutual friend, Garrett Frederick (“Frederick”), in Kings
Mountain around 6:30 p.m. on 13 March 2012. Roberts was Defendant’s girlfriend.
Schenck and Edwards were dating each other. The four of them sat in a sunroom
where they smoked marijuana and listened to music. Roberts called a “chat line”
used for “meet[ing] men [in the area] who want to talk or do other things.” Roberts
explained the chat line process at trial: “You just call and [record] a [voicemail]
greeting and either [the men] can message you or you message them.” Using the
speakerphone, Roberts began playing messages men had left for her on the chat line.
One of the messages was from a man with a heavy foreign accent. Roberts
decided to send him a message, and she and the man had a brief conversation over
the phone making “small talk[].” Roberts told the man she lived in Kings Mountain
and asked him to meet her there. Later, when asked why the man was interested in
meeting her, Roberts testified “[she] told him for sex.” Roberts and the caller
exchanged phone numbers. After hanging up, Defendant and Roberts decided to “rob
[the man with the accent] and get [his] money.”
Defendant, Roberts, Schenck, and Edwards left Frederick’s residence together
around 9:00 p.m. and drove in a 1998 Toyota Camry (“the Camry”) belonging to
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Roberts to Ebenezer, a small community outside Kings Mountain. During the ten-
minute drive to Ebenezer, they discussed whether Roberts should meet the man at a
hotel, but it was ultimately decided that Roberts should meet him at 206 Putnam
Place, a vacant house where her father used to live. Along the way, they stopped at
another home and picked up Schenck’s cousin, Sheldon Thompson (“Thompson”).
Roberts was “on and off [Defendant’s cell phone]” with the man they intended to rob,
giving him driving directions to Ebenezer from Charlotte. Roberts testified that
[t]he plan [they developed while on the way to Ebenezer]
was for [Roberts] to go get in [the man’s] car. [Edwards]
was going to wait in [Roberts’s] car . . . at [a neighbor’s]
house. [Defendant, Schenck, and Thompson] were
supposed to hide in the bushes, come up to the car, scare
the man and only rob him, and we [were] all supposed to
go back to my car and leave.
Roberts “didn’t remember . . . having a conversation about who [specifically] was
going to take the money.”
Schenck testified Defendant was supposed to get the money using a gun, and
Schenck was supposed to “watch out [from the Camry] . . . to make sure . . . nothing
happen[ed] to [Defendant].” Schenck also testified it “was not unusual for [him] to
back up [Defendant] in a prostitution situation . . . involving [Roberts].”
They next stopped at Schenck’s grandmother’s house in Ebenezer. Roberts and
Schenck went inside and Defendant and Edwards remained in the Camry. The man
from the chat line “was calling back and forth on [Defendant’s] phone” and Edwards
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spoke to him while Roberts was inside Schenck’s grandmother’s house. When
Schenck and Roberts returned to the car, Roberts drove “right down the road . . .
[about] a minute” and parked at the residence of her family friend, Wayne Bell
(“Bell”). Roberts spoke over the phone to the man a final time to give him specific
directions to 206 Putnam Place.
At Bell’s house, Defendant, Roberts, Schenck and Thompson got out of the
Camry and Edwards got into the front seat. Defendant, Roberts, Schenck and
Thompson walked through Bell’s backyard and approached the back of the house at
206 Putnam Place. Roberts went to the left of the house and the others went to the
right. Roberts could see a white Cadillac (“the Cadillac”) parked in the driveway of
206 Putnam Place. Roberts got in the Cadillac’s passenger side and the driver
introduced himself to her as Francis Munufie (“Munufie”). After talking to Munufie
briefly, Roberts got out of the Cadillac and went back behind the house, where she
spoke with Defendant, who was still with Schenck and Thompson. Roberts testified
she was “really nervous and antsy” and told Defendant that Munufie “was . . .
touching [her] uncomfortably, and [she] wanted for it to be over.” She asked “what
the holdup was.” Defendant told Roberts: “Shut up. We got this. We’re going to do
this. We’re coming.” Roberts had not seen Defendant with a weapon at that point.
Roberts returned to the Cadillac. Defendant came up to the driver’s side door
and “knocked on the window with a gun.” Defendant told Munufie to get out of the
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Cadillac and tried to open the door, but it was locked. Roberts unlocked the door from
inside. Roberts testified she immediately got out and ran to the back of 206 Putnam
Place and then to the Camry parked in Bell’s driveway. She heard four or five
gunshots as she ran.
Schenck testified that Munufie opened the door and Defendant began
“reach[ing] for [Munufie’s] pockets” while Munufie was still sitting in the Cadillac.
Defendant told Munufie to get out of the car and when Munufie did, “[Defendant] had
the gun in [Munufie’s] face telling him to give [Defendant] the money.” Munufie
motioned as if he was going to pull something out of his back pocket, but brought his
hand up empty. Defendant was still holding the gun in Munufie’s face, demanding
money, and Munufie “slapped [at] the gun.” Schenck testified that after Munufie
slapped the gun a third time, Defendant shot Munufie in his left upper arm. Schenck,
Roberts, and Thompson then ran back to the Camry. As he was running, Schenck
heard “multiple [gun] shots.” Edwards testified that, while waiting in the Camry,
she “heard five or six gunshots. And less than a minute later [Schenck, Thompson,
and Roberts] were in the back seat [of the Camry] and [Roberts] told me to go.”
According to Roberts, Defendant returned to the Camry last, and “jump[ed] in
the front seat” as Edwards was pulling out of Bell’s driveway. Edwards drove away,
but “ran off the side of the road at one point because [she] was shook [up].” Edwards
testified “[e]verybody was frantic. [Roberts] was like, ‘What happened? What
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happened? Did you kill him?’ And [Defendant] said, ‘I don’t know. I shot him in the
face.’ And that’s – I think at that point I swerved off the road. [Defendant] said, ‘I’m
sorry. I’m sorry.’” Schenck testified Roberts was “screaming [at Defendant] . . .
[asking] did [Defendant] shoot the dude.” According to Schenck, Defendant did not
respond at first, but eventually said, “I had to do it.” Roberts testified she “was . . .
crying really bad and . . . [asking Defendant] ‘What happened? What happened?’”
and that Defendant simply responded, “I’m sorry.”
Roberts switched seats with Edwards and began driving. She drove to the
apartment of Schenck’s cousin, Angelica Adams (“Adams”), in Gastonia. At Adams’s
apartment, the group sat in the living room smoking marijuana. According to
Roberts, Defendant asked Adams for “[s]ome Comet or some bleach or some kind of
stuff to clean with” and went to the bathroom. Around 3:00 a.m., Adams drove
Edwards to her home in Galilee and drove Schenck and Thompson back to Ebenezer.
Roberts and Defendant got in the Camry parked outside Adams’s apartment
and talked for about twenty minutes. Roberts later told police that, after Adams and
the others left, Roberts saw Defendant wrap a gun in a yellow t-shirt and hide it
under some stairs at the apartment complex. Around 6:00 a.m., Defendant and
Roberts went to Defendant’s mother’s apartment in Kings Mountain. They fell asleep
briefly, but were awakened by police knocking on the door of the apartment. Two
officers spoke with Roberts and Defendant separately. Roberts testified she
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“[b]asically gave [the officers] the runaround, a bunch of lies, jumbled up lies.” Before
leaving, the officers told Roberts they wanted to talk to her again. They also seized
the Camry, saying it had been seen near 206 Putnam Place the previous night.
Deputy Jimmy Ellis (“Deputy Ellis”) of the Cleveland County Sheriff’s Office
(“CCSO”) testified he responded to a 911 call around 10:55 p.m. on 13 March 2012
reporting five or six gun shots fired near Putnam Place in Ebenezer. Deputy Ellis
observed a white Cadillac parked in the driveway at 206 Putnam Place. The vehicle’s
lights were on, and there was music blaring loudly from inside. As Deputy Ellis
approached the Cadillac, he saw the driver’s side door was open and found a man,
later identified as Francis Munufie, lying on his back with an apparent gunshot
wound to his head. Deputy Ellis radioed a request for EMS and backup deputies. A
number of officers arrived and began canvassing the neighborhood. Investigators
spoke with Bell, who informed them he had seen Roberts and several others in her
Camry parked nearby earlier that evening. Police found four spent nine millimeter
gun shell casings in the grass and driveway ten to fifteen feet from Munufie’s body.1
A medical examiner performed an autopsy on Munufie’s body on 14 March
2012, and determined Munufie suffered gunshot wounds to the left side of his head,
to his upper right, and “graze wounds” to the right side of his abdomen. The examiner
1 Crime scene investigators observed three spent shell casings on the night of the murder
before Munufie’s body was removed from the scene. A fourth cartridge was found by a detective upon
returning to 206 Putnam Place around 4:00 p.m. the next day.
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collected an intact bullet from behind Munufie’s right collarbone, several small bullet
fragments from Munufie’s arm, and a small bullet fragment located near Munufie’s
jawbone. The bullet and bullet fragments were packaged as evidence and returned
to CCSO. CCSO investigators also discovered a bullet fragment lodged in the interior
of Munufie’s Cadillac when the vehicle was processed for fingerprints on 16 March
2012. The shell casings, bullet and bullet fragments, and a subsequently recovered
firearm were all sealed and delivered to the State Bureau of Investigation’s Western
Lab by CCSO Detective Gary Lee for ballistics testing.
Throughout the week following Munufie’s death, investigators interviewed
Defendant, Roberts, Schenck, Thompson, and Edwards. Roberts submitted
fingerprint and DNA samples on 20 March 2012. On the way to the Law Enforcement
Center for fingerprinting, Roberts told detectives she had been involved with the
attempted robbery of Munufie. Roberts also suggested investigators should search
Adams’s apartment building in Gastonia for the gun used during the robbery attempt.
The same day, CCSO Sergeant Mark Craig (“Sgt. Craig”) went to Adams’s apartment,
where he found a nine millimeter, semi-automatic handgun wrapped in a yellow t-
shirt underneath a staircase on the outside of the building. Roberts later agreed to
speak to Defendant while wearing a hidden audio recording device. She testified
Defendant was “real standoffish” during the conversation and “kept telling her to
shut the fuck up, and [saying] he didn’t want to talk about [the robbery attempt].”
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CCSO Detective Jessica Woosley (“Det. Woosley”) testified Defendant was
arrested on 23 March 2012 on charges of first-degree murder, attempted robbery with
a dangerous weapon, and conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon.
Roberts, Schenck, Edwards, and Thompson were also arrested on the same charges
and later entered into plea agreements with the State. A grand jury indicted
Defendant on 9 April 2012 for first-degree murder, robbery with a dangerous weapon,
and conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon.
Roberts, Schenck, Edwards, and Thompson testified for the State at
Defendant’s trial on 13 July 2015. Deborah Chancey (“Chancey”), a firearms analyst
at the State Crime Lab, testified regarding her analysis of the four fired shell casings,
five bullets and/or bullet fragments, and handgun submitted to the Crime Lab for
testing. It was Chancey’s opinion that the shell casings exhibited “a sufficient
amount of agreement” with casings test-fired from the handgun received by the Crime
Lab. However, Chancey also testified that although the bullet and bullet fragments
received by the Crime Lab “exhibited some agreement of detail with the test-fires,
. . . the amount of agreement was not sufficient to identify [them] to any particular
firearm.”
Erin Ermish (“Ermish”), a DNA analyst at the State Crime Lab, testified about
forensic testing she performed on a number of items of evidence in the case, including
DNA swabbings from the exterior driver’s side door handle of Munufie’s Cadillac; the
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gun recovered from Adams’s apartment; and the yellow t-shirt that had been wrapped
around the gun. On cross-examination, Ermish testified, “For any of the items that
I tested, I did not get a match between [Defendant’s] [DNA] profile and the DNA
[detected on the item].” Defendant did not testify or present any additional evidence.
At the close of the evidence, but prior to closing arguments, the trial court
instructed the jury:
As jurors you are often referred to as the fact finders, which
simply means that it’s up to you to find the true facts in
this case from the evidence according to what your
recollection of the evidence is. When you go back and start
deliberating, if six of you say, Well, I remember this
witness says things this way and the other six of you say
No, I don’t remember it that way, . . . you don’t have the
option of saying, Well, let’s go ask the judge and let the
judge tell us what did that witness really say. Because if
you ask that question, my response is going to be, That’s
part of your job, to figure it out and to make that
determination based on your recollection and not what I
say the evidence is, what [the lawyers] say the evidence is,
but what you say the evidence is. That’s why you’ve been
listening so carefully, so that you can determine the true
facts from the evidence as you find the evidence to be.
After closing arguments, the trial court further instructed the jury, “If you need to
review any exhibits or if you have any questions, please write out such request and
. . . I will bring you back into the courtroom to address any such questions or
requests.” Defendant was convicted on 30 July 2015 of first-degree felony murder,
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attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon,2 and conspiracy to commit robbery with
a dangerous weapon. The trial court arrested judgment on the conviction for
attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon and consolidated the remaining
convictions into a single judgment. Defendant was sentenced to an active term of life
in prison without parole. Defendant gave notice of appeal in open court.
II. Jury Instructions Regarding Witness Testimony
A. Standard of Review
Defendant contends the trial court violated a statutory mandate requiring trial
courts to exercise discretion in considering jury requests to review witness testimony
or other evidence. Specifically, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1233(a) provides in part:
If the jury after retiring for deliberation requests a review
of certain testimony or other evidence, the jurors must be
conducted to the courtroom. The judge in his discretion,
after notice to the prosecutor and defendant, may direct
that requested parts of the testimony be read to the jury
and may permit the jury to reexamine in open court the
requested materials admitted into evidence.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1233(a) (2015). According to Defendant, certain comments
made by the trial court to the jury prior to closing arguments demonstrate the court’s
failure to exercise discretion as directed by the statute. Defendant’s argument is
reviewable despite the fact that he did not raise this objection at trial. See State v.
2 During the charge conference, following an argument by defense counsel that the robbery
was incomplete, the trial court dismissed the charge of robbery with a dangerous weapon and replaced
it with attempted robbery.
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Starr, 365 N.C. 314, 317, 718 S.E.2d 362, 365 (2011) (“When a trial court violates
[N.C.G.S. § 15A-1233(a)] by denying the jury’s request . . . upon the ground that the
trial court has no power to grant the motion in its discretion, the ruling is reviewable,
and the alleged error is preserved by law even when the defendant fails to object.”
(citation and internal quotation marks omitted)). “Alleged violation of a statutory
mandate presents a question of law, which we review de novo on appeal.” Dion v.
Batten, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 790 S.E.2d 844, 852, 2016 WL 4088417 at *8 (2016).
A trial court’s failure to exercise its discretion under N.C.G.S. § 15A-1233(a)
warrants a new trial only where the error was prejudicial. See State v. Johnson, 164
N.C. App. 1, 20, 595 S.E.2d 176, 187 (2004). Accordingly, to prevail in the present
appeal, Defendant must show not only a failure by the trial court to exercise its
discretion but also “a reasonable possibility that, had the error in question not been
committed, a different result would have been reached at [his] trial[.]” See N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 15A-1443(a) (2015); State v. Hatfield, 225 N.C. App. 765, 769, 738 S.E.2d 236,
239 (2013).
As this Court recently held upon its review of relevant case law,
a trial court’s error in failing to exercise its discretion in
denying a jury’s request to review testimony constitutes
prejudicial error when the requested testimony (1) is
‘material to the determination of [a] defendant’s guilt or
innocence’; and (2) involves ‘issues of some confusion or
contradiction’ such that the jury would want to review this
evidence to fully understand it.
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State v. Chapman, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 781 S.E.2d 320, 327 (2016) (quoting State
v. Johnson, 346 N.C. 119, 126, 484 S.E.2d 372, 377 (1997)).
B. Analysis
1. Exercise of Discretion Under N.C.G.S. § 15A-1233(a)
Our Supreme Court has observed that N.C.G.S. § 15A-1233(a) codifies “the
long-standing common law rule that the decision whether to grant or refuse a request
by the jury for a restatement of the evidence lies within the discretion of the trial
court.” State v. Barrow, 350 N.C. 640, 646, 517 S.E.2d 374, 378 (1999). It is error for
a trial court to make statements that, even considered contextually, “suggest[] the
trial court [does] not have discretion to grant the jury’s request [to review witness
testimony].” See Hatfield, 225 N.C. App. at 771, 738 S.E.2d at 240. For example, a
trial court fails to exercise its discretion to deny a jury’s request to review witness
testimony by responding that a transcript is “not available,” see State v. Lang, 301
N.C. 508, 511, 272 S.E.2d 123, 125 (1980), or that the court lacks “the ability” to
present the transcript to the jury, see Barrow, 350 N.C. at 648, 517 S.E.2d at 379.
See also Johnson, 346 N.C. at 124, 484 S.E.2d at 376 (holding trial court failed to
exercise its discretion to grant jury’s request where “[t]he trial court told the jury, ‘I’ll
need to instruct you that we will not be able to replay or review the testimony for
you.” (emphases in original)); Hatfield, 225 N.C. App. at 771, 738 S.E.2d at 240
(holding trial court failed to exercise its discretion in considering jury’s request where,
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after jury requested review of witness testimony, “the trial court simply told the jury,
‘[w]e can’t do that.’”); State v. Thompkins, 83 N.C. App. 42, 45, 348 S.E.2d 605, 607
(1986) (holding trial court failed to exercise its discretion in denying jury request to
rehear testimony where the trial court told the jury, “[I]t is not possible to arrange
that. . . . I’m sorry that there is no way I can accommodate that request.”).
In the present case, the trial court failed to exercise its discretion to grant or
deny a request by the jury to review witness testimony. Contrary to the State’s
contention that the trial court merely made it “clear [to the jurors] that if they asked
him for his interpretation [of witness testimony],” the judge would instruct them to
“make that determination based on [their own] recollection[s],” the court did not
inform the jury it would refuse to interpret the meaning of any particular testimony
or “recapitulate the facts” of the case. Rather, the court made comments prior to
closing arguments that suggested it would be futile for the jury to request to review
witness testimony whatsoever:
When you go back and start deliberating, if six of you say,
Well, I remember this witness says things this way and the
other six of you say, No, I don’t remember it that way . . .
you don’t have the option of saying, Well, let’s go ask the
judge and let the judge tell us what did that witness really
say. Because if you ask that question, my response it going
to be, That’s part of your job, to figure it out and to make
that determination based on your recollection[.]
Although the trial court’s surrounding comments may have emphasized the jury’s
fact-finding role, its unequivocal statement that jurors “[would not] have the option,”
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during deliberations, to ask the court “what . . . [a] witness really [said]” suggested
the court lacked the ability to even consider such a request. This was error. See State
v. Long, 196 N.C. App. 22, 40, 674 S.E.2d 696, 706 (2009) (citing “cases in which our
courts have concluded that although the trial court admonished the jury to rely upon
their recollections, the trial court did not exercise its discretion because of
accompanying language which indicated the trial court did not believe it had the
discretion to grant the request.” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)); see
also Johnson, 164 N.C. App. at 20, 595 S.E.2d at 187 (“While [§ 1233(a)] refers solely
to requests made by the jury for review of certain testimony or evidence, we
nonetheless find that the purpose and intent of the statute are violated . . . [where]
the trial court’s pretrial comments could have foreclosed the jury from making a
request for such testimony or evidence. Thus, we find error even without a request
by the jury.” (emphasis added)).
2. Prejudicial Error
Even when a trial court fails to exercise its discretion to grant or deny a jury’s
request to review evidence, a defendant must demonstrate he was prejudiced by the
trial court’s failure to exercise discretion. See N.C.G.S. § 15A-1443(a) (providing in
part that “[t]he burden of showing . . . prejudice . . . is upon the defendant.”). This
Court has held it is not necessarily prejudicial error to preemptively deny a jury an
opportunity to request to review witness testimony even where “a [defendant’s]
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conviction hinges in large part on the credibility of an alleged accomplice who testifies
at trial[.]” Johnson, 164 N.C. App. at 20, 595 S.E.2d at 187. The defendant must
show that certain testimony involved issues of some confusion and contradiction such
that it is likely a jury would want to review the testimony. See id. (citation and
internal quotation marks omitted).
This Court has also distinguished “cases where material evidence was
requested [by the jury], [as opposed to] cases where the evidence requested was not
determinative of guilt or innocence.” Long, 196 N.C. App. at 40, 674 S.E.2d at 707
(citations omitted) (emphases added). We thus consider whether, in the present case,
Defendant has identified specific witness testimony involving issues of such confusion
and contradiction that the jury would have likely wanted to review it or that was
material to the determination of Defendant’s guilt or innocence. We conclude he has
not.
Defendant alleges he was prejudiced by the trial court’s failure to exercise its
discretion because “[t]he only evidence linking [Defendant] to the homicide” came
from four accomplice witnesses who “gave conflicting testimony about [1] the alleged
plan to commit a robbery and how and when it developed[;] . . . [2] the details of what
happened during the robbery attempt[;] . . . [3] what Defendant . . . allegedly said
during the drive to Gastonia[;] and . . . [4] what allegedly happened at the apartment
of [Adams] in Gastonia.” As Defendant bears the burden of showing prejudice, we
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limit our review to the specific areas of purportedly “conflicting [witness] testimony”
Defendant identifies. We address each in turn.
a. The alleged plan to commit a robbery
Defendant first contends that Roberts, Schenck, and Edwards “gave
contradictory testimony about the alleged discussions prior to the homicide
concerning the plan to rob [Munufie after] lur[ing him] to the scene by [Roberts]
through the chat line connection[.]” Beyond this general assertion, Defendant does
not point to any specific testimony by the individual witnesses which he characterizes
as “conflicting” on this subject. Our review of the record indicates that, in fact, the
accomplice witnesses gave largely consistent accounts of the planning stage leading
up to the attempted robbery. For example, Roberts, Schenck, and Edwards all
testified that, while they were at Frederick’s house, Roberts was talking on the chat
line in order to select a person to rob. Roberts, Schenck, and Edwards all testified
the original plan was to lure Munufie to a hotel, but after group discussion, they
settled on 206 Putnam Place. It was undisputed that Roberts gave Munufie driving
directions to Kings Mountain and later to Putnam Place specifically. Roberts testified
that, after picking up Thompson in Ebenezer, the plan that emerged
was for [Roberts] to go get in [Munufie’s] car. [Edwards]
was going to wait . . . in the Camry . . . . [Defendant,
Schenck, and Thompson] were supposed to hide in the
bushes [behind 206 Putnam Place], come up to the
[Cadillac], scare [Munufie] and only rob him, and we [were]
all supposed to go back to [the Camry] and leave.
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Roberts testified she could not recall whether there was any discussion of who would
actually take Munufie’s money. Schenck also testified that the plan was for Roberts
to get in the Cadillac, but that Defendant was supposed to “get the money . . . with a
gun.” However, both Roberts and Schenck testified they did not see Defendant with
a gun during the planning stage. Edwards testified that “[t]he plan was that
[Munufie would] come down [to Kings Mountain] and [Roberts] was going to get in
the car with him and then he was going to get robbed, I guess.” We are unable to
discern any material contradictions among the accomplice witnesses’ testimony on
this issue, and Defendant has not pointed to any specific conflicts in support of his
argument.
b. The details of what happened during the robbery attempt
Defendant next argues the accomplice witnesses “gave conflicting testimony
about the details of what happened during the robbery attempt.” Specifically,
Defendant contends that “[t]he testimony of [Schenck] and [Roberts] that [Defendant]
was seen holding a gun when he allegedly encountered . . . Munufie at the driver’s
side door of [the] Cadillac was both confusing and contradicted.” Defendant offers
two reasons why the testimony of Schenck and Roberts on this point was “confusing
and contradicted.” First, Defendant maintains the evidence showed that during the
attempted robbery, Defendant “was wearing loose-waisted pajama pants, the kind of
clothing . . . unlikely to provide a means for holding and concealing a . . . firearm.”
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Second, Defendant notes that, while Schenck and Roberts both testified Defendant
touched the driver’s side door handle of Munufie’s Cadillac, Defendant’s DNA was not
discovered anywhere on the vehicle’s exterior.
The factual details Defendant identifies did not contradict the testimony of
Schenck and Roberts about their own observations of Defendant holding a gun during
the robbery attempt. Although Schenck testified Defendant was wearing “pajama
pants” during the attempted robbery, he did not testify they were “loose-waisted.”
Schenck also did not testify that he saw Defendant pull the gun from his waistband;
he testified only that, by the time Defendant approached the driver’s side door of the
Cadillac, “[Defendant] had pulled out a gun[.]” Roberts testified that, when she got
out of the Cadillac the first time and went to the back of the house to ask Defendant
what was taking so long, she did not see Defendant with a gun. Roberts then returned
to the Cadillac, with her back to Defendant as he approached the driver’s side door,
and testified she could only see “shadows out of [her] peripheral view.” Like Schenck,
Roberts testified that Defendant “knocked on the [driver’s side] window with a gun.”
Roberts testified she did not actually see a gun in Defendant’s possession “[until] he
knocked on the window with the gun.” Neither witness testified about when or how
Defendant obtained the gun; where he concealed it on his person, if at all; or when he
first pulled out the gun.
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Roberts and Schenck both testified Defendant tried to open the driver’s side
door of Munufie’s Cadillac. Thus, the State offered consistent testimony on this issue
from multiple eyewitnesses to the actual robbery attempt, and Defendant did not
offer contradictory testimony. Cf. Hatfield, 225 N.C. App at 773, 738 S.E.2d at 241
(holding trial court’s failure to exercise its discretion under N.C.G.S. § 15A-1233(a)
was prejudicial where requested testimony was that of the sole eyewitness to the
defendant’s alleged crimes, and defendant directly contradicted the witness’s
testimony at trial.). The jury heard expert testimony regarding the lack of
Defendant’s DNA on Munufie’s Cadillac, against which it could weigh the testimony
of Roberts and Schenck that Defendant in fact touched the Cadillac’s door handle.
Defendant has failed to show some confusion or contradiction that would make it
likely that the jury would have wanted to review the testimony of Roberts or Schenck
on this issue.
c. Defendant’s alleged statements during the drive to Gastonia
Defendant next contends that Roberts, Schenck, and Edwards “gave
contradictory testimony about the statements allegedly made by [Defendant] during
the drive to Gastonia after the homicide.” Once again, Defendant does not direct us
to specific testimony by the individual witnesses.
Thompson testified that, during the car ride to Gastonia, “[n]obody said
anything.” Thompson was the only accomplice witness to deny ever having gone to
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206 Putnam Place on 13 March 2012. He also testified he had a “bad memory” and
remembered very little about the night of the attempted robbery or the days that
followed. However, Roberts, Schenck, and Edwards all testified about statements
Defendant made during the drive. The statements attributed to Defendant by these
witnesses, although not identical, were not inconsistent. Roberts testified she “was
. . . crying really bad and [asking Defendant], ‘What happened? What happened?’
. . . [and after a couple of minutes Defendant] just said, ‘I’m sorry.’” Roberts also
testified that she said, “Damn, we’re going to get in trouble,” and that Defendant
replied, “No, we ain’t.” According to Schenck, Roberts
kept asking [Defendant] why – “Did you shoot him? Why
did you shoot him? How many times did you shoot him?”
[Defendant] wasn’t really saying nothing [sic] [at first]. . . .
And while we [were] driving [Roberts] just kept asking
[Defendant] like, “Why did you do it?” And [Defendant]
was just like, “I had to do it.”
Edwards testified that, during the drive to Gastonia, “[e]verybody was frantic.
[Roberts] was like, ‘What happened? What happened? Did you kill him? And
[Defendant] said, ‘I don’t know. I shot him in the face.’ . . . [Defendant] said, ‘I’m
sorry. I’m sorry.’”
This testimony from Roberts, Schenck, and Edwards about Defendant’s alleged
statements during the drive to Gastonia was mutually reinforcing, not mutually
exclusive. Each witness described a similar sequence of events: Roberts pressing
Defendant to explain what happened; Defendant’s initial silence; and an eventual
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statement by Defendant suggesting some level of culpability. Defendant has not
shown any direct contradictions among the witness accounts. Further, as the State
presented testimony from multiple eyewitnesses to the actual robbery attempt, the
statements Defendant allegedly made after the fact were not material to the
determination of defendant’s guilt or innocence.
d. What allegedly happened at Adams’s apartment in Gastonia
Finally, Defendant contends he was prejudiced by the trial court’s error
because the accomplice witnesses “gave conflicting testimony about what allegedly
happened at the apartment of Angelica Adams in Gastonia.” Defendant makes this
assertion generally but, in arguing prejudice, does not point to specific examples of
“conflicting [witness] testimony” about what transpired at Adams’s apartment. We
find nothing in the relevant witness testimony on this topic that was either material
to a determination of Defendant’s guilt or innocence or involved issues of such
confusion or contradiction that the jury would likely have needed to review the
testimony in order to understand it.
Adams and the four accomplice witnesses testified about what happened while
they were at the apartment, and certain details differed among the witnesses.
Schenck, Edwards, and Thompson all testified that, at some point while they were at
Adams’s apartment, Defendant and the four accomplices went outside and talked.
Schenck and Edwards testified that while they were outside, they discussed possible
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alibis. Thompson testified that they didn’t “talk[] about too much of [anything]” while
outside the apartment. Adams testified that, “[a]s far as [she could] remember,” the
group remained in her apartment for their entire visit and the only person who left
her presence was Defendant, who used a bathroom in the apartment. Roberts
testified that the group was only at the apartment for approximately ten minutes
before Adams drove Schenck, Edwards, and Thompson home; Edwards testified the
group stayed for approximately one hour; and Adams testified the group stayed for
several hours.
Roberts was the only one of the four accomplice witnesses who testified
Defendant used the bathroom at Adams’s apartment. Roberts was also the only
witness to testify that Defendant asked Adams for some cleaning products before
going into the bathroom. Adams testified that Defendant used her bathroom, and
that when she returned home later she found “dirt, [and] black stuff all over [the
bathroom] sink.” Adams and all four accomplice witnesses testified consistently that,
at some point, Adams drove Schenck, Edwards, and Thompson home, leaving Roberts
and Defendant alone together. No witness testified he or she saw Defendant with a
gun while the group was together inside or outside Adams’s apartment. Thus, there
was no “conflicting” witness testimony on any of these issues.
Roberts testified that, after the others left, she and Defendant sat in the Camry
talking for approximately twenty minutes. According to Roberts, she again asked
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Defendant what happened during the attempted robbery, and Defendant replied,
“Sorry, I had to.” Roberts testified that, while they were still sitting in the car, she
saw Defendant wrap a gun in a t-shirt and then go “hide it up under the [apartment]
stairs.” Although Roberts was the only eyewitness to testify about Defendant hiding
a gun at Adams’s apartment after the attempted robbery, Defendant was not
prejudiced by the jury’s lack of opportunity to review that specific testimony.
Roberts’s testimony was corroborated by several investigating officers who
testified at trial. Det. Woosley testified Roberts told investigating officers they might
find the gun at Adams’s apartment on 20 March 2012.3 Det. Woosley testified she
relayed that information to other CCSO officers who then acted upon it. CCSO
Lieutenant Mark Craig (“Lt. Craig”) testified he went to Adams’s apartment on 20
March 2012 “[t]o look for a yellow shirt and a gun . . . [after] receiv[ing] a call from
[his CCSO] captain[.]” CCSO Officer John Kaiser (“Officer Kaiser”) testified he was
with Lt. Craig on 20 March 2012 when Lt. Craig received a call indicating they should
search Adams’s apartment. Officer Kaiser testified they “were looking for a yellow
cloth or [t]-shirt. And the information we had was that there would be a gun inside
this yellow cloth or [t]-shirt. That’s what we were looking for.” Upon arriving at
3 The jury also heard an audio recording of portions of Roberts’s 20 March 2012 interview with
Det. Woosley and CCSO Detective Amy Stroupe. The State offered the recording into evidence as a
prior consistent statement, and the trial court received it “for the purposes [sic] of corroboration and
only for that purpose.”
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Adams’s apartment complex, Lt. Craig immediately “noticed something yellow under
a staircase. And I was there to retrieve something yellow and . . . thought surely it
couldn’t be this easy.” Taken together, these officers’ testimony established that,
based on information received from Roberts, CCSO officers found a gun at Adams’s
apartment wrapped in a yellow t-shirt and placed beneath a staircase, consistent with
Roberts’s eyewitness testimony.
Additionally, Roberts’s testimony about Defendant hiding a gun at Adams’s
apartment was not the only evidence linking Defendant to the crime of attempted
robbery. Cf. Hatfield, 225 N.C. App. at 772, 738 S.E.2d at 241 (“Our Supreme Court
has previously held that a jury is likely to want to review testimony that is the only
evidence directly linking [a] defendant to the alleged crimes.” (citation and internal
quotation marks omitted)). Instead, Roberts’s testimony was the only evidence
linking Defendant to the subsequent possession of a gun possibly used in the robbery
attempt. Both Schenck and Roberts testified they saw Defendant committing the
attempted robbery. Cf. Thompkins, 83 N.C. App. at 46, 348 S.E.2d at 607 (finding
trial court’s failure to exercise its discretion was prejudicial where “[t]he jury
requested a review of the testimony of . . . the only witness to identify defendant as
the perpetrator. Whether the jury fully understood [that witness’s] testimony was
material to the determination of defendant’s guilt or innocence.”) Accordingly, we
cannot conclude Roberts’s testimony about Defendant hiding a gun at the apartment
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complex was “determinative of [Defendant’s] guilt or innocence.” See Long, 196 N.C.
App. at 40, 674 S.E.2d at 707.
Defendant has failed to identify any particular testimony by the accomplice
witnesses which, if reviewed by the jury, suggests “a reasonable possibility . . . [of] a
different result . . . at [Defendant’s] trial[.]” See N.C.G.S. § 15A-1443(a). Accordingly,
we find Defendant received a trial free from prejudicial error.
NO PREJUDICIAL ERROR.
Judges STROUD and INMAN concur.
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