In re R.B.L.

776 S.E.2d 363
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 21, 2015
DocketNo. COA14–1043.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 776 S.E.2d 363 (In re R.B.L.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re R.B.L., 776 S.E.2d 363 (N.C. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Judge.

I. Factual Background and Procedural History

On 17 December 2012, Western Alamance High School Assistant Principal David Nebrig received an anonymous tip that a hand-to-hand drug transaction had occurred during lunch in a student bathroom. Together with Principal Todd Stephans, Assistant Principal Nebrig investigated this tip by interviewing a student named Chad, who explained that he and several other students had been in the bathroom during lunch when a student named Richard approached them and displayed a small tin container that was half filled with marijuana.1 Based on this information, Principal Stephans decided to speak with Richard, whom he subsequently escorted to the front office with assistance from School Resource Officer ("SRO") Josh Hayes of the Alamance County Sheriff's Office.

Upon reaching the front office, Principal Stephans led Richard to a separate, unoccupied office that measured between 8 by 10 and 10 by 13 feet in area. Inside, Assistant Principal Nebrig sat behind a desk while Principal Stephans and SRO Hayes stood off to his side and Richard sat in a chair beside the door, which was closed but not locked. SRO Hayes entered and exited the room several times during the ensuing 10- to 25-minute interview of Richard. Principal Stephans and Assistant Principal Nebrig took the lead in questioning Richard about what had happened in the bathroom during lunch. Although Richard initially denied any wrongdoing, he quickly admitted to possessing marijuana, then reached into his backpack and handed over a tin containing marijuana and nine dollars that he said he received from two of his classmates for selling marijuana to them in five-dollar increments. SRO Hayes took possession of both the money and the marijuana, which he weighed at approximately 1.7 grams and then locked in his vehicle until he could enter it into evidence at the Sheriff's Office. At the end of the questioning, Richard was allowed to call his stepfather and was subsequently suspended from school.

On 10 January 2013, SRO Hayes filed juvenile petitions in Alamance County District Court against Richard for one count of possessing a controlled substance with intent to sell or deliver, namely 1.7 grams of marijuana, and one count of selling or delivering a controlled substance. On 3 May 2013, the State dismissed the petition for selling or delivering a controlled substance, and an adjudication hearing was conducted on the remaining charge during the 11 July 2013 session of Alamance County District Court.

At the outset of the hearing, Chad testified that on 17 December 2012, Richard approached him in the bathroom during lunch and showed him a small tin container containing a substance that Chad recognized by sight and smell as marijuana. Toward the end of Chad's testimony, during a break in the proceeding, the district court judge paused to inform Richard of his rights under section 7B-2405 of our General Statutes to confront and cross-examine witnesses as well as his privilege against self-incrimination. Richard responded that he understood his rights, and the hearing continued.

Shortly thereafter, Richard's counsel argued that Richard's 17 December 2012 statement was the product of a custodial interrogation and should therefore be suppressed due to the fact Richard was never given Mirandawarnings. In order to evaluate this argument, the court received voir diretestimony from Principal Stephans, Assistant Principal Nebrig, SRO Hayes, and Richard himself.

Principal Stephans acknowledged that Richard was never informed that he had the right to remain silent, but also testified that Richard was never handcuffed or otherwise physically restrained and the door to the office was never locked. While he admitted that Richard would have been subject to discipline if he had refused to accompany him to the office or declined to answer questions there based on the school's student handbook, Principal Stephans testified that none of the adults present threatened Richard with any adverse consequences that might ensue if he refused to cooperate, that the tone of the questioning was calm and conversational, and that he and Assistant Principal Nebrig did not have to do much prying with their questions because Richard was very honest and forthcoming. According to Principal Stephans, although the school is required to report drug-related offenses to the police and SRO Hayes is routinely asked to observe related questioning, nearly all the questions Richard was asked on 17 December 2012 came from school administrators and focused on "gather[ing] information" about potential violations of school rules, rather than "worry[ing] about what criminal act occurred, and whether law enforcement need[ed] to be involved quite yet."

Assistant Principal Nebrig's voir diretestimony largely corroborated that of Principal Stephans. Specifically, he testified that he and Principal Stephans took the lead in questioning Richard and only looked to SRO Hayes for clarification, and that although he remembered SRO Hayes asking at least one question, SRO Hayes did not tell either him or Principal Stephans what questions to ask.

SRO Hayes testified on voir direthat he helped escort Richard to the office by following at a distance of 15-20 feet behind him as he walked there, but that he never restrained Richard in any way. SRO Hayes testified further that although he was present while Principal Stephans and Assistant Principal Nebrig questioned Richard, he "let[ ] them run their school investigation" and the only question he asked during the interview came toward the end, when Richard asked him whether he was going to jail. After replying in the negative, SRO Hayes inquired how many more transactions Richard could have made with the amount of marijuana that was left in the tin, to which Richard answered "three."

Richard testified during the voir direhearing that he was almost 15 and a half years old on 17 December 2012, that he went to the office voluntarily after he heard his name called on the school's intercom, and that SRO Hayes followed him to the office at a distance of approximately 20 feet. When Richard reached the office, Principal Stephans was standing in the hallway and told him to go inside. Richard did so and sat down. Principal Stephans then entered followed by Assistant Principal Nebrig who was holding Richard's book bag. SRO Hayes entered last. Richard testified that:

Then they, then Mr. Nebrig asked (inaudible) me [a] question, what happened in the bathroom today? And I was like, I don't know what you're talking about. And then Mr. Nebrig was like [Richard] you have good character, we're not dumb, you're not dumb, just be honest and tell us what happened. That's when I pulled out-that's when (inaudible) my book bag was right there on the desk, [so I] pulled out the can of marijuana and lay it on the desk.

Richard later explained that his decision to admit to possessing and selling the marijuana was motivated by "just like honesty, like, the truth will set you free, so I was just like confessed and told them, like, pulled out the marijuana tin and (inaudible) there it is." Richard testified further that he did not feel free to leave the office, but admitted on cross-examination that he was never told that he could not leave or physically prevented from doing so, and that although he did not know whether the door was locked, he believed he could have walked out if he had wanted to.

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Bluebook (online)
776 S.E.2d 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rbl-ncctapp-2015.