State v. Alford

453 S.E.2d 512, 339 N.C. 562, 1995 N.C. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 10, 1995
Docket365A93
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 453 S.E.2d 512 (State v. Alford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Alford, 453 S.E.2d 512, 339 N.C. 562, 1995 N.C. LEXIS 25 (N.C. 1995).

Opinion

PARKER, Justice.

Defendant was tried noncapitally on an indictment charging him with the first-degree murder of Joey Addison (“victim”). The jury *566 returned a verdict finding defendant guilty of first-degree murder upon the theories of (i) premeditation and deliberation and (ii) felony murder. Defendant was sentenced to life imprisonment. For the reasons discussed herein, we conclude that defendant’s trial was free of prejudicial error and uphold his conviction and sentence.

The State’s evidence tended to show that on the afternoon of 27 September 1992 the victim went to his mother’s house to return a lawn mower and traded his smaller car for her larger 1980 Oldsmobile. Gregory Dixon, the victim’s cousin, who was visiting from Washington, D.C., testified that the victim picked him up that afternoon after leaving his mother’s house and the two returned to the victim’s residence in Rowland, North Carolina. Jeffrey Rowdy and Gerard Bennett came over to the victim’s house around 9:00 p.m. and played cards with the victim, Dixon, and some other friends. One of the men, Eugene, had firecrackers in his pockets. Around 11:00 p.m. the victim, Dixon, Rowdy, and Bennett left in the 1980 Oldsmobile and went to a local pool hall where they stayed for approximately forty-five minutes. After leaving the pool hall, the men went to the store and purchased several six-packs of beer. The men drove to the Soul Train Lounge near Fairmont and sat in the parking lot for about thirty-five minutes, drinking their beer and talking to other friends, including Reginald and Tony Roberts. During this time, the victim drank approximately a six-pack of beer. State’s evidence tended to show that neither the victim nor any of his friends were armed with any weapons that night, either in the parking lot or inside the Soul Train Lounge.

After finishing their beer, the victim and his friends went into the lounge. A fight broke out between some men from Rowland and some men from Fairmont, and the manager of the bar made everyone go outside. The State’s evidence tended to show that neither the victim nor his friends from Rowland were involved in the fight or in any other altercations at the Soul Train Lounge the night of 27 September 1992.

Approximately twenty minutes later the manager began to let people back into the lounge. The victim talked to the manager of the bar and told him that neither he nor his friends had been involved in the fight inside the lounge, and the manager let them reenter the bar. Another fight soon broke out. At that point the manager closed the bar for the night and made everyone leave. The State’s evidence tended to show that neither the victim nor any of his friends were involved in this second altercation.

*567 After the Soul Train Lounge was closed for a second time, the victim stood under a tree in the parking lot, talking with several friends. Firecrackers were set off in another part of the parking lot by someone, possibly by the victim’s friend Eugene. The State’s evidence tended to show that several shots were fired while the victim was standing in the parking lot, and the victim and his friends ran to his mother’s car. The victim got into the driver’s seat, Dixon got into the front passenger seat, and Rowdy and Bennett got into the backseat.

Rowdy, who was sitting directly behind the victim, testified that after the men got into the car, he heard a shot fired from his left and saw the victim slump over. Dixon testified that the victim grabbed Dixon’s leg. Dixon opened his door and saw that his cousin had been shot and had blood running down' his shirt. Dixon, Rowdy, and Bennett grabbed the victim and put him in the backseat of the car. At this time, the men saw a man with a rifle run in front of the car; the man was cursing at them and calling them names. He got into a car that pulled up in front of the victim’s car and then drove away.

After placing the victim in the backseat of the car, Dixon, Rowdy, and Bennett rushed to the hospital, racing through the streets at a speed of eighty-five to ninety miles per hour. They passed a police officer, who chased the car until it ran off the road into a fire hydrant. The crash caused the victim’s body to fall on the floor in the backseat of the car. The police officers ordered the men out of the car, and when the officers noticed the victim’s body on the floor in the back, they called the rescue squad to attend to the victim.

The victim’s body was transported to Southeastern General Hospital for an autopsy. Dr. Bob Andrews, a board-certified pathologist, performed the autopsy and determined that the victim died as a result of a gunshot wound to the left side of the head, just below the left ear. Andrews described the wound as being from left to right, in a straight horizontal direction, entering the head at a ninety-degree angle and passing through both hemispheres and main lobes of the brain. The autopsy revealed no evidence of any injuries to the victim’s body caused by the car crash. At the time of his death, the victim’s blood alcohol level was 30 milligrams per deciliter, the equivalent of .03 on a breathalyzer.

Officer Stewart McPhatter, an identification officer for the Robeson County Sheriff’s Department, testified that he arrived on the scene shortly after the crash and observed the victim’s body in the *568 backseat of the car. He searched the vehicle but did not find evidence of any weapons or ballistics inside the car.

Johnnie Leonard testified that on the night of 27 September 1992 he was at the Soul Train Lounge, where he saw both defendant and the victim. After the Soul Train Lounge was closed for the second time, he went to the parking lot. He saw his cousin, Jamie Jones, take a .22 rifle from the trunk of a red Monte Carlo and hand it to defendant, who loaded it. Leonard testified that he heard one shot fired and that he grabbed his own .38-caliber handgun and shot it into the air two times after he heard the first shot fired. Then he got into a burgundy Chevrolet Celebrity, driven by his friend Isaac Smith.

Tony Roberts testified that he saw defendant approach the victim’s car, walk away several car lengths, lean on a car for leverage, and fire towards the victim’s car. He saw defendant get into a car that had pulled up in front of the victim’s car and blocked it. Defendant was laughing and calling the occupants of the victim’s vehicle names.

Johnnie Leonard further testified that he and Isaac Smith picked up defendant and Jamie Jones in the burgundy Celebrity after the shooting. Leonard testified that defendant still had the rifle in his hands and that when he got into Smith’s car, defendant told the other occupants that he had just “shot a m--f-in the neck.” Leonard testified that since Jones did not want to walk with the rifle, he asked Leonard to hold the rifle for him and said that he would return for it later. Leonard consented and took the gun home. The next morning, after hearing that the victim was dead, Leonard told his father what had happened and turned the loaded rifle over to Detective Ricky Britt and Sheriff Bullard.

Defendant presented no evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
453 S.E.2d 512, 339 N.C. 562, 1995 N.C. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-alford-nc-1995.