State v. Barber

463 S.E.2d 405, 120 N.C. App. 505, 1995 N.C. App. LEXIS 922
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 7, 1995
DocketNo. COA94-872
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 463 S.E.2d 405 (State v. Barber) 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
State v. Barber, 463 S.E.2d 405, 120 N.C. App. 505, 1995 N.C. App. LEXIS 922 (N.C. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

McGEE, Judge.

Defendant, Calvin Wayne Barber, was indicted on 19 April 1993 on four counts of first degree sexual offense, one count of first degree rape, and one count of first degree kidnapping. The cases were joined for trial and were heard before a jury at the 7 March 1994 Criminal Session of Cumberland County Superior Court with Judge B. Craig Ellis presiding. Defendant was convicted of one count of first degree rape, four counts of first degree sexual offense and one count of first degree kidnapping. Judge Ellis vacated the conviction for first degree kidnapping and entered conviction for second degree kidnapping. Defendant was sentenced to three consecutive terms of life in prison. From these judgments, defendant appeals.

The State’s evidence tended to show the following. The victim was an eighteen-year-old high school senior. On the evening of 4 March 1993 at approximately 10:30 p.m., she had finished work at a Cumberland County bingo parlor and was waiting at a nearby restaurant for her mother to pick her up. Initially, the victim stood in front of the bingo parlor, but a security guard instructed her to wait in front of a nearby restaurant because he felt it would be safer.

As the victim waited for her mother, defendant approached her and engaged her in conversation. The victim described defendant as a very dirty, heavy-set man in need of a shave who had long, greasy, curly hair. Defendant grabbed her hair, jerked her head back, stuck a knife to her neck, and pinned her arms up against the wall. He led her to a dumpster at the side of the building where she thought he was going to take her pocketbook. Defendant said that was not what he wanted and led her into a wooded area and made her sit down. Defendant kept trying to touch her and asked if she had ever been raped by her father.

Defendant told the victim to take off her glove and he laid his knife in her hand. Defendant said something about wanting her to trust him. On his knees in front of her, defendant searched her purse [507]*507and asked her questions. The victim did not put her glove back on after defendant took back his knife. Defendant threatened to slice her throat and leave her in the woods where no one would find her. The victim told defendant she did not want to die.

Defendant took the victim towards a trailer park, holding her with his left hand and keeping the knife in his right hand. The victim was scared and told defendant that she wanted to go home. As they walked past the trailer park, she saw two men walk by, but defendant told her not to call out. About fifteen minutes after leaving the wooded area, they arrived at a green-colored duplex later identified as defendant’s residence. Defendant locked the door behind them, reminding the victim he still had the knife and that he would use it. Defendant led her to his bedroom and told her to undress and get on the bed. The victim told defendant that she “didn’t want to do nothing” and “wanted to go home,” but defendant threatened to get the knife. Defendant took off his clothes. He put his fingers inside the victim’s vagina. She was crying and defendant repeatedly told her to shut up. Defendant inserted his tongue into her vagina and then forced the victim to perform oral sex on him. Defendant raped the victim. She felt a sharp pain when it seemed defendant attempted to put his penis in her rectum. Later the victim got up and went to the bathroom. When she returned, defendant grabbed her and forced her to have oral sex again. Later the victim saw defendant’s eyes were closed and believing he might have passed out, she waited in the bed for fifteen minutes. When he did not move, she dressed, left the house and went down the street to a store and called her mother.

Cross-examination revealed minor inconsistencies between the victim’s testimony and her statements to various people that evening. The victim’s mother testified that when she arrived to pick up her daughter after work, she did not see her and could not find her anywhere. She called the police and reported her daughter missing, then returned home to wait by the phone. About two and one-half hours later, her daughter called, screaming “Mama, please come and get me. Mama, he’s hurt me. Please.” The mother called the police and told them her daughter had called from a convenience store near where she worked, and the mother went there immediately. She found her daughter on the ground, in a fetal position, surrounded by law enforcement officials. She testified she had never seen her daughter so upset before. The victim was transported by ambulance to the Cape Fear Hospital emergency room.

[508]*508Sergeant Terri Putnam of the Cumberland County Sheriff’s Department Sex Crimes Unit testified she was dispatched to the store where the victim was located and was briefed at the scene. She drove around the area and then went to the hospital to interview the victim. Sergeant Putnam found the victim in an examination room crying. She explained to the victim that it was important to understand what had happened, and she then conducted a “substance of oral interview” which does not involve taking a person’s statement word-for-word but involves listening for key comments. Sergeant Putnam did not deem a word-for-word statement necessary because the incident was a recent one and identifying the perpetrator and obtaining fresh untainted evidence were her key concerns.

Sergeant Putnam took the victim back to the neighborhood where the crimes occurred and she identified the residence where she was raped. Sergeant Putnam returned the victim to her parents and drew up a search warrant, listing personal items the victim had been wearing that evening. During the search of the house, a water bill, power bill, and a social security card, all in defendant’s name, were found. None of the victim’s personal items were found. Sergeant Putnam searched the woods for the victim’s glove but it was not located.

After defendant was arrested, he made two separate statements to Sergeant Putnam. First, he stated that he met a girl, with the same name as the victim, on the street who agreed to perform sexual acts with him for fifty dollars. They went to his home and performed those acts. However, he refused to pay her because she was “lousy.” In his second statement he said he made no attempt to remove or hide anything from his residence and that the knife he had was used as a tool, not as a weapon.

Detective Nancy Cressler of the Cumberland County Sheriff’s Department testified she assisted Sergeant Putnam in the search of defendant’s residence and in the search for the missing glove. When she arrested defendant, she found a knife in the pocket of defendant’s trousers which the victim identified as the knife defendant used on her.

Dr. Darryl Simpkins was the emergency room physician on duty at the hospital on 5 March 1993 when the victim arrived. Because she was brought in with a complaint of sexual assault, Dr. Simpkins performed an examination, and he observed a tearing of the skin near the victim’s rectum. Dr. Simpkins testified it takes tremendous force to tear the skin similar to the tear he observed on the victim’s body. He [509]*509stated the tear could have been caused by an attempted penile insertion. Defendant presented no evidence.

I.

Defendant argues he is entitled to a new trial because before defendant decided to testify, the trial court impermissibly chilled his right to testify on his own behalf when it declined to rule on his motion in limine

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Manning
534 S.E.2d 219 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
463 S.E.2d 405, 120 N.C. App. 505, 1995 N.C. App. LEXIS 922, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-barber-ncctapp-1995.