State v. Barrow

718 S.E.2d 673, 216 N.C. App. 436, 2011 N.C. App. LEXIS 2291
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 1, 2011
DocketNo. COA10-978
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 718 S.E.2d 673 (State v. Barrow) 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. Barrow, 718 S.E.2d 673, 216 N.C. App. 436, 2011 N.C. App. LEXIS 2291 (N.C. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinions

GEER, Judge.

Defendant Chad Jarrett Barrow appeals from his conviction of second degree murder of his son, Jace. The jury was instructed that it could find defendant guilty of felony murder, second degree murder, or involuntary manslaughter, or it could find defendant not guilty. On appeal, defendant primarily argues that the trial court erred in submitting second degree murder to the jury because, according to defendant, the record does not contain evidence that would allow the jury to find him guilty of second degree murder but not guilty of felony murder. In order, however, for defendant to be guilty of felony murder (based on felonious child abuse), the jury was required to find that defendant used a deadly weapon. Since the State’s evidence would have permitted the jury to find that defendant did not use a deadly weapon but still killed Jace with malice, we hold that the trial court properly instructed the jury on the offense of second degree murder.

Facts

The State’s evidence tended to show the following facts. Jace Barrow was born on 5 March 2007 to Lindsey Kiser and defendant, [438]*438who lived together in Shelby, North Carolina. According to Jace’s pediatric nurse practitioner, Jace was a healthy child and was growing and developing normally.

On 4 July 2007, Ms. Kiser, defendant, and Jace went to Ms. Kiser's family’s lake house to spend the holiday with extended family. While it was defendant’s turn to watch Jace, defendant became agitated and angry. Later, when defendant went to put Jace down for a nap, Ms. Kiser’s cousin, Angela Alexander, went into the house and heard Jace screaming and crying. She saw defendant holding Jace and shaking him vigorously. Ms. Alexander took Jace and calmed him down. Ms. Kiser, who had also heard Jace crying, ran into the room. Defendant told her that when Jace woke up, he was crying, and defendant could not get the baby to calm down or take his bottle. Defendant was very agitated.

During a visit between defendant and Ms. Kiser’s uncle, Keith Blanton, defendant said that caring for Jace was hard and if he could go back and do it over, he would never have had the baby. Defendant told Mr. Blanton, “We’re not ready for it, unprepared for a baby.” Mr. Blanton observed a change in defendant after Jace was born. While, before, defendant had seemed very happy, afterwards, he was very unhappy and agitated.

On 21 August 2007, defendant brought Jace to the house of Ms. Kiser’s aunt, Kay Wallace. Defendant was helping Ms. Wallace’s husband fix an attic fan. Ms. Wallace babysat Jace and took photographs of him. The photographs did not show any bruising on Jace’s face. Towards the end of the day, Ms. Kiser’s best friend, Ashley Pruitt, dropped by defendant and Ms. Kiser’s house to visit, arriving before Ms. Kiser had gotten home from work. Immediately after Ms. Pruitt got there, defendant told her to “look what Jace did to his eye. He must have hit himself with a toy.” Jace had bruises on his eye and nose and seemed lethargic and fussy.

On 22 August 2007, when Ms. Kiser went to work, she left Jace in defendant’s care. Jace was happy, responsive, and in his swing as she left the house. Later that day, Officer Julius Littlejohn of the Shelby Police Department responded to a 911 call about an infant who was unable to breathe. When he arrived at defendant’s home, he found defendant holding Jace, asking where EMS was. Officer Littlejohn described defendant as agitated and upset, and Officer Littlejohn took Jace from defendant. Initially, Jace’s breathing was very weak, and then his breathing seemed to stop. Officer Littlejohn observed a [439]*439bruise under Jace’s left eye and possibly bruises on Jace’s nose and forehead. The officer performed rescue breathing until EMS arrived.

Paramedic Kenneth Dale Childers arrived at defendant’s house at 12:21 p.m. He observed that Jace was cyanotic and only breathing two or three times per minute, which is not enough to sustain life— infants typically breathe 30 to 40 times per minute.' Mr. Childers moved Jace into the ambulance and began giving him artificial respiration. Mr. Childers observed that Jace had a bruise over his left eye and across the bridge of his nose as well as an abrasion on the left side of his head above the ear with some swelling. Mr. Childers also observed that Jace had decerebrate posture, meaning that his extremities were posturing inward towards his body and his muscles were tight and flexed. Mr. Childers testified at trial that decerebrate posturing is usually a sign of a head injury.

Defendant told Mr. Childers that he found Jace slumped over in the swing when defendant got up from a nap. Later, Officer Barbie Ledford arrived to assist. She observed bruising around Jace’s eye, across the bridge of his nose, on the left side of his forehead, by his ear, on the left side of his neck, and on the side of his rib cage. She asked defendant what had happened. Defendant told her that he had placed Jace in the swing, had turned on cartoons, and had then gone outside to smoke a cigarette. Defendant said that when he came back inside, Jace was slumped over and not breathing. Defendant could not explain the bruising, but said he thought it was from Jace sleeping on his hand.

In the emergency room, Dr. Joseph Mullen ordered a CT scan after observing the bruises on Jace’s face. The CT scan showed intracranial bleeding, and Dr. Mullen had Jace transferred by helicopter to Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte. Defendant told Dr. Mullen that he found Jace slumped over after he returned from smoking a cigarette outside.

Dr. Michael Brian Wilson treated Jace at the pediatric critical care unit of Levine Children’s Hospital in Charlotte. At that point, Jace was not making any purposeful movements, and another CT scan showed signs of brain swelling. Despite efforts to relieve the pressure, Jace’s condition continued to deteriorate. By the early morning of 23 August 2007, one of his pupils had become fixed and dilated, and another CT scan showed that Jace’s brain had herniated, which Dr. Wilson described as “not an injury that you can recover from.”

[440]*440Dr. Wilson concluded that Jace’s bilateral subdural bleeding and a retinal hemorrhage in Jace’s right eye indicated he suffered significant trauma. According to Dr. Wilson, “[t]here has to be either a . . . blunt force injury[] or ... an extremely forceful shaking injury to produce bleeding in the back of the eye.” Dr. Wilson explained that because a five-month-old’s brain and blood vessels are still forming, “[i]f a child is shaken forcefully, the brain slushes back and forth inside the head, and that can produce bleeding” by breaking the “blood vessels that come out of the brain and into the skull” and causing “bleeding at the back of the eye.” Dr. Wilson believed that the bruises on Jace’s face had occurred within 24 to 48 hours and that whatever trauma caused the bruising could also have caused the injury to Jace’s brain.

Defendant was indicted for first degree murder of Jace. A separate indictment alleged two aggravating factors: that, at the time of the killing, (1) the victim was very young and physically infirm, and (2) defendant took advantage of a position of trust to commit the offense.

At trial, the State presented expert testimony that Jace suffered two acute subdural hematomas, cerebral edema, retinal hemorrhages, and bruises and abrasions on his head. Dr. Christopher Gulledge, of the Mecklenburg County Medical Examiner’s office, found that the cause of Jace’s death was abusive head trauma.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
718 S.E.2d 673, 216 N.C. App. 436, 2011 N.C. App. LEXIS 2291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-barrow-ncctapp-2011.