State v. Berry

573 S.E.2d 132, 356 N.C. 490, 2002 N.C. LEXIS 1264
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 20, 2002
Docket389A01
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 573 S.E.2d 132 (State v. Berry) 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. Berry, 573 S.E.2d 132, 356 N.C. 490, 2002 N.C. LEXIS 1264 (N.C. 2002).

Opinion

EDMUNDS, Justice.

Defendant Kyle Berry was indicted for the first-degree murder of Margaret Theresa Fetter. He was convicted on the basis of premeditation and deliberation and sentenced to death.

The State presented evidence that Timothy Ratliff was eating at a McDonald’s restaurant in Wilmington on 5 November 1998. He was approached by Bobby Autry, who asked for a cigarette. Autry, accompanied by Theresa Fetter, the victim, later returned to Ratliff and asked Ratliff to rent a motel room for him. They all drove to a Motel Six on Market Street, where Fetter provided funds to Ratliff. Ratliff entered the motel, rented a room, and gave the receipt to Fetter.

Later that same day, Erwin Hegwer received a telephone call from his step-grandson, Jon Malonee. In response to the call, Hegwer drove to the Motel Six, where he picked up Malonee, defendant, Autry, Josh Whitney, and Fetter. He dropped them off at the parking lot of the Food Lion grocery store at Seventeenth Street and South College Road in Wilmington. Malonee later called Hegwer again about 1:30 a.m. on 6 November 1998. Hegwer drove to New Hanover Regional Hospital, where he picked up Malonee, defendant, and Autry and took them back to the Motel Six. When he asked where “the girl” was, he was told that Whitney had driven her home.

Defendant and the others were at the hospital because defendant’s hand had been lacerated. Emergency medical technicians (EMTs) had responded to the Food Lion parking lot at approximately 12:30 a.m. Defendant left a group of people, approached the EMT vehicle, and displayed the cut. A Wilmington police officer who had also responded asked defendant about the injury. Defendant reported that he had fallen behind the Food Lion while walking home from a friend’s house. He could neither name the friend nor describe where the house was, and the officer was unable to find any glass or other material that might have caused the injury. The EMTs bandaged defendant’s hand and transported him to the hospital, where he was examined by Dr. Thomas E. Parent, an orthopedic surgeon who specializes in hand surgery. Dr. Parent later operated on defendant’s hand on 11 November 1998. It was Dr. Parent’s opinion as an expert *495 in the field of orthopedic treatment and surgery that defendant’s injury did not result from a fall, but was consistent with defendant having been cut by a knife.

Fetter’s body was found on 24 November 1998. At that time, Autry was incarcerated in the New Hanover County jail. Autry had spoken with Wrightsville Beach Police Officer Hovie Pope on 23 November 1998, and as a result of the conversation, Pope checked Autry out of jail the next day. They drove to an area near Seventeenth Street and South College Road, where they walked down a trail into a wooded lot and observed a badly decomposed corpse. The body was near the SPEC day care center, not far from the Food Lion on Seventeenth Street and South College Road. Being unsure which agency had jurisdiction, Officer Pope called investigators from both the New Hanover Sheriff’s Department and the Wilmington Police Department. When the investigators arrived, Officer Pope showed them pieces of pipe and a knife, all of which he had observed at the scene. Wilmington Police Detective Thomas Witkowski recovered a twenty-four-inch piece of pipe near the body and a forty-eight-inch piece of pipe at the back of a nearby parking area. He also discovered a folding knife with a red handle. SBI Agent Dennis Honeycutt sprayed the area with luminol, a chemical that reacts to blood, and saw indications of a blood trail near the point where the victim’s body was found.

In a pocket of Fetter’s pants, investigators found a receipt from the Motel Six dated 5-6 November 1998, in the name of Timothy Ratliff. The autopsy of Fetter’s body was conducted by Dr. John Butts, who noted two cutting injuries to the left forehead. He also observed broken bones around the left eye and two breaks in the left jaw, which he characterized as blunt-force injuries. Indentations in the left rear of the victim’s skull indicated to him that she had been twice struck with a sharp object. In addition, he observed injuries to the victim’s hands, which he characterized as defensive wounds suffered as she tried to ward off blows. The victim’s lungs showed signs of infection or pneumonia, indicating that the head injuries had not killed her outright. Dr. Butts’ expert opinion was that she died as a result of blunt-force injuries.

Defendant made a number of statements to others about the murder. In so doing, he explained that he killed Fetter to keep her from talking about a murder he had previously committed on 17 or 18 September 1998. During a conversation with his friend David Surles, defendant said he had seen a woman, later determined to be Lisa *496 Maves, while at the beach. He related that the woman was upset, so he talked with her and had sex with her. Defendant then said that the woman afterwards was “freaking out,” so he stabbed her in the head with a bottle. Defendant told Surles that Fetter knew about this earlier killing of Lisa Maves and that he slit Fetter’s throat to keep her from telling about it. Defendant stated that he had dumped Fetter’s body behind the SPEC building. In his court testimony about this conversation, Surles added that defendant’s nickname, “Crazy K,” came from “gang members and stuff.”

Marvin Harper testified that while he was in the New Hanover County jail, he heard defendant and Josh Whitley talking about the killing of a young girl who was found on Highway 132. Harper also heard defendant say that he killed the girl found on Highway 132 because he knew she would testify against him about the girl on the beach.

Paul Venth testified that he had shared a jail cell with defendant in August and September 1999. Defendant told Venth about an incident when he and Jon Malonee were with a woman on the beach. When the woman became angry, defendant said he stabbed her in the side of the head, and the knife became stuck. He added that stabbing someone in the head was quick, efficient, and silent, and that the killing had made him feel good. Defendant related that he and Malonee put her body in the water but the tide washed it ashore. Defendant also stated that he killed Fetter to keep her from talking about the earlier murder and about other crimes of his with which she was familiar. Defendant said Fetter was led into the woods where Bobby Autry hit her first with a metal bar. When defendant tried to stab her, his folding knife closed over his fingers and cut his hand so badly that he had to go to the hospital. Defendant added that when he and others returned to the scene the next day, Fetter had apparently crawled a short distance, so they moved the body back and covered it with leaves.

Rachael Williams testified that she had been Fetter’s friend. In October 1998, Fetter told Williams that she knew that Jon Malonee and defendant were involved in a murder at Wrightsville Beach and feared that they were going to try to kill her.

The State provided evidence to corroborate defendant’s admissions that he had participated in the murder of Lisa Maves. Dr. John Almeida, an expert in forensic pathology, conducted the autopsy. He testified that Maves had two stab wounds to the *497 head, one of which had penetrated the brain. He also found symptoms of other blunt-trauma wounds to the head.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
573 S.E.2d 132, 356 N.C. 490, 2002 N.C. LEXIS 1264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-berry-nc-2002.