State v. Branche

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 7, 2023
Docket22-768
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Branche (State v. Branche) 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. Branche, (N.C. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. CO22-768

Filed 7 November 2023

Carteret County, No. 18 CRS 53515

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

LEWIS VICTOR BRANCHE, III

Appeal by Defendant from judgment entered 5 April 2022 by Judge Joshua W.

Willey, Jr., in Carteret County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 24

August 2023.

Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Special Deputy Attorney General Robert C. Montgomery, for the State.

Appellate Defender Glenn Gerding, by Assistant Appellate Defender Heidi Reiner, for Defendant.

WOOD, Judge.

Lewis Victor Branche, III (“Defendant”) admitted at trial, through counsel, to

having killed Kristen Bennett (“Bennett”), the mother of his son. A jury convicted

Defendant of first-degree murder based on theories of premeditation and deliberation

as well as lying in wait. Defendant challenges his conviction based on sufficiency of

the evidence. We hold substantial evidence supports his conviction based on

premeditation and deliberation. We further hold the trial court did not err by

admitting numerous gruesome photographs of the body, and the alleged errors STATE V. BRANCHE

Opinion of the Court

contained in the Prosecutor’s closing argument did not prejudice Defendant.

Therefore, we uphold Defendant’s conviction of first-degree murder.

I. Factual and Procedural History

At his trial, Defendant admitted, through counsel, he shot and killed Bennett

on 14 August 2018. At the time of her death, Bennett was twenty-four years old and

lived with Defendant and their five-year old son on Hibbs Road. Bennett worked as

a waitress at a strip club, and Defendant worked at a car dealership. Defendant

routinely carried a nine-millimeter handgun but was not known to carry a .22 pistol.

Bennett’s father, Chuck Bennett (“Chuck”) heard Defendant and Bennett argue about

the fact that Bennett worked at a strip club. Defendant voiced his displeasure about

Bennett’s employment, and Chuck described Defendant as “jealous” about it.

On the day of the murder, Ray Gray, Jr. (“Gray”) had shopped at Food Lion in

Newport and was driving home when he noticed two people fighting in a yard on

Hibbs Road. Gray described the altercation as, “they were scrapping, having a fight.”

Gray decided he should intervene in the altercation, so he turned his car around and

parked in a neighbor’s driveway. Gray got out of his car, “walked towards the two

that were fighting,” and told them to stop. Gray was concerned about whether

Bennett was being assaulted and about two children who were playing in a nearby

sand pile. Gray stated Defendant and Bennett were flailing their arms in the air.

Bennett was advancing on Defendant, and Defendant was backing up and trying to

push Bennett back. Bennett told Gray to “get the F out of here,” and Gray was only

-2- STATE V. BRANCHE

on the scene for approximately two minutes. All of this occurred sometime between

1:30 p.m. and 1:45 p.m.

A different witness, Robert Taylor (“Robert”), had picked up a sandwich during

his lunch break and was returning to work when he noticed a young lady, who was

later identified as Bennett, walking along the side of the road. She appeared to

Robert to be wiping her face. Another witness, Danny Taylor (“Danny”), was driving

down Hibbs Road between 2:00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m. on the day of the murder when he

saw a blue car pulled over on the side of the road as well as a woman resembling

Bennett. Bennett owned a blue Chevrolet. One of the car doors was open and it

looked to Danny like Bennett was getting ready to get into the car.

A camera installed at a church across the street from Defendant’s and

Bennett’s residence captured their residence within its view. The camera captured

the altercation between Defendant and Bennett at 1:40 p.m. as well as Gray pulling

over and attempting to intervene at 1:43-1:44 p.m. Bennett’s car pulled out of the

driveway between 2:35 p.m. and 2:37 p.m. with Defendant and the two children inside

but not Bennett. Bennett’s car returned to the driveway between 2:57 p.m. and 2:58

p.m., and Defendant got out of the car. Finally, at 4:07 p.m., the camera captured

Defendant pulling out of the driveway in his truck. According to Defendant, he was

leaving to return to work.

A few minutes after 4:00 p.m. on the day of the murder, Defendant called

Bennett’s mother, Christy Bennett (“Christy”), who lived with Defendant and

-3- STATE V. BRANCHE

Bennett at their residence on Hibbs Road, to tell her that he and Bennett had been

in an argument and that Bennett threw a bottle of red juice at him which hit Christy’s

mattress and sprayed everywhere. Defendant told her he took the sheets off the

mattress to launder them. Christy found this conversation odd. Two days later,

Christy called 9-1-1 on 16 August 2018 to report Bennett’s disappearance.

After Bennett’s death, Defendant acted as though Bennett were simply missing

by putting up missing persons fliers and telling people she left him. Defendant told

law enforcement he returned home at approximately 2:30 p.m. on the day of the

murder to find Bennett, some of her clothes, and her stripper bag missing. At 5:59

p.m., Defendant texted Bennett, “Hey girl.” Later, he texted Bennett’s father “to see

if [Bennett] had said anything to him.”

On 23 August 2018, behind Defendant’s property, law enforcement found a

very large pile of dead tree limbs piled up as well as fresh dirt and pine straw.

Investigators removed the branches and found an indentation in the ground.

Investigators used a probe to prod the dirt, and they smelled an odor of decomposition

on it. They did not discover a body, but they did find a grave approximately five-foot-

three inches long, thirty-four inches wide, and seventeen inches deep. Soil from this

shallow grave was found to have trace amounts of blood in it.

Defendant was arrested for Bennett’s murder on 4 September 2018. While

incarcerated, Defendant had conversations with an inmate named William Greene

(“Greene”), who agreed to provide information to law enforcement in exchange for a

-4- STATE V. BRANCHE

potential dismissal of his own charges. Greene stated that Defendant told him he

and Bennett had a big argument because he had seen texts on her phone to a number

he did not recognize and had deleted the number from her phone. Bennett then

walked away. Defendant took the kids elsewhere, drove back to pick up Bennett, and

then returned to the house where they continued fighting. Defendant stated that

Bennett threatened to show him videos of her performing fellatio on other people.

Defendant told Greene that after Bennett’s threat “something clicked off in his head

and he just grabbed the gun that was on the counter and shot her in the back of the

head.” Greene told law enforcement Defendant said he had “lost it,” and it was “out

of nowhere.” Defendant told Greene the gun he used to kill Bennett was “for shooting

animals in the yard. . . . any little animal he would go out back, bang bang[.]”

Defendant revealed to Greene he ultimately hid Bennett’s body in a burn pit next to

a doghouse located at Defendant’s grandfather’s house.

On 16 July 2019, acting on the information provided by Greene, investigators

obtained permission from Defendant’s grandfather to dig under the burn pit on his

property.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Branche, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-branche-ncctapp-2023.