State v. Broadway

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 1, 2026
Docket25-1159
StatusPublished
AuthorJudge Allegra Collins

This text of State v. Broadway (State v. Broadway) 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. Broadway, (N.C. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA25-1159

Filed 1 July 2026

Mecklenburg County, Nos. 20CR243256-590, 20CR243257-590

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

BARRY BOYD BROADWAY

Appeal by Defendant from judgment entered 16 May 2025 by Judge Peter

Knight in Mecklenburg County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 3 June

2026.

Attorney General Jeff Jackson, by Assistant Attorney General J. Blake Norman, for the State-Appellee.

Appellate Defender Glenn Gerding, by Assistant Appellate Defender Kathryn L. VandenBerg, for Defendant-Appellant.

COLLINS, Judge.

Defendant Barry Boyd Broadway appeals from judgment entered upon guilty

verdicts of attempted first degree murder, assault with a deadly weapon with intent

to kill inflicting serious injury (AWDWIKISI), assault inflicting serious bodily injury

(AISBI), and assault inflicting serious injury by strangulation. Defendant argues

that the trial court erred by failing to intervene ex mero motu during the State’s

closing argument, failing to instruct on the lesser-included offense of assault

inflicting serious injury on the AWDWIKISI charge, and sentencing Defendant for STATE V. BROADWAY

Opinion of the Court

both AWDWIKISI and AISBI for the same conduct where those convictions merge

under the double jeopardy clause. The trial court did not err by failing to intervene

ex mero motu during the State’s closing arguments nor by not instructing the jury on

assault inflicting serious injury. We arrest judgment on Defendant’s conviction for

assault inflicting serious bodily injury and remand for resentencing.

I. Background

The evidence at trial tended to show the following:

Defendant and Shayla Prioleau began dating in 2019 and had been living

together in Prioleau’s Charlotte townhouse for approximately one month. On the

evening of 29 December 2020, an argument arose when, before she went to bed,

Prioleau reminded Defendant to take out the trash. Defendant became angry; he

went into the bathroom and slammed the door behind him. Prioleau got out of bed,

naked and unarmed, and knocked on the bathroom door to check on him. Defendant

opened the door and grabbed Prioleau’s neck. Prioleau attempted to fight him off,

telling him that he was going to kill her. Defendant continued strangling her until

she lost consciousness. Prioleau did not remember being struck or seeing a gun

during the assault.

Prioleau awoke covered in blood to Defendant holding her while reciting the

Lord’s Prayer. She got up, put on a bathrobe, and left the townhouse. Defendant did

not attempt to stop her from leaving. She drove to her mother’s home where she

called for help upon entering and then collapsed. Emergency services responded and

-2- STATE V. BROADWAY

transported her to the hospital.

Medical examination revealed that Prioleau suffered a comminuted fracture of

her zygoma, or cheekbone, requiring reconstructive surgery to install permanent

titanium plates in her face. She had multiple lacerations on her face and head

requiring staples and stitches, extensive facial swelling and bruising, and bilateral

carotid artery dissections which put her at risk of stroke and brain damage. A

forensic nurse examiner interviewed, examined, and photographed Prioleau at the

hospital.

The following day, Prioleau’s mother and brother confronted Defendant after

he refused to speak to the police the night before. In a video of the interaction

recorded by Prioleau’s mother, Defendant admits to strangling Prioleau three times

and describes waiting for her to start breathing before strangling her again.

Law enforcement arrested Defendant on 31 December 2020 and searched

Prioleau’s townhouse. They found blood throughout the bathroom, a rifle against the

bathroom wall with blood on it, bloody clothing, and two unfired cartridges – one on

the bathroom floor and one in another upstairs bedroom.

During closing argument, the prosecutor set a timer and held her breath to

show the time it generally takes for “respiration to cease” during strangulation. The

prosecutor also asserted that Defendant left the bathroom to retrieve his rifle and

then beat Prioleau while she was unconscious. Defense counsel did not make any

objections during the State’s closing argument.

-3- STATE V. BROADWAY

During the charge conference, defense counsel requested an instruction on

assault inflicting serious injury as a lesser-included offense for both AWDWIKISI and

AISBI. The trial court gave the lesser-included offense instruction only for AISBI.

Defendant was convicted for attempted first degree murder, AWDWIKISI,

AISBI, and assault inflicting serious injury by strangulation. The trial court arrested

judgment on assault inflicting serious injury by strangulation and sentenced

Defendant to consecutive terms of 157 to 201 months’ imprisonment for attempted

first degree murder, 73 to 100 months’ imprisonment for AWDWIKISI, and 16 to 29

months’ imprisonment for AISBI.

Defendant timely appealed.

II. Discussion

A. State’s Motion to Supplement the Record

We first address the State’s motion made pursuant to North Carolina Rule of

Appellate Procedure 9(b)(5) seeking to alter the certified trial transcript’s description

of a courtroom demonstration that occurred during the State’s closing argument.

A transcript designated to be used on appeal must “be settled, together with

the other components of the record on appeal, according to the procedures established

in Rule 11.” N.C. R. App. P. 9(c)(3)(a). Pursuant to Rule 11, “[w]ithin thirty days . .

. after service upon appellee of appellant’s proposed record on appeal, that appellee

may serve upon all other parties specific amendments or objections to the proposed

record on appeal[.]” Id. at 11(c). “Amendments or objections to the proposed record

-4- STATE V. BROADWAY

on appeal shall be set out in a separate document and shall specify any item(s) for

which an objection is based on the contention that . . . the content of a statement or

narration is factually inaccurate.” Id.

Rule 9(b)(5) allows this Court, on the motion of a party, to supplement the

record with “any items that could otherwise have been included pursuant to Rule 9”

“[i]f the record on appeal as settled is insufficient to respond to the issues presented

in an appellant’s brief[.]” Id. at 9(b)(5)(a). Neither Rule 9 nor 11 allows a party to

submit an affidavit contradicting the content of the certified transcript. To the

contrary, Rule 11(c) requires that any objection to the contents of the proposed record

– including objections asserting that “the content of a statement or narration is

factually inaccurate” – must be made before the record is settled, and must be

presented to the trial court, which is charged with settling the record when the

parties disagree. Id. at 11(c).

Here, the transcript was served on both parties; the proposed record,

designating the complete transcript and listing errors in closing argument as a

proposed issue on appeal, was served on the State on 29 October 2025; and the record

was settled by operation of law on 1 December 2025. The designated transcript

describes the prosecutor’s closing argument demonstration as follows:

([Prosecutor] setting a timer on her phone.)

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State v. Broadway, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-broadway-ncctapp-2026.