State v. Cesnik

795 S.E.2d 654, 2017 WL 490486, 2017 N.C. App. LEXIS 71
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 7, 2017
DocketNo. COA 16-590
StatusPublished

This text of 795 S.E.2d 654 (State v. Cesnik) 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. Cesnik, 795 S.E.2d 654, 2017 WL 490486, 2017 N.C. App. LEXIS 71 (N.C. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

HUNTER, JR, Robert, N., Judge.

Wesley Cesnik ("Defendant") petitions this Court for review of his convictions for one count of conspiracy to sell diazepam, and one count of possession with intent to sell or deliver diazepam. We grant Defendant's petition and affirm the judgment of the trial court.

I. Facts and Background

On 5 May 2015, a Wake County grand jury indicted Defendant on one count of conspiracy to sell diazepam and one count of possession with intent to sell or deliver diazepam. The case came for trial in Wake County Superior Court on 2 November 2015. The evidence tended to show the following.

Captain Orlando Soto ("Soto") of the Rolesville Police Department testified first for the State. On 20 May 2014, Soto received a report that two female bartenders at a Knightdale restaurant sold controlled substances. Soto worked with the North Carolina Alcohol Law Enforcement Agency ("ALE"), which sent two undercover agents to the restaurant to purchase controlled substances.

Meredith Shoaf ("Agent Shoaf"), one of the agents, testified next. After receiving a briefing from Agent Eric Hill ("Agent Hill"), Agent Shoaf and Agent Kevin Beverly ("Agent Beverly") enter the restaurant at approximately 9:41 p.m. on the night of 10 July 2014. Agent Shoaf asks Daphne Turner ("Turner"), one of the bartenders, if she had any controlled substances for sale. Turner points to Shawn Bunce ("Bunce"), and tells Agent Shoaf he might have some.

Agent Shoaf speaks with Bunce. After they play a bar game together, Agent Shoaf asks Bunce if he has any controlled substances, specifying Valium or Xanax. Bunce responds he can call someone and order some. Bunce goes to the bar, speaks with Turner, then makes a call on his cell phone and goes outside. Agent Shoaf estimated he remained outside for approximately 10 minutes. Bunce then returns to Agent Shoaf and tells her he has "ordered up" and the drugs will arrive in approximately 10 minutes. Bunce tells Agent Shoaf he does not have any money. They go outside together and work out a price of $20.00 for ten pills. Agent Shoaf gives Bunce the money and returns to the bar.

At approximately 10:50 p.m., Agent Shoaf sees Defendant enter the bar and speak with Bunce and an off-duty bartender, Crystal Modlin ("Modlin"). Agent Shoaf witnesses Defendant and Bunce "hand something to each other." She does not see anyone else hand anything to Bunce. Bunce then motions for Agent Shoaf to follow him outside near the front door, where he hands her ten small blue pills wrapped in a small drink napkin. Agent Shoaf identifies the pills as Xanax. Agent Shoaf then notifies Agents Hill and Beverly she had completed the purchase and is in possession of the pills.

Agents Shoaf and Beverly leave the restaurant approximately an hour later and meet Agent Hill at a predetermined location. Agent Shoaf gives the pills to Agent Hill. Agent Hill shows Agent Shoaf a Department of Motor Vehicles ("DMV") photograph of Defendant and Agent Shoaf identifies Defendant as the person who delivered the pills to Bunce.

Agent Hill testified next. As the lead investigator, he placed Agents Shoaf and Beverly in the restaurant, provided them with money and a vehicle, and took possession of any evidence gathered during the investigation. After Agents Shoaf and Beverly enter the restaurant, Agent Hill drives to a parking lot across the street from the restaurant. From there, he has a clear view of the restaurant's front door, patio seating area, and parking lot through his binoculars.

Agent Hill describes the difficulties of using visual or audio surveillance in an undercover operation in a bar. He remains in contact with Agents Shoaf and Beverly during the investigation via regular calls and texts to their cell phones. Agent Hill receives a text from Agent Shoaf alerting him a potential deal was in progress and describing Bunce. Agent Shoaf advises Agent Hill as to what Bunce was wearing, and he has on a walking boot or cast. Agent Hill observes an individual matching the description emerge from the restaurant and talk on his cell phone for approximately five to ten minutes.

A few minutes later, Agent Hill sees a gray SUV enter the restaurant's parking lot. A male individual gets out, briefly enters the restaurant, and then leaves without carrying any food items. Agent Hill does not get a clear look at him. He then receives a text message from Agent Shoaf alerting him the deal was complete and advising him to look out for a white male in a gray SUV that was leaving. Agent Hill checks the license plate number of the SUV with the DMV, and from the address on the registration identifies Defendant as the driver.

After Agents Shoaf and Beverly leave the restaurant, Agent Hill meets them at a pre-arranged location. Agent Shoaf transfers the pills to Agent Hill. Using a reference book, he identifies them as Xanax.

Amanda Aharon, ("Aharon") a forensic drug chemist with the Raleigh/Wake County City-County Bureau of Identification, testified next. The court accepted her as an expert in the area of forensic chemistry. She testified the pills' shape, color, and markings matched the description of diazepam in a pharmaceutical database. She tested the pills with a mass spectrometer, which confirmed the pills contained diazepam.

After Aharon's testimony, the State rested its case. Defendant moved for a judgment of acquittal based on insufficiency of the evidence. The court denied the motion.

Defendant's only witness was Bunce. Bunce admitted he sold ten Xanax pills to Agent Shoaf for $20.00. He testified he had a prescription for the pills. After Agent Shoaf asked him whether he had a controlled substance, Bunce tells her he can get them for her, but it will take some time because he is waiting for someone. He does not want her to know the pills belong to him. He then "went out to [his] truck, messed around for a little bit and got them, put them in a baggie, came back in ... five, ten minutes later[.]" He then gives Agent Shoaf the pills after he returns to the restaurant. Bunce testified he made a phone call while getting the pills, but it was only to another friend to inquire whether he was coming to the restaurant that night.

Bunce testified he saw Defendant at the restaurant that night. He shook hands with Defendant and made "idle chitchat." He denied Defendant handed him anything that night. Bunce only knows Defendant because Defendant's girlfriend, Modlin, works there and Defendant often comes to the restaurant to pick her up. He described the extent of their relationship as merely having had a few drinks together.

Bunce had also been charged with selling diazepam stemming from the same incident. He pled guilty and received two years' probation. Bunce testified he did not come forward at the time of his plea to tell the court Defendant was not guilty because he "thought it would incriminate [him]," and he believed Defendant might have already implicated him to police.

Under cross-examination, Bunce admitted he did not recall who he called that night and was unsure what time the sale took place. He testified when he was arrested on the night of the sale, he told the arresting officer "[y]ou got the wrong person." Bunce testified he had spoken with Defendant's attorney, William Delahoyde, ("Attorney Delahoyde") on two prior occasions, once in his jail cell the weekend prior to the trial, where they went over the police report together, and again on the date of the trial.

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Bluebook (online)
795 S.E.2d 654, 2017 WL 490486, 2017 N.C. App. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cesnik-ncctapp-2017.