State v. Chapman

781 S.E.2d 320, 244 N.C. App. 699
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 2016
Docket15-439
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 781 S.E.2d 320 (State v. Chapman) 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. Chapman, 781 S.E.2d 320, 244 N.C. App. 699 (N.C. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

DAVIS, Judge.

*700 Thomas Steven Chapman ("Chapman") and Stephanie Marie Thibault ("Thibault") (collectively "Defendants") appeal from the trial court's judgments entered on the jury's verdicts finding each of them guilty of robbery with a dangerous weapon. After careful review, we conclude that Defendants received a fair trial free from prejudicial error.

*701 Factual Background

The State's evidence at trial tended to establish the following facts: On 14 April 2013, Colin Adkins ("Adkins") was working the night shift as a store clerk at the Market Express convenience store in Stallings, North Carolina. At approximately 10:00 p.m. that evening, a man entered the store wearing a black hooded sweatshirt "with a graphic across the front," jeans, tennis shoes, and a blue bandana pulled up over his face and nose. The man pulled out a black and *323 silver firearm that "looked about the size of a thirty-eight special" and told Adkins to give him "everything in the register." Initially, the man pointed the gun at Adkins' head and upper body. He then moved behind the counter and pressed the gun into Adkins' ribs. Adkins handed approximately $1,000.00 from one of the store's cash registers to the man. Although the bandana was covering most of the man's face, Adkins could see that he was "Caucasian." Adkins also estimated that the man was about six feet tall.

The Market Express is connected to a McDonald's restaurant, and Deputy Ian Gross ("Deputy Gross"), a deputy sheriff with the Union County Sheriff's Office, was off-duty and waiting in the drive-thru line of the McDonald's at the time of the robbery. As he was placing his order, Deputy Gross observed a white male in a black hoodie run out of the Market Express. Upon inquiring what was happening, Deputy Gross was informed that the Market Express had just been robbed.

Deputy Gross turned his vehicle around and drove across the street in the direction the man had been running. He lost sight of the man for approximately 15 seconds but then noticed a single car in the parking lot of the Grand Asian Market, which was closed at the time. Deputy Gross decided to pursue the vehicle, a teal Nissan Maxima, and followed it for approximately two miles, noting the Maxima's license plate number in the process. As he was following the Maxima, he observed that the vehicle's occupants "appeared to be a female driver and a male passenger."

Deputy Gross returned to the McDonald's to meet the law enforcement officers who had arrived on the scene and report the license plate number of the Maxima. Officers performed a computer check on the license plate number and determined that the listed address for the registered owner of the vehicle was located in the Brandon Oaks neighborhood in Indian Trail, North Carolina. Officers drove to this address and found a teal Nissan Maxima matching the description and license plate number Deputy Gross had provided. The hood of the vehicle was still warm, and the officers saw a black hooded sweatshirt inside the car.

*702 Deputy Michael Crenshaw ("Deputy Crenshaw") with the Union County Sheriff's Office approached the front door of the residence located at this address. Before he had the opportunity to knock on the door, a white female-later identified as Thibault-exited the home and walked toward him. Deputy Crenshaw asked Thibault who was inside the residence, and she replied that her mother, sister, and grandmother were in the home. When Deputy Crenshaw "asked her specifically if there were ... any males inside the home," Thibault responded in the negative. However, as Deputy Crenshaw was speaking with Thibault, he observed a white male who appeared to be about six feet tall hiding behind the front door.

Deputy Crenshaw drew his weapon and ordered the male, who was later identified as Chapman, to exit the home. The other officer on the scene, Corporal J.W. Weatherman ("Corporal Weatherman") of the Stallings Police Department, conducted a pat-down search of Chapman and discovered a large amount of cash on his person.

Law enforcement officers obtained a search warrant for the home and discovered in Thibault's bedroom a pair of jeans, a blue bandana, a black and silver Colt Defender Air Pistol, and a wallet, which contained a North Carolina-issued identification card and driver's license in Chapman's name. Detective Sergeant R.H. Cranford ("Detective Sergeant Cranford") recovered the air pistol from the bedroom and "render[ed] the weapon safe" by removing the air cartridge and allowing the pressurized gas to escape the cartridge. As Detective Sergeant Cranford unscrewed the air cartridge, he could hear the sound of gas leaving the canister. After discovering the above-described items in Thibault's room, Detective Sergeant Cranford arrested Defendants.

On 2 September 2014, a grand jury returned bills of indictment charging Defendants with robbery with a dangerous weapon. Defendants' cases were joined for trial, and a jury trial was held in Union County Superior Court before the Honorable Lynn S. Gullett *324 beginning on 13 October 2014. As a part of its case against Defendants, the State introduced a videotape of a test fire Detective Sergeant Cranford had conducted utilizing the air pistol recovered from Thibault's bedroom. The video showed Detective Sergeant Cranford firing the air pistol at a sheet of plywood from various distances.

Following the State's case-in-chief, Thibault elected to testify in her own defense. She testified that she had known Chapman since 2007 or 2008 and that he would stay at her home "a couple times a week." She *703 stated that on the night of 14 April 2013, Chapman came to her house at approximately 7:00 p.m. Thibault offered him leftover spaghetti, but Chapman told her he would " rather get some McDonald's" and that he needed to go out and get cigarettes anyway.

Thibault testified that she accompanied Chapman as he first drove to the Market Express to buy cigarettes. Chapman entered the store by himself and stood in line to purchase the cigarettes. She explained that he then left the store, returned to the car, and pulled into the drive-thru lane for the McDonald's. Thibault testified that they then returned to her house at which point she took a shower, and shortly thereafter the police arrived. Thibault stated that she had not known that the Market Express was robbed, had no reason to believe that Chapman was involved in the robbery, did not drive the get-away car for the robbery, and was not present in the Grand Asian Market parking lot that evening. Thibault also testified that she and her nephew had fired the air pistol at targets in the yard earlier in the day on 14 April 2013 and that the BBs they fired barely made it to the target because the air canister in the air pistol was low and the pressure was weak.

The jury returned verdicts on 21 October 2014 finding both Defendants guilty of robbery with a dangerous weapon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
781 S.E.2d 320, 244 N.C. App. 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-chapman-ncctapp-2016.