State v. Choudhry

717 S.E.2d 348, 365 N.C. 215, 2011 N.C. LEXIS 659
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 26, 2011
Docket409A10
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 717 S.E.2d 348 (State v. Choudhry) 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. Choudhry, 717 S.E.2d 348, 365 N.C. 215, 2011 N.C. LEXIS 659 (N.C. 2011).

Opinion

EDMUNDS, Justice.

In this case we consider whether the trial court conducted an adequate inquiry pertaining to defense counsel’s possible conflict of interest arising from his prior representation of a State’s witness. Although the trial court heard argument from the prosecutor and from defense counsel on this issue and made direct inquiry of defendant after placing him under oath, we conclude that, under the facts of this case, the inquiry was insufficient to assure that defendant knowingly intelligently, and voluntarily made his decision regarding counsel’s continued representation. However, because defendant has failed to make a threshold showing that defense counsel’s performance was adversely affected by the conflict, much less that defendant was prejudiced by the representation, we modify and affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.

*216 Factual and Procedural Background

At trial, the State presented evidence that during the evening of 3 November 2002, defendant Khuram Choudhry drove his friends Umar Malik and Hasan Sokoni to a BP gas station on Chapel Hill Boulevard in Durham where the victim Rana Shazad Ahmed (“Shazad,” or “the victim”) was employed. Sokoni, who was sitting in the back seat, testified that he could tell defendant and Malik “weren’t happy” with the victim and that he later heard there was “a beef between Shazad and the mother and sister of [defendant].” Sokoni testified that he “could kind of. .. tell that there was some type of altercation that was going to happen because they were mad,” and he “assume[d]” defendant and Malik were looking for Shazad to “chastise” him or “rough him up.” Seeing that Shazad was closing the store, defendant drove the three to Shazad’s apartment complex about a mile away and waited. When Shazad pulled into the apartment parking lot, defendant and Malik jumped out of the car. Sokoni, who remained in the back seat of defendant’s car, heard “two or three hits” that sounded like “balls being hit by a baseball bat.” A minute or two later, defendant and Malik ran back to the car and defendant drove the three back to his residence in Durham. Sokoni testified that at the time he asked no questions of defendant or Malik, but added that two weeks after the incident, he observed defendant stop on Interstate 85 during a trip to Virginia and throw a bat from his vehicle.

Defendant’s then-girlfriend Michelle Wahome testified that in November 2002, she was awakened by a late-night telephone call from defendant. She related that defendant sounded “panicky” and said, “ ‘Oh my God, oh my God, you won’t believe what happened. . . . Shazad’s gone. Shazad’s dead. He’s gone out of this world.’ ” When Wahome asked him to clarify, defendant told her the victim had called his house and cursed out his mother, so he, Malik, and Sokoni drove to the victim’s residence to “ ‘F’ him up.” Defendant added that although Sokoni had promised to help, he reneged.

According to Wahome, defendant told her he hit the victim once with a bat or a stick and that Malik then took the bat or stick and hit the victim on the head so hard that he fell to the ground. While the victim was down, Malik kept hitting him until he stopped moving. Defendant told her he was not worried about DNA evidence, but mentioned that he had left his pack of Newport cigarettes at the scene. Wahome expressed skepticism, so defendant told her to look at the newspapers in the morning. When she did, she saw a report that the victim had been murdered.

*217 At approximately 6:30 a.m. on 4 November 2002, the victim’s roommates awoke to find him lying in a pool of blood outside the door to their apartment. The victim was breathing, but unresponsive and cold to the touch. Arriving paramedics found the victim flat on his back, unconscious. They observed a “very large amount of blood” and a laceration on the back of the victim’s head. His eyes were bruised and swollen shut, indicating that he “ha[d] been down for quite a while.” The victim was transported to Duke Hospital where he died approximately eleven days later. An autopsy revealed two lacerations to the victim’s head, multiple skull fractures, bleeding in the brain, and bruising to his arms, neck, chest, and back. The cause of death was determined to be blunt force trauma to the head.

At the crime scene, investigators recovered the victim’s wallet, a pack of Newport cigarettes, and samples of blood and hair. Although the blood and hair were identified as having come from the victim, no fingerprints were found on the cigarette pack.

Wahome further testified that she made several statements to police during the course of the investigation. She testified that she continued to date defendant after the telephone call in which he told her of his participation in the victim’s murder but, following a discussion with her father, went to the Durham Police Department on 25 June 2003 and gave a written statement to Investigator Delores West. At the time Wahome initially contacted police, the investigation of the victim’s murder had run into a dead end. In this statement, Wahome related that defendant identified Malik as having beat the victim, while also initially admitting, but then denying, his own complicity.

Although Wahome did not appear to Investigator West to be impaired in any way during the interview, a few days later she called Investigator West to retract her statement, claiming she had been high on drugs and had not told the truth. However, at defendant’s trial, Wahome testified on cross-examination that she recanted her initial statement because of threats from defendant.

On 21 November 2003, Wahome gave another statement to investigators describing defendant’s telephone call to her after the beating. This statement differed in several respects from her June 2003 statement, including the month of defendant’s initial telephone call to her describing the incident.

On 21 June 2006, Wahome was arrested for trafficking heroin. While in custody, she sent letters from the Durham County Jail to Investigator West on 21 August and 27 September 2006. In response, *218 Investigator West interviewed Wahome on 28 August and again on 14 September 2006. During the September interview, Wahome provided Investigator West the name “Hasan” as someone who might have firsthand knowledge of the murder and gave information as to where he could be found. The drug charge against Wahome was dismissed on the ground that “[f]urther evidence indicates Defendant had no knowledge of presence of drugs and that drugs likely planted by another individual.”

On 26 September 2006, Investigator West located and interviewed Hasan Sokoni. Sokoni implicated defendant, recounted the course of events the night of the victim’s murder, and said that he, defendant, and defendant’s two sisters and brother-in-law had later driven to Virginia, where defendant disposed of the murder weapon. Sokoni’s trial testimony, though reluctant, was consistent with this statement.

On 27 September 2006, officers arrested defendant and Malik. Defendant waived his right to an attorney.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
717 S.E.2d 348, 365 N.C. 215, 2011 N.C. LEXIS 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-choudhry-nc-2011.