State v. Crawford

406 S.E.2d 579, 329 N.C. 466, 1991 N.C. LEXIS 531
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 14, 1991
Docket443A89
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 406 S.E.2d 579 (State v. Crawford) 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. Crawford, 406 S.E.2d 579, 329 N.C. 466, 1991 N.C. LEXIS 531 (N.C. 1991).

Opinion

MEYER, Justice.

In 1988, six-year-old Christopher West lived with his mother, Angela West, his younger brother, Shaun, and his sister, Sara, in a Burlington apartment. Defendant, Angela West’s boyfriend, moved in with them in September of that year. On 1 October 1988, Christopher awoke early and broke a house rule by taking food from the kitchen without permission. The State produced evidence at trial that showed defendant had developed a pattern of using extraordinary disciplinary methods intended to punish and humiliate Christopher for disobeying rules. On the following day, Christopher awoke with a minor rash, which defendant attributed to sherbet Christopher had eaten. Defendant attempted to “flush out [Christopher’s] system” by coercing him to drink large quantities of water over the next two to three hours. Christopher complained, but defendant continued to coerce him to drink. Finally, the water intake caused Christopher to scream, convulse, and lose his eyesight. After being taken to the hospital unconscious, where he was diagnosed as suffering from water intoxication, Christopher was pronounced brain dead and was removed from a respirator the next day. A jury found defendant guilty of first-degree murder and of felony child abuse. After a sentencing hearing and upon its finding of no aggravating circumstances, the jury recommended *471 a sentence of life imprisonment. The trial court sentenced defendant to life imprisonment for first-degree murder and arrested judgment on the conviction for felony child abuse. We find no error.

The State’s evidence tended to show the following. In the spring of 1987, defendant and Angela West met through a mutual friend and, by the summer, were dating regularly. After defendant left his job in February 1988, he spent more time with Angela West and soon began to fill the role of disciplinarian of the children as well.

The State introduced testimony describing a number of incidents involving extraordinary disciplinary methods to show by circumstantial evidence an absence of mistake and an intent by defendant to punish Christopher on 2 October 1988. Defendant testified that certain of his disciplinary techniques were inappropriate but contends that they were done in good faith, and in any event, he agreed to stop using inappropriate disciplinary measures after meeting with an investigator from the Department of Social Services (DSS) in May of 1988.

Testimony as to defendant’s disciplinary techniques was as follows. In the late winter of 1988, at Angela West’s request, defendant punished Christopher for allegedly starting a fire in nearby woods. Defendant affixed a sign around Christopher’s neck which read, “I sat [sic] the woods on fire, and I lied to my mama.” Christopher was required to stand outside with the sign around his neck for between ten and twenty minutes and to recite aloud the words on the sign. When Christopher would try to go back into the apartment, defendant would push him back outside.

Defendant testified to paddling the children on the soles of their feet in order to conceal bruising, to giving the children cold showers “to cool them down” when “they were in an excited state,” to putting hot sauce on their tongues, and to washing their mouths out with soap. The latter two disciplinary methods were to prevent “lying and cussing.” Other testimony indicated that Christopher had such a physical reaction to the soap used that his mouth “puffed up.”

Additionally, a neighbor testified that in the late spring or early summer of 1988, she saw Christopher wearing a diaper, carrying a baby bottle, and crying. When asked at the time why *472 Christopher was wearing a diaper, defendant responded that “he was being punished, because he was a sissy.”

One of Angela West’s friends, who visited the apartment frequently, testified that she saw Christopher disciplined on more than one occasion by being required to stand in the corner. When Christopher cried, defendant would taunt him by saying, “Look at the baby. Chris is a little baby.”

Another witness testified that defendant asked her if she had ever seen anyone drink hot sauce before. Christopher cried and screamed, in fright when defendant said this; then, as the visitor left, she heard Christopher screaming, crying, and saying it was “hot” as defendant poured the hot sauce into a glass. Another witness testified that defendant had told her that Christopher learned from humiliation.

Defendant’s extraordinary punishment procedures were not limited to Christopher. Evidence presented at trial indicated that Sara had been forced to sleep in a urine-soaked bed, which was “his way of teaching [her] not to wet the bed,” and in another instance, defendant put Sara’s urine-soaked underwear on her head. When these instances of punishment occurred, Sara was two or three years old. Finally, a witness testified that in the summer of 1988, defendant forced Shaun to stand with his face up against a tree in the park. A school counselor testified that defendant told her that he was on a “mission” to help Angela West with disciplinary problems. Defendant denies that he made such a statement.

DSS began an investigation of the West family on 9 May 1988. A DSS investigator visited the West home, where defendant stated that Christopher was a bully and needed discipline. Defendant related a number of his disciplinary methods to the investigator, who reported defendant to the police. He was arrested in June for misdemeanor child abuse of the West children. However, on 2 August 1988, those charges were dismissed.

West entered a service agreement on 16 May 1988 with DSS. The agreement in this instance provided that defendant would have no contact with any of the West children. The agreement expired in August 1988 and was not renewed. Defendant was asked to submit to a mental health evaluation, due to the misdemeanor child abuse charges against him, but did not do so on the advice *473 of his attorney. Christopher, however, was examined by a pediatrician, who found no indication of mental instability or mental illness.

Defendant moved in with the West family in September while still unemployed and looked after Christopher’s brother Shaun. Shaun had been removed from kindergarten, defendant contends, to prevent him from being expelled. There were at least two meetings at approximately that same time with DSS in which the agency continued to press, to no avail, for removal of the children from the home.

On 1 October 1988, while Angela West was at work and defendant was home alone with the three children, defendant discovered that biscuits were missing from the kitchen and confronted Shaun and Christopher about breaking the house rule that forbade them from going downstairs to the kitchen before an adult was awake to accompany them. Shaun admitted breaking the rule and implicated Christopher. Defendant spanked the boys on the buttocks and required them to stand in the corner. When Angela West returned home, the children were still standing in the corner, having been spanked a second time for not standing quietly. At that time, West and defendant noted a mild rash or reddish mark on Christopher’s forehead and face. West restricted the boys to their room for the day.

The next morning, defendant awoke late.

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Bluebook (online)
406 S.E.2d 579, 329 N.C. 466, 1991 N.C. LEXIS 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-crawford-nc-1991.