State v. Dilworth

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 20, 2020
Docket20-179
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Dilworth (State v. Dilworth) 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. Dilworth, (N.C. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA20-179

Filed: 20 October 2020

Forsyth County, No. 18CRS052839

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

STERLING JAMAR DILWORTH

Appeal by Defendant from Judgment entered 21 March 2019 by Judge L. Todd

Burke in Forsyth County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 8 September

2020.

Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Assistant Attorney General Thomas H. Moore, for the State.

Assistant Public Defender Brendan O’Donnell and Public Defender Jennifer Harjo for defendant-appellant.

HAMPSON, Judge.

Factual and Procedural Background

Sterling Jamar Dilworth (Defendant) appeals from a Judgment entered 21

March 2019 upon a jury verdict finding him guilty of Assault with a Deadly Weapon

Inflicting Serious Injury. The Record before us, including evidence presented at trial,

tends to show the following:

Travis Moses (Moses) and Ellsworth Jessup (Jessup) had been neighbors and

had known each other since Moses was young. Moses owned an all-terrain vehicle STATE V. DILWORTH

Opinion of the Court

(ATV), and Jessup granted Moses permission to ride the ATV on Jessup’s

approximately thirty acres of property. Jessup cleared several trails throughout the

property for Moses’s use. Jessup’s sister owned the parcel of property adjacent to

Jessup’s land, on which Defendant resided.

Around 8:10 p.m. on the evening of 29 March 2018, Moses was riding his ATV

along Jessup’s property. As he was riding his ATV, Moses stopped to send several

text messages to a friend. Suddenly and without warning, an individual later

identified as Defendant began attacking Moses with a steak knife. During the attack,

Defendant repeatedly screamed “I don’t know who you are.” Defendant briefly

paused his attack when Moses identified himself and informed Defendant that Jessup

granted him permission to ride on the property. However, Defendant renewed his

attack when Moses got off his ATV. After being stabbed multiple times, including in

and around his neck and eye, Moses made his way back onto his ATV and drove it

directly home, where his wife subsequently called 911.

Deputy A.J. Hatfield (Deputy Hatfield) of the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office

responded to Moses’s residence after dispatch reported a suspected stabbing. Deputy

Hatfield found Moses in his garage with his wife, Jessup, and another man. Deputy

Hatfield observed “a tremendous amount of blood spatter on the ground, surrounding

[Moses’s] body [and] also all over his body.” Moses described the attack to Deputy

Hatfield before being transported via ambulance to Wake Forest Baptist Hospital in

-2- STATE V. DILWORTH

Winston Salem, North Carolina. Deputy Hatfield also spoke with Jessup, who gave

him directions to Defendant’s house since he was identified as the most likely suspect.

Investigator James Ray, also of the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office, met Moses

at the Wake Forest Baptist Hospital Emergency Room. Moses again described the

attack to Investigator Ray and provided him with the suspected location where there

would likely be blood spatter and tracks from Moses’s ATV. Investigator Ray testified

through their conversation, Moses “was able to draw [him] a map of how he got on

the land and provide a description of the most likely location of the crime scene.”

Moses then underwent surgery to repair damage to his eye caused by the stabbing.

Before leaving the hospital to join the investigation, Investigator Ray called Deputy

Hatfield to relay the suspected the location of the attack.

Investigator Ray arrived at Moses’s residence soon after and assisted Deputy

Hatfield in his search to determine where Moses was attacked. Investigator Ray and

Deputy Hatfield located tire tracks and blood spatter on Jessup’s property an

estimated 200 to 250 feet from Defendant’s trailer, which Investigator Ray testified

was consistent with Moses’s description. As Deputy Hatfield examined the ground

and surrounding area, an individual, later identified as Defendant, approached

Deputy Hatfield and Investigator Ray with his driver’s license. Deputy Hatfield

testified he asked Defendant if he knew why he was there, to which Defendant

responded he had been in an altercation earlier.

-3- STATE V. DILWORTH

Investigator Ray took over interviewing Defendant. Defendant told

Investigator Ray he heard loud noises earlier that night and stepped outside to see

what was going on. Then, Defendant continued, he heard music and saw Moses

driving the ATV on his property. Defendant described approaching Moses from

behind and stabbing him with the steak knife. During their conversation, Defendant

identified to Investigator Ray the area of the attack, which Investigator Ray later

confirmed with geodata to be outside Defendant’s property line.1 Investigator Ray

asked Defendant where his property lines were but stated Defendant “wasn’t able to

identify exactly where his property lines were.” Defendant accompanied Investigator

Ray to the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office where Defendant provided a written

statement.

On 2 July 2018, and again on 7 January 2019, Defendant was indicted for

Assault with a Deadly Weapon with Intent to Kill Inflicting Serious Injury. On 10

May 2018, Defendant noticed his intent to put forth the affirmative defense of self-

defense. Defendant’s case came on for trial on 19 March 2019. At trial, Defendant

testified in his defense. Defendant testified on the evening of 29 March 2018 he heard

noises from the back of his house. Defendant went to his porch and saw an ATV

“creeping alongside [his] house.” Defendant described the ATV as traveling very

slowly along a “little hill” in close proximity to his house. When defense counsel asked

1 Investigator Ray testified the officers used geodata maps, which were obtained from public record websites and showed the parcels of land.

-4- STATE V. DILWORTH

Defendant, “So, what, about 10 feet, 15?” Defendant answered: “Somewhere along

those lines.”

Defendant then recounted the attack, testifying he felt threatened for his

safety. Defendant grabbed a steak knife from his cabinet, and, because the ATV had

stopped, Defendant approached Moses screaming “I don’t know you” and stabbing

him repeatedly. Once Moses eventually identified himself and told Defendant he had

permission from Jessup to ride on his property, Defendant testified he “backed off of

him.” However, when Moses got off of his ATV and took off his shirt, Defendant stated

he again felt threatened and “that’s when [he] really got to him. That’s when it came

to his eye and neck region, and things of that nature.” Defendant reiterated his

purpose in the attack was to get an intruder off his premises. On cross-examination,

Defendant testified prior to the attack he smelled burning vegetation and heard

gunshots. Defendant conceded, however, he did not mention either the smell of

burning vegetation or gunshots to investigators the night of the attack or in his

written statement. Defendant also corroborated Investigator Ray’s testimony,

stating: “Well, I mean, like I told the investigator, I’m not aware of the property line

or nothing like that. I felt like all of that land there was -- belong to us.”

During the charge conference, Defendant requested the trial court instruct the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Dilworth, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dilworth-ncctapp-2020.