State v. Early
This text of 690 S.E.2d 769 (State v. Early) 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.
Opinion
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
v.
ERIC DANIEL EARLY
Court of Appeals of North Carolina.
Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Assistant Attorney General Richard A. Graham, for the State.
Winifred H. Dillon for Defendant-Appellant.
McGEE, Judge.
Eric Daniel Early (Defendant) was convicted of first-degree arson, possession of drug paraphernalia, and resisting a public officer on 2 October 2008. Defendant was sentenced to an active term of 65 to 87 months. Defendant appeals.
The evidence at trial tended to show that on 1 November 2007, Frank Allbones (Allbones) lived in an apartment duplex (the duplex) at 408 Martin Street in Reidsville. During the evening of 31 October 2007, Allbones heard rustling noises coming from the adjacent apartment of the duplex. Allbones was awakened by the smell of smoke around 2:00 a.m. on 1 November 2007, but he went back to sleep. However, at 2:30 a.m., he awoke again to find his apartment filled with smoke. Allbones went outside where he discovered that Apartment 408B of the duplex was on fire. Allbones' wife called 911, and Allbones removed his family from the duplex. Allbones' apartment was not damaged by the fire, except for the smoke.
Apartment 408B of the duplex had been leased to Ingrid Velasco (Velasco) since January 2006. On 1 November 2007, Velasco was in the process of moving out of the apartment. Defendant and Velasco had been in a long-term relationship and had a daughter together, but they were not dating on 1 November 2007.
Lieutenant Ryan Oakley of the Reidsville Police Department responded to a disturbance call at 3:07 a.m. on 1 November 2007 at 408 Hillcrest Street, located approximately two blocks from Allbones' apartment at 408 Martin Street. Lieutenant Oakley arrived at 408 Hillcrest Street and found Defendant, who told Lieutenant Oakley that his name was Timothy Daniel Love. Lieutenant Oakley conducted a pat-down of Defendant and asked him about a document he felt in Defendant's pocket during the pat-down. Defendant handed the document to Lieutenant Oakley. The document was a credit card application addressed to Velasco at her 408B Martin Street address. Defendant told Lieutenant Oakley that Velasco was his girlfriend. Lieutenant Oakley was aware that the fire department was investigating a fire at 408 Martin Street and recognized the address on the paper as the location of the fire.
Canine Officer James Allen of the Reidsville Police Department responded to the dispatch regarding a fire at 408 Martin Street. While Officer Allen was controlling traffic at the fire, he was called by Lieutenant Oakley to come to Hillcrest Street and assist him with Defendant. At Lieutenant Oakley's request, Officer Allen arrested Defendant for resisting, obstructing, or delaying a public officer, and conducted a search of Defendant. Officer Allen discovered a crack pipe on Defendant's person during the search.
Defendant was taken to the Reidsville Police Department and was interviewed by Detective Mike Austin. Detective Austin read Defendant his Miranda rights, which Defendant agreed to waive. Detective Austin then asked Defendant what he had been doing earlier that evening. Defendant replied "F ____ this, just take me to jail." Defendant was charged with felony breaking or entering, felony larceny, first-degree arson, possession of drug paraphernalia, and resisting a public officer.
Jerry Webster (Webster), a licensed private investigator who conducts fire investigations for the insurance industry, testified at trial as an expert in fire investigation, origin, and cause. Webster investigated the residence at 408B Martin Street on 5 November 2007 and determined that the fire originated in the bedroom of the apartment. In the bedroom, Webster found what he recognized as a "fire pattern that's created by the burning of a flammable liquid on carpet." Webster opined that such a pattern could not be created by someone spilling a flammable liquid but rather was created by pouring the liquid onto the carpet in an arc. Using an accelerant detection dog, Webster found a spot in the bedroom that smelled of gasoline. Based on his investigation, Webster testified that the fire was "deliberately set. . . caused by the ignition of the vapors from the flammable liquid, most likely gasoline, on the floor of the bedroom."
John Harris, Fire Marshal for the City of Reidsville and an officer of the Reidsville Police Department, also testified at trial as an expert in fire investigation, origin, and cause. Fire Marshal Harris testified he responded to a fire call at 408 Martin Street and shortly thereafter was dispatched to Hillcrest Street where Lieutenant Oakley had detained Defendant. When Fire Marshal Harris arrived at the Hillcrest Street location, he smelled a "distinctive odor" on Defendant. Fire Marshal Harris testified: "House fire has a distinctive odor. It's involving the plastics and the other material that's involved and burned, and I smelled the odor on his person when I approached [Defendant]."
Fire Marshal Harris further testified that Defendant, in the presence of his attorney, made the following statement during an interview several days later:
[That at about 1:00 a.m. or 1:30 a.m., Defendant went to 408B Martin Street]
. . .
[Defendant] knew that one of the windows was unlocked. So [Defendant] opened it and went through.
[Defendant] drank some more beer and smoked some crack. When [Defendant] ran out of that, [Defendant] went outside and got a bottle of gas. It was a small Clorox bottle . . . [Defendant] was going to huff it to stay high.
[Defendant] took the bottle inside with [him].. . . [Defendant] was in the bedroom smoking the last of [his] crack, and the gas had spilled out on the floor. Maybe the bottle was still standing.
[Defendant] was sitting on the floor by the closet. [Defendant] was lighting the crack pipe, and, as [his] arm came down, [Defendant] must have hit the bottle of gas.
A fire started, and [Defendant] jumped up. [Defendant] grabbed a bottle of orange juice and tried to put out the fire. [Defendant] was very scared and ran out the door.
Fire Marshal Harris testified that after further investigation of the fire scene, he found a "pour pattern" in the bedroom, which was "indicative of a flammable liquid being poured onto a floor surface[.]" It was his opinion that the fire was intentionally set.
Defendant testified at trial that he had been told to leave work on 31 October 2007, because he was "messed up" after taking Xanax and smoking crack the night before. After leaving work, Defendant called his crack supplier. Defendant met his drug dealer and then smoked crack while his daughters prepared to go trick-or-treating.
Defendant further testified that he later obtained "about a dozen or so" Valium pills from his current girlfriend's pocketbook, and took half of those pills after returning from trick-or-treating at about 7:30 p.m. Defendant drank beer and took his and Velasco's daughter to Velasco's apartment at 408B Martin Street. Defendant returned to his mother's house and continued to take pills and drink beer. A male acquaintance arrived and the two drank beer together until they ran out, then they went to 408B Martin Street to watch television. Because Velasco was moving out, there was no television at the apartment and the other man left.
Defendant climbed into the apartment through a window, went into the bedroom, and smoked crack on the floor. Defendant took more Valium.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
690 S.E.2d 769, 202 N.C. App. 373, 2010 N.C. App. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-early-ncctapp-2010.