State v. Everett

630 S.E.2d 703, 178 N.C. App. 44, 2006 N.C. App. LEXIS 1302
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJune 20, 2006
DocketCOA05-1197
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 630 S.E.2d 703 (State v. Everett) 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. Everett, 630 S.E.2d 703, 178 N.C. App. 44, 2006 N.C. App. LEXIS 1302 (N.C. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinions

TYSON, Judge.

Karen Elaine Everett (“defendant”) appeals from judgment entered after a jury found her to be guilty of second degree murder. We award defendant a new trial.

I. Background

A. State’s Evidence

On 26 November 2000 at approximately 5:40 p.m., Wake County Sheriffs Deputy Joel Holt (“Deputy Holt”) was serving warrants when he was dispatched to a call reporting a shooting at the 6100 block of Highway 401 in Fuquay-Varina. Deputy Holt arrived at the residence and saw defendant standing in the doorway and speaking on the telephone. As Deputy Holt walked into the yard toward the house, defendant entered her home. Deputy Holt went to the front door, identified himself, .looked into the house, and saw a pistol laying on the coffee table. Deputy Holt identified himself again upon entering the house and heard a child crying, “My daddy, my daddy, I want my daddy.” A blanket covered the child’s head. Deputy Holt observed the body of Michael Everett (“the victim”) in the hallway. The victim was lying on his right shoulder with his feet toward the kitchen and head toward the hallway. Deputy Holt detected no movement in the victim and observed a large puddle of blood on the floor. He testified defendant was calm, not emotional or upset, and was trying to prevent her [46]*46child from seeing the victim’s body. He also testified defendant’s clothes were not torn, contained no blood, and he did not observe marks on defendant’s face or neck. Defendant straightforwardly acknowledged that she had shot the victim.

A volunteer fireman, Captain Lonnie Bridges (“Captain Bridges”), arrived at the scene. Captain Bridges observed pooled blood around the victim that appeared “congealed” and “old.” The victim’s body was cool.

Wake County Sheriff’s Deputy James Landmark (“Deputy Landmark”) arrived and asked defendant what had happened. Defendant responded that she did not want to talk with him in front of her daughter. Defendant’s father-in-law came to the home and took custody of the child.

Defendant told Deputy Landmark that she and her husband, the victim, had been arguing for a couple of days after he accused her of seeing someone else. Defendant told Deputy Landmark her husband pushed her, threatened to kill her, and grabbed her by the throat. Defendant told the victim to “back off.” The victim kept coming toward defendant, at which point she shot him.

Sergeant Gerald Baker (“Sergeant Baker”) was the lead investigator at the scene and also interviewed defendant. Defendant told Sergeant Baker the victim had threatened to kill her and had put his hands around her neck. The victim told defendant, “I can kill you now, bitch.” The victim came toward defendant in the kitchen. Defendant retrieved her gun from the living room. Defendant fired the gun toward the kitchen cabinets. The victim continued to come towards defendant and she fired the gun at him.

Agent Dave Edington (“Agent Edington”) of the City-County Bureau of Investigation testified he recovered a bullet imbedded in the windowsill above the kitchen sink. Based on the method of entrance by the bullet, Agent Edington testified the gun was apparently fired from the living room near the Christmas tree.

Defendant’s aunt, Eton Everett (“Everett”), also testified for the State. Defendant called Everett at 5:31 p.m. and told her, “call daddy and you guys get out here right away, I just shot Michael.” Everett also testified defendant and the victim had suffered domestic problems over the years. Defendant had never told Everett she was afraid of the victim. Everett did not know of incidents where the victim had injured defendant. Everett never saw the victim act violently towards [47]*47anyone. She never observed the victim with a gun. Everett admitted she was married to the victim’s brother.

Agent David Santora (“Agent Santora”) testified as an expert witness in firearm identification. Agent Santora testified that a bullet hole on the victim’s right shirt sleeve was consistent with a contact shot. The other bullet holes on the victim were caused by shots fired less than eighteen inches away.

Dr. Cheryl Szpak (“Dr. Szpak”) performed the autopsy on the victim. Dr. Szpak testified that no alcohol was found in the victim’s blood. One bullet had entered the victim’s right biceps, traveled through the sternum and the heart, and lodged in the victim’s lung. Another bullet entered the left chest area below the nipple, perforated the lung and diaphragm, and lodged close to the spine. The remaining bullet entered the victim’s lower back to the right of the spine and lodged in his spinal canal. Dr. Szpak testified the cause of the victim’s death was massive blood loss in the chest and a rupture of the heart resulting from gunshot wounds.

B. Defendant’s Evidence

Defendant testified she married the victim in 1988. In the early years of their marriage, the couple engaged in verbal and physical arguments. The victim would tear things up and defendant would try to “stay out of the way of it.” Once in 1990, defendant was supposed to meet the victim after work, but defendant was unable to meet him. The victim accused her of leaving work with someone. The victim choked defendant and ripped her clothes. Defendant reported the incident to the police. The victim was charged with and convicted of assault.

Defendant also testified that there were “lots of incidents” in the early years of their marriage and that it was “easy for [her] to get away.” Defendant slept in her office at times.

The couple engaged in another physical altercation in 1998. Defendant was helping her friend, Iris Bryant (“Bryant”), move a fish aquarium. Bryant owned a hair salon. Defendant was Byant’s client and friend. Defendant turned her back and the victim jumped on her and pushed her through a screen door. The victim “banged” defendant’s head against a- wall and choked her. Bryant corroborated defendant’s account at trial. Bryant testified the victim “came and grabbed [defendant] by the neck, and he swung her out the door to the back of the porch, and her body was against the wall, and he tore [48]*48off all her clothes.” Defendant’s breasts were exposed and she was “scarred up at the neck.” Defendant obtained a domestic violence protective order against the victim. The victim was charged and convicted of assault on a female as a result of this altercation.

Bryant further testified the victim dropped defendant off at her salon a couple of months before the shooting. The victim took defendant’s book bag out of the car, threw it at defendant, and called her a “bitch.”

Defendant testified beginning in 2000 their arguments became more violent and the victim’s temper worsened. The victim insisted that defendant was having extramarital affairs. One evening in November 2000, the same month as the shooting, defendant was asleep on the couch and awoke to find the victim holding an assault rifle pointed at her head. He told her he was going to “blow [her] head off.” Defendant coaxed the victim into putting down the gun by telling him that the gun had not been cleaned and it could explode if he fired it.

Defendant kept problems in their marriage private because her aunt, Eton Everett, was married to defendant’s brother. Defendant continued to live with the victim because she wanted her daughter “to have one more Christmas holiday with him as a family.” She believed that the marriage would work if she “kept working at it.”

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State v. Everett
630 S.E.2d 703 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
630 S.E.2d 703, 178 N.C. App. 44, 2006 N.C. App. LEXIS 1302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-everett-ncctapp-2006.