State v. Ezzell

642 S.E.2d 274, 182 N.C. App. 417, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 695
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedApril 3, 2007
DocketCOA06-624
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 642 S.E.2d 274 (State v. Ezzell) 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. Ezzell, 642 S.E.2d 274, 182 N.C. App. 417, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 695 (N.C. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

JACKSON, Judge.

On 7 March 2005, James Ezzell (“defendant”) was indicted for murder, and on 16 November 2005, the jury found defendant guilty of second-degree murder. The trial court sentenced defendant to a minimum of 125 months imprisonment with a corresponding maximum of 158 months. The court also ordered defendant to pay restitution in the amount of $14,850.03. Defendant gave timely notice of appeal.

On 2 October 2004, defendant invited several friends and family members to go four-wheeling with him on a trail , in Wilson County, North Carolina. Among the people defendant invited was Jeff Winstead (“Winstead”), who, without defendant’s prior approval, invited Mark Carlini (“Carlini”) and Carlini’s wife, Amy. The group gathered at a cabin being rented by defendant, and Carlini and his wife were introduced to defendant. The group then rode their four-wheelers on the trails, stopping occasionally to eat and drink beer.

At some point during the outing, the group stopped near a pond and talked, during which time a “heated” conversation erupted between Carlini and defendant. Carlini said to defendant, “So you’re Frank Ezzell? ... I remember you.... You’re Frank Ezzell, the old rabbit man. You used to sell rabbits.” One of defendant’s friends invited on the trip explained that he “could tell tension was getting high.”' According to witnesses, Carlini recounted a story from when he and a friend, “Romek,” were teenagers, and defendant hit Romek in the head with a gun. Despite his wife’s requests to drop the matter, Carlini, who had consumed over twelve beers during the day, became increasingly excited and agitated, explaining that he was not “some young dumb kid anymore” and telling defendant, “I’ve been waiting 25 years to kick your ass, old man.” Defendant told Carlini, “Don’t start something,” and Carlini then gave defendant a wraparound hug, saying, “It’s okay. Water under the bridge.” Two witnesses testified that they did not believe that Carlini squeezed defendant very hard, particularly since Carlini had a beer in one of his hands at the time. Defendant, however, testified that Carlini squeezed the breath out of him, squeezed him so hard his back popped, and “squeezed [him] so hard [he] wet in [his] pants.” Defendant further stated that after *419 Carlini, who was a bigger and younger man, put defendant down, Carlini threatened “to kick [defendant’s] damn ass before this day is over with.”

Immediately after this incident, defendant and his girlfriend, Cynthia Edwards (“Edwards”), left the group. Two other members of the group — Robbie Jones (“Jones”) and Christopher Hobson (“Hobson”) — left the trails shortly thereafter. Once back at the cabin, Jones arid Hobson observed defendant yelling at Edwards and telling her to go home. Jones attempted to persuade defendant to drop the matter with Carlini: “I pretty much told him — I said, ‘Just leave it alone.’ I said Mark [Carlini] was a little mouthy, just leave and we’ll come back another day when he’s not here and ride.” Defendant, however, responded by saying, “I don’t know if I can do that.” After helping Edwards with her four-wheeler, Jones got into his truck. Jones explained he had never seen defendant talk to Edwards in such a manner and stated to Hobson, “I don’t know what Frank might do, he might kill that man.”

Shortly after Jones left and approximately twenty-five to thirty minutes after initially leaving Carlini and the others at the pond, defendant went back up the trail on his four-wheeler, leaving Edwards and Hobson at the cabin. Edwards expressed concern about what defendant might do, stating that defendant “probably had a gun.” A few minutes later, Winstead and the Carlinis, who remained at the pond, saw defendant on the trail, “puttering up in the distance,” by which Winstead meant that defendant was “just driving around, puttering a little bit, slowly.” Hobson returned and informed the group of the need to leave, and then defendant approached to within fifty yards of the group and told everyone remaining, “Ya’ll have ten minutes to get off of my property.”

Defendant left once again, and the group began to pack up their belongings and leave the trail on their four-wheelers. Carlini led the group, followed by his wife, then Hobson, and Winstead in the rear. Hobson warned Winstead that defendant might have a gun, and Winstead then warned Carlini’s wife of that possibility. Winstead caught up with Carlini and warned him, “Mark, he might have a gun. Don’t say anything. Be good. Let’s just go.”

As the group proceeded along the trail, Hobson noticed that Carlini and defendant were riding approximately twenty-five feet away from one another. Hobson, who was approximately one hundred yards away at the time, observed that Carlini and defendant *420 were riding slowly and had their heads turned to each other. Hobson testified, “I could tell that they were talking, arguing, or whatever it may be. But I could not hear what they were saying.” According to Hobson, at no time did Carlini attempt to ram defendant on the four-wheeler. Hobson then attempted to catch up with them, and when he was approximately twenty-five or thirty feet behind them, he observed defendant pull out a gun ánd shoot Carlini.

Hobson slammed on the brakes when he heard the gunshot, and he saw that Carlini stopped his four-wheeler. Hobson and Carlini’s wife ran to Carlini, and Hobson testified that “Mark said, ‘I’ve been shot,’ or ‘He shot me.’ I can’t remember which'he said. Amy thought he might have been joking at first because he was sitting on his four-wheeler. I said, ‘Let me check you.’ I looked down his side and I saw a hole in his shirt.” Carlini then appeared to go into shock, “and he just slumped forward.” Defendant meanwhile left the scene, and Hobson did not see defendant after the shooting. Defendant testified at trial that he drove away from the scene and hid his ghns under pine straw near a pine tree. After Carlini slumped over on his four-wheeler, Carlini’s wife jumped on the four-wheeler and drove to the nearest residence where they called 911. Carlini was pronounced dead at the hospital.

Police responded to the residence from which the 911 phone call was placed, and Hobson showed the police where the shooting had occurred. The police were alerted to be on the lookout for defendant, and Detective J.T. Bass (“Detective Bass”) spotted defendant on a four-wheeler in the distance. Detective Bass turned to inform a fellow officer that he had spotted an individual that matched defendant’s description. Detective Bass testified, “As I turned back to look, the individual on the four-wheeler pretty much did a circle turn and left . . . .” Police officers continued to search for defendant, and Deputy Steven Babcock (“Deputy Babcock”) eventually “observed the defendant peeking over the top of the beans” in a nearby field. Deputy Babcock then apprehended and arrested defendant. Defendant subsequently was indicted, and on 16 November 2005, the jury found defendant guilty of second-degree murder.

On appeal, defendant contends that the trial court erred in permitting extensive cross-examination by the State questioning defendant’s exercise of his right to remain silent. We disagree.

At trial, defense counsel failed to object to those portions of the cross-examination that defendant now challenges on appeal. Accord *421

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
642 S.E.2d 274, 182 N.C. App. 417, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ezzell-ncctapp-2007.