State v. Fernanders

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMay 7, 2024
Docket23-837
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Fernanders (State v. Fernanders) 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. Fernanders, (N.C. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA23-837

Filed 7 May 2024

Polk County, Nos. 16CRS50264, 16CRS50269

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

KWAME FERNANDERS, Defendant.

Appeal by defendant from judgment entered 8 September 2022 by Judge

Martin B. McGee in Polk County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 2

April 2024.

Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Special Deputy Attorney General Marc Bernstein, for the State-appellee.

Appellate Defender Glenn Gerding, by Assistant Appellate Defender Amanda S. Zimmer, for defendant-appellant.

GORE, Judge.

Defendant, Kwame Fernanders, appeals his conviction for first-degree murder

and possession of a stolen vehicle. Defendant was sentenced to life imprisonment

without possibility of parole for first-degree murder and the trial court arrested

judgment for the conviction of possession of a stolen vehicle. Defendant seeks review

of the trial court’s multiple evidentiary rulings and its denial of his motion to sever

the charges. Upon review of the briefs, the record, and case law, we conclude the trial

court did not err.

I. STATE V. FERNANDERS

Opinion of the Court

Defendant, his girlfriend Kayla Black, and his friend Quintae Edwards met

and began driving in defendant’s car from Greenville, South Carolina, late on 30

March 2016. Early in the morning on 31 March 2016, they stopped at a gas station.

Defendant and Edwards left Black but soon returned driving a red Ford Mustang.

They left defendant’s car and drove off in the red Ford Mustang headed toward North

Carolina. Different angles of video footage and still shots of the footage, admitted

during trial, revealed defendant and Edwards had broken into Reliable Rides and

stolen the red Ford Mustang from the facility. In the videos, defendant and Edwards

were wearing the same clothes they were later sighted in just prior to the shooting;

defendant was also seen with a gun and wearing a pair of brown and yellow work

gloves.

At approximately 5:00 a.m., they stopped at a BP gas station in Polk County,

North Carolina. The gas station was not open at the time, so they waited for it to

open. Prior to the gas attendant opening the station, Black testified, and the gas

attendant testified, that defendant wanted to rob the attendant, but Black had held

him back from doing so. After buying gas, Black drove the Ford Mustang towards

the interstate with defendant seated in the front seat and Edwards seated in the back

seat.

As they drove onto the ramp, they saw a “box truck” parked on the side of the

ramp and stopped by it to get directions. Destry Horne was the driver of the truck

and had stopped while in the middle of making a furniture delivery. Black testified

-2- STATE V. FERNANDERS

she was trying to fix her GPS while defendant pulled down his window and began

talking to Horne. Black testified Horne was polite and defendant was also talking

politely, but defendant quickly became aggressive. Black heard Edwards say, “Do it,

bro” from the back seat and defendant told Black to turn her head away.

Immediately after she turned her head, Black heard a gunshot and looked in

time to see defendant pulling his arm with the gun in his hand back into the car.

Black drove away quickly, and not long after, Horne was discovered unresponsive and

bleeding in the truck. He was later pronounced dead from a gunshot wound. A police

officer, who testified at trial, had seen the box truck and the Mustang parked around

5:40 a.m. as he drove by, but he did not investigate because it was common to see

vehicles stopped at the on ramp. He was called to the scene approximately ten to

fifteen minutes later. The police officer discovered a spent .40 caliber cartridge casing

on the ground near the truck.

Police obtained the video footage from the BP gas station of the Mustang,

defendant, Edwards, and Black, and issued images to the public to identify them.

The police department’s surveillance camera caught the Mustang driving by just after

the shooting, headed towards South Carolina. Defendant, Black, and Edwards were

recognized in a couple different locations as they drove south, and they evaded arrest

while in Landrum, South Carolina, and Gainesville, Florida. While in South

Carolina, they abandoned the Mustang and were later seen driving in a maroon

Subaru. Prior to the arrest, Black testified at trial that she, defendant, and Edwards

-3- STATE V. FERNANDERS

had broken into a college apartment and robbed college students. According to

Black’s testimony, one student was taken with her and defendant to an ATM to

withdraw money. Black testified that defendant used the same gun during this break

in and robbery that he used in the shooting.

Defendant, Edwards, and Black were later apprehended and arrested at a Best

Western in Tallahassee, Florida on 4 April 2016. Police officers recovered a gun

(located beside defendant at the time of arrest), the keys to the maroon Subaru, and

recovered yellow and brown work gloves and twenty-seven .40 caliber Smith &

Wesson Aguila rounds in the Subaru.

Defendant was charged with first-degree murder and possession of a stolen

motor vehicle. Defendant filed a pre-trial motion to sever the charges for trial. The

trial court denied defendant’s motion and granted the State’s motion to join the

charges. Defendant renewed his motion to sever the charges at the close of the State’s

evidence and at the close of all the evidence. During trial, defendant made multiple

specific objections: to the admission of video footage and still shots from the footage

at Reliable Rides; to Black identifying defendant and his gun in the video footage and

still shots from Reliable Rides; to Black’s testimony of the robbery in Gainesville,

Florida; to the State’s tender of their expert, Coudriet, as a ballistics expert; and to

Coudriet’s opinion that the .40 caliber cartridge casing recovered from the scene was

fired from the gun retrieved at defendant’s arrest. The jury returned guilty verdicts

for both charges. The trial court arrested judgment on the possession of a stolen

-4- STATE V. FERNANDERS

motor vehicle conviction and sentenced defendant to life imprisonment without

possibility of parole for the first-degree murder conviction. Defendant timely

appealed the judgment.

II.

Defendant appeals of right pursuant to N.C.G.S §§ 7A-27(b) and 15A-1444(a).

Defendant challenges multiple evidentiary rulings made by the trial court.

Defendant argues the trial court erred with the following evidentiary rulings: (1) by

admitting evidence of the Gainesville robbery through Kayla Black’s testimony; (2)

by allowing Kayla Black to identify the gun displayed in the video footage and

photographs of the break in at Reliable Rides; (3) by admitting ten videos and five

photographs from the break in at Reliable Rides; (4) by denying defendant’s motion

to sever the first-degree murder charge from the possession of a stolen motor vehicle

charge; (5) by allowing the State’s expert witness to testify the used .40 caliber

cartridge casing, retrieved by the truck, was fired from the gun seized in defendant’s

hotel room; and (6) through the cumulative errors committed by the trial court.

Defense counsel objected to and preserved each issue for review.

A.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Fernanders, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fernanders-ncctapp-2024.