State v. Gordon

789 S.E.2d 659, 248 N.C. App. 403, 2016 N.C. App. LEXIS 773
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 19, 2016
Docket15-820
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 789 S.E.2d 659 (State v. Gordon) 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. Gordon, 789 S.E.2d 659, 248 N.C. App. 403, 2016 N.C. App. LEXIS 773 (N.C. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

INMAN, Judge.

*403 Bobby Lee Gordon, Jr. ("Defendant") appeals from a judgment after a jury found him guilty of attempted first-degree rape, first-degree *404 kidnapping, and first-degree sexual offense. On appeal, Defendant argues that the trial court erred by failing to dismiss the charge of first-degree kidnapping based upon insufficient evidence that the victim was not released in a safe place, failing to give the jury a curative instruction after sustaining defense counsel's objection to the prosecutor's allegedly improper statement during closing argument, and failing to intervene ex mero motu to an additional allegedly improper statement. After a thorough review of the record, relevant law, and arguments of the parties, we hold that Defendant received a trial free from error; as such, we affirm the judgment against him.

Factual & Procedural History

The State's evidence tended to show:

On 27 April 2009, Sue 1 was walking on Main Street in High Point, filling out job applications at various businesses. Defendant stopped the white truck he was driving a couple of times to ask Sue if she wanted a ride. She responded that she did not need a ride.

When Sue started walking home, she observed the white truck pass her and turn around. Defendant pulled up beside her, pointed a gun at her head, and said, "Get into the truck and do what I tell you to do and I won't kill you." Sue got in the truck and Defendant said, "We are going to go see my girlfriend. I just want to make her jealous." While he drove, Defendant kept the gun pointed at Sue. She begged him to let her go. After about six or seven minutes of driving, Defendant turned onto an access ramp off Interstate 85. He eventually stopped the truck in "a little *405 dirt patch area" in a "very wooded area" that was "almost impossible to see from the highway." Defendant told Sue to take her clothes off.

Sue opened the door to Defendant's truck, whereupon he grabbed her throat. The two then wrestled to the ground. Defendant placed his hands around Sue's neck and strangled her for a couple of minutes. While they were on the ground, Defendant fired his gun near Sue's left ear. Sue testified that the gun was about one foot away from her head when it fired. She stopped fighting because she "thought he was going to kill *662 [her] at that point." Sue noticed that Defendant's gun had a white or pearl handle.

Defendant asked Sue for her belt. She refused to give it to him and said that she was not going to take off her clothes. Defendant then tried to rip off her pants and Sue took off her belt. Defendant continued his efforts to remove Sue's clothes and told her that he would let her go if he saw her private parts. When she refused, the struggle resumed. Defendant inserted his fingers into Sue's vagina. Defendant's pants were down and he attempted to penetrate Sue with his penis; however, Sue, who was on her back, continued to kick and push him. Sue testified that the struggle lasted fifteen to twenty minutes.

Defendant stopped struggling with Sue and allowed her to put her clothes on. He took her belt and driver's license and said, "I know where you live. If you tell anybody I will come back and I will kill you." He asked Sue whether she had made any calls on her cell phone. She showed Defendant her recent call history. Defendant got in his truck. Sue ran into the wooded area and watched Defendant's truck drive away. She then ran across the four-lane highway into her back yard. Sue immediately called her roommate and explained what had just transpired. He called the police, who arrived at Sue's apartment in about ten minutes. Sue gave the officer a statement of the events.

Because she was afraid to stay in High Point, Sue moved to Jacksonville, Florida a couple of months after the incident. Sue testified that she had never met Defendant before the day he assaulted her, and did not know his name until she was contacted two years later by Detective Melanie Leonard. Detective Leonard, the detective handling the case, asked Sue to view a photo lineup, which officers in Florida administered. Sue selected Defendant's photograph. Subsequently, Detective Leonard called Sue and asked her to rate on a scale of one to ten her certainty that the photo she selected was that of her assailant. Sue responded that it was a "seven." At trial, Sue testified that Defendant "is the man that held [her] at gunpoint in 2009."

*406 Detective Mark Barnes of the Davidson County Sheriff's Office testified that on 28 December 2012, he assisted the High Point Police Department in executing a search warrant at Defendant's address. Defendant asked what the search was about, and Detective Barnes responded that he did not know. Defendant then explained that he knew what it was about, that it involved a girl who was walking down the street in High Point about two years earlier. He said that he had stopped and picked her up, that they bought some drugs, and then went back to his place and partied. He said that he gave her $30.00 and "took her down the road and put her out."

Officers searched a Buick LeSabre parked in Defendant's yard. They found a silver handgun with a pearl grip handle. While the officers were searching Defendant's residence, Defendant's mother pulled up in a white pickup truck.

Defendant's evidence tended to show:

Defendant's sister, Julie Ann Gordon Quick, testified that Defendant brought Sue into her place of work in January or February 2009. After Defendant's arrest in 2013, Ms. Quick was able to identify Sue as her brother's date back in 2009 by searching her name on Facebook. The prosecutor elicited from Ms. Quick that she never told law enforcement that her brother had dated Sue in early 2009. She further testified that her mother owned a GMC Sonoma truck in April 2009.

Defendant's mother, Gloria Elaine Gordon, testified that around Easter of 2009, her son brought Sue by her house. She did not see Sue again until she testified at Defendant's trial. She further testified that she owned a 1995 GMC Sonoma pickup truck in April of 2009, but it had been in Deborah Wright's transmission shop on 22 April 2009. She explained that she paid Ms. Wright by check for the repairs on 5 May 2009. She testified that she had located the work ticket that Deborah Wright had produced when the clutch job on the truck was paid for. The work ticket, Defendant's Exhibit 7, identified the vehicle as a Chevrolet S-10 and bore no date. Deborah Wright testified that she had no way of knowing when she worked on Ms. *663 Gordon's truck because it had been "several years."

On 27 December 2012, Defendant was charged with first-degree kidnapping, attempted first-degree rape, assault by strangulation, and first-degree sexual offense against a female. On 11 March 2013, he was indicted on the same charges. On 15 December 2014, the charges were joined for trial before Judge R. Stuart Albright.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
789 S.E.2d 659, 248 N.C. App. 403, 2016 N.C. App. LEXIS 773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gordon-ncctapp-2016.