State v. Green

365 S.E.2d 587, 321 N.C. 594, 1988 N.C. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 9, 1988
Docket38A87
StatusPublished
Cited by100 cases

This text of 365 S.E.2d 587 (State v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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. Green, 365 S.E.2d 587, 321 N.C. 594, 1988 N.C. LEXIS 112 (N.C. 1988).

Opinion

MARTIN, Justice.

For the reasons stated below, we find the defendant’s assignments of error to be without merit and hold that he received a fair trial, free of prejudicial error.

Viewed in the light most favorable to the state, the evidence presented at trial tended to show the following: On the morning of 12 February 1985, Callie Grimes went to look for her husband, *597 Jimmy, who had not come home the previous night. She sought him at a local bar, the Chiefs Club, located on Highway 55 near the town of Apex. Arriving at approximately 8:15 a.m., she found the door unlocked and, upon entering, found her husband lying dead on the barroom floor. The body of Garland Williams was lying beside her husband. When Callie Grimes went behind the bar to telephone for help, she discovered the body of the third victim, the bar’s owner, Charlie Ray Johnson.

Forensic evidence tended to show that the men had died no later than 5:00 a.m. Crime scene investigators determined that the wallets of the victims had been taken from them. However, they also found $9,000 in a blue bank bag belonging to Charlie Johnson and an additional $7,500 in hundred dollar bills in Johnson’s coat pocket.

The autopsy of Jimmy Ray Grimes revealed four gunshot wounds. He was shot in the head three times at close range with a small-caliber gun. There was also a contact wound in the pit of his stomach where he had been shot with a large-caliber bullet. Grimes had a blood alcohol level of 0.20 percent.

Charlie Ray Johnson had been shot four times. Two large-caliber bullets had struck his trunk while two small-caliber bullets had been fired into his forehead and ear at close range. Charlie Johnson had a blood alcohol level of 0.31 percent.

Garland Williams was shot three times. A large-caliber bullet entered his back. He had two close-range head wounds, one caused by a large-caliber and one by a small-caliber bullet. His blood alcohol level was 0.19 percent.

According to the testimony of several of the bar’s patrons, defendant arrived at the Chiefs Club with Debra Blankenship on the afternoon of 11 February. During that afternoon and evening and into the early morning hours of 12 February, defendant and Blankenship played pool, drank beer, and used cocaine at the Chiefs Club. Defendant also sold cocaine to a patron, who in turn sold it to several others at the club, and Charlie Johnson used cocaine given to him by defendant. Patrons testified that defendant had in his possession both his own .38-caliber pistol and Blankenship’s .22-caliber pistol. Charlie Johnson kept a .38-caliber pistol under the bar. These guns were displayed several times in the *598 hours preceding the shootings. Both defendant and Johnson displayed their .38s when a man assaulted his girlfriend. Defendant followed the violent patron outside the bar to remonstrate with him, having first armed himself with a pistol. Defendant also made a display of his .38 when he went upstairs with a group of bar patrons to inject cocaine. Defendant and Johnson were observed displaying and discussing their guns, including Blankenship’s .22, in the early morning hours.

J. C. Sandy was the last patron, other than defendant and Blankenship, to leave the Chiefs Club. At about 2:30 a.m„ he had a brief conversation with Jimmy Grimes, who came and spoke to him as he sat in his parked Jeep outside the club. Grimes told him that Charlie Johnson, who was preparing to close, was permitting defendant, Blankenship, and Garland Williams to remain in the bar but would not allow him to stay. There had been some tension between the two men because Grimes had wanted Johnson to intervene more forcefully in the boyfriend/girlfriend quarrel that had left the girlfriend with a badly bruised face. Grimes told Sandy that he would sleep in his parked car until it was time for him to go to work. He also told Sandy that he believed defendant was going to rob Charlie Johnson. Grimes and Sandy knocked on the club door and gained admittance for a brief period of time, after which they left the club. Sandy drove home. Grimes went to his car.

Debra Blankenship testified that while Sandy and Grimes were making their brief entrance into the bar, she, at defendant’s request, went outside to warm up her van in preparation for their departure. Sandy saw her reenter the bar as he drove away. Blankenship testified that soon after reentering the bar she told defendant she was ready to leave and returned to the van. After waiting for him with the motor running for a little time, she turned off the engine and went to sleep in the back of the van.

When Debra Blankenship woke in the van, early on the morning of 12 February, she found that defendant was driving towards Virginia on N.C. 86. Blankenship was born and partly raised in Glade Hill, Virginia, where she had numerous kin with whom she and her immediate family had close ties. The couple drove to Glade Hill, where they picked up several cartons of stored belongings. They then drove to Daytona Beach, Florida, where *599 Blankenship’s parents were attending the races. According to Blankenship’s testimony and that of her family and kin, she sought the aid and protection of her parents because, although she loved defendant, she feared him.

Debra Blankenship testified that when she woke in the van defendant told her that he was in trouble because he had “blowed three people away.” As they were driving to Glade Hill, defendant asked her to throw a package out the window of the van. It felt smooth to Blankenship and may have contained the wallets of the murder victims. He later handed her a towel and three guns — her .22, his .38, and a gun that looked to her like Charlie Johnson’s .38 —and asked her to wipe them. Later he got out of the van and disposed of them. Defendant also cut up the clothes and boots he had worn at the Chief’s Club and disposed of them in the woods. Blankenship had observed stains on the dungarees he had been wearing, on the pants’ legs below the knees.

While in Glade Hill, defendant told Blankenship’s uncle, aunt, and cousin that he had killed three people and that Debra had no part in the killings. When the couple reached Florida, defendant made the same statement to each of Blankenship’s parents and to her father’s niece, who had accompanied them to Daytona. Defendant asked Debra’s father to help him get a car in which to flee. L. B. Blankenship refused him.

On the evening of the couple’s arrival in Daytona Beach, 14 February, a man from Durham, North Carolina, who knew defendant was wanted for murder in North Carolina, saw defendant, recognized him, and informed Daytona Beach police as to his whereabouts. In the early morning hours of 15 February, Daytona Beach police entered the Blankenship hotel suite and found defendant hiding in a closet with a sawed-off shotgun. When he was advised by police to drop the gun, he neither complied nor resisted. The gun was wrested from his hands by police and he was placed under arrest.

Defendant and Debra Blankenship were jointly tried for the first-degree murders of the Chiefs Club victims. Defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree based on premeditation and deliberation in all three cases. Blankenship was acquitted.

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Bluebook (online)
365 S.E.2d 587, 321 N.C. 594, 1988 N.C. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-green-nc-1988.