State v. Hamilton

519 S.E.2d 514, 351 N.C. 14, 1999 N.C. LEXIS 1000
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 8, 1999
Docket385A97
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 519 S.E.2d 514 (State v. Hamilton) 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. Hamilton, 519 S.E.2d 514, 351 N.C. 14, 1999 N.C. LEXIS 1000 (N.C. 1999).

Opinion

MARTIN, Justice.

On 19 February 1996 defendant Jerry Lee Hamilton (defendant) was indicted for the murder of Joy Jones Goebel (Goebel). Defendant was tried capitally at the 10 February 1997 Criminal Session of Superior Court, Richmond County. The jury found defendant guilty of *16 first-degree murder on the basis of premeditation and deliberation. Following a capital sentencing proceeding, the jury recommended a sentence of death, and the trial court entered judgment in accordance with that recommendation.

The State’s evidence tended to show the following: According to the testimony of defendant’s nephew, Johnny Ray Knight (Knight), defendant and Knight went to Jimmy’s Lounge and Game Room on Battley Dairy Road in Richmond County, North Carolina, around 7:00 p.m. on 17 December 1994. Defendant and Knight drank beer and played pool until 2:00 a.m., when the owner, Jimmy Freeman (Freeman), announced it was closing time. Defendant and Knight left the bar together and stood outside in the parking lot.

At this time Goebel arrived in the parking lot, spoke briefly with defendant and Knight, and entered the bar to purchase beer. Freeman, however, refused to sell Goebel beer because it was after closing time. Goebel asked Freeman if they were still selling beer in South Carolina. Freeman told her that he did not think so. Goebel left the bar and went outside to the parking lot where defendant and Knight were loitering. Defendant, Knight, and Goebel left the parking lot and walked down Battley Dairy Road discussing whether they could still purchase beer in South Carolina.

As Freeman closed the bar, Knight came running back and asked if anyone was going toward South Carolina who could give them a ride. Freeman said no. Freeman asked Knight who was with him and Knight replied defendant and Goebel. Knight then rejoined defendant and Goebel.

While defendant, Goebel, and Knight were walking together, Knight began looking for a can to use to smoke crack cocaine until Goebel told Knight that she had a glass pipe they could use. They then stopped walking and proceeded into a clearing in the woods off Battley Dairy Road to smoke crack cocaine. Knight recalled smoking the first rock but could not remember who smoked the second. Knight testified that defendant smoked a cocaine rock in the early morning hours of 18 December 1994.

After smoking crack cocaine, Knight and Goebel started kissing and decided to have sex. Knight testified that he had a knife in his pants and that he stuck it in the ground before having sex with Goebel. While Goebel and Knight were having sex, Knight noticed that defendant was standing to his right.

*17 When Knight finished having sex with Goebel, he put his pants back on, lit a cigarette, and sat by a pine tree near the road. When Knight looked back, he saw what appeared to be defendant having sex with Goebel. Knight testified, “[Goebel] was lyin’ on her back with her legs open, and [defendant] was standin’ there playing with hisself [sic], rubbing hisself [sic] up and down on her or something.” When Knight looked back a second time, he saw Goebel on her hands and knees and defendant behind her with his pants down.

Shortly thereafter, Knight heard Goebel scream. Knight turned back and saw defendant, with Knight’s knife in his hand, struggling with Goebel. Goebel kicked defendant and knocked the knife out of his hand. Defendant then hit Goebel in the mouth, and she fell back. Defendant grabbed the knife and stabbed Goebel repeatedly. At one point, defendant stabbed Goebel so deeply that the knife would not come out of her body. Defendant had to use two hands to jerk the knife out, causing Goebel’s body to lift off the ground. Knight could not recall how many times defendant stabbed Goebel but indicated that he believed she was dead because she did not appear to be breathing.

Knight testified that defendant complained he had hurt his hand and that defendant used Goebel’s blood-soaked shirt to wrap around his hand. Defendant told Knight to help him pull Goebel’s body further into the woods. Defendant also told Knight that if either of them got caught, he should take the blame and not mention the other’s name. Knight further testified that he became frustrated at defendant’s demands for Knight to make sure Goebel was dead, so he picked up a stick and struck Goebel in the head several times. As defendant and Knight left the scene, defendant held the knife, and Knight picked up Goebel’s shoes and pants.

As they walked home, Knight threw Goebel’s pants and shoes into a pond, and defendant took the knife, wiped it clean with Goebel’s shirt, handed it to Knight, and told Knight to bury it. Knight stomped the knife into the ground. When defendant arrived home, he put Goebel’s shirt in a trash barrel and burned it.

Dr. Thomas Clark, a forensic pathologist with the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, performed Goebel’s autopsy. Dr. Clark testified that there were two blunt-force injuries to Goebel’s head and thirty-two sharp-force injuries, or stab wounds, to Goebel’s head, back, chest, and abdomen. Three of the sharp-force injuries had the *18 potential to be rapidly fatal. Dr. Clark opined that multiple stab wounds caused Goebel’s death.

At trial defendant offered evidence to show that he was not with Knight and Goebel when Goebel was murdered. Defendant admitted that he went to Jimmy’s Lounge and Game Room with Knight on 17 December 1994 and that he played pool and drank beer until closing time. Defendant testified that, as he left the bar, he grabbed the door and shut it on his hand. Defendant further testified that he and Knight were standing outside the bar when Goebel arrived in the parking lot. Defendant did not remember seeing her go inside the bar, but recalled that she was not there long before she came back outside and stated that Freeman would not sell her any beer. Defendant, Knight, and Goebel walked down the road away from the bar. Defendant stated that the three of them stopped walking when defendant said he was going home because his hand was hurting. Defendant left Knight and Goebel and went home.

Defendant introduced the testimony of two witnesses, Shawn Ponds (Ponds) and Joseph Staton (Staton), to offer evidence that Knight killed Goebel. Ponds and Staton both knew Knight and were in jail with Knight after Goebel was murdered.

Ponds testified that Knight told him the story of how he beat Goebel in the head and repeatedly stabbed her. Staton testified that, in late December 1994 or early January 1995, Knight told him that he had killed Goebel and described hitting her in the face with a stick, knocking out some of her teeth, and then stabbing her in the chest several times. Knight allegedly told Staton the same story in late February 1995. According to Staton, Knight never mentioned that defendant was involved in the murder. Staton further testified that Knight told him the Sheriff’s Department had threatened Knight with the death penalty and that Knight said he “wasn’t going to do it by himself’ and indicated he would blame it on someone.

GUILT-INNOCENCE PHASE

By assignment of error, defendant contends the trial court erred in granting the State’s motion in limine to preclude defendant, by and through his counsel, from questioning Knight about a prior knife threat in 1987.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
519 S.E.2d 514, 351 N.C. 14, 1999 N.C. LEXIS 1000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hamilton-nc-1999.