State v. Hurd

784 S.E.2d 528, 246 N.C. App. 281, 2016 N.C. App. LEXIS 294
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 15, 2016
Docket15-588
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 784 S.E.2d 528 (State v. Hurd) 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. Hurd, 784 S.E.2d 528, 246 N.C. App. 281, 2016 N.C. App. LEXIS 294 (N.C. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

ROBERT N. HUNTER, JR., Judge.

*282 Justin Duane Hurd ("Defendant") appeals following a jury verdict convicting him of three counts of first degree murder, two counts of first degree kidnapping, and one count of first degree arson. Following the verdict, the trial court imposed three consecutive life sentences without parole. On appeal, Defendant asks this Court to vacate his convictions and remand for a new trial, and contends (1) the trial court clearly erred in sustaining the State's Batson challenge, (2) the State's closing argument was grossly improper and the trial court should have intervened ex mero motu, and (3) the State's closing argument violated Due Process. We disagree.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

On 20 April 2009, a Mecklenburg County grand jury indicted Defendant for three counts of first degree murder, two counts of first degree kidnapping, and one count of first degree arson. On 18 June 2009, the case was declared capital and Defendant pled not guilty. The case was called for trial 21 January 2014. The State presented a circumstantial case using thirty-three witnesses and over 268 exhibits. None of the State's witnesses were eyewitnesses to the murders. Two of the witnesses testified they met Defendant in jail and heard him claim responsibility for the murders. On appeal, Defendant does not contest the veracity of the State's evidence. The following is a summary of the evidence taken in the light most favorable to the State.

In January 2008, Antonio Harmon ("Harmon"), Nathaniel Sanders ("Sanders"), and two other men traveled from Cincinnati, Ohio to meet with Defendant in Atlanta, Georgia. During the meeting, Sanders talked to Defendant for twenty minutes. Harmon had seen Defendant once or twice in Cincinnati, but never talked to him. While Defendant and Sanders spoke, Harmon looked inside Defendant's car and saw a duffel bag of guns inside.

On 1 February 2008, Defendant called Sanders to meet again. Defendant, Sanders, Harmon, and the two other men met at a bar. During this meeting Defendant and Sanders spoke, and Harmon saw a duffel bag containing a Taser inside Sanders's van.

After the meeting, Sanders put the duffel bag of guns inside his van, and told Harmon they could "go out of town and bust a couple of moves"

*283 "to get some extra cash." Harmon declined because he "didn't want to get caught up in anything," and decided to go home to Cincinnati.

On 3 February 2008, Kevin Young lived in a house located in Charlotte, North Carolina, with his girlfriend Kinshasa Wagstaff and her nineteen-year-old niece, Jasmine Hines.

*531 Young trafficked marijuana and worked as a disc jockey and handyman, and Wagstaff worked in real estate. Young owed "big money" to "some drug dealers" in New York.

During the evening of 3 February 2008, Defendant acted as an "enforcer" for the New York drug dealers and went to Young's house with Sanders. Defendant killed Young, Wagstaff, and Hines inside the home, and made Sanders "pull the trigger ... so [he too] would be accountable." They burned the house down and put evidence inside a Cadillac Escalade parked inside the garage. The garage door was "kind of pushed out and crumpled up" such that Defendant and Sanders could not drive the Escalade away. The Escalade contained gasoline cans, lighters, trash bags, tennis shoes with Wagstaff's blood on them, and a trash bag containing gasoline, raw chicken parts, a bent knife with a broken tip and Young's blood on it, a Taser, beer bottle, and water bottles.

Investigators found Wagstaff's charred body lying in the front foyer of the house, with her dog's burned body lying next to her. They found various items nearby including a bloody scarf, bloody bed sheet, cell phone, purse, keys, and mail. A medical examination revealed she had multiple stab wounds to the neck, amid "a number of trauma injuries." Her left wrist was bound with double stranded copper wire, and both of her wrists sustained "fire fractures" from being exposed to heat.

In the kitchen, police found Young's charred body next to a spent .45 caliber shell casing. His hands were handcuffed behind his back. He sustained a lethal gunshot wound to the abdomen and "two sharp force injuries" to the neck and cheek.

Hines's body was found uncharred. She had a gag in her mouth formed out of "an orange dish towel that had a scarf [and duct tape] wrapped around it." Hines had two gunshot wounds to her head and back, "some blunt force injuries," bruises, scrapes, and chemical burns to her back, legs, and arms.

At 4:59 a.m., Sanders drove to a nearby Run Exxon gas station between Huntersville and Charlotte. He went into the store and bought coffee and gas cans. The store clerk, Rodchester Hutchins, noticed Sanders had "a busted lip" and a red substance on his hoodie that looked like blood. Sanders appeared "nervous" and said he was "tired." Hutchins *284 told Sanders to pull his van behind the gas station to rest, but Sanders declined because "he had to get back to Atlanta." He was murdered in Cincinnati six months later.

Defendant was arrested in May 2009 and indicted for the 3 February 2008 triple murder. When he was incarcerated awaiting trial, he told two inmates that Sanders "was taken care of," and he did not have to worry about any witnesses. Defendant was never charged with Sanders's murder.

On 18 June 2009, the case was declared capital. Sometime 1 prior to trial, defense counsel filed a pretrial motion entitled, "Motion to Prohibit District Attorney From Peremptorily Challenging Prospective Black Jurors." In it, Defendant requested the trial court "prohibit the District Attorney from exercising peremptory challenges as to potential Black jurors, or in the alternative to order that the District Attorney state reasons on the record for peremptory challenges of such jurors." The trial court noted the motion was "not supported by any showing of a discriminatory practice or intent on behalf of the State," and denied the motion.

The case was called for trial 21 January 2014. On the eighth day of jury selection, 3 February 2014, prospective Juror 10 was called to the jury box. Juror 10 is a fifty-year-old white male who works for the U.S. Postal Service. During voir dire, Juror 10 said he could follow the law and be fair and impartial. He described his "feelings about the death penalty" as follows:

Personally, I don't-I don't like the fact that someone's life [is] being taken, but at the same time if that justice is-word that correctly. I think that's what we need to be done, I would think I could go through-I mean, I think I can make a *532 decision on that.... I would guess I would say before I came here I have no problem. Now that I'm here, I'm actually thinking about it makes you stop and think. I would like to think based on the facts I could make a decision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
784 S.E.2d 528, 246 N.C. App. 281, 2016 N.C. App. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hurd-ncctapp-2016.