State v. Jenrette

763 S.E.2d 404, 236 N.C. App. 616, 2014 N.C. App. LEXIS 1035
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 7, 2014
DocketCOA13-1353
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 763 S.E.2d 404 (State v. Jenrette) 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. Jenrette, 763 S.E.2d 404, 236 N.C. App. 616, 2014 N.C. App. LEXIS 1035 (N.C. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

DAVIS, Judge.

Santonio Thurman Jenrette (“Defendant”) appeals from his convictions of two counts of first-degree murder, possession with intent to sell and/or deliver cocaine, two counts of possession of a firearm by a felon, two counts of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury, and two counts of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder. On appeal, he contends that the trial court erred in (1) granting the State’s motion to join all of the charges against him for trial; (2) failing to provide an adequate not guilty mandate at the conclusion of its jury instructions as to one of the first-degree murder charges; (3) instructing the jury on a charge of first-degree murder based on the lying in wait doctrine; (4) failing to adequately distinguish between the separate offenses with which Defendant was charged in its jury instructions; and (5) instructing the jury on a charge of first-degree murder based on the felony murder doctrine where there was insufficient evidence of the predicate felonies. After careful review, we conclude that Defendant received a fair trial free from prejudicial error.

Factual Background

The State presented evidence at trial tending to establish the following facts: On 21 September 2007, a confrontation took place between *618 Cormail Reaves (“Reaves”) and Eugene Williams (“Williams”) at a high school football game in Columbus County, North Carolina between East Columbus High School and Whiteville High School. Williams and Reaves were members of two rival gangs with a history of animosity toward each other. Williams was a member of the “Chadboume Boys” and Reaves — like Defendant •— was a member of the “Whiteville Circle Boys.” Members of both groups, including Reaves and Williams, were prepared to fight as a result of the confrontation but ultimately backed down due to the presence of law enforcement officers at the game.

After the game, several members of the Chadboume Boys, including Williams, Darnell Frink (“Frink”), Travis Williams, Jason Williams, and William Inman (“Inman”), went to the stadium parking lot where they ran into Reaves again. Reaves was talking on his cellphone, and when he saw them, he pointed his finger at them as if he was pulling the trigger of a gun. Without engaging Reaves, they got into Jason Williams’ Chevrolet Tahoe and drove to a local gas station, Sam’s Pitt Stop.

At Sam’s Pitt Stop, Williams, Frink, Travis Williams, Jason Williams, and Inman parked in front of a gas pump and were standing around the Tahoe when Jason Williams and Inman noticed a Ford Taums pulling up toward them with the windows down. Jason Williams saw gun barrels protruding from both the front passenger window and the rear passenger-side window of the Taums. He yelled “get down” and immediately thereafter occupants of the Taums — all of whom were wearing ski masks — opened fire on them. Defendant, Reaves, and Defendant’s 14-year-old cousin Rashed 1 Delamez Jones (“Jones”) were three of the occupants of the Taurus who fired guns.

Inman and Frink were both struck by bullets fired by the masked persons in the Taums. Frink died as a result of his gunshot wounds. Inman was wounded in his left thigh and was taken to the hospital for treatment. A bystander, Antwan Waddell, was stmck by bullets in his left thigh and ankle.

Shortly after the shooting, Sabrina Moody (“Moody”) saw a Taums containing Defendant, Marquell Hunter, and an unknown person pull into Stanley Circle directly in front of her parked car. Moody saw Defendant and the other two men get out of their vehicle, remove guns from the back of the Taums, and then quickly run across the street in order to place the guns inside another vehicle.

*619 The Taurus was found burning in a field off of Prison Camp Road later that night. It was ultimately identified as a car belonging to Johnny Sellers (“Sellers”), a used car salesman, that had been stolen along with Sellers’ .25 caliber semi-automatic pistol from the dealership lot the evening of the shooting.

The following evening, Defendant and Reaves were driving a black Acura when they were pulled over by Officers Donald Edwards (“Officer Edwards”) and Edward Memory (“Officer Memory”) of the Whiteville Police Department because the rear taillight of the Acura was not working. Upon inspecting the backseat of the vehicle where Reaves was sitting, Officer Edwards observed two pistols between Reaves’ legs. Defendant and Reaves were removed from the vehicle, and the firearms were seized.

Officer Donnie Hedwin (“Officer Hedwin”) of the Whiteville Police Department, who had arrived on the scene, patted down Defendant, handcuffed him, and placed him in the backseat of Officer Memory’s patrol car. However, while the officers were securing the scene, Defendant managed to force open the door of Officer Memory’s car and escape unobserved.

Upon searching the backseat of Officer Memory’s car after Defendant had escaped, Officer Edwards discovered two baggies containing a substance that was later identified as cocaine wedged underneath the seat. A .45 caliber pistol recovered from the Acura was identified as the same weapon used in the shooting at Sam’s Pitt Stop.

On 19 November 2007, approximately two months after the shooting, Defendant, who was still at large, took Jones out to the woods in a car he had borrowed from a woman named Rebecca White on the pretext of getting in some “target practice.” While in the woods, Defendant shot Jones five times, killing him. Defendant then left Jones’ body in the woods after wedging it under several nearby wooden pallets. The next day, Jones’ mother and aunt, who were searching for Jones, saw Defendant walking along the side of the road. When Jones’ mother asked him whether he had seen Jones, Defendant “just kept walking, he wouldn’t look at [her].” On 5 December 2007, Jones’ body was discovered in the woods off of Barney Tyler Road in Hallsboro, North Carolina.

Defendant fled to Gary, Indiana, where he was eventually apprehended and extradited back to North Carolina. Prior to being apprehended, Defendant filmed a video of himself performing a piece of rap music that he had composed. The lyrics of the song mentioned both *620 the location where Jones’ body was found and the manner in which he had been killed.

While in custody pending trial, Defendant told Aaron McDowell (“McDowell”), Defendant’s cellmate at the Columbus County Jail, how and why he had killed Jones, explaining that he had done so in order to prevent Jones from revealing Defendant’s role in the 21 September 2007 shooting. He also told McDowell he had taken Jones out to a secluded area in Hallsboro to shoot him.

Jeffrey Morton (“Morton”), another inmate in the Columbus County Jail who was incarcerated in the same cell block as Defendant, overheard Defendant talking to a third inmate, Rufus McMillian, about the murder of Jones. Specifically, Morton heard Defendant state that he considered Jones to be “a weak link,” that he took Jones “to a wooded area for target practice [,]” and that he “basically... smoked a couple of blunts with this young guy and took him out and gave him a pistol and they shot some and then he turned the pistol on him and shot him five or six times.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
763 S.E.2d 404, 236 N.C. App. 616, 2014 N.C. App. LEXIS 1035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jenrette-ncctapp-2014.