State v. Knight

459 S.E.2d 481, 340 N.C. 531, 1995 N.C. LEXIS 378
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 28, 1995
Docket110A94
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 459 S.E.2d 481 (State v. Knight) 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. Knight, 459 S.E.2d 481, 340 N.C. 531, 1995 N.C. LEXIS 378 (N.C. 1995).

Opinion

PARKER, Justice.

Defendant was tried capitally on an indictment charging him with the first-degree murder of Carlos Colon Stoner (“victim”). The jury returned a verdict finding defendant guilty as charged. During a capital sentencing proceeding, the jury was unable to unanimously agree as to its sentencing recommendation, and the trial court imposed a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment. For the reasons discussed herein, we conclude that defendant’s trial was free of prejudicial error and uphold his conviction and sentence.

On the morning of 27 May 1992, the body of Carlos Stoner was discovered in Washington Park in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The body was lying half on and half off the Greenway transversing the park.

*537 Dr. Patrick Lantz, the county medical examiner, performed an autopsy on the victim’s body. He testified that the victim had been stabbed more than twenty-seven times and that a number of his wounds would have been individually fatal. There was a stab wound at the base of the victim’s skull extending into his brain stem, which Dr. Lantz believed had been inflicted prior to the victim’s death. Dr. Lantz testified that the victim’s heart was still beating at the time this wound was inflicted based on the amount of bleeding near the wound. This wound would have incapacitated the victim although his heart could have continued beating for a period of several minutes after the wound was inflicted.

The victim also had a very large gaping wound in his chest, approximately seven inches by three inches, where his rib cage had been split open. This wound exposed the victim’s heart and right lung. Dr. Lantz testified that the victim had likely been alive when he received this wound and could have lived up to five minutes after it was inflicted.

Several other wounds penetrated the victim’s lungs and the space surrounding his heart. According to Dr. Lantz these smaller wounds would have leaked blood slowly. Death from these wounds would have taken anywhere from a matter of minutes to possibly more than an hour after they were inflicted.

The victim’s penis had been severed from his body and inserted into his mouth. Dr. Lantz testified that this castration occurred at or near the time of the victim’s death.

The autopsy further revealed that the victim had a blood alcohol level of 280 milligrams per deciliter (.28). The victim was HIV-positive.

Dwayne Doby (“Doby”) testified against defendant at trial. The State’s evidence tended to show that on the evening of 26 May 1992, Doby was at a party on Academy Street in Winston-Salem. According to Doby he was standing in the yard of Wendy Britton’s home on Academy Street with a group of people including defendant and Mark Smith. The men were drinking beer when the victim walked past them. The victim was drunk and shouting. Smith hollered at the victim and told him to be quiet. The victim rolled up his sleeves and said he was going to “whup [sic] somebody’s a — .” Doby testified that he did not see the victim fight anyone and that he did not see anyone *538 strike the victim at that time. Smith walked over to where the victim was standing and talked with him for a while.

After Smith returned to the party, the victim again began shouting at the people at the party. Smith and defendant went across the street to where the victim was standing. The men shouted at each other for a while, and then the victim was invited to come have a drink at the party. The victim drank part of a beer and was asked to leave the party. The victim then walked up Academy Street to the Circle K.

Doby testified that as the victim was walking away from the party, Andrew Gilbert arrived at the party. Shortly thereafter, Smith approached Doby and asked him to drive Smith, Gilbert, and defendant up the road to pick up the victim. The men planned to beat up the victim in a local park. Doby got in the front seat of his truck, and the other men got in the back. Doby drove to the Circle K. Smith got out of the truck and talked to the victim, who agreed to go off with the other men. The victim got in the passenger side of the truck, and the men drove to another local store to buy beer. At this time the victim tried to get out of the truck, but defendant had his hand on the victim’s shoulder and told him to get back in the truck.

Doby drove his truck to the Greenway in Washington Park. Doby drove down the Greenway to a clearing, turned around, and parked on the pathway facing out of the park. When he turned the truck lights off, he was still able to see what was going on outside the truck. He testified that the area was well lit from nearby streetlights, the moon, and lights from a Duke Power supply lot located across the street from the park. Doby testified at trial that he could see all the other persons present, the path, and the clearing where the truck was parked.

After he parked the truck, Doby got out and walked around to the back of the truck. Gilbert told Doby to get back in the truck. The victim had not yet exited the truck, and Doby heard defendant ask him to do so. Doby testified that the victim was visibly drunk and difficult to understand. The victim stepped out of the truck and put his hands on the side of the truck. Defendant told the victim to step away from the truck; and when he refused, defendant hit him in the jaw. Defendant elbowed him in the chest, and the victim started to fall. Gilbert had a knife in his hands and started stabbing the victim. Doby saw Gilbert make several slashing motions and heard Gilbert claim that he had stabbed the victim three times before he hit the ground. Smith kicked and beat on the victim after he had fallen to the ground. *539 Once the attack started, Doby heard the victim grunt a few times; and then he was quiet.

After this initial attack on the victim, Smith and Gilbert got back in the truck; and Doby rolled it approximately fifteen feet down the Greenway. Defendant continued to beat on the victim and asked Gilbert for the knife. Doby saw defendant stab the victim repeatedly before returning to the truck. When he returned to the truck, defendant claimed he had stabbed the victim thirteen or fourteen times with the knife. Doby saw defendant wipe the blood off his hands and the knife with the victim’s hat. Gilbert threw the knife out of the truck during the trip back to the party on Academy Street. The men made a pact not to tell anyone about the murder.

Approximately one hour later, defendant asked Doby for a ride to defendant’s house. Defendant went inside and retrieved a hunting knife, which was approximately eleven inches long. He asked Doby to drive him back to the Greenway so he could make sure the victim was dead. Doby drove defendant back to Washington Park and dropped him off. Doby circled the block twice and then picked defendant up on Broad Street. At that time he noticed that defendant had a great deal of blood on his hands. Defendant still had the knife with him.

Defendant got into the truck and told Doby that the victim had still been alive. Doby testified that defendant told him that the victim had been asking for help and that he had kicked the victim in the head. Next, defendant claimed he took his knife and stuck it in the victim’s neck and twisted it, a trick his father had learned in Vietnam.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
459 S.E.2d 481, 340 N.C. 531, 1995 N.C. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-knight-nc-1995.