State v. McLean

640 S.E.2d 770, 181 N.C. App. 469, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 260
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 6, 2007
DocketCOA06-216
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 640 S.E.2d 770 (State v. McLean) 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. McLean, 640 S.E.2d 770, 181 N.C. App. 469, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 260 (N.C. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Judge.

Willie Louis McLean (“Defendant”) appeals from judgments entered upon his convictions of conspiracy to commit armed robbery, attempted armed robbery, three counts of armed robbery, and first-degree murder. For the reasons stated herein, we conclude that Defendant is entitled to a new trial.

At trial, the State’s evidence tended to show the following: On 1 November 2002, crew members working maintenance with the City of Raleigh were “pitching quarters” at the shop while waiting for their shift to end. At approximately 11:30 p.m., two young men walked into the shop. The larger of the two was wearing a yellow shirt, and the other man had on a gray hooded sweatshirt. The man in the yellow shirt was firing a handgun as he came through the door and told the crew members to “give up [their] wallets.” During the robbery, Robert Saiz, a supervisor, was shot and killed as he attempted to flee through a back door. Later, Decarus Vinson, one of the robbery victims, identified Defendant’s cousin, Dwight McLean (“Dwight”), in a photographic array as the shooter. Mr. Vinson testified that the man in the gray sweatshirt kept his face covered with the hood. That individual gathered all of the wallets and took them away. Mr. Vinson said he had over $500 in his wallet because 1 November 2002 was payday and he had cashed his check. Mr. Vinson further testified that he observed his co-workers surrender their wallets to the robbers.

In pretrial proceedings and at trial, Mr. Vinson described the individual who gathered up the wallets as being of similar weight and size as Defendant. He also testified that Defendant was the same size, relative to Dwight, as the second robber. However, none of the eyewitnesses was able to positively identify Defendant as the second robber because that individual kept his face covered.

Following a track from the crime scene, a Raleigh police officer and his K-9 dog found the discarded yellow shirt and hooded sweatshirt, which smelled like gunpowder, on the ground. The track led *471 them further to the driveway area of the Timber Lake Apartment complex, where the dog lost the scent. A resident of the complex, Mr. Newkirk, testified that late on the night of 1 November 2002, he was outside talking on his cell phone when he was approached by two men who asked to use his phone. He directed them to the pay phone at the complex. Mr. Newkirk identified Dwight from a photographic lineup as the taller of the two men who approached him. He testified that Defendant’s size and complexion closely resembled the other man, but he was unable to identify Defendant in the photographic lineup.

Similarly, a cab driver who picked up two young men from the Timber Lake Apartments around midnight on 1 November 2002 subsequently identified Dwight as the bigger of the two, but did not get a good look at the shorter, smaller man and did not identify Defendant as one of the two men he picked up. He took the two men to a gas station near another apartment complex where Dwight’s mother lived.

Cherrie McLean, Defendant’s and Dwight’s cousin, testified for the State that, a few days after 1 November 2002, she drove Defendant and Dwight to Durham. Ms. McLean said that, on the way, Dwight began to cry. When she asked him what was going on, he replied that he should never have done what his uncle, Louis McLean (“Louis”), asked him to do, and that he “didn’t mean to shoot the man.” Ms. McLean asked Dwight what he was talking about, and he told her that Louis had asked him and Defendant to “rob his job[.]” Dwight said that Louis gave him the gun and that, while he was shooting to try to “scare peoplef,]” Defendant was going around picking up Louis’s co-workers’ wallets. He told her that Louis had had a disagreement with Robert Saiz and “wanted revenge.” He also mentioned that he and Defendant got away in a cab that took them to a gas station. Ms. McLean testified that Defendant did not protest or dispute any of Dwight’s statements.

Ms. McLean gave this information to a Raleigh police detective after she was arrested in January 2003. She was in jail and hoping to get out when her attorney asked her if she knew anything about the robbery and murder. After speaking with her, the attorney talked to law enforcement officers and the District Attorney’s office on Ms. McLean’s behalf. Ms. McLean then gave a recorded statement describing her trip to Durham with Dwight and Defendant. She subsequently entered into a plea agreement “to take care of’ all the cases pending against her in Wake and Durham Counties. She received a probationary sentence in exchange for her plea.

*472 On cross-examination, Ms. McLean testified that after being arrested, she requested pretrial release because she had a three-year-old child and was pregnant, but her request was denied. Her attorney told her the State would not drop or reduce the charges against her because that had already been done for her in the past. After providing information about the robbery and murder, however, she was placed on pretrial release. On the same day she got out of jail, she spoke to a private investigator and told him she. had been mad at Defendant when she gave the information to law enforcement authorities, that she had falsely accused him of being involved in the robbery and murder, and that she did so because of her anger at him and because she thought her accusation would help her get out of jail. Ms: McLean also agreed on cross-examination that she and Defendant did not get along and had had “run-ins” in the past.

On the basis of Ms. McLean’s recorded statement, Defendant was arrested and charged with the crimes. He voluntarily gave blood and hair samples shortly after his arrest. An agent of the State Bureau of Investigation compared a hair taken from the gray sweatshirt to a sample of both Dwight’s and Defendant’s hair, but no match was made. Another agent performed a DNA analysis of cuttings taken from the yellow shirt and the gray sweatshirt. His comparison of blood samples from Defendant and Dwight to skin cells from the cuttings established that whereas the DNA on both pieces of clothing came from more than one individual, the predominant profile on the yellow shirt came from Dwight, and the predominant profile on the gray sweatshirt matched that of Defendant. The age of the DNA on the shirts could not be determined.

Raleigh police detective Randy Miller testified that • after Defendant was arrested, he stated that his uncle, Louis, had called him and asked him to rob Louis’s co-workers, but Defendant had not answered the request. Detective Miller testified further that Louis told law enforcement authorities that Dwight was the shooter, but he did not identify Defendant as being involved.

Testifying on behalf of Defendant were his father, Willie Caldwell; his father’s fiancé, Cornelia Peterson; and her daughter, Towanda Peterson. Defendant, who does not work, does not drive, and receives social security disability benefits based on a mental disability, lived with his father, as did Cornelia. All three witnesses testified that Defendant was at home on the night of 1 November 2002. Mr. Caldwell and Ms. Peterson arrived home from work about 11:00 p.m. *473 to find Defendant, Ms. Peterson’s two daughters, and Towanda’s children there. Defendant was watching television and did not leave the house after his father got home.

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Related

State v. Doles
671 S.E.2d 599 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2009)
State v. Brunson
653 S.E.2d 552 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
640 S.E.2d 770, 181 N.C. App. 469, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mclean-ncctapp-2007.