State v. Mercer

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 4, 2026
Docket25-646
StatusPublished
AuthorJudge Tom Murry

This text of State v. Mercer (State v. Mercer) 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. Mercer, (N.C. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA25-646

Filed 4 March 2026

Wilson County, No. 23CRS372629-970

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

TRAVIS RAY MERCER, Defendant.

Appeal by Defendant from judgment entered 15 January 2025 by Judge John

M. Dunlow in Wilson County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 15

January 2026.

Attorney General Jeff Jackson, by Assistant Attorney General Ashley C. Council, for the State.

Attorney Joseph E. Gerber for Defendant–Appellant.

MURRY, Judge.

Travis R. Mercer (Defendant) appeals from judgments entered upon guilty

verdicts for false imprisonment and assault inflicting serious bodily injury. On

appeal, Defendant contends that his counsel was per se ineffective because he

“conceded [Defendant’s] guilt to a lesser-included offense without his consent” and

prejudicially ineffective because he “failed to move to suppress the fruits of a search

conducted by a warrant issued from a facially insufficient indictment.” Defendant

further contends that the trial court erred by failing to intervene ex mero motu during STATE V. MERCER

Opinion of the Court

the State’s closing argument. For the following reasons, this Court holds that

Defendant did not receive any ineffective assistance of counsel (IAC) and that the

trial court did not err by declining to intervene during the State’s closing argument.

I. Background

This matter arises out of an incident between Defendant and Glenda Lucas

Randolph that resulted in injury to her shoulder. As of July 2023, Defendant and

Randolph had known each other for eight years, of which they had spent at least four

years in what Randolph described as a “boyfriend/girlfriend fiancé crazy

rollercoaster” relationship. On the morning of 30 July 2023, Officer Luis Quesada of

the Wilson County Police Department responded to a 911 call from a local gas station

to find Randolph distraught and complaining of shoulder pain. Medical personnel

transported Randolph to Wilson Medical Center, where doctors diagnosed and

treated a closed right humeral fracture. Detective Taja S. Frails noted facial bruising

and a sling on Randolph’s right arm when she interviewed her at the hospital.

That same day, officers applied for a search warrant for Defendant’s residence

at 113 Garner Street in Wilson. The search warrant listed Detective “U.E. Johnson”

and Detective “T. Frails” as co-applicants. The accompanying affidavit listed

Detective Johnson as the applicant but bore Detective Frails’s signature in the section

for “signature of applicant.” Magistrate T.M. Harris issued the search warrant, and

the officers executed it that same day. Upon entering Defendant’s residence, they

found Defendant hiding behind a couch in the living room. While searching

-2- STATE V. MERCER

Defendant’s bedroom, the officers seized Randolph’s feces-covered shoes and

underwear as evidence. They also observed feces throughout the bedroom and a

“[b]ody size hole that looked like someone slammed against the wall.” Officer A.J.

Burns logged an inventory of the recovered items.

On 6 November 2023, a grand jury indicted Defendant for first-degree

kidnapping and assault inflicting serious bodily injury. At trial on 13 January 2025,

the parties presented conflicting evidence. Detective Frails testified to finding

Randolph’s clothes and feces in Defendant’s home, which the State accompanied by

introducing Detective Frails’s body-camera footage and photographs from the search.

As the prosecuting witness for the State, Randolph’s testimony tended to show

the following: On 29 July 2023, Randolph arrived home after a sobriety meeting when

Defendant told her to come to his home and clean his room, which she did under

protest. At some point, Defendant became agitated and threw her against the wall.

Then, on 30 July 2023, when Randolph was sleeping in Defendant’s bed, he pulled

her off of the bed by her leg, causing her to fall and fracture her right shoulder.

Defendant then stomped on her broken shoulder approximately three times and on

her stomach, causing her to lose control of her bowels and defecate. When she

requested medical treatment, he refused and ordered her to clean the room and her

feces. After Defendant went back to sleep, Randolph, still covered in feces, donned

Defendant’s boxers and escaped to a gas station across the street.

-3- STATE V. MERCER

Testifying in his own defense later at trial, Defendant offered a conflicting

sequence of events and ultimately denied assaulting Randolph. He testified that they

had both been using drugs and alcohol over multiple days, and that, when he had

tried to get Randolph to stop smoking crack, she became belligerent, headbutted him,

fell off of his bed, and landed on her shoulder. He stated that he did not know what

caused Randolph to defecate but that she had a history of incontinence.

During closing arguments, defense counsel argued that the State had not met

its evidentiary burden for first-degree kidnapping because “kidnapping . . . doesn’t fit

the circumstances of this case.” He urged the jury to consider the lesser-included

offenses as follows:

Your choices would be guilty of first-degree kidnapping, guilty of second-degree kidnapping, guilty of felonious restraint, guilty of false imprisonment, or not guilty. I would suggest to you that you have two choices. You can find Defendant guilty of false imprisonment, which is a misdemeanor. Or you can get a not guilty in this case.

(Quotation modified.) In contrast, the State’s closing argument emphasized to the

jury that Randolph “told the truth and that’s really all we can ask of her. She told

you what happened. She told you what he did to her . . . . She told the truth.”

Defendant did not object to the State’s remarks at trial.

On 15 January 2025, the jury found Defendant guilty of assault inflicting

serious bodily injury and the lesser-included offense of false imprisonment. Finding

Defendant to have a felony prior record level (PRL) V and a misdemeanor PRL III,

the trial court consolidated the judgments and sentenced Defendant to 23–37 months’

-4- STATE V. MERCER

imprisonment with 135 days’ credit. Defendant timely appealed.

II. Jurisdiction

This Court has jurisdiction over Defendant’s appeal from the trial court’s final

judgment under N.C.G.S. §§ 7A-27, 15A-1444. See N.C.G.S. § 7A-27(b) (2025) (final

judgment of a trial court); id. § 15A-1444(a) (pleaded not guilty but found guilty). IAC

claims generally “should be considered through motions for appropriate relief and not

on direct appeal.” State v. Stroud, 147 N.C. App. 549, 553 (2001). But because “the

cold record reveals that no further investigation is required,” this Court also has

jurisdiction to determine Defendant’s IAC claim on direct review. State v. Fair, 354

N.C. 131, 166 (2001).

III. Analysis

Defendant argues that his counsel was per se ineffective because he “conceded

his guilt to a lesser-included offense without his consent” and prejudicially ineffective

because he did not “move to suppress the fruits of a search conducted by a warrant

issued from a facially insufficient indictment.” Defendant also argues that the trial

court erred by failing to intervene ex mero motu during the State’s closing argument.

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State v. Mercer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mercer-ncctapp-2026.