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
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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.
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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’
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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.
For the following reasons, we hold that Defendant did not receive IAC and that the
trial court did not err by failing to intervene during the State’s closing argument.
A. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Defendant asserts two Sixth Amendment right-to-counsel claims on both per
se and prejudicially ineffective grounds. For the following reasons, we disagree on
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both counts and hold that Defendant did not receive IAC on either ground.
The Federal Sixth Amendment guarantees a criminal defendant’s right to
effective assistance of counsel. See U.S. Const. amend. VI. A defense counsel violates
his client’s right by committing an error “so serious” as to “not function[ ] as the
‘counsel’ guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment,” thus depriving the defendant of a fair
trial. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984). To bring a successful IAC
claim on appeal, a defendant must establish both that (1) his counsel’s deficient
performance “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness” and (2) “the
deficient performance prejudiced the defense.” Id. To establish prejudice, Defendant
“must show . . . a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors,
the result of the proceeding would have been different.” State v. Allen, 360 N.C. 297,
316 (2006) (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694). A reasonable probability is that
which is “sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome,” Strickland, 466 U.S. at
694, for which “a different result must be substantial, not just conceivable.” State v.
Lane, 271 N.C. App. 307, 313–14 (2020) (quotation omitted); see State v. Phillips, 365
N.C. 103, 121 (2011) (assessing prejudice by “looking at the totality of the evidence”).
“The fact that counsel made an error, even an unreasonable error, does not warrant
reversal of a conviction unless there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
errors, there would have been a different result in the proceedings.” State v. Braswell,
312 N.C. 553, 563 (1985) (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694).
1. Per Se Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
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We first address Defendant’s per se IAC claim.1 Defendant contends that
defense counsel improperly conceded his guilt by telling the jury that it “could find
[Defendant] guilty of false imprisonment, which is a misdemeanor.” He argues that
“a full reading of [defense counsel’s] closing argument shows that it was a plea to the
jury to compromise by finding [Defendant] guilty of lesser-included misdemeanors
within each charged felony.” While we review prejudicial IAC claims under the
Strickland standard, we review per se IAC claims under a de novo standard. See State
v. Moore, 286 N.C. App. 341, 345 (2022); Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687. For the following
reasons, we disagree and hold that Defendant did not receive per se IAC.
Despite its creation of a two-part test, Strickland left open the possibility of an
error so egregious as to presume prejudice on appeal. See Strickland, 466 U.S. at 692.
Our Supreme Court similarly recognized that some circumstances may be “so likely
to prejudice the accused that the cost of litigating their effect in a particular case is
unjustified.” State v. Harbison, 315 N.C. 175, 180 (1985) (quoting United States v.
Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 658 (1984)) (holding that defense counsel’s admission of guilt to
lesser-charged offense without prior consent is so likely to prejudice defendant that
it is reversible error per se). As a result, the Harbison Court established “ineffective
assistance of counsel, per se in violation of the Sixth Amendment, . . . in every
1 Defendant expressly limits this claim to defense counsel’s comments regarding his first-degree kidnapping charge and subsequent false-imprisonment conviction. We limit our review accordingly.
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criminal case in which the defendant’s counsel admits the defendant’s guilt to the
jury without the defendant’s consent.” Id.
On appeal, we consider defense counsel’s challenged statement contextually
“to determine whether the statement was, in fact, a concession of defendant’s guilt of
a crime.” State v. Mills, 205 N.C. App. 577, 587 (2010). Although a Harbison claim is
generally based on an explicit admission of the defendant’s guilt, “an implied
admission of guilt . . . [may] constitute Harbison error” where the “statements to the
jury cannot logically be interpreted as anything other than an implied concession of
guilt to a charged offense.” State v. McAllister, 375 N.C. 455, 475 (2020). But defense
counsel may “remind the jury that it can find the defendant guilty of a lesser-included
offense if it does not find [the] defendant guilty of the charged offense.” State v.
Parker, 290 N.C. App. 650, 654 (2023).
In assessing Defendant’s claim, we find State v. Parker particularly
instructive. In Parker, this Court held that the defense counsel did not concede the
defendant’s guilt by stating to the jury that it “decide[s] whether the use of force is
excessive. But if it was excessive, that is voluntary manslaughter. That is not
first[-]degree murder. That is not second[-]degree murder. That is voluntary
manslaughter.” Id. at 655. The Court in Parker noted that, because the defendant
“was charged with first-degree murder, and the transcript reveals his counsel
advocating for the jury to find [him] either not guilty, or” the lesser-included offense
of “guilty of voluntary manslaughter,” his defense counsel “neither stated nor
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implied” the defendant’s guilt. Id. Rather, he argued that the most serious crime of
which the defendant could be convicted was a lesser-included offense. Id.; see State v.
Campbell, 359 N.C. 644, 696 (2005) (holding that defense counsel did not concede
guilt when explaining that, without evidence of specific intent, the most serious
possible conviction was second-degree murder).
Here, defense counsel’s statement that the jury “could find [Defendant] guilty
of false imprisonment, which is a misdemeanor . . . or not guilty” is much more similar
to the defense counsel’s comments in Parker than those in Harbison. See Parker, 290
N.C. App. at 655. The record reveals that Defendant was charged with first-degree
kidnapping and that defense counsel asked the jury to find him either guilty of false
imprisonment or not guilty altogether. As in Parker, defense counsel’s statements
neither foreclosed a not-guilty verdict nor instructed the jury that Defendant was
guilty of any offense; rather, they presented an alternative without implicitly or
explicitly conceding Defendant’s guilt to the lesser-included offense. Read in proper
context, defense counsel’s closing argument challenged the State’s proof and
preserved a not-guilty verdict as an available option by alternatively asking the jury
to consider lesser-included offenses. Accordingly, because we hold that defense
counsel neither stated nor implied Defendant’s guilt, we need not address whether
he obtained Defendant’s prior consent. See Harbison, 315 N.C. at 180. Therefore,
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Defendant did not receive per se IAC.2
2. Prejudicially Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
We next address Defendant’s prejudicial IAC claim. He contends his counsel’s
failure to move to “suppress the fruits of a search conducted by a warrant issued from
a facially insufficient indictment” rendered defense counsel prejudicially ineffective.
Because “the affidavit supporting the application for the search warrant is the only
information in the record on which basis the magistrate could have lawfully issued
the search warrant,” he argues that “the warrant should have never been issued.”
But Defendant’s second claim fares no better than his first. For the following reasons,
we disagree and hold that Defendant did not receive prejudicial IAC.
As discussed above, we analyze claims of prejudicial IAC under Strickland’s
two-pronged test. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687. Under this test, a reviewing court need
not assess counsel’s performance if “dispos[ing] of an ineffectiveness claim on the
ground of . . . [in]sufficient prejudice” would be easier. Id. at 697. This Court has
similarly held that an attorney’s “failure to file a motion to suppress is not . . . [IAC]
where the search or stop that led to the discovery of the evidence was lawful.” State
v. Canty, 224 N.C. App. 514, 517 (2012); see State v. Hernandez, 293 N.C. App. 283,
2 We typically examine a defendant’s claim under the “normal ineffectiveness standard set forth in Strickland v. Washington” upon determining that he did not receive per se IAC. State v. McDowell, 329 N.C. 363, 387 (1991). We do not do so here because Defendant argued only that defense counsel’s conduct amounted to per se IAC and does not argue prejudice to the extent that his counsel’s comments alternatively amounted to prejudicial IAC. See N.C. R. App. P. 28(b)(6); State v. Bowman, 274 N.C. App. 214, 220 (2020) (declining to reach Strickland analysis on same basis).
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300 (2024) (no prejudicial IAC where, “had the defendant’s trial counsel objected to
the search warrant, the result of the proceeding would have been the same.” (citation
modified)). Accordingly, we must first assess the warrant’s lawfulness to assess
whether defense counsel then ineffectively failed to challenge it through a motion to
suppress.
The Federal Fourth Amendment protects “[t]he right of the people to be secure
against unreasonable searches and seizures” by requiring “[w]arrants issue[d] upon
probable cause” that “particularly describe[ ] the place to be searched[ ] and the
things to be seized,” U.S. Const. amend. IV (ellipses omitted), which the Federal
Fourth Amendment’s Due Process Clause incorporates against the States. See Mapp
v. Ohio, 367 U.S. 643 (1961) (incorporating Search and Seizure Clause); Aguilar v.
Texas, 378 U.S. 108 (1964) (incorporating Warrants and Particular Description
Clauses), abrogated on other grounds by Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213 (1983).
“Probable cause . . . means a reasonable ground to believe that the proposed search
will reveal the presence upon the premises to be searched of the objects sought and
that those objects will aid in the apprehension or conviction of the offender.” State v.
Campbell, 282 N.C. 125, 128–29 (1972).
A search-warrant application must include (1) a statement of probable cause
and (2) “one or more affidavits particularly setting forth the facts and circumstances
establishing probable cause.” N.C.G.S. § 15A-244(2)–(3) (2025). Any affidavit “must
establish a nexus between the objects sought and the place to be searched,” State v.
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Eddings, 280 N.C. App. 204, 210 (2021), which must show that either “criminal
activity actually occurred at the location to be searched or that the fruits of a crime
that occurred elsewhere are observed at a certain place,” State v. Oates, 224 N.C. App.
634, 644 (2012). “[I]nformation relayed from one officer to another” may supply the
necessary “[p]robable cause for an affidavit . . . if that information was reported while
the officer performed his or her duties.” State v. Rayfield, 231 N.C. App. 632, 643
(2014).
In reviewing a warrant application, a magistrate must “make a practical,
common-sense decision whether, given all the circumstances set forth in the affidavit
before him, including the ‘veracity’ and ‘basis of knowledge’ of persons supplying
hearsay information, there is a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime
will be found in a particular place.” Gates, 462 U.S. at 238. In doing so, the magistrate
may consider “the totality of the circumstances” by drawing “reasonable inferences”
from the affidavit’s facts, Eddings, 280 N.C. App. at 210 (quoting State v. Arrington,
311 N.C. 633,638 (1972)), to determine “whether the evidence as a whole provides a
substantial basis for concluding that probable cause exists,” State v. Beam, 325 N.C.
217, 221 (1989).
Because “[p]robable cause does not mean actual and positive cause, nor does it
import absolute certainty,” Campbell, 282 N.C. at 129 (quotation omitted), our
Supreme Court has cautioned against a “grudging or negative attitude by reviewing
courts toward warrants” as “inconsistent with the Fourth Amendment’s strong
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preference for searches conducted pursuant to a warrant,” State v. Riggs, 328 N.C.
213, 222 (1991) (quoting Gates, 462 U.S. at 236). Accordingly, “courts should not
invalidate warrant[s] by interpreting affidavit[s] in a hypertechnical, rather than a
commonsense, manner.” Id. (alterations in original) (quoting Gates, 462 U.S. at 236).
We instead afford “great deference” to “a magistrate’s determination of probable
cause,” State v. Brody, 251 N.C. App. 812, 820–21 (2017) (quotation omitted), and
must only “ensur[e] that the issuing magistrate had a ‘substantial basis for . . .
conclud[ing] that probable cause existed,’ ” State v. McKinney, 368 N.C. 161, 164
(2015) (second and third alterations in original) (quoting Gates, 462 U.S. 238 (1983)).
Additionally, any officer acting within his territorial jurisdiction may execute a
search warrant, regardless of whether he applied for it but “must, without
unnecessary delay, return to the clerk of the issuing court the warrant together with
a written inventory of the items seized.” N.C.G.S. § 15A-257 (2025). “The inventory,
if any, and return must be signed and sworn to by the officer who executed the
warrant.” Id. But see State v. Tessnear, 265 N.C. 319, 325 (1965) (officer on affidavit
need not be same officer to execute warrant).
Here, considering the totality of the circumstances, the affidavit attached to
the warrant application set out the underlying circumstances from which the issuing
magistrate could find that probable cause existed to search Defendant’s home. The
affidavit also properly established a connection linking Defendant’s home address to
Randolph’s injury by explaining that Randolph “advised she was assaulted by
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[Defendant] at his residence for hours,” stating that the clothing she wore during this
assault “should still be located” inside Defendant’s home. Given the “all the
circumstances set forth in the affidavit,” the magistrate reasonably concluded that “a
fair probability” existed that an officer would find “contraband or evidence” of
Randolph’s assault at Defendant’s residence. Gates, 462 U.S. at 238. Thus, the
magistrate properly issued and the officers properly executed the warrant under
N.C.G.S. § 15A-257.
Having determined that probable cause supported the issuance of the search
warrant, we conclude that, “[h]ad Defendant’s trial counsel objected to the [search
warrant], the result of the proceeding would have been the same.” Hernandez, 293
N.C. App. at 283. Even if defense counsel had moved to suppress the evidence
obtained from the search warrant, the trial court would have properly denied the
motion because the warrant was sufficient to establish probable cause. See
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688. For these reasons, Defendant cannot show a “reasonable
probability that in the absence of counsel’s alleged errors the result of the proceeding
would have been different.” Braswell, 312 N.C. at 563. Therefore, Defendant did not
receive prejudicial IAC.
B. Closing Argument
Finally, Defendant argues that the trial court erred by not intervening ex mero
motu during the State’s closing argument that the prosecuting witness “told the truth
and that’s all we can really ask of her.” We disagree and hold that the trial court did
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not so err.
Although a defendant’s failure to object to an alleged error at trial ordinarily
prevents him from raising the same issue on appeal, we recognize a “narrow exception
. . . for statements during closing argument so grossly improper” that the trial court
abuses its discretion per se by not intervening on its own initiative. State v. Tart, 372
N.C. 73, 81 (2019). We instead review these remarks for whether they “were so grossly
improper that the trial court committed reversible error by failing to intervene ex
mero motu,” State v. Jones, 355 N.C. 117, 133 (2002), and thus grant relief only upon
finding both gross impropriety and resulting prejudice, see State v. Huey, 370 N.C.
174, 179 (2017).
We recognize that prosecutors “owe honesty and fervor to the State and
fairness to the defendant in the performance of their duties.” State v. Locklear, 294
N.C. 210, 217 (1978). In closing arguments, “an attorney may not become abusive,
inject his personal experiences, express his personal belief as to the truth or falsity of
the evidence or as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant, or make arguments on
the basis of matters outside the record.” N.C.G.S. § 15A-1230 (2025). But within these
parameters, attorneys have “wide latitude in their closing arguments to the jury, with
the State being entitled to argue to the jury the law, the facts in evidence, and all
reasonable inferences drawn therefrom,” State v. Fletcher, 370 N.C. 313, 319 (2017)
(quotation omitted), including the ability to “argue that the State’s witnesses are
credible” in order to “giv[e] the jury reasons to believe the State’s evidence,” State v.
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Augustine, 359 N.C. 709, 725 (2005); see State v. Arrington, 299 N.C. App. 211, 215
(2025) (comments that witness “never lied” and “told you all the truth” were not
improper when “made in the context of the prosecutor’s arguments to the jury that
[the witness’s] testimony was credible because specific portions of his testimony
matched the physical evidence presented”).
Gross impropriety is an “exceedingly high bar” surmountable “only when the
prosecutor’s statements went so far beyond the parameters of propriety that the trial
court” must “intervene to protect the rights of the parties and the sanctity of the
proceedings.” State v. Reber, 386 N.C. 153, 163 (2024). To show gross impropriety, a
defendant must demonstrate that the “comments so infected the trial with unfairness
that they rendered the conviction fundamentally unfair.” State v. Davis, 349 N.C. 1,
23 (1998). We consider the State’s closing argument “in the context in which the
remarks were made and the overall factual circumstances to which they referred.”
State v. Jaynes, 353 N.C. 534, 559 (2001) (quotation omitted).
Here, the State’s comments that Randolph “told the truth” occurred in the
context of a closing argument in which the State argued that Randolph’s testimony
was credible after Defendant contradicted her account in his own testimony. As in
Wiley and Arrington, the State did not impermissibly “vouch[ ]” for Randolph but
instead “merely g[ave] the jury reasons to believe the State’s witness” by advocating
for her truthfulness in light of Defendant’s testimony. See Arrington, N.C. App. at
215. Even assuming arguendo the impropriety of the State’s comments, Defendant
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has failed to show how they would prejudice him by “infect[ing] the trial with
unfairness and thus render[ing] the conviction fundamentally unfair.” State v.
Carroll, 356 N.C. 526, 537 (2002) (quotation omitted). Therefore, we hold that the
trial court did not prejudicially err by declining to intervene ex mero motu in response
to the State’s challenged remarks.
IV. Conclusion
For the above reasons, this Court holds that Defendant did not receive per se
or prejudicially ineffective assistance of counsel and that the trial court did not err by
declining to intervene during the State’s closing argument.
NO ERROR.
Chief Judge DILLON and Judge HAMPSON concur.
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