State v. Moore

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 1, 2022
Docket22-220
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
State v. Moore, (N.C. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

2022-NCCOA-716

No. COA22-220

Filed 1 November 2022

Alamance County, No. 18CRS056582

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

ERIC DOUGLAS MOORE

Appeal by Defendant from judgment entered 24 May 2021 by Judge David T.

Lambeth, Jr., in Alamance County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 4

October 2022.

Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Special Deputy Attorney General Francisco Benzoni, for the State-Appellee.

Appellate Defender Glenn Gerding, by Assistant Appellate Defender Kathryn L. VandenBerg, for Defendant-Appellant.

COLLINS, Judge.

¶1 Defendant Eric Douglas Moore appeals from judgment entered upon a jury

verdict of guilty of first-degree murder. Defendant contends that his counsel was per

se ineffective because he “implicitly admitted [Defendant’s] guilt to second-degree

murder[;]” that his counsel was prejudicially ineffective because he promised a

defense that was not delivered, presented a “pointless” defense witness, and asserted

an incoherent defense that conceded guilt without permission; and that the trial court STATE V. MOORE

Opinion of the Court

erred by admitting certain opinion evidence. After careful review, we conclude

Defendant did not receive ineffective assistance of counsel and admission of the lay

witness opinion testimony did not amount to prejudicial error.

I. Procedural History and Factual Background

¶2 On 17 December 2018, Mary McBroom and her friend Tiyanna Love drove to

the Sheetz on Alamance Road to purchase drugs from Defendant. McBroom told Love

she intended to pay for the drugs with a “fake 100 dollar bill.” Love “had told her not

to do it but she was so desperate to do it she did it anyways.” McBroom kept her car

running while she walked over to Defendant’s car to retrieve the drugs. After the

purchase, she jogged back to the car and sped off. Defendant was accompanied by

Alexxa McKnight, who was in the passenger seat during the transaction. After

McBroom left, Defendant looked over at McKnight, “flashed” the money, and said “I

think I just got got. This is not real.” According to McKnight, Defendant appeared

agitated and upset after the transaction.

¶3 Shortly after the transaction, McBroom and Love received text messages from

Defendant with “[l]aughing emojis and saying, watch this.” Defendant called

McBroom but she did not answer. Around this time, Defendant called Quiana Miles,

McBroom’s friend with whom she was staying, via Facebook and told her that he was

looking for McBroom because “she had gave him a fake -- some fake money[,]” and

that “he didn’t play about his money basically.” McBroom and Love returned to Love’s STATE V. MOORE

boyfriend’s house and “chilled until like 3:00 -- like 4:00 or 5:00 in the morning” before

McBroom went to Miles’ residence on Tucker Street, where she was staying.

¶4 Between 4:04 A.M. and 4:21 A.M., Defendant and McBroom exchanged a series

of text messages in which McBroom acknowledged that she owed Defendant money,

Defendant asked when she would have it, and McBroom replied that she would try

and donate plasma. From approximately 4:22 A.M. to 5:51 A.M., McBroom called

Defendant 22 times attempting to meet up with him. Defendant told McKnight and

her boyfriend, Laking Crews, that he wanted to go to Tucker Street Apartments to

“pick something up.” Shortly after McKnight backed into a parking spot at Tucker

Street, “somebody approached the back of the car on [Defendant’s] side.” McKnight

heard a short span of dialogue and then a gunshot. McKnight was startled and drove

away. After driving a short distance, Defendant told McKnight to “stop and get the

‘F’ out of the driver’s seat.” Defendant drove to the Short Stop and then his cousin’s

house before he “dropped himself off at home.”

¶5 At approximately 6:18 A.M., McBroom called the police and reported that she

had been shot. Officers arrived on the scene and found McBroom “laying on their

back face up, not moving.” McBroom ultimately died from “a penetrating gunshot

wound of the torso.” The autopsy revealed that there was no soot or stippling in the

entrance wound, and “[t]here were no other findings that would allow determination

of the range of fire.” STATE V. MOORE

¶6 Defendant was indicted for first-degree murder, and the case proceeded to trial

on 18 May 2021. Prior to opening statements and outside the presence of the jury,

defense counsel informed the trial court that Defendant planned to concede that he

fired the shot that resulted in or proximately caused McBroom’s death. Defense

counsel also informed the trial court that at some point, he might argue that

Defendant was guilty of lesser-included offenses. The trial court conducted a colloquy

wherein Defendant indicated that he consented to this strategy.

¶7 During opening statements, defense counsel acknowledged that Defendant

was a drug dealer and had previously sold drugs to McBroom, that Defendant met

with McBroom at Tucker Street Apartments, that McBroom tried to grab drugs out

of Defendant’s hand and started “wrestling them out of the vehicle[,]” and that

Defendant fired a shot that entered McBroom’s midsection.

¶8 At trial, the State introduced Detective Adam Snow to testify regarding the

text messages between Defendant and McBroom before the murder. Over

Defendant’s objection, Snow testified that, in his experience, it would be easier for

somebody to lure a victim by “continu[ing] on the normal path of drug business.”

During his case-in-chief, Defendant introduced Ramona Rascoe, an evidence

technician with the Burlington Police Department. Rascoe testified that a plastic

baggie with a white powdery substance was found in the grassy area behind the

apartment along the alley. Although Defendant initially intended to testify, he later STATE V. MOORE

invoked his right to remain silent and not testify. When asked whether he spoke with

counsel about not testifying, whether he was satisfied with his legal services, and

whether the decision was in his best interest, Defendant responded, “[y]es.”

Thereafter, the defense rested.

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

its burden of proving premeditation and deliberation for first-degree murder. He

argued that Defendant did not “express any kind of anger, hatred, ill will, spite,” in

any of the text messages between Defendant and McBroom, and that Defendant did

not have “a premeditated and deliberated plan, to go over there and kill Mary

McBroom.”

¶ 10 The jury returned a guilty verdict, and Defendant was sentenced to life in

prison without parole. Defendant timely appealed.

II. Discussion

A. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel

¶ 11 Defendant argues that he received per se ineffective assistance of counsel or,

in the alternative, prejudicial ineffective assistance of counsel, in violation of his

Sixth Amendment right to counsel.

¶ 12 “The right to assistance of counsel is guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment to

the Federal Constitution and by Article I, Sections 19 and 23 of the Constitution of

North Carolina.” State v. McNeill, 371 N.C. 198, 217, 813 S.E.2d 797, 812 (2018) STATE V. MOORE

(citation omitted).

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Moore, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-moore-ncctapp-2022.