State v. Norris

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 29, 2022
Docket20-908
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Norris (State v. Norris) 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. Norris, (N.C. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

2022-NCCOA-908

No. COA20-908

Filed 29 December 2022

Randolph County, No. 18 CRS 000051

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

JACOB THOMAS NORRIS, Defendant.

Appeal by Defendant from judgment entered 12 March 2020 by Judge William

A. Wood II in Randolph County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 30

November 2021.

Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Senior Policy & Strategy Counsel Steven A. Mange, for the State.

Kimberly P. Hoppin for defendant-appellant.

MURPHY, Judge.

¶1 While in high school, Defendant Jacob Thomas Norris admired the Joker, a

comic book villain and fictional mass murderer. One day, after confessing via social

media to his then-girlfriend, Patty,1 that he was entertaining homicidal thoughts

with respect to a number of his peers, Defendant asked her whether she wanted to

kill people as well. Patty, concerned by the conversation, reported what Defendant

1 We use a pseudonym for Defendant’s romantic interest throughout this opinion to protect her identity and for ease of reading. STATE V. NORRIS

Opinion of the Court

had said to her mom—who, in turn, reported the conversation to law enforcement and

school authorities. Defendant was subsequently discovered with a collection of notes

and drawings indicating he wanted to harm or kill at least thirteen specific peers.

¶2 Defendant was tried for soliciting Patty to commit first-degree murder. At

trial, the State’s closing arguments included multiple comments about mass

shootings. The jury convicted Defendant, who now timely appeals. On appeal,

Defendant argues the trial court erred in (A) denying his motion to dismiss for

insufficient evidence; (B) denying his motion to dismiss for fatal variance with the

indictment; (C) admitting irrelevant evidence under Rules 401 and 402 of our Rules

of Evidence; (D) admitting evidence substantially more prejudicial than probative

under Rule 403 of our Rules of Evidence; and (E) failing to, ex mero motu, strike the

State’s grossly improper remarks during closing arguments. For the reasons stated

below, we dismiss the case in part; hold in part that the trial court did not err; and,

finally, hold in part that, although the trial court erred, it did not commit prejudicial

error.

BACKGROUND

¶3 Early in 2018, Defendant Jacob Thomas Norris began dating Patty while both

were students at the same high school. During their relationship—most of which STATE V. NORRIS

consisted of exchanging messages via Snapchat2—Patty learned of Defendant’s

fascination with the Joker, a murderous comic book villain. Defendant and Patty,

who shared a milder interest in the Joker, referred to one another with pet names

referencing the Joker and his romantic partner in crime, Harley Quinn, during the

brief course of their relationship.

¶4 On 29 January 2018, Defendant and Patty exchanged a series of messages in

which Defendant expressed having homicidal thoughts and a desire for Patty to join

him in acting on them:

[Defendant:] I have something to say.

[Patty:] Yeah?

[Defendant:] When you say you want to be my Harley, my true Harley, that you don’t know what’s going to happen when we call ourselves Joker and Harley.

[Patty:] What?

[Defendant:] You said you want to be my true Harley meaning you would have to hurt people.

[Patty:] What are you getting at? Like I’m getting an idea now but not the full picture.

2 At trial, the State asked Patty, “What is Snapchat for us old folks?” For the benefit of the “old folks,” Patty explained that “you can either like send pictures and like little messages or you can talk like regular texting on a cell phone and you can video chat or regular voice call on there.” STATE V. NORRIS

[Defendant:] You know how Joker and Harley kill people? That's what I'm getting at.

[Patty:] Yeah. Do you want to do something like that?

[Defendant:] Get it no[w]. Yes.

[Patty:] Do you want to do that specifically?

[Defendant:] You don’t want that, do you? If you do, don’t -- if you don’t, I understand.

[Patty:] I’m just asking.

[Defendant:] But do you want that?

....

[Patty:] I can’t quite say I do. I have a side of me that does.

[Defendant:] So, no. I told you I’m a sociopath.

[Defendant:] You see me differently now, don’t you?

[Patty:] Since we’re asking questions that come deep from our minds, I have one for you and everything is up to you because I respect everything you say and feel.

[Defendant:] Shoot.

[Patty:] Do you know what polyamorous is?

[Defendant:] I’ll Google it. Hold on.

[Patty:] No, let me tell you. STATE V. NORRIS

[Patty:] But do you have any idea what it is?

[Defendant:] No, never heard of it.

[Patty:] Do you know what monogamous is?

[Defendant:] Never heard of it.

[Patty:] Okay.

[Defendant:] So going to tell me?

[Patty:] Monogamous is when two people date/marry, and it’s only two people. Polyamorous is when there are more than two people date one another.

[Defendant:] What are you trying to say?

[Patty:] Just hear me out. Okay? Don’t just assume anything because it most likely will not be true.

[Defendant:] Okay.

[Patty:] So I feel as I am polyamorous myself because I’ve always liked more than one person. Not right now though. It’s just strictly you, I promise. But I truly do feel as though I am this way. I have a video of information on polyamorous if you’re interested in hearing more about it so you understand it better, but I wanted to run this by you because I want your opinion and thoughts and I thought now is the perfect time to ask you since we are both asking things that only both of us would understand each other in more ways and, no, I do not see you differently. It just caught me off guard.

[Defendant:] So do you or do you not want to be my Harley? STATE V. NORRIS

[Patty:] I am your Harley. Just you understand your Harley.

[Defendant:] I understand.

[Patty:] Or accept this part of her.

[Defendant:] Is this the gentle part?

[Patty:] Of what I’m saying?

[Defendant:] Yes.

[Patty:] How much do you accept?

[Defendant:] The whole package.

[Patty:] Thank you. Thank you for dealing with me, seeing me as how I am accepting me for who I am as a person. I know I already ask so much of you and you have no idea how thankful I am that you are here in my life and love me for who I am. I don’t think any words could ever tell me enough of what you are and mean to me. I don’t know what I did to get you in my life but whatever it was I would do it again over and over and over. No matter how many times I would constantly do it so you came into my life. I have a feeling you’re going to be my one. I can just feel it. Now I’ll gladly be your Harley Quinn till the day I die.[3]

3For formatting purposes, the dialogue reproduced in the text of the opinion above is the conversation between Defendant and Patty as read aloud by Patty for the jury at trial. As minor alterations exist between the transcribed version of the conversation above and the conversation as presented in the exhibits, we turn the attention of any reader wishing to examine the original Snapchat conversation to Record Supplement pages 1 through 11. STATE V. NORRIS

After the exchange, Patty, concerned about what Defendant had expressed, showed

the messages to her mother, who reported the conversation to law enforcement. The

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