State v. Pierre

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 17, 2019
Docket18-1088
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Pierre (State v. Pierre) 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. Pierre, (N.C. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA18-1088

Filed: 17 December 2019

Orange County, Nos. 16 CRS 000123, 051476

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

KENNETH PIERRE, Defendant.

Appeal by Defendant from judgments entered 14 May 2018 by Judge Rebecca

W. Holt in Orange County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 9 May

2019.

Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Assistant Attorney General Thomas H. Moore, for the State.

Coleman, Gledhill, Hargrave, Merritt & Rainsford, P.C., by James Rainsford and Cyrus Griswold, for defendant-appellant.

MURPHY, Judge.

When a trial court errs in instructing the jury on a theory of guilt that was not

supported by the evidence adduced at trial, we will not order a new trial unless the

defendant can show the instructional error was prejudicial. To prove such an error

prejudicial, the defendant must show that the State failed to present exceedingly

strong evidence of his guilt or that that evidence was either in dispute or subject to

serious credibility-related questions. Here, the State presented exceedingly strong

evidence of Defendant’s guilt that was neither in dispute nor subject to serious

credibility-related questions. We hold the trial court committed no prejudicial error. STATE V. PIERRE

Opinion of the Court

BACKGROUND

On 17 May 2016, Willie Stroud (“Stroud”) and Bernard Degraffenreidt

(“Bernard”) hosted two young women, Jermisha Baldwin (“Jermisha”) and

Defendant’s niece, Kendretta Pierre (“Kendretta”), and also Bernard’s brother,

Derrick Degraffenreidt, at their home in Chapel Hill. Stroud, the owner of the house,

called local police during the visit and claimed one of the women had stolen his wallet.

Chapel Hill Police reported to the house and identified Jermisha and Kendretta as

the female houseguests. The officers interviewed the women, who denied taking

Stroud’s wallet, and left after Stroud informed them that he did not wish to file any

criminal charges. The same group was back at Stroud’s house the following day.

During the second visit, Kendretta “went into a spell . . . [and] started throwing

things off the [kitchen] table. She then went in the living room and fell down on the

floor and started kicking.” This presumably occurred as a result of Kendretta’s

drinking and consuming “synthetic weed.” Kendretta and Jermisha left the house

shortly after Kendretta regained her faculties, and “about an hour later” Defendant,

Kenneth Pierre, arrived at Stroud’s house.

Defendant was driving a car with at least two passengers. After parking in

the driveway, Defendant approached Stroud and Bernard, who were on the porch

when he arrived. Both Stroud and Bernard testified that Defendant asked which one

of them was Stroud and accused Stroud of trying to take sexual advantage of

-2- STATE V. PIERRE

Kendretta. Defendant then said, “I’m coming to kill—kill Willie[,]” and reached down

to draw a handgun from a holster on his waist. Stroud struggled with Defendant to

keep him from drawing the gun, but, eventually, Defendant was able to draw his gun

and aim it at Stroud, who fled inside his home. At this point, Bernard, who was

already inside the house, tried to call the police, “but my nerves were so bad I couldn't

even hit the numbers right.”

Bernard believed Defendant had left and went to the door to see if he had, but

Stroud advised him that Defendant was still there and knocked Bernard to the

ground. “[T]hat’s when the shots went off.” Multiple gunshots were fired and one

entered Stroud’s house, landing in a dresser inside Stroud’s bedroom. After the

gunshots, Stroud and Bernard heard what they assumed was Defendant’s car driving

away. Shortly thereafter, Stroud’s son, Willie Stroud Jr., and a neighbor both

reported the shooting to police.

During their investigation of the crime scene, police found two .40-caliber

bullet casings in the street in front of Stroud’s house and also recovered a .40-caliber

bullet from a dresser inside his home. Stroud told the officers he did not know the

man who had confronted him, but noted that the man identified himself as “KP” and

that he thought the man was related to one of the women who had visited his house

earlier that day. While police remained on the scene, Stroud called his niece, Retillias

-3- STATE V. PIERRE

Byrd Johnson (“Retillias”), and Retillias traveled to Stroud’s house to comfort him

and assist in cleaning up the house.

When Retillias arrived, Stroud told her what happened, and that the

perpetrator had identified himself as “KP.” Retillias testified:

I told him that I only knew one KP. So I actually pulled out my cell phone. And I pulled up my Facebook; and I showed him a picture of KP, which was actually [Defendant,] Kenneth Pierre. And from that picture, the Facebook photo I showed him, he told me that's who he had just finished wrestling with. So that’s how we knew exactly who it was.

Suspecting Defendant was the person who had shot into Stroud’s home, Retillias

confronted Defendant about the incident the next time the two saw each other, and

Defendant told her he had been the one who fired the weapon. Retillias testified that

she asked Defendant:

“Why did you go and shoot up my uncle’s house and why were you wrestling with him --”

Q: Okay. And he told you that he went there?

[Retillias:] --that he could have shot him. Yes.

Q: And shot and had a firearm?

[Retillias:] And that he was upset. Yes.

Defendant was eventually arrested and charged with discharging a firearm

into an occupied dwelling and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, and the

grand jury for Orange County subsequently indicted Defendant on the same.

-4- STATE V. PIERRE

Defendant was tried by a jury in Orange County Superior Court. During the

conference regarding jury instructions, Defendant objected to the inclusion of an

acting in concert instruction for the discharging a firearm into an occupied dwelling

charge. The trial court overruled that objection and also chose not to grant

Defendant’s request to include a separate box on the verdict sheet that the jury could

check if they found him guilty by reason of his acting in concert with another

individual.1

1 The trial court instructed the jury:

The defendant has been charged with discharging a firearm into an occupied dwelling. For you to find the defendant guilty of this offense, the State must prove three things beyond a reasonable doubt: First, that the defendant willfully or wantonly discharged a firearm into a dwelling -- an act is willful or wanton when it is done intentionally with knowledge or a reasonable ground to believe that the act would endanger the rights or safety of others; second, that the dwelling was occupied by one or more persons at the time the firearm was discharged; and third, that the defendant knew or had reasonable grounds to believe that the dwelling was occupied by one or more persons. For a defendant to be guilty of a crime, it is not necessary that the defendant do all of the acts necessary to constitute the crime. If two or more persons join in a common purpose to commit discharging a firearm into an occupied dwelling, each of them, if actually or constructively present, is guilty of the crime.

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Related

State v. Shaw
370 S.E.2d 546 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1988)
State v. McGee
758 S.E.2d 661 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2014)
State v. Malachi
821 S.E.2d 407 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 2018)
State v. Chevallier
824 S.E.2d 440 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2019)
State v. Steen
826 S.E.2d 478 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Pierre, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pierre-ncctapp-2019.