State v. Reber
This text of State v. Reber (State v. Reber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. 138A23
Filed 23 May 2024
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
v. JOSHUA DAVID REBER
Appeal pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-30(2) from the decision of a divided panel of
the Court of Appeals, 289 N.C. App. 66 (2023), reversing a judgment entered on 9
August 2021 by Judge Forrest D. Bridges in Superior Court, Ashe County, and
remanding the case. Heard in the Supreme Court on 13 February 2024.
Joshua H. Stein, Attorney General, by Sherri Horner Lawrence, Special Deputy Attorney General, for the State-appellant.
Daniel M. Blau for defendant-appellee.
DIETZ, Justice.
Defendant Joshua Reber appeals his convictions for raping and sexually
abusing a young child. A divided panel of the Court of Appeals held that the trial
court committed plain error by admitting certain evidence from the State’s cross-
examination of Reber and erred by failing to intervene on its own initiative when the
State made improper remarks during closing argument.
As explained below, the Court of Appeals majority did not properly apply the
exacting standards of review for these unpreserved issues. Applying those standards,
Reber failed to satisfy the prejudice prong of plain error review and failed to show STATE V. REBER
Opinion of the Court
that the State’s remarks were so grossly improper that they compelled the trial court
to intervene ex mero motu. We therefore reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals
and remand for consideration of Reber’s remaining arguments.
Facts and Procedural History
In 2015, eleven-year-old K.W.1 became close with a boy from school that she
considered her boyfriend. This relationship made K.W. feel guilty because she
worried she was “cheating on him.” For several years, Reber, a friend of K.W.’s family,
had been taking K.W. to isolated locations, such as a deer blind in the woods near her
house, and sexually abusing her.
Ultimately, K.W. confided in her school-age boyfriend, who insisted that she
tell her mother about Reber’s abuse. K.W.’s mother contacted law enforcement, who
immediately began an investigation. The State later charged Reber with multiple
counts of rape of a child and sexual offense with a child. The case went to trial in
2021.
At trial, K.W. recounted in excruciating detail how, beginning when she was
eight years old, Reber took her into the woods without telling her family, often late
at night, where he sexually abused her.
Reber took the stand in his own defense and acknowledged taking K.W. into
the woods alone at night without telling anyone. But he denied that he ever raped or
1 Under Rule 42(b) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure, the parties
agreed to use the initials “K.W.” to refer to the juvenile. We use the initials agreed to by the parties.
-2- STATE V. REBER
sexually abused K.W. During his testimony, Reber described normal sexual
relationships he had with adult women, including a woman named Danielle. He
explained that his romantic relationship with Danielle started in the fall of 2015, and
before that, Danielle was “just a friend.”
On cross-examination, the prosecutor pursued a series of questions that were
based on Reber’s testimony about his relationship with Danielle. The prosecutor first
asked about text messages recovered from Reber’s phone during the time period when
he claimed Danielle was “just a friend.”
In the first series of text messages, Reber told Danielle that he remembered
seeing her bare breasts when they had a previous romantic encounter. After Danielle
stated that she did not remember that event, Reber replied, “You did get drunk pretty
fast.” Reber did not object to this question and answer.
Later in the questioning, the prosecutor asked Reber about another text
exchange with Danielle. These text messages concerned Reber’s attempts to find a
place to have sex with Danielle.
In the messages, Reber expressed concern about getting a motel room to have
sex because he would need to take his daughter with him, and she might tell his
grandparents that he was having sex. Reber’s grandparents had strong religious
beliefs and insisted that he not engage in sexual activity outside of marriage.
In the text exchange with Danielle, Reber acknowledged that if they went to a
hotel to have sex, he could ask his daughter not to say anything to his grandparents.
-3- STATE V. REBER
The prosecutor then asked Reber, “So you would encourage a child, if asked, not to
tell on you?” Reber responded, “Well, on that set of circumstance[s], yes.” Reber also
did not object to this line of questioning.
The prosecutor also established without objection that Reber had sex with a
number of women using a method that Reber referred to as the “pull-out” method,
during which he did not use a condom or any form of contraception.
During closing argument, the prosecutor made two statements that referenced
Reber’s testimony described above. The first statement referenced Reber’s sexual
history with Danielle:
Danielle, a woman who when he was developing a friendship, his first sexual encounter with her involved taking her boobs out of her shirt and having intercourse with her and you’ve seen the text messages to show that she was too drunk to even remember it to even remember taking her shirt off.
The second statement regarded Reber’s use of the “pull-out” method of contraception
during sexual intercourse:
An eight- to 11-year-old child having sex with a man 16 years her senior who by his own testimony is sleeping with other women in this community with no protection. You think about that. You think about an eight- or nine-year- old walking around pregnant. You think about an eight- or nine-year-old poking around with herpes or gonorrhea or syphilis or Aids [sic].
Reber did not object to these statements during closing argument.
The jury found Reber guilty of four counts of rape of a child and six counts of
sex offense with a child. The trial court sentenced Reber to two consecutive terms of
-4- STATE V. REBER
300 to 420 months in prison.
Reber appealed and argued that it was plain error to admit the cross-
examination testimony described above. Reber also argued that it was reversible
error to permit the prosecutor to make the statements during closing argument that
are quoted above.
A divided Court of Appeals reversed Reber’s convictions and ordered a new
trial. State v. Reber, 289 N.C. App. 66, 83 (2023). The majority held that the
introduction of the challenged evidence on cross-examination amounted to plain error
and that the prosecutor’s statements during closing argument were so grossly
improper that the trial court should have intervened on its own initiative. Id. at 74,
82. The dissent asserted that “even assuming” there were evidentiary errors, Reber
could not meet the prejudice prong of plain error review because he failed to show
“that the jury’s verdict probably would have been different had the jury not heard
this testimony.” Id. at 83–84 (Dillon, J., dissenting). The dissent also concluded that
the statements during closing argument were not grossly improper and therefore not
reversible error. Id.
The State filed a timely notice of appeal based on the dissent. See N.C.G.S.
§ 7A-30(2) (2023).
-5- STATE V. REBER
Analysis
I. Evidentiary challenges
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. 138A23
Filed 23 May 2024
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
v. JOSHUA DAVID REBER
Appeal pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-30(2) from the decision of a divided panel of
the Court of Appeals, 289 N.C. App. 66 (2023), reversing a judgment entered on 9
August 2021 by Judge Forrest D. Bridges in Superior Court, Ashe County, and
remanding the case. Heard in the Supreme Court on 13 February 2024.
Joshua H. Stein, Attorney General, by Sherri Horner Lawrence, Special Deputy Attorney General, for the State-appellant.
Daniel M. Blau for defendant-appellee.
DIETZ, Justice.
Defendant Joshua Reber appeals his convictions for raping and sexually
abusing a young child. A divided panel of the Court of Appeals held that the trial
court committed plain error by admitting certain evidence from the State’s cross-
examination of Reber and erred by failing to intervene on its own initiative when the
State made improper remarks during closing argument.
As explained below, the Court of Appeals majority did not properly apply the
exacting standards of review for these unpreserved issues. Applying those standards,
Reber failed to satisfy the prejudice prong of plain error review and failed to show STATE V. REBER
Opinion of the Court
that the State’s remarks were so grossly improper that they compelled the trial court
to intervene ex mero motu. We therefore reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals
and remand for consideration of Reber’s remaining arguments.
Facts and Procedural History
In 2015, eleven-year-old K.W.1 became close with a boy from school that she
considered her boyfriend. This relationship made K.W. feel guilty because she
worried she was “cheating on him.” For several years, Reber, a friend of K.W.’s family,
had been taking K.W. to isolated locations, such as a deer blind in the woods near her
house, and sexually abusing her.
Ultimately, K.W. confided in her school-age boyfriend, who insisted that she
tell her mother about Reber’s abuse. K.W.’s mother contacted law enforcement, who
immediately began an investigation. The State later charged Reber with multiple
counts of rape of a child and sexual offense with a child. The case went to trial in
2021.
At trial, K.W. recounted in excruciating detail how, beginning when she was
eight years old, Reber took her into the woods without telling her family, often late
at night, where he sexually abused her.
Reber took the stand in his own defense and acknowledged taking K.W. into
the woods alone at night without telling anyone. But he denied that he ever raped or
1 Under Rule 42(b) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure, the parties
agreed to use the initials “K.W.” to refer to the juvenile. We use the initials agreed to by the parties.
-2- STATE V. REBER
sexually abused K.W. During his testimony, Reber described normal sexual
relationships he had with adult women, including a woman named Danielle. He
explained that his romantic relationship with Danielle started in the fall of 2015, and
before that, Danielle was “just a friend.”
On cross-examination, the prosecutor pursued a series of questions that were
based on Reber’s testimony about his relationship with Danielle. The prosecutor first
asked about text messages recovered from Reber’s phone during the time period when
he claimed Danielle was “just a friend.”
In the first series of text messages, Reber told Danielle that he remembered
seeing her bare breasts when they had a previous romantic encounter. After Danielle
stated that she did not remember that event, Reber replied, “You did get drunk pretty
fast.” Reber did not object to this question and answer.
Later in the questioning, the prosecutor asked Reber about another text
exchange with Danielle. These text messages concerned Reber’s attempts to find a
place to have sex with Danielle.
In the messages, Reber expressed concern about getting a motel room to have
sex because he would need to take his daughter with him, and she might tell his
grandparents that he was having sex. Reber’s grandparents had strong religious
beliefs and insisted that he not engage in sexual activity outside of marriage.
In the text exchange with Danielle, Reber acknowledged that if they went to a
hotel to have sex, he could ask his daughter not to say anything to his grandparents.
-3- STATE V. REBER
The prosecutor then asked Reber, “So you would encourage a child, if asked, not to
tell on you?” Reber responded, “Well, on that set of circumstance[s], yes.” Reber also
did not object to this line of questioning.
The prosecutor also established without objection that Reber had sex with a
number of women using a method that Reber referred to as the “pull-out” method,
during which he did not use a condom or any form of contraception.
During closing argument, the prosecutor made two statements that referenced
Reber’s testimony described above. The first statement referenced Reber’s sexual
history with Danielle:
Danielle, a woman who when he was developing a friendship, his first sexual encounter with her involved taking her boobs out of her shirt and having intercourse with her and you’ve seen the text messages to show that she was too drunk to even remember it to even remember taking her shirt off.
The second statement regarded Reber’s use of the “pull-out” method of contraception
during sexual intercourse:
An eight- to 11-year-old child having sex with a man 16 years her senior who by his own testimony is sleeping with other women in this community with no protection. You think about that. You think about an eight- or nine-year- old walking around pregnant. You think about an eight- or nine-year-old poking around with herpes or gonorrhea or syphilis or Aids [sic].
Reber did not object to these statements during closing argument.
The jury found Reber guilty of four counts of rape of a child and six counts of
sex offense with a child. The trial court sentenced Reber to two consecutive terms of
-4- STATE V. REBER
300 to 420 months in prison.
Reber appealed and argued that it was plain error to admit the cross-
examination testimony described above. Reber also argued that it was reversible
error to permit the prosecutor to make the statements during closing argument that
are quoted above.
A divided Court of Appeals reversed Reber’s convictions and ordered a new
trial. State v. Reber, 289 N.C. App. 66, 83 (2023). The majority held that the
introduction of the challenged evidence on cross-examination amounted to plain error
and that the prosecutor’s statements during closing argument were so grossly
improper that the trial court should have intervened on its own initiative. Id. at 74,
82. The dissent asserted that “even assuming” there were evidentiary errors, Reber
could not meet the prejudice prong of plain error review because he failed to show
“that the jury’s verdict probably would have been different had the jury not heard
this testimony.” Id. at 83–84 (Dillon, J., dissenting). The dissent also concluded that
the statements during closing argument were not grossly improper and therefore not
reversible error. Id.
The State filed a timely notice of appeal based on the dissent. See N.C.G.S.
§ 7A-30(2) (2023).
-5- STATE V. REBER
Analysis
I. Evidentiary challenges
We begin with the Court of Appeals’ analysis of Reber’s evidentiary challenges.
Reber’s appeal from the admission of his cross-examination testimony turns on the
application of a standard of review known as “plain error.” Ordinarily, to preserve an
issue for appellate review, a litigant must raise the issue and secure a ruling from
the trial court. N.C. R. App. P. 10(a)(1). For evidentiary and instructional errors, this
typically requires the party challenging the evidence or jury instruction to make a
timely objection. Id. Without an objection, that error is deemed unpreserved, and the
issue is therefore waived on appeal. State v. Lawrence, 365 N.C. 506, 512 (2012).
This preservation rule serves crucial functions in our justice system. First, and
most obviously, it promotes the efficiency of a justice system with limited resources.
State v. Odom, 307 N.C. 655, 660 (1983). When a party alerts the trial court of a
potential error, the court can correct it. For example, with an evidentiary objection,
the trial court can refuse to admit the evidence or offer a limiting instruction to the
jury. If the error is not identified until after the trial, the only option is to set aside
the judgment and order a new trial. See id. This is an incredibly costly alternative.
Second, this preservation rule reduces the risk of “gamesmanship” in the
appellate process. State v. Bursell, 372 N.C. 196, 199 (2019). As noted above, when
there is a reversible evidentiary or instructional error in a criminal trial, the remedy
on appeal is to vacate the judgment and remand for a new trial. A preservation
-6- STATE V. REBER
requirement “prevents parties from allowing evidence to be introduced or other things
to happen during a trial as a matter of trial strategy and then assigning error to them
if the strategy does not work.” Id. (cleaned up).
Despite the important functions of this preservation rule, its application can
be harsh. There will be times when the lack of preservation means the trial court
committed a reversible error but the aggrieved party cannot raise that error on
appeal.
Plain error exists for the rare cases where the harshness of this preservation
rule vastly outweighs its benefits. When we first recognized the rule in Odom, we
emphasized that it was available only in extraordinary cases. 307 N.C. at 660. We
explained that it should be “applied cautiously and only in the exceptional case,” that
it is reserved for “grave error which amounts to a denial of a fundamental right of the
accused,” and that it focuses on error that has “resulted in a miscarriage of justice”
or the denial of a “fair trial.” Lawrence, 365 N.C. at 516–17 (quoting Odom, 307 N.C.
at 660).
When we issued our “doctrinal statement” on plain error in Lawrence, we
incorporated these principles into a three-factor test: First, the defendant must show
that a fundamental error occurred at trial. 365 N.C. at 518. Second, the defendant
must show that the error had a “probable impact” on the outcome, meaning that
“absent the error, the jury probably would have returned a different verdict.” Id. at
518–19. Finally, the defendant must show that the error is an “exceptional case” that
-7- STATE V. REBER
warrants plain error review, typically by showing that the error seriously affects “the
fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” Id. at 518.2
In the years since Lawrence, the Court of Appeals consistently has struggled
with the application of the second prong of this test. See, e.g., State v. Towe, 366 N.C.
56, 61–62 (2012) (rejecting Court of Appeals’ plain error analysis); State v. Juarez,
369 N.C. 351, 358 (2016) (same); State v. Maddux, 371 N.C. 558, 565 (2018) (same).
This struggle appears to stem from the word choice in Lawrence. When initially
describing this second prong (which we will refer to as the “prejudice” prong),
Lawrence stated that “a defendant must establish prejudice—that, after examination
of the entire record, the error had a probable impact on the jury’s finding that the
defendant was guilty.” Lawrence, 365 N.C. at 518 (cleaned up) (emphasis added).
In isolation, this standard appears similar to other standards used to measure
prejudice. For example, when an evidentiary error is preserved in our state system,
the harmless error test asks whether the defendant has shown a “reasonable
2 The reasoning of our dissenting colleagues relies entirely on the premise that plain
error does not have a multi-factor test and instead is a sort of holistic analysis. This reasoning is inconsistent with how Lawrence articulated the test. Moreover, in Lawrence we explained that “this Court relied heavily on the federal standard when it adopted plain error review.” Id. at 515. We then examined in detail the “four-factor test” for plain error in federal doctrine, evaluating each “prong” of that analysis before condensing it into our own three-factor test for state doctrine (combining the “error” and “plain” factors into one “fundamental error” factor). Id. at 515–18. No decision of this Court has ever suggested that the multiple factors in Lawrence (inspired by the multiple factors in the federal test) are not, in fact, multiple factors. The dissent’s new theory of plain error—that it involves one holistic analysis—is an invention not from our precedent, but from necessity. It is necessary both to justify the dissent’s disagreement with our prejudice analysis and to justify the dissent’s lengthy analysis of issues that were not the basis of the Court of Appeals dissent. See post, footnote 3.
-8- STATE V. REBER
possibility” that, but for the error, the jury would have reached a different result.
State v. Brichikov, 383 N.C. 543, 557 (2022). As we have explained, this is “a non-
exacting inquiry.” Id. After all, there can be a reasonable possibility of some event
occurring even if it is not the most likely outcome.
Similarly, in claims for ineffective assistance of counsel, the test for prejudice
asks whether there is a “reasonable probability” that, absent the errors, the result of
the proceeding would have been different. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668,
695 (1984). To satisfy this test, the defendant “need not show that counsel’s deficient
conduct more likely than not altered the outcome in the case.” Id. at 693 (emphasis
added). This is so because, as with a “reasonable possibility,” there can be a
“reasonable probability” of some event occurring even if a different outcome is even
more probable.
Although the phrase “probable impact” in the plain error test might appear
similar to these other standards, Lawrence further articulated the test in a way that
makes it far more exacting. When the Court described the test for showing a “probable
impact,” it quoted language from State v. Walker examining whether “absent the
error the jury probably would have reached a different verdict.” Lawrence, 365 N.C.
at 518 (emphasis added) (quoting State v. Walker, 316 N.C. 33, 39 (1986)). When we
then applied the “probable impact” test to the facts in Lawrence, we followed Walker’s
language and examined whether absent the error, the jury probably would have
returned a different verdict. Id. at 519.
-9- STATE V. REBER
This wording is important because this standard—showing that a jury
probably would have reached a different result—requires a showing that the outcome
is significantly more likely than not. In ordinary English usage, an event will
“probably” occur if it is “almost certainly” the expected outcome; it is treated as
synonymous with words such as “presumably” and “doubtless.” Probably, New Oxford
American Dictionary (3d ed. 2010); Probably, Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate
Dictionary (11th ed. 2007).
Since Lawrence, this Court has repeatedly disavowed approaches to the
prejudice analysis that weaken this exacting standard. For example, in Towe, we
rejected a Court of Appeals decision that held there was a “probable impact” because
it was “highly plausible that the jury could have reached a different result.” 366 N.C.
at 61–62. We reiterated that “the plain error standard requires a determination that
the jury probably would have returned a different result.” Id. at 57.
In Maddux, we rejected a Court of Appeals holding that a “lack of
overwhelming and uncontroverted evidence against defendant required the
conclusion that a jury probably would have reached a different result.” 371 N.C. at
564–65. We emphasized that the proper consideration was not the strength of the
State’s evidence, but whether, “absent the error, the jury probably would have
reached a different result.” Id. at 564. Similarly, in Juarez, we rejected the Court of
Appeals’ plain error analysis and again emphasized that the standard requires a
showing that it is “probable, not just possible,” that the outcome would have been
-10- STATE V. REBER
different absent the error. 369 N.C. at 358.
The Court of Appeals majority in this case again failed to apply the exacting
prejudice standard required for plain error review. The majority concluded that the
plain error test was satisfied because the challenged evidence from Reber’s cross-
examination was “highly prejudicial” and therefore “made it more likely that the jury
would convict Defendant based on his character, rather than the facts presented.”
Reber, 289 N.C. App. at 78. Thus, the Court of Appeals reasoned, the challenged
evidence had a probable impact on the outcome. Id. at 79.
This analysis is not consistent with our precedent. The question is not whether
the challenged evidence made it more likely that the jury would reach the same
result. Instead, the analysis is whether, without that evidence, the jury probably
would have reached a different result. This is a crucial distinction because something
can become more likely to occur yet still be far from probably going to occur.
This case serves as an example of this principle. Although the State’s only
direct evidence of Reber’s crimes was K.W.’s own testimony, there was plenty of
surrounding evidence that supported K.W.’s credibility. K.W. described her sexual
abuse using details that an eleven-year-old child otherwise would not be expected to
know. Reber provided no explanation for how K.W. could have known these details of
sexual activity.
Reber denied K.W.’s allegations in his own testimony, but there were a number
of credibility issues with that testimony. First, Reber conceded that he was alone with
-11- STATE V. REBER
K.W. during many of the times when K.W. alleged that the abuse occurred. For
example, K.W. testified that Reber repeatedly sexually abused her in a deer blind
near her house. Reber admitted that he took K.W. to that deer blind or a nearby picnic
table without telling K.W.’s parents. When the prosecutor asked Reber about taking
an “8- to 11-year-old, out into the dark with a man 16 years older than her” without
telling her parents or anyone else, Reber simply responded that he “didn’t really see
nothing wrong with it.”
K.W. also testified that she used Snapchat to communicate and send nude
photos back and forth with Reber. K.W. explained that they used Snapchat to
exchange the nude photographs, rather than other social media applications, because
photographs “disappear on Snapchat.”
In his trial testimony, Reber insisted that he never used Snapchat, explaining
that he “couldn’t figure it out” and “didn’t understand how to really mess with that
too much.” But the prosecutor established with Reber that he was “really tech savvy”
and would often fix computer issues for his girlfriend, grandmother, and for residents
of a nearby group home. The prosecutor also established that he regularly played
sophisticated video games. This line of questioning led to the following exchange:
Q. But you couldn’t figure out how to use Snapchat?
A. Well, I’m not real big on pictures and stuff so I really didn’t even try.
Q. So you’ve gone from not being able to figure it out to not really trying?
-12- STATE V. REBER
A. Well, I didn’t — couldn’t figure it out anyways, but I didn’t even try to figure it out even if I wanted. I mean, there was no need to.
When investigators seized Reber’s cell phone, they discovered that all of the
social media applications had an installation date in May 2015, the month after K.W.
alleged that the abuse ended. There was no data on the phone concerning Reber’s
social media use before that time.
To be sure, K.W. also had some potential credibility issues. For example, K.W.
told her mother that Reber had a “straight” mole either on his pubic line or where his
leg “meets the butt.” Law enforcement took photographs of Reber’s genital area that
did not reveal a mole. But, to be fair, the officer who conducted the forensic inspection
testified at trial that he did not take photographs of Reber’s backside where his leg
connects to his buttocks. The officer also acknowledged that he had never seen a
“straight” mole before and that Reber had some dark veins on his genitals.
In addition, although K.W. testified that most of the sexual abuse with Reber
occurred in the deer blind or at the picnic table in the woods behind her home, she
testified that there were a few times when the abuse occurred at Reber’s home. She
described one instance in which she remained at home with Reber while members of
his family went to church. Reber’s grandmother contradicted this testimony,
explaining that she could not recall any time that K.W. stayed behind with Reber
while others went to church.
All of this is to say that, disregarding the challenged evidence, this was a fairly
-13- STATE V. REBER
close case for the jury, based mostly on witness credibility. But a close case is not
enough to prevail on the prejudice prong of plain error. The Court of Appeals majority
focused on the “highly prejudicial” impact of the challenged evidence and how that
evidence “made it more likely” that the jury would convict. Reber, 289 N.C. App. at
78.
As explained above, the question on plain error is not whether the challenged
evidence increased the likelihood of the jury reaching the same verdict. It examines
the opposite question—whether, absent that evidence, the jury probably would have
returned a different verdict. Lawrence, 365 N.C. at 519. In other words, the test
examines the state of all the evidence except for the challenged evidence and asks
whether, in light of that remaining evidence, the jury probably would have done
something different.
Reber has not met that burden here. As the Court of Appeals dissent correctly
acknowledged, it is certainly possible that the jury would have acquitted Reber.
Likewise, it is certainly possible that the jury would have deadlocked and been unable
to return any verdict. But Reber has not shown that the jury probably would have
done so. K.W. told a compelling account of life-altering sexual abuse. She
acknowledged that there were gaps in her memory but recounted specific details of
the abuse on the witness stand that matched her initial descriptions with child abuse
counselors many years earlier.
Reber denied the allegations in his own testimony, but the jury may have
-14- STATE V. REBER
questioned his credibility, particularly in light of his admission that he took K.W. to
isolated locations late at night without telling anyone and his shifting answers
concerning Snapchat.
In short, viewing all the remaining evidence, this was not a particularly strong
case for the State, but it also was not a case where the jury probably would have
reached a different result. Accordingly, Reber failed to satisfy the exacting standard
to show plain error, and the Court of Appeals erred by holding that he did so.3
II. Statements during closing argument
We next turn to the prosecutor’s statements during closing argument. As with
Reber’s evidentiary challenges, this issue was not preserved by a timely objection at
trial. Thus, under the general preservation rules applicable to criminal trials, this
issue is waived and cannot be raised on appeal. See N.C. R. App. P. 10(a)(1). Moreover,
plain error review does not apply to this issue because plain error is reserved for
evidentiary or instructional errors. Lawrence, 365 N.C. at 516. Closing arguments are
not evidence. State v. Jaynes, 353 N.C. 534, 558 (2001).
3 Our dissenting colleagues spend considerable time addressing why Rule 404(b) of
the Rules of Evidence prohibits certain character evidence, why the challenged evidence in this case was inadmissible under Rule 404(b), and why Reber did not open the door to admission of that evidence through his own testimony on direct examination. Even Reber acknowledges in his briefing that “the Rule 404(b) question is not before this Court” because that issue “was not the basis of the dissenting opinion.” Indeed, the Court of Appeals dissent expressly declined to address the Rule 404(b) issue, instead explaining that “assuming” there was an error, there was no resulting prejudice. Reber, 289 N.C. App. at 83 (Dillon, J., dissenting). Because this case is before us solely based on the reasoning in that dissent, we lack jurisdiction to examine issues that the dissent chose not to address. See Cryan v. Nat’l Council of YMCA, 384 N.C. 569, 574 (2023); Morris v. Rodeberg, 385 N.C. 405, 415 (2023).
-15- STATE V. REBER
Nevertheless, this Court created a narrow exception to the preservation rules
for statements during closing argument so “grossly improper” that the trial court was
compelled to intervene on its own initiative. State v. Tart, 372 N.C. 73, 81 (2019). This
is an exceedingly high bar. It applies only when the prosecutor’s statements went so
far beyond the “parameters of propriety” that the trial court is forced to intervene to
“protect the rights of the parties and the sanctity of the proceedings.” State v. Jones,
355 N.C. 117, 133 (2002).
Reber argues that two separate statements during the State’s closing
argument satisfy this “grossly improper” standard and compelled the trial court to
intervene. These arguments fail for separate reasons.
Reber first points to the prosecutor’s statement that he told his ex-girlfriend
Danielle that he touched her bare breasts when she was too heavily intoxicated to
remember.
This statement references evidence that is the subject of Reber’s plain error
argument discussed above. The Court of Appeals majority held that this statement
was “based on improperly admitted evidence”—a conclusion that followed from the
majority’s earlier holding that it was plain error to admit that evidence. Reber, 289
N.C. App. at 82.
As explained above, we reject that determination; the admission of that cross-
examination testimony was not plain error. Our holding on this issue invalidates the
reasoning of the Court of Appeals. It is proper for a prosecutor during closing
-16- STATE V. REBER
argument to describe testimony or other evidence that was introduced during the
trial. Jaynes, 353 N.C. at 560–61. Having determined that the introduction of this
evidence was not plain error, referring to that evidence during closing argument
cannot meet the “grossly improper” standard. When evidence is introduced without
objection at trial and does not meet the criteria for plain error, it is well within the
“parameters of propriety” for a trial court to permit that evidence to be described in
closing arguments. See Jones, 355 N.C. at 133.
Reber next points to statements by the prosecutor that he did not use a condom
when having sex with his adult partners. Relying on this evidence, the prosecutor
then told the jury: “You think about that. You think about an eight- or nine-year-old
walking around pregnant. You think about an eight- or nine-year-old poking around
with herpes or gonorrhea or syphilis or Aids [sic].”
The Court of Appeals majority held that this remark was a “thinly veiled
attempt to appeal to the jury’s emotions” and was an improper attempt to portray
Reber as “sexually manipulative, promiscuous, and a carrier of sexually transmitted
diseases.” Reber, 289 N.C. App. at 82.
We agree with the Court of Appeals majority that these statements were an
improper appeal to the jury’s emotions, rather than an appeal to reason. If Reber had
timely objected, this might be a different case. But our case law has emphasized that
these sorts of inflammatory statements appealing to the jury’s emotions—ones that
might be reversible error if preserved—still often fail to meet the much higher
-17- STATE V. REBER
standard requiring the trial court to intervene on its own.
In State v. Hamlet, for example, the prosecutor referred to the defendant as an
“animal” who was “the baddest on the block and everybody knows it.” 312 N.C. 162,
172–73 (1984). We noted that it was error for a prosecutor to make “comparisons of
criminal defendants to members of the animal kingdom” but held that doing so “was
not so improper as to require action by the trial court ex mero motu given the
defendant’s failure to object.” Id. at 173.
Similarly, in State v. Murillo, the prosecutor discredited the defendant’s expert
witness by telling the jury that it is the “sad state of our legal system, that when you
need someone to say something, you can find them. You can pay them enough and
they’ll say it.” 349 N.C. 573, 604 (1998). We cited past case law holding that this type
of statement was error, but ultimately held that “we cannot conclude that the
prosecutor’s arguments were so grossly improper as to require the trial court to
intervene ex mero motu when, at trial, defense counsel apparently did not believe the
argument was prejudicial.” Id. at 605–06.
Here, too, we do not condone a prosecutor’s request for the jury to imagine a
young child becoming pregnant or suffering from various sexually transmitted
diseases when there was no evidence that any of these things occurred in this case.
But this isolated statement during closing argument simply does not meet the
“grossly improper” standard as it has developed in our case law. As we explained in
Murillo, unless the challenged statements meet this high bar, we cannot fault the
-18- STATE V. REBER
trial court for failing to intervene when “defense counsel apparently did not believe
the argument was prejudicial.” Id. at 606. We therefore agree with the Court of
Appeals dissent that this statement during closing argument, although likely
objectionable, is not so egregious that it is reversible error when unpreserved.
We conclude with an observation about Reber’s arguments on appeal. Every
one of these arguments—the arguments on which the Court of Appeals relied for its
ruling and a number of arguments that the Court of Appeals did not address—involve
issues not preserved at trial. But this is hardly a case of trial counsel asleep at the
switch. Reber’s counsel put on a robust defense that included witnesses who
contradicted the State’s evidence and testimony that cast doubt on the thoroughness
of the State’s investigation. Reber’s counsel also made copious objections to the State’s
evidence. The trial court sustained many of those objections.
From the perspective of the trial court, Reber and his counsel had a strategy
to obtain an acquittal and were acting on it—meaning this is precisely the sort of case
where the trial court may have been particularly cautious of intervening on its own
initiative when defense counsel was silent, worried that doing so may undermine the
defendant’s strategy at trial.
In his briefing to this Court, Reber criticized the State for pointing out that his
counsel’s “lack of objection may have been a strategic decision.” Reber’s premise is
correct—whether the failure to object was part of a strategic decision is irrelevant for
both plain error review and the “grossly improper” standard for unpreserved
-19- STATE V. REBER
objections during closing argument.
But this highlights a crucial point about these two exceptional standards of
review: the bar is set exceedingly high because whenever these claims exist on direct
appeal, there will be a corresponding claim of ineffective assistance of counsel that
can be pursued in a motion for appropriate relief. There are several reasons why that
ineffective assistance claim will often be a better vehicle to raise these issues.
First, as explained above and as the Court of Appeals dissent correctly
observed, the prejudice standard for ineffective assistance claims is lower—the
defendant need only show a “reasonable probability” that absent the error the jury
would have reached a different result. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 693, 695. This means
a defendant might prevail on an ineffective assistance claim even when unable to
prevail on plain error review.
Second, an ineffective assistance claim brought in a motion for appropriate
relief avoids the gamesmanship concern we discussed above; it provides a forum
where a fact-finder can determine whether the failure to object was indeed a
reasonable strategic decision, or instead a deficiency on the part of counsel. See, e.g.,
State v. Todd, 369 N.C. 707, 712 (2017).
The record in this case does not indicate whether Reber has pursued
corresponding ineffective assistance claims in a motion for appropriate relief. Nothing
in our holding today precludes him from doing so.
-20- STATE V. REBER
Conclusion
We reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and remand for consideration
of Reber’s remaining arguments on appeal.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
-21- STATE V. REBER
Earls, J., dissenting
Justice EARLS dissenting.
This case involves the introduction of Rule 404(b) evidence in a case where
there is no physical or medical evidence and the only evidence that a criminal offense
occurred is the testimony of the complaining witness. The outcome of this case was
based solely on the jury’s perception of each witnesses’ credibility, including the
defendant’s. While the majority neglects to mention the type of evidence at issue in
this case, namely that it was 404(b) character evidence, this fact is necessary to
determining whether the error in Mr. Reber’s case meets North Carolina’s plain error
standard. In all cases, the risk of improperly admitted 404(b) evidence is that it will
diminish the defendant’s credibility, inflame the passions of the jury, and lead to a
verdict based on an improper basis, such as emotion. See State v. Kimbrell, 320 N.C.
762, 768–69 (1987). However, this risk is at its highest in cases where the jury’s
decision is based entirely on the perceived truthfulness of witnesses.
We recently noted in a similar case where we found prejudicial plain error in
the admission of testimony bearing on a witness’s credibility, “where, as here, the sole
direct evidence of sexual abuse is testimony from the victim, the case necessarily
‘turn[s] on the credibility of the victim.’ ” State v. Clark, 380 N.C. 204, 213 (2022)
(alteration in original) (quoting State v. Towe, 366 N.C. 56, 63 (2012)). In Clark, the
disputed testimony related to the victim’s credibility; here, the disputed testimony
relates to the defendant’s credibility. But in both instances, the legal issue is the same
and the legal analysis should be applied in the same way. This is not in any way to
-22- STATE V. REBER
diminish the severity of the offense at issue here or to ignore the implications of a
new trial for the victim. Our task is to ensure that equal justice prevails, that trials
are fair, and that verdicts are untainted by improper appeals to irrelevant
considerations. See, e.g., State v. Cain, 175 N.C. 825, 828 (1918) (“The object of a trial
expressed in the oath of a juror to ‘[d]o equal and impartial justice between the State
and the prisoner at the bar,’ . . . to acquit the innocent and to convict the guilty.”).
Based on our precedents, the 404(b) evidence in this case was improperly
admitted and its introduction into evidence was plain error. Additionally, while Mr.
Reber did not object to the prosecutor’s remarks during closing arguments, those
statements were based, in part, on the improperly admitted evidence and were “so
grossly improper” that the trial court should have intervened ex mero motu. See State
v. Trull, 349 N.C. 428, 451 (1998). By neglecting to intervene, the trial court failed to
protect Mr. Reber’s rights and the sanctity of the proceedings. State v. Jones, 355 N.C.
117, 133 (2002).
Accordingly, I dissent.
I. Background
Mr. Reber and his one-year-old daughter moved to North Carolina in 2009 to
live with Mr. Reber’s grandparents. After moving to the state, Mr. Reber began
working in a group home where he met K.W.’s parents, Troy and Sherry. He soon
began hunting with Troy and became friends with the whole family, including Troy
and Sherry’s five children.
-23- STATE V. REBER
In October 2015, K.W. told her mother that Mr. Reber had been “messing with
her.” Sherry reported the allegations to the Ashe County Sheriff’s Office, and K.W.
was interviewed and received a medical exam. In the interview, K.W. disclosed that
Mr. Reber had been touching her sexually since she was eight years old and that the
first time was one night in the deer blind after the two had been hunting. K.W. alleged
that Mr. Reber abused her in multiple locations over three years: the deer blind,
K.W.’s couch, K.W.’s bedroom, the bathroom in K.W.’s home, Mr. Reber’s bedroom,
and in the woods and a smoking spot outside Mr. Reber’s home. According to K.W.,
the abuse ended just before her eleventh birthday in April 2015.
K.W.’s medical exam produced no physical evidence that she had been
sexually abused. And while K.W. told her mother that Mr. Reber had a mole near his
pubic line, no mole was found upon examination of the area by the examining nurse
and Detective Lewis. Furthermore, K.W.’s allegations that she and Mr. Reber sent
nude photos on Snapchat were never corroborated. Police also never found any text
messages between K.W. and Mr. Reber on Mr. Reber’s phone or on K.W.’s tablet.
No witness, aside from K.W., testified to any inappropriate behavior between
K.W. and Mr. Reber. K.W.’s mother testified that she trusted Mr. Reber to be alone
with her daughter, and Mr. Reber’s grandmother, Dorothy, disputed that any abuse
could have occurred in her home. Dorothy explained that she was always home when
K.W. was present and the door to Mr. Reber’s room always remained open when K.W.
was there. Moreover, although K.W. indicated that some of the abuse occurred one
-24- STATE V. REBER
morning while Mr. Reber’s family was at church, Dorothy testified that this was not
possible. Namely because on the day of the alleged incident, K.W. was at church with
Mr. Reber’s family and not home alone with Mr. Reber.
Moreover, Mr. Reber denied having any sexual contact with K.W. He testified
that he only spent the night at Troy and Sherry’s house when Troy invited him to and
that on those nights, he slept on the couch where Troy stayed up late watching
television. Mr. Reber also noted that even though he and K.W. sometimes hunted
together at night, the two had never been alone in the deer blind.
II. Rule 404 of the North Carolina Rules of Evidence
Because the plain error standard is based, in part, on the prejudice a defendant
suffers when evidence is improperly admitted, State v. Lawrence, 365 N.C. 506, 518
(2012), it is necessary to begin with a discussion of Rule 404(b) and a review of the
Rule 404(b) evidence offered in Mr. Reber’s case. See N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 404(b)
(2023).
Under Rule 404, “[e]vidence of a person’s character or a trait of his character
is not admissible” to show that the person “acted in conformity therewith on a
particular occasion.” N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 404(a). However, evidence of a defendant’s
“other crimes, wrongs, or acts” may be “admissible for other purposes, such as proof
of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of
mistake, entrapment or accident.” N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 404(b). In all cases however,
the rule of relevancy applies, and the evidence sought to be introduced must be
-25- STATE V. REBER
“relevant to any fact or issue other than the character of the accused.” State v. Jones,
322 N.C. 585, 588 (1988) (cleaned up). Evidence is relevant if it has “any tendency to
make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the
action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.”
N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 401 (2023).
Any relevant evidence of a defendant’s prior bad acts “must be closely
scrutinized” because its introduction can “distract” the jury and “confuse their
consideration of issues at trial.” Jones, 322 N.C. at 588–89. Namely because “proof
that a defendant has been guilty of another . . . equally heinous” act can prompt the
jury to readily accept the “prosecution’s theory that [the defendant] is guilty of the
crime charged.” Id. at 589 (cleaned up). The effect of this evidence “is to predispose
the mind of the juror to believe the [defendant] is guilty, and thus effectually to strip
him of the presumption of innocence.” Id. (cleaned up).
Accordingly, Rule 404(b) evidence is “constrained by the requirements of
similarity and temporal proximity.” State v. Al-Bayyinah, 356 N.C. 150, 154 (2002);
see also State v. Boyd, 321 N.C. 574, 577 (1988) (“[T]he ultimate test for determining
whether such evidence is admissible is whether the incidents are sufficiently similar
and not so remote in time as to be more probative than prejudicial . . . .”). We have
said that a prior bad act or crime is sufficiently similar when there are “some unusual
facts present in both crimes or particularly similar acts which would indicate that the
same person committed both.” State v. Stager, 329 N.C. 278, 304 (1991) (quoting State
-26- STATE V. REBER
v. Green, 321 N.C. 594, 603 (1988)). While these similarities do not need to “rise to
the level of the unique and bizarre,” Green, 321 N.C. at 604, the State must show a
“common modus operandi or ‘signature’ ” between the prior bad act and the crime
charged, State v. Scott, 318 N.C. 237, 244 (1986).
In cases where an adult defendant is charged with sexually abusing a child
and the State seeks to introduce evidence of the defendant’s prior bad acts pursuant
to Rule 404(b), our Court has required that there be a strong factual similarity
between the prior bad act and the crime currently charged. For example, in Scott, the
defendant had been charged with committing a first-degree sexual act, cunnilingus
with his sister’s two daughters, who were three and four years old at the time of the
offense. Id. at 239. There, our Court determined that the evidence the State sought
to introduce, alleged sexual contacts by defendant against his sister after threatening
her with a knife when he was thirteen years old, was not sufficiently similar because
it lacked a common “modus operandi or ‘signature’ ” with the presently-charged
crime. Id. at 244. Likewise, the Court of Appeals has also insisted on a high degree of
similarity between a prior bad act and the currently charged crime in child sexual
assault cases. See State v. Doisey, 138 N.C. App. 620, 626 (2000) (holding that
evidence a defendant had recorded children in the bathroom was not admissible to
prove the defendant had sexually assaulted his girlfriend’s twelve-year-old daughter).
Rule 404(b)’s similarity requirement is particularly important when the prior
bad act sought to be introduced involves sex acts with adults. The Court of Appeals
-27- STATE V. REBER
has repeatedly found that evidence of a defendant’s sexual acts with other adults is
inadmissible to prove child sexual abuse. See, e.g., State v. Davis, 222 N.C. App. 562,
566–70 (2012) (finding that evidence the defendant had written a story about
nonconsensual anal sex with an adult woman was not admissible to prove he had
anal sex with a male child); State v. Bush, 164 N.C. App. 254, 260–62 (2004) (holding
that evidence the defendant bought and owned pornography was not admissible to
prove he sexually abused a female child); State v. Dunston, 161 N.C. App. 468, 473
(2003) (concluding that evidence that the defendant “engaged in and liked” anal sex
with his wife was not admissible to prove he had anal sex with a female child).
The challenged evidence here includes certain text messages. The first text
message exchange involved a conversation between Mr. Reber and Danielle, an adult,
and relates to a prior sexual encounter between the two involving alcohol. The second
text message exchange referenced Mr. Reber and Danielle’s discussion of their plan
to meet at a motel for sex and Mr. Reber’s subsequent mention of asking his daughter
not to share this plan with Mr. Reber’s grandparents.
While these text messages discuss sexual acts, that is where the similarities
between the crimes Mr. Reber was accused of and the text messages he exchanged
with Danielle, an adult woman, end. The conduct K.W. alleges occurred over the span
of three years and involved a child between the ages of eight and eleven. While the
sexual act discussed in the first text message occurred after Danielle had been
drinking, there is no evidence that Mr. Reber ever gave K.W. alcohol or that K.W.
-28- STATE V. REBER
was impaired during the alleged offenses. Moreover, although K.W. stated the alleged
abuse had occurred in the deer blind and at her home, there is no evidence that Mr.
Reber and Danielle ever had sex in those places. There is also no evidence Danielle
and Mr. Reber exchanged nude photos, despite K.W. alleging that she and Mr. Reber
had engaged in that act. Accordingly, there is nothing similar about the abuse K.W.
alleged and the acts referenced in the wrongfully admitted text messages between
Mr. Reber and Danielle.
Furthermore, during its closing argument, the State all but confessed that it
wanted these text messages admitted for the impermissible purpose of character
evidence. In closing, the State asked the jury: “Who is Joshua Reber?” The prosecutor
then attacked Mr. Reber’s character, describing him as someone whose first sexual
encounter with Danielle “involved taking her boobs out of her shirt and having
intercourse with her” when “she was too drunk to even remember it.” Yet Rule 404
expressly forbids the introduction of evidence for this reason, stating that evidence of
a prior bad act is not admissible to “prov[e] that [the defendant] acted in conformity
therewith on a particular occasion.” N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 404(a). Admission of this
evidence allowed the jury to convict Mr. Reber based on the kind of person they think
he is, “rather than because the evidence discloses, beyond a reasonable doubt, that
he committed the offense charged.” Jones, 322 N.C. at 590.
III. Door Opening
While the majority does not address whether Mr. Reber may have opened the
-29- STATE V. REBER
door to the challenged evidence by testifying regarding his relationship with Danielle
because it assumes that admission of the challenged evidence was erroneous, I do not
read the dissent in the Court of Appeals as narrowly as the majority does. See State
v. Reber, 289 N.C. App. 66, 83 (2023) (Dillon, J., dissenting) (“Arguably, the
questioning was not error, as the defense opened the door to the questioning by asking
Defendant on direct about his relationship with this adult woman.”). In my view,
under our precedent, it was impermissible for the prosecutor to question Mr. Reber
about the details of his sexual relationship with Danielle.
“Where one party introduces evidence as to a particular fact or transaction, the
other party is entitled to introduce evidence in explanation or rebuttal thereof, even
though such latter evidence would be incompetent or irrelevant had it been offered
initially.” State v. Albert, 303 N.C. 173, 177 (1981) (first citing State v. Patterson, 284
N.C. 190 (1973), then citing State v. Black, 230 N.C. 448 (1949)). However, while
“[s]uch cross-examination is permissible,” it cannot be used “to expose an entirely new
line of inquiry otherwise impermissible under [our] Rules.” State v. Lynch, 334 N.C.
402, 412 (1993). Instead, it can “only” be used “to correct inaccuracies or misleading
omissions in the defendant’s testimony or to dispel favorable inferences arising
therefrom.” Id. (emphasis added).
On direct examination, the evidence Mr. Reber offered was in response to the
State’s case-in-chief. First, K.W.’s testimony provided that she and Mr. Reber had
exchanged nude photos through Snapchat. To establish that Mr. Reber was familiar
-30- STATE V. REBER
with Snapchat, the State introduced text messages between Danielle and Mr. Reber
that discussed the Snapchat application. In response, and to establish who Danielle
was and that he was not familiar with the Snapchat application, Mr. Reber testified
that Danielle was an ex-girlfriend and that he was not familiar with Snapchat, nor
did he use it to communicate with K.W.
Next, Mr. Reber’s testimony regarding his sexual partners and condom use was
also in direct response to the State’s evidence. Namely, K.W.’s testimony that Mr.
Reber did not use condoms and that he used the “pull-out” method of contraception
during sex. On direct examination, and to rebut K.W.’s testimony, Mr. Reber testified
that he frequently used condoms. While defense counsel asked Mr. Reber if he had
adult sexual partners, this questioning was used to inquire about Mr. Reber’s condom
use in direct response to K.W.’s testimony. Additionally, Mr. Reber was entitled to
offer that evidence to rebut K.W.’s allegation that he was attracted to and engaged in
sexual acts with an underage girl.
In sum, the “particular fact[s] or transaction[s],” see Albert, 303 N.C. at 177,
that Mr. Reber testified to on direct examination were (1) that he had adult
girlfriends, and (2) that he regularly used condoms. His testimony did not recount the
details of his sexual relationship with Danielle or any other adult woman. Mr. Reber
also did not mention whether he and Danielle had sexual relations under the
influence of alcohol or before they began dating. His direct examination testimony
also did not discuss whether he and Danielle had difficulty finding a location for sex
-31- STATE V. REBER
or if they wanted to conceal their sexual relationship from Mr. Reber’s grandparents.
Importantly, Mr. Reber’s testimony about having an adult girlfriend did not give the
State carte blanche to ask about the details of Mr. Reber’s sexual relationship with
Danielle. This testimony was both irrelevant and inadmissible. See N.C.G.S. § 8C-1,
Rule 401; N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 404.
IV. Plain Error Standard
Under Rule 10 of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure, “[i]n order
to preserve an issue for appellate review, a party must have presented to the trial
court a timely request, objection, or motion, stating the specific grounds for the ruling
the party desired the court to make if the specific grounds were not apparent from
the context.” N.C. R. App. P. 10(a)(1). However, in cases where there are “plain errors
or defects affecting substantial rights,” these errors “may be noticed although they
were not brought to the attention of the court.” State v. Odom, 307 N.C. 655, 660
(1983) (cleaned up). While this standard “is normally limited to instructional and
evidentiary error[s]” that are unpreserved, Lawrence, 365 N.C. at 516, “the term plain
error” is not limited only to those errors that are “obvious or apparent,” Odom, 307
N.C. at 660 (cleaned up).
This Court adopted the plain error standard in Odom and provided a
comprehensive explanation of the rule’s scope and purpose. There, this Court
explained, that while the plain error standard’s protections are only applicable in
“exceptional” cases, where “it can be said . . . a fundamental error” has occurred, what
-32- STATE V. REBER
constitutes a fundamental error is broad and has been defined as: (1) “something so
basic, so prejudicial, so lacking in its elements that justice cannot have been done”;
or (2) “the error is grave error which amounts to a denial of a fundamental right of
the accused”; or (3) “the error has resulted in” either “a miscarriage of justice or in
the denial . . . of a fair trial” for the accused; or (4) the error “seriously affect[s] the
fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings”; or (5) where “the
instructional mistake had a probable impact on the jury’s finding that the defendant
was guilty.” Id. (cleaned up) (quoting United States v. McCaskill, 676 F.2d 995, 1002
(4th Cir. 1982)).
Moreover, this standard cannot be applied in isolation and requires review of
“the entire record” in a case. Id. (quoting McCaskill, 676 F.2d at 1002). This Court
affirmed this and the above principles first in State v. Black, 308 N.C. 736, 740–41
(1983), and then again in State v. Walker, 316 N.C. 33, 39 (1986). This mandate exists,
in part, because the question a reviewing court must answer is whether “the error . . .
‘tilted the scales’ and caused the jury to reach its verdict convicting the defendant.”
Walker, 316 N.C. at 39 (quoting Black, 308 N.C. at 741). Indeed, as both the Black
and Walker Courts explained, the strength and volume of the evidence against the
defendant plays a role in the plain error analysis.1 Black, 308 N.C. at 741; Walker,
1 It is important to note that while the majority cites State v. Maddux, 371 N.C. 558,
564 (2018), for the proposition that it is improper to consider “the strength of the State’s evidence” when conducting a plain error analysis, Maddux does not state this. Instead, Maddux reiterates the directive in Lawrence, 365 N.C. at 519, which requires the reviewing
-33- STATE V. REBER
316 N.C. at 40; see also Maddux, 371 N.C. at 567; see also Lawrence, 365 N.C at 519.
Namely, when there is “overwhelming evidence against the defendant” it may
“prevent[ ] the error complained of from rising to the level of ‘plain error.’ ” Walker,
316 N.C. at 40. Without examining the entire record, this analysis cannot be properly
achieved.
In Lawrence, this Court reaffirmed the “probable impact” standard from Odom,
Black, and Walker, stating that “a criminal defendant is entitled to a new trial if the
defendant demonstrates that the jury probably would have returned a different
verdict had the error not occurred.” Lawrence, 365 N.C. at 507 (emphasis added). This
premise was reiterated again in Maddux, where this Court stated that a “[d]efendant
must demonstrate that absent the error, the jury probably would have reached a
different result.” 371 N.C. at 565 (cleaned up). Thus, while the majority’s
interpretation of the plain error standard in Lawrence makes it virtually impossible
to meet, that is not what this Court intended. Instead, because the term “different
result” includes a hung jury the real inquiry is whether absent the error, one juror
probably would have concluded that there is reasonable doubt as to any element of
the crime. See id. Because if one juror has reasonable doubt, the jury would be unable
to reach consensus and there would be a different result in the case. See id.
Moreover, while it is true that in Lawrence, this Court clarified the plain error
Court to consider whether the State has presented “overwhelming and uncontroverted evidence” against the defendant. Id.
-34- STATE V. REBER
standard, this Court also clearly stated it was “reaffirm[ing] [its] holding in Odom.”
Lawrence, 365 N.C at 518. In doing so, this Court quoted directly from the Odom
opinion to explain that (1) “[f]or error to constitute plain error, a defendant must
demonstrate that a fundamental error occurred at trial”; (2) “[t]o show that an error
was fundamental, a defendant must establish prejudice—that, after examination of
the entire record, the error ‘had a probable impact on the jury’s finding that the
defendant was guilty’ ”; and (3) “because plain error is to be ‘applied cautiously and
only in the exceptional case,’ the error will often be one that ‘seriously affect[s] the
fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.’ ” Id. (third alteration
in original) (quoting Odom, 307 N.C. at 660).
Later, in State v. Towe, 366 N.C. 56 (2012), State v. Juarez, 369 N.C. 351
(2016), and Maddux, 371 N.C. 558, this Court stated that it was following the
standard first articulated in Odom and reaffirmed in Lawrence. In all three of these
cases, this Court’s opinions quote from and provide citations to the opinions in both
Lawrence and Odom. The standard articulated in Lawrence, Towe, Juarez, and
Maddux, while focusing in part on the “probable impact” of the error on the jury’s
finding that the defendant was guilty, also emphasizes the need to analyze an error
to determine if a fundamental error exists, which is dependent on whether prejudice
is established, and whether the error is one “that seriously affects the fairness,
integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” Lawrence, 365 N.C. at 518
(cleaned up); see Towe, 366 N.C. at 62; Juarez, 369 N.C. at 358; Maddux, 371 N.C at
-35- STATE V. REBER
564. Moreover, in Towe, this Court provided additional context for applying the plain
error standard. There, this Court stated it was “apply[ing] the test set out in
Lawrence and Odom” and explained that as part of its plain error analysis, it must
consider whether the erroneously admitted testimony in Mr. Towe’s case
“impermissibly bolstered the victim’s credibility” such that it had “the prejudicial
effect necessary to establish that the error was a fundamental error.” Towe, 366 N.C.
at 62–63 (cleaned up).
The majority evades the entirety of the plain error analysis, through a type of
appellate gerrymandering, which slices and dices the issues this Court may review
when an appeal is based on a dissent. This is based, in part, on the majority’s narrow
reading of the dissent as only addressing the “prejudice prong” of plain error review.
This approach is a misapplication of this Court’s decision in Cryan v. Nat’l Council of
YMCAs, 384 N.C. 569 (2023). In Cryan, this Court reiterated the standard set out in
Rule 16 of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure, which states that when
an appeal is based solely upon a dissent in the Court of Appeals, review in this Court
is “limited to a consideration of those issues that are . . . specifically set out in the
dissenting opinion as the basis for that dissent.” 384 N.C. at 574 (emphasis added)
(quoting N.C. R. App. P. 16(b)).
In Mr. Reber’s case, the dissent at the Court of Appeals included two issues:
whether “the prosecution’s cross examination of Defendant” and the admission of that
“testimony” and the “prosecutor’s statements during closing” were “error.” Reber, 289
-36- STATE V. REBER
N.C. App. at 83 (Dillon, J., dissenting). Accordingly, those are the two issues before
this Court. The directive that this Court only review the issues set out in the
dissenting opinion does not mandate this Court to only consider one portion of the
plain error standard while ignoring all others. Moreover, the plain error standard
does not contain “prongs” that are as separate and distinct as the majority suggests.
Instead, all three portions of this standard are interrelated.2 The interrelatedness of
the first two prongs is clearly articulated in Lawrence, which provides that
[f]or error to constitute plain error, a defendant must demonstrate that a fundamental error occurred at trial. To show that an error was fundamental, a defendant must establish prejudice—that, after examination of the entire record, the error had a probable impact on the jury's finding that the defendant was guilty.
Lawrence, 365 N.C. at 518 (cleaned up); see also Maddux, 371 N.C. at 564; Juarez,
369 N.C. at 358. Additionally, Juarez focused on the interrelatedness of the last two
portions of the plain error test and admonished the Court of Appeals for “fail[ing] to
analyze whether [the] error [in that case] had the type of prejudicial impact that
seriously affected the fairness, integrity or public reputation of the judicial
proceeding.” 369 N.C. at 358 (cleaned up). Importantly, this Court explained that
2 The majority mischaracterizes our plain error analysis as being a “holistic” test that
disregards the plain error standard’s three prongs. But what the majority fails to consider is that two things can be true. Namely, that the plain error standard is composed of three factors, and those three factors are interrelated. The majority suggests this premise sets forth a “new theory of plain error,” but our precedent in Lawrence, Maddux, and Juarez shows the opposite is true. Indeed, our decisions in those cases exemplify the interrelatedness of the plain error test’s three parts. See Lawrence, 365 N.C. at 518; see also Maddux, 371 N.C. at 564; Juarez, 369 N.C. at 358.
-37- STATE V. REBER
without answering this question, a plain error analysis is “insufficient.” Id. Thus, on
appeal, the proper review requires an analysis of the entire plain error standard.
The improperly admitted text messages in this case meet the plain error
standard. Rule 404(b) evidence is inherently prejudicial because it tempts the jury to
convict the defendant based on what they think of his character. Jones, 322 N.C. at
590. Put another way, the jury might convict the defendant because they believe he
is the kind of person who would commit the charged offense and not because the State
has proved the defendant committed the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. Id. The
risk of this is even greater in cases like this one where there is no medical or physical
evidence and no eyewitness to the alleged abuse and thus the jury is tasked with
evaluating only the credibility and truthfulness of each witness. See Kimbrell, 320
N.C. at 767. Accordingly, the outcome of Mr. Reber’s trial “depended [only] on the
jury’s perception of the relative veracity of the witnesses.” Id.
The situations in both Black and Walker stand in stark contrast to Mr. Reber’s
case. In Black, the “[e]vidence presented by the State was very convincing,” 308 N.C.
at 741, while the evidence against the defendant in Walker was said to be
“overwhelming,” 316 N.C. at 40. Here, the evidence against Mr. Reber only consisted
of the complaining witness’s testimony and there was no medical or physical evidence
to corroborate those statements. Even the majority admits this “was not a
particularly strong case for the State.”
Additionally, in its brief to this Court, the State argues that the jury believed
-38- STATE V. REBER
K.W.’s testimony over that of Mr. Reber’s and that accordingly, the improperly
admitted evidence cannot rise to the level of plain error. This argument overlooks the
very reason 404(b) evidence is inherently prejudicial and ignores this Court’s
directive in Towe. Namely that when the alleged error challenges erroneously
admitted testimony, the reviewing court must consider whether that testimony
“impermissibly bolstered the victim’s credibility” such that it had “the prejudicial
effect necessary to establish that the error was a fundamental error.” Towe, 366 N.C
at 62–63 (cleaned up). This is especially pertinent in Mr. Reber’s case, where the only
evidence against him was the testimony of the complaining witness. Consequently,
the introduction of Rule 404(b) evidence, which portrayed Mr. Reber as “a sexual
deviant,” see State v. Maxwell, 96 N.C. App. 19, 25 (1989), undoubtedly
“impermissibly bolstered [K.W.’s] credibility,” while simultaneously destroying Mr.
Reber’s, see Towe, 366 N.C. at 62-63. Taking all of this together, the admission of the
improperly admitted Rule 404(b) evidence probably impacted the jury’s finding that
Mr. Reber was guilty and thus meets North Carolina’s plain error standard.
Accordingly, Mr. Reber should be granted a new trial. See id. at 64.
V. Prosecutor’s Statements During Closing Arguments
In State v. Jones, this Court “[r]egrettably” expressed its concern regarding the
growing number of claims alleging that improper arguments had occurred. 355 N.C.
at 127. The Court also voiced a concern that “it appear[ed] . . . that some attorneys
intentionally ‘push the envelope’ with their jury arguments in the belief that there
-39- STATE V. REBER
will be no consequences for doing so.” Id. This is particularly concerning in criminal
cases that involve the State’s attorney, “whose interest . . . in a criminal prosecution
is not that it shall win a case, but that justice shall be done.” Id. at 130 (quoting
Berger v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 88 (1935)). Thus, the United States Supreme
Court has stated that while a prosecutor may “strike hard blows, he is not at liberty
to strike foul ones.” Id. (quoting Berger, 295 U.S. at 88). “If verdicts cannot be carried
without appealing to prejudice or resorting to unwanted denunciation, they ought not
to be carried at all.” State v. Tucker, 190 N.C. 708, 714 (1925).
The State’s responsibility to adhere to these mandates is a weighty one.
Particularly because the “average jur[or] . . . has confidence that these obligations . . .
will be faithfully observed.” State v. Smith, 279 N.C. 163, 167 (1971) (quoting Berger,
295 U.S. at 88). Accordingly, “improper suggestions, insinuations and, especially,
assertions of personal knowledge are apt to carry much weight against the accused
when they should properly carry none.” Id. (quoting Berger, 295 U.S. at 88).
Similarly, trial judges have a responsibility as “overseers of our courts” to
intervene when attorneys violate “courtroom protocol.” Jones, 355 N.C. at 128 (citing
Couch v. Priv. Diagnostic Clinic, 351 N.C. 92 (1999)). This is particularly true during
closing arguments, where defense counsel may be reluctant to interrupt the State’s
closing remarks “for fear of incurring jury disfavor.” Id. at 129. Moreover,
intervention by the trial court becomes “especially proper” in cases where “the State
is prosecuting one of its citizens” to ensure “the jury [will not be] unfairly prejudiced
-40- STATE V. REBER
against [the defendant].” State v. Miller, 271 N.C. 646, 659 (1967). Accordingly,
during closing arguments the trial court must “monitor vigilantly” what is said and
“intervene as warranted.” Jones, 355 N.C. at 129.
In cases where an alleged improper closing argument is not followed by a
timely objection, the correct standard of review asks, “whether the [remarks were] so
grossly improper that the trial court erred in failing to intervene ex mero motu.” Trull,
349 N.C. at 451. Stated differently, was the argument so improper that the trial court
was required to intervene, stop the attorney from making “similar remarks,” “and/or
. . . instruct[ ] the jury to disregard the improper comments already made,” “in order
to protect the rights of the parties and the sanctity of the proceedings”? Jones, 355
N.C. at 133. In Mr. Reber’s case, the answer to this question is, “yes.”
To constitute reversible error, the prosecutor’s statements must be “both
improper and prejudicial.” Id. A remark is improper if it is “calculated to lead the jury
astray” and includes “references to matters outside the record and statements of
personal opinion.” Id. These statements are prejudicial “either because of individual
stigma or because of the general tenor of the argument as a whole.” Id.
In Jones, this Court reviewed a prosecutor’s statements during closing
arguments, which included name calling and were not objected to during trial. There,
the prosecutor said the following about the defendant: “You got this quitter, this loser,
this worthless piece of—who’s mean. . . . He’s as mean as they come. He’s lower than
the dirt on a snake’s belly.” Id. (alteration in original). This Court found that the
-41- STATE V. REBER
prosecutor’s remarks “incorporated personal conclusions,” which “amounted to little
more than name calling,” and accordingly, the prosecutor had “exceed[ed] the
boundaries of proper argument.” Id. at 133–34. Furthermore, this Court explained
that the prosecutor’s tactics during trial prejudiced the defendant “by improperly
leading the jury to base its decision not on the evidence relat[ed] to the issues
submitted, but on misleading characterizations, crafted by counsel, that [were]
intended to undermine reason in favor of visceral appeal.” Id. at 134.
Similarly in Miller, the prosecutor “defiled” the character of the defendants
during closing. 271 N.C. at 657. There too, this Court reviewed statements that were
not objected to at trial. Id. These remarks “inferred” that the defendants, who were
charged with breaking and entering into a jewelry store, “were habitual store[ ]
breakers,” had broken into buildings prior to the incident they were charged with,
and were “involved in a big[-]time business” Id. at 653, 657. None of these statements
were supported by the record. See id. Because “[d]efendants in criminal prosecutions
should be convicted upon the evidence in the case, and not upon prejudice” created by
an “abus[ive] . . . solicitor,” this Court granted a new trial. Id. at 657, 661; see also
Smith, 279 N.C. at 165, 167 (holding that the prosecutor’s statements during closing
arguments, which referred to the defendant as “lower than the bone belly of a cur
dog,” were prejudicial and the trial judge who “failed to intervene on his own motion[ ]
was derelict in his duty”).
The prosecutor’s statements in Mr. Reber’s case are similar to those in Jones
-42- STATE V. REBER
and Miller; namely because the comments the prosecutor made relate to matters
outside the record and are more properly characterized as the prosecutor’s personal
opinion. See Jones, 355 N.C. at 133. Like in Jones, the prosecutor in Mr. Reber’s case
made unsupported comments about the defendant’s character. This included
insinuations that Mr. Reber was the kind of man whose “first sexual encounter” with
a woman would “involve[ ] taking her boobs out of her shirt and having intercourse
with her . . . [when] she was too drunk to even remember it.”
While the majority concludes that these statements were properly admitted
evidence and thus, it was proper for the State to reference them during closing
arguments, this conclusion is incorrect. First, as explained above, this evidence was
not only improperly admitted, but its admission into evidence also meets the plain
error standard and thus, should be excluded. Accordingly, this evidence must be
disregarded and cannot be referenced during closing arguments. Moreover, the
prosecutor’s only reason for making these remarks was to persuade the jury to convict
Mr. Reber based on what the jury thought of Mr. Reber’s character and not because
the State had proved that Mr. Reber committed the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Jones, 322 N.C. at 590. This deprived Mr. Reber of a fair and impartial trial. See
Miller, 271 N.C. at 660–61.
Moreover, like in Miller, the prosecutor in Mr. Reber’s case also made
comments that were wholly extraneous to the record. Those remarks included
references to Mr. Reber’s condom use and sexually transmitted diseases. While it is
-43- STATE V. REBER
true that some of the improperly admitted evidence involved Mr. Reber’s condom use,
none of the evidence supported the prosecutor’s claim that Mr. Reber contracted
herpes, gonorrhea, syphilis, or AIDS. Accordingly, although the statements about Mr.
Reber’s condom use were improperly admitted, meet our plain error standard, and
should be disregarded, the prosecutor also made statements that were not part of the
record at all. These statements deprived Mr. Reber of a fair and impartial trial. See
id.
“Arguments to a jury should be fair and based on the evidence or on that which
may be properly inferred from the case.” Id. at 659. In this case, “prejudice to the
cause of the accused is so highly probable that we are not justified in assuming its
non-existence.” Smith, 279 N.C. at 166 (quoting Berger, 295 U.S. at 89). This
prejudice is based on both “individual stigma” and “the general tenor of the argument
as a whole,” which sought to portray Mr. Reber as a sexual deviant. See Jones, 355
N.C. at 133. Because the remarks made by the prosecutor impaired Mr. Reber’s right
to a “fair and impartial trial,” I would affirm the Court of Appeals’ holding and grant
Mr. Reber a new trial “where passion and prejudice and facts not in evidence have no
part.” See Miller, 271 N.C. at 660–61.
Lastly, while the majority suggests that an ineffective assistance of counsel
(IAC) claim “will often be a better vehicle to raise these issues,” that is a hollow and
disingenuous promise. The opposite is true. See Eve Brensike Primus, Structural
Reform in Criminal Defense: Relocating Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claims, 92
-44- STATE V. REBER
Cornell L. Rev. 679, 680–81 (2007) [hereinafter Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Claims]. In many cases, even defendants with meritorious claims may experience
serious delays in filing an IAC claim or be precluded from bringing their claim
altogether. Id. For example, a defendant rarely is able to bring an IAC claim on direct
appeal because the claim is not “apparent on the face of the record” and thus requires
“further development of the facts.” See State v. Allen, 360 N.C. 297, 316 (2006). This
means that IAC claims will usually be brought by way of a motion for appropriate
relief. By this stage in the proceedings, years may have passed between the
defendant’s conviction and the filing of their IAC claim, which makes it more difficult
to find witnesses and gather evidence to support a claim. See Ineffective Assistance of
Counsel Claims at 680. It is also not uncommon that a defendant has fully served
their term of incarceration by the time a motion for appropriate relief can be filed. Id.
at 680–81. Moreover, because there is no constitutional right to an attorney past a
defendant’s first appeal, many defendants are financially precluded from filing an
IAC claim. See id. at 681; Pennsylvania v. Finley, 481 U.S. 551, 555 (1987).
Additionally, the legal standard required to show an IAC claim is challenging
to meet. To succeed on an IAC claim, “the defendant must satisfy a two-part test” (the
Strickland test). State v. Banks, 367 N.C. 652, 655 (2014) (citing Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984)).
First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was deficient. This requires showing that counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the “counsel” guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth
-45- STATE V. REBER
Amendment. Second, the defendant must show that the deficient performance prejudiced the defense. This requires showing that counsel’s errors were so serious as to deprive the defendant of a fair trial, a trial whose result is reliable.
Id. (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687).
The first prong of the Strickland test requires a showing that the attorney’s
conduct “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.” State v. Oglesby, 382
N.C. 235, 243 (2022) (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688). Embedded within this test
is a “strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of
reasonable professional assistance.” Id. (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689).
Furthermore, this Court has explained that because “counsel is given wide latitude
in matters of strategy,” the defendant’s “burden to show that counsel’s performance
fell short of the required standard is a heavy one for [the] defendant to bear.” State v.
McNeill, 371 N.C. 198, 218–19 (2018) (cleaned up).
The defendant must also show that “counsel’s deficient performance prejudiced
the defense.” Oglesby, 382 N.C. at 246 (cleaned up). This requires the defendant to
show “that counsel’s errors were so serious as to deprive the defendant of a fair trial,
a trial whose result is reliable.” Id. (cleaned up). To prove prejudice, “[t]he defendant
must show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional
errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A reasonable
probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694.
-46- STATE V. REBER
The majority’s discussion regarding the strategic decisions Mr. Reber’s counsel
may have made, while based only on assumption, illustrates the difficulty of proving
IAC claims. Namely, that it can be challenging for a reviewing Court to decipher if
the conduct complained of was a tactical decision, where counsel has “wide latitude.”
See id. at 689; see also State v. Fair, 354 N.C. 131, 167 (2001) (holding that counsel’s
actions were “a matter of reasonable trial strategy”). While strict guidelines
determining what might constitute “reasonable trial strategy,” see Fair, 354 N.C. at
167, would be helpful to a reviewing Court, those guidelines “would interfere with the
constitutionally protected independence of counsel and restrict the wide latitude
counsel must have in making tactical decisions,” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689. Thus,
while the majority focuses on the second prong of an IAC claim, the first prong, which
requires a showing that “counsel’s performance was deficient,” see Banks, 367 N.C.
at 655, is also a very hard prong to meet.
An IAC claim, even if available to a defendant, should not be a substitute for
adjudicating claims involving prejudicial errors. Here, the circumstances of Mr.
Reber’s trial support that he suffered prejudice, both by the improperly admitted
404(b) evidence and the prosecutor’s statements during closing. I would hold that (1)
the improperly admitted 404(b) evidence meets our plain error standard, and (2) the
prosecutor’s challenged statements during closing “were so grossly improper” that the
trial court should have intervened ex mero motu. Accordingly, under North Carolina
law, Mr. Reber is entitled to a new trial.
-47- STATE V. REBER
Justice RIGGS joins in this dissenting opinion.
-48-
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
State v. Reber, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-reber-nc-2024.