State v. Strickland

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMay 3, 2022
Docket21-491
StatusPublished

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

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

2022-NCCOA-299

No. COA21-491

Filed 3 May 2022

Edgecombe County, Nos. 18 CRS 52502, 52655, 52686 & 705353

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

BENNIE WAYNE STRICKLAND, JR., Defendant.

Appeal by Defendant from judgments entered 25 February 2020 by Judge

James E. Hardin, Jr., in Edgecombe County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of

Appeals 22 March 2022.

Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Assistant Attorney General Derek L. Hunter, for the State.

William D. Spence for Defendant-Appellant.

INMAN, Judge.

¶1 Defendant Bennie Wayne Strickland, Jr., (“Defendant”) appeals from

judgments entered following a jury trial finding him guilty of solicitation to commit

murder, two violations of domestic violence protection orders, and hit and run with a

motor vehicle. On appeal, Defendant argues that the trial court erred in improperly

resolving his motion to substitute counsel during trial, denying his motion to dismiss

the solicitation charge, failing to intervene ex mero motu during the prosecutor’s STATE V. STRICKLAND

Opinion of the Court

closing arguments, and in its jury instructions. After careful review, we hold

Defendant has failed to demonstrate prejudicial error.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2 The record below discloses the following:

¶3 Defendant and Carrie Thomas were involved in an on-and-off again romantic

relationship. At its start, Defendant told Ms. Thomas that, “if I can’t have you,

nobody will. If it ain’t going to be me, it ain’t going to be nobody. I’ll kill you.”

¶4 In the summer of 2017, Ms. Thomas and her children moved in with Defendant.

Twenty days later, she moved out because of Defendant’s “over-possessive nature,”

but they continued to see each other. This cycle of breaking up and reuniting

continued until, on 2 January 2018, Ms. Thomas secured a domestic violence

protection order (“DVPO”) against Defendant in an effort to finally end their

relationship. Ms. Thomas later dismissed the DVPO. When Defendant then

threatened to kill Ms. Thomas and her children by burning down her house with her

and her children in it, Ms. Thomas procured a second DVPO against Defendant and

an emergency permit to carry a concealed weapon.

¶5 Defendant continued to harass Ms. Thomas. Her employer blocked

Defendant’s phone number because he often called while Ms. Thomas was working.

On one occasion, Defendant came to her workplace and parked in an adjacent parking

lot, leading Ms. Thomas’s supervisor to call the police and take additional STATE V. STRICKLAND

preventative measures to protect Ms. Thomas at work.

¶6 On 30 October 2018, Defendant was arrested for violating the DVPO, hit and

run, and assault with a deadly weapon after he followed Ms. Thomas to a Bojangles

in Tarboro and drove his truck into the back of her vehicle. Defendant was

incarcerated in the Edgecombe County Detention Center while awaiting trial. While

incarcerated, Defendant called Ms. Thomas multiple times, further violating the

DVPO.

¶7 During his incarceration, Defendant shared a “pod” with Christian Capps,

Jerry Plascencio, David Anderson, and approximately 20 to 30 other inmates.

Defendant and Mr. Capps often talked to each other about hating their ex-girlfriends

and spoke about killing each other’s ex-girlfriends. Messrs. Capps, Plascencio, and

Anderson eventually disclosed these conversations to law enforcement and, on 11

March 2019, Defendant was indicted on two counts of solicitation to commit first-

degree murder.

¶8 Defendant’s trial began on 17 February 2020.1 Mr. Capps testified for the

State. Mr. Capps told the jury that he did not initially believe Defendant wanted to

kill Ms. Thomas and instead dismissed their conversations as venting or “just jail

talk.” That impression changed after Mr. Capps told everyone in the pod that he

1 Defendant’s earlier charges for violating a DVPO, assault with a deadly weapon, and hit and run were consolidated for trial with his solicitation charges. STATE V. STRICKLAND

would soon make bond and be released before Thanksgiving; upon hearing the news,

Defendant gave Mr. Capps a map that he had drawn showing where Ms. Thomas

lived. The map included directions, highways, landmarks, and physical descriptions

of Ms. Thomas and her car. Defendant told Mr. Capps, “if you go home, you kill my

old lady, and I’ll kill your old lady in return.” Defendant suggested two different ways

Mr. Capps could kill Ms. Thomas: (1) by going into her home, making her drink liquor

until she passed out, then injecting her with heroin to make it seem like an overdose;

or (2) “run up in the house Rambo-style and kill everyone there execution-style.”

When Defendant later asked for the map back, Mr. Capps told him that he had

flushed it down the toilet; however, per Mr. Capps’s testimony, he had not in fact

flushed the map himself, but had given it to Mr. Plascencio to destroy. Mr. Capps

later reported Defendant’s comments to members of the Edgecombe County Sheriff’s

Office, describing the map and its contents to them verbally and by written

statement.

¶9 One of those law enforcement officers, a sergeant with the Edgecombe County

Sheriff’s Office investigating Defendant’s acts of domestic violence, testified that she

was given the map by Mr. Plascencio after interviewing Mr. Capps. She further

testified that she also met with Mr. Anderson, who corroborated Mr. Capps’s reports

with a written statement.

¶ 10 Defendant testified and denied asking Mr. Capps to kill Ms. Thomas. STATE V. STRICKLAND

Defendant instead insisted that he drew the map for Mr. Capps so he could go to Ms.

Thomas’s house and explain that Defendant had not meant to hit her vehicle.

Defendant also denied asking Mr. Capps for the map back.

¶ 11 Defendant was disruptive throughout the trial, incurring twelve convictions

for criminal contempt as a result of numerous vulgar outbursts filled with invectives

against the judge, the judge’s family, the prosecutor, and others. In one lengthy,

expletive-ridden tirade, Defendant stated he was dissatisfied with his counsel’s cross-

examination and believed that his counsel was working with the State to convict him.

Later, Defendant told the trial court that he was “requesting that he not be my lawyer

because he’s ineffective.” Defendant reiterated his dissatisfaction with his counsel’s

cross-examination and lack of objections, as well as his claim that defense counsel

was working for the State. Defendant further asserted his attorney—who is Black—

would not represent him in good faith because Defendant had been accused of being

a member of the Aryan Nation.

¶ 12 The trial court responded to these statements by asking Defendant if he wished

to represent himself, to which he replied, “no. I was asking for [counsel] to be

replaced.” When the trial court informed Defendant that his only option at that

juncture was to continue with his current counsel or represent himself, Defendant

acceded that he did not want to represent himself and stated he “d[id]n’t care what

you [the trial court] d[id].” The trial court then concluded that Defendant’s request STATE V. STRICKLAND

for new counsel was not the result of an absolute impasse, and instead stemmed from

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