State v. Vines

829 S.E.2d 701, 266 N.C. App. 403
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 16, 2019
DocketNo. COA18-961
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 829 S.E.2d 701 (State v. Vines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Vines, 829 S.E.2d 701, 266 N.C. App. 403 (N.C. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

INMAN, Judge.

Defendant Dennis Ray Vines ("Defendant") appeals his convictions following jury verdicts finding him guilty of attempted first-degree forcible rape and first-degree forcible sexual offense. Defendant argues that the trial court erred in (1) denying his motion to dismiss the sexual offense charge because the State produced insufficient evidence that a taser was a dangerous weapon; and (2) refusing to instruct the jury on voluntary intoxication to negate the specific intent element of the attempted rape charge. After careful review of the record and applicable law, we hold that Defendant has failed to demonstrate error.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The evidence introduced at trial tended to show the following:

Beginning sometime in 2011, Defendant started a romantic relationship with Regina Thigpen ("Regina"). In 2016, Defendant was primarily living with Regina in her residence, along with two of her children, her eighteen-year-old daughter K.D. and her sixteen-year-old son R.M.1 Defendant was part of Regina's nuclear family and had a close relationship with K.D., who considered him a father figure.

On the night of 14 September 2016, Defendant and Regina were at her residence. Occasionally, Regina and her sister would go out to play bingo, but Regina told her sister that she did not want to go that night for monetary reasons. Defendant, however, encouraged her to attend and offered her funds. This was "unusual" for Defendant, who normally "complain[ed]" and "ha[d] an attitude about [Regina] going to [b]ingo." When Regina did play bingo, she did not usually return home until about 2:00 a.m. to 3:00 a.m. the next morning. After Defendant gave Regina money to play, she and her sister then left the residence between 8:00 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.

After Regina left for bingo, K.D., who was still in high school, arrived home from her shift at a restaurant sometime before midnight. When K.D. arrived, Defendant was the only one in the house. K.D. did not stay long because she, with the permission of Defendant, went to her then-boyfriend's residence approximately five minutes away. Sometime later, K.D. returned home after Defendant called her saying it was getting late. Regina was still playing bingo and R.M. was not present when K.D. arrived back home. After Defendant and K.D. "laughed and joked" with one another upon her arrival, K.D. then went to her room, changed clothes, and fell asleep.

Later that night, K.D. was awakened by the sensation that she could not breathe and that she was being choked. When K.D. opened her eyes, she saw Defendant-who was holding a knife and a taser-on top of her, strangling her, and repeatedly telling her to "take them off." K.D. recognized the taser as the pink taser that she kept on her bedroom dresser. Defendant activated the taser twice "for it to flicker" during the altercation.

As Defendant continued to strangle K.D., she kicked him in the stomach, and the two fell off the bed onto the floor. Although K.D. continued to struggle, Defendant lifted her up by the neck and pulled down her pants and underwear. Defendant then ordered K.D. to walk toward Regina's bedroom, with the knife and taser pointed at her back. When they entered the bedroom, K.D. noticed that a pornographic video was playing on Defendant's phone, situated on a pillow. Once in the bedroom, Defendant pushed K.D. onto the bed and digitally penetrated her vagina. Defendant then forced K.D. to lie on her back. Defendant attempted to bind K.D.'s hands with duct tape, but stopped when she told him that "[she] would stop fighting" in response to Defendant's threat that he would kill her younger brother R.M. when he returned home. Defendant then attempted vaginal intercourse with K.D. but could not sustain an erection.2

Defendant eventually ceased his attempts at vaginal intercourse. K.D. noticed that Defendant was "act[ing] like he was talking to people in his head" and was "saying stuff like somebody else was there, like he was hearing voices," and told her to "go." K.D. promptly got off the bed, grabbed the knife and taser, and went into her room and closed the door. Defendant then "busted [K.D's] door open" before she could change clothes, begging for her forgiveness. Defendant proclaimed that his life was in K.D's hands, that he would not assault her again, and told her "it's not [him]. It's the drugs." Defendant repeated these pleas "[a]t least five or six times."

K.D. then sent a text message to Regina, who was still at bingo, and told her to come straight home. K.D. also sent a text message to her boyfriend reporting the assault and asking him to call Regina. Regina tried calling K.D. in response to her text, but got no answer. Regina then called K.D's boyfriend, who told her about Defendant's assault on K.D. Regina and her sister called the police and drove back to the house.

K.D.'s younger brother R.M. and his friend were first to arrive home after the assault, followed minutes later by Regina, her sister, and the police. Regina observed that Defendant, who was sitting on the couch in the living room, "was high" and "had been drinking" because she could smell the alcohol. Regina's sister also noticed that Defendant's eyes appeared "glassy." As K.D. told Regina and the officers what transpired, Defendant initially tried to repudiate her story, but soon fell silent and did not speak thereafter. After officers arrested Defendant, they discovered through a search of his person "a small bag of marijuana and [a] glass crack pipe."

On 3 April 2017, Defendant was indicted for first-degree forcible rape, first-degree kidnapping, assault by strangulation, and first-degree forcible sexual offense. The indictment for the sexual offense charge was later amended before trial to reflect the appropriate statutory title.3

While in prison awaiting trial, Defendant and Regina had three separate phone conversations. Among the topics discussed was Defendant's history with drugs and the implication of drugs being used on the night in question, which appear as follows:

[REGINA]: Let me say that I told you, you had problems within yourself, I told you, you needed help
[DEFENDANT]: Stand by me
[REGINA]: You didn't want it, you didn't want it. You wanted them drugs.
....
[REGINA]: [W]ould you want the charges dropped if it was your daughter? ...
[DEFENDANT]: If I knew that I loved them and they had, and I knew it was drug related.
[REGINA]: If you loved her that much then why did you do it?
[DEFENDANT]: If it was drug related and he didn't mean it[.]
....
[DEFENDANT]: I fucked up. I snapped out. I blanked out. My mind snapped and I got to pay for them [sic] consequences[.]4

Defendant's cases came on for trial on 6 November 2017. At the close of the State's evidence, defense counsel moved to dismiss all the charges, and the trial court summarily denied the motion. Defendant did not present evidence.

At the charge conference, defense counsel requested that the trial court give the pattern jury instruction for voluntary intoxication, reasoning that the State introduced evidence regarding Defendant's intoxication at the time of the alleged offenses.

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Bluebook (online)
829 S.E.2d 701, 266 N.C. App. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-vines-ncctapp-2019.