State v. Huey
State v. Huey
Opinion
**176 In this appeal we consider whether statements made by the prosecutor in his closing argument were improper and prejudicial, such that the trial court should have intervened ex mero motu . The Court of Appeals concluded that the prosecutor's insinuations that defendant was a liar and lied on the stand in cahoots with defense counsel and his expert witness were improper, and had the cumulative effect of resulting in unfair prejudice to defendant. The unanimous panel of the Court of Appeals vacated the conviction and ordered a new trial. We hold that while the prosecutor's arguments were improper, the prosecutor's arguments did not amount to prejudicial error in light of the evidence against defendant. Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals.
On 24 October 2011, defendant was indicted for first-degree murder. Defendant pleaded not guilty, and his trial commenced on 7 July 2014 before Judge Eric L. Levinson in Superior Court, Mecklenburg County. At trial the State's evidence tended to show that on 13 October 2011, at approximately 11:00 p.m., defendant Derrick Aundra Huey retrieved his gun from his truck, put the gun in his pocket, and told an unidentified person to ask James Love to come outside and talk about an earlier disagreement. Defendant then shot Love while they stood in the street. After the shooting defendant called 911 and, without identifying himself, stated, "I shot the motherfucker." A neighbor saw defendant's truck leave the scene after the shooting, but then returned shortly thereafter. Defendant initially denied shooting Love and told the police an unidentified man shot the victim. After listening to the 911 call, defendant admitted that he shot Love. Before trial defendant changed his account of the events in question numerous times. Then four months preceding trial, after communications with his attorney and expert witness, psychiatrist George Patrick Corvin, M.D., defendant changed his story once again and decided to admit to shooting Love, arguing that Love was shot in self-defense.
Defendant's evidence tended to show defendant and the victim had a history of prior altercations. Defendant testified that on the night in question, the victim threatened defendant. According to defendant, he was attempting to purchase drugs from an unidentified man when Love approached. Love hit defendant in the head and threatened him with what defendant believed to be a knife. While Love continued to threaten defendant, the unidentified man drew a handgun. Defendant grabbed the unidentified man's weapon and fired a warning shot. When Love did not **177 stop his aggressive actions towards defendant, defendant fired another shot, which killed Love. The unidentified man then took the gun and ran away. The defendant's evidence *468 also showed the victim was known to carry a box cutter, and a box cutter was found near the victim's body. Further, the defense presented evidence that defendant has an intelligence quotient (I.Q.) of 61 and suffers from head trauma caused by an attempted suicide by automobile crash. Defendant's expert witness testified that his I.Q. and head trauma affected defendant's decision-making processes. Defendant also suffers from hallucinations, which have been treated with antipsychotic and antidepressant medications.
During closing arguments, the assistant district attorney opened by saying, "Innocent men don't lie." Over the course of his argument, the prosecutor used some variation of the verb "to lie" at least thirteen times. Referring to defendant, the prosecutor said:
The defendant is not going to give you the truth. He's spent years planning to come in here to tell you he didn't do it, and then in the past four months he's come up with another story, and he's decided to go with that instead. But he's going to stick to that story, that story that he developed after he sat down with his attorney and his defense experts and decided on what he wanted to tell you. You're not going to find the truth there.
The prosecutor continued:
[Dr. Corvin] sat down with Mr. Smith and the defendant and made sure the defendant understood the law, understood what he was charged with, what the elements were, and understood the defenses and what they meant and the law about the defenses. As he sits there on the stand, as he sits there right now, it has been explained to the defendant you're supposed to consider the fierceness of the assault that he was victim to. So isn't it interesting that four months ago it went from a grab to it went to a punch, a slash, a hack, not just at me but at everybody. All of a sudden a grab went to a wild-armed (phonetic) handle. Now that the law has been explained to him, now that he's been talked out of claiming I didn't do it.
... But when the defendant was given a chance to just tell you the truth, he decided he's going to tell you whatever version he thought would get you to vote not guilty.
**178 Referring to defense counsel, the prosecutor said:
Mr. Smith tells you all we're trying to hide from this. All the evidence shows the box cutter was involved, the box cutter was involved, all the evidence. Do you know who's not a witness in this case? Mr. Smith. He wasn't there. He's paid to defend the defendant.
Referring to the defense's expert witness, Dr. Corvin, the prosecutor stated:
Now, I want to talk a little bit about Dr. Corvin, some of his opinions. But before we do that, we've got to make something clear. Make no mistake. Dr. Corvin has a client here. He works for the defendant. He is not an impartial mental-health expert.... Dr. Corvin is a part of the defense team, he has a specific purpose, and he's paid for it. You heard Dr. Corvin makes over $300,000 a year just working for criminal defendants. He is not impartial. In fact, I'd suggest to you he's just a $6,000 excuse man. That's what he is.... Dr. Corvin came in here and did exactly what he was paid to do[.]
The prosecutor repeated the theme of "innocent men don't lie" once more in the opening of his rebuttal argument, stating: "I'm going to say this again, innocent men don't lie, they simply don't have to. The truth shall set you free unless, of course, you're on trial for a murder that you committed." Defense counsel did not object at any of these points during the prosecutor's closing arguments. The trial court did not intervene ex meru moto at any time during the prosecutor's closing arguments.
On 18 July 2014, the jury found defendant guilty of voluntary manslaughter. Defendant appealed the conviction to the Court of Appeals, arguing "the trial court erred by failing to intervene ex mero motu when the State made improper statements during closing arguments." 1
*469
State v. Huey,
--- N.C.App. ----, ----,
In an attempt to strike a balance between allowing attorneys appropriate latitude to argue heated cases and enforcing proper boundaries to maintain professionalism, this Court has considered prosecutors' closing arguments at length.
The standard of review for assessing alleged improper closing arguments that fail to provoke timely objection from opposing counsel is whether the remarks were so grossly improper that the trial court committed reversible error by failing to intervene ex mero motu. In other words, the reviewing court must determine whether the argument in question strayed far enough from the parameters of propriety that the trial court, in order to protect the rights of the parties and the sanctity of the proceedings, should have intervened on its own accord....
State v. Jones
,
First, although control of jury argument is left to the discretion of the trial judge, trial counsel must nevertheless conduct themselves
**180
within certain statutory parameters.
State v. Wiley
,
If an argument is improper, and opposing counsel fails to object to it, the second step of the analysis requires a showing that the argument is
so grossly
improper that a defendant's right to a fair trial was
*470
prejudiced by the trial court's failure to intervene.
Jones
, 355 N.C. at 133,
Despite this deferential standard, this Court has held that improper arguments amount to prejudice when the circumstances required. In
Jones
this Court held that it was reversible error when the trial court failed to intervene in the closing argument of a sentencing hearing after the prosecutor's comment "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." 355 N.C. at 133,
Turning to the prosecutor's closing argument in this case, we consider whether his statements were first, improper, and then, so grossly improper as to prejudice defendant's right to due process.
First, defendant argues the prosecutor's repeated statements insinuating that defendant lied were improper. Over the course of his argument, the prosecutor used some variation of "lie" at least thirteen times, though never directly calling defendant a liar. "Innocent men don't lie" appeared to be
*471
the State's theme: the prosecutor used it at the beginning of his closing argument and again when beginning his rebuttal. The prosecutor also referred to defendant's claim of self-defense as "just not a true statement." The prosecutor commented that the unidentified man
**182
involved in the shooting scenario was "imaginary" and "simply made up." The prosecutor also asserted defendant engaged in "[t]he act of lying" and "trie[d] to hide the truth from you all." Relying on
Hembree
, defendant argues that even though the prosecutor did not directly call defendant a liar, the effect and intimations of his statements are also improper.
A prosecutor is not permitted to insult a defendant or assert the defendant is a liar.
See
Jones
, 355 N.C. at 133-34,
Nonetheless, even though the statements are improper, we do not find them to be so grossly improper that they amount to prejudice. Unlike the argument at issue in Miller , which this Court found prejudicial, the evidence in this case does support a permissible inference that defendant's testimony lacked credibility. Defendant gave six alternating versions of the shooting, five to police and one to the jury. 2 Accordingly, **183 this was evidence from which the prosecutor could argue defendant had not told the truth on several occasions, from which, the jury could find that defendant had not told the truth at his trial. While we do not approve of the prosecutor's repetitive and dominant insinuations that defendant was a liar, we do believe sufficient evidence to supported the premise that defendant's contradictory statements were untruthful. Further, the evidence supporting defendant's voluntary manslaughter conviction is overwhelming, as discussed below.
Next, defendant argues that the prosecutor's assertion that defense expert witness Dr. Corvin was "just a $6,000 excuse man" was also improper. The statement implied Dr. Corvin was not trustworthy because he was paid by defendant for his testimony. Evidence in the record supports the assertion that Dr. Corvin received compensation. Dr. Corvin's practice received over $300,000 in 2012 for services to criminal defendants, and he testified he worked in excess of twenty hours on this case at the legislature-authorized rate of $320 per hour. This Court has held it is proper for an attorney to point out potential bias resulting from payment a witness received or would receive for his services, while it is improper to argue that an
*472
expert should not be believed because he would give untruthful or inaccurate testimony in exchange for pay.
State v. Rogers
,
Finally, defendant argues that the prosecutor improperly argued that defense counsel should not be believed because "[h]e's paid to defend the defendant." Defendant also argues the prosecutor improperly
**184
insinuated that the defense attorney and the defense expert conspired to assist defendant in committing perjury before the jury by stating: "[H]e's going to stick to that story, that story that he developed after he sat down with his attorney and his defense experts and decided on what he wanted to tell you. You're not going to find the truth there." We agree this language was improper. A prosecutor is not permitted to make "uncomplimentary" statements about defense counsel when "there is nothing in the record to justify it."
Miller
,
In
Hembree
this Court considered a similar statement by a prosecutor: "defendant, along with his two attorneys, come together to try and create some sort of story."
Though "we have found grossly improper the practice of flatly calling a witness or opposing counsel a liar when there has been no evidence to support the allegation,"
id
. at 19,
Here, despite defendant's five conflicting stories before trial, it was undisputed at trial that defendant shot the victim after having previously argued with him. Defendant admitted to being upset because the victim had "cussed him out" before the shooting. Immediately after the shooting, defendant admitted to the 911 operator that he shot the victim. According to defendant's own testimony, despite believing the victim may have had a knife or box cutter in one of his hands, he did not see a weapon in the victim's hand before he shot him. Defendant explained that it was dark at the time, and although he never saw the box cutter, he "felt it." Defendant's injuries from the altercation consisted of a scratch on his collarbone area and a torn t-shirt, while the State presented evidence suggesting the additional "mark" on his head may have been in existence previously. According to defendant's own testimony, the unidentified bystander pulled out a gun to shoot the victim, and defendant grabbed the gun and shot the victim himself. It is undisputed that defendant fled the scene after the shooting. Defendant also testified he returned to the scene after fleeing. Defendant also admitted to drinking before and being high on heroin during the altercation. Finally, even without the prosecutor's statements addressing defendant's credibility, it was relatively clear from Detective Crum's, Detective Sterrett's, and defendant's own testimony that several, widely varying iterations of **186 defendant's story existed prior to the version defendant presented to the jury at trial.
During its deliberations the jury asked to see a photo of the box cutter as it was found at the scene and the box cutter itself. The jury also asked to see the t-shirt defendant was wearing when he was arrested, which defendant testified had been torn during the altercation with the victim. Further, the jury asked to review the transcripts of the 911 call and Detective Sterrett's interrogation of defendant. Therefore, the jury considered the evidence during deliberations, rather than solely relying on the prosecutor's improper statements. Also, the jury's finding that defendant was guilty of voluntary manslaughter, rather than first-degree murder, indicates the jury was persuaded by defendant's and his expert's testimony to some extent. If the prosecutor's statements had destroyed all credibility of the defense team, as defendant asserts, there would be no testimony to support a finding of voluntary manslaughter; however, the jury convicted defendant of voluntary manslaughter, indicating they found he acted in imperfect self-defense. A finding of self-defense, whether perfect or imperfect, requires the jury to find a defendant's testimony credible to some degree because the jury must find that the defendant possessed an honest and reasonable belief it was necessary to kill the victim in order to save himself from death or great bodily harm.
See
State v. Norris
,
For the foregoing reasons, we hold it was not reversible error when the trial court failed to intervene
ex mero motu
in the prosecutor's closing arguments. Nonetheless, we are disturbed that some counsel may be purposefully crafting improper arguments, attempting to get away with as much as opposing counsel and the trial court will allow, rather than adhering to statutory requirements and general standards of professionalism. Our concern stems from the fact that the same closing argument language continues to reappear before this Court despite our repeated warnings that such arguments are improper.
See
Jones
, 355 N.C. at 134-35,
**187
"The power and effectiveness of a closing argument is a vital part of the adversarial process that forms the basis of our justice system. A well-reasoned, well-articulated closing argument can be a critical part of winning a case."
Jones
, 355 N.C. at 135,
Therefore, for the reasons stated above, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals as to the issue before us on appeal and instruct that court to reinstate the trial court's judgment.
REVERSED.
On appeal, defendant also argued the trial court erred in instructing the jury on flight. The Court of Appeals rejected this argument, concluding "[t]here is some evidence in the record supporting the theory that Defendant drove away briefly in order to dispose of the firearm he used to shoot Love."
Huey
, --- N.C.App. ----,
Defendant told the 911 operator he shot the victim. He told Detective Crum he shot the victim, then told Detective Crum he meant to say an unknown male shot the victim. Defendant first told Detective Sterrett an unknown male shot the victim. Then he told Detective Sterrett he shot the victim after taking the gun from his truck and putting the gun in his pocket, and asking someone to get the victim to come outside. Then he told Detective Sterrett he shot the victim after approaching the victim with the gun exposed. At trial, defendant told the jury that while he was talking with a drug dealer, the victim approached and attacked him and the drug dealer, and defendant grabbed the drug dealer's gun and shot the victim.
Rogers
cites to
Couch v. Private Diagnostic Clinic
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE of North Carolina v. Derrick Aundra HUEY
- Cited By
- 42 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Whether the trial court committed gross prejudicial error by not intervening ex mero motu in the prosecutor's closing argument implying that defendant's paid counsel and paid expert witness assisted defendant in committing perjury.