State v. Tart
State v. Tart
Opinion of the Court
**74This criminal appeal presents two issues for the Court to resolve: whether a short-form indictment sufficiently charged attempted first-degree murder when the wording of the indictment did not precisely duplicate the language of the relevant statute and whether a prosecutor's remarks during closing argument were so grossly improper that the trial court should have intervened ex mero motu . While we agree with the Court of Appeals that the State's characterizations during its closing argument do not entitle defendant to a new trial, we reject the lower appellate court's determination regarding the short-form indictment and hold that the indictment was sufficient to vest the trial court with subject-matter jurisdiction to try defendant for attempted first-degree murder. Accordingly, we affirm in part and reverse in part the decision of the Court of Appeals.
Factual and Procedural Background
In late February 2014, defendant Jermaine Antwan Tart was residing at a homeless shelter in Winston-Salem where the victim in this case, Richard Cassidy, was a volunteer worker. On 2 March 2014, Cassidy was leading a group of shelter residents, including defendant, as they walked to an overflow location of the shelter. During the walk to this area, defendant made several inappropriate comments and began to speak incoherently. Defendant suddenly began to assault Cassidy from behind, stabbing Cassidy in the head and knocking him to the ground. Defendant then got on top of Cassidy and continued to attack him, striking Cassidy's head, neck, shoulder, and back with a knife. Even after another shelter resident attempted to intervene in order to try to stop the attack, defendant persisted in his assault of Cassidy. A law enforcement officer arrived on the scene and was able to stop defendant's attack on Cassidy. Although the injuries that Cassidy sustained were serious and life-threatening, he survived the assault. Defendant subsequently stated during interviews with law enforcement officers and mental health professionals that he was upset with Cassidy because Cassidy had allowed others to steal from him, had disrespected defendant, and had shot defendant when defendant was a child.
Defendant was charged with the offenses of attempted first-degree murder and assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury. At trial, there was no dispute that defendant had stabbed Cassidy. The sole contested question concerned defendant's mens rea, namely, whether defendant had the specific intent to attempt to commit first-degree murder.
**75The State introduced testimony from Richard Blanks, M.D., an expert in the field of forensic psychiatry, who opined that an individual can have a specific intent and a delusion at the same time. Also in his testimony, Dr. Blanks offered defendant's belief that Cassidy had allowed others to steal from defendant as an example of defendant's non-delusional reasons for being angry with Cassidy, even if defendant's beliefs were actually inaccurate. Dr. Blanks testified that these beliefs constituted identifiable non-delusional reasons that could cause defendant to be angry with Cassidy and would further evidence defendant's specific intent to kill Cassidy.
*839Dr. Christine Herfkens, a psychologist and expert in forensic and clinical neuropsychology who was a witness for the defense, testified that defendant had a long history of mental illness, including schizoaffective disorder and antisocial personality disorder, which is a disorder formerly known as sociopathy. Defendant's medical records indicated that he had been admitted to state hospitals at least twelve times between 2002 and 2014, each time exhibiting homicidal ideation, which Herfkens defined as the desire to kill another person. In addition, defendant was dependent on both alcohol and marijuana.
At the close of the State's evidence and again at the close of all of the evidence, defendant moved to dismiss both charges against him, arguing that he had demonstrated diminished capacity and the absence of the specific intent to kill. The trial court denied these motions. The jury subsequently found defendant guilty of attempted first-degree murder and assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury. The trial court sentenced defendant to concurrent terms totaling 207 to 261 months of imprisonment.
Defendant appealed to the Court of Appeals and raised two arguments, neither of which was presented to the trial court. First, defendant challenged the indictment that purported to charge him with attempted first-degree murder, claiming that it was insufficient to confer subject-matter jurisdiction on the trial court. Specifically, defendant noted that the short-form indictment utilized for the attempted first-degree murder charge included one word from the statutorily approved language for charging manslaughter along with the prescribed wording for a murder offense. Second, defendant contended that certain remarks in the prosecutor's closing argument at trial were so grossly improper that the trial court committed reversible error in failing to intervene ex mero motu . In a unanimous, unpublished opinion issued on 5 December 2017, the North Carolina Court of Appeals agreed with defendant's indictment **76argument and vacated his attempted first-degree murder conviction, but found no error in the trial court's silence during the State's closing argument and therefore upheld the assault conviction. See State v. Tart , --- N.C. App. ----,
On 14 December 2017, the State filed a petition for writ of supersedeas and application for temporary stay in this Court. The following day, this Court stayed the decision of the Court of Appeals. On 11 January 2018, the State filed a petition seeking discretionary review of the Court of Appeals' decision regarding sufficiency of the indictment for attempted first-degree murder, and on 22 January, defendant filed a conditional petition for discretionary review of the Court of Appeals' resolution of the closing argument issue. This Court allowed both petitions for discretionary review on 9 May 2018.
Analysis
I. Facial Sufficiency of the Short-form Attempted First-degree Murder Indictment
North Carolina General Statutes section 15-144 sets out the appropriate phrasing which can be utilized in indictments for the criminal offenses of murder and manslaughter. The statute reads in pertinent part:
[I]t is sufficient in describing murder to allege that the accused person feloniously, willfully, and of his malice aforethought, did kill and murder (naming the person killed), and concluding as is now required by law; and it is sufficient in describing manslaughter to allege that the accused feloniously and willfully did kill and slay (naming the person killed), and concluding as aforesaid ....
N.C.G.S. § 15-144 (2017). The indictment in the case at bar, in charging defendant with the criminal offense of attempted first-degree murder, states in pertinent part: "the defendant [Jermaine Antwan Tart] unlawfully, willfully and feloniously did attempt to kill and slay Richard Cassidy with malice aforethought." (Emphasis added).
A comparison of the statutory requirements to sufficiently charge a person in an indictment for an offense pertaining to murder under N.C.G.S. § 15-144 and the challenged indictment in the instant case offers two notable observations: (1) the phrase "malice aforethought" appears in both the statutory requirements and the current indictment, and (2) the phrase "kill and murder,"
*840which is statutorily associated with an offense pertaining to murder in an indictment, is replaced in the current indictment with the phrase "kill and slay," which is statutorily **77associated with an offense pertaining to manslaughter in an indictment. Therefore, the indictment that this Court evaluates for its sufficiency to charge defendant with the offense of attempted first-degree murder contains language associated not only with an offense pertaining to murder-namely, "malice aforethought"-but also with an offense pertaining to manslaughter-namely, "kill and slay"-as designated in N.C.G.S. § 15-144.
The State argues that the Court of Appeals erred by employing a new "interchangeability" analysis with respect to the construction of indictments that do not adhere verbatim to their authorizing statutes. In considering the indictment charging defendant with attempted first-degree murder in the present case, the Court of Appeals concluded:
The indictment in question fails to comply with the short form indictment authorized by N.C.G.S. § 15-144. It states the following: "[t]he jurors for the State upon their oath present that on or about [the dates of offense shown and in the county named above] the defendant named above unlawfully, willfully and feloniously did attempt to kill and slay Richard Cassidy with malice aforethought." (emphasis added). It does not allege Defendant attempted to "kill and murder"-the requisite language for murder. Instead it contains the phrase "kill and slay"-the requisite language for manslaughter. The terms "murder" and "slay" are not interchangeable. Thus, this indictment is insufficient to charge attempted murder and the trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter judgment on this charge.
Tart ,
The plain language of N.C.G.S. § 15-144, coupled with consideration of the constitutional purpose of indictments, dictates our determination that the indictment here effectively withstands challenge. An indictment is "a written accusation of a crime drawn up by the public prosecuting attorney and submitted to the grand jury, and by them found and presented on oath or affirmation as a true bill."
**78State v. Thomas ,
(1) [to provide] such certainty in the statement of the accusation as will identify the offense with which the accused is sought to be charged; (2) to protect the accused from being twice put in jeopardy for the same offense; (3) to enable the accused to prepare for trial, and (4) to enable the court, on conviction or plea of nolo contendere or guilty[,] to pronounce sentence according to the rights of the case.
State v. Greer ,
N.C.G.S. § 15-144 is clear that a short-form indictment for murder is sufficient if it alleges "the accused person feloniously, willfully, and of his malice aforethought , did kill and murder (naming the person killed)," while a short-form indictment for manslaughter is sufficient if it alleges "the accused feloniously and willfully did kill and slay (naming the person killed)." N.C.G.S. § 15-144 (emphases added). An examination of this statutory language reveals that there are two express differences in the terminology utilized by the General Assembly to establish short-form indictments for the offenses of murder and manslaughter that are critical to the case at bar: (1) the reference in manslaughter offenses that the named defendant did slay an individual, compared with the reference in murder offenses that the defendant *841did "murder" an individual; and (2) the mandated inclusion in an indictment for a murder offense of the essential element of "malice aforethought," while the allegation of "malice aforethought" is not required to charge manslaughter. The critical and dispositive difference between short-form indictments for murder offenses and manslaughter offenses is the substantive allegation of the element of "malice aforethought" in murder offense short-form indictments, rather than the employment of the synonyms "slay" in manslaughter offense short-form indictments or "murder" in murder offense short-form indictments upon which the Court of Appeals chose to focus.
Black's Law Dictionary defines the noun "murder" as "[t]he killing of a human being with malice aforethought,"
We hold that the use of the term "slay" instead of "murder" in an indictment that also includes an allegation of "malice aforethought" complies with the relevant constitutional and statutory requirements for valid murder offense indictments and serves its functional purposes with regard to both the defendant and the court. See id. at 327,
II. Remarks during the State's Closing Argument
Defendant contends that the Court of Appeals erred in failing to find that the trial court should have intervened ex mero motu during the State's closing argument. Specifically, defendant draws our attention **80to comments made to the jury by the prosecutor that defendant "had the specific intent to kill many people, over a 20-year period of time," and that if the jury did not convict, defendant would be "unleashed, yet again, onto our streets." Defendant also argues that there was gross impropriety in the State's claims to the jury that defendant's potentially delusional beliefs were a valid foundation upon which the jury could find that defendant possessed the requisite specific intent for the commission of the offense of attempted first-degree murder. Defendant asserts that these *842statements were so grossly improper and prejudicial that he is entitled to a new trial. After careful consideration, we cannot fault the trial court in declining to interject itself into the State's closing argument when defendant himself chose to refrain from objecting to these remarks at trial. Accordingly, we affirm the Court of Appeals on this issue.
This Court noted in State v. Jones ,
A lawyer's function during closing argument is to provide the jury with a summation of the evidence, Herring v. New York ,422 U.S. 853 , 861-62 [95 S.Ct. 2550 , 2555],45 L.Ed.2d 593 , 599-600 (1975), which in turn "serves to sharpen and clarify the issues for resolution by the trier of fact,"id. at 862 [95 S.Ct. at 2555 ],45 L.Ed.2d at 600 , and should be limited to relevant legal issues. See State v. Allen ,353 N.C. 504 , 508-11,546 S.E.2d 372 , 374-76 (2001).
Regarding closing arguments made to the jury during criminal trials, the North Carolina General Statutes provide that "an attorney may not: (1) become abusive, (2) express his personal belief as to the truth or falsity of the evidence, (3) express his personal belief as to which party should prevail, or (4) make arguments premised on matters outside the record." Jones ,
Nonetheless,
[w]here a defendant fails to object to the closing arguments at trial, defendant must establish that the remarks **81were so grossly improper that the trial court abused its discretion by failing to intervene ex mero motu . "To establish such an abuse, defendant must show that the prosecutor's comments so infected the trial with unfairness that they rendered the conviction fundamentally unfair." State v. Davis ,349 N.C. 1 , 23,506 S.E.2d 455 , 467 (1998), cert. denied ,526 U.S. 1161 [119 S.Ct. 2053 ],144 L.Ed.2d 219 (1999). " '[T]he impropriety of the argument must be gross indeed in order for this Court to hold that a trial judge abused his discretion in not recognizing and correcting ex mero motu an argument which defense counsel apparently did not believe was prejudicial when he heard it.' " State v. Hipps ,348 N.C. 377 , 411,501 S.E.2d 625 , 645 (1998) (quoting State v. Johnson ,298 N.C. 355 , 369,259 S.E.2d 752 , 761 (1979) ), cert. denied ,525 U.S. 1180 [119 S.Ct. 1119 ],143 L.Ed. 2d 114 (1999).
State v. Mitchell ,
In applying the analysis enunciated in the cited case law to determine whether or not there was any impropriety in the prosecutor's closing argument, defendant emphasizes the "substantial evidence of [defendant's] mental illness and inability to form specific intent" and contends that the challenged remarks by the prosecution "lacked a reasonable basis in the record and appealed to the passions and prejudices of the jury." Before this Court,
In the first instance, the prosecutor told the jury that defendant's mental health history
is ripe with examples of violence, and homicidal ideations, the desire and intent to kill other people. The mental illness, if he did in fact suffer one, it didn't prevent him from forming the specific intent to kill. He had the specific intent to kill many people, over a 20-year period of time .
**83That mental illness continued to come back up through all of these diagnoses, through all of these hospitalizations.
(Emphasis added).
Defendant characterizes the Court of Appeals' review of these comments, in which it opined that "each [challenged] term was referenced during testimony and has a basis in the record," Tart ,
You are, in a very real way, the conscience of our community. You are the ones who are standing on the wall. You're the ones who are standing up for [the victim, Cassidy], who, for the last 10 years of his life, has stood up for the poor, for the marginalized, for the forgotten, and for the hopeless.
You can stand up for him. You can protect our communities and ensure that a homicidal, manipulative, sociopath, is not unleashed, yet again, onto our streets.
... You can protect our communities and ensure that a homicidal, manipulative, sociopath, is not unleashed, yet again, onto our streets .
I'm not asking you to do anything other than follow the law.
(Emphasis added). Defendant contends that the reference to being "unleashed" was inflammatory and prejudicial. In addressing this statement, the Court of Appeals noted that appellate courts "have upheld other similar 'hyperbolic expression[s] of the State's position that a not guilty verdict, in light of the evidence of guilt, would be an injustice.' " Tart ,
The final passage of the State's closing argument which defendant argues is grossly improper and prejudicial concerns the prosecutor's **85reference to defendant's potentially delusional, but factually plausible, motives for stabbing Cassidy. This portion of the prosecutor's summation would encompass defendant's claims that Cassidy allowed defendant's medication to be stolen and told defendant to put defendant's belongings away, that Cassidy had disrespected defendant, and that Cassidy had shot defendant when defendant was a child. Defendant posits now that there is no evidence in the trial record to show that these events actually occurred and therefore "[w]holly imagined events cannot create a rational basis for a defendant's actions." Following a competency hearing, the trial court found defendant to be competent to stand trial for the charged offenses. During the trial, references were made to these events through testimonial evidence that is contained in the record. Based on the evidence *845generated during the trial and the accompanying issues, defendant's mental state was argued to the jury by the State and the defense in their respective closing arguments. Later, the jury was instructed on the concept of diminished capacity and its possible effect on the ability to form the specific intent to kill. As previously noted, the principles espoused by this Court in Jones , Mitchell , and Alston are jointly invoked so as to establish that the prosecutor's closing argument in this arena of the case is substantiated by the trial record's context, that the prosecutor's statements about the existence of defendant's motives to harm Cassidy served to sharpen and clarify the issues for the jurors as the triers of fact, and that ultimately the trial court was not under a duty to intervene ex mero motu during the State's closing argument because the summation was not grossly improper.
In light of the facts and circumstances of this case, the trial record, the legal theories presented by the parties, and the applicable law, we cannot conclude that the trial court erred in declining to interject itself into the State's closing argument while defendant chose to sit silently and raise no objection to the now-challenged remarks. The portions of the State's summation that have been addressed before this Court do not rise to the level of those previously found in our case decisions to be so grossly improper as to require ex mero motu action by the trial court. Accordingly, we affirm the Court of Appeals' decision on this issue.
Conclusion
In sum, we reverse the determination by the Court of Appeals regarding the sufficiency of the short-form indictment and reinstate the judgment entered upon defendant's conviction for attempted first-degree murder. We affirm the portion of the Court of Appeals' decision which concludes that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in declining to intervene ex mero motu during the State's closing argument.
**86AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART.
Justice DAVIS did not participate in the consideration or decision of this case.
Black's Law Dictionary does not supply a definition for the word "murder" when used as a verb.
In the Court of Appeals, defendant challenged additional portions of the State's closing argument, but defendant did not petition this Court for review of the Court of Appeals' ruling on those portions, and therefore we do not address them here.
Concurring in Part
I agree with the majority's holding that "the indictment in this case was sufficient to vest the trial court with subject matter jurisdiction to try defendant for attempted first-degree murder." Nonetheless, a new trial is warranted because the prosecutor's statements to the jury in this case are similar to statements this Court has previously held to be improper and to constitute prejudicial error necessitating a new trial, even when not objected to at trial. In addition, the trial judge should have intervened ex mero motu during the prosecutor's closing argument when the prosecutor urged the jury to convict Jermaine Antwan Tart based not on whether Mr. Tart had the requisite mental intent at the time of the offense but rather out of fear that as a "homicidal, manipulative, sociopath" who "had the specific intent to kill many people, over a 20-year period of time," he would be "unleashed, yet again, onto our streets" to kill innocent people. Thus, I would reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and remand for a new trial.
The prosecutor's closing argument was improper in two significant respects, each one independently sufficient to justify a new trial. Together they assuredly dictate that result. The first impropriety was the prosecutor's inflammatory name-calling and fear mongering, including calling defendant "a homicidal sociopath" four times during the closing argument. The second impropriety was the prosecutor's reliance on events that all the evidence showed never happened as "factual" motivations supposedly leading defendant to decide to kill Mr. Cassidy. Take away these parts of the prosecution's closing argument and all that is left is the prosecutor's appropriate description of the attack itself, summary of defendant's actions immediately after the attack, and discussion of the jury instructions. The improprieties that occurred were not mere throwaway lines in a long and proper argument; they were the heart of the prosecutor's presentation to the jury. The nature of the improper statements "rendered the proceedings fundamentally unfair."
*846State v. Mann ,
**871. Standard of Review
Two different standards apply when reviewing cases involving improper closing arguments, depending on whether there was an objection at trial. If the defendant made a timely objection, the question is "whether the trial court abused its discretion by failing to sustain the objection." State v. Jones ,
This Court has explained that "[w]hen the prosecutor becomes abusive, injects his personal views and opinions into the argument before the jury, he violates the rules of fair debate and it becomes the duty of the trial judge to intervene to stop improper argument and to instruct the jury not to consider it." State v. Smith ,
2. Improper Name-Calling and Appeals to Prejudice
There can be no doubt that in this case the only issue the jury needed to determine was whether Mr. Tart had the requisite mental capacity to intend to kill Mr. Cassidy. There was no dispute over whether Tart was the person who attacked Cassidy; Tart agreed that there should not be a self-defense instruction, and both the prosecution and the defense argued to the jury in closing that the only question for them was Mr. Tart's state of mind at the time of the attack. The only issue for the jury was whether defendant was delusional and unable to form the intent to kill, as the defense contended: "This whole case turns on the capacity of Mr. Tart's mind, around 8 o'clock at night at First Presbyterian Church in downtown Winston-Salem on March 2nd, 2014. Was he capable of **88forming the specific intent to kill Mr. Cassidy? ... [W]as his mind all there enough for him to be able to?" Or was he intending to kill Mr. Cassidy with premeditation, as the prosecution argued: "The intent, his intent to kill Richard Cassidy is written all over this case. It is written in blood. His intent to kill Richard Cassidy is a stain on the sidewalk in front of First Presbyterian Church." Additionally, the court instructed the jury on the issue of lack of mental capacity as it related to both the attempted first-degree murder charge and the charge of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury.
In these circumstances, the prosecutor's repeated statements that Tart is a "violent, manipulative, homicidal sociopath" were not intended to shed light on whether he was indeed delusional at the time of the attack but rather to make the point that defendant needed to be incarcerated so he would not harm anyone else. The prosecutor's statements "were purposely intended to deflect the jury away from its proper role as a fact-finder by appealing to its members' passions and/or prejudices," causing the remarks to be prejudicial and grossly improper. Jones ,
But what she did consider is the Defendant's mental health history, a 20-year mental health history.
Members of jury [sic], that is ripe with examples of violence, and homicidal ideations, the desire and intent to kill other people. The mental illness, if he did in fact suffer one, it didn't prevent him from forming the specific intent to kill. He had the specific intent to kill many people, over a 20-year period of time. That mental illness continued to come back up through all of these diagnoses, through all of these hospitalizations.
**89Antisocial Personality Disorder, a disorder characterized by violence. By deceit. By manipulation. By an inability to conform your conduct to the confines of the law. ... You know what a synonym is for someone who suffers from Antisocial Personality Disorder ? A sociopath.
So the Defendant is a violent, manipulative, homicidal sociopath. That's his diagnosis. Based on that. They want you to just give him a slap on the wrist for this. Because he's been diagnosed as a homicidal sociopath, we'll let you do this.
....
... You can protect our communities and ensure that a homicidal, manipulative, sociopath, is not unleashed, yet again, onto our streets.
The prosecutor set up this argument to use the pejorative term "sociopath" by referencing and asking about the term in his cross-examination of Dr. Herfkens, and in his questioning of Dr. Blanks when called by the State to rebut the testimony of Dr. Herfkens, and he persisted in using the word even though both experts testified that the term is no longer used by medical professionals.
Notably, the prosecutor used a tactic similar to one that this Court found improper in State v. Dalton ,
The prosecutor's rhetoric in his closing argument likely sparked fear in the minds of the jurors that defendant was like a wild animal who, if "unleashed ... onto [the] streets," would again try to kill someone. "This Court does not condone comparisons between defendants and animals." State v. Roache ,
The prosecutor's further assertion that defendant had the specific intent to kill many people over a twenty-year period was drawn in part from an expert witness's report that defendant had murderous ideations that could be defined as an intent. The prosecutor then took this information and manipulated it to suggest to the jury that defendant had been roaming the streets looking for someone to kill and would do so again. As this Court observed in State v. Miller ,
This Court has previously found less derogatory statements about a defendant to be plain error justifying a new trial, even when the defendant did not object at trial. In describing the defendant in Smith , the prosecutor stated he was "lower than the bone belly of a cur dog."
In Jones the prosecutor in his closing argument compared the Columbine school shootings and the Oklahoma City bombing with the defendant's crime, which this Court noted was "a thinly veiled attempt to appeal to the jury's emotions." 355 N.C. at 132,
The statements made by the State in its closing argument here were grossly improper and required the trial court to intervene ex mero motu . This Court has long established that a defendant has a "right to a fair and impartial trial .... where passion and prejudice and facts not in evidence may have no part." State v. Smith ,
*849Id. at 635,
3. Referring to Delusions as Fact
The second impropriety in the prosecutor's argument occurred when he suggested that delusional thoughts and statements about things that never happened could have rationally led Jermaine Tart to form the requisite specific intent to kill Mr. Cassidy. At two different times in his closing argument, the prosecutor referred to events that Cassidy testified did not happen, and he urged the jury to find that those events explained why Tart's attack on Cassidy was rationally motivated by a premeditated intent to kill untouched by diminished mental capacity. The prosecutor referred to each of these things that never happened as a "factual, non-delusion reason, or motivation for doing what he did." It is improper for counsel to make arguments that are not based on reasonable inferences that may be drawn from the evidence admitted at trial. See State v. Anderson ,
There is simply no support for the proposition that events that never happened, such as Cassidy stealing Tart's medicine, which Cassidy testified never occurred, or Cassidy not giving Tart his telephone number, which again, Cassidy testified never happened, could appropriately be called "factual" and "non-delusional." Wholly imagined events cannot support a reasonable inference that defendant acted rationally. The mere fact that Mr. Tart tragically chose to act on his delusions is not proof of specific intent. See Roache , 358 N.C. at 282,
The majority dismisses this argument by pointing out that the trial court found defendant to be competent to stand trial. This is completely beside the point. The issue is whether, at the time of this assault, Mr. Tart was suffering from a mental illness such that he lacked the mental capacity to form the requisite intent to kill with premeditation. Even the prosecution admits that defendant's mental state on the night of 2 March 2014 is what is at issue in this case. That defendant subsequently received treatment, took medications, and ultimately was found competent to stand trial answers a completely different question than whether he suffered from a diminished mental capacity on the night of this incident. For the prosecutor to argue that things which never **93happened could be "factual" and could explain Tart's actions was an improper inference from the evidence presented at the trial of this case.
"In sum, improper closing arguments cannot be tolerated." Matthews , 358 N.C. at 112,
For example, with regard to the attempted murder charge, the jury was instructed, "If, as a result of lack of mental capacity, the Defendant did not have the specific intent to kill Mr. Cassidy, formed after premeditation and deliberation, the Defendant is not guilty of Attempted First Degree Murder."
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE of North Carolina v. Jermaine Antwan TART
- Cited By
- 12 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Appeal from convictions for attempted murder and assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury whether the short-form indictment charging attempted murder was fatally defective whether the trial court erred in not intervening ex mero motu in the State's closing arguments.