Defendant Phillip Eugene Anderson appeals from his conviction for first degree murder. Defendant argues primarily that the trial court erred in admitting expert ballistics testimony. Defendant’s arguments are, however, based upon
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc.,
Facts
The State’s evidence tended to
On a Sunday afternoon that fall, defendant came to Jacobie’s house looking for Adams. Jacobie’s roommate, Stacy Wong, told Adams that defendant was outside, and Adams went with defendant into his house. Subsequently, Adams told Wong and Jacobie that defendant had said that somebody was going to get hurt if she kept visiting Jacobie’s house and that defendant had tried to choke her.
The following Tuesday, 2 October 2001, Adams told her roommate, Patricia Andrus, that she was going out for a few hours and if she was not back by midnight, to go ahead and put the alarm on. Andrus stayed awake until about 1:00 a.m., but Adams had not yet returned home. By lunchtime the next day, Andrus still had not seen Adams, and there was no indication that Adams had slept in her room. Three days later, on 5 October 2001, Andrus filed a missing persons report with the Durham Police.
Ramal Lowery, a friend of defendant’s, testified that defendant called him several times on the night of 2 October and in the early morning hours of 3 October. During the last call, defendant asked Lowery to come to his house so that they could talk about something important. When Lowery arrived, defendant told him that he had killed Adams. Because Lowery did not believe him, defendant had Lowery drive the two of them to an area off Hillandale Road in Durham. Defendant told Lowery to park in a wooded area beyond a parking lot, and Lowery could see a body laying on the ground when he got out of his car. As Lowery drove back to defendant’s home, defendant kept saying, “I’m a piece of shit, I shouldn’t have done it.”
Defendant also told Lowery that he needed to get rid of the gun used to kill Adams. Once they reached defendant’s house, defendant went inside and came out with a duffle bag. They drove down Highway 751 to a bridge. Defendant took a brown paper bag out of the duffle bag and threw it over the bridge. Defendant told Lowery that a gun was inside the bag.
On 5 October 2001, the police received a call that there was a body on the side of the road near the intersection of Hillandale Road and Horton Road. Officers found Adams’ body, which was already decomposing, in a ditch about five to 10 feet off the road. Adams had suffered two gunshot wounds, one to the right side of the back of the head and the other to her neck. The medical examiner estimated that the time of death was approximately two to three days before the body was discovered.
Defendant was indicted for the first degree murder of Teresa Adams. At trial, defendant did not present any evidence. The jury found defendant guilty of first degree murder, and defendant was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole.
I
Defendant contends that the trial court erred under Rule 702 of the Rules of Evidence by admitting Powell’s ballistics testimony.
1
Defendant argues that Agent Powell did not comply with “normally accepted scientific methodology” and that “Ms. Powell’s results should not have been accepted under
Daubert.”
Defendant further objects that “[f]or scientific evidence to be admissible, the expert must point to external sources that validate the methodology,” citing
Daubert v. Merrell Dow
Pharms.,
Instead of evaluating expert witnesses under the standard set out in
Daubert,
courts in this State must conduct a three-step inquiry when considering whether to admit expert testimony pursuant to Rule 702 of the Rules of Evidence: “(1) whether the expert’s proffered method of proof is reliable, (2) whether the witness presenting the evidence qualifies as an expert in that area, and (3) whether the evidence is relevant.”
Morgan,
Defendant does not argue that Agent Powell was not qualified as an expert or that the evidence was not relevant. Defendant challenges only the reliability of Agent Powell’s testimony. Reliability in this State is “a preliminary, foundational inquiry into the basic methodological adequacy of an area of expert testimony. This assessment does not, however, go so far as to require the expert’s testimony to be proven conclusively reliable or indisputably valid before it can be admitted into evidence.”
Howerton,
In order to assess reliability, a trial court may look to expert testimony regarding reliability, may take judicial notice, or may use a combination of the two approaches.
Id.
at 459,
If no precedent exists, such as when an expert is proposing “novel scientific theories, unestablished techniques, or compelling new perspectives on otherwise settled theories or techniques,” the trial court is required to focus on “indices of reliability” to determine reliability, including the expert’s use of established
Our Supreme Court has previously upheld the admission of similar firearms or ballistics testimony.
See State v. Gainey,
In challenging Agent Powell’s methodology at trial, defendant did not offer any expert testimony or scientific literature. Oh appeal, however, defendant relies upon a series of journal articles that he contends establish that Agent Powell improperly failed to use photographs to document her work and that her methodology failed to comply with accepted scientific methods. Those articles were not, however, presented to the trial judge. A defendant cannot establish an abuse of discretion by the trial judge based on scientific literature never provided to that judge. Defendant’s literature review thus does not demonstrate that the trial judge abused his discretion in making his preliminary determination that Agent Powell’s testimony was suf ficiently reliable to meet the requirements of Rule 702 of the Rules of Evidence.
According to our Supreme Court, “once the trial court makes a preliminary determination that the scientific or technical area underlying a qualified expert’s opinion is sufficiently reliable (and, of course, relevant), any lingering questions or controversy concerning the quality of the expert’s conclusions go to the weight of the testimony rather than its admissibility.”
Howerton,
Defendant’s arguments regarding the discoloration of the bullets resulting from the bodily fluids of the victim, the corrosion of the gun, and the subjective nature of Agent Powell’s examination go to the weight of Agent Powell’s testimony and not its admissibility.
See Felton,
Defendant next argues that the trial court erred in admitting 15 photographs taken of the victim’s body at the crime scene and taken during the autopsy because the photographs were minimally probative, highly prejudicial, and meant to inflame the passions of the jury to the detriment of defendant. Defendant objected at trial, but the trial court found that “all of the photographs that are before the Court show separate and distinct views of the body, or of items of evidence close to the body, or in proximity to the body, or on the body. They’re all different. They are not unduly duplicative. They are not unfairly prejudicial, and their probative value outweigh any prejudice in this case.”
Pictures of a victim’s body may be introduced “even if they are gory, gruesome, horrible or revolting, so long as they are used for illustrative purposes and so long as their excessive or repetitious use is not aimed solely at arousing the passions of the jury.”
State v. Hennis,
After reviewing the photographs at issue and the other evidence in the record, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the jury to view the 15 photos. The photographs were illustrative of and relevant to testimony of the crime scene investigator and the medical examiner. Additionally, even though some of the pictures looked similar, the individual photographs each show a different view of the body, a different injury inflicted, and different pieces of evidence found around the body. We cannot say that the trial judge abused his discretion in determining that the pictures were not unduly duplicative, unfairly prejudicial, or of limited probative value.
See State v. Trull,
Defendant also argues that the photographs were not properly explained to the jury. He contends that a witness should have walked through and explained each photograph. Defendant, however, failed to make this argument to the trial court: “As has been said many times, ‘the law does not permit parties to swap horses between courts in order to get a better mount,’ . . . meaning, of course, that a contention not raised and argued in the trial court may not be raised and
argued for the first time in the appellate court.”
Wood v. Weldon,
Ill
Defendant next challenges certain statements made by the prosecutor during closing arguments. Defendant argues that the trial court erred in overruling his objection to two remarks that he contends went beyond the evidence offered at trial. Defendant further argues that the trial court erred in not acting
ex mero mo tu
when the prosecutor expressed
During closing arguments, trial counsel is allowed “wide latitude” in his remarks to the jury and may argue the law, all the facts in evidence, and any reasonable inference drawn from the law and facts.
State v. Craig,
[A]n attorney may not become abusive, inject his personal experiences, express his personal belief as to the truth or falsity of the evidence or as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant, or make arguments on the basis of matters outside the record except for matters concerning which the court may take judicial notice. An attorney may, however, on the basis of his analysis of the evidence, argue any position or conclusion with respect to a matter in issue.
The propriety of counsel’s argument is left largely to the control and discretion of the trial judge, and we review any ruling by the trial court only for abuse of discretion.
State v. Roache,
Defendant first points to the following argument as unsupported by the evidence:
[Prosecutor]: So that Tuesday night, when [the victim] got a phonecall, put on her old sandals, old skirt, threw on a jacket, picked up her keys and her cell phone, probably going to meet outside and talk. I’m going to settle this once and for all. Go out there and talk.
[Defense counsel]: There’s no evidence of that, Your Honor.
The Court: Overruled.
(Emphasis added.) Subsequently, the State made the second argument challenged by defendant as not supported by the evidence:
[Prosecutor]: What do you think Mr. Anderson was doing? He didn’t just bring his keys and his cell phone, did he? What did he bring? A loaded .357. What kind of love is that? In his mind it was until death do us part. See, if he couldn’t have her, nobody would. And he drove her out right down the street from her house. You all saw that blood on the side of the road over here. Shot her there and drug her in the woods.
[Defense counsel]: There’s no evidence of that either, Your Honor. Objection.
The Court: She may argue any inference from the evidence.
(Emphasis added.) We believe that the State’s suggestion that Adams met defendant to settle matters with him and that defendant shot Adams on the side of the road before dragging her into the woods are inferences that reasonably can be drawn from the evidence presented. Even if that were not the case, in light of the evidence, any error from the statements was harmless.
Defendant also points to the prosecutor’s expression of opinion on defendant’s possible theory of the case:
Now, I’m going to sit down and let you all listen to [the defense attorney]. And he’ll bring up a lot of things that Ramal said that were different, not a hundred percent like he likes them. He may even try to throw out there maybe Ramal killed him. I mean that is just crazy. He might do that.
(Emphasis added.) Defendant argues this is an impermissible expression of the prosecutor’s personal beliefs. We agree that this remark was improper under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1230 because it expressed a personal belief as to the truth or falsity of defendant’s arguments.
Because, however, defendant did not object to this comment at trial, he “must establish that the remarks were so grossly improper that the trial court abused its discretion by failing to intervene
ex mero motu.” State v. Braxton,
IV
Finally, defendant argues that the trial court erred in denying his request for a jury instruction on voluntary manslaughter. Any possible error in failing to give this instruction was, however, harmless. “It is well-settled law in this state that when a jury is properly instructed on both first-degree and second-degree murder and returns a verdict of guilty of first-d.egree murder, the failure to instruct on voluntary manslaughter is harmless error.”
State v. East,
No error.
Notes
. Defendant also argues on appeal that the expert testimony violated his constitutional rights. Defendant did not, however, make this constitutional argument below, and “[i]t is well settled that this Court will not review constitutional questions that
were not raised or passed upon in the trial court.”
State v. Carpenter,
. The case cited by defendant,
Sexton v. State,
. Defendant also argues that these errors violated his constitutional rights. Because he did not assert these constitutional arguments below, they are not properly before this Court.
Carpenter,
