Demetrius Antoine Cofield (Defendant) appeals his conviction for the first-degree murder of Mohammed Suleiman Mullah (Mullah) in the perpetration of attempted armed robbery.
During jury selection, defense counsel peremptorily challenged prospective jurors Anita Cooke (Cooke), James Russ (Russ), Milton Moore, Jr. (Moore), and Michael Speight (Speight) on behalf of Defendant, who is African-American. The State objected to their removal, contending that the challenges at issue were racially motivated, and noted that “each of these four jurors . . . are Caucasian, [and] have given no .. . answers that the State would feel would entitle [defense] counsel to remove them . . . .”
The State specifically noted that Cooke had indicated that she would consider both the death penalty and life imprisonment, and had stated there was no reason she could not be fair. The State also noted that one of the accepted African-American jurors “has almost the identical credentials [as Cooke, and these jurors] parallel each other consistently and entirely.” As for Russ, the State contended that “he’s heard about the incident, just like Number Two, who is black, yet the defendant is willing to let Number Two sit up there, when both Number Two and [Russ] have almost identical credentials.” As for Moore, “he has been on a jury, just as Number Two, who is black, has been on a jury. He has said he could consider both punishments. He has given no reason .. . that the State has heard that would show that he is impartial to [Defendant] in any way.” As for Speight, the State contended that he “has indicated that he could consider both [life and death] punishments. He has given no indication that the State has seen that he would be impartial, or unfair to this [Defendant] in any way.”
The Court found the following facts:
The Jury passed to [Defendant] consisted of four black males, two white males, two black females and four white females. . . . The challenged jurors were all white .... [T]he Court listened to the juror voir dire, which is of record, and examined juror questionnaires of the jurors passed by the State to [Defendant]; . . . that the Court adopts the objections of the State and the questions and answers of the jurors on voir dire and the information contained in the questionnaire as its findings of fact.
The trial court found that the State had made out a prima facie case of racially motivated peremptory challenges.
Defense counsel then attempted to rebut the State’s
prima facie
case with race-neutral explanations for the challenges. As for Cooke, defense counsel stated that she was formerly employed by Nash General Hospital. “She, by her own admission and own statement, indicated that she was familiar with Doctor Levy. Doctor Levy [who performed the autopsy on Mullah] is a very important witness in this case for the State . . . .” Defense counsel also noted that Cooke’s sister-in-law was a victim of a recent breaking and entering, and that her uncle had worked with the Rocky Mount Police Department, as did the officers involved in Defendant’s case. Defense counsel explained that Russ was challenged because “when asked as to his race, he calls himself Caucasian [rather than white],” and this indicated to defense counsel “that, perhaps, this gentleman has, in his own mind, some difficulty with races.” In addition, Russ had requested, and the trial court had denied, excusal from jury duty for health reasons. Furthermore, defense counsel noted that Russ had served as a pilot in the military, and “we do not need to have individuals with the propensities of a prior military record serving on a jury in this case . . . base[d] ... on the experience of counsel, both personally and also in general.” Russ also “is a member of the VFW, nothing finer than the VFW, but in this case we do not believe that a member of VFW should be sitting as a member in this
The State did not immediately offer any additional argument as to the four challenged jurors. The trial court removed Speight pursuant to defense counsel’s peremptory challenge, but sustained the State’s objections to the removal of the other three prospective jurors challenged. After additional questioning of the prospective jurors, defense counsel again peremptorily challenged Cooke, Russ, and Moore, offering the following additional reasons:
Moore refuses to answer the questions asked and posed upon him by counsel. His answer to any questions were over and over that he didn’t remember. His attitude as displayed in the courtroom was not only obnoxious, but was rude. . . .
In addition, [Moore] was mimicking what the Court was saying to counsel earlier about, “That’s already been asked. You’ve already asked that” ... on at least two occasions. [Moore]... was the foreperson on a previous jury. . . .
[Russ did not complete his answers, and] has a family member who has suffered from a rape in the past. . . .
[Cooke] was familiar [with] and ... knew Dr. Levy, [an expert witness for the State].... [S]he only saw him once or so, or twice or so. Nevertheless, she . . . has a family member, who was a sister-in-law that was involved in a breaking and entering, and . . . she has a retired uncle from the [police department involved in this case].
The trial court, after hearing defense counsel’s explanations for use of the Defendant’s peremptory challenges, found “that [defense counsel] failed to advance race-neutral reasons for the peremptory challenges at issue,” and “had failed to rebut the prima facie case of purposeful racial discrimination.”
Although the trial court determined that defense counsel’s explanations were not facially race neutral, it nonetheless allowed the State to offer surrebuttal arguments that defense counsel’s explanations were merely pretextual excuses for purposeful racial discrimination. The State noted:
[Cooke’s] relative, her uncle, she said . . . that she was “a little girl” when he retired [from the police department]. . . . She does not [currently] know anybody with [that police department].. . .
As to [Moore], Your Honor, if there had been any “obnoxious” attitude elicited, it’s been, the State would contend, because [Moore] has been asked the same question, with all respect to counsel, at least three or four times, and each time, including the first time, he gave an articulate, intelligent answer, which the State could understand what he was saying the first time. We would say he probably feels his answer was articulate and intelligent the first time, and if he gets obnoxious [it’s] because he’s asked the same thing four times.
[Russ] said [the] “rape [of a family member] occurred nine to ten years ago [and] was resolved to his satisfaction”. .. [and] he concluded ... by saying he could consider life imprisonment.
The trial court noted that:
[It had] followed the voir dire examination closely, observed the demeanor of the jurors in question, and the attorneys, observed the expressions of the jurors and their reactions to the questions asked andlistened to the tone of their voices and their answers to the questions propounded; and that the Court read nothing in the questionnaires that was not later explained, heard no answer and noticed nothing in the demeanor of the three jurors or the manner in which they answered that would disqualify them from serving impartially.
The trial court then found “that the reason advanced by [defense counsel] for exercising the challenges was vague and merely a pretext and purposely racially discriminatory.” The jury which ultimately heard Defendant’s case was composed of seven African-American jurors and five Caucasian jurors, and included Cooke, Russ, and Moore.
Undisputed evidence revealed that on the afternoon .of 6 November 1995, Mullah, the cashier of Branch Street Grocery (the Store) in Rocky Mount, North Carolina, received a fatal gunshot wound. Defendant, who was then a seventeen-year-old high school student, gave the following statement (Statement) to the police that same evening:
I told Jimmy to give me the burner, gun. Jimmy gave me the gun. I told them I was going to the [Store]. I was wearing a blue raincoat with the hood pulled down to just above my eyes, and a bandanna over the bottom of my face to my nose.
I went inside the [Store] and Jimmy stayed out front. Inside [I] pointed the 9-millimeter at [Mullah] and said, “Yo, give me your loot; give me your loot.”
[Mullah] just laughed at me. I told him again to give me the loot. He kept laughing and reached under the counter. I fired the gun and ran out.
An officer wrote out this Statement as Defendant gave it, and Defendant signed it. Defendant made a motion to suppress this Statement, which the trial court denied. The trial court, after concluding that “Defendant purposely, freely, knowingly, and voluntarily waived each of his rights and made a [Statement],” admitted it into evidence over Defendant’s objection at trial.
At trial, Rodney Massenburg (Massenburg) testified that he saw Defendant with a gun, and then saw Defendant go into the Store alone. Massenburg heard one gunshot while Defendant was in the Store, then saw Defendant exit the Store and place the gun in his pants. When Massenburg went inside the Store to investigate, Mullah was fatally wounded and lying on the floor behind the counter where the cash register was located.
Defendant testified in court that he was not in the Store when Mullah was shot, and that he did not attempt to rob the Store.
Defendant made a motion to dismiss the charges against him, and in the alternative, requested jury instructions on the lesser-included offense of second-degree murder. The trial court denied both requests. The jury found Defendant guilty of attempted robbery with a firearm and of first-degree murder in the perpetration of a felony. Defendant was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole.
The issues are whether: (I) Defendant’s peremptory challenges against three jurors were racially motivated; (II) there was substantial evidence that Defendant was guilty of first-degree murder committed in the perpetration of attempted robbery with a firearm; and (III) the evidence supported submission of second-degree murder.
I
In
Batson v. Kentucky,
Batson
has been expanded to prohibit not only the State, but also criminal defendants from engaging in purposeful racial discrimination in their exercise of peremptory challenges.
See Georgia v. McCollum,
To allow for appellate review, the trial court must make specific findings of fact at each stage of the
Batson
inquiry that it reaches.
State v. Sanders,
A. Prima Facie Showing
To challenge the defense counsel’s exercise of the defendant’s peremptory challenges, the State must first establish a
prima facie
case of racial discrimination.
Barnes,
[T]he defendant’s race, the victim’s race, the race of the key witnesses, questions and statements of the [challenging attorney] which tend to support or refute an inference of discrimination, repeated use of peremptory challenges against [prospective jurors of a particular race] such that it tends to establish a pattern of strikes . . . , use of a disproportionate number of peremptory challenges to strike [prospective jurors of a particular race] in a single case, and the [challenging attorney’s] acceptance rate of potential [jurors of this race].
Quick,
In this case, Defendant is African-American. Just prior to defense counsel’s exercise of Defendant’s peremptory challenges, the jury consisted of six African-American jurors and six Caucasian jurors. Defense counsel peremptorily challenged no African-American jurors at this point, but did peremptorily challenge four Caucasian jurors— two-thirds of the Caucasian jurors then available. These are relevant circumstances tending to reveal a “pattern of strikes” against Caucasian jurors by defense counsel, as well as defense counsel’s disproportionate use of peremptory challenges to strike Caucasian jurors. Furthermore, in making out its prima facie case, the State noted other relevant circumstances, including the facts that African-American jurors remaining on the jury panel “paralleled] ” the challenged Caucasian jurors (i.e., one non-challenged African-American juror had previously heard about the case, one had previously served on a jury, and a close relative of one accepted African-American juror had been victimized in the past), that the challenged Caucasian jurors had indicated that they could consider both life imprisonment and the death penalty, and that none had demonstrated any partiality. The trial corut, in “adopting] the objections of the State” in its findings of fact, demonstrated its agreement on these points. These relevant circumstances in the record support the trial court’s determination that a prima facie case of discrimination was shown by the State. Applying the clearly erroneous standard of review, we are not “left with the definite and firm conviction” that the trial court erred in this threshold Batson determination.
B. Race-Neutral Explanation
After the State has established a
prima facie
case, the burden shifts to defense counsel to offer “an explanation based on something other than the race of the juror[s].”
Hernandez,
In this case, defense counsel’s explanations for peremptorily challenging Cooke included that Cooke knew one of the State’s expert witnesses, that her sister was a victim of a recent breaking and entering, and that her uncle worked in the same police department as officers involved in the case. Each of these reasons is reasonably specific and related to this case, and none, on their face, are racially motivated.
As for Russ and Moore, defense counsel stated that they were peremptorily challenged because defense counsel felt that they appeared to have “some difficulty with races.” Both Russ and Moore had served in the military. Russ was a member of the VFW. Moore was a member of a gun club. Defense counsel noted that “on the experience of counsel,” these associations were unsatisfactory to Defendant. Defense counsel was also concerned about some of Russ’s facial expressions when questioned about a family member who had previously been raped. These reasons, like those given for Cooke, were reasonably specific, related to this case, facially race neutral, and based on defense counsel’s “hunches and past experience.”
Finally, defense counsel felt that Speight had been deceptive, and would not look defense counsel “in the eye.” Again,
The trial court found that defense counsel had “failed to advance race-neutral reasons for the peremptory challenges at issue,” and therefore had “failed to rebut the prima facie case of purposeful racial discrimination.” As any facially race-neutral reason offered by the challenging attorney “will be deemed race neutral” unless a discriminatory intent “is inherent in the explanation,” the trial court clearly erred in finding that defense counsel had failed to offer race-neutral explanations for his peremptory challenges. Contrary to the trial court’s finding, defense counsel successfully rebutted the State’s prima facie case of racial discrimination. Although the trial court erroneously determined that defense counsel had failed to offer race-neutral explanations, it nonetheless continued the Batson inquiry as if defense counsel had offered race-neutral explanations. 2
C. Pretextual Determination
If defense counsel provides facially race-neutral reasons for the exercise of its peremptory challenges, the trial court must determine whether these reasons are merely pretextual excuses for purposeful discrimination.
See Hernandez,
In this case, the State noted on surrebuttal that Cooke was “a little girl” when her uncle retired from the police department, arguing that defense counsel’s concern that Cooke had ties to the police department involved in this case was merely pretextual. The State noted that Moore was not obnoxious to defense counsel, as defense counsel had stated during his rebuttal, but was merely irritated because defense counsel had repeatedly asked Moore the same questions. The State also noted that the rape of Russ’s family member, which concerned defense counsel, had occurred “nine to ten years ago.” The trial court noted that it had “followed the
voir dire
examination closely, observed the demeanor of the jurors in question, and the attorneys, observed the expressions of the jurors and their reactions to the questions asked and listened to the tone of their voices and their answers to the questions propounded” in finding that
defense counsel’s explanations were “vague and merely a pretext.” Based on the record before us, we cannot say that the trial court clearly erred in finding that defense counsel’s explanations were pre-textual. It follows that the State has established purposeful discrimination; the trial court therefore properly refused to allow defense counsel’s
II
Defendant next contends that there was insufficient evidence to submit attempted armed robbery and first-degree murder in perpetration of a felony to the jury. We disagree.
A motion to dismiss is properly denied if substantial evidence is presented of each essential element of the offense.
State v. Roseborough,
To establish first-degree murder in the perpetration of a felony, “[t]he prosecution need only prove that the killing took place while the accused was perpetrating or attempting to perpetrate one of the enumerated felonies.”
State v. Bell,
The evidence in the light most favorable to the State in this case includes Defendant’s signed Statement, 3 in which Defendant stated that he carried a gun into the Store with his “hood pulled down to just above my eyes, and a bandanna over the bottom of my face to my nose.” Defendant’s Statement confesses that he “pointed the 9-millimeter [gun] at [Mullah] and said, ‘Yo, give me your loot; give me your loot.’ ” Defendant confessed that when Mullah laughed at him, “I fired the gun and ran out.” Defendant’s Statement is supported by Massenburg’s corroborating testimony that he saw Defendant enter the Store with a gun and heard a gunshot while Defendant was inside the Store, and by the fact that Mullah’s fatally wounded body was found near the cash register. This additional evidence, when considered with Defendant’s Statement, supports the Statement and permits a reasonable inference that Defendant, armed with a gun, shot and killed Mullah while unlawfully attempting to take cash from him in the Store. Thus there is substantial evidence in the record from which a rational trier of fact could find beyond a reasonable doubt that Defendant killed Mullah in the perpetration of the felony of attempted armed robbery.
Ill
Instructions on a lesser-included offense are required only when there is conflicting evidence as to a crucial element of the offense charged, and the evidence supports the elements of the lesser-included offense.
State v. Nelson,
In this case, the State’s evidence, as noted in Section II, supported a jury finding of first-degree murder in the perpetration of the felony of attempted armed robbery. At trial, Defendant denied shooting Mullah; a denial, however, does not constitute conflicting evidence of an element of the State’s case. The trial court therefore did not err in refusing to submit second-degree murder to the jury.
No error.
Notes
. Normally our state appellate courts utilize an “any competent evidence” standard of review of the findings of fact entered by the trial court.
See, e.g., State v. Wade,
. The procedure utilized by the trial court in this case, although not required, facilitates appellate review. In the event it is determined on appeal, as in this case, that the trial court erred in finding that race-neutral explanations were not offered by the challenging attorney, this Court can, on the record before it, review whether the explanations are pretextual without remanding for a new
Batson
hearing.
Cf. State v. Hall,
. We note that although Defendant assigned error to the trial court’s admission of his Statement into evidence, Defendant fails to make reference to or argue this assignment of error in his brief before this Court, and thereby abandons this assignment of error. See N.C.E. App. P. 28(b)(5) (“Immediately following each question shall be a reference to the assignments of error pertinent to the question .... Assignments of error not set out in the appellant’s brief, or in support of which no reason or argument is stated or authority cited, will be taken as abandoned.”).
