On 2 October 1997, defendant was charged by way of a juvenile petition with the murder of fifteen-year-old Brian Jason Dragon. Defendant was also fifteen years old at the time of the alleged offense and was supposedly a close Mend of the victim. After a probable cause hearing, the juvenile court judge bound defendant over to be tried as an adult in superior court. Defendant was then tried at the 11 January 1999 Session of Guilford County Superior Court. On 26 January 1999, the jury returned a verdict finding him guilty of second-degree murder. The trial judge sentenced defendant to a term of 157 to 198 months’ imprisonment, from which he appeals.
Defendant first contests the admission of certain testimony by defense witness Michael J. Edmundson, a former police officer with the Greensboro Police Department. Following his arrest, defendant was placed in a patrol car with then-Officer Edmundson. Defendant was not at this time advised of his
Miranda
rights. (Simply being taken into custody does not trigger the protections of
Miranda,
a defendant must also be subject to police
interrogation. State v. Ladd,
On cross-examination by the State, Officer Edmundson testified that, following this voluntary statement, defendant was informed that a youth detective would be speaking with him upon arrival at the station, to which defendant responded, “Not without my lawyer.” (Tr. at 825). The State used this second statement to rebut defendant’s mistake-of-fact defense. Specifically, the State argued to the jury that, if it truly was a mistake, defendant would not have needed to speak with a lawyer. Defendant now claims that, by introducing defendant’s statement “Not without my lawyer,” the State unconstitutionally used defendant’s exercise of his right to counsel against him.
We begin with a brief overview of the Constitutional right to counsel. There are two separate rights to counsel embodied in the
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Constitution. The first is the explicit right to counsel contained in the Sixth Amendment. That right is only triggered once formal adversarial proceedings are initiated.
Kirby v. Illinois,
Having clarified the specific right involved, we next outline the relevant case law in this area. In
Doyle v. Ohio,
the United States Supreme Court held that, after a defendant is given the
Miranda
warnings, the exercise of his right to silence cannot be used against him.
Our own Supreme Court later extended
Doyle’s
holding regarding a defendant’s right to silence to encompass a defendant’s right to counsel as well, such that invocation of that right after defendant is read the
Miranda
warnings also cannot be used against him.
Ladd,
Before proceeding further, we do point out that, because the evidence of defendant’s exercise of his right to counsel was used to rebut his mistake-of-fact defense and thus implicitly attack the veracity of his statement “I didn’t mean to do it,” there is at least some potential debate over whether it was used here for impeachment purposes or for substantive purposes. We need not answer that question as we do not believe it to be decisive.
See, e.g., Wainwright,
No case in North Carolina has squarely addressed this precise issue. We acknowledge that, in
State v. Sowell,
For the answer, we look back to
Ladd.
In that case, the defendant was arrested for murder and armed robbery and then read his
Miranda
rights.
Ladd,
*572 By giving the Miranda warnings, the police officers indicated to defendant that they were prepared to recognize his right to the presence of an attorney should he choose to exercise it. Therefore, we conclude that the words chosen by defendant to invoke this constitutional privilege should not have been admitted into evidence against him.
Id.
at 284,
We believe
Fletcher
also mandates this result.
Fletcher
affirmatively holds that a defendant’s pr
e-Miranda
silence can be used against him.
Fletcher,
We therefore hold that the Fifth Amendment’s Self-Incrimination Clause (as incorporated through the Due Process Clause of the *573 Fourteenth Amendment) does not prevent the use of defendant’s right to counsel against him at trial when defendant exercises that right prior to his being advised of his Miranda rights. Because defendant exercised his right to counsel before being informed of his Miranda rights (and before the warnings were even required), the State was not constitutionally prohibited from introducing Officer Edmundson’s testimony at trial. We therefore overrule defendant’s assignment of error.
Defendant next contends that the trial court erred in refusing to dismiss the charge of second-degree murder. The evidence at trial can be summarized as follows: Brian Dragon (the victim) told defendant he was going to have sex with defendant’s sister, to which defendant responded, “You ain’t going to do nothing to my sister. I’ll shoot you.” (Tr. at 670). Defendant then got a gun and pointed it at Dragon. Dragon then shoved defendant, defendant shoved him back, Dragon shoved him once more, and defendant then shot Dragon. Defendant contends this evidence showed he was legally provoked so as to negate the element of malice required for second-degree murder. We disagree.
Our Supreme Court has summarized the law with respect to provocation in the following manner:
There are two kinds of provocation relating to the law of homicide: One is that level of provocation which negates malice and reduces murder to voluntary manslaughter. Mere words, however abusive or insulting are not sufficient to negate malice and reduce the homicide to manslaughter. Rather, this level of provocation must ordinarily amount to an assault or threatened assault by the victim against the perpetrator.
The other kind of provocation is that which, while insufficient to reduce murder to manslaughter, is sufficient to incite defendant to act suddenly and without deliberation. Thus, words or conduct not amounting to an assault or threatened assault, may be enough to arouse a sudden and sufficient passion in the perpetrator to negate deliberation and reduce a homicide to murder in the second degree.
State v. Watson,
In this regard, we find
State v. Barr,
In another assignment of error, defendant objects to a portion of the prosecutor’s closing argument regarding the inference of malice. Specifically, defendant objects to the following language:
I say to you, ladies and gentlemen, and the law presumes, you see, that when somebody points this type of deadly weapon at somebody, has cocked it, is aiming it, and is threatening to use it, that that is inherently dangerous.
(Tr. at 1027). Defendant claims this is an incorrect statement of the law and thus prejudicial to defendant.
See generally State v. Ratliff,
We begin by noting defendant did not object to these closing remarks. Thus, our standard of review is to determine whether the remarks “were so grossly improper that the trial court abused its discretion in failing to intervene
ex mero mo tu
to correct the error.”
State v. Oxendine,
At most, the prosecutor’s remarks were technical misstatements of the law. Defendant’s actions in cocking the gun, pointing it, and
*575
threatening to use it were only
evidence
from which malice might be inferred. The effect of the remarks was not prejudicial, in that the trial court subsequently instructed the jury correctly on the element of malice.
See also State v. Brown,
Defendant also assigns error to the prosecutor’s statement in closing arguments regarding defendant’s lack of emotion. Specifically, defendant objects to the following remarks:
You see, all of his conduct, all of his statements, are telling you something about his character, or his lack of character might be a better term. You’ve had a chance to observe his demeanor here in the courtroom. Have you seen the slightest bit of emotion on his part as we’re talking for a week about the death of his so-called best friend? I’ve watched him. I haven’t seen any. He is a cold fish. He’s the kind of individual, when you think about it, you see, who would do exactly what the evidence shows he did.
(Tr. at 1102).
A lawyer may not assert his own opinions about a defendant’s credibility in open court; issues of credibility are solely the province of the jury.
State v. Locklear,
Here, although the prosecutor veered toward the line marking comment on defendant’s credibility, we do not believe he crossed it. The prosecutor was simply urging the jury to take into account defendant’s lack of emotion and “cold fish” demeanor during the trial. In the end, this is sufficiently similar to the case of
State v. Myers,
299
*576
N.C. 671,
I watched specifically to see [defendant’s] reaction as those pictures of the blood were handed to him and then finally the three pictures of his wife, the woman that he said that he loved, with a gaping hole in her head. He didn’t flinch. Didn’t bat an eye. I don’t know if you were watching him but no remorse and that I contend to you, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, is the first among many things that the State asks that you consider on the question of premeditation and deliberation.
Id.
at 679-80,
Finally, defendant assigns error to the trial court’s imposition of a civil judgment against him in the amount of $11,000 to cover the victim’s funeral expenses. Our statutes now authorize a judge to order the payment of restitution to a victim’s estate. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1340.34(a) (1999). For certain offenses, such as second degree murder, restitution is mandatory. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1340.34(b). For other offenses, restitution is permissive. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1340.34(c). However, section 1340.34 became effective 1 December 1998 and thus does not apply to crimes committed before that date. 1998 N.C. Sess. Laws 212 § 19.4(r). The crime here was committed on 29 September 1997, before the statute’s effective date. We therefore vacate the trial court’s order of restitution.
In all other respects, however, we conclude defendant received a fair trial, free from prejudicial error.
No error in part, vacated in part.
