State v. Mumma , 257 N.C. App. 829 ( 2018 )


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  •                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA17-481
    Filed: 6 February 2018
    Swain County, No. 11 CRS 50950
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.
    WILLOUGHBY HENEREY MUMMA
    Appeal by defendant from judgment entered 10 June 2016 by Judge Marvin P.
    Pope, Jr., in Swain County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 31 October
    2017.
    Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Assistant Attorney General Sherri H.
    Lawrence, for the State.
    Meghan Adelle Jones for defendant-appellant.
    BRYANT, Judge.
    Where there was sufficient evidence presented at trial that defendant was the
    aggressor, the trial court did not err in instructing the jury on the aggressor doctrine.
    Assuming arguendo the trial court erred in allowing the jury to review photographs
    of the deceased victim during jury deliberations over defendant’s objection, this error
    was harmless where defendant has not established that he was prejudiced thereby.
    Lastly, where the prosecutor’s closing argument was not so grossly improper as to
    render defendant’s trial and conviction fundamentally unfair, the trial court did not
    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    err when it declined to intervene ex mero motu during the prosecutor’s closing
    argument, and we find no prejudicial error in the judgment of the trial court.
    On 9 November 2011, defendant Willoughby Mumma was with his wife Amy
    Chapman at their home in Bryson City, North Carolina. Amy’s twenty-year-old son,
    Christopher Robinson, who lived with Amy and defendant, came home around 5:30
    p.m. that evening where he encountered defendant and Amy, drinking and taking
    pills.
    At around 8:00 p.m., Amy drove to a store where she purchased six alcoholic
    beverages. She returned home within twenty to twenty-five minutes.
    While Amy was gone, defendant and his friend, Dewayne Bradley, had the
    following conversation via text message:
    8:11 p.m., defendant: “I’m goin 2 kil her.”
    8:11 p.m., defendant: “I’m goin 2 kil her.”
    8:12 p.m., Bradley: “Please don’t.”
    8:13 p.m., defendant: “Im going 2 I cant take.”
    8:13 p.m., Bradley: “Man just walk down the road.”
    8:13 p.m., defendant: “Do you have ne lime?”
    8:14 p.m., Bradley: “Noooooo, just chill.”
    8:15 p.m., defendant: “No im over it I can’t take no more I
    luv u bro.”
    8:16 p.m., Bradley: “Please lessen to me”
    8:17 p.m., defendant: “Im sorry I have 2”
    8:20 p.m., Bradley: “Man ill come and get 2morr, my word”
    8:21 p.m., defendant: “Line will get rid of the body”
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    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    Around 9:45 p.m., defendant and Amy began arguing over an alarm clock radio.
    Robinson went into the bedroom and told them to stop arguing.           According to
    defendant, Amy was intoxicated and “got meaner as the night went on.”
    At 11:16 p.m., defendant called Bradley multiple times and repeatedly called
    Bradley into the early morning hours of 10 November 2011. At 11:52 p.m., defendant
    texted Bradley duplicate text messages stating, “I need u 2 call me now GD.”
    At 9:30 a.m. the next morning, Robinson woke up and walked past defendant
    sitting on the couch in the living room, texting on his cell phone. Robinson went into
    the bedroom to look for Amy and get a cigarette. Robinson saw blankets all over the
    bedroom floor and a quarter-sized spot of blood on the bed. Robinson initially thought
    Amy may have hit defendant; she would get angry when she drank, and he had seen
    Amy hit defendant before. Defendant told Robinson to get out of the room. Robinson
    asked where Amy was, and defendant told him she was at work. Defendant was
    pacing back and forth from the living room to the kitchen, acting “like things [were
    not] right.”
    Defendant told Robinson to get ready for school. Bradley and his wife arrived
    to pick up Robinson for school. Bradley went into the house while Robinson got in
    the car. Defendant showed Bradley Amy’s body on the closet floor. Bradley left
    immediately, got in his car, and told his wife and Robinson to lock the car doors.
    Defendant tried to get in the car with them, but Bradley ordered him out of the car.
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    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    As they drove away, defendant ran into the woods. Bradley told Robinson that his
    mother was dead. He pulled into a driveway down the street, called 911, and waited
    for the police to arrive.
    Law enforcement responded to the 911 call and discovered Amy’s body in the
    bedroom closet. At some point later that day, Jennifer Jones, Bradley’s ex-girlfriend,
    sent defendant a text asking, “What did you do?” Defendant responded, “I kild her.”
    Law enforcement officers located defendant down the road from the residence in a
    field containing briars, weeds, and tall grasses. He was taken into custody at 5:18
    p.m. with scratches on his arms and legs.
    When law enforcement interviewed defendant later that day, defendant stated
    that both he and Amy were drug addicts and that on the night of 9 November 2011,
    they had been drinking and had also taken about thirty Klonopin pills each.
    Defendant stated that Amy tried to stab him with his pocketknife, at which point he
    took the knife from her, pushed her to the floor, sat on top of her, and stabbed her in
    the neck because she bit him. He stabbed her in the eye when she tried to scream for
    Robinson to help her. The knife blade broke off in her eye. Defendant stated that he
    “blacked out,” “freaked out,” and “killed her.” Later, at trial, defendant would testify
    that he “had to end that fight. She was trying to get the knife back.”
    On 11 November 2011, Dr. Sam Davis, a pathologist at Harris Regional
    Hospital, performed an autopsy on Amy’s body. Dr. Davis opined that the cause of
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    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    death was “exsanguination, or bleeding to death” “due to stab wounds on her neck
    and eye.” Amy had one stab wound in the upper right eyelid, perforating the eyeball,
    one stab wound in the left anterior neck, and two stab wounds to the anterior right
    neck, with one wound perforating the external jugular vein. Dr. Davis testified at
    trial about defensive wounds on the backs of her hands as “a textbook appearance of
    being stuck in a defensive posture. . . . [S]he was not striking, but rather [was] being
    struck.”
    On 22 November 2011, defendant was indicted for first-degree murder.
    Defendant filed a “Notice of Defenses” for accident, diminished capacity, and
    voluntary intoxication, and later amended his notice to include only diminished
    capacity and voluntary intoxication. Thereafter, defendant filed a “3rd Amended
    Notice of Defenses” for self-defense and voluntary intoxication.
    The case came on for trial during the 23 May 2015 session of Swain County
    Superior Court, the Honorable Marvin P. Pope, Jr., Judge presiding.           The jury
    returned a verdict of guilty of second-degree murder, and the trial court entered
    judgment and imposed a sentence of 180 to 225 months imprisonment. Defendant
    appeals.
    _________________________________________________________
    On appeal, defendant contends the trial court (I) violated a statutory mandate
    or committed plain error by giving erroneous jury instructions on self-defense; (II)
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    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    erred by sending inflammatory photographs of the decedent’s body to the jury
    deliberation room; and (III) erred by failing to intervene and stop the prosecutor from
    making improper closing arguments.
    I
    Defendant first argues that the trial court erroneously instructed the jury on
    self-defense when all the evidence showed that Amy was the aggressor. Defendant
    also contends that this issue is “preserved for review as a matter of law,” despite his
    failure to object to the jury charge at trial. We disagree and review for plain error.
    See State v. Juarez, 
    369 N.C. 351
    , 357–58, 
    794 S.E.2d 293
    , 299–300 (2016) (reviewing
    for plain error the defendant’s challenge to the trial court’s jury instruction on the
    aggressor doctrine of self-defense where the defendant did not object to the
    instruction as given at trial).
    Rule 10 the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure provide that “[a]
    party may not make any portion of the jury charge or omission therefrom the basis of
    an issue presented on appeal unless the party objects thereto before the jury retires
    to consider its verdict, stating distinctly that to which objection is made and the
    grounds of the objection . . . .” N.C. R. App. P. 10(a)(2) (2017). “For error to constitute
    plain error, a defendant must demonstrate that a fundamental error occurred at
    trial.” State v. Lawrence, 
    365 N.C. 506
    , 518, 
    723 S.E.2d 326
    , 334 (2012) (citation
    omitted). “To show that an error was fundamental, a defendant must establish
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    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    prejudice that, after examination of the entire record, the error ‘had a probable impact
    on the jury’s finding that the defendant was guilty.’ ” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted) (quoting
    State v. Odom, 
    307 N.C. 655
    , 660, 
    300 S.E.2d 375
    , 378 (1983)).
    “An individual is the aggressor if he ‘aggressively and willingly enters into a
    fight without legal excuse or provocation.’ ” State v. Effler, 
    207 N.C. App. 91
    , 97, 
    698 S.E.2d 547
    , 551 (2010) (quoting State v. Potter, 
    295 N.C. 126
    , 144, 
    244 S.E.2d 397
    ,
    409 (1978)). “It is undisputed that ‘[a] person is entitled under the law of self-defense
    to harm another only if he is “without fault in provoking, engaging in, or continuing
    a difficulty with another.” ’ ” Id. at 98, 
    698 S.E.2d at 552
     (quoting State v. Stone, 
    104 N.C. App. 448
    , 451–52, 
    409 S.E.2d 719
    , 721 (1991)). “This Court has repeatedly held
    that ‘where the evidence does not indicate that the defendant was the aggressor, the
    trial court should not instruct on that element of self-defense.” State v. Vaughn, 
    227 N.C. App. 198
    , 202, 
    742 S.E.2d 276
    , 278 (2013) (quoting State v. Jenkins, 
    202 N.C. App. 291
    , 297, 
    688 S.E.2d 101
    , 105 (2010)).
    “[T]he judge has the duty to instruct the jury on the law arising from all the
    evidence presented.” State v. Smith, 
    360 N.C. 341
    , 346, 
    626 S.E.2d 258
    , 261 (2006)
    (quoting State v. Moore, 
    75 N.C. App. 543
    , 546, 
    331 S.E.2d 251
    , 253 (1985)). “In
    instructing the jury with respect to a defense to a criminal charge, ‘the facts must be
    interpreted in the light most favorable to the defendant.” State v. Holloman, 
    369 N.C. 615
    , 625, 
    799 S.E.2d 824
    , 831 (2017) (quoting State v. Montague, 
    298 N.C. 752
    , 755,
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    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    
    259 S.E.2d 899
    , 902 (1979)). It is considered error to charge the jury on the aggressor
    doctrine where “the record . . . discloses no evidence tending to show that the
    defendant brought on the difficulty or was the aggressor[.]” Vaughn, 227 N.C. App.
    at 203, 742 S.E.2d at 279 (emphasis added) (quoting State v. Washington, 
    234 N.C. 531
    , 535, 
    67 S.E.2d 498
    , 501 (1951)).
    In the instant case, defendant challenges the following portion of the jury
    instructions:
    If the defendant voluntarily and without provocation
    entered the fight, the defendant could be considered the
    aggressor, unless the defendant thereafter attempted to
    abandon the fight. . . .
    ....
    The defendant is not entitled to the benefit of self-defense
    if the defendant was the aggressor with the intent to kill or
    inflict serious bodily harm upon the deceased.
    Contrary to defendant’s assertion otherwise and far from “no evidence,” see 
    id.
    (citation omitted), there was sufficient evidence presented at trial that defendant was
    the aggressor. For example, a DVD recording of defendant’s 10 November 2011
    interview with law enforcement officers was played for the jury in which he described
    how Amy came at him with the knife, he took the knife away from her, and proceeded
    to get on top of her and stab her in the neck and then in the eye to keep her from
    screaming for help. Based on this account to law enforcement, defendant became the
    aggressor after he gained control of the knife and then proceeded to get on top of Amy
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    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    and stab her. Even though the jury also heard evidence—defendant’s testimony—
    that Amy kept trying to regain control of the knife, defendant not only maintained
    control of the knife throughout the remainder of the fight, but he also continued the
    fight until Amy was killed.
    This Court has previously noted that “the lack of injuries to [the] defendant,
    compared to the nature and severity of the wounds on [the victim] at his death, [was]
    sufficient evidence from which a jury could find that [the] defendant was the
    aggressor or that [the] defendant used excessive force.” State v. Presson, 
    229 N.C. App. 325
    , 330, 
    747 S.E.2d 651
    , 656 (2013). Here, too, defendant had no visible injuries
    aside from a few scratches which defendant admitted he sustained after running
    through the woods the next morning. In contrast, Amy sustained stab wounds to the
    eye and the neck, as well as lacerations on her back, shoulder, lip, cheek, temple,
    hands, and fingers. Furthermore, the pathologist who performed the autopsy on Amy
    testified that “[t]his [was] a textbook appearance of being stuck in a defense position.
    . . . This is simply a classic example of defensive wounds . . . . [S]he was not striking,
    but rather being struck.”
    Defendant’s text messages to Bradley prior to Amy’s killing also provide
    sufficient evidence from which a jury could find that defendant was the aggressor.
    From 8:11 p.m. until 8:21 p.m., defendant sent multiple text messages stating he was
    going to kill Amy, even asking for lime (or “line,” as defendant’s referred to it) to help
    -9-
    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    dispose of the body. As such, the jury could reasonably infer and find that defendant’s
    testimony was not credible and that instead of fending off an attack from Amy, he
    instead instigated the fight with her in order to kill her, as he stated earlier via text
    message he wanted to do. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in instructing the
    jury on the aggressor doctrine where sufficient evidence supported the instruction.
    Defendant’s argument is overruled.
    II
    Defendant next argues the trial court erred by sending inflammatory
    photographs of the decedent’s body to the jury deliberation room, over defendant’s
    objection, in violation of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1233.        Defendant contends that
    sending the exhibits to the deliberation room without his consent constitutes error
    and that considering the number and content of the photographs, as well as the
    amount of time the jury viewed them, he was prejudiced by this error. We disagree.
    Whether the trial court has violated a statutory mandate is reviewed de novo.
    State v. Ashe, 
    314 N.C. 28
    , 39, 
    331 S.E.2d 652
    , 659 (1985).
    “Upon request by the jury and with consent of all parties, the judge may in his
    discretion permit the jury to take to the jury room exhibits and writings which have
    been received in evidence.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1233(b) (2015). “Photographs of a
    homicide victim 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
    - 10 -
    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    excessive or repetitious use is not aimed solely at arousing the passions of the jury.”
    State v. Chapman, 
    359 N.C. 328
    , 350, 
    611 S.E.2d 794
    , 812–13 (2005) (quoting State
    v. Blakeney, 
    352 N.C. 287
    , 309–10, 
    531 S.E.2d 799
    , 816 (2000)).
    In State v. Cunningham, the North Carolina Supreme Court noted that
    “[a]lthough the defendant did not object to the sending of the exhibits to the jury
    room, he did not consent to it as required by the statute.” 
    344 N.C. 341
    , 364, 
    474 S.E.2d 772
    , 783 (1996). However, the Supreme Court concluded that “[i]n light of the
    strong evidence against the defendant, letting the jury have these items of evidence
    in the jury room could not have affected the outcome of the trial[,]” and “[a]ssuming
    this was error, it was harmless.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    In the instant case, defendant filed a pretrial “Motion to Exclude Photographs”
    and also objected to the jury’s request to see all photographic evidence during
    deliberations, although he did acknowledge that the decision was “in the Court’s
    discretion”:
    [Defendant’s attorney]: Your Honor, I know it’s in the
    Court’s discretion, but I would object. I’d prefer for them to
    rely on the testimony and recollection.
    THE COURT: Well --
    [Defendant’s attorney]: I mean, I know it’s in your
    discretion, Your Honor.
    THE COURT: In my discretion, I’m going to allow them to
    have all the photographs that have been introduced into
    evidence.
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    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    [Defendant’s attorney]: Yes, Your Honor.
    However, even if defendant “did not consent to [the jury’s request] as required
    by the statute[,]” assuming it was error, it was harmless where defendant has failed
    to establish that he was prejudiced in light of the overwhelming evidence of
    defendant’s guilt. See 
    id.
     (citation omitted).
    At trial, there were at least 170 or more photographic exhibits admitted into
    evidence, many of which were indeed images of the deceased’s body or portions
    thereof. However, those photographs showed the circumstances and position of the
    deceased’s body as it was found at the scene and the photographs of the injuries,
    including close-up views, were also relevant to show the type, severity, and number
    of injuries sustained by the deceased. They were necessary to depict the extent and
    nature of her injuries, as well as the location and position—inside a closet—in which
    she was found by law enforcement. This photographic evidence was the best evidence
    to help illustrate the responding officers’ testimony. Indeed, defendant did not object
    to the admission of these photographs into evidence; he only objected to the trial
    court’s decision to allow the photographs into the jury deliberation room. Defendant
    has not established how he was prejudiced by the trial court’s decision to allow the
    jurors to review photographic exhibits which they had already seen.
    In any event, there was more than sufficient evidence for a jury to find beyond
    a reasonable doubt that defendant committed second-degree murder and did not act
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    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    in self-defense. Dr. Davis testified that Amy was struck in a defensive posture and
    that she “was not striking, but rather being struck.” According to defendant’s own
    testimony, he obtained control and possession of the knife and proceeded to stab Amy
    in the eye and the neck. Lastly, defendant’s several text messages sent to Bradley
    prior to the murder also indicated that defendant intended to kill Amy. Defendant
    stated repeatedly that he was going to kill Amy and asked for lime to help dispose of
    the body.
    Based on all of the forgoing, even if it was error for the trial court to allow the
    jury to review photographs of the deceased victim during jury deliberations without
    defendant’s consent, this error was harmless where defendant has not established
    that he was prejudiced thereby. Defendant’s argument is overruled.
    III
    Lastly, defendant contends the trial court erred by failing to intervene ex mero
    motu during the State’s closing argument.         Specifically, defendant contends the
    prosecutor’s closing arguments were grossly improper as they injected the
    prosecutor’s personal beliefs, appealed to the jury’s passion, and led the jury away
    from the evidence. We disagree.
    “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
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    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    intervene ex mero motu.” State v. Jones, 
    355 N.C. 117
    , 133, 
    558 S.E.2d 97
    , 107 (2002)
    (citing State v. Trull, 
    349 N.C. 428
    , 451, 
    509 S.E.2d 178
    , 193 (1998)).
    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 and:
    (1) precluded other similar remarks from the offending
    attorney; and/or (2) instructed the jury to disregard the
    improper comments already made.
    
    Id.
    “The scope of jury arguments is left largely to the control and discretion of the
    trial court, and trial counsel will be granted wide latitude in the argument of hotly
    contested cases.” State v. Call, 
    349 N.C. 382
    , 419, 
    508 S.E.2d 496
    , 519 (1998) (citation
    omitted). Closing arguments must “(1) be devoid of counsel’s personal opinion; (2)
    avoid name-calling and/or references to matters beyond the record; (3) be premised
    on logical deductions, not on appeals to passion or prejudice; and (4) be constructed
    from fair inferences drawn only from evidence properly admitted at trial.” Jones, 355
    N.C. at 135, 
    558 S.E.2d at 108
    .
    In the instant case, defendant challenges the following portions of the
    prosecutor’s argument as “grossly improper”:
    But in this case, in this case, from the get-go, from the time
    you were seated . . . the State unequivocally, without any
    doubt, does not feel this defendant deserves the legal right
    to kill Amy Chapman in self-defense. That means he walks.
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    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    ....
    So from the get-go I will say it and will say it until this
    process is done and will continue to believe that. This
    defendant does not have the legal right to kill Amy
    Chapman in self-defense. He doesn’t get the opportunity to
    get any lesser included offense based on self-defense.
    ....
    [D]oes he have that right? Does he? You’re going to make
    that decision. I’ve made mine up.
    ....
    [Does] [defendant] have the right to kill Amy Chapman in
    self-defense? If you want to go back and deliberate and say
    yes, he did, then you’ve got to do what you’ve got to do. You
    got to do it. I respectfully disagree.
    ....
    It’s convenient now, after he’s been interviewed and then
    transcribed that he now changes his story from up on top
    of her, stabbing her, straddling her. Now they’re on the
    ground and she’s grabbing for his groin area and trying to
    get to the knife.
    At this point, defendant objected and the trial court sustained the objection but gave
    no curative instruction or otherwise instructed the prosecutor not to give his personal
    opinion.
    . . . [W]hat was his interest in changing his statement to
    that, to that? One is possibly getting a self-defense
    instruction. So that’s what the law allows him to, based on
    the evidence that’s been presented through his testimony.
    ....
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    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    So we know he intended to kill her, because he’s offering
    self-defense. He’s offering self-defense. He got up here and
    says it was me or her. So what’s he saying? I intended to
    kill her. I intended to do it. I’m proud of it.
    The prosecutor then referenced letters defendant wrote to his family:
    Oh, I couldn’t say much in my letters. I mean, come on.
    You’re talking to family here. It was an accident. I would
    hate to see what wasn’t an accident, you know.
    ....
    I went at 1:00 a.m. and went and saw [Robinson]. I was
    checking on him, he’s got diabetes. Are you kidding me?
    Hate to keep using that. . . .
    No, it’s because you hope he didn’t hear anything,
    and you’re making sure he didn’t. That’s what he was
    doing. That’s what he was checking on. Checking on his
    diabetes, give me a break.
    Error will not be found “in a trial court’s failure to intervene in closing
    arguments ex mero motu unless the remarks were so grossly improper they rendered
    the trial and conviction fundamentally unfair.” State v. Allen, 
    360 N.C. 297
    , 306–07,
    
    626 S.E.2d 271
    , 280 (2006) (emphasis added) (citing Call, 349 N.C. at 419–20, 508
    S.E.2d at 519). “[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. Smith, 
    359 N.C. 199
    , 218, 
    607 S.E.2d 607
    , 621 (2005) (alteration in original) (quoting State v. Kemmerlin, 356 N.C.
    - 16 -
    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    446, 470, 
    573 S.E.2d 870
    , 887 (2002)).
    In the instant case, the challenged portions of the prosecutor’s closing
    argument—and to which defendant did not object at trial—when taken in context of
    his entire argument, draw reasonable inferences based on defendant’s inconsistent
    statements and point out those inconsistencies in defendant’s testimony.           The
    prosecutor’s asides such as “Are you kidding me?” and “give me a break” and “come
    on,” do not reflect the prosecutor’s personal opinion, but rather point out
    inconsistencies in defendant’s testimony. Further, with regard to the prosecutor’s
    statement that he would “respectfully disagree” with the jury if they decided to
    deliberate and find that defendant killed Chapman in self-defense, even if this
    argument was improper, it was not so grossly improper as to render the trial and
    conviction “fundamentally unfair” and warrant the trial court’s intervention ex mero
    motu. See State v. Gladden, 
    315 N.C. 398
    , 426, 
    340 S.E.2d 673
    , 690 (1986) (finding
    that it was not so grossly improper for the trial court to decline to intervene ex mero
    motu where the prosecutor argued that he “probably wouldn’t [tell the truth] either”
    if he “was in [the defendant’s] shoes”); cf. State v. Walters, 
    357 N.C. 68
    , 102–05, 
    588 S.E.2d 344
    , 363–66 (2003) (finding the prosecutor’s argument improper where he
    compared the defendant to Adolf Hitler, over the defendant’s objection, by imploring
    the jury to “stand up to evil” like Winston Churchill did “when he stood up to Hitler,”
    but also finding that the “necessary showing of prejudice was not met”).
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    STATE V. MUMMA
    Opinion of the Court
    Accordingly, where the prosecutor’s argument was not so grossly improper as
    to render defendant’s trial and conviction fundamentally unfair, the trial court did
    not err when it declined to intervene ex mero motu during the prosecutor’s closing
    argument. Defendant’s argument is overruled.
    NO PREJUDICIAL ERROR.
    Judge DILLON concurs.
    Judge ARROWOOD dissents in a separate opinion.
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    No. COA17-481 – State v. Mumma
    ARROWOOD, Judge, dissenting.
    I respectfully dissent from the Majority Opinion’s holding that the trial court
    did not commit prejudicial error in sending photographs of the decedent’s body to the
    jury room over defendant’s objection.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1233(b) (2017), in pertinent part, provides:      “Upon
    request by the jury and with consent of all parties, the judge may in his discretion
    permit the jury to take to the jury room exhibits and writings which have been
    received in evidence.” (Emphasis added.)
    In the present case, on 19 June 2016, the jury retired to deliberate at 10:05
    a.m. At 10:56 a.m., the jury asked a question regarding punishment. The court
    properly instructed them that punishment was not a matter for them to consider,
    whereupon the jury took their morning break. Immediately upon the jury’s return
    from the morning break at 11:21 a.m., the jury asked for all the photographs to be
    sent to the jury room. Defendant objected. In spite of this objection, the court stated
    that, in its discretion, it was going to permit the photographs to be sent to the jury
    room.
    At approximately 11:31 a.m., the court had the approximately 179 photographs
    that were admitted into evidence sent to the jury room. Many of these photographs
    were from the autopsy to which defendant had previously objected. The jury took a
    lunch recess from approximately 12:26 p.m. until 1:58 p.m. Approximately two hours
    STATE V. MUMMA
    ARROWOOD, J., dissenting
    later, the jury indicated it was deadlocked 11-1. The court then gave an Allen charge
    and permitted the jury to take a 15 minute break. After deliberating an additional
    45 minutes, the jury returned a verdict of guilty of second-degree murder. The
    objected to photographs were the only exhibits in the jury room during the
    deliberations.
    Allowing the jury to receive the photographs in the jury room over defendant’s
    objection was error. See State v. Huffstetler, 
    312 N.C. 92
    , 114, 
    322 S.E.2d 110
    , 124
    (1984). The issue thus becomes whether the error was prejudicial.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1443(a) (2017), in pertinent part, provides: “A defendant
    is prejudiced by errors relating to rights arising other than under the Constitution of
    the United States when there is a reasonable possibility that, had the error in
    question not been committed, a different result would have been reached at the trial
    out of which the appeal arises.” The burden is on the defendant to establish this
    prejudice. See State v. Milby, 
    302 N.C. 137
    , 142, 
    273 S.E.2d 716
    , 720 (1981).
    When considering the circumstances of this case in their entirety, including:
    the large number of photographs (179), the fact that many of the photographs were
    graphic, the fact that only the photographic evidence was taken to the jury room, the
    fact that the improper photographs were in the jury room for almost the entire
    deliberation, and, particularly noteworthy, the facts that the jury was deadlocked to
    the extent that an Allen charge was necessary and that the court provided
    2
    STATE V. MUMMA
    ARROWOOD, J., dissenting
    instructions and verdict sheets to the jury with various options to find defendant
    guilty, I believe defendant has met his burden of establishing there is a reasonable
    possibility that, had this error not been committed, a different result would have been
    reached.
    Therefore, I vote to reverse this case and remand this matter to Swain County
    Superior Court for a New Trial.
    3