State v. Rayfield , 231 N.C. App. 632 ( 2014 )


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  •                                   NO. COA13-531
    NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
    Filed: 7 January 2014
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.                                Gaston County
    Nos. 10 CRS 56852, 11 CRS
    13597–99, 13601–04.
    DOUGLAS DALTON RAYFIELD, II
    Appeal by Defendant from order entered 8 September 2011 by
    Judge Jesse B. Caldwell, III and judgments entered 17 January 2012
    by Judge Nathaniel J. Poovey in Gaston County Superior Court. Heard
    in the Court of Appeals 9 October 2013.
    Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Assistant Attorney General
    Laura E. Crumpler, for the State.
    Mark Montgomery for Defendant.
    STEPHENS, Judge.
    Evidence and Procedural History
    Douglas Dalton Rayfield, II (“Defendant”) was indicted for
    multiple counts of sexual acts with K.C.,1 a minor. Defendant was
    tried before a jury beginning 9 January 2012 in Gaston County
    Superior Court. The evidence presented at trial tended to show the
    following:
    1   Initials are used to protect the juvenile’s identity.
    -2-
    K.C.   was   fourteen   years   old   at    the    time      of   trial.   Her
    stepfather had known Defendant since childhood, and they were so
    close that he treated Defendant like a brother. K.C. and Defendant
    were regularly left unsupervised in her stepfather’s house, and
    Defendant   was   allowed    to   transport     her    to   and    from   various
    locations without third-party supervision. One day, when K.C. was
    eight years old, Defendant drove her to his house after working on
    a car at her stepfather’s house. When they arrived at Defendant’s
    residence, he told K.C. to get into a “limo” that was parked in
    his front yard so they could play a game. Once inside, Defendant
    told K.C. to pull down her pants. When she did, he touched his
    penis to her “vagina area.” Defendant ejaculated on the seat and
    told K.C. it was “lotion.”
    On another occasion, K.C. was playing video games in her room
    when Defendant walked in and asked her to “help him make lotion.”
    When she refused, Defendant said he would stop “bugging” her if
    she would help him. He told her to pull down her pants, put his
    mouth “in my vagina area,” and was “licking all over.” K.C. left
    the room to wipe off. When she returned, Defendant had his penis
    out. She again refused to help him make “lotion.” As K.C.’s father
    pulled into the driveway, Defendant zipped up his pants and left.
    -3-
    On a separate occasion, Defendant drove K.C. from her house
    to his house to look for a motorcycle part. Defendant brought K.C.
    to his room and showed her a video of a man         having sexual
    intercourse with a young girl. Defendant told K.C. that he was the
    man. Defendant then showed K.C. images of a young girl posing
    “[l]ike a girl really shouldn’t be posing” and suggested that K.C.
    make similar pictures. As the encounter continued, Defendant took
    off his pants and began “playing with himself.” He eventually
    ejaculated and told K.C. that the ejaculate was not lotion, but
    actually was “what gets a girl pregnant.”
    Another time, Defendant groped K.C.’s breast area while they
    were in the car together. After doing so, he noted that she was
    “getting bigger.”
    Defendant twice transported K.C. to a motel. On one occasion,
    Defendant brought a magazine with pictures of naked men and women
    for them to view. They looked at the pictures together until K.C.’s
    mother called Defendant. Defendant told her that they were at
    Walmart.2 Another time, Defendant offered to take K.C. to a Girl
    Scout meeting. Instead of taking her directly to the meeting,
    2 As the State notes in its brief, Defendant erroneously stated on
    appeal that this incident ended when K.C. told her mother that she
    was at Walmart with Defendant. That is incorrect. The trial
    transcript indicates that the encounter ended when K.C.’s mother
    called Defendant, and he told her that they were at Walmart.
    -4-
    Defendant took her to a motel and asked her to “help him” fill a
    small black vial with ejaculate. He told her that, if she did not
    help   him   fill    the   vial,   someone    would     cut   his    fingers    off.
    Defendant    asked    multiple     times,    and   K.C.    refused     each    time.
    Defendant eventually yielded and drove K.C. to the meeting without
    proceeding further.
    The last encounter between K.C. and Defendant occurred when
    K.C. was twelve years old. Defendant drove her to his house, and
    they parked outside. In the car, he showed her a vial and again
    informed her that he needed her help to fill the vial and keep his
    fingers from being cut off. This time K.C. said she would help him
    save his fingers. Defendant took her pants off and performed
    missionary-style intercourse on her while they were in the car. He
    ejaculated outside of her vagina and partially filled the vial.
    When he was finished, he drove K.C. home.
    On 18 May 2010, K.C. told the interim counselor at her middle
    school that Defendant had shown her a video of a young girl
    performing sexual acts and had touched her inappropriately. K.C.
    elaborated, and the school authorities contacted K.C.’s mother and
    the local police. The next day, Detective R.E. Bloom appeared
    before    the   magistrate     and   submitted      a     sworn     affidavit    and
    application for a search warrant.
    -5-
    Therein, Detective Bloom asserted that he had responded to a
    call for service to investigate an allegation of sexual assault.
    He stated that K.C. had informed another officer of incidents
    occurring from the time she was eight years old until she was
    eleven. Detective Bloom also alleged that sexual assaults took
    place in K.C.’s home, in Defendant’s home, and in a Gastonia-based
    motel. Regarding those places, the affidavit listed either the
    address or provided a description of the approximate location. The
    affidavit also stated that Detective Bloom had confirmed K.C.’s
    statement by collecting evidence that Defendant was at America’s
    Best Motel on 8 May 2010. The affidavit asserted that Defendant
    had shown K.C. pornographic videos and images in his home. The
    images were of Defendant having sexual intercourse with an unknown
    female, who K.C. believed was under ten years old. The affidavit
    noted that Defendant is a registered sex offender and requested a
    search warrant for Defendant’s home and the magazines, videos,
    computers, cell phones, and thumb drives located therein. The
    magistrate   issued   a   search    warrant,   and   police   searched
    Defendant’s home and the contraband recovered therefrom between 19
    May 2010 and 24 May 2010.
    Defendant was charged with four counts of indecent liberties
    with a child, one count of disseminating obscene material, one
    -6-
    count of crime against nature, one count of first-degree statutory
    sex offense, and one count of first-degree statutory rape. On 6
    May 2011, Defendant’s counsel filed a motion to suppress the
    evidence seized during the execution of the search warrant. That
    motion was denied on 8 September 2011. Defendant’s motion to
    exclude evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts was also denied.
    Items of child pornography and adult pornography were admitted at
    trial along with the testimony of another person, A.L.,3 who
    willingly had sexual intercourse with Defendant when she was
    fourteen. Defendant was convicted of all the charges and sentenced
    to imprisonment for no less than 640 months and no more than 788
    months.
    Discussion
    Defendant argues on appeal that the trial court erred in (1)
    denying his motion to suppress the evidence seized from his house
    and (2) admitting into evidence certain pornography found in
    Defendant’s home and the testimony of A.L. We find no error.
    I. Defendant’s Motion to Suppress
    3   Initials are used to protect the juvenile’s identity.
    -7-
    In support of his first argument, Defendant claims that (1)
    the information in the search warrant affidavit was “stale” because
    as many as three and a half years had passed since Defendant
    allegedly showed pornography to K.C., (2) the search warrant was
    based on misleading information, and (3) the search warrant was
    issued in substantial violation of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-245
    (2011). Accordingly, Defendant contends that the evidence found
    during the search of his home should have been suppressed as “fruit
    of the poisonous tree.” We disagree.
    A. Preservation of Appellate Review
    As a preliminary matter, we address the State’s contention
    that Defendant did not adequately preserve appellate review of the
    denial of his motion to suppress because he failed to object at
    trial. A pretrial motion to suppress is a type of motion in limine.
    State v. Golphin, 
    352 N.C. 364
    , 405, 
    533 S.E.2d 168
    , 198 (2000),
    cert. denied, 
    532 U.S. 931
    , 
    149 L. Ed. 2d 305
     (2001). Such a
    “motion . . . [is] not sufficient to preserve for appeal the
    question of admissibility of evidence if the defendant does not
    object to that evidence at the time it is offered at trial.” 
    Id.
    In order to preserve an issue for appellate review by objection at
    trial,   the   appealing   party   must   present   “a   timely   request,
    objection, or motion, stating the specific grounds for the ruling
    -8-
    the party desired the court to make if the specific grounds were
    not apparent from the context.” N.C.R. App. P. 10(a)(1) (emphasis
    added).
    In the present case, Defendant made a pretrial motion to
    suppress the evidence seized from his home. That motion was denied.
    Defendant renewed the motion at trial, and the motion was again
    denied. Although Defendant’s counsel did not state his grounds for
    the objection when the evidence was offered at trial, it is clear
    from the context that he was renewing his earlier objections to
    the evidence for the reasons stated in his motion to suppress:
    [THE STATE]: Would you open State’s Exhibit A?
    (The [officer-]witness complied)
    . . .
    [THE STATE]: What’s contained in that box?
    [THE OFFICER]: There are numerous periodicals
    of a sexual nature, magazines. There are
    several, looks like nine DVDs. There are some
    printed, looks like images printed off of the
    Internet of a pornographic sexual nature.
    [THE STATE]: Now, you said those are the same
    items that you saw in the box there in
    [Defendant’s] residence when the box was
    seized?
    [THE OFFICER]: That’s correct.
    [THE STATE]: Are there any other photographs
    or items in that box?
    -9-
    [THE OFFICER]: There are some Polaroids,
    Polaroid photographs, yes. And like I said,
    the printed — there are some, looks like
    computer printed images from off of websites
    of young females.
    . . .
    [THE STATE]: Your Honor, we would be moving
    into evidence the contents of that box. . . .
    [COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT]: Of course, you know[]
    the nature of my objection, Your Honor. . . .
    . . .
    THE COURT: Do you wish to be heard about any
    of that, [counsel for Defendant]? I know that
    you object to all of it, but.
    [COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT]: I do, and I don’t
    wish to be heard about those exhibits being
    selected or being published.
    Based on this exchange it is clear from the context that trial
    counsel and the trial judge understood that Defendant wished to
    preserve his earlier objections on the grounds stated therein.
    Therefore, we hold that this issue was properly preserved for
    appellate review.4
    B. Standard of Review and Legal Background
    Our review of the denial of a motion to suppress is “limited
    4 Defendant argues in the alternative that, if this issue was not
    properly preserved for appellate review, his trial counsel was
    ineffective. Because we hold that Defendant’s trial counsel
    properly preserved this issue for appeal, we need not address his
    argument as to ineffective assistance of counsel.
    -10-
    to determining whether the trial judge’s underlying findings of
    fact are supported by competent evidence, in which event they are
    conclusively binding on appeal, and whether those factual findings
    in turn support the judge’s ultimate conclusions of law.” State v.
    Cooke, 
    306 N.C. 132
    , 134, 
    291 S.E.2d 618
    , 619 (1982).
    A valid search warrant application must
    contain allegations of fact supporting the
    statement. The statements must be supported by
    one or more affidavits particularly setting
    forth the facts and circumstances establishing
    probable cause to believe that the items are
    in the places or in the possession of the
    individuals to be searched. Although the
    affidavit is not required to contain all
    evidentiary details, it should contain those
    facts material and essential to the case to
    support the finding of probable cause. This
    Court has held that affidavits containing only
    conclusory statements of the affiant’s belief
    that probable cause exists are insufficient to
    establish   probable    cause   for  a  search
    warrant.   The    clear    purpose   of  these
    requirements for affidavits . . . is to allow
    a magistrate or other judicial official to
    make an independent determination as to
    whether probable cause exists for the issuance
    of the warrant under N.C. Gen. Stat. [§] 15A-
    245(b). [That section] requires that a
    judicial    official     may   consider   only
    information contained in the affidavit, unless
    such information appears in the record or upon
    the face of the warrant.
    State v. McHone, 
    158 N.C. App. 117
    , 120, 
    580 S.E.2d 80
    , 83 (2003)
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    In preparing an affidavit for this purpose, “[t]he officer
    -11-
    making the affidavit may do so in reliance upon information
    reported to him by other officers in the performance of their
    duties.” State v. Horner, 
    310 N.C. 274
    , 280, 
    311 S.E.2d 281
    , 286
    (1984). “Whether an applicant has submitted sufficient evidence to
    establish    probable    cause     to    issue   a   search   warrant       is     a
    non[-]technical,    common-sense         judgment    of   laymen   applying        a
    standard less demanding than those used in more formal legal
    proceedings.” State v. Ledbetter, 
    120 N.C. App. 117
    , 121, 
    461 S.E.2d 341
    , 344 (1995) (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted). “The trial court’s conclusions of law . . . are fully
    reviewable on appeal.” State v. Hughes, 
    353 N.C. 200
    , 208, 
    539 S.E.2d 625
    , 631 (2000).
    C. Staleness
    Appealing the denial of his motion to suppress, Defendant
    first   argues   that    certain    allegations      in    Detective    Bloom’s
    affidavit were stale and did not support a finding of probable
    cause. Specifically, Defendant points out that there is a three-
    and-one-half-year       gap   between      the   alleged    viewing    of        the
    pornography in Defendant’s house and the time the affidavit was
    issued. In addition, Defendant contends that other descriptions of
    sexual conduct with minors described in the affidavit did not have
    -12-
    specific time references and, therefore, failed to support a
    finding of probable cause. We disagree.
    “When evidence of previous criminal activity is advanced to
    support a finding of probable cause, a further examination must be
    made to determine if the evidence of the prior activity is stale.”
    State v. McCoy, 
    100 N.C. App. 574
    , 577, 
    397 S.E.2d 355
    , 358 (1990).
    Before a search warrant may be issued, proof
    of probable cause must be established by facts
    so closely related to the time of issuance of
    the warrant so as to justify a finding of
    probable cause at that time. The general rule
    is that no more than a “reasonable” time may
    have elapsed. The test for “staleness” of
    information on which a search warrant is based
    is whether the facts indicate that probable
    cause exists at the time the warrant is
    issued. Common sense must be used in
    determining the degree of evaporation of
    probable cause. The likelihood that the
    evidence sought is still in place is a
    function not simply of watch and calendar[,]
    but of variables that do not punch a clock.
    State v. Lindsey, 
    58 N.C. App. 564
    , 565–66, 
    293 S.E.2d 833
    , 834
    (1982) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted; emphasis
    added). “[W]here the affidavit properly recites facts indicating
    activity of a protracted and continuous nature, a course of
    conduct,   the   passage   of   time   becomes   less   significant.   The
    continuity of the offense may be the most important factor in
    determining whether the probable cause is valid or stale.” McCoy,
    
    100 N.C. App. at 577
    , 
    397 S.E.2d at 358
     (citation omitted). In
    -13-
    addition, our courts have repeatedly held that “young children
    cannot be expected to be exact regarding times and dates[.]” State
    v. Wood, 
    311 N.C. 739
    , 742, 
    319 S.E.2d 247
    , 249 (1984).
    Although K.C was generally unable to provide dates to the
    attesting officers in this case, we hold that her allegations of
    inappropriate sexual touching by Defendant over a sustained period
    of time allowed the magistrate to reasonably conclude that probable
    cause was present to justify the search of Defendant’s residence.
    See McCoy, 
    100 N.C. App. at 577
    , 
    397 S.E.2d at 358
    . “Common sense
    is the ultimate criterion in determining the degree of evaporation
    of probable cause.” State v. Jones, 
    299 N.C. 298
    , 305, 
    261 S.E.2d 860
    , 865 (1980) (citation omitted). “The significance of the length
    of time between the point probable cause arose and when the warrant
    issued depends largely upon the [nature of the property to be
    seized]   and should be contemplated in view of the practical
    consideration[s]   of   everyday    life.”   
    Id.
       (citation   omitted).
    Another variable to consider when determining staleness is the
    character of the crime. State v. Witherspoon, 
    110 N.C. App. 413
    ,
    419, 
    429 S.E.2d 783
    , 786 (1993).
    In this case, the affidavit set forth that Defendant showed
    K.C. pornographic videos and images in his home. The images showed
    Defendant having sexual intercourse with an unknown female, who
    -14-
    K.C. believed was under ten years old. The affidavit went on to
    state that Defendant was a registered sex offender. It then
    requested a search warrant for Defendant’s home and included
    magazines, videos, computers, cell phones, and thumb drives in the
    objects to be searched.
    Our Supreme Court has determined that, when items to be
    searched     are   not   inherently    incriminating       and   have    enduring
    utility for the person to be searched, a reasonably prudent
    magistrate could conclude that the items can be found in the area
    to be searched. Jones, 
    299 N.C. at 305
    , 
    261 S.E.2d at 865
    . Here,
    the items sought by the search warrant                 —   magazines, videos,
    computers, cell phones, hard drives, gaming systems, MP3 players,
    a camera, a video recorder, thumb drives, and other pictures or
    documents — were not incriminating in and of themselves and were
    of enduring utility to Defendant. See, e.g., 
    id.
     (upholding a
    search warrant when five months had elapsed between the time the
    witness saw the defendant’s hatchet and gloves and the witness
    spoke   to    police     because,    inter   alia,     the   items      were   not
    incriminating      in    and   of   themselves   and   had   utility      to   the
    defendant).
    There was no reason for the magistrate in this case to
    conclude that Defendant would have felt the need to dispose of the
    -15-
    evidence sought even though acts associated with that evidence
    were committed years earlier. Indeed, a practical assessment of
    the information contained in the warrant would lead a reasonably
    prudent   magistrate   to     conclude     that      the   computers,    cameras,
    accessories, and photographs were likely located in Defendant’s
    home even though certain allegations made in the affidavit referred
    to acts committed years before. See State v. Pickard, 
    178 N.C. App. 330
    , 336, 
    631 S.E.2d 203
    , 208 (2006) (holding that the
    affidavit provided the magistrate with a substantial basis for
    concluding that probable cause existed to issue a search warrant
    when   the   items   sought    —   computers,        computer   equipment     and
    accessories,     cassette    videos   or     DVDs,    video   cameras,    digital
    cameras, film cameras, and accessories — were not particularly
    incriminating and were of enduring utility to the defendant).
    Accordingly, the information contained in the search warrant was
    not stale and the magistrate had sufficient evidence to support a
    determination of probable cause. Defendant’s first argument is
    overruled.
    D. False and Misleading Information
    Second,   Defendant    contends       that    the   search   warrant   was
    invalid because Detective Bloom’s affidavit was based on false and
    misleading information. We disagree.
    -16-
    The   Fourth   Amendment’s   requirement   of   a   factual   showing
    sufficient to constitute “probable cause” anticipates a truthful
    presentation of facts. Franks v. Delaware, 
    438 U.S. 154
    , 164–65,
    
    57 L. Ed. 2d 667
    , 678 (1978).
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-978 provides that a
    defendant can challenge the “validity of a
    search warrant and the admissibility of
    evidence obtained thereunder by contesting the
    truthfulness of the testimony” which showed
    probable cause for the issuance of the
    warrant. N.C. [Gen. Stat.] § 15A-978(a)[]. The
    section   defines   truthful    testimony   as
    testimony which reports in good faith the
    circumstances relied on to establish probable
    cause.
    A factual showing sufficient to support
    probable cause requires a truthful showing of
    facts. Truthful, however, does not mean . . .
    that every fact recited in the warrant
    affidavit is necessarily correct, for probable
    cause may be founded upon hearsay and upon
    information received from informants, as well
    as upon information within the affiant’s own
    knowledge. . . . Instead, “truthful” means
    that the information put forth is believed or
    appropriately accepted by the affiant as true.
    [Because there is a presumption of validity
    with respect to the affidavit supporting the
    search warrant, a] defendant must make a
    preliminary    showing   that    the   affiant
    knowingly, or with reckless disregard for the
    truth, made a false statement in the
    affidavit. Only the affiant’s veracity is at
    issue in the evidentiary hearing. Furthermore,
    a claim . . . is not established by presenting
    evidence which merely contradicts assertions
    contained in the affidavit or shows the
    affidavit[] contains false statements . . . .
    Rather, the evidence presented must establish
    -17-
    facts from which the finder of fact might
    conclude that the affiant alleged the facts in
    bad faith.
    State v. Severn, 
    130 N.C. App. 319
    , 322, 
    502 S.E.2d 882
    , 884 (1998)
    (citations,      certain    internal    quotation     marks,   and    ellipses
    omitted). Further, an inadvertent error by an officer making an
    affidavit, when he or she did not know it was an error, may be
    immaterial where the affidavit is still sufficient on its face to
    support a finding of probable cause. See State v. Steele, 
    18 N.C. App. 126
    , 
    196 S.E.2d 379
     (1973).
    In support of his argument that Detective Bloom’s affidavit
    was   based    on   false   and   misleading   information     sufficient   to
    invalidate the search warrant, Defendant first notes that the
    affidavit does not provide the name or address of the motel where
    K.C. was taken. However, as our Supreme Court stated in Wood,
    children are not expected to remember exact dates and times. 
    311 N.C. at 742
    , 
    319 S.E.2d at 249
    . Likewise, the fact that K.C.
    relayed   this      information   to   Detective    Bloom   without   specific
    details regarding the name of the motel or its address is not
    fatal.
    Second, Defendant points out that Detective Bloom did not
    speak directly to K.C. when determining the information to be used
    in the affidavit, relying instead on a report from Officer Jeff
    Bryant and a video interview of K.C. This point is misplaced.
    -18-
    Probable cause for an affidavit may be based on information
    relayed from one officer to another if that information was
    reported while the officer performed his or her duties. Horner,
    
    310 N.C. at 280
    , 
    311 S.E.2d at 286
    . The affidavit in this case
    states that, during a call for service, the school resource officer
    at   K.C.’s   middle   school   advised   Officer   Bryant   of   K.C.’s
    allegations. As “[o]bservations of fellow officers engaged in the
    same investigation are plainly a reliable basis for a warrant
    applied for by one of their number[,]” it was proper for Detective
    Bloom to rely on information from Officer Bryant for a probable
    cause determination. See 
    id.
    Third, Defendant asserts that Detective Bloom’s affidavit
    contained nothing about a discrepancy between when K.C. claimed to
    have been taken to the motel and the date that someone named
    “Douglas Rayfield” registered at America’s Best Value Motel. To
    the extent that there was such a discrepancy, it was not sufficient
    to invalidate the search warrant.
    As we have already noted,
    in the interests of justice and recognizing
    that young children cannot be expected to be
    exact regarding times and dates, a child’s
    uncertainty as to time or date upon which the
    offense charged was committed goes to the
    weight rather than the admissibility of the
    evidence.
    -19-
    Wood, 
    311 N.C. at 742
    , 
    319 S.E.2d at 249
    . In denying Defendant’s
    motion to suppress, the trial court found that Detective Bloom
    made    “honest    mistakes   and     inadvertence”     which     did   not
    unconstitutionally taint the search warrant. In addition, much of
    the confusion in the affidavit stemmed from information about the
    motel name and certain dates. Analyzing the affidavit as a whole,
    however, Detective Bloom made clear that K.C. was assaulted by
    Defendant on multiple occasions for three years. It states that
    (1) Defendant was a good friend of K.C.’s stepfather and (2) that
    sexual assaults took place in K.C.’s home, Defendant’s home, and
    a nearby motel. Further, the affidavit asserts that K.C. viewed
    pornographic videos of Defendant and another girl with Defendant
    in his home. These findings support the trial court’s conclusion
    that probable cause was present to justify a search of Defendant’s
    residence for magazines, videos, computers, hard drives, cameras,
    and other pictures.
    Therefore, to the extent Detective Bloom made mistakes in the
    affidavit, we conclude that those mistakes did not result from
    false    and   misleading   information    and   that   the     affidavit’s
    remaining content was sufficient to establish probable cause.
    Accordingly, Defendant’s second argument is overruled.
    E. The Validity of the Search Warrant Under 15A-245(a)
    -20-
    Section 15A-245(a) provides in pertinent part that:
    [An] issuing official may examine on oath the
    applicant . . . , but information other than
    that contained in the affidavit may not be
    considered   by    the   issuing  official in
    determining whether probable cause exists for
    the issuance of the warrant unless the
    information     is     either    recorded  or
    contemporaneously summarized in the record or
    on the face of the warrant by the issuing
    official.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-245(a) (2011).
    The magistrate in this case indicated on the search warrant
    that, in addition to the affidavit, the application was supported
    by Detective Bloom’s sworn testimony. The magistrate did not
    indicate, however, that the testimony was reduced to writing or
    recorded. In its order on the motion to suppress, the trial court
    found that Detective Bloom’s oral testimony was not reduced to
    writing. Thus, the magistrate violated section 15A-245 by neither
    recording nor contemporaneously summarizing the oral testimony
    offered by Detective Bloom.
    On appeal, Defendant argues that the trial court erred in
    denying   his   motion     to   suppress     because   the     magistrate
    substantially   violated    section     15A-245,   requiring   that   the
    evidence obtained from his home be suppressed. Alternatively, he
    contends that this case should be remanded for further findings of
    fact and conclusions of law due to the trial court’s failure to
    -21-
    properly address the nature of the magistrate’s violation. Because
    our analysis of Defendant’s argument depends on whether the trial
    court properly addressed the validity of the search warrant, we
    address that question first.
    i. The Trial Court’s Order
    In   his    alternative     argument,    Defendant      contends      that   we
    should remand this case for a new hearing followed by complete and
    proper findings of fact and conclusions of law on grounds the trial
    court (1) made “incomplete” findings and (2) failed to make any
    findings or conclusions as to whether the magistrate substantially
    violated section 15A-245. We are unpersuaded.
    a. Findings of Fact
    As discussed above, this Court is limited to determining
    whether   a    trial   court’s    findings    of     fact   “are    supported     by
    competent evidence, in which event they are conclusively binding
    on appeal, and whether those factual findings in turn support the
    judge’s ultimate conclusions of law.” State v. Williams, 
    362 N.C. 628
    , 632, 
    669 S.E.2d 290
    , 294 (2008) (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted). In this case, the trial court made the
    following      pertinent    findings    of    fact    in    its    order   denying
    Defendant’s motion to suppress:
    3. That on the onset date, May 19th, 2010,
    Detective Bloom appeared before the magistrate
    -22-
    and   submitted   a  sworn   application   and
    affidavit[ ]in which, among other things, he
    asserted his history and training in law
    enforcement. That he had responded to a call
    for service at [K.C.’s middle school] by a
    resource officer. That a 12[-]year-old white
    female,   [K.C.],   was   allegedly   sexually
    assaulted by one Douglas Dalton Rayfield, on
    multiple occasions. That Detective Bloom spoke
    with [K.C.], and that the affidavit submitted
    to the magistrate contains the statement that
    she advised that the incidents occurred from
    the time she was 8[ ]years old until she was
    11[ ]years old. That she further explained
    that [Defendant] was[ ]a good friend of her
    father. That the affidavit submitted with the
    application[ ]for the search warrant further
    advised that sexual assaults took place in her
    home at [the listed address], and at the home
    of [D]efendant, [at the listed address5]. That
    the affidavit also submitted that [K.C.] said
    that a recent sexual assault took place at a
    motel in the City of Gastonia, behind an old
    steakhouse at the intersection of[ ]Highway
    321 and Interstate 85.
    4. That said affidavit[ ]in support of the
    search warrant further alleged that on May
    19th, 2010, during a child advocacy hearing
    interview, [K.C.] provided details about the
    assaults. That the affidavit[ ]in support of
    the search warrant stated that Detective Bloom
    had confirmed [K.C.’s] statement by collecting
    information that confirmed that [Defendant]
    was at America’s Best Motel on May 8th, 2010.
    That the affidavit further sets forth that at
    [Defendant’s] home [Defendant] showed [K.C.]
    pornographic videos and images of [Defendant]
    having intercourse with an unknown female,
    [who K.C.] believed was around 10[ ]years of
    age. That the affidavit further set forth that
    [Defendant] was a registered sex offender.
    5   Street addresses have been redacted to protect K.C.’s identity.
    -23-
    That the affidavit further requested the
    search warrant for [Defendant’s] home at [the
    listed address],[ ]and that [the warrant]
    would include magazines, videos, computers,
    cell phones, hard drives, gaming systems,
    thumb drives, and the like.
    5. That Detective Bloom went to the [m]otel on
    Highway 321, which was America’s Best Value.
    That the name of this [m]otel had been
    recently changed. That at some time before
    that it was a Motel 6, by name.
    . . .
    7. That there are several hotels . . . off of
    Interstate 85 and Highway 321. That there was
    a receipt which Detective Bloom obtained from
    America’s Best Value Inn, which reflected that
    on    May    the    8th    of    2010,    that
    [Defendant ]rented a room, asserting that
    there would be two people in his party, and
    that he was leaving at 11:00 a.m. on May the
    9th, 2010.
    . . .
    9. That [K.C.] stated that [Defendant’s]
    [m]otel room was messy with clothes all
    around. That while there she saw a video of
    the man that she identified as [Defendant]
    with a girl [who] she contended was about
    10[ ]years of age.
    . . .
    13. That [K.C.] made a statement that there
    had been oral sex with [Defendant] some two
    weeks after her 9th birthday. That she further
    testified that there was a sexual encounter in
    a car wash, and that she was afraid of cameras
    catching them. That at one point [Defendant]
    offered her $100 to continue with sex acts.
    -24-
    . . .
    23. That questions about the name of the
    [m]otel where the victim indicated she was
    with [Defendant] and confusion regarding
    whether the name of the [m]otel was Knights
    Inn or America’s Best are explained by the
    fact that the [m]otel’s name had recently
    changed shortly before Detective Bloom visited
    the[ m]otel, and the fact that [K.C.], who
    reported being at the hotel, is a minor, whose
    memory for specifics, such as the name of a
    hotel, cannot be expected to be on par with an
    adult.
    Given those findings, the court denied Defendant’s motion to
    suppress and concluded as a matter of law “[t]hat the totality of
    the circumstances surrounding the issuance of the said search
    warrant supports the magistrate’s finding of[ ]probable cause upon
    the aforesaid affidavit of Detective Bloom.”
    In his brief, Defendant disputes certain elements of findings
    of fact 7, 9, 13, and 23. Regarding finding 7, Defendant points
    out   that   Detective   Bloom’s   testimony   contradicts   the   Court’s
    finding that two people were listed on the receipt from the motel.
    At the suppression hearing, Detective Bloom testified that the
    receipt did not indicate how many people were in Defendant’s party.
    Defendant also notes that finding of fact 9 contradicts Detective
    Bloom’s affidavit regarding where K.C. saw the video of Defendant
    having sex with a minor. The finding states that it occurred in
    the motel room while the affidavit asserts that it occurred in
    -25-
    Defendant’s home. Defendant also argues that portions of finding
    of fact 13 — which describes certain sexual acts committed by
    Defendant — are not relevant to the trial court’s determination of
    probable    cause   because    they     occurred    too     long    ago.6   Lastly,
    Defendant    quibbles   with    the     trial     court’s    finding    that   the
    confusion regarding the name of the motel was resolved because the
    motel’s name had recently changed from “Knights Inn” to “America’s
    Best Inn,” asserting that the motel had in fact changed its name
    from “Motel 6,” as stated in the trial court’s fifth finding of
    fact. These arguments are insufficient to overturn the trial
    court’s conclusion regarding probable cause.
    “Probable     cause     need    not    be   shown    by   proof   beyond   a
    reasonable doubt, but rather [it is shown by] whether it is more
    probable than not that . . . contraband will be found at a
    specifically described location.” State v. Edwards, 
    185 N.C. App. 701
    , 704, 
    649 S.E.2d 646
    , 649 (2007). While Defendant has correctly
    identified errors in the trial court’s findings of fact, he fails
    to address the Court’s myriad other findings as they relate to its
    conclusion that probable cause to search Defendant’s home was
    present.    As   discussed     above,       Detective     Bloom’s    affidavit   —
    6 We resolved this issue in our discussion regarding staleness,
    supra, and do not address it further.
    -26-
    summarized by the trial court in findings of fact 3 and 4 — was
    sufficient on its own to establish probable cause. Therefore, to
    the extent the trial court’s other findings contain errors, they
    are not so severe as to undercut the court’s conclusion of law
    that probable cause was present to justify the search. In light of
    the other evidence cited by the trial court in support of its
    conclusion that probable cause was present to justify the search
    of Defendant’s home, this argument is overruled.
    b.   Findings and Conclusions Regarding the
    Substantiality of the Statutory Violation
    Section 15A-974(b) provides that
    [t]he court, in making a determination whether
    or not evidence shall be suppressed under this
    section, shall make findings of fact and
    conclusions of law which shall be included in
    the record, pursuant to [section] 15A–977(f).
    N.C. Gen.    Stat. § 15A–974 (2011). Pursuant to that section,
    Defendant contends that the trial court erred by failing to make
    findings and conclusions regarding “the substantiality of the
    statutory violation.” We disagree.
    On the nature of the magistrate’s statutory violation, the
    trial court made the following pertinent findings of fact:
    15. That in presenting his application in
    writing to the magistrate, Detective Bloom
    also gave some oral testimony which was not
    reduced to writing by either Detective Bloom
    or the magistrate.
    -27-
    . . .
    36. That the Court finds that the mistakes and
    factual discrepancies set forth in [the]
    affidavit were the result of honest mistakes
    and inadvertence[] and did not take away from
    the validity of the consideration of the
    totality of the circumstances relative to the
    issuance of [the] warrant.
    The trial court also concluded as a matter of law:
    2. That any violation of law regarding the
    oral testimony of Detective Bloom not being
    recorded   would    constitute   a statutory
    violation and not a constitutional violation
    of [Defendant’s] rights under the Fourth and
    Fourteenth Amendments to the United States
    Constitution    and    the   North  Carolina
    Constitution.
    . . .
    4. That the totality of the circumstances
    surrounding the issuance of the . . . search
    warrant supports the magistrate’s finding of
    probable cause upon the aforesaid affidavit of
    Detective Bloom.
    Contrary   to   Defendant’s    argument   on   appeal,   the   cited
    authority — section 15A-974(b) — does not require the trial court
    to make findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding whether
    a statutory violation was substantial and, therefore, whether the
    violation would require suppression of the evidence. Instead, the
    statute simply states that the trial court must make findings of
    -28-
    fact and conclusions of law in support of its order on a motion to
    suppress.
    In this case, the court made findings of fact based on
    Detective Bloom’s affidavit. Those findings are discussed above,
    and   we    have    already   determined     that    they    supported        its
    determination that probable cause was present and were therefore
    sufficient to justify the court’s denial of Defendant’s motion to
    suppress.    Accordingly,     Defendant’s     alternative      argument        is
    overruled.
    ii. The Magistrate’s Statutory Violation
    Defendant    also   contends    that   the    magistrate’s      error    in
    failing to record Detective Bloom’s testimony was a substantial
    violation of section 15A-245(a), requiring suppression of the
    evidence under section 15A-974(b), because (1) the error affected
    Defendant’s constitutional right to have a “neutral and detached
    magistrate    determine    probable    cause,”7     (2)   Detective    Bloom’s
    unrecorded testimony was used by the trial court for certain of
    its findings of fact in support of its decision to deny Defendant’s
    7  On this point, Defendant asserts that “[b]y waiving the
    requirement of a contemporaneous recording of the detective’s
    statement, the magistrate opened the way for the detective to
    provide after the fact, self-serving testimony at the suppression
    hearing to correct and fill in discrepancies in and omissions from
    his affidavit.”
    -29-
    motion   to    suppress,    (3)   Detective     Bloom   and   the   magistrate
    intentionally “chose to ignore [section 15A-245]” because the
    statute had been in effect for five years and Detective Bloom was
    a “seasoned” officer, and (4) “failure to enforce the statute
    [would] doubtless result in future improper searches” as there
    would be “nothing to prevent an officer’s providing self-serving
    testimony to create a post hoc justification for the search if it
    proves fruitful.” For support, Defendant cites to McHone, where we
    held that a search warrant application maintained “only” by a
    conclusory      affidavit   constituted     a   substantial    violation    of
    sections 15A-244 and 15A-974. 158 N.C. App. at 122, 
    580 S.E.2d at 84
    . We are unpersuaded.
    In pertinent part, the text of Detective Bloom’s affidavit
    reads as follows:
    . . .
    [T]he   Gaston  County  Police  Department
    responded to a call for service to [K.C.’s
    middle school].
    [The school resource officer] advised Officer
    . . . Bryant, of the Gaston County Police
    Department,    that    12[-]year[-]old    white
    female, [K.C.], was allegedly [s]exually
    [a]ssaulted   by    [Defendant]   on   multiple
    occasions. [K.C.] advised that the incidents
    occurred from the time she was 8 years old
    until she was 11 years old. She explained that
    [Defendant] was a good friend of her father.
    She advised that the sexual assaults took
    -30-
    place in her home, [at the listed address] and
    at the home of Defendant, [at the listed
    address]. She also advised that a recent
    sexual assault took place at a motel in the
    City of Gastonia behind an old steak house at
    the intersection of Highway 321 and Interstate
    85.
    On 05/19/2010, during a [c]hild [a]dvocacy
    [c]enter interview, [K.C.] provided details
    about the assaults. Affiant confirmed [K.C.’s]
    statement by collecting information that
    confirmed [Defendant] was at the America’s
    Best Motel on May 8, 2010. [K.C.] also
    explained that at [Defendant’s] home in his
    bedroom[,   he]    showed   her   pornographic
    videos/images of [himself] having sexual
    intercourse with an unknown female[, who K.C.]
    believed was around the age of 10 years old.
    It has been also confirmed that [Defendant] is
    a registered [sex o]ffender.
    Based on the information in this affidavit,
    Affiant respectfully requests that a search
    warrant be issued for the home, vehicles,
    common areas, and outbuilding for [Defendant]
    at [the listed address] so that a complete
    investigation may be conducted and physical
    evidence may be collected to assist in the
    investigation of [s]ex [o]ffense.
    Generally, an affidavit in an application for a search warrant
    is deemed sufficient
    if it supplies reasonable cause to believe
    that the proposed search for evidence of the
    commission of the designated criminal offense
    will reveal the presence upon the described
    premises of the objects sought and that they
    will aid in the apprehension or conviction of
    the offender.
    State v. Vestal, 
    278 N.C. 561
    , 576, 
    180 S.E.2d 755
    , 765 (1971),
    -31-
    cert. denied sub nom., Vestal v. North Carolina, 
    414 U.S. 874
    , 
    38 L. Ed. 2d 114
     (1973). “Probable cause cannot be shown[, however,]
    by   affidavits    which   are    purely      conclusory,   stating    only   the
    affiant’s or an informer’s belief that probable cause exists
    without detailing any of the underlying circumstances upon which
    that belief is based[.]” State v. Campbell, 
    282 N.C. 125
    , 130–31,
    
    191 S.E.2d 752
    , 756 (1972) (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    The affidavit in this case is not merely conclusory. It
    includes (1) background of the circumstances of Detective Bloom’s
    involvement in the case, (2) details of where the sexual assaults
    took   place,     (3)   details   of    child     pornography   that    was   in
    Defendant’s possession and that had been used during the sexual
    assaults, (4) the assertion that Defendant is a registered sex
    offender, and (5) the fact that Defendant resided at the house
    that was the subject of the search warrant. Further, as we have
    already pointed out, the information provided by Detective Bloom
    in his affidavit was sufficient — on its own — for the magistrate
    to properly make a determination that probable cause was present
    in this case. Accordingly, the magistrate did not substantially
    violate section 15A-245(a) in failing to include a record of
    Detective Bloom’s oral testimony, and, therefore, the trial court
    -32-
    did not err in denying Defendant’s motion to suppress.8
    II. Adult Pornography and A.L.’s Testimony
    In   addition   to   the   arguments   addressed   above,   Defendant
    contends that the trial court erred in admitting into evidence (1)
    certain portions of the pornography seized from his home and (2)
    the testimony of A.L. Defendant asserts that both constitute
    irrelevant, inadmissible character evidence under Rule 404(b) and
    are substantially more prejudicial than probative under Rule 403.
    Defendant also asserts that the evidence admitted under 404(b)
    merely shows his “propensity” or “disposition” to commit sex crimes
    and, therefore, is inadmissible. We disagree.
    “Rule 404(a) is a general rule of exclusion, prohibiting the
    introduction of character evidence to prove that a person acted in
    conformity with that evidence of character.” State v. Bogle, 
    324 N.C. 190
    , 201, 
    376 S.E.2d 745
    , 751 (1989). Rule 404(b) is a
    general rule of inclusion of relevant evidence
    of other crimes, wrongs or acts by a
    defendant, subject to but one exception[,]
    requiring [the exclusion of evidence] if its
    only probative value is to show that the
    defendant has the propensity or disposition to
    commit an offense of the nature of the crime
    charged.
    8 Defendant also contends that “[i]t cannot be gainsaid that
    [Defendant] was prejudiced by the denial of his motion to
    suppress.” Because we have concluded that the trial court did not
    err in denying Defendant’s motion to suppress, this argument is
    overruled.
    -33-
    State v. Coffey, 
    326 N.C. 268
    , 278–79, 
    389 S.E.2d 48
    , 54 (1990)
    (emphasis in original). Rule 404(b) provides that while evidence
    of “other crimes, wrongs, or acts” is not admissible “to prove the
    character of a person in order to show that he acted in conformity
    therewith,” such evidence is admissible “for other purposes, such
    as   proof   of   motive,   opportunity,         intent,   preparation,   plan,
    knowledge,    identity,     or   absence    of    mistake,   entrapment[,]   or
    accident.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 404(b) (2011).
    Though this Court has not used the term
    de novo to describe its own review of 404(b)
    evidence, we have consistently engaged in a
    fact-based inquiry under Rule 404(b) while
    applying an abuse of discretion standard to
    the subsequent balancing of probative value
    and unfair prejudice under Rule 403. [W]hen
    analyzing rulings applying Rules 404(b) and
    403, we conduct distinct inquiries with
    different standards of review. When the trial
    court    has  made   findings  of   fact   and
    conclusions of law to support its 404(b)
    ruling . . . we look to whether the evidence
    supports the findings and whether the findings
    support the conclusions. We review de novo the
    legal conclusion that the evidence is, or is
    not, within the coverage of Rule 404(b). We
    then review the trial court’s Rule 403
    determination for abuse of discretion.
    State v. Beckelheimer, 
    366 N.C. 127
    , 130, 
    726 S.E.2d 156
    , 158-59
    (2012) (italics added).
    A. Adult Pornography
    -34-
    The trial court denied Defendant’s motion to exclude the adult
    pornography found in his home because the pornography constituted
    “relevant” evidence bearing upon Defendant’s motive, intent, and
    common plan or scheme with respect to the alleged crimes. On
    appeal, Defendant argues that the trial court erred in admitting
    the adult pornography on those grounds. Defendant contends that
    there was no evidence that he ever showed K.C. all of the images
    seen by the jury, the adult pornography was not relevant to any
    issue other than Defendant’s “propensity” or “disposition” to
    commit   sex   crimes   against    girls,   and,    therefore,    the   adult
    pornography should have been excluded under Rule 404(b).
    In State v. Brown, __ N.C. App. __, __, 
    710 S.E.2d 265
    , 269–
    70 (2011), affirmed per curiam, __ N.C. __, 
    722 S.E.2d 508
     (2012),
    this Court considered the admissibility of pornography showing
    incestuous sexual acts, referred to as “Family Letters,” in a
    prosecution for sexual offenses committed by a father against his
    daughters.     Noting   that   a   defendant’s     possession    of   general
    pornography was usually considered inadmissible, we pointed out
    that the Family Letters material “was of an uncommon and specific
    type of pornography; the objects of sexual desire aroused by the
    pornography in evidence were few; and the victim was the clear
    -35-
    object of the sexual desire implied by the possession [of that
    material].” 
    Id.
     at __, 
    710 S.E.2d at 269
    .
    Here   the   trial    court    admitted      the   pornography    over
    Defendant’s motion to exclude and contemporaneously instructed the
    jury that it could consider the pornography only if it determined
    that the material was relevant to Defendant’s motive or intent to
    commit the alleged criminal conduct. The pornography was found at
    Defendant’s house after a valid warrant was obtained to search the
    premises, as discussed above, and there was testimony at trial
    that   Defendant    showed   K.C.    both   child   pornography   and   adult
    pornography. For these reasons, the evidence was admissible under
    Rule 404(b) as relevant to Defendant’s motive or intent.
    Nonetheless, the pornography may still be deemed inadmissible
    under the Rule 403 balancing test, i.e., whether the probative
    value of the evidence is substantially outweighed by the danger of
    unfair prejudice. State v. Summers, 
    177 N.C. App. 691
    , 697, 
    629 S.E.2d 902
    , 907 (“Once the trial court determines evidence is
    properly admissible under Rule 404(b), it must still determine if
    the probative value of the evidence is substantially outweighed by
    the danger of unfair prejudice under Rule 403.”) (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted), disc. review denied and appeal
    dismissed, 
    360 N.C. 653
    , 
    637 S.E.2d 192
     (2006); see also N.C. Gen.
    -36-
    Stat. § 8C–1, Rule 403 (2011). This determination “is within the
    sound discretion of the trial court, whose ruling will be reversed
    on appeal only when it is shown that the ruling was so arbitrary
    that it could not have resulted from a reasoned decision.” State
    v. Bidgood, 
    144 N.C. App. 267
    , 272, 
    550 S.E.2d 198
    , 202, cert.
    denied, 
    354 N.C. 222
    , 
    554 S.E.2d 647
     (2001).
    Here, “a review of the record reveals that the trial court
    was   aware     of   the   potential    danger    of   unfair    prejudice   to
    [D]efendant and was careful to give a proper limiting instruction
    to the jury.” State v. Hipps, 
    348 N.C. 377
    , 406, 
    501 S.E.2d 625
    ,
    642 (1998). The trial judge viewed the evidence himself, heard
    arguments from the attorneys, and ruled on its admissibility as
    follows:
    Weighing the prejudicial effect of [the
    pornography], although it is prejudicial to
    [D]efendant’s case, it is not so prejudicial
    such that the danger of unfair prejudice
    outweighs the probative value. In conducting
    the Rule 403 analysis I’ll find that this
    evidence withstands any 403 challenge in that
    the danger of unfair prejudice does not
    substantially outweigh the probative value. In
    exercise of the Court’s discretion, however,
    I am going to limit the number of exhibits
    that are published to the jury.
    At trial, the court limited the number of pornographic magazines
    that could be viewed by the jury. Moreover, the court gave the
    appropriate      limiting    instruction.        Indeed,   the    pornographic
    -37-
    evidence admitted in this case corroborated K.C.’s statement that
    Defendant showed her a video of an adult man having sex with a
    young girl, as well as pornographic images of both girls and women,
    and that Defendant suggested K.C. have photos of herself taken.
    Given the trial judge’s careful handling of the process, we
    conclude that it was not an abuse of discretion for the trial court
    to   determine   that   the   danger   of   unfair   prejudice   did   not
    substantially outweigh the probative value of the evidence and,
    accordingly, to admit into evidence the pornography found in
    Defendant’s home. Defendant’s argument as to this evidence is
    overruled.
    B. A.L.’s Testimony
    In addition, Defendant contends that the trial court erred in
    admitting evidence of past acts of sexual misconduct by Defendant
    against A.L. Defendant asserts that the evidence was inadmissible
    under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 404(b) and that the probative
    value, if any, was substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair
    prejudice under Rule 403. The crux of Defendant’s argument is that
    the acts of sexual misconduct committed against A.L. have nothing
    to do with K.C.
    Defendant filed a motion in limine to exclude evidence of
    past acts of sexual misconduct against A.L. As noted above, a
    -38-
    motion in limine is not sufficient to preserve for appeal the
    question of admissibility of evidence if the defendant does not
    object to that evidence at the time it is offered at trial. See
    State v. Hayes, 
    350 N.C. 79
    , 80, 
    511 S.E.2d 302
    , 303 (1999). Here,
    the trial court concluded that the evidence of prior acts was
    admissible under Rule 404(b) as sufficiently similar and not too
    remote in time.       The State then elicited testimony on direct
    examination    from   A.L.   about    sexual   misconduct    committed   by
    Defendant. Defendant never objected to the admissibility of A.L.’s
    testimony.
    Indeed, in the context of arguing the admissibility of the
    pornographic   magazines,    Defense    counsel   conceded    that   A.L.’s
    testimony was proper 404(b) evidence:
    [COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT]: . . . . Is there any
    possibility[ ]based on the evidence in this
    case that any juror could reasonably believe
    that if my client did the physical acts that
    [K.C.] has testified to, that he had some
    intent other than to arouse his own sexual —
    satisfy his own sexual gratification, or if he
    touched   her,   looking   at   the   indecent
    liberties, that it was for the purpose of
    sexual gratification. . . . If the jurors
    believe that he did [the] acts there’s really
    no possibility that they’re going to say,
    well, he did it but we don’t know why he did
    it, he was maybe conducting research or doing
    — I mean, there’s just not a possibility[]
    because it goes right with the evidence that
    has been presented by [K.C.] If she [is to be]
    believed then the only possible intent was to
    -39-
    gratify [Defendant’s] sexual desires and his
    purpose as well.
    THE COURT: Are you stipulating to that fact?
    [COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT]: Well, I’m not
    stipulating to it, Your Honor, I’m just saying
    that what other possible conclusion could
    there be. And the State is already going to
    get in the testimony of [A.L.] under 404(b) as
    to the prior conduct. I mean, it just seems
    like this is unnecessary, it’s cumulative, and
    it’s a very weak issue that this is necessary
    evidence to admit.
    In addition, the following exchange occurred immediately prior to
    A.L.’s testimony:
    [COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT]: For the record, I
    would object to the recall of Sergeant Dover.
    But I also have an issue to address with
    [A.L.].
    THE COURT: Okay. What’s that issue?
    [COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT]: That issue, Your
    Honor, is this. When the Court denied my
    motion to exclude her 404(b) testimony in that
    same proceeding the Court granted the motion
    to keep out the conviction that stemmed from
    that conduct unless my client testified or
    unless we opened the door during cross[-
    ]examination. And what I intend to do when she
    testifies is not challenge in any way her
    allegation that there was a sexual act, sexual
    intercourse, that occurred on August 25th,
    2001. That was the basis for the conviction,
    I’m not contesting that at all. However, in
    the materials that were handed over from the
    State when they interviewed her she’s made a
    new claim[ ]that was never made back during
    that time frame. And I’ve read all of the
    discovery. Now she is saying that in addition
    -40-
    to that there was an act where they had sexual
    intercourse in my client’s car. So I do want
    to challenge that because everything I can see
    that was not the basis of the conviction. I’m
    not contesting in any way shape or form that
    that act happened, however, I do want to
    challenge that allegation because I don’t
    think that was part of that case. And I believe
    by doing so I’m not opening the door to the
    conviction.
    (Emphasis added).
    Unlike the objection to the motion to suppress discussed
    supra,   it    is    not   clear   from    this    colloquy   that    counsel    for
    Defendant was objecting to the admission of A.L.’s testimony under
    Rule 404(b). Defense counsel clearly objects to the recall of
    Sergeant Dover, but does not make a similar objection to A.L.’s
    testimony. Although counsel for Defendant mentioned Rule 404(b) in
    his objection, it is clear from the context of this exchange that
    his objection was to obtain a preliminary ruling that his cross-
    examination     of    A.L.   would   not    open    the   door   to   evidence   of
    Defendant’s conviction by challenging the veracity of the car
    incident with A.L. As Defendant did not object pursuant to Rule
    404(b), such objection is not preserved on appeal. See State v.
    Lawrence, 
    365 N.C. 506
    , 517–19, 
    723 S.E.2d 326
    , 334 (2012); see
    also Wood v. Weldon, 
    160 N.C. App. 697
    , 699, 
    586 S.E.2d 801
    , 803
    (2003) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted) (holding
    that a defendant cannot “swap horses between courts in order to
    -41-
    get a better mount” on appeal). Because Defendant did not argue
    plain error in the alternative, he may not seek appellate review
    of this issue.
    Assuming arguendo       that Defendant     properly preserved this
    issue for review, his argument would fail nonetheless. The test
    for determining the admissibility of evidence of prior conduct is
    “whether the incidents are sufficiently similar and not so remote
    in   time   as   to   be   more   probative   than   prejudicial   under   the
    balancing test of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 403.” State v.
    Carpenter, 
    179 N.C. App. 79
    , 84, 
    632 S.E.2d 538
    , 541 (citation
    omitted), rev’d on other grounds, 
    361 N.C. 382
    , 
    646 S.E.2d 105
    (2007). “The determination of similarity and remoteness is made on
    a case-by-case basis,” with the degree of similarity required being
    that which would lead the jury to the “reasonable inference that
    the defendant committed both the prior and present acts.” 
    Id.
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Additionally,
    this Court stated that we have been “markedly liberal in admitting
    evidence of similar sex offenses to show one of the purposes
    enumerated in Rule 404(b).” State v. Carpenter, 
    147 N.C. App. 386
    ,
    392, 
    556 S.E.2d 316
    , 320 (2001) (citation and internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    The Supreme Court in Beckelheimer upheld a trial court’s
    -42-
    admission of evidence under Rule 404(b) based on “key similarities”
    between the sex offense for which the defendant was being tried
    and a prior sex offense.9 366 N.C. at 131, 
    726 S.E.2d at 159
    . In
    9   In Beckelheimer,
    [t]he trial court found that “the age range of
    [the 404(b) witness] was close to the age
    range of the alleged victim,” a finding
    supported by the evidence: the victim was an
    eleven-year-old    male    cousin   of   [the]
    defendant, and the witness was also [the]
    defendant’s young male cousin who was around
    twelve years old at the time of the alleged
    prior acts. The trial court found similarities
    in “the location of the occurrence,” a finding
    also   supported   by   the   evidence:  [the]
    defendant and the victim spent time playing
    video games in [the] defendant’s bedroom where
    the   alleged   abuse   occurred,   and  [the]
    defendant and the witness also spent time
    playing video games together and in [the]
    defendant’s bedroom where the alleged abuse
    occurred. Finally, the trial court found
    similarities in “how the occurrences were
    brought about,” a finding supported by the
    evidence: the victim described two incidents
    during which the defendant placed his hands on
    the victim’s genital area outside of his
    clothes while pretending to be asleep; he also
    described an incident during which [the]
    defendant lay on him pretending to be asleep,
    then reached inside the victim’s pants to
    touch his genitals, then performed oral sex on
    the victim. The witness testified to a similar
    progression of sexual acts, beginning with
    fondling outside the clothing and proceeding
    to fondling inside the pants and then to oral
    sex; he also described how [the] defendant
    would pretend to be asleep while touching
    him.
    -43-
    so holding, the Court noted the trial court’s finding that the
    victim in the charged crime was an eleven–year–old cousin of the
    defendant, while the 404(b) witness was also a cousin who had been
    around twelve years old at the time of the prior acts. Id. at 131,
    
    726 S.E.2d at 159
    . Accordingly, the Court “conclude[d] . . . that
    the similar ages of the victims is more pertinent in [the] case
    than the age difference between victim and perpetrator.” Id. at
    132, 
    726 S.E.2d at 160
    . In addition, the Court upheld the trial
    court’s finding that the location of the occurrence of the acts
    was similar in that the crime and the 404(b) offense both occurred
    after the defendant played video games with his victims in his
    bedroom.   Id.   at   131,   
    726 S.E.2d at 160
    .   Lastly,   the    Court
    emphasized that the crime and the 404(b) offenses had both been
    “brought about” in the same manner with a similar progression of
    sexual acts. Id. at 131, 
    726 S.E.2d at 160
    . Therefore, the Court
    concluded that the similarities of the victims (i.e., their ages
    and   relationship    to   the   defendant),     the   similarities     of   the
    locations, and the similarities in how the sexual offenses came to
    occur were sufficient to render the evidence admissible under Rule
    366 N.C. at 131, 
    726 S.E.2d at 159
    . The North Carolina Supreme
    Court concluded that these similarities were sufficient to support
    the State’s theory of modus operandi. 
    Id.
    -44-
    404(b). Id. at 133, 
    726 S.E.2d at 160
    .
    Defendant argues that his sexual relationship with A.L. was
    too remote in time and dissimilar in nature to be admissible under
    Rule 404. However, A.L was assaulted in the same car as K.C. While
    A.L. testified that the sex was consensual, A.L was a fourteen-
    year-old girl at the time of the assault and could not legally
    consent to sexual intercourse with Defendant. See 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-27
    .7A (2011). Indeed, contrary to the language in Defendant’s
    brief, this encounter was not a “teenage romance.”10
    Defendant also argues that the roughly seven-year time period
    between the two assaults makes the assault of A.L. irrelevant to
    the assault of K.C. under Rule 404. However, this Court in State
    v. Williamson pointed out that “a ten-year gap between instances
    of similar sexual misbehavior [does] not render them so remote in
    time as to negate the existence of a common plan or scheme.” 
    146 N.C. App. 325
    , 333, 
    553 S.E.2d 54
    , 60 (2001), disc. review denied,
    
    355 N.C. 222
    , 
    560 S.E.2d 366
     (2002). Therefore, the seven-year
    time gap would not negate the existence of a common plan or scheme
    in this case.
    10Defendant repeatedly misstated the age difference between A.L.
    and Defendant in his brief. When A.L. was fourteen, Defendant was
    actually a twenty-seven-year-old man despite the fact that he told
    her he was nineteen.
    -45-
    Lastly, we note that Defendant’s interactions with A.L. are
    sufficiently similar to his interactions with K.C. such that A.L.’s
    testimony is relevant and admissible under Rule 404(b). Both
    children   were    young,   white,    and     female.   Defendant   sexually
    assaulted each of them in the same car, a silver Hyundai Tiburon.
    He also took both children to a motel, where they engaged in sexual
    activity. While there were no pornographic materials or vials used
    when Defendant sexually assaulted A.L., he did ask both victims to
    have their own photos or videos made.
    For   the    reasons   stated   above,    Defendant’s   arguments   are
    overruled, and we find
    NO ERROR.
    Judges CALABRIA and ELMORE concur.