State v. Teague ( 2022 )


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  •                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    2022-NCCOA-600
    No. COA21-10
    Filed 1 November 2022
    Wake County, Nos. 18 CRS 205570–71, 205588
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.
    JOSEPH EDWARDS TEAGUE, III
    Appeal by defendant from judgments entered 31 January 2020 by Judge
    Thomas H. Lock in Wake County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 1
    December 2021.
    Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Assistant Attorney General Kristin J.
    Uicker, for the State.
    Hynson Law, PLLC, by Warren D. Hynson, for defendant-appellant.
    ZACHARY, Judge.
    ¶1         Defendant Joseph Edwards Teague, III, appeals from judgments entered upon
    a jury’s verdicts finding him guilty of conspiracy to traffic marijuana by
    transportation, possession with intent to sell or deliver marijuana, felony possession
    of marijuana, felony keeping or maintaining a storage unit for keeping or selling
    controlled substances, felony keeping or maintaining a dwelling for keeping or selling
    controlled substances, and possession with intent to sell or deliver delta-9-
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    tetrahydrocannabinol (“THC”). After careful review, we affirm the trial court’s denial
    of Defendant’s motion to suppress, and conclude that Defendant received a trial free
    from prejudicial error.
    I.      Background
    ¶2         On 21 March 2018, Investigator Selburn Menzie of the Wake County Sheriff’s
    Office High-Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (“HIDTA”) Task Force was working at
    a FedEx facility as part of his routine parcel interdiction duty. On the conveyor belt,
    he observed a package (the “target package”) with “all the seams . . . taped,” which he
    later testified was “one of many indicators” that a parcel may contain illegal drugs.
    The target package named “Marcus Rawls” as its sender and “Joe Teague” as its
    intended recipient. The shipping label indicated that the target package had been
    shipped from California and listed “(888) 888 8888” as the telephone number for the
    addressee, “Joe Teague” in Raleigh, North Carolina. In his experience and training
    as a member of the HIDTA Task Force, Investigator Menzie recognized these as
    additional indicators of possible drug smuggling.
    ¶3         Investigator Menzie removed the target package from the belt and ran the
    sender and recipient information from the shipping label through two law
    enforcement databases. From these databases, Investigator Menzie determined that
    the phone number given for the target package’s sender “Marcus Rawls” did not
    match the phone number for the listed shipping address, and he confirmed that the
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    Opinion of the Court
    “(888) 888 8888” phone number provided for its recipient “Joe Teague” did not exist.
    Investigator Menzie also noticed that the target package had been sent from a
    different location than its listed shipping address. Investigator Menzie then placed
    the target package in a line with “four or five” other similar parcels. His partner,
    Officer James Smith, was already on the scene with his certified narcotics detector
    dog, Hydro. At Officer Smith’s command, Hydro conducted a drug sniff of the
    packages. Hydro alerted to the target package.
    ¶4         Investigator Menzie removed the target package from the FedEx facility and
    obtained a search warrant for it. Investigator Menzie, Officer Smith, and other law
    enforcement officers then opened the target package at the interdiction unit office.
    Inside the target package, the officers found approximately 15 yellow envelopes, each
    containing vacuum-sealed bags of a green, leafy substance that they recognized as
    marijuana; inside one of the bags, they also discovered what appeared to be a GPS
    tracking device. After weighing and photographing the contents of each bag, the
    officers determined that the target package contained approximately 15 pounds of
    the green, leafy substance that they recognized as marijuana.
    ¶5         Investigator Menzie then drove to the address listed on the target package’s
    shipping label, where he saw people (including one later identified as Defendant) in
    the driveway. While surveilling the recipient’s address, Investigator Menzie observed
    that there was a self-storage facility approximately two miles away. He later testified
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    that the proximity of this facility was noteworthy to him “[b]ecause a storage unit is
    commonly used by individuals who [are] dealing with large amounts of illegal
    substance to store away sometimes from their residence, sometimes just to
    disassociate themselves from the residence that they’re actually living in.”
    ¶6         Later that day, a FedEx employee informed Investigator Menzie that a man
    identifying himself as “Marcus” had called FedEx to inquire about the status of the
    target package, and that he left a phone number at which to contact him with further
    information. Investigator Menzie called Marcus, who confirmed the tracking number
    of the target package, its shipping address, and the name of its intended recipient. At
    that point, Investigator Menzie identified himself as a law enforcement officer;
    Marcus reacted with surprise, cussed, and abruptly ended the call.
    ¶7         The next day, on 22 March 2018, Investigator Menzie, Officer Smith, and
    Sergeant Daniel Wright investigated the self-storage facility near the intended
    recipient’s address. Officer Smith took Hydro to a row of storage units that were “out
    of sight[,]” and Hydro alerted to a particular unit. Investigator Menzie left to obtain
    a search warrant for the unit. Before Investigator Menzie returned, Defendant
    arrived and approached the unit with a bag in his hand. Sergeant Wright intercepted
    Defendant and patted him down.
    ¶8         When Defendant placed the bag on the back of his car, Sergeant Wright
    observed a substance inside of the bag that he recognized, from his training and
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    Opinion of the Court
    experience, as “marijuana wax.” Sergeant Wright handcuffed Defendant, and they
    waited for Investigator Menzie to return with the search warrant. After Investigator
    Menzie returned and read the search warrant to Defendant, the officers opened the
    storage unit with the use of a key provided by Defendant. Inside, the officers found a
    box containing more vacuum-sealed bags of what appeared to be the same green, leafy
    substance that they recognized as marijuana, and a suitcase containing several clear
    jars of a brown substance that Sergeant Wright later testified was “commonly
    referred to as shatter . . . . [I]t’s cooked-down marijuana. It’s highly concentrated
    THC.”
    ¶9             Investigator Menzie then obtained a document search warrant for Defendant’s
    residence, which matched the address for the intended recipient of the target
    package. Law enforcement officers executed the search warrant that same day and
    discovered items that they believed to be drugs and drug paraphernalia. At that point,
    the officers temporarily halted the search until they obtained a drug search warrant;
    then, the search resumed. Inside a padlocked bedroom, officers discovered empty
    vacuum-sealed bags in a dresser drawer; a butane gas canister used to manufacture
    marijuana wax; a digital scale hidden behind a television; a bong; an e-cigarette with
    cartridges containing a brown liquid; and glass jars similar to those found in the
    search of Defendant’s storage unit.
    ¶ 10           On 5 June 2018, a Wake County grand jury returned indictments charging
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    Defendant with two counts of conspiracy to traffic marijuana (one charge by
    transportation and one by possession); two counts of possession with intent to sell or
    deliver marijuana; one count of possession with intent to sell or deliver THC; two
    counts of possession of marijuana; one count of maintaining a storage unit for
    purposes of keeping or selling controlled substances; and one count of maintaining a
    dwelling for purposes of keeping or selling controlled substances.
    ¶ 11         On 19 November 2018, Defendant moved to suppress “evidence obtained as the
    result of an unconstitutional seizure of the [target package] addressed to . . .
    Defendant, the unconstitutional search, seizure, and interrogation of [Defendant],
    and the unconstitutional search and seizure of [Defendant]’s storage locker and
    residence.” On 27 January 2020, Defendant’s motion came on for hearing in Wake
    County Superior Court. After considering the motion and arguments of counsel, the
    trial court denied Defendant’s motion from the bench. No written order was entered.
    ¶ 12         At the close of the State’s evidence, Defendant moved to dismiss all charges
    against him, which the trial court denied. Defendant renewed his motion to dismiss
    at the close of all evidence, which the trial court again denied. The State then
    voluntarily dismissed the charge of conspiracy to traffic marijuana by possession.
    During the charge conference, the trial court sua sponte dismissed one count of
    possession with intent to sell or deliver marijuana and one count of felony possession
    of marijuana.
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    ¶ 13         On 31 January 2020, the jury returned its verdicts finding Defendant guilty of
    the remaining charges. The trial court sentenced Defendant to an active term of 25–
    39 months in the custody of the North Carolina Division of Adult Correction for
    conspiracy to traffic marijuana by transportation. The trial court then consolidated
    the remaining convictions into three judgments, sentenced Defendant to three
    consecutive terms of 5–15 months in the custody of the North Carolina Division of
    Adult Correction, then suspended these sentences and ordered that Defendant be
    placed on supervised probation for a period of 24 months following his release from
    incarceration. Defendant gave oral notice of appeal in open court.
    II.     Discussion
    ¶ 14         On appeal, Defendant raises several constitutional issues concerning the
    investigation of the target package. Defendant argues that the trial court erred by
    denying his motion to suppress because law enforcement officers lacked either
    probable cause or reasonable suspicion to support (1) the initial removal of the target
    package from the conveyor belt at the FedEx facility and (2) the temporary retention
    of the target package to effectuate a drug dog sniff.
    ¶ 15         Defendant then makes several arguments that arise from our General
    Assembly’s legalization of industrial hemp. See An Act to Recognize the Importance
    and Legitimacy of Industrial Hemp Research, to Provide for Compliance with
    Portions of the Federal Agricultural Act of 2014, and to Promote Increased
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    Agricultural Employment, S.L. 2015-299, 
    2015 N.C. Sess. Laws 1483
    . The Industrial
    Hemp Act “legalized the cultivation, processing, and sale of industrial hemp within
    the state, subject to the oversight of the North Carolina Industrial Hemp
    Commission.” State v. Parker, 
    277 N.C. App. 531
    , 2021-NCCOA-217, ¶ 27, disc. review
    denied, 
    378 N.C. 366
    , 
    860 S.E.2d 917
     (2021).
    ¶ 16         In sum, Defendant argues that “[b]ecause industrial hemp and marijuana . . .
    are identical in appearance and odor, and both contain THC, law enforcement officers
    and drug-detecting canines are unable to distinguish the two without a quantitative
    test measuring the chemical percentage of THC, irrespective of their training and
    experience.” Thus, Defendant maintains that (1) the trial court erred by denying his
    motion to suppress because the green, leafy substance inside the target package was
    seized prior to determining whether it contained an unlawful concentration of THC;
    (2) the indictment charging Defendant with possession with intent to sell or deliver
    THC was facially invalid because it failed to specifically allege an unlawful
    concentration of THC; (3) the trial court erred by denying Defendant’s motion to
    dismiss the charge of possession with intent to sell or deliver THC because the State
    presented insufficient evidence that the brown material recovered during lawful
    searches of Defendant’s storage unit, residence, and the bag that he was carrying
    when he arrived at the storage unit contained an unlawful concentration of THC; and
    (4) the trial court erred by permitting several of the State’s witnesses to offer opinion
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    Opinion of the Court
    testimony identifying the various seized substances as “marijuana,” “marijuana wax,”
    “shatter,” and “highly concentrated THC,” absent a scientifically valid chemical
    analysis of each substance, in violation of Rule 702 of the North Carolina Rules of
    Evidence.
    ¶ 17         Defendant further argues that the trial court committed plain error by
    admitting evidence regarding the chemical analysis of the seized material discovered
    inside the target package, in violation of his constitutional right to confront
    testimonial witnesses against him.
    ¶ 18         Finally, Defendant advances a pair of arguments concerning the charge of
    conspiracy to traffic marijuana by transportation. Defendant contends that the trial
    court erred by denying his motion to dismiss this charge due to insufficient evidence,
    and that the trial court erred by admitting into evidence a recording of a phone call
    between Investigator Menzie and Marcus Rawls, Defendant’s alleged co-conspirator.
    A. Motion to Suppress
    ¶ 19         We begin by addressing Defendant’s constitutional arguments concerning the
    initial removal of the target package from the conveyor belt at the FedEx facility and
    the subsequent searches and seizures that followed. Defendant raises several
    arguments arising under the federal and state constitutions, essentially claiming that
    the trial court erred by denying his motion to suppress because law enforcement
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    Opinion of the Court
    officers lacked either probable cause or reasonable suspicion1 to seize the target
    package at the FedEx facility. However, for the following reasons, we affirm the trial
    court’s denial of Defendant’s motion to suppress.
    1. Standard of Review
    ¶ 20          “In evaluating the denial of a motion to suppress, the reviewing court must
    determine whether competent evidence supports the trial court’s findings of fact and
    whether the findings of fact support the conclusions of law.” State v. Williams, 
    366 N.C. 110
    , 114, 
    726 S.E.2d 161
    , 165 (2012) (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted). “The trial court’s findings of fact on a motion to suppress are conclusive on
    appeal if supported by competent evidence, even if the evidence is conflicting.” 
    Id.
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). “Findings of fact that are not
    challenged on appeal are deemed to be supported by competent evidence and are
    binding upon this Court.” State v. Lane, 
    280 N.C. App. 264
    , 2021-NCCOA-593, ¶ 12
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). “Conclusions of law are reviewed de
    novo and are fully reviewable on appeal.” Williams, 
    366 N.C. at 114
    , 
    726 S.E.2d at 165
     (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    1 Defendant argues that “this Court could—and should—rule under our State
    Constitution that probable cause is required to seize and investigate a parcel,” rather than
    continuing to apply the reasonable suspicion standard adopted by the United States Supreme
    Court. See United States v. Van Leeuwen, 
    397 U.S. 249
    , 252–53, 
    25 L. Ed. 2d 282
    , 285–86
    (1970). As discussed in section II.A.2 below, we decline Defendant’s invitation to address this
    issue.
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    2. The Trial Court’s Ruling
    ¶ 21         At the conclusion of the suppression hearing, the trial court denied Defendant’s
    motion to suppress. The court instructed the assistant district attorney to prepare a
    proposed order2 consistent with the following orally rendered findings of fact and
    conclusions of law:
    You should find the facts by a preponderance of the
    evidence that on the day in question, March 21, 2018, these
    officers were working interdiction at Fed Ex, that Fed Ex
    facility on Atlantic Avenue; that they observed this parcel
    coming down the conveyor belt, and their attention was
    attracted to it by the fact that all the seams were taped,
    which, based upon their training and experience -- or,
    rather, training and experience of Investigator Menzie, is
    an indication of a parcel which might contain controlled
    substances.
    That upon examination of the shipping label, the phone
    number listed for the recipient appeared to be fictitious. It
    was 888-8888.
    That the officers removed the package from the conveyor
    belt and examined it further. Upon running the name and
    address and phone number for the sender through the law
    enforcement databases -- and you should identify those
    which they were employing -- it appeared that the address
    for the sender was fictitious; that the phone number for the
    sender was fictitious; that the sender, in fact, lived at
    another address; that the package was actually shipped out
    of Sun Valley, California, not North Hollywood, California.
    That the officers then placed the package in a lineup with
    four other parcels and had a K-9 or dog trained in narcotics
    detection, which dog is on the scene with its handler, sniff
    2   No written order on Defendant’s motion to suppress appears in the record on appeal.
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    Opinion of the Court
    the packages. Include as a fact, of course, that the dog was
    certified, and please include the name of the certifying
    agency.
    That the dog alerted on the suspect package, and based
    upon this information, the officers seized the package and
    applied to the magistrate for a search warrant.
    Based upon these facts, the Court would conclude as a
    matter of law that [D]efendant did have standing to
    challenge the search warrant based upon the fact that
    [D]efendant is the named recipient of the package; that a
    reasonable and articulable suspicion existed sufficient to
    justify the brief detention of the package for purposes of
    having a drug dog sniff it; and that the retention of the
    package was for a reasonable period of time given that the
    dog was on the scene. And, in fact, as a finding of fact, you
    may include that the process of this lineup took about five
    to ten minutes.
    And that based upon the totality of the circumstances,
    probable cause existed for the issuance of the search
    warrant for the parcel. And, accordingly, the motion to
    suppress the issuance of the search warrant and seizure of
    the parcel is denied.
    ¶ 22         On appeal, Defendant does not specifically challenge any of the trial court’s
    findings of fact, and therefore they are binding upon this Court. Lane, ¶ 12. Rather,
    Defendant challenges the trial court’s conclusion of law, based upon the unchallenged
    facts, that “the brief detention of the [target] package for purposes of having a drug
    dog sniff it” was supported by reasonable suspicion.3
    3   The United States Supreme Court has determined that a warrantless postal
    interdiction must be supported by reasonable suspicion of illegal activity afoot. See Van
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    Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 23          We conclude that Defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights were not violated in
    the case at bar. At the outset, we do not accept Defendant’s initial contention that the
    mere removal of the target package from the conveyor belt for a drug dog sniff was a
    “seizure” implicating his Fourth Amendment rights. Neither was the drug dog sniff
    at the FedEx facility a “search” infringing upon any of Defendant’s Fourth
    Amendment rights.
    ¶ 24          However, assuming, arguendo, that Defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights
    were implicated, we also conclude that he waived appellate review of these
    arguments. Each of these reasons compels our conclusion that the trial court did not
    err by denying Defendant’s motion to suppress.
    3. Removal of the Target Package
    ¶ 25          At all stages of this case, from the suppression hearing through appellate
    briefing, Defendant has maintained that the initial removal of the target package
    from the conveyor belt was a seizure in violation of the Fourth Amendment. After
    Leeuwen, 
    397 U.S. at
    252–53, 
    25 L. Ed. 2d at
    285–86. However, Defendant invites this Court
    to interpret the North Carolina Constitution as requiring that the State satisfy the more
    stringent probable cause standard in warrantless postal interdictions. See State v. Carter,
    
    322 N.C. 709
    , 713, 
    370 S.E.2d 553
    , 555 (1988) (“Even were the two provisions identical, we
    have the authority to construe our own constitution differently from the construction by the
    United States Supreme Court of the Federal Constitution, as long as our citizens are thereby
    accorded no lesser rights than they are guaranteed by the parallel federal provision.”),
    superseded in part by statute on other grounds, An Act to Provide for the Adoption of the Good
    Faith Exception to the Exclusionary Rule into State Law, S.L. 2011-6, § 2, 2011 Sess. Laws
    10, 11. Given our disposition of Defendant’s other Fourth Amendment arguments, we need
    not address this issue at this juncture.
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    Opinion of the Court
    careful review, we disagree.
    ¶ 26            The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution protects “[t]he right
    of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
    unreasonable searches and seizures[.]” U.S. Const. amend. IV. “The North Carolina
    Constitution affords similar protection.” State v. Cabbagestalk, 
    266 N.C. App. 106
    ,
    111, 
    830 S.E.2d 5
    , 9 (2019); see N.C. Const. art. I, § 20. “Letters and other sealed
    packages are in the general class of effects in which the public at large has a
    legitimate expectation of privacy; warrantless searches of such effects are
    presumptively unreasonable.” United States v. Jacobsen, 
    466 U.S. 109
    , 114, 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 85
    , 94 (1984). “Both the sender and the designated recipient of a package sent by
    mail or other carrier have a legitimate expectation of privacy in the contents of that
    package.” United States v. Hurley, 182 F. App’x 142, 145 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 
    549 U.S. 905
    , 
    166 L. Ed. 2d 183
     (2006)4; see also Jacobsen, 
    466 U.S. at 114
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d at 94
    .
    ¶ 27            “A ‘seizure’ of property occurs when there is some meaningful interference with
    an individual’s possessory interests in that property.” Jacobsen, 
    466 U.S. at 113
    , 80
    It is axiomatic that the courts of North Carolina must treat “decisions of the United
    4
    States Supreme Court as binding” on issues arising under the federal constitution, but our
    Supreme Court has repeatedly recognized that we may also “accord[ ] to decisions of lower
    federal courts such persuasiveness as these decisions might reasonably command.” State v.
    Berryman, 
    360 N.C. 209
    , 212, 
    624 S.E.2d 350
    , 353 (2006) (citation omitted).
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    L. Ed. 2d at 94. “The intrusion on possessory interests occasioned by a seizure of one’s
    personal effects can vary both in its nature and extent. The seizure may be made after
    the owner has relinquished control of the property to a third party[,]” such as an
    express courier. United States v. Place, 
    462 U.S. 696
    , 705, 
    77 L. Ed. 2d 110
    , 119–20
    (1983). A sender who voluntarily relinquishes control of a package to a private courier
    may be “unable to show that the invasion intruded upon either a privacy interest in
    the contents of the packages or a possessory interest in the packages themselves.” 
    Id.
    at 705–06 n.6, 
    77 L. Ed. 2d at
    120 n.6 (citation omitted). Therefore, in postal
    interdiction cases just as in other Fourth Amendment contexts, the nature and extent
    of the intrusion upon the privacy interest in the contents of a package vary with the
    totality of the circumstances. Indeed, as Justice Brennan noted in Place, “the mere
    detention of mail not in [an addressee’s] custody or control amounts to at most a
    minimal or technical interference with his person or effects, resulting in no personal
    deprivation at all.” 
    Id.
     at 718 n.5, 
    77 L. Ed. 2d at
    128 n.5 (Brennan, J., concurring)
    (citation omitted).
    ¶ 28         Although neither the appellate courts of North Carolina nor the United States
    Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit have directly addressed the Fourth
    Amendment in the context of postal interdiction, other federal circuit courts of
    appeals have considered this issue. For example, the Ninth Circuit has concluded
    that, “[a]lthough a person has a legitimate interest that a mailed package will not be
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    Opinion of the Court
    opened and searched en route, there can be no reasonable expectation that postal
    service employees will not handle the package or that they will not view its exterior[.]”
    United States v. Hernandez, 
    313 F.3d 1206
    , 1209–10 (9th Cir. 2002) (citation omitted),
    cert. denied, 
    538 U.S. 1023
    , 
    155 L. Ed. 2d 867
     (2003). The Hernandez Court further
    explained that the recipient of a mailed package has a different interest in the
    package than its sender:
    The recipient of a mailed item . . . has a reasonable
    expectation that the mail will not be detained by postal
    employees beyond the normal delivery date and time. In
    other words, an addressee’s possessory interest is in the
    timely delivery of a package, not in having his package
    routed on a particular conveyor belt, sorted in a particular
    area, or stored in any particular sorting bin for a particular
    amount of time.
    Id. at 1210 (emphasis added) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    Therefore, “even though first-class mail is protected by the Fourth Amendment from
    unreasonable search and seizure, it is not beyond the reach of all inspection. Rather,
    the question is whether the conditions for its detention and inspection have been
    satisfied.” Id. (citations and internal quotation marks omitted); United States v. Van
    Leeuwen, 
    397 U.S. 249
    , 251–52, 
    25 L. Ed. 2d 282
    , 285 (1970).
    ¶ 29         In Van Leeuwen, for instance, the United States Supreme Court concluded that
    law enforcement officers’ warrantless detention of a first-class package for
    approximately 29 hours while they obtained a search warrant did not implicate the
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    Opinion of the Court
    defendant’s privacy interest:
    No interest protected by the Fourth Amendment was
    invaded by forwarding the packages the following day
    rather than the day when they were deposited. The
    significant Fourth Amendment interest was in the privacy
    of this first-class mail; and that privacy was not disturbed
    or invaded until the approval of the magistrate was
    obtained.
    
    397 U.S. at 253
    , 
    25 L. Ed. 2d at 286
     (emphasis added).
    ¶ 30         Accordingly, “for the purposes of the Fourth Amendment, no seizure occurs if
    a package is detained in a manner that does not significantly interfere with its timely
    delivery in the normal course of business.” United States v. Quoc Viet Hoang, 
    486 F.3d 1156
    , 1162 (9th Cir. 2007), cert. denied, 
    552 U.S. 1144
    , 
    169 L. Ed. 2d 813
     (2008);
    see also 
    id.
     (holding that “the ten minute detention of [a defendant]’s package in the
    FedEx hold room without reasonable suspicion d[id] not implicate his Fourth
    Amendment rights”).
    ¶ 31         In the instant case, when the trial court denied Defendant’s motion to
    suppress, it found as fact that Hydro was “on the scene with” Officer Smith and that
    “the process of this lineup took about five to ten minutes.” Defendant does not
    challenge these findings of fact, and they are, therefore, binding on appeal. See Lane,
    ¶ 12. Based on these unchallenged findings, the trial court concluded that “the
    retention of the [target] package was for a reasonable period of time given that the
    dog was on the scene.” Defendant’s insistence that this temporary retention of the
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    Opinion of the Court
    target package amounted to a seizure implicating his Fourth Amendment rights is
    not supported by the relevant case law, as a delay of approximately five to ten
    minutes to procure an on-site canine unit for a drug sniff of an apparently suspicious
    package did “not significantly interfere with [the target package’s] timely delivery in
    the normal course of business.” Quoc Viet Hoang, 
    486 F.3d at 1162
    . Accordingly,
    Defendant’s “possessory interest . . . in the timely delivery of [the target] package”
    was not disturbed, Hernandez, 
    313 F.3d at 1210
    , and we cannot agree with
    Defendant’s argument that the mere removal of the target package from the conveyor
    belt for a drug dog sniff was a “seizure” implicating the Fourth Amendment.
    ¶ 32         Defendant also challenges several investigatory acts undertaken by law
    enforcement officers before Investigator Menzie obtained a search warrant to open
    the target package upon Hydro’s positive alert to the presence of controlled
    substances during the drug dog sniff conducted at the FedEx facility. For the reasons
    explained above, the initial removal of the target package from the conveyor belt was
    not a “seizure” implicating Defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights. As the trial court
    properly concluded, “a reasonable and articulable suspicion existed sufficient to
    justify the brief detention of the package for purposes of having a drug dog sniff it;
    and . . . the retention of the package was for a reasonable period of time given that
    the dog was on the scene.”
    ¶ 33         Neither was Hydro’s drug sniff a “search” implicating Defendant’s Fourth
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    Amendment rights. And, given that Hydro alerted to the target package in the line-
    up, the trial court correctly concluded “that based upon the totality of the
    circumstances, probable cause existed for the issuance of the search warrant for the
    parcel.” Taken together, neither the removal of the package nor the drug dog sniff
    violated Defendant’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches
    and seizures because under the facts presented, those acts constituted neither a
    seizure (the removal) nor a search (the drug dog sniff). Rather, those acts, viewed in
    the totality of the circumstances, merely provided further support for Investigator
    Menzie’s determination that probable cause existed to obtain a search warrant to
    open the target package. Accordingly, the trial court did not err by denying
    Defendant’s motion to suppress.
    ¶ 34         Moreover, the subsequent searches and seizures flowing from these acts were
    supported by valid warrants. Defendant challenges the validity of these warrants
    solely for want of probable cause, based on the same Fourth Amendment arguments
    that we have addressed and determined to be without merit. Yet each search warrant
    application reveals that law enforcement officers properly built their investigation
    step by step.
    ¶ 35         Having determined that probable cause existed to support his application for
    a search warrant of the target package, Investigator Menzie immediately sought and
    obtained one, and the resultant search yielded approximately 15 pounds of vacuum-
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    sealed marijuana and a GPS tracker. When Investigator Menzie surveilled the
    residence to which the target package was addressed, he noticed a nearby storage
    facility and subsequently learned that Defendant rented a unit at that location. In a
    second drug dog sniff—which Defendant does not challenge on appeal—Hydro alerted
    to Defendant’s storage unit, and within an hour Defendant arrived at the unit
    carrying a tote in which was visible a brown substance that law enforcement officers
    believed was THC. These facts, combined with the previously developed probable
    cause, gave rise to further probable cause sufficient to support the issuance of a
    search warrant for the storage unit. That lawful search, in turn, provided sufficient
    probable cause to support the issuance of a document search warrant for the
    residence, the search of which provided sufficient probable cause to support the
    issuance of a controlled substances search warrant, permitting the lawful search of
    the residence.
    ¶ 36         In sum, at every stage of the investigation—from the initial removal of the
    target package and the drug dog sniff at the FedEx facility through each search and
    seizure conducted pursuant to valid and lawfully obtained warrants—law
    enforcement officers complied with the requirements of the Fourth Amendment.
    Accordingly, Defendant’s challenge is overruled.
    ¶ 37         However, even assuming, arguendo, that the law enforcement officers’ actions
    here amounted to searches or seizures within the purview of the Fourth Amendment,
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    we additionally conclude that he has waived appellate review of these issues.
    4. Waiver of Appellate Review
    ¶ 38         Rule 10(a)(1) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure establishes
    that a party must object at trial, and obtain a ruling from the court, in order to
    preserve an issue for appellate review:
    In order to preserve an issue for appellate review, a party
    must have presented to the trial court a timely request,
    objection, or motion, stating the specific grounds for the
    ruling the party desired the court to make if the specific
    grounds were not apparent from the context. It is also
    necessary for the complaining party to obtain a ruling upon
    the party’s request, objection, or motion.
    N.C.R. App. P. 10(a)(1).
    ¶ 39         A motion in limine, such as a pretrial motion to suppress, 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.” 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). Following the denial of a pretrial motion to suppress evidence, the defendant’s
    subsequent “[f]ailure to object at trial waives appellate review[.]” State v. Anthony,
    
    271 N.C. App. 749
    , 752, 
    845 S.E.2d 452
    , 455, disc. review denied, 
    376 N.C. 544
    , 
    851 S.E.2d 634
     (2020).
    ¶ 40         Here, Defendant filed a pretrial motion to suppress, inter alia, “evidence
    obtained as the result of an unconstitutional seizure of the [target package] addressed
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    to . . . Defendant,” and renewed his objection at trial to the introduction of evidence
    concerning the drug dog sniff. Nonetheless, Defendant concedes that he “did not
    object when the State elicited testimony about the removal of the [target package]
    from the conveyor belt.” Therefore, Defendant has waived appellate review of the
    issue of the target package’s removal from the conveyor belt, see 
    id.,
     and the trial
    court’s conclusion that “a reasonable and articulable suspicion existed sufficient to
    justify a brief detention of the package for purposes of having a drug dog sniff it”
    remains undisturbed.
    ¶ 41         Perhaps in an attempt to avoid this waiver, Defendant couches his dog-sniff
    argument in the conjunctive, combining the drug dog sniff with the alleged “seizure”
    of the target package from the conveyor belt: “such actions plus the conducting of a
    lineup with a narcotics-detecting canine constituted a search[.]” (Emphasis added).
    This argument fails.
    ¶ 42         Despite the fact that Defendant objected at trial to the introduction of evidence
    regarding Hydro’s drug sniff of the target package once it was removed from the
    conveyor belt, this subsequent objection cannot overcome Defendant’s failure to object
    to the State’s initial introduction of Investigator Menzie’s testimony regarding the
    removal of the target package itself—the alleged “seizure” that Defendant has
    consistently characterized as the initial Fourth Amendment violation. Moreover,
    Defendant’s subsequent objection at trial to the introduction of evidence regarding
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    the drug dog sniff cannot preserve Defendant’s broader Fourth Amendment
    arguments for appellate review because the drug dog sniff, on its own, did not infringe
    on Defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights.
    ¶ 43         Defendant primarily bases his argument concerning the drug dog sniff on
    Florida v. Jardines, in which the United States Supreme Court concluded that “the
    officers’ investigation took place in a constitutionally protected area”—the front porch
    of the defendant’s home—and held that “[t]he government’s use of trained police dogs
    to investigate the home and its immediate surroundings is a ‘search’ within the
    meaning of the Fourth Amendment.” 
    569 U.S. 1
    , 7, 11–12, 
    185 L. Ed. 2d 495
    , 501–02,
    504 (2013).
    ¶ 44         In analogizing the target package in this case to the front door of the home in
    Jardines, Defendant disregards extensive precedent according a person’s home
    heightened Fourth Amendment protection. 
    Id. at 6
    , 
    185 L. Ed. 2d at 501
     (“[W]hen it
    comes to the Fourth Amendment, the home is first among equals.”). In fact, the
    Jardines Court explicitly distinguished a warrantless drug dog sniff of the home and
    its immediate surroundings from previous decisions involving warrantless drug dog
    sniffs in public places, which the Supreme Court determined did not implicate the
    defendants’ constitutional expectations of privacy in their property or effects. 
    Id.
     at
    10–11, 
    185 L. Ed. 2d at
    503–04; see also Illinois v. Caballes, 
    543 U.S. 405
    , 409, 
    160 L. Ed. 2d 842
    , 847 (2005) (concluding that “the use of a well-trained narcotics-detection
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    dog . . . during a lawful traffic stop, generally does not implicate legitimate privacy
    interests”); Place, 
    462 U.S. at 707
    , 
    77 L. Ed. 2d at 121
     (concluding that the “exposure
    of [the] respondent’s luggage, which was located in a public place, to a trained canine
    . . . did not constitute a ‘search’ within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment”).
    ¶ 45         The Jardines Court focused on the physical intrusion of the defendant’s “home
    and its immediate surroundings” rather than any violation of his reasonable
    expectation of privacy. 
    569 U.S. at 11
    , 
    185 L. Ed. 2d at 504
     (“[W]e need not decide
    whether the officers’ investigation of Jardines’ home violated his expectation of
    privacy under Katz [v. United States, 
    389 U.S. 347
    , 
    19 L. Ed. 2d 576
     (1967)]. . . . That
    the officers learned what they learned only by physically intruding on Jardines’
    property to gather evidence is enough to establish that a search occurred.”).
    ¶ 46         As our Supreme Court has explained, Jardines presents an exception to the
    “generally permissive view of public dog sniffs under the Fourth Amendment.” State
    v. Miller, 
    367 N.C. 702
    , 708, 
    766 S.E.2d 289
    , 293 (2014). Insofar as the relevant
    decisions of the United States Supreme Court “encourage police to utilize dog sniffs
    in the public sphere,” the Court’s decision in Jardines “places police on a much shorter
    leash when employing dog sniffs in and around the home.” 
    Id.
     (emphases added).
    ¶ 47         In the present case, however, Defendant can claim no physical intrusion
    analogous to that in Jardines, because the drug dog sniff in question did not occur at
    his home or within its immediate surroundings. Instead, the drug dog sniff here is
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    precisely in line with the sort of investigation in the “public sphere” that our Supreme
    Court noted was “encourage[d]” by the United States Supreme Court’s pre-Jardines
    opinions. 
    Id.
    ¶ 48         We conclude that the drug dog sniff of the target package, which occurred on
    the grounds of a private, third-party facility at which Defendant was not present and
    in which he claimed no property interest, did not implicate any Fourth Amendment
    right in and of itself. Further, at the time of these events, Defendant was unaware of
    either the drug dog sniff or the temporary retention of the target package that
    precipitated the sniff. Lastly, as previously discussed, the target package was only
    detained for a brief period of time, which was insufficient to implicate Defendant’s
    Fourth Amendment rights. See Van Leeuwen, 
    397 U.S. at 253
    , 
    25 L. Ed. 2d at 286
    .
    ¶ 49         Accordingly, the warrantless drug dog sniff of the target package, still in the
    mail stream and in the custody of a third party on the grounds of a facility in which
    Defendant had no possessory interest, and which the trial court found only “took
    about five to ten minutes[,]” did not in and of itself implicate the Fourth Amendment.
    Therefore, Defendant’s renewed objection at trial to the introduction of evidence
    concerning the drug dog sniff was insufficient to resurrect any prior unpreserved
    Fourth Amendment argument for appellate review.
    5. Plain Error
    ¶ 50         Finally, “out of an abundance of caution,” Defendant contends that the trial
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    court’s denial of his motion to suppress “constituted plain error necessitating
    reversal.” However, “[t]he first step under plain error review is . . . to determine
    whether any error occurred at all.” State v. Oxendine, 
    246 N.C. App. 502
    , 510, 
    783 S.E.2d 286
    , 292, disc. review denied, 
    368 N.C. 921
    , 
    787 S.E.2d 24
     (2016). We have
    already determined that the law enforcement officers’ actions did not implicate any
    of Defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights. In that Defendant is unable to show any
    error in the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress, Defendant’s plain error
    arguments are overruled as well.
    ¶ 51         Moreover, in reaching these determinations, we have carefully reviewed the
    evidence at the suppression hearing. We further conclude that the trial court’s
    findings of fact are supported by the evidence, and that those findings, in turn,
    support the trial court’s conclusions of law and its denial of Defendant’s motion to
    suppress. For all of these reasons, we affirm the denial of Defendant’s motion to
    suppress.
    B. Industrial Hemp
    ¶ 52         The majority of Defendant’s remaining issues on appeal stem from our General
    Assembly’s legalization of industrial hemp. “Industrial hemp is a variety of the
    species Cannabis Sativa—the same species of plant as marijuana. The difference
    between the two substances is that industrial hemp contains very low levels of [THC],
    which is the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana.” Parker, ¶ 27. Our General
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    Statutes define “industrial hemp” as “[a]ll parts and varieties of the plant Cannabis
    sativa (L.), cultivated or possessed by a grower licensed by the [North Carolina
    Industrial Hemp] Commission, whether growing or not, that contain a [THC]
    concentration of not more than three-tenths of one percent (0.3%) on a dry weight
    basis.” 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 106-568.51
    (7) (2021).5
    ¶ 53          Defendant maintains that the passage of the Industrial Hemp Act altered the
    legal landscape surrounding marijuana and THC, changes which resulted in
    prejudicial errors during several stages of his prosecution. Specifically, Defendant
    challenges: (1) the validity of the indictment charging him with possession with intent
    to sell or deliver THC; (2) the sufficiency of the State’s evidence regarding the charge
    of possession with intent to sell or deliver THC; and (3) the admissibility of the
    opinion testimony of witnesses for the State identifying the various seized substances
    as “marijuana,” “marijuana wax,” “shatter,” and “highly concentrated THC.”
    5 In order to maintain the legal status of “hemp” and “hemp products,” see 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 90-87
    (13a)–(13b) (2022), following the expiration of the Industrial Hemp Act on 30
    June 2022, our General Assembly amended the North Carolina Controlled Substances Act
    effective 30 June 2022, see An Act to Conform the Hemp Laws with Federal Law by
    Permanently Excluding Hemp from the State Controlled Substances Act, S.L. 2022-32,
    https://www.ncleg.gov/EnactedLegislation/SessionLaws/PDF/2021-2022/SL2022-32.pdf.
    Nonetheless, as a general rule, “the amendment of a criminal statute does not affect the
    prosecution or punishment of a crime committed before the amendment becomes effective[.]”
    State v. Hart, 
    287 N.C. 76
    , 81, 
    213 S.E.2d 291
    , 295 (1975) (citation omitted). Thus, “as to such
    crimes the original statute remains in force.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted). Because the Industrial
    Hemp Act was in effect at all times relevant to this appeal, our analysis is unchanged by this
    recent legislation.
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    Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 54         We note initially that at the root of these arguments is a fundamental
    misapprehension concerning the State’s burden of proof at each stage of these
    proceedings, none of which the provisions of the Industrial Hemp Act affect to the
    degree that Defendant contends. Although our appellate courts have yet to fully
    address the effect of industrial hemp’s legalization on the panoply of standards and
    procedures applicable during the various stages of a criminal investigation and
    prosecution for acts involving marijuana, see Parker, ¶ 29 (“The legal issues raised by
    the recent legalization of hemp have yet to be analyzed by the appellate courts of this
    state.”), the federal courts of North Carolina have considered some of these issues.
    We find their analyses illustrative with regard to the enduring viability of our
    marijuana case law and the legal principles articulated by those precedents, despite
    the enactment of the Industrial Hemp Act.
    ¶ 55         In United States v. Harris, the United States District Court for the Eastern
    District of North Carolina explained that “the smell of marijuana alone . . . supports
    a determination of probable cause, even if some use of industrial hemp products is
    legal under North Carolina law. This is because ‘only the probability, and not a prima
    facie showing, of criminal activity is the standard of probable cause.’ ” No. 4:18-CR-
    57-FL-1, 
    2019 WL 6704996
    , at *3 (E.D.N.C. Dec. 9, 2019) (emphasis added) (quoting
    Illinois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 235, 
    76 L. Ed. 2d 527
    , 546, reh’g denied, 
    463 U.S. 1237
    ,
    
    77 L. Ed. 2d 1453
     (1983)).
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    ¶ 56         Similarly, in United States v. Brooks, the United States District Court for the
    Western District of North Carolina denied a defendant’s motion to suppress where,
    inter alia, the defendant argued that the odor of marijuana that the law enforcement
    officer detected “could have been from a legal source.” No. 3:19-cr-00211-FDW-DCK,
    
    2021 WL 1668048
    , at *4 (W.D.N.C. Apr. 28, 2021). In denying the motion to suppress,
    the trial court noted that the defendant cited “no relevant case law which requires a
    law enforcement officer to test contraband found in a vehicle based on the plain smell
    of marijuana.” 
    Id.
    ¶ 57         The court then explained the basis for its determination that the legalization
    of industrial hemp did not alter the court’s probable-cause analysis:
    Assuming, arguendo, hemp and marijuana smell
    “identical,” then the presence of hemp does not make all
    police probable cause searches based on the odor
    unreasonable. The law, and the legal landscape on
    marijuana as a whole, is ever changing but one thing is still
    true: marijuana is illegal. To date, even with the social
    acceptance of marijuana seeming to grow daily, precedent
    on the plain odor of marijuana giving law enforcement
    probable cause to search has not been overturned.
    Therefore, if hemp does have a nearly identical smell to
    marijuana — and hemp was present — it would suggest to
    this court that [the law enforcement officer] was even more
    reasonable to believe evidence of marijuana was present.
    
    Id.
     (first emphasis added) (footnotes omitted).
    ¶ 58         The reasoning and analyses of these federal cases are persuasive, and
    demonstrate the general shortcoming that underlies Defendant’s various arguments
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    on appeal. The passage of the Industrial Hemp Act, in and of itself, did not modify
    the State’s burden of proof at the various stages of our criminal proceedings.6
    1. Sufficiency of the Indictment
    ¶ 59          With the above guidance in mind, we first reject Defendant’s argument that
    the indictment charging him with possession with intent to sell or deliver THC “was
    facially defective because it did not allege with particularity an offense proscribed by
    North Carolina law subsequent to the legalization of industrial hemp.”
    ¶ 60          It is axiomatic that “a valid bill of indictment is essential to the jurisdiction of
    the trial court to try an accused for a felony.” State v. Mostafavi, 
    370 N.C. 681
    , 684,
    6 Defendant also invokes the Industrial Hemp Act to support his argument that the
    trial court erred by denying his motion to suppress because the green, leafy substance inside
    the parcel was “seized” from the target package prior to determining whether it contained an
    unlawful concentration of THC. However, for the reasons articulated in section II.A.3 above,
    to the extent that Defendant challenges the initial removal of the target package from the
    conveyor belt at the FedEx facility, such removal was not a “seizure” implicating his Fourth
    Amendment rights. And to the extent that Defendant refers to the seizure of the vacuum-
    sealed bags discovered inside the target package, the bags were seized pursuant to the
    execution of a valid, lawfully obtained search warrant and therefore did not violate
    Defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights. Further, for the reasons articulated herein, the
    Industrial Hemp Act has not changed the State’s burden of proof to overcome a motion to
    suppress.
    Finally, we note that this is not a case where the detectable odor of marijuana was the
    only suspicious fact concerning the package. The trial court’s findings of fact include, inter
    alia, that the seams of the package were sealed, the phone number listed for the recipient on
    the target package was fictitious, the sender’s address and phone number listed on the target
    package were fictitious, and the actual city from which the target package was sent differed
    from the city of origin stated on the package. We therefore need not address in this case
    whether the odor of marijuana alone may give rise to probable cause for the issuance of a
    search warrant, as the totality of the circumstances here was sufficient to give rise to
    probable cause. Accordingly, this argument is overruled.
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    811 S.E.2d 138
    , 140 (2018) (citation omitted). While “an indictment must allege all
    the essential elements of the offense endeavored to be charged, . . . an indictment
    couched in the language of the statute is generally sufficient to charge the statutory
    offense[.]” Id. at 685, 
    811 S.E.2d at 141
     (citations and internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    ¶ 61         In the instant case, the challenged indictment alleged that Defendant
    “unlawfully, willfully and feloniously did possess with intent to sell or deliver a
    controlled substance, delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol, commonly referred to as ‘THC’,
    which is included in Schedule VI of the North Carolina Controlled Substances Act.
    This act was done in violation of N.C.G.S. § 90-95(a)(1).” Defendant contends that, in
    light of the legalization of industrial hemp, “a cognizable criminal charge would be
    possession of a substance containing an unlawful quantity of the chemical compound”
    THC. Defendant argues that the indictment was facially defective because it failed to
    specifically allege that he possessed “an unlawful quantity” of THC, and thus the trial
    court lacked jurisdiction to enter judgment on this charge.
    ¶ 62         However, regardless of the passage of the Industrial Hemp Act, the
    concentration of THC is not an element of the offense of possession with intent to sell
    or deliver THC. The Controlled Substances Act makes it illegal to “possess with intent
    to manufacture, sell or deliver, a controlled substance[.]” 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 90-95
    (a)(1).
    “The offense of possession with intent to sell or deliver has the following three
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    elements: (1) possession of a substance; (2) the substance must be a controlled
    substance; (3) there must be intent to sell or distribute the controlled substance.”
    State   v.   Carr,   
    145 N.C. App. 335
    ,   341,       
    549 S.E.2d 897
    ,   901   (2001).
    “Tetrahydrocannabinols”—a broader category of substances that includes THC—are
    Schedule VI controlled substances. 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 90-94
    (2). Accordingly, by
    identifying THC as a controlled substance, the indictment at issue here was
    appropriately “couched in the language of the statute” and “sufficient to charge the
    statutory offense[.]” Mostafavi, 370 N.C. at 685, 
    811 S.E.2d at 141
     (citation omitted).
    ¶ 63           Finally, the “plain reading of Chapter 90 reveals lawful possession of a
    controlled substance is not an element of the statute but rather an exception[.]” State
    v. Palmer, 
    273 N.C. App. 169
    , 169, 
    847 S.E.2d 449
    , 450 (2020). Significantly, the
    Industrial Hemp Act did not remove THC from Schedule VI of the Controlled
    Substances Act. See 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 90-94
    (2). And if the Industrial Hemp Act creates
    an exception for industrial hemp or somehow alters the State’s well-established
    burden of proof in controlled-substance prosecutions, “[i]t shall not be necessary for
    the State to negate any exemption or exception set forth in [the Controlled Substances
    Act] in any complaint, information, indictment, or other pleading or in any trial,
    hearing, or other proceeding under” the Controlled Substances Act. 
    Id.
     § 90-113.1(a).
    The burden of proving that a controlled substance is, in fact, lawfully possessed is
    borne by the defendant. Id.
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    ¶ 64          Defendant has not shown that the indictment charging him with possession
    with intent to sell or deliver THC was fatally deficient. Accordingly, this argument is
    overruled.
    2. Motion to Dismiss
    ¶ 65          Defendant next argues that the trial court erred by denying his motion to
    dismiss the charge of possession with intent to sell or deliver THC “because there was
    insufficient evidence the brown material tested by the CCBI lab contained the
    requisite percentage of [THC] to be deemed an unlawful substance.”7 This argument,
    too, is without merit, because none of the “brown material” falls within the Industrial
    Hemp Act’s definition of “industrial hemp.”
    ¶ 66          This Court reviews a trial court’s denial of a motion to dismiss de novo. State
    v. McClaude, 
    237 N.C. App. 350
    , 352, 
    765 S.E.2d 104
    , 107 (2014). The question for
    the trial court upon a defendant’s motion to dismiss “is whether there is substantial
    evidence (1) of each essential element of the offense charged, or of a lesser offense
    included therein, and (2) of [the] defendant’s being the perpetrator of such offense. If
    so, the motion is properly denied.” 
    Id.
     at 352–53, 765 S.E.2d at 107 (citation omitted).
    7 At trial, the State’s forensic chemist testified that she tested one item (“11 sheets of
    shatter”) of the several items of brown material that were submitted to her lab at the City-
    County Bureau of Investigation. She testified that she only tested this item because there is
    no statutory “weight-based threshold for . . . THC,” and that it is “fairly common in most
    crime labs to test to [the] statutory threshold in terms of efficiency.” See 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 90
    -
    95(d)(4) (making the possession “of any quantity of . . . tetrahydrocannabinols isolated from
    the resin of marijuana” a Class I felony (emphasis added)).
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    “In making its determination, the trial court must consider all evidence admitted,
    whether competent or incompetent, in the light most favorable to the State, giving
    the State the benefit of every reasonable inference and resolving any contradictions
    in its favor.” Id. at 353, 765 S.E.2d at 107 (citation omitted).
    ¶ 67         As stated above, for the purposes of the Industrial Hemp Act, “industrial hemp”
    means “[a]ll parts and varieties of the plant Cannabis sativa (L.), cultivated or
    possessed by a grower licensed by the [North Carolina Industrial Hemp] Commission,
    whether growing or not, that contain a [THC] concentration of not more than three-
    tenths of one percent (0.3%) on a dry weight basis.” 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 106-568.51
    (7).
    ¶ 68         Defendant’s claim—that “[w]ithout determining the level of concentration of
    [THC] in the brown substance, the State did not present any evidence that the brown
    substance actually contained 0.3% or more of [THC] and was thus illegal”—assumes,
    without explicitly arguing, that the “brown material” was “industrial hemp,” as
    defined by 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 106-568.51
    (7), in the first place. We disagree.
    ¶ 69         The brown material was neither a part nor a variety of the plant Cannabis
    sativa. The State’s forensic chemist, who was tendered and accepted as an expert
    witness without objection from Defendant, testified that “[t]here was no plant
    material present” in her macroscopic identification of the solid brown material. The
    forensic chemist also testified that the brown materials were “extracts of the
    marijuana plant[.]” Thus, the brown material is not within the Industrial Hemp Act’s
    STATE V. TEAGUE
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    Opinion of the Court
    definition of “industrial hemp,” but instead more squarely falls under its definition of
    “THC”: “[t]he natural or synthetic equivalents of the substances contained in the
    plant, or in the resinous extractives of, cannabis, or any synthetic substances,
    compounds, salts, or derivatives of the plant or chemicals and their isomers with
    similar chemical structure and pharmacological activity.” 
    Id.
     § 106-568.51(8)
    (emphasis added). Further, even if we accepted Defendant’s implicit argument that
    the brown material was a “part” or “variety” of the plant Cannabis sativa, Defendant
    makes no argument that he was “a grower licensed by the [North Carolina Industrial
    Hemp] Commission,” or that the brown material was cultivated by such a licensed
    grower, as the statutory definition of “industrial hemp” requires. Id. § 106-568.51(7).
    ¶ 70          Because the brown material was not “industrial hemp” as defined by the
    Industrial Hemp Act, the State was not required to present evidence that the
    substance contained 0.3% or more of THC by dry-weight concentration in order to
    meet its burden of proof for the offense of possession with intent to sell or deliver
    THC.
    ¶ 71          Accordingly, after careful review of the record, and viewing the evidence “in
    the light most favorable to the State,” McClaude, 237 N.C. App. at 353, 765 S.E.2d at
    107 (citation omitted), we conclude that the State presented sufficient evidence to
    withstand Defendant’s motion to dismiss the charge of possession with intent to sell
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    Opinion of the Court
    or deliver THC.8 This argument is overruled.
    3. Opinion Testimony
    ¶ 72          Lastly, Defendant argues that the trial court erred by permitting several of the
    State’s witnesses to offer opinion testimony that seized substances were “marijuana,”
    “marijuana wax,” “shatter,” and “highly concentrated THC” without scientifically
    valid chemical analyses identifying them as such, in violation of Rule 702.
    ¶ 73          Our appellate courts “review the trial court’s decision to admit lay opinion
    testimony evidence for abuse of discretion, looking to whether the court’s ruling is
    manifestly unsupported by reason or is so arbitrary that it could not have been the
    result of a reasoned decision.” State v. Delau, 
    381 N.C. 226
    , 2022-NCSC-61, ¶ 29
    (citation omitted). Further, in order to show that the erroneous admission of evidence
    in a criminal trial prejudiced the defendant, the “defendant bears the burden of
    8  Defendant’s argument concerning the sufficiency of the evidence to support the
    charge of possession with intent to sell or deliver THC dovetails with his argument, addressed
    below, concerning the allegedly erroneous admission of testimony identifying the seized
    materials as unlawful controlled substances absent scientifically valid chemical analyses in
    violation of Rule 702. To the extent that Defendant’s Rule 702 argument bears on his motion
    to dismiss argument, we note that our Supreme Court has recently clarified that it would be
    error for this Court to first determine “whether the evidence suffices to support a defendant’s
    criminal conviction by ascertaining whether the evidence relevant to the issue of the
    defendant’s guilt should or should not have been admitted[,]” and then to consider “whether
    the admissible evidence, examined without reference to the allegedly inadmissible evidence
    that the trial court allowed the jury to hear, sufficed to support the defendant’s conviction.”
    State v. Osborne, 
    372 N.C. 619
    , 630, 
    831 S.E.2d 328
    , 336 (2019). Accordingly, pursuant to our
    Supreme Court’s guidance in Osborne, we cannot and should not exclude the challenged
    identification testimony from our consideration of the evidence supporting Defendant’s
    convictions. 
    Id.
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    showing that there is a reasonable possibility that a different result would have been
    reached at the trial had the trial court excluded” the erroneously admitted evidence.
    State v. Carter, 
    237 N.C. App. 274
    , 284, 
    765 S.E.2d 56
    , 63 (2014) (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted); N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1443(a). For the reasons that follow,
    we conclude that Defendant has not shown prejudicial error.
    ¶ 74          “[T]he State has the burden of proving every element of the charge beyond a
    reasonable doubt . . . .” State v. Nabors, 
    365 N.C. 306
    , 313, 
    718 S.E.2d 623
    , 627 (2011).
    Specifically, in prosecutions involving controlled substances, the State bears the
    burden of proving the substance’s identity beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Ward,
    
    364 N.C. 133
    , 147, 
    694 S.E.2d 738
    , 747 (2010). As a general rule, “the expert witness
    testimony required to establish that . . . substances introduced [at trial] are in fact
    controlled substances must be based on a scientifically valid chemical analysis and
    not mere visual inspection.” 
    Id. at 142
    , 
    694 S.E.2d at 744
    .
    ¶ 75         However, marijuana has long been excepted from this rule. Notwithstanding
    Ward, this Court has “specifically noted that marijuana is distinguishable from other
    controlled substances that require more technical analyses for positive identification.
    In keeping with a long line of cases, we [have repeatedly] held . . . that the State is
    not required to submit marijuana for chemical analysis.” State v. Mitchell, 
    224 N.C. App. 171
    , 179, 
    735 S.E.2d 438
    , 444 (2012) (citation omitted), appeal dismissed and
    disc. review denied, 
    366 N.C. 578
    , 
    740 S.E.2d 466
     (2013).
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    ¶ 76         Nevertheless, Defendant argues that “the legalization of industrial hemp in
    North Carolina has eviscerated th[e] justification” for the marijuana exception
    recognized in Mitchell and other cases. Yet assuming, arguendo, that the trial court
    abused its discretion in admitting this testimony, Defendant fails to demonstrate that
    he was prejudiced by its admission.
    ¶ 77         As the State observes, “Defendant makes no argument explaining how or for
    which convictions that evidence affected the jury’s verdict.” To be sure, Defendant’s
    assertion of prejudice is little more than a general recapitulation of his overall
    arguments regarding the Industrial Hemp Act. For example, Defendant claims that
    “the State failed to produce any evidence that the substances seized in the storage
    unit, in the bag [Defendant] carried at the storage unit, or in the residence were
    subjected to a valid scientific chemical analysis that confirmed their percentage of”
    THC. Thus, Defendant contends that the testimony from Investigator Menzie, Officer
    Smith, and Sergeant Wright “that, in their opinion, such substances were
    ‘marijuana,’ ‘marijuana wax,’ ‘shatter,’ or ‘highly concentrated THC,’ constituted the
    State’s most compelling evidence that [Defendant] was guilty of possessing the
    alleged substances in question.” Accordingly, if the “most compelling evidence” of
    Defendant’s guilt was erroneously admitted, then that admission must have been
    prejudicial. We disagree with Defendant’s contention.
    ¶ 78         First, as Defendant candidly acknowledges, the green, leafy substance in the
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    target package was tested, and the substance was determined to contain an unlawful
    concentration of THC. Defendant, therefore, could not have been prejudiced by any
    erroneously admitted testimony regarding the green, leafy substance found in the
    target package because “a scientifically valid chemical analysis” was conducted with
    respect to this substance. Ward, 
    364 N.C. at 142
    , 
    694 S.E.2d at 744
    .
    ¶ 79         Second, as discussed above, the brown material was not “industrial hemp” as
    defined in the Industrial Hemp Act. As such, the State was not required to present
    evidence of the concentration of THC present in the brown material; it needed only
    present “a scientifically valid chemical analysis” showing that the brown material
    contained THC, 
    id.,
     which the State did. Therefore, Defendant could not have been
    prejudiced by any erroneously admitted testimony identifying the brown material.
    ¶ 80         Lastly, although the green, leafy substance discovered in the storage unit was
    not tested for its concentration of THC, the State presented overwhelming evidence
    of Defendant’s guilt of the offense of possession with intent to sell or deliver
    marijuana, such that any erroneously admitted testimony regarding its identification
    could not have reasonably affected the jury’s verdict on this charge. Significantly, as
    discussed below, the State presented substantial evidence of Defendant’s
    participation in a conspiracy to traffic marijuana—a conspiracy that culminated in
    the discovery of approximately $153,000.00 worth of “high quality” marijuana inside
    the target package, which was addressed to Defendant at Defendant’s residence. The
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    Opinion of the Court
    State also presented a scientifically valid chemical analysis showing that the green,
    leafy material discovered in the target package contained an unlawful concentration
    of THC. Further, the State presented evidence of Defendant’s unlawful possession of
    various other controlled substances and drug paraphernalia, which law enforcement
    officers recovered from four distinct sources: the target package; the storage unit (to
    which the officers gained entry pursuant to a lawful search warrant by use of
    Defendant’s key and with his cooperation); a bag in Defendant’s possession when he
    arrived at the storage unit, in which some of the brown material was in plain view
    when he set down the bag at the request of a law enforcement officer; and his
    residence.
    ¶ 81          For the foregoing reasons, and in light of the substantial and overwhelming
    evidence of Defendant’s guilt, we conclude that Defendant has not shown “that there
    is a reasonable possibility that a different result would have been reached at the trial
    had the trial court excluded” any erroneously admitted testimony regarding the
    identification of any untested substances. Carter, 237 N.C. App. at 284, 765 S.E.2d at
    63 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Defendant’s argument is
    overruled.9
    9 Defendant also argues that the trial court committed plain error by admitting
    evidence concerning the chemical analysis of the green, leafy substance discovered in the
    target package when individuals involved in allegedly critical stages of that analysis did not
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    C. Conspiracy
    ¶ 82          Defendant next argues that the trial court erred by denying his motion to
    dismiss the charge of conspiracy to traffic marijuana by transportation, due to
    insufficient evidence of a conspiracy between him and another. Additionally,
    Defendant contends that the trial court erroneously and prejudicially admitted into
    evidence the recording of a phone call between Investigator Menzie and “Marcus,” the
    shipper of the target package. Defendant’s arguments are without merit.
    1. Motion to Dismiss
    ¶ 83          The elements of a criminal conspiracy are well established:
    A criminal conspiracy is an agreement between two or
    more persons to do an unlawful act or to do a lawful act in
    an unlawful way or by unlawful means. To constitute a
    conspiracy, it is not necessary that the parties should have
    come together and agreed in express terms to unite for a
    common object: A mutual, implied understanding is
    sufficient, so far as the combination or conspiracy is
    testify, which Defendant contends violated his constitutional right to confront witnesses
    against him. However, “plain error review in North Carolina is normally limited to
    instructional and evidentiary error.” State v. Lawrence, 
    365 N.C. 506
    , 516, 
    723 S.E.2d 326
    ,
    333 (2012). “Constitutional issues not raised and passed upon at trial will not be considered
    for the first time on appeal.” State v. Lloyd, 
    354 N.C. 76
    , 86–87, 
    552 S.E.2d 596
    , 607 (2001).
    Defendant acknowledges that he did not preserve this issue by objecting to the testimony
    regarding the analysis or testing of the substances in this case, nor did he object to the
    admission of the written certificate of analysis into evidence. Moreover, Defendant did not
    seek to introduce at trial the testimony of any of the “numerous individuals involved in
    critical stages of the testing process”—none of whom signed the certificate of analysis
    admitted into evidence at trial. These are the individuals that Defendant now complains he
    constitutionally should have been able to confront. This asserted error is based upon a
    constitutional right, and is not squarely an evidentiary error; thus, plain error review is not
    available and this argument is dismissed.
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    concerned, to constitute the offense.
    State v. Chavez, 
    378 N.C. 265
    , 2021-NCSC-86, ¶ 14 (citation omitted).
    ¶ 84         Significantly, “[t]he conspiracy is the crime and not its execution. Therefore,
    no overt act is necessary to complete the crime of conspiracy. As soon as the union of
    wills for the unlawful purpose is perfected, the offense of conspiracy is completed.”
    
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    ¶ 85         The State may establish the existence of a conspiracy “by direct or
    circumstantial evidence.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted). Indeed, direct evidence is not
    essential to proving a conspiracy, for such proof “is rarely obtainable. It may be, and
    generally is, established by a number of indefinite acts, each of which, standing alone,
    might have little weight, but, taken collectively, they point unerringly to the existence
    of a conspiracy.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    ¶ 86         As stated above, we review de novo a trial court’s denial of a criminal
    defendant’s motion to dismiss. McClaude, 237 N.C. App. at 352, 765 S.E.2d at 107.
    ¶ 87         Here, Defendant argues that “the State lacked evidence of any communication
    or planning between [himself] and another person that could sufficiently prove an
    agreement or understanding to traffic marijuana.” According to Defendant, “[t]he
    State’s evidence, at best, raised the suspicion of a possible association between
    [Defendant] and the shipper of the [target package], but that was not enough to
    submit this charge to the jury.” Defendant asserts that the State’s case “essentially
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    rested on the fact that ‘Joe Teague’ was the addressee listed on the” target package.
    Yet in a separate evidentiary challenge, Defendant also asserts that the trial court
    erroneously admitted into evidence the recording of a phone call between Investigator
    Menzie and Marcus. Although seemingly irrelevant to the question at hand,
    Defendant’s evidentiary argument nevertheless implicitly acknowledges that the
    State did, in fact, present additional evidence—more than just the shipping label—to
    establish the existence of a conspiracy.
    ¶ 88         Indeed, the State proffered other circumstantial evidence in support of the
    existence of a conspiracy in addition to the recording of the phone call between
    Investigator Menzie and Marcus. For example, Investigator Menzie testified that he
    estimated the street value of the “high quality” marijuana contained in the target
    package to be approximately $153,000.00. We agree with the State that such evidence
    creates “a strong inference that Marcus did not simply randomly mail the [target
    package] to Defendant but instead that he mailed it because Defendant agreed to
    accept it.” See id. at 353, 765 S.E.2d at 107 (explaining that the State is entitled to
    “the benefit of every reasonable inference” and the resolution of “any contradictions
    in its favor” on appellate review of the denial of a defendant’s motion to dismiss
    (citation omitted)). Additionally, Marcus shipped this valuable parcel from California
    to Defendant’s address using Defendant’s actual name and packed a GPS tracker
    within the target package. Viewed “in the light most favorable to the State,” id.
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    (citation omitted), these facts further indicate a mutual concern for and interest in
    the target package.
    ¶ 89         Moreover, the recorded phone call itself—which was not erroneously admitted,
    for the reasons discussed below—constitutes additional circumstantial evidence
    supporting the existence of a conspiracy. As detailed in Investigator Menzie’s search-
    warrant application for Defendant’s mobile phone, a FedEx employee informed
    Investigator Menzie that Marcus called FedEx to inquire about the target package’s
    status, requested a return call when the package was located, and left his phone
    number. In the affidavit supporting his search-warrant application, Investigator
    Menzie averred that:
    I called the number and spoke with “Marcus” who
    confirmed the tracking number of his parcel, the address it
    was going [to] and the name of the recipient. The
    information he provided was the same information listed
    on the [target package] intercepted. After obtaining that
    information, I identified myself to him and informed him I
    had his parcel in my custody. Marcus said, “F[***]” and
    hung up.
    ¶ 90         “[T]aken collectively,” Marcus’s recorded admission to Investigator Menzie
    that he sent the target package, his knowledge of its relevant details, his documented
    concern for the package’s apparent failure to reach its destination, and his profane
    exclamation upon learning that he was speaking with a law enforcement officer
    provide strong circumstantial evidence that “point[s] unerringly to the existence of a
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    conspiracy.” Chavez, ¶ 14 (citation omitted). Defendant’s argument is overruled.
    2. Statement of a Co-Conspirator
    ¶ 91         Defendant also argues that the recorded phone-call audio was inadmissible
    hearsay, which was erroneously and prejudicially admitted into evidence. We
    disagree.
    a. Standard of Review
    ¶ 92         “This Court conducts de novo review of the admission of evidence over a
    hearsay objection. An erroneous admission of hearsay necessitates a new trial only if
    the defendant shows that there is a reasonable possibility that without the error the
    jury would have reached a different result.” State v. Roberts, 
    268 N.C. App. 272
    , 276,
    
    836 S.E.2d 287
    , 291 (2019) (citations omitted), disc. review denied, 
    374 N.C. 271
    , 
    839 S.E.2d 350
     (2020).
    b. Analysis
    ¶ 93         Rule 801 of the North Carolina Rules of Evidence defines “hearsay” as “a
    statement, other than one made by the declarant while testifying at the trial or
    hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted.” N.C. Gen. Stat.
    § 8C-1, Rule 801(c). “Hearsay is not admissible except as provided by statute” or by
    the Rules of Evidence. Id. § 8C-1, Rule 802. “A statement is admissible as an exception
    to the hearsay rule if it is offered against a party and it is . . . a statement by a
    co[-]conspirator of such party during the course and in furtherance of the conspiracy.”
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    Id. § 8C-1, Rule 801(d). The proper admission into evidence of a conspirator’s
    statement against a co-conspirator “requires the State to establish that: (1) a
    conspiracy existed; (2) the acts or declarations were made by a party to it and in
    pursuance of its objectives; and (3) while it was active, that is, after it was formed
    and before it ended.” State v. Valentine, 
    357 N.C. 512
    , 521, 
    591 S.E.2d 846
    , 854 (2003)
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶ 94         Defendant argues that the State has not satisfied any of these requirements,
    primarily alleging that “[s]tatements not made between the alleged co-conspirators
    do not satisfy the criteria for admitting hearsay under the co-conspirator exception.”
    However, “when the State has introduced prima facie evidence of a conspiracy, the
    acts and declarations of each party to it in furtherance of its objectives are admissible
    against the other members regardless of their presence or absence at the time the
    acts and declarations were done or uttered.” State v. Tilley, 
    292 N.C. 132
    , 138, 
    232 S.E.2d 433
    , 438 (1977). Accordingly, Defendant’s argument that a statement must be
    made “between the alleged co-conspirators” in order to be admissible under the co-
    conspirator exception to the hearsay rule lacks merit.
    ¶ 95         Further, as the trial court found in ruling on Defendant’s objection:
    [I]n the light most favorable to the State, the State
    established a conspiracy existed and that this statement
    was made while the conspiracy was still active, that is,
    after it was formed and before it was ended; that the
    statements were made by a party to the conspiracy, to wit,
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    Marcus Rawls or a person purporting to be Marcus Rawls;
    and that it was in pursuance of its objectives in that the
    declarant was attempting to ensure that the [target]
    package was properly delivered.
    ¶ 96         After the trial court noted that it was “not aware of any requirement that the
    statement must be made to another party to the conspiracy as opposed to some third
    party who is not a co-conspirator[,]” the court overruled Defendant’s objection and
    admitted the recording of the phone call as the statement of a co-conspirator. We
    discern no error in the trial court’s ruling.
    III.     Conclusion
    ¶ 97         For the reasons stated above, including the fact that neither the initial removal
    of the target package nor the drug dog sniff constituted a search or seizure implicating
    Defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights and Defendant’s waiver of appellate review of
    his Fourth Amendment arguments concerning the initial removal of the target
    package from the conveyor belt, we affirm the trial court’s denial of Defendant’s
    motion to suppress.
    ¶ 98         The legalization of industrial hemp, which is reported to be indistinguishable
    from marijuana without quantitative chemical analysis, raises compelling legal
    issues for our courts. However, we conclude that Defendant’s arguments in the
    instant case are without merit. Accordingly, these arguments are overruled.
    ¶ 99         Similarly, Defendant’s arguments relating to the charge of conspiracy to traffic
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    marijuana by transportation are unpersuasive and overruled. For all these reasons,
    we conclude that Defendant received a fair trial, free from prejudicial error.
    AFFIRMED IN PART; NO PREJUDICIAL ERROR IN PART.
    Judges DILLON and COLLINS concur.