State v. Stroud , 252 N.C. App. 200 ( 2017 )


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  •                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA16-59
    Filed: 7 March 2017
    Duplin County, No. 12 CRS 051891
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.
    HERBERT LEE STROUD
    Appeal by Defendant from judgments entered 1 May 2015 by Judge W. Allen
    Cobb Jr. in Superior Court, Duplin County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 22 August
    2016.
    Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Special Deputy Attorney General Sandra
    Wallace-Smith, for the State.
    Appellate Defender Glenn Gerding, by Assistant Appellate Defender Daniel
    Shatz, for Defendant.
    McGEE, Chief Judge.
    Herbert Lee Stroud (“Defendant”) appeals from judgments entered after a jury
    found him guilty of first-degree felony murder, larceny, robbery with a dangerous
    weapon, and possession of stolen goods.
    I. Background
    The body of Henry Lionel Bouyer, Jr. (“Bouyer”) was discovered in a shallow
    ditch on the side of Carrolls Road in Warsaw, North Carolina, in the early morning
    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    hours of 21 August 2012. Dr. Anuradha Arcot (“Dr. Arcot”), the forensic pathologist
    who performed the autopsy, testified Bouyer died from three shots fired from a
    shotgun at close range – one to his neck, a second to his back, and a third near his
    groin. Dr. Arcot was unable to determine a specific time of death, and could only say
    that Bouyer died sometime within the twenty-four hours prior to the discovery of his
    body. The State presented a timeline of the events surrounding Bouyer’s death.
    A few days prior to the discovery of Bouyer’s body, Defendant and his stepson,
    Jeremy Stephens (“Stephens”), visited the home of Travis Jones (“Jones”), a
    mechanic. Defendant and Stephens asked Jones what alterations he could make to
    the appearance of a motorcycle. Jones replied that if he was provided the necessary
    parts and was paid for his labor, he could make any modifications they desired.
    Defendant and Stephens did not have a motorcycle with them on that day.
    Around 6:00 p.m. on 20 August 2012, Bouyer drove his motorcycle to a BP
    station in Warsaw to buy a lottery ticket. Bouyer’s motorcycle, a Suzuki GSXR 1000,
    was a distinctive black and yellow color with a Joker emblem painted on its side.
    From the BP station, Bouyer drove to a barbershop for a haircut, arriving around
    6:45 p.m. While receiving his haircut, Bouyer made and received between five and
    ten phone calls, annoying his barber and friend, Martin Batts (“Batts”). Bouyer paid
    Batts with cash from his wallet, and left on his motorcycle between 7:15 p.m. and 7:30
    p.m.
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    STATE V. STROUD
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    Bouyer was next seen at the Small Towns Convenience Mart (“Small Towns”)
    in nearby Magnolia, North Carolina. Ivey Chestnutt (“Chestnutt”), a clerk at Small
    Towns, saw Bouyer enter the store around 7:30 p.m. Chestnutt and Bouyer began a
    conversation, during which Bouyer received a number of phone calls. After finishing
    one of his phone calls, Bouyer told Chestnutt he had “a guy that wants to buy my
    motorcycle.” Bouyer explained that he “ran it out to him for a couple days, and right
    now he wants to keep bugging me, wanting [me] to rent the motorcycle out to him or
    wanting to buy it.”    Bouyer added that if the unnamed person would pay him
    $5,000.00, he would sell that person the motorcycle. Bouyer received one more phone
    call, said goodbye to Chestnutt, and left.
    Bouyer rode his motorcycle back to the BP station in Warsaw to meet with
    Defendant and Stephens. Dedra McGowan (“McGowan”), a clerk at the BP station,
    saw Bouyer enter the BP station first, followed by the Defendant shortly thereafter.
    After speaking inside the BP station for only a moment, Bouyer and Defendant left
    the station and continued talking in the parking lot with Bouyer sitting on his
    motorcycle, and Defendant and Stephens sitting in Defendant’s Jeep Cherokee (“the
    Jeep”). McGowan testified that the three “looked comfortable,” and “looked like they
    knew each other already.”      Surveillance footage from the BP station confirmed
    McGowan’s testimony, showing Bouyer and Defendant inside the BP station for a
    short period of time, and also Bouyer, Defendant, and Stephens talking in the parking
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    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    lot for about four minutes. Following this conversation, Defendant and Stephens left
    the parking lot at 8:59 p.m. in Defendant’s Jeep, and Bouyer headed in the same
    direction on his motorcycle seventeen seconds later. No testimony presented at trial
    tended to show Bouyer’s whereabouts after 8:59 p.m. on 20 August 2012.
    That same night, Defendant visited the home of his friend, Ellie Graham
    (“Graham”), in Rose Hill, North Carolina. Graham initially testified that “it was a
    little after 9:00 [p.m.] when [Defendant] came to my house[,]” but later testified that
    Defendant arrived “somewhere between 9:00 [p.m.] and 11:00 [p.m.]”            Graham
    testified that during a thirty minute visit, Defendant “wasn’t himself that day”
    because he was crying, and was generally distraught about marital problems he was
    having with his wife. Graham testified that other than Defendant having red eyes
    associated with crying, he did not notice anything different about Defendant’s
    physical appearance.     Graham testified that Defendant was alone, and that
    Defendant stated he needed to borrow some money so he could pick Stephens up from
    work that night.
    The following day, Defendant and Stephens returned to Jones’ house around
    4:00 p.m. with a motorcycle, later identified as Bouyer’s. Defendant and Stephens
    told Jones they would like the motorcycle to be stretched out and lowered, and would
    like a mural to be painted on its side. Jones told them that he could not start work
    on the motorcycle until they either purchased the required parts or paid him so he
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    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    could order the parts himself. Defendant and Stephens did not have any money with
    them at the time, so the motorcycle was parked in a field adjacent to Jones’ house.
    A few days later, Defendant and Stephens returned to Jones’ house to ask
    whether he could sell the bike or otherwise “get rid of it for them.” Jones responded
    that he would be unable to find a buyer without the proper paperwork, but if he was
    provided with the title to the motorcycle, he would attempt to find a buyer. During
    that visit, Jones asked Defendant and Stephens whether they “finally [got their]
    money problem straightened out.” Jones testified that Defendant responded “that
    any problem that they had, any money – any problem that they had had been taken
    care of, and then [Defendant] looked at [Stephens], and [Stephens] smiled, and that
    was the end of that conversation.”
    A. Law Enforcement Investigation
    Bouyer’s body was discovered the morning of 21 August 2012 around 7:30 a.m.
    Among the evidence collected at the scene by law enforcement was: a motorcycle
    helmet, later identified as Bouyer’s; a broken cell phone; a pear; and a spent 9-
    millimeter shell casing, found one hundred yards from the body. Deputy George
    Garner (“Deputy Garner”), of the Duplin County Sheriff’s Office, was asked to assist
    in identifying the phone number for the phone that was found at the scene. After
    identifying the phone number, a subpoena was issued for the subscriber information
    on the number, which in turn allowed Deputy Garner to determine that the phone
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    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    belonged to Bouyer. The Duplin County Sheriff’s Office also requested and received
    cell phone records of Defendant and Stephens, among others.
    Records from the cell phones of Defendant, Stephens, and Bouyer provided
    information regarding phone calls and text messages between Stephens and Bouyer,
    and the relative locations of the three phones on the night of 20 August 2012. First,
    the call detail records from the phones of Bouyer, Stephens, and Defendant confirmed
    that many of the phone calls Bouyer placed and received on 20 August 2012 were to
    and from the cell phone number identified as belonging to Stephens. That day,
    Bouyer called Stephens four times, and Stephens called Bouyer eleven times. The
    call detail records show that Defendant’s phone was never used to call, and did not
    receive a call from, Bouyer’s phone on 20 August 2012.
    Next, the text detail records show multiple text messages between Stephens
    and Bouyer regarding, presumably, the purchase of Bouyer’s motorcycle. Stephens
    texted Bouyer at 7:29 p.m. on 20 August 2012 that they would “[m]eet . . . at Small
    Towns,” and two minutes later, texted Bouyer that “[w]e are buying it today, ill [sic]
    let u [sic] use my card [sic] to get back tour [sic] crib.” The call detail records also
    show that Defendant’s phone was never used to send a message to, nor did it ever
    receive a message from, Bouyer’s phone.
    Finally, the call detail records, through the use of historical cell site analysis,
    also provided some evidence of the relative location of the phones of Bouyer,
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    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    Defendant, and Stephens on the night of 20 August 2012. At trial, Agent William
    Williams (“Agent Williams”), of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, testified that
    the last two phone calls made to Bouyer’s phone that resulted in location data being
    collected were made at 8:20 p.m. and 8:36 p.m. on 20 August 2012. When those calls
    were received, Bouyer’s cell phone utilized a specific cell tower and sector: tower 4c4,
    sector 2. Agent Williams testified that both the BP station and Bouyer’s residence
    were within the “footprint” of tower 4c4, sector 2, meaning calls made from those
    locations would likely be routed through that tower and sector. Regarding Stephens’
    phone, Agent Williams testified that at 8:36 p.m. and 8:39 p.m. on 20 August 2012,
    Stephens’ phone utilized that same tower and sector, which indicated that his phone
    and Bouyer’s phone “would have been within the footprint of this particular tower,”
    meaning that they “were relatively close together.” Stephens’ phone then utilized the
    same tower, but a different sector, sector 3, five times on 20 August 2012, at 9:15
    p.m., 9:17 p.m., 9:19 p.m., 9:20 p.m., and 9:55 p.m. According to Agent Williams,
    tower 4c4, sector 3 was significant because it was the sector in which Bouyer’s body
    was discovered the next morning.
    Regarding Defendant’s phone, Agent Williams testified that it utilized tower
    4c4, sector 1 four times between 9:39 p.m. and 9:48 p.m. Three of those calls – at 9:43
    p.m., 9:45 p.m., and 9:48 p.m. – were between Stephens’ and Defendant’s phones.
    Agent Williams explained that tower 4c4, sector 1, “points” to the northeast, towards
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    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    Warsaw. Defendant’s phone then utilized a different tower, tower 4bf, sector 1, near
    Rose Hill, at 11:04 p.m. Though Defendant’s phone made and received a total of
    eighty-nine calls on 20 August 2012, it never utilized tower 4c4, sector 3 on that date.
    Lieutenant Michael Stevens (“Lt. Stevens”), an investigator with the Duplin
    County Sheriff’s Office, retrieved the security footage from the BP station.         Lt.
    Stevens, who was a friend of Bouyer, knew Bouyer worked as a truck driver and
    would often park his truck in the BP station parking lot when it was not in use. While
    at the BP station retrieving the surveillance footage, Lt. Stevens noticed Bouyer’s
    truck in the parking lot.       In searching the truck, the title to Bouyer’s Suzuki
    motorcycle was located.
    After reviewing the call detail records and viewing the BP surveillance footage,
    law enforcement deemed Stephens a suspect and began surveillance of him on 24
    August 2012. During the surveillance, officers observed Stephens leave the Subway
    restaurant in Rose Hill, North Carolina where he worked, in Defendant’s Jeep.
    Following him from the Subway, officers observed Defendant and Stephens make
    stops at several locations, and eventually followed the pair to Jones’ residence. As a
    result of the surveillance, law enforcement seized Bouyer’s motorcycle from the field
    adjacent to Jones’ residence.
    Law enforcement obtained a warrant to search Defendant’s Jeep on 28 August
    2012. From the Jeep, law enforcement retrieved a wallet, found underneath the
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    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    center console of the vehicle.     The wallet contained Bouyer’s North Carolina
    registration card identifying him as the owner of a Suzuki motorcycle. Subsequent
    forensic testing revealed Defendant’s DNA on the wallet. Law enforcement also
    found a bag containing a pear in the back cargo area of the Jeep.
    The same day, law enforcement also obtained and executed a search warrant
    on Defendant’s home, where both he and Stephens lived. In Stephens’ bedroom, law
    enforcement recovered a motorcycle helmet, in which subsequent testing revealed the
    presence of Stephens’ DNA, but not Defendant’s or Bouyer’s. At the time the search
    was executed, Defendant’s bedroom door was locked and had to be forced open. In
    Defendant’s bedroom, law enforcement discovered a Lorcin 9-millimeter handgun
    hidden inside the frame of an electric heater, along with a box of 9-millimeter bullets.
    A credit card belonging to Stephens was found in Defendant’s closet, indicating that
    both Defendant and Stephens “seemed to occupy that residence” and had regular
    access to the entire house.    Subsequent forensics testing confirmed that the 9-
    millimeter shell casing found one hundred yards from Bouyer’s body had been fired
    from the 9-millimeter handgun found hidden in Defendant’s bedroom. Police also
    found shotgun shell wadding in the backyard of the residence, and a pear tree in the
    backyard of the adjoining residence. No shotgun was recovered from Defendant’s and
    Stephens’ residence.
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    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    Items seized from both Defendant’s car and home, including a pair of Stephen’s
    shoes; a pair of Defendant’s shoes; a pair of Defendant’s pants; the front and rear floor
    mats from Defendant’s Jeep; the rear cargo floor lining from Defendant’s Jeep; a pair
    of gloves; and a black trash bag, among others, were sent to the North Carolina State
    Crime Lab for testing. None of the items seized from Defendant or Stephens tested
    positive for the presence of blood. Based on the evidence collected throughout the
    investigation, a warrant for Defendant’s arrest was issued 7 September 2012.
    B. Indictment and Trial
    Defendant was indicted by a grand jury on 6 October 2014, and his trial began
    on 20 April 2015. At trial, the State presented the testimony of thirty-seven witnesses
    over a span of six days. At the conclusion of the State’s case, Defendant’s counsel
    made the following motion:
    [Defendant’s Counsel]: If Your Honor please, the defendant
    would -- as to Count 1 of the indictment charging murder
    by premeditation and deliberation, we would ask for a
    directed verdict. We would acknowledge that there’s
    enough to go to the jury on the felony murder, but I do
    not – no premeditation or deliberation would be supported.
    After hearing from the State, Defendant’s counsel clarified that the motion for a
    directed verdict included counts two - four of the indictment, on the charges of felony
    larceny, robbery with a dangerous weapon, and possession of stolen goods. The trial
    court denied Defendant’s motion.
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    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    The jury returned a verdict on 1 May 2015 finding Defendant guilty of first-
    degree murder in the perpetration of a felony only; it specifically declined to find
    Defendant guilty of first-degree murder on a theory of premeditation and
    deliberation. The jury also convicted Defendant of felony larceny, robbery with a
    dangerous weapon, and possession of stolen goods. After the verdict was announced,
    Defendant moved “to set aside the verdict for lack of evidence and for legal errors.”
    The trial court denied Defendant’s motion. The trial court then entered judgments
    in accordance with the jury’s verdict, and sentenced Defendant to life imprisonment
    without the possibility of parole on the charge of first-degree murder, and to a
    concurrent term of imprisonment between sixty-four and eighty-nine months for the
    other three convictions. Defendant appeals.
    II. Analysis
    Defendant contends the trial court erred by denying his motion to dismiss and
    failing to arrest judgment on the three felonies underlying his conviction for felony
    first-degree murder. He also contends the trial court plainly erred by allowing the
    introduction of testimony regarding his attempts to hire an attorney.
    A. Denial of Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss
    Defendant argues the trial court erred in failing to dismiss for insufficient
    evidence the charges of robbery with a dangerous weapon, larceny, and first-degree
    murder. As a preliminary matter, we must determine whether this argument has
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    Opinion of the Court
    been properly preserved for our review. As noted, Defendant moved for directed
    verdict on the charge of first-degree murder under a theory of premeditation and
    deliberation at the close of State’s evidence, but conceded at that time “that there’s
    enough to go to the jury on the felony murder.” Before the trial court ruled on the
    directed verdict motion, Defendant clarified that the motion was also made as to
    counts two - four of the indictment, those being the charges of larceny, robbery with
    a dangerous weapon, and possession of stolen goods. After the motion was denied
    and the jury returned its verdicts, Defendant then made a separate motion “to set
    aside the verdict for lack of evidence and for legal errors,” which was also denied.
    In State v. Mercer, 
    317 N.C. 87
    , 
    343 S.E.2d 885
     (1986), our Supreme Court
    explained that a defendant’s motion “to set aside the verdict as being against the
    weight of the evidence” is “properly denominated a motion for dismissal for
    insufficiency of the evidence to sustain a conviction . . . after return of a verdict of
    guilty and before entry of judgment, [N.C. Gen. Stat.] § 15A-1227(a)(3).” Mercer, 317
    N.C. at 99-100, 
    343 S.E.2d at 893
     (citation and quotation marks omitted, alteration
    in original). Given that Defendant’s motion in the present case was nearly identical
    to that made by the Mercer defendant, we likewise treat Defendant’s motion as a
    motion to dismiss pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 15A-1227(a)(3). Id.
    N.C.G.S. § 15A-1227(a)(3) provides in relevant part: “A motion for dismissal
    for insufficiency of the evidence to sustain a conviction may be made . . . [a]fter return
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    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    of a verdict of guilty and before entry of judgment.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1227(a)(3)
    (2015). The statute also specifically provides that a “[f]ailure to make the motion at
    the close of the State’s evidence or after all the evidence is not a bar to making the
    motion at a later time,” and that “[t]he sufficiency of all evidence introduced in a
    criminal case is reviewable on appeal without regard to whether a motion has been
    made during trial[.]” N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 15A-1227(b),(d) (2015). Notwithstanding
    Defendant’s anomalous concession that the evidence presented by the State was
    sufficient to withstand a motion for a directed verdict as to the charge of first-degree
    murder in the perpetration of a felony, we are satisfied that Defendant’s latter
    motion, standing alone, was sufficient to properly preserve this issue for our review.
    In accord with precedent, we interpret that motion, styled by Defendant’s counsel as
    a motion “to set aside the verdict for lack of evidence and for legal errors,” as a motion
    to dismiss pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1227(a)(3). Because Defendant’s § 15A-
    1227(a)(3) motion was made as to all of the convictions against him – including his
    conviction for first-degree felony murder – we conclude that Defendant properly
    moved to dismiss each of the charges against him, and consider the merits of
    Defendant’s argument.
    This Court reviews a trial court’s denial of a motion to dismiss de novo. State
    v. Smith, 
    186 N.C. App. 57
    , 62, 
    650 S.E.2d 29
    , 33 (2007) (citing State v. McKinnon,
    
    306 N.C. 288
    , 298, 
    293 S.E.2d 118
    , 125 (1982)). Our review of a trial court’s ruling
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    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    on a motion to dismiss is the same regardless of when the motion was made. State v.
    Scott, 
    356 N.C. 591
    , 595, 
    573 S.E.2d 866
    , 868 (2002). In ruling on a motion to dismiss,
    “the trial court need determine only whether there is substantial evidence of each
    essential element of the crime and that the defendant is the perpetrator. Substantial
    evidence is that amount of relevant evidence necessary to persuade a rational juror
    to accept a conclusion.” State v. Winkler, 
    368 N.C. 572
    , 574, 
    780 S.E.2d 824
    , 826
    (2015) (citation and quotation marks omitted). “The terms ‘more than a scintilla of
    evidence’ and ‘substantial evidence’ are in reality the same and simply mean that the
    evidence must be existing and real, not just seeming or imaginary.”           State v.
    Earnhardt, 
    307 N.C. 62
    , 66, 
    296 S.E.2d 649
    , 652 (1982) (citation omitted).          In
    reviewing the trial court’s ruling, we must evaluate the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the State, and all contradictions in the evidence must be resolved in its
    favor. State v. Malloy, 
    309 N.C. 176
    , 179, 
    305 S.E.2d 718
    , 720 (1983). The State
    is entitled to every reasonable intendment and every
    reasonable inference to be drawn therefrom; contradictions
    and discrepancies are for the jury to resolve and do not
    warrant dismissal; and all of the evidence actually
    admitted, whether competent or incompetent, which is
    favorable to the State is to be considered by the court in
    ruling on the motion.
    Winkler, 368 N.C. at 574, 780 S.E.2d at 826 (citation omitted).
    “If the trial court finds substantial evidence, whether direct or circumstantial,
    or a combination, to support a finding that the offense charged has been committed
    and that the defendant committed it, the case is for the jury and the motion to dismiss
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    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    should be denied.” Id. (citation omitted). “Ultimately, the question for the court is
    whether a reasonable inference of defendant’s guilt may be drawn from the
    circumstances.” State v. Lee, 
    348 N.C. 474
    , 488, 
    501 S.E.2d 334
    , 343 (1998) (citation
    omitted). If, however, the evidence presented at trial is “sufficient only to raise a
    suspicion or conjecture as to either the commission of the offense or the identity of
    the defendant as the perpetrator, the motion to dismiss must be allowed.” State v.
    Golphin, 
    352 N.C. 364
    , 458, 
    533 S.E.2d 168
    , 229-30 (2000) (citation omitted).
    Felony murder is defined in 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-17
     as: “A murder
    which . . . shall be committed in the perpetration or attempted perpetration of any
    arson, rape or a sex offense, robbery, kidnapping, burglary, or other felony committed
    or attempted with the use of a deadly weapon shall be deemed to be murder in the
    first degree[.]” 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. §14-17
    (a) (2015). “[T]he elements necessary to prove
    felony murder are that [1] the killing took place [2] while the accused was
    perpetrating or attempting to perpetrate one of the enumerated felonies [in N.C.G.S.
    § 14-17].” State v. Bunch, 
    363 N.C. 841
    , 846-47, 
    689 S.E.2d 866
    , 870 (2010) (quotation
    omitted). When the jury returned its verdict finding Defendant guilty of first-degree
    felony murder, it indicated that the felonies underlying the murder conviction were
    larceny, robbery with a dangerous weapon, and possession of stolen goods.          As
    Defendant only argues that the State failed to present “substantial evidence” that he
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    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    was the perpetrator of larceny and robbery with a dangerous weapon, we only address
    those two crimes.1
    Defendant was convicted of felony larceny, pursuant to 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14
    -
    72(a), and robbery with a dangerous weapon, pursuant to 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-87
    .
    Defendant does not argue that the State failed to present substantial evidence that
    larceny and robbery with a dangerous weapon occurred; rather, the gravamen of
    Defendant’s argument is that the State failed to provide substantial evidence that
    Defendant was the perpetrator of those two offenses. We disagree.
    The State presented evidence tending to show that, in the days prior to 20
    August 2012, Defendant and Stephens visited Jones’ residence and were interested
    in changing the appearance of a motorcycle, though they did not have a motorcycle
    with them at the time. Through a multitude of witnesses, the State then presented
    a timeline of Defendant’s, Stephens’, and Bouyer’s movements on the evening of 20
    August 2012 from roughly 6:00 p.m. until 8:59 p.m. At 8:59 p.m., Bouyer departed a
    meeting with Defendant and Stephens that occurred in the parking lot of the BP
    station, and all three men were seen heading off in the same direction. Defendant
    and Stephens were the last to see Bouyer until his body was discovered early the next
    1 While Defendant concedes there was substantial evidence that he committed the crime of
    possession of stolen goods, he argues that possession of stolen goods may never serve as the predicate
    felony for a felony first-degree murder conviction. Because we determine the State presented
    substantial evidence on the robbery with a dangerous weapon and larceny charges, we do not address
    this argument.
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    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    morning.   In the days following the discovery of Bouyer’s body, Defendant and
    Stephens were in possession of Bouyer’s motorcycle – the same motorcycle Bouyer
    was last seen riding at 8:59 p.m. on 20 August 2015. Evidence presented by the State
    showed Defendant and Stephens delivered Bouyer’s motorcycle to Jones in the days
    after Bouyer’s death, attempted to have the appearance of the motorcycle altered, and
    later pursued its sale or destruction.
    Other evidence suggested Defendant’s presence at the scene where Bouyer’s
    motorcycle was taken, in that Stephens and Defendant were last seen leaving the BP
    station together in Defendant’s Jeep at 8:59 p.m. Stephens’ cellphone was then used
    a total of four times within twenty-one minutes of 8:59 p.m. in the “footprint” of tower
    4c4, sector 3, the cell tower and sector in which Bouyer’s body was later discovered.
    Defendant’s DNA was found on Bouyer’s wallet, which in turn was discovered in
    Defendant’s Jeep. The evidence also suggested that two guns were used at the scene
    where Bouyer’s body was later found; Bouyer was killed by three shots from a
    shotgun, and a spent 9-millimeter shell casing was also found within one hundred
    yards of Bouyer’s body. Forensic testing matched the spent shell casing to a Lorcin
    9-millimeter handgun later found hidden in Defendant’s bedroom.
    The evidence presented by the State at trial allowed a reasonable inference
    that Defendant participated in the robbery and larceny of Bouyer’s motorcycle, and
    that Bouyer was killed during that robbery and larceny. To the extent that some
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    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    evidence suggested Defendant was alone for a portion of the night, when visiting
    Graham, and tended to show that Defendant’s cellphone was never used within the
    footprint of Tower 4c4, sector 3, these “contradictions and discrepancies [were] for the
    jury to resolve and [did] not warrant dismissal.” Winkler, 368 N.C. at 574, 780 S.E.2d
    at 826. In sum, we hold that the State presented substantial evidence to allow the
    jury to draw a reasonable inference that Defendant was the perpetrator of robbery
    with a dangerous weapon and larceny. Lee, 348 N.C. at 488, 
    501 S.E.2d at 343
    . While
    much of this evidence was circumstantial, circumstantial evidence is all a trial court
    needs to deny a defendant’s motion to dismiss for insufficient evidence, and it is then
    for the jury to resolve conflicts in the evidence and determine the defendant’s guilt
    beyond a reasonable doubt. Winkler, 368 N.C. at 574, 780 S.E.2d at 826. The trial
    court did not err in denying Defendant’s motion to dismiss.
    B. Evidence Regarding Defendant’s Attempts to Hire An Attorney
    Defendant argues the trial court erred in allowing the introduction of evidence
    regarding Defendant’s attempts to hire legal counsel prior to his arrest. As Defendant
    concedes, he failed to timely object at trial to the testimony regarding his efforts to
    hire an attorney. Due to that failure, the State contends that Defendant has waived
    all appellate review of the issue, including our review for plain error. As support for
    this proposition, the State cites State v. Houser, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 
    768 S.E.2d 626
    , 632 (2015), in which this Court held that “Constitutional issues not raised and
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    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    passed upon at trial will not be considered for the first time on appeal, not even for
    plain error.” Houser, ___ N.C. App. at ___, 768 S.E.2d at 632 (quoting State v. Gobal,
    
    186 N.C. App. 308
    , 
    651 S.E.2d 279
     (2007), aff’d per curiam, 
    362 N.C. 342
    , 
    661 S.E.2d 732
     (2008) (footnote and citations omitted)). However, our Supreme Court recently
    reaffirmed that where an alleged constitutional error occurs during either
    instructions to the jury or on evidentiary issues, an appellate court must review for
    plain error if it is specifically and distinctly contended:
    [W]e apply the general rule that “failure to raise a
    constitutional issue at trial generally waives that issue for
    appeal.” [State v. Wilson, 
    363 N.C. 478
    , 484, 
    681 S.E.2d 325
    , 330 (2009)].       Nevertheless, because the alleged
    constitutional error occurred during the trial court’s
    instructions to the jury, we may review for plain error. State
    v. Cummings, 
    352 N.C. 600
    , 612-13, 
    536 S.E.2d 36
    , 47
    (2000) (quoting State v. Greene, 
    351 N.C. 562
    , 566, 
    528 S.E.2d 575
    , 578, cert. denied, 
    531 U.S. 1041
    , 
    121 S. Ct. 635
    ,
    
    148 L. Ed. 2d 543
     (2000) (“[W]e have previously decided
    that plain error analysis applies only to instructions to the
    jury and evidentiary matters.”)), cert. denied, 
    532 U.S. 997
    ,
    
    121 S. Ct. 1660
    , 
    149 L. Ed. 2d 641
     (2001).
    State v. May, 
    368 N.C. 112
    , 118, 
    772 S.E.2d 458
    , 462-63 (2015) (emphasis added).
    Our Supreme Court has conducted plain error review in cases in which the defendant
    asserted on appeal that the introduction of evidence and testimony violated their
    constitutional rights, despite the lack of an objection at trial. See, e.g., State v. Moore,
    
    366 N.C. 100
    , 104-05, 
    726 S.E.2d 168
    , 172 (2012); State v. Raines, 
    362 N.C. 1
    , 16-17,
    
    653 S.E.2d 126
    , 136 (2007).
    - 19 -
    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    In the present case, Defendant argued in his brief to this Court that admission
    of portions of two witnesses’ testimony, admitted without Defendant’s objection, was
    erroneous, and admission of the testimony violated his Sixth Amendment rights.
    Since this argument is rooted in an “evidentiary matter[],” Greene, 
    351 N.C. at 566
    ,
    
    528 S.E.2d at 578
    , we consider whether introduction of this evidence amounted to
    plain error.2 See State v. Garcell, 
    363 N.C. 10
    , 53, 
    678 S.E.2d 618
    , 645 (2009); N.C.
    R. App. P. 10(a)(4). The plain error rule
    is always to be applied cautiously and only in the
    exceptional case where, after reviewing the entire record,
    it can be said the claimed error is a “fundamental error,
    something so basic, so prejudicial, so lacking in its
    elements that justice cannot have been done,” or “where
    [the error] is grave error which amounts to a denial of a
    fundamental right of the accused,” or the error has
    “‘resulted in a miscarriage of justice or in the denial to
    appellant of a fair trial’” or where the error is such as to
    “seriously affect the fairness, integrity or public reputation
    of judicial proceedings” or where it can be fairly said
    “the . . . mistake had a probable impact on the jury’s finding
    that the defendant was guilty.”
    Cummings, 
    352 N.C. at 616
    , 
    536 S.E.2d at 49
     (alterations in original) (quoting State
    v. Odom, 
    307 N.C. 655
    , 660, 
    300 S.E.2d 375
    , 378 (1983)). To prevail, a defendant
    must show “not only that there was error, but that absent the error, the jury probably
    2  To be entitled to plain error review, a defendant must “specifically and distinctly contend
    that the alleged error constituted plain error.” State v. Lawrence, 
    365 N.C. 506
    , 516, 
    723 S.E.2d 326
    ,
    333 (2012). Here, Defendant has done so; therefore, we proceed to a plain error analysis.
    - 20 -
    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    would have reached a different result.” State v. Haselden, 
    357 N.C. 1
    , 13, 
    577 S.E.2d 594
    , 602 (2003) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    Defendant contends the State improperly elicited statements from two
    witnesses regarding his attempts to hire a lawyer, and that these statements likely
    affected the jury’s verdict. First, one of the law enforcement officers involved in the
    case, Lieutenant Andrew Hanchey (“Lt. Hanchey”), explained from the witness stand
    that a notepad was among the evidence recovered during a search of Defendant’s
    wife’s car. At the prompting of the prosecutor, Lt. Hanchey testified that the notepad
    contained a note which read “lawyers to call” and listed the names of several law
    firms. Second, McGowan, the clerk at the BP station, was asked by the prosecutor to
    recall all instances in which she had seen Defendant and Stephens after Bouyer’s
    body had been discovered. McGowan recounted her last encounter with Defendant:
    [Prosecutor:] . . . [W]hen was the next time you saw
    [Defendant]?
    [McGowan:] He came in the store. I’m not sure the date,
    but it’s the date that he got arrested. He came in the store.
    I was working second shift that day, and he had a little,
    yellow notepad, and he was trying to get me to write my
    name and my address and stuff down, because he said that
    they were going to get a lawyer and, you know, “Put your
    information down right here so we can go get this lawyer.”
    [Prosecutor:] Did you agree to do that?
    [McGowan:] No.
    [Prosecutor:] Why not?
    - 21 -
    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    [McGowan:] I told [Defendant] that I didn’t need a lawyer,
    that guilty people need a lawyer, and I wanted him to leave
    me alone.
    This particular exchange ended that day’s testimony; except for mentioning the
    exchange as a reference point for resuming McGowan’s testimony the following day,
    the prosecutor did not ask any additional questions regarding Defendant’s attempts
    to hire an attorney.
    The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees that “[i]n
    all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right . . . to have the assistance
    of counsel for his defense.” U.S. CONST. Amend. VI. This fundamental right was made
    applicable to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment, see, e.g., McMann v.
    Richardson, 
    397 U.S. 759
    , 
    25 L. Ed. 2d 763
     (1970); State v. Wise, 
    64 N.C. App. 108
    ,
    
    306 S.E.2d 569
     (1983), and includes the right of an accused to select an attorney of
    his or her choice. State v. Yelton, 
    87 N.C. App. 554
    , 559, 
    361 S.E.2d 753
    , 757 (1987).
    Our Supreme Court has held that “there are ‘no special circumstances that would
    justify use of a constitutional privilege to discredit or convict a person who asserts
    it[;] [t]he value of constitutional privileges is largely destroyed if persons can be
    penalized for relying on them.’” State v. Ladd, 
    308 N.C. 272
    , 284, 
    302 S.E.2d 164
    ,
    172 (1983) (quoting Grunewald v. United States, 
    353 U.S. 391
    , 425, 
    1 L. Ed. 2d 931
    ,
    955 (1956) (Black, J., concurring)).
    - 22 -
    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    We have no difficulty concluding that the two exchanges violated Defendant’s
    Sixth Amendment right to counsel, and should not have been admitted into evidence.
    Lt. Hanchey’s statement served no purpose other than to inform the jury that
    Defendant had attempted to hire an attorney prior to his arrest.              Likewise,
    McGowan’s opinion that only “guilty people need a lawyer” is the epitome of using “a
    constitutional privilege to discredit or convict a person who asserts it.” Ladd, 308
    N.C. at 284, 
    302 S.E.2d at 172
    .        Having determined that admission of these
    statements was error, we consider whether admission of these statements amounted
    to plain error. We hold that it did not.
    A review of the transcript reveals that, while the prosecutor in this case elicited
    Lt. Hanchey’s testimony regarding the “lawyers to call” note, the prosecutor did not
    emphasize or highlight Defendant’s exercise of his rights, and questioning
    immediately moved on to other subjects. With regard to McGowan’s testimony that
    “only guilty people need lawyers,” we note that the prosecutor’s question which
    elicited this response was relatively innocuous – the prosecutor merely asked
    McGowan why she declined to give Defendant her contact information.                After
    McGowan gave her inflammatory answer, the prosecutor declined to capitalize on or
    to emphasize McGowan’s comments. See Moore, 366 N.C. at 106-107, 
    726 S.E.2d at 173-74
     (holding that statements of a witness regarding the defendant’s invocation of
    his constitutional rights did not amount to plain error where the prosecutor “did not
    - 23 -
    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    emphasize, capitalize on, or directly elicit [the witness’s] prohibited responses”); State
    v. Alexander, 
    337 N.C. 182
    , 196, 
    446 S.E.2d 83
    , 91 (1994) (finding no plain error where
    the prosecutor asked a State’s witness, a police officer, if the defendant spoke or
    talked to him, and noting that the comments were “relatively benign” and that the
    prosecutor did not emphasize that the defendant did not speak with law enforcement
    after his arrest). Given the passing nature of these statements, the lack of emphasis
    or detailed discussion of these comments by the prosecutor, and the voluminous
    amount of other testimony and evidence received throughout this case, we do not
    believe the statements by Lt. Hanchey and McGowan “had a probable impact on the
    jury’s finding that [D]efendant was guilty.” Cummings, 352 N.C. at 616, 
    536 S.E.2d at 49
    . Therefore, admission of the testimony was not plain error.
    C. Failure to Arrest Judgment/Vacatur of Underlying Felonies
    Defendant next argues the trial court erred by failing to arrest judgment on all
    of the felonies underlying his felony first-degree murder conviction.         The State
    concedes the error, but maintains the proper remedy is to arrest judgment on
    Defendant’s robbery with a dangerous weapon conviction, and vacate the larceny and
    possession of stolen goods convictions.
    In its verdict, the jury indicated it had determined that the robbery with a
    dangerous weapon, larceny, and possession of stolen goods convictions served as the
    predicate felonies underlying Defendant’s conviction for first-degree felony murder.
    - 24 -
    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    Our Supreme Court has held that when a defendant is convicted of felony murder,
    “the underlying felony supporting a conviction for felony murder merges into the
    murder conviction.     The underlying felony provides no basis for an additional
    sentence, and any judgment imposed thereon must be arrested.” State v. Barlowe,
    
    337 N.C. 371
    , 381, 
    446 S.E.2d 352
    , 358-59 (1994); see also State v. Millsaps, 
    356 N.C. 556
    , 560, 
    572 S.E.2d 767
    , 770 (2002) (noting that conviction of the underlying felony
    “constitutes an element of first-degree murder,” requiring merger for sentencing
    purposes). Following this rule in the present case, we find the trial court erred in
    failing to arrest judgment on Defendant’s conviction for robbery with a dangerous
    weapon.
    Normally, “[o]nly one underlying felony is necessary to support a felony-
    murder conviction[.]” Barlowe, 337 N.C. at 381, 446 S.E.2d at 358. While the merger
    rule “requires the trial court to arrest judgment on at least one of the underlying
    felony murder convictions if two separate convictions supported the conviction for
    felony murder,” the trial court is permitted to use its “discretion to select which felony
    conviction would serve as the underlying felony.” State v. Ridgeway, 
    185 N.C. App. 423
    , 437, 
    648 S.E.2d 886
    , 896 (2007) (emphasis added) (citations and internal
    quotation marks omitted).      The other felony convictions are not required to be
    arrested under the merger rule. 
    Id.
    - 25 -
    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    Application of this rule would suggest that a remand to the trial court is
    necessary for it to exercise discretion in choosing which of the three felonies on which
    to arrest judgment. However, remand for this purpose is not needed in the present
    case because the three felonies underlying Defendant’s first-degree murder conviction
    are not “separate convictions.” Defendant’s convictions for robbery with a dangerous
    weapon, larceny, and possession of stolen goods all related to the same event – the
    taking and subsequent possession of Bouyer’s motorcycle. Our Supreme Court has
    held that felony larceny is a lesser-included offense of robbery with a dangerous
    weapon when both charges stem from the same taking. See State v. Cobb, 
    150 N.C. App. 31
    , 43, 
    563 S.E.2d 600
    , 609 (2002) (citing State v. White, 
    322 N.C. 506
    , 518, 
    369 S.E.2d 813
    , 819 (1988)). A trial court “violate[s] federal and state constitutional
    principles against double jeopardy,” when it sentences a defendant for a robbery with
    a dangerous weapon and larceny arising out of the same taking, and the proper
    remedy is to arrest judgment on the larceny conviction. State v. Jaynes, 
    342 N.C. 249
    , 276, 
    464 S.E.2d 448
    , 465 (1995) (citing State v. Adams, 
    331 N.C. 317
    , 333, 
    416 S.E.2d 380
    , 389 (1992)).
    Similarly, our Supreme Court has held that while “[l]arceny and possession of
    property stolen in the larceny are separate crimes” because “[e]ach crime requires
    proof of an additional fact which the other does not,” our General Assembly “did not
    intend to punish an individual for receiving or possession of the same goods that he
    - 26 -
    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    stole.” State v. Perry, 
    305 N.C. 225
    , 234-37, 
    287 S.E.2d 810
    , 815-17 (1982), overruled
    in part on other grounds by State v. Mumford, 
    364 N.C. 394
    , 402, 
    699 S.E.2d 911
    , 916
    (2010); see also State v. Moses, 
    205 N.C. App. 629
    , 640, 
    698 S.E.2d 688
    , 696 (2010)
    (noting that the “Legislature . . . did not intend to subject a defendant to multiple
    punishments for both robbery and the possession of stolen goods that were the
    proceeds of the same robbery”). In Perry, a case in which the defendant was convicted
    of both larceny and possession of the goods stolen in that larceny, our Supreme Court
    chose to vacate the possession of stolen goods conviction, rather than arrest judgment
    on that conviction. Perry, 305 N.C. at 237, 
    287 S.E.2d at 817
    . Following Perry, we do
    the same in the present case.
    III. Conclusion
    The State presented “substantial evidence” that Defendant was the
    perpetrator of the crimes for which he was charged and convicted, and the trial court
    did not err in denying Defendant’s motion to dismiss the charges of first-degree felony
    murder, robbery with a dangerous weapon, and larceny. The trial court erred in
    admitting the two statements elicited by the State regarding Defendant’s attempts
    to hire an attorney. Those statements violated Defendant’s Sixth Amendment right
    to counsel. However, given the passing nature of those statements, the circumstances
    in which they arose, and the voluminous other evidence presented against Defendant
    - 27 -
    STATE V. STROUD
    Opinion of the Court
    in the course of his trial, we conclude that the error did not likely affect the jury’s
    verdict and for that reason did not amount to plain error.
    Regarding Defendant’s sentencing, the trial court’s judgment of life in prison
    without the possibility of parole corresponding with Defendant’s conviction for first-
    degree felony murder remains undisturbed.          However, we arrest judgment on
    Defendant’s convictions for robbery with a dangerous weapon and larceny, and vacate
    Defendant’s conviction for possession of stolen goods.
    NO ERROR IN PART; NO PLAIN ERROR IN PART; JUDGMENT
    ARRESTED IN PART; VACATED IN PART.
    Judges STROUD and INMAN concur.
    - 28 -