State v. McNeill ( 2018 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. 446A13
    Filed 8 June 2018
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.
    MARIO ANDRETTE McNEILL
    Appeal as of right pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-27(a) from a judgment imposing
    a sentence of death entered by Judge James Floyd Ammons Jr. on 29 May 2013 in
    Superior Court, Cumberland County, upon a jury verdict finding defendant guilty of
    first-degree murder. Heard in the Supreme Court on 9 May 2017 in session in the
    Old Chowan County Courthouse (1767) in the Town of Edenton pursuant to N.C.G.S.
    § 7A-10(a).
    Joshua H. Stein, Attorney General, by Anne M. Middleton and Derrick C.
    Mertz, Special Deputy Attorneys General, for the State.
    Glenn Gerding, Appellate Defender, and Andrew DeSimone, Benjamin
    Dowling-Sendor, and Daniel Shatz, Assistant Appellate Defenders, for
    defendant-appellant.
    HUDSON, Justice.
    Defendant Mario Andrette McNeill appeals his conviction and sentence of
    death for the first-degree murder of Shaniya Davis. Defendant was found guilty of
    first-degree murder based on malice, premeditation, and deliberation, and under the
    felony murder rule, with the underlying felonies being sex offense of a child and
    kidnapping. Defendant was also convicted of related charges of sexual offense of a
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    child by an adult offender, taking indecent liberties with a child, first-degree
    kidnapping, human trafficking, and subjecting the victim to sexual servitude. We
    find no error in defendant’s trial or sentencing, and we further determine that
    defendant’s sentence of death is not disproportionate to his crimes.
    Background
    The evidence at trial tended to show that in September 2009, Shaniya Davis
    was five years old and, along with her mother, Antoinette Davis, and her seven-year-
    old brother, C.D., lived in the trailer of Antoinette’s sister, Brenda Davis, located in
    Sleepy Hollow Trailer Park (Sleepy Hollow) in Fayetteville, North Carolina. Brenda
    had previously “been seeing” defendant, who also went by the nickname “Mano,”1 and
    he had given her the deposit to move into the Sleepy Hollow trailer.               Because
    defendant spent time at the trailer, he knew Antoinette and had been in the presence
    of Shaniya and C.D. before, and he also knew how to get into the trailer, even when
    the door was locked. At the time of the events at issue, Brenda was “seeing” Jeroy
    Smith, the father of her children. Brenda, Jeroy, and their children stayed in the
    back bedroom, while Antoinette and her children stayed in the front room of the
    trailer. Defendant lived with April Autry, the mother of his eighteen-month-old
    daughter, on Washington Drive in Fayetteville.
    1Because defendant is referred to as “Mano” in the transcript, we use that spelling
    here; however, in a police interview, he explained that he was known as “Mono,” which people
    confused with the “kissing disease.”
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    On the evening of 9 November and continuing into the early morning hours of
    10 November 2009, after ingesting cocaine and “a couple shots of liquor,” defendant
    began “text[ing] all the females in [his] phone.” He tried to text Brenda, but her
    phone was turned off. Another woman, Taisa McClain, who also lived in Sleepy
    Hollow, began exchanging text messages with defendant and agreed to invite him
    over; however, by the time defendant arrived at Sleepy Hollow at 2:52 a.m. on 10
    November, Taisa had fallen asleep and did not answer defendant’s texts. At 3:06
    a.m., defendant texted “Goodnight” to Taisa and then at 3:07 a.m., defendant again
    attempted to text Brenda.
    At around 5:30 a.m., Brenda woke up because she thought she heard the
    bedroom door open, and she mentioned this to Jeroy. Brenda and Jeroy went back to
    sleep but were reawakened at around 6:00 a.m. by Antoinette, who came into the
    room and asked if they had seen Shaniya. When they responded in the negative,
    Antoinette told them she was going outside to search for Shaniya. While Antoinette
    was outside, C.D. told Brenda and Jeroy that defendant had been there the previous
    night. Jeroy asked C.D. if he was sure about this, and C.D. responded, “yeah.”
    Brenda texted and called defendant, but he did not answer his telephone. Jeroy then
    called April Autry, who told him that defendant was not with her.
    Antoinette returned to the trailer and reported that she had knocked on doors
    in Sleepy Hollow but that no one had seen Shaniya. Brenda told Antoinette to call
    the police, but Antoinette was hesitant to do so. Brenda and Jeroy went outside and
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    noticed that the stairs and railings of the trailer contained feces that had not been
    there the night before. There was also what appeared to be illegible yellow writing
    scribbled within the feces on a railing.
    Shortly after 6:00 a.m. that same morning, defendant arrived at the Comfort
    Inn & Suites (Comfort Suites) in Sanford where he entered the hotel alone, provided
    identification, and checked into Room 201 under his own name. There was video
    footage of the transaction because cameras operated continually throughout the
    hotel.2 Defendant told the front desk clerk, Jacqueline Lee, that he was traveling
    with his daughter to take her to her mother in Virginia. Video footage from hotel
    security cameras showed that after checking in, defendant returned to his vehicle in
    the back of the parking lot at approximately 6:17 a.m, where he remained for several
    minutes, before coming back into the hotel carrying a child covered up with a blue
    blanket. Lee observed defendant carrying the child on the video feed and noticed the
    texture of her hair, which Lee recalled when she saw an Amber Alert that was issued
    for Shaniya. Additionally, Seth Chambers, who was staying at the hotel during a
    business trip, passed defendant in the hallway near Room 201 at 6:24 a.m. and
    observed defendant carrying a child.
    2The general manager of the hotel, Angela Thompson, testified at trial and explained
    that because the cameras are manually programmed, the time varies slightly between
    separate cameras, but by no more than a minute apart. Additionally, Thompson testified
    that on 10 November she had not yet changed the time on the recorders to reflect the recent
    daylight savings time change on 1 November 2009; as a result, the time stamps on the video
    recordings were one hour ahead of the actual time. For clarity, we refer simply to the actual
    time.
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    At the hotel’s morning shift change, Regina Bacani replaced Lee at the front
    desk. During the shift change, defendant came to the breakfast area alone, got a
    banana, some juice, and a muffin, and took them back to his room. Lee pointed
    defendant out to Bacani and told her about the recent check-in. Hotel cameras
    showed defendant walking toward the breakfast area at 6:36 a.m. and returning
    down the hall and into his room with food and drink in his hands.
    Back at Sleepy Hollow, Antoinette called the police at 6:52 a.m. at the urging
    of Brenda. About ten minutes after Antoinette’s telephone call, the police arrived,
    began searching for Shaniya with canines, and started interviewing people.
    Fayetteville Police Officer Elizabeth Culver observed a substance that was later
    determined to be feces on both railings of the front porch. The substance was smooth,
    like something had been poured on it. Antoinette Davis had a cooking pot in her hand
    when Officer Culver arrived, and someone said Antoinette had poured water on the
    railings, so Officer Culver asked her not to do that. In the trash can of unit 1119,
    police found a blanket that Antoinette Davis identified as hers and which Jeroy Smith
    recognized as having been in the living room of the trailer recently. The blanket was
    a thick child’s comforter-type blanket, and it had feces on it. Jennifer Slish, a forensic
    technician for the Fayetteville Police Department at that time, took the blanket into
    evidence to be processed for fluids, fibers, and hairs.
    Officer Culver spoke with Antoinette, Brenda, Jeroy, and C.D. at the scene.
    C.D. seemed very distracted and would look at his aunt before responding. C.D. said
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    he remembered Shaniya coming to bed but did not remember her leaving the
    bedroom. At trial, C.D. ultimately testified that he had seen defendant at the trailer
    that morning. Because Antoinette and Brenda were consistently looking at their
    phones and texting, Officer Culver had difficulty getting them to focus on the
    questions being asked, so her Lieutenant agreed to take them downtown to be
    interviewed. Officer Culver and her partner, Daniel Suggs, went to the main office
    of the trailer park to view the security video so as to look for a child roaming around
    the trailer park or for vehicles coming into the area.
    At approximately 7:34 a.m., the video cameras at the Comfort Suites showed
    defendant leaving Room 201 and going to the elevator with a child later identified as
    Shaniya. At 7:35 a.m., the video shows defendant exiting the side door of the hotel
    and walking down the sidewalk still carrying Shaniya. Matthew Argyle, the hotel’s
    maintenance worker at the time, appeared on the video one minute later. Argyle
    later testified that he was outside the side door picking up cigarette butts and trash
    when he saw defendant come out with a five- or six-year-old female child on his
    shoulder. Defendant had her covered, and Argyle thought she was asleep. When
    Argyle said hello, defendant made eye contact with him before looking away without
    saying anything in response and continuing walking toward the parking lot. Argyle
    “noticed something was amiss,” and he thus tried to observe defendant without
    making it obvious that he was doing so. Defendant put the child in the right rear
    passenger side of his car, got into the driver’s seat, and began smoking a cigarette or
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    Opinion of the Court
    cigar. Argyle continued to watch defendant while acting like he was doing busy work,
    because he just felt something was amiss. Defendant then drove to the pavilion at
    the front entrance of the hotel, extinguished his smoking material, and entered the
    hotel.
    Defendant approached the front desk and asked Bacani for his security deposit,
    stating that he had to get back on the road to drive his daughter to Virginia to meet
    her mother. Security cameras show Bacani giving defendant the cash receipt to sign
    and returning the deposit. The housekeeper who later cleaned Room 201 brought
    Bacani one or two small, clear, open plastic packets with white residue that she had
    found in the room, which Bacani believed to be cocaine.
    Meanwhile, Argyle watched defendant leave the hotel entrance, get back in his
    car, drive away, and turn left onto the main road. Argyle did not act on his feeling
    that something was wrong until the following day when hotel staff saw an Amber
    Alert and called law enforcement. The hotel security cameras show defendant leaving
    the hotel’s front entrance and getting into his car at 7:40 a.m., after which the car
    turned left towards Highway 87.
    Telephone records indicate that at approximately 7:49 a.m., defendant sent a
    text saying “Hey” to Brenda Davis, who was at the police station at this time and had
    texted “Hey” to defendant at 6:53 a.m. after learning from C.D. that defendant had
    been in the trailer the previous night. At approximately 8:22 a.m., cell phone tower
    pings showed defendant’s phone to be near the intersection of Highway 87, Highway
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    24, and Highway 27 in an area known as the Johnsonville and Barbeque area of
    Highway 87. At approximately 8:33 a.m., Brenda sent a text message to defendant
    stating, “U been 2 my house.” At 8:35 a.m., defendant responded to Brenda, “No
    [wh]y.”   Brenda sent a return message at 8:37 a.m. stating, “U lyin,” to which
    defendant responded, “No can i come though.” At 8:39 a.m., Brenda responded, “Hell
    no.” At 8:40 a.m., defendant sent a message to Brenda stating, “Dam its [sic] like
    that.” At 8:41 a.m., defendant sent a message to Brenda adding, “Him there.” At
    8:47 a.m., Brenda sent a message to defendant telling him, “Dont text me no mo [sic].”
    At 8:50 a.m., defendant sent a message to Brenda saying, “Sure what ever.” At 9:19
    a.m., defendant sent a message to Brenda inquiring, “[Wh]y [your] baby dad call my
    baby ma askin 4 me.” At 9:48 a.m., defendant sent a final message to Brenda asking,
    “What da hell is going on.” Brenda testified that she did not tell law enforcement she
    was text messaging defendant during the same time she was at the station because
    she “didn’t want to assume” anything at that point. For the same reason, she did not
    immediately tell police what C.D. had said about seeing defendant in the trailer.
    Bacani finished working at the Comfort Suites at 3:00 p.m. and reported back
    for the 7:00 a.m. shift change the next day, 11 November 2009. Bacani and Lee then
    noticed an Amber Alert on the hotel’s computer screen. Lee thought the picture
    shown on the screen was that of the same child she had observed with defendant the
    previous morning, and accordingly, she called the Amber Alert hot line. Slish, the
    forensic technician, responded to the call and processed Room 201 for evidence. The
    -8-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    hotel manager advised Slish that the bedding had not been changed but that the
    trash had been taken out and a towel had been removed before staff became aware of
    the situation. Two comforters from the beds in Room 201 were among the evidence
    Slish collected.
    Charles Kimble, who was at that time a Captain in the Fayetteville Police
    Department and in charge of its investigation bureau, was responsible for the
    logistics of trying to find Shaniya. Based on the video from the hotel, police believed
    that defendant had been with Shaniya and that she was still alive. After obtaining
    defendant’s cell phone number from his mother, police gave the number to FBI
    Special Agent Frank Brostrom, who began an analysis of defendant’s phone.
    Brostrom testified that the National Center for Missing and Exploited
    Children had already notified the FBI about the case. According to Brostrom, when
    the FBI receives a notification of a missing child, agents immediately contact local
    law enforcement to offer assistance. Brostrom contacted Sergeant Chris Courseon of
    the Fayetteville Police Department, who quickly invited Brostrom to come and help
    with the search for Shaniya. Brostrom arrived at Sleepy Hollow on the afternoon of
    10 November.
    In exigent circumstances, including situations when young children are
    missing, the FBI can make a showing of imminent danger of serious bodily injury or
    death and thereby obtain from communications carriers information such as
    telephone data, “GPS, toll records,” and cell tower records. Brostrom had already
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    telefaxed exigent circumstance requests to telephone companies to obtain
    information on phone numbers belonging to Brenda Davis, Antoinette Davis, and an
    associate of theirs, and on 12 November, Brostrom made a request for information
    regarding defendant’s phone number.         Brostrom quickly obtained information
    associated with defendant’s cell phone including call details, cell phone tower
    locations, and text messaging, with longitudes and latitudes for the cell towers for
    which the phone number would have pinged.
    Defendant’s cell phone data were analyzed by Special Agent Michael Sutton of
    the FBI’s Cellular Analysis Survey Team (CAST). CAST assesses cellular telephone
    records and applies the cell tower and sectors utilized by a particular phone to map
    its location. When Sutton received the electronic information from defendant’s cell
    phone, he performed an initial analysis, created some rough draft maps, and provided
    Brostrom an initial search area in the Highway 87 area along Highway 27. Following
    the FBI’s recommendation, police began searching for Shaniya in the area around
    Highway 87 from Spring Lake toward Sanford. Having received offers of assistance
    from volunteers and different law enforcement agencies, investigators mobilized a
    huge search and rescue effort.
    After the hotel video showing defendant with a child believed to be Shaniya
    came to light, Brenda Davis and Jeroy Smith told police that C.D. had seen defendant
    at the trailer the night Shaniya disappeared. Brenda had also seen defendant try to
    talk to Antoinette at their aunt’s house, to which Antoinette responded, “I don’t have
    -10-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    shit to say to you.   I just want to know where my mother fucking baby’s at.”
    Defendant said, “All right,” and jumped in his car and sped away. Brenda began to
    think Antoinette was lying about what she knew, and Brenda and Antoinette argued
    and did not speak after this. In the evening hours of 12 November, Brenda talked to
    detectives again, told them about the text messages with defendant, and ultimately
    gave them her phone to take photos of these texts.
    That same day, police found defendant, and he agreed to come to the station to
    speak with them. Police also located defendant’s Mitsubishi Gallant, which was
    backed into a space at the Mount Sinai apartments, away from his residence on
    Washington Drive. Police did an exigent circumstances search of the vehicle’s trunk
    and then had the car towed to the police department. The car was processed for
    forensic evidence, which included taking soil samples from the wheel wells and taking
    the brake and gas pedal covers for substance analysis.
    Beginning at around 9:30 p.m. on the evening of 12 November, several law
    enforcement officers interviewed defendant in an effort to find Shaniya. Although
    Shaniya had now been missing for two days, officers were still hopeful of finding her
    alive. The officers did not handcuff defendant or place him under arrest, and they
    specifically informed him that the door to the interview room was unlocked and that
    he was free to leave the room. Defendant also had his cell phone, on which he
    continued to receive messages and which he used during breaks in the interview.
    Defendant admitted he was at Sleepy Hollow just after midnight on 10 November
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    driving around in the black Mitsubishi, but at first he denied going to Brenda Davis’s
    trailer, denied seeing Shaniya or even knowing her, denied having her in the vehicle,
    and denied leaving the city limits or being in Sanford at a hotel. When police showed
    defendant a photograph of himself at the hotel, defendant initially denied it was he.
    When confronted with the information that the same person signed in to the hotel as
    Mario McNeill showing defendant’s identification and listing defendant’s home
    address, defendant suggested that maybe he had lost his identification. Defendant
    then admitted he had been at the hotel with Shaniya.
    About fifty-four minutes into the interview, defendant began telling a story
    about receiving a text message, which he said he thought came from Brenda Davis’s
    phone, telling him to come to Sleepy Hollow and pick Shaniya up on the porch.
    Defendant said he got Shaniya and took her to the hotel room, where he ingested
    cocaine. According to defendant, while he was at the hotel, he got a call or text
    message from some unknown people to bring Shaniya to a dry cleaning establishment
    at the corner of Country Club Drive and Ramsey Street. Defendant stated that he
    delivered Shaniya to these unnamed people and that they were driving a gray Nissan
    Maxima.
    Agent Brostrom testified that the focus of the interview changed when
    defendant suddenly stated he was waiting to get a call “to come to kill her.” The
    interviewing officers tried to get defendant to expand on this statement, but he would
    not. The messages on defendant’s phone exchanges with Brenda did not pertain to
    -12-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    picking up someone waiting on the porch, as defendant claimed during the interview.
    There were no calls or text messages to defendant’s phone from unknown persons, as
    claimed by defendant; the only messages during this time period were between
    defendant’s and Brenda’s phones. At the end of the interview, defendant was arrested
    for kidnapping Shaniya.
    When police later viewed the videotape of the interview, they saw that when
    they left defendant alone in the interview room during a break, defendant made the
    sign of the cross, took out a key, got down on the floor, put the key in a wall electrical
    socket, and appeared to receive a jolt. Defendant then took off his shoes and put the
    key in the electrical socket again.
    Shaniya had been reported missing on 10 November, and a massive search was
    continuing along Highway 87 but had not yet located Shaniya. Kimble, the head
    investigator for the Fayetteville Police Department, later testified in a pretrial
    hearing that on the morning of 13 November, he met with then-District Attorney Ed
    Grannis about several cases, including this one. The District Attorney pulled Kimble
    aside and told Kimble that Allen Rogers, a Fayetteville defense attorney, might have
    some information that could help them in the case and that Rogers would be calling
    him. Kimble did not know how Grannis knew Rogers might be able to assist. Rogers
    had accompanied defendant at his first appearance on Friday morning following his
    arrest on kidnapping charges, and it was Kimble’s understanding that Rogers was
    defendant’s attorney in this matter.
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    The following day, Kimble received a telephone call from attorney Coy Brewer.
    Brewer said the information Kimble needed was to look for green porta-potties on
    Highway 87. Based on the information he received earlier that Allen Rogers would
    be calling, Kimble assumed after receiving the call from Coy Brewer, that Brewer and
    Rogers were working together on the case.
    Police did look for green porta-potties along Highway 87 and saw numerous
    porta-potties along the road.       Kimble told District Attorney Grannis that the
    information he had received from Brewer was vague, and Grannis suggested he talk
    to Rogers. On Sunday, 15 November, Kimble called Allen Rogers and told him that
    the information he had received from Brewer about looking for green porta-potties
    along Highway 87 was somewhat vague. Rogers said he was traveling and would
    talk to his client when he returned to town. Rogers later followed up with Kimble
    and said police needed “to look for green porta-potties in an area where they kill deer”
    on Highway 87 between Spring Lake and Sanford. According to Kimble, Rogers
    stated in a subsequent phone call, “let me talk to my guy” and later called back to say
    they need to look in an area where hunters field dress deer after they kill them.
    Kimble called Rogers once more to see if there were additional details, and Rogers
    said “that’s all my guy remembers.”3
    Searchers did not locate Shaniya that day, and the search resumed the
    Rogers later testified in a pre-trial hearing that he did not recall using the phrase
    3
    “my guy.”
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    following morning, 16 November 2009. A Sanford company training canine officers
    from the Virgin Islands volunteered to assist in the search. Around 1:00 p.m. that
    day, one of the officers from the Virgin Islands and his training dog found Shaniya’s
    body lying partially under a log in an area with deer carcasses near the intersection
    of Highway 87 and Walker Road. Police collected forensic evidence at the scene. On
    19 November 2009, defendant was charged with first-degree murder and first-degree
    rape of the victim. On 5 July 2011, a Cumberland County Grand Jury indicted
    defendant for first-degree murder, rape of a child by an adult offender, sexual offense
    of a child by an adult offender, felony child abuse inflicting serious bodily injury,
    felony child abuse by prostitution, first-degree kidnapping, human trafficking (minor
    victim), sexual servitude (minor victim), and taking indecent liberties with a child.4
    Defendant filed various pre-trial motions, several of which are relevant to his
    contentions on appeal.    Before the indictments, on 9 June 2011, defendant filed a
    Motion To Prohibit The State from Seeking the Death Penalty Pursuant to the North
    Carolina Racial Justice Act, and on 5 June 2012, defendant filed a supplement to the
    motion. A Rule 24 conference was held on 5 October 2011, during which the State
    gave notice of its intent to seek the death penalty. Defendant did not raise his claim
    under the Racial Justice Act at the Rule 24 conference. The trial court conducted a
    4   On 25 July 2011, the grand jury returned superseding indictments for all the
    charges. On 11 February 2013, the grand jury again returned superseding indictments for
    first-degree kidnapping, human trafficking (minor victim), and sexual servitude (minor
    victim).
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    hearing on numerous pre-trial motions on 11 January 2013, at which time the trial
    court denied defendant’s motions under the Racial Justice Act.
    On 9 January 2013, defendant filed a motion to suppress all statements he
    made to law enforcement officers during his interview on 12 November 2009. The
    motion was heard on 2 April 2013, and on 4 April 2013, the trial court signed an order
    denying the motion in part and granting it in part, in which the court suppressed
    defendant’s statements made during a one-minute period near the end of the
    interview, when Brostrom “answered the Defendant’s question by telling the
    Defendant that he had been free to leave until he had confessed to kidnapping” but
    had not yet advised defendant of his Miranda rights.
    The next day, 5 April, defendant filed a document captioned in part a Motion
    to Require Specific Performance or, Alternatively, to Suppress Statements and
    Evidence.5   The motion alleged that, in exchange for information regarding the
    location of Shaniya’s body as conveyed through defendant’s initial attorneys, Allen
    Rogers and Coy Brewer, the State had agreed not to seek the death penalty.
    Defendant sought “specific performance” of the purported agreement, suggesting that
    the trial court should declare the case noncapital or, in the alternative, suppress the
    5The full title of defendant’s motion was “MOTION TO REQUIRE SPECIFIC
    PERFORMANCE BY THE STATE OF ITS PROMISE TO DEFENDANT; OR, IN THE
    ALTERNATIVE, MOTION TO SUPPRESS STATEMENTS OF DEFENDANT THAT LED
    TO DISCOVERY OF BODY, ALONG WITH SUPPRESSION OF ANY AND ALL EVIDENCE
    DERIVED FROM THE DISCOVERY OF THE BODY.”
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    evidence that defendant’s attorneys had disclosed the location of Shaniya’s body as
    well as all evidence obtained from discovery of the body because defendant had
    received ineffective assistance of counsel. At the hearing on the motion on 8 April
    2013, defendant presented documentary evidence, but offered no testimony. The trial
    court orally denied defendant’s motion at the hearing and entered its written order
    on 17 April 2013. The trial court found that no agreements existed between the State
    of North Carolina and defendant in exchange for his information regarding the
    location of Shaniya and that his attorneys were authorized by him to provide the
    information to law enforcement. Further, the trial court ruled that the disclosure did
    not occur at a “ ‘critical stage’ of the proceeding,” but that even if such had been the
    case, defendant did not receive ineffective assistance of counsel.
    Additionally, when the trial court became aware at the 8 April hearing that
    the State was offering defendant a plea of guilty to first-degree murder with a
    sentence of life imprisonment without parole in lieu of a possible death sentence, the
    trial court inquired of defendant’s counsel if defendant and they were aware of the
    offer and whether they needed additional time to consider it. Defendant’s counsel
    informed the trial court that defendant had elected to proceed to trial. The trial court
    required the State to hold the offer open for at least one more day to give defendant
    and his counsel more time to consider the offer. On 9 April 2013, defendant, through
    his counsel, rejected the State’s offer of life imprisonment and elected to proceed to
    trial.
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    Opinion of the Court
    Also on 5 April 2013, the State filed a motion in limine asking the court to
    determine the admissibility, under Rule of Evidence 801(d), of statements made by
    defendant through his counsel to law enforcement concerning the location of the body
    of Shaniya Davis. When this motion came on for hearing on 26 and 29 April 2013,
    defendant made oral motions arguing, inter alia, that evidence regarding the
    disclosure of Shaniya’s location was inadmissible on grounds of: (1) ineffective
    assistance of counsel; (2) attorney-client privilege, the Sixth Amendment to the
    United State Constitution, and Article I, Section 23 of the North Carolina
    Constitution; (3) N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 801(d); and (4) the Due Process and Law of
    the Land Clauses of the Federal and North Carolina constitutions. The trial court
    heard testimony from Kimble, Rogers, and Brewer;6 defendant again did not testify
    at this hearing. The trial court entered a written order, which included findings and
    conclusions and also adopted and incorporated by reference the findings and
    conclusions set forth in its 17 April 2013 order, concluding that defendant’s right to
    effective assistance of counsel had not been violated and that the attorneys’
    6  Brewer asserted the attorney-client privilege as to all questions asked, including
    whether he represented defendant. After Brewer’s testimony the trial court noted that for
    the privilege to exist, the relationship of attorney and client had to be shown, and defendant
    had not even established this fact. Defendant then called attorney Allen Rogers, who in
    similar vein asserted the attorney-client privilege as to each question asked. The trial court
    noted that Rogers’s client was present; the State noted that defendant was asserting
    ineffective assistance of counsel in the alternative and thus had waived the privilege as to
    this subject. The trial court ruled defendant had waived the privilege as to the things alleged
    and ordered Rogers to answer the questions.
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    statements to law enforcement regarding Shaniya’s location were admissible through
    Captain Kimble as an exception to the hearsay rule under N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule
    801(d) (“Exception for Admissions by a Party-Opponent”).
    Defendant was tried before Judge James Floyd Ammons Jr. at the 8 April 2013
    criminal session of the Superior Court in Cumberland County. Before trial, the State
    dismissed the two charges of felony child abuse. At trial, defendant stipulated to four
    items: (1) that he was at Sleepy Hollow; (2) that he left the trailer park with Shaniya
    Davis; (3) that he was at the Comfort Suites with Shaniya Davis; and (4) that he left
    the Comfort Suites with Shaniya Davis. In addition to the evidence previously
    discussed, the State presented considerable forensic evidence at trial.
    Thomas Clark, M.D., Deputy Chief Medical Examiner for the State of North
    Carolina until his retirement in 2010, conducted the autopsy on Shaniya Davis on 17
    November 2009 and testified at trial as an expert in the field of forensic pathology.
    The autopsy identified a small bruise on the left side of Shaniya’s face, injuries to her
    vaginal area, and two abrasions on her upper thighs.          Dr. Clark testified that
    abrasions are a scraping type of injury in which part or all of the outer layer of skin
    is removed by a blunt object, and that two linear or line-like abrasions at the upper
    part of Shaniya’s inner thighs matched the band of the underwear Shaniya was
    wearing. Dr. Clark noted injuries consistent with sexual assault, specifically, the
    absence of a hymen and the presence of a ring of abrasion or scraping injury
    surrounding the entrance to the vagina indicating that a blunt object had penetrated
    -19-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    the vagina and left the ring of injury. In addition to preparing a sexual assault kit,
    Dr. Clark collected several hairs that were found during the external examination
    and preserved the sheet on which Shaniya was initially examined. Shaniya’s lungs
    showed edema, chronic bronchitis, and focal intra-alveolar hemorrhage. Edema is
    caused by an imbalance of pressure in the body that causes fluid from capillaries to
    enter the air spaces in the lung. Dr. Clark concluded that the most likely cause of
    death was external airway obstruction or asphyxiation.
    Special Agent Jody West, a supervisor in the forensic biology section of the
    State Crime Lab, testified as an expert in the field of forensic serology and forensic
    DNA analysis. Special Agent West examined the evidence in this case, including
    performing a Kastle-Meyer or phenolphthalein test, which is a test used to indicate
    whether blood is present on an item. This chemical analysis indicated the presence
    of blood on the vaginal swabs, rectal swabs, oral swabs, and the crotch area of
    Shaniya’s panties. Samples from the small blanket recovered from the trash can gave
    the chemical indication for blood, as did the inside bottom rear portion of the shirt
    Shaniya was wearing. The white sheet from the medical examiner’s office also gave
    a chemical indication for the presence of blood. Examination of the items failed to
    produce a chemical indication for the presence of semen, spermatazoa, or human
    saliva.
    DNA analysis on samples taken from the rear seat of defendant’s car was
    consistent with multiple contributors; defendant could not be excluded as a
    -20-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    contributor, and no conclusion could be rendered regarding the contribution of
    Shaniya Davis to this mixture.     Special Agent West transferred some items to
    Jennifer Remy of the trace evidence section at the Crime Lab for DNA hair analysis
    and to Kristin Hughes of the forensic biology section to perform Y-STR analysis—a
    type of DNA analysis focusing on the Y chromosome. Analysis of hairs collected in
    the case ultimately revealed a pubic hair having the same mitochondrial DNA as
    defendant’s pubic hair found on the hotel comforter, and another pubic hair with the
    same mitochondrial DNA as defendant’s pubic hair found on the small blanket found
    in the trash can of the mobile home park. Defendant could not be excluded as the
    source of these two hairs. Two head hairs found on the small blanket located in the
    trash can of the mobile home park had the same mitochondrial DNA sequence as
    Shaniya Davis’s head hair; therefore, Shaniya could not be excluded as the source of
    those hairs.   Three hairs recovered from Shaniya’s right hand by the medical
    examiner were consistent with Shaniya’s own head hair and were not sent for further
    testing. The Y-STR analysis on the vaginal swabs, the rectal swabs, and the oral
    swabs revealed no male DNA; Special Agent Hughes testified that this result was not
    unexpected because DNA begins to degrade or break down over time and that beyond
    a seventy-two hour window, it becomes more and more likely that investigators will
    not be able to obtain any DNA profile.
    Heather Hanna, a geologist with the North Carolina Geological Survey,
    testified as an expert in forensic geochemistry and forensic geology. Hanna analyzed
    -21-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    soil samples, including those from the roadside near where the body was found, from
    the body recovery site, and from the gas pedal of defendant’s Mitsubishi Gallant. In
    all three samples she found garnet, a mineral grain that was unique to two geologic
    units upstream from near where the body was discovered and which would not
    naturally be found in Fayetteville. Hanna concluded that it was “highly unlikely”
    that the soil from those three samples did not come from the same source.
    Hanna also found a tiny metal fiber in the soil sample taken from the shoulder
    of the road near the body recovery site and another metal fiber in the soil collected
    from the gas pedal of defendant’s car. These samples were analyzed by Roberto
    Garcia, an expert in materials characterization and identification who is a materials
    engineer at N.C. State University in the analytical instrumentation facility. Garcia
    testified that the measurements of the two pieces of metal were consistent with each
    other and that their thickness and shape suggested they came from a braided metal
    wire. Further, a chemical analysis using an energy dispersive spectroscopy (an EDS
    detector) indicated that the two samples also were chemically consistent. Garcia’s
    conclusion was that the metallic fiber from the gas pedal of defendant’s car and the
    metallic fiber from the soil sample from the body recovery site were consistent with
    each other and consistent with having the same source.
    Following Special Agent Sutton’s initial analysis of defendant’s cell phone
    activity, which led to his recommendation to law enforcement to search in the
    Highway 87 area along Highway 27, he later conducted a more extensive analysis of
    -22-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    defendant’s cell phone. Based on defendant’s cell phone records, Sutton testified
    where defendant’s phone had been at certain times on 10 November 2009: at
    approximately 2:33 a.m., it was in the area of Fayetteville at and around defendant’s
    residence on Washington Drive; at approximately 2:59 a.m., 3:02 a.m., 3:05 a.m., 3:19
    a.m., and 3:57 a.m., it was in the area of and around Shaniya’s residence at Sleepy
    Hollow; at approximately 7:00 a.m., 7:32 a.m., and 7:45 a.m., it was in the Sanford
    area at or near the Comfort Suites; at approximately 8:22 a.m. and 8:25 a.m., it was
    south of Walker Road near the intersection of Highway 87, Highway 24, and Highway
    27, in an area that is between the Johnsonville and Barbecue area on Highway 87
    and is the area in which Shaniya’s body was eventually discovered; and during a
    remaining block of calls beginning at approximately 9:38 a.m., the phone was back in
    the area of defendant’s residence.
    Defendant did not present any evidence during the guilt-innocence proceeding
    of the trial.
    On 23 May 2013, a jury found defendant guilty of first-degree murder based on
    malice, premeditation, and deliberation, and under the felony murder rule, with the
    underlying felonies being sex offense of a child and kidnapping. The jury also found
    defendant guilty of all other remaining charges, except for rape of a child by an adult
    offender.
    The trial court then held a capital sentencing proceeding, during which the
    State introduced evidence that defendant had been convicted on 10 January 2003 of
    -23-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    three counts of assault inflicting serious bodily injury. Defendant stipulated that this
    information was correct.
    Shaniya’s father and half-sister testified as impact witnesses.        Shaniya’s
    father, Bradley Lockhart, testified that he had met Shaniya’s mother at a party, had
    been in a brief relationship with her, and had learned that Antoinette was pregnant
    only shortly before Shaniya’s birth on 14 June 2004. For a little less than two years
    after Shaniya’s birth, Shaniya lived with Antoinette and her family. Mr. Lockhart
    had frequent contact with Shaniya and would pick her up every weekend for visits.
    Toward the end of 2006 or the beginning of 2007, Mr. Lockhart bought a fairly
    large house in Fayetteville, and Shaniya moved in with him and his four other
    children. Shaniya had frequent contact with her mother during this time. Shaniya
    was very close with Mr. Lockhart and the other children; she enjoyed dress-up and
    prancing around the house in her plastic dress-up shoes but was also a little bit of a
    tomboy and liked to play basketball with her little brother and ride her little scooter.
    Shaniya considered herself a singer and desired to join the children’s choir at the
    church they attended.
    Shaniya moved back to be with her mother in October 2009. Even when he
    was out of town for work, Mr. Lockhart talked to Shaniya on the telephone four to
    five times a week. Mr. Lockhart testified that Shaniya’s death was one of the hardest
    things he had experienced, that it tears him up every day, and that he still finds it
    hard to sleep even after three-and-a-half years. He said he suffered two collapsed
    -24-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    lungs from the stress, finds it hard to stay focused and to function, and questions if
    he could have done anything different.
    Cheyenne Lockhart, Bradley Lockhart’s twenty-one-year-old daughter and
    Shaniya’s half-sister, described Shaniya as her little “mini-me” who followed her
    everywhere. Shaniya was bubbly and loved to talk and play jokes. She was caring
    and would always tell them she loved them. Shaniya’s loss was very painful, and
    Cheyenne thinks about Shaniya every day.
    Defendant did not present additional mitigation evidence or give closing
    arguments in the sentencing proceeding; he understood that this decision was against
    the advice of counsel. The trial court determined that there was an absolute impasse
    between defendant and his attorneys and ordered the attorneys to acquiesce to
    defendant’s wishes.
    On 29 May 2013, the jury returned a binding recommendation that defendant
    be sentenced to death for the first-degree murder.       The trial court accordingly
    sentenced Mr. McNeill to death for first-degree murder, and to consecutive sentences
    of 336 to 413 months for sexual offense against a child by an adult offender, 116 to
    149 months for first-degree kidnapping, 116 to 149 months for human trafficking of
    a minor victim, 116 to 149 months for sexual servitude of a minor victim, and 21 to
    26 months for taking indecent liberties with a child. Defendant immediately filed his
    appeal of right to this Court.
    Analysis
    -25-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    Defendant first argues that he received ineffective assistance of counsel from
    his original attorneys because they disclosed to law enforcement where to look for
    Shaniya. Defendant contends that even though he was asserting his innocence, his
    attorneys, Rogers and Brewer, made this disclosure only one day into their
    representation, without seeking any benefit or protection in return, without any deal
    in place, without receiving or consulting any formal discovery from the State, and
    after giving defendant erroneous advice.
    As an initial matter, we have held that ineffective assistance of counsel claims
    brought on direct review, as opposed to in a motion for appropriate relief, “will be
    decided on the merits when the cold record reveals that no further investigation is
    required, i.e., claims that may be developed and argued without such ancillary
    procedures as the appointment of investigators or an evidentiary hearing.” State v.
    Fair, 
    354 N.C. 131
    , 166, 
    557 S.E.2d 500
    , 524 (2001) (citations omitted), cert. denied,
    
    535 U.S. 1114
    , 
    122 S. Ct. 2332
    , 
    153 L. Ed. 2d 162
    (2002). Defendants “should
    necessarily raise those [ineffective assistance of counsel] claims on direct appeal that
    are apparent from the record” and are “not required to file a separate [motion for
    appropriate relief] in the appellate court during the pendency of that appeal.” 
    Id. at 167,
    557 S.E.2d at 525. Accordingly, “on direct appeal we must determine if . . .
    ineffective assistance of counsel claims have been prematurely brought,” in which
    event “we must ‘dismiss those claims without prejudice to the defendant’s right to
    -26-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    reassert them during a subsequent [motion for appropriate relief] proceeding.’ ” State
    v. Campbell, 
    359 N.C. 644
    , 691, 
    617 S.E.2d 1
    , 30 (2005) (second alteration in original)
    (quoting Fair, 354 N.C. at 
    167, 557 S.E.2d at 525
    ), cert. denied, 
    547 U.S. 1073
    , 126 S.
    Ct. 1773, 
    164 L. Ed. 2d 523
    (2006).
    Here defendant first raised his ineffective assistance of counsel argument
    before trial in his Motion to Require Specific Performance or, Alternatively, to
    Suppress Statements and Evidence. Thus, defendant was able to present evidence
    and arguments during a hearing on that motion, which the trial court took into
    consideration in its 17 April 2013 order denying defendant’s motion and ruling that
    defendant did not receive ineffective assistance of counsel.      Additionally, in its
    subsequent ruling on the State’s motion in limine and defendant’s oral motions
    relating to the admissibility of evidence about the disclosure, the trial court
    considered further arguments and evidence, including the testimony of Captain
    Kimble, as well as that of defendant’s original attorneys, Rogers and Brewer.
    Defendant reasserted his ineffective assistance of counsel argument at this hearing.
    In an order entered on 16 May 2013, the trial court again ruled that defendant’s
    attorneys were not ineffective. Because the trial court was able to receive evidence
    and make findings on this issue before trial, we conclude that “the cold record reveals
    that no further investigation is required.” 
    Fair, 354 N.C. at 166
    , 557 S.E.2d at 524.
    Accordingly, we may properly address the merits of defendant’s ineffective assistance
    of counsel claim.
    -27-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    “The right to assistance of counsel is guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment to
    the Federal Constitution and by Article I, Sections 19 and 23 of the Constitution of
    North Carolina.” State v. Sneed, 
    284 N.C. 606
    , 611, 
    201 S.E.2d 867
    , 871 (1974). A
    defendant’s right to assistance of counsel “includes the right to the effective
    assistance of counsel.” State v. Braswell, 
    312 N.C. 553
    , 561, 
    324 S.E.2d 241
    , 247-48
    (1985) (citing McMann v. Richardson, 
    397 U.S. 759
    , 771 & n.14, 
    90 S. Ct. 1441
    , 1449
    & n.14, 
    25 L. Ed. 2d 763
    , 773 & n.14 (1970)).7 A defendant challenging his conviction
    on the basis of ineffective assistance of counsel must establish that his counsel’s
    conduct “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.”                Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687-88, 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 2064, 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    , 693 (1984).
    In Strickland the United States Supreme Court set out a two-part test that a
    defendant must satisfy in order to meet his burden:
    First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance
    was deficient. This requires showing that counsel made
    errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the
    “counsel” guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth
    Amendment. Second, the defendant must show that the
    deficient performance prejudiced the defense.            This
    requires showing that counsel’s errors were so serious as to
    deprive the defendant of a fair trial, a trial whose result is
    7 The State argues, and the trial court found in its 17 April 2013 order, that because
    the Sixth Amendment is offense specific, and because defendant had at the time of the
    disclosure only been charged with kidnapping, defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel
    had not attached for purposes of the subsequent first-degree murder charge. Therefore, the
    State argues that the trial court correctly found that defendant could not have had an
    ineffective assistance of counsel claim under the Sixth Amendment. Because we conclude
    that defendant did not receive ineffective assistance of counsel, we need not address whether
    defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel had attached with respect to the first-degree
    murder charge at the time of the disclosure.
    -28-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    reliable. Unless a defendant makes both showings, it
    cannot be said that the conviction or death sentence
    resulted from a breakdown in the adversary process that
    renders the result unreliable.
    
    Id. at 687,
    104 S. Ct. at 
    2064, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 693
    ; see also 
    Braswell, 312 N.C. at 562
    -
    
    63, 324 S.E.2d at 248
    (“[W]e expressly adopt the test set out in Strickland v.
    Washington as a uniform standard to be applied to measure ineffective assistance of
    counsel under the North Carolina Constitution.”).
    With regard to the first Strickland prong, “[r]ather than articulating specific
    guidelines for appropriate attorney conduct, the Court in Strickland emphasized that
    ‘[t]he proper measure of attorney performance remains simply reasonableness under
    prevailing professional norms.’ ” State v. Todd, 
    369 N.C. 707
    , 711, 
    799 S.E.2d 834
    ,
    837-38 (2017) (second alteration in original) (quoting 
    Strickland 466 U.S. at 688
    , 104
    S. Ct. at 
    2065, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 694
    ). We have stated that “[c]ounsel is given wide
    latitude in matters of strategy, and the burden to show that counsel’s performance
    fell short of the required standard is a heavy one for defendant to bear.” State v.
    Fletcher, 
    354 N.C. 455
    , 482, 
    555 S.E.2d 534
    , 551 (2001), cert. denied, 
    537 U.S. 846
    ,
    
    123 S. Ct. 184
    , 
    154 L. Ed. 2d 73
    (2002); see also 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690-91
    , 104
    S. Ct. at 
    2066, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 695
    (“[S]trategic choices made after thorough
    investigation of law and facts relevant to plausible options are virtually
    unchallengeable; and strategic choices made after less than complete investigation
    are reasonable precisely to the extent that reasonable professional judgments support
    -29-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    the limitations on investigation.”). “Moreover, this Court indulges the presumption
    that trial counsel’s representation is within the boundaries of acceptable professional
    conduct.” 
    Campbell, 359 N.C. at 690
    , 617 S.E.2d at 30 (citing State v. Fisher, 
    318 N.C. 512
    , 532, 
    350 S.E.2d 334
    , 346 (1986)). As the Court stated in Strickland:
    A fair assessment of attorney performance requires that
    every effort be made to eliminate the distorting effects of
    hindsight, to reconstruct the circumstances of counsel’s
    challenged conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from
    counsel’s perspective at the time.         Because of the
    difficulties inherent in making the evaluation, a court must
    indulge a strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls
    within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance
    
    .... 466 U.S. at 689
    , 104 S. Ct. at 
    2065, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 694
    .
    With regard to the second Strickland prong, “[p]rejudice is established by
    showing ‘that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional
    errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.’ ” 
    Campbell, 359 N.C. at 690
    , 617 S.E.2d at 29 (quoting 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694
    , 104 S. Ct. at 
    2068, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 698
    ). “The fact that counsel made an error, even an unreasonable error,
    does not warrant reversal of a conviction unless there is a reasonable probability that,
    but for counsel’s errors, there would have been a different result in the proceedings.”
    Braswell, 312 N.C. at 5
    63, 324 S.E.2d at 248
    (citing 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694
    , 104
    S. Ct. at 
    2068, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 698
    ). “A reasonable probability is a probability
    sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” 
    Campbell, 359 N.C. at 690
    , 617
    S.E.2d at 29-30 (quoting 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694
    , 104 S. Ct. at 2068, 80 L. Ed. 2d
    -30-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    at 698). “[B]oth deficient performance and prejudice are required for a successful
    ineffective assistance of counsel claim.” 
    Todd, 369 N.C. at 711
    , 799 S.E.2d at 837.
    When the trial court has made findings of fact and conclusions of law to support
    its ruling on a defendant’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, “we review the
    trial court’s order to determine ‘whether the findings of fact are supported by
    evidence, whether the findings of fact support the conclusions of law, and whether
    the conclusions of law support the order entered by the trial court.’ ” State v. Frogge,
    
    359 N.C. 228
    , 240, 
    607 S.E.2d 627
    , 634 (2005) (quoting State v. Stevens, 
    305 N.C. 712
    ,
    720, 
    291 S.E.2d 585
    , 591 (1982)).8 We review conclusions of law de novo. E.g., State
    v. Biber, 
    365 N.C. 162
    , 168, 
    712 S.E.2d 874
    , 878 (2011) (citing State v. McCollum, 
    334 N.C. 208
    , 237, 
    433 S.E.2d 144
    , 160 (1993), cert. denied, 
    512 U.S. 1254
    , 
    114 S. Ct. 2784
    ,
    
    129 L. Ed. 2d 895
    (1994), judgment vacated, Nos. 83 CRS 15506-07 (Robeson Co.), 91
    CRS 40727 (Cumberland Co.), 
    2014 WL 4345428
    (N.C. Super Ct. Robeson County
    Sept. 2, 2014)).
    Defendant’s claim stems from the conduct of his original attorneys, Rogers and
    Brewer. After defendant was charged with kidnapping, he waived court appointed
    counsel and engaged the services of Rogers, who had previously represented
    8 While in Frogge the trial court’s order addressed a claim of ineffective assistance of
    counsel brought in a postconviction motion for appropriate 
    relief, 359 N.C. at 230
    , 607 S.E.2d
    at 628-29, we can find no reason to apply a different standard in reviewing a trial court’s
    ruling on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel brought before trial and challenged on
    direct appeal.
    -31-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    defendant in 2003 and 2008. Rogers is a former JAG attorney who at that time had
    practiced law for twenty years, and a large part of his practice was criminal defense
    work.    Rogers immediately associated Brewer, with whom he had a working
    relationship in criminal cases, to assist in the matter. Brewer is a former assistant
    district attorney and former district court judge. Additionally, Brewer was a superior
    court judge for the 12th Judicial District from 1977 until 1998, and he was the senior
    resident superior court judge for the 12th Judicial District from 1991 to 1998. Brewer
    had returned to practicing law, and since 1999 a large part of his practice was
    criminal defense. The trial court made findings that Rogers and Brewer were both
    experienced criminal defense attorneys.
    When Rogers and Brewer undertook representation of defendant on 13
    November 2009, Shaniya had been missing since the morning of 10 November. A
    massive search had been underway since the morning of Shaniya’s disappearance,
    and law enforcement officers, having seen a child resembling Shaniya in the hotel
    videos, hoped to find her still alive. Defendant had admitted to police that he had
    taken Shaniya from Sleepy Hollow to the Comfort Suites in Sanford, where he had
    been observed by hotel cameras and multiple witnesses and was the last person to be
    seen with Shaniya.     By 12 November, multiple law enforcement agencies and
    volunteers were searching in the area around Highway 87 near Sanford, where
    defendant’s cell phone data had placed him.
    -32-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    Rogers had conversations with Kimble to gauge the status of the investigation,
    and he was aware of the evidence against defendant and defendant’s admission to
    taking Shaniya from Sleepy Hollow to the Comfort Suites. Rogers testified that he
    was also aware of defendant’s three felony convictions for assault in 2003, which
    constituted aggravating circumstances that could be used at a capital sentencing
    proceeding. Accordingly, when Rogers and Brewer met with defendant, “there was
    conversation about the search and about the consequences of the child not being
    found,” and they began discussing with defendant the possibility that forthcoming
    charges could result in a capital case. Defendant “was denying that he was involved
    in hurting [Shaniya] or killing her,” and Rogers asked defendant “if he had any
    information about the location of [Shaniya].” Defendant told Rogers and Brewer he
    did have information about Shaniya’s location, but according to Rogers, “[defendant]
    didn’t tell me where he got the information from.” When Rogers was asked at the
    hearing whether there was a presumption that Shaniya was alive, he stated:
    Again, didn’t know -- really didn’t know. As I said,
    [defendant] denied, you know, causing her harm,
    assaulting her in any way. There certainly was some
    concerns with the amount of time, but I can’t say that we
    knew.
    Rogers testified that it was in this “atmosphere”—with a five-year-old child missing
    over several cold and rainy days, with law enforcement performing a massive search,
    and with defendant being the sole suspect and the last person to be seen with
    Shaniya—that this conversation came about.
    -33-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    According to Rogers, they discussed the death penalty with defendant, and
    defendant “agreed that it would be in his best interests to offer information that might
    be helpful to the location.”    Rogers explained to defendant that providing this
    information could be helpful because such action could show cooperation and remorse,
    which could either help achieve a plea agreement for a life sentence or be presented
    as mitigating circumstances in a sentencing proceeding, and ultimately “could avert
    the imposition of the -- and execution of the death penalty.” Accordingly, defendant
    agreed with Rogers and Brewer that they would recommend where to search to law
    enforcement without specifically stating defendant’s name or that he was the source
    of the information. According to Rogers, he was trying to give defendant the best
    advice he could to help save defendant’s life, and defendant understood the situation
    at that point and agreed with the strategy.
    Accordingly, Brewer spoke with Captain Kimble on 14 November 2009 and
    instructed him to “look for green porta-potties on Highway 87.” Rogers then spoke
    with Kimble on 14 and 15 November and told him to “look for green porta-potties in
    an area where they kill deer . . . . on Highway 87 between Spring Lake and Sanford,”
    and also to “look in an area where they -- where they take the deer after they -- after
    they’ve been killed.” Captain Kimble narrowed the search, and at approximately 1:00
    p.m. on 16 November 2009, one of the searchers found Shaniya’s body in the woods
    “near the area where they were field dressing deer.”
    -34-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    Defendant first raised his pretrial ineffective assistance of counsel argument
    in his 5 April 2013 Motion to Require Specific Performance or, Alternatively, to
    Suppress Statements and Evidence. In its 17 April 2013 order denying defendant’s
    motion, the trial court found as fact:
    2.     The Court provided the Defendant the opportunity
    to present evidence and arguments during the
    hearing on his Motion, and the Defendant did so.
    3.     The Defendant offered into evidence without
    objection four (4) exhibits, Defendant’s Exhibits A,
    B, C, and D.[9] The Court carefully examined the
    Defendant’s exhibits.
    4.     When the Court provided the Defendant an
    opportunity to present sworn testimony, the
    Defendant did not do so.
    ....
    6.     During Mr. Rogers’ representation, the Defendant
    provided specific information to Mr. Rogers as to the
    location of Shaniya Davis’ body, and the Defendant
    9   Exhibit A was an e-mail apparently from Agent Brostrom in which he stated:
    I think we should monitor the possibility, at the appropriate
    time, to approach the attorneys for the kidnaper/rapist Mario
    McNeill and for the mother Antoinette Davis, regarding
    potential cooperation agreements in order to get the whole story.
    To date, I [sic] the DA has offered to take the Death Penalty off
    the table in exchange for the body.
    The trial court found that “[n]either the District Attorney nor anyone acting on his behalf”
    made such an offer and that there existed “no agreement of any kind as to what would happen
    if the Defendant provided law enforcement with information concerning the location” of
    Shaniya. Defendant does not challenge the trial court’s findings regarding the existence of
    any agreement, but instead directs his arguments towards his attorneys’ purported failure
    to pursue such an agreement.
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    authorized Mr. Rogers to provide that specific
    information to law enforcement.
    7.    Pursuant to the Defendant’s authorization, Mr.
    Rogers provided to law enforcement that specific
    information as to the location of Shaniya Davis’
    body.
    8.    The Defendant’s information regarding the location
    of Shaniya Davis’ body did not constitute an
    admission to a crime.
    ....
    13.   Under the totality of the circumstances, Mr. Rogers
    did not ineffectively assist the Defendant in
    providing information to law enforcement
    concerning the location of Shaniya Davis’ body
    without an agreement of some kind as to what would
    happen should the Defendant provide that
    information.
    14.   The Defendant’s provision of such information to law
    enforcement through his attorney at that stage in
    the search for Shaniya Davis was objectively
    reasonable in that it provided the State a basis for it
    to consider future plea negotiations with the
    Defendant should the Defendant be charged with
    more offenses related to the missing child during
    which negotiations the death penalty might be
    eliminated from the range of possible punishments.
    The provision of such information was also
    objectively reasonable in that it provided the
    Defendant the opportunity to obtain the benefit of a
    mitigating circumstance should charges be brought
    against the Defendant for which the death penalty
    was a possible punishment.
    ....
    17.   The Defendant was represented by competent
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    counsel who afforded him effective, reasonable, and
    professional representation.
    From these findings, the trial court made the following conclusions, in relevant part:
    3.       . . . [E]ven if the exchange of information at issue in
    this matter occurred at a “critical stage” of the
    proceeding, the Defendant has not shown that his
    counsel’s performance fell below an objective
    standard of reasonableness.
    4.       Likewise, even if the exchange of information at
    issue in this matter occurred at a “critical stage” of
    the proceeding, the Defendant has not shown that
    the alleged deficient performance prejudiced the
    defense in such a way as will deprive the defendant
    of a fair trial.
    5.       The Defendant was represented by competent
    counsel who afforded him effective, reasonable, and
    professional representation.
    6.       None of the Defendant’s rights under the United
    States Constitution, North Carolina Constitution, or
    the North Carolina General Statutes were violated.
    Additionally, in its subsequent ruling on the State’s motion in limine and
    defendant’s oral motions regarding the admissibility of evidence relating to the
    disclosure, the trial court considered further arguments and evidence, including the
    testimony of Captain Kimble, as well as that of defendant’s original attorneys, Rogers
    and Brewer.        At this hearing, defendant reasserted his ineffective assistance of
    counsel argument; however, he did not testify at the hearing. In an order entered on
    16 May 2013, the trial court made the following relevant findings:
    5.       During their representation of the Defendant, Mr.
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
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    Brewer and Mr. Rogers talked to the Defendant
    while he was in jail about cooperating with the police
    in looking for Shaniya Davis. They discussed how
    the Defendant might benefit from cooperating with
    the police on this issue by avoiding the imposition
    and execution of the death penalty. During these
    discussions, the Defendant specifically authorized
    his attorneys, Brewer and Mr. Rogers, to give
    information to the police relating to the location of
    Shaniya Davis. Nothing about their discussions
    suggests that the Defendant involuntarily provided
    the information at issue to his attorneys.
    ....
    9.    The Defendant authorized his attorneys to
    communicate information to the police that would
    aid them in locating Shaniya Davis. The Defendant
    did not authorize his attorneys to make any
    admissions on his behalf, and they did not make any
    admissions on his behalf. Neither Mr. Rogers nor
    Mr. Brewer told Captain Kimble the specific source
    of the information as to the directions where to
    search. As this Court has previously found and
    concluded in its prior Order relating to the
    Defendant’s Motion for Specific Performance, the
    State of North Carolina, through the District
    Attorney’s office, never offered any deal, plea
    concessions, immunity, or any other incentives to
    the Defendant for this information, and neither Mr.
    Brewer nor Mr. Rogers ever communicated any deal,
    plea concessions, or any other incentives from the
    State to the Defendant.
    ....
    17.   Under the totality of the circumstances, the
    Defendant’s attorneys did not ineffectively assist the
    Defendant in providing information to law
    enforcement concerning the location of Shaniya
    Davis’ body without an agreement of some kind as to
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    what would happen should the Defendant provide
    that information.
    18.   The Defendant’s provision of such information to law
    enforcement through his attorney at that stage in
    the search for Shaniya Davis was objectively
    reasonable in that it provided the State a basis for it
    to consider future plea negotiations with the
    Defendant should the Defendant be charged with
    more offenses related to the missing child during
    which negotiations the death penalty might be
    eliminated from the range of possible punishments.
    The provision of such information was also
    objectively reasonable in that it provided the
    Defendant the opportunity to obtain the benefit of a
    mitigating circumstance should charges be brought
    against the Defendant for which the death penalty
    was a possible punishment.
    19.   The Defendant was represented by competent
    counsel who afforded him effective, reasonable, and
    professional representation.
    20.   In keeping with this Court’s prior Order on the
    Defendant’s claim of ineffective assistance of
    counsel, the Court adopts and incorporates by
    reference all of its findings of fact and conclusions of
    law in this Order as if fully set forth herein. In so
    doing, the Court again does not find or conclude that
    any ineffective assistance of counsel has occurred.
    The Defendant has not shown that the advice and
    conduct of his attorneys fell below an objective
    standard, and the Defendant has not shown any
    prejudice. Even if the Defendant is prejudiced by the
    disclosure of this information, he has also benefited
    by the disclosure of this information in that the
    State offered to allow the Defendant to plead guilty
    and avoid the death penalty. He received that
    benefit. Further assuming that the Defendant could
    show prejudice, the Court does not find ineffective
    assistance of counsel. This finding is without
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    prejudice to the Defendant and may be raised on
    appeal.
    21.   Furthermore, the Court finds that the Defendant’s
    attorneys     were    not    ineffective   in   their
    representation of the Defendant as the Defendant
    made a voluntary strategic decision to provide the
    information at issue so as to obtain the benefit of
    avoiding the imposition and execution of the death
    penalty. The Defendant may also receive a future
    benefit of this disclosure if he is convicted of first
    degree murder and thereby faces a sentencing
    hearing in that the disclosure of the information as
    to the location of Shaniya Davis may be offered as a
    mitigating circumstance to the jury.
    From these findings, the trial court made the following conclusions, in relevant
    part:
    7.    Under the totality of the circumstances, the
    Defendant’s attorneys did not ineffectively assist the
    Defendant in providing information to law
    enforcement concerning the location of Shaniya
    Davis’ body without an agreement of some kind as to
    what would happen should the Defendant provide
    that information.
    8.    The Defendant’s provision of such information to law
    enforcement through his attorney at that stage in
    the search for Shaniya Davis was objectively
    reasonable in that it provided the State a basis for it
    to consider future plea negotiations with the
    Defendant should the Defendant be charged with
    more offenses related to the missing child during
    which negotiations the death penalty might be
    eliminated from the range of possible punishments.
    The provision of such information was also
    objectively reasonable in that it provided the
    Defendant the opportunity to obtain the benefit of a
    mitigating circumstance should charges he brought
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    against the Defendant for which the death penalty
    was a possible punishment.
    9.    The Defendant was represented by competent
    counsel who afforded him effective, reasonable, and
    professional representation.
    10.   In keeping with this Court’s prior Order on the
    Defendant’s claim of ineffective assistance of
    counsel, the Court adopts and incorporates by
    reference all of its findings of fact and conclusions of
    law in this Order as if fully set forth herein.
    11.   The Defendant has not shown that the advice and
    conduct of his attorneys fell below an objective
    standard, and the Defendant has not shown any
    prejudice. Even if the Defendant is prejudiced by the
    disclosure of this information, he has also benefited
    by the disclosure of this information in that the
    State offered to allow the Defendant to plead guilty
    and avoid the death penalty. He received that
    benefit. Further assuming that the Defendant could
    show prejudice, there was no ineffective assistance
    of counsel.
    12.   Furthermore, the Defendant’s attorneys were not
    ineffective in their representation of the Defendant
    as the Defendant made a voluntary strategic
    decision to provide the information at issue so as to
    obtain the benefit of avoiding the imposition and
    execution of the death penalty. The Defendant may
    also receive a future benefit of this disclosure if he is
    convicted of first degree murder and thereby faces a
    sentencing hearing in that the disclosure of the
    information as to the location of Shaniya Davis may
    he offered as a mitigating circumstance to the jury.
    ....
    14.   None of the Defendant’s rights under the United
    States Constitution, North Carolina Constitution, or
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    the North Carolina General Statutes were violated.
    Here defendant does not challenge any of the trial court’s findings of fact, but rather,
    he disputes the trial court’s ultimate determination that he did not receive
    constitutionally deficient counsel under Strickland.
    A. Benefit of Disclosure
    Defendant initially attempts to meet his burden under the first Strickland
    prong by arguing that his attorneys’ conduct was deficient because they “handed the
    State the single most incriminating piece of evidence against [defendant] without
    even seeking any benefit or protection for [defendant] in return.” Defendant points
    out that Rogers testified that he never tried to get any type of agreement from the
    State before disclosing the information.          Defendant asserts that under the
    “[p]revailing norms of practice,” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 
    688, 104 S. Ct. at 2065
    , 80 L.
    Ed. 2d at 694, his attorneys had a duty to seek or secure a benefit for him in exchange
    for the disclosure, and that their breach of this duty was constitutionally deficient.
    We disagree.
    In making this argument, defendant relies upon the American Bar Association
    (ABA) Guidelines for the Appointment and Performance of Counsel in Death Penalty
    Cases, as they were applicable at the time. See id. at 
    688, 104 S. Ct. at 2065
    , 80 L.
    Ed. 2d at 694 (“Prevailing norms of practice as reflected in American Bar Association
    standards and the like, e. g., ABA Standards for Criminal Justice 4–1.1 to 4–8.6 (2d
    -42-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    ed. 1980) (“The Defense Function”), are guides to determining what is reasonable, but
    they are only guides.”). Specifically, Guideline 10.5.B.2 provided:
    Promptly upon entry into the case, initial counsel should
    communicate in an appropriate manner with both the
    client and the government regarding the protection of the
    client’s rights against self-incrimination, to the effective
    assistance of counsel, and to preservation of the attorney-
    client privilege and similar safeguards.
    Additionally, Guideline 10.9.1 provided, in relevant part:
    A.     Counsel at every stage of the case have an obligation
    to take all steps that may be appropriate in the
    exercise of professional judgment in accordance with
    these Guidelines to achieve an agreed-upon
    disposition.
    B.     Counsel at every stage of the case should explore
    with the client the possibility and desirability of
    reaching an agreed-upon disposition. In so doing,
    counsel should fully explain the rights that would
    be waived, the possible collateral consequences, and
    the legal, factual, and contextual considerations that
    bear upon the decision.
    Defendant also relies upon the ABA Standards for Criminal Justice, Prosecution
    Function and Defense Function applicable at that time. Specifically, Standard 4-3.6,
    entitled “Prompt Action to Protect the Accused,” provided, inter alia:
    Many important rights of the accused can be
    protected and preserved only by prompt legal action.
    Defense counsel should inform the accused of his or her
    rights at the earliest opportunity and take all necessary
    action to vindicate such rights.
    While these provisions, which undoubtedly furnish sound guidance to defense
    attorneys in criminal cases, are perhaps broader in scope than the specific duty
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    contemplated by defendant here, they do in general terms tend to support defendant’s
    assertion that defense counsel should protect their client’s rights by pursuing benefits
    in return for the disclosure of potentially incriminating information.
    Yet, to the extent that counsel has a duty to seek a benefit in exchange for
    disclosing such information, it is plain that defendant’s attorneys did seek a benefit
    in exchange for the disclosure of Shaniya’s location—the purpose of the disclosure
    was to show that defendant could demonstrate cooperation and remorse, which would
    benefit defendant in the form of achieving a plea agreement for a life sentence or as
    a mitigating circumstance, and ultimately, to avoid the imposition of the death
    penalty.    This was the “agreed-upon disposition,” ABA Guidelines for the
    Appointment and Performance of Defense Counsel in Death Penalty Cases 10.9.1
    (Feb. 2003), which defendant later repudiated when he rejected the State’s plea offer
    of life in prison and refused to present mitigating evidence at trial.
    Despite defendant’s assent at the time of the disclosure, he argues on appeal
    that a plea agreement for life in prison so as to avoid the death penalty was not a
    reasonable objective that would justify the disclosure of incriminating information at
    that stage of the case because his attorneys were aware he had denied causing
    Shaniya any harm and because, according to defendant, “everything turned” on his
    innocence defense. This contention, however, is difficult to square with the record,
    because his attorneys were also aware that he had in essence confessed to kidnapping
    a five-year-old child from her home in the middle of the night and taking her to a
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    remote hotel where he was the last and only person to be seen with Shaniya.
    Moreover, they were aware of the fact that he possessed information on the remote
    location of Shaniya, though he was unwilling to disclose how he had acquired that
    information, and that this information directed law enforcement to search a more
    specific area in the same vicinity in which an extensive search tracking defendant’s
    cell phone data was already underway, suggesting that an incriminating discovery
    could be imminent. Even if defendant possessed a reasonable explanation for his
    actions that could exculpate him from directly causing harm to Shaniya, he was, at a
    minimum, likely to face charges of felony murder if, as feared, Shaniya was found
    deceased. Thus, while the disclosure certainly would be incriminating to defendant
    and could lead to the discovery of additional incriminating evidence against him, as
    proved to be the case here, the disclosure must be viewed in light of the already
    heavily incriminating evidence against defendat, as well as the apparent likelihood
    that the discovery of further incriminating evidence could be forthcoming.
    Similarly, defendant argues that the “agreed-upon disposition” was inadequate
    in that his attorneys should have endeavored to obtain a more favorable outcome.
    For example, defendant argues that his attorneys should have attempted to secure
    an agreement from the State to proceed noncapitally, which he alleges would have
    both protected him from imposition of the death penalty and preserved his ability to
    assert a defense of factual innocence. But defendant fails to explain how making the
    disclosure with such an agreement in place would have in any way affected his ability
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    to assert a defense of factual innocence. Here defendant was not required to plead
    guilty absent such an agreement; rather, he was free to put on any available evidence
    of his innocence, just as he would have been had the State proceeded noncapitally.
    Additionally, defendant asserts that his attorneys should have attempted to
    secure a non-attribution agreement, which could have limited the State’s use of any
    evidence regarding the disclosure solely to impeachment purposes at trial, or a proffer
    letter, which could have provided that the prosecutors would not use anything that
    defendant or his lawyers told them against defendant during the case-in-chief.
    Whether prosecutors would have been amenable to these considerations is
    speculative, but given the nature of the situation at that time—with the ongoing
    search for Shaniya and the considerable evidence against defendant—we are deeply
    skeptical. Moreover, while we recognize that in many situations it would make
    strategic sense to attempt to negotiate for the best possible agreement before
    disclosing potentially incriminating information, that is not necessarily true in
    situations when, as here, time was a substantial factor. Had law enforcement located
    Shaniya before defendant’s disclosure, the opportunity to obtain any benefit in return
    for defendant’s information would have been irrevocably lost. Additionally, given
    that defendant was denying causing any harm to Shaniya, there was the possibility,
    however remote, that Shaniya was still alive.
    Defendant attempts to minimize the role of time as a factor by suggesting that
    Shaniya might never have been discovered absent the disclosure, pointing to several
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
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    of the State’s arguments at trial. For instance, defendant notes that the State argued
    at trial that Shaniya’s body was “well hidden,” “hardly visible,” and “was very difficult
    to find -- and may not have been found without this information. Authorities had
    been searching in that general area and had not been able to locate the victim prior
    to this information.” Given that a massive search was underway in the same general
    area in which Shaniya was ultimately discovered, we are skeptical of defendant’s
    claim. More importantly, however, entertaining this type of speculative argument
    would be contrary to our mandate that “every effort be made to eliminate the
    distorting effects of hindsight” and “to evaluate the conduct from counsel’s
    perspective at the time.” 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689
    , 104 S. Ct. at 
    2065, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 694
    . The information Rogers and Brewer received from defendant directed law
    enforcement to search a more specific area in the same vicinity in which an extensive
    search was already underway at that time, suggesting that a discovery could very
    well be imminent. Rogers and Brewer could in no way anticipate how well hidden or
    how difficult to discover the body of Shaniya might be, nor could they have anticipated
    receiving that information from defendant, who denied causing any harm to Shaniya.
    See 
    Sneed, 284 N.C. at 614
    , 201 S.E.2d at 872 (“We think that the attorney-client
    relationship is such that when a client gives his attorney facts constituting a defense,
    the attorney may rely on the statement given unless it is patently false.”).
    In sum, we cannot agree with defendant that it was unreasonable for his
    attorneys to target a plea agreement for life in prison and the avoidance of the death
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    penalty in exchange for making the disclosure. We note that the commentary to
    Guideline 10.9.1 from the same ABA Guidelines for the Appointment and
    Performance of Defense Counsel in Death Penalty Cases cited by defendant, states:
    “Death is different because avoiding execution is, in
    many capital cases, the best and only realistic result
    possible”; as a result, plea bargains in capital cases are not
    usually “offered” but instead must be “pursued and won.”
    Agreements are often only possible after many years of
    effort. Accordingly, this Guideline emphasizes that the
    obligation of counsel to seek an agreed-upon disposition
    continues throughout all phases of the case.
    (Footnote call number omitted.) Certainly, the decision to consider a client’s situation
    as a potential capital case and seek a disposition accordingly is not one to be taken
    lightly; on that account, we note that, as found by the trial court, Rogers and Brewer
    were both experienced criminal defense attorneys. See 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 681
    ,
    104 S. Ct. at 
    2061, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 689
    (“Among the factors relevant to deciding
    whether particular strategic choices are reasonable are the experience of the attorney
    . . . .”). We hold only that under the unique and difficult circumstances here—with
    the already heavily incriminating evidence against defendant, as well as the apparent
    likelihood that the discovery of further incriminating evidence could be imminent—
    and “indul[ging] a strong presumption that [defendant’s attorneys’] conduct falls
    within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance,” 
    Id. at 689,
    104 S. Ct. at
    
    2065, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 694
    , Rogers and Brewer’s decision to disclose potentially
    incriminating information with the sought-after goal of avoiding imposition of the
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    death penalty did not fall below “an objective standard of reasonableness,” 
    id. at 688,
    104 S. Ct. at 
    2064, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 693
    .
    Whether defendant’s attorneys erred in not first securing, or attempting to
    secure, a plea agreement for life in prison before making the disclosure is a separate
    and more difficult question. On the one hand, as we have previously noted, any
    negotiations with prosecutors may have been an uphill battle and would have been
    further complicated by the issue of time. On the other hand, a plea agreement for life
    in prison would likely have been a more attainable benefit than the alternatives
    proffered by defendant in his brief (a non-attribution agreement or a proffer letter).
    Additionally, without any agreement firmly in place, defendant’s attorneys exposed
    him to the possibility of further incrimination without any guaranteed benefit save
    for the existence of potential mitigating evidence at trial. Yet, we need not answer
    this question because, given that we have held that a plea agreement for life in prison
    and avoidance of the death penalty was a reasonable disposition in these
    circumstances, defendant cannot establish any prejudice when the State did offer
    defendant a plea agreement for life in prison. That is—even assuming arguendo that
    defendant’s attorneys were deficient in disclosing the information without any plea
    agreement in place, defendant cannot show “a reasonable probability that, but for
    [his attorneys’] unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
    different” when the very result that was desired did materialize and was rejected by
    defendant’s own choice. Id. at 
    694, 104 S. Ct. at 2068
    , 80 L. Ed. 2d at 698.
    -49-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    B. Adequate Investigation
    Defendant next argues that his attorneys were deficient in their performance
    because they failed to conduct an adequate investigation before disclosing to police
    where to search for Shaniya when they were only one day into their representation
    of defendant. See 
    id. at 691,
    104 S. Ct. at 
    2066, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 695
    (“[C]ounsel has a
    duty to make reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable decision that makes
    particular investigations unnecessary.”) According to defendant, “everything turned”
    on his innocence defense, and his attorneys had a duty to adequately investigate that
    defense before destroying it by disclosing incriminating evidence to the State.
    Defendant argues that this disclosure was contrary to the applicable ABA guidelines,
    under which attorneys should investigate issues of guilt regardless of overwhelming
    evidence against a defendant or the defendant’s own admissions or statements
    constituting guilt.
    Defendant’s assertions, however, are not borne out by the record. For example,
    defendant argues that Rogers failed to look at any formal discovery materials before
    making the disclosure.     Yet, Rogers testified that at that early stage in the
    investigation, there was no discovery file to examine. Similarly, defendant seizes
    upon Rogers’s response that he was unaware that defendant had at one point denied
    being the person depicted in photographs from the hotel, alleging that this statement
    demonstrates Rogers’s failure to investigate defendant’s claims of innocence. But we
    can find little significance in Rogers’s statement. Defendant’s “denial” occurred when
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    he was first confronted with photographs of himself and Shaniya taken from the
    Comfort Suites video footage. Defendant briefly attempted to claim that the person
    in the videos was someone who looked just like him, had somehow stolen his I.D. and
    car, and had signed into the hotel with defendant’s name.          Defendant quickly
    admitted it was he in the photographs, and then tried to claim he was delivering
    Shaniya to an unknown third party at the direction of text messages, which were not
    on defendant’s phone and of which there is no record. Defendant fails to explain how
    Rogers’s ignorance of defendant’s short-lived denial of a fact relating to the
    kidnapping—a fact that was plainly apparent from available evidence, to which
    defendant shortly thereafter admitted and to which he later stipulated at trial—
    demonstrates any failure by Rogers to adequately investigate issues of defendant’s
    guilt or innocence on the issue of murder.
    Apart from defendant’s brief denial, defendant is unable to identify anything
    that Rogers’s allegedly inadequate investigation failed to uncover and which would
    have had any effect on the reasonableness of his attorneys’ strategic decision to make
    the disclosure. See 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690-91
    , 104 S. Ct. at 
    2066, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 695
    (“[S]trategic choices made after thorough investigation of law and facts relevant
    to plausible options are virtually unchallengeable; and strategic choices made after
    less than complete investigation are reasonable precisely to the extent that
    reasonable professional judgments support the limitations on investigation.”). Nor
    does defendant suggest precisely what other investigative avenues Rogers and
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    Brewer should have pursued. Rogers and Brewer discussed defendant’s situation
    with him, and Rogers testified that he had conversations with Kimble to gauge the
    status of the investigation as it related to defendant’s involvement. From these
    investigations, defendant’s attorneys learned that defendant had kidnapped Shaniya
    in the middle of the night, and taken her to a hotel where he was the last person to
    be seen with her, and that searchers were presently conducting a massive, ongoing
    attempt to locate Shaniya by combing through the areas revealed by defendant’s cell
    phone data. We conclude that defendant’s attorneys’ strategic choice here to disclose
    where to look for Shaniya was “made after thorough investigation of law and facts
    relevant to plausible options.” 
    Id. at 690,
    104 S. Ct. at 
    2066, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 695
    .
    Even if defendant was able to identify some additional investigative steps his
    attorneys could have taken and to demonstrate that counsel engaged in a “less than
    complete investigation,” we conclude that, given that time was a significant factor
    here, “reasonable professional judgments” would have “support[ed] the limitations on
    investigation.” 
    Id. at 691,
    104 S. Ct. at 
    2066, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 695
    .
    C. Source of Disclosure
    Next, defendant asserts that his attorneys erroneously advised him that they
    would shield his identity as the source of the information but that their method of
    disclosure revealed him as the source.       Defendant argues that by doing so, his
    attorneys violated the Rules of Professional Conduct and the applicable ABA
    guidelines requiring a client’s informed consent before lawyers may reveal
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
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    information acquired during the professional relationship. See, e.g., N.C. St. B. Rev.
    R. Prof’l Conduct r. 1.6(a) (2018 Ann. R. N.C. 1183, 1205) (“A lawyer shall not reveal
    information acquired during the professional relationship with a client unless the
    client gives informed consent . . . .”).
    In support of his argument, defendant points to this exchange between Terry
    Alford, defendant’s trial attorney, and Rogers at the hearing:
    Q      And so the discussion that you had with Mr. McNeill
    concerning the information, the authority that you had was
    to convey the information but not to reveal the source; is
    that correct?
    A    That was certainly our intent. And my recollection
    was just conveying the information, not saying Mario
    McNeill said anything or any specific person.
    Q     Right.    And he never specifically gave you
    permission to be able to say the information came from
    him, did he?
    A     He did not specifically say, convey the information
    came from me.
    Defendant asserts that because they agreed not to explicitly name him as the source
    of the disclosure, this agreement necessarily implied that his attorneys would not
    allow evidence from the disclosure to be attributed to him, either directly or by
    inference. According to defendant, this is reflected in Finding of Fact 9 from the trial
    court’s 16 May 2013 order, in which the trial court found that defendant “did not
    authorize his attorneys to make any admissions on his behalf.”
    The record, however, cannot support defendant’s characterization of the
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    Opinion of the Court
    agreement as being conditioned upon his attorneys’ implicit promise that they would
    prevent the disclosure from being attributed to defendant, even by inference. Indeed,
    the entire purpose of the disclosure, to which defendant agreed, was that it be
    attributable to defendant to show cooperation on his part. Immediately before the
    portion of the hearing relied upon by defendant, Rogers testified:
    Q     That was the way it was done by Mr. Brewer is that
    he gave it as a recommendation. He didn’t say where the
    information come from; is that correct?
    A     That is correct. And that is my best recollection of
    what I did so as well.
    Q      In other words, the information that you were
    relaying to the police was intended to be information you
    received from someone, but you did not want to relay who
    that came from; is that correct?
    A     That’s correct.
    Q     At any time when you were talking to the
    authorities, did you tell them who it came from?
    A     No. No, I didn’t.
    Q     So any belief that someone may have that
    information you gave them came from Mr. McNeill would
    be their speculation. You never specifically said where it
    came from, did you?
    A     No, I didn’t.
    Q     That was because you weren’t authorized by Mr.
    McNeill to specifically tell someone where that information
    came from, were you?
    A     No, that’s not true. We were authorized.
    -54-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    Q      You were authorized to do what?
    A      We were authorized to disclose the information.
    Q     But were you authorized to disclose the source of the
    information?
    A     In our conversation prior to disclosing the
    information, it was decided that the information would be
    provided without specifically stating the source.
    Q      And that’s the way Mr. Brewer did it, and that was
    your intention of doing it also, not to provide the source,
    correct?
    A      That’s correct.
    (Emphasis added.) Rogers further explained that while it was agreed to convey the
    information without “specifically stating the source,” they were also not trying to hide
    defendant’s role in furnishing the information. As Rogers testified at the hearing:
    Q      And when you’re talking about getting mitigating
    information for the defendant, Mario McNeill, to use or to
    set him up down the road with having the benefit of having
    been helpful in providing her body, that sort of thing --
    A      Yes.
    Q     -- right? Being cooperative. He could be claimed to
    be cooperative, right?
    A      That’s correct.
    Q     You’re not hiding from Captain Kimble who you’re
    getting the information from?
    A      No, I’m not.
    -55-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    Q       You won’t be able to claim any credit, or he won’t be
    able to claim any credit down the road should he need it if
    it’s a mystery as to where the information is coming from,
    right?
    A      That’s correct.
    In light of Rogers’s testimony and the agreed-upon purpose of the disclosure, the fact
    that defendant and his attorneys agreed not to explicitly name defendant as the
    source of the disclosure cannot be read as an implicit understanding that his
    attorneys would shield him as the source but rather must be read in the context of
    their conversation, in which defendant told his attorneys that he had information
    about Shaniya’s location but did not explain how he had acquired that information,
    and in which defendant was “denying that he was involved in hurting [Shaniya] or
    killing her.” The method of disclosure allowed an immediate inference of cooperation
    but avoided any inadvertent admission of guilt. While defendant relies heavily upon
    a portion of Finding of Fact 9, the trial court’s full sentence from that finding states
    that “[t]he Defendant did not authorize his attorneys to make any admissions on his
    behalf, and they did not make any admissions on his behalf.” (Emphasis added.)
    Similarly, in its previous order from 17 April 2013, the trial court found that
    defendant “authorized Mr. Rogers to provide that specific information to law
    enforcement” and that “[t]he Defendant’s information . . . did not constitute an
    admission to a crime.” (Emphasis added.) Thus, while the record establishes that
    defendant’s attorneys were not authorized to make any admissions of guilt to any
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    crimes on behalf of defendant, it does not support defendant’s assertion that they
    advised him they would shield his identity as the source of the information.
    Certainly, that the information came from defendant’s attorneys allowed an
    inference that defendant was the source, which, while demonstrating immediate
    cooperation on the part of defendant, was also potentially incriminating as it
    suggested an inference of guilt. But this trade-off goes to the heart of the agreed-
    upon strategy—the mounting evidence against defendant was already highly
    incriminating, and providing this information to the police that could potentially be
    further incriminating was a strategic decision made to avoid imposition of the death
    penalty.
    Whether defendant’s attorneys should have advised him to adopt a different
    strategy that attempted to disclose the information anonymously and to shield
    defendant’s identity as the source—perhaps until the sentencing proceeding of a
    capital trial—is a separate question not specifically raised by defendant, but on these
    facts we can see little to be gained, and more importantly, no constitutional
    deficiency, in failing to take such a course. Defendant’s attorneys clearly believed
    that disclosing the information without hiding his identity was the best way to
    demonstrate cooperation and receive a benefit for the information while avoiding any
    overt suggestion of guilt on the part of defendant. Either defendant possessed an
    exculpatory explanation as to how he had acquired information on Shaniya’s location,
    which he was at that point unwilling to share with his attorneys, or he did not. If he
    -57-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    was being truthful with his attorneys in denying causing any harm to Shaniya, then
    he did possess such an explanation, and his attorneys’ overt omission of his name in
    making the disclosure cleared the path for him to rebut the inference of guilt via any
    available evidence that an unnamed third party was the ultimate source of the
    information. This was the scenario defendant argued in his closing, albeit without
    any evidentiary support.
    Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Conclusion
    In sum, we conclude that defendant has failed to meet his burden under
    Strickland and we find no error in the trial court’s ruling. The strategy employed by
    Rogers and Brewer here, to which defendant agreed, was a result of their “trying to
    give [defendant] the best advice [they could] to try to help save his life.” Significantly,
    defendant agreed with this strategy, and he received the very benefit sought by this
    strategy when the State later offered him a plea agreement for life in prison, which
    defendant twice declined. Defendant also declined to present any mitigating evidence
    in the sentencing proceeding of the trial, thus rejecting a further benefit contemplated
    by his agreed-upon strategy.       Accordingly, defendant’s ineffective assistance of
    counsel claim is overruled.
    Cronic claim
    In addition to arguing that he received ineffective assistance of counsel under
    Strickland, defendant also argues that he received ineffective assistance under the
    standard set forth in United States v. Cronic, 
    466 U.S. 648
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2039
    , 80 L. Ed.
    -58-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    2d 657 (1984). In Strickland the Court considered “claims of ineffective assistance
    based on allegations of specific errors by counsel—claims which, by their very nature,
    require courts to evaluate both the attorney’s performance and the effect of that
    performance on the reliability and fairness of the proceeding.” 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 702
    , 104 S. Ct. at 
    2072, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 703
    (Brennan, J., concurring in the opinion).
    On the other hand, in Cronic the Court considered ineffective assistance of counsel
    claims in the context of cases in which there is a “complete denial of counsel,” “counsel
    entirely fails to subject the prosecution’s case to meaningful adversarial testing,” or
    “the surrounding circumstances [make] it so unlikely that any lawyer could provide
    effective assistance that ineffectiveness [is] properly presumed without inquiry into
    actual performance at trial.” 
    Cronic, 466 U.S. at 659-61
    , 104 S. Ct. at 2047-48, 80 L.
    Ed. 2d at 668-69.
    Defendant argues that his attorneys, by disclosing of the location of Shaniya
    to police without first securing any benefit in return, were essentially working for the
    police and that this situation resulted in a breakdown of the adversarial process
    under Cronic. We are unpersuaded. Defendant’s challenge is more properly brought
    as an allegation of a specific error under Strickland, which we have already
    addressed.   Moreover, for the reasons previously stated, we conclude that the
    attorneys’ disclosure was a reasonable strategic decision made in the course of their
    representation of defendant and certainly did not amount to a “breakdown in the
    adversarial process that would justify a presumption that respondent’s conviction
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    was insufficiently reliable to satisfy the Constitution.” 
    Id. at 662,
    104 S. Ct. at 
    2049, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 670
    .
    Attorney-Client Privilege
    Defendant next argues that the information regarding the location of Shaniya
    was inadmissible by virtue of the attorney–client privilege. “It is an established rule
    of the common law that confidential communications made to an attorney in his
    professional capacity by his client are privileged, and the attorney cannot be
    compelled to testify to them unless his client consents.” Dobias v. White, 
    240 N.C. 680
    , 684, 
    83 S.E.2d 785
    , 788 (1954) (citations omitted). Significantly, however, “not
    all communications between an attorney and a client are privileged,” In re
    Investigation of Miller, 
    357 N.C. 316
    , 335, 
    584 S.E.2d 772
    , 786 (2003) (citations
    omitted), but rather, “[o]nly confidential communications are protected,” 
    Dobias, 240 N.C. at 684
    , 83 S.E.2d at 788 (emphasis added). “For example, . . . if it appears that
    a communication was not regarded as confidential or that the communication was
    made for the purpose of being conveyed by the attorney to others, the communication
    is not privileged.” In re 
    Miller, 357 N.C. at 335
    , 584 S.E.2d at 786 (citing State v.
    McIntosh, 
    336 N.C. 517
    , 524, 
    444 S.E.2d 438
    , 442 (1994)).
    The party asserting the privilege has the burden of establishing each of the
    essential elements of a privileged communication. 
    Id. at 336,
    584 S.E.2d at 787
    (quoting 1 Scott N. Stone & Robert K. Taylor, Testimonial Privileges § 1.61, at 1–161
    (2d ed. 1994) (citations omitted) (“This burden may not be met by ‘mere conclusory or
    -60-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    ipse dixit assertions,’ or by a ‘blanket refusal to testify.’ Rather, sufficient evidence
    must be adduced, usually by means of an affidavit or affidavits, to establish the
    privilege with respect to each disputed item.”)).         This Court has held that the
    elements of a privileged communication are:
    (1) the relation of attorney and client existed at the time
    the communication was made, (2) the communication was
    made in confidence, (3) the communication relates to a
    matter about which the attorney is being professionally
    consulted, (4) the communication was made in the course
    of giving or seeking legal advice for a proper purpose
    although litigation need not be contemplated and (5) the
    client has not waived the privilege.
    State v. Murvin, 
    304 N.C. 523
    , 531, 
    284 S.E.2d 289
    , 294 (1981) (citation omitted).
    Finally, “the responsibility of determining whether the attorney-client privilege
    applies belongs to the trial court.” In re Miller, 357 N.C. at 
    336, 584 S.E.2d at 787
    (citing Hughes v. Boone, 
    102 N.C. 137
    , 160, 
    9 S.E. 286
    , 292 (1889)).
    Here the trial court determined that defendant failed to meet his burden of
    demonstrating that the information he provided to his attorneys concerning the
    location of Shaniya was privileged.        In its order denying defendant’s Motion to
    Require Specific Performance or, Alternatively, to Suppress Statements and
    Evidence, the trial court found as fact:
    6.     During Mr. Rogers’ representation, the Defendant
    provided specific information to Mr. Rogers as to the
    location of Shaniya Davis’ body, and the Defendant
    authorized Mr. Rogers to provide that specific
    information to law enforcement.
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    7.     Pursuant to the Defendant’s authorization, Mr.
    Rogers provided to law enforcement that specific
    information as to the location of Shaniya Davis’
    body.
    8.     The Defendant’s information regarding the location
    of Shaniya Davis’ body did not constitute an
    admission to a crime.
    In its second order, the trial court adopted and incorporated all of its findings from
    its previous order, and additionally found as fact:
    5.     During their representation of the Defendant, Mr.
    Brewer and Mr. Rogers talked to the Defendant
    while he was in jail about cooperating with the police
    in looking for Shaniya Davis. They discussed how
    the Defendant might benefit from cooperating with
    the police on this issue by avoiding the imposition
    and execution of the death penalty. During these
    discussions, the Defendant specifically authorized
    his attorneys, Brewer and Mr. Rogers, to give
    information to the police relating to the location of
    Shaniya Davis. Nothing about their discussions
    suggests that the Defendant involuntarily provided
    the information at issue to his attorneys.
    ....
    9.     The Defendant authorized his attorneys to
    communicate information to the police that would
    aid them in locating Shaniya Davis. The Defendant
    did not authorize his attorneys to make any
    admissions on his behalf, and they did not make any
    admissions on his behalf. Neither Mr. Rogers nor
    Mr. Brewer told Captain Kimble the specific source
    of the information as to the directions where to
    search. . . . .
    ....
    -62-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    15.   Contrary to the Defendant’s argument, the
    Defendant did not meet his burden of demonstrating
    that the statements at issue were privileged
    communications. The evidence shows that they do
    not fall within the protection of the attorney-client
    privilege because they were not confidential. The
    statements at issue were not regarded by the
    Defendant and his attorneys as confidential as they
    were made for the purpose of being conveyed by the
    attorney to others and were therefore not privileged.
    16.   Even assuming that the attorney-client privilege
    existed, the Defendant waived the privilege in
    respect to the information given to the police for the
    sole purpose of allowing his attorneys to share the
    information with the police. This information was
    not given in exchange for any plea deal, dismissal of
    charges, immunity, or any other incentive or
    inducement offered by the State, and this
    information was not given during any plea
    negotiations with the District Attorney or any of his
    staff under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 410.
    ....
    22.   The Defendant waived the attorney-client privilege
    in that he specifically intended the information that
    he gave to his attorneys about the location of
    Shaniya Davis be shared with the authorities for the
    sole purpose of locating Shaniya Davis, the
    Defendant authorized the limited disclosure of this
    information for that limited purpose, there is no
    evidence of any deal to disclose this information, the
    disclosure was not the result of plea negotiations,
    the disclosure was voluntary, and there is no
    evidence of the Defendant’s motive for the disclosure
    other than an interest on the part of the Defendant
    that Shaniya Davis would be found and that he
    might avoid the imposition and execution of the
    death penalty.
    -63-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    23.    The defendant has not waived his privilege in regard
    to his attorneys testifying in this case on the trial on
    the merits.
    Based upon these findings of fact, the trial court concluded:
    4.     The Defendant waived the attorney-client privilege
    as to some of this information. As to the information
    that Mr. Brewer and Mr. Rogers supplied to Captain
    Kimble, the attorney-client privilege did not exist
    because the information was not given to the
    attorneys in confidence as the Defendant voluntarily
    gave the information to his attorneys for the purpose
    of his attorneys sharing it with the police, and even
    if the attorney-client privilege did exist, that the
    defendant waived the attorney-client privilege so
    that his attorneys could share that information with
    the authorities.
    ....
    13.    The Defendant waived the attorney-client privilege
    in that he specifically intended the information that
    he gave to his attorneys about the location of
    Shaniya Davis he shared with the authorities for the
    sole purpose of locating Shaniya Davis, the
    Defendant authorized the limited disclosure of this
    information for that limited purpose, there is no
    evidence of any deal to disclose this information, the
    disclosure was not the result of plea negotiations,
    the disclosure was voluntary, and there is no
    evidence of the Defendant’s motive for the disclosure
    other than an interest on the part of the Defendant
    that Shaniya Davis would be found and that he
    might avoid the imposition and execution of the
    death penalty.
    14.    None of the Defendant’s rights under the United
    States Constitution, North Carolina Constitution, or
    the North Carolina General Statutes were violated.
    -64-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    We conclude that the trial court correctly determined that the information was not
    protected by attorney–client privilege. Specifically, the testimony of Rogers and
    Brewer plainly establishes that defendant communicated the information to them
    with the purpose that it be relayed to law enforcement to assist in the search for
    Shaniya. Accordingly, the evidence establishes that defendant’s communication of
    the information to his attorneys “was made for the purpose of being conveyed by the
    attorney[s] to others,” and as a result, “the communication is not privileged.” In re
    
    Miller, 357 N.C. at 335
    , 584 S.E.2d at 786 (citing 
    McIntosh, 336 N.C. at 524
    , 444
    S.E.2d at 442).
    Nonetheless, defendant argues on appeal that any waiver of the privilege on
    his part (or any intention that the information be conveyed to others) was made under
    the condition that he not be revealed as the source of the information. Defendant
    contends that his attorneys breached this condition by disclosing the information
    without protecting his identity as the source, rendering any waiver a nullity and
    leaving intact the privileged status of the information. Defendant further asserts
    that, at a minimum, his identity as the source of the information was privileged and
    should have been protected against any comment or infringement by the State.
    According to defendant, the trial court, by allowing evidence at trial that the
    information came from his attorneys and by allowing the State to argue inferences of
    guilt from that evidence, deliberately invaded the attorney–client relationship and
    violated his federal and state rights to counsel under the Sixth Amendment to the
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    United States Constitution and Article I, Section 23 of the North Carolina
    Constitution.
    Defendant’s contentions, however, are again premised on the same portions of
    the record on which he based his previous argument that his attorneys breached their
    duty of confidentiality10 and provided ineffective assistance of counsel. For instance,
    defendant again refers to the trial court’s Finding of Fact 9, which states that
    defendant “did not authorize his attorneys to make any admissions on his behalf.”
    Yet, as noted above, this finding, in which the trial court continued by stating “and
    they did not make any admission on his behalf,” references admissions to a crime. As
    we have previously concluded, while the record establishes that defendant’s attorneys
    10 While the attorney–client privilege and the ethical duty of confidentiality are
    related principles, they are not synonymous, and the applicability here of the former is
    questionable given that the disclosure of purportedly confidential information was not made
    pursuant to compulsion of law over the objection of defendant, but rather was made
    voluntarily and out of court. See N.C. St. B. Rev. R. Prof’l Conduct r. 1.6(a) cmt. 3 (2018 Ann.
    R. N.C. at 1205) (“The principle of client-lawyer confidentiality is given effect by related
    bodies of law: the attorney-client privilege, the work product doctrine and the rule of
    confidentiality established in professional ethics. The attorney-client privilege and work-
    product doctrine apply in judicial and other proceedings in which a lawyer may be called as
    a witness or otherwise required to produce evidence concerning a client. The rule of client-
    lawyer confidentiality applies in situations other than those where evidence is sought from
    the lawyer through compulsion of law. The confidentiality rule, for example, applies not only
    to matters communicated in confidence by the client but also to all information acquired
    during the representation, whatever its source. A lawyer may not disclose such information
    except as authorized or required by the Rules of Professional Conduct or other law.” (citation
    omitted)); 
    Dobias, 240 N.C. at 684
    , 83 S.E.2d at 788 (“It is an established rule of the common
    law that confidential communications made to an attorney in his professional capacity by his
    client are privileged, and the attorney cannot be compelled to testify to them unless his client
    consents.” (emphasis added)). In any event, for the reasons stated above, the information
    defendant communicated to his attorneys was not privileged.
    -66-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    were not authorized to make any admissions of guilt to any crimes on behalf of
    defendant, and that they made no such admissions, the record does not support
    defendant’s characterization of the agreement as being conditioned upon his
    attorneys’ representation that they would prevent the disclosure from being
    attributed to defendant, even by inference. Defendant’s arguments to the contrary
    are overruled.
    Hearsay - Admissions by a Party–Opponent
    Defendant next contends that Captain Kimble’s testimony that he received
    information on the location of Shaniya from defendant’s attorneys was inadmissible
    hearsay and that the trial court erred in denying defendant’s motion to suppress this
    testimony. We disagree.
    “ ‘Hearsay’ is 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.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 801(c) (2017); see also 
    id. Rule 801(a)
    (2017)
    (defining “statement” as “(1) an oral or written assertion or (2) nonverbal conduct of
    a person, if it is intended by him as an assertion”). “In general, hearsay evidence is
    not admissible.” State v. Rivera, 
    350 N.C. 285
    , 288-89, 
    514 S.E.2d 720
    , 722 (1999)
    (citing State v. Wilson, 
    322 N.C. 117
    , 131-32, 
    367 S.E.2d 589
    , 598 (1988)).          An
    exception to the hearsay rule exists in Rule 801(d), which provides in pertinent part:
    (d) Exception for Admissions by a Party-Opponent.
    – A statement is admissible as an exception to the hearsay
    rule if it is offered against a party and it is . . . (C) a
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    statement by a person authorized by him to make a
    statement concerning the subject, or (D) a statement by his
    agent or servant concerning a matter within the scope of
    his agency or employment, made during the existence of
    the relationship[.]
    N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 801(d) (2017).
    Here defendant objected to the admission of Kimble’s testimony about
    statements made to him by defendant’s attorneys concerning the location of Shaniya
    on the basis that, inter alia, such testimony was inadmissible hearsay. The trial court
    determined that defendant’s attorneys’ statements to Kimble were admissible under
    N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 801(d). Accordingly, the trial court ordered that:
    The State may call Assistant Chief Kimble as a witness,
    and he may testify pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule
    801(d) about his conversations with Mr. Brewer and Mr.
    Rogers inasmuch as these attorneys were the Defendant’s
    agents and were authorized by the Defendant to make the
    statements at issue . . . .
    The trial court did not allow Kimble to testify “as to any feelings about the source of
    the information.”
    Defendant argues that because the trial court found that he “did not authorize
    his attorneys to make any admissions on his behalf,” and yet admitted into evidence
    his attorneys’ statements to Kimble pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 801(d) under
    the “Admissions by a Party-Opponent” hearsay exception, the trial court erroneously
    allowed defendant’s attorneys’ disclosure to be admitted as defendant’s own
    statement and to be attributed to him, resulting in prejudice and requiring a new
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    trial. (Emphases added.)      The consonance of the word “admission” may appear
    contradictory here at first glance, but this argument too is without merit.
    As previously discussed, in Finding of Fact 9 the trial court determined that
    defendant did not authorize his attorneys to make any admissions of guilt to any
    crimes and, on that account, “they did not make any admissions on his behalf.” As
    the trial court specifically found in its earlier order, defendant “authorized Mr. Rogers
    to provide that specific information to law enforcement” and “[t]he Defendant’s
    information . . . did not constitute an admission to a crime.” (Emphasis added.) It is
    clear that the trial court’s meaning of “admission” in this respect was more akin to a
    “confession,” which is “an acknowledgement in express[ed] words by [the] accused in
    a criminal case of his guilt [of] the crime charged or of some essential part of it.” State
    v. Trexler, 
    316 N.C. 528
    , 531, 
    342 S.E.2d 878
    , 880 (1986) (quoting State v. Fox, 
    277 N.C. 1
    , 25, 
    175 S.E.2d 561
    , 576 (1970)).
    In contrast, this Court has defined “admission” in the context of Rule 801(d)
    more broadly as “a statement of pertinent facts which, in light of other evidence, is
    incriminating.” State v. Lambert, 
    341 N.C. 36
    , 50, 
    460 S.E.2d 123
    , 131 (1995) (quoting
    
    Trexler, 316 N.C. at 531
    , 342 S.E.2d at 879-80); see also State v. Chapman, 
    359 N.C. 328
    , 355, 
    611 S.E.2d 794
    , 816 (2005) (referring to the Rule 801(d) exception when
    applied to a defendant’s statement as the “statement of a party opponent” (emphasis
    added)); 
    Trexler, 316 N.C. at 531
    , 342 S.E.2d at 880 (“A confession, therefore, is a type
    of an admission.” (citations omitted)). Under this broad definition, the “Admissions
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
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    by a Party-Opponent” hearsay exception encompasses more than mere admissions of
    guilt. See, e.g., 
    Chapman, 359 N.C. at 355
    , 611 S.E.2d at 816 (concluding that the
    defendant’s statement to a detective about a threatening telephone call he received
    the day after the murder of which he was accused was admissible as the statement
    of a party opponent); State v. Collins, 
    335 N.C. 729
    , 738, 
    440 S.E.2d 559
    , 564 (1994)
    (opining that the defendant’s comments concerning his previous statements about
    threats he had made to his wife before her death fell within the exception for
    admissions by a party opponent).         As a result, the trial court’s admitting of
    defendant’s attorneys’ statements under Rule 801(d) did not conflict with Finding of
    Fact 9, which explicitly found that defendant “did not authorize his attorneys to make
    any admissions on his behalf, and they did not.”
    Because, as discussed previously, defendant authorized his attorneys to convey
    the information to law enforcement, the trial court did not err in admitting the
    evidence as “statement[s] by a person authorized by [defendant] to make a statement
    concerning the subject.” N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 801(d)(C). Moreover, consistent with
    defendant’s agreement with his attorneys that he not specifically be named as the
    source, the trial court did not permit Kimble to testify “as to any feelings about the
    source of the information.”11 Certainly, one could infer that defendant was the
    11 Defendant argues that admission of the statements under Rule 801(d) means that
    they came in as defendant’s own statements and were directly attributable to him. However,
    the jury was not informed of the manner in which this evidence was admitted—in other
    words, that the statements were authorized by defendant. The jury could only infer that
    -70-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    ultimate source of information that came from his attorneys. At trial, the State
    repeatedly argued this inference; however, as discussed above, this argument was an
    inevitable result of the agreed-upon strategy in making the disclosure. Defendant’s
    arguments are overruled.
    Due Process
    Next, defendant argues that the cumulative effect of his original attorneys’
    ineffective assistance of counsel, combined with the trial court’s admission into
    evidence of testimony that his lawyers disclosed the location of Shaniya to police, as
    well as its admission of all evidence recovered from that location and all evidence
    derived from the discovery of Shaniya’s body, deprived defendant of a fair trial in
    violation of his rights to due process of law under the Fourteenth Amendment to the
    United States Constitution and the Law of the Land Clause of the North Carolina
    Constitution.   Because we have held that defendant did not receive ineffective
    assistance of counsel and that the trial court did not err in any evidentiary rulings,
    defendant’s contentions are without merit.
    Improper Statements During the State’s Closing Argument
    Defendant’s next argument concerns two statements made by the State during
    closing arguments at the guilt-innocence proceeding of the trial. More specifically,
    defendant was the source from the fact that the attorneys who possessed the information
    represented him. As previously discussed, while inference was incriminating, it was
    permissible in light of the agreed-upon disclosure.
    -71-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    defendant argues that because these two comments severely prejudiced him, the trial
    court abused its discretion in denying his repeated requests for a mistrial. We do not
    agree.
    A trial court “must declare a mistrial upon the defendant’s motion if there
    occurs during the trial . . . conduct inside or outside the courtroom, resulting in
    substantial and irreparable prejudice to the defendant’s case.” N.C.G.S. § 15A-1061
    (2017). The determination “as to whether substantial and irreparable prejudice has
    occurred lies within the sound discretion of the trial judge and . . . will not be
    disturbed on appeal absent a showing of abuse of discretion.” State v. Thomas, 
    350 N.C. 315
    , 341, 
    514 S.E.2d 486
    , 502 (1999) (citing State v. McNeill, 
    349 N.C. 634
    , 646,
    
    509 S.E.2d 415
    , 422 (1998), cert. denied, 
    528 U.S. 838
    , 
    120 S. Ct. 102
    , 
    145 L. Ed. 2d 87
    (1999)), cert. denied, 
    528 U.S. 1006
    , 
    120 S. Ct. 503
    , 
    145 L. Ed. 2d 388
    (1999); see
    also State v. Taylor, 
    362 N.C. 514
    , 538, 
    669 S.E.2d 239
    , 260 (2008) (“An abuse of
    discretion occurs when a ruling is ‘manifestly unsupported by reason, which is to say
    it is so arbitrary that it could not have been the result of a reasoned decision.’ ”
    (quoting State v. T.D.R., 
    347 N.C. 489
    , 503, 
    495 S.E.2d 700
    , 708 (1998))), cert. denied,
    
    558 U.S. 851
    , 
    130 S. Ct. 129
    , 
    175 L. Ed. 2d 84
    (2009). Further, “[t]he decision of the
    trial judge is entitled to great deference since he is in a far better position than an
    appellate court to determine the effect of any such error on the jury.” 
    Thomas, 350 N.C. at 341
    , 514 S.E.2d at 502 (citing State v. King, 
    343 N.C. 29
    , 44, 
    468 S.E.2d 232
    ,
    242 (1996)). We also note that “[m]istrial is a drastic remedy, warranted only for such
    -72-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    serious improprieties as would make it impossible to attain a fair and impartial
    verdict.” State v. Smith, 
    320 N.C. 404
    , 418, 
    358 S.E.2d 329
    , 337 (1987) (quoting State
    v. Stocks, 
    319 N.C. 437
    , 441, 
    355 S.E.2d 492
    , 494 (1987)).
    Defendant’s motions for mistrial here were based on statements made by the
    prosecutor in the State’s closing arguments. During closing arguments “an attorney
    may not become abusive, inject his personal experiences, express his personal belief
    as to the truth or falsity of the evidence or as to the guilt or innocence of the
    defendant, or make arguments on the basis of matters outside the record.” N.C.G.S.
    § 15A-1230(a) (2017). We have recognized, however, that prosecutors “ ‘are given
    wide latitude in the scope of their argument’ and may ‘argue to the jury the law, the
    facts in evidence, and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom.’ ” State v. Goss, 
    361 N.C. 610
    , 626, 
    651 S.E.2d 867
    , 877 (2007) (quoting State v. Alston, 
    341 N.C. 198
    , 239,
    
    461 S.E.2d 687
    , 709-10 (1995), cert. denied, 
    516 U.S. 1148
    , 
    116 S. Ct. 1021
    , 
    134 L. Ed. 2d
    100 (1996)), cert. denied, 
    555 U.S. 835
    , 
    129 S. Ct. 59
    , 
    172 L. Ed. 2d 58
    (2008). The
    trial court may ordinarily remedy improper argument with curative instructions
    “since it is presumed that jurors will understand and comply with the instructions of
    the court,” State v. Young, 
    291 N.C. 562
    , 573, 
    231 S.E.2d 577
    , 584 (1977) (first citing
    State v. Sparrow, 
    276 N.C. 499
    , 
    173 S.E.2d 897
    (1970); then citing State v. Long, 
    280 N.C. 633
    , 
    187 S.E.2d 47
    (1972)), though “[s]ome transgressions are so gross and their
    effect so highly prejudicial that no curative instruction will suffice to remove the
    -73-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    adverse impression from the minds of the jurors,” 
    id. at 573-74,
    231 S.E.2d at 584
    (citations omitted).
    Here, during its closing argument in the guilt-innocence proceeding of the trial,
    while commenting on defendant’s theory of the crime, the prosecutor stated:
    Where was Shaniya’s body found? Off Walker Road, past
    Spring Lake before you get to Sanford, exactly where the
    defendant’s attorney said you would find the body. So that
    would mean that her people, her relatives that are going to
    take her to school that morning, they drive her right back
    up to Sanford, another 40 minute drive. They just
    happened to sexually assault her and dump her body where
    the cell phone analysis, where the defendant’s lawyer said
    he put the body, where the metal identification says the
    body is and where the soil sample identification says the
    body is. And that’s all just coincidence? The defense would
    have you believe that that’s just coincidence.
    (Emphasis added.) During the next recess, out of the presence of the jury, defendant’s
    trial attorney objected to the prosecutor’s comment and moved for a mistrial.
    Defendant’s attorney argued to the trial court: “You made the lines. You drew the
    lines and that went way past the line -- way past the line. His statement was the
    body was found where his lawyer said he put the body.” The trial court responded
    that it did not hear the comment and asked the court reporter to read back that
    portion of the State’s argument. The trial court then stated, “All right. Motion for
    mistrial is denied. If you want me to tell them to disregard that, I’ll be glad to tell
    them that. I didn’t catch it. I’m not sure how many of them caught it.” Defendant’s
    -74-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    attorney declined, stating, “No, sir. That would just be drawing more attention to the
    error.” The trial court then said:
    All right. Let’s bring them in. I have told the jury to
    remember the evidence for themselves. If the lawyer says
    something they don’t remember from the evidence, they are
    to disregard that and abide by their own recollection of the
    evidence. Based on that and in my discretion, the motion
    for mistrial is denied. And I will give them a cautionary
    instruction now -- a general cautionary instruction, not
    about that specifically but to -- in general, about remember
    the evidence, okay?
    When the jury returned, the trial court instructed jurors:
    Let me remind you once again that closing arguments are
    not evidence. The evidence is what you heard and saw
    during the presentation of evidence. If, during the course
    of making a final argument, one or more of the attorneys
    attempts to restate the evidence or a portion of the evidence
    and your recollection of the evidence is different from the
    attorneys’, you are to recall and remember the evidence
    and be guided exclusively by your own recollection of the
    evidence.
    Later in the State’s closing argument, the prosecutor asserted:
    He killed and left Shaniya on Walker Road. The cell phone
    analysis puts him there. The soil sample analysis puts him
    there. The metal identification analysis puts him there.
    And his defense attorney telling law enforcement where to
    look for the body puts him there.
    (Emphasis added.) Defendant’s attorney objected at the next recess and again moved
    for a mistrial based on the prosecutor’s stating “his defense attorney telling law
    enforcement where to look for the body puts him there.” The trial court responded
    that “I think it’s the same as saying the metal and the minerals puts him there. It’s
    -75-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    an inference from what the attorney said. So your motion for mistrial is denied.”
    Defendant’s attorney renewed his motion and asserted that the combination of the
    two comments should result in a mistrial. The trial court ruled:
    All right. Well, I find nothing wrong with the second
    incident that you’re complaining of. I do find that he did
    cross by saying what I told him -- not what I told him not
    to but would not allow testimony that the defendant
    provided the information to the lawyer. He improperly
    commented on that in the first incident. In my discretion,
    I denied your request for mistrial. I gave a cautionary
    instruction to the jury and I do not feel like the comment
    rises to the point where I should declare a mistrial. I think
    that clarifies my ruling.
    The trial court denied the defense’s repeated renewals of its motions for mistrial.
    Defendant argues that the prosecutor’s statements that Shaniya’s body was
    found “where the defendant’s lawyer said he put the body” and that “[defendant’s]
    attorney telling law enforcement where to look for the body puts him there”
    contravened the trial court’s pretrial rulings concerning evidence of the disclosure
    and were without support in the record. Defendant asserts that these statements
    were severely prejudicial because they called on the jury to infer that he made
    confessions to his attorneys, which, if made, would have been privileged and
    inadmissible, and also to infer that defendant concealed the body, which defendant
    contends amounts to evidence of malice and of premeditation and deliberation.
    Additionally, defendant argues that the statements were so prejudicial that the trial
    court’s general curative instructions did nothing to cure the impermissible inferences
    -76-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    urged by the State, nor could a more specific curative instruction have remedied the
    issue. As a result, defendant contends that the trial court abused its discretion in
    denying his motions for mistrial.
    With regard to the second statement, namely, that “[defendant’s] attorney
    telling law enforcement where to look for the body puts him there,” we conclude that
    this statement was not improper. As discussed above, evidence that the information
    of Shaniya’s location was conveyed to law enforcement by defendant’s attorneys was
    properly admitted by the trial court and this evidence permitted reasonable
    inferences to be drawn that were incriminating to defendant. These inferences are
    precisely what the prosecutor argued here—that defendant was the ultimate source
    of the information and had been to that location. Thus, the prosecutor’s statement
    was permissible because he was arguing “the facts in evidence, and . . . reasonable
    inferences drawn therefrom,” 
    Goss, 361 N.C. at 626
    , 651 S.E.2d at 877 (quoting
    
    Alston, 341 N.C. at 239
    , 461 S.E.2d at 709-10); see also, e.g., State v. Smith, 
    294 N.C. 365
    , 379, 
    241 S.E.2d 674
    , 682 (1978) (“Since the evidence was properly admitted, the
    prosecutor was entitled to argue the full force of that evidence to the jury.”).
    Defendant was free to rebut these inferences with any available evidence, as he
    sought to do in his closing argument. But defendant’s objection to the incriminating
    nature of these inferences is in reality a reiteration of his previous arguments that
    the disclosure, and the admission of evidence relating to the disclosure, violated his
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    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    constitutional rights and resulted in prejudice. As we have already considered and
    rejected these arguments, defendant’s contention here must fail as well.
    On the other hand, the prosecutor’s first statement that Shaniya’s body was
    found “where the defendant’s lawyer said he put the body” was improper. This
    statement was not couched as an inference but rather as an assertion of fact, which
    was not an accurate reflection of the evidence. Nonetheless, we conclude that this
    improper statement was not “such [a] serious impropriet[y] as would make it
    impossible to attain a fair and impartial verdict.” 
    Smith, 320 N.C. at 418
    , 358 S.E.2d
    at 337 (quoting 
    Stocks, 319 N.C. at 441
    , 355 S.E.2d at 494). Given that the prosecutor
    was allowed to argue the reasonable inferences arising from the evidence of
    defendant’s attorneys’ disclosure, and did so repeatedly in his closing argument, this
    sole misstatement of that evidence did not run far afield of what was permissible.
    Had we arrived at a different conclusion with respect to defendant’s previous
    arguments, the impropriety of this statement may have been more egregious.
    Further, we note that the trial judge agreed the statement was improper once
    it was read back by the court reporter, but when it was originally uttered he did not
    notice the statement, which ultimately occupied a single line from an extensive
    closing argument spanning sixty-nine pages of the record. See 
    Young, 291 N.C. at 573
    , 231 S.E.2d at 583 (noting that the prosecutor’s statement at issue “comprises
    only a few lines from forty-one pages in the record devoted to the closing arguments
    for the State”). As the trial court stated when offering to give a specific curative
    -78-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    instruction, “If you want me to tell them to disregard that, I’ll be glad to tell them
    that. I didn’t catch it. I’m not sure how many of them caught it.” This excerpt
    supports the trial court’s discretionary ruling relating to the effect the statement may
    have had on the jury. Moreover, in addition to offering to give a specific curative
    instruction, the trial court gave a general curative instruction.
    Additionally, the evidence against defendant was overwhelming. See State v.
    Huey, 
    370 N.C. 174
    , 181, 
    804 S.E.2d 464
    , 470 (2017) (“When this Court has found the
    existence of overwhelming evidence against a defendant, we have not found
    statements that are improper to amount to prejudice and reversible error.” (citing
    State v. Sexton, 
    336 N.C. 321
    , 363-64, 
    444 S.E.2d 879
    , 903, cert. denied, 
    513 U.S. 1006
    ,
    
    115 S. Ct. 525
    , 
    130 L. Ed. 2d 429
    (1994), grant of postconviction relief aff’d, 
    352 N.C. 336
    , 
    532 S.E.2d 179
    (2000))). This evidence included, inter alia: defendant’s initial
    denial to police of knowing Shaniya or being involved in her disappearance until
    confronted by photos from the hotel video cameras; the eyewitness and video
    evidence, as well as defendant’s trial stipulation, of defendant taking Shaniya from
    Sleepy Hollow to the Comfort Suites and leaving the hotel with her; the small blanket
    that was discovered in the trash can and contained feces, blood, Shaniya’s hair, and
    defendant’s pubic hair; the DNA evidence of defendant’s pubic hair on the hotel
    comforter; the cell phone information showing that defendant was near the location
    where the body was found and contradicting his story of receiving anonymous
    instructions and taking Shaniya to the dry cleaning establishment in Fayetteville;
    -79-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    the soil and metal fragment recovered from defendant’s car that was uniquely
    consistent with the location where Shaniya’s body was found; defendant’s apparent
    attempt to kill himself after being confronted with the evidence against him; and the
    fact that the police received information on where to search for Shaniya from
    attorneys who were representing defendant. In light of the foregoing reasons, and
    affording “great deference” to the trial judge “since he is in a far better position than
    an appellate court to determine the effect of any such error on the jury,” 
    Thomas, 350 N.C. at 341
    , 514 S.E.2d at 502 (citing 
    King, 343 N.C. at 44
    , 468 S.E.2d at 242), we
    conclude that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion in denying defendant’s
    motions for a mistrial based upon the improper remark.
    Jury Instruction for Sex Offense and (e)(5) Aggravating Circumstance
    Defendant next argues that the trial court erred in the guilt-innocence
    proceeding by instructing the jury that it could find defendant guilty of sexual offense
    of a child if it found either vaginal or anal penetration because the State failed to
    present any evidence of anal penetration and because “it cannot be discerned from
    the record upon which theory or theories the jury relied in arriving at its verdict.”
    State v. Lynch, 
    327 N.C. 210
    , 219, 
    393 S.E.2d 811
    , 816 (1990) (citing State v. Pakulski,
    
    319 N.C. 562
    , 574, 
    356 S.E.2d 319
    , 326 (1987)). For the same reasons, defendant
    contends that the trial court erred in the sentencing proceeding by instructing the
    jury that it could find the (e)(5) aggravating circumstance that the “capital felony was
    -80-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    committed while the defendant was engaged in the commission of, or flight after
    committing, the act of a sexual offense with a child.” We disagree.
    “A trial judge should never give instructions to a jury which are not based upon
    a state of facts presented by some reasonable view of the evidence.” State v. Sweat,
    
    366 N.C. 79
    , 89, 
    727 S.E.2d 691
    , 698 (2012) (quoting State v. Lampkins, 
    283 N.C. 520
    ,
    523, 
    196 S.E.2d 697
    , 699 (1973)). Before a particular charge is submitted to the jury,
    “the trial court must find substantial evidence has been introduced tending to prove
    each essential element of the offense charged and that the defendant was the
    perpetrator of the offense.” State v. Williams, 
    308 N.C. 47
    , 64, 
    301 S.E.2d 335
    , 346
    (citing State v. Powell, 
    299 N.C. 95
    , 98, 
    261 S.E.2d 114
    , 117 (1980)), cert. denied, 
    464 U.S. 865
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 202
    , 
    78 L. Ed. 2d 177
    (1983). In determining whether there is
    sufficient evidence to support every element of the offense charged, “[t]he evidence is
    to be considered in the light most favorable to the State; the State is entitled to every
    reasonable intendment and every reasonable inference to be drawn therefrom.”
    
    Powell, 299 N.C. at 99
    , 261 S.E.2d at 117 (citations omitted). Similarly, in the
    sentencing proceeding, “[i]n determining the sufficiency of the evidence to submit an
    aggravating circumstance to the jury, the trial court must consider the evidence in
    the light most favorable to the State, with the State entitled to every reasonable
    inference to be drawn therefrom.” State v. Bell, 
    359 N.C. 1
    , 32, 
    603 S.E.2d 93
    , 114
    (2004) (quoting State v. Anthony, 
    354 N.C. 372
    , 434, 
    555 S.E.2d 557
    , 596 (2001), cert.
    -81-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    denied, 
    536 U.S. 930
    , 
    122 S. Ct. 2605
    , 
    153 L. Ed. 2d 791
    (2002)), cert. denied, 
    544 U.S. 1052
    , 
    125 S. Ct. 2299
    , 
    161 L. Ed. 2d 1094
    (2005).
    Defendant asserts that the evidence of anal penetration was insufficient under
    our decision in State v. Hicks, 
    319 N.C. 84
    , 
    352 S.E.2d 424
    (1987).           There the
    defendant was convicted of first-degree sexual offense based upon a theory of anal
    penetration.    
    Id. at 89-90,
    352 S.E.2d at 425, 427.      The only evidence of anal
    penetration was the seven-year-old victim’s testimony that the defendant “put his
    penis in the back of me.” 
    Id. at 86,
    90, 352 S.E.2d at 425
    , 427. Additionally, the
    physician who had examined the victim, when asked about evidence of “sexual
    intercourse anally,” testified that there was “[n]one at all.” 
    Id. at 90,
    352 S.E.2d at
    427. We reversed the defendant’s conviction, concluding that:
    Given the ambiguity of [the victim’s] testimony as to
    anal intercourse, and absent corroborative evidence (such
    as physiological or demonstrative evidence) that anal
    intercourse occurred, we hold that as a matter of law the
    evidence was insufficient to support a verdict, and the
    charge of first degree sexual offense should not have been
    submitted to the jury.
    
    Id. at 90,
    352 S.E.2d at 427. Defendant argues that Hicks is controlling here because
    while the autopsy revealed injuries to Shaniya’s vaginal area, there was “no evidence
    of rectal injury;”12 however, defendant’s reliance upon Hicks is misplaced.
    12  Defendant also argues that the State’s evidence failed to reveal any semen,
    spermatozoa, or male DNA on the rectal swabs, nor was any found on Shaniya’s panties. We
    note that there was expert testimony from a DNA expert, stating that the absence of DNA
    was not unexpected because DNA begins to degrade or break down over time and that beyond
    -82-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    As an initial matter, we note that evidence of an apparent injury is not
    dispositive on the issue of penetration. See, e.g., State v. Smith, 
    315 N.C. 76
    , 102, 
    337 S.E.2d 833
    , 850 (1985) (stating that “no medical evidence of penetration, such as
    bruising or tearing, is required to support” a conviction for first-degree sexual
    offense); State v. Norman, 
    196 N.C. App. 779
    , 782, 
    675 S.E.2d 395
    , 398 (in which an
    expert explained that the absence of anal damage does not mean sexual assault did
    not occur “because the anal area was meant to stretch without tearing”), disc. rev.
    denied, 
    363 N.C. 587
    , 
    683 S.E.2d 382
    (2009). More importantly, while the autopsy
    revealed no apparent injury, here there was sufficient other evidence that was lacking
    in Hicks. In this case, a Kastle-Meyer or phenolphthalein test, which is a test used
    to give the indication of whether blood is present on an item, indicated the presence
    of blood in Shaniya’s anus. This chemical analysis also revealed a positive indication
    for the presence of blood in the crotch area of Shaniya’s panties, as well on the bottom
    rear portion of Shaniya’s shirt. Additionally, there was the circumstantial evidence
    on the rail and steps of the trailer of feces which had not been present the previous
    night. Further, in a nearby trash can, police discovered a child’s blanket that had
    previously been in the living room of the trailer and that also contained feces, as well
    as blood, Shaniya’s hair, and defendant’s pubic hair. This trash can was located
    a 72 hour window it becomes more and more likely that it will not be recoverable. Special
    Agent Hughes also testified that environmental conditions can affect how quickly DNA
    breaks down. Here Shaniya was missing for over six days.
    -83-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    across the street from the Davis residence and in close proximity to where defendant
    had parked his car the previous night—after he had texted multiple women and
    driven to the trailer park with the apparent hope of connecting with one of them. We
    hold that this evidence, taken in the light most favorable to the State, was sufficient
    to submit to the jury the issue of defendant’s guilt of sexual offense, as well as the
    (e)(5) aggravating circumstance related to a sexual offense, based upon a theory of
    anal penetration. Defendant’s arguments are overruled.
    Voluntariness of Defendant’s Statements to Police
    Defendant next argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to
    suppress statements he made during his interview with police on 12 November
    2009.13 This argument is without merit.
    “The standard of review in evaluating the denial of a motion to suppress is
    whether competent evidence supports the trial court’s findings of fact and whether
    13  Defendant also argues that certain evidence of his conduct—specifically that, during
    a break in the interrogation, he twice put a key into a wall electrical socket—should also have
    been inadmissible as “fruit of the involuntary statements.” Defendant, however, did not
    challenge the admission of this conduct in the trial court and raises this issue for the first
    time on appeal. Accordingly, “[d]efendant has failed to properly preserve this issue because
    of his failure to raise it before the trial court.” State v. Gainey, 
    355 N.C. 73
    , 100, 
    558 S.E.2d 463
    , 480 (first citing N.C. R. App. P. 10(b)(1); then citing State v. Eason, 
    328 N.C. 409
    , 420,
    
    402 S.E.2d 809
    , 814 (1991)), cert. denied, 
    537 U.S. 896
    , 
    123 S. Ct. 182
    , 
    154 L. Ed. 2d 165
    (2002). Further, defendant has not requested plain error review of this issue. See N.C. R.
    App. P. 10(4) (“In criminal cases, an issue that was not preserved by objection noted at trial
    and that is not deemed preserved by rule or law without any such action nevertheless may
    be made the basis of an issue presented on appeal when the judicial action questioned is
    specifically and distinctly contended to amount to plain error.”).
    -84-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    the findings of fact support the conclusions of law.” 
    Biber, 365 N.C. at 167-68
    , 712
    S.E.2d at 878 (citing State v. Brooks, 
    337 N.C. 132
    , 140-41, 
    446 S.E.2d 579
    , 585
    (1994)). We review conclusions of law de novo. 
    Id. at 168,
    712 S.E.2d at 878 (citing
    
    McCollum, 334 N.C. at 237
    , 433 S.E.2d at 160).
    While defendant’s primary contention in the trial court was that he was
    subjected to custodial interrogation without the requisite Miranda warnings, he has
    abandoned that argument on appeal and instead contends solely that his statements
    were not voluntarily made, rendering their admission into evidence a violation of the
    Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution
    and Article I, Sections 19 and 23 of the North Carolina Constitution. The test for
    voluntariness is whether, under the totality of the circumstances, “the confession [is]
    the product of an essentially free and unconstrained choice by its maker,” in which
    event it is admissible, or instead whether a defendant’s “will has been overborne and
    his capacity for self-determination critically impaired,” in which event “the use of his
    confession offends due process.” Culombe v. Connecticut, 
    367 U.S. 568
    , 602, 
    81 S. Ct. 1860
    , 1879, 
    6 L. Ed. 2d 1037
    , 1057-58 (1961) (citing Rogers v. Richmond, 
    365 U.S. 534
    , 544, 
    81 S. Ct. 735
    , 741, 
    5 L. Ed. 2d 760
    , 768 (1961)); see also State v. Hardy, 
    339 N.C. 207
    , 222, 
    451 S.E.2d 600
    , 608 (1994) (“The test for voluntariness in North
    Carolina is the same as the federal test.” (citing State v. Jackson, 
    308 N.C. 549
    , 581,
    
    304 S.E.2d 134
    , 152 (1983), judgment vacated and remanded, 
    479 U.S. 1077
    , 107 S.
    -85-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    Ct. 1271, 
    94 L. Ed. 2d 133
    (1987), aff’d on remand, 
    322 N.C. 251
    , 
    368 S.E.2d 838
    (1988), cert. denied, 
    490 U.S. 1110
    , 
    109 S. Ct. 3165
    , 
    104 L. Ed. 2d 1027
    (1989))).
    According to defendant, despite his initial denials to police that he was
    involved in the disappearance of Shaniya, which demonstrated his will not to make a
    statement, the detectives made promises, threats, and other coercive comments that
    overcame defendant’s will after fifty-four minutes and caused him to make certain
    statements, including his admission to taking Shaniya from Sleepy Hollow to the
    Comfort Suites as well as his story about receiving instructions on his telephone from
    an unnamed third party. Defendant contends that the trial court erred by finding
    that the investigating officers did not make any promises or threats and by
    concluding that his statements were voluntarily made. We need not address these
    contentions, however, because, as the State argues, even if defendant was able to
    establish any error by the trial court in admitting these statements, such error would
    be harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. See N.C.G.S. § 15A-1443(b) (2017) (“A
    violation of the defendant’s rights under the Constitution of the United States is
    prejudicial unless the appellate court finds that it was harmless beyond a reasonable
    doubt. The burden is upon the State to demonstrate, beyond a reasonable doubt, that
    the error was harmless.”).
    While a confession is prejudicial because it is the “best evidence” of a
    defendant’s guilt, State v. Fox, 
    274 N.C. 277
    , 289, 
    163 S.E.2d 492
    , 501 (1968),
    defendant did not confess to murder or sexual assault. On the contrary, even after
    -86-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    the point at which defendant’s will was purportedly overborne, he denied causing any
    harm to Shaniya. Defendant’s sole admission was that he had taken Shaniya from
    Sleepy Hollow to the Comfort Suites—a fact to which he stipulated at trial and that
    he does not dispute on appeal.
    Any prejudice caused by the admission of defendant’s statements would be
    limited to the effect on his credibility. For example, the State was able to present
    evidence of defendant’s phone records and cellular location data that tended to
    disprove defendant’s story about receiving instructions on his phone from an
    unnamed third party to take Shaniya to a dry cleaning establishment at the corner
    of Country Club Drive and Ramsey Street in Fayetteville. Further, towards the end
    of the interview with police, defendant denied making his earlier statements, which
    would both contradict his earlier statements and also his stipulation at trial. Yet,
    this was not the only evidence tending to damage defendant’s credibility.         For
    instance, defendant’s suppression argument would have no effect on the admissibility
    of his statements made before the point at which he contends his will was overborne,
    including his various denials of being at Brenda Davis’s trailer, of seeing Shaniya or
    even knowing her, of having Shaniya in his car, of taking her to the hotel in Sanford,
    and of being the person seen on video recordings checking into the hotel under
    defendant’s name and with his identification. Similarly, there was the evidence that
    defendant had told both of the clerks at the Comfort Suites that he was traveling with
    his daughter and taking her to her mother in Virginia. Given the overwhelming
    -87-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    evidence of defendant’s guilt presented at trial, we conclude that any conceivable
    effect on defendant’s credibility caused by the admission of his statements would be
    harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. See State v. Autry, 
    321 N.C. 392
    , 400, 
    364 S.E.2d 341
    , 346 (1988) (“Significantly, this Court has held that the presence of
    overwhelming evidence of guilt may render error of constitutional dimension
    harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.” (citing State v. Brown, 
    306 N.C. 151
    , 164, 
    293 S.E.2d 569
    , 578, cert. denied, 
    459 U.S. 1080
    , 
    103 S. Ct. 503
    , 
    74 L. Ed. 2d 642
    (1982))).
    Racial Justice Act Hearing
    Defendant next argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion under
    the Racial Justice Act to prohibit the State from seeking the death penalty without
    holding an evidentiary hearing.
    The Racial Justice Act (RJA) became effective on 11 August 2009 and provided
    that “[n]o person shall be subject to or given a sentence of death or shall be executed
    pursuant to any judgment that was sought or obtained on the basis of race.” N.C.G.S.
    § 15A-2010 (2009); Act of Aug. 6, 2009, ch. 464, 2009 N.C. Sess. Laws 1213. The RJA
    implemented a hearing procedure authorizing a defendant to raise an RJA claim
    either at the Rule 24 pretrial conference or in postconviction proceedings. N.C.G.S. §
    15A-2012 (2009); Ch. 464, sec. 1, 2009 N.C. Sess. Laws at 1214-15.            The RJA
    provided, in pertinent part:
    (a)   The defendant shall state with particularity
    how the evidence supports a claim that race was a
    significant factor in decisions to seek or impose the
    -88-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    sentence of death in the county, the prosecutorial district,
    the judicial division, or the State at the time the death
    sentence was sought or imposed.
    (1)    The claim shall be raised by the defendant at
    the pretrial conference required by Rule 24 of
    the General Rules of Practice for the Superior
    and District Courts or in postconviction
    proceedings pursuant to Article 89 of Chapter
    15A of the General Statutes.
    (2)    The court shall schedule a hearing on the
    claim and shall prescribe a time for the
    submission of evidence by both parties.
    N.C.G.S. § 15A-2012; Ch. 464, sec. 1, 2009 N.C. Sess. Laws at 1214-15. The RJA was
    amended in 2012, see Act of June 21, 2012, ch. 136, secs. 3-4, 2012 N.C. Sess. Laws
    (Reg. Sess. 2012) 471, 471-73, and then repealed in its entirety in 2013, see Act of
    June 13, 2013, ch. 154, sec. 5, 2013 N.C. Sess. Laws 368, 372.
    Defendant contends that although the RJA was amended, and ultimately
    repealed, the ex post facto clauses of the United States and North Carolina
    Constitutions, the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, Article I,
    Section 19 of the North Carolina Constitution, and North Carolina common law bar
    the application of the amended RJA or the repeal of the RJA to his rights under the
    original RJA. Further, defendant argues that despite the mandatory language of the
    original RJA that “[t]he court shall schedule a hearing on the claim and shall
    prescribe a time for the submission of evidence by both parties,” N.C.G.S. § 15A-
    -89-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    2012(a)(2) (2009) (emphases added), the trial court erroneously denied his RJA
    motion without holding an evidentiary hearing.
    Yet, assuming arguendo that any version of the RJA applies to defendant, he
    neglects to note that he himself did not follow the language of section 15A-2012(a)(1),
    which mandates that “[t]he claim shall be raised by the defendant at the pretrial
    conference required by Rule 24 of the General Rules of Practice for the Superior
    and District Courts or in postconviction proceedings pursuant to Article 89 of
    Chapter 15A of the General Statutes.” 
    Id. § 2012(a)(1)
    (2009) (emphasis added). Here
    defendant did not raise his RJA claim at the Rule 24 conference. Notably, at the Rule
    24 conference, the trial court twice asked defendant whether he wanted to be heard,
    and on both occasions defendant stated that there was nothing to be offered for
    defendant. Defendant cannot complain of the trial court’s failure to strictly adhere
    to the RJA’s pretrial statutory procedures where he himself failed to follow those
    procedures.
    We observe that the RJA authorized a defendant to raise an RJA claim at the
    Rule 24 pretrial conference “or in postconviction proceedings pursuant to Article 89
    of Chapter 15A of the General Statutes.” 
    Id. Accordingly, while
    we express no
    opinion on the substance of any rights or claims defendant may have under any
    version of the RJA, our conclusion here is without prejudice to defendant’s ability to
    raise any such claim in postconviction proceedings in the form of a motion for
    appropriate relief.
    -90-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    Improper Remarks in Closing Arguments at Sentencing Proceeding
    Defendant next argues that the trial court erred by failing to intervene ex mero
    motu during the State’s closing argument in the sentencing proceeding. We disagree.
    Defendant takes exception to two statements made by prosecutors during the
    State’s closing argument which refer to his decision not to present mitigating
    evidence or closing arguments. First, Assistant District Attorney Cox stated:
    Do not let the actions sway or cause you to sympathize with
    his course of action in this sentencing phase about
    argument or evidence -- do not let it manipulate you into
    feeling sympathy for the defendant. The judge will instruct
    you that you’re not to take that into consideration. Do not
    let it sway you.
    Shortly afterward, District Attorney West stated:
    Now, I ask you, as Ms. Cox did -- we do not know why the
    defendant has conducted himself in the sentencing hearing
    as he has; but, I ask you to follow the law when you go
    through the process. It may be to invoke sympathy. It may
    be a simple act of defiance, or it may be some type of
    manipulation. Whatever the reason, I ask you to go
    through this process and make your decision based on the
    facts and the law in this particular case.
    According to defendant, the remarks were grossly improper because they expressed
    personal opinions, based solely on speculation and without support in the record,
    which attributed improper motives to defendant’s decision not to present mitigating
    evidence or give closing arguments at the sentencing proceeding. Defendant did not
    object on either occasion.
    -91-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    “Where there is no objection, ‘the standard of review to determine whether the
    trial court should have intervened ex mero motu is whether the allegedly improper
    argument was so prejudicial and grossly improper as to interfere with defendant’s
    right to a fair trial.’ ” State v. Gaines, 
    345 N.C. 647
    , 673, 
    483 S.E.2d 396
    , 412 (quoting
    State v. Alford, 
    339 N.C. 562
    , 571, 
    453 S.E.2d 512
    , 516 (1995)), cert. denied, 
    522 U.S. 900
    , 
    118 S. Ct. 248
    , 
    139 L. Ed. 2d 177
    (1997).
    We conclude that there was no gross impropriety in the prosecutors’ remarks
    such that the trial court was required to intervene ex mero motu. We first note that
    it was not impermissible for the prosecutors here to comment on defendant’s lack of
    mitigating evidence. See State v. Taylor, 
    337 N.C. 597
    , 613, 
    447 S.E.2d 360
    , 370
    (1994)14 (“It is well established that although the defendant’s failure to take the stand
    and deny the charges against him may not be the subject of comment, the defendant’s
    failure to produce exculpatory evidence or to contradict evidence presented by the
    State may properly be brought to the jury’s attention by the State in its closing
    argument.” (first citing State v. Reid, 
    334 N.C. 551
    , 555, 
    434 S.E.2d 193
    , 196 (1993);
    then citing State v. Young, 
    317 N.C. 396
    , 415, 
    346 S.E.2d 626
    , 637 (1986); then citing
    State v. Mason, 
    315 N.C. 724
    , 732, 
    340 S.E.2d 430
    , 436 (1986); and then citing State
    v. Tilley, 
    292 N.C. 132
    , 143, 
    232 S.E.2d 433
    , 441 (1977))); see also State v. Brown, 
    320 N.C. 179
    , 204-06, 
    358 S.E.2d 1
    , 18-19 (1987) (finding no gross impropriety in
    In February 2010, a three judge panel of the North Carolina Innocence Inquiry
    14
    Commission unanimously ruled that Taylor had been wrongly convicted in 1993.
    -92-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    prosecutor’s arguments during capital sentencing proceeding concerning the
    defendant’s failure to produce siblings who could testify on his behalf), cert. denied,
    
    484 U.S. 970
    , 
    108 S. Ct. 467
    , 
    98 L. Ed. 2d 406
    (1987). Further, the thrust of both
    prosecutors’ arguments was a simple admonition to the jury to make its decision
    based on the facts and the law presented in the case. To the extent that there was
    any impropriety in the prosecutors’ suggestions that defendant’s decision not to
    present mitigating evidence or give closing arguments was an “act of defiance” or a
    “manipulation” to garner sympathy, we conclude that these comments were not “so
    prejudicial and grossly improper as to interfere with defendant’s right to a fair trial.”
    
    Gaines, 345 N.C. at 673
    , 483 S.E.2d at 412 (quoting 
    Alford, 339 N.C. at 571
    , 453
    S.E.2d at 516).
    Preservation Issues
    Defendant argues that the death penalty constitutes cruel and unusual
    punishment in violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United
    States Constitution and Article I, Section 27 of the North Carolina Constitution, and
    that North Carolina’s capital sentencing scheme is arbitrary, vague, and overbroad.
    Defendant does not characterize this assertion as a preservation issue, but “we treat
    the assigned error as such in light of our numerous decisions that have rejected a
    similar argument.” State v. Hurst, 
    360 N.C. 181
    , 205, 
    624 S.E.2d 309
    , 326, cert.
    denied, 
    549 U.S. 875
    , 
    127 S. Ct. 186
    , 
    166 L. Ed. 2d 131
    (2006). This Court has
    previously considered and rejected these arguments, and we decline to depart from
    -93-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    our prior precedent. See, e.g., 
    id. at 205,
    624 S.E.2d at 327 (“This Court has held that
    the North Carolina capital sentencing scheme is constitutional . . . .” (citing State v.
    Powell, 
    340 N.C. 674
    , 695, 
    459 S.E.2d 219
    , 230 (1995), cert. denied, 
    516 U.S. 1060
    ,
    
    116 S. Ct. 739
    , 
    133 L. Ed. 2d 688
    (1996))); see also State v. Maness, 
    363 N.C. 261
    , 294,
    
    677 S.E.2d 796
    , 816-17 (2009), cert. denied, 
    559 U.S. 1052
    , 
    130 S. Ct. 2349
    , 
    176 L. Ed. 2d
    568 (2010); State v. Duke, 
    360 N.C. 110
    , 142, 
    623 S.E.2d 11
    , 32 (2005), cert. denied,
    
    549 U.S. 855
    , 
    127 S. Ct. 130
    , 
    166 L. Ed. 2d 96
    (2006); State v. Garcia, 
    358 N.C. 382
    ,
    424-25, 
    597 S.E.2d 724
    , 753 (2004), cert. denied, 
    543 U.S. 1156
    , 
    125 S. Ct. 1301
    , 
    161 L. Ed. 2d 122
    (2005); State v. Williams, 
    304 N.C. 394
    , 409-11, 
    284 S.E.2d 437
    , 448
    (1981), cert. denied, 
    456 U.S. 932
    , 
    102 S. Ct. 1985
    , 
    2 L. Ed. 2d 450
    (1982); State v.
    Barfield, 
    298 N.C. 306
    , 343-54, 
    259 S.E.2d 510
    , 537-44 (1979), cert. denied, 
    448 U.S. 907
    , 
    100 S. Ct. 3050
    , 
    65 L. Ed. 2d 1137
    (1980), disavowed on other grounds, State v.
    Johnson, 
    317 N.C. 193
    , 203-04, 
    344 S.E.2d 775
    , 782 (1986).
    Defendant raises five additional issues that he concedes have previously been
    decided by this Court contrary to his position: (1) the trial court erred by ordering
    defense counsel to defer to defendant’s decision not to present mitigating evidence in
    the sentencing proceeding after finding an absolute impasse between defendant and
    defense counsel; (2) the trial court committed plain error under the Eighth and
    Fourteenth Amendments by instructing the jury that it could refuse to give effect to
    nonstatutory mitigating evidence if the jury deemed the evidence not to have
    mitigating value; (3) the trial court committed plain error by using the word
    -94-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    “satisfies” in capital sentencing instructions to define defendant’s burden of
    persuasion to prove mitigating circumstances; (4) the trial court committed plain
    error by instructing the jurors for Issues Three and Four that each juror “may”
    consider mitigating circumstances found in Issue Two; and (5) when charging the
    commission of murder that is punishable by death, the failure to allege aggravating
    circumstances in the short-form murder indictment is a jurisdictional defect under
    North Carolina law.
    Having considered defendant’s arguments, we see no reason to revisit or depart
    from our earlier holdings. See State v. Grooms, 
    353 N.C. 50
    , 84-86, 
    540 S.E.2d 713
    ,
    734-35 (2000) (holding that when the defendant and his counsel had reached an
    absolute impasse, the trial court properly ordered defense counsel to defer to
    defendant’s wishes not to present mitigating evidence and that this ruling did not
    deprive the defendant of effective assistance of counsel),15 cert. denied, 
    534 U.S. 838
    ,
    
    122 S. Ct. 93
    , 
    151 L. Ed. 2d 54
    (2001); State v. Payne, 
    337 N.C. 505
    , 533, 
    448 S.E.2d 93
    , 109 (1994) (finding no error in a sentencing instruction that “allowed the jury to
    decide that a non-statutory circumstance existed but that it had no mitigating
    15  Defendant asserts that the trial court’s order prohibiting his counsel from
    presenting mitigating evidence deprived him of his Sixth Amendment right to effective
    assistance of counsel under Cronic in that it prevented “meaningful adversarial testing” of
    the State’s penalty case. 
    Cronic, 466 U.S. at 659
    , 104 S. Ct. at 
    2047, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 668
    . We
    note that while the Court in Grooms referenced Strickland in addressing and rejecting the
    ineffective assistance of counsel portion of the defendant’s mitigating evidence argument,
    
    Grooms, 353 N.C. at 86
    , 540 S.E.2d at 735, the defendant there asserted violations of the
    Sixth Amendment right to counsel under both Strickland and Cronic.
    -95-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    value”), cert. denied, 
    514 U.S. 1038
    , 
    115 S. Ct. 1405
    , 
    131 L. Ed. 2d 292
    (1995); 
    id. at 531-33,
    448 S.E.2d at 108-09 (holding that the use of the term “satisfy” to define a
    defendant’s burden of proof for mitigating circumstances was not plain error); State
    v. Lee, 
    335 N.C. 244
    , 286-87, 
    439 S.E.2d 547
    , 569-70 (opining that the trial court did
    not err in instructing the jurors for Issues Three and Four that each juror “may”
    consider mitigating circumstances found in Issue Two), cert. denied, 
    513 U.S. 891
    ,
    
    115 S. Ct. 239
    , 
    130 L. Ed. 2d 162
    (1994); see also State v. Wilkerson, 
    363 N.C. 382
    ,
    435, 
    683 S.E.2d 174
    , 206 (2009) (“This Court has repeatedly held that short-form
    murder indictments satisfy the requirements of our state and federal constitutions.”
    (citing State v. Hunt, 
    357 N.C. 257
    , 278, 
    582 S.E.2d 593
    , 607, cert. denied, 
    539 U.S. 985
    , 
    124 S. Ct. 44
    , 
    156 L. Ed. 2d 702
    (2003))), cert. denied, 
    559 U.S. 1074
    , 
    130 S. Ct. 2104
    , 
    176 L. Ed. 2d
    734 (2010).
    Proportionality Review
    Finally, in accordance with our statutory responsibility, we consider whether
    the record supports the aggravating circumstances found by the jury, whether the
    death sentence “was imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice, or any other
    arbitrary factor,” and whether the death sentence “is excessive or disproportionate to
    the penalty imposed in similar cases, considering both the crime and the defendant.”
    N.C.G.S. § 15A-2000(d)(2) (2017).
    The jury found all five of the aggravating circumstances submitted for its
    -96-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    consideration.16 The jury found the existence of three aggravating circumstances
    under N.C.G.S. § 15A-2000(e)(3), namely, that in three separate instances defendant
    had been previously convicted of a felony involving the use of violence to another
    person. The jury found the existence of two additional aggravating circumstances
    under N.C.G.S. § 15A-2000(e)(5): first, that the capital felony was committed while
    the defendant was engaged in the commission of, or flight after committing, the act
    of first degree kidnapping; and second, that the capital felony was committed while
    the defendant was engaged in the commission of, or flight after committing, the act
    of a sexual offense with a child. After careful consideration, we conclude that the
    jury’s finding of these circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt was fully supported
    by the evidence.
    Defendant presents no argument that his sentence of death should be vacated
    because it “was imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice, or any other
    arbitrary factors,” 
    id. § 15A-2000(d)(2),
    and our careful review of the record and
    transcripts reveals nothing that would support such a ruling.
    16 Two statutory mitigating circumstances were submitted—that the capacity of
    defendant to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the
    requirements of the law was impaired, N.C.G.S. § 15A-2000(f)(6), and the catchall mitigating
    circumstance that any other circumstance arose from the evidence that any juror deems to
    have mitigating value, 
    id. § 15A-2000(f)(9)—but
    neither was found by the jury. At least one
    juror found the non-statutory mitigating circumstance that defendant’s use of marijuana and
    or alcohol, and or cocaine affected his decision making, and at least one juror found the
    nonstatutory mitigating circumstance that defendant is a good father to his children and
    loves them. The jury found beyond a reasonable doubt that these mitigating circumstances
    were insufficient to outweigh the aggravating circumstances.
    -97-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    Last, we must determine whether “the sentence of death is excessive or
    disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases, considering both the crime
    and the defendant.” 
    Id. § 15A-2000(d)(2).
    “We consider all cases which are roughly
    similar in facts to the instant case, although we are not constrained to cite each and
    every case we have used for comparison.” State v. McNeill, 
    360 N.C. 231
    , 254, 
    624 S.E.2d 329
    , 344 (citing State v. al-Bayyinah, 
    359 N.C. 741
    , 760-61, 
    616 S.E.2d 500
    ,
    514 (2005), cert. denied, 
    547 U.S. 1076
    , 
    126 S. Ct. 1784
    , 
    164 L. Ed. 2d 528
    (2006)),
    cert. denied, 
    549 U.S. 960
    , 
    127 S. Ct. 396
    , 
    166 L. Ed. 2d 281
    (2006). “Whether the
    death penalty is disproportionate ‘ultimately rest[s] upon the “experienced
    judgments” of the members of this Court.’ ” 
    al-Bayyinah, 359 N.C. at 761
    , 616 S.E.2d
    at 514 (alteration in original) (quoting State v. Green, 
    336 N.C. 142
    , 198, 
    443 S.E.2d 14
    , 47, cert. denied, 
    513 U.S. 1046
    , 
    115 S. Ct. 642
    , 
    130 L. Ed. 2d 547
    (1994)).
    This Court has held the death penalty to be disproportionate in eight cases:
    State v. Kemmerlin, 
    356 N.C. 446
    , 487-89, 
    573 S.E.2d 870
    , 897-99 (2002); State v.
    Benson, 
    323 N.C. 318
    , 328-29, 
    372 S.E.2d 517
    , 522-23 (1988); State v. Stokes, 
    319 N.C. 1
    , 19-27, 
    352 S.E.2d 653
    , 663-68 (1987); State v. Rogers, 
    316 N.C. 203
    , 234-37, 
    341 S.E.2d 713
    , 731-33 (1986), overruled on other grounds by 
    Gaines, 345 N.C. at 676-77
    ,
    483 S.E.2d at 414, and by State v. Vandiver, 
    321 N.C. 570
    , 573, 
    364 S.E.2d 373
    , 375
    (1988); State v. Young, 
    312 N.C. 669
    , 686-91, 
    325 S.E.2d 181
    , 192-94 (1985); State v.
    Hill, 
    311 N.C. 465
    , 475-79, 
    319 S.E.2d 163
    , 170-72 (1984); State v. Bondurant, 
    309 N.C. 674
    , 692-94, 
    309 S.E.2d 170
    , 181-83 (1983); and State v. Jackson, 
    309 N.C. 26
    ,
    -98-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    45-47, 
    305 S.E.2d 703
    , 716-18 (1983). We conclude that this case is not substantially
    similar to any of those cases.
    Here defendant kidnapped a five-year-old child from her home and sexually
    assaulted her before strangling her and discarding her body under a log in a remote
    area used for field dressing deer carcasses. We note that this Court “ha[s] never found
    a death sentence disproportionate in a case involving a victim of first-degree murder
    who also was sexually assaulted.” State v. Kandies, 
    342 N.C. 419
    , 455, 
    467 S.E.2d 67
    , 87 (citing State v. Payne, 
    337 N.C. 505
    , 537, 
    448 S.E.2d 93
    , 112 (1994), cert. denied,
    
    514 U.S. 1038
    , 
    115 S. Ct. 1405
    , 
    131 L. Ed. 2d 292
    (1995)), cert. denied, 
    519 U.S. 894
    ,
    
    117 S. Ct. 237
    , 
    136 L. Ed. 2d 167
    (1996). Further, “[t]his Court has deemed the (e)(3)
    aggravating circumstance,” of which the jury here found three separate instances,
    “standing alone, to be sufficient to sustain a sentence of death.” 
    al-Bayyinah, 359 N.C. at 762
    , 616 S.E.2d at 515 (citing State v. Bacon, 
    337 N.C. 66
    , 110 n.8, 
    446 S.E.2d 542
    , 566 n.8 (1994), cert. denied, 
    513 U.S. 1159
    , 
    115 S. Ct. 1120
    , 
    130 L. Ed. 2d 1083
    (1995)). Similarly, we have held that the (e)(5) aggravating circumstance, of which
    the jury here found two separate instances based upon the commission, or flight after
    commission of, kidnapping and sex offense, to be sufficient to affirm a sentence of
    death. See State v. Zuniga, 
    320 N.C. 233
    , 274-75, 
    357 S.E.2d 898
    , 923-24, cert. denied,
    
    484 U.S. 959
    , 
    108 S. Ct. 359
    , 
    98 L. Ed. 2d 384
    (1987). Moreover, the jury found
    defendant guilty of both felony murder and first-degree murder committed with
    malice, premeditation, and deliberation. While a conviction based solely upon felony
    -99-
    STATE V. MCNEILL
    Opinion of the Court
    murder is punishable by a sentence of death, “a finding of premeditation and
    deliberation indicates a more calculated and cold-blooded crime for which the death
    penalty is more often appropriate.” State v. Phillips, 
    365 N.C. 103
    , 150, 
    711 S.E.2d 122
    , 154 (2011) (quoting 
    Taylor, 362 N.C. at 563
    , 669 S.E.2d at 276 (internal
    quotation marks omitted)), cert. denied, 
    565 U.S. 1204
    , 
    132 S. Ct. 1541
    , 
    182 L. Ed. 2d 176
    (2012).
    In comparing defendant’s case with those in which this Court has found the
    death penalty to be proportionate, 
    al-Bayyinah, 359 N.C. at 762
    , 616 S.E.2d at 515,
    we conclude that defendant’s case is more analogous to these cases. See, e.g., State v.
    Lane, 
    365 N.C. 7
    , 39-40, 
    707 S.E.2d 210
    , 230 (holding a sentence of death
    proportionate when the “defendant confessed to taking advantage of a trusting five-
    year-old child, then raping and sodomizing her before putting her, while still alive, in
    a garbage bag sealed with duct tape, wrapping her in a tarp, and discarding her body
    in a creek”), cert. denied, 
    565 U.S. 1081
    , 
    132 S. Ct. 816
    , 
    181 L. Ed. 2d 529
    (2011).
    Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons we conclude that defendant received a fair trial and
    capital sentencing proceeding free of prejudicial error, and that the death sentence
    recommended by the jury and imposed by the trial court is not excessive or
    disproportionate.
    NO ERROR.
    -100-