State v. McKnight ( 2015 )


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  •                                 NO. COA14-752
    NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
    Filed: 20 January 2015
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.                                      Wake County
    No. 13 CRS 203743
    VAN LAMAR MCKNIGHT
    Appeal by Defendant from judgment entered 6 December 2013
    by Judge R. Allen Baddour in Wake County Superior Court. Heard
    in the Court of Appeals 6 November 2014.
    Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Special                Deputy      Attorney
    General R. Marcus Lodge, for the State.
    Appellate Defender Staples Hughes, by Assistant Appellate
    Defender Jason Christopher Yoder, for Defendant.
    STEPHENS, Judge.
    Defendant Van Lamar McKnight was convicted in Wake County
    Superior   Court   of   one   count   of    trafficking   in   marijuana    by
    possession   and   one    count   of       trafficking    in   marijuana    by
    transportation.    Defendant    now    appeals   from    the   trial    court’s
    denial of his motion to suppress evidence that he alleges was
    obtained in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. Defendant
    also contends that the trial court             committed plain error by
    -2-
    denying his motion in limine to exclude evidence that was both
    irrelevant and prejudicial. After careful review, we hold the
    trial    court      did        not    err    in        denying    Defendant’s           motion   to
    suppress,         nor    did     it    commit          plain     error    by      admitting      the
    evidence Defendant challenges.
    I. Facts and procedural history
    On 5 August 2013, Defendant was indicted by a Wake County
    grand     jury      on     one       count        of     trafficking        in       marijuana   by
    possession         and     one       count     of       trafficking       in         marijuana   by
    transportation. Those charges arose from Defendant’s arrest on
    14     February         2013     after       officers          from   the        Raleigh      Police
    Department         (“RPD”)        stopped          and     searched       his         vehicle    and
    discovered more than ten pounds of marijuana concealed in two
    packages       during      their       ongoing           investigation           of    Defendant’s
    friend, Travion Stokes.
    The evidence introduced at Defendant’s trial tended to show
    that    in   November          2012,     the      RPD     learned     from       a    confidential
    informant that Stokes, who at the time was on probation for a
    federal cocaine trafficking conviction, was trafficking in large
    amounts      of    marijuana.         On     12    February       2013,     after       conducting
    several weeks of undercover surveillance and a controlled buy
    using    the      confidential         informant,          RPD    Detective           James   Battle
    -3-
    searched a trash can left by the curb at Stokes’ residence at
    601   Sawmill     Road   in    Raleigh        and   found     a    plastic      baggie
    containing less than one-tenth of a gram of marijuana residue.
    Based on this information, Detective Battle obtained a search
    warrant for Stokes and his residence.
    On the morning of 14 February 2013, Detective Battle and
    RPD   Detective    Sarah      Goree   stationed        themselves        in   unmarked
    police   vehicles    near     Stokes’    residence       to       conduct     pre-raid
    surveillance prior to executing the search warrant, while RPD
    Officer Keith Pickens parked his marked patrol car farther away
    at a nearby intersection as back-up. The officers did not have
    access to a S.W.A.T. team that day, so their plan was to stop
    Stokes in his automobile after he left his home and then execute
    the search warrant for his residence. Around 8:30 a.m., Stokes
    drove a pickup truck into his driveway, parked at the rear of
    the house, and went inside. Around 8:45 a.m., Defendant——whom
    RPD officers had not previously seen during the course of their
    investigation——arrived        at   Stokes’      home    driving      a    GMC   Acadia
    sport utility vehicle, which he parked in the front. Stokes then
    came out of the house and the two men removed two large white
    boxes from Stokes’ pickup truck, carried them around to the
    front of the house, and placed them in the back of Defendant’s
    -4-
    vehicle. The boxes were sealed shut and did not appear very
    heavy.
    When    Defendant        got    back     in    his   Acadia    and      drove   away,
    Detective Goree and Sergeant Charles Lynch, another officer in
    an unmarked vehicle, followed him, as did Officer Pickens at a
    distance to avoid being seen in his patrol car. The officers
    followed Defendant for roughly ten to fifteen minutes, during
    which    they      did    not    observe        any     traffic      violations,       until
    Defendant      unexpectedly           backed    his     Acadia    into     a   residential
    driveway      at   7202    Shellburne          Drive.    Detective       Goree      continued
    past    the    driveway      and       lost     visual      contact    with      Defendant.
    Sergeant      Lynch      continued       past    the    driveway      as   well      and   saw
    Defendant pull back out into the road without getting out of his
    car. Officer Pickens, who had not yet reached the driveway,
    heard over the radio that his colleagues were unable to continue
    following Defendant, and thereupon activated his patrol car’s
    lights and pulled Defendant over.
    Officer     Pickens,        who     later       testified      that     he    noticed
    Defendant      seemed      slightly       nervous       but   was     otherwise        acting
    normally, ordered Defendant out of the Acadia and had him sit on
    the curb until RPD Detective Kenneth Barber joined them a few
    minutes later. Detective Barber later testified that upon his
    -5-
    arrival, he smelled burnt marijuana through the Acadia’s open
    window and decided to conduct a search. No burnt marijuana was
    found during the search of Defendant’s vehicle, but when the
    officers    inspected    the   two   boxes    Defendant       had   taken    from
    Stokes’ house, they discovered that inside each box was another,
    smaller box containing a shrink-wrapped orange plastic bucket.
    These    buckets,   in    turn,   contained     5.8     and   4.9   pounds     of
    marijuana in sealed plastic bags.
    Defendant was arrested and taken to a police station for
    interrogation, during which Detective Battle found a key among
    the     contents    of    Defendant’s        pockets.     Detective         Battle
    subsequently discovered the key fit the lock on the front door
    of the residence at 7202 Shellburne Drive, where he smelled
    marijuana    through     the   doorframe.     After     obtaining    a      search
    warrant, RPD officers returned to that residence and found 91
    grams of marijuana hidden above a kitchen cabinet. They also
    found paraphernalia including two digital scales, Ziploc bags,
    and a vacuum food saver machine in the kitchen. In the attic of
    the home, the officers found a freezer-sealed bag of marijuana,
    a black trash bag with sealed marijuana inside, and a small
    orange-red bucket. The officers also searched for documents to
    show who owned the house and found bank records in the name of
    -6-
    Revaune    Moe,    who    had    two       prior   drug    arrests,      as    well       as    a
    uniform    citation       for   a    man     named    Cory       Robinson     and   letters
    addressed to him and a man named Andre Turner. They found no
    evidence linking Defendant to the house, and he was not charged
    with possession of any of the drugs recovered there.
    When Defendant’s trial in Wake County Superior Court began
    on 2 December 2013, his primary defense was that he did not know
    there    was    marijuana       in   the     boxes    he     received       from    Stokes.
    Defendant first moved to suppress the marijuana found in his
    Acadia, arguing that it was the product of an unconstitutional
    seizure because the RPD officers lacked reasonable suspicion to
    stop    his    vehicle.     Defendant’s        voir       dire    examination        of    the
    officers       involved    in    his   arrest        showed      that:   (1)       prior       to
    arriving at Stokes’ home on 14 February 2013, Defendant had not
    previously been a target of the investigation and was not listed
    on   the   search    warrant         for    Stokes’    residence;        (2)    no    money
    changed hands when Defendant accepted the boxes from Stokes; and
    (3) Defendant had not been driving erratically or committed any
    traffic violations before being stopped by Officer Pickens. The
    State opposed the motion to suppress, arguing that: (1) the RPD
    officers did not initiate a search of Defendant while he was
    still on Stokes’ property due to safety concerns given the lack
    -7-
    of   a   S.W.A.T.   team     but    were    still   justified       in   stopping
    Defendant   after   he     left    under   a   theory   that   he    was   taking
    evidence from a crime scene; and (2) Defendant’s backing into
    the driveway at 7202 Shellburne Drive and then leaving without
    getting out of his vehicle constituted evasive action sufficient
    to support a reasonable suspicion that criminal activity was
    afoot. The trial court denied Defendant’s motion, concluding,
    inter alia, that:
    2. The officers possessed probable cause to
    search the residence and person of Travion
    Stokes    for  controlled   substances,   as
    evidenced   by  a  lawfully   issued  search
    warrant.
    3.   The  officers  determined   that   their
    manpower did not permit the safe execution
    of the search warrant while [D]efendant was
    on the premises with Travion Stokes, and the
    observation of the officers of the transfer
    of two large packages into [D]efendant’s
    vehicle, [D]efendant’s evasive action of
    pulling into a residence momentarily, when
    viewed in light of the totality of the
    circumstances,  support   a  finding   of   a
    reasonable, articulable suspicion justifying
    the officers in stopping the [D]efendant’s
    vehicle.
    Defendant failed to object when this evidence was introduced at
    trial.
    Defendant also filed both a motion to suppress the evidence
    found at 7202 Shellburne Drive and a motion in limine to exclude
    -8-
    it after the State gave notice that it planned to introduce that
    evidence for the purpose of proving Defendant’s knowledge of the
    contents of the boxes he received from Stokes, given the fact
    that   he      “was   taking    [the    boxes]    from      one   residence   where
    [police]     found    marijuana    directly      to   another     residence    where
    they found marijuana,” as well as the similarities in packaging
    between the marijuana found in the Acadia and the marijuana
    found in the attic. The trial court denied Defendant’s motion to
    suppress because, apart from possessing a key to 7202 Shellburne
    Drive, Defendant could not establish any basis that would give
    him a legitimate expectation of privacy at that residence. In
    his motion in limine, Defendant argued that the evidence was
    irrelevant, prejudicial, and would confuse the issues for the
    jury because he had not been charged with any crime involving
    7202        Shellburne         Drive.     Defendant          also      highlighted
    dissimilarities between the evidence seized from his car and the
    evidence seized from the attic, including differences in the
    grade of marijuana, the types of bags containing it, and the
    colors    of    the   buckets    found   nearby.      The    trial   court    denied
    Defendant’s motion, and Defendant failed to timely object when
    the evidence was admitted at trial to preserve the issue for
    review.
    -9-
    Defendant chose to testify at his trial, and although he
    acknowledged to having pled guilty to possession of marijuana
    with intent to sell and deliver in 2009, he insisted that he had
    no   knowledge   that   the    boxes    he    received      from     Stokes         on    14
    February 2013 contained marijuana. Instead, he testified that
    Stokes had called him that morning and said he was running late
    for a doctor’s appointment, asked him to drop off the boxes at
    7202 Shellburne Drive as a favor, and given him a key to the
    residence.     Defendant    testified       that    he    had    known     Stokes         for
    about a year and that the two men had become friends through
    their shared enthusiasm for motorcycles. Defendant admitted that
    he had been aware that Stokes was on federal probation for drug
    charges,   but    assumed     that   this     actually          provided       a    strong
    incentive for Stokes to avoid further illegal activity. In any
    event, Defendant explained, the boxes were already sealed before
    he received them, Defendant never asked what they contained, and
    he did not have an opportunity to learn their contents before
    the RPD pulled him over. Defendant testified that he was unaware
    that he was being followed when he backed into 7202 Shellburne
    Drive,   and   that   the   reason     he    left    so    quickly       was       that    he
    received a cellphone call from his wife——who was upset because
    she needed her son’s car seat from the back of the Acadia to
    -10-
    give to a babysitter so the couple could enjoy a date together —
    —and that even though he was already at his destination and did
    not want to make another trip, he decided to drive back across
    town and then return again to 7202 Shellburne Drive to deliver
    the boxes because it was Valentine’s Day.
    On 6 December 2013, the jury returned a verdict finding
    Defendant guilty of both charges against him. The trial court
    consolidated the counts into a single judgment and sentenced
    Defendant to a term of 25 to 39 months in prison. Defendant gave
    oral notice of appeal in open court.
    II. Defendant’s motion to suppress
    Defendant argues that the trial court erred in denying his
    motion to suppress the marijuana found in the boxes he received
    from Stokes because the RPD officers who stopped and searched
    his   vehicle    lacked   reasonable     suspicion   to   do   so   and   thus
    violated his Fourth Amendment rights. We disagree.
    Typically, this Court’s review of a denial of a motion to
    suppress “is strictly limited to determining whether the trial
    [court’s] underlying findings of fact are supported by competent
    evidence,   in    which   event   they    are   conclusively    binding     on
    appeal, and whether those factual findings in turn support the
    [court’s] ultimate conclusions of law,” which are then subject
    -11-
    to de novo review. State v. Mello, 
    200 N.C. App. 437
    , 439, 
    684 S.E.2d 483
    , 486 (2009) (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted), affirmed             per curiam, 
    364 N.C. 421
    , 
    700 S.E.2d 224
    (2010). However, Defendant acknowledges that because he failed
    to preserve this issue for appellate review by timely objecting
    when the evidence was admitted at trial, the standard of review
    is   plain     error.      Under    a    plain      error    analysis,    Defendant      is
    entitled to a new trial only if he can demonstrate that the
    trial court committed an error “so fundamental as to amount to a
    miscarriage of justice or which probably resulted in the jury
    reaching       a   different       verdict       than   it    otherwise    would       have
    reached.” State v. Brunson, 
    187 N.C. App. 472
    , 477, 
    653 S.E.2d 552
    , 555 (2007) (citation omitted).
    The Fourth Amendment protects the “right of the people . .
    .    against       unreasonable      searches        and     seizures,”   U.S.     Const.
    amend.   IV,       and    is    applicable     to    the    states   through     the    Due
    Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. See Mapp v. Ohio,
    
    367 U.S. 643
    , 655, 
    6 L. Ed. 2d 1081
    , 1090 (1961). It applies to
    seizures of the person, including brief investigatory detentions
    such as those involved in stopping a vehicle. Reid v. Georgia,
    
    448 U.S. 438
    , 440, 
    65 L. Ed. 2d 890
    , 893 (1980). It is well
    established        that    in    order    to   conduct       an   investigatory    stop,
    -12-
    police must have a reasonable suspicion that criminal activity
    may be afoot. See Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 30, 
    20 L. Ed. 2d 889
    , 911 (1968).
    As    our    Supreme    Court     has   explained,     “[a]n    investigatory
    stop    must    be    justified    by     a    reasonable    suspicion,      based    on
    objective facts, that the individual is involved in criminal
    activity.” State v. Watkins, 
    337 N.C. 437
    , 441, 
    446 S.E.2d 67
    ,
    70 (1994) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). In
    reviewing          whether     a   reasonable          suspicion      to     make     an
    investigatory         stop     exists,    this     Court     “must     consider      the
    totality of the circumstances——the whole picture” to determine
    if the stop was “based on specific and articulable facts, as
    well as the rational inferences from those facts, as viewed
    through the eyes of a reasonable, cautions officer, guided by
    his     experience      and    training.”        
    Id.
        (citations     and    internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    In the present case, Defendant argues that the trial court
    plainly erred in its finding of fact and conclusion of law that
    his act of turning around in the driveway at 7202 Shellburne
    Drive       constituted       evasive    action        sufficient     to   support    a
    reasonable suspicion for an investigatory stop of his vehicle.
    Specifically, Defendant argues that the trial court’s findings
    -13-
    and conclusions were unsupported by competent evidence, given
    that    neither    of   the    two   RPD   officers      who   followed     him   in
    unmarked     vehicles     testified      that      his   conduct    provided      any
    indication that he was aware they were following him, let alone
    that   he    was   driving    evasively.      In    support    of   his   argument,
    Defendant cites this Court’s holding in State v. White, 
    214 N.C. App. 471
    , 
    712 S.E.2d 921
     (2011), that to support a finding of
    evasive action, the State must “establish a nexus between [a
    d]efendant’s flight and the police officers’ presence.” Id. at
    480, 
    712 S.E.2d at 928
    . Since the State failed to establish such
    a nexus here, Defendant argues that the trial                       court plainly
    erred by improperly admitting the only physical evidence that he
    possessed and transported marijuana.
    It is well established under state and federal law that
    although mere presence in a high crime area is not sufficient to
    support a reasonable suspicion that an individual is involved in
    criminal activity, an individual’s presence in a suspected drug
    area coupled with evasive action may provide an adequate basis
    for    the   reasonable      suspicion     necessary     for   an   investigatory
    stop. See Illinois v. Wardlow, 
    528 U.S. 119
    , 
    145 L. Ed. 2d 570
    (2000); State v. Butler, 
    331 N.C. 227
    , 233-34, 
    415 S.E.2d 719
    ,
    722–23 (1992). However, as we explained in White, in order for
    -14-
    an action to be considered evasive, the State must “establish a
    nexus between [a d]efendant’s flight and the police officers’
    presence.”      214   N.C.      App.     at    480,    
    712 S.E.2d at 928
    .    Prior
    decisions by this Court and our Supreme Court make clear that a
    defendant cannot be found to have acted evasively unless there
    is some evidence that he was aware he was being followed by, or
    in the presence of, a police officer. See, e.g., Butler, 331
    N.C. at 233, 
    415 S.E.2d at 722
     (finding evasive action where
    “upon    making    eye     contact       with    the       uniformed      officers,         [the]
    defendant immediately moved away, behavior that is evidence of
    flight”); State v. Willis, 
    125 N.C. App. 537
    , 539, 
    481 S.E.2d 407
    ,    409    (1997)      (finding      evasive       action       where       a    defendant
    behaved nervously and cut across a parking lot on foot after it
    became “apparent to [him]” that he was being followed).
    Here, Defendant’s argument about evasive action has some
    merit.    Neither     of    the    two    RPD    officers         who   followed           him   in
    unmarked cars testified that he acted evasively or that his
    conduct       indicated     his    awareness          of    the    fact    he       was     being
    followed.      Indeed,     as     Defendant      notes,       during      the       suppression
    hearing the only testimony indicating evasive driving came from
    Officer Pickens, who was following the two unmarked police cars
    at a distance and did not directly observe Defendant until after
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    Defendant had already pulled out of the driveway. When asked
    about Defendant’s driving, Officer Pickens testified:
    Q: Do you remember anything significant
    about your approach to the vehicle?
    A: No. I mean, some of the radio traffic
    that was being relayed to me, that the
    [D]efendant was being evasive in the way
    that he was operating his vehicle. Again, I
    believe he had maybe realiz[ed] that he was
    being followed.
    [Defendant’s counsel]: Objection         to     that,
    [Y]our Honor; move to strike.
    THE COURT: Sustained.
    A: The information that I was hearing was
    that the operation of his vehicle was such
    that he would not be followed any longer by
    one of the detectives [who] was in one of
    the unmarked vehicles.
    Officer Pickens further testified that he did not personally
    observe   anything   unusual   about    how   Defendant    operated   his
    vehicle before pulling him over. Thus, we conclude that there is
    no competent evidence in the record that indicates Defendant was
    aware that his Acadia was being followed by police. Therefore,
    because Defendant’s act of turning around in the driveway at
    7202 Shellburne Drive cannot properly be considered evasive, we
    hold that the trial court erred in its finding of fact and
    conclusion of law that Defendant acted evasively.
    -16-
    However, that does not end our inquiry, as our Supreme
    Court had made clear that “[a] correct decision of a lower court
    [on a motion to suppress] will not be disturbed on review simply
    because      an    insufficient     or     superfluous         reason    is   assigned.”
    State v. Austin, 
    320 N.C. 276
    , 290, 
    357 S.E.2d 641
    , 650, cert.
    denied, 
    484 U.S. 916
    , 
    98 L. Ed. 2d 224
     (1987). Even where the
    trial    court’s     reasoning      for    denying      a      defendant’s     motion     to
    suppress is incorrect, “we are not required on this basis alone
    to    determine     that    the    ruling       was   erroneous,”       because    “[t]he
    crucial inquiry for [this Court] is admissibility and whether
    the     ultimate     ruling       was     supported       by     the    evidence.”       
    Id.
    (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    Here, Defendant contends that absent the finding of evasive
    action,      the    RPD    officers’       personal     observations          of   him    at
    Stokes’      residence      provided       no     other        basis    for   reasonable
    suspicion to stop his vehicle. Specifically, Defendant contends
    that the trial court erred in concluding that the search warrant
    for     Stokes’     residence       was     a    factor        supporting     reasonable
    suspicion against him because “[a]n individual’s presence in an
    area    of   expected      criminal       activity,       standing      alone,     is    not
    enough to support a reasonable, particularized suspicion that
    the person is committing a crime.” Wardlow, 
    528 U.S. at 124
    , 145
    -17-
    L. Ed. 2d at 586. Moreover, Defendant contends that the transfer
    of   boxes    from       Stokes’    truck       to   Defendant’s    Acadia     was      also
    insufficient        to    support     a    reasonable     suspicion       that    a     drug
    transaction had occurred, given that the officers never observed
    any money changing hands that morning and never in their months-
    long surveillance of Stokes witnessed him sell any marijuana
    from his home, utilize large boxes to transport it, or interact
    with Defendant in any way.
    We find Defendant’s argument unpersuasive. While it is true
    that   an    individual’s          mere    presence     in   an    area   of     expected
    criminal activity does not by itself give rise to reasonable
    suspicion, the record before us indicates that Defendant was
    more than merely present at Stokes’ home, insofar as he accepted
    two large boxes from Stokes, carried them to his Acadia, put
    them inside, and drove away. Further, Defendant’s argument that
    there was nothing inherently suspicious about those two large
    boxes ignores the fact that RPD officers had already obtained a
    warrant      to    search    Stokes       and   his    residence    for   evidence        of
    marijuana         trafficking,      which       implicitly    authorized         them     to
    search any container capable of carrying marijuana, including
    the boxes. See, e.g., State v. Bryant, 
    196 N.C. App. 154
    , 
    674 S.E.2d 753
    , disc. review denied, 
    363 N.C. 375
    , 
    679 S.E.2d 135
    -18-
    (2009) (holding that officers executing a search warrant may
    legally seize any object encompassed within its description of
    items to be searched).
    In his brief, Defendant suggests that the scope of the
    search warrant did not include Stokes’ car; however, the warrant
    was not included in the record on appeal and Defendant does not
    specifically challenge its validity, nor would he have standing
    to do so, given the absence of evidence that he either owned or
    held a possessory interest in Stokes’ residence or maintained a
    reasonable expectation of privacy there. See, e.g., State v.
    Rodelo, __ N.C. App. __, 
    752 S.E.2d 766
    , disc. review denied, __
    N.C. __, 
    762 S.E.2d 204
     (2014) (holding that a defendant who
    cannot   show   evidence   of   either    his   ownership   or   possessory
    interest or a reasonable expectation of privacy lacks standing
    to challenge an alleged Fourth Amendment violation).              But even
    assuming arguendo Defendant was correct in this assertion, the
    scope of the warrant still included Stokes himself, which means
    the officers would have had probable cause to search the boxes
    once they saw Stokes and Defendant take them out of the pickup
    truck. While the officers chose not to search at that time, due
    to the unavailability of a S.W.A.T. team and concerns about
    safety, the mere fact that the boxes were then placed inside
    -19-
    Defendant’s   Acadia   did    not    automatically     immunize   them   from
    future    searches   once    the    vehicle   left    the   property    simply
    because the vehicle was not listed in the warrant. If anything,
    in light of the totality of the circumstances, given the fact
    that Stokes was under investigation for marijuana trafficking——
    which is an offense that by definition involves moving narcotics
    from one location to another, see 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 90-95
    (h)(1)
    (2013)——Defendant’s act of putting two boxes large enough to
    contain    marijuana   into    his    vehicle   and    then   driving    away
    immediately thereafter was more than sufficient to support a
    reasonable suspicion that he was involved in criminal activity.1
    1
    In support of his argument to the contrary, Defendant cites
    this Court’s unpublished decision in State v. Majett, __ N.C.
    App. __, 
    675 S.E.2d 719
     (2009) (unpublished), available at 
    2009 WL 1192726
    . We note first that Rule 30(e)(3) of our Rules of
    Appellate Procedure provides that this Court’s unpublished
    decisions do not constitute controlling legal         authority.
    Moreover, despite superficial similarities, the present facts
    are easily distinguishable from those in Majett, where police
    received a tip from an anonymous informant that the defendant
    was distributing cocaine from his residence, then found crack
    cocaine on three men whom they saw entering and leaving the
    defendant’s residence. Although the police in Majett may well
    have been able to obtain a warrant to search the defendant’s
    residence, they instead chose to stop the defendant’s vehicle
    immediately, arrest him, and search for drugs, which they
    subsequently found. In reversing his conviction, this Court held
    that the stop amounted to an unreasonable seizure because the
    police lacked probable cause to effectuate a warrantless arrest
    given the absence of any evidence connecting the defendant’s
    suspected illegal conduct to his vehicle, which had not broken
    -20-
    That being the case, the officers did not need to wait until
    Defendant committed a traffic violation or acted evasively to
    conduct an investigatory stop. Thus, although the trial court’s
    conclusion       that       Defendant    acted    evasively      was      erroneous,         we
    conclude       it     was    also   unnecessary     to     support        a    finding       of
    reasonable suspicion to conduct an investigatory stop in this
    case. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court did not err in
    denying        Defendant’s      motion     to    suppress     or    plainly          err     in
    admitting this evidence at trial.
    III. Defendant’s motion in limine
    Defendant also argues that the trial court committed plain
    error     by     admitting      into     evidence    the    marijuana          and     other
    contraband found at 7202 Shellburne Drive for the purpose of
    showing his knowledge that the boxes he received from Stokes
    contained marijuana. Specifically, Defendant contends that this
    evidence       was    irrelevant,       inadmissible,      and     prejudicial         under
    Rules 401, 402, and 404(b) of our Rules of Evidence because
    there   was      no     evidence    that    he    had    ever      been       inside       7202
    any traffic laws prior to the stop. In the present case, by
    contrast, the RPD officers properly obtained a search warrant
    for Stokes’ residence, where they directly observed the transfer
    of boxes to Defendant’s Acadia, which provided a sufficient
    basis for reasonable suspicion for an investigatory stop of his
    vehicle.
    -21-
    Shellburne Drive, knew its owner, or possessed or was even aware
    of the drugs hidden therein. While Defendant’s argument has some
    merit with regards to relevance and admissibility, we do not
    agree that admission of this evidence was so prejudicial as to
    constitute      an   error      “so   fundamental      as    to   amount     to     a
    miscarriage of justice” or “which probably resulted in the jury
    reaching    a    different      verdict   than    it     otherwise   would      have
    reached.” Brunson, 187 N.C. App. at 477, 
    653 S.E.2d at 555
    .
    Rule 401 of our Rules of Evidence defines relevant evidence
    as “evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any
    fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action
    more probable or less probable than it would be without the
    evidence.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 401 (2013). By contrast,
    irrelevant evidence has no tendency to prove a fact at issue and
    must be excluded. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 402. However,
    irrelevant      evidence   is    typically     considered     harmless     “unless
    [the] defendant shows that he was so prejudiced by the erroneous
    admission    that    a   different    result     would    have    ensued   if     the
    evidence had been excluded.” State v. Moctezuma, 
    141 N.C. App. 90
    , 93-94, 
    539 S.E.2d 52
    , 55 (2000).
    The issue here, then, is whether the evidence found at 7202
    Shellburne Drive increased the probability that Defendant knew
    -22-
    that the boxes he received from Stokes contained marijuana. The
    State argues that this evidence was properly admitted to show
    Defendant’s knowledge under Rule 404(b), which provides that
    [e]vidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts
    is not admissible to prove the character of
    a person in order to show that he acted in
    conformity therewith. It may, however, be
    admissible for other purposes, such as proof
    of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation,
    plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of
    mistake, entrapment or accident.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 404(b). Defendant counters that
    because there was no evidence that he actually or constructively
    possessed      the    drugs       and    other     contraband     found    at    7202
    Shellburne     Drive,      it    was    improper    to   admit    the   evidence   as
    evidence of his knowledge under Rule 404(b). In support of his
    argument, he cites this Court’s holding in State v. Moctezuma,
    
    supra.
    In   Moctezuma,      we    held    that     the   trial    court    erred   in
    admitting evidence under Rule 404(b) for the purpose of showing
    a defendant’s knowledge where there was no evidence connecting
    the evidence to any crime, wrong, or act by the defendant. 141
    N.C.   App.    at    95,    
    539 S.E.2d at 56
    .   There,    a    confidential
    informant     told    police      that    three    men   in   a   white    van   with
    Tennessee license plates would drive to a residence where a
    large quantity of cocaine was located and then conduct a cocaine
    -23-
    deal in a grocery store parking lot. 
    Id. at 91
    , 
    539 S.E.2d at 54
    .    Pursuant    to   that   tip,    police   conducted      surveillance     and
    followed the van to a trailer where the defendant and another
    man lived; watched the defendant and two other men exit the van,
    enter the trailer, and reemerge shortly thereafter; and followed
    the van to the grocery store before surrounding it and arresting
    its occupants. 
    Id.
     During the arrest, an officer noticed the
    defendant, who had been driving the van, place something wrapped
    in white tissue to the right of his seat. 
    Id.
     Upon inspection,
    police found over 136 grams of cocaine in a plastic bag wrapped
    in white tissue to the right of the drivers’ seat. 
    Id.
     When
    police returned to the trailer, they found two kilos of cocaine
    and    other     paraphernalia    in    a    bathroom.   
    Id.
          At   trial,   the
    defendant claimed he was not aware there was cocaine in the van
    or    in   the   trailer.   
    Id. at 92
    ,    
    539 S.E.2d at 54
    .   Over   his
    objections, the State introduced evidence of the cocaine found
    in the trailer to show the defendant’s awareness that there had
    been cocaine inside the van. 
    Id.
    On appeal to this Court, we held that the trial court erred
    in admitting the cocaine from the trailer under Rule 404(b),
    reasoning that because there was no evidence that the defendant
    was aware of the cocaine in the trailer that he shared with
    -24-
    another man, that evidence could not constitute proof of his
    awareness of cocaine in the van, thus rendering it irrelevant
    and inadmissible. As we explained,
    Rule 404(b) speaks of “[e]vidence of other
    crimes, wrongs, or acts.” Here, there are no
    crimes, wrongs, or acts with which [the]
    defendant   is   connected.  There  was   no
    evidence introduced at trial to directly
    link [the] defendant to the drugs seized at
    the trailer in which he occupied a bedroom.
    [The d]efendant was not charged with any
    offense in connection with the drugs seized
    at   the   trailer,   and   [the]  defendant
    consistently denied any knowledge of such
    drugs.
    Further,    the    circumstantial    evidence
    presented at trial——the fact that drugs
    belonging to other people were discovered at
    the trailer [the] defendant shared with
    others——was too weak to support an inference
    of knowledge on his part. . . . Under these
    circumstances,  we   find   that  there   was
    insufficient evidence to show that [the]
    defendant knew about the drugs seized at the
    trailer.
    
    Id. at 94-95
    , 
    539 S.E.2d at 56
    .
    In   the    present      case,      with    regards      to   the    issues   of
    relevance and admissibility, we find strong parallels between
    the   marijuana      and    other    contraband     found      at   7202   Shellburne
    Drive   and    the    cocaine       found    in   the    trailer     in     Moctezuma.
    Although the State contends that the contraband found at 7202
    Shellburne     Drive       should    be     admissible    to    prove      Defendant’s
    -25-
    knowledge because of its similarity to the marijuana found in
    the boxes Defendant received from Stokes, as we explained in
    Moctezuma,    “Rule      404(b)   speaks      of     evidence     of   other       crimes,
    wrongs, or acts,” but here, “there are no crimes, wrongs, or
    acts”   to    connect     that       contraband         with   Defendant.         See    
    id.
    (internal     quotation       marks    omitted).         Here,    as   in    Moctezuma,
    Defendant was not charged with any offense in connection with
    the contraband found at 7202 Shellburne Drive, nor is there any
    evidence     that   Defendant        actually      or    constructively       possessed
    that contraband or even knew of its existence. Indeed, there is
    no   evidence       Defendant        had    ever        previously     visited          7202
    Shellburne Drive, and when police searched the residence, they
    found no evidence that connected Defendant to it. Moreover, as
    Defendant repeatedly emphasized at trial, the contraband found
    at   7202    Shellburne       Drive    was        notably      dissimilar    from       the
    contraband found in his vehicle insofar as the marijuana was of
    a different grade and the buckets were a different color. Under
    these circumstances, we find insufficient evidence to show that
    Defendant knew about the drugs found at 7202 Shellburne Drive.
    Consequently,       we   do    not     believe       that      evidence     was     either
    relevant     or   admissible      to   show       Defendant’s     knowledge        of    the
    contents of the boxes he received from Stokes, and we therefore
    -26-
    hold that the trial court erred in denying Defendant’s motion in
    limine to exclude it.
    Defendant further contends that the erroneous admission of
    this evidence was so prejudicial to him as to constitute plain
    error, thus warranting a new trial. Defendant again relies on
    Moctezuma         to    support     his       argument.       There,     in    reversing     the
    defendant’s            conviction,       we    held     the    erroneous        admission     of
    irrelevant evidence to be prejudicial because “the jury could
    have    easily         concluded,       given    the    value     and     quantity     of    the
    seized drugs, as well as the time spent at trial examining such,
    that [the] defendant was a high level drug trafficker.” 
    Id. at 95
    ,    
    539 S.E.2d at 56
    .    Defendant       argues    that        the   same   logic
    should apply here, and further supports his argument by citing
    prior    cases         in   which       this    Court    has     found    that      irrelevant
    evidence that leads to the spurious conclusion that the accused
    is     linked      to       a    huge     drug    trafficking          operation       can    be
    prejudicial. See, e.g., State v. Cuevas, 
    121 N.C. App. 553
    , 557-
    58, 
    468 S.E.2d 425
    , 428, disc. review denied, 
    343 N.C. 309
    , 
    471 S.E.2d 77
        (1996)        (holding       that    the     trial     court      erred    by
    admitting irrelevant evidence that the defendant who was charged
    with cocaine trafficking had a stamp on his passport indicating
    that he had visited Colombia approximately two months before his
    -27-
    arrest, as it tended to mislead the jury as to the level of his
    involvement in drug trafficking, but nevertheless affirming his
    conviction because the properly admitted evidence against him
    was   sufficiently     overwhelming     to    make    it    “unlikely      that    a
    different     result   would   have    occurred      at    trial    but    for   the
    introduction     of    the   passport.”).     However,      given    the    record
    before us, we do not agree that the trial court’s error was “so
    fundamental as to amount to a miscarriage of justice” or that it
    “probably resulted in the jury reaching a different verdict than
    it otherwise would have reached.” Brunson, 187 N.C. App. at 477,
    
    653 S.E.2d at 555
    .
    Defendant’s argument ignores a critical distinction between
    the   facts    here    and   what   made     the   erroneous       admission      of
    irrelevant evidence so prejudicial in Moctezuma——specifically,
    the radical disparity between the quantity of narcotics found
    when Moctezuma was arrested and the quantity found elsewhere
    that was erroneously admitted into evidence under Rule 404(b).
    In Moctezuma, the defendant was arrested driving a vehicle that
    contained roughly 136 grams——or, about four ounces——of cocaine,
    but the trial court subsequently admitted evidence that police
    had recovered over four pounds of cocaine from his trailer. 141
    N.C. App. at 95, 
    539 S.E.2d at 56
    . The erroneously admitted
    -28-
    contraband        taken      from    the     defendant’s      shared        home       was
    prejudicial         because    it     magnified      the    amount        of     cocaine
    purportedly associated with him by a factor of roughly 16, thus
    leaving the jury to draw the inference that he was some kind of
    drug kingpin.        
    Id.
         By contrast, there is no such                 prejudicial
    disparity in the present case, given that Defendant was arrested
    with over ten pounds of marijuana in his vehicle, while the
    police      found    far     less    marijuana      in   their     search       of    7202
    Shellburne Drive. In other words, even without the erroneously
    admitted     evidence,       the    jury   could    still   have    concluded         that
    Defendant was a high level drug trafficker or otherwise involved
    in a large drug trafficking operation based on the relevant and
    properly admitted evidence before it.
    Defendant nevertheless insists that he was prejudiced by
    the trial court’s error, emphasizing that the only contested
    issue at his trial was his knowledge that the boxes he received
    from     Stokes     contained       marijuana      and   that,     apart       from   the
    contraband found at 7202 Shellburne Drive, the State’s evidence
    on   this    point     was    weak    at    best.    However,      this     Court      has
    previously recognized that in narcotics prosecutions, “[i]n the
    absence of a confession by [the] defendant that [he knew the
    boxes contained marijuana], the State’s proof of [the knowledge]
    -29-
    element must of necessity be circumstantial.” State v. Nunez,
    
    204 N.C. App. 164
    , 168, 
    693 S.E.2d 223
    , 226 (2010). Moreover,
    “[i]n borderline or close cases, our courts have consistently
    expressed a preference for submitting issues to the jury.” State
    v. Jenkins, 
    167 N.C. App. 696
    , 701, 
    606 S.E.2d 430
    , 433 (2005)
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    In the present case, when Defendant took the stand to deny
    any knowledge of what was in those boxes, he testified that he
    knew Stokes was on federal probation for drug trafficking but
    agreed to do him a favor by transporting two large boxes without
    inquiring      about      their   contents     to    an   address   he     had   never
    previously visited. He also admitted to having pled guilty to
    possession of marijuana with intent to sell and deliver in 2009.
    Whether or not Defendant knew that the boxes contained marijuana
    was a credibility determination for the jury, and although these
    facts   do    not    by    themselves    prove      his   guilt,    they   certainly
    provided sufficient grounds for the jury to infer that Defendant
    should have known what he was getting himself into.
    We       therefore     conclude     that   the    trial     court’s    erroneous
    decision to admit irrelevant evidence was not “so fundamental as
    to amount to a miscarriage of justice” and did not “probably
    result[]      in    the   jury    reaching     a    different    verdict     than   it
    -30-
    otherwise would have reached.” Brunson, 187 N.C. App. at 477,
    
    653 S.E.2d at 555
    . Accordingly, we hold that the trial court did
    not commit plain error in denying Defendant’s motion to exclude
    the evidence found at 7202 Shellburne Drive.
    NO ERROR.
    Judges STEELMAN and GEER concur.