State v. Moore ( 2017 )


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  •                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA16-999
    Filed: 16 May 2017
    Orange County, Nos. 15 CRS 51309, 51310
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, Plaintiff,
    v.
    PIERRE JE BRON MOORE, Defendant.
    Appeal by defendant from judgment entered 20 April 2016 by Judge R. Allen
    Baddour, Jr. in Orange County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 21
    March 2017.
    Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Special Deputy Attorney General Joseph
    E. Herrin, for the State.
    Meghan Adelle Jones for defendant-appellant.
    ZACHARY, Judge.
    Pierre Je Bron Moore (defendant) appeals from the judgment entered upon his
    convictions of fleeing to elude arrest, resisting an officer, driving without a driver’s
    license, failing to heed a law enforcement officer’s blue light and siren, speeding, and
    reckless driving. On appeal, defendant argues that the trial court erred by denying
    his motion for a continuance, by allowing the State to introduce into evidence a copy
    of a convenience store surveillance video, and by denying his motion to suppress
    statements made by defendant. We conclude that the trial court did not err by
    denying defendant’s motion for a continuance or his motion to suppress. We further
    STATE V. MOORE
    Opinion of the Court
    conclude that the trial court erred by admitting the video, but that its admission was
    not prejudicial.
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    On 6 July 2015, the Grand Jury of Orange County returned indictments
    charging defendant with the felony of fleeing to elude arrest and with the related
    misdemeanors of resisting an officer, reckless driving to endanger, driving without a
    license, speeding, and failing to heed a law enforcement officer’s blue light and siren.
    Mr. George Doyle was initially appointed to represent defendant, but was permitted
    to withdraw on 9 March 2016, at which time defendant’s trial counsel, Ms. Kellie
    Mannette, was appointed to represent him. The charges against defendant came on
    for trial before a jury at the 18 April 2016 criminal session of Superior Court for
    Orange County, the Honorable R. Allen Baddour, Jr. presiding. Defendant did not
    testify or present evidence at trial. The State’s evidence tended to show, in relevant
    part, the following.
    During the early morning hours of 21 May 2015, Carrboro Police Officer David
    Deshaies was on patrol and was driving on Jones Ferry Road, in Carrboro, North
    Carolina. As Officer Deshaies drove past a Kangaroo gas station and convenience
    store, he noticed a man getting out of the driver’s side of a silver Nissan Altima. A
    month earlier, Officer Deshaies had attempted to stop a similar car for speeding, but
    the car fled. At that time, Officer Deshaies had noted that the Altima had a 30 day
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    temporary tag, but the officer was unable to identify the driver and no one was
    charged as a result of that incident. When Officer Deshaies saw a similar silver
    Nissan Altima on 21 May 2015, he checked the license tag number on his computer
    and learned that the car, which was owned by someone other than defendant, had
    been issued a license plate about ten days earlier. Officer Deshaies suspected that it
    was the same vehicle that he had tried to stop a month earlier.
    Officer Deshaies pulled into the Kangaroo parking lot and observed defendant
    getting out of the driver’s side of the Altima. Officer Deshaies recognized defendant
    from other encounters during the previous two years, and noticed that defendant was
    wearing a white cloth on his head. When Officer Deshaies saw defendant and another
    man enter the convenience store, he contacted other officers, and they agreed to watch
    the vehicle when it left the store and to stop the car if the driver violated any traffic
    laws. Officer Deshaies then drove a short distance from the store, and as a result he
    did not see who was driving when the car left the store’s parking lot.
    After the Altima left the parking lot, Officer Deshaies observed that it was
    exceeding the legal speed limit and contacted the law enforcement center to inform
    the dispatch officer that he was going to stop the Nissan. When Officer Deshaies
    activated his blue light and siren, the car accelerated rapidly away from him. Officer
    Deshaies followed the car for several miles, during which time he observed it run a
    red light and accelerate to speeds of over 110 miles per hour. Officer Deshaies chased
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    Opinion of the Court
    the car for several minutes before his supervisor directed him to discontinue the
    attempt to stop the vehicle. Officer Deshaies then returned to the Kangaroo gas
    station and convenience store where he had first noticed the car. Officer Deshaies
    described defendant’s appearance to the store’s clerk, who told the officer that he
    knew a person who fit the description, and that he would recognize the person if he
    saw him again.
    On 22 May 2015, Officer Deshaies returned to the Kangaroo store and asked
    the manager if he could review the store’s video surveillance footage from the night
    before. Officer Deshaies was permitted to view the video footage. However, the
    manager of the store told Officer Deshaies that the ownership of the Kangaroo store
    was in the process of being transferred to a different company and that, as a result of
    corporate policies involved in the transfer of ownership, the manager of the Kangaroo
    store lacked the authority to make a copy of the video. Officer Deshaies then used
    the video camera in his cell phone to copy the video, and downloaded the video from
    his cell phone to a computer to make a digital copy. Officer Deshaies testified that
    the video was an accurate representation of the video that he reviewed at the store.
    The trial court allowed the copy of the surveillance video to be played for the
    jury, over defendant’s objection. The video depicts footage of the convenience store
    premises taken by four different cameras recording views of the parking lot and the
    interior of the store. The footage includes images of a man with a white cloth on his
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    Opinion of the Court
    head getting out of the driver’s side of a car. Officer Deshaies identified this man as
    defendant. Officer Deshaies testified that he had personally observed defendant get
    out of the car but that he had moved his patrol vehicle out of view of the store before
    defendant and the other man got back into the car and drove away. The video also
    shows defendant getting into the driver’s side of the car before it left the parking lot.
    The clerk testified that on 21 May 2015 he was employed as a clerk at the
    Kangaroo gas station and convenience store on Jones Ferry Road, in Carrboro.
    Defendant had been a “regular customer” at the store and at around 1:00 a.m. on 21
    May 2015, defendant and another man made a brief visit to the store. The clerk
    identified defendant in court and on the copy of the surveillance video.
    Carrboro Police Officer Russell Suitt testified that he and defendant had
    attended high school together. Officer Suitt was not involved in the car chase on 21
    May 2015, but the next day he learned that there were outstanding warrants for
    defendant’s arrest. That morning, Officer Suitt saw defendant walking on Homestead
    Road in Chapel Hill. Officer Suitt stopped defendant and informed him that there
    were warrants for his arrest. Defendant was arrested and placed in Officer Suitt’s
    patrol vehicle without incident. As Officer Suitt was transporting defendant to the
    law enforcement center, another officer spoke to Officer Suitt over the police radio in
    the car, and asked Officer Suitt if he had information about the location of the vehicle
    that was involved in the incident the night before. Defendant spoke up from the back
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    seat of the patrol vehicle and said that the car was in a secret location. Defendant
    also told Officer Suitt that he had sped away from the law enforcement officers the
    night before because he feared being charged with impaired driving.
    On 20 April 2016, the jury returned verdicts finding defendant guilty of the
    charged offenses. The trial court arrested judgment on the charges of speeding and
    reckless driving, and consolidated the remaining charges for sentencing. The court
    sentenced defendant to a term of eight to nineteen months’ imprisonment, to be
    served at the expiration of another sentence that defendant was then serving for an
    unrelated charge. Defendant noted a timely appeal to this Court.
    II. Denial of Motion for Continuance
    A. Legal Principles
    On appeal, defendant argues that the denial of his motion to continue the trial
    of this case deprived him of his constitutional right to the effective assistance of
    counsel, as guaranteed by the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United
    States Constitution and Article I, Section 23 of the North Carolina Constitution. The
    standard of review of a trial court’s ruling on a continuance motion is well-
    established:
    It is, of course, axiomatic that a motion for a continuance
    is ordinarily addressed to the sound discretion of the trial
    judge whose ruling thereon is not subject to review absent
    a gross abuse. It is equally well established, however, that,
    when such a motion raises a constitutional issue, the trial
    court’s action upon it involves a question of law which is
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    Opinion of the Court
    fully reviewable by an examination of the particular
    circumstances of each case. Denial of a motion for a
    continuance, regardless of its nature, is, nevertheless,
    grounds for a new trial only upon a showing by defendant
    that the denial was erroneous and that [his] case was
    prejudiced thereby.
    State v. Searles, 
    304 N.C. 149
    , 153, 
    282 S.E.2d 430
    , 433 (1981) (citations omitted).
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-952(g) (2015) addresses a trial court’s determination of
    whether to allow a continuance and provides in relevant part that “the judge shall
    consider at least the following factors in determining whether to grant a
    continuance:”
    (1) Whether the failure to grant a continuance would be
    likely to result in a miscarriage of justice; [and]
    (2) Whether the case taken as a whole is so unusual and so
    complex, due to the number of defendants or the nature of
    the prosecution or otherwise, that more time is needed for
    adequate preparation[.]
    The refusal to grant a continuance may, in certain factual circumstances,
    violate a defendant’s constitutional rights. “The defendant’s rights to the assistance
    of counsel and to confront witnesses are guaranteed by the Sixth and Fourteenth
    Amendments to the Constitution of the United States and by sections 19 and 23 of
    Article I of the Constitution of North Carolina. Implicit in these constitutional
    provisions is the requirement that an accused have a reasonable time to investigate,
    prepare and present his defense.” State v. Tunstall, 
    334 N.C. 320
    , 328, 
    432 S.E.2d 331
    , 336 (1993) (internal quotation omitted).
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    “[T]he constitutional guarantees of assistance of counsel and confrontation of
    witnesses include the right of a defendant to have a reasonable time to investigate
    and prepare his case, but no precise limits are fixed in this context, and what
    constitutes a reasonable length of time for defense preparation must be determined
    upon the facts of each case.” Searles, 304 N.C. at 153-54, 
    282 S.E.2d at 433
     (citation
    omitted). The Supreme Court of North Carolina has explained:
    To establish that the trial court’s failure to give additional
    time to prepare constituted a constitutional violation,
    defendant must show “how his case would have been better
    prepared had the continuance been granted or that he was
    materially prejudiced by the denial of his motion.” “[A]
    motion for a continuance should be supported by an
    affidavit showing sufficient grounds for the continuance.”
    “[A] postponement is proper if there is a belief that
    material evidence will come to light and such belief is
    reasonably grounded on known facts.” . . . Continuances
    should not be granted unless the reasons therefor are fully
    established.
    State v. McCullers, 
    341 N.C. 19
    , 31-32, 
    460 S.E.2d 163
    , 170 (1995) (quoting State v.
    Covington, 
    317 N.C. 127
    , 130, 
    343 S.E.2d 524
    , 526 (1986), State v. Kuplen, 
    316 N.C. 387
    , 403, 
    343 S.E.2d 793
    , 802 (1986), and State v. Tolley, 
    290 N.C. 349
    , 357, 
    226 S.E.2d 353
    , 362 (1976)) (emphasis in original).
    B. Discussion
    Following defendant’s arrest on 22 May 2015, Mr. George Doyle was appointed
    to represent defendant on the charges that are the subject of this appeal. Defendant
    was later charged with first-degree murder in an unrelated case, and Ms. Kellie
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    Opinion of the Court
    Mannette was appointed to represent him on that charge.          On 9 March 2016,
    defendant appeared in superior court before the Honorable James E. Hardin, Jr.,
    judge presiding, who continued the homicide case until September 2016. Mr. Doyle
    was present at the hearing and moved that the trial court allow him to withdraw as
    defendant’s counsel on the charges in the present case and appoint Ms. Mannette as
    counsel on these charges, in addition to the homicide charge on which she already
    represented defendant. The prosecutor informed the court that the instant charges
    were scheduled for trial on 18 April 2016, and the parties engaged in the following
    discussion regarding Ms. Mannette’s representation of defendant:
    MR. DOYLE: . . . I would move to withdraw and ask that
    you appoint Ms. Mannette to those files, as appropriate.
    MS. MANNETTE: . . . Your Honor, . . . just for the record,
    I’ve been speaking to Mr. Doyle about the posture of these
    cases. And my understanding is that they were heading
    towards a resolution on those cases. I will let the Court
    know that, if they are not able to come to a non-trial
    resolution, I certainly will not be prepared in a month to
    try those cases. I do want that on the record. I don’t know
    that that’s going to be an issue here, but I did want to put
    that on the record. I’ll leave it in Your Honor’s discretion,
    whether or not to grant this motion or we can continue to
    work together but on the separate cases.
    ...
    THE COURT: -- [to the prosecutor] [D]o you want to be
    heard?
    PROSECUTOR: My concern is -- I mean, and it’s really -- I
    don’t know how much standing the State has in regards to
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    STATE V. MOORE
    Opinion of the Court
    this -- is that they are set for trial. If they were in an
    administrative posture, I would -- I wouldn’t voice any
    concern, essentially. But given that they’re in trial posture,
    I don’t know if we come April 18th and the State’s ready to
    proceed and Ms. Mannette’s not, now --
    THE COURT: It’s going to get continued. That’s the bottom
    line.
    PROSECUTOR: Right, right. So once again, I’ll leave it in
    Your Honor’s discretion. . . .
    When the case was called for trial on 18 April 2016, defense counsel orally
    moved for a continuance; however, the record does not contain a written motion or an
    affidavit supporting defendant’s request for a continuance. Defendant’s counsel told
    the trial court that she had agreed to represent defendant “with the understanding”
    that if the parties could not reach a non-trial disposition, she “would not be prepared
    to try the case[.]” Defense counsel explained that she had hoped to resolve the charges
    without a trial, but had learned that morning that defendant would not accept the
    State’s plea offer. Defense counsel acknowledged that she had received discovery a
    month earlier, on the day she was appointed. Counsel stated that she had not
    interviewed a witness or conducted the legal research necessary to support her
    pretrial motions. The trial court denied the motion for continuance.
    As discussed above, in order to establish that the denial of a continuance
    motion was an error of constitutional magnitude, a defendant must show both that
    the trial court erred by denying his motion and also that this error resulted in
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    Opinion of the Court
    prejudice to the defendant. On appeal, defendant argues that the trial court’s denial
    of his continuance motion violated his rights under the United States and North
    Carolina Constitutions to the effective assistance of counsel and to adequate time
    within which to prepare a defense.         We have carefully considered defendant’s
    arguments and conclude that they lack merit.
    Defendant first contends that the trial court erred by denying his continuance
    motion on the grounds that a comment made by Judge Hardin during the 9 March
    2016 hearing constituted a “ruling” on defendant’s right to a continuance, which the
    trial court lacked the authority to overrule. Defendant’s argument is based on the
    following excerpt from the 9 March 2016 hearing:
    PROSECUTOR: . . . [G]iven that they’re in trial posture, I
    don’t know if we come April 18th and the State’s ready to
    proceed and Ms. Mannette’s not, now --
    THE COURT: It’s going to get continued. That’s the bottom
    line.
    “It is well established that one superior court judge may not ordinarily modify,
    overrule, or change the judgment or order of another superior court judge previously
    entered in the same case.” In re Royster, 
    361 N.C. 560
    , 563, 
    648 S.E.2d 837
    , 840
    (2007) (citation omitted). In this case, the trial court’s remark was clearly not a
    “judgment or order.” However, on appeal, defendant characterizes this statement as
    a “ruling” that could not be overruled by another superior court judge. “Unfortunately
    for [defendant, he] failed to obtain a written ruling[.] . . . [A]n order rendered in open
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    STATE V. MOORE
    Opinion of the Court
    court is not enforceable until it is entered, i.e., until it is reduced to writing, signed
    by the judge, and filed with the clerk of court.” In re Goddard & Peterson, PLLC, __
    N.C. App. __, 
    789 S.E.2d 835
    , 840 (2016) (internal quotation omitted). Defendant cites
    no authority holding that an oral statement by the judge, which is not reduced to
    writing or entered as an order or judgment, constitutes a “judgment or order” that
    may not be overruled by another judge. We conclude that this argument lacks merit.
    Defendant also contends that he established before the trial court his need for
    additional time to prepare a defense. At the pretrial hearing, defense counsel stated
    that there was a “lay witness” whom she had not interviewed, a suppression motion
    for which she had not conducted the necessary research, and other unspecified
    “motions in limine that need to be filed and argued.” Defense counsel did not identify
    the witness or articulate any material factual issue upon which this witness might
    testify.
    Nor did defendant’s counsel proffer an explanation, other than her reliance
    upon Judge Hardin’s comment at the earlier hearing, for her failure to interview the
    witness, to conduct the necessary research, or to file a properly supported written
    motion for continuance. For example, defense counsel did not state that she had
    experienced a personal emergency, was involved in a jury trial, or had been required
    to travel during the month between her appointment and the trial of these charges.
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    STATE V. MOORE
    Opinion of the Court
    In addition, as discussed above, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-952(g)(2) directs a trial
    court to consider, in ruling on a motion for continuance, “[w]hether the case taken as
    a whole is so unusual and so complex . . . that more time is needed for adequate
    preparation[.]” In this case, defendant did not argue at the pretrial hearing that the
    trial of these charges was unusual or complex. The charges lodged against defendant
    all arose from a single incident of high speed driving and the only factual issue that
    was seriously contested at trial was the identity of the driver. We conclude that
    defendant failed to establish at the pretrial hearing that the denial of his continuance
    motion would violate his right to due process or to the effective assistance of counsel.
    Moreover, even assuming, arguendo, that it was error to deny defendant’s
    motion to continue, defendant has failed to show prejudice on appeal. In his appellate
    brief, defendant does not identify specific factual issues that might have been resolved
    differently if his counsel had conducted further investigation or interviewed
    witnesses. Defendant argues that his counsel was ineffective at trial, based upon
    counsel’s failure to conduct legal research prior to trial in support of his suppression
    motion. The premise of this contention is that, had defendant provided the trial court
    with case law to support his position, the court would then have granted his
    suppression motion. This argument has two flaws. First, “[w]e are cognizant of the
    rule that in a bench trial, the trial judge will be presumed to know the law and will
    disregard irrelevant or inadmissible evidence.” Scott v. Scott, 
    106 N.C. App. 606
    , 613,
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    Opinion of the Court
    
    417 S.E.2d 818
    , 823 (1992), aff’d 
    336 N.C. 284
    , 
    442 S.E.2d 493
     (1994). We presume
    that the trial court was acquainted with the relevant jurisprudence governing the
    issues raised by defendant’s suppression motion. Secondly, on appeal defendant has
    not identified any specific cases or legal theories that, if they had been proffered to
    the trial court, might have altered the court’s ruling on his suppression motion.
    Defendant also asserts that prejudice should be presumed, on the grounds that there
    was only a remote likelihood that even an experienced trial lawyer could prepare to
    try these charges in a month. However, defendant fails to identify any unusual
    complexities that might support this contention. We conclude that defendant has
    failed to show that the trial court violated defendant’s constitutional rights in its
    denial of defendant’s continuance motion.
    III. Admission of Video
    
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8-97
     (2015) provides that:
    Any party may introduce a photograph, video tape, motion
    picture, X-ray or other photographic representation as
    substantive evidence upon laying a proper foundation and
    meeting other applicable evidentiary requirements. This
    section does not prohibit a party from introducing a
    photograph or other pictorial representation solely for the
    purpose of illustrating the testimony of a witness.
    
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8-97
     provides that a photograph may be introduced for either
    illustrative or substantive purposes. “Rule 901 of our Rules of Evidence requires
    authentication or identification ‘by evidence sufficient to support a finding that the
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    STATE V. MOORE
    Opinion of the Court
    matter in question is what its proponent claims.’ ” State v. Murray, 
    229 N.C. App. 285
    , 288, 
    746 S.E.2d 452
    , 455 (2013) (citing N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 901).
    “Video images may be introduced into evidence for illustrative purposes after
    a proper foundation is laid. 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8-97
     (2015). The proponent for admission
    of a video lays this foundation with ‘testimony that the motion picture or videotape
    fairly and accurately illustrates the events filmed (illustrative purposes).’ ” State v.
    Fleming, __ N.C. App. __, __, 
    786 S.E.2d 760
    , 764-65 (2016) (quoting State v. Cannon,
    
    92 N.C. App. 246
    , 254, 
    374 S.E.2d 604
    , 608-09 (1988), rev’d on other grounds, 
    326 N.C. 37
    , 
    387 S.E.2d 450
     (1990)).
    In State v. Snead, 
    368 N.C. 811
    , 
    783 S.E.2d 733
     (2016), our Supreme Court
    addressed the requirements for introduction of a video as substantive evidence:
    Rule 901(a) requires that evidence be authenticated by
    showing “that the matter in question is what its proponent
    claims.” N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 901(a) (2015). . . . .
    Recordings such as a tape from an automatic surveillance
    camera can be authenticated as the accurate product of an
    automated process under Rule 901(b)(9). . . . Evidence that
    the recording process is reliable and that the video
    introduced at trial is the same video that was produced by
    the recording process is sufficient to authenticate the video
    and lay a proper foundation for its admission as
    substantive evidence.
    Snead, 368 N.C. at 814, 783 S.E.2d at 736 (internal quotation omitted). Snead held
    that the testimony offered at trial was sufficient to authenticate the video:
    . . . [The witness’s] testimony was sufficient to authenticate
    the video under Rule 901. [The witness] established that
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    STATE V. MOORE
    Opinion of the Court
    the recording process was reliable by testifying that he was
    familiar with how Belk’s video surveillance system worked,
    that the recording equipment was “industry standard,”
    that the equipment was “in working order” on 1 February
    2013, and that the videos produced by the surveillance
    system contain safeguards to prevent tampering.
    Moreover, [the witness] established that the video
    introduced at trial was the same video produced by the
    recording process by stating that the State’s exhibit at trial
    contained exactly the same video that he saw on the digital
    video recorder. . . . [The witness’s] testimony, therefore,
    satisfied Rule 901, and the trial court did not err in
    admitting the video into evidence.
    Snead at 815-16, 783 S.E.2d at 737.
    In the present case, the evidence concerning the admissibility of the video
    consisted of the following. Officer Deshaies testified that the day after the incident
    giving rise to these charges, he asked the manager of the Kangaroo convenience store
    for a copy of the surveillance video made by cameras at the store. The manager
    allowed Officer Deshaies to review the video, but was unable to copy it. Officer
    Deshaies used the video camera function on his cell phone to make a copy of the
    surveillance footage. At trial he testified that the cell phone video accurately showed
    the contents of the video that he had seen at the store. The store clerk also reviewed
    the video, but was not asked any questions about the creation of the original video or
    whether it accurately depicted the events that he observed on 21 May 2015.
    A careful review of the transcript in this case reveals that no testimony was
    elicited at trial concerning the type of recording equipment used to make the video,
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    STATE V. MOORE
    Opinion of the Court
    its condition on 21 May 2015, or its general reliability. No witness was asked whether
    the video accurately depicted events that he had observed, and no testimony was
    offered on the subject. We conclude that the State failed to offer a proper foundation
    for introduction of the video as either illustrative or substantive evidence.
    On appeal, the State contends that the clerk “testified that the events
    contained on the video copy made by Officer Deshaies were an accurate portrayal of
    what he had seen on the original videotape and had witnessed within the store.” This
    assertion is inaccurate. The clerk testified that defendant was shown on the video,
    but was not asked whether the video accurately depicted events he observed on 21
    May 2015, and did not volunteer testimony of this nature. We hold that the trial
    court erred by admitting the video into evidence.
    We next consider whether the introduction of the video was prejudicial.
    Defendant did not object to the admission of the video on constitutional grounds.
    Regarding prejudice from errors that do not arise under the state or federal
    constitution, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1443(a) states that:
    A defendant is prejudiced by errors relating to rights
    arising other than under the Constitution of the United
    States when there is a reasonable possibility that, had the
    error in question not been committed, a different result
    would have been reached at the trial out of which the
    appeal arises. The burden of showing such prejudice under
    this subsection is upon the defendant.
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    Opinion of the Court
    In this case, the primary issue for the jury to resolve was whether the State
    had shown beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant was the driver of the car that
    sped away from Officer Deshaies on 21 May 2015. In its appellate brief, the State
    argues that the video was admissible and does not address the issue of prejudice.
    Defendant argues that, absent the admission of the video there is a reasonable
    possibility that the jury would not have convicted him. We have considered the
    admission of the video in the context of the other evidence against defendant, and
    conclude that it was not prejudicial.
    We summarize the trial evidence pertaining to defendant’s identity as the
    driver as follows: Officer Deshaies testified that he saw defendant getting out of the
    car on the driver’s side. The jury might reasonably infer that the person who drove
    the car into the store’s parking lot would also drive when the two men left the store.
    In addition, as discussed in detail below, the State offered evidence that at the time
    of his arrest defendant told the arresting officer “that the only reason he ran from
    officers the night of 5/21/2015 was because he had been drinking and did not want to
    deal with the driving while impaired charges.” This statement was a direct admission
    of the fact that he was driving the car the night before, given that a passenger in the
    car would not be charged with impaired driving. On the other hand, defendant directs
    our attention to the facts that defendant did not own the car, and that the jury asked
    to review the video during its deliberations.
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    STATE V. MOORE
    Opinion of the Court
    We have evaluated the degree to which the admission of the video may have
    played a role in the jury’s decision to convict defendant, particularly given that
    defendant essentially confessed to being the driver of the car, and conclude that there
    is no reasonable possibility that the jury would have failed to convict defendant
    absent the video evidence.
    IV. Denial of Suppression Motion
    Prior to trial, defendant moved to suppress the statements that he made to
    Officer Suitts while the officer was transporting him to the law enforcement center.
    The trial court conducted a hearing on defendant’s suppression motion on the day
    that the trial began and denied defendant’s motion. On appeal, defendant argues
    that his statements were made in response to police interrogation or its functional
    equivalent, in violation of his right under the Fifth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution to avoid self-incrimination. We disagree.
    In Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 444, 
    16 L. Ed. 2d 694
    , 707 (1966), the
    United States Supreme Court held that:
    [T]he prosecution may not use statements, whether
    exculpatory or inculpatory, stemming from custodial
    interrogation of the defendant unless it demonstrates the
    use of procedural safeguards effective to secure the
    privilege against self-incrimination. . . . Prior to any
    questioning, the person must be warned that he has a right
    to remain silent, that any statement he does make may be
    used as evidence against him, and that he has a right to
    the presence of an attorney, either retained or appointed.
    - 19 -
    STATE V. MOORE
    Opinion of the Court
    “The rule of Miranda requiring that suspects be informed of their
    constitutional rights before being questioned by the police only applies to custodial
    interrogation.” State v. Brooks, 
    337 N.C. 132
    , 143, 
    446 S.E.2d 579
    , 586 (1994).
    Miranda also held, as relevant to the present case, that “[a]ny statement given freely
    and voluntarily without any compelling influences is, of course, admissible in
    evidence.” Miranda, 
    384 U.S. at 478
    , 
    16 L. Ed. 2d at 726
    .
    In the present case, there is no dispute that when defendant made inculpatory
    statements to Officer Suitt he was in custody and had not been apprised of his
    Miranda rights. Thus, the dispositive issue is whether defendant was subjected to
    interrogation. “The Supreme Court has defined the term ‘interrogation’ as follows:
    ‘Any words or actions on the part of the police . . . that the police should know are
    reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response from the suspect.’ ” State v.
    Brewington, 
    352 N.C. 489
    , 503, 
    532 S.E.2d 496
    , 504 (2000) (quoting Rhode Island v.
    Innis, 
    446 U.S. 291
    , 301, 
    64 L. Ed. 2d 297
    , 308 (1980)).
    Defendant made inculpatory statements after being arrested and while being
    transported to the law enforcement center. These statements were made in response
    to questions from Officer Suitt’s supervising officer over the police radio. At the
    hearing on defendant’s suppression motion, Officer Suitt testified as follows:
    PROSECUTOR: Okay. And what happened next [after
    defendant was secured in the patrol vehicle]?
    - 20 -
    STATE V. MOORE
    Opinion of the Court
    OFFICER SUITT: . . . [W]e were en route to the police
    department and Mr. Moore heard -- my lieutenant was
    asking about the vehicle, maybe see if we could locate the
    vehicle. He asked if Mr. Moore had said anything about
    where the vehicle was located. Well, obviously the speaker
    in my patrol car, anybody can hear that’s inside the car.
    Mr. Moore stated that we wouldn’t find the vehicle, it was
    possibly in a secret spot, as stated in -- in the report.
    PROSECUTOR: Okay. And to be clear, was that in
    response to any question that was being asked of him?
    OFFICER SUITTS: It was not. I did not ask him any
    questions. I believe it would be in response to my
    supervisor, lieutenant, asking the question over the radio
    to me “Did he say anything about where the car was
    located?” And his response was in response to that.
    PROSECUTOR: Okay. What happened next?
    OFFICER SUITTS: Still en route to the police department,
    Mr. Moore stated, as I put in the report, that the only
    reason that he ran from officers the night prior was because
    he didn’t want to get the impaired driving charge, the DWI.
    PROSECUTOR: Okay. Do you remember with any
    specificity what he said? You can use your report, if
    necessary.
    OFFICER SUITTS: Yeah, just -- I’ll read it straight from -
    - from the report. . . . “Mr. Moore went on to advise me he
    ran from . . . officers on 5/21/15 [] because he had been
    drinking and did not want to deal with the driving while
    impaired charge.”
    PROSECUTOR: Okay. And was that statement made in
    response to any questions that you posed to him?
    OFFICER SUITTS: No, I did not ask any questions. And
    the reason I did not ask him any questions, I had not
    - 21 -
    STATE V. MOORE
    Opinion of the Court
    Mirandized him any -- in any way because I had no
    intentions on asking any questions.
    Based upon this testimony, the trial court found that defendant’s statements
    were “spontaneous utterances” that were “not made in response to questions posed to
    him by law enforcement” and that “defendant’s statement in response to a radio
    communication by a law enforcement officer to Suitt cannot be interpreted to be an
    interrogation or questioning of defendant.” (emphasis in original). The court
    concluded that “[d]efendant’s statements were not coerced, and were not obtained in
    violation of his constitutional rights.”
    The thrust of defendant’s appellate argument is that Officer Suitt should have
    known that the conversation between Officer Suitt and another officer would be
    reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response. Defendant asserts that
    defendant had a reasonable “perception that he was expected to participate in the
    conversation” initiated over the police radio by Officer Suitt’s superior officer.
    Defendant also notes that before Officer Suitt turned off the video recording in the
    patrol car, he asked defendant where he had been walking. There is no indication in
    the record that defendant answered this question. Moreover, defendant’s inculpatory
    statements did not pertain to his walk on the morning of his arrest.
    Defendant has not directed our attention to appellate jurisprudence in which
    the court held that a brief exchange between two law enforcement officers was the
    functional equivalent of interrogation, and we note that in the leading case on this
    - 22 -
    STATE V. MOORE
    Opinion of the Court
    issue, Rhode Island v. Innis, 
    446 U.S. 291
    , 
    64 L. Ed. 2d 297
     (1980), the Supreme Court
    rejected a similar argument. In Innis, the defendant was arrested for a homicide.
    During the drive to the law enforcement center, the officers who had arrested
    defendant discussed the fact that the firearm used in the murder had not been
    located, and expressed concern about the possibility that a handicapped child might
    find the weapon and harm himself. Defendant interrupted the officers’ conversation
    and offered to show them where the gun was located. On appeal, the defendant
    argued that the officers’ discussion was the equivalent of an interrogation. The
    Supreme Court first enunciated the standard for determining when a defendant is
    subjected to interrogation:
    We conclude that the Miranda safeguards come into play
    whenever a person in custody is subjected to either express
    questioning or its functional equivalent. That is to say, the
    term ‘interrogation’ under Miranda refers not only to
    express questioning, but also to any words or actions on the
    part of the police . . . that the police should know are
    reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response from
    the suspect. . . . . But, since the police surely cannot be held
    accountable for the unforeseeable results of their words or
    actions, the definition of interrogation can extend only to
    words or actions on the part of police officers that they
    should have known were reasonably likely to elicit an
    incriminating response.
    Innis, 
    446 U.S. at 301
    , 
    64 L. Ed. 2d at 307-08
    . The Court then applied this standard
    to the facts of Innis, and held that the conversation conducted by the officers in the
    defendant’s presence did not constitute the equivalent of an interrogation:
    - 23 -
    STATE V. MOORE
    Opinion of the Court
    [W]e conclude that the respondent was not “interrogated”
    within the meaning of Miranda. . . . [T]he conversation
    between [the officers] included no express questioning of
    the respondent. Rather, that conversation was, at least in
    form, nothing more than a dialogue between the two
    officers to which no response from the respondent was
    invited. Moreover, it cannot be fairly concluded that the
    respondent was subjected to the “functional equivalent” of
    questioning. It cannot be said, in short, that [the officers]
    should have known that their conversation was reasonably
    likely to elicit an incriminating response from the
    respondent.
    Innis at 302, 
    64 L. Ed. 2d at 309
    . We find Innis functionally indistinguishable from
    the present case. Indeed, the officers’ conversation in Innis was more likely to elicit
    a response from the defendant, given the emotional tone of the officers’ concern for
    the safety of a child, than would the question asked over the police radio in the
    presence of this defendant in the present case.
    We have also considered the holding of our Supreme Court in State v. DeCastro,
    
    342 N.C. 667
    , 
    467 S.E.2d 653
     (1996). In DeCastro, the defendant was arrested on
    charges of robbery and murder and was taken to the law enforcement center, where
    an officer took possession of defendant’s clothing and personal effects. This officer
    asked another law enforcement officer who was present whether defendant could
    retain custody of money that was in his possession.        Defendant overheard and
    volunteered that he “had some of my own money, too” a statement that supported the
    charge of robbery.    DeCastro, 
    342 N.C. at 678
    , 
    467 S.E.2d at 658
    . On appeal,
    defendant argued that “the detective’s question, made in defendant’s presence while
    - 24 -
    STATE V. MOORE
    Opinion of the Court
    he was in police custody, could have been perceived by defendant as seeking a
    response” and was therefore “the functional equivalent of police interrogation in
    violation of his constitutional rights.” DeCastro at 683, 447 S.E.2d at 661. Our
    Supreme Court rejected this argument, holding that defendant’s statement “was not
    the result of interrogation in derogation of defendant’s right to have an attorney
    present during questioning. The question by Detective Berube regarding whether
    defendant could keep the money from his pocket was not directed to defendant, but
    to Agent McDougall.” DeCastro at 684, 447 S.E.2d at 661.
    We conclude that defendant has failed to show that he was subjected to the
    functional equivalent of an interrogation, and that the trial court did not err by
    denying his motion to suppress.
    V. Conclusion
    For the reasons discussed above, we conclude that the trial court did not err by
    denying defendant’s motion to continue or his motion to suppress the statements he
    made to Officer Suitt, but that the trial court erred by admitting into evidence the
    cell phone copy of a surveillance video from the convenience store. We hold, however,
    that given the strength of the other evidence offered by the State, this error was not
    prejudicial to defendant.
    NO ERROR IN PART, NO PREJUDICIAL ERROR IN PART.
    Judges BRYANT and INMAN concur.
    - 25 -