State v. Foster ( 2014 )


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  •                                  NO. COA13-1084
    NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
    Filed: 5 August 2014
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.                                       Mecklenburg County
    No. 11 CRS 230328
    BRANDON MIKAL FOSTER,
    Defendant.
    Appeal by defendant from judgment entered 11 October 2012
    by Judge Linwood O. Foust in Mecklenburg County Superior Court.
    Heard in the Court of Appeals 19 March 2014.
    Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Assistant Attorney General
    Alesia M. Balshakova, for the State.
    Gilda C. Rodriguez for defendant-appellant.
    GEER, Judge.
    Defendant Brandon Mikal Foster appeals his conviction of
    delivery of cocaine.       Defendant argues on appeal that the trial
    court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on the defense of
    entrapment.      Based on defendant's evidence that an undercover
    officer tricked defendant into believing that the officer was
    romantically     interested      in   defendant     in     order    to     persuade
    defendant   to   obtain    cocaine    for    him,   that    defendant       had   no
    predisposition    to    commit    a   drug   offense     such      as    delivering
    -2-
    cocaine, and that the criminal design originated solely with the
    officer,     we    hold      that   the    trial       court    erred       in      failing   to
    instruct the jury on the defense of entrapment.
    The   trial      court,      however,       indicated         that      it    was     also
    denying the request for an instruction as a sanction under N.C.
    Gen.    Stat.     §     15A-910(a)        for    failure       to    provide         "specific
    information       as    to   the    nature      and    extent       of   the     defense"      as
    required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-905(c)(1)(b) (2013).                                 Because
    the trial court made no findings of fact to justify imposition
    of such a harsh sanction, and the State has not shown that it
    suffered any prejudice from the lack of detail in the notice
    filed eight months prior to trial, we hold that the trial court
    abused its discretion in precluding the use of the entrapment
    defense as a sanction.              Consequently, defendant is entitled to a
    new trial.
    Facts
    The State's evidence tended to show the following facts.
    On 22 June 2011, Officer Thomas Wishon, Officer Daniel Bignall,
    and     Detective       Hefner      of     the        Charlotte-Mecklenburg                Police
    Department ("CMPD") were working undercover at Chasers, a male
    strip    club      in     Charlotte,       North       Carolina,         investigating         a
    complaint         of      sexually-oriented             business          and        narcotics
    violations.       Defendant was working as a dancer at the club that
    -3-
    night,     and    there     were   only     a    few     patrons    at    the     club.
    Defendant, whose stage name was Thunder, and another dancer with
    the    stage     name   Mercury     approached      the    officers       after    they
    finished dancing.           Mercury and         defendant gave lap dances to
    Officer Bignall and Detective Hefner.
    Officer     Wishon    engaged      in     small     talk    with     defendant
    throughout the evening.            Officer Wishon admitted that he tipped
    defendant and flirted, maintained eye contact, and joked with
    defendant.       Towards the end of the night, Officer Wishon asked
    defendant if he had a "hookup" and indicated that he would like
    to buy some cocaine.          Defendant stated that he had a "connect."
    Officer Wishon asked defendant for his phone number and told
    defendant that he was going to a friend's party but would be
    back    after    the    party.     Before       leaving,    Officer      Wishon   gave
    defendant a goodbye hug.
    Later     that   night,     Officer       Wishon    received       three   text
    messages from defendant.            The first stated, "'You have to come
    back.    You never got a lap dance.                LOL.:)'"        The second text
    stated, "'I can get what you wanted if you need it.                       Let me know
    quick.'"       The third text stated, "'My friend needs to know what
    to get if your [sic] still wanting that.'"                    Officer Wishon did
    not respond to these text messages or return to the nightclub
    that night.
    -4-
    Officer Wishon did not text defendant until 29 June 2011,
    when    he     asked   defendant   if     he    was   able   to    "hook    him   up."
    Officer      Wishon    and   defendant    exchanged      several    text     messages
    discussing the details of the deal.                   They arranged for Officer
    Wishon to go to Chasers the following day to make the purchase.
    The next day, 30 June 2011, Officer Wishon went to Chasers
    where     he    and    other   undercover         officers   played        pool   with
    defendant until defendant's "source" arrived.                     When defendant's
    source, later identified as Paul Peterson, walked in, defendant
    said to Officer Wishon:            "Oh.         He's here.        Let me get your
    money."        Officer Wishon handed defendant $185.00 and watched
    defendant follow Mr. Peterson into the bathroom.                    When defendant
    returned, he had a plastic baggy of cocaine tucked into his
    underwear on his hip.           He asked Officer Wishon to be "frisky"
    with him.       Officer Wishon told defendant that he was making him
    uncomfortable, but he, nevertheless, retrieved the plastic baggy
    of cocaine from defendant's hip.                 Shortly thereafter, defendant
    was arrested.
    After defendant was read his rights, he agreed to talk with
    Officer Stephanie White of the CMPD.                    Defendant told Officer
    White that he met Mr. Peterson in the bathroom, took the $185.00
    given to him by Officer Wishon and exchanged it for the cocaine,
    put the cocaine in his underwear and Officer Wishon retrieved
    -5-
    it.     Defendant also told Officer White that Officer Wishon had
    offered him $100.00 to broker the drug deal.                          Officer White
    testified that, generally, undercover officers will only offer
    someone a cigarette or up to $5.00 at most to broker a drug deal
    and that defendant's claim that he was offered $100.00 was a
    lie.
    On    11   July   2011,     defendant     was   indicted    for      sale    of   a
    controlled substance, possession with intent to sell or deliver
    a controlled substance, and delivery of a controlled substance.
    On 2 February 2012, defendant filed a notice of an intent to
    assert      the    defense    of   entrapment.         The   notice        stated    that
    "undercover CMPD Officer Wishon, acting on behalf of Charlotte
    Mecklenburg        Police    Department     induced      Brandon      M.    Foster       to
    obtain cocaine, a crime not contemplated by Brandon M. Foster."
    At a pretrial hearing on 8 October 2012, the State made a
    motion in limine to bar defendant from asserting the defense of
    entrapment        on   the   grounds   that      the   notice   did     not    "contain
    specific information as to the nature and the extent of this
    defense" as required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-905(c).                         The trial
    court       initially    denied     the    State's     motion     and      then     asked
    defendant         to   describe     more    specifically        what       constituted
    entrapment in this case.             After defendant gave a proffer of the
    evidence he intended to present to support the defense, the
    -6-
    trial court again denied the State's motion.                             The trial began
    the following day.
    Defendant testified in his own defense on the second day of
    trial.        He testified that on the night of 22 June 2011, he
    believed that Officer Wishon was interested in him.                                  Officer
    Wishon initiated a conversation with defendant by asking him if
    he was single and asking other personal information such as what
    he liked to do besides dancing.                       Defendant told Officer Wishon
    that he was in school and that he danced to pay the bills.                                He
    was    intrigued         by   Officer       Wishon,      noting   that     Officer    Wishon
    "never mentioned the fact that I was sitting there in boy shorts
    or    that    I     am   half     naked"     and   instead       kept   the   conversation
    intellectual and sincere.
    By the end of the night, defendant had given Officer Wishon
    his real name and telephone number, information that he normally
    did    not    give       guests      at   the   club.       At    one   point,     defendant
    commented that he thought Officer Wishon liked Mercury.                              Officer
    Wishon responded that he was into defendant and that is why he
    wanted       defendant's        number      and    not    Mercury's.          When   Officer
    Wishon left, he gave defendant a goodbye hug.
    At     one    point      in    the    night,      after    having      a   one-on-one
    conversation with defendant, Officer Wishon asked both defendant
    and Mercury about getting "straight," which is street language
    -7-
    for cocaine.       Defendant asked "[w]hat are you talking about?"
    Officer   Wishon    clarified      that    he    was   referring    to    cocaine.
    Defendant    stated   that    he   did    not     do   drugs.      However,    both
    defendant and Mercury told Officer Wishon that they would ask
    around for him.
    Defendant testified that he did ask around, but did not
    find anything that night.           He did not speak to Officer Wishon
    about drugs again before the officers left.                 Although defendant
    texted Officer Wishon later about the lap dances,                        he denied
    sending     the   second     and   third        text   messages.         The   last
    communication between the two of them that night was Officer
    Wishon's response stating that he was not coming back to the
    club that night.
    Defendant did not hear from Officer Wishon again until one
    week later when he texted defendant, "Are you working tonight?"
    By that time, defendant had deleted Officer Wishon's number from
    his phone, thinking that Officer Wishon had lost interest in
    him.    Defendant's first response, therefore, was to ask who was
    texting him.      When defendant found out it was Officer Wishon, he
    became excited and giddy.            They texted back and forth a few
    times, but when Officer Wishon turned the conversation back to
    narcotics, defendant slowed down his responses.                     Referring to
    cocaine, Officer Wishon asked defendant if he had ever found
    -8-
    what Officer Wishon had asked for the night of 22 June 2011.
    Defendant told him he had not.                Officer Wishon asked defendant
    if he could find him drugs, and defendant told him the same
    thing he had told him the first night -- that he could ask
    around.
    Defendant told Officer Wishon to contact Eric, a customer
    of defendant's.      Defendant began texting between both Officer
    Wishon and Eric, relaying the questions of Officer Wishon to
    Eric,     and   forwarding     Eric's     responses      to    Officer     Wishon.
    Officer    Wishon   told     defendant    he     was   planning      on   going   to
    Chasers the following night.           Defendant forwarded Officer Wishon
    a text from Eric stating that the drug dealer was supposed to be
    at Chasers that night as well.
    On the night of 30 June 2011, defendant was excited to see
    Officer Wishon at Chasers and went over to talk to him after he
    had finished a set.          It was a busy Friday night, so defendant
    was unable to talk as much as he had been able to talk on the
    first   night.      Instead,     the     conversations        were   centered     on
    Officer Wishon's questions about the dealer and whether he was
    there or not -- Officer Wishon would go to the bar and tip
    defendant and ask defendant when the drug dealer would arrive.
    He tipped defendant $10.00.
    -9-
    Eric was at the bar and signaled to defendant when the drug
    dealer, Paul Peterson, had arrived.                Defendant recognized the
    drug dealer as "Uncle Paul," a man who frequented the bar, but
    he did not know him personally.                Defendant told Officer Wishon
    that the drug dealer was at the club, and Officer Wishon asked
    defendant to get the cocaine for him.               Defendant took the money
    from Officer Wishon, followed Mr. Peterson to the bathroom, and
    returned with the cocaine.           He put the drugs in his underwear
    and asked Officer Wishon to retrieve the drugs because he did
    not want to touch the drugs himself.
    When       asked    why   he   got   the    drugs    for   Officer   Wishon,
    defendant replied: "I was doing what I could to impress him.                  He
    seemed to like me.        I liked him, so I tried to do that for him."
    He also explained, "I had a crush.               Having someone continuously
    ask you for the same thing makes you feel persuaded to do it."
    Defendant testified that in one of the texts from Officer
    Wishon,   he    was    told   he   would   be    given   $100.00   for   setting
    everything up.         However, defendant did not state that money was
    what motivated him to help Officer Wishon.                 Instead, defendant
    explained:
    I mean, I just I liked him. In my life and
    my organization at that profession I was
    doing, I didn't get a lot of chances to meet
    decent people to actually date or who could
    possibly be a possible date.
    -10-
    When I found someone who I was really,
    really interested in and I felt like they
    were interested in me, I took a chance
    basically.
    I didn't per se want to do it with the
    narcotics or be involved in it. I felt like
    I was pushed more to get it or else the
    interest would have been lost on his part in
    me.
    Defendant felt that Officer Wishon took advantage of both his
    emotions      and   his    financial       situation.      He   had      told   Officer
    Wishon that he lived with his mother and that he was working to
    support himself and his mother and pay for school.                       He had never
    gotten in trouble before and does not use or sell drugs.
    At the close of all the evidence, the State again argued
    that    it   was    not    given     notice   of   the    nature    and    extent   of
    defendant's defense of entrapment until trial and asked that it
    be given until the following morning to address the issue of
    entrapment.           In    response,       defense      counsel      asserted     that
    defendant filed his intent to use the entrapment defense on 2
    February 2012, 240 days prior to trial.
    The trial court then indicated that "[w]hat the Court is
    going to hear with regard to the entrapment defense is whether
    or not that defense should go to the jury."                     The court granted
    the State's request that it wait to hear the parties' arguments
    until   the    following      morning.        Specifically,        the    trial   court
    stated,      "In    the    morning    at   9:30,   [the    court    will    hear    the
    -11-
    parties] about whether the issue of entrapment goes to the jury,
    based    on   the    evidence    before       the     Court."        Defense      counsel
    responded: "So I may be clear what the State is asking and what
    the Court is deciding -- we are not revisiting the issue of the
    motion   in    limine.      We   are     objecting.            There    is     sufficient
    evidence to present the testimony to submit to a jury for its
    consideration."
    The following morning, after hearing the parties' arguments
    regarding      the     sufficiency       of     the     evidence        presented      on
    entrapment,      the    trial    court    concluded        that        there    was   not
    sufficient     evidence    to    instruct       the     jury    on     the     entrapment
    defense.      Although the parties had not addressed the adequacy of
    the notice, the trial court also added:
    In addition, the Court having given
    further thought to the motion of State
    raises the issue of notice to the state
    [sic] of the intent to use the defense of
    entrapment,   the   Court  finds   that   the
    defendant failed to comply with the statute;
    that the defendant did not give them
    specifics as to the basis of the defense.
    So in addition to the Court's rul[ing]
    finding that the defendant failed to present
    sufficient   or    competent   evidence   of
    entrapment, the defendant further failed to
    notify the State in accordance with the
    statute of its intent to raise the defense
    of entrapment.    The Court will not submit
    the issue of entrapment to the jury.
    -12-
    The jury found defendant guilty of delivery of cocaine and
    not guilty of the other two offenses.            The trial court sentenced
    defendant to a presumptive-range term of five to six months
    imprisonment.       The    court    suspended    defendant's       sentence      and
    placed   defendant        on    supervised     probation     for    12    months.
    Defendant timely appealed to this Court.
    Discussion
    Defendant   first          argues   that   the   trial   court       erred    in
    concluding   that    the       evidence    was   insufficient       to    warrant
    submission of the defense of entrapment to the jury.
    "Entrapment is the inducement of a
    person to commit a criminal offense not
    contemplated by that person, for the mere
    purpose of instituting a criminal action
    against him.    To establish the defense of
    entrapment, it must be shown that (1) law
    enforcement officers or their agents engaged
    in acts of persuasion, trickery or fraud to
    induce the defendant to commit a crime, and
    (2) the criminal design originated in the
    minds of those officials, rather than with
    the defendant. The defense is not available
    to a defendant who was predisposed to commit
    the crime charged absent the inducement of
    law enforcement officials.    The defendant
    has the burden of proving entrapment to the
    satisfaction of the jury."
    State v. Thompson, 
    141 N.C. App. 698
    , 706, 
    543 S.E.2d 160
    , 165
    (2001) (quoting State v. Davis, 
    126 N.C. App. 415
    , 417-18, 
    485 S.E.2d 329
    , 331 (1997)).
    -13-
    "The       fact     that       governmental          officials        merely     afford
    opportunities or facilities for the commission of the offense
    is, standing alone, not enough to give rise to the defense of
    entrapment."        State v. Hageman, 
    307 N.C. 1
    , 30, 
    296 S.E.2d 433
    ,
    449 (1982).         Instead, the defendant must present evidence that
    the law enforcement officers or their agents engaged in "acts of
    persuasion, trickery, or fraud[.]"                          State v. Martin, 
    77 N.C. App. 61
    ,    67,       
    334 S.E.2d 459
    ,    462     (1985).      "A    defendant     is
    entitled      to    a     jury      instruction        on    entrapment       whenever      the
    defense      is    supported         by    defendant's       evidence,       viewed    in   the
    light most favorable to the defendant."                            State v. Jamerson, 
    64 N.C. App. 301
    , 303, 
    307 S.E.2d 436
    , 437 (1983).
    In State v. Stanley, 
    288 N.C. 19
    , 32-33, 
    215 S.E.2d 589
    ,
    597-98     (1975),        our       Supreme        Court     held     that    the     evidence
    presented at trial established that the defendant was entrapped
    as a matter of law.                 There, the undisputed evidence showed that
    an     undercover         officer,           based     on      false     representations,
    befriended        the    teenage          defendant   and     became    a     "big    brother"
    figure to him.             Id. at 32, 
    215 S.E.2d at 597
    .                        The officer
    repeatedly        asked       the    defendant       where    he    could     find    and   buy
    drugs, persuaded the defendant to make more than one drug buy
    for him, and supplied the money for the purchases.                               
    Id.
     at 21-
    22, 
    215 S.E.2d at 591
    .                On two occasions prior to his arrest for
    -14-
    possession of a controlled substance, the defendant purchased
    drugs that turned out to be counterfeit because the defendant
    did not know the difference.                   Id. at 22, 
    215 S.E.2d at 591
    .                The
    Supreme      Court       held     that      this    evidence         demonstrated    that   the
    criminal design originated with the officer, and there was not
    any evidence indicating that the defendant was predisposed to
    engage in possession or distribution of drugs.                                 Id. at 32-33,
    
    215 S.E.2d at 597-98
    .
    Even where the evidence does not establish entrapment as a
    matter of law, "[i]f defendant's evidence creates an issue of
    fact as to entrapment, then the jury must be instructed on the
    defense of entrapment."                     State v. Branham, 
    153 N.C. App. 91
    ,
    100,    
    569 S.E.2d 24
    ,       29   (2002).           In   Branham,    the   defendant
    testified that two days before he was arrested, an informant,
    who    was    the     older       brother      of    a    girl      defendant    knew,   asked
    defendant if he "'could get him a kilo of Cocaine,'" and the
    defendant responded that he had no idea where to get it.                                    
    Id.,
    569 S.E.2d at 30
    .                The next day, the informant repeatedly asked
    the defendant for LSD, and persisted until the defendant agreed
    to    locate       the     LSD    requested.             
    Id.
           Although    the   defendant
    offered       to    drive        the    informant        to    the    seller    so   that   the
    informant          could     make       the    purchase            himself,    the   defendant
    ultimately         agreed        to    make   the     purchase        after    the   informant
    -15-
    offered the defendant an additional $100.00.                  
    Id. at 100-01
    , 
    569 S.E.2d at 30
    .
    This Court held that the trial court properly instructed
    the jury on the issue of entrapment since "there was evidence
    that [an informant] and the officers initiated the offense, but
    also    evidence    from    which     the     jury   could   have    inferred     that
    defendant was predisposed to sell LSD."                 
    Id. at 100
    , 
    569 S.E.2d at 30
    .       Specifically,      "[d]efendant's       testimony       that     [the
    informant] repeatedly pushed defendant to obtain drugs for him,
    that he attempted to get [the informant] to make the purchase
    himself, and that he had never before been involved in any drug
    sales of this quantity" was sufficient to raise an issue of fact
    as   to      inducement    and   lack    of    predisposition       to   commit    the
    offenses, despite the State's evidence to the contrary.                         
    Id. at 101-02
    , 
    569 S.E.2d at 30
    .
    In     Jamerson,    the   defendant       presented    evidence     that     an
    undercover      officer    and   an     informant     came   to   the    defendant's
    apartment and asked the defendant to sell them some drugs, but
    the defendant said that he did not have any.                      64 N.C. App. at
    302, 
    307 S.E.2d at 436
    .          When the officer and informant returned
    a few hours later and the defendant still did not have any drugs
    and had not made any attempt to locate any drugs, the officer
    repeatedly told the defendant that he desperately needed drugs
    -16-
    because he was an addict.          
    Id.,
     
    307 S.E.2d at 437
    .                 After the
    informant located a person who would sell drugs and offered the
    defendant $15.00 to make the purchase, the informant drove the
    defendant to the location and the defendant made the purchase
    with money provided by the officer.               
    Id.
        This Court held that
    this evidence was sufficient to require submission of a jury
    instruction on entrapment.        Id. at 303, 
    307 S.E.2d at 437
    .
    We believe that the facts of this case are analogous to
    Stanley,    Branham,    and    Jamerson.          Defendant's       evidence     and
    Officer    Wishon's    own    testimony       tended    to   show   that     Officer
    Wishon falsely led defendant to believe that he was romantically
    interested in defendant by asking him personal questions about
    defendant's life, maintaining eye contact, flirting, joking with
    him throughout the evening, asking for defendant's phone number,
    saying that he was "into" defendant rather than another dancer,
    and giving defendant a hug goodbye the first night they met.
    The undisputed evidence shows that Officer Wishon, who was
    investigating narcotics violations, initiated the conversation
    regarding     drugs    by    asking    defendant        where   he     could     get
    "straight," a street term for cocaine that defendant did not
    understand.       After      Officer    Wishon     clarified        that    he   was
    referring to cocaine, defendant told Officer Wishon that he did
    not do drugs but that he would ask around.                   Although the State
    -17-
    presented evidence that defendant, later that evening, renewed
    the conversation about his obtaining cocaine for Officer Wishon
    in two text messages defendant sent, defendant admitted sending
    only a flirtatious text message that did not mention drugs and
    denied sending the other two text messages.               For purposes of the
    entrapment issue, we must assume that defendant's testimony is
    true.
    Consequently,     viewing       the   evidence    in    the     light     most
    favorable to defendant, there was no further discussion of drugs
    after defendant said simply that he would ask around until, a
    week later, Officer Wishon texted defendant about whether he was
    working that night.          In the meantime, defendant had deleted
    Officer Wishon's phone number from his phone, an act a jury
    could find was consistent with someone focused on a romantic
    interest rather than a potential drug client.               The initial texts
    a week later were not about drugs, but Officer Wishon then again
    asked   defendant   about     obtaining     drugs    for    him.      Defendant
    ultimately did not himself act as an intermediary with the drug
    dealer,   but   identified    one   of    his   clients    who     could    assist
    Officer Wishon with connecting with the drug dealer -- evidence
    which suggests that defendant did not have a predisposition to
    engage in drug dealing.
    -18-
    In addition, defendant testified that he only agreed to
    help Officer Wishon obtain the drugs because he was romantically
    interested    in   Officer    Wishon,   and,    after    being    continuously
    asked about the drugs, "felt like [he] was pushed more to get it
    or else the interest would have been lost on [Officer Wishon's]
    part in [defendant]."        The record also contains no evidence that
    defendant had previously used drugs, engaged in drug dealing, or
    was aware of common street lingo for drugs -- indeed, the record
    contains no evidence of any other behavior on defendant's part
    that was suggestive of a predisposition to help supply someone
    with drugs.
    In sum, viewed in a light most favorable to defendant,
    Officer Wishon's flirtatious behavior towards defendant combined
    with his persistent requests for cocaine persuaded defendant to
    obtain the cocaine for Officer Wishon.                  Further, defendant's
    evidence would permit the jury to find that the idea for the
    crime   (delivery   of   cocaine)   originated     with     and   was   pursued
    solely by Officer Wishon, with no indication that defendant had
    any predisposition to participate in drug transactions.
    Thus, as in Stanley, Branham, and Jamerson, the undercover
    officer   initiated   the    conversation      about    drugs,    persisted   in
    seeking drugs, and provided defendant with the money for the
    exchange.     Moreover, Officer Wishon's acts of inducement, like
    -19-
    those of the undercover officer in Stanley, involved emotional
    manipulation including creating a false relationship and then
    taking   advantage     of    the   defendant's      desire   to    maintain   that
    relationship.      Finally, as in Stanley, there was no evidence of
    predisposition.
    The State, nevertheless, argues that Officer Wishon merely
    afforded    defendant        the   opportunity      to    commit   the     offense,
    arguing that the facts of this case are analogous to Thompson,
    Martin, State v. Rowe, 
    33 N.C. App. 611
    , 
    235 S.E.2d 873
     (1977),
    State v. Booker, 
    33 N.C. App. 223
    , 
    234 S.E.2d 417
     (1977), and
    State v. Stanback, 
    19 N.C. App. 375
    , 
    198 S.E.2d 759
     (1973),
    decisions holding that the evidence was insufficient to show
    that the defendant was entrapped.             We disagree.
    In     each   of   the    cases   cited    by   the   State,    the   evidence
    established that the undercover agent had reason to believe the
    defendant was a drug dealer,            or     the defendant       was    otherwise
    specifically targeted by the undercover agent because the agent
    had reason to believe the defendant could obtain drugs.                        See
    Martin, 77 N.C. App. at 63, 
    334 S.E.2d at 460
     (evidence was
    presented that defendant told undercover agent that "he had been
    dealing drugs for sixteen years and had a reputation in the
    community as a 'fair dealer who gave a good product at a fair
    price'"); Thompson, 141 N.C. App. at 699-700, 
    543 S.E.2d at
    162
    -20-
    (sheriff's        office   received           information      from        informant       that
    defendant was selling drugs from his apartment and defendant was
    a heroin addict with extensive criminal history); Booker, 
    33 N.C. App. at 223
    , 
    234 S.E.2d at 417
     (undercover officer went to
    defendant's house and asked to buy drugs, and defendant stated
    that he knew where he could get some marijuana and was able to
    retrieve drugs in 20 minutes); Rowe, 
    33 N.C. App. at 614
    , 
    235 S.E.2d at 875
       (evidence        established         that     undercover          agent
    "worked   herself       into    the     drug     traffic     society        and    purchased
    drugs from the defendant"); Stanback, 19 N.C. App. at 376, 198
    S.E.2d at 760 (undercover agent went to defendant's apartment to
    purchase drugs that defendant had promised to sell                                  to agent
    previous day, and defendant told agent after transaction that
    "'[a]nytime you need anything, an ounce or a lid or a pound, I
    can get it for you'").
    While the State argues that this case is similar to the
    decisions      upon     which     it     relies      because        defendant       did    not
    hesitate before telling Officer Wishon that he would ask around
    about drugs and did so in a short period of time, in the cases
    the State cites, any evidence tending to show that the defendant
    needed little urging before agreeing to the undercover agent's
    request     was     consistent         with    the     totality       of     the    evidence
    suggesting     that     the     defendant       was,    in   fact,     a     drug    dealer.
    -21-
    When, in this case, the evidence is viewed in the light most
    favorable to defendant, there is no suggestion that defendant
    was a drug dealer, had any criminal history, or was in any way
    predisposed     to    commit    the   offense      of     delivery      of     cocaine
    independent of government influence.
    Given the lack of evidence regarding defendant's criminal
    predisposition,      any   evidence       that    defendant       required      little
    urging     before    agreeing    to   ask     around      for   drugs        could    be
    attributed by a jury to defendant's romantic interest in Officer
    Wishon and a desire to impress him.               Thus, the evidence that the
    State points to as showing that defendant was predisposed to
    commit the crime is consistent with defendant's theory of the
    entrapment defense and merely creates an issue of fact for the
    jury to decide.         We therefore hold that defendant                     presented
    sufficient evidence of the essential elements of entrapment, and
    the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury based on
    a lack of evidence.
    The question remains whether the trial court's denial of
    defendant's request for an entrapment instruction may be upheld
    as a sanction for defendant's failure to provide adequate notice
    of his defense.        N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-905(c)(1)(b) specifies
    that   a   defendant   must     provide     the   State    with    notice      of    its
    intent to offer at trial the defense of entrapment and that the
    -22-
    notice must "contain specific information as to the nature and
    extent of the defense."         The trial court, in this case, found
    generally    that   defendant    violated   N.C.      Gen.     Stat.   §    15A-
    905(c)(1)(b)      because   "defendant    did   not     give    [the       State]
    specifics as to the basis of the defense."            The trial court then
    used this violation as an additional basis for its refusal to
    submit the issue of entrapment to the jury.
    If a trial court determines that a defendant has violated
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-905(c)(1)(b), it may impose any of the
    following sanctions on the defendant:
    (1)   Order the party to permit the discovery
    or inspection, or
    (2)   Grant a continuance or recess, or
    (3)   Prohibit the party from          introducing
    evidence not disclosed, or
    (3a) Declare a mistrial, or
    (3b) Dismiss the charge,        with   or    without
    prejudice, or
    (4)   Enter other appropriate orders.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-910(a) (2013).
    However, "[p]rior to finding any sanctions appropriate, the
    court shall consider both the materiality of the subject matter
    and the totality of the circumstances surrounding an alleged
    failure to comply with this Article or an order issued pursuant
    to this Article."      N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-910(b).           "If the court
    -23-
    imposes any sanction, it must make specific findings justifying
    the imposed sanction."        N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-910(d).
    "Whether   a   party    has     complied    with   discovery      and     what
    sanctions, if any, should be imposed are questions addressed to
    the sound discretion of the trial court."                 State v. Tucker, 
    329 N.C. 709
    ,   716,   
    407 S.E.2d 805
    ,   810   (1991).        "'Abuse     of
    discretion     results      where    the     court's    ruling    is    manifestly
    unsupported by reason or is so arbitrary that it could not have
    been the result of a reasoned decision.'"                 State v. Elliot, 
    360 N.C. 400
    , 419, 
    628 S.E.2d 735
    , 748 (2006) (quoting State v.
    Hennis, 
    323 N.C. 279
    , 285, 
    372 S.E.2d 523
    , 527 (1988)).
    As explained by our Supreme Court, "the rules of discovery
    contained in the Criminal Procedure Act were enacted by the
    General Assembly to ensure, insofar as possible, that defendants
    receive a fair trial and not be taken by surprise.                       They were
    not enacted to serve as mandatory rules of exclusion for trivial
    defects in the State's mode of compliance."                  State v. Thomas,
    
    291 N.C. 687
    , 692, 
    231 S.E.2d 585
    , 588 (1977).                         Despite the
    General Assembly's emphasis on protecting defendants from the
    State's noncompliance, "[s]uch legislative intent . . . does not
    give defendants carte blanche to violate discovery orders, but
    rather, defendants and defense counsel both must act in good
    faith, just as is required of their counterparts representing
    -24-
    the State."        State v. Gillespie, 
    180 N.C. App. 514
    , 525, 
    638 S.E.2d 481
    , 489 (2006), modified and affirmed, 
    362 N.C. 150
    , 
    655 S.E.2d 355
        (2008).        Thus,   the   rules   of    discovery     have    been
    applied with equal force to both defendants and the State to
    ensure a fair trial and avoid unfair surprise for both parties.
    See, e.g., State v. McMahon, 
    67 N.C. App. 181
    , 183, 
    312 S.E.2d 526
    , 527 (1984) (applying common law notions of fairness and
    holding    that    discovery      rule    applicable       to   State    is   equally
    applicable to defendant).
    In State v. Cooper, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 
    747 S.E.2d 398
    ,
    414 (2013), appeal dismissed and disc. review denied, ___ N.C.
    ___,   
    753 S.E.2d 783
        (2014),   this    Court     reversed      the    trial
    court's imposition of sanctions against a defendant when the
    sanction     imposed     "was    disproportionate      to       the   purposes    this
    state's discovery rules were intended to serve."                      In Cooper, the
    trial court had excluded the testimony of the defendant's second
    expert witness as a sanction for the defendant's failure to
    disclose the witness to the State as required by N.C. Gen. Stat.
    § 15A-905 (2011).        ___ N.C. App. at ___, 747 S.E.2d at 403.                  The
    defendant had only proffered the second expert witness after the
    State successfully moved at trial to exclude the testimony of
    defendant's first expert witness on the basis that the witness
    was not qualified to testify as an expert.                        Id. at ___, 747
    -25-
    S.E.2d    at    413.           Because     the    State       had      not       indicated     any
    intention      to    challenge       the    defendant's           first      expert      witness
    prior    to    trial,      the     defendant      did       not   anticipate           needing   a
    second expert, and, as a result, did not have the second expert
    on its witness list.              Id. at ___, 747 S.E.2d at 413.
    In addressing whether the trial court abused its discretion
    in sanctioning the defendant by excluding the testimony of the
    expert    witness,        the     Cooper    Court         first     recognized          that   the
    imposition          of     sanctions       on         a     criminal         defendant         has
    constitutional            implications           because          of         a        defendant's
    constitutional           right    under    the    Sixth       Amendment          to    present   a
    defense.       Id. at ___, 747 S.E.2d at 414.                     The Court then pointed
    to the factors set out by the United States Supreme Court in
    Taylor v. Illinois, 
    484 U.S. 400
    , 98 L. Ed. 2d. 798, 
    108 S. Ct. 646
       (1988),       to    be     considered      in       determining        the      appropriate
    sanction,      consistent         with    that    constitutional              right,      when   a
    defendant has failed to disclose a witness:
    "Although the Taylor Court declined to cast
    a mechanical standard to govern all possible
    cases, it established that, as a general
    matter, the trial judge (in deciding which
    sanction   to   impose)   must   weigh   the
    defendant's right to compulsory process
    against the countervailing public interests:
    (1) the integrity of the adversary process,
    (2) the interest in the fair and efficient
    administration of justice, and (3) the
    potential prejudice to the truth-determining
    function of the trial process.     The judge
    -26-
    should also factor into the mix the nature
    of the explanation given for the party's
    failure seasonably to abide by the discovery
    request, the willfulness vel non of the
    violation,   the   relative   simplicity  of
    compliance, and whether or not some unfair
    tactical advantage has been sought."
    ___ N.C. App. at ___, 747 S.E.2d at 415 (quoting Chappee v.
    Vose, 
    843 F.2d 25
    , 29 (1st Cir. 1988)).
    Applying the Taylor factors to the facts in Cooper, the
    Court reasoned:
    Defendant,   in   failing   to    provide
    earlier notice to the State, was clearly not
    seeking any tactical advantage.     The trial
    court made no finding of willful misconduct,
    and the record divulges none.       Defendant
    only sought out another expert . . . after
    the State was successful in moving to limit
    [the first expert's] testimony in the middle
    of the trial. At that point, Defendant had
    no way to present vital expert testimony and
    comply with N.C.G.S. § 15A–905(c)(2).
    In   light of the lack of willful
    misconduct on the part of Defendant, the
    rational reason presented for failing to
    inform the State before trial that Defendant
    would be calling [the second expert], the
    role of the State in having this situation
    arise after the trial had commenced, the
    fundamental nature of the rights involved,
    the importance to the defense of the
    testimony    excluded,   and   the   minimal
    prejudice to the State had the trial court
    imposed a lesser sanction       -- such as
    continuance or recess, we hold that imposing
    the harsh sanction of excluding [the second
    expert] from testifying constituted an abuse
    of discretion.
    Id. at ___, 747 S.E.2d at 415.
    -27-
    In State v. Dorman, ___ N.C. App. ___, 
    737 S.E.2d 452
    ,
    appeal dismissed and disc. review denied, 
    366 N.C. 594
    , 
    743 S.E.2d 205
     (2013), this Court addressed, in similar fashion, the
    appropriateness of the extreme sanction of dismissal when the
    State     has     committed     a     discovery     violation,          even   though
    sanctioning the State has no constitutional implications.                            The
    Court   held     that    "'[g]iven     that     dismissal       of   charges   is     an
    "extreme sanction" which should not be routinely imposed,'" such
    dismissals       "'should   also      contain     findings      which    detail      the
    perceived prejudice to the defendant which justifies the extreme
    sanction imposed.'"           
    Id.
     at ___, 737 S.E.2d at 470 (quoting
    State v. Allen, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 
    731 S.E.2d 510
    , 527-28,
    disc. review denied, 
    366 N.C. 415
    , 
    737 S.E.2d 377
     (2012), cert.
    denied,    ___    U.S.   ___,   
    185 L. Ed. 2d 876
    ,    
    133 S. Ct. 2009
    (2013)).     After noting that the defendant had possession of the
    evidence the State initially failed to disclose, the Court held
    that "[a]bsent a finding explaining the specific and continuing
    prejudice       Defendant     will    suffer,      the    trial      court's       order
    dismissing the charge on this basis is in error."                        
    Id.
     at ___,
    737 S.E.2d at 470.
    We see no reason why the rules set out in Cooper and Dorman
    should not apply with equal force to a trial court's refusal to
    instruct the jury on an affirmative defense presented by the
    -28-
    defendant.          Such a sanction in this case has the same effect on
    the defendant as the "harsh sanction" in Cooper that interfered
    with     the    defendant's          defense     --   even    though    defendant        was
    allowed        to     present       entrapment    evidence,     the     jury     was     not
    instructed in a way that permitted it to consider that evidence
    as   a    basis       for    acquitting      defendant.        Given    such     a     harsh
    sanction, the trial court was required, under Dorman, to justify
    the sanction with findings regarding the prejudice to the State
    resulting from defendant's discovery violation.
    Requiring the trial court to consider the prejudice to the
    State resulting from the defendant's discovery violation before
    imposing        the       extreme    sanction    of   precluding       an    affirmative
    defense is also consistent with this court's holding in State v.
    McDonald, 
    191 N.C. App. 782
    , 786-87, 
    663 S.E.2d 462
    , 465 (2008).
    In McDonald, the defendant failed to provide the State with
    notice     of       the    defenses     it   intended    to    assert       at   trial    as
    required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-905, despite the State having
    made several motions requesting notice of defenses.                          Id. at 785,
    
    663 S.E.2d at 464-65
    .                 The trial court ultimately allowed the
    defendant to assert the defenses of duress and accident                                  but
    precluded the defendant from asserting the defenses of voluntary
    intoxication and diminished capacity.                   
    Id.,
     
    663 S.E.2d at 465
    .
    -29-
    This   Court    noted        that   the    State      "had    anticipated            the
    accident defense" and that "unlike the diminished capacity and
    voluntary intoxication defenses, the defense of duress would not
    require    substantial        preparation         on   the    part       of    the    State,
    including the engagement of experts."                  Id. at 786, 
    663 S.E.2d at 465
    .      Because the trial court "precluded only those defenses
    that would have prejudiced the State" and allowed defendant to
    proceed with other defenses -- either because the State could
    have anticipated the defense, or because the State could quickly
    and adequately prepare despite the late notice -- this Court
    held   that   the     trial    court's       sanction        was    not       an    abuse    of
    discretion.        Id. at 787, 
    663 S.E.2d at 465
    .
    In line with this Court's analysis in Cooper, Dorman, and
    McDonald,     we    hold     that    in    considering       the     totality         of    the
    circumstances        prior    to     imposing      sanctions        on    a        defendant,
    relevant factors for the trial court to consider include without
    limitation: (1) the defendant's explanation for the discovery
    violation including whether the discovery violation constituted
    willful misconduct on the part of the defendant or whether the
    defendant sought to gain a tactical advantage by committing the
    discovery violation, (2) the State's role, if any, in bringing
    about the violation, (3) the prejudice to the State resulting
    from the defendant's discovery violation, (4) the prejudice to
    -30-
    the defendant resulting from the sanction, including whether the
    sanction    could       interfere    with    any        fundamental     rights      of    the
    defendant, and (5) the possibility of imposing a less severe
    sanction on the defendant.
    In this case, the trial court found that defendant violated
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-905(c)(1)(b) because "defendant did not
    give [the State] specifics as to the basis of the defense."
    Assuming, without deciding, that defendant's notice constituted
    a   discovery     violation,        we    must     determine,      in     light     of    the
    factors     listed       above,    whether        the    trial     court      abused      its
    discretion in refusing to instruct the jury on the defense of
    entrapment.
    We note first that the procedure by which the trial court
    concluded       that     defendant       failed    to     comply    with      the    notice
    requirements suggests that it was not the result of a reasoned
    decision.         The     trial    court     originally          denied    the      State's
    pretrial motion for sanctions.                    At the end of the trial, the
    trial court indicated that it would hear oral argument regarding
    the   submission        of   the    entrapment       defense       to   the    jury,      but
    specifically limited the party's arguments to the sufficiency of
    the   evidence      --    the     court    confirmed       that    it     would     not    be
    revisiting the court's decision to deny the State's pretrial
    motion    for    sanctions.          Nevertheless,         after    ruling       that     the
    -31-
    evidence presented by defendant was insufficient to support an
    instruction on the defense of entrapment, the trial court, sua
    sponte, without giving defendant any notice or an opportunity to
    be heard, decided to reverse its denial of the State's pretrial
    motion for sanctions and preclude the              use of the     entrapment
    defense as a sanction.
    In doing so, the trial court made no findings "justifying
    the imposed sanction" as required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-
    910(d) and made no finding that the State had been prejudiced by
    the lack of specifics in defendant's notice.                The court simply
    found that defendant had failed to fully comply with the notice
    statute.      The procedure followed by the trial court, the failure
    to find prejudice, and the lack of findings are inconsistent
    with the court's ruling being a reasoned decision to further the
    purposes of the rules of discovery.           Rather, the record suggests
    that the trial court imposed sanctions simply as an afterthought
    to bolster its decision not to instruct the jury on entrapment.
    In addition, our review of the record reveals no basis for
    imposing the extreme sanction of precluding a defense.                There is
    no indication that defendant, in failing to give more specifics
    in his notice, acted in bad faith or to gain an unfair advantage
    at   trial.     Rather,   defendant   filed    a   timely    notice   well   in
    advance of trial, disclosing his intent to assert the defense of
    -32-
    entrapment and including the identity of the specific officer
    whom defendant contended induced him to commit the crime.                        The
    State made no showing that the omission of further details was
    in bad faith or a tactical move.
    Indeed, the record indicates that any lack of preparation
    to meet the defense was contributed to by the State's failing to
    take timely action.           Defendant filed his notice on 2 February
    2012 -- more than eight months prior to trial.                          During that
    time, the State had general notice of defendant's intent to use
    the defense and specific notice that Officer Wishon's actions
    resulted in the alleged entrapment.               Officer Wishon, the State's
    lead     witness,      was    readily       accessible     to     the   State    for
    questioning regarding his conduct in interacting with defendant.
    In     the    event    that   the    State      desired    additional     specifics
    regarding defendant's entrapment defense, the State could have
    requested more information from defendant or moved for an order
    requiring      defendant      to    provide     adequate     discovery.         Given
    defense counsel's apparent belief that he had complied with N.C.
    Gen. Stat. § 15A-905(c)(1)(b), the State's failure to request
    more    information      or   to    alert    defendant     that   its   notice    was
    inadequate during the eight months prior to trial, similar to
    the State's failure in Cooper to notify the defendant prior to
    trial    of    its    intention     to   challenge   the    defendant's     primary
    -33-
    expert, deprived defendant of an opportunity to comply with the
    rules of discovery in a timely fashion and avoid being subject
    to sanctions.
    Moreover, the refusal to instruct the jury concerning an
    affirmative     defense      is        a    harsh      sanction       that    implicates
    defendant's fundamental right to present a defense at trial.                               In
    contrast, the prejudice to the State resulting from defendant's
    violation was minimal.             During the pretrial motions hearing,
    defendant gave a detailed proffer of the evidence he intended to
    present to establish entrapment.                    The State did not call its
    first witness until the following day, and defendant did not
    testify until the second day of trial.                    Because the evidence on
    entrapment was testimonial in nature, was limited to the acts of
    Officer Wishon, and "would not require substantial preparation
    on   the   part       of   the    State,        including       the     engagement         of
    experts[,]"     McDonald,        191       at   786,   
    663 S.E.2d at 465
    ,    the
    additional days to prepare after receiving notice of the nature
    and extent of defendant's entrapment defense should have been
    sufficient to remedy any prejudice to the State.                         In any event,
    the State would not have been prejudiced had the trial court
    imposed    a   less    severe     sanction         such   as   a   continuance        or    a
    recess.
    -34-
    After      considering           the    totality         of    the    circumstances,        we
    hold that the trial court's refusal to instruct the jury on the
    entrapment defense was not a proper sanction for any failure by
    defendant to provide sufficiently specific notice of his intent
    to assert the defense of entrapment.                             The trial court's ruling,
    therefore, constituted an abuse of discretion.                                   See Dorman, ___
    N.C.   App.       at   ___,       737    S.E.2d       at       470   (holding     trial       court's
    pretrial order suppressing certain witnesses' testimony from use
    in    future       proceedings          based        on    State's         initial     failure     to
    disclose        various       documented           conversations           was   in    error     when
    defendant was in possession of the relevant information well
    before trial, and trial court failed to detail specific and
    continuing prejudice defendant suffered as a result of initial
    nondisclosure           and       failed        to        explain      how       suppression       of
    witnesses' testimony remedied non-disclosure).
    Conclusion
    We   hold       that    defendant           presented         sufficient        evidence    to
    warrant         submission        of    the        entrapment        defense      to    the     jury.
    Further, the trial court abused its discretion when precluding
    the    entrapment        defense         as    a     sanction        for    defendant's        having
    served      a    notice      of    his    intent          to    rely   upon      the    entrapment
    defense         that   was    not       sufficiently            specific.         Defendant       is,
    therefore, entitled to a new trial.
    -35-
    New trial.
    Judges STEPHENS and ERVIN concur.