State v. Stallings ( 2020 )


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  •               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA19-636
    Filed: 21 April 2020
    Guilford County, Nos. 19CRS025048, 17CRS086101
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.
    KENNETH CHRISTOPHER STALLINGS, Defendant.
    Appeal by Defendant from judgment entered 10 January 2019 by Judge
    William A. Wood, II, in Guilford County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of
    Appeals 18 February 2020.
    Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Assistant Attorney General Benjamin T.
    Spangler, for the State.
    Daniel J. Dolan, for Defendant-Appellant.
    INMAN, Judge.
    Defendant Kenneth Christopher Stallings (“Defendant”) appeals from a judgment
    entered following a jury verdict finding him guilty of possession with intent to sell or
    deliver marijuana, possession of marijuana drug paraphernalia, and trafficking in
    methamphetamine. On appeal, Defendant contends that the trial court: (1) lacked
    subject matter jurisdiction to try him on the charge of trafficking in
    methamphetamine because the relevant charging document—an information
    superseding an earlier indictment—was not filed prior to trial; and (2) committed
    STATE V. STALLINGS
    Opinion of the Court
    plain error in failing to give a jury instruction on guilty knowledge sua sponte. After
    careful review, we hold that Defendant has failed to demonstrate reversible error.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    The evidence at trial tends to show the following:
    On the afternoon of 19 September 2017, Officer Senaria Smith of the
    Greensboro Police Department responded to a call from a security company about a
    possible break-in at a house on Gatewood Avenue. When she arrived at the home,
    she heard a noise from inside and noticed that the side door had been forced open.
    Concerned that a person could still be in the home, Officer Smith drew her sidearm
    and called for backup.
    Additional officers arrived a short time later and conducted a protective sweep
    of the house. In the course of the sweep, Officer Smith observed a scale and narcotics
    on the kitchen counter, a plastic bag with a crystalline substance on the floor, and a
    hole in the laundry room wall with plastic baggies inside.
    Defendant arrived at the house as police were leaving. Officer Smith asked
    him if he lived there.   Defendant replied that he did and stated that he had a
    roommate named “Michael—uh—Smith.”
    Police informed Defendant that officers had found evidence of narcotics in plain
    view during their protective sweep. Defendant responded by asking, “More than
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    STATE V. STALLINGS
    Opinion of the Court
    weed?” When the officers described the additional narcotics, Defendant said, “I don’t
    know about all that.” He then told police that he was trying to call Michael Smith.
    Defendant cooperated with police and signed a form consenting to a search of
    the home. In the bedroom Defendant identified as his roommate’s, Officer Smith
    found a stack of paperwork bearing only Defendant’s name. A Greensboro drug and
    vice detective, Harvey Harris, arrived a short time later to assist Officer Smith.
    Detective Harris observed two substances—one crystalline and the other consistent
    with marijuana—on the scale on the kitchen counter. Next to the scale, Detective
    Harris saw a bag containing a crystalline substance inside a pill bottle bearing
    Defendant’s name. He also observed plastic bags, including a bag of marijuana,
    nearby, as well as a marijuana cigarette in the ashtray of the living room. Searches
    by other officers turned up another bag of marijuana in a bedroom. Detective Harris
    also located the plastic bag that Officer Smith had seen on the floor of the laundry
    room and noticed it contained a crystalline substance.
    Detective Harris asked Defendant who lived there. Defendant confirmed that
    his name was on the lease and utility bills. Detective Harris further questioned
    Defendant about the crystalline substances which appeared to be methamphetamine,
    and Defendant said he and Michael Smith both stayed there. Detective Harris asked
    Defendant for a picture of Michael Smith, which he was unable to provide. Defendant
    stated that Michael Smith’s phone had been cut off, and that he did not know any of
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    STATE V. STALLINGS
    Opinion of the Court
    his roommate’s friends or relatives. He denied dealing in methamphetamines or any
    illegal narcotics but admitted to smoking marijuana.
    Asked to identify items in the house belonging to his roommate, Defendant was
    unable to specifically identify anything other than a green toothbrush with a travel
    cap located in the bathroom. The officers concluded their search of the house after
    recovering the following items: (1) the plastic bag from the laundry room floor, which
    contained methamphetamine; (2) the clear plastic bags in a cut out area of the
    laundry room wall; (3) the digital scale with marijuana and a crystalline substance;
    (4) the pill bottle with Defendant’s name on it and a bag of methamphetamine inside;
    (5) the bag of marijuana and a box of plastic bags on the kitchen counter; (6) the
    marijuana roach in the living room; (7) a bag of marijuana from one of the bedrooms;
    (8) $1,247 in cash in a bedroom closet; (9) the paperwork with Defendant’s name on
    it; (10) Defendant’s phone; (11) an additional iPhone from one of the bedrooms; and
    (12) a tablet computer that Defendant claimed as his. Defendant was taken into
    custody following the search, and Officer Smith and Detective Harris both recorded
    the above events with body cameras.
    Following Defendant’s arrest, police searched Defendant’s phone and
    discovered text messages that indicated Defendant sold marijuana. Lab reports later
    confirmed that the substance found in the plastic bag in the laundry room was
    methamphetamine. Officers continued to monitor Defendant’s home for two weeks
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    STATE V. STALLINGS
    Opinion of the Court
    following the break-in in an attempt to locate and identify Michael Smith; those
    efforts ultimately proved unsuccessful, and no person named “Michael Smith” was
    ever located.
    A Guilford County grand jury returned two indictments on 19 February 2018.
    The first indictment, filed in file number 17 CRS 86100, charged Defendant with one
    count each of trafficking in MDMA and maintaining a dwelling for keeping and
    selling MDMA; the second indictment, filed in file number 17 CRS 86101, charged
    him with one count of possession with intent to sell marijuana and one count of
    possession of marijuana paraphernalia. Both cases came on for trial on 7 January
    2019 and were consolidated at the outset of proceedings.
    The trial court called in prospective jurors and questioned them about any
    undue hardships warranting deferral of jury service. It next informed the venire of
    the charges brought against Defendant, the date of the alleged offenses, and
    Defendant’s plea of not guilty. The trial court sat twelve potential jurors in the jury
    box and asked if they had any connection with the judge, the attorneys, Defendant,
    and any potential witnesses. It then turned the voir dire questioning over to the
    State, but the prosecutor instead requested a bench conference.        The trial court
    excused the venire, at which point the prosecutor pointed out that the allegations in
    the indictment in file number 17 CRS 86100 concerned MDMA rather than the
    methamphetamine ultimately shown on the lab reports:
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    STATE V. STALLINGS
    Opinion of the Court
    [THE STATE]: [T]he substance in the lab report is
    methamphetamine. It is not 3, 4-MDMA, which is what
    was identified.
    ....
    Now, at this point, we have two choices: I can dismiss that
    charge, because we have not impaneled a jury, and I can
    reindict and [have] Mr. Stallings go through the arrest
    process again, or I — or we can do it on a bill of information.
    However, Your Honor knows and his attorney knows,
    that’s totally up to Mr. Stallings at this point.
    ....
    [DEFENDANT’S COUNSEL]: Like [the prosecutor] . . . I
    have been prepping this thing about a month, and I read
    that twice as well, several times. And it is what it is. I
    would like an opportunity just to step back in the
    conference room and talk to my client with regard to the
    options in the case. I think the options that [the
    prosecutor] stated in open court are accurate.
    THE COURT: [Defendant’s counsel], you take all the time
    you need.
    Over an hour later, the parties returned to the courtroom and proceedings
    resumed. Defendant’s counsel informed the Court that, after discussing their options
    and “the risks and benefits of both the bill of information and a delay,” Defendant
    agreed to proceed by information charging him with trafficking methamphetamine
    and had signed a waiver of indictment and statutory notice normally required for the
    new charge. The trial court pointed out that it had previously denied Defendant’s
    pre-trial motion for a continuance and recusal and noted that Defendant would
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    STATE V. STALLINGS
    Opinion of the Court
    essentially receive that relief if he decided against waiving reindictment. Defendant’s
    counsel confirmed on the record that his client nonetheless wished to proceed on the
    information. Consistent with that understanding, the prosecutor read into the record
    the allegations in the new bill of information—charging Defendant with only one
    count of trafficking methamphetamine—and informed the court that “at the same
    time, I’ll be filing a dismissal in the MDMA [indictment].”
    With the new information in hand, the trial court called the prospective jurors
    back into the room and informed them of the new charge. Following jury selection,
    the jury was empaneled, and the trial proceeded in ordinary fashion. Officer Smith
    and Detective Harris both testified to their experiences with Defendant on the day of
    the break-in, and the footage from their body cameras was submitted into evidence
    during the State’s presentation. Defendant did not testify in his defense, but he did
    call a man named Tyrone Brown as a witness. Mr. Brown testified that he: (1) was
    the roommate that lived in the house with Defendant; (2) had brought the
    methamphetamine into the house without Defendant’s knowledge; and (3) hid the
    methamphetamine in the laundry room and pill bottle. When asked what room he
    stayed in, Mr. Brown testified “all of them[,]” and testified that he kept clothes in
    closets in both rooms.
    After the close of evidence and during the jury charge, the trial court gave the
    standard instruction on narcotics trafficking, which did not include any specific
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    STATE V. STALLINGS
    Opinion of the Court
    instruction on guilty knowledge. The jury ultimately convicted Defendant on all
    counts. Defendant now appeals.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A. Standards of Review
    Defendant presents two arguments on appeal, contending that the trial court:
    (1) lacked subject matter jurisdiction to convict him of the trafficking charge given
    the procedural timing of the filed information; and (2) committed plain error in failing
    to give the jury additional instruction on the guilty knowledge element of that same
    crime. Each is subject to a different standard of review on appeal.
    We review subject matter jurisdiction de novo. State v. Herman, 
    221 N.C. App. 204
    , 209, 
    726 S.E.2d 863
    , 866 (2012).       To the extent our jurisdictional analysis
    requires statutory interpretation, that too is a question of law subject to de novo
    review. Lassiter v. N.C. Baptist Hosps., Inc., 
    368 N.C. 367
    , ___, 
    778 S.E.2d 68
    , 73
    (2015).
    Plain error review of the trial court’s jury instruction requires Defendant to
    show error that “had a probable impact on the jury’s finding of guilt.” State v. Odom,
    
    307 N.C. 655
    , 661, 
    300 S.E.2d 375
    , 378-79 (1983). Such error must be “a fundamental
    error, something so basic, so prejudicial, so lacking in its elements that justice cannot
    have been done[.]” State v. Gregory, 
    342 N.C. 580
    , 586, 
    467 S.E.2d 28
    , 32 (1996).
    B. Subject Matter Jurisdiction and the Information
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    STATE V. STALLINGS
    Opinion of the Court
    Defendant argues that a superseding information must be filed prior to trial,
    and the State’s failure to do so in this case deprived Defendant of his constitutional
    right    to   prosecution      by    indictment—his         written     waiver      of   that    right
    notwithstanding.1 Based on the plain language of the statute Defendant relies on for
    this argument, we disagree.
    Defendant points to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-646 (2019), which provides in
    pertinent part:
    If at any time before entry of a plea of guilty to an
    indictment or information, or commencement of a trial
    thereof, another indictment or information is filed in the
    same court charging the defendant with an offense charged
    or attempted to be charged in the first instrument, the first
    one is, with respect to the offense, superseded by the second
    and, upon the defendant’s arraignment upon the second
    indictment or information, the count of the first instrument
    charging the offense must be dismissed by the superior
    court judge.
    Defendant construes the statute to mean that the State can file a superseding
    information only “before entry of a plea of guilty to an indictment or information[,]”
    id., and the State’s failure to do so nullifies the information, as well as Defendant’s
    waiver of the constitutional right to prosecution by indictment, while depriving the
    trial court of subject matter jurisdiction over the charge.2
    1 Defendant does not argue that the initial indictment or superseding information is facially
    invalid in any other respect.
    2 We note that a plea of guilty may be entered before or after trial has begun. See, e.g., State
    v. Paige, 
    180 N.C. App. 693
    , 
    639 S.E.2d 143
    , 
    2006 WL 3717551
     (2006) (unpublished) (affirming a trial
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    STATE V. STALLINGS
    Opinion of the Court
    Defendant’s interpretation is unsupported by the plain language of the statute.
    Absent any ambiguity, an absurd result, or an outcome that contravenes a statute’s
    expressed purpose,3 we are duty-bound to give effect to that plain language. State v.
    Curtis, 
    371 N.C. 355
    , 358, 
    817 S.E.2d 187
    , 189 (2018).
    Our Supreme Court has previously held that N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-646 merely
    requires the trial court to perform the “ministerial act” of dismissing an initial
    charging document when a superseding indictment or information is filed before trial
    or the entry of a guilty plea. State v. Carson, 
    320 N.C. 328
    , 333, 
    357 S.E.2d 662
    , 666
    (1987). The statute imposes a positive duty on the trial court, not the State. This is
    in contrast to other statutes in which the General Assembly has expressly required
    the State to file charging documents by a particular stage of proceedings. See N.C.
    Gen. Stat. § 15A-922(d) (2019) (requiring the State to file a statement of charges upon
    determination of a prosecutor “prior to arraignment in the district court” (emphasis
    added)); State v. Wall, 
    235 N.C. App. 196
    , 200, 
    760 S.E.2d 386
    , 388 (2014) (holding
    the State’s failure to file its statement of charges consistent with the timing
    requirement in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-922(d) deprived the trial court of jurisdiction);
    State v. Allen, 
    292 N.C. 431
    , 433-34, 
    233 S.E.2d 585
    , 587 (1977) (holding that an
    court’s order denying a defendant’s motion to withdraw a guilty plea that was entered during the
    State’s presentation of evidence); State v. Moody, 
    345 N.C. 563
    , 
    481 S.E.2d 629
     (1997) (holding no error
    on appeal from a trial in which the defendant pled guilty to first-degree murder during trial and after
    the State had presented testimony from multiple witnesses).
    3 Defendant does not argue any of these positions on appeal.
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    STATE V. STALLINGS
    Opinion of the Court
    habitual felon indictment must be brought prior to full prosecution of the underlying
    substantive felony consistent with the statutory procedures established by the
    Habitual Felons Act).
    Previous decisions by this Court suggest that such a timing requirement does
    not exist when there is a proper waiver of prosecution by indictment. See, e.g., State
    v. Wilson, 
    128 N.C. App. 688
    , 
    497 S.E.2d 416
     (1998) (holding a defendant could appeal
    question of subject matter jurisdiction over an unindicted charge presented to the
    jury—even though defendant himself requested instruction on the crime at the
    charge conference—because defendant had not waived indictment under N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 15A-642(c)).
    We also disagree with Defendant’s argument that his constitutional right to
    prosecution by indictment has been violated. Article I, Section 22 of the Constitution
    of North Carolina provides that “[e]xcept in misdemeanor cases initiated in the
    District Court Division, no person shall be put to answer any criminal charge but by
    indictment, presentment, or impeachment.” That section also states, however, that
    “any person, when represented by counsel, may, under such regulations as the
    General Assembly shall prescribe, waive indictment in noncapital cases.” Id. Under
    our statutes, such a waiver is accomplished if it is “in writing and signed by the
    defendant and his attorney” and “attached to or executed upon the bill of
    information.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-642(c) (2019). Here, Defendant’s waiver complies
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    STATE V. STALLINGS
    Opinion of the Court
    with the constitutional and statutory requirements for waiving prosecution by
    indictment, as he was represented by counsel and executed a written waiver on the
    superseding bill of information. While Defendant now protests that he was never
    made aware that he was waiving “his right to have a superseding information timely
    filed” and thus did not knowingly, voluntarily, and intelligently waive prosecution by
    indictment, he identifies no constitutional provision requiring the pre-trial filing of a
    superseding information.
    Because we hold that N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-646 does not require the State to
    file a superseding information before trial in order to retain the trial court’s subject
    matter jurisdiction, we do not reach Defendant’s argument that a trial begins for
    purposes of the statute at or around the time the trial judge first addresses the
    venire.4
    Defendant also suggests that the trial court had no subject matter jurisdiction
    because he was not formally arraigned on the new charge.5 But, as pointed out by
    4 Regardless of whether this is the case procedurally, it is not true of trials for double jeopardy
    purposes. See, e.g., State v. Courtney, 
    372 N.C. 458
    , 463, 
    831 S.E.2d 260
    , 265 (2019) (“[J]eopardy
    attaches when a jury is sworn[.]” (citing Richardson v. United States, 
    468 U.S. 317
    , 326, 
    82 L. Ed. 2d 242
    , 251 (1984))).
    5 Although a reversal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction would not turn on issues of
    prejudice, we note that Defendant certainly did not suffer any here. Defendant, not the State,
    determined how to proceed after an hour-long discussion with his attorney. He elected to go forward
    on the information after the trial court pointed out that re-indictment would have given him the relief
    he sought in his pretrial motion for a continuance and recusal. Further, it is clear from the record and
    pretrial motions that Defendant and his counsel understood that methamphetamine—not MDMA—
    served as the basis for the trafficking charge, and the substitution of methamphetamine in the
    information appears to have had no impact on Defendant’s defense or trial strategy.
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    STATE V. STALLINGS
    Opinion of the Court
    the State, the lack of formal arraignment does not constitute reversible error when
    the defendant does not object and assert inadequate notice of the charge. See, e.g.,
    State v. Brown, 
    306 N.C. 151
    , 174, 
    293 S.E.2d 569
    , 584 (1982) (“The failure to conduct
    a formal arraignment itself is not reversible error. . . . [F]ailure to do so is not
    prejudicial error unless defendant objects and states that he is not properly informed
    of the charges.” (citations omitted)).6
    C. Guilty Knowledge Instruction and Plain Error
    Defendant argues that the trial court committed plain error in failing to give
    the jury a discrete instruction on the requirement that he had guilty knowledge of
    the methamphetamine. Defendant relies primarily on State v. Coleman, 
    227 N.C. App. 354
    , 
    742 S.E.2d 346
     (2013), in which this Court awarded a new trial to a
    defendant who asserted this same plain error argument in his trial and conviction for
    trafficking heroin. 227 N.C. App. at 355, 742 S.E.2d at 347. The defendant argued
    that the evidence showed that while he knew he possessed drugs, he did not know
    the drugs were heroin and the trial court should have instructed the jury it could
    convict only if it found that “the defendant knew that what he possessed was
    [heroin].” Id. at 356, 742 S.E.2d at 348 (citation and quotation marks omitted;
    6Nor are we troubled by the question, raised at oral argument, as to whether the superseding
    information was filed before or after the State’s dismissal of the initial indictment; though the
    information was file-stamped nine minutes after the dismissal, Defendant signed the waiver and the
    State read the information into the record prior to the State dismissing the initial indictment. Further,
    the State made clear on the record its intention that the information and dismissal be filed “at the
    same time[.]”
    - 13 -
    STATE V. STALLINGS
    Opinion of the Court
    alteration in original). This Court agreed, noting that the State introduced witness
    testimony and videotaped evidence of “consistent assertions by defendant, admitted
    as substantive evidence, that he thought he was carrying marijuana and cocaine”
    rather than heroin. Id. at 360, 742 S.E.2d at 350. We then held that the error was
    so prejudicial as to amount to plain error because: (1) guilty knowledge was “the
    defendant’s sole defense to the charges,” and “his entire defense was predicated upon
    a lack of knowledge that the substance he possessed was heroin[,]” id. at 361-62, 742
    S.E.2d at 350-51; (2) “the closing arguments by both the prosecution and defense were
    in apparent agreement that this was the most contested issue[,]” id. at 361, 742
    S.E.2d at 350; (3) “[n]one of the other facts were controverted,” id. at 363, 742 S.E.2d
    at 352; and (4) the prosecutor misstated the law concerning guilty knowledge in his
    closing arguments to the jury. Id.
    The instant case shares some superficial similarities to Coleman in that
    Defendant argues evidence showed he did not know that methamphetamine, rather
    than simply marijuana, was present in his home.           But unlike the defendant in
    Coleman, who did not deny knowledge of possessing a substance and instead denied
    knowing what it was, Defendant denied any knowledge of the existence of
    methamphetamine and instead argued to the jury that it belonged to Mr. Brown.
    Defendant’s only witness did not testify that Defendant was ignorant of the nature of
    the methamphetamine; he instead testified that Defendant was not aware of its
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    STATE V. STALLINGS
    Opinion of the Court
    existence in the home at all. Defendant brought motions to dismiss the charges for
    insufficiency of the evidence at the close of each party’s case, arguing in both
    instances that the State had failed to prove Defendant possessed the drugs. In closing
    argument, Defendant’s counsel emphatically argued to the jury that “the [S]tate must
    show that Mr. Stallings is the man that should be convicted. And Mr. Stallings is not
    that man. . . . Mr. Stallings is not that man because Mr. Brown has taken
    responsibility for the methamphetamine.” Coleman is inapposite to this case.
    In any event, even assuming arguendo that the trial court erred in not giving
    a specific instruction on guilty knowledge in light of this evidence, it does not rise to
    the level of plain error that “had a probable impact on the jury’s finding of guilt.”
    Odom, 307 N.C. at 661, 
    300 S.E.2d at 378-79
    .
    The State offered copious evidence that Defendant was the only occupant of
    the home where the drugs were found when it impeached Mr. Brown’s testimony and
    Defendant’s version of events. For example, the State showed that: (1) Defendant
    repeatedly told police that his roommate was “Michael Smith,” but no Michael Smith
    was ever found; (2) police found no items in the home bearing Mr. Brown’s name; (3)
    Defendant’s name was the only name on the lease, the mail, and all paperwork found
    in the home; (4) Defendant acknowledged smoking marijuana, his phone contained
    dozens of text messages about marijuana sales, and police found both marijuana and
    a white crystalline substance on a scale in the home; (5) Mr. Brown denied knowing
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    STATE V. STALLINGS
    Opinion of the Court
    about any scales in the home when questioned on cross-examination; and (6) police
    found a white crystalline substance inside a pill bottle with Defendant’s name on it.
    In short, Defendant’s defense and the State’s evidence at trial distinguish this case
    from Coleman and place it outside “ ‘the rare case in which an improper instruction
    will justify reversal of a criminal conviction when no objection has been made in the
    trial court.’ ” Odom, 307 N.C. at 660-61, 
    300 S.E.2d at 378
     (quoting Henderson v.
    Kibbe, 
    431 U.S. 145
    , 154, 
    52 L. Ed. 2d 203
    , 212 (1977)).
    III. CONCLUSION
    Defendant’s argument that his right to prosecution by indictment was
    violated by the filing of superseding information after the judge’s address to the
    venire but before jury selection is misplaced. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-646, unlike some
    procedural statutes governing other charging documents, does not impose a filing
    deadline on the State, and Defendant waived in writing his constitutional right to
    prosecution by indictment. We therefore hold the trial court did not lack subject
    matter jurisdiction to try and convict Defendant of trafficking methamphetamine.
    We further hold that Defendant has failed to demonstrate plain error warranting a
    new trial based on the absence of a jury instruction on guilty knowledge.
    NO ERROR; NO PLAIN ERROR.
    Judges STROUD and DILLON concur.
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