State v. Graham ( 2020 )


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  •               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA17-1362
    Filed: 17 March 2020
    Clay County, No. 12 CRS 181
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.
    JOHN D. GRAHAM
    Appeal by defendant from judgment entered 13 December 2016 by Judge Eric
    Levinson in Clay County Superior Court and order entered 13 May 2019 by Judge
    Athena F. Brooks in Clay County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals
    7 January 2020.
    Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Assistant Attorney General Erin O’Kane
    Scott and Special Deputy Attorney General Benjamin O. Zellinger, for the State.
    Appellant Defender Glenn Gerding, by Assistant Appellate Defender Daniel K.
    Shatz, for defendant.
    ARROWOOD, Judge.
    John D. Graham (“defendant”) appeals from judgment entered upon his
    conviction for sexual offense against a child under age thirteen and order denying his
    Motion for Appropriate Relief (“MAR”). We find no error in the jury trial phase of
    defendant’s trial.   However, we vacate the trial court’s order imposing lifetime
    satellite-based monitoring (“SBM”) upon defendant, with remand for the trial court
    to conduct an evidentiary hearing on its appropriateness pursuant to Grady v. North
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    Carolina, 
    575 U.S. 306
    , 
    191 L. Ed. 2d 459
    (2015), and its progeny. Furthermore, we
    agree that the trial court’s order denying defendant’s MAR is insufficient, and vacate
    and remand for entry of an order not inconsistent with this opinion.
    I.        Background
    A.      Trial
    On 11 September 2012, defendant was indicted on four counts each of engaging
    in a sexual act with a child under thirteen years of age and taking indecent liberties
    with a child. Defendant’s case came on for trial in the criminal session of Clay County
    Superior Court before the Honorable Eric Levinson on 5 December 2016.
    The State’s key witness at trial was the alleged victim, A.M.D. 1 A.M.D.’s
    testimony was to the effect that defendant had touched the outside and inside of her
    vagina with his fingers on numerous occasions at four separate residences where she
    lived with her mother, Cassie D., over a period between one and two years. A.M.D.
    testified in greatest detail regarding defendant’s sexual abuse of her at the residence
    referred to as “the Ruby Falls house.” A.M.D. specifically mentioned three instances
    in which defendant inserted his finger into her vagina at the Ruby Falls house: on
    the couch in the living room while the family was watching television, on defendant’s
    bed in the basement while her siblings were playing videogames in the same room,
    and in her own room while defendant read her a book. A.M.D. also mentioned telling
    1   Initials are used to protect the identity of the victim and for ease of reading.
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    her step-grandmother (“Ms. Hester”) that defendant hurt her and gesturing toward
    her genitals when asked where.
    The State also presented three witnesses who testified that A.M.D. had made
    consistent statements to them on prior occasions. John Tucker, P.A., (“Mr. Tucker”)
    testified that, during his medical examination of A.M.D. in 2012, she told him that
    defendant hurt her and touched or penetrated her vagina “[w]ith his hand” “[m]ore
    than one time[,]” but did not “stick a stick inside” of her. A.M.D.’s brother T.D.
    testified that when he asked her if defendant ever molested her, “she said yes but she
    never gave the details.”
    Ms. Hester testified that when A.M.D. was visiting her on 30 May 2012,
    A.M.D. mentioned that defendant was her mother’s boyfriend and was living with the
    family at the Ruby Falls house. A.M.D. told her that defendant “hurts” her, and when
    asked where, “she pointed to her private parts.” Ms. Hester further testified that,
    around 2014, A.M.D. provided her with additional details on the molestation. Many
    of these additional details were consistent with A.M.D.’s trial testimony: “at the
    basement [of the Ruby Falls] house when they were watching TV . . . [defendant]
    would always touch her private parts and hurt her there[;]” that her “mommy was
    present” when defendant molested her while watching TV in the basement of the
    Ruby Falls house; and “that he used his fingers a lot with her private parts, placing
    them in her private parts.”
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    However, some of A.M.D.’s prior statements offered by Ms. Hester involved
    matters to which she did not testify, such as that defendant “made he[r] put his
    private parts in her mouth and that he had choked her[,]” inserted objects into her
    private parts, and “had hurt her on her back side.” Defense counsel objected to the
    first instance of such additional information.            The trial court gave a limiting
    instruction that the prior statements could only be considered to assess the credibility
    of A.M.D.’s trial testimony and allowed questioning to proceed.
    Detective Tony Ellis of the Clay County Sheriff’s Department testified that he
    responded to the hospital on 2 June 2012 in response to a report of child molestation
    involving A.M.D. He set up a forensic interview for A.M.D. with a local child advocacy
    specialist on 4 June 2012. This interview was recorded and played for the jury. After
    ascertaining that the “Roger” A.M.D. alleged sexually abused her was defendant,
    Detective Ellis set about looking for him.       Detective Ellis was unable to locate
    defendant at the residence of Cassie D., nor at any of his known prior addresses in
    North Carolina and Georgia. Detective Ellis then enlisted the help of the United
    States Marshals in locating defendant. After refreshing his recollection with the
    order for defendant’s arrest, Detective Ellis testified that the Marshals subsequently
    returned defendant to the Clay County Sheriff’s Department on 14 November 2012
    and communicated to Detective Ellis that defendant had been apprehended and
    extradited from Puerto Rico.
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    At the close of its evidence, the State dismissed the four indecent liberties
    charges against defendant. Defendant’s only witness was A.M.D.’s maternal aunt,
    Holly D. Holly D. testified that A.M.D. told her on two occasions that her accusations
    against defendant were false and that A.M.D. had falsely accused defendant because
    her stepmother Lora D. had threatened to kill her mother if she did not, and bribed
    her with a horse and other gifts if she did.
    On 9 December 2016, the jury returned a verdict finding defendant guilty of
    one count of engaging in a sexual act with a child under thirteen years of age and not
    guilty of the remaining three counts of the same offense. The charge for which
    defendant was found guilty corresponded to the alleged events at the Ruby Falls
    house.
    B.     Sentencing
    The trial court sentenced defendant on 13 December 2016. The court first set
    about calculating defendant’s prior record level for the purpose of structured
    sentencing. The State introduced evidence of defendant’s prior convictions from
    Georgia, including statutory rape and child molestation, thru a copy of his indictment
    and plea paperwork for the convictions.          Though presented by the State and
    acknowledged by the court, a copy of the Georgia statute under which defendant had
    been convicted was never placed in the record.
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    After some discussion with counsel for defendant and the State, the court found
    that the Georgia statutory rape offense was substantially similar to North Carolina’s
    own statutory rape law, which is a Class B1 felony.          Thus, the court treated
    defendant’s prior conviction as a Class B1 felony and assigned him nine prior record
    points. The court also assigned defendant one point for escaping the Clay County
    Detention Center while awaiting his trial, for a total of ten points corresponding to
    Prior Record Level IV.     The court sentenced defendant to 335 to 462 months’
    imprisonment and ordered him to register as a sex offender upon his release.
    Next, the court considered the State’s proposed order subjecting defendant to
    North Carolina’s SBM program for life after his release from prison. Counsel for
    defendant and the State agreed that the court was required to hold an evidentiary
    hearing, pursuant to Grady v. North Carolina, 
    575 U.S. 306
    , 
    191 L. Ed. 2d 459
    , at
    which the State must prove that it is reasonable to subject defendant to the SBM
    program for life. The State offered several times to proceed with such a hearing. The
    trial court ignored the State’s offer to proceed introducing evidence in a Grady
    hearing. Rather, after taking notice of the facts adduced at trial, the court summarily
    gave its reasons for finding lifetime enrollment in the SBM program reasonable for
    defendant and entered the order. The court found lifetime SBM reasonable because
    defendant had been convicted of statutory rape of Cassie D. in Georgia, served eight
    years in prison, immediately absconded from parole upon his release, assumed a false
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    name, and moved in with his former victim and began sexually abusing her daughter.
    Defendant gave oral notice of appeal.
    C.     Motion for Appropriate Relief
    During the pendency of his appeal, defendant filed a MAR with this Court on
    24 August 2018. The motion claimed that A.M.D. had recanted on her trial testimony
    and included an affidavit to that effect allegedly written by A.M.D.              On
    15 October 2018, we remanded defendant’s motion to the Clay County Superior Court
    with instructions to conduct an evidentiary hearing on the motion (“the MAR
    hearing”) pursuant to State v. Britt, 
    320 N.C. 705
    , 715, 
    360 S.E.2d 660
    , 665 (1987),
    within sixty days.
    Due to scheduling conflicts with the prosecuting attorney and the Clay County
    Superior Court’s failure to hold a criminal session of court between the weeks of
    3 September 2018 and 17 December 2018, defendant’s hearing was not held until
    30 April 2019, over eight months after filing his motion with this Court.
    The MAR hearing was held before the Honorable Athena F. Brooks from
    30 April to 3 May 2019. At the hearing, A.M.D. testified that she fabricated her
    accusations of sexual abuse against defendant at trial due to bribes and threats from
    Lora D. Defendant introduced a letter into evidence that was alleged to have been
    written by A.M.D. and left on her mother’s desk in January of 2018, when A.M.D.
    was living with her father and stepmother. The letter made admissions consistent
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    with A.M.D.’s hearing testimony. Cassie D. also testified at the hearing that, prior
    to trial, A.M.D. had also told her that she was falsely accusing defendant due to
    threats and bribes from Lora D. Cassie D. further testified that she had regained
    emergency custody of her children after Lora D. allegedly hurt A.M.D. on several
    occasions.
    The State produced and played several recordings of phone calls between
    Cassie D. and defendant during his incarceration, which took place from July 2017 to
    March 2019. Many of these conversations, including those prior to the alleged date
    of A.M.D.’s letter in January 2018, discussed the romance between Cassie D. and
    defendant and the potential for A.M.D. to provide a recantation to aid in his appeal.
    A child specialist investigator with the Clay County District Attorney’s Office
    testified that she had been present when A.M.D. had been interviewed prior to trial,
    and the child never mentioned any concerns about Lora D.
    In its order, the court recited the relevant testimony from trial and the hearing,
    including that: (a) A.M.D. testified at the hearing in much greater detail about the
    occasions in which she alleged defendant had abused her, including details such as
    the movie being watched, but denied that any abuse occurred on these occasions as
    she had stated at trial; (b) A.M.D. testified that she lied at trial because Lora D.
    threatened and bribed her; and (c) Holly D. gave testimony at trial to the same effect.
    -8-
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    The court found that it was suspicious for A.M.D. to recall additional details at
    the hearing, many years further removed from the events in question. The court
    further noted that A.M.D.’s mother and defendant engaged in frequent telephone
    conversations regarding defendant’s appeal, including how a recantation from A.M.D.
    would aid his appeal, both before and after A.M.D. allegedly wrote her mother a letter
    admitting she fabricated her accusations. The court found that it did not believe
    A.M.D.’s testimony regarding the notarization of her affidavit because her testimony
    on this matter changed between the two days of the hearing, after hearing her
    mother’s testimony.
    From these findings, the court in turn found that “the child was feeling some
    form of pressure to make these statements [at the hearing].” The court declined “to
    speculate as to whether this was self-induced or from an external source.” Based
    upon this determination, the court concluded as a matter of law that it was “not
    satisfied that the testimony given by [A.M.D.] at the trial on this matter in December
    2016 was false[,]” and thus a finding that “false testimony at the trial would [cause]
    a different result would not have been possible.”        Accordingly, the court denied
    defendant’s MAR.
    II.    Discussion
    On appeal, defendant argues that the trial court:         (a) erred in admitting
    impermissible hearsay that did not corroborate A.M.D.’s testimony; (b) plainly erred
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    in admitting testimony regarding his extradition from Puerto Rico and instructing
    the jury that this could be considered as evidence of flight; (c) erred in the calculation
    of defendant’s prior record level; and (d) erred by ordering that defendant be subjected
    to lifetime SBM at the expiration of his active sentence. Furthermore, defendant
    argues that the court abused its discretion in its order denying his MAR. We address
    each argument in turn.
    A.     Allowing Prior Statement Testimony of Ms. Hester
    Defendant first argues that the trial court erred in allowing Ms. Hester to
    testify to prior statements A.M.D. made to her. Defendant contends that these
    statements were inadmissible hearsay, rather than admissible prior statements
    corroborating a witness’s trial testimony. We disagree.
    “A trial court’s determination that evidence is admissible as corroborative
    evidence is reviewed for abuse of discretion.” State v. Cook, 
    195 N.C. App. 230
    , 243,
    
    672 S.E.2d 25
    , 33 (2009) (citation omitted). “Prior consistent statements of a witness
    are admissible as corroborative evidence even when the witness has not been
    impeached.” State v. Ramey, 
    318 N.C. 457
    , 468, 
    349 S.E.2d 566
    , 573 (1986) (citation
    omitted). In State v. Johnson, we summarized the distinction between inadmissible
    hearsay and admissible prior corroborative statements as follows:
    Hearsay is “a statement, other than one made by the
    declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered
    into evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted.”
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 801 (2007). . . .
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    Statements properly offered to corroborate former
    statements of a witness are “not offered for their
    substantive truth and consequently [are] not hearsay.”
    State v. Levan, 
    326 N.C. 155
    , 167, 
    388 S.E.2d 429
    , 435
    (1990).
    
    209 N.C. App. 682
    , 692, 
    706 S.E.2d 790
    , 797 (2011) (brackets in original). We also
    summarized the standard for determining whether a prior statement is corroborative:
    Corroborating statements are those statements that tend
    to strengthen; to add weight or credibility to a thing by
    additional and confirming facts or evidence. Nevertheless,
    if the testimony offered in corroboration is generally
    consistent with the witness’s testimony, slight variations
    will not render it inadmissible. . . . Such variations only
    affect the credibility of the evidence which is always for the
    jury. . . . [C]orroborative testimony may contain new or
    additional information when it tends to strengthen and add
    credibility to the testimony which it corroborates . . . .
    
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks and citations omitted).
    In the instant case, A.M.D. testified at trial that defendant touched the interior
    and exterior of her vagina with his hands and fingers on numerous occasions at the
    Ruby Falls house. Three prior statements of A.M.D. were admitted to corroborate
    her testimony. The prior statements offered by Mr. Tucker and T.D. are unchallenged
    on appeal.
    Defendant only challenges A.M.D.’s prior statement to Ms. Hester. Defendant
    argues that, even with the limiting instruction, the trial court erred in allowing Ms.
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    Hester’s testimony recounting A.M.D.’s prior statements related to fellatio, anal
    molestation, and the insertion of objects into A.M.D.’s private parts.
    During her testimony, A.M.D. did not mention any such acts when asked when,
    where, and how defendant hurt her. A.M.D. did say that she only saw defendant’s
    penis once when she went into the basement to wake him up, and stated that it did
    not touch her on that occasion. Thus, A.M.D.’s testimony only indirectly contradicts
    the challenged prior statement related to fellatio. Her testimony is silent regarding
    anal molestation and use of objects.
    Accordingly, the instant case is different than those in which prior statements
    were held non-corroborative because they directly contradicted several aspects of a
    witness’s testimony. See, e.g., State v. Frogge, 
    345 N.C. 614
    , 617, 
    481 S.E.2d 278
    , 279-
    80 (1997) (prior statements were not corroborative where: (a) witness testified that
    defendant procured a knife after victim hit him with metal bar, whereas prior
    statement indicated witness did not recall whether defendant or victim first wielded
    weapon; (b) witness testified that defendant went to party after murdering victims
    and returned to scene of crime and staged robbery, whereas prior statement indicated
    defendant staged robbery prior to leaving for party; and (c) witness testified that
    defendant did not tell him why he stabbed victim, whereas prior statement indicated
    that defendant told witness he stabbed victim because he hated her). Nor is it one in
    which the challenged prior statement is far removed from its original declarant. See
    - 12 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    State v. Stills, 
    310 N.C. 410
    , 416, 
    312 S.E.2d 443
    , 447 (1984) (noting that, where prior
    statement offered to corroborate another corroborating witness was partially
    inconsistent with testimony of original declarant, “justify[ing] the admission into
    evidence of hearsay statements three or four times removed from the original
    declarant under the guise of corroborating the corroborative witnesses is
    unacceptable”) (emphasis in original).
    Here, A.M.D. did not confirm, deny, or speak of these additional acts in any
    manner during her testimony. Her testimony that she only saw defendant’s penis
    once and it did not touch her on that occasion indirectly contradicts Ms. Hester’s
    testimony regarding fellatio. However, the vast majority of A.M.D.’s prior statements
    offered by Ms. Hester conformed with A.M.D.’s testimony that defendant penetrated
    her vagina with his fingers on numerous occasions at the Ruby Falls house. The
    excerpts of A.M.D.’s prior statements which do not align with this account of events
    merely add detail on the differing nature of defendant’s abuse of A.M.D.
    In State v. Ramey, our Supreme Court found that a victim’s prior statements
    were sufficiently similar to his trial testimony to be admitted for corroborative
    purposes, even though they added more detail to the account of abuse given at 
    trial. 318 N.C. at 470
    , 349 S.E.2d at 574. The victim testified that the defendant first
    touched his penis when he was five years old and that defendant had done so more
    than five times. 
    Id. In one
    of his prior statements, the victim had given this same
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    account of events, but added that the defendant would visit him at his home, buy him
    ice cream, and tell him not to tell anyone what happened. 
    Id. at 469,
    349 S.E.2d at
    574. In another prior statement, the victim gave a consistent account of events but
    added that defendant had put both his mouth and hands on his penis. Id. at 
    470, 349 S.E.2d at 574
    . Our Supreme Court held that:
    [The victim’s] testimony clearly indicated a course of
    continuing sexual abuse by the defendant. The victim’s
    prior oral and written statements . . ., although including
    additional facts not referred to in his testimony, tended to
    strengthen and add credibility to his trial testimony. They
    were, therefore, admissible as corroborative evidence. The
    jury could not be allowed to consider this evidence for any
    other purpose, however, and whether it in fact corroborated
    the victim’s testimony was, of course, a jury question.
    
    Id. (internal citations
    omitted).
    Similar to Ramey, here A.M.D.’s testimony clearly indicates a pattern of
    continuing abuse by defendant while her family lived at the Ruby Falls house,
    consisting of defendant’s penetration of A.M.D.’s genitals with his fingers. A.M.D.’s
    prior statements offered by Ms. Hester substantially conform with A.M.D.’s
    testimony at trial, save for the addition of other forms of abuse. These statements
    were sufficiently similar to A.M.D.’s testimony for the trial court to allow the jury to
    decide their corroborative value for itself, after receiving a limiting instruction to that
    effect. Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its discretion.
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    Assuming arguendo that the trial court abused its discretion by admitting
    A.M.D.’s prior statements to Ms. Hester, defendant was not prejudiced thereby. The
    jury heard two other witnesses give accounts of A.M.D.’s prior statements that
    conformed with her testimony of abuse given at trial, without providing additional
    details.   Furthermore, one of these witnesses was a disinterested medical
    professional. See State v. Smith, 
    315 N.C. 76
    , 99, 
    337 S.E.2d 833
    , 848 (1985) (finding
    corroborative testimony of disinterested rape task force volunteer likely to have
    greater influence on jury). Defendant has not shown that, without A.M.D.’s prior
    statements recounted by Ms. Hester, there is a reasonable possibility that the jury
    would have found A.M.D.’s trial testimony to lack credibility.
    The State’s brief attempts to further distinguish Stills from the instant case by
    stating that the trial court in Stills gave the jury no limiting instruction when it
    admitted allegedly corroborative, impermissible hearsay over objection. In Stills, our
    Supreme Court did find impermissible some allegedly corroborative statements to
    which the defendant did not object and the trial court provided no limiting
    
    instruction. 310 N.C. at 415
    , 312 S.E.2d at 446. Our Supreme Court was somewhat
    ambiguous in identifying the prior statements with which it took issue. However, a
    careful reading of the case reveals that the Court also found impermissible one
    allegedly corroborative statement to which the defendant did object, and the trial
    court provided an adequate limiting instruction. 
    Id. at 413,
    312 S.E.2d at 445-46.
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    B.     Testimony of Extradition and Instruction on Evidence of Flight
    Defendant further argues that the trial court plainly erred by: (1) allowing
    Detective Ellis to testify regarding defendant’s extradition back to North Carolina
    after his arrest in Puerto Rico, and (2) instructing the jury that this could be
    considered evidence of flight. Defendant concedes that he failed to preserve these
    issues at trial, and thus our review is limited to plain error.
    For error to constitute plain error, a defendant must
    demonstrate that a fundamental error occurred at trial. To
    show that an error was fundamental, a defendant must
    establish prejudice—that, after examination of the entire
    record, the error had a probable impact on the jury’s
    finding that the defendant was guilty. Moreover, because
    plain error is to be applied cautiously and only in the
    exceptional case, the error will often be one that seriously
    affect[s] the fairness, integrity or public reputation of
    judicial proceedings.
    State v. Lawrence, 
    365 N.C. 506
    , 518, 
    723 S.E.2d 326
    , 334 (2012) (alteration in
    original) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    1.     Testimony of Extradition
    Defendant argues that the trial court plainly erred in allowing Detective Ellis
    to testify regarding defendant’s apprehension and extradition from Puerto Rico.
    Defendant contends that Detective Ellis only learned of his extradition from
    conversations with the Marshals and the extradition paperwork, and therefore lacked
    personal knowledge to testify to this matter as required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1,
    Rule 602 (2019). We disagree.
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    An evidentiary foundation for personal knowledge “may, but need not, consist
    of the testimony of the witness himself.” 
    Id. We agree
    with the State’s position that
    “Detective Ellis’s initiation of the involvement of the U.S. Marshals Service and direct
    oversight of the case as lead detective demonstrate personal knowledge sufficient to
    satisfy the requirements of . . . Rule 602. Detective Ellis had personal knowledge
    regarding the inability to locate [d]efendant after visiting all of his known residences
    since his release from prison in Georgia in 2008.         Detective Ellis initiated the
    conversation with U.S. Marshals regarding assistance [in] locating [d]efendant.” This
    constitutes sufficient personal knowledge to testify concerning defendant’s
    extradition under Rule 602.
    Assuming arguendo that the trial court erred in allowing this testimony, any
    such error did not have a probable impact on the jury’s verdict. The jury also heard
    testimony that defendant subsequently escaped from the Clay County Detention
    Center and was found hiding in the attic of a nearby home. Thus, even without the
    challenged testimony, the jury heard evidence that defendant attempted to flee before
    he could be prosecuted for the alleged offenses. Defendant has thus failed to prove
    that the jury probably would have reached a different verdict without Detective Ellis’s
    testimony on his extradition.
    2.     Jury Instruction on Flight
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    Defendant argues that the trial court plainly erred by instructing the jury that
    his arrest and extradition from Puerto Rico could be considered evidence of flight
    indicative of guilt. Defendant maintains that the State did not produce evidence that
    he went to Puerto Rico to avoid apprehension for his crimes. We disagree.
    “A trial judge is not required to instruct a jury on defendant’s flight unless
    there is some evidence in the record reasonably supporting the theory that defendant
    fled after commission of the crime charged. Mere evidence that defendant left the
    scene of the crime is not enough to support an instruction on flight. There must also
    be some evidence that defendant took steps to avoid apprehension.”           State v.
    Thompson, 
    328 N.C. 477
    , 489-90, 
    402 S.E.2d 386
    , 392 (1991) (internal quotation
    marks and citations omitted).
    Evidence that a defendant departed from his usual routine by subsequently
    leaving the area and staying in another town, county, or state may support an
    instruction on flight. See State v. Allen, 
    346 N.C. 731
    , 740-41, 
    488 S.E.2d 188
    , 193
    (1997) (holding no plain error where defendant “drove away from the scene of the
    crime and was not apprehended until later that night in another county”); State v.
    Shelly, 
    181 N.C. App. 196
    , 209, 
    638 S.E.2d 516
    , 526 (2007) (“Defendant left the scene
    of the shooting and did not return home. Rather, he spent the night at the home of
    his cousin’s girlfriend, an action that was not part of Defendant’s normal pattern of
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    behavior and could be viewed as a step to avoid apprehension. Accordingly, the trial
    court did not err in instructing the jury on flight.”).
    Here, the jury heard testimony that defendant’s normal routine at the time he
    learned of A.M.D.’s accusations involved residing in the basement of the Ruby Falls
    home. Immediately after A.M.D. made her accusations in June of 2012, defendant
    could be found at neither the Ruby Falls home nor any of his other prior known
    addresses. Nearly six months later in November of 2012, defendant was found and
    arrested in Puerto Rico. Defendant was nowhere to be found immediately after
    A.M.D. accused him of sexual abuse, and was apprehended several months later in a
    territory outside the continental United States. This evidence reasonably supports
    the State’s theory that defendant fled to avoid apprehension for his crimes against
    A.M.D. Thus, the trial court did not err in instructing the jury on flight.
    C.      Sentencing
    Next, defendant argues that the trial court erred in sentencing him by
    improperly calculating his prior record level and imposing lifetime SBM after the
    expiration of his active term of imprisonment. We address each argument in turn.
    1.     Prior Record Calculation
    Defendant contends that, in its calculation of his prior record level, the trial
    court erroneously determined that one of his prior convictions in Georgia was
    substantially similar to a Class B1 felony in North Carolina. We disagree.
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    a.       Standard of Review
    By default, prior felony convictions from other jurisdictions are treated as
    Class I felonies when calculating a defendant’s prior record level. N.C. Gen. Stat. §
    15A-1340.14(e) (2019). However, the prior felony conviction can be treated as a
    higher class of felony if the State proves by a preponderance of the evidence that it is
    “substantially similar” to a North Carolina felony of that class.           
    Id. When determining
    substantial similarity, the trial court is tasked with “comparing the
    elements of [the] out-of-state and North Carolina offenses.” State v. Sanders, 
    367 N.C. 716
    , 720, 
    766 S.E.2d 331
    , 334 (2014) (citations omitted). “[W]hether an out-of-
    state offense is substantially similar to a North Carolina offense is a question of law”
    that we review de novo. State v. Hanton, 
    175 N.C. App. 250
    , 254, 
    623 S.E.2d 600
    , 604
    (2006). In so reviewing, we keep in mind that “the requirement set forth in N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 15A-1340.14(e) is not that the statutory wording precisely match, but rather
    that the offense be ‘substantially similar.’ ” State v. Sapp, 
    190 N.C. App. 698
    , 713,
    
    661 S.E.2d 304
    , 312 (2008).
    b.        Record Sufficient for Review
    In the instant case, the State failed to meet its burden of proof. While a copy
    of the Georgia statute under which defendant had been convicted was given to and
    reviewed by the trial court in making its determination, it was never introduced into
    evidence. Nonetheless, the State’s failure to meet its evidentiary burden is harmless
    - 20 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    where the record contains “sufficient information regarding an out-of-state conviction
    for this Court to determine if it is substantially similar to a North Carolina offense[.]”
    State v. Henderson, 
    201 N.C. App. 381
    , 388, 
    689 S.E.2d 462
    , 467 (2009).
    As defendant concedes, such is the case here. The record evidence before the
    court during sentencing contained defendant’s Georgia indictment and guilty plea.
    The relevant counts in the indictment alleged that defendant committed child
    molestation in violation of Ga. Code Ann. § 16-6-4 (2001) and statutory rape in
    violation of Ga. Code Ann. § 16-6-3 (2001) between October 1999 and October 2000.
    Moreover, the court’s prior record level worksheet indicates that only the statutory
    rape offense was used to add nine points to the defendant’s prior record level. The
    transcript reveals that the trial court and counsel for defendant and the State
    discussed whether the Georgia statute was substantially similar to North Carolina’s
    statutory provision outlawing sexual intercourse with persons under sixteen years of
    age. Therefore, the record contains enough information for us to review the trial
    court’s determination that the Georgia and North Carolina offenses were
    substantially similar.
    c.     Substantial Similarity
    The version of the Georgia statute in effect at the time of defendant’s prior
    offense provides that “[a] person commits the offense of statutory rape when he or she
    engages in sexual intercourse with any person under the age of 16 years and not his
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    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    or her spouse[.]” Ga. Code Ann. § 16-6-3(a). The court determined this offense was
    substantially similar to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-27.25(a) (2015), which makes it a Class
    B1 felony “if the defendant engages in vaginal intercourse with another person who
    is 15 years of age or younger and the defendant is at least 12 years old and at least
    six years older than the person, except when the defendant is lawfully married to the
    person.” Such conduct constitutes only a Class C felony where the defendant is
    between four and six years older than the victim. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-27.25(b).
    1.    Victim Age and Scope of Prohibited Conduct
    Defendant maintains that the Georgia offense of statutory rape is not
    “substantially similar” to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-27.25(a), because Ga. Code Ann. § 16-
    6-3(a) “does not require any particular age difference between the two participants.
    Unlike its North Carolina counterparts, the Georgia statute applies equally to all
    [victims] under the age of 16 years, instead of drawing distinctions between victims
    under the age of 13 and 13, 14 and 15 year-old victims.”
    We find defendant’s attempt to distinguish the Georgia offense from that of
    North Carolina based on distinctions between the ages of victims unpersuasive.
    Defendant’s argument is based upon a prior version of our statutes that made sexual
    intercourse with minors under age 13 and those 13 to 15 years old distinct offenses,
    albeit both Class B1 felonies. See N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 14-27.7A, 27.2(a) (2001). At the
    - 22 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    time of defendant’s sentencing, these two offenses had been consolidated into a single
    offense by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-27.25 (2015).
    2.    Age Requirements for Offenders
    However, defendant correctly notes that the North Carolina and Georgia
    statutes have differing age requirements for offenders. According to defendant, this
    puts the offenses beyond the ambit of substantial similarity.
    In State v. Bryant, we held that the South Carolina offense of criminal sexual
    conduct with minors in the first degree, see S.C. Code Ann. § 16-3-655(1) (1996), was
    not substantially similar to the North Carolina offenses of statutory rape of a child
    by an adult and statutory sexual offense with a child by an adult, see N.C. Gen. Stat.
    §§ 14-27.23, 27.28 (2015). 
    255 N.C. App. 93
    , 100, 
    804 S.E.2d 563
    , 567-68 (2017). In
    reaching this conclusion, we reasoned that:
    these offenses are not substantially similar due to their
    disparate age requirements. Although both of the North
    Carolina statutes require that the offender be at least 18
    years of age, a person of any age may violate South
    Carolina’s statute. Moreover, North Carolina’s statutes
    apply to victims under the age of 13 years, while South
    Carolina’s statute protects victims who are less than eleven
    years of age. The North Carolina and South Carolina
    statutes thus apply to different offenders and different
    victims. Therefore, the offenses are not substantially
    similar.
    
    Id. at 100,
    804 S.E.2d at 568 (internal quotations marks, citations, and alterations
    omitted).
    - 23 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    In the instant case, the relevant offenses of North Carolina and Georgia have
    disparate requirements concerning the difference in age between the victim and
    offender.   The North Carolina statute can only be violated by the older of two
    participants in sexual intercourse, where at least one is below the age of consent. See
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-27.25(a) (stating that a person has committed the Class B1 felony
    offense only if he “is at least six years older” than a person under 16 years old with
    whom he engages in vaginal intercourse). The Georgia statute can be violated by
    both the younger and older parties to sexual intercourse, where both are under the
    age of 16 and older than 13. See Ga. Code Ann. § 16-3-1 (2001) (setting 13 years as
    age of criminal responsibility).
    Depending on the age of the offender and victim, conduct prohibited by the
    Georgia statute does not necessarily constitute the Class B1 felony offense in North
    Carolina.   Cf. 
    Sapp, 190 N.C. App. at 713
    , 661 S.E.2d at 312 (holding inverse
    proposition to suffice for finding of substantial similarity).     There are several
    hypothetical combinations of victim and offender ages for which the same underlying
    action violates Ga. Code Ann. § 16-6-3 but does not constitute an offense, or only
    qualifies as a Class C felony, under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-27.25. For example, an
    offender engaging in sexual intercourse with a 13-year-old victim has committed the
    Georgia offense whether he is 13 or 19 years old, whereas the offender would not have
    - 24 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    committed the Class B1 felony offense in North Carolina if he was any younger than
    19 years old.
    Nevertheless, we hold that Bryant does not compel a similar result in the
    instant case for several reasons. As an initial matter, an analysis of our precedent in
    applying N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1340.14(e) reveals that Bryant represents an outlier
    in our case law on substantial similarity. Most cases in which our courts have found
    no substantial similarity between two offenses involved situations where one offense
    contained an additional, more distinct element than merely a differing age
    requirement. See, e.g., 
    Sanders, 367 N.C. at 719-21
    , 766 S.E.2d at 333-34 (holding
    North Carolina offense of “assault on a female” not substantially similar to Tennessee
    offense of “domestic assault” because the latter “does not require the victim to be
    female or the assailant to be male and of a certain age” and, unlike the former, could
    only occur inside the home); State v. Foxworth, No. COA14-693, 
    2015 WL 660792
    , at
    *3 (N.C. Ct. App. Feb. 17, 2015) (holding two attempted murder statutes not
    substantially similar where North Carolina offense required additional mens rea
    element of premeditation); State v. Hogan, 
    234 N.C. App. 218
    , 230, 
    758 S.E.2d 465
    ,
    474 (2014) (holding New Jersey offense of third-degree theft not substantially similar
    to North Carolina offense of misdemeanor larceny because “[t]here are many
    elements of third degree theft not found in misdemeanor larceny” and “[s]everal of
    these possible elements, such as theft from a person, would also make the larceny a
    - 25 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    felony in North Carolina”); 
    Hanton, 175 N.C. App. at 258-59
    , 623 S.E.2d at 606-607
    (holding New York offense of second-degree assault not substantially similar to North
    Carolina offense of assault inflicting serious injury, due to lack of serious physical
    injury requirement).
    Furthermore, we have overlooked differing statutory requirements far greater
    than age requirements in finding substantial similarity between two offenses. See,
    e.g., State v. Johnson, No. COA16-1170, 
    2017 WL 2437001
    , at *3 (N.C. Ct. App.
    June 6, 2017) (holding North Carolina and Tennessee offenses of resisting arrest
    substantially similar despite Tennessee’s additional requirement of “force,”
    indicating it “is more serious than the same offense in North Carolina[.]”); State v.
    Fortney, 
    201 N.C. App. 662
    , 671, 
    687 S.E.2d 518
    , 525 (2010) (holding Virginia and
    North Carolina offenses prohibiting convicted felons’ involvement with firearms
    substantially similar, despite Virginia statute only prohibiting knowing and
    intentional possession or transport and North Carolina statute’s more extensive
    prohibition on purchase, ownership, possession, or having a firearm in custody, care,
    or control).
    Having noted the aberrant nature of our holding in Bryant, we now turn to our
    chief consideration in holding the offenses substantially similar: “There may be . . .
    hypothetical scenarios which highlight the more nuanced differences between the two
    offenses.      But the subtle distinctions do not override the almost inescapable
    - 26 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    conclusion that both offenses criminalize essentially the same conduct . . . .” State v.
    Riley, 
    253 N.C. App. 819
    , 827, 
    802 S.E.2d 494
    , 500 (2017).
    We have previously found an out-of-state felony sexual offense against a minor
    to be substantially similar to our own, despite semantic differences in the age
    requirements for the offender and victim. See State v. Corey, No. COA17-1031, 
    2018 WL 2642772
    (N.C. Ct. App. June 5, 2018), rev’d in part, vacated in part on other
    grounds, 
    373 N.C. 225
    , 
    835 S.E.2d 830
    (2019). In Corey, we held that two sexual
    offense statutes prohibiting essentially the same conduct with slightly different age
    requirements were substantially similar. 
    Id. at *4.
    Michigan’s offense of fourth-
    degree sexual misconduct required an offender at least 18 years old and five years
    older than a 13-, 14-, or 15-year-old victim. 
    Id. at *3-4.
    The statute prohibited
    engaging in “sexual contact” between an offender and victim.         
    Id. at *4
      North
    Carolina’s offense of taking indecent liberties with a child required that the offender
    be at least 16 years old and five years older than a victim under 18 years old. 
    Id. (citing N.C.
    Gen. Stat. § 14-202.1 (2017)). The statute prohibited the taking of
    “immoral, improper, or indecent liberties with the child . . . for the purpose of . . .
    arousing sexual gratification.” 
    Id. Despite the
    hypothetical scenarios in which an offender of a certain age would
    violate the North Carolina statute and not the Michigan statute, we agreed with the
    trial court that:
    - 27 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    [T]he statutes at issue are substantially similar because
    the elements of the statutes target assailants that engage in
    similar conduct with similar victims, i.e., assailants who
    engage in sexual conduct with children for the purpose of
    sexual arousal. All child victims who meet the age
    requirement for the Michigan offense of fourth-degree
    sexual conduct . . . would meet the age requirement and
    could be classified as victims under N.C. Gen Stat. § 14-
    202.1 (2017). Moreover, the Michigan statute and case law
    further defining the offense seeks to prevent actions by
    defendants against children which lead to or arouse sexual
    gratification. The same is true of our indecent liberties
    with a child statute. We therefore conclude that the
    offenses are substantially similar . . . .
    
    Id. (emphasis added).
    Although unpublished, we find our reasoning in Corey persuasive in the
    instant case. Both the North Carolina and Georgia statutes seek to protect persons
    under the age of 16 from engaging in sexual activity with older individuals. Any
    victim meeting the age requirement of the Georgia offense would meet the age
    requirement and could be classified as a victim under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-27.25.
    Moreover, both statutes opt to levy greater punishment on older offenders with
    greater age discrepancies from their victims.       Although it does so in a manner
    structurally different from our own, the Georgia statute stratifies the severity of
    punishment based on the age discrepancy between the offender and the victim.
    Offenders under 21 years old face a minimum punishment of imprisonment for one
    year, whereas offenders 21 years of age and older face a minimum punishment of
    imprisonment for ten years. Ga. Code Ann. § 16-6-3(b). The same conduct is only
    - 28 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    punishable as a misdemeanor if the offender has an age difference of three years or
    fewer from a 14- or 15-year-old victim. 
    Id. Additionally, we
    note that defendant’s indictment in the instant case reveals
    he would have been 36 years old when he committed the conduct underlying his
    Georgia conviction against a person under 16 years of age. Thus, defendant’s conduct
    would constitute the Class B1 felony offense under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-27.25(a).
    Although not dispositive, we find this fact weighs against the various hypothetical
    technicalities defendant points to in arguing the offenses are dissimilar.
    Both N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-27.25 and Ga. Code Ann. § 16-6-3 seek to protect
    persons under age sixteen from those who would engage in sexual intercourse with
    them, and seek greater deterrence for offenders significantly older than their victims
    by punishing them more severely. Therefore, we hold that the trial court did not err
    in finding the two offenses substantially similar. The trial court properly treated
    defendant’s prior conviction of the Georgia offense as a Class B1 felony for the
    purposes of calculating his prior record level.
    2. Lifetime Satellite-Based Monitoring
    Finally, defendant argues that the trial court erred by entering an order
    subjecting defendant to lifetime participation in the State’s SBM program. Accepting
    arguendo the State’s contention that defendant has failed to preserve this issue on
    appeal, we invoke N.C.R. App. P. 2 (2020) to assess the merits of defendant’s
    - 29 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    argument, which we find controlling. See State v. Bursell, 
    372 N.C. 196
    , 200-201, 
    827 S.E.2d 302
    , 305-306 (2019) (holding this Court erred in finding that defendant
    preserved constitutional challenge to lifetime SBM order, but permissively invoked
    Rule 2 in alternative to address issue).
    a.       Error
    An order requiring a defendant to participate in the State’s lifetime SBM
    program per N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-208.40A(c) (2019) effects a search triggering the
    Fourth Amendment’s protection from unreasonable searches and seizures. Grady v.
    North 
    Carolina, 575 U.S. at 308-309
    , 191 L. Ed. 2d at 461. This is a substantial right
    that warrants our discretionary invocation of Rule 2. 
    Bursell, 372 N.C. at 200-201
    ,
    827 S.E.2d at 305-306.
    We first note that defendant does not fall within the category of persons for
    whom our Supreme Court has ruled mandatory enrollment in the SBM program
    facially unconstitutional. See State v. Grady, 
    372 N.C. 509
    , 522, 
    831 S.E.2d 542
    , 553
    (2019) (limiting holding that program was facially unconstitutional as to “individuals
    who are subject to mandatory lifetime SBM based solely on their status as a
    statutorily defined ‘recidivist’ who have completed their prison sentences and are no
    longer supervised by the State through probation, parole, or post-release
    supervision”) (footnote omitted). While defendant does qualify as a recidivist, the
    trial court’s SBM order also makes findings that defendant’s convicted offense was
    - 30 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    sexually violent, committed against a child, involved the physical, mental, or sexual
    abuse of a minor, and qualified as an aggravated offense under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-
    208.6(1a) (2019). See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-208.40A (2019) (listing these factors as
    warranting entry of order enrolling defendant in lifetime SBM program).
    Before a trial court may order a defendant to participate in the SBM program
    for life, the State must prove that the SBM program is reasonable as applied to the
    defendant, considering the totality of the circumstances, the nature and extent to
    which it intrudes upon the defendant’s reasonable privacy interests, and the extent
    to which it furthers legitimate governmental interests. State v. Blue, 
    246 N.C. App. 259
    , 264-65, 
    783 S.E.2d 524
    , 527 (2016) (clarifying burden of proof at Grady hearing
    lies with State) (citing 
    Grady, 575 U.S. at 310
    , 191 L. Ed. 2d at 462).
    The State concedes that the trial court had insufficient evidence before it to
    support the SBM order. In particular, the State notes that it presented no evidence
    on the burdens the program imposes upon participants or any data on the extent to
    which the program advances legitimate government interests. Rather, after taking
    notice of the facts and evidence adduced at trial, the trial court ignored the State’s
    offer to proceed introducing evidence in a Grady hearing and summarily gave its
    reasons for finding lifetime enrollment in the SBM program reasonable. See 
    Blue, 246 N.C. App. at 264-65
    , 783 S.E.2d at 527 (finding error where “the trial court simply
    acknowledged that SBM constitutes a search and summarily concluded it is
    - 31 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    reasonable, stating that ‘[b]ased upon [the second-degree rape] conviction, and upon
    the file as a whole, lifetime satellite-based monitoring is reasonable and necessary
    and required by the statute.’ ”) (alterations in original). We agree with defendant and
    the State. The trial court thus erred by ordering that defendant participate in the
    SBM program for life.
    b.      Remedy
    Having found for defendant on the issue of error under Grady and its progeny,
    we must now determine the proper remedy.
    We disagree with defendant’s contention that reversal of the SBM order
    without remand is appropriate. This would be the proper remedy if the trial court
    had held a Grady hearing, and the State had simply failed to introduce enough
    evidence to meet its burden. See, e.g., State v. White, No. COA 18-39, 
    2018 WL 4200979
    , at *8 (N.C. Ct. App. Sept. 4, 2018) (“[B]ecause the State presented
    insufficient evidence to meet its burden, the State is not entitled to a new SBM
    hearing for the purpose of giving it a ‘second bite at the apple.’ ”) (citation omitted),
    remanded, 
    372 N.C. 726
    , 2019 N.C. LEXIS 1175 (2019); State v. Dravis, No. COA18-
    76, 
    2018 WL 4201041
    , at *4 (N.C. Ct. App. Sept. 4, 2018), remanded, 
    372 N.C. 721
    ,
    2019 N.C. LEXIS 1173 (2019); State v. Greene, 
    255 N.C. App. 780
    , 783-84, 
    806 S.E.2d 343
    , 345 (2017).
    - 32 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    Here, the trial court entered a conclusory finding of reasonableness and did not
    afford the State an opportunity to satisfy its evidentiary burden, despite the State’s
    repeated offers to proceed with a Grady hearing and introduce further evidence.
    Thus, the State has not yet had its “first bite of the apple,” and vacatur of the SBM
    order with remand for an evidentiary hearing consistent with the most recent
    guidance from our Supreme Court in State v. Grady, 
    372 N.C. 509
    , 
    831 S.E.2d 542
    , is
    appropriate. State v. White, __ N.C. App. __, __, 
    820 S.E.2d 116
    , 122-23 (2018).
    D.    Order Denying Motion for Appropriate Relief
    Defendant argues that the trial court abused its discretion in its order denying
    his MAR requesting a new trial. Specifically, defendant contends that the order’s
    findings of fact, taken as a whole, are insufficient to support the trial court’s legal
    conclusions. We agree, and vacate and remand with instructions to enter an order
    containing sufficient findings of fact to address the issues raised by the motion and
    which the trial court believes to support its conclusion of law.
    1.     Standard of Review
    “When considering rulings on motions for appropriate relief, we review the
    trial court’s order to determine whether the findings of fact are supported by evidence,
    whether the findings of fact support the conclusions of law, and whether the
    conclusions of law support the order entered by the trial court.” 
    Frogge, 359 N.C. at 240
    , 607 S.E.2d at 634 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The trial
    - 33 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    court’s findings of fact are binding on appeal if supported by competent evidence, and
    conclusions of law are reviewed de novo. State v. Lutz, 
    177 N.C. App. 140
    , 142, 
    628 S.E.2d 34
    , 35 (2006) (citation omitted).
    Pursuant to a motion for appropriate relief,
    A defendant may be allowed a new trial on the basis of
    recanted testimony if:
    1) the court is reasonably well satisfied that the
    testimony given by a material witness is false,
    and
    2) there is a reasonable possibility that, had the
    false testimony not been admitted, a different
    result would have been reached at the trial.
    
    Britt, 320 N.C. at 715
    , 360 S.E.2d at 665. The defendant “has the burden of proving
    by a preponderance of the evidence every fact essential to support the motion.” N.C.
    Gen. Stat. § 15A-1420(c)(5) (2019).
    2.       Application
    Defendant challenges several findings of fact, arguing that they merely recite
    testimony and do not make necessary credibility determinations between conflicting
    testimony. We agree. Taken as a whole, the order’s findings of fact do not resolve
    factual issues necessary to reach the trial court’s conclusion of law.
    Finding of fact 3 is, by itself, fatal to the order. This finding recites A.M.D.’s
    hearing testimony that she lied at trial due to threats and bribes from Lora D. and
    Holly D.’s trial testimony that A.M.D. made similar statements to her. Defendant
    - 34 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    argues that this finding is deficient because it merely recites testimony without
    resolving any of the factual issues raised by this evidence: namely, whether the court
    believed it to be true. See In re Green, 
    67 N.C. App. 501
    , 505 n.1, 
    313 S.E.2d 193
    , 195
    n.1 (1984) (“[V]erbatim recitations of the testimony . . . do not constitute findings of
    fact by the trial judge, because they do not reflect a conscious choice between the
    conflicting versions of the incident in question which emerged from all the evidence
    presented.”) (emphasis in original). We agree.
    A trial court must make sufficient findings of fact and
    conclusions of law to allow the reviewing court to
    determine whether a judgment, and the legal conclusions
    that underlie it, represent a correct application of the law.
    Recitation of testimony is insufficient only where a
    material conflict actually exists on that particular issue,
    and does not resolve the conflicts in the evidence and
    actually find facts. A material conflict in the evidence
    exists when evidence presented by one party controverts
    evidence presented by an opposing party such that the
    outcome of the matter to be decided is likely to be affected.
    State v. Cody, No. COA18-503, 
    2018 WL 6318427
    , at *8 (N.C. Ct. App. Dec. 4, 2018)
    (alterations, internal quotation marks, and citations omitted), disc. rev. dismissed,
    cert. denied, 
    372 N.C. 100
    , 
    824 S.E.2d 417
    (2019).
    The testimony at the trial and hearing clearly present a material conflict in
    the evidence. A.M.D. testified at trial that defendant sexually abused her. Holly D.
    testified at trial that A.M.D. told her she was lying due to threats and bribes from
    - 35 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    Lora D. A.M.D. testified at the hearing that defendant did not sexually abuse her,
    and that she lied at trial due to Lora D.’s threats and bribes.
    A determinative finding on whether A.M.D. had indeed lied in her trial
    testimony due to bribes and threats from Lora D. would cut to the core of the first
    prong of the Britt test. An affirmative finding on this issue would have compelled the
    court to find that it was reasonably satisfied that the testimony of a material witness
    was false. Moreover, the primary evidence against defendant consisted of A.M.D.’s
    testimony and the testimony of other witnesses recalling what she said to them on
    prior occasions. Thus, without A.M.D.’s trial testimony, the second prong of Britt
    would likely be satisfied because there is a strong possibility that defendant could not
    otherwise have been convicted. “[T]he outcome of the matter to be decided is likely
    to be affected” by the court’s resolution of this conflict in the evidence, State v. Baker,
    
    208 N.C. App. 376
    , 384, 
    702 S.E.2d 825
    , 831 (2010), therefore the trial court abused
    its discretion by failing to expressly find which version of events it believed to be true.
    The dissent would find the trial court’s order adequate under Britt, based on
    the court’s findings noting its suspicion regarding the context in which A.M.D.’s
    recantation arose. The dissent does not explain how such findings can suffice to
    support the trial court’s Britt conclusion without running afoul of our mandate to
    make findings resolving material conflicts in the evidence:              in the present
    circumstances where “evidence presented by one party controverts evidence
    - 36 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    presented by an opposing party such that the outcome of the matter to be decided is
    likely to be affected[,]” the trial court must make an ultimate determination
    regarding which version of events raised by the evidence it believes to be true. 
    Id. The trial
    court’s findings noting the suspect context in which A.M.D.’s recantation
    arose, however well-grounded they may be, are no substitute for a finding that
    directly resolves whether A.M.D. was indeed bribed and threatened to give false
    testimony at trial. This principle is far from an expansion of our Supreme Court’s
    mandate in Britt.     Rather, it arises from our general precedent addressing the
    sufficiency of findings of fact in any order, whether in the MAR context or otherwise.
    Furthermore, the trial court’s remaining findings of fact, viewed as a whole, do
    not adequately address other evidentiary issues raised at the MAR hearing. Findings
    of fact 1, 2, and 4 all contain recitations of A.M.D.’s testimony at the hearing, without
    expressly determining the veracity of this testimony.          The court assesses the
    credibility of this testimony indirectly in conclusion of law 4, where it makes a finding
    that it “is convinced that the child was feeling some form of pressure to make these
    statements[,]” without “speculat[ing] as to whether this was self-induced or from an
    external source.”   “Internal pressure” is vague and could equally refer to either
    A.M.D.’s guilty conscience for falsely testifying at trial, or a desire to make her mother
    happy after observing her mother’s romantic relationship with her incarcerated
    - 37 -
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Opinion of the Court
    abuser. The court must make some finding that sets forth its determination, rather
    than providing a vague reference as detailed above.
    A court hearing an MAR must make findings in its order that are unambiguous
    and assess the credibility of the evidence on key issues presented by the motion. The
    court failed to do this in the instant case, and therefore abused its discretion in its
    order denying defendant’s MAR.           We therefore vacate the court’s order denying
    defendant’s motion and remand with instructions for the court to issue a new order2
    containing findings that resolve the factual issues presented by defendant’s motion,
    the supporting affidavit, and the testimony at the hearing.
    III.    Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we find no error in the evidentiary phase of
    defendant’s trial, and vacate the trial court’s orders enrolling defendant in the SBM
    program and denying defendant’s MAR. We remand for entry of a new MAR order
    consistent with this opinion. If the court’s new MAR order does not necessitate a new
    trial, we direct the court to conduct an evidentiary hearing on the reasonableness of
    subjecting defendant to the SBM program upon his release.
    NO ERROR IN PART; VACATED IN PART AND REMANDED.
    Chief Judge MCGEE concurs.
    Judge BRYANT concurs in part and dissents in part in separate opinion.
    2We request the court to exercise a degree of expediency not seen in its first treatment of
    defendant’s motion in making these determinations.
    - 38 -
    No. COA17-1362 – State v. Graham
    BRYANT, Judge, concurring in part, dissenting in part.
    I fully concur in the majority opinion as it relates to the jury trial and the order
    on satellite-based monitoring. However, I disagree with the majority’s opinion that
    the lower court abused its discretion by making findings of fact insufficient to support
    its conclusions of law and denying defendant’s motion for appropriate relief
    (hereinafter “MAR”). Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
    Following the evidentiary hearing on defendant’s MAR, the lower court
    entered an order which contained the following:
    FINDINGS OF FACT
    1.     On December 5, 2016, a Jury of Clay County found
    the defendant Guilty of Statutory Sex Offense with a Child.
    At the trial of the matter [A.M.D.] testified as to various
    facts and occurrences during a relevant time frame during
    the year 2012. At the trial, she testified as to basic facts
    including details of the touching and acts of the defendant
    which could have constituted the offense. During this
    hearing on May 1, 2019, [A.M.D.] testified to many more
    details of the events, including the name of the movie being
    watched during the “couch” incident (Bobby and the
    Nutcracker); the book the defendant was reading her
    during the “bedroom” incident (The Opossum came a
    Knocking); the video game being played (Halo) during on
    the basement incidents.
    2.    During the trial [A.M.D.] testified Roger (the
    defendant) was play asleep and when she tried to wake him
    up he pulled his privates out and when she went running
    upstairs to tell her mom that her mom giggled. During this
    hearing [A.M.D.] testified she went down and Roger was
    asleep and he wasn’t getting up and [A.M.D.] went and told
    mom he wasn’t waking up but not about privates and she
    did not remember going to bathroom [sic] to hide or being
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Bryant, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part
    scared. She testified the defendant didn’t show his privates
    then or any other time. As to the other possible time frames
    of occurrences which were testified to at the trial, in this
    hearing [A.M.D.] denied any and all touching. She gave
    further details as to the names of the movie, book and video
    game but denials of any touching.
    3.      When asked why [A.M.D.] lied during the trial she
    stated she was afraid of her step mother (Lora) as Lora had
    stated she would hurt or kill [A.M.D.]’s mom. Further the
    Step mother would get her things she wanted like a horse
    or get her toys if she testified and said these things. Also
    [A.M.D.] stated she didn’t like liars and hated the lying
    during the trial. At the trial in December 2016, Holly
    Dempsey testified to something similar in relating a
    comment made to her by [A.M.D.] wherein she stated Lora
    said if she didn’t say this she would kill her mom.
    4.     Defendant’s Exhibit 1 is a letter tha[t] [A.M.D.] says
    she wrote and left for her mother on her desk in January
    2018 while [A.M.D.] was living with her dad. [A.M.D.]
    decided to write the letter because she knows her mom was
    “torn up” over the truth and not knowing the facts and
    [A.M.D.] wanted her to be happy again. Also, [A.M.D.]
    made comments about that’s what love is about. This is the
    letter which led to the affidavit of [A.M.D.]. Upon
    questioning by both the State and the Defense counsel
    [A.M.D.] and her mother, Cassie, stated this letter was
    written and left in January 2018. Further they both stated
    it was not discussed between them until March 2018.
    However when telephone calls were played by the State
    which were recorded between the defendant and Cassie
    reference is made to [A.M.D.] being willing to testify in court
    and getting an affidavit to send to the lawyer on December
    6, 2017. Moreover, the defendant discusses whether
    [A.M.D.] is willing to testify in court about what she told
    Cassie. He tells Cassie to tell him about what [A.M.D.] said
    and to get an affidavit to send to the lawyer to help the
    appeals case. He asks when [A.M.D.] is going to be with
    Cassie and away from Lora and the dad. On December 19,
    2
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Bryant, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part
    2017 during another phone call between the defendant and
    Cassie, the defendant discussed getting [A.M.D.] in touch
    with a PI to get a statement from her, specifically Teresa
    Dean, and asks Cassie to look the number up. On January
    12, 2018 during a phone call the defendant asks Cassie who
    else she had told of what [A.M.D.] said.
    5.     During a phone call on May 7, 2019 [sic] the
    defendant is told by Cassie that Teresa Dean had been to
    talk to [A.M.D.]. The Defendant asks what was said and
    wanted Cassie to ask questions so she could tell him what
    was said during the interview.
    6.     During a phone call on May 31, 2018 a voice the
    Court took to be [A.M.D.] called the defendant Dad to
    which he responds “aww” when Cassie says [A.M.D.] calls
    him that. This was overheard on the phone call when there
    was [sic] several voices clamoring to speak to the defendant
    on the phone among them Levi (the defendant’s son with
    Cassie) Cassie and [A.M.D.]. There is then a discussion as
    to how long going to be until get [A.M.D.] gets into court.
    [sic]
    7.    During a phone call on June 1, 2018 the defendant
    and Cassie discuss the MAR. The defendant explains
    where the testimony from [A.M.D.] comes in and how the
    MAR is the best chance because then the defendant can
    talk about the lawyer not doing stuff and [A.M.D.]
    recanting her testimony.
    8.     The Affidavit (Defense Exhibit 2) was notarized at a
    bank in Georgia. During the first testimony of [A.M.D.] at
    this hearing she stated she signed it and the next day the
    lady put the stamp on it. The stamp being the notary seal.
    Cassie testified [A.M.D.] made some corrections to the
    affidavit and then they went to the bank and someone
    notarized it at the bank and then faxed it to the lawyer.
    When [A.M.D.] testified again two days later, she
    “remembered” she had signed the affidavit in front of the
    3
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Bryant, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part
    lady and had shown her an ID, one from her school with
    her picture on it.
    CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
    ....
    3.     The Court utilizing the standard as set out in State
    v. Britt, 
    320 N.C. 705
    , 
    360 S.E.2d 660
    (1987); is charged
    with deciding the conditions. The first being if the Court is
    reasonably well satisfied that the testimony given by a
    material witness if false [sic] and the second being if there
    is a reasonable possibility that, had the false testimony not
    been admitted, a different result would have been reached
    at trial.
    4.     The Court is not satisfied that the testimony given by
    [A.M.D.] at the trial on this matter in December 2016 was
    false. The Court concludes that the child gave surprisingly
    more details at this hearing than at the trial, some five to
    six years after the offenses. The trial was closer in time to
    the events and it is suspicious that more details would be
    recalled as time elapses. The Court heard the additional
    details the child gave during the affidavit and its signature
    during the course of this hearing between the two days of
    testimony and after witnessing the testimony of the
    mother. The Court is unconvinced this is accurate
    testimony. Further the details of the “recantation” and its
    use by the defendant as additional help for his appeal was
    discussed repeatedly between the defendant and the
    mother prior to the alleged time the letter (defendant’s
    exhibit 1) was “left” by the child. The Court is convinced
    that the child was feeling some form of pressure to make
    these statements. The Court is not going to speculate as to
    whether this was self-induced or from an external source.
    5.    The Court not finding false testimony at the trial
    would find a different result would not have been possible.
    (emphasis added).
    4
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Bryant, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part
    Our standard of review as to rulings on MARs is to determine whether the trial
    court’s findings of fact are supported by the evidence, whether the findings of fact
    support the conclusions of law, and whether the conclusions of law support the order.
    See State v. Frogge, 
    359 N.C. 228
    , 240, 
    607 S.E.2d 627
    , 634 (2005).            This was
    acknowledged by the majority along with the well-known principle that “the trial
    court’s findings of fact are binding on appeal if supported and the conclusions of law
    are reviewed de novo. State v. Lutz, 
    177 N.C. App. 140
    , 142, 
    628 S.E.2d 34
    , 35 (2006)
    (citation omitted).” It is also a well-known principle that “[w]here trial is by judge
    and not by jury, the trial court’s findings of fact have the force and effect of a verdict
    by a jury and are conclusive on appeal if there is evidence to support them, even
    though the evidence might sustain findings to the contrary.” In re Estate of Trogdon,
    
    330 N.C. 143
    , 147, 
    409 S.E.2d 897
    , 900 (1991) (citations omitted).
    As noted by the majority, defendant has the burden of proof on an MAR.
    Defendant may be allowed a new trial on the basis of recanted testimony if:
    1) the court is reasonably well satisfied that the testimony
    given by a material witness is false, and
    2) there is a reasonable possibility that, had the false
    testimony not been admitted, a different result would
    have been reached at the trial.
    State v. Britt, 
    320 N.C. 705
    , 715, 
    360 S.E.2d 660
    , 665 (1987).
    Here, the lower court made a credibility determination based on testimony
    presented during the December 2016 trial and testimony presented during the May
    5
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Bryant, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part
    2019 MAR hearing.      The court determined that it “[was] not satisfied that the
    testimony given by [A.M.D.] at the trial on this matter in December 2016 was false.”
    Further, the court concluded it was “unconvinced” the testimony at the MAR hearing
    was accurate.
    The evidence presented during defendant’s December 2016 trial showed that
    four years after she was abused at the age of eight, then twelve-year-old A.M.D.
    testified to acts of sexual abuse for which defendant was convicted. In May 2019, the
    hearing on defendant’s MAR was conducted. Per the MAR court’s finding of fact 1,
    the court noted the extent to which A.M.D. provided details at defendant’s trial in
    2016 versus the extent to which she provided details in 2019, regarding the
    circumstances surrounding a sex offense which did not occur. During defendant’s
    2016 trial, A.M.D. testified to basic facts which could have constituted a statutory sex
    offense with a child, while during the 2019 MAR hearing A.M.D. testified to the name
    of the movie that was playing during the “couch” incident, the book defendant was
    reading during the “bedroom” incident, and the video game being played during the
    “basement” incident, again testifying to facts surrounding incidents she later said did
    not occur.
    Per finding of fact 2, A.M.D. recanted the testimony she gave during the 2016
    trial—when she testified that defendant had “pulled his privates out” as she tried to
    wake him—and at the MAR hearing, she denied “any and all touching” by defendant.
    6
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Bryant, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part
    In finding of fact 8, the court noted discrepancies in A.M.D.’s testimony, as well as
    that of her mother, Cassie, regarding how and when the affidavit A.M.D. signed in
    support of defendant’s MAR was notarized. A.M.D. testified that the impetus for
    recanting her testimony, a letter she wrote to her mother—Defendant’s Exhibit 1—
    was written and left for her mother in January 2018. A.M.D. knew “her mom was
    ‘torn up’ over the truth and not knowing the facts and [A.M.D.] wanted her [mother]
    to be happy again.” Moreover, A.M.D. testified that she and her mother did not
    discuss the contents of the letter until March 2018. However, the MAR court found
    that defendant and A.M.D.’s mother, Cassie, were recorded on 6 December 2017,
    discussing with defendant A.M.D.’s willingness to testify in court and getting an
    affidavit to send to a lawyer. “[D]efendant discusse[d] whether [A.M.D.] [wa]s willing
    to testify in court about what she told Cassie. He t[old] Cassie to tell him about what
    [A.M.D.] said and to get an affidavit to send to the lawyer to help with the appeals
    case.” On 19 December 2017, defendant and Cassie were recorded discussing getting
    A.M.D. in touch with a PI in order to get a statement. Again, there were clear
    discrepancies in the testimony of AMD and Cassie as to how, when, and perhaps
    where the affidavit of recantation was obtained.
    In the court order denying defendant’s MAR, the court acknowledged the test
    to grant defendant a new trial on the basis of recanted testimony as set forth in Britt,
    7
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Bryant, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part
    
    320 N.C. 705
    , 
    360 S.E.2d 660
    . Therefore, it is clear the MAR court was aware the
    Britt test determined whether defendant’s MAR could be granted.
    The majority reverses the lower court order solely on the basis that the MAR
    court did not specifically state whether it found A.M.D.’s 2019 MAR hearing
    testimony that she was threatened and bribed to submit false testimony during
    defendant’s 2016 trial to be true or false. The majority states that finding of fact 3 is,
    by itself, fatal to the order because the “finding recites A.M.D.’s hearing testimony
    that she lied at trial due to threats and bribes from Lora D.” The majority accepts
    defendant’s argument that the MAR court did not resolve the factual issue raised by
    that evidence. On the other hand, the majority does not accept that the MAR court
    did just what Britt requires as a first step: determine whether “the court is reasonably
    well satisfied that the testimony given by a material witness is false[.]” 
    Britt, 320 N.C. at 715
    , 360 S.E.2d at 665.
    What the majority is interposing is an expansion of the Britt test: a court
    hearing a MAR “must make findings in its order that are unambiguous and assess
    the credibility of the evidence on key issues presented by the motion.” Here, during
    the MAR hearing, the witness recanted the bare bones of her trial testimony. But
    upon hearing the evidence, the lower court clearly had serious concerns regarding the
    circumstances and sequence of events that gave rise to the recantation by the
    witness—a minor child—as well as the pressure imposed (“either self-induced or from
    8
    STATE V. GRAHAM
    Bryant, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part
    an external source”) upon that recanting witness which may have affected her
    veracity. As such, the court was “unconvinced” the recanting witness’s testimony
    given during the 2019 MAR hearing was “accurate,” and therefore, in accordance with
    Britt, the MAR court “[wa]s not satisfied that the testimony given by [A.M.D.] at trial
    on this matter in December 2016 was false.”
    The lower court’s order was sufficient to satisfy the Britt test and denying
    defendant’s MAR was not an abuse of discretion. Defendant merely failed to meet
    his burden of proof. It is not this Court’s responsibility to use a test created by
    defendant that would require a lower court to make findings of fact on what defendant
    considers the critical issue.      And I urge the majority not to adopt such an
    unsupportable position.
    I will note that going forward, more specificity in the strength of a trial court’s
    findings of fact and conclusions of law is always appreciated by our appellate courts.
    However, I disagree that, because we do not have what defendant may consider a
    more perfect order, the order we do have, which makes appropriate findings of fact
    and conclusions of law pursuant to the Britt rule, should be vacated.
    For these reasons, I would uphold the lower court’s order denying defendant’s
    MAR.
    9