State v. Lynch ( 2020 )


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  •                 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA19-358
    Filed: 19 May 2020
    Lenoir County, Nos. 16CRS050202, 17CRS000096-97
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.
    JUSTIN LAVONE LYNCH, Defendant.
    Appeal by Defendant from judgment entered 19 March 2018 by Judge Charles
    Henry in Lenoir County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 18 March
    2020.
    Attorney General Joshua H. Stein by Assistant Attorney General Sherri H.
    Lawrence, for the State.
    Glover & Petersen, P.A., by James R. Glover, for Defendant-Appellant.
    DILLON, Judge.
    Defendant Justin Lynch appeals from a judgment entered against him for first-
    degree murder, robbery with a dangerous weapon, and assault with a deadly weapon
    with the intent to kill inflicting serious injury. Defendant was sentenced to life
    without parole for the murder conviction and to shorter terms for the other
    convictions.
    I. Background
    STATE V. LYNCH
    Opinion of the Court
    This case arises out of the robbery of a bar on 22 January 2016, perpetrated by
    two masked individuals. The evidence at trial tended to show that Defendant was
    one of the masked individuals. During the robbery, Defendant shot and killed the
    owner of the bar, and he and his accomplice fled with the cash register. Officers
    tracked down Defendant and his accomplice and arrested them. Defendant was
    advised of his Miranda rights and signed a waiver, never asking to speak with a
    lawyer. Defendant was interrogated alone by two officers at the police station.
    Defendant adamantly denied any involvement during much of the
    interrogation. However, towards the end of the recorded, three-hour interrogation,
    Defendant finally confessed to his involvement.
    Prior to trial, Defendant moved to have his confession suppressed. His motion
    was denied.
    At trial, the State introduced Defendant’s confession and the testimonies of
    others involved in the robbery implicating Defendant. The jury convicted Defendant.
    Defendant appeals.
    II. Analysis
    A. Voluntariness of Defendant’s Confession
    On appeal, Defendant argues that it was error for the trial court to admit his
    confession.   He contends that his confession was not voluntary “because it was
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    STATE V. LYNCH
    Opinion of the Court
    produced by the hope for a sentence less tha[n] life imprisonment [in]duced by the
    statements and actions of the officers who interrogated him.”
    The transcript from the interrogation tends to show that Defendant was not
    predisposed to confess; he repeatedly denied any involvement; he was predisposed to
    believe that he would receive a life sentence whether he confessed or not; the
    interrogators told Defendant that they had overwhelming evidence of his guilt; they
    told him that they believed he was lying; they told Defendant that he had a better
    chance of a lesser sentence if he cooperated with them; and Defendant eventually
    cooperated, confessing to his involvement and naming his accomplice, believing that
    by cooperating, he had a better chance of a reduced sentence.
    1. A confession induced by hope may be involuntary, depending on the totality of the
    circumstances.
    “It has been the law of this State from its beginning that an extrajudicial
    confession of guilt by an accused is admissible against him only when it is voluntary.”
    State v. Fox, 
    274 N.C. 277
    , 292, 
    163 S.E.2d 492
    , 502 (1968) (emphasis added)
    (citations omitted). In an opinion penned during the first decade of our Supreme
    Court’s existence, our original three justices each expressed the view that a confession
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    STATE V. LYNCH
    Opinion of the Court
    which was induced by some promise or hope is involuntary and, therefore,
    inadmissible.1 State v. Roberts, 
    12 N.C. 259
    , 260 (1827) (granting a new trial).
    We stress, though, that a confession motivated by some hope of leniency, in and
    of itself, does not render a confession involuntary. Indeed, hope may be part of a
    defendant’s calculus in voluntarily deciding to confess.
    It is when this hope develops from something said by one in authority, such as
    by an interrogating officer, that our Supreme Court has held that a confession may
    be deemed involuntary. But even hope so derived is not per se involuntary. Rather,
    the court “looks at the totality of the circumstances.” State v. Jackson, 
    308 N.C. 549
    ,
    581, 
    304 S.E.2d 134
    ,152 (1983). And where a “defendant’s will [i]s not overborne [by
    the hope],” his confession can still be said to be “made freely and voluntarily with full
    knowledge of the consequences.” State v. Richardson, 
    316 N.C. 594
    , 604, 
    342 S.E.2d 823
    , 831 (1986) (requiring the reviewing court to look at the totality of the
    circumstances to determine whether a confession induced, in part, by hope is
    voluntary).
    1 Our first Chief Justice John Louis Taylor, our only foreign-born Chief Justice (born in
    London), stated: “The true rule is, that a confession cannot be received in evidence, where the
    Defendant has been influenced by any threat or promise[.]” State v. Roberts, 
    12 N.C. 259
    , 260 (1827).
    Justice John Hall stated: “In order to make the confessions of a prisoner evidence to a Jury, it
    should appear that he was not induced to make them from a hope of favor, or compelled by fear of
    injury.” 
    Id. at 260-61
    .
    Justice Leonard Henderson, for whom the town of Henderson is named, stated: “Confessions
    are either voluntary or involuntary. They are called voluntary, when made neither under the influence
    of hope or fear. . . . [I]t is said, and said with truth, that confessions induced by hope . . . are, of all
    kinds of evidence, the least to be relied on, and are therefore entirely to be rejected.” 
    Id. at 261-62
    .
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    STATE V. LYNCH
    Opinion of the Court
    In any event, it is the role of the trial judge, and the appellate judges on review,
    to consider the totality of the circumstances in determining whether a confession was
    so induced by hope so as to render it involuntary.
    2. Where there are no disputes as to what occurred during the interrogation, we
    review de novo whether Defendant’s confession was voluntary.
    It is the role of the trial court to resolve disputes about what was said or done
    by the defendant or the investigating officers during an interrogation.               See
    Richardson, 316 N.C. at 600-01, 
    342 S.E.2d at 828
     (1986). However, where there is
    no dispute or after the trial court has resolved such disputes, whether a defendant’s
    confession was voluntary “is a question of law and is fully reviewable on appeal.”
    State v. Barden, 
    356 N.C. 316
    , 339, 
    572 S.E.2d 108
    , 124 (2002) (internal quotation
    marks omitted) (citation omitted). That is, whether certain conduct and language by
    the interrogating officers “amounted to such threats or promises or influenced the
    defendant by hope and fear as to render [his] subsequent confession involuntary” is
    reviewed de novo on appeal, as a question of law. Richardson, at 601, 
    342 S.E.2d at 828
    ; see State v. Rook, 
    304 N.C. 201
    , 216, 
    283 S.E.2d 732
    , 742 (1981) (holding that
    where a defendant is influenced by hope and fear the subsequent confession is
    involuntary); see also State v. Andrew, 
    61 N.C. 205
    , 206 (1867) (“What facts amount
    to such threats or promises as make confessions not voluntary and admissible in
    evidence is a question of law, and the decision of the judge in the court below can be
    reviewed by this court[.]”).
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    STATE V. LYNCH
    Opinion of the Court
    3. Our Supreme Court has instructed that, though certain statements by
    interrogators are inappropriate, the determination of voluntariness must be based
    on the totality of the circumstances.
    Confessions induced by hope or fear tend not to be reliably true, as there is
    some probability that the suspect decided to confess to something that he did not do
    simply because he believed it to be his best option at the time. Indeed, this was one
    of Justice Henderson’s concerns in Roberts. Roberts, 
    12 N.C. at 262
    .
    There is, however, a greater concern, a constitutional concern: no matter how
    truthful a confession may appear to be on its face, a defendant has the constitutional
    right not to have incriminating statements, involuntarily made by him, used against
    him. See Bram v. United States, 
    168 U.S. 532
    , 542, 
    42 L.Ed. 568
    , 573 (1897) (“In
    criminal trials, in the courts of the United States, wherever a question arises whether
    a confession is incompetent because not voluntary, the issue is controlled by [the]
    [F]ifth [A]mendment[.]).    Therefore, the issue is not how truthful Defendant’s
    confession may otherwise appear to be. Rather, our task is to determine, based on
    the totality of circumstances, whether Defendant’s confession was voluntary.
    As the issue before us is largely a question of law, we are bound by
    jurisprudence from our Supreme Court in determining whether Defendant’s
    confession was voluntary. Our Supreme Court has decided a number of cases during
    its 200-year history where an issue was the voluntariness of a confession. The line
    between voluntary and involuntary may appear blurred at times, as certain
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    STATE V. LYNCH
    Opinion of the Court
    statements by officers are sometimes held to be sufficient to render a confession
    involuntary, while similar statements in other cases have been held not sufficient.
    But a closer look at these cases reveals that our Supreme Court decides each case
    based on the totality of the circumstances.
    Our Supreme Court has held that “a confession obtained as a result of an
    inducement of hope promising relief from the criminal charge to which the confession
    relates is involuntary and inadmissible.” State v. Hayes, 
    314 N.C. 460
    , 476, 
    334 S.E.2d 741
    , 750-51 (1985).       But the Court always looks at the totality of the
    circumstances to discern whether the confession was actually induced by the promise
    of a chance for leniency.
    In Hayes, for example, our Supreme Court suggested a statement to the
    defendant that “it could possibly be of some help if he talked” was inappropriate. 
    Id. at 476
    , 
    334 S.E.2d at 750
    . However, the Court concluded that since the statement
    was the only inappropriate one made and since the other circumstances suggested
    that it did not cause the defendant to confess, the confession was voluntary: “We
    conclude, however, that this [singular] statement by Captain Roberts could not have
    aroused in the defendant, a man 28 years old with experience dealing with law
    enforcement officials, any reasonable hope of reward if he confessed to the crimes.”
    
    Id. at 476
    , 
    334 S.E.2d at 751
    .
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    STATE V. LYNCH
    Opinion of the Court
    Likewise, in State v. Corley, our Supreme Court held that a statement by an
    interrogator to the defendant “that things would go better with him if he told the
    truth,” though inappropriate, was not enough to render the defendant’s confession
    involuntary:
    At no time during the defendant’s testimony [during voir
    dire on the motion to suppress] did he say that any
    statement to him by [the officer] . . . caused him to hope to
    gain in any way by confessing to the crimes under
    investigation.
    ...
    The totality of the circumstances clearly compelled the trial
    court’s determination that the defendant’s statements
    were not induced by any hope or fear arising from the
    conduct of the officers and, therefore, were voluntary.
    
    310 N.C. 40
    , 52-53, 
    311 S.E.2d 540
    , 547-48 (1984).
    However, our Supreme Court has held on many occasions that a single
    suggestion by an interrogating officer may be enough to render a defendant’s
    confession involuntary, suggesting that reviewing courts should err on the side of the
    defendant:
    The assertion of his innocence, in reply to the proposition
    that he should confess and thus make it easier for him, does
    not at all prove that the offer of benefit from the officer who
    had him in charge did not find a lodgment in his mind. If
    so, what could be more reasonable than that when he found
    himself on the way to prison in charge of the author of this
    hope that a confession would alleviate his condition, he
    should be tempted to act then upon a suggestion that he
    had rejected when the prospect did not seem to him so dark,
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    STATE V. LYNCH
    Opinion of the Court
    and make a confession. It [m]ay have proceeded from this
    cause, from this hope so held out to him. If it may have
    proceeded from that cause, there is no guaranty of its truth,
    and it must be rejected.
    State v. Pruitt, 
    286 N.C. 442
    , 457, 
    212 S.E.2d 92
    , 102 (1975) (quoting State v. Drake,
    
    113 N.C. 625
    , 
    18 S.E. 166
     (1893)). For instance, in State v. Fuqua, our Supreme Court
    held that merely telling the defendant “[t]hat if he wanted to talk to me then I would
    be able to testify that he talked to me and was cooperative[,]” was enough to render
    a confession involuntary as it was made “by a person in authority . . . which gave
    defendant a hope for lighter punishment.” 
    269 N.C. 223
    , 228, 
    152 S.E.2d 68
    , 72
    (1967). In considering the totality of the circumstances, the Court noted that the
    statement of hope was made “before the defendant made his confession.” 
    Id. at 228
    ,
    
    152 S.E.2d at 72
    .
    In State v. McCullers, though, our Supreme Court held that more egregious
    statements by an interrogator to a defendant did not render his confession
    involuntary, based on the totality of the circumstances, essentially because they were
    made after the defendant admitted to being involved in the crime. 
    341 N.C. 19
    , 
    460 S.E.2d 163
     (1995). In that case, after the defendant admitted to being at the location
    of a killing and named his accomplices, the interrogator, in trying to get the defendant
    to implicate himself further, had the following exchange with the defendant:
    [Officer] You are going to jail. . . . You are gonna be charged
    with murder. What’s gonna be to your favor is for you to
    tell the truth and that’s all we want is the truth.
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    STATE V. LYNCH
    Opinion of the Court
    [Defendant] So you’re saying either way, I’m going to jail?
    ...
    [Officer] Listen to me. Don’t you think a Judge, a jury and
    society will look upon you much better, if you say, I didn’t
    mean to kill the man, I didn’t know he was gonna die, than
    [for] you to sit there and keep denying that you done it,
    when I’ve got all these other witnesses that say you did.
    Which way looks the best for you?
    
    Id. at 23
    , 
    460 S.E.2d at 165
    . The Court held that the evidence showed that the
    defendant had already admitted to traveling to Raleigh with others and robbing a
    victim and hitting the victim with a bat before the officer made the above statements,
    The Court ultimately concluded that “[u]nder the totality of the circumstances test,
    the isolated statements [above] do not support defendant’s contention that his
    statements were made involuntarily out of fear or hope[.]” 
    Id. at 28
    , 
    460 S.E.2d at 168
    .
    Our Supreme Court has suggested that any statement tending to produce hope
    does not tilt the scales where the statement does not directly reference hope
    concerning the criminal charges that the defendant is currently facing. See State v.
    Gainey, 
    355 N.C. 73
    , 84, 
    558 S.E.2d 463
    , 471 (2002) (“This Court has held that an
    improper inducement must promise relief from the criminal charge to which the
    confession relates, and not merely provide the defendant with a collateral
    advantage.”). In Gainey, the Court held that a statement to the defendant that “[i]f
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    STATE V. LYNCH
    Opinion of the Court
    he wanted to help himself that he could help himself by cooperating[,]” was not
    sufficient to render a confession involuntary in that case as the officer “never made
    any promises to defendant concerning the disposition of his case.” Id. at 84, 
    558 S.E.2d at 471
    .
    We note that an admonition by interrogators to “tell the truth” is typically
    acceptable, while an admonition to “confess guilt” tilts towards concluding a
    confession was involuntary. See, e.g., State v. Dishman, 
    249 N.C. 759
    , 763, 
    107 S.E.2d 750
    , 753 (1959) (Parker, J., concurring).
    One final point, our Supreme Court has instructed that hope induced by
    interrogators is less egregious when the statements are made in response to a
    solicitation by the accused, as the totality of the circumstances suggest that the
    accused is voluntarily bargaining with his interrogators in exchange for a confession
    rather than interrogators trying to induce a confession from a defendant predisposed
    not to confess. See State v. Smith, 
    328 N.C. 99
    , 118, 
    400 S.E.2d 712
    , 722 (1991).
    Though Smith involved some statements by the interrogator that seem to cross the
    line, the Court held that the resulting confession was voluntary, as the interrogator’s
    statements were in response to the defendant’s inquiry and the defendant had
    “significant experience” with being interrogated:
    Defendant had significant experience with the criminal
    justice system, and it appears that the officers did little if
    anything to instill fear into him.
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    STATE V. LYNCH
    Opinion of the Court
    This case is more like State v. Richardson, 
    316 N.C. 594
    ,
    
    342 S.E.2d 823
    . In Richardson defendant's confession
    came as a result of bargaining with police officers. Thus,
    the promises made did not render his confession
    involuntary because "[p]romises or other statements
    indicating to an accused that he will receive some benefit if
    he confesses do not render his confession involuntary when
    made in response to a solicitation by the accused." Id. at
    604, 
    342 S.E.2d at 831
    . In the present case, defendant
    testified that Sheriff Hardy asked where the "gun and stuff
    was at." Defendant asked why he should tell, and Sheriff
    Hardy responded that defendant could get the electric
    chair. Thus, according to defendant's own testimony, any
    benefits that Sheriff Hardy mentioned were in response to
    defendant's own inquiry.
    Id. at 118, 
    400 S.E.2d at 722
    .
    4. Based on the totality of the circumstances, we conclude that Defendant’s
    confession was involuntary, based on our close examination of our Supreme Court’s
    jurisprudence.
    We have thoroughly reviewed the 42-page transcript from the interrogation of
    Defendant and conclude that his confession was involuntary, and therefore should
    have been excluded. The transcript tends to show that the following occurred during
    the interrogation:
    Defendant was 18 years old at the time. A short time after the robbery and
    shooting, Defendant was apprehended and brought into custody. He arrived at the
    police station at around 6:30 in the evening, where he was handcuffed and placed
    alone in a room, separated from his alleged accomplice who was also apprehended.
    At some point he was read his Miranda rights and did not ask for an attorney. Over
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    Opinion of the Court
    six hours later, at 12:46 a.m., two interrogators entered his room, they uncuff him,
    and they proceeded to interrogate him. Defendant consented to the interrogation.
    He confessed to stealing some items from some homes. The investigators then
    focused on the events in the bar where the shooting occurred and the cash register
    was stolen. Defendant denied any involvement.
    Without any prompting from Defendant, investigators told Defendant that
    they already knew the truth and that Defendant needed to be honest. They accused
    Defendant of lying.
    Without any prompting from Defendant, they suggested that Defendant’s
    shooting of the bar owner was a mistake, to which Defendant continued to simply
    deny any involvement.
    Without any prompting from Defendant, they told Defendant that “we know
    who your accomplice is that went with you” and that “multiple times [you two]
    actually rode by [the bar] saying you want[ed] to hit that place[.]” Defendant simply
    denied it: “Y’all got the wrong information cause I didn’t . . . I have nothing to do with
    it.”
    Without any prompting from Defendant, investigators then appealed to
    Defendant’s belief in God to tell the truth:
    “How would God feel knowing what you know, what I know
    . . . . How would you think God feels knowing what we all
    know happened and you’re sitting there looking at me in
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    Opinion of the Court
    the face telling me that you didn’t have nothing to do with
    it?”
    Defendant, though, continued to repeatedly deny any involvement, saying he was at
    home.
    In response, and without any prompting from Defendant, they told him to be
    honest so that they could “help” him and so that “the judge” would see him as an
    honest man rather than as a gang member:
    “Well, the thing that I’m thinking about is knowing what
    we know and you’ve got to understand and know some of
    the things we [already] know. If you choose to stay on the
    path that you’re on right now which is just not saying
    anything except that you were home which we know is not
    true, then there is not going to be a lot of room for any kind
    of help. . . .
    The issue is, is you’re going to find yourself in court and
    they’re going to ask what did you do that says you are the
    truthful man that you claim to be [rather than simply a
    gang member]. . . .
    [I]f you stand in front of the judge and [deny involvement],
    . . . [h]e’s not going to have any choice by to judge you by
    what he sees and what we show him. I want you to take
    the opportunity to let him see that you are not defined by
    that gang. . . . I believe that there is that good upstanding
    God fearing person in you[.] . . . Let that be who the judge
    sees. Let that [honest man in you] be who he decides
    what’s going to happen.”
    Defendant, though, continued to deny involvement: “I don’t know what you want
    out of me, man. I can’t tell you nothing I don’t know.”
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    Opinion of the Court
    They told him that they would have the evidence to convict him anyway:
    “There’s another person involved. We’ll talk to that person. And that person will
    tell us. We got evidence that can lead back to you. It’s just a matter of time. We
    send it. They test it. They tell us. You said you already got a felony. Right?”
    Defendant simply responded that he does have a felony in his record.
    Then, without any prompting from Defendant, the interrogators suggested
    that if he was not honest, then he would lose a benefit before the judge:
    “Then those kind[s] of things that would benefit you for the
    judge to hear [i.e., his confession/remorse] will go away.”
    The interrogators again appealed to Defendant’s belief in God and to his
    grandmother’s belief in God to tell the truth, and told Defendant that it was up to
    him to get “[a]ll the benefit you can get.” They appealed to his relationship with his
    grandmother and to God, and then stated that it was up to him “to get it.” Defendant
    then asked them: “Want me to get what?” An interrogator answered: “All the benefit
    that you can get [by confessing],” and then described this benefit as being a life with
    a clean conscience and a right relationship with his grandmother.
    But without any further inquiry by Defendant, the other interrogator
    interjected “[w]e can let the district attorney, you know, here and show that you were
    very, being very cooperative on everything . . . . You’ve got to trust us to know that
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    we can help you.” But Defendant responded by continuing to deny any involvement
    in the shooting.
    Then an interrogator, unprompted, said, “Don’t miss this man, Please,” to
    which Defendant responded, “Miss what? What . . . am I missing?” Defendant said
    that he was not going to throw his life away by confessing to something he did not do.
    But the interrogators responded that they “[knew] what you did [and] who all was
    involved. We know exactly what happened.”
    Defendant, though, again denied any involvement. They responded by telling
    him that they did not believe him. They informed Defendant that “we got multiple
    statements from people who said [after the incident] that you made the statement
    yourself several times that you did not want to kill that guy [during the robbery].”
    But Defendant maintained his innocence: “No, I know . . . well I didn’t do that. . . .
    You can’t have evidence.” An interrogator responded, “Oh, I got evidence bo.”
    The interrogators described evidence that they had.           And without any
    prompting from Defendant, an interrogator promised that if Defendant confessed,
    they would ask the judge to “be lenient because he was truthful.”
    We pause to note that the trial court made a finding that Defendant asked the
    interrogators if he would be shown leniency if he confessed, suggesting that they were
    simply responding to his question. Specifically, the trial court found that Defendant
    stated, “So listen, can you just break something down for me clear. No sugar coating
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    Opinion of the Court
    . . . . So what, like, all right, so explain this opportunity that I’m missing right now.”
    However, Defendant did not make this statement until immediately after the
    interrogator made the unprompted promise that they would ask the judge to be
    lenient if he confessed.
    After some back and forth, Defendant stated that he would be locked up for the
    rest of his life, no matter what he did, because of the overwhelming evidence they
    said they had against him. They responded (appropriately) that his life, though,
    would be easier. He asked, “how [would that] make it easier for my life?” They
    responded, “One, the judge has the opportunity to make it easier on your sentence.”
    The interrogators stated that they could not promise what the judge would actually
    do. But then they described how they wanted the judge to view the Defendant as an
    honest, remorseful person and that they would vouch for him in court. They described
    that his honesty would be a “mitigating factor.”
    Defendant still asserted his belief that he would get life imprisonment. An
    interrogator responded by confessing that he could not promise anything but that
    “[w]hat I can promise you is that you stand a better chance of not getting life by being
    truthful and remorseful, all right.” Defendant said that he understood.
    It is at this point, about two hours into the interrogation, that Defendant
    offered to tell of his involvement but stated that he did not want to name his
    accomplice for fear of becoming a target if he was ever released. He described his
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    involvement. He said that he did not want to name his accomplice because his
    accomplice would find out, but that the investigators should be able to figure it out.
    However, they pressed him “to tell everything he [knew] to save his life.”          He
    proceeded to describe the robbery/shooting in great detail and how he and his
    accomplice disposed of evidence, but without ever naming his accomplice.
    The interrogators suggested to Defendant that he needed to confirm the
    identity of his accomplice for them to be able to say that he was fully cooperative. He
    eventually named his accomplice. The interrogation ended, and Defendant wrote a
    letter of apology showing his remorse to the victim’s family.
    In sum, it is obvious that Defendant was predisposed to deny involvement, as
    he denied any involvement dozens of times. It is obvious that Defendant believed
    that he would receive a life sentence whether he confessed or not. And it is obvious
    that, without first being prompted by a question from Defendant, the interrogators:
    introduced the idea into the interrogation that they had ample evidence against
    Defendant, that they knew he was lying, that the judge could be influenced to show
    him leniency in sentencing if he confessed his guilt, and that they would be willing to
    testify on his behalf. Accordingly, based on the totality of the circumstances, we must
    conclude that Defendant’s confession was involuntary. As such, the trial court erred
    in denying Defendant’s motion to suppress.
    B. Prejudice to Defendant
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    Opinion of the Court
    The error in allowing Defendant’s confession into evidence constitutes a
    constitutional error. We conclude that the State failed to meet its burden of showing
    that this constitutional error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, as is the
    State’s burden on appeal. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1443(b) (2016). There was
    sufficient evidence to convict Defendant aside from Defendant’s confession. This
    evidence consisted of testimony from Defendant’s accomplice and two others also
    involved in the robbery, as well as video surveillance footage showing the masked
    individuals perpetrating the crimes. It may be that a jury would have convicted
    Defendant anyway.
    There was, however, no physical evidence linking Defendant to the crime, and
    none of the witnesses at the bar could positively identify Defendant as one of the
    perpetrators.   Defendant’s confession was quite damning to his case, essentially
    confessing to fatally shooting the owner of the bar during a robbery. We cannot say
    beyond a reasonable doubt that all twelve jurors would have voted to convict
    Defendant if his confession was not offered into evidence. Alternatively, even under
    a prejudicial error review, we conclude Defendant is entitled to a new trial. It is
    certainly reasonably possible that at least one juror would have had reasonable doubt
    of Defendant’s guilt, but for the admission of his confession. Accordingly, we conclude
    that Defendant is entitled to a new trial.
    III. Conclusion
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    STATE V. LYNCH
    Opinion of the Court
    Based on our Supreme Court’s jurisprudence, we conclude that Defendant’s
    confession in this case was not voluntarily made. We have considered the totality of
    the circumstances surrounding Defendant’s confession and must conclude that the
    confession was induced by hope instilled by the interrogators. We further conclude
    that the admission of Defendant’s extrajudicial confession constituted reversible
    error.
    NEW TRIAL.
    Judges COLLINS and BROOK concur.
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