State v. Bryant ( 2014 )


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  • An unpublished opinion of the North Carolina Court of Appeals does not constitute
    controlling legal authority. Citation is disfavored, but may be permitted in accordance
    with the provisions of Rule 30(e)(3) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    NO. COA13-1384
    NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
    Filed:      16 September 2014
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    Brunswick County
    v.
    Nos. 08 CRS 52588, 3040, 11 CRS 1781
    CREIG WIAND BRYANT
    Appeal    by   defendant     from    judgments    entered     17   September
    2012 by Judge Thomas H. Lock in Brunswick County Superior Court.
    Heard in the Court of Appeals 8 May 2014.
    Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Special                   Deputy    Attorney
    General Jonathan P. Babb, for the State.
    Appellate Defender Staples Hughes, by Assistant Appellate
    Defender Paul M. Green, for Defendant.
    ERVIN, Judge.
    Defendant      Creig     Wiand      Bryant    appeals     from     judgments
    sentencing him to consecutive terms of imprisonment based upon
    his convictions for robbery with a             dangerous weapon, conspiracy
    to commit murder, and first degree murder.                On appeal, Defendant
    argues that the trial court erred by refusing to admit certain
    evidence on hearsay-related grounds and to allow Defendant to
    have access to certain documents.             In addition, Defendant argues
    that we should either grant the motion for appropriate relief
    -2-
    that he has filed on appeal or remand this case to the trial
    court for an evidentiary hearing.            After careful consideration
    of   Defendant’s   challenges    to   the    trial   court’s   judgments   in
    light of the record and the applicable law, we conclude that the
    trial court’s judgments should remain undisturbed.
    I. Factual Background
    A. Substantive Facts
    1. State’s Evidence
    On 30 May 2007, Delphia and Howard Bryant sold three acres
    of real property located at 1820 Stone Chimney Road in Supply to
    Defendant.    Subsequently, Defendant, who owned a rifle with a
    scope, developed financial problems, having borrowed money from
    a “loan shark” in order to purchase a tractor-trailer truck.
    After incurring that indebtedness, Defendant expressed an
    interest in selling the         Stone Chimney Road property to Adam
    Bradshaw in order to obtain money to repay the “loan sharks,”
    who were pressing him for payment.             According to the proposed
    arrangement   between   Defendant      and   Mr.   Bradshaw,   Mr.   Bradshaw
    would, after obtaining title, refrain from selling the property;
    allow Defendant to repay the purchase price, with interest; and
    return title to the property to Defendant at the completion of
    the repayment process.
    -3-
    Mr. Bradshaw worked as a real estate broker for Century 21
    and was known for driving a royal blue Mustang convertible.                          Mr.
    Bradshaw’s Mustang bore a license plate reading “C21King” and                          a
    magnetic sign to which his name, telephone number, and the words
    “Century         21”   had   been   affixed.           Prior    to   reaching    final
    agreement concerning the proposed transaction                        with Defendant,
    Mr. Bradshaw informed Robert Schomp, a co-worker and real estate
    broker, that Defendant was seeking to sell the Stone Chimney
    Road   property        quickly    and   that     it    could    be   purchased   “dirt
    cheap.”      Although Mr. Schomp was told that the purchase price
    for    the   Stone      Chimney     Road      property    would      be   $29,000,    he
    declined to become involved in the proposed transaction out of
    “great concern” stemming from the fact that the purchase price
    was well below market value.
    On    5    December    2007,     Mr.    Bradshaw        purchased   the   Stone
    Chimney Road property from Defendant.                   H. Mac Tyson, II, who had
    an office across from Mr. Bradshaw’s, handled the transaction
    for Defendant and Mr. Bradshaw.                       According to the agreement
    between the parties, Defendant was to receive a sales price of
    $22,500 and use the proceeds from the sale of the Stone Chimney
    Road property to provide a down payment in connection with the
    purchase of a separate tract of land.                    In addition, the parties
    agreed that Defendant had the right to repurchase the property
    -4-
    from       Mr.     Bradshaw       for     $17,500          if   the     related      option    was
    exercised        prior     to     midnight      on     5    June      2008.     The    agreement
    between the parties specifically stated that the sales price was
    “well below [the] tax value” given Defendant’s need to make a
    “quick cash sale.”
    After       purchasing         the      Stone       Chimney      Road    property,      Mr.
    Bradshaw         attempted       to     sell    it.         However,      Mr.     Bradshaw     had
    trouble selling the property.                        Mr. Bradshaw’s efforts to sell
    the property were hampered by a number of factors, including the
    repeated theft of the “for sale” signs posted on the property.
    Although Defendant was initially pleased by his arrangement with
    Mr.    Bradshaw,          he    became      dissatisfied         upon    learning      that    Mr.
    Bradshaw had put the property on the market since he had agreed
    to pay Mr. Bradshaw $1,500 bi-monthly as part of his effort to
    repurchase the property.
    Defendant’s             entire    family       was       upset    by    the    fact    that
    Defendant had lost ownership of the property.1                                Defendant was so
    upset       that     he    began        stalking       Mr.      Bradshaw       and    told    Lora
    Moultrie, his girlfriend, that he was “going to kill the MF” and
    enlisted her help to do so.                           As part of that process, Ms.
    1
    Howard and Delphia Bryant recorded a statement in the
    office of the Brunswick County Register of Deeds on 31 January
    2008, stating that the Stone Chimney Road property was not to be
    sold but rather was to be transferred through the family down
    the generations.
    -5-
    Moultrie persuaded Robert Stanley to notarize a quitclaim deed
    transferring the property from Mr. Bradshaw to Defendant, an act
    that was effectuated without either party being present.                  This
    deed was recorded on 1 February 2008.
    Ms.    Moultrie   called    Mr.    Bradshaw    on   16    April   2008    to
    discuss selling an abandoned          green   home owned by her sister
    located on Watts Road.         Although Ms. Moultrie planned to meet
    with Mr. Bradshaw on 24 April 2008 for the purpose of viewing
    the property, Mr. Bradshaw canceled their appointment due to
    illness.    Subsequently,      Ms.    Moultrie    called     Mr.   Bradshaw   at
    approximately 4:00 p.m. on 26 April 2008 for the purpose of
    arranging a meeting with Mr. Bradshaw at the Watts Road home.
    However, Ms. Moultrie did not plan to attend this meeting given
    that it had been arranged to get Mr. Bradshaw to come to the
    Watts Road home so that Defendant could kill him.
    On 26 April 2008, Defendant drove a white pickup truck to
    the residence of Christy Hughes, where he picked Ms. Hughes up.
    At that time, Defendant told Ms. Hughes that he needed to go
    somewhere to meet a friend.            After Defendant and Ms. Hughes
    arrived at the Watts Road property, Defendant gave Ms. Hughes
    the keys to his truck and his telephone, told her to leave the
    area, and informed her that he would notify her when it was time
    for her to return and pick him up.               Before leaving the Watts
    -6-
    Road property, Ms. Hughes overheard Defendant speaking to Ms.
    Moultrie on the phone for the purpose of asking when “he” was
    going to show up.
    Subsequently,      Defendant    called      Ms.    Moultrie       to     tell    her
    that Mr. Bradshaw had not arrived.               As a result, Ms. Moultrie
    called   Mr.   Bradshaw   to    find    out    why    he   had    not      kept      the
    scheduled appointment.         During that conversation, Mr. Bradshaw
    stated that, while he was going to be a little late, he still
    intended to come to the Watts Road property.                   In light of that
    fact, Ms. Moultrie called Defendant at 4:59 p.m. for the purpose
    of informing him that Mr. Bradshaw was on his way.
    As he traveled to Watts Road, Mr. Bradshaw spoke with Mr.
    Schomp, who had called him at 5:11 p.m. after noticing that Mr.
    Bradshaw   was    driving      on   Four      Mile     Road.          During        that
    conversation,    Mr.   Bradshaw     told      Mr.    Schomp    that     he    had    an
    appointment on Watts Road.          A number of other individuals saw
    Mr. Bradshaw signaling for a turn from Four Mile Road onto Watts
    Road or having parked his vehicle close to the Moultrie home on
    Watts Road.
    At least two hours after Ms. Hughes left him at the Watts
    Road property, Defendant called Ms. Hughes and asked her to pick
    him from a different location.               After being retrieved by Ms.
    Hughes, Defendant returned home to Ms. Moultrie, where he told
    -7-
    her that he had killed Mr. Bradshaw.         According to Defendant, he
    went to the home of a man that Ms. Moutrie did not know named
    Chuck, could not get a clean view of Mr. Bradshaw through the
    scope of his rifle given that Mr. Bradshaw would not stay still,
    and that Chuck had shot Mr. Bradshaw in the back of the head.
    At that point, Defendant told Ms. Moultrie that he and Chuck had
    dragged Mr. Bradshaw’s body to the end of the road and covered
    it with leaves and straw.
    Subsequently, Defendant and Ms. Moultrie went to the Watts
    Road property, where Ms. Moultrie observed Defendant retrieving
    a gun bag from a wooded area.          After their visit to the Watts
    Road area, Defendant and Ms. Moultrie went to South Carolina,
    where they purchased gas using a credit card that belonged to
    the Bradshaw family.
    Mr.   Bradshaw    and   his    family   were   supposed   to   host   his
    father-in-law and his family for dinner at around 4:45 p.m. on
    26 April 2008.      Although everyone else had finished dinner by
    approximately 7:00 p.m., Mr. Bradshaw’s wife became concerned
    because Mr. Bradshaw had failed to come to the planned dinner,
    refrained from answering her telephone calls, and did not come
    home at all that night.         As a result of the fact that no one had
    heard   anything   from   Mr.    Bradshaw   by   the   following   day,   his
    family contacted the police and filed a missing person’s report.
    -8-
    On 29 April 2008, investigating officers went to Watts Road
    after determining that Mr. Bradshaw had been in that area on the
    last occasion when anyone had seen him.             As the investigating
    officers drove down Watts Road, they smelled a pungent odor.
    After noticing a pile of debris that appeared to be able to
    contain a body, the investigating officers saw a shoe in front
    of the debris pile and feet protruding from the rear.                       Upon
    further examination of the debris pile, investigating officers
    found Mr. Bradshaw’s body.           A subsequent autopsy established
    that Mr. Bradshaw died from a gunshot wound to the back of his
    head that was probably inflicted by a high-powered rifle bullet.
    On 1 May 2008, investigating officers went to the abandoned
    home on Watts Road, where they found a pool of blood, what
    appeared to be fragments of a human skull, and Defendant’s DNA
    on hairs recovered from a mattress next to a broken window.                 Ms.
    Moultrie eventually led the investigating officers to a location
    at which they discovered Mr. Bradshaw’s car.
    On 8 May 2008, Athakus Bryant brought a slug gun with a
    mounted   scope   to    the   investigating   officers.         According    to
    Athakus   Bryant,      Defendant   had   brought   the   slug    gun   to   his
    residence at or about the time that Mr. Bradshaw was murdered
    with a request that Athakus Bryant hold the slug gun for a
    -9-
    period of time.          A few days later, Defendant returned and showed
    Athakus Bryant a rifle with a scope.
    2. Defense Evidence
    Mr. Bradshaw had been seen in Longwood, an area that was
    known    to     have     drug-related          problems.            Mr.    Bradshaw    smoked
    cocaine       with    and     purchased        cocaine    from       Patrick    Taylor      and
    Tamara    Kelly.         On      the    Friday    before      his     disappearance,        Mr.
    Bradshaw      purchased          cocaine    and      headed    toward       Tamara    Kelly’s
    residence.           A witness saw Mr. Taylor and Ms. Kelly driving a
    blue    Mustang        after      Mr.    Bradshaw’s       disappearance        had     become
    public knowledge.              As a result of the fact that numerous blue
    Mustangs had been seen in the area, the witness could do no more
    than    say    that     he     thought,     but      could    not     confirm,       that   the
    vehicle in which Mr. Taylor and Ms. Kelly were driving after Mr.
    Bradshaw’s disappearance had signage referencing Century 21 on
    the front bumper.            A second witness saw Mr. Taylor and Ms. Kelly
    in Mr. Bradshaw’s Mustang on either the Sunday or the Monday
    after Mr. Bradshaw’s disappearance and indicated that it was not
    unusual    to    see     different         people     driving       Mr.    Bradshaw’s       car.
    Another witness testified that, at approximately 8:30 p.m. on
    the Saturday prior to the date upon which Mr. Bradshaw’s body
    was     discovered,         he    saw    Mr.     Taylor       and    Ms.    Kelly     in    Mr.
    Bradshaw’s vehicle.               Finally, after the date of Mr. Bradshaw’s
    -10-
    disappearance        and    before     the    date     upon   which   news     coverage
    concerning Mr. Bradshaw’s death began to appear, a member of the
    Crips gang named Richard Antwan Brown appeared at his cousin’s
    residence.          Although Mr. Brown usually had a neat and clean
    appearance and dressed well, he was excited, in a disheveled
    condition, had blood on his left sock, and emitted a foul odor.
    B. Procedural Facts
    On 1 May 2008, a warrant for arrest charging Defendant with
    murder was issued.            On 2 June 2008, the Brunswick County grand
    jury returned bills of indictment charging Defendant with first
    degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder.                           On 18 April
    2011,    the    Brunswick      County        grand    jury    returned    a    bill   of
    indictment      charging      Defendant       with     robbery    with   a    dangerous
    weapon.    The charges against Defendant came on for trial at the
    20 August 2012 criminal session of the Brunswick County Superior
    Court.         On   17     September    2012,        the   jury   returned     verdicts
    convicting      Defendant      as    charged.         At   the    conclusion    of    the
    ensuing sentencing hearing, the trial court entered judgments
    sentencing Defendant to a term of life imprisonment without the
    possibility of parole based upon his conviction for first degree
    murder, to a consecutive term of 180 to 225 months imprisonment
    based upon his conviction for conspiracy to commit murder, and
    to a consecutive term of 72 to 96 months imprisonment based upon
    -11-
    his conviction for robbery with a firearm.      Defendant noted an
    appeal to this Court from the trial court’s judgments.
    II. Legal Analysis
    A. Evidentiary Issues
    1. Standard of Review
    The admissibility of alleged hearsay evidence is a question
    of law reviewable using a de novo standard of review.     State v.
    McLean, 
    205 N.C. App. 247
    , 249, 
    695 S.E.2d 813
    , 815 (2010).
    Under a de novo standard of review, this Court “considers the
    matter anew and freely substitutes its own judgment” for that of
    the trial court.    State v. Williams, 
    362 N.C. 628
    , 632-33, 
    669 S.E.2d 290
    , 294 (2008).     “A defendant is prejudiced by errors
    relating to rights arising other than under the Constitution of
    the United States when there is a reasonable possibility that,
    had the error in question not been committed, a different result
    would have been reached at the trial out of which the appeal
    arises.”   N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1443(a).2
    2. Specific Evidentiary Issues
    a. Mr. Brown’s Question
    2
    Although Defendant argues that the challenged evidentiary
    rulings violated his federal and state constitutional rights,
    that set of contentions is not properly before us given that
    Defendant failed to advance these constitutional arguments
    before the trial court. State v. Hunter, 
    305 N.C. 106
    , 112, 
    286 S.E.2d 535
    , 539 (1982) (stating that “a constitutional question
    which is not raised and passed upon in the trial court will not
    ordinarily be considered on appeal”).
    -12-
    In   his   first    challenge        to     the    trial       court’s     judgments,
    Defendant      contends     that     the   trial        court    erred      by    excluding
    certain     testimony     on     hearsay        grounds.             More   specifically,
    Defendant argues that the trial court should have allowed the
    admission of evidence to the effect that Ms. Moultrie’s cousin,
    Mr. Brown, had asked his cousin, Shamus Bland, if he had heard
    anything about a murder.             Defendant is not entitled to relief on
    the basis of this contention.
    According to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 801(c), hearsay
    consists of “a statement, other than one made by the declarant
    while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to
    prove the truth of the matter asserted.”                             A “statement,” for
    hearsay-related      purposes,        is   defined       as     an    “oral      or   written
    assertion.”      N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 801(a).                       “Out-of-court
    statements offered for purposes other than to prove the truth of
    the   matter     asserted      are   not    considered          hearsay.”         State    v.
    Golphin, 
    352 N.C. 364
    , 440, 
    533 S.E.2d 168
    , 219 (2000) (citation
    omitted), cert denied, 
    532 U.S. 931
    , 
    121 S. Ct. 1379
    , 
    149 L. Ed. 2d
    305 (2001).
    Although the State argues that, while the excluded comment
    took “the form of a question,” it was, in actuality, “an implied
    assertion,” the challenged evidence was nothing more or less
    than an inquiry concerning the extent to which the other party
    -13-
    to a conversation had heard about a murder.                    Instead of using
    this statement for the truth of the matter asserted, Defendant
    sought the admission of Mr. Brown’s question for the purpose of
    showing that it had been made and arguing that the posing of the
    question implied that Mr. Brown had had some involvement in the
    commission     of   Mr.    Bradshaw’s      murder.    However,      although      the
    exclusion of the challenged evidence was error, we are unable to
    see   that    “there     is   a    reasonable    possibility    that    .    .    .    a
    different result would have been reached at the trial,” N.C.
    Gen. Stat. § 15A-1443(a), in the event that the trial court had
    allowed the admission of the evidence in question.                     Simply put,
    the excluded evidence consisted of a vague comment that did not
    identify     the    murder    in    question,    contained     no   admission         of
    culpability, and provided no indication that Defendant was not
    involved in the death of Mr. Bradshaw.                As a result, given the
    limited      probative     value     of   the    excluded    evidence       and   the
    strength of the State’s case against Defendant, we conclude that
    the trial court’s decision to exclude the challenged evidence,
    while erroneous, did not prejudice Defendant’s chances for a
    more favorable outcome at trial.
    b. Eric Bryant’s Statements
    Secondly, Defendant argues that the trial court erred by
    excluding evidence concerning statements made by his brother,
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    Eric    Bryant,         in   which,     according       to    Defendant,      Eric    Bryant
    implicated himself in Mr. Bradshaw’s murder.                          More specifically,
    Defendant contends that the trial court should have allowed him
    to elicit evidence during his cross-examination of Special Agent
    Kelly    Oaks      of     the    State    Bureau     of      Investigation     concerning
    statements that Ms. Moultrie told Special Agent Oaks that Eric
    Bryant made to her.              Defendant’s argument lacks merit.
    At       trial,    Defendant      sought      to      introduce     notes     made   by
    Special Agent Oaks concerning statements made by Ms. Moultrie
    during      a    polygraph       examination.         During        that   interview,       Ms.
    Moultrie stated that Eric Bryant had said that he had “handled
    [his] business” and had to “get the f*** out of here,” that Eric
    Bryant had “overheard me talking to my sister about meeting
    [Mr.] Bradshaw over at her house,” and that Mr. Bradshaw had
    “screwed [the] family out of money [and] he was mad about it.”
    According to Defendant, the trial court should have allowed the
    admission         of     these     statements      on       the     grounds   that     these
    statements         were         inconsistent       with       Ms.     Moultrie’s       trial
    testimony; within the confines of the hearsay exceptions for
    excited         utterances,       statement     of      a    then-existing     mental        or
    emotional        condition,       and    statements         against    interest;      or    not
    hearsay at all.
    -15-
    The       evidence       that    Defendant       sought   to    elicit   concerning
    Eric Bryant’s statements consisted of Ms. Moultrie’s statements
    to Special Agent Oaks concerning statements that Eric Bryant
    made       to    her.      In    view      of   Defendant’s      contention     that    these
    statements            tended    to     exculpate    Defendant      and    inculpate      Eric
    Bryant, it is clear that Defendant sought to use most, if not
    all, of Eric Bryant’s statements for the truth of the matter
    asserted.             As a result, in order to obtain the admission of
    these statements, Defendant was required to show that “each part
    of   the        combined       statements       conforms    to    an   exception    to    the
    hearsay rule.”            N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 805.
    Aside from the fact that Defendant has not, in his brief,
    explained how the statements that Ms. Moultrie made to Special
    Agent Oaks contradicted Ms. Moultrie’s trial testimony,3 we are
    not, for the most part, satisfied that the statements attributed
    to   Eric        Bryant    either       failed     to   constitute       hearsay   or    fell
    within          the   scope     of   any    applicable     hearsay       exception.       For
    example, Defendant has not explained how any portion of Eric
    Bryant’s statements, as recounted by Ms. Moultrie, constituted
    “[a] statement describing or explaining an event or condition
    3
    In view of Defendant’s admission that Ms. Moultrie did not
    testify concerning the extent to which Eric Bryant overheard her
    conversation with her sister about meeting Mr. Bradshaw in her
    trial testimony, we are unable to see how the portion of Ms.
    Moultrie’s testimony concerning that subject would be relevant
    for impeachment-related purposes.
    -16-
    made while the declarant was perceiving the event or condition,
    or   immediately        thereafter.”            N.C.    Gen.    Stat.    §     8C-1,   Rule
    803(1).       Similarly, Defendant has                 failed to explain how any
    portion of Eric Bryant’s statements “relat[ed] to a startling
    event or condition made while the declarant was under the stress
    of excitement caused by the event or condition.”                                N.C. Gen.
    Stat.    §    8C-1,    Rule      803(2).        Finally,       while    “[a]    statement
    tending to expose the declarant to criminal liability is . . .
    admissible in a criminal case [if] corroborating circumstances
    clearly      indicate      the    trustworthiness        of    the     statement,”     N.C.
    Gen.    Stat.   §     8C-1,      Rule   804(b)(3),       Defendant       has    failed    to
    demonstrate      the       existence       of     the     required       “corroborating
    circumstances.”         See, e.g., State v. Pickens, 
    346 N.C. 628
    , 642,
    
    488 S.E.2d 162
    , 169-70 (1997).                  As a result, the trial court did
    not err by excluding evidence concerning the statements that
    Eric Bryant made to Ms. Moultrie.
    c. Ms. Moultrie’s Suppression Motion
    Thirdly, Defendant contends that the trial court erred by
    failing to allow the admission of evidence concerning statements
    contained in affidavits submitted in support of Ms. Moultrie’s
    motion to suppress statements made during an interview conducted
    by   investigating         officers     for     the    purpose    of    impeaching       her
    testimony.          More    specifically,         Defendant      contends       that     the
    -17-
    information contained in these affidavits, which were executed
    by   Ms.      Moultrie’s      defense       counsel,        was    admissible       for    the
    purpose of challenging the credibility of her trial testimony,
    which    was      consistent        with    the       statements     made       during    this
    interview.        We do not find Defendant’s contention persuasive.
    After      being     charged      with      involvement      in    Mr.     Bradshaw’s
    murder,       Ms.       Moultrie    moved       to     suppress     her     statement       to
    investigating officers on the grounds that her statement had
    resulted         from     unlawful       police       coercion.           Ms.     Moultrie’s
    suppression          motions,      which       were     accompanied        by     affidavits
    executed by her trial counsel on the basis of information and
    belief,       asserted       that     Ms.       Moultrie      had    been        threatened,
    intimidated,         subjected      to     sleep      deprivation,       deprived    of    the
    ability to communicate with family members, and told that she
    would go to jail in the event that she did not make a statement.
    After the State introduced evidence concerning the statements
    that    Ms.      Moultrie    made     during         this   interview     at    Defendant’s
    trial      for      corroborative          purposes,        Defendant       unsuccessfully
    sought     to       cross-examine        Ms.     Moultrie      about      the     statements
    concerning        the     circumstances         surrounding        the    making     of    her
    original      statement       contained         in    her   suppression         motions    and
    supporting affidavits.               In his brief, Defendant contends that,
    since these statements were made in documents signed and filed
    -18-
    by her authorized agents, he was entitled to use them for the
    purpose of attacking the credibility of her trial testimony.
    A careful review of the appellate decisions relating to
    this    issue    establishes      that    the    trial    court’s   ruling      was
    consistent with the Supreme Court’s decision in State v. Gell,
    
    351 N.C. 192
    , 
    524 S.E.2d 332
    , cert. denied, 
    531 U.S. 867
    , 121 S.
    Ct. 163, 
    148 L. Ed. 2d 110
    (2000).                  In Gell, the defendant
    sought to question two witnesses concerning allegations made in
    connection with the litigation of suppression motions in which
    the witnesses alleged that certain inculpatory statements that
    they    had   previously   made    to     investigating     officers     had    been
    obtained by coercion.          
    Id. at 208,
    524 S.E.2d at 343.               In
    rejecting     this   contention,     the    Supreme      Court   held   that    the
    “motions to suppress and supporting affidavits were inadmissible
    hearsay,” that the “trial court correctly prohibited defendant
    from    questioning     [the      witnesses]       regarding      the    specific
    documents filed on their behalf in their individual cases,” and
    that “defendant was not prevented from impeaching the witnesses
    by     questioning    them     about       the     voluntariness        of     their
    statements.”     
    Id. at 209,
    524 S.E.2d at 343.             Although Defendant
    attempts to distinguish Gell on the basis of a contention that
    the    Court’s   holding   conflicted       with   decisions     made    in    prior
    cases, we believe that the decisions upon which Defendant relies
    -19-
    are factually distinguishable from Gell.               In addition, even if a
    conflict of the type that Defendant posits actually exists, we
    are bound by the most recent authority from the Supreme Court
    relevant   to    any    particular       issue,   which    Defendant,       in    this
    instance, appears to concede to be Gell.               State v. Whitaker, 
    201 N.C. App. 190
    , 201-02, 
    689 S.E.2d 395
    , 402 (2009) (holding that
    “we do not have authority to overrule decisions of the Supreme
    Court”), aff’d, 
    364 N.C. 404
    , 
    700 S.E.2d 215
    (2010).                              As a
    result, the trial court did not err by precluding Defendant from
    cross-examining        Ms.    Moultrie    concerning      the    contents    of    the
    suppression motion and supporting affidavits that were signed
    and filed by her trial counsel.
    B. In Camera Review
    Next,    Defendant      has   requested     that      this   Court     review
    certain documents that the trial court declined, after an in
    camera review, to order be provided to Defendant for the purpose
    of ascertaining if they contained exculpatory information that
    should have been disclosed to Defendant prior to trial.                             We
    conduct such reviews on a de novo basis, State v. Tadeja, 191
    N.C.   App.    439,    449,    
    664 S.E.2d 402
    ,   410      (2008),   with     our
    practice being to “examine the sealed records to determine if
    they contain information that is ‘both favorable to the accused
    and material [to either] his guilt or punishment.’”                         State v.
    -20-
    McGill, 
    141 N.C. App. 98
    , 101-02, 
    539 S.E.2d 351
    , 355 (2000)
    (alteration in original) (quoting Pennsylvania v. Ritchie, 
    480 U.S. 39
    , 57, 
    107 S. Ct. 989
    , 1001, 
    94 L. Ed. 2d 40
    , 57 (1987)).
    After carefully reviewing the sealed information, we conclude
    that the trial court did not err by refusing to order that any
    of the information contained in the documents in question be
    disclosed to Defendant prior to trial.
    C. Motion for Appropriate Relief
    On 25 March 2014, Defendant filed a motion for appropriate
    relief     with    this       Court     pursuant      to    N.C.    Gen.     Stat.        §   15A-
    1418(a).          In    his     motion,    Defendant         alleges      that      the       State
    unlawfully failed to inform him of the existence of evidence
    that he believes to have been in its possession at the time of
    or   prior    to       trial     and    requests       that    we    either        vacate       his
    convictions        or    remand     this       case   to    the     trial    court        for    an
    evidentiary        hearing.            After     carefully        reviewing        Defendant’s
    motion and the attached supporting materials, we conclude that
    Defendant’s motion for appropriate relief should be denied.
    As    we    have     already       noted,       Defendant      presented       evidence
    tending      to    suggest        that     individuals         other        than    Defendant
    murdered     Mr.        Bradshaw.          For    example,           Defendant       elicited
    evidence     tending       to    show     that    Mr.      Brown    was   seen      after       Mr.
    Bradshaw’s death in a disheveled condition with blood on one of
    -21-
    his socks.           Similarly, Defendant elicited evidence tending to
    show that Mr. Taylor and Ms. Kelly were seen in possession of
    Mr. Bradshaw’s automobile on a number of occasions after the
    murder.          In     response      to     this        second       defense      contention,
    investigating officers interviewed Mr. Taylor, who led them to a
    second       blue     Mustang      that     was    similar       to    the     one    that    Mr.
    Bradshaw had owned.                 More specifically, Mr. Bradshaw owned a
    2007       Mustang     with    a    black    convertible          top    while       the    other
    vehicle was a 2008 Mustang with a beige convertible top.4
    In    rebuttal,        Mr.    Taylor       testified       that,      despite       having
    lived in Longwood for his entire life, he had never seen Mr.
    Bradshaw or Mr. Bradshaw’s vehicle.                         According to Mr. Taylor,
    Aleisha Faircloth owned the blue Mustang with a cream-colored
    top.       Mr. Taylor had been in the back of Ms. Faircloth’s Mustang
    while       it   had    been    parked       in    his     driveway       on    one    or    more
    occasions.
    Subsequently,           Defendant          sought     to       determine       how    the
    investigating          officers      could    have       known    that       Ms.   Faircloth’s
    vehicle was a 2008, rather than a 2007, model.                            As the result of
    a title and vehicle history information search performed by a
    defense investigator, Defendant located documentation tending to
    suggest      that      the    certificate         of   origin     associated          with   Ms.
    4
    Photographs of the 2008 blue Mustang were admitted into
    evidence as State’s Exhibit Nos. 193 and 194.
    -22-
    Faircloth’s vehicle had been issued in Dearborn, Michigan, on 25
    April 2008; that the vehicle had been assigned to a dealership
    in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, at that time; that the vehicle had
    been purchased by a rental car dealership in Charlotte on 29
    April 2008; that the vehicle had been transferred to Ford Motor
    Credit         on    10    December    2008;         that    the     vehicle    had    been
    transferred to Quality Motor in Whiteville on 23 December 2008;
    and that the vehicle was purchased by a couple residing in Ash
    on   23    December         2008.      Based    upon        this    evidence,    Defendant
    contends that, since Ms. Faircloth’s Mustang could not have been
    in   Brunswick            County    during     the    time     in    which     the    murder
    occurred, the State was or should have been aware of this fact;
    and that he is entitled to relief from his convictions based
    upon the State’s failure to disclose this evidence.
    1. Statutory Grounds for Relief
    As an initial matter, Defendant directs our attention to
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-903(a)(1), which requires the State, upon
    request, to “make available to the defendant the complete files
    of   all       law   enforcement      agencies,       investigatory       agencies,       and
    prosecutors’ offices involved in the investigation of the crimes
    committed or the prosecution of the defendant,” and N.C. Gen.
    Stat.      §    15A-907,      which    makes     this       disclosure       obligation    a
    continuing one.              However, statutory violations such as those
    -23-
    alleged to have occurred in this instance are not cognizable in
    a motion for appropriate relief made more than ten days after
    the entry of judgment.          N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1415(b).                      As a
    result, given that Defendant’s motion for appropriate relief was
    filed more than ten days after the entry of judgment, he is not
    entitled to relief from his convictions on the basis of alleged
    violations of N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 15A-903(a)(1) and 15A-907.
    2. Presentation of False Evidence
    Secondly,     Defendant       contends     that     the    State’s       conduct
    amounted to the knowing presentation of misleading testimony in
    violation of his federal and state constitutional right to due
    process.   Assuming, without deciding, that the non-disclosure of
    the   evidence    described    in    Defendant’s        motion    for    appropriate
    relief constituted the knowing use of false evidence, we do not
    believe    that    Defendant        is    entitled      to      relief    from       his
    convictions on the basis of this contention.
    In Napue v. Illinois, 
    360 U.S. 264
    , 265, 
    79 S. Ct. 1173
    ,
    1175, 
    3 L. Ed. 2d 1217
    , 1219 (1959), the United States Supreme
    Court   addressed    the   issue         of   whether    “the     failure      of    the
    prosecutor to correct the testimony of the witness which he knew
    to be false denied petitioner due process of law in violation of
    the   Fourteenth    Amendment       to    the   Constitution       of    the   United
    States” and held that         “a conviction          obtained through use of
    -24-
    false     evidence,      known     to     be    such       by    representatives          of   the
    State, must fall under the Fourteenth Amendment” regardless of
    whether the false evidence which the State knowingly presented
    was   relevant      to   the      issue    of    the       defendant’s         guilt    or     “the
    credibility of the witness.”                   
    Id. at 269,
    79 S. Ct. at 
    1177, 3 L. Ed. 2d at 1221
    .                Similarly, this Court has held that the
    “[k]nowing use by the prosecution of materially false testimony
    violates a defendant’s right to a fair trial.”5                               State v. Morgan,
    
    60 N.C. App. 614
    , 622, 
    299 S.E.2d 823
    , 828 (1983).
    “The    United        States      Supreme           Court       has     established      the
    standard of materiality under which the knowing use of perjured
    testimony requires a conviction to be set aside if there is any
    reasonable     likelihood          that        the    false       testimony          could     have
    affected the judgment of the jury.”                             State v. Call, 
    349 N.C. 382
    , 405, 
    508 S.E.2d 496
    , 511 (1998) (quotation marks omitted)
    (quoting State v. Sanders, 
    327 N.C. 319
    , 336, 
    395 S.E.2d 412
    ,
    424 (1990)).
    In    attempting       to    persuade          us    that       the     allegedly      false
    evidence     that     the      State      presented          at       trial    was     material,
    Defendant     argues        that     the       evidence          in    question        “deprived
    5
    In his motion for appropriate relief, Defendant does not
    appear to allege that the State made knowing use of false
    evidence.    Instead, Defendant simply argues that he was
    “deprived of his right to due process of law by the false
    impression created at his trial.” 
    Morgan, 60 N.C. App. at 623
    ,
    299 S.E.2d at 829.
    -25-
    [Defendant] of a strong jury argument that its witnesses saw
    exactly     what    they    believed      they     had    seen    –    Adam    Bradshaw’s
    Mustang in Longwood, after the murder, under the control of
    persons unrelated to the defendant.”                    We do not find Defendant’s
    argument persuasive for a number of reasons.
    As an initial matter, the State’s case against Defendant
    was    a   strong    one.       Among     other       things,    the    State       elicited
    evidence        tending    to   show    that     Defendant,      unlike       either      Mr.
    Taylor or Mr. Brown, had a strong motive for wanting to kill Mr.
    Bradshaw.         In addition, Ms. Moultrie testified that Defendant
    had made statements about wanting to kill Mr. Bradshaw, had had
    her arrange a meeting between himself and Mr. Bradshaw on the
    evening on which Mr. Bradshaw was killed, and claimed to have
    been   involved      in    killing     Mr.     Bradshaw    after       the    murder.       A
    number     of    witnesses      without      any   apparent      motive       to    testify
    falsely     stated    that      Defendant       had    been     dropped       off    at   the
    location at which the meeting with Mr. Bradshaw was supposed to
    occur, that Mr. Bradshaw had an appointment at the same time and
    location specified in Ms. Moultrie’s testimony, and that Mr.
    Bradshaw went to the location at which the meeting was scheduled
    to occur at the time at which Defendant was shown to have been
    present.         In addition, the record evidence reflects that Mr.
    Bradshaw was killed at the location at which he was supposed to
    -26-
    meet Defendant, that Defendant’s DNA was present in the vicinity
    of   the   location    at    which    Mr.   Bradshaw   was    killed,    that   Mr.
    Bradshaw’s body was disposed of in the manner described in his
    admission to Ms. Moultrie, and that Defendant owned a weapon
    that   was   capable    of    inflicting       the   wounds   that    caused    Mr.
    Bradshaw’s    death.         As   a   result,    the   State’s    case    against
    Defendant was a strong one.
    In addition, the fact that Mr. Taylor was seen driving Mr.
    Bradshaw’s vehicle after the murder does not tend to exculpate
    Defendant.    The record is devoid of any evidence tending to show
    how Mr. Taylor might have obtained possession of Mr. Bradshaw’s
    car.    In addition, the record contains evidence that Defendant
    might not have been alone at the time that Mr. Bradshaw was
    murdered.     As a result, the record does not establish that any
    involvement in Mr. Bradshaw’s murder that Mr. Taylor might have
    had was exclusive of Defendant’s involvement in the commission
    of that crime.
    Finally, Mr. Taylor did not indicate a specific time in
    which he rode in Ms. Faircloth’s Mustang.               Although the evidence
    offered on Defendant’s behalf tended to show that Mr. Taylor was
    seen riding in Mr. Bradshaw’s vehicle after the date upon which
    the murder occurred, the same cannot be said of Mr. Taylor’s
    claim to have ridden in Ms. Faircloth’s Mustang.                     As a result,
    -27-
    any testimony by Mr. Taylor to the effect that he rode in Ms.
    Faircloth’s vehicle did little to rebut Defendant’s claim that
    he had been seen in Mr. Bradshaw’s vehicle after his death.                    As
    a result, Mr. Taylor’s rebuttal testimony was not as conclusive
    as Defendant tends to suggest.
    As a general proposition, reviewing courts have found the
    materiality necessary to support an award of relief in instances
    in which the defendant’s conviction was based upon the testimony
    of the witness who provided the knowingly false evidence.                     See
    Napue, 
    360 U.S. 264
    , 
    79 S. Ct. 1173
    , 
    3 L. Ed. 2d 1217
    ; Mooney v.
    Holohan, 
    294 U.S. 103
    , 
    55 S. Ct. 340
    , 
    79 L. Ed. 791
    (1935);
    Giglio v. United States, 
    405 U.S. 150
    , 
    92 S. Ct. 763
    , 
    31 L. Ed. 2d
    104 (1972); Morgan, 
    60 N.C. App. 614
    , 
    299 S.E.2d 823
    .                       In
    each of      those cases, the State’s case against the defendant
    hinged on the testimony of a witness whose credibility could not
    be   fully    evaluated    given    the    prosecution’s    failure     to   fully
    disclose reasons for questioning the witness’ veracity.                  In this
    case, on the other hand, the undisclosed evidence related to the
    credibility of a witness whose testimony did not have such a
    direct bearing on the issue of Defendant’s guilt.                As a result,
    given   that    we   are   unable    to    determine   that    “there    is   any
    reasonable     likelihood    that    the    [purportedly]     false   testimony
    could have affected the judgment of the jury,” Call, 349 N.C. at
    -28-
    
    405, 508 S.E.2d at 511
    , we conclude that the Napue claim set out
    in Defendant’s motion for appropriate relief lacks merit.
    3. Brady Claim
    Finally, Defendant asserts that the State violated his due
    process rights by failing to disclose the existence of evidence
    tending   to   show   that   Ms.   Faircloth’s   car   was   not    in   North
    Carolina at the time of Mr. Bradshaw’s murder.               Once again, we
    conclude that Defendant is not entitled to relief based on this
    claim.
    As the Supreme Court held in Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    , 87, 
    83 S. Ct. 1194
    , 1196-97, 
    10 L. Ed. 2d 215
    , 218 (1963),
    “the suppression by the prosecution of evidence favorable to an
    accused upon request violates due process where the evidence is
    material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the
    good faith or bad faith of the prosecution.”                 However, “the
    United States Supreme Court [has] rejected the idea that every
    nondisclosure    automatically     constitutes    reversible       error    and
    held that ‘prejudicial error must be determined by examining the
    materiality of the evidence.’”         State v. Tirado, 
    358 N.C. 551
    ,
    589, 
    599 S.E.2d 515
    , 540 (2004) (quoting State v. Howard, 
    334 N.C. 602
    , 605, 
    433 S.E.2d 742
    , 744 (1993)), cert. denied, 
    544 U.S. 909
    , 
    125 S. Ct. 1600
    , 
    161 L. Ed. 2d 285
    (2005).                       “‘The
    evidence is material only if there is a reasonable probability
    -29-
    that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result
    of the proceeding would have been different.                       A “reasonable
    probability” is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence
    in the outcome.’”        
    Id. at 589,
    599 S.E.2d at 540-41 (quoting
    United States v. Bagley, 
    473 U.S. 667
    , 682, 
    105 S. Ct. 3375
    ,
    3383,   87   L.    Ed.   2d   481,   494      (1985)).      Assuming,    without
    deciding, that the State failed to disclose the information upon
    which Defendant’s claim relies, we are unable to conclude that
    the     undisclosed      evidence       satisfies        Brady’s     materiality
    requirement.
    As we have previously indicated, Defendant contends that
    his ability to present an effective defense was hampered by the
    State’s suggestion on rebuttal that Mr. Taylor was driving Ms.
    Faircloth’s       Mustang,    rather    than     Mr.     Bradshaw’s     Mustang,
    immediately after Mr. Bradshaw’s death.                  In view of the fact
    that the State’s case against Defendant was a strong one, the
    fact that Mr. Taylor was seen in possession of Mr. Bradshaw’s
    vehicle after the date of the murder does not tend to exculpate
    Defendant, and the fact that Mr. Taylor never testified that he
    had been a passenger in Ms. Faircloth’s vehicle around the time
    of Mr. Bradshaw’s death, his testimony did little, if anything,
    to rebut Defendant’s evidence.                As a result, given that the
    undisclosed evidence does little to undermine our confidence in
    -30-
    the   outcome   reached      at    Defendant’s     trial,     we   conclude    that
    Defendant     has   failed    to       establish      the   materiality   of    the
    undisclosed     evidence.         As   a    result,    Defendant’s    motion    for
    appropriate relief should be, and hereby is, denied.6
    III. Conclusion
    Thus, for the reasons set forth above, we conclude that
    none of Defendant’s challenges to the trial court’s judgments
    have merit and that Defendant’s motion for appropriate relief
    should be denied.         As a result, the trial court’s judgments
    should, and hereby do, remain undisturbed.
    NO ERROR.
    Judge ROBERT N. HUNTER, Jr., concurred in this opinion
    prior to 6 September 2014.
    Judge DAVIS concurs.
    Report per Rule 30(e).
    6
    According to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1418(b), “[w]hen a
    motion for appropriate relief is made in the appellate division,
    the appellate court must decide whether the motion may be
    determined on the basis of the materials before it, [or] whether
    it is necessary to remand the case to the trial division for
    taking evidence or conducting other proceedings . . ..    If the
    appellate court does not remand the case for proceedings on the
    motion, it may determine the motion in conjunction with the
    appeal and enter its ruling on the motion with its determination
    of the case.” As a result of our belief that we do not need to
    have additional factual development in order to decide the
    issues raised by Defendant’s motion for appropriate relief on
    materiality grounds, we believe that we are in a position to
    address the issues raised by Defendant’s motion for appropriate
    relief on the merits without the necessity for conducting
    further proceedings.