Court of Appeals

, Court of Appeals , COA21-111 (Judge April Wood) , Published
Hirschler v. Hirschler

Contempt; civil contempt; criminal contempt; Moot; age of majority; dismissed; notice; sua sponte

, Court of Appeals , COA20-402 (Judge Donna Stroud) , Published
State v. Thomas

hearsay; past recorded recollection; expert reliability; lay opinions

, Court of Appeals , COA21-218 (Judge John Tyson) , Published
State v. McCutcheon

First-degree murder; Rules of Evidence 401 and 402; Victim-impact evidence, NCGS 15A-833(a)(1); plain error review; invited error; circumstantial evidence.

, Court of Appeals , COA20-323 (Judge Darren Jackson) , Published
State v. Lamp

Sex Offender Registration Act; the defendant's provision of an incorrect address to the sheriff's office constituted circumstantial evidence of willfulness and deceptive intent; trial court did not err in denying motion to dismiss at the close of the evidence

, Court of Appeals , COA21-129 (Judge Tobias Hampson) , Published
State v. Bryant

Knowing and Voluntary Admissions under State v. Harbison

, Court of Appeals , COA20-268 (Judge Chris Dillon) , Published
State v. Barber

Second-degree trespass, General Assembly, misdemeanor statement of charges, indictment, district court, superior court, trial de novo, amendment in substance, conduct, first amendment, public property, forum, jury instructions, without authorization, legal right.

, Court of Appeals , COA20-610 (Judge John Tyson) , Published
State v. Applewhite

Right to counsel; sufficient indictment; pro se representation; competency to stand trial; prior record level; no merger; NCGS 14-43.11(a)(i); human trafficking; promoting prostitution; habitual felon status; NCGS 90-113.22A

, Court of Appeals , COA21-268 (Judge John Arrowood) , Published
State v. Thorpe

Motion for appropriate relief; COVID-19; cruel and unusual punishment.

, Court of Appeals , COA20-882 (Judge Allegra Collins) , Published
State v. Crisp

No error in omission of jury instruction on defense of accident, jury's verdict of second-degree murder was not ambiguous for sentencing purposes, no error in omission of jury instruction on depraved-heart theory of malice.

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