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State v. Perry - Robbery Conviction Appeal

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Filed March 20th, 2026
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Summary

The North Carolina Supreme Court reversed a Court of Appeals decision that had overturned a robbery conviction. The Supreme Court found that the State presented sufficient evidence to survive a motion to dismiss, allowing the charge to proceed to the jury. This decision impacts how evidence sufficiency is evaluated in robbery cases within the state.

What changed

The North Carolina Supreme Court, in the case of State v. Perry (Docket No. 64PA24), reversed a decision by the Court of Appeals that had overturned a defendant's conviction for robbery with a dangerous weapon. The Supreme Court determined that the lower appellate court erred in its assessment of the evidence, finding that the State had presented substantial evidence to support the charge, thus allowing the case to proceed to the jury. The ruling specifically addresses the standard for surviving a motion to dismiss based on the sufficiency of evidence in criminal proceedings.

This decision has direct implications for legal professionals handling criminal appeals in North Carolina, particularly concerning robbery charges. Compliance officers and legal teams should note the Supreme Court's emphasis on the standard of review for motions to dismiss, which requires that a reasonable inference of guilt can be drawn from the evidence presented. The ruling effectively reinstates the trial court's original judgment, and the defendant's conviction for robbery with a dangerous weapon stands unless further appeals are pursued or other legal avenues are exhausted. The effective date of this Supreme Court opinion is March 20, 2026.

What to do next

  1. Review the Supreme Court's opinion on evidence sufficiency for robbery charges.
  2. Update legal arguments and strategies related to motions to dismiss in similar cases.

Source document (simplified)

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Top Caption Syllabus [Combined Opinion

                  by Justice Phil Berger Jr.](https://www.courtlistener.com/opinion/10811791/state-v-perry/#o1)

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Supreme Court of North Carolina

Syllabus

Whether the Court of Appeals erred by reversing the trial court's denial of defendant's motion to dismiss the charge of robbery with a dangerous weapon.

Combined Opinion

                        by Justice Phil Berger Jr.

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. 64PA24

Filed 20 March 2026

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.
DAMARLO JAMON PERRY

On discretionary review pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-31 of a unanimous,

unpublished decision of the Court of Appeals, No. COA23-375 (N.C. Ct. App. Feb. 20,

2024), reversing an order denying defendant’s motion to dismiss entered on 29 August

2022 and vacating a judgment entered on 1 September 2022 by Judge David L. Hall

in Superior Court, Cabarrus County. Heard in the Supreme Court on 17 September

2025.

Jeff Jackson, Attorney General, by Stacey A. Phipps, Special Deputy Attorney
General, for the State-appellant.

Kaelyn N. Sweet for defendant-appellee.

BERGER, Justice.

Defendant was convicted of, among other things, robbery with a dangerous

weapon. The Court of Appeals reversed the conviction after it determined that the

State failed to present substantial evidence that defendant, or someone with whom

he was acting in concert, took the victim’s property. We are, therefore, concerned

here with the sufficiency of evidence needed to survive a motion to dismiss and submit

a charge to the jury.
STATE V. PERRY

Opinion of the Court

In our system of justice, the jury has dominion over questions of fact. Mindful

of the jury’s sphere, a motion to dismiss should be granted only when no “reasonable

inference of the defendant’s guilt of the crime charged may be drawn from the

evidence.” State v. Powell, 299 N.C. 95, 99 (1980) (emphasis omitted). In this case,

the trial court applied the appropriate standard and properly denied defendant’s

motion to dismiss. We, therefore, reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Around 8:00 p.m. on 18 May 2021, Damon Scott arrived at the apartment of

Shenika Lynch with his phone, house key, and $250. When Scott attempted to enter

the apartment, he was struck from behind and fell to the ground. Defendant hit Scott

on the top of his head with a gun, and as Scott attempted to get to his feet, defendant

and other assailants stomped on Scott. Scott recognized defendant among his

attackers and saw defendant holding a gun.

Scott passed out during the attack. Later that night, he woke up in the middle

of the road, severely injured. Scott realized his phone, house key, and cash were

missing.1 He flagged down a driver who drove him home where he attempted to sleep.

1 While evidence is conflicting regarding the moment Scott realized his possessions

were missing, see State v. Perry, No. COA23-375, 2024 WL 687053, at fn. 1 (N.C. Ct. App.
Feb. 20, 2024), on a motion to dismiss, “we view the evidence in the light most favorable to
the State, resolving all conflicts in the evidence in favor of the State and giving it the benefit
of all reasonable inferences,” State v. Tirado, 358 N.C. 551, 582 (2004). Here, Scott’s
statement to Detective John Cramer that he realized his possessions were missing after
waking up in the road was elicited by the defense on cross-examination of Detective Cramer.
As the trial court acknowledged, the statement was thus admitted into evidence.
Accordingly, for purposes of this opinion, we accept as true Scott’s statement that he realized
his possessions were missing after waking up in the road.

-2-
STATE V. PERRY

Opinion of the Court

Later, after Scott woke up gagging on his own blood and struggling to breathe, his

niece Lemon Collins, took him to a hospital where he was intubated and later

transferred to a Level 1 Trauma Center in Charlotte. Scott was hospitalized for more

than two weeks, and during that time he underwent blood transfusions and multiple

surgeries. His missing possessions were never recovered.

Defendant was indicted for robbery with a dangerous weapon, assault

inflicting serious bodily injury, drug-related offenses, and attaining habitual felon

status. At trial, the State introduced Rule 404(b) evidence related to defendant’s

participation in a 2012 armed robbery. See N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 404(b) (2025).

Testimony showed that in the prior incident, defendant had “approached the victim,

asked the victim for his money, . . . assaulted the victim with [a] handgun,” and then

stole his wallet. The witness explained that defendant had “pistol-whipped” the

victim, which the witness clarified meant “[s]triking him with the handgun on his

head.” The evidence regarding this prior crime was allowed for limited purposes to

prove that at the time of the alleged offenses, [defendant]
had the intent, which is a necessary element of both assault
inflicting serious bodily injury and robbery with a
dangerous weapon, [and the evidence] is offered to the
extent that [the jury] find[s] that . . . there may have
existed in [defendant’s] mind a plan or scheme, design,
involving the crimes he is accused of or the absence of
accident or mistake.

At the close of the State’s evidence, defendant moved to dismiss the charge of

robbery with a dangerous weapon, arguing that there was insufficient evidence for

the jury to determine that defendant “took property from the person of another or in

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STATE V. PERRY

Opinion of the Court

that person’s presence.” The trial court denied the motion. At the close of all

evidence, defendant declined to put on evidence and renewed his motion to dismiss.

The trial court denied the motion, reasoning:

In this case there is the evidence properly admitted
about the 2012 event. And there’s a uniqueness there. It is
not unheard of, but it is relatively uncommon in terms of
robbery with a firearm or robbery with a dangerous
weapon. There is evidence that was admitted about
[defendant] approaching the subject, striking him with a
firearm instead of threatening him with a firearm or in fact
shooting him or firing the weapon, but using it as a blunt
instrument and robbed the gentleman. That has been
judicially established. I limited the evidence such that it
would not be unfairly prejudicial.

This allegation from Mr. Scott, if the jury chooses to
believe him, is that . . . [d]efendant used the firearm as
something to strike him with, a blunt force instrument to
strike him in the head. And there is evidence that a
reasonable jury could believe that the alleged victim’s
property was missing potentially very soon thereafter. But
there is a reasonable inference that those who attacked the
alleged victim took the alleged victim’s property.

For those reasons I deem it a question of fact for the
jury, and will respectfully deny the motion.

The jury found defendant guilty of robbery with a dangerous weapon and

assault inflicting serious bodily injury. Defendant thereafter pled guilty to attaining

habitual felon status, and he was sentenced to 146 to 188 months in prison.

Defendant appealed the robbery conviction to the Court of Appeals, arguing that the

State failed to present sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to find that he, or

someone with whom he was acting in concert, took Scott’s property.

-4-
STATE V. PERRY

Opinion of the Court

In an unpublished opinion, the Court of Appeals reversed the trial court’s order

denying defendant’s motion to dismiss and vacated defendant’s conviction for robbery

with a dangerous weapon, holding that “the circumstantial evidence in this case—the

victim’s missing property, [d]efendant’s opportunity to commit the crime, and

[d]efendant’s intent or plan to rob—even in the light most favorable to the State, is

not sufficient to sustain [d]efendant’s conviction under our Supreme Court’s caselaw.”

State v. Perry, No. COA23-375, 2024 WL 687053, at *1 (N.C. Ct. App. Feb. 20, 2024).

We allowed the State’s petition for discretionary review on 13 December 2024. For

the reasons discussed herein, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals.

II. Discussion

To survive a motion to dismiss, the State faces a “low bar.” State v. Ford, 388

N.C. 713, 727 (2025) (Berger, J., concurring). “If there is more than a scintilla of

competent evidence to support the allegations in the warrant or indictment, it is the

court’s duty to submit the case to the jury.” State v. Horner, 248 N.C. 342, 344–45

(1958); see also State v. Dover, 381 N.C. 535, 547 (2022) (more than a scintilla of

evidence simply means “the amount necessary to persuade a rational juror to accept

a conclusion[.]” (cleaned up)). While precedent has also articulated the standard as

requiring “substantial evidence,” State v. Golder, 374 N.C. 238, 249 (2020), “[t]he

terms ‘more than a scintilla of evidence’ and ‘substantial evidence’ are in reality the

same,” State v. Gillard, 386 N.C. 797, 832 (2024) (quoting State v. Earnhardt, 307

N.C. 62, 66 (1982)).

-5-
STATE V. PERRY

Opinion of the Court

“When reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, we view the evidence in the

light most favorable to the State, resolving all conflicts in the evidence in favor of the

State and giving it the benefit of all reasonable inferences.” State v. Tirado, 358 N.C.

551, 582 (2004). “Moreover, circumstantial evidence may withstand a motion to

dismiss and support a conviction even when the evidence does not rule out every

hypothesis of innocence.” Id. (cleaned up). “When the motion calls into question the

sufficiency of circumstantial evidence, the question for the Court is whether a

reasonable inference of defendant’s guilt may be drawn from the circumstances.”

Powell, 299 N.C. at 99 (cleaned up).

“[E]vidence favorable to the State is to be considered as a whole in order to

determine its sufficiency. This is especially necessary . . . when the proof offered is

circumstantial, for rarely will one bit of such evidence be sufficient, in itself, to point

to a defendant’s guilt.” State v. Thomas, 296 N.C. 236, 244–45 (1978). Further,

“[c]ontradictions and discrepancies must be resolved in favor of the State, and the

defendant’s evidence, unless favorable to the State, is not to be taken into

consideration.” State v. Stone, 323 N.C. 447, 452 (1988) (quoting State v. Bullard,

312 N.C. 129, 160 (1984)). In other words, if there is more than a scintilla of evidence,

“whether direct or circumstantial, or a combination, to support a finding that the

offense charged has been committed and that the defendant committed it, the case is

for the jury and the motion to dismiss should be denied.” Golder, 374 N.C. at 250

(cleaned up).

-6-
STATE V. PERRY

Opinion of the Court

To prove a defendant committed the offense of robbery with a dangerous

weapon, the State must provide sufficient evidence of (1) an unlawful taking or an

attempt to take personal property from the person or in the presence of another; (2) by

use or threatened use of a firearm or other dangerous weapon; and (3) whereby the

life of a person is endangered or threatened. See State v. Hill, 365 N.C. 273, 275

(2011); N.C.G.S. § 14-87(a) (2025). We have noted that “it is immaterial whether the

intention to commit the theft was formed before or after force was used upon the

victims.” State v. Barden, 356 N.C. 316, 352 (2002) (quoting State v. Green, 321 N.C.

594, 605 (1988)).

Here, defendant challenged the sufficiency of the State’s evidence as to the first

element. Specifically, defendant argued that evidence of his “opportunity” to take

Scott’s property was insufficient to survive a motion to dismiss.

The Court of Appeals, relying on our precedent in State v. Moore, 312 N.C. 607

(1985), and State v. Baker, 338 N.C. 526 (1994), determined that the facts in this case

were analogous to Moore. The court reasoned that “[u]nlike in Baker, the evidence

here did not establish for how long Scott laid unconscious in the road before he awoke

to discover his property missing,” and “Scott’s location in the road placed the

vulnerable property in a public location inviting to passersby—like the store in

Moore.” Perry, 2024 WL 687053, at *4. The Court of Appeals concluded that

“evidence of a defendant’s mere opportunity to commit a crime is not sufficient to send

the charge to the jury,” id. at *3 (cleaned up), and “[e]vidence of a defendant’s intent

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STATE V. PERRY

Opinion of the Court

or plan to take property does not itself support the inference that he followed through

when presented with an opportunity,” id. at *5.

But splintered, piecemeal, and formulaic comparisons to the facts of prior cases

are not dispositive where precedent commands that the evidence must be considered

“as a whole,” Thomas, 296 N.C. at 245, and “[c]ontradictions and discrepancies must

be resolved in favor of the State,” Stone, 323 N.C. at 452 (quoting Bullard, 312 N.C.

at 160). Thus, the Court of Appeals’ application of our precedent was in error.

In Moore, we held that the trial court properly granted the defendant’s motion

to dismiss because the evidence “disclose[d] no more than an opportunity for [the]

defendant, as well as others, to have taken the money.” 312 N.C. at 613. There, the

defendant sexually assaulted a store clerk at knifepoint in the store bathroom. Id. at

608–10. During the incident, the victim’s purse was located behind the cashier’s

counter. Id. at 611. When the defendant left the store, the victim fled for help,

leaving her purse behind and the store unlocked and unattended for at least forty

minutes until police arrived. Id. at 612.

Notably, the store was located in a high-crime area described as “a vicinity in

which [the victim’s] sense of insecurity caused her to keep the store’s front door locked

during business hours.” Id. at 613. When the victim returned to the store “some two

hours” after the assault, her wallet was missing from inside her purse. Id. at 610.

Without any other evidence to indicate the defendant had taken the wallet, this Court

reasoned that the bare “opportunity for [the] defendant, as well as others,” to commit

-8-
STATE V. PERRY

Opinion of the Court

the crime was insufficient to send the robbery charge to the jury. Id. at 613.

In Baker, conversely, “[t]he disappearance of the [victim’s] money was

discovered around thirty minutes after [the] defendant was seen with the victim

outside the store.” Baker, 338 N.C. at 560. We concluded that the motion to dismiss

was properly denied because “[the victim’s] forceful abduction and the taking of the

money are so closely related in time as to form a continuous chain of events.” Id. at

561.

In the light most favorable to the State, the evidence here tended to show that

defendant pistol-whipped Scott with the intent to rob him and that Scott’s possessions

were on his person at the time of the assault and missing when he regained

consciousness in the road. More specifically, the State’s evidence indicated that

defendant was Scott’s primary assailant, striking him on the head with a gun as he

entered the apartment. Not only was defendant with Scott around the time period

when Scott’s possessions went missing, but he was a central force among the

attackers who “started stomping [Scott] and knocked [him] out and took [him] and

threw [him] out in the road.”

Further, the 404(b) evidence was admitted to establish defendant’s intent to

commit the robbery in this case, and the jury was properly instructed on use of this

evidence.2 Although reasonable jurors might disagree on the ultimate question of

2 The dissent fails to meaningfully engage with the 404(b) evidence and concludes that

“the State only established that [defendant] had the opportunity to commit the offense[.]”
But we are not at liberty to ignore the 404(b) evidence in our analysis, and when included,

-9-
STATE V. PERRY

Opinion of the Court

guilt, the evidence “as a whole,” see Thomas, 296 N.C. at 245, permitted an inference

that the absence of Scott’s wallet was the result of a continuous chain of events

connected to defendant even though there is no direct evidence defendant took Scott’s

wallet.

the State presented more than a scintilla of evidence of defendant’s opportunity, intent, and
temporal and spatial proximity to the victim and the victim’s missing property at the time of
the assault.
In addition to ignoring the 404(b) evidence, the dissent appears to argue that the
doctrine of recent possession is relevant here. But that doctrine is applicable where the State
presents evidence of a defendant’s ex post possession of stolen property, a fact which does not
exist in this case. Even though we have consistently held that recovery of a stolen item is
not required to prove a taking occurred, see State v. Palmer, 334 N.C. 104, 112–113 (1993),
the dissent suggests that the lack of such evidence is determinative here. We agree that
evidence defendant possessed Scott’s property after the assault, had it existed, would have
certainly bolstered the State’s case. But the lack of such evidence does not negate or
otherwise discount the evidence that was elicited, and the dissent is simply wrong about the
applicability of the doctrine here.
Moreover, the dissent mistakenly introduces a subjective component to its analysis,
stating in a footnote that “in cases where the State’s evidence was weak, like it is here, our
Court has treated possession as significant.” But the question here is not the weight but the
existence of evidence. That is an objective measure. And by describing the evidence as
“weak,” the dissent impliedly acknowledges that the evidence in fact exists. This apparent
misapprehension reveals yet another reason why use of the “substantial evidence” language
favored by the dissent can confuse the inquiry, and “the more than a scintilla of evidence
standard is probably the more accurate framing . . . [.]” State v. Ford, 388 N.C. 713, 727
(Berger, J., concurring) (cleaned up).
The dissent is also wrong to use State v. Evans, 279 N.C. 447 (1971), for support
because, as the Court stated there, the State’s evidence was “utterly inconsistent with an
attempt to rob,” and “completely negate[d] the allegation in the indictment of an assault upon
[the victim] . . . and the allegation that they attempted to take personal property from [the]
business establishment.” Evans, 279 N.C. at 455. Here, the State’s evidence is not nearly so
deficient.
Finally, the dissent contends that “no evidence was presented creating an inference
that [defendant] possessed Mr. Scott’s property[.]” Although the State does not specifically
argue this point, we note that robbery with a dangerous weapon does not require possession
or even acquisition of stolen property to complete the offense; an attempt to take the property
is enough. See N.C.G.S. § 14-87(a); see also Hill, 365 N.C. at 275 (conviction for robbery with
a dangerous weapon requires either an “unlawful taking or an attempt to take personal
property . . . [.]”(emphasis added)).

-10-
STATE V. PERRY

Opinion of the Court

Our precedent makes clear that direct evidence is not required to overcome a

motion to dismiss[.]” See Tirado, 358 N.C. at 582 (“[C]ircumstantial evidence may

withstand a motion to dismiss . . . .” (quoting Stone, 323 N.C. at 452)). While the

Court of Appeals was correct that “evidence of a defendant’s mere opportunity to

commit a crime is not sufficient to send the charge to the jury,” Perry, 2024 WL

687053, at *3 (quoting State v. Campbell, 373 N.C. 216, 221 (2019)), the court failed

to consider the State’s evidence “as a whole,” see Thomas, 296 N.C. at 245.

Here, there was more than a scintilla of evidence to allow the jury to “decide

whether the evidence satisfies them beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is

guilty.” See id. The State did not simply present evidence of opportunity alone. To

the contrary, the State’s evidence tended to show that, in addition to the Rule 404(b)

evidence discussed above, Scott had his possessions on his person at the time he was

assaulted and that he realized his possessions were missing when he regained

consciousness in the road after the assault. Unlike the victim’s purse in Moore which

was left in an unlocked and unattended store for forty minutes, the facts here, in the

light most favorable to the State, tended to show that Scott and his attackers had

direct access to the missing property during the relevant timeframe.

The Court of Appeals embraced defendant’s argument that a thieving passerby

or another individual unconnected with the assault might have robbed Scott while he

lay in the road or sometime thereafter. The court stated that “[d]uring the period

Scott laid unconscious, anyone in the vicinity could have happened upon him and

-11-
STATE V. PERRY

Opinion of the Court

opportunistically seized his possessions from his person.” Perry, 2024 WL 687053, at

*4. But appellate courts may not assume the function of the jury, and the State’s

evidence may survive a motion to dismiss “even when [it] does not rule out every

hypothesis of innocence.” Tirado, 358 N.C. at 582 (cleaned up).

Moreover, like the “continuous chain of events” in Baker, 338 N.C. at 561, Scott

indicated that his possessions were missing when he woke up in the road after he was

assaulted by defendant with the intent to rob him. Defendant’s argument that

someone else might have passed by and robbed Scott while he lay unconscious,

although perhaps a proper jury argument, cannot discount or otherwise take away

from the evidence presented by the State.3 We emphasize that the evidence at this

stage need not convince the judge beyond a reasonable doubt; rather, evidence need

only allow for a “reasonable inference of the defendant’s guilt.” Powell, 299 N.C. at

99 (emphasis omitted). Taken as whole, the State presented enough evidence to infer

that the assault and robbery were part of a “continuous chain of events.” See Baker,

338 N.C. at 561.

We also note that it is a defendant’s burden to present evidence identifying an

3 The dissent makes the same mistake as the Court of Appeals panel below by failing

to evaluate the State’s evidence as a whole. Both made rigid, mechanical comparisons to
Moore and Baker while ignoring the totality of the State’s evidence. Compounding this error,
the dissent entirely disregards the well-established rule that the State’s evidence need not
“rule out every hypothesis of innocence.” Tirado, 358 N.C. at 582 (cleaned up). While the
dissent is correct that Scott was “vulnerable to the public” when he was unconscious in the
road, the State is not required to exclude the possibility of alternative perpetrators at the
motion to dismiss stage. Rather, the State need only present enough evidence to allow for a
reasonable inference of defendant’s guilt.

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STATE V. PERRY

Opinion of the Court

alternative perpetrator. Indeed, evidence proffered to show that someone other than

the defendant committed the crime charged must “point directly to the guilt of some

specific person.” State v. Abbitt, 385 N.C. 28, 41 (2023) (emphasis added) (quoting

State v. McNeill, 326 N.C. 712, 721 (1990)). Defendant cannot succeed on a motion

to dismiss by speculating simply that “it could have been someone else.”

At bottom, the Court of Appeals’ analysis overlooked the dispositive inquiry on

a motion to dismiss, i.e., whether the State presented more than a scintilla of evidence

to support a reasonable inference of defendant’s guilt. At this stage, the State’s

evidence must be considered as a whole. The Court of Appeals, relying on rigid

comparisons to distinguishable fact patterns in our prior cases failed apply the proper

standard. Because the State presented more than a scintilla of evidence, or the

amount necessary to persuade a rational juror to accept a conclusion, the motion to

dismiss was properly denied.

III. Conclusion

On a motion to dismiss, we are mindful that the court “is concerned only with

the sufficiency of the evidence to carry the case to the jury and not with its weight.”

Powell, 299 N.C. at 99. It is for the jury to serve as the ultimate arbiters of guilt, and

a court should dismiss a charge only when the evidence is so lacking that no

“reasonable inference of the defendant’s guilt of the crime charged may be drawn from

the evidence.” Id. (emphasis omitted).

Here, considering the evidence as a whole and affording the State the benefit

-13-
STATE V. PERRY

Opinion of the Court

of all reasonable inferences, the State presented sufficient evidence that defendant,

or someone acting in concert with defendant, took Scott’s property. We reverse the

judgment of the Court of Appeals.

REVERSED.

-14-
STATE V. PERRY

Riggs, J., dissenting

Justice RIGGS dissenting.

I disagree with the majority’s holding that the State’s evidence suggesting that

Mr. Perry took Mr. Scott’s property was sufficient for the charge of robbery with a

dangerous weapon to be submitted to the jury. For that reason and because I believe

this Court must step carefully to ensure that it does not render an important legal

process—a motion to dismiss the State’s charges for insufficiency of the evidence—

essentially pointless, I respectfully dissent.

I. Factual Background

On 18 May 2021, Damon Scott was invited to Shenika Lynch’s apartment. The

time at which he arrived at the apartment was not clear from trial testimony. During

trial, Mr. Scott testified that he arrived around 8:00 p.m.; however, in an interview

conducted by a detective about a month after the incident, Mr. Scott stated that he

arrived around 11:00 p.m. to 12:00 a.m.1 He arrived carrying his cell phone, house

key, and around $250 in cash. Shortly after arriving, Mr. Scott was struck by

defendant, Demarlo Perry, and stomped by Mr. Perry and other individuals in the

apartment. Mr. Scott testified that the assailants “knocked [him] out and . . . threw

1 To provide a fuller picture of what evidence was presented at trial, I am including

instances in the testimony where Mr. Scott’s direct testimony at trial conflicts with the
statements he made during the interview he gave to Detective John Cramer on 30 June 2021.
Of course, for the purpose of a motion to dismiss, “[t]he trial court does not weigh the
evidence, consider evidence unfavorable to the State, or determine any witness’ credibility.”
State v. Parker, 354 N.C. 268, 278 (2001) (citing State v. Lucas, 353 N.C. 568, 581 (2001)).

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STATE V. PERRY

Riggs, J., dissenting

[him] out in the road.”

At some point Mr. Scott lost consciousness, but the record is not clear about

when this occurred. Mr. Scott testified that the last thing he recalled before passing

out was being left in the middle of the road; however, he also testified that he did not

know how he got outside. No evidence was presented regarding how long Mr. Scott

was lying in the road. When he eventually came to, Mr. Scott flagged down a passerby

to ask for a ride home. Once at home, Mr. Scott spoke with his niece and then slept,

but later that night, he was taken to the hospital where his injuries required him to

stay for an extended period of time.

The timeline is not clear about when Mr. Scott discovered he was no longer in

possession of his phone, house key, and cash. At trial, Mr. Scott testified that he

realized that his items were missing when he arrived at the hospital.

Notwithstanding Mr. Scott’s direct trial testimony, a detective testified that Mr. Scott

told him in an interview that he noticed he was missing his possessions when he woke

up in the road.

Mr. Perry was indicted for multiple charges including, among others, robbery

with a dangerous weapon and assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injury.

During the trial, the trial court allowed the State to introduce evidence of Mr. Perry’s

prior participation in a 2012 robbery where Mr. Perry struck the victim with a

handgun and took the victim’s wallet. The trial court allowed the evidence under

Rule 404(b) for the purpose of showing that Mr. Perry had the intent to commit

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STATE V. PERRY

Riggs, J., dissenting

robbery with a dangerous weapon or that the crime was a part of a common plan. Mr.

Perry moved twice to dismiss the robbery with a dangerous weapon charge, and the

trial court denied the motions each time.

II. Standard of Review

As a threshold matter, I take this opportunity to address the State’s burden

and how that burden is articulated by the majority. While the bar may be low for the

State to survive a motion to dismiss, it cannot be the case that a motion to dismiss

for insufficiency of the evidence is a functionally pointless motion, particularly in a

case such as this.2 To survive a motion to dismiss, the State must present substantial

evidence of each of the essential elements of the offense charged and that the

defendant is the perpetrator of the offense. State v. Golder, 374 N.C. 238, 249 (2020).

The test for sufficiency of the evidence is the same whether the State provides direct

evidence or circumstantial evidence. State v. Barnes, 334 N.C. 67, 75 (1993). For

circumstantial evidence, the trial court must decide whether a reasonable inference

of the defendant’s guilt may be drawn from the circumstances. Id. If the evidence is

only sufficient to raise a suspicion or conjecture as to either the commission of the

offense or the identity of the perpetrator, then the motion to dismiss should be

allowed. State v. Powell, 299 N.C. 95, 98 (1980); see also State v. Campbell, 373 N.C.

2 Here, the State has failed to present any evidence of a timeline that supports a

reasonable inference, beyond mere speculation, that Mr. Perry could have been the
perpetrator of a theft. The rule emerging from this case is one that could, I fear, lull the State
into complacency in carrying its burden, relieving the government of the burden of providing
sufficient timeline evidence to support the charges it brings.

-17-
STATE V. PERRY

Riggs, J., dissenting

216, 221 (2019) (“Under well-settled caselaw, evidence of a defendant’s mere

opportunity to commit a crime is not sufficient to send the charge to the jury.”). In

contrast, if the record developed at trial contains substantial evidence, whether direct

or circumstantial or both, to support a finding that the offense charged has been

committed and that the defendant committed it, then the case is for the jury and the

motion to dismiss should be denied. Golder, 374 N.C. at 250. “When reviewing the

sufficiency of the evidence, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the

State, resolving all conflicts in the evidence in favor of the State and giving it the

benefit of all reasonable inferences.” State v. Tirado, 358 N.C. 551, 582 (2004)

(emphasis added).

Courts evaluate whether the State has carried its burden by utilizing the above

rules in what our courts have called the “substantial evidence” test or the “more than

a scintilla of evidence” test, and our precedent states these are the same. See, e.g.,

State v. Weinstein, 224 N.C. 645, 648 (1944) (“The rule is that the motion for judgment

of nonsuit must be denied if there be any substantial evidence—more than a

scintilla—to prove the allegations of the bill.”); Powell, 299 N.C. at 99 (“The terms

‘more than a scintilla of evidence’ and ‘substantial evidence’ are in reality the same

. . . .”); State v. Smith, 40 N.C. App. 72, 78 (1979) (providing an overview of how the

test has been articulated by this Court and concluding, “To this day, it appears that

the ‘more than a scintilla of evidence’ test and the ‘substantial evidence’ test are in

reality only one test which is most frequently designated the ‘substantial evidence

-18-
STATE V. PERRY

Riggs, J., dissenting

test’ ”). But see State v. Agnew, 294 N.C. 382, 396 (1978) (Exum, J., dissenting)

(asserting that “more than a scintilla of evidence” is not the true test, rather, the test

is whether there is “substantial evidence—direct, circumstantial, or both—to support

a finding that the offense charged has been committed and that the accused

committed it” (quoting State v. Stewart, 292 N.C. 219, 224 (1977))).

Yet even with precedent asserting that these articulations of the test are one

and the same, in application the focus on a “scintilla,” as the majority employs in this

case, has the potential to effectively obviate any work that a court may ever do to hold

the State to any standard of sufficiency of the evidence on a motion to dismiss. That

would be wrong in both a practical and a precedential sense. For example, in Powell,

this Court elaborated on those terms and announced that “the evidence must be

existing and real, not just seeming or imaginary.” 299 N.C. at 99. Further, this Court

has stated that “[s]ubstantial evidence is that amount of relevant evidence necessary

to persuade a rational juror to accept a conclusion.” State v. Mann, 355 N.C. 294, 301

(2002) (citing State v. Frogge, 351 N.C. 576, 584 (2000)). A motion to dismiss for

insufficient evidence is an important procedural tool that serves as a safeguard

against unfounded charges reaching the jury leading to potentially unwarranted

convictions.3 Therefore, it is important that this tool not lose all use.

3 See generally Thompson v. City of Louisville, 362 U.S. 199, 206 (1960) (stating that

“it [is] a violation of due process to convict and punish a man without evidence of his guilt”);
Harris v. United States, 404 U.S. 1232, 1233 (1971) (“It is beyond question, of course, that a
conviction based on a record lacking any relevant evidence as to a crucial element of the
offense charged would violate due process.”); Carrie Leonetti, When the Emperor Has No

-19-
STATE V. PERRY

Riggs, J., dissenting

III. The State failed to present sufficient evidence of the robbery with a
dangerous weapon charge.

Returning to the matter at hand, I would hold that the State failed to present

sufficient evidence of the robbery with a dangerous weapon charge. Based on the

evidence presented, the State only established that Mr. Perry had the opportunity to

commit the offense and did not present sufficient evidence for a rational juror to infer

that it was Mr. Perry that took Mr. Scott’s property rather than anyone else in the

area that had access to Mr. Scott that night.

The elements of robbery with a dangerous weapon are: “(1) the unlawful taking

or an attempt to take personal property from the person or in the presence of another

(2) by use of a firearm or other dangerous weapon (3) whereby the life of a person is

endangered or threatened.” State v. Small, 328 N.C. 175, 181 (1991) (quoting State v.

Beaty, 306 N.C. 491, 496 (1982)); see also N.C.G.S. § 14-87(a) (2025). “Force or

intimidation occasioned by the use or threatened use of firearms[ ] is the main

element of the offense.” Small, 328 N.C. at 181 (quoting Beaty, 306 N.C. at 496).

The majority asserts that the Court of Appeals erred in holding that this case

was more similar to the facts of State v. Moore, 312 N.C. 607 (1985), than State v.

Baker, 338 N.C. 526 (1994). And the majority relies heavily on the rule that

Clothes: a Proposal for Defensive Summary Judgment in Criminal Cases, 84 S. Cal. L. Rev.
661, 711 (2011) (discussing mechanisms for summary dispositions of criminal charges
including the motion to dismiss and observing that “[p]ermitting a weak or even frivolous
prosecution case to proceed to trial and verdict unnecessarily risks having some juries convict
despite the paucity of evidence of guilt”).

-20-
STATE V. PERRY

Riggs, J., dissenting

“[c]ontradictions and discrepancies must be resolved in favor of the State.” See State

v. Stone, 323 N.C. 447, 452 (1988) (quoting State v. Bullard, 312 N.C. 129, 160 (1984)).

I disagree with the majority’s analysis and would hold that the Court of Appeals

applied our precedent correctly.

In Moore, the defendant was convicted of robbery with a dangerous weapon

based upon a sexual assault at knifepoint when the victim was working alone in a

store. 312 N.C. at 608–09. After the assault, the victim left the store to seek help

and left the back door unlocked. Id. at 609–10. The victim only discovered that her

wallet was missing from her purse when she returned. Id. at 610. Around two hours

elapsed between the time of the attack and the time when the victim noticed her

wallet was missing and approximately forty to forty-five minutes passed from the

time the victim left the store until police arrived. Id. at 610, 612. The Court

concluded that the evidence proved that the defendant had the opportunity to have

taken the money but also proved that “[a]nyone in the vicinity . . . could have entered

the store during this time and taken the wallet”; thus, the Court determined that the

defendant’s conviction of robbery with a dangerous weapon could not stand. Id. at

613.

And in Baker, the victim, also a shopkeeper like the victim in Moore, was seen

outside the store being forcibly held by the defendant around thirty minutes before it

was discovered that money had been taken from the cash register. 338 N.C. at 560.

The Court determined that the evidence supported the inference that the abduction

-21-
STATE V. PERRY

Riggs, J., dissenting

and the taking were essentially “a continuous chain of events” and held that the

motion to dismiss the robbery charge was properly denied. Id. at 561.

The majority concludes that this case is unlike Moore, where there was a

minimum timeframe of at least forty minutes when the store was unattended, and

more like Baker, “a continuous chain of events,” because the State’s evidence “tended

to show that [Mr.] Scott and his attackers had direct access to the missing property

during the relevant timeframe.” But that conclusion disregards the fact that the

State failed to present any evidence of a reasonably short timeframe like the

circumstances of Baker. Even viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the

State and accepting as true that Mr. Scott realized he was missing his possessions

when he woke up in the road and not at the hospital, there is still an indeterminate

amount of time that Mr. Scott was lying out in the road before waking up and getting

a ride home. This was not a continuous chain of events like in Baker. Rather, while

Mr. Scott was unconscious, he was vulnerable to the general public in addition to Mr.

Perry or the other assailants. Therefore, likening the sufficiency of the evidence in

this case to the sufficiency of the evidence presented in Moore, the Court of Appeals

correctly held that the evidence presented by the State proved nothing more than the

fact that Mr. Perry had the opportunity to take the property from Mr. Scott. And as

this Court has determined, “evidence of a defendant’s mere opportunity to commit a

crime is not sufficient to send the charge to the jury.” Campbell, 373 N.C. at 221.

-22-
STATE V. PERRY

Riggs, J., dissenting

And while the State may have presented evidence of Mr. Perry’s prior similar

offense to support an inference of Mr. Perry’s intent, that evidence does not transform

the State’s evidence from showing a “mere opportunity” into a “reasonable inference”

that he was, in fact, the perpetrator. See id.; Barnes, 334 N.C. at 75; see also N.C.G.S.

§ 8C-1, Rule 404(b) (2025) (“Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not

admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show that he acted in

conformity therewith.”). Specifically, this Court has held that evidence of opportunity

and intent can be sufficient to show that a defendant was the perpetrator of a robbery

where evidence is also presented that suggests the defendant possessed the taken

property. See, e.g., State v. Dover, 381 N.C. 535, 548–51 (2022) (emphasis added)

(holding that the evidence was sufficient to support the reasonable inference that the

defendant was the perpetrator of a robbery where the evidence tended to show that

the defendant had the opportunity to commit the offense, had prior financial struggles

indicating a motive, and was in possession of a large amount of money after the

victim’s money was stolen); see also, e.g., State v. Evans, 279 N.C. 447, 452 (1971)

(stating in dicta that “[p]roof of the defendant’s presence in a place of business, his

possession therein of a firearm and his intent to commit the offense of robbery is not

sufficient to support a conviction of the offense described in G.S. 14-87, for it omits

the essential elements of (1) a taking or attempt to take personal property, and (2)

the endangering or threatening of the life of a person”). In this matter, no evidence

-23-
STATE V. PERRY

Riggs, J., dissenting

was presented creating an inference that Mr. Perry possessed Mr. Scott’s property,

thus the Rule 404(b) evidence does not tip the balance of this test in the State’s favor.4

Additionally, this Court’s holding in State v. Murphy, 225 N.C. 115 (1945),

supports a conclusion that the State failed to present sufficient evidence of the

robbery charge. In Murphy, the victim was assaulted while riding his bike home and

was left unconscious in the street for an indeterminate amount of time. 225 N.C. at

115–16. Two women later moved the victim to a porch, and the victim woke up after

around ten minutes and discovered that the money he had been carrying was missing.

Id. at 116. The Court determined that “the evidence disclose[d] no more than an

opportunity for the defendants to take the money” and also showed “an equal

opportunity for others to have taken the money.” Id. at 117. Therefore, the Court

stated that “[u]nder such circumstances to find that any particular person took the

money is to enter the realm of speculation” and held that the State did not present

sufficient evidence to sustain the robbery charge against the defendants. Id. The

same result must follow here.

Finally, I wish to clarify the majority’s assertion that “it is a defendant’s burden

to present evidence identifying an alternative perpetrator.” While I agree that our

4 To be clear, we are not arguing that possession of the stolen property is a required

element of robbery with a dangerous weapon. However, in cases where the State’s evidence
was weak, like it is here, our Court has treated possession as significant. Our point is to
emphasize how the State’s 404(b) intent evidence and the lacking timeline evidence
(supporting that Mr. Perry had more than the “mere opportunity” to be the perpetrator) are
not enough for the State to survive a motion to dismiss.

-24-
STATE V. PERRY

Riggs, J., dissenting

caselaw states that “[w]here evidence ‘is proffered to show that someone other than

the defendant committed the crime charged, admission of the evidence must do more

than create mere conjecture of another’s guilt in order to be relevant,’ ” State v. Abbitt,

385 N.C. 28, 40 (2023) (quoting State v. McNeill, 326 N.C. 712, 721 (1990)), that legal

statement is irrelevant to the case at hand. Mr. Perry’s argument is simply that the

State failed to present sufficient evidence to create a timeline narrow enough to

support a reasonable inference that Mr. Perry had more than just an opportunity to

be the perpetrator of this offense.

The State bears the burden of presenting sufficient evidence and, unless we

implicitly overrule Moore and Murphy, the State had the burden here to establish a

timeline tight enough to make reasonable for a jury the inference that it was Mr.

Perry, and not someone else, who committed the crime. The State could have elicited

testimony from the passerby who gave Mr. Scott a ride home, from his niece who he

chatted with once he arrived at home, or from hospital staff.5 If the State had done

so, my position in this matter may have been different because evidence that

5 The trial transcripts demonstrate the State called several witnesses who, at least in

theory, could have provided timeline evidence that answered the reasonableness question,
including Mr. Scott; Dr. MacNeill, an emergency medicine physician who treated Mr. Scott
when he went to the hospital for his injuries during the night of the incident; Dr. Korn, a
plastic surgeon who Mr. Scott was referred to on that night or shortly thereafter; and
Detective John Cramer, the police investigator assigned to the case who interviewed Mr.
Scott. The passerby that gave Mr. Scott a ride and Mr. Scott’s niece were not called as
witnesses. The State failed to elicit any testimony—that parties in this matter could have
likely provided—clarifying the duration of time between the assault occurring and Mr. Scott
noticing his possessions were missing.

-25-
STATE V. PERRY

Riggs, J., dissenting

narrowed the timeline on opportunity would affect the reasonableness of the

inference jurors were asked to make. But as it stands, I would hold that the State

failed to carry its burden.

Accordingly, on these facts, the State has failed to meet its burden to show that

Mr. Perry was the perpetrator of the robbery offense and the Court of Appeals did not

err in vacating Mr. Perry’s conviction of robbery with a dangerous weapon. Therefore,

I respectfully dissent.

Justice EARLS joins in this dissenting opinion.

-26-

Named provisions

Syllabus Combined Opinion

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
NC Courts
Filed
March 20th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Document ID
No. 64PA24
Docket
64PA24
Supersedes
Unpublished decision of the Court of Appeals, No. COA23-375 (N.C. Ct. App. Feb. 20, 2024)

Who this affects

Applies to
Legal professionals
Activity scope
Criminal Prosecutions Appellate Review
Geographic scope
US-NC US-NC

Taxonomy

Primary area
Criminal Justice
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Appellate Procedure Evidence Sufficiency

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