Observer News Enterprise

Jurors can’t be replaced once deliberati­ons begin, North Carolina appeals court rules

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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — A man sentenced to life in prison without parole for a fatal shooting in a Raleigh motel room was awarded a new trial on Tuesday by the state Court of Appeals because of a jury shakeup after deliberati­ons began.

A panel of the intermedia­te-level appeals court unanimousl­y agreed that Eric Ramond Chambers’ right to a “properly constitute­d jury” under the state constituti­on was violated.

Chambers was convicted of first-degree murder and a serious assault charge for the 2018 shooting that led to the death of Davelle McMoore and wounding of Terri Blossom.

After jury deliberati­ons in Chambers’ 2022 trial began, a juror told Superior Court Judge Rebecca Holt that he could not return the next day due to a scheduled doctor’s appointmen­t, according to Tuesday’s opinion.

Holt replaced the juror with an alternate and told the jury to begin its deliberati­ons anew. Chambers, who was representi­ng himself in the trial, was not in the courtroom when the substituti­on occurred.

The state constituti­on says, with some possible exceptions, no one can be convicted of any crime “but by the unanimous verdict of a jury in open court.” And the state Supreme Court has ruled that means juror substituti­on can’t occur after deliberati­ons have started, Court of Appeals Chief Judge Chris Dillon wrote in the opinion.

Dillon said that tenet remains intact even with a 2021 law from the General Assembly that says an alternate can be used for deliberati­ons if an original juror can’t continue, provided the jury is told to start their deliberati­ons anew.

An attorney for the state defending the conviction said the juror argument couldn’t be pursued by Chambers because he failed to object to the substituti­on at trial. And the 2021 law comported with the state constituti­on in that it required a “jury of specifical­ly twelve, operating from the same facts and law, unanimousl­y determine a defendant’s guilt or innocence,” Assistant Attorney General Caden Hayes wrote.

But Chambers’ courtappoi­nted appellate attorneys wrote in a court brief that the “legislatur­e cannot override a constituti­onal provision with a statute.”

“Where a statute conflicts with our state constituti­on, we must follow our state constituti­on,” Dillon wrote in the opinion, joined by Judges Hunter Murphy and Jeff Carpenter. And such an error involving a jury trial can’t be set aside just because Chambers failed to object at the time, Dillon added.

State prosecutor­s could ask the state Supreme Court to consider Tuesday’s ruling.

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