News Roundup – North Carolina Criminal Law

As AP News reports, Hunter Biden, the son of President Biden, was convicted of three felony offenses in a federal court in Delaware this week. The convictions include making a false statement to a licensed gun dealer, making false statements on the firearm purchase application form, and illegal possession of a gun. The younger Biden…

NC Supreme Court Holds that Media Entities May Seek Access to Law Enforcement Recordings by Filing a Petition – North Carolina Criminal Law

In March 2021, several news organizations filed a petition in Alamance County Superior Court seeking the release of law enforcement recordings of an “I Am Change” march that took place in Graham, North Carolina in October 2020. Marchers and law enforcement had clashed, and several people were arrested. The superior court held a hearing and…

What Evidence is Needed to Support a Constructive Dismissal Claim?

Constructive Dismissal Claim A constructive dismissal claim involves an employer’s conduct that causes working conditions to be intolerable for an employee. The claim must be supported by evidence of this intolerable work environment. This evidence may include a variety of things such as email and text messages, voicemails, and written notes. The employee also needs…

News Roundup – North Carolina Criminal Law

Three years ago, the North Carolina Supreme Court in State v. Corbett, 2021-NCSC-18, ___ N.C. ___, 855 S.E.2d 228, 252 (2021), affirmed the court of appeals’ reversal of the defendants’ convictions for second degree murder. The case garnered national and international attention. The victim, Jason Corbett, was a citizen of Ireland, who had relocated to…

N.C. Court of Appeals (June 4, 2024) – North Carolina Criminal Law

This post summarizes the published criminal opinions from the North Carolina Court of Appeals released on June 4, 2024. These summaries will be added to Smith’s Criminal Case Compendium, a free and searchable database of case summaries from 2008 to the present. Order of specific performance for plea agreement was error where defendant did not…

News Roundup – North Carolina Criminal Law

Former President Donald Trump was found guilty of 34 felonies in his “hush money” trial in New York yesterday, making him the first former president in U.S. history to be convicted of a crime. On their second day of deliberations, the jury found that Trump illegally falsified business records to cover up a $130,000 payment to an adult…

N.C. Supreme Court (May 23, 2024) – North Carolina Criminal Law

This post summarizes the published criminal opinions from the Supreme Court of North Carolina released on May 23, 2024. These summaries will be added to Smith’s Criminal Case Compendium, a free and searchable database of case summaries from 2008 to the present. Supreme Court holds that constitutional and statutory defects in indictments do not deprive…

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