Title: State v. Keller
Citation: N/A
Docket Number: 201A19
State: north-carolina
Issuer: north-carolina Supreme Court
Date: June 5, 2020

THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA 
No. 201A19 
Filed 5 June 2020 
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA 
 
 
v. 
DAVID ALAN KELLER 
 
Appeal pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-30(2) from the decision of a divided panel of 
the Court of Appeals, 828 S.E.2d 578 (N.C. Ct. App. 2019), affirming a judgment 
entered on 26 September 2016 by Judge Eric L. Levinson in Superior Court, Lincoln 
County. Heard in the Supreme Court on 9 March 2020.  
Joshua H. Stein, Attorney General, by Sherri H. Lawrence, Assistant Attorney 
General, for the State-appellee.  
 
Glenn Gerding, Appellate Defender, by Emily Holmes Davis, Assistant 
Appellate Defender, for defendant-appellant.  
 
BEASLEY, Chief Justice. 
 
 
In this case we consider whether the trial court erred by refusing to instruct 
the jury on the defense of entrapment. Defendant contends that he presented 
sufficient evidence of entrapment to allow the jury to decide the factual issue of 
whether he was entrapped. We agree. For the reasons stated below, we hold that the 
trial court committed prejudicial error by failing to instruct the jury on the defense 
of entrapment, and we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals.  
STATE V. KELLER 
 
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On 11 May 2015, Detective Brent Heavner, who worked as an undercover 
officer in an operation targeting online sexual predators for the Lincolnton Police 
Department, began posting online as a fifteen-year-old boy named “Kelly.” Detective 
Heavner posted a personal advertisement titled “Boy Needs a Man” on the “Personal 
Encounters” section of Craigslist, which read:  
OK never did this so here it goes. I am wanting to 
experience a man, never have tried it but want to. I have 
been with a girl and now wanna [sic] try a man. I am 
posting here because I want a complete stranger so no one 
will find out about this. I would like an older man that is 
not shy and knows what to do cause [sic] I will be probably 
a little nervous. I would prefer a pic and a number so we 
can not use email. I will be picky so be patient. BUT would 
like to do this soon, u [sic] would have to come to me. would 
like to try anything I am a white male open to anyone[.]  
The next day, defendant responded to Detective Heavner’s post as follows:  
Hey[.] I am a 44 white male looking for a young guy to take 
care of and spoil[.] I am 175 lbs. 32/32 pants[,] 6.5 cut[,] DD 
free. If you would like to be a daddys [sic] boy and have 
your every need provided for you let me know I am looking 
for a boy to treat very special.  
 
Detective Heavner responded to defendant’s message asking, “whats [sic] your 
number and what do you like [?]” Defendant responded by e-mailing his phone 
number. When Detective Heavner failed to respond, defendant sent the following 
three e-mails later that day:  
2:43 p.m.: I sent you my number. I look like a 44-year-old 
guy. Not fat and not ugly.  
 
9:38 p.m.: Are u [sic] still needing a man. I am still looking 
for a boy[.]  
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9:51 p.m.: This man is still looking for his boy toy[.]  
 
Detective Heavner responded the following morning and defendant stated, “I could 
offer you a home. Car to drive[,] phone[,] clothes[, and] money to spend. . . . Pretty 
much whatever you need. . . . I have had 3 boys. They never had to work and got 
everything they ever asked for[.]” Defendant asked Detective Heavner for a picture 
and his “stats” and he sent defendant an image obtained from Google images. In 
response to the pictures, defendant began complimenting Detective Heavner and 
offering to take good care of him. Defendant also told Detective Heavner about his 
three previous “boys.” He told Detective Heavner that “Jeremy was 17. He was with 
me 3 years[,]” “[t]hen [K]aylen was 24 he was with me for 5 years. Then he got 
arrested for DWI three times[,]” and “I have had [D]ustin since 2008.” They began to 
discuss when they could meet, but Detective Heavner expressed concern in the 
following text message exchange:  
[Detective Heavner]: I may be to young but I am needing a 
place to go, my aunt is about to put me back in foster care 
and I will run away if she does[.]  
 
[Defendant]: How old are u[?] If your [sic] 17 it’s legal[.]  
 
[Detective Heavner]: I am a good kid, just my parents are 
shit bags and are in prison and I am the one suffering. I am 
not quiet [sic]16 and actually 16 is the legal age[.]  
 
[Defendant]: Send me a pic I can see your face please[.]  
 
[Detective Heavner]: I am scared to show my face right 
now[.]  
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[Defendant]: Well. I could let you live here with me and 
take care of you[.] 
 
[Detective Heavner]: If ur [sic] willing it sounds good[.] 
 
[Defendant]: But we could not have sex till you was [sic] old 
enough[.] 
 
[Detective Heavner]: Ouch not good lol[.]  
 
Defendant went on to state that he did not want to go to jail and told Detective 
Heavner that “[y]ou know my son got on line [sic] and thought he was talking to a 
girl it turned out to be a cop and when he went to meet her he got arrested and went 
to jail for 3 years and now has to register as a sex offender.”  
Prior to this conversation, Detective Heavner had not informed defendant of 
his age. Defendant continued the conversation and they made plans for defendant to 
pick him up the next day. When Detective Heavner told defendant that “I want to 
perform oral sex on u really bad for some reason can we do that[?]” defendant 
responded, “I don’t want to talk about that stuff on here” and expressed his hope that  
Detective Heavner would understand. The conversation about problems at home 
continued, until Detective Heavner brought up sex again:  
[Detective Heavner]: I am very curious[.]  
 
[Defendant]: Curious about what[?]  
 
[Detective Heavner]: I don’t know how to say it[.]  
 
[Defendant]: Just say it. I won’t judge you[.]  
 
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[Detective Heavner]: How do I know if I am[.] And if I come 
there and we can’t be sexual it might be a mistake[.]  
 
. . . . 
 
[Defendant]: I said we could[.]  
 
. . . .  
 
[Detective Heavner]: You said we could when I am old 
enough for u [.]  
 
[Defendant]: Well like I said don’t want to talk through 
text. But will talk to you in person about it[.]  
 
[Detective Heavner]: You said I said we could so does that 
mean yes cuz if not I may have to find someone else first to 
see what its like[.]  
 
. . . .  
 
[Defendant]: Don’t find anyone else. Please[.]  
 
[Detective Heavner]: Only if we can have oral sex and anal 
tomorrow so I will know, just give me a yes or no and I will 
shut up about it[.]  
 
[Defendant]: Yes[.]  
 
After exchanging additional texts, defendant agreed to meet Detective Heavner and 
take him back to defendant’s home the next day. When defendant arrived at the 
agreed upon location, officers placed defendant under arrest.  
On 10 August 2015 defendant was indicted under N.C.G.S. § 14-202.3 for 
solicitation by computer or electronic device of a person believed to be fifteen years of 
age or younger for the purpose of committing an unlawful sexual act and appearing 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
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at the meeting location where he was to meet the person whom he believed was a 
child.  
Detective Heavner testified at trial, explaining to the jury how he made the 
post in the Casual Encounters section of Craigslist and how he had to confirm he was 
eighteen years old before making his post.  Detective Heavner read the e-mails and 
text messages exchanged between himself and defendant for the jury.  
Defendant’s housemate, Curtis Miller, testified on behalf of the defense. Miller 
testified that he had known defendant for approximately twenty-five years and 
currently resided with him. Miller also testified that during the time Miller knew 
defendant he had brought home five or six men that were all over the age of eighteen. 
When the men lived with defendant, they had separate rooms and defendant helped 
them get jobs and get back on their feet.  
Defendant also testified, stating that he began using Craigslist’s personal 
advertisements in 2006. He used Craigslist because it was an adult website and he 
had previously received messages from minors when he used other online websites 
and chatrooms. He testified that in order to access the Casual Encounters section of 
Craigslist, he had agreed that he was over the age of eighteen, and he further 
explained that Craigslist required users’ date of birth before allowing a post in the 
Casual Encounters section.   He stated that over the course of ten years, he had met 
multiple men on the website and some of the men lived with him for extended periods. 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
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Defendant testified that he was not romantically or sexually involved with every man 
he met online, or even every man who moved in with him.  
With regard to Detective Heavner’s age, defendant testified that at the time he 
gave Heavner his phone number, they had not discussed the matter “because you’ve 
got to be 18 to be on Craigslist.” He also testified that he believed Detective Heavner 
was seventeen years old and he would not “mess with anybody” unless they were 
eighteen. He explained that when he was in his twenties he met Jeremy, who was 
seventeen at the time, and made Jeremy wait until he was eighteen to move in.  
Defendant further testified that he did not include any sexual content in his 
text messages with Detective Heavner and explained that the detective was the only 
person during the encounter to allude to the possibility of sexual activity during their 
conversations. Defendant testified that he responded to Detective Heavner’s 
advertisement because he and his live-in companion were having problems and 
defendant wanted to make him jealous. He further testified that “sex was not on my 
mind at this time” and that he was concerned Detective Heavner was in danger 
because his aunt was not providing for him. He discussed Detective Heavner with his 
housemate Curtis Miller and planned on letting him stay in the spare bedroom.  
However, on cross-examination, defendant admitted that initially, his 
response to the Craigslist ad was sexual in nature, but that he thought Detective 
Heavner was over eighteen years old. He further testified that he did not recall 
Detective Heavner telling him that he was only fifteen years old. He also explained 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
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that he did not want Detective Heavner finding anyone else because he was afraid 
whoever he met may hurt him. He testified that he agreed to have sex with Detective 
Heavner simply “to shut him up.”  
At the close of all of the evidence, defendant made a motion to dismiss, which 
the trial court denied. Defense counsel further argued for jury instructions on the 
defense of entrapment. The trial court ultimately denied defendant’s request for jury 
instructions on entrapment, finding the defense inconsistent with defendant’s 
argument that he did not travel to the meeting location for the purpose of having sex 
with “Detective Heavner.  
Shortly after deliberations began, the jury asked for the elements of the offense 
and some of the State’s evidence. Approximately two hours later the jury returned 
with another question, asking the court, “Please define intent to have sex with a 
minor. Does it matter if the defendant’s intent is to have sex when the boy is underage 
or if his intent is to wait until—is to wait to have sex until the boy is of age?” The trial 
court instructed the jury that “[i]t would constitute a violation of the law to have 
intent with a boy who is underage. It would not be a violation of the criminal code to 
have—to intend to have sex with someone who is not underage.” Later that afternoon, 
the jury asked for the elements of the offense again. Shortly thereafter the jury 
indicated it had reached a verdict. However, when the trial court asked the foreperson 
if there was a unanimous decision, the foreperson indicated that it was not a 
unanimous verdict and that everyone had “made their own personal decision.”  
STATE V. KELLER 
 
Opinion of the Court 
 
 
 
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The jury returned for further deliberations the following day, and on 23 August 
2016, it found defendant guilty of the offense charged. The trial court sentenced 
defendant to ten-to-twenty-one months’ imprisonment and mandatory registration as 
a sex offender for thirty years. Defendant filed a petition for a writ of certiorari, which 
was granted by the Court of Appeals. Defendant argued on appeal that the trial court 
erred when it failed to instruct the jury on entrapment.  
In a divided opinion issued 21 May 2019, the Court of Appeals held that the 
refusal to instruct on entrapment was not error because the evidence failed to support 
the instruction. State v. Keller, 828 S.E.2d 578, 583–84 (N.C. Ct. App. 2019). The 
majority concluded that defendant failed to show his entitlement to an entrapment 
instruction for two reasons: (1) the evidence showed that he was willing to engage in 
criminal activity; and (2) he failed to show that he did not have a predisposition to 
commit the act. Id. The Court of Appeals noted that defendant repeatedly used the 
word “boy” when communicating with Detective Heavner and continued to speak with 
him after he told defendant he was fifteen years old. Id. The court ultimately held 
that Detective Heavner simply gave defendant the opportunity to commit the crime, 
in which defendant willingly engaged. Id. at 584. Because the majority’s conclusion 
that defendant was predisposed to commit the crime was dispositive, it did not 
address the other issues raised on appeal. 
Arguing that the majority failed to consider the evidence in the light most 
favorable to defendant and to accept defendant’s testimony as true as required by the 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
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applicable standard of review, the dissenting judge would have concluded that 
defendant demonstrated his entitlement to the entrapment instruction. Id. at 587–
90 (Inman, J., dissenting). The dissenting judge further opined that the State’s 
argument—that defendant was not entitled to the entrapment defense because he 
denied elements of the crime—was unavailing. Id. at 590. Finally, the dissenting 
judge asserted that defendant showed he was prejudiced by the trial court’s denial of 
an entrapment instruction. Id. at 590–91. Based on the dissent, defendant filed notice 
of appeal on 25 June 2019.  
Analysis 
The issue before this Court is whether the trial court committed prejudicial 
error by failing to instruct the jury regarding the defense of entrapment. Resolution 
of that issue requires this Court to determine whether defendant was entitled to 
entrapment jury instructions, whether those instructions were impermissibly 
inconsistent with defendant’s other theories of defense, and whether defendant was 
prejudiced by the trial court’s failure to give the instructions.  
I. 
Entrapment Instructions  
“The first duties of the officers of the law are to prevent, not to punish crime. 
It is not their duty to incite to and create crime for the sole purpose of prosecuting 
and punishing it.” State v. Stanley, 288 N.C. 19, 29, 215 S.E.2d 589, 595 (2010) 
(citation omitted). Thus, “[th]e defense of entrapment is available when there are acts 
of persuasion, trickery or fraud carried out by law enforcement officers or their agents 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
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to induce a defendant to commit a crime and when the criminal intent lies with the 
law enforcement agencies.” State v. Hageman, 307 N.C. 1, 28, 296 S.E.2d 438, 449 
(1982) (citing State v. Walker, 295 N.C. 510, 246 S.E.2d 748 (1978)). Entrapment is a 
complete defense to the crime charged. See State v. Wallace, 246 N.C. 445, 447, 98 
S.E.2d 473, 474 (1957) (“The law of entrapment is that it not only may, but it does 
constitute a defense.”) Defendants have the burden of proving the defense of 
entrapment “to the satisfaction of the jury” and the burden does not shift to the 
prosecution to prove predisposition beyond a reasonable doubt. Hageman, 307 N.C. 
at 28; 296 S.E.2d at 448.  
The crucial inquiry by this Court is whether law enforcement or the defendant 
created the criminal intent. If a defendant has a “predisposition to commit the crime 
independent of governmental inducement and influence,” the origin of the criminal 
intent lies with the defendant and the defense of entrapment is unavailable. Id. at 
29, 296 S.E.2d at 449. Predisposition may be shown by “a defendant’s ready 
compliance, acquiescence in, or willingness to cooperate in the criminal plan where 
the police merely afford the defendant an opportunity to commit the crime.” Id. at 31, 
296 S.E.2d at 450 (citations omitted). 
Generally, the issue of whether a defendant is entrapped is a question of fact 
to be resolved by the jury. State v. Hipp 245 N.C. 205, 207; 95 S.E.2d 452 454 (1956) 
(“It is neither the function of the trial court nor this Court to say whether the 
defendant’s story is true or false. That is the jury’s function.”). A defendant is entitled 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
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to jury instructions on the defense of entrapment if he presents “some credible 
evidence tending to support the defendant’s contention that he was a victim of 
entrapment.” State v. Burnette, 242 N.C. 164, 173, 87 S.E.2d 191, 197 (1955). In order 
to determine whether defendant presented “some credible evidence,” we consider 
whether defendant has presented sufficient evidence to permit a jury to reasonably 
infer that he was entrapped. See Walker, 295 N.C. at 515, 246 S.E.2d at 751 
(concluding that defendant’s evidence was “simply insufficient to permit a jury to 
infer that any undue persuasion, trickery or fraud was practiced by government 
agents upon defendant to induce him”).  
Here, we do not determine defendant’s guilt or weigh the credibility of his 
testimony; rather, we consider whether defendant met the threshold burden of 
producing “some credible evidence” of each element of entrapment.  
When making this determination, we view the evidence in the light most 
favorable to the defendant, see State v. Moore, 363 N.C. 793, 796, 688 S.E.2d 447, 449 
(2010); State v. Mash, 323 N.C. 339, 348 372 S.E.2d 532, 537 (1988), and we take the 
defendant’s testimony as true, see Moore, 363 N.C. at 796, 688 S.E.2d at 449 (citing 
State v. Hipp, 245 N.C. 205, 95 S.E.2d 452 (1956) (“[I]f defendant’s evidence, taken 
as true, is sufficient to support an instruction . . . it must be given[.]”); State v. Ott, 
236 N.C. App. 648, 652, 763 S.E.2d 530, 533 (quoting State v. Foster, 235 N.C. App. 
365, 374, 761 S.E.2d 208, 215 (2014)) (“[F]or purposes of the entrapment issue, we 
must assume that [the] defendant’s testimony is true[.]”). Discrepancies in 
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defendant’s evidence or contradictory evidence offered by the State do not bar the 
availability of this defense. See State v. Dooley, 285 N.C. 158, 163, 203 S.E.2d 815, 
818 (1974) (noting in a self-defense case, “[w]here there is evidence that defendant 
acted in self-defense, the court must charge on this aspect, even though there is 
contradictory evidence by the State or discrepancies in defendant’s evidence”). 
Therefore, it is not necessary that this Court find defendant’s evidence persuasive on 
its merits—we need only find that, giving the defendant the benefit of every doubt 
and assuming the veracity of his testimony, a reasonable jury could do so.  
The evidence here, viewed in the light most favorable to defendant and 
assuming the truth of his testimony, is sufficient to allow a reasonable juror to 
conclude that defendant was not predisposed to commit the crime and the criminal 
intent was placed in defendant’s mind by Detective Heavner.1 Defendant’s conduct 
prior to responding to the Craigslist posting does not show predisposition to commit 
sexual activity with a minor. No evidence was introduced that defendant had ever 
engaged in sexual activity with an underage child. Rather, defendant’s evidence 
showed that he had a history of interacting with adult men through Craigslist and he 
often invited those men to live with him. He further testified that not all of his 
interactions through Craigslist were sexual in nature, and that he did not have sexual 
 
1 Here, it is uncontested whether Detective Heavner performed an act of persuasion, trickery, 
or fraud. Detective Heavner’s conduct constituted an act of trickery because he testified that he had 
been working on an undercover operation on Craigslist for approximately 18 months and would 
“pretend to be either a 14-year-old girl, 14-year-old boy, or 15-year-old boy.”  
STATE V. KELLER 
 
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relations with every man that lived with him. While defendant did acknowledge 
“mutual fondling” with a sixteen-year-old when defendant was nineteen years old, 
such an encounter is not illegal in North Carolina. See N.C.G.S. § 14-27.30 (2019) (“A 
defendant is guilty of a Class B1 felony if the defendant engages in a sexual act with 
another person who is 15 years of age or younger and the defendant is at least 12 
years old and at least six years older than the person[.]”) Defendant’s evidence, which 
we must view in the light most favorable to him, indicates nothing more than 
consensual sexual activity with same-sex partners legally capable of consent. We 
cannot conclude that such evidence demonstrates a predisposition to engaging in 
sexual activity with a child.  
 
Defendant testified that he believed Detective Heavner to be eighteen years 
old when they began communicating because Craigslist required age verification 
prior to allowing posts in the Casual Encounters forum. Therefore, none of the 
communications made by defendant prior to Detective Heavner revealing his age can 
show predisposition to commit the crime charged. Once defendant became aware of 
Detective Heavner’s age, he repeatedly stated that they would have to wait until 
Detective Heavner could give legal consent before the two could engage in sexual 
intercourse. After defendant refused to have sex with Detective Heavner due to his 
age, Heavner repeatedly shifted the conversation back towards the topic of sexual 
activity. Defendant’s testimony indicates that he relented to Detective Heavner’s 
requests only after he threatened to meet someone else with whom to engage in 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
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sexual activity if defendant was unwilling to participate. Defendant testified that he 
was concerned that Detective Heavner would meet with someone else who could hurt 
or kill him. Taking defendant’s testimony as true, defendant presented evidence 
which a reasonable juror could find credible to demonstrate that he did not have a 
willingness or predisposition to engage in sexual activity with a minor, but had a 
desire to protect Detective Heavner from potential danger.  
II. 
Inconsistent Theories    
 
Having determined that defendant presented sufficient evidence to warrant an 
entrapment instruction, we turn now to whether defendant’s claim that he was 
entrapped is prohibitively inconsistent with defendant’s other assertions. Generally, 
“[w]here a defendant claims he has not done an act, he also cannot claim that the 
government induced him to do that act.” State v. Neville, 302 N.C. 623, 626, 276 
S.E.2d 373, 374 (1981). Thus, a defendant cannot simultaneously deny committing 
the criminal act and also raise the defense of entrapment. The defense of entrapment 
is available, however, if “the State’s own evidence raises an inference of entrapment” 
or if “the defendant denies the intent required for the commission of the offense.” Id. 
at 626, 276 S.E.2d at 374.  
This Court’s holding in Neville is instructive here. In Neville, the defendant 
was charged with possession with intent to sell a controlled substance after he sold 
drugs to an undercover SBI agent. Id. at 625, 276 S.E.2d at 374–5. The defendant 
testified at trial, denying the act of possessing drugs or giving the undercover agent 
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any drugs. Id. Defendant testified that he and another individual, an informant 
working with the undercover agent, had conspired to trick the undercover agent into 
believing that defendant had purchased LSD with funds provided by the undercover 
agent when in fact the informant already possessed the LSD. Id. On appeal, the 
defendant argued that he was entitled to an entrapment instruction because, 
although he denied actually possessing the LSD, he did not deny participating in the 
scheme that gave the appearance of his having sold drugs to the informant. Id. at 
625, 276 S.E.2d at 374. This Court held that the defendant’s denial of having 
possessed or sold the controlled substance precluded the entrapment instruction. Id. 
at 626, 276 S.E.2d at 374. However, the Court went on to distinguish between a denial 
of the criminal act—the actus reus—and the denial of the criminal intent—the mens 
rea. We reasoned that the defense of entrapment remains available despite the 
defendant’s denial of the culpable mens rea because “the defense of entrapment itself 
is an assertion that it was the will of the government, and not of the defendant, which 
spawned the commission of the offense.” Id. at 626, 276 S.E.2d at 375.  
Here, the delineation between the criminal act and the criminal intent is less 
clear. Defendant was charged and convicted of soliciting a minor by computer to 
commit an unlawful sex act, which provides: 
A person is guilty of solicitation of a child by a computer if 
the person is 16 years of age or older and the person 
knowingly, with the intent to commit an unlawful sex act, 
entices, advises, coerces, orders, or commands, by means of 
a computer or any other device capable of electronic data 
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storage or transmission, a child who is less than 16 years 
of age and at least five years younger than the defendant, 
or a person the defendant believes to be a child who is less 
than 16 years of age and who the defendant believes to be 
at least five years younger than the defendant, to meet 
with the defendant or any other person for the purpose of 
committing an unlawful sex act. 
N.C.G.S. § 14-202.3. This offense includes multiple elements relating to a defendant’s 
state of mind. Defendant denied that he intended to commit an unlawful sexual act; 
that he had knowledge Detective Heavner was under sixteen years old; and that his 
purpose in meeting Detective Heavner was to commit an unlawful sex act. Each of 
these assertions relates to defendant’s state of mind or criminal intent.  
 
Unlike in Neville, in which the defendant denied the actus reus of the criminal 
activity, defendant here denies only his criminal intent—the mens rea. He did not 
deny that he communicated with Detective Heavner online or that he drove to meet 
with Heavner but only that his intentions in doing so were criminal. Consistent with 
Neville, we hold that defendant’s arguments at trial were consistent with the defense 
of entrapment and should not bar the availability of the defense.  
III. 
Prejudice 
Under N.C.G.S. § 15A-1443(a) (2019), a criminal defendant is prejudiced by 
non-constitutional errors 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[.]” As previously discussed, defendant presented substantial evidence that might 
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allow a reasonable juror to find that it was Detective Heavner, rather than defendant, 
who repeatedly demanded that defendant agree to participate in sexual activity.  
The jury’s questions to the trial court further support a finding of prejudice. 
The jury returned with a question about defendant’s intent, asking the trial court to 
define intent and whether it mattered if defendant intended to wait to have sex until 
the victim was of legal age. This question shows that at least part of the jury’s 
deliberation focused on whether defendant had the requisite criminal intent, and the 
central inquiry for entrapment in this case is whether the criminal intent was 
originated by defendant or law enforcement. An entrapment instruction would have 
allowed the jury to determine whether that criminal intent originated in the mind of 
defendant or Detective Heavner. This question, combined with defendant’s 
testimony, shows there is a reasonable possibility that a different result would have 
been reached had the jury been instructed on entrapment. We therefore conclude that 
the trial court’s failure to instruct the jury on entrapment was prejudicial and 
defendant is entitled to a new trial.  
 
REVERSED AND REMANDED. 
 
 
 
Justice NEWBY dissenting. 
The crucial event in this case is the moment defendant learned his prospective 
sexual partner was underage. Once he learned that fact, he did not end his pursuit. 
Instead, he continued his undertaking to the point of driving to pick up his young 
victim. His actions demonstrate his predisposition to pursue such an illegal sexual 
encounter. Defendant nonetheless claims that he was entrapped by law enforcement. 
The majority takes defendant at his word and blinds itself to the mountain of 
uncontested evidence that shows that defendant was predisposed to commit the 
offense. The majority thus removes from our case law the requirement that a 
defendant must present sufficient credible evidence of entrapment. This case 
presents two issues: (1) whether defendant admitted that he committed all the 
elements of the offense, as he must admit if he wants to assert an entrapment defense; 
and (2) whether defendant presented sufficient credible evidence that he was not 
predisposed to solicit sex with someone under sixteen years of age. Defendant has 
done neither. He is therefore not entitled to a jury instruction on the defense of 
entrapment. I respectfully dissent. 
Tragically, some adults use the internet to identify potential child victims and 
illegally entice them into engaging in sexual encounters. To address this societal 
problem, Detective Brent Heavner of the Lincolnton Police Department posed as a 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
-2- 
 
boy named “Kelly”1 as part of an undercover operation and posted the following 
advertisement, titled “boy needing a man – m4m,” in Craigslist’s “Casual Encounters” 
section:  
OK never did this so here it goes. I am wanting to 
experience a man, never have tried it but want to. I have 
been with a girl and now wanna try a man. I am posting 
here because I want a complete stranger so no one will find 
out about this. I would like an older man that is not shy 
and knows what to do cause I will be probably a little 
nervous. I would prefer a pic and a number so we can not 
use email. I will be picky so be patient. BUT would like to 
do this soon, u would have to come to me. [W]ould like to 
try anything I am a white male open to anyone[.] 
Defendant responded to the advertisement the next day describing himself, including 
his genitalia, and stating that he was “looking for a boy to treat very special.”2 He 
admits he was looking for a sexual encounter. Defendant soon gave Kelly his phone 
number, and the two began communicating by text message. Defendant reiterated to 
Kelly that he was looking for “a boy to take care of and spoil.” He also asked Kelly for 
a picture and for Kelly’s “stats.” Defendant told Kelly he would buy him all sorts of 
things and that, in exchange, Kelly would “make [defendant] happy.” As the 
conversation continued, defendant informed Kelly that he had hosted multiple live-
in partners in the past and that he was tired of his current partner. After Kelly sent 
a photo, defendant complimented Kelly’s appearance multiple times and spoke of his 
 
1 Detective Heavner is most often referred to in this opinion as “Kelly,” the name of 
the child alias. 
2 Defendant identified himself as a forty-four-year-old male. It was later determined 
that he was fifty-one years of age. 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
-3- 
 
ability to have sex frequently. 
 
Kelly soon informed defendant that he was under sixteen years of age. 
Defendant nevertheless continued the conversation. He first told Kelly that Kelly 
could live with him, but that they could not have sex until Kelly “was old enough.” 
Defendant continued to ask for another picture of Kelly but also expressed his concern 
that he did not want to go to jail. Specifically, defendant explained that he did not 
want to end up like his son, who was imprisoned for three years after attempting a 
liaison with someone he thought was “a girl,” but was actually a law enforcement 
officer posing as a girl online. 
 
Kelly continued to steer the conversation to sexual themes, and defendant 
continued responding. Kelly explained that he had only had sex with “[two] girls” and 
that he wanted defendant to be the first man with whom he had sex. Defendant 
responded “[o]k. Well we can fix that. We will go slow.” They then agreed that they 
would meet the following day. As Kelly continued to talk about having sex with 
defendant, defendant explained that he did not “want to talk about that stuff [by text 
message].” 
Nevertheless, later in the conversation defendant became more explicit about 
his willingness to have sex with Kelly. When Kelly suggested that it might be a 
mistake for him to meet with defendant if they could not “be sexual,” defendant 
responded “I said we could.” After Kelly sought clarification, defendant told him 
“[w]ell like I said [I] don’t want to talk through text. But will talk to you in person 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
-4- 
 
about it.” Finally, Kelly issued an ultimatum, asking defendant for a direct answer 
as to whether they could have sex, and stating that he “may have to find someone 
else first” if they could not. To this, defendant simply responded “[y]es.” Kelly then 
specifically asked if they could “have oral sex and anal” the next day. Again, 
defendant responded “[y]es.” 
Throughout the rest of their conversation, defendant resisted further 
discussions about sex over text message. But he moved forward with the plan to pick 
up Kelly the next day, all the while giving Kelly compliments like “[y]ou[’re] the 
prettiest boy I ever saw” and “[y]ou[’re] just what I have been looking for.” The next 
day, defendant drove to pick up Kelly at a location Kelly selected and was arrested at 
the scene. 
Defendant was tried for solicitation by computer of a person believed to be 
under the age of sixteen for the purpose of committing an unlawful sex act and 
appearing at a meeting location. See N.C.G.S. 14-202.3(a), (c)(2) (2019). The trial 
court denied defendant’s request for a jury instruction on the defense of entrapment, 
and defendant was convicted and sentenced to ten to twenty-one months 
imprisonment. The Court of Appeals upheld the trial court’s decision not to give a 
jury instruction on the defense of entrapment. 
To assert the defense of entrapment, a defendant must first admit that he 
committed all the acts that are elements of the charged offense. As this Court said in 
State v. Neville, “it is inconsistent for [a] defendant to assert on the one hand that he 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
-5- 
 
did not do certain acts and then to insist that the government induced him to do the 
very acts which he disavows doing.” 302 N.C. 623, 625, 276 S.E.2d 373, 375 (1981). 
The Court in Neville went on to clarify that a defendant may still assert the defense 
of entrapment if he “denies the intent required for the commission of the offense.” Id. 
at 626, 276 S.E.2d at 375 (emphasis added). The Court explained that “the 
entrapment defense is not inconsistent with the defense of lack of mental state since 
the defense of entrapment itself is an assertion that it was the will of the government, 
and not of the defendant, which spawned the commission of the offense.” Id. This 
limited exception of intent thus does not apply to all underlying facts about what was 
going on in a defendant’s mind at the time the offense was committed. Instead, it only 
applies to the intent required to commit the acts of the charged offense. 
Defendant in this case cannot assert the defense of entrapment because he has 
not admitted to all the elements of the charged offense. Defendant was charged with 
soliciting sex with a child by computer and appearing at a meeting location. To be 
found guilty of this offense, a defendant must, among other things, solicit sex with 
someone the defendant believes to be under sixteen years of age using a computer, 
with the intent to commit an unlawful sexual act, and appear at a meeting location.3 
 
3 Subsection 14-202.3(a) provides that “[a] person is guilty of solicitation of a child by 
a computer if the person is 16 years of age or older and the person knowingly, with the intent 
to commit an unlawful sex act, entices, advises, coerces, orders, or commands, by means of a 
computer or any other device capable of electronic data storage or transmission, a child who 
is less than 16 years of age and at least five years younger than the defendant, or a person 
the defendant believes to be a child who is less than 16 years of age and who the defendant 
believes to be at least five years younger than the defendant, to meet with the defendant or 
any other person for the purpose of committing an unlawful sex act.” (Emphasis added). The 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
-6- 
 
The jury was therefore instructed that to find defendant guilty, it had to find beyond 
a reasonable doubt (1) that defendant “was [sixteen] years of age or older”; (2) that 
defendant “enticed and/or advised by means of [an electronic device] a person 
[defendant] believes to be . . . less than [sixteen] years old and at least five years 
younger than [defendant], to meet with the defendant for the purpose of committing 
an unlawful sex act”; (3) that defendant “acted knowingly with the intent to commit 
an unlawful sex act”; and (4) that defendant “actually appeared at the meeting 
location.” The jury returned a guilty verdict.4 
As the majority emphasizes, defendant still maintains that he did not know 
Kelly was under the age of sixteen. But belief that the intended victim is under the 
age of sixteen is an element of the offense charged against defendant. Thus, under 
North Carolina law, defendant cannot consistently claim both that he did not know 
that Kelly was under the age of sixteen and that the government induced him to 
solicit sex with someone defendant knew was underage. 
The majority wrongly decides that defendant’s knowledge of Kelly’s age 
amounts to a denial of intent, which Neville allows to be asserted alongside the 
 
accused is guilty of a Class G felony if, in addition to those things, he also appears at a 
meeting location. N.C.G.S. § 14-202.3(c)(2). 
4 The majority focuses on certain pieces of evidence that, if viewed in isolation, might 
suggest that defendant had no intent to engage in sexual conduct with Kelly. However, 
defendant made that precise argument to the jury, and the jury rejected it. The jury found 
that defendant had the requisite intent. Thus, this Court may not now reconsider whether 
defendant had such intent; it may only consider whether that intent was purely implanted 
by law enforcement, or whether defendant was predisposed to possess it. 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
-7- 
 
defense of entrapment. Knowledge of the victim’s age is not, however, the sort of 
mental state to which Neville was referring. Neville explains that only intent to 
commit the necessary acts for the offense falls into this category. 302 N.C. at 626, 276 
S.E.2d at 375 (referring to instances in which “the defendant denies the intent 
required for the commission of the offense” (emphasis added)). A defendant may only 
contest this type of mental state alongside an entrapment defense because, as the 
Neville Court explained, to claim entrapment is essentially to claim “that it was the 
will of the government, and not of the defendant, which spawned the commission of 
the offense.” Id. (emphasis added).  
In other words, in this case, defendant could only deny one of the four parts of 
the jury instruction and still maintain the defense of entrapment—the requirement 
that he “acted knowingly with the intent to commit an unlawful sex act.” (Emphasis 
added.) He can deny he intended to have sex. But he cannot deny that he was at least 
sixteen years of age, that he enticed someone to meet who he knew was under sixteen 
years of age, or that he appeared at a meeting location. Because defendant denies 
knowledge of Kelly’s age, he cannot assert the defense of entrapment. 
If, instead, a defendant admits to the elements of the charged offense, “[t]he 
defense of entrapment is available when there are acts of persuasion, trickery or 
fraud carried out by law enforcement officers or their agents to induce a defendant to 
commit a crime and when the origin of the criminal intent lies with the law 
enforcement agencies.” State v. Hageman, 307 N.C. 1, 28, 296 S.E.2d 433, 449 (1982). 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
-8- 
 
A defendant is not entitled to a jury instruction on the defense of entrapment simply 
by showing that law enforcement engaged in deceptive behavior. Id. A defendant 
must also show “that the trickery, fraud or deception was ‘practiced upon one who 
entertained no prior criminal intent.’ ” Id. (quoting State v. Stanley, 288 N.C. 19, 28, 
215 S.E.2d 589, 595 (1975)). Thus, as this Court has explained, if a defendant was 
“predisposed” to commit the criminal conduct, the defense of entrapment is not 
available to him. State v. Luster, 306 N.C. 566, 579, 295 S.E.2d 421, 428 (1982). 
“[M]erely providing the opportunity for one predisposed to criminal conduct does not 
constitute entrapment.” Id. (emphasis added). 
Moreover, our precedent shows that a defendant is not entitled to a jury 
instruction on the defense of entrapment even if the opportunity law enforcement 
presents to commit a crime is a particularly enticing option. In Luster, law 
enforcement set up an entire business front and offered people money for stolen goods. 
306 N.C. at 568, 295 S.E.2d at 422. The defendant was charged after he sold multiple 
stolen vehicles to undercover law enforcement officers. Id. at 569, 295 S.E.2d at 423. 
The defendant later claimed he was entrapped, testifying that he had not been in any 
criminal trouble other than an unrelated misdemeanor six or seven years before and 
that he did not know the vehicles were stolen. Id. at 570, 579, 295 S.E.2d at 424, 428. 
Nevertheless, this Court went on to hold that he was not entitled to an entrapment 
instruction. Id. at 579, 295 S.E.2d at 428. The Court explained that the key inquiry 
is whether the defendant was predisposed to the criminal activity, not merely 
whether law enforcement created a seemingly convenient opportunity for the 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
-9- 
 
defendant to commit the criminal activity. Id. The Court thus did not consider the 
defendant’s evidence of entrapment to be sufficient because other evidence plainly 
contradicted it—the defendant bragged to law enforcement about dealing in stolen 
vehicles, and he claimed he had inside contacts at a car dealership. Id. at 575, 295 
S.E.2d at 426. This was so even though the defendant claimed he was paid $400 by 
law enforcement officers to bring them more stolen vehicles. Id. at 581, 295 S.E.2d at 
429. In the Court’s words, the “evidence overwhelmingly refute[d] [the] defendant’s 
contention [that he was induced by law enforcement to commit the offense].” Id. 
Luster therefore reveals that defendant here must show more than the fact 
that law enforcement’s actions helped persuade him to commit the offense. He must 
provide sufficient evidence that he was not predisposed to intend to engage in sexual 
conduct with Kelly. 
Luster thus also illuminates the proper standard of review. When a defendant 
raises the defense of entrapment, the trial court looks at all the evidence in the light 
most favorable to the defendant. Id. at 572, 295 S.E.2d at 425. But the court should 
not ignore concrete contradictory evidence. The defendant has the burden of showing 
that “credible” and “sufficient” evidence supports all the elements of entrapment. Id. 
at 571–72, 295 S.E.2d at 424–25. 
The record here does not support defendant’s claim of entrapment. The 
evidence in this case instead shows that law enforcement merely provided the 
apparent opportunity for defendant to commit criminal acts he was predisposed to 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
-10- 
 
commit. Defendant admitted that he had sexual intentions when he began 
communicating with Kelly. It is not a crime to seek sexual relations online. However, 
the telling point is what defendant did after he learned of Kelly’s age. The evidence 
shows defendant maintained the intent to pursue a sexual encounter even after he 
learned that Kelly was underage. If defendant was not predisposed, he would have 
terminated the conversation. 
Once Kelly responded to defendant and eventually revealed that he was fifteen 
years of age, initially defendant expressed that the two of them would have to wait 
until Kelly was older to have sex. Nevertheless, defendant did not end the 
conversation there. Instead, he continued to respond to Kelly even when Kelly 
repeatedly turned the conversation to sexual themes. Multiple times when Kelly 
brought up the possibility of the two of them having sex, defendant simply said that 
he did not want to talk about it over text message. The reasonable explanation of 
defendant’s reluctance to discuss specifics over text message is that defendant wanted 
to avoid posting additional evidence of his criminal intent. Indeed, that explanation 
is further supported by defendant’s statements expressing that he did not want to 
end up like his son, who was imprisoned for a similar offense.  
In any event, defendant was unable to consistently conceal his intent; after 
Kelly said that it “might be a mistake” for him to meet with defendant if they could 
not have sex, defendant replied “I said we could.” And when Kelly then responded 
that he thought defendant said they “could [only have sex] when [Kelly was] old 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
-11- 
 
enough,” defendant reiterated that he did not want to “talk through text” but would 
talk to Kelly in person about it. 
Defendant soon demonstrated his intent even more explicitly, after Kelly 
stated that he may have to “find someone else” if defendant would not promise to 
have sex with him. Kelly told defendant that he would meet him “[o]nly if [they could] 
have oral sex and anal [sex the next day],” and told defendant to “just give [him] a 
yes or no and [he would] shut up about it.” Defendant simply replied “[y]es.” The 
reasonable understanding of defendant’s text conversation with Kelly is that 
defendant began with, and throughout the conversation maintained, the intent to 
engage in sexual conduct with Kelly. 
Defendant’s limited evidence to the contrary is too weak to show that he was 
not predisposed to seek sexual conduct with the underage Kelly. In other words, 
defendant has not met his burden of showing sufficient credible evidence that he had 
no criminal predisposition. Defendant claims that he only agreed to have sex with 
Kelly because he was afraid that, if he did not, Kelly would seek to meet with someone 
else and potentially be harmed. His alleged fear presumably was in part the result of 
Kelly’s statements that his aunt did not want to care for him and that he would search 
elsewhere if defendant did not agree to have sex.   
But this evidence does not show that defendant had no predisposition to seek 
sex with Kelly. More likely, the evidence reveals the strength of defendant’s 
predisposition. First, as noted above, defendant engaged with Kelly’s sex-themed 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
-12- 
 
dialogue after learning Kelly’s age and before Kelly’s final threat to look elsewhere 
(additionally, defendant’s denial of knowledge of Kelly’s age is conclusively 
undermined by the evidence; he would not have initially expressed that the two of 
them would have to wait to have sex, or that he was concerned about going to jail, 
unless he knew that Kelly was underage). Second, if the only encouragement required 
for defendant to explicitly agree to have sex the following day was Kelly’s threat to 
look for someone else, defendant already had a predisposition, if not an outright 
intent, to have sex. Seeking sex with a minor to “protect” the minor from some other 
harm (such as sex with someone else) is not a defense. Even if the thought of Kelly 
going elsewhere solidified defendant’s intent to have sex, it did not create that intent.  
The other evidence the majority recites does not amount to sufficient credible 
evidence of entrapment either. The majority notes that defendant has not been known 
to engage in illegal sexual conduct with a minor in the past and that defendant 
expected to interact only with adults on Craigslist because of that website’s age 
restrictions. 
First, the fact that defendant has not been known to engage in the same illegal 
conduct as the offense charged is not significant evidence that defendant had no 
predisposition to commit the offense. An individual’s history is weak evidence of how 
that person might act in any given new situation. That principle holds true in this 
case too—the fact that defendant had not been known to seek illegal sex with a minor 
before does not mean he was not predisposed to do so with someone like Kelly, who 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
-13- 
 
was, in defendant’s words “the prettiest boy [he] ever saw” and “just what [he had] 
been looking for.” 
Second, it may be true that defendant originally expected to interact with only 
of-age individuals when he first accessed Craigslist, but that too is, at best, weak 
evidence that he had no criminal predisposition.5 Defendant admitted he had sexual 
intentions when he responded to Kelly’s Craigslist advertisement. And he continued 
pursuing a relationship with Kelly after Kelly revealed his young age and kept asking 
if the two of them could have sex. 
Indeed, the majority’s approach directly contradicts the approach this Court 
took in Luster when evaluating a defense of entrapment. In that case the Court held 
that the defendant’s evidence of entrapment, which included his assertions that he 
had never committed a crime like the one charged and that law enforcement paid him 
$400 to encourage him to commit the crime again, was “overwhelmingly refute[d]” by 
other evidence. 306 N.C. at 581, 295 S.E.2d at 429. This case is like Luster. Though 
defendant has presented evidence that he has not had unlawful sex with an underage 
person, and though he claims he did not know Kelly’s age, far greater evidence shows 
that he was well aware of Kelly’s age and was predisposed to commit the offense. 
At the core, then, the majority goes wrong because it misunderstands the 
standard of review. Certainly, we must reasonably view all the evidence in the light 
 
5 Predisposition, after all, is not the same as intent. A predisposition may remain 
latent and subconscious until an opportunity to act on it arises. 
STATE V. KELLER 
 
Newby, J., dissenting 
 
-14- 
 
most favorable to defendant. See, e.g., id. at 572, 295 S.E.2d at 425. Yet, that does not 
mean we disregard evidence that dramatically contradicts defendant’s assertions. 
This Court should give defendant the benefit of the doubt when there is doubt. 
Ultimately, though, defendant has the burden of demonstrating that the facts, 
considered in their entirety¸ present “credible” and “sufficient” evidence that 
defendant was not predisposed to commit the offense. Id. at 571–72, 295 S.E.2d at 
424–25. The majority improperly grasps onto only those facts which could possibly 
support defendant’s claim, and it ignores all the others. If the majority considered the 
factual record properly, it would see that, if anything, substantial evidence shows 
that defendant intended to engage in sexual conduct with Kelly from the beginning 
to the end of their text conversation and that he was predisposed to commit the 
offense. The trial court thus properly denied defendant’s request for a jury instruction 
on the defense of entrapment. The decision of the Court of Appeals should be affirmed. 
I respectfully dissent. 
Justice MORGAN joins in this dissenting opinion.