North Carolina

NC state trooper killed in Durham by wrong-way driver with history of DWIs

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  • Master Trooper Steven J. Perry was killed in a crash on the Durham Freeway on Sunday.
  • Perry was allegedly struck by a driver traveling the wrong way.
  • The other driver was also killed.

A state trooper was killed in a wrong-way crash on the Durham Freeway early Sunday morning by a driver with at least three DWIs.

Master Trooper Steven J. Perry, 30, was driving northbound on the Freeway, also known as N.C. 147, near Anderson Street when his Dodge Charger was hit head-on by a 2015 Nissan Altima, according to a news release. The Altima was traveling southbound in the northbound lanes.

Melshawn Moore, 39, of Kinston, was driving the Altima, the release said. He also was killed. Investigators said they suspect he was impaired, though they didn’t specify what substance he is thought to have consumed.

Court records show Moore had been convicted of driving while impaired at least three times in North Carolina:

  • He pleaded guilty Jan. 20, 2010, to driving while impaired in August 2009 in Jacksonville and received a year of unsupervised probation.
  • He pleaded guilty Jan. 22, 2013, to driving while impaired in May 2012 in Lenoir County and was given a suspended sentence. Moore then served five months in the misdemeanant confinement program after violating the terms of his probation in May 2017.
  • He pleaded guilty Sept. 25, 2017, to driving while impaired in May 2017 in Lenoir County and was sentenced to 27 days of jail and a year of supervised probation.

Traffic citations against Moore, ranging from reckless driving to endanger to possession of an open container/consuming alcohol in a passenger area, were dismissed in at least six cases in Lenoir and Pitt counties from 2010 to 2022, court records show.

Moore and Perry both died at the scene. Neither vehicle had any other passengers, according to the release.

State troopers responded about 2:45 a.m., but radio traffic suggests the crash was first reported shortly after 2:30 a.m.

“They’re saying two cars crashed, possible injuries and possibly a state trooper involved,” a dispatcher radioed at 2:39 a.m.

Radio traffic indicated the crash occurred on the northbound side of the freeway, with debris blocking all lanes. Police closed the road near Swift Avenue just before 3 a.m., and the road had reopened by noon Sunday, according to the N.C. Department of Transportation’s website.

A large U.S. flag is displayed over I-40 as firefighters and law enforcement personnel line an overpass to honor fallen N.C. Highway Patrol Master Trooper Steven Perry as his body was transported with a law enforcement escort on Monday afternoon from the State Medical Examiner's Office in Raleigh to Fisher Funeral Parlor in Durham.
A large U.S. flag is displayed over I-40 as firefighters and law enforcement personnel line an overpass to honor fallen N.C. Highway Patrol Master Trooper Steven Perry as his body was transported with a law enforcement escort on Monday afternoon from the State Medical Examiner's Office in Raleigh to Fisher Funeral Parlor in Durham. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

Perry worked in Durham County throughout his six years as a trooper and was a member of the 148th Basic Patrol school, the State Highway Patrol said.

A GoFundMe campaign has been set up to help the family of the trooper, who had an infant. As of Monday morning, it had raised nearly $11,000 of a $100,000 goal

“Steven was not only a proud Trooper, but also a loving father to his infant daughter, Sasha Joy, and a devoted partner to Hunter,” according to the campaign page. “He was known for his infectious sense of humor and his remarkable ability to bring laughter to any room he entered.”

The crash remained under investigation as of Sunday afternoon.

“Please stay safe, take care of one another and keep the family in your prayers,” Col. Freddy Johnson Jr., the Highway Patrol’s commander, wrote on the agency’s Facebook post.

This story was originally published March 1, 2026 at 10:23 AM with the headline "NC state trooper killed in Durham by wrong-way driver with history of DWIs."

Lexi Solomon
The News & Observer
Lexi Solomon joined The News & Observer in August 2024 as the emerging news reporter. She previously worked in Fayetteville at The Fayetteville Observer and CityView, reporting on crime, education and local government. She is a 2022 graduate of Virginia Tech with degrees in Russian and National Security & Foreign Affairs.
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