OPINION
Aftеr robbing the employees of a Houston restaurant at gunpoint, and while fleeing the scene of his crime, Appellant shot Armando Guerrero, a bystander, to death. For this offense he was convicted of capital murder. See Penal Code, § 19.03(a)(2). The jury answered the special punishment issues affirmatively, and the trial judge sentenced him to death. Art. 37.071(b), V.A.C.C.P. His appeal to this Court is automatic. See Art. 37.071(h), V.A.C.C.P.; Tex.R.App.Proc., rule 40(b)(1).
I.
In his first point of error, Appellant maintains that the trial judge erred in permitting the State to question prospectivе jurors concerning their attitudes toward the death penalty. 1
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Both parties in a criminal trial have the right to exclude from jury service for cause any veniremember whose beliefs would “render[] him incapable or unfit to serve on the jury.” Art. 35.16, V.A.C.C.P. The parties may also exclude a limited number of qualified veniremembers for idiosyncratic reasons.
2
Art. 35.15, V.A.C.C.P. Consequently, within reasonable limits both the State and the defendant must be allowed to explore any attitudes of veniremembers which might render them challengeable for cause or otherwise subjectively undesirable as jurors.
Guerra v. State,
Just as the accused is entitled to discover those prospective jurors who hold uncommonly harsh views of retribution and punishment, so also is the State free to search out those who might be unusually lenient.
Cf. Campbell v. State,
Appellant’s first point of error is overruled.
II.
In his second point of error Appellant complains that the trial judge erroneously allowed a State’s challenge for cause against a veniremember who had already been accepted for jury service, sworn and empanelled. 3
*335 The dispute arose when a previously sworn juror in this cause approached the trial judge prior to the conclusion of jury selection and before the taking of evidence with information indicating for the first time that her views regarding the death penalty would substantially impair the performance of her duties. As a result the judge permitted furthеr examination of the juror by both parties and ultimately sustained the State’s challenge for cause against her.
As we have held on several occasions in the past, a trial court does not lack authority to reconsider the qualifications of a prospective juror.
McManus v. State,
Appellant’s second point of error is overruled.
III.
At the punishment phase of trial in this cause, the State offered proof that Appellant had previously committed a number of other offenses, including the unlawful carrying of a weapon. See V.T.C.A., Penal Code § 46.02. The officer who arrested him on the weapon charge was permitted to testify, over objection, that he seized a woman’s stocking from Appellant’s shirt pocket at the time of arrest. In his third point of error, Appellant contends that such testimony should not have been received in evidence.
Because Appellant wore a stocking over his head while committing the offense for which he was convicted in this cause, and had done so while committing other aggravated robberies in the past, both parties agree that reference to the stocking implies Appellant was planning to commit yet another robbery at the time he was arrested for carrying a weapon. Thus we first inquire whether the State may prove at the punishment phase of a capital trial that the accused has planned other offenses. We think it abundantly clear that the Stаte is indeed entitled to do this.
In many capital prosecutions the most significant punishment issue in the case is whether the defendant will likely commit “criminal acts of violence” in the future. Art. 37.071(b)(2), V.A.C.C.P. We think proof that he was planning such acts even at the time of his arrest for another offense clearly has a “tendency to make the existence of [this] fact ... more probable ... than it would be without the evidence.” Tex.R.Cr.Evid. 401.
McManus,
591 S.W.2d
*336
at 526.
6
Certainly, we are unwilling to hold that the trial judge erred in thinking so.
See Green v. State,
Since both parties agree that the challenged testimony is relevant to this question, its admissibility is assured unless there is a legal policy for excluding it. Tex.R.Cr.Evid. 402. Here, Appellant merely contends that the testimony should have been disallowed because possession of a woman’s stocking does not in itself constitute a crime, nor does it definitely establish that he was preparing to commit one.
Of course, we agree that the testimony is not conclusive. Yet relevant evidence is often inconclusive, standing alone, and the parties are free to debate its inferential significance and probative weight before the jury in their closing arguments. The weakness of this evidence does not, however, render it inadmissible unless it has a relatively strong potential for unfairly prejudicing the defendant. See Tex.R.Cr.Evid. 403. Otherwise, its admissibility is not affected by the fact that it may be inconclusive or unpersuasive upon the significant matter to which it relates.
Because Appellant does not suggest any specific legal policy for exclusion of the testimony, nor does he maintain that it was unfairly prejudicial to him, his third point of error is overruled. 7
IV.
Appellant’s fourth point of error alleges that the trial court should not have permitted the prosecuting attorney, during the voir dire examination of prospective jurors, to characterize the victims and their families in this case as her “сlients.” No objection was interposed on behalf of Appellant at the time.
The prosecuting attorney in a criminal action does not represent a private interest.
See
Arts. 2.01, 2.02, Y.A.C.C.P. Any contrary suggestion, communicated to a juror or prospective juror in the case, is therefore erroneous, whether it occurs during
voir dire,
final argument, or some other important stage of the trial.
Rougeau v. State,
Nevertheless, we do not regard the objectionable implication as so threatening to the fairness of a criminal trial that the judge must intervene to correct it even when not asked to do so by the defendant. As is usually the case, failure to complain *337 of a matter at trial forfeits the right to complain of it on appeal. There are few exceptions to this rule, and we can divine none, to excuse Appellant’s default in the present context. Here, a curative instruction could easily have dissipated any potential for prejudice visited upon Appellant. And, since the statement complained of occurred at voir dire, thе Appellant could even have inquired of the prospective jurors whether such statement would affect their deliberations. To allow an exception to our default rules under the circumstances presented here could actually serve to discourage timely objections.
Accordingly, his fourth point of error is overruled.
V.
We have permitted both Appellant and his attorney to file supplemental briefs raising additional points of error. In his first Pro Se Supplemental Brief, Appellant contends that jury instructions given under Texas law at the penalty phase of his trial effectively misled jurors about their actual role in the assessment of punishment by intimating that a sentence of life imprisonment was not possible unless ten jurors agreed to answer one or more special punishment questions in the negative. Appellant argues that, because a persistently negative vote by even one juror is actually sufficient to ensure that the death penalty will not be imposed, prohibiting the parties and the trial judge from informing thе jurors of this fact serves to pressure affirmative answers from them in violation of the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution. 8
We take it to be past serious dispute that the features of Texas capital sentencing procedure about which Appellant here complains are uncommonly enigmatic. For instance, there is no such thing as a hung jury at the punishment phase of a Texas capital murder trial, in the sense that unresolved issues might later be litigated at a retrial of the same cаse. Failure of the jurors to agree automatically results in a sentence of life imprisonment. Art. 37.-071(e), V.A.C.C.P. But the jurors don’t know this. Indeed, the law prohibits the parties and the trial judge alike from telling them so. Art. 37.071(g), V.A.C.C.P. Instead, the instructions they receive from the court suggest that a sentence of life imprisonment is not possible unless ten jurors agree to answer one or more special punishment questions in the negative. Art. 37.071(d), V.A.C.C.P. Accordingly, if one assumes that jurors are told during voir dire, as they nearly always are, that a negative аnswer to one or more of the statutory punishment questions necessarily results in life imprisonment, it is conceivable that they will surmise later instructions requiring ten votes for a negative answer mean that a life sentence will not be imposed otherwise.
Certainly, reliability of the decision to impose death is reduced impermissibly when, among other reasons, jurors are misled into believing that their decision may be less momentous than it really is.
Caldwell v. Mississippi,
Accordingly, inasmuch as Appellant argues that jurors should be informed about the consequence of their failure to agree
*338
because nonagreement is an optional verdict under our law, he is simply mistaken. Abstention is not a jury option. Rather, as in other cases, it is merely a consequence of the jury’s inability to exercise its available options by reaching a verdict. It is not, nor would it be appropriate to suggest that it is, a verdict itself.
See Padgett v. State,
More troubling, however, is the implication that our statutes, by requiring consensus, inhibit the free exercise by each juror of his individual judgment about the propriety of a death sentence.
See Mills v. Maryland,
The points raised in Appellant’s Pro Se Supplemental Brief are overruled.
YI.
Appellant’s remaining supplemental points contend in various ways that his conviction must be reversed for failure of the trial judge to authorize assessment of a sentence less than death on the basis of certain evidence offered in mitigation of punishment.
See Penny v. Lynaugh,
For example, in some respects Appellant seems only to claim that the allegedly mitigating evidence was relevant because it served to reduce the probability either of his having acted deliberately in the killing or of his being a danger to society in the future. To the extent this is what he means by mitigation, however, it was plainly not necessary that the trial judge explain the significance of such evidence to the jury. Relevancy is an empirical relationship which jurors may safely be presumed to appreciate without benefit of judicial instruction.
Quinones v. State,
Nor .was a definition of the term “deliberately” required to assure a fair understanding by the jury of Appellant’s mitigating evidence.
Ex parte Baldree,
Accordingly, Appellant’s similar argument with respect to the second special issue is equally flawed. He there claims that the mitigating significance of his drug addiction and alcoholism, his generally good character and splendid prospects for rehabilitation, together with his regard for the welfare of others, could not be fully understood by the jury without definitions of “probability” and “continuing threat to society.” However, because he does not suggest how these terms should have been defined, we have some difficulty penetrating his argument. The gist of it seems to be that his evidence is reasonably susceptible of both an aggravating and a mitigating interpretation under the second special issue, lending it the celebrated “double-edged sword” effect made famous by
Penry. See Ex parte Goodman,
Nevertheless, Appellant does seem to claim in other supplemental points that his evidence also had relevant mitigating value of a kind not compassed or contemplated аt all by the special issues. If true, of course, some further means of soliciting the reasoned moral assent of jurors was an essential prerequisite to the imposition of a death sentence against him, as it is clear under
Penry
that the Eighth Amendment will not tolerate assessment of the death penalty by a sentencer who has been effectively precluded from considering relevant evidence proferred in mitigation of punishment.
Gribble v. State,
While we appreciate the evident social and moral poverty of Appellant’s formative years, we are not persuaded that any substantial portion of society shares a belief in the reduced culpability of persons disadvantaged in the way he describes. Our recent efforts to implement the Supreme Court’s holding in
Penry
have led us to adopt a view of mitigation which is considerably less expansive than that urged by Appellant in this case, and by other similarly situated claimants. As a general matter, we have taken the view that evidence does not have significant mitigating potential of the kind contemplated by
Penry
if, for example, it has “relevancy directly within the scope of the second special punishment issue and [is] truly mitigating.”
Black v. State,
*340 The points raised in Appellant’s Supplemental Brief and Second Pro Se Supplemental Brief are, therefore, overruled.
Finding no basis in points raised by Appellant to disturb the judgment of the trial court, we affirm the conviction and sentence of death in this cause.
Notes
. Specifically, appellant contends that the judge should not have denied his motion in limine to such effect. The motion to which he refers, however, is not truly a motion in limine, since it does not constitute a request that the admissibility of evidence or disposition of other matter by the court be determined outside the jury’s presence.
Norman v. State,
. Such reasons may not, of course, be racially motivated.
See
Art. 35.261, V.A.C.C.P.;
Batson v. Kentucky,
. Appellant alleges, without elaborаtion, that discharge of this juror deprived him of his right “to a fair trial by an unbiased jury of his peers[,]’’ in violation of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article 1, Sections 10 and 15 of the Texas Constitution. He also maintains, again without any explanation, that the trial court’s action deprived him of his right to "due process and equal protection of the law[,]” contrary to the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution and Article 1, Section 19 of the Texas Constitution.
Except insofar as these claims аre analogous to those addressed in our existing case law on the subject, cited hereinbelow, we are unable to discern any specific constitutional argument in appellant's contentions.
. The last serious attack on this proposition was mounted by Judge Davidson, dissenting in
Houston,
. Appellant does not contend that inadequate cause existed for challenging this juror. Moreover, because he does not claim to have suffered any specifically unfair disadvantage here, we have no occasion to pass upon thе limits, if any, of the trial judge’s discretion in this regard.
.
Cf. Herrera
v.
State,
. Appellant does assert that "the only purpose of the offer in this case was to prejudice the minds of the jury further[,]" that it "was nothing but prejudicial[,]" that “[t]he probative value here was merely to demonstrate that Appellant was a robbery waiting to happen,” and that "[t]he state did not need to engage in this type of overkill in order to convince the jury that Appellant did, on occasion, commit a robbery using a lady’s stocking as a disguise.”
Because the record does include proof that appellant committed several other offenses, including aggravated robberies, while wearing a woman's stocking over his head, we are willing to interpret his "ovеrkill” argument as an allegation that the testimony here in question was of little additional probative value.
See Morgan v. State,
. The Texas capital sentencing scheme has changed in a number of significant respects since Appellant's trial in 1987. Although most of these changes do not affect the analysis here, all references in the following discussion are to the pertinent statutes in effect at the time this case was tried.
