Lead Opinion
OPINION
¶ 1 Appellant, Donald Anthony Grant, was charged in Oklahoma County District Court, Case No. CF-2001-4696, with two counts of First Degree, Malice Aforethought Murder (21 O.S.2001, § 701.7(A)), and two counts of Robbery with Firearms (21 O.S.2001, § 801). As to the murder counts, the State alleged a number of aggravating circumstances in support of the death penalty.
SUMMARY OF THE FACTS
¶ 2 The essential facts of the crimes are not disputed. On July 18, 2001, Appellant entered a LaQuinta Inn in Del City, ostensibly to fill out an employment application. In reality, Appellant had planned to rob the hotel in order to obtain money to post bond for a girlfriend, Shlonda Gatewood (who was in the Oklahoma County Jail at the time), and was prepared to kill any witnesses to the crime. Appellant may have been motivated to strike this particular business because another girlfriend of his, Cheryl Tubbs, had been fired from employment there a few months before; in any event, Appellant was familiar with the layout of the property and the location of video surveillance equipment.
¶ 3 When Appellant saw the hotel manager, Brenda McElyea, he approached her with a pistol in his hand and ordered her to walk to a storage room, where he fatally shot her once in the head, and slashed her neck and back with a box knife to make sure the knife was sharp enough to use on his next victim. Appellant then left the storage room and approached another employee, Suzette Smith, in the break room. Appellant ordered Smith at gunpoint to give him the money from the hotel register, which she did. Appellant then ordered Smith to walk back to the manager’s office, where he shot her three times in the face. Smith continued to struggle to escape, so Appellant brutally beat her and cut her numerous times with his knife. He hit Smith in the head with his pistol, attempted to break her neck, and threw a computer monitor on her head in an effort to stop her struggling. Eventually, Smith succumbed to her wounds and died in the office. Before leaving the office, Appellant took personal property from Smith’s purse.
¶ 4 Appellant then left the hotel and walked to a nearby discount store, where he abandoned his pistol and some traveler’s checks he had taken in the robbery.
ANALYSIS
¶ 5 Although he held the State to its burden of proving each element of the crimes, Appellant did not contest the State’s claim that he was guilty of robbing and murdering Smith and McElyea. Similarly, on appeal, Appellant’s complaints do not concern the sufficiency of the evidence to support his convictions per se.
I.
APPELLANT’S COMPETENCY TO STAND TRIAL
¶ 6 In Proposition 1, Appellant claims that he was incompetent to stand trial. Ap
¶ 7 Appellant submits that in the months between the competency trial and the trial on guilt and punishment, his competency may well have deteriorated. He points to his statements at various pretrial and in camera hearings, pro se writings, and his testimony in the punishment stage of the trial in an attempt to support this claim. He also submits extra-record evidence to support a related claim, based on the Sixth Amendment right to counsel, that trial counsel was deficient for not challenging his competency at the time of trial. Specifically, he presents (1) an expert’s retrospective opinion, based on evaluation of various materials, that Appellant was not competent to stand trial in November 2005; and (2) documentary evidence suggesting that in mid-2005, Appellant was not diligent about taking medications prescribed to treat his mental illness.
¶ 8 The constitutional guarantee of due process of law has been interpreted to include the right to be tried only when one is sufficiently competent to understand the nature of the charges and to assist counsel in preparing a defense. Cooper v. Oklahoma,
¶ 9 Although competency is presumed, once a defendant has presented sufficient evidence to raise a doubt about his competency, Oklahoma law affords him the right to a jury trial on the issue.
¶ 10 Initially, we note that the judge who presided over Appellant’s trial had been assigned to this case in March 2003, and presided over the competency trial in February 2005. Closer to the time of trial on guilt and punishment, and during the trial itself, the
¶ 11 Appellant’s two-lawyer defense team was experienced and zealous, considering that the overwhelming evidence against their client limited their options. At no time did either of them express doubts about their client’s competency during the trial. Their chief mental-health expert, Dr. Grundy, who spent many hours interviewing Appellant over the lengthy course of the prosecution, attended at least part of the trial and testified for the defense. Yet, there is no indication that Dr. Grundy had doubts about Appellant’s competency, either at that time or on reflection afterward. Appellant asks this Court to disregard the lack of doubt by those who interacted with him at the time, and substitute the retrospective evaluation of a different expert, Dr. McGarrahan, that Appellant now presents on appeal.
¶ 12 According to the supplementary materials Appellant has presented, Dr. McGarra-han interviewed trial counsel and Appellant some two years after trial, and reviewed (among other things) Appellant’s medical records while he was in jail awaiting trial. Both trial attorneys maintained that at the time of trial, they believed Appellant understood the nature of the proceedings. Nevertheless, Dr. McGarrahan concludes that Appellant was unable to “rationally assist” them in his defense. This claim seems to be based on the fact that Appellant testified in the punishment stage against counsel’s advice. Just as we do not judge counsel’s effectiveness solely by the success of their strategies, see Coddington v. State,
II.
APPELLANT’S REQUEST TO REPRESENT HIMSELF
¶ 14 In Proposition 2, Appellant contends that he was denied his right to represent himself at trial. Counsel was appointed to represent Appellant shortly after his apprehension in the fall of 2001. Lead counsel at Appellant’s trial was appointed to replace original counsel in April 2003. Several weeks before trial, Appellant wrote a letter indicating that he wished to be relieved of counsel. The trial court took no action at that time. Appellant claims that this letter was an unequivocal request to proceed pro se. He argues that the right to represent oneself is of constitutional dimension, and that because, generally speaking, a presumption exists against waiver of constitutional rights, the trial court’s failure to promptly conduct a hearing on his request denied him his constitutional right to proceed pro se.
¶ 15 The right to counsel, explicitly guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment to the federal Constitution and analogous provisions of the Oklahoma constitution, has been interpreted to include the converse as well: the right to represent oneself, without the aid of counsel.
¶ 16 The trial court held several pretrial colloquies with Appellant. We can conceive of no better opportunity for him to have expressed any desire to proceed pro se. Yet he did not even suggest dissatisfaction with
III.
ISSUES CONCERNING THE COMPOSITION OF THE JURY
¶ 17 Appellant makes several complaints regarding the composition
A. The trial court’s refusal to remove Panelist A. for cause.
¶ 18 In Proposition 3, Appellant claims the trial court erred in not removing Panelist A. from the venire for cause. He contends it was unfair to force him to use a peremptory challenge to remove this panelist. Appellant timely requested removal of Panelist A. for cause, used a peremptory challenge to remove him, used all of his remaining peremptory challenges, and requested an additional challenge, specifying who else he would excuse and why. This issue is thus properly preserved for appellate review. Rojem v. State,
¶ 19 Panelist A. was initially passed for cause by both parties. However, during defense voir dire, counsel inquired about panelists’ experiences with and attitudes on mental illness. Panelist A. was one of several panelists who indicated that they had friends or family who suffered from mental illness. Some of these panelists did not wish to speak about the matter in open court, and discussed it at the bench. Yet when asked about the details of his experiences with mental illness, Panelist A. said, “I’d rather not discuss it,” even at the bench. The trial court had counsel move on to other panelists and topics, but during a recess, the court resumed the discussion with counsel and Panelist A. The trial court made it clear that the purpose of the inquiry was to determine whether A. could fairly consider evidence of mental illness if it were presented to him. Panelist A. said, ‘Yes.” After further inquiry by both counsel, Panelist A. conceded that his initial attitudes about mental illness might place the defense at a disadvantage, and he agreed “that wouldn’t be fair.” When the prosecutor assured Panelist A. that, as the finder of fact, he would not be required to believe evidence of mental illness, Panelist A. asked, “Doesn’t that compromise the duty of the jury?” The prosecutor responded that it did not, so long as he could be fair about considering the evidence in the first place.
¶ 21 The trial court has discretion in the manner and extent of questions asked in voir dire. Brogie v. State,
¶ 22 Still, Panelist A.’s reluctance to approach the matter more openly is disconcerting. All doubts regarding juror impartiality must be resolved in favor of the accused. We apply this rule to trial courts, and to our own analysis as well. Hawkins v. State,
B. The trial court’s removal of Panelist I. for not being “death qualified.”
¶ 23 In Proposition 4, Appellant claims the trial court committed error in excusing Panelist I. for cause. Panelist I. initially indicated that she could fairly consider all three punishment options. However,
¶ 24 In a capital case, a prospective juror may not be excused for cause simply because she voices philosophical or religious objections to the death penalty. Witherspoon v. Illinois,
¶25 Appellant argues that it was unfair to excuse Panelist I. for admitting that she could consider what, in essence, would turn out to be an entirely proper mitigating circumstance that would justify a sentence other than death. Yet Panelist I.’s responses suggest that based on her experiences, a defendant’s mental illness (specifically schizophrenia) might render her unable to consider the death penalty at all. When defense counsel asked Panelist I. if, assuming evidence of schizophrenia was presented, she could give both sides a fair trial, she replied: “I don’t think that I would because I would be learning more — I would be more empathetic towards the person with the schizophrenia, since I have personal experience with it.” When defense counsel attempted to rehabilitate the panelist, asking her if she could put aside her personal experiences and decide the case solely on the evidence presented, her answer was, “No, it would be too hard_” Despite further attempts at rehabilitation by the defense, Panelist I. stood firm: “I have told you I don’t think that I would be able to [consider the death penalty], if that is a factor, if that indeed is a factor.” These answers support the trial court’s conclusion that I. could not fairly consider all punishment options in this case.
C. The State’s use of peremptory challenges to remove minority panelists.
¶26 In Proposition 5, Appellant claims the State violated Batson v. Kentucky,
¶ 27 Appellant’s first complaint concerns Panelist E., an African-American woman. When asked to give a race-neutral explanation for removing E., the prosecutor gave two: first, that she had failed to disclose a misdemeanor charge filed against her in Oklahoma County; and second, that she said she would “have to pray and let God guide her” in deliberations. Appellant attempts to dismantle both justifications, but we need find only one of them facially race-neutral, and find the latter to be just that.
D. The trial court’s decision to excuse a panelist for sleeping.
¶ 29 In Proposition 6, Appellant claims the trial court erred in excusing Pa-nelist P. for sleeping during voir dire. The record indicates that the problem was brought to the court’s attention by the prosecutor on the first day of voir dire. The trial court spoke with Panelist P. and admonished him of the importance of remaining alert. On the second day of voir dire, the court noticed that P. was sleeping again, and again discussed the matter with him. Over objection by the defense, the trial court granted the State’s motion to excuse P. for cause.
¶ 30 Appellant notes that sleeping during voir dire is not specified among the bases for challenging a panelist for cause. See 22 O.S.2001, §§ 658, 659. However, § 658 of the Criminal Procedure Code allows excusal for any “defect in the faculties of the mind or organs of the body” that render the panelist “incapable of performing the duties of a juror.” 22 O.S.2001, § 658(3). Furthermore, the trial court may excuse any panelist for any reason that “may render him, at the time, an unsuitable juror.” 12 O.S.2001, § 572 (civil rules on jury formation); see also 22 O.S.2001, § 592 (incorporating civil rules on jury formation into Criminal Procedure Code). A trial court’s decision to excuse a panelist due to factors which may bear on his competency to serve on the jury is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Blozy v. State,
¶31 Appellant describes the trial court’s decision to excuse Panelist P. as “precipitous.” But the trial court noticed the panelist to be sleeping on two consecutive days, and spoke with him each time, before deciding to excuse him. We defer to the trial court’s observations and its conclusions based thereon. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in excusing Panelist P. for cause.
¶ 32 In Proposition 7, Appellant claims he was denied due process when the trial court replaced a sitting juror with an alternate. During the trial, Juror A. reported to the court several incidents that made her uncomfortable. She stated that one of the witnesses had approached her outside the courtroom, that spectators to the trial had “stared her down” near the courthouse elevators, and that yet another spectator had ridden on the elevator with her, attempted to converse with her, and blocked her exit from the elevator and made an oblique comment. Juror A. stated that two of these incidents were witnessed by another juror in her company, Juror R. The trial court also spoke with Juror R., whose accounts differed somewhat from those of Juror A. In essence, Juror R. did not feel that the actions of the spectators were meant to be intimidating in any way. After both jurors had been interviewed, the prosecutor asked that Juror A. be excused and replaced with one of the alternates, because Juror A.’s accounts of attempted jury tampering appeared to have been embellished. Defense counsel objected to A.’s removal, stating that she had done nothing wrong.
¶ 33 A trial judge has inherent authority to remove a sitting juror and substitute an alternate juror, when good cause is shown. Miller v. State,
¶ 34 Appellant claims the trial court’s removal of Juror A., was uncalled for, because she did nothing wrong and never claimed that these incidents affected her ability to serve. But a juror’s reaction to outside forces, real or perceived, is a prime example of how her ability to be fair and impartial may be compromised without actual “misconduct” on her own part. See Washington,
¶ 35 Appellant suggests that he had a “right” to the original twelve persons seated on the jury. We cannot agree. As we have pointed out, “[t]he defendant has no vested right to have any particular juror on the panel selected to serve in his case. His right is that of refusal rather than that of selection.” Gregg v. State,
DOUBLE JEOPARDY
¶ 36 In Proposition 8 Appellant claims, for the first time on appeal, that his two convictions for First Degree Robbery violate the constitutional guarantee against double jeopardy. U.S. Const.Amends. Y, XIV; Okl. Const. Art. 2, § 21. The evidence showed that Appellant, at gunpoint, forced Suzette Smith to give him cash and checks from the hotel’s drawer. A short time later, Appellant took personal belongings, including an ATM card, from Smith’s purse. Appellant claims that because Smith was the “victim” of both robberies, and because both took place in a short span of time, only one robbery was committed. We disagree.
¶37 Appellant points out that robbery is a crime against the person, not against property. However, one person can be robbed twice by the same perpetrator in a short span of time. We addressed this same argument on somewhat similar facts in Rogers v. State,
V.
PUNISHMENT-STAGE ISSUES
¶ 38 Appellant does not contest the sufficiency of the evidence to support the aggravating circumstances alleged by the State in support of the death penalty. The evidence presented in the guilt stage of trial (and incorporated into the punishment stage) supported the jury’s finding (1) that Appellant’s conduct during the crimes created a great risk of death to more than one person, and (2) that the murders were committed in order to avoid arrest or prosecution. In the punishment stage of the trial, the State presented additional evidence (3) that at the time of the murders, Appellant was serving a sentence of imprisonment for conviction of a felony;
A. Admissibility of writings purportedly authored by Appellant in jail.
¶ 39 In Proposition 9, Appellant claims that two writings purportedly authored by him were not properly authenticated. In the punishment stage of the trial, the prosecutor offered State’s Exhibit 213, packet of approximately fifty handwritten requests, inquiries, and complaints to jail staff (most using a preprinted jail form), allegedly written by Appellant, to illustrate his ability to ' reason and communicate effectively— thereby rebutting the defense claim that Appellant had a diminished mental capacity which mitigated his culpability for the murders. Defense counsel did not object to the admission of the packet, so we review only for plain error.
¶ 40 The earliest two inmate requests appear to be dated before Appellant was apprehended and extradited to Oklahoma; in fact, one is dated several weeks before the murders were even committed. Appellant points out that the alleged author of these two documents is “Anthony Grant,” while the rest are authored by “Donald Grant” or “Donald Anthony Grant,” and claims that an inmate named Anthony Wayne Grant was in the Oklahoma County Jail in mid-2001. The State responds that even if the first two writings were not authored by Appellant, any error in their admission was harmless, because approximately four dozen other writings in the same packet were, in fact, authored by Appellant.
¶ 41 The remaining jail inquiries show Appellant’s ability to reason and express himself from September 2001 until October 2004. In some of them, Appellant continued his message on the back of the form or attached additional handwritten pages. (In contrast, the two writings Appellant complains of were brief inquiries, consisting of one or two sentences each.) Moreover, the jury had other, even more convincing documentary evidence of Appellant’s mental abilities during the same period of time. Besides the inmate inquiries, the State introduced a half-dozen pro se pleadings that Appellant had filed in his case in 2003 and 2004. Perhaps most damaging to Appellant, however, was the nine-page letter he wrote in September 2005, explaining the motivation for the murders and giving the reader a moment-by-moment account of them. No graphic detail was spared. This letter, which Appellant admitted to authoring, is further evidence of his ability to plan and comprehend the nature and consequences of his conduct. In light of the substantial documentary evidence on this issue, we have no difficulty concluding that the two writings Appellant complains of did not contribute to the jury’s punishment decision in any material way.
B. Exclusion of certain exhibits proffered by the defense.
¶ 42 In Proposition 10, Appellant assigns error to the trial court’s exclusion of Defense Exhibits 1 through 18. As previously discussed, Appellant underwent numerous psychological evaluations to determine his competency during the course of the prosecution. At trial, Appellant’s chief expert witness, Dr. Grundy, testified extensively about his own evaluations of Appellant’s mental health, as well as those of several other experts, which he duly considered as a normal part of his professional duties. Appellant sought to admit Defendant’s Exhibits 1-8, which were reports Dr. Grundy had periodically drafted summarizing his evaluations, and Defendant’s Exhibits 9-18, which were reports by various other mental health professionals who had examined Appellant.
¶43 Section 2703 of the Evidence Code permits an expert witness to render an opinion based on information which may not itself be admissible, if such information is “of a type reasonably relied upon by experts in the particular field.” 12 O.S.2001, § 2703; see also Lewis v. State,
¶44 Appellant does not contest the fact that Dr. Grundy was permitted to testify about the information contained in his own reports, as well as those of other mental health professionals. His only complaint is that the reports themselves should have been admitted as exhibits, for the jury’s consideration during deliberations. Appellant cites several cases from this Court as authority for the proposition that mental-health evaluations should be considered “business records,” and therefore excepted from the rule generally barring hearsay. 12 O.S.2001, § 2803(6). Appellant concedes that under the Evidence Code, even if a writing is admissible under some exception to the hearsay rule, it must still be sufficiently authenticated, see 12 O.S.2001, § 2901, and the cases he relies on reiterate this requirement.
¶ 45 Dr. Grundy’s own reports were cumulative to his own testimony, and the trial court did not abuse its discretion in excluding them for that reason. 12 O.S.2001, § 2403; Hancock v. State,
¶46 In the final analysis, we fail to see how Appellant was prejudiced by the trial court’s decision. Because Dr. Grundy was able to testify about these reports, he gave a comprehensive summary of Appellant’s mental functioning, from the defense point of view, but supported in many aspects by experts not aligned with the defense. See Ake,
C. Instruction on the proper use of mitigation evidence.
¶47 In Proposition 11, Appellant claims that the trial court’s instructions, coupled with the prosecutors’ closing arguments, improperly limited the jury’s consideration of evidence presented in mitigation of the death sentence. The trial court administered the standard instructions on the definition and use of mitigating evidence. See OUJI-CR (2nd) Nos. 4-78 and 4-79. Appellant concedes that we have found these instructions to be entirely proper. See, e.g., Malone v. State,
D. Admission of gruesome crime-scene photographs.
¶49 In Proposition 12, Appellant complains that photographs of the two victims’ bodies, introduced in the punishment stage, were needlessly cumulative and unfairly prejudicial. Appellant complains about the number of photographs introduced, and the fact that some injuries appear in more than one photograph. We review the trial court’s admission of this evidence for an abuse of discretion. Hogan v. State,
¶ 50 The photographs of the victims introduced in the punishment stage were somewhat more gruesome than those introduced in the guilt stage. Images of the numerous cuts to McElyea’s back were offered to show that Appellant posed a continuing threat to society; Appellant admitted that he wanted to test the knife’s sharpness for his next intended victim (Smith). Images of Smith’s numerous horrific injuries were offered to show that her murder was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel. The photographs at issue were clearly relevant to support these specific aggravating circumstances. Hogan,
¶ 51 Appellant also argues that the photographs were not properly authenticated. The medical examiner who testified at trial, Dr. Choi, was not the examiner who conducted the autopsy; thus, Appellant claims, Dr. Choi had no personal knowledge of whether the photographs accurately depicted the condition of the victims’ bodies. Appellant did not object on these grounds at trial, and we reject the argument in any event. A photograph may be authenticated by any method sufficient to establish that it depicts what it purports to depict, including (1) comparison by the trier of fact with other evidence that has been authenticated, and (2) “[a]ppearance, content, substance, internal patterns or other distinctive characteristics taken in conjunction with circumstances.” 12 O.S.2001, § 2901(A), (B)(3), (4). In this ease, the autopsy photographs, and the injuries they depicted, were consistent with the photographs of the victims at the crime scene, with Appellant’s admissions of what he did to the victims, and with the medical examiner’s written report, which Appellant does not object to. The court did not abuse its discretion in admitting these photographs.
¶ 52 In Proposition 14, Appellant challenges the constitutionality of Oklahoma law allowing pre-mortem photographs of victims in murder trials, see 12 O.S.Supp.2003, § 2403, and claims that the pre-mortem photographs introduced in this case injected sympathy and emotion into the sentencing proceedings. The State offered a single pre-mortem photograph of each victim into evidence. Appellant specifically complains that the photograph of one victim was a wedding portrait from several years ago. Yet, while defense counsel generally objected to the admission of any pre-mortem photographs as “unduly inflammatory,” he did not specifically object that a different photograph of one victim might be more appropriate. In any event, in a number of recent cases, we have upheld careful application of 12 O.S. § 2403 against claims that the statute unconstitutionally injects passion and unfair prejudice into the capital sentencing process. See e.g. Marquez-Burrola v. State,
F. Ineffective assistance of counsel.
¶ 53 In Proposition 16, Appellant claims his trial counsel team performed defi-ciently, denying him his Sixth Amendment right to reasonably effective assistance of counsel. We begin with the legal framework for evaluating ineffective-counsel claims. Appellant must demonstrate that trial counsel’s performance was so deficient as to have rendered Appellant, in essence, without counsel. We assess counsel’s performance for reasonableness in light of prevailing professional norms. Appellant must also demonstrate that the allegedly deficient performance caused prejudice; there must be a reasonable probability that the actions in question undermine confidence in the outcome of the proceedings. We begin with the presumption that counsel’s conduct was reasonable, and we accord great deference to questions of trial strategy, recognizing that there are many ways to handle any given case, and that counsel must make many strategic decisions along the way. Strickland,
¶54 Appellant’s first complaint involves the autopsy photographs introduced in the punishment stage of the trial (see discussion of Proposition 12). Appellant claims that the State failed to give notice of its intent to use these photographs to support certain aggravating circumstances. The State responds that notice was in fact given, as the prosecutor filed several proposed exhibit lists which included these particular photographs. Oklahoma law prohibits the State from offering evidence in support of the death penalty without giving the defense an opportunity to review it before trial. “Only such evidence in aggravation as the State has made known to the defendant prior to his trial shall be admissible.” 21 O.S.2001, § 701.10(C). Appellant implies that the State was required to specifically state which exhibits would be reserved for the punishment stage, and which specific aggravating circumstances they would be used to support. The law is simply not that demanding. Incorporation of all guilt-stage evidence into the punishment stage of a capital trial is a universal practice.
¶ 55 Next, Appellant faults trial counsel for not more closely examining State’s Exhibit 213, the packet of inmate requests discussed in Proposition 9. Had counsel done so, Appellant claims, he would have realized that two
¶ 56 Appellant also claims trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to most of the prosecutors’ comments complained of in Proposition 13. Although we discuss those comments in more detail below, for purposes here, we conclude that none of these comments were so improper that any objections to them would rightfully have been sustained. Pavatt v. State,
¶ 57 Appellant’s last two complaints involve trial counsel’s failure to investigate aspects of his mental health. As for Appellant’s claim that trial counsel did not adequately monitor his competency to stand trial, we discussed and rejected that assertion in Proposition 1. The final complaint is defense counsel’s failure to call several witnesses who could have testified about Appellant’s mental illness. Appellant submits three affidavits from friends or family which discuss his disadvantaged childhood, and offer occasional examples of his strange behavior in the years preceding the instant crimes. Appellant also submits two affidavits from jail personnel who attest to his mental problems while awaiting trial. Appellant also includes a report by a neuropsychologist, linking some of Appellant’s mental deficits to an organic brain disorder, and concluding that these deficits appeared very early in Appellant’s life. As we noted in Proposition 1, these extra-record materials were presented, contemporaneously with Appellant’s brief, in conjunction with a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. See Rule 3.11, Rules of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, 22 O.S., Ch. 18, App. (2009).
¶ 58 Because the evidence of Appellant’s guilt was overwhelming, defense counsel focused on punishment. Most of the aggravating circumstances were self-evident from the first-stage evidence. Counsel’s strategy was to present expert evidence on Appellant’s mental illness, and testimony from family members about his disadvantaged and dysfunctional childhood. These mitigation strategies were by no means antagonistic. In fact, jurors might have found the circumstances surrounding Appellant’s formative years to have created, or at least aggravated, his mental problems. But defense counsel spent considerable time presenting such evidence to the jury. And while the presence or absence of organic brain disorder might have shed light on one potential cause of Appellant’s mental illness, the fact that Appellant had some sort of mental illness was never in serious dispute. In our view, the affidavits Appellant submits on appeal do not present anything qualitatively different from what was presented at trial on these issues.
G. Propriety of executing the mentally ill.
¶ 59 In Proposition 15, Appellant claims that application of the death penalty to mentally ill defendants constitutes cruel and unusual punishment, and argues that his own mental illness should, as a matter of law, exempt him from the death penalty. Appellant urges this Court to exempt the mentally ill from capital sentencing, much as juveniles and the mentally retarded are. Appellant offers no authority for this proposal. To be
¶ 60 Appellant repeatedly argues that he was mentally ill at the time he murdered Brenda McElyea and Suzette Smith. However, that issue has never been properly litigated. Appellant did not raise an insanity defense or otherwise argue that he suffered from impaired mental functioning at the time of the offenses. The focus of the mental-health evidence in this prosecution was on Appellant’s competency to stand trial, which even the defense’s chief expert, Dr. Grundy, indicated was an entirely separate inquiry that he was not asked to conduct. Thus, even if we were to entertain the policy arguments cited by Appellant, we are unable to apply them to Appellant on the record before us.
¶ 61 Appellant was free to present evidence of mental illness to the jury as a mitigating circumstance, and he did so. The jury apparently found that whatever mental illness Appellant might have, it did not mitigate his moral, culpability or blame. Despite evidence that Appellant suffers from some sort of mental illness, “we accept the jury’s conclusion that Appellant harbored a culpability deserving of the death penalty.” Lockett v. State,
H. Arbitrary and emotion-driven application of the death penalty; cumulative error; mandatory sentence review.
¶ 62 In Proposition 13, Appellant claims the jury’s imposition of the death penalty in this case was driven by passion and other improper factors. This argument combines the same complaints made in several other propositions, and adds some additional complaints of prosecutor misconduct. In Proposition 17, he claims that all errors previously identified worked cumulatively to deny him a fair sentencing proceeding. We combine our discussion of these cumulative-error claims with our mandatory sentence review. Under Oklahoma law, this Court is required to conduct review of any death sentence to determine (1) whether the evidence supports the sentencer’s finding of aggravating circumstances, and (2) whether, despite any aggravating circumstances, the sentence of death was imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary (and therefore improper) factor. 21 O.S.2001, § 701.13.
¶ 63 We have found no error in the evidence, instructions, or argument complained of separately in other propositions, and need not reiterate Appellant’s specific concerns about them here. We have considered the remaining claims of prosecutor misconduct and find them to be without merit. Appellant claims that by waiting until closing argument to present the photographs of the victims, and Appellant’s confession letter to the jury, the prosecutors deliberately sought a “visceral” response in sentencing. Yet all of this evidence was properly admitted in the punishment stage, and Appellant appears to concede its relevance. We find nothing improper here.
¶ 64 Appellant next claims that in punishment-stage closing arguments, the prosecutors misrepresented the evidence, offered their own opinions, and asked the jury to consider extraneous information. We disagree. Appellant has combed through the closing arguments and taken exception to several statements therein. A statement is not misleading simply because it is the view taken by the adverse party. The prosecutors’ comments were not grossly misleading; they were fair comments on the evidence
¶ 65 The prosecutors’ comments summarized the evidence, summarized the applicable law, and argued why the State believed that the death penalty was appropriate in this ease. We find no error here. Propositions 13 and 17 are denied. We have reviewed the entire record and find no evidence that the jury’s imposition of the death penalty was the product of any improper factor. The sentences imposed by the jury are therefore AFFIRMED.
DECISION
¶ 66 The Judgment and Sentence of the district court is AFFIRMED. Pursuant to Rule 3.15, Rules of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, Title 22, Ch.18, App. (2009), the MANDATE is ORDERED issued upon the delivery and filing of this decision.
Notes
. As to both murder counts, the State alleged (1) that the defendant knowingly created a great risk of death to more than one person; (2) that the murders were committed for the purpose of avoiding arrest or prosecution; (3) that the murders were committed by a person serving a sentence of imprisonment on conviction of a felony; and (4) that a probability existed that the defendant would pose a continuing threat to society. As to one of the murder counts (Count 2), the State also alleged that the murder was heinous, atrocious, or cruel.
. Sentencing was held January 6, 2006. The appeal record was transmitted to this Court on or about February 28, 2007. Appellant's opening brief was filed October 11, 2007. The State's response was filed January 9, 2008. Appellant filed a reply brief February 28, 2008.
. A few weeks after the crimes, the surveillance video that Appellant had removed from the hotel’s recorder was found in a wooded area between the hotel and the discount store.
. Incriminating details of Appellant’s motive, preparation, and execution of these crimes were presented in the guilt stage of the trial through the testimony of Gatewood, who related what Appellant had told her. A similar account was presented in the punishment stage of trial, through a letter that Appellant had written a few weeks before trial. Appellant also offered additional details when he elected to testify in the punishment stage.
.Appellant personally concurred in his counsel’s strategy to acknowledge guilt. The trial court made a sufficient record on this issue. See Jackson v. State,
.Appellant points to several cryptic comments in his writings, in his colloquies with the court, and in his trial testimony, as evidence that he did not understand the nature of the proceedings. But these comments were not delusions that sprang from Appellant's own mind. They related to an unconventional philosophy, or religion of sorts, that Appellant adhered to, similar in some respects to the Black Muslim or Nation of Islam movements, and known variously as "The Nation of Gods and Earths” or "The Five Percenters.” This set of beliefs is not uncommon among inmates in the Northeastern United States, where Appellant had grown up and been incarcerated. See generally Hetsberger v. Dept. of Corrections,
. For example, when the prosecutor, on cross-examination, asked Appellant to detail how he went about the murders, Appellant replied, "Do you actually want to hear this?”
. We also resist the temptation to classify strategic trial decisions as either ingeniously clever or hopelessly doomed. Any successful strategy will almost always be deemed to have been a sound one. At least in the context of avoiding the death penalty, a strategy only needs to convince one juror that the defendant’s life should be spared. One could argue that, given the evidence of Appellant's guilt, the aggravating circumstances, and Appellant's remorseless pretrial confession, he had little to lose by testifying in the punishment stage. After evidence of Appellant's mental problems and his childhood environment, Appellant’s testimony might have been enough to convince a single juror to extend sympathy to him and spare his life. Dr. McGarrahan’s interview indicates that even lead trial counsel harbored "varying agreeability” with the notion of allowing Appellant to testify.
. These extra-record materials were submitted contemporaneously with Appellant's brief, in conjunction with a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. See Rule 3.11, Rules of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, 22 O.S., Ch. 18, App. (2009). Appellant’s motion to supplement the record with these materials is DENIED.
. See McKaskle v. Wiggins,
.While the accused has autonomy in this regard, that autonomy is accompanied by the responsibility to make his desires clear. Cf. McKaskle,
. In fact, at one pretrial colloquy, concerning second-chair defense counsel's familial relation to the State’s case agent, Appellant said: "I understand the conflict of interest. If I feel that he has done something that is not negotiable I’m going to go pro bono [sic]. I’m going to represent myself.” This statement clearly indicates that Appellant did not wish to represent himself at that time. Appellant also claims that he initially "resisted” counsel’s intended strategy to acknowledge guilt, .but later "capitulated.” He points to the pretrial colloquy on this issue as proof of his dissatisfaction with counsel and his alleged continuing desire to proceed pro se. The record simply does not support this claim. Defense counsel announced to the court that he intended to "concede guilt” in voir dire. Appellant apparently understood this phrase to mean something akin to pleading guilty, and made it clear that he wanted the fact-finder to determine his guilt: “Let them do that.” The trial court gave counsel additional time to confer with Appellant off the record. When the colloquy was resumed, Appellant, without reservation, concurred with counsel's decision to "acknowledge" guilt in voir dire.
. Prior to trial, the State had moved in limine to restrict defense counsel's voir dire on certain issues, including mental illness, so as to avoid probing too deeply into the personal lives of the panelists. The trial court agreed such background information was usually inappropriate. The court indicated that inquiries about panelists' attitudes on mental illness, psychiatry, and the like would be proper so long as they were framed in general terms, but that "just a general discussion about Aunt Nilly’s mental illness” would likely not be. Several times during voir dire, the prosecutor objected when she felt defense counsel crossed the line by asking questions on subjects that delved too deeply into panelists' personal lives. Defense counsel agreed to focus on the general question of whether there was anything in the panelist's background that would interfere with being a fair juror, and to leave it to the individual panelist whether or not to offer further details.
. Citing Morgan v. Illinois,
. Appellant also argues that the practical effect of erroneously excusing Panelist I. for cause was to give the State an additional peremptory challenge, and that because unrelated court documents indicate Panelist I. was African-American, the prosecutor was essentially allowed to "avoid justifying the use of a peremptory challenge with
. Appellant's first Batson objection was to the excusal of Panelist G. The prosecutor responded that despite her Hispanic surname. Panelist G. appeared to be Caucasian, and maintained that any claim of a "pattern” of race-based exclusion was, as yet, premature. Once the prosecutor struck the two African-American panelists at issue here, defense counsel never asked the trial court to revisit the strike of Panelist G., and Appellant does not complain about G.’s removal in this appeal.
. Appellant faults the first explanation because the panelists were never specifically asked if they had ever been "charged” with a crime, only if they had ever "been in a court of law, under any circumstances, either as a witness, a plaintiff or as a defendant”. When the prosecutor revealed that Panelist E. had been charged with writing a bad check, the court discussed the matter with counsel and the panelist in camera. Apparently, Panelist E. took care of the matter at the court clerk's office. On appeal, the State claims this race-neutral reason was still plausible, since the prosecutor may have felt that E. had not been entirely forthcoming. During the in camera hearing, the court asked Panelist E. if she had anything to add on the "appearing in court” issue. She then offered another, much clearer incident of being "in court” that she had not previously disclosed: she had appeared in bankruptcy court less than a month before. Yet, only when the court specifically asked E. about the bogus check matter did she disclose it.
.We reject Appellant's claim that the prosecutor’s strike amounted to discrimination based on religious affiliation, and therefore have no occa-
.The trial court commented that the racial makeup of the seated jury showed no pattern of discrimination. Appellant criticizes this reasoning, claiming that a "pattern” of discrimination is not essential to a Batson claim. Yet, Appellant’s own analysis focuses on supposed patterns in the peremptory-challenge process, and on the racial makeup of the seated jury. If the motivation behind one strike is in doubt, the court “would be required to consider” other minority strikes, i.e., whether a "pattern” is evident. Snyder, - U.S. at -,
. We also note that before Panelist J. was ever removed, the prosecutor indicated that she wished to waive her remaining three challenges; but under the trial court's method of jury selection, she was required to use all nine. The State used its last challenge to remove Panelist J.
. Appellant characterizes the removal of Panelist P. as, in essence, giving the State a peremptory challenge it was not entitled to. Because P.
. Again, Appellant characterizes the trial court's action as, in essence, allowing the State an additional peremptory challenge. See foot
. Appellant relies heavily on Mansfield v. Champion,
. At the time of the murders, Appellant was on parole from a felony conviction in Virginia. The State presented uncontested evidence of this fact in the punishment stage of the trial. The fact that Appellant was on parole is sufficient to meet the statutory requirement that the defendant be serving "a sentence of imprisonment.”
. To support the continuing-threat aggravator, the State presented evidence (1) that a few months before the murders, after Appellant’s girlfriend Cheryl Tubbs was fired from her employment at the hotel, Appellant made threats to harm the staff of the hotel; (2) that after murdering Brenda McElyea, Appellant slashed her body with a box knife to ensure the weapon was sharp
. Defense counsel had initial concerns about the authorship of at least one of the two writings, but did not renew his objection, even after the trial court gave him additional time to review the packet. See Proposition 16, regarding the claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.
. Despite the brevity of these two writings, Appellant maintains that they were particularly prejudicial because "they were written in close proximity to the crime and showed particularly clear thinking and goal-directed behavior [at the time of the murders]." Yet, the issue of Appellant’s mental illness was not so compartmentalized. Appellant never interposed an insanity defense; evidence of his mental illness was reserved for the punishment stage. And while mental illness was certainly expressed as a mitigating circumstance, the formal list of mitigating factors presented by the defense did not restrict the issue of mental illness to the time that the crimes were committed ("Donald Grant has been diagnosed as schizophrenic; psychotic symptoms have been reported. Donald Grant has suffered from mental impairments since childhood”). Appellant’s primary expert witness on this issue, Dr. Grundy, made it clear
. Defendant’s Exhibit 5 was a duplicate copy of Defendant's Exhibit 1. Defendant’s Exhibit 16 was a duplicate copy of Defendant’s Exhibit 9.
. Moore v. State,
.Appellant counters that evidentiary rules on authentication arbitrarily deprived him of his constitutional right to present evidence. Yet there is no suggestion that Appellant was prevented from subpoenaing the experts in question to sponsor their own reports, or presenting any other type of evidence which might be sufficient to satisfy § 2901. See Ake,
.Unlike traditional "business records” — e.g., routine entries of numbers or other information — and even other types of professional evaluations, assessments of mental health are subjective in nature and susceptible to constant revision based on additional information and interim treatment. In Nauni v. State,
. The cases illustrate the danger of turning the trial into a game of documentary tit-for-tat. See Jones,
. In Harris, we directed that the language of OUJI-CR (2nd) No. 4-78 here be revised, but in so doing, made it clear that we found no material fault with the previous language of the instruction. Hams,
. The trial court’s definition read, in part, as follows:
Mitigating circumstances are (1) circumstances that may extenuate or reduce the degree of moral culpability or blame, or (2) circumstances which in fairness, sympathy or mercy may lead you as jurors individually or collectively to decide against imposing the death penalty. The determination of what circumstances are mitigating is for you to resolve under the facts and circumstances of this case....
. Appellant also claims that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to these photographs on grounds of inadequate notice. We
. The photographs at issue were, in fact, identified by the Medical Examiner in the guilt stage, but were not offered into evidence until the punishment stage.
. Appellant also submits the affidavit of one of the jurors that sentenced him, stating that Appellant appeared to her to be like a "zombie" during the trial, rarely speaking to his attorneys. This observation may have been relevant to the juror’s fact-finding task at trial, but it is of marginal value in determining whether Appellant was competent.
. For example. Appellant refers to a proposal by the American Bar Association’s Individual Rights and Responsibilities Section, made in 2003, that a defendant should not be sentenced to death if, at the time of the offense, he had a severe mental disorder or disability that significantly impaired his capacity (a) to appreciate the nature, consequences or wrongfulness of his conduct, (b) to exercise rational judgment in relation to conduct, or (c) to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law. This position requires not just "mental illness” — which is still an elusive and mutable diagnosis — but mental illness to a degree that affects perception, volition, or judgment.
. Golden v. State,
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting.
¶ 1 I agree with the majority that Panelist A should have been excused for cause after refusing to answer questions on the issue of mental illness. I cannot agree that this error requires no relief. In a capital case, one juror can mean the difference between life and death. Because Panelist A was not excused for cause, Grant had to use a peremptory challenge he would have used against another juror. In consequence, Grant was unfairly denied a peremptory challenge. According to our ease law, the case must be reversed.
¶ 2 In Golden v. State, this Court held that a peremptory challenge is a structural component of the trial; denial of a preemptory challenge is not subject to harmless error analysis, prejudice is presumed, and the error warrants reversal.
¶ 3 I note that in reaching its conclusion the majority independently, and improperly, reviews the record concerning the juror on whom Grant would have used the lost peremptory, determining that Grant has not shown she was less than fair or impartial. This procedure misstates our law preserving denial of a peremptory challenge for review.
¶ 4 Grant preserved this issue for review. After examining the record, the Court found that Panelist A should have been excused for cause. Grant claims he was denied a peremptory challenge. The Court agrees. Under Golden, this finding requires reversal. Given our holding in Golden, the majority’s conclusion that his sitting jury was fair and impartial is simply irrelevant.
¶ 5 I also disagree with the majority’s analysis of Proposition XI. The language of the uniform instruction defining mitigating evidence has been amended since Grant’s trial. The majority states that, in Harris v. State,
.
.
. See, e.g., Browning v. State,
. I state above the procedure for preserving this issue for review. Where this purely procedural requirement is followed, as it was here, the issue is preserved. Further substantive analysis of the "unacceptable” juror by this Court is both unnecessary and inappropriate. See Jones v. State,
.
