*574 OPINION
A jury fоund Robert Jones guilty of first degree murder and sentenced him to death. Jones challenges both the conviction and the imposition of the death sentence in this appeal. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the conviction but set aside the death sentence and remand for a new penalty hearing.
*575 THE FACTS
In the early morning hours of September 29, 1978 an argument erupted in the Chy Inn Bar between Jones and Rayfield Brown. Another bar patron, Bobby Lee Robinson, testified that he tried to put an end to the argument by buying everybody a drink. Jones picked up the bottle of vodka Robinson had purchased for him, drank the contents, and then handed the bottle to Robinson. Robinson put the bottle back on the bar counter and moved away to play somе records. Approximately three minutes later Jones walked out of the bar, returned with a handgun, pointed it to Brown’s head and fired the gun. Brown died shortly thereafter of the gunshot wound to the head.
Jones left the bar before police arrived. He returned to his uncle’s house, where he resided, and told a cousin that he had shot a man at a bar. Jones attempted to flеe to Massachusetts by bus but was arrested enroute in Vail, Colorado.
The degree of Jones’ intoxication was disputed during the trial. Defense counsel argued that Jones could not be guilty of first degree murder because he was severely intoxicated at the time of the shooting. Jones’ uncle testified that Jones was intoxicated at 12:30 a.m., several hours before the сonfrontation at the bar. Another defense witness testified that Jones was stumbling over shrubbery and appeared to be drunk at about 6:00 a.m., approximately one to two hours after the shooting. Eyewitnesses to the murder testified that Jones’ gait and speech were normal, and that he did not appear drunk. The evidence also indicated that Jones managed to bury thе gun and walk home via an inconspicuous route, indicating that Jones was capable of premeditating the murder.
After the jury found Jones guilty of first degree murder, the prosecutor presented evidence of Jones’ previous convictions at the penalty hearing as aggravating circumstances warranting the imposition of the death penalty.
Jones offered evidence in mitigation from his mother and Clark County jail officials. Jones’ mother testified that he had had trouble in school, was illiterate, had a low I.Q., and that he offered to donate his kidney when hers failed. According to jail personnel, Jones had been a model prisoner during his incarceration before trial. After a brief deliberation the jury sentenced Jones to death.
THE GUILT PHASE
The Cautionary Instruction
Jones first contends that the district court prejudicially erred in not giving a cautionary instruction that no inference could be
*576
drawn from his failure to testify. State trial courts have a constitutional obligation to give a cautionary instruction, upon proper request, “to minimize the danger that the jury will give evidentiary weight to a defendant’s failure to testify.” Carter v. Kentucky,
Jones argues that a Carter violation occurred at his trial despite his failure to request the cautionary instruction. He contends that he was prevented from requesting a cautionary instruction by NRS 175.181(1) which the trial judge read to him while advising him of his right not to testify. NRS 175.181(1) provides:
No instruction shall be given relative to the failure of thе person charged with the commission of crime or offense to testify, except, upon the request of the person so charged, the court shall instruct the jury that, in accordance with a right guaranteed by the constitution, no person can be compelled, in a criminal action, to be a witness against himself.
We have previously recognized the futility of
objecting
to an instruction whose validity has been consistently upheld.
See
St. Pierre v. State,
Jones has demonstrated good cause for his failure to request the instruction. Until
Carter
compelled state courts to give a cautionary instruction, if requested, we consistently held that an instruction elaborating on the language of NRS 175.181 was properly rejected.
See
Theriault v. State,
Although Jones had good cause for failing to request a
Carter
instruction, we conclude that the absence of the instruction has not prejudiced his substantial rights. A
Carter
error is evaluated
*577
under the harmless error standard of Chapman v. California,
After reviewing the evidence of Jones’ guilt under this standard, we conclude that any prejudice to Jones resulting from the failure to give the cautionary instruction was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Evidence of Jones’ guilt is overwhelming. Severаl eyewitnesses identified Jones as the killer. His counsel admitted in closing argument that Jones was the man who killed Brown. The only real dispute centered on the degree of Jones’ intoxication. The jury was adequately instructed on this issue, and there was substantial evidence to support a finding that Jones was capable of premeditation. Given the overwhelming evidenсe of Jones’ guilt, we conclude that the absence of a Carter instruction did not have any measurable impact on the jury’s deliberations.
Prosecutorial Misconduct
At the conclusion of the guilt phase of the trial the prosecutor, Bradley Richardson, pleaded with the jury to be fair to the victim in this case.
1
Defense counsel objected to the remark, and the trial judge ordered it stricken from the record. Respondent now concedes that the remark was improper.
See
Mears v. State,
Prosecutorial misconduct can and will result in the reversal of convictiоns when it denies defendants their right to a fair trial.
See
McGuire v. State,
When you took your oath, you were voirdired or questioned and asked whether you could be fair and impartial to both sides. And I recall you all qualifying with a yes, that you would be fair to both sides.
That includes the State of Nevada.
That would also include the victim in this case; who, of course, is not
Mr. Amundson: Objection, Your Honor.
The Court: The objection is sustained.
Stricken.
(Emphasis added.) Given the overwhelming evidence of Jones’ guilt we conclude that this comment was not prejudicial. Nothing in
McGuire
requires us to abandon the harmless error rule, and we decline to do so now.
Cf.
Moser v. State,
THE PENALTY PHASE
Evidence of Prior Convictions
Jones contends that the district court erred in admitting evidence concerning his three prior felony convictions. He argues that testimony from the victims of his three prior felonious assaults was unduly prejudicial in light of defense counsel’s offer to stipulate to the convictions. We reject this contention.
It is well established in Nevada that evidence of prior convictions is admissible at penalty hearings when relevant and credible and not dubious or tenuous.
See
Biondi v. State,
*579 Executive Clemency Instructions
During the penalty phase of the trial, the trial court read to the jury the following instructions:
Instruction 5
In such a case, the jury is instructed to consider the aggravating circumstances, if any, to determine whether the aggravating circumstances justify the imposition of a death penalty.
Otherwise, the punishment imposed shall be imprisonment in the State Prison for life with or without the possibility of parole.
You are instructed that the sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole does not exclude executive clemency.
If the punishment is fixed at life imprisonment with the possibility of parole, eligibility for parole begins when a minimum of ten years has been served.
Instruction 6
Executive clemency involves an act of pardon which is evidenced by an executive order signed by the Governor absolving a defendant from -the guilt of his criminal act and completely exempting him from the pains and penalties imposed on him by law. Executive clemency also includes action by the State Board of Pardons in commuting or reducing a defendant’s punishment of life without the possibility of parole to life with the possibility of parole, or action by the State Board of Pardons in shortening the time a defendant is eligible for parole.
Executive clemency cannot be granted in any case unless there is a majority vote for clemency by a Pardons Board consisting of the Governor, the Attorney General, and the five Justices of the Nevada Supreme Court. 3
*580 (Footnote added.)
This court,
sua sponte
4
raised the issue of whether an instruction concerning the possibility of executive clemency for a sentence of life imprisonment without possibility of parole constituted reversible error. We delayed our decision in this case and reordered argument pending the United States Supreme Court’s decision in California v. Ramos,
Although appellant’s participation in the drafting of the challenged instructions would ordinarily preclude appellate review, Kearney v. State,
Ramos
was decided adversely to Jones’ contention that Instructions 5 and 6 regarding the possibility of clemency and parole constituted reversible error. In Petrocelli v. State,
In his closing remarks, however, the prosecutor elaborated on the language of these instructions and misstated the law. 5 The prosecutor’s comments misled the jury about the commutation powers of the pardons board:
Look at Jury Instruction No. 6. Write this down, so you can remember it.
You might want to look at it when you’re deliberating.
Even if a person is put into prison with Life Without the *581 Possibility of Parole, there is always the possibility of executive clemency, which means there is always the possibility the defendant can have his sentence commuted from Life Without the Possibility to Life With the Possibility of Parole.
And he can also then receive parole on this matter.
And that is why, if there’s any possibility of this gentleman getting out and getting back into the society of decent, law-abiding, normal — normally reacting humans — there should be no possibility for this man to ever get out.
And, since there is a possibility, with Life Without, the State urges the death penalty.
(Emphasis added.)
Although the Federal Constitution does not require a jury to be informed that death sentences, as well as life sentences, may be commuted,
Ramos,
463 U.S. at ......,
We are required to determine whether a death sentence has
*582
been imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice or any arbitrary factor. NRS 177.055(2)(c). We conclude that the jury may well have imposed the death sentence in this case arbitrarily and under the influence of passion.
Cf.
Caldwell v. Mississippi, ...... U.S. ......,
If the newly empaneled jury opts to impose another death sentence on Jones, we will review the sentence at that time for proportionality as required by NRS 177.055(2)(d). 6 We decline to do so now because we conclude that an objective, reasonable jury, supplied with accurate, not misleading, information, may *583 well decide not to impоse a death sentence under the facts presented here.
Jones’ remaining assignments of error are held to be without merit. We affirm the judgment of conviction, vacate the death sentence and remand for a new penalty hearing.
Notes
Jones raises several other instances of prosecutorial misconduct in his brief. We reject those contentions as unmeritorious and not deserving of discussion here.
Furthermore, we note that detailed information regarding prior convictions may work to the benefit of a defendant as well as to his detriment. For *579 example, in this case, after the state introduced evidence of Jones’ three prior convictions, one in Mississippi and the other two in Massachusetts, Jones’ mother tеstified that the 1968 Mississippi conviction was the subject of a civil rights investigation. According to Mrs. Jones, her son was stopped by a group of white policemen as he crossed the Covington County line from Charles County. Covington County is a dry county; Jones apparently had gone to Charles County to visit a bar. The police forced Jones to drive his car to a nearby gravеyard instead of taking him to jail. They then poured gasoline on the car while Jones was still inside and then ignited the gas, trapping Jones inside. Jones, fearful for his life and severely burned, forced his way out of the car, hit one of the officers and ran through the woods to his aunt’s house. Jones was subsequently convicted for felonious assault of a police officer and sentеnced to serve four years in the Mississippi State Penitentiary. This was the first time Jones was in “trouble” with the law.
During the first oral argument in this case, we discovered that these *580 instructions were the result of a compromise between counsel. This compromise yielded a unique set of instructions. Apparently, Jury Instructions 5 and 6 are the amalgamation of NRS 175.554 and 175.161(7).
Pursuant to an order issued by this cоurt, the parties submitted supplemental briefs addressing the impact of People v. Ramos,
We also note that Instruction 6 itself was inaccurate. It failed to correctly state that the governor has veto power over any majority vote for pardon.
NRS 177.055(2)(d) was recently amended to abolish the proportionality review requirement. 1985 Nev. Stats, ch. 527, § 1, at 1597-1598. This amendment is inapplicable in this case since Jones’ crime was committed before the amendment took effect.
See
Wilson v. State,
