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The appellant, Vernon Madison, was convicted of two counts of capital murder in the death of Julius Schulte, see §
The facts of this case, as set out by the trial court, are as follows:
*95"That on April 18, 1985, the residents of 1058 Etta Avenue were Cheryl Green,1 the woman with whom the Defendant had lived until days prior to the murder, and Kimberly Hughes, her 11-year-old daughter.
"That night, Cpl. Julius Schulte, a police officer of the City of Mobile, was dispatched and went to 1058 Etta Avenue in Mobile to investigate a missing child complaint.
"When Cpl. Schulte arrived, he learned that the child, Kimberly Hughes, had come home after her mother called the police but before he arrived. He also found himself in the midst of a domestic dispute between Cheryl Green and the Defendant, for April 18, 1985, was also the night that Green had thrown the Defendant's personal effects out of the house they previously shared.
"The Defendant had come and gone from 1058 Eitta Avenue before Cpl. Schulte arrived, ostensibly to look for Kimberly. He came back with another woman, Mary McCord, after Cpl. Schulte was on the scene, but he left her and his .32 caliber pistol at the corner before proceeding to the house located in the middle of the block.
"Once inside the 1058 Etta Avenue residence, the Defendant argued with Green, accusing her of calling the police on him. Even though he now knew the child was secure, Cpl. Schulte remained on the scene and called for a backup officer, because he had been asked to stay until Green and her child were safely away from the Defendant.
"The Defendant and Green came out of the house, and both talked to Cpl. Schulte, who never exited his patrol car. After that brief conversation, the defendant appeared to leave. He did not go far; rather, he simply went to the corner where Mary McCord was holding his .32 caliber pistol. He took the gun from her and left her.
"Now armed, the Defendant went back to where Green was still talking with Cpl. Schulte, who still sat innocently and unsuspectingly in his unmarked police car. The Defendant, however, returned a different way. He went over one block, and he sneaked up behind the houses on Etta Avenue. He emerged from the shadows, approached Cpl. Schulte from the left rear, and coldly and methodically fired two shots at near point blank range into the back of Cpl. Schulte's head. He then turned the weapon on Cheryl Green, shooting her in the back. After killing his helpless victim. Cpl. Schulte, and shooting Cheryl Green, the Defendant fled the scene."
The first count of the appellant's indictment charged him with the intentional shooting of Julius Schulte while Schulte was "on duty as a police officer"; the second count charged that the shooting occurred while Schulte was "performing an official or job related act." Both counts are alternative methods of proving a single offense. See §
In Floyd v. State,
In Meyer v. State,
In Tucker v. State,
In the present case, although the instructions of the trial court were confusing, the Court sufficiently informed the jury with regard to the burden of proof and the necessity for unanimity in its verdict. The juror s were aware that the appellant was guilty of only one offense, as evidenced by their verdict form, which stated the single offense of "the capital felony as charged in the indictment." Their death penalty decision therefore was not improperly affected by the framing of the indictment.
The trial court found with regard to §
With regard to the §
With regard to nonstatutory mitigating circumstances, the appellant argues that there was ample evidence offered at the penalty phase to support the existence of such circumstances. Specifically, he refers to Dr. Amyx's testimony as to the appellant's mental illness, his mother's plea for mercy, a friend's testimony concerning a positive change in the appellant since the killing, and *97 the appellant's own statement, in which he expressed remorse and apologized to the victim's family. In addition, the appellant argues that the trial court's sentencing order was insufficient because it did not specifically identify the mitigating circumstances found and weighed by the court.
However, the order of the trial court stated, in pertinent part, that the court "considered the testimony of lay witnesses and all other mitigating evidence offered by the Defendant, including that not enumerated as statutory mitigating circumstances." The court was not required to state that it considered a particular mitigating circumstance, and the lack of a specific finding did not mean that the court did not consider that evidence. Ex parte Haney,
The §
The appellant was aware of the residential character of the neighborhood because he had previously lived there. In addition, he was positioned so that he could actually see Hughes, Chadwick, and Trapp. Therefore, the appellant could have foreseen that his firing at Cheryl Green would create a great risk of death to many persons other than the two intended victims. The appellant contends that the State argued at the close of the guilt phase that "the only risk of death during this offense" was to the two intended victims. However, the prosecutor's actual argument was that the appellant did not shoot Hughes, Chadwick, or Trapp but instead shot "the two people he was mad at." The prosecutor did not contend that the others were not at risk. Based on the record, there is no error or plain error in the trial court's presenting the §
"(1) The Defendant indeed has a significant history of prior criminal activity. The pre-sentence report documents a 20-year history of at least nine criminal convictions, most of which involve the threat or use of violence against other human beings. Therefore, the Title
13A-5-51 (1) factor does exist and is considered."
(Emphasis added.)
However, the part of the sentencing order quoted by the appellant is the first in the section of the sentencing order entitled, "II. MITIGATING CIRCUMSTANCES," and it is clear from the context that this finding was inadvertently recorded as an affirmative finding. The findings of the trial court with regard to mitigating circumstances follow the statutory order of §
The appellant also contends that the trial court improperly found nonstatutory aggravating circumstances as evidenced by the following in its sentencing order:
"The murder of Julius Schulte was a consciousless [sic] act committed by a man whose life history is but one sequel after another of violent, assaultive acts against other human beings and with total disregard for our laws and those who are charged with enforcing them."
However, the passage in question is not included in the section of sentencing order entitled, "I. AGGRAVATING CIRCUMSTANCES." This passage appears instead in the portion of the order in which the court explains its weighing of the aggravating and mitigating circumstances. It is apparent that the passage was not referring to an improper nonstatutory aggravating circumstance.
The appellant also argues that the State and the trial court added another nonstatutory aggravating circumstance when the court allowed the prosecutor to state to the jury in his penalty phase argument, "You've seen the first three and [this] verdict makes the fourth conviction of crimes of violence committed by this Defendant." The appellant cites in support of his argument cases that hold that convictions, not charges, are to be considered; these cases are inapplicable because the crime at issue here was a conviction. Moreover, the mere fact that certain facts were mentioned at some point in the court's sentencing order did not mean that the court improperly considered them as aggravating circumstances. Based on the record, there is no plain error.
The appellant contends that the prosecutor presented victim impact arguments, which, he says, were improper because they distracted the jury from determining culpability. Specifically, he argues that during the guilt-phase closing argument, the prosecutor erred in stating the following with regard to one of the eyewitnesses to the crime:
"I don't know if any of us can imagine what young Kim Hughes has been through in her lifetime. She was ten years old at the time she saw her mother gunned down and saw a police officer killed before her very eyes."
However, the victim in this case was Julius Schulte, not Kim Hughes, and the statements *99
made by the prosecutor were not improper argument because they represented his inferences and conclusions drawn from evidence which had been presented at trial. In Sanders v. State,
The appellant also contends that the prosecutor erred in arguing the worth of the victim, as follows:
"I want you to look at the man who was Julius Schulte. This is the man who spent 13 years of his long career working with kids as a juvenile probation officer, and as a parent and as any parent can tell you, that takes a lot of patience. He wasn't just a juvenile officer. That night he could have just said, once he found out that Kim was okay, he could have said, `I'm out of here.' But that wasn't Julius Schulte. Julius waited, called his backup, to see if he could help further. This is the kind of man that was executed by this Defendant on that occasion, and, folks, that is why I stand before you today and respectfully ask you to return verdicts of guilty on both counts."
The prosecutor's statements concerning Julius Schulte also represented inferences and conclusions drawn from the evidence that was presented at trial. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by permitting the prosecutor's statements during his guilt-phase argument. There is no error with regard to this issue.
However, mere words or gestures will not reduce a homicide from murder to manslaughter, Harrison v. State,
Venue should be changed when there is a showing of inherently prejudicial publicity that has so saturated the community as to have a probable impact upon the jurors. Jackson v. State,
The record reveals that during voir dire, the trial court asked the veniremembers if there was a serious reason that any of them could not serve on the jury because they were to be sequestered. Two responded affirmatively. One stated that his mother had just had surgery and that she also had Alzheimer's disease and was being taken care of by a neighbor during the day, the other informed the court that his mother was terminally ill. The trial court then excused both of them, and the appellant did not object. The extreme nature of these illnesses was sufficient to show undue hardship, and the trial court did not abuse its discretion by excusing the two veniremembers from jury service.
With regard to a third veniremember, the record reveals that she was not removed from the venire until after individual voir dire had been completed. At that time, the trial court conducted an off-the-record discussion with an unidentified juror and then a bench discussion with counsel, in which the court stated, "We're going to strike [Mrs. M.] She would be excellent for the State, but she's the bookkeeper and she's got three children and nobody to get them to school. So, I'm going to strike her." The appellant made no objection and the court told Mrs. M. to go "take care of those three children." The court then instructed someone to tell him "what's the actual count now." Upon learning that it was 50, the court stated, "That's an even number," and the parties then immediately proceeded to strike the jury.
It appears from the record that Mrs. M. was struck to bring the venire panel to an even number, rather than excused based on undue hardship. Moreover, the trial court noted circumstances with regard to Mrs. M. that would have constituted business and personal hardship. Therefore, the trial court's decision to strike Mrs. M. did not constitute error or plain error.
The record reveals that, after veniremember R.B. stated that he did not support the death penalty, the trial court permitted the appellant to ask him whether, in "a situation like wartime, like we're in the war with Hitler, Saddam Hussein or something like that," he would oppose "going to war or our country going to wa[r] and taking other people's lives in the protection of our country." The court next questioned veniremember P. H., asking whether "if you were selected as a juror in this case — and I'm not interested in war time . . . there is no set of facts that you . . . could vote for death by electrocution?" After P.H. answered, "Yes, sir," the trial court told him that it would now let defense counsel "ask anything he wishes, to and including war time." However, when counsel attempted to ask P. H., "[C]ould you believe in State imposed killing if it was a war time and like Richard said, he could. Do you feel like in war time you might be able to *101 do something like that, the court stated, not interested in war time. . . . So, ask about it."
The appellant did not object to the trial court's instruction or further attempt to question the juror concerning his beliefs about killing during a time of war. He now argues that his desired inquiry was whether the juror could impose a death penalty during wartime. However, it is clear from the record that his question at trial actually was whether the juror could support killing in defense of his country during wartime. This question was not sufficiently related to the issue of capital punishment to be relevant, and an affirmative response would not have rehabilitated the juror with regard to the imposition of the death penalty. Therefore, the trial court's refusal to permit the question was not an abuse of discretion.
The appellant contends that the trial court erred in finding that he failed to establish a prima facie case under Batson v.Kentucky,
In Batson v. Kentucky,
The appellant argues on appeal that the State struck 7 of 13 qualified black potential jurors, or over half of the black venirepersons, and that it used 7 of its 18 strikes to remove those black potential jurors. He further argues that 34 of the blacks removed by the State did not answer any questions on voir dire and that the prosecutor's office has a history of excluding qualified black potential jurors based on race.
However, the only evidence actually offered by the appellant at trial was as follows: that the State struck 4 black males and 2 black females, who were variously employed; that the State struck 7 of 15 blacks, and that 3 veniremembers who were struck had not responded to any questions on voir dire. Despite repeated requests by the trial court that he produce more evidence, including, specifically, evidence of bias, the appellant offered nothing further in support of his Batson claim.
The appellant's evidence was insufficient to show that the struck jurors shared only the characteristic of race. It also was insufficient to show a pattern of strikes against black jurors, particularly in light of the increased percentage of blacks who served on the jury relative to both the initial panel and the population of the county.5 The only evidence that arguably could lead to an inference of discrimination was a lack of questions or meaningful questions to 3 of the challenged jurors. The trial court's determination as to whether the defendant has established purposeful racial discrimination should be reversed only if it is clearly erroneous. Ex parte Branch, supra. The trial court's denial of the appellant's Batson motion in the present case was not clearly erroneous.
The appellant contends that the trial court erred in instructing the jury that it had a duty to reconcile the testimony of the witnesses. He argues that this instruction invaded the province of the jury and could have conditioned the jurors to disbelieve uncontroverted testimony.
However, the record reveals that the trial court's actual charge was, in pertinent part, as follows:
"Now, . . . you might logically assume that all witnesses who take the oath are presumed to speak the truth. Our Supreme Court has said, and I believe correctly so, that no such presumption exists. You, as the sole triers of the facts, are to determine that. I will tell you it's the law of this State that if you can reconcile the testimony of all the witnesses with that of being the truth, then, of course, you should do so. If you cannot do that, then, again, as the sole triers of the facts in this case you must determine which witness or witnesses you choose to believe and which witness or witnesses you choose not to believe.
"I will tell you it's the law of this State that if you believe any witness has wilfully sworn falsely to a material fact, you may, if you wish, disregard that person's entire testimony. The theory of our law being simply this: If a person would testify falsely in any material aspect — not any inadvertent answer, but would wilfully testify falsely in any material aspect, the law would presume that person would testify falsely in any other material aspect.
"Of course, you may consider many other things: the demeanor of the witness on *103 the stand, and that simply means how that person answered the questions asked them; his or her ability to see and know the facts about which he or she has testified; how that person may be affected by your verdict; or, another way of saying the same thing, is any bias or prejudice which any witnesses may possibly possess . . ."
The record further reveals that the appellant did not object at trial to this portion of the court's oral charge; therefore, this issue must be reviewed under the plain error standard. Rule 45A, A.R.App.P. In Williams v. State,
However, the appellate court's objection to the evidence introduced in Carson was that it was not made clear to the jury that the replica knife had no connection with the knife allegedly in Carson's possession when he was arrested. The appellate court noted that trial courts have great discretion in this area and conceded that the replica knife could ordinarily have been admitted as illustrative or demonstrative evidence. However, the court stated that the admission of the knife was error under the facts of Carson because a deputy policy chief was allowed to testify to the chain of custody and refer to the replica as "the" knife when he was unable to positively identify the weapon. No such error exists in the appellant's case.
In Liberty National Life Ins. Co. v. Weldon,
However, in Spaziano v. Florida,
The record reveals that the appellant did not object to the trial court's override of the jury's advisory verdict. Therefore, reviewed under the plain error standard, the trial court's override is affirmed.
The trial court properly found the existence of two aggravating circumstances: First, that the capital offense was committed by a person under sentence of imprisonment, §
After an independent weighing of the circumstances, this Court finds that the trial court's sentence of death was proper. This Court further finds that, considering both the crime and the defendant, the sentence is not excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases. Therefore, the appellant's conviction and sentence of death are proper. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
All judges concur except COBB, J., who recuses.
