*283 Opinion
Raymond Houston (appellant) appeals his conviction for second degree murder with a weapon of his estranged wife, Lucille Houston (Houston), for which the trial court sentenced him to a term of 40 years to life in prison. Appellant contends that the trial court violated his constitutional rights by admitting into evidence Houston’s previous statements to police and hospital personnel about appellant’s acts of domestic violence against her; erred in refusing to exclude certain DNA evidence; committed prejudicial error by admitting purportedly improper “bad character” evidence regarding appellant’s extramarital affairs; and should have allowed him an evidentiary hearing to develop purported facts of spectator misconduct that supposedly tainted the jury. Appellant contends that his conviction must be reversed and a new trial granted or, in the alternative, that the matter must be remanded for an evidentiary hearing regarding the purported spectator misconduct. For the reasons stated post, we affirm appellant’s conviction.
BACKGROUND
I. Factual Background
On November 23, 2001, Houston’s friends contacted the police and appellant after Houston had failed to pick up an out-of-town visitor at the airport on November 21, 2001, appear with appellant at a friend’s house on November 22, 2001, for Thanksgiving dinner, or call her mother on her mother’s birthday. Houston, a photojoumalist for the San Jose Mercury News, was married to appellant since 1998. In June 2001, she had moved out of their jointly owned house on Fresno Street in Oakland and filed for divorce.
Appellant met with Houston’s friends and the police on November 23, 2001. There was testimony that he claimed at that time that Houston had stayed with him overnight at the Fresno Street house on November 20, 2001; that he had moved her car into his garage Tuesday night so she could remove camera equipment to make room for the luggage of her out-of-town visitor; 1 that he had left her at the house early the following morning, November 21, 2001, to go to his workplace in Alameda; that Houston had planned, among other things, to pick up her friend at the airport and later meet him around noon at his workplace to have documents notarized transferring appellant’s ownership interest in the Fresno Street house to Houston; that they had planned to attend the Thanksgiving dinner together the next day; and that she did not appear at his workplace and had not contacted him since. Appellant *284 said Houston had told him she was going to pick up her friend at the airport around 9:00 a.m. or 9:30 a.m., a time he later recalled to be 11:00 a.m. or 11:30 a.m. Appellant also claimed that he had tried to attend the Thanksgiving dinner, but could not find the friend’s house, although he had been there before and the friend was listed in the phonebook. Appellant said that he had tried to reach Houston by telephone. He allowed police to look through the house, but nothing was found relating to Houston.
Appellant gave a written witness statement to police later in the early morning of November 24, 2001, which was prepared by an interviewing officer and signed by appellant. He recited much of what he had said earlier, stating that he left Houston alive at the Fresno Street house when he left for work between 6:30 and 6:40 a.m. on the morning of November 21, 2001, and that “[i]t is very unlike Lucille to be missing. She has good physical and mental conditions and has never done anything like this before. I have no idea where Lucille could have gone.” The interviewing officer testified at trial that appellant did not indicate at the time that anyone else had access to the house.
On November 25, 2001, Lucille Houston’s body was found under a blue tarp on the backseat of her car, clad in underpants only, parked on a street within about 15 minutes’ walking distance of the Fresno Street house. The pathologist who performed an autopsy testified that Houston was killed by gunshots to her abdomen and head. Police recovered a bullet from Houston’s brain, but the bullet that caused the wound to Houston’s abdomen had passed through her body and was not found in the car. Police also found an envelope in the backseat pocket of the driver’s area containing documents which contemplated appellant’s transfer of his interest in the Fresno Street house to Houston.
Police searched the Fresno Street house again after they found Houston’s body. An investigator noticed a recently plastered area of one wall about 39 inches off the ground behind a coat rack in appellant’s upstairs bedroom. Inside the wall, police found a bullet. An experienced police forensic biologist extracted material from the bullet and found traces of what almost certainly was Houston’s DNA; she testified that only one in 635 billion people would be a DNA match. A police firearms expert conducted an extensive analysis of the bullets recovered from Houston’s brain and from appellant’s bedroom wall and concluded that they were fired from the same gun, a .380 automatic.
Police found other relevant physical evidence in the Fresno Street house. They concluded from their examination of a box spring in appellant’s bedroom that a bullet had passed through it, with the “entry” hole approximately 37 inches and “exit” hole about 39 inches above the ground when the *285 box spring was placed on edge. They also found numerous unidentifiable fingerprints in the house, no blood evidence, cleaning supplies, and a container of joint compound.
The police did not find any of Houston’s personal effects at the Fresno Street house. They searched the hotel room where Houston had been staying, and found such things as her toiletries, cosmetics, clothes, and inhaler there.
Appellant was subsequently arrested and, by information filed on May 2, 2002, charged with murdering Houston sometime between November 20 and 25, 2001, in violation of Penal Code section 187, and with using a firearm in violation of Penal Code sections 12022.53, subdivisions (c) and (d), 1203.06, subdivision (a)(1) and 12022.5, subdivision (a)(1). Appellant pled not guilty and denied the enhancements.
II. Relevant Pretrial Motions
Prior to trial, the parties debated several relevant motions regarding evidence, which are addressed further in the discussion section, post. First, respondent sought to have admitted, and appellant sought to exclude, Houston’s hearsay statements regarding two prior incidents of domestic violence involving appellant. Houston had made statements to the police and hospital personnel that appellant had attacked her on June 22, 2001, in a fight at the Fresno Street house, pulling out some of her hair and injuring her finger, after Houston told him she wanted a divorce because she could not understand why he stayed out all night. Respondent also sought admission, and appellant the exclusion, of Houston’s statement to police about an August 2001 incident, in which she stated that appellant had argued with her about the disposition of the Fresno Street house in their divorce and then kicked out her car window. The court allowed all of the evidence to be admitted.
Second, appellant moved to exclude evidence of Houston’s DNA that police had extracted from the bullet found in the wall of appellant’s bedroom. Appellant contended that the police had “digested” the entire bullet to extract DNA from the bullet, and thereby made it impossible for appellant to determine the reliability of the police’s extraction methods. Respondent contended that under the circumstances of their investigation at the time, the police acted appropriately and without any intent to unnecessarily destroy evidence. The court denied appellant’s motion.
Third, the parties debated the admissibility of testimony from two witnesses, W.M. and S.P., who each testified at trial that she had had an affair with appellant during appellant’s marriage to Houston. Respondent moved to introduce S.P.’s testimony of her dealings with appellant, which at trial *286 included appellant’s promises, before Houston’s death, to marry her and, later, to provide financial support for a baby they had conceived together. Respondent contended that this testimony was relevant to show appellant’s deceitfulness, arguing that appellant had been stringing S.P. along in the same manner that he had deceived Houston about selling his interest in the house to her. The court granted this motion.
Respondent moved to introduce testimony by W.M. that appellant made comments indicating he was possessive about his house in August of 2001. The court, after cautioning respondent about the possible undue prejudice that could result from extended testimony about appellant’s extramarital affairs, granted this motion as well.
Finally, the parties debated whether respondent would be allowed to ask S.P. and W.M. if appellant told them he was married during their affairs. Appellant contended such testimony would be prejudicial, while respondent contended it was relevant to the credibility of both appellant and of S.P. and W.M. The court, agreeing with respondent, allowed the line of questioning.
III. The Trial of Appellant
A. Respondent’s Evidence
Respondent presented the testimony and evidence discussed above. Witnesses also testified about suspicious statements and actions by appellant after Houston’s disappearance. For example, appellant did not respond to a telephone message on November 22, 2001, from the hostess of the Thanksgiving dinner expressing concern about Houston’s whereabouts; sought the advice of counsel before signing his witness statement for police; did not join in efforts to publicize Houston’s disappearance organized by Houston’s friends; abruptly volunteered to police that a blue tarp was missing from his backyard while discussing Houston’s disappearance with them; and misled a work dispatcher on November 24, 2001, about his whereabouts when told the police were “looking” for him because, a coworker testified, appellant said at the time that he feared arrest.
Respondent also presented evidence which indicated that appellant and Houston had engaged in difficult negotiations regarding the disposition of the Fresno Street house in their divorce. At the time of her disappearance, Houston had been urging appellant for some time to transfer his interest in the house to her so that she could refinance the property and use part of the funds obtained to pay appellant for his interest. A loan officer and escrow assistant testified, and their testimony together was that Houston had qualified for a loan, and had been given an interspousal deed for appellant’s signature *287 in October 2001. Although Houston said that appellant had told her he had sent the deed back to the loan company in October, the company had not received the document, and the loan documents subsequently had expired. A few days before Houston’s disappearance, the loan company had sent new documents by overnight delivery to Houston for signing, and made an appointment with Houston to meet at 12:45 p.m. on November 21, 2001, but Houston did not show up. A friend of Houston’s testified that Houston told her that appellant would not sign the papers.
Three of appellant’s co workers also testified on respondent’s behalf. One coworker testified that a few days after Houston’s disappearance, on Saturday, November 24, 2001, appellant told her that he had argued with Houston when she stayed over at his house, and that he previously had tom up a quitclaim deed that he had signed because Houston had been unable to pay him for his interest. Appellant said Houston was supposed to have met him at his workplace to have documents notarized on November 21, 2001, but that he had told Houston “that she might as well not show up if she didn’t bring some proof that she had gotten financing for the house, a contract or a loan, some proof that she could pay him for his—for the house, that she might as well just not show up.” Appellant told the coworker that Houston had called him a “motherfucker” in reply. He then told the coworker “something like, bitch thinks she can play me. Bitch thinks she can bum me, something indicating that he felt that Lucy could get away with doing this, not paying for the house.” The coworker also testified that appellant had told her in earlier conversations “[t]hat it was his house and she wasn’t going to get his house.”
A second coworker, a notary, testified that she had notarized a transfer deed that appellant signed before her on October 26, 2001, but that she had no discussions with him about notarizing documents on November 21, 2001.
A third coworker recalled that before Houston’s death, appellant told him he owned guns, including a .380 automatic specifically.
Respondent also presented phone records showing the last call from Houston’s cell phone was at 6:17 p.m. on November 20, 2001. A witness, Barry, testified that he and Houston were platonic friends, and spoke by telephone at that time. Other telephone records showed that appellant’s cell phone voice mail was accessed between 2:00 a.m. and 3:00 a.m. on the morning of November 21, 2001.
Respondent also presented testimony about the June and August 2001 incidents of violence between appellant and Houston. The police officer who took Houston’s June 2001 statement testified that, independent of Houston’s *288 statement, it appeared to him that a portion of Houston’s hair had been pulled out of her head and that there was blood on her ear.
Two witnesses testified about the August 2001 incident as well. Appellant’s neighbor testified, that she saw appellant and Houston in front of their house on the day in question, heard appellant say, “[B]itch, you go get some keys from the other nigga,” then appear to try to hit Houston, after which Houston ran to her car. She then saw appellant, looking angry, kick out a window on the driver’s side of Houston’s car. Houston’s supervisor at the San Jose Mercury News also testified that Houston called her in August 2001 and told her appellant had broken out a window in her company car, and that she wanted her car and cell phone changed so that appellant would not be able to contact her or find her.
W.M. and S.P. testified about their affairs with appellant. S.P. testified that her involvement with appellant began in 2000, and W.M. testified that her involvement with him began in the spring of 2001. Each woman testified that appellant did not tell her that he was married.
B. Appellant’s Evidence
Appellant’s defense relied heavily on a witness who testified that she saw a man by Houston’s parked car outside her home sometime between 6:30 a.m. and 7:00 a.m. on the morning of November 21, 2001. The witness initially told police on November 25, 2001, when Houston’s body was discovered in the car’s backseat, that she looked outside a window of her house early in the morning of November 21 and saw a black man who was “32 or 33 years old, about 6 [feet] 1 [inch] or 6 [feet] 2 [inches] and really thin, and maybe 150 pounds” emerging from Houston’s car. She indicated at trial that he was “lanky,” meaning “thin at the bottom, more broad at the top.” The man’s description of height and build apparently did not match that of appellant in 2001.
The witness acknowledged at trial that her recollections had changed significantly over time and that she had misled authorities in some of her accounts. She initially gave a written statement to police on November 25, 2001, then gave a recorded statement a few days later, and subsequently discussed the matter with appellant’s investigator on August 2, 2003. In her recorded statement, she indicated the man was older than her original description, stating he was in his late 30’s or early 40’s, and later told appellant’s investigator that the man was upward of 48 years old. At trial, she recalled a man of about 40 who was lanky, and who “looked as if he were locking a car. He did not drive up in the car.” She was inconsistent in her accounts about the time she saw the man and whether the sun had been *289 shining. She admitted at trial that she had misled police about whether the sun was out in her written statement because she had wanted to get them out of her house, that she had not really read what the police had prepared from her comments before she signed it, and that she had previously lied to a prosecutor about whether or not she saw the man shut the car door because she did not want to appear in court. She also testified that she did not think she could identify the man she saw.
Appellant also relied on the testimony of two coworkers to contend that he was at work around the same time that this witness saw a man by Houston’s parked car on the morning of November 21, 2001. One coworker testified that he saw appellant with a bloody nose in a bathroom at his Alameda workplace at 6:50 a.m. one morning. However, the coworker’s testimony indicated he was less than certain whether he saw appellant on Tuesday, November 20, or Wednesday, November 21, 2001. When he was asked about the date, he testified that he had said in a recorded statement to police that it was Tuesday, but that it came out Wednesday because of a scratch in the tape. “I thought it was Tuesday. To the best of my knowledge I thought it was Tuesday. It could have been Wednesday. I can’t say for sure.” When pressed by appellant’s trial counsel about the transcript of his remarks, he stated, “If Wednesday is what I said, then that’s what I’ll have to go with,” and he did not argue with counsel’s representation that the interviewing officers’ notes also referred to Wednesday. The second coworker recalled appellant telling him by walkie-talkie at around 7:20 a.m. on Wednesday morning that appellant was returning to the yard from the field.
Appellant testified at trial as well, regarding many of the subjects raised by the prosecution. He denied killing Houston. He claimed to have substantial cleaning supplies in the house because a neighbor who worked for the Clorox Company had provided them to him, and to have previously plastered another wall in the house. He acknowledged having fights with Houston in June and August 2001, but downplayed each incident, contending, for example, that his actions in the June fight were the result of her violence towards him and suggesting that only extensions in her hair had come out.
Appellant testified that Houston had stayed the night with him on November 20, suggested that Houston had checked his voice mail in the middle of the night while he slept, and stated that he left her asleep in bed at around 6:25 a.m. or 6:30 a.m. on the morning of November 21, 2001. He testified that he did not worry about Houston when she failed to appear at his workplace on November 21, 2001, thinking she was “doing female, girlie things,” and remained relatively unconcerned after her friends and police contacted him on November 23, 2001, because he “just thought she was wherever. Maybe she was with her boyfriend.”
*290 Appellant testified that Houston had been involved with two different lovers during their marriage. First, he testified that she had been involved with Barry, the witness who had testified about his November 20 telephone call with Houston. Appellant also testified that at the time of her death, Houston was lovers with a tall, thin, middle-aged African-American drug dealer named “Jesse.” Appellant testified that he had been friendly with Jesse at one time, stating, for example, that he had been to his apartment and went to a picnic for a company where Jesse worked. He stated that after Jesse became involved with Houston, Jesse threatened him over the telephone when appellant told him not to call his house, and that Jesse continued to call and threaten him after Houston had moved out. Appellant’s testimony about Jesse was lacking in many details; for example, appellant never provided any specific address for Jesse, nor could he recall the name of the company that held the picnic, or even Jesse’s last name. Other than appellant’s own testimony, neither appellant nor respondent presented any evidence showing that Jesse actually existed. 2
Appellant claimed in direct examination that he initially told police “maybe you ought to check with her boyfriend.” On cross-examination, he said that he did not bring up Jesse until after he had learned of the witness’s report to police that she had seen a man of Jesse’s description emerge from Houston’s car in the early morning of November 21, 2001. After he was asked if he had testified on direct that he told police about Jesse, appellant claimed that he “probably did” tell police. Appellant claimed that Houston told him on November 20, 2001, the night she stayed with him at the Fresno Street house, that she had quarreled with Jesse earlier that day. He also contended that Jesse had keys to the house, and that he told police on November 23, 2001, that when he returned home on November 21, he noticed that, unlike normal, his house alarm was off and two-by-fours that typically secured the garage door were not in place.
Appellant denied telling his coworker soon after Houston’s disappearance that he had previously tom up a grant deed transferring his interest in the house to Houston, contending instead that he signed and gave it back to Houston in late October 2001, who mailed them to the loan company, but that she later told him the loan company reported that it had not received them. He testified that he was ready to sign over his interest to Houston again on November 21, 2001, and that Houston told him she would give him a check for an agreed-to buy-out price of $38,000, and a contract indicating she would pay him an additional $2,000 over the next year.
*291 Appellant also denied telling another coworker that he owned a .380 automatic, and stated that he lied to other people that he owned a gun. He also testified that he misled his work dispatcher about his whereabouts on November 24, 2001, because the dispatcher had said the police were going to arrest him.
Appellant testified that he told S.P. and W.M. that he was married. He contended that, contrary to S.P.’s testimony, she told him her child was -not his, and that, regardless, any demands for child support would not have put him under financial pressure because he held significant assets.
Appellant testified that he loved his wife, and that they continued to have a relationship up to the time that she was killed. He testified about notes he said he gave to Houston in the months before her death in which he expressed his love, declared that he was her “dream come true,” offered to move out of the house, and referred to her “new bitch man,” a reference appellant testified was intended to refer to Jesse rather than Barry.
After appellant’s representations about his marriage to Houston, respondent sought to cross-examine appellant regarding other extramarital affairs. After appellant at first stated he had only engaged in two affairs, he acknowledged two others. Appellant’s counsel objected that the line of inquiry was not relevant and constituted improper character evidence. The trial court overruled his objections, and admonished the jury that the evidence of these two additional affairs should be considered only regarding the issue of appellant’s credibility, and not his propensity to have murdered Houston.
The court also allowed respondent to ask appellant if he had had sex with W.M. in his house, and if several other women that respondent identified by name had been in the house after appellant’s separation from Houston. Appellant’s counsel objected that the testimony was inadmissible pursuant to Evidence Code section 352, but the court allowed the line of questioning to be admitted into evidence.
C. Closing Arguments
Respondent’s counsel opened his closing argument to the jury with a reference to the evidence from Houston’s June 2001 police report, then moved to a lengthy discussion of the substantial circumstantial evidence that supported the conclusion that appellant killed Houston. He wove together numerous facts and physical evidence, such as the bullet found in the wall of appellant’s upstairs bedroom at the Fresno Street house, to argue that appellant had shot and killed Houston in his bedroom on the evening of November 20, 2001, sometime after she arrived to attempt to persuade him to *292 sign over his interest in the house to her, moved Houston’s car into his garage, wrapped the body in a blue tarp from his backyard, and removed it from the house. Respondent argued that if someone other than appellant had killed Houston in the house, they would have no incentive to remove her body from the premises in order to cover up their crime; only if a person lived in the house would they feel compelled to do so. Respondent argued “that [Houston] was killed there . . . and that the crime scene was covered up and the defendant is the only one with a motive to cover up the crime scene, that evidence alone is sufficient to prove to you beyond a reasonable doubt that this defendant killed his wife.”
Respondent’s counsel next contended that appellant had told numerous lies, and pointed to inconsistencies in appellant’s statements and testimony, including regarding his claimed failure to find the friend’s house on Thanksgiving; his ignorance about what time Houston was to pick up her friend at the airport; inconsistent statements about when he had moved Houston’s car into his garage; his abrupt reference to his missing blue tarp; his misrepresentation about his whereabouts to police on November 24, 2001; and his statements before Houston’s death that he owned a gun.
Respondent’s counsel then detailed the evidence of Houston’s efforts to persuade appellant to sign over his interest in the house to her, and appellant’s statements to his coworker after her disappearance that he had argued with Houston about the house and said words to the effect that “The bitch wants to take my house.” Respondent argued that appellant was deleting possibly incriminating telephone messages from Houston about the house from his voice mail in the early morning hours of November 21, 2001.
After this lengthy presentation, respondent’s counsel referred to the disputed evidence of appellant’s prior acts of violence against Houston to argue further that appellant was inclined to use violence against Houston and had a motive for killing her. Respondent’s counsel argued, “This house buyout was the thing that set him off. He had his disposition to commit violence against [Houston] which when she tried to stand up for herself and assert herself. [Sic.] This is evidence that proves to you beyond a reasonable doubt that this defendant shot and killed Lucy Houston.”
Appellant’s trial counsel argued that respondent’s case was a weak circumstantial evidence case and that the evidence, particularly the testimony of the witness who looked outside her home on the morning of November 21, 2001, and saw a tall, thin man by Houston’s car, pointed to Jesse as the killer. He argued: “So, what I’m saying is that, there, she was in the brightness of the early morning sun, and she saw this individual. End of the case, ladies and gentlemen of the jury. End of the case. [][] Since it’s purely circumstantial, *293 since she obviously saw someone completely different, how can any objective, neutral, fair, just jury find my client guilty? End of the case.”
Appellant’s trial counsel contended that the evidence of appellant’s prior acts of violence against Houston was the “centerpiece” of the prosecution’s case. He discussed the incidents in some detail, using appellant’s own testimony to argue that the June 2001 incident was a “reciprocal” fight and the August 2001 kicking out of the car window not direct violence against Houston.
Appellant’s trial counsel offered various explanations for appellant’s actions and statements. For example, he defended appellant’s statements that he did not really own a gun, pointing out that no one had ever seen one owned by him, and argued that Jesse, as a drug dealer, would be much more likely to have one. He did not contest that appellant was upset about Houston’s failure to assure him payment for his interest in the house, but insisted that appellant’s instincts were “valid.” He argued it was reasonable for appellant to want to consult with a lawyer before signing a police statement under the circumstances and that appellant had cooperated fully with police efforts to search his house. He pointed out that the police did not discover the patched portion of the bedroom wall the first time they looked through the house on November 23, 2001. Suggesting that Houston was killed elsewhere, he contended that it was “an overwhelming probability” that Jesse framed appellant by using his keys to enter the Fresno Street house while appellant was at work, putting a hole in the upstairs bedroom wall, planting a bullet there, and patching up the wall, all with the confidence that the police would find Houston’s body and return to search the house again.
In his rebuttal, respondent’s counsel pointed out the inconsistencies in the statements by the witness who saw a tall, lanky man by Houston’s car on November 21, 2001; the evidence of numerous lies and inconsistencies in appellant’s statements, actions and testimony; and the absence of any evidence besides appellant’s own unconvincing testimony that Jesse actually existed.
D. Jury Deliberations and Verdict
In the course of discussing jury instructions, the parties revisited their differences over the evidence of appellant’s extramarital affairs. The court expressed its own concerns that the use of these affairs not be used to show appellant was a “person of immoral character,” and explained that it had allowed in the evidence regarding appellant’s affairs with W.M. and S.P. as relevant to motive, and the evidence of other women being in the Fresno Street house as relevant to the fingerprints found in appellant’s upstairs *294 bedroom. The court provided the jury with an instruction so limiting the jury’s consideration of this evidence. 3
On October 23, 2003, after deliberations that occurred over the course of four different days, the jury returned with their verdict. They found appellant guilty of the second degree murder of Houston, and that he used a weapon in violation of Penal Code section 12022.53, subdivision (d).
E. Motion for Hearing; Verdict; Appeal
After the jury’s verdict, appellant moved for an evidentiary hearing to establish grounds to move for a new trial based on purported spectator misconduct, namely the wearing of buttons and placards bearing Houston’s likeness by certain spectators during the trial. At the hearing on this motion, a button and placard were admitted as exhibits, with the parties agreeing that the button was two and one-quarter inches in diameter and the placard about three inches wide and four and one-half inches long. The trial court denied appellant’s request, stating that the buttons and placards were merely an “innocent means of remembrance” of Houston, that he had twice admonished the jury not to consider them, that no misconduct had occurred, and that even if it had, “it wasn’t of such a character as to prejudice the defendant or influence the verdict in this case.”
On December 12, 2003, appellant was sentenced to a term of 40 years to life, which consisted of 15 years to life for the murder conviction and 25 years to life for the weapon use. He was also ordered to pay restitution and credited with days in custody. Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal on December 24, 2003.
DISCUSSION
I. Houston’s Statements About Appellant’s Violent Acts in June and August 2001
Appellant contends that his federal constitutional rights to due process, confrontation and cross-examination were violated because Houston’s June
*295
and August 2001 hearsay statements to police and hospital personnel that appellant had attacked her were testimonial in nature and, therefore, should have been excluded from the evidence pursuant to the United States Supreme Court’s recent decision,
Crawford
v.
Washington
(2004)
At the time of trial in this matter, constitutional inquiries regarding the admissibility of hearsay evidence were governed by
Ohio
v.
Roberts
(1980)
We need not determine the constitutional issues raised by appellant, however, if any claimed error by the trial court in admitting Houston’s statements was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, pursuant to
Chapman
v.
*296
California, supra,
A. There Was Overwhelming Evidence of Appellant’s Guilt
The record here indicates that, regardless of Houston’s June and August 2001 statements, there was overwhelming evidence that appellant murdered Houston, including that:
(1) Appellant and Houston had separated several months before her death and were in the process of divorcing.
(2) The two were arguing over the disposition of the Fresno Street house in their divorce, a house which appellant was possessive about and which remained his home.
(3) Appellant and Houston met at the Fresno Street house on the evening of November 20, 2001, and argued bitterly over the house.
(4) No one other than appellant reported seeing or hearing from Houston after November 20, 2001.
(5) Appellant reported that he had moved Houston’s car into his garage sometime on the evening of November 20, or in the early morning of November 21, 2001.
(6) A witness saw Houston’s car parked outside the witness’s home on the street, within walking distance of the Fresno Street house, sometime between 6:30 and 7:00 a.m. on November 21, 2001, where police later discovered it.
(7) Houston’s body was found on November 25, 2001, in the backseat of her car, mutilated by two gunshot wounds and containing a bullet from a .380 *297 automatic, covered by a blue tarp, and an envelope containing real estate documents sent to Houston for appellant’s execution was found in the backseat pocket of the driver’s area.
(8) Police subsequently found a bullet inside a concealed, recently plastered area of a wall in appellant’s bedroom, as well as a box spring in the bedroom that was damaged in a manner consistent with a bullet passing through it.
(9) A police firearms expert concluded from an extensive examination of the bullet recovered from Houston’s brain and the bullet removed from appellant’s bedroom wall that they were fired from the same gun, a .380 automatic.
(10) Police found joint compound and cleaning supplies in the Fresno Street house.
(11) Appellant did not report that anything was amiss inside the house before the police discovered the incriminating physical evidence discussed herein, and the house did not show signs of Houston having been there.
(12) Appellant’s actions and statements in the days after Houston’s disappearance were highly suspicious, including that although appellant contended that Houston failed to meet him as planned on November 21 and 22, 2001, he made no corroborated effort to find Houston or tell others that she was missing.
(13) During Houston’s disappearance, appellant misled the police about his whereabouts because, as he told a coworker, he was afraid he would be arrested, and consulted with an attorney before signing a police witness statement, although evidence of a crime had not yet been discovered.
(14) During Houston’s disappearance, appellant volunteered abruptly to police that a blue tarp was missing from his backyard.
(15) Prior to Houston’s disappearance, appellant told a coworker that he owned a .380 automatic.
(16) Appellant had engaged in violent acts against Houston within months of her death, fighting with her in June 2001 just prior to their separation and kicking in her car window in August 2001.
Appellant did not present anything credible to rebut this incriminating evidence. He relied greatly on his own testimony. Over and over again, he *298 insisted that the testimony of other witnesses was false, and repeatedly testified in a self-serving and inconsistent fashion, to the point that no reasonable jury could find him credible. For example, he claimed that he was not worried about Houston when he spoke to police on November 23, 2001, yet stated in his written witness statement at the time that it was unlike Houston to be missing. Despite his professed lack of concern, appellant testified that he told police his house was not secured when he returned home on November 21, 2003, which is absent from his witness statement. He simply denied that he made incriminating statements to coworkers, such as that he had previously ripped up a grant deed, argued with Houston about the Fresno Street house when she stayed over at his house, or owned a .380 automatic. He testified that he gave Houston his signed grant deed in October 2001, but that she told him later that the loan company had never received the papers, and that he was ready to sign papers again on November 21, contradicting the testimony of the loan officer, Houston’s friend, and appellant’s coworker. His contentions that his fight with Houston in June 2001 was reciprocal and that he did not actually hit Houston in August 2001 when he kicked out her car window were unpersuasive distinctions that failed to rebut the evidence that he used violence against Houston on each occasion. Faced with damaging testimony from two women, W.M. and S.P., with whom he had affairs during his marriage, he claimed each was lying. He attempted to lie on the stand when he denied that he had had other affairs, admitting to them only after respondent persisted in cross-examination. He claimed that he had in effect misled people when it suited his purposes, testifying that he made statements to people in the past indicating that he owned a gun when he did not.
Most importantly, appellant could not explain how a bullet fired from the same gun as the bullet found in Houston’s brain, and containing traces of Houston’s DNA, made its way into a freshly plastered wall of his own bedroom. Appellant’s insistence that Houston had a lover named “Jesse” who was the real killer was particularly incredible. He did not present any verifiable information about Jesse, not even his last name. Moreover, he acknowledged on cross-examination that he did not bring up Jesse until after learning of a witness’s description of a man seen by Houston’s car on November 21, 2001. Although he then backtracked to contend that he “probably told” police initially about Jesse, this too is absent from his police witness statement. In the end, appellant’s trial counsel was left with little besides speculation to argue to the jury that Jesse had somehow framed appellant by planting the DNA-tainted bullet in his bedroom wall while appellant was away from his home.
Appellant also placed great emphasis on the witness who testified that she saw a tall, lanky man by Houston’s car on the morning of November 21, 2001, and on coworkers’ testimony that they saw him at work, arguing that *299 this was proof that someone other than appellant was the real killer. This evidence presented the only mildly controversial factual question in the case, and it was a very weak question at that, particularly in light of the overwhelming evidence of appellant’s guilt. The witness who saw a tall, lanky man by Houston’s car outside her home between 6:30 and 7:00 a.m. on the morning of November 21 changed her description of the man and his actions over time, indicating she was less than certain about what she saw in the first place. The coworker who saw appellant at their workplace provided similarly uncertain testimony about whether he saw appellant on the morning of November 20 or 21. The other coworker’s testimony that he talked to appellant by walkie-talkie later on the morning of November 21, was relatively inconsequential, since it did not establish one way or the other if appellant was at his workplace earlier.
Furthermore, appellant’s own statements undermined his contention that the “real killer” was seen standing by Houston’s car on the morning of November 21, 2001. Appellant stated in his police witness statement that he left Houston at his house between 6:30 and 6:40 a.m. on the morning of November 21, 2001, and he testified at trial that he left Houston at his house at around 6:25 or 6:30 a.m. that morning. This left appellant’s “real killer” a scant few minutes, if any at all, to kill Houston, wrap her in appellant’s blue tarp, place her body in Houston’s car, and drive to the location where, according to the witness’s trial testimony, “he” was seen by Houston’s car between 6:30 and 7:00 a.m. that morning. This time frame, if realistic at all, would also indicate that this “real killer” shot Houston at the Fresno Street house (contrary to appellant’s trial counsel’s suggestion in his closing argument that the murder occurred elsewhere), removed her body, and returned to the house to clean up and patch appellant’s bedroom wall, although leaving the body and the evidence would have cast suspicion on appellant. In other words, appellant’s story does not withstand even the slightest scrutiny.
Appellant’s incredible story about another killer only underscores the importance of the physical evidence found in the Fresno Street house. Indeed, appellant’s appellate counsel acknowledges the strength of this evidence in her opening brief to this court, stating, “the DNA on the bullet was strong circumstantial evidence that Houston was killed at home, making [ajppellant the most likely agency of her demise.” In short, the physical evidence found at appellant’s home was very strong evidence and, when combined with the other circumstantial evidence, it was overwhelming evidence of appellant’s guilt.
B. Houston’s Statements Were Tangential and Cumulative
As indicated by our discussion directly ante, Houston’s June and August 2001 statements were tangential to the overwhelming evidence that appellant *300 murdered Houston at the Fresno Street house and then covered up his crime. The tangential nature of her statements was demonstrated by respondent’s closing argument, in which respondent extensively discussed other evidence before delving into any detail about appellant’s past acts of violence against Houston.
Houston’s statements also were cumulative of other evidence unchallenged by appellant, including his own testimony. Houston’s June 22, 2001 statements to police and medical personnel indicated that appellant had attacked her that day in a fight at the Fresno Street house, pulling out some of her hair and causing an injury to her finger, after Houston told him she wanted a divorce because she could not understand why he would stay out all night. Even if her statements had been excluded, there was testimony by the police officer who took her June 2001 statement that Houston appeared before him with a portion of her hair tom out and blood on her ear, and appellant’s own testimony that he and Houston had fought that day. Furthermore, appellant testified that Houston left him that night and filed for divorce in the week following this incident, from which it could be inferred that their fight was related to problems in their marriage.
Houston’s report to police about appellant’s destruction of her car window in the August 2001 incident was similarly cumulative. A neighbor also testified that she saw appellant mn after Houston and kick in her car window after appearing to try and hit Houston, Houston’s employer testified that Houston told her what appellant had done, and appellant himself admitted kicking in the car window at trial. No one testified that appellant was set off by what Houston claimed in her report, an argument over the disposition of their Fresno Street house. However, other evidence already discussed, such as the testimony of the loan officer, of Houston’s friend about Houston’s efforts to obtain appellant’s interest in the house, of a coworker recounting what appellant said about the subject, indicated that appellant and Houston were engaged in a bitter dispute over the Fresno Street house.
C. The Jury’s Deliberations Did Not Indicate This Was a “Close Case”
Appellant also contends that the jury engaged in lengthy deliberations spread over the course of four days, thereby demonstrating that the case was a close one that requires a finding of prejudice here. This is incorrect.
Appellant cites our Supreme Court’s conclusion that deliberations of almost 12 hours were an indication that a case was not “open and shut.”
(People v. Cardenas
(1982)
Furthermore, the length of a jury’s deliberation is related to the amount of information presented at trial, as is indicated in another case cited by appellant,
People v. Filson
(1994)
Even assuming for the sake of argument that the jury’s actions indicate this was a “close case,” appellant argues only that this would mean that “ ‘any error of a
substantial
nature may require a reversal and
any doubt
as to its prejudicial character should be resolved in favor of the appellant.’ [Citation.]”
(People
v.
Von Villas
(1992)
Accordingly, any error by the trial court in admitting Houston’s June and August 2001 statements was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because the other evidence of appellant’s guilt was overwhelming, and Houston’s statements were both cumulative of other evidence and of a tangential nature. Therefore, any such error is not a ground for reversal here.
(Chapman v. California, supra,
*302 II. Evidence of the Victim’s DNA on the Bullet Found in Appellant’s Bedroom Wall
Appellant next contends that the trial court committed reversible error by denying his pretrial motion to exclude the evidence of Houston’s DNA found on the bullet recovered from inside a wall of appellant’s bedroom because its admission was a violation of his federal due process rights. This too is incorrect.
The parties agree that the applicable law is stated in
People
v.
Roybal
(1998)
Our Supreme Court has also made clear that “[when] the prosecution finds it necessary to consume the evidence in order to test it, there is no due process violation. The prosecution must be allowed to investigate and prosecute crime, and due process does not require that it forego investigation in order to avoid destroying potentially exculpatory evidence.”
(People v. Griffin
(1988)
The parties also agree that we apply a substantial evidence standard of review to the trial court’s denial of appellant’s motion; that is, “we must determine whether, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the superior court’s finding, there was substantial evidence to support its ruling.”
(People v. Roybal, supra,
At the pretrial hearing below on whether or not to exclude the DNA evidence, an experienced forensic biologist for the Oakland Police Department testified that she received the bullet on November 29, 2001, and examined it prior to anyone’s being arrested for Houston’s murder. She consulted with the department’s firearms expert, who wanted to test the bullet *303 as well, and decided that she should conduct her examination of the bullet first to avoid the possibility that the firearms expert would destroy potential biology in handling it. She then put the bullet in a plastic tube with digestion material, which digested all of the DNA off of the bullet. While she acknowledged that it was preferable not to digest all of the DNA off of the bullet, she also explained why alternatives suggested by appellant’s counsel in his cross-examination of her would not work. She also tested only a portion of the biological material recovered from the bullet, and took steps to preserve the remainder, which was about three times the amount she tested herself. The remainder was still available for testing at the time of the pretrial hearing.
The court denied appellant’s motion, ruling that the DNA evidence did not necessarily identify appellant directly, but indicated only “that circumstantially at some point the decedent in tins case . . . had contact with the slug,” rather than specifically and directly pointing at the appellant. The court found that the police used reasonable methods to examine the bullet under the circumstances, that the defense still had the opportunity to examine any possibly exculpatory material taken from the bullet, and that there was no evidence that anyone had willfully destroyed any potentially exculpatory material.
Appellant contends on appeal that the forensic biologist acted improperly because she “made no attempt to find an alternative to total consumption of the sample other than consulting with a firearms expert, who presumably was not well versed in DNA testing and solutions to her problem. . . . Although a portion of extracted DNA remained available for retesting, [a]ppellant was foreclosed from determining the reliability of the extraction process itself.” The forensic biologist’s lack of action by itself, however, does not indicate bad faith, which is an essential element to appellant’s claim.
(People v. Griffin, supra,
*304
Appellant cites two cases for the proposition that police should be “careful to preserve the ability of both parties to have independent testing.” As respondent points out, nothing in these cases alters the analysis. In
People v. Cooper
(1991) 53 Cal.3d
111
[
We find, therefore, that there was substantial evidence to support the trial court’s denial of appellant’s motion to exclude the DNA evidence. Accordingly, we affirm the court’s ruling.
III. Evidence Regarding Appellant’s Extramarital Affairs
Although appellant does not contest on appeal most of W.M.’s and S.R’s testimony about their relationships with appellant during his marriage to Houston, appellant argues that the trial court committed prejudicial error, and violated his due process rights, by admitting their testimony that he did not tell them he was married, as well as by allowing respondent to cross-examine him about other extramarital affairs and women.
A trial court in its discretion may exclude evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the probability that its admission will, among other things, “create substantial danger of undue prejudice, of confusing the issues, or of misleading the jury.” (Evid. Code, § 352 (section 352).) “Under Evidence Code section 352, the court must strike a balance between the probative value of the evidence and the danger of prejudice. The court must consider ‘ “the relationship between the evidence and the relevant inferences to be drawn from it, whether the evidence is relative to the main or only a collateral issue, and the necessity of the evidence to the proponent’s case as well as the reasons recited in section 352 for exclusion.” [Citation.]’ ”
(People v. Harlan
(1990)
*305 As we discuss post, the disputed evidence was admissible because it was relevant, in part because appellant put his own credibility at issue in the case. Regardless, the admission of the contested evidence was not particularly prejudicial.
A. W.M. ’s and S.P. ’s Testimony About Appellant’s Deceit
Appellant first contends, as he did below, that the trial court should not have allowed W.M. and S.P. to testify that appellant failed to tell them that he was married because it “was nothing more than inflammatory bad character evidence” that should have been excluded pursuant to section 352. Respondent essentially restates its arguments that this evidence was relevant to the credibility of appellant and of W.M. and S.P. 5 The trial court admitted the evidence, noting that “the fact that [S.P. and W.M.] knew whether he was married or not probably affects them more than it affects him. The fact that he was carrying on, the jury is going to know he was married at the time.” The parties do not dispute that the court cautioned respondent about conducting any lengthy examination on the subject, and that respondent’s examination consisted of one question to each witness.
The court did not abuse its discretion in admitting this evidence of appellant’s deceit because it was relevant to appellant’s credibility. The past lies of a party can be relevant to credibility issues in murder cases. (See
People v. Coddington
(2000)
The trial court also did not abuse its discretion by allowing in this testimony of deceit because it was also relevant to W.M.’s and S.P.’s credibility as witnesses. The jury might have viewed W.M.’s and S.P.’s credibility differently if the women testified that they knowingly participated *306 in the deceit of a hidden, extramarital affair. Furthermore, the jury might have viewed appellant’s pride in the Fresno Street house differently if W.M. had testified that she understood appellant was speaking as part of a married couple. Similarly, the jury could have viewed S.P.’s efforts to obtain appellant’s financial support for their child differently if S.P. had acknowledged conceiving the child while aware that appellant was married.
B. Cross-examination of Appellant About Other Extramarital Affairs
Appellant also contends that the court should not have allowed respondent to cross-examine him about other extramarital affairs. Respondent asked appellant a number of questions about Houston’s accusing him of having affairs, and then asked appellant to name the women with whom he had engaged in affairs during his marriage to Houston. Appellant answered, “Just those two,” meaning W.M. and S.P. Appellant’s counsel objected to this line of inquiry as irrelevant, and the trial court overruled the objection. After additional questioning, appellant disclosed that he had had extramarital affairs with two more women. After his counsel’s renewed objection, the court admonished the jury that the evidence should be considered for the issue of appellant’s credibility, but not for his propensity to have committed the charged crime.
Later that day, outside the presence of the jury, appellant’s counsel objected to the evidence as irrelevant character evidence. Respondent argued that appellant had opened the door by introducing into evidence an August 24, 2001 note he claimed to have written to Houston, which purportedly showed that his relations with her were good after their separation. The note states:
“Lucy I love you. Lucy, I love you so much that I can’t help but inform you my true feelings. I just wanted to be the man—I just wanted to be the man that is so good to you. I am—I am a sensitive person and not a madman but a loving man. No one can be a better man than I.
“When it comes to you, I am a—I am a dream come true just for you. Thank you for the card. It is so real. I love you, Lucy. Your nature boy.”
Respondent argued that appellant’s stated sentiments in the note were deceptive and masked his true emotions, as evidenced by his extramarital affairs, while appellant’s counsel countered that the marriage was an open one at the time of the note and, therefore, the affairs were not relevant. The court overruled appellant’s objections again, cautioning respondent against going into “352 sort of areas” and stating the basis of its ruling was that the evidence “does raise issues of credibility.”
*307 In respondent’s subsequent cross-examination of appellant, respondent asked appellant if he ever had sex with W.M. at the Fresno Street house and if any of four other women had been in the upstairs bedroom of the house during his separation from Houston. Respondent’s stated purpose for this line of inquiry was to explain why there were unidentified latent fingerprints in the house, apparently out of concern that the defense would argue that the unidentifiable fingerprints indicated that someone other than appellant killed Houston. Appellant’s counsel again objected to the questions as violating section 352. The court allowed continued questioning on the subject.
The court did not abuse its discretion in allowing in this evidence, whether it be for motive, credibility, or to explain the latent fingerprints. Evidence of an accused spouse’s intimate relations with others is relevant to the state of his or her marital relationship with the victim spouse and, therefore, to motive. (See
People
v.
Gosden
(1936)
Furthermore, the evidence was relevant to appellant’s credibility, particularly given that his August 24, 2001 note to Houston specifically states that he loved her, and that he was “a dream come true just for you.” (Italics added.) It could be inferred from evidence of his extramarital affairs that appellant was deceiving Houston with such a statement, regardless of his trial counsel’s claims of an open marriage.
Finally, respondent was entitled to introduce evidence regarding the latent fingerprints found in appellant’s bedroom in anticipation that the defense might contend the prints belonged to the “real” killer. Indeed, as we have already discussed, appellant’s trial counsel did argue that Jesse entered the house while appellant was absent and planted a bullet containing Houston’s DNA in appellant’s bedroom wall in an effort to frame appellant.
*308 C. Lack of Prejudicial Error
Even if we assume, for the sake of argument, that the court erred by admitting the extramarital affairs evidence, it did not commit any prejudicial error requiring reversal. As we have already discussed, there was other overwhelming evidence, particularly the physical evidence found in the Fresno Street house, that appellant murdered Houston. The extramarital affairs evidence was not strongly probative of this other evidence, except for the evidence regarding women who had been in appellant’s house, which was clearly relevant.
Furthermore, the extramarital affairs evidence was cumulative in two respects. To the extent the evidence raised the issue of extramarital affairs, it was cumulative of W.M.’s and S.P.’s testimony that they each had an intimate relationship with appellant during his marriage. To the extent the evidence raised issues about appellant’s willingness to deceive, there was other admissible evidence of his deceit. This included S.P.’s testimony that he assured her financial help, but failed to provide it; his deception regarding his whereabouts during Houston’s disappearance; and his own testimony that he lied to people about owning a gun, which, whether true or not, indicated his willingness to deceive.
Finally, the court’s instruction to the jury to limit its consideration of the extramarital affairs evidence to motive and to latent fingerprints evidence, and not to consider it as evidence of appellant’s bad character, appropriately contained the impact of the testimony to the relevant issues in the case. As appellant acknowledges in his opening brief, the jury is presumed to follow the court’s instructions
(People v. Bryden
(1998)
Accordingly, the court did not abuse its discretion pursuant to section 352 in admitting any of the extramarital affairs evidence, nor did any prejudicial error occur. For the same reasons, appellant’s contentions that admission of the evidence violated his due process rights and was so prejudicial as to require reversal are not correct. Although appellant arguably waived these constitutional arguments on appeal by not raising them below
(People
v.
Burgener
(2003)
IV. The Trial Court Did Not Err Regarding Spectator Displays of Buttons and Placards Bearing Houston’s Likeness
Appellant contends that his federal constitutional rights to due process and a fair trial were violated by certain spectators’ wearing of buttons and placards bearing Houston’s likeness in the courtroom, and that the trial court erred by refusing to grant him an evidentiary hearing in which he could develop a factual record establishing that actual prejudice resulted from this misconduct. He requests we remand this matter to the trial court for such an evidentiary hearing. We deny appellant’s request because, in light of the particular facts and issues before the jury in the trial below, any inherent prejudice was minimal enough to be cured by the court’s prompt admonitions to ignore the displays. Any actual prejudice was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because of the overwhelming evidence of appellant’s guilt.
During appellant’s direct examination, the trial court noted that a number of spectators were wearing buttons bearing the likeness of Houston. The court admonished the jury that, while spectators could wear them, the buttons were not evidence and the jury should not consider them for any purpose. The court stated: “It was brought to my attention today and I also observed personally that a number of people that are here observing this trial are wearing buttons about three inches in diameter that appear to bear the likeness of Lucille Houston. ... [ft] I’m just admonishing each of you if you have seen the buttons, its perfectly proper for the buttons to be worn. There’s absolutely nothing wrong with that. On the other side of the coin ... I guess the fact that people are in court that do wear buttons in support or in remembrance of Lucille Houston is not evidence in this case and should not be considered by you for any purpose.”
During closing arguments, the court again noted that there were people in the audience wearing “badges” in support of Houston: “Ladies and gentlemen, before we hear from [appellant’s trial counsel], let me once again admonish you. I guess that’s a stronger word than I intended it to be, but to counsel you, please, that it’s obvious that today that the people in the audience are again wearing badges in support of. And that’s not evidence in this case, [ft] Same admonishment bears that I gave earlier concerning that. Some of you may have noticed it; some of you may not have noticed it. That really isn’t evidence in this case.”
After the court’s second admonishment, appellant’s trial counsel began his closing argument to the jury with the following statement:
*310 “I sense that there’s a number of the good friends and relatives of Lucille Houston in the audience .... And it is appropriate that we all have a level of bereavement for her, and it is appropriate that her friends and relatives attend this proceeding.
“And it is legal that they can wear some manifestation of their loved one on their person. On the other hand, it sometimes ... it is felt by a jury to be some form of subliminal or direct psychological input, that somehow they are here and their presence and their manifestation of love is an indicator that the accused is more likely to be guilty than not guilty.
“That’s not true. His honor has so indicated. Their presence is not evidence. And they are putting on you no pressure, and they are entering into this court with no psychological motive of persuading you or manipulating you. They are here because they are rightfully bereaved and they enjoy a constitutional right to show their allegiance.”
After the jury found appellant guilty of second degree murder with the use of a weapon, appellant’s trial counsel moved for an evidentiary hearing to develop evidence of grounds for a new trial based on what he now claimed was spectator misconduct, i.e., the displays of the buttons and placards. He stated in a declaration that he had objected during the evidentiary phase of the trial when he noticed spectators were wearing on their upper garments badges of Houston that displayed a photograph of her, and objected again during closing argument when he noticed that “a much increased segment of spectators,” some sitting in a front row previously reserved for law enforcement, were wearing rectangular placards displaying Houston’s likeness, where on more than one occasion the jury “walked right by them on the way to the jury box.” He stated that he could not recall whether he asked for a mistrial, but that he did on both occasions ask for orders that the displays be removed or, if the court was not so inclined, for admonitions to the jury. 7 Respondent contended in its opposition brief that because of the large number of spectators in the courtroom for closing argument, the front row had been opened up to spectators other than law enforcement, that law enforcement spectators did not wear any buttons or placards during the trial, and that not all of the spectators in the front row wore a placard or button.
At the hearing on appellant’s motion, the parties agreed that the button had a diameter of 2.25 inches and that the placard was three inches wide and just shy of four and one-half inches long. Appellant’s counsel argued that the buttons and placards were “a silent, manipulating maneuver by the part of the *311 spectators who were obviously here on the side of the prosecution,” and requested that the jurors be brought in and asked if they felt the placards affected their verdict. Respondent argued that there was no authority for the court to order spectators to remove the buttons and placards, no indication that the verdict was affected, and no real basis for the requested evidentiary hearing. The trial court denied the motion, stating that it did not recall if respondent’s counsel had requested a mistrial earlier, but that the buttons and placards were “a rather innocent means of remembrance” of Houston, that it had twice admonished the jury not to consider them, that there was no misconduct, and even if there had been misconduct, “it wasn’t of such a character as to prejudice the defendant or influence the verdict in this case.” Nothing in the record indicates that the jury was actually prejudiced by the buttons and placards.
A. Any Inherent Prejudice Was Cured by the Trial Court’s Admonitions
The first question presented by appellant’s claim of spectator misconduct is whether or not the court’s two admonitions cured any inherent prejudice presented by the spectators’ displays of buttons and placards bearing Houston’s likeness. We conclude that they did in light of the particular facts and issues before the jury.
As appellant points out, the right to a fair trial is a fundamental liberty. “A criminal defendant has the right to be tried in an atmosphere undisturbed by public passion.”
(Norris v. Risley
(9th Cir. 1989)
*312
Courts have long recognized that misconduct at trial can be cured by admonitions and instructions. For example, our Supreme Court has held that a motion for mistrial based on a claim that a defendant’s federal due process rights were violated at trial should only be granted if the court “ ‘ “is apprised of prejudice that it judges incurable by admonition or instruction.” ’ [Citation.]”
(People
v.
Lucero
(2000)
Jurors are presumed to follow a court’s admonitions and instructions.
(Romano
v.
Oklahoma
(1994)
Two Ninth Circuit cases have found inherent prejudice in displays of buttons and the like by courtroom spectators in the absence of admonitions to the jury,
Norris II, supra,
The defendant was found guilty, and subsequently filed a habeas petition in federal district court, which turned down his petition without an evidentiary hearing.
(Norris I, supra,
The district court determined that approximately 15 women from two different organizations wore buttons with the word “Rape” underlined in a broad red stroke in and around the courtroom, that the buttons were two and one-half inches in diameter, and that at least three jurors had seen the buttons; at any given time, three women were wearing the buttons either inside or outside the courtroom. (Norris II, supra, 918 F.2d at pp. 829-831.) After the district court found no inherent prejudice from these facts, the defendant appealed again to the Ninth Circuit.
In
Norris II, supra,
In
Musladin, supra,
Musladin, after he was convicted of first degree murder and related offenses and sought reversal in state court without success, filed a petition for
*314
writ of habeas corpus in federal district court arguing that the state court had unreasonably applied clearly established federal law in violation of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (which is not at issue in the present case) in determining that his rights to a fair trial had not been violated by the family members’ display of buttons. His petition was denied, and he appealed to the Ninth Circuit.
(Musladin, supra,
The Ninth Circuit agreed that the state court had unreasonably applied the federal law “that certain practices attendant to the conduct of a trial can create such an ‘unacceptable risk of impermissible factors coming into play,’ as to be ‘inherently prejudicial’ to a criminal defendant . . . .”
(Musladin, supra,
Second, the
Musladin
court found that the state appellate court had added a legal requirement not present in federal law because, although the state court considered “ ‘the wearing of photographs of victims in a courtroom to be an “impermissible factor coming into play” ’ ”
(Musladin, supra,
We follow Musladin’s instruction and look past the “general sentiment” reflected in the buttons and placards displayed at appellant’s trial in the present case to “determine the specific message [conveyed] in light of the particular facts and issues before the jury.”
(Musladin, supra,
Furthermore, and most importantly, unlike
Norris II, supra,
A number of federal courts have found court admonitions sufficient to cure or mitigate against any inherent prejudice caused by claimed due process violations at trial. In
Brown
v.
Terhune
(N.D. Cal. 2001)
In
U.S.
v.
Elder
(9th Cir. 2002)
Several recent opinions issued by our Supreme Court regarding due process claims based upon prosecutorial and spectator misconduct at trial also have found admonitions sufficient to cure inherent prejudice. For example, in
People
v.
Dennis
(1998)
People
v.
Lucero
(1988)
Similarly, in
People v. Craig
(1978)
Nothing about the spectator displays at issue in the present case was more threatening to appellant’s right to a fair trial than the kinds of misconduct discussed in these cases. The spectator displays delivered an ambiguous message at best, were relatively passive, did not impart any facts outside the record to the jury, and did not involve misconduct by anyone wearing a cloak of official authority. Appellant’s own counsel mitigated any inherent prejudice by his comments at the beginning of his closing argument, which he made without objection by respondent or interference by the court. Accordingly, under the particular facts and issues before the jury in this case, the court’s prompt admonitions cured any inherent prejudice that may have resulted from these spectator displays.
*319 B. Any Actual Prejudice Was Harmless Beyond a Reasonable Doubt
Appellant also argues that we should remand this matter for an evidentiary hearing in order for it to be determined if the jurors were actually prejudiced by the actions of spectators here. We disagree. The trial court was correct in finding that any such prejudice would not be a basis for reversal here.
As we have already discussed above, assuming for the sake of argument that the trial court erred in denying appellant an evidentiary hearing to pursue his claims of federal constitutional error, there nonetheless can be no reversal if the constitutional error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
(Chapman
v.
California, supra,
Again, the evidence of appellant’s guilt was overwhelming and the buttons and placards ambiguous at best in their message. The trial court, upon receiving notice of the buttons and placards, promptly admonished the jury to ignore them entirely. Under these circumstances, the buttons and placards could not have prejudiced the jury’s determinations. (See, e.g.,
People v. Craig, supra,
Appellant cites additional case law for his contention that an evidentiary hearing is required, but it is not relevant here. In
People
v.
Pennisi
(1990)
Appellant argues that under California law an evidentiary hearing based on the mere possibility of spectator misconduct is required, citing
People
v.
*320
Burgener
(1986)
Accordingly, we find that any spectator misconduct here was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
(Chapman
v.
California, supra,
Nonetheless, we are most concerned that spectator practices such as the wearing of buttons and placards displaying a victim’s likeness at trial can be unduly disruptive to the trial process. Here, for example, the trial court admonished the jury on two separate occasions during the trial that the jury was to ignore these buttons and placards, and appellant’s counsel took time to address the issue in his closing argument. Even if these buttons and placards evoked somber feelings about Houston alone, it was unnecessarily disruptive to the trial that they became an issue at all. “Trial courts possess broad power to control their courtrooms and maintain order and security.”
(People v. Woodward
(1992)
Still, we are mindful that appellant “ ' “is entitled to a fair trial . . . not a perfect one.” ’ ”
(People v. Miranda, supra,
*321 DISPOSITION
We affirm the trial court’s rulings and appellant’s conviction in their entirety.
Kline, P. J., and Haerle, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 21, 2005. George, C. J., did not participate therein.
Notes
Houston’s friend recalled that appellant specifically said he moved Houston’s car into the garage on the evening of November 20, 2001, which she found strange because it required appellant to leave his own Mercedes, which he carefully protected, on the street overnight. Appellant later contended that he moved the car into the garage the next morning, and that he never said he did so Tuesday night.
Appellant’s trial counsel did argue that the testimony of a clerk at the hotel where Houston was staying that he, the clerk, saw her talking with a “tall” unidentified man in the hotel parking lot one evening, was proof of “Jesse.”
That jury instruction, CALJIC No. 2.50, stated:
“Evidence has been introduced for the purpose of showing that the defendant engaged in one or more extramarital relationships during the course of his marriage to Lucille Houston.
“Except as you may otherwise be instructed, this evidence, if believed, may not be considered by you to prove that defendant is a person of bad character or that he has a disposition to commit crimes. It may be considered by you only for the limited purpose of determining if it tends to show:
“A motive for the commission of the crime charged; and
“To explain circumstantial evidence related to latent fingerprints.
“For the limited purpose for which you may consider such evidence, you must weigh it in the same manner as you do all other evidence in the case.”
Cage, supra,
In the proceedings below, respondent referred to the question of whether or not the women knew appellant was married as the “big pink elephant in the room” that, left unaddressed, could result in jurors thinking the women were “little tramps that decided to go break apart a home . . . .”
Accordingly, appellant’s ineffective assistance of counsel argument, presented in a brief footnote in his opening appellate brief, is without merit.
Any such discussions between the court and counsel outside the presence of the jury are not contained in the record.
See
Estelle v. Williams, supra,
The trial court’s characterization of the displays as an “innocent means of remembrance” further distinguishes this case from
Musladin, supra,
Although the parties here do not discuss the standards outlined in U.S. v. Angulo, supra, 4 F.3d 843, we conclude, applying these standards, that, in light of the public nature of the displays involved in appellant’s case, the minimal, if any, prejudice that could have been caused by them, and the court’s admonitions, the trial court properly determined that no evidentiary hearing was necessary.
Given our finding that any actual prejudice was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, we do not actually determine whether any such prejudice occurred when the trial court allowed the buttons and placards to be worn in the courtroom and denied appellant’s request for an evidentiary hearing. Furthermore, because of the important constitutional issues raised, we again assume for the purposes of discussion that appellant did not waive his rights to raise these issues on appeal, as respondent contends. (See
People v. Jennings, supra,
