*293 Opinion
Cliff St. Joseph appeals from his convictions of the first degree murder of John Doe No. 60 and sodomy and false imprisonment of Ricky Hunter. The court sentenced appellant to state prison for a term of 25 years to life for the murder. This sentence is to be served consecutively to the aggravated term of nine years for the sodomy. The three-year sentence for false imprisonment is stayed pursuant to Penal Code section 654.
Facts
On June 15, 1985, a body was discovered in an industrial area of San Francisco. An autopsy revealed that the victim’s death had been caused by multiple stab wounds, which had been inflicted while the victim was nude. There were numerous other scars and abrasions on the body including a five-pointed star, which had been carved into the victim’s chest and upper abdomen.
On June 24, in response to a call from appellant’s apartment, the police arrested four people for disturbing the peace. One of the people arrested, Mr. Hunter, had been taken to the apartment two days before by appellant. At the apartment he was restrained and repeatedly assaulted by appellant, Mr. Bork, and Mr. Spela. During this time appellant, Bork and Spela were discussing Satanic worship and “sacrificing” Hunter.
Mr. Bork, who had numerous prior felonies, was granted immunity from prosecution for offenses against Mr. Hunter and for being an accessory to murder. He was an escapee from Canada who, shortly after he arrived in San Francisco, had been befriended by appellant. Bork was present in the apartment when the murder victim arrived. He left the apartment after he heard screaming from the bedroom and saw appellant slashing the victim’s chest. When he returned to the apartment later that night, the victim was lying on the bed bleeding. Bork helped appellant dispose of the body in an industrial area of the city.
A search of appellant’s apartment found numerous bloodstains of the same blood type as the murder victim.
Appellant described the killing to an inmate, McCray, who shared a cell with him.
*294 Analysis *
2. The Evidence Was Sufficient to Support a Conviction of First Degree Murder Perpetrated by Torture
Appellant contends that the court should not have instructed the jury on the theory of first degree murder perpetrated by torture because the evidence was insufficient to support a conviction on the theory of torture murder. The premise of his argument is that there was insufficient evidence to support the inference that either the pentagram carved in the victim’s chest, or the genital mutilation, occurred while the victim was alive. Once these injuries are excluded, appellant contends the evidence was insufficient to support an inference that he intended to inflict pain and suffering on the victim.
One of the key elements of murder perpetrated by torture is that “[t]he perpetrator committed the murder with a willful, deliberate, and premeditated intent to inflict extreme and prolonged pain upon a living human being for the purpose of revenge, extortion, persuasion or for any sadistic purpose.” (CALJIC No. 8.24 (1989 rev.).) “It is not the amount of pain inflicted which distinguishes a torturer from another murderer, as most killings involve significant pain.
(People
v.
Tubby
[1949]
Although the severity of the wounds inflicted on the victim is a factor to consider in determining whether the perpetrator had this intent, the courts have cautioned against exclusive reliance on the condition of the victim’s body. (See, also,
People
v.
Morales
(1989)
There was substantial evidence that appellant committed a sadistic, ritualistic, human sacrifice consisting of whipping with a chain, slashing the victim’s lips, dripping wax into the victim’s eyes, burning and carving the victim’s flesh with a knife, multiple stabbings, tying the limbs with guitar wire, and genital mutilation. The inference of subjective intent to inflict pain for sadistic purposes may be drawn from the beatings, Bork’s testimony that appellant masturbated over the victim’s body and that, when the victim briefly recovered, appellant became “ecstatic” that “he rose to die again.” The inference is further supported by McCray’s testimony that appellant said the victim was brought to appellant’s apartment for sadomasochistic purposes; the nature of the wounds; and the coroner’s testimony that many of the wounds were consistent with sadomasochistic practices.
Appellant, nonetheless, argues that this evidence was insufficient to support an instruction on first degree murder perpetrated by torture because most of the more egregious, painful injuries were inflicted after the victim died. In support of his conclusion that the evidence was insufficient, appellant first contends that this court must disregard Bork’s testimony regarding the sequence of infliction of injuries as “inherently improbable” (see, e.g.,
People
v.
Thornton
[(1974)] 11 Cal.3d [738] at p. 754 [
3. The Torture Murder Instructions Were Correct
The instructions given on torture murder were the 1987 version of CALJIC No. 8.24. Appellant argues that these instructions were incorrect because they did not inform the jury that there “must be a causal
*296
relationship between the torturous act and the victim’s death.”
(People
v.
Davenport
(1985)
Our Supreme Court has recently reiterated that its definition of torture murder set forth in
People
v.
Wiley
(1976)
Although the courts have stated that there must be a causal relationship between the torturous acts and the murder, none of the various definitions of the elements of torture murder advanced by our Supreme Court have ever included explicit language to this effect. Instead, the necessity of finding a causal relationship has only been implicit in the definition of the first element of torture murder, i.e., that “the act or acts which caused the death must involve a high degree of probability of death.” Thus, we are not persuaded by appellant’s argument that it was error not to include explicit language, similar to the language added to the 1989 version of CALJIC No. 8.24.
In any event, the specific harm that appellant contends flows from the failure to include this language regarding causation in the instruction, i.e., that the jury could find torture murder based on tortuous acts committed after the victim died, is obviated by the inclusion of the following language in the 1987 version of CALJIC No. 8.24 given in this case: “The perpetrator committed the murder with a willful, deliberate, and premeditated intent to inflict extreme and prolonged pain
upon a living human being.
...” Thus, in order to find appellant guilty of torture murder under these instructions, the jury would have had to find that the torturous acts were committed while the victim was alive. “Instructions should be interpreted, if possible, so as to support the judgment rather than defeat it if they are
*297
reasonably susceptible to such interpretation.”
(People
v.
Laskiewicz
(1986)
We also note that, even if the instructions were erroneous, appellant’s claim of prejudice depends on the premise that, based on the evidence, the jury could reasonably have found that the death was caused by three stab wounds, not inflicted with torturous intent, and that the torture occurred after the victim died. This argument overlooks the substantial, undisputed evidence of numerous injuries inflicted upon the victim while he was alive. It is improbable that based on this course of conduct that a reasonable jury would have found that the only “torturous acts” were the carving of the pentagonal star and the genital mutilation, and that these acts were committed after the victim died.
Appellant also appears to argue that the injuries that undisputedly occurred while the victim was alive could not be the basis for a finding of torture murder because they were not identified by the coroner as the ultimately fatal injuries or “cause of death.” This type of attempt to parse the injuries inflicted during a course of conduct into a series of nonfatal injuries has been rejected.
(See People
v.
Hindmarsh
(1986)
4. Bork’s Testimony Under a Grant of Immunity Did Not Deprive Appellant of His Due Process Right to a Fair Trial
Appellant next argues that permitting Bork to testify under a grant of immunity for accessory after the fact for the murder of John Doe No. 60 and for any act related to the charges of false imprisonment and sodomy of Hunter deprived appellant of a fair trial.
Before Bork testified the court determined that, if called as a witness, he would invoke his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination in response to any questions regarding events occurring at appellant’s apartment in 1985. The court upheld Bork’s invocation of the privilege. The prosecutor then requested that the court order Bork to testify under a grant of immunity as to the sodomy and false imprisonment of Ricky Hunter and for Penal Code section 32, accessory after the fact to the murder of John Doe No. 60. This grant of immunity did not extend to the murder. Bork, who was represented by counsel, expressly waived his privilege against self- *298 incrimination with respect to questions pertaining to the murder of John Doe No. 60.
Appellant contends that Penal Code section 1324 requires that a witness be given complete transactional immunity with respect to “any offense which is implicated by the compelled testimony.”
2
(People
v.
Campbell
(1982)
Nothing prevents the prosecution from reaching a consensual agreement with the witness to testify under a narrower grant of immunity than he might otherwise be entitled to under Penal Code section 1324. Thus, for example, in
People
v.
Superior Court (Perry)
(1989)
Appellant’s argument reduces to the claim that, despite the agreement between Bork and the prosecution regarding the scope of immunity that would be granted, appellant can, in effect, demand that the district attorney grant Bork immunity as to all of the potential charges, including the murder of John Doe No. 60. Appellant is proposing that the
defendant
should
*299
have the right to compel the prosecution to grant immunity to a witness. This proposition has been consistently rejected.
(In re Weber
(1974)
Appellant, drawing an analogy to
People
v.
Medina
(1974)
Taken to its logical extreme, appellant’s due process argument would require the prosecution to grant complete immunity to any accomplice witness testifying for the prosecution. Otherwise, he reasons, the accomplice will simply testify in a manner that exculpates himself.
We are unpersuaded that it is necessary to create such an obligation in order to protect appellant’s right to a fair trial. There is no question that the testimony of an accomplice witness should be viewed with great suspicion, and the court routinely instructs the jury to view such testimony *300 with distrust. The defendant is also free to explore fully the motivation for such a witness to lie. The defendant is also free to expose the scope of immunity granted to the witness and to explore the witness’s expectations of favorable treatment even where no immunity has been granted or no deals have been made. Appellant took full advantage of his right to impeach Bork on all of these bases. We find that appellant’s due process rights were fully protected by the exercise of his right vigorously to cross-examine and impeach Bork.
Conclusion
The judgment is affirmed.
Racanelli, P. J., and Newsom, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied March 13, 1991.
Notes
See footnote ante, page 289.
Appellant further asserts that Spela’s testimony that appellant told him that the genital mutilation occurred while the victim was still alive must also be disregarded as inherently improbable. Appellant, however, offers no reason why Spela’s testimony should be regarded as inherently improbable.
Even when a witness testifies under compulsion pursuant to Penal Code section 1324, the scope of immunity is limited by the scope of inquiry. Thus, the prosecutor may limit the scope of immunity by narrowly defining the scope of testimony the witness is under compulsion to give. (See, e.g.,
People
v.
Campbell, supra,
Bork voluntarily waived his privilege against self-incrimination with respect to questions relating to the murder of John Doe No. 60. It is axiomatic that a witness may waive the privilege against self-incrimination.
(Minnesota
v.
Murphy
(1984)
The Supreme Court has read
People
v.
Medina, supra,
See footnote ante, page 289.
