Memorandum Decision
¶ 1 Cody Jesse Augustine appeals his conviction for attempted murder, a first degree felony,
see
Utah Code Ann. § 76 — 5—203(2)—(3) (LexisNexis 2012);
1
id.
§§ 76-4-101, -102, arguing that the trial court’s exclusion of his expert witness and permitting the proseeu
I. Extreme Emotional Distress
¶ 2 One of Augustine’s main defenses at trial was that he acted under extreme emotional distress at the time of the attack on the victim (J.E.),'which, if believed by the jury, would have resulted in a conviction of the lesser offense of attempted manslaughter. Augustine testified at trial that he ultimately became “[unjhinged” after a series of events occurring in the evening hours between July 28 and 29, 2008, that culminated in his stabbing J.E. with a knife several times while J.E. fled from Stapley’s assault with a four-bladed battle-ax. Augustine sought to support his extreme emotional distress defense with expert witness testimony and proffered that the expert would testify as to “significant issues in [Augustine’s] background, childhood and onward, that would affect his ability to deal with certain stressors” involved in this ease. The trial court, however, excluded the expert testimony on relevance grounds, explaining that extreme emotional distress involves “an objective, ... reasonable person” standard and, as proffered, the expert testimony would address only a subjective standard of whether the behavior “was reasonable for this individual.” Augustine argues that the trial court’s determination was incorrect and that, as a result, his constitutionally protected right to present witnesses and evidence in support of his defense was violated.
¶ 3 We review the trial court’s decision to exclude expert testimony for an abuse of discretion and “to ensure that no mistakes of law affected [the] lower court’s use of its' discretion.”
State v. Sheehan,
¶ 4 “A person suffers extreme emotional distress when exposed to extremely unusual and overwhelming stress such that the average reasonable person would react by experiencing a loss of self-control.”
State v. Spillers,
¶ 5 While Augustine’s expert witness’s testimony would support a subjective distress analysis by explaining Augustine’s behavior in light of the other traumatic experiences that have occurred in his life, Augustine has not convinced us that he is entitled to the defense in the first place.
See generally White,
¶ 6 Here, Augustine bases his entitlement to an extreme emotional distress defense based on the culmination of three “triggering events.” 3 First, Augustine felt “anger, distress, [and] grief’ when he worried that the painful urination he had begun experiencing might be a sexually transmitted disease (STD) that he concluded he must have contracted from his girlfriend, who must have contracted it from her last sexual partner, J.E. Second, shortly after Augustine self-diagnosed his ailments as an STD, he drove to J.E.’s house seeking retribution and got into a fistfight, which spiked his adrenaline. Last, the sight of blood and Stapley knocked down during the altercation with J.E. caused Augustine to panic. As a result of the combined pressure of these three stressors, Augustine asserts, he lost control of his rationality and was driven to stab J.E. repeatedly.
¶ 7 We are unconvinced that such a sequence of events merits an extreme emotional distress defense. The triggering stressors that Augustine enumerates are largely self-imposed — he sought out J.E. for retribution for what was an assumption that J.E. indirectly passed along an STD to Augustine. Augustine went to J.E.’s house looking for a fight. Thus, the ensuing fight and adrenaline spiking are products of his own behavior. Augustine admitted as much at trial, affirmatively answering the State’s question as to whether his “anxiety to a pretty significant extent is something [he] caused [him]self.” Likewise, the escalation of the fight to involve Stapley and weapons are factors that Augustine brought upon himself by seeking out a fight and bringing a weapon in the first place. “Thus, defendant’s emotional disturbance was a product of his knowingly or intentionally involving himself in the commission of a crime and [is not] excusable [under the extreme emotional distress defense].”
See State v. Gardner,
II. Mental State Instruction
¶ 8 Next, Augustine argues that although the accomplice liability jury instruction quoted the relevant statutory provision verbatim, it nonetheless was confusing and incomplete. Specifically, Augustine asserts that the instruction given failed “to adequately instruct the jury that the mental state required in order to find him guilty of attempted murder as an accomplice was the actual intent to cause death.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Without further clarification, Augustine contests, the jury instructions “left the door open for the jury to find Augustine guilty of attempted murder based on Staple/s intent to cause death, even if they believed Augustine intended only to inflict serious bodily injury.” The State contends that “the instructions as a whole accurately and adequately informed the jury of the mental state necessary to convict [Augustine] as an accomplice to attempted murder.” We agree with the State.
¶ 9 “[W]e review challenges to jury instructions under a correctness standard.”
State v. Featherhat,
Jury instructions must be read and evaluated as a whole. They must accurately and adequately inform a criminal jury as to the basic elements of the crime charged. However, if taken as a whole they fairly instruct the jury on the law applicable to the case, the fact that one of the instructions, standing alone, is not as accurate as it might have been is not reversible error.
State v. Lucero,
¶ 10 Here, instruction twelve explains the accomplice liability standard by quoting the relevant statutory provision word-for-word: “Every person, acting with the mental state required for the commission of an offense who directly commits the offense, who solicits, requests, commands, encourages, or intentionally aids another person to engage in conduct which constitutes an offense shall be criminally liable as a party for such conduct.” See Utah Code Ann. § 76-2-202 (LexisNexis 2012). This instruction clearly indicates that a requirement of accomplice liability is that the accomplice “act[] with the mental state required for the ... offense,” which in this case was attempted murder. Instruction fifteen outlines the elements of attempted murder:
Before you can convict the defendant of the offense of Attempted Criminal Homicide, Murder, ... you must find from all of the evidence and beyond a reasonable doubt each and every one of the following elements of that offense that is alleged to have occurred on or about July 28-29, 2008:
1. That in Salt Lake County, State of Utah;
2. The defendant intentionally attempted to cause the death of another person; and
3. That the victim suffered serious bodily injury in the course of the offense.
Thus, even assuming the jury focused on the accomplice liability instruction in the face of compelling evidence of Augustine’s liability as a principal, this instruction clearly indicates that a conviction for attempted murder requires a finding that the defendant had the “intent[ to] attempt!] to cause the death of another person” or, as the parties referred to it throughout the trial, the “inten[t] to kill.” Thus, reading instructions twelve and fifteen together, the mens rea required for accomplice liability was adequately explained by the jury instructions provided.
Cf. State v. Larsen,
III. Calling Stapley as a Witness
¶ 11 Last, Augustine contends that after Stapley informed the court of his intention to remain silent, having Stapley subsequently refuse to testify in the presence of the jury allowed the State to support its case with the inferences that could be drawn from Stapley’s refusal, thereby denying Augustine his constitutional right to a fair trial. We review questions of constitutional law for correctness.
See State v. Martinez,
¶ 12 The issue here boils down to whether the conversation that occurred outside of the jury’s presence during which Stapley indicated that he had been planning on refusing to testify amounted to his having actually invoked a Fifth Amendment privilege. A witness’s “exercise of the [Fifth Amendment] privilege is not evidence to be used in the case by any party.”
State v. Travis,
¶ 13 Here, neither the trial court nor Stap-ley’s counsel were sure as to whether Stapley could validly claim a Fifth Amendment privilege in Augustine’s case. The trial court stated,
Mi’. Stapley, it’s by no means clear to me that you have a Fifth Amendment right to not testify. So I’m not sure you can[] constitutionally [refuse to] testify. Based on the fact that you testified at your trial and you were found guilty, and I’m not sure that that means there is one, but I think there is, arguably there is a Fifth Amendment right. But I will tell you as a matter of law, it’s not clear to me whether you can assert that.
Stapley’s trial counsel noted that he had explained to Stapley the possible ramifica
¶ 14 Under the facts and circumstances of this case, we do not believe that error, let alone reversible error, occurred or that Augustine’s constitutional rights were violated when the trial court permitted the State to call Stapley as a witness simply because there was a likelihood that Stapley would refuse to testify regardless of whether he could validly do so. The parties and the trial court were unsure whether Stapley could validly claim the privilege. Stapley was present when both his trial counsel and the trial court expressed their hesitation as to whether Stapley could validly claim a Fifth Amendment privilege in this case and he was reminded by his counsel and the court what the ramifications of remaining silent would be if the privilege was deemed inapplicable. Given the emphasis on the uncertainty as to what Stapley’s rights were in this case, it was reasonable for the State to call Stapley to allow him the opportunity to change his mind and to determine if the trial court would accept Stapley’s exercise of the privilege. This is far from a situation where the prosecutor “call[ed] a witness who he kn[ew would] claim a valid privilege not to testify, for the purpose of impressing upon the jury the fact of the claim of privilege.”
See Travis,
¶ 15 In sum, Augustine was not entitled to the affirmative defense of extreme emotional distress because the stressors he identified as triggering his extreme emotional distress were self-created. As a result, we do not address Augustine’s other arguments related to his defense of extreme emotional distress. The jury instructions adequately explained the mens rea requirement for a conviction either as an accomplice or a principal, and it was not a violation of Augustine’s constitutional rights to have Stapley assert his Fifth Amendment privilege in the presence of the jury. Affirmed.
Notes
. Where subsequent amendments to the relevant statutory provisions do not affect our analysis, we cite the most recent version of the Utah Code.
. Augustine and Stapley were jointly charged with attempted murder, but the cases were ultimately severed.
See generally State v. Stapley,
. Augustine notes that a defendant is not required "to show a highly provocative triggering event that was contemporaneous with [his] loss of self-control” to be entitled to an instruction on the extreme emotional distress defense.
See State v. White,
