Because of his complicity in the deaths of Robin and Julie Kerry, defendant Marlin Gray was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to death. § 565.020. 1 Following the convictions, a motion for post-conviction relief was filed, heard and denied. This Court has jurisdiction of the appeal. Mo. Const, art. V, § 3. The judgments are affirmed.
I.
The first issue in this case has to do with the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conclusion that defendant knowingly caused the death of Julie or Robin Kerry after deliberation. The evidence is viewed in a light most favorable to the verdict, affording the state all reasonable favorable inferences and ignoring contrary evidence and inferences.
State v. Grim,
Twenty-year-old Julie Kerry and her sister, nineteen-year-old Robin Kerry, made arrangements with their nineteen-year-old cousin, Thomas Cummins, to meet them shortly before midnight on April 4, 1991. Cummins, who was visiting at his grandparents’ home in St. Louis, sneaked away shortly before midnight to meet the girls at a prearranged location. The Kerry sisters were intent on showing Cummins a graffiti poem the girls had painted on the Chain of Rocks bridge. The Chain of Rocks bridge had been abandoned some years earlier. It spans the Mississippi River at St. Louis and has been a site of drinking and partying by trespassers since its abandonment. The three arrived at the bridge, climbed through an opening in the fence, and went onto the Missouri side of the bridge.
Earlier that same evening, defendant Marlin Gray, Reginald (Reggie) Clemons, Antonio (Tony) Richardson and Daniel Winfrey met at the home of a mutual friend in St. Louis. The latter two individuals were juveniles, being sixteen and fifteen years old respectively. Defendant was the oldest and largest of the group. At defendant’s suggestion, the four left for the Chain of Rocks bridge to “smoke a joint” that defendant had acquired from someone at the house where the four met. The defendant’s group had been at the bridge sometime before the Kerry sisters and Cummins arrived.
As the two victims and their cousin were walking toward the Illinois side of the bridge, they encountered defendant and his three companions. After a brief exchange of greetings, Winfrey asked for cigarettes, which were supplied by one of the Kerry sisters. As he had done earlier for his cohorts, defendant demonstrated to Cummins and the girls how to climb down a manhole on the deck of the bridge to a metal platform which leads to a concrete pier that supports the bridge. Defendant told Cummins the platform was a good place to be “alone with your woman.” The two groups then separated, with the Kerrys and Cummins walking eastward toward Illinois and the defendant’s group walking toward Missouri.
While walking away, Clemons suggested that they rob Cummins and the Kerrys. Defendant smiled, clapped his hands, and replied, “Yeah, I feel like hurting somebody.” The four then turned and began walking back toward the east end of the bridge. While walking, Clemons and defendant engaged in some conversation. When defendant handed Winfrey a condom, he responded to the implication by saying he “wasn’t going to do anything.” At that point, defendant and Clemons pushed Winfrey against the bridge railing and said, “You’re gonna do it.” Winfrey then agreed to “do it.”
The defendant’s group continued walking toward the Illinois side and again came upon the Kerrys and Cummins. The girls were watching a campfire that had been built by someone on the Illinois side of the river. Richardson went to the side of the bridge and yelled something at the people by the campfire. At that point, the Kerrys and Cummins began walking back toward the Missouri side of the bridge. The defendant and his three associates followed at a close distance.
As the group passed a bend in the bridge, defendant, on a prearranged signal, put his *375 arm around Cummins and walked him back ten to fifteen feet telling him, “This is a robbery. Get down on the ground.” Cum-mins complied. Defendant told Cummins that if he looked up, defendant would kill or shoot Cummins. At the same time, Clemons, Winfrey and Richardson grabbed Julie and Robin Kerry. The girls screamed. One of the assailants said, “[D]o you want to die?” and ordered the girls to stop screaming or the speaker would “throw you off this bridge.” This statement, if not made by defendant, was made within earshot of defendant. Winfrey held Robin Kerry on the ground, covering her face with her coat. Clemons ripped off Julie Kerry’s clothing and raped her as she was held by Richardson. At some point, while Julie and Robin were being raped by Clemons and Richardson, defendant went to Cummins, who was still lying face down on the ground. Defendant stated, “I’ve never had the privilege of popping somebody ... if you put your head up or try to look, I’m going to pop you.” Defendant then went to where Winfrey was holding Robin Kerry on the ground. Defendant told Winfrey to watch Cummins. Then, with the assistance of Clemons, defendant tore off Robin Kerry’s clothing and raped her. Clemons then forced Cummins to surrender his wallet, wristwatch, some cash and keys. Clemons apparently became agitated upon finding Cummins firefighter’s badge, thinking he might be a police officer. One of the assailants then forced Cummins to get up and, while holding Cummins’ head down so he could not see who it was, walked him a short distance on the bridge and made him lie down again. There defendant and Winfrey warned Cummins not to talk to police. One of them showed Cummins his driver’s license and said, ‘We know who you are and if you tell anybody, we’re going to come and get you.” Cummins heard two voices discussing whether he would live or die.
While defendant was in the act of raping Robin Kerry, Richardson forced Julie Kerry into the manhole and followed her. When defendant finished, he went to Winfrey, who was still watching Cummins, and asked where Richardson had gone. Winfrey pointed toward the Missouri side of the river. Defendant then ran off toward the Missouri side in search of Richardson and Julie Kerry, running past the manhole. According to defendant, he thought Richardson had taken her “to the end of the bridge, where he could take her by the river and maybe drown her or somethin’.”
Clemons, after completing his rape of Robin Kerry, forced her down the same manhole where Richardson had taken Julie. Clemons then returned to Cummins and, putting Cum-mins’ coat over his head, forced him down the same manhole where Richardson and the two girls were located. Clemons then followed, as did Winfrey. However, Winfrey was told by Clemons to go find the defendant, which he did.
Clemons ordered Cummins and the Kerry sisters to step out onto the concrete pier below the metal platform. The three were told not to touch each other. Julie Kerry and then Robin were pushed from the pier of the bridge, falling a distance of fifty to seventy feet to the water. Cummins was then told to jump. Believing his chances of survival were better if he jumped instead of being pushed, he jumped from the bridge.
Meanwhile, Winfrey caught up with defendant. The two were returning back onto the bridge and were near a rock pile at the entrance of the bridge when they were met by Clemons and Richardson. Clemons said, ‘We threw them off. Let’s go.” The group ran to their car, drove to a gas station in Alton, Illinois, and bought food and cigarettes with the money they had taken from the victims. The group then drove to an observation point over the Mississippi River called the Chair, where they sat and watched the river. While there, Clemons remarked, “They’ll never make it to shore.” Defendant praised Richardson for being “brave” to push the Kerry sisters off the bridge.
Later, in police custody, defendant admitted to participating in raping both of the girls but denied that he had been involved in the murders. His tape recorded statement, although he claims it was obtained by police coercion, was admitted in evidence and was consistent in most essentials with the above statement of facts.
*376 Although Cummins survived and testified at trial, Julie and Robin Kerry were killed. The body of Robin Kerry was never recovered. Julie Kerry’s body was found three weeks later in the Mississippi River by the sheriff of Pemiscot County, Missouri.
II.
The defendant argues that the above evidence is insufficient to demonstrate that defendant knowingly caused or acted with others to cause the death of Julie or Robin Kerry after deliberation. “Deliberation” means cool reflection for any length of time, no matter how brief.
§ 565.002(3).
Thus, in order to convict, there must be some evidence that defendant made a decision to kill the victims prior to the murder.
State v. O’Brien,
The state responds by arguing that defendant’s participation in planning to commit the crimes of robbery and rape together with the threats to kill the victims that were made either by defendant or in his presence in the course of the rape and robbery, and defendant’s statement after the killing that those who did the acts were “brave” are sufficient facts to infer that the defendant deliberated on the killing of Robin and Julie Kerry. Deliberation may be inferred from the acts of forcing the victims into the manhole, off the metal platform onto the concrete pier and then pushing the two victims from the pier. If defendant was shown to have participated in any of those acts, deliberation on the killing might be inferred. However, he was not shown to have participated in those acts.
A distinct question is whether defen- ' dant’s participation in the planning and execution of the rape and robbery are sufficient to infer deliberation of murder. Implicit in any forcible rape or robbery is that threats are made against the victim to accomplish the criminal purpose. Forcible rape and first degree robbery each require the use of force or threat of force as elements of the crime. §§ 566.030 and 569.020. A homicide committed during the perpetration of those or other felonies is second degree murder. § 565.021.1(2). Had the legislature intended to impose the most severe punishment for participating in the planning or execution of a forcible rape or robbery where death to a person results from the perpetration of those crimes, it could have so provided. However, no such provision was made. The statute requires not merely the deliberation of forcible rape and robbery, but deliberation of the killing of a person. The legislature has made the distinction between first degree murder and second degree felony-murder. To hold otherwise would mean that every homicide that occurs during a forcible rape or first degree robbery would be first degree murder and the felony/murder provisions of § 565.021.1(2) would be meaningless. However, that is not what the statute provides. We must abide by the legislatively created distinction. As O’Brien makes clear, more is required than the planning and execution of a crime involving the use of force.
In eases of accessory liability for first degree murder, evidence of at least three circumstances appears to be highly relevant in determining if accomplice deliberation may be inferred. The first circumstance is where there is a statement or conduct by the defendant or a statement or conduct by a code-fendant in the presence of defendant prior to the murder indicating a purpose to kill a human.
State v. Isa,
A second circumstance permitting an inference of accessory liability is evidence that the murder was committed by means of a deadly weapon and the accomplice was aware that the deadly weapon was to be used in the commission of a crime.
State v. Turner,
A third factual circumstance common in first degree murder cases where accomplice deliberation is found to exist is where there is evidence that the accessory either participated in the homicide or continued in the criminal enterprise when it was apparent that a victim was to be killed.
Isa,
Here there were threats to Mil made either by the defendant or in the defendant’s presence. In addition, the defendant at one point stated he would shoot Cummins, indicating that he had ready access to a deadly weapon, even though no weapon was actually displayed or used to commit the homicides in this case. The jury was entitled to believe defendant had a gun. Defendant continued in the criminal enterprise after the threats to kill the victims were made. After the threats, he held Cummins at bay while the rapes were committed. Defendant participated in a discussion about whether Cum-mins should be killed, followed moments later by an attempt on Cummins’ life and the two homicides. These facts, together with defendant’s statement that he felt like hurting somebody, Ms role as a leader and enforcer in the group, and Ms belief before leaving the bridge that Richardson had gone to drown Julie Kerry in the river, are sufficient evidence to permit an inference by the jury that defendant had a conscious purpose of committing the acts in which he engaged so that the victims would be killed and that the homicides occurred after he coolly deliberated on the deaths for some amount of time, however short.
The facts in tMs case stand in stark contrast to those in O’Brien. The defendant there made an agreement with Ms codefend-ant to commit a strong-arm robbery. O’Brien’s role was to lure the victim into an alley so Ms codefendant could commit the robbery. No deadly weapons were used or threatened to be used by O’Brien and none was displayed in Ms presence. No threat to kill was made by defendant or in defendant’s presence. O’Brien departed the alley before the codefendant actually engaged in the egregious beating which resulted in the victim’s death. O’Brien did not continue in Ms participation after it became apparent by threats or acts that deadly force would be used. In that ease, tMs Court reversed the first degree murder conviction due to insufficiency of the evidence of deliberation. Id. at 220.
As in O’Brien, the defendant here was not present when the victims were murdered. However, nothing in O’Brien suggests that in order to have deliberation, an accessory must actually have been present when the murder occurred. It is the threats to kill the victims made by defendant and threats of such force by others in defendant’s presence that distinguishes O’Brien from tMs case. The totality of the evidence here permits an inference of deliberation. Thus, the claim of insufficient evidence of deliberation on the purpose to kill fails.
III.
The defendant also argues that the trial court committed plain error during the ques *378 tioning of the jury venire. During the voir dire, the trial judge used several examples to explain to potential jurors the concepts of accessory liability for crime and reasonable doubt.
The voir dire was conducted in panels of twelve or more. While the statements and questions asked by the trial judge were slightly different with each panel, the following were typical:
In fact, I defined [reasonable doubt] to you a couple days ago when I read that long instruction to you. I told you that proof beyond a reasonable doubt is proof that leaves you firmly convinced and it’s not proof beyond all doubt, it’s just proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
Probably all twenty-one of you have a different definition in your mind as to what proof beyond a reasonable doubt is and that’s fine. Everybody’s got a different, different set of rules in their own mind in terms of what reasonable doubt is, but that’s the standard. It’s not proof beyond all doubt.
Let me give you something that I think will either confuse the heck out of you or make it more clear. Hopefully it Will make it more clear. If you’re charged with a speeding ticket driving down the highway, you’re doing ten miles over the limit or you’re charged with doing ten miles over the limit, a policeman stops you and you go into the city court and you plead not guilty and you want a trial.
At the trial the prosecutor is going to have to prove for this ten dollar traffic ticket that you are guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. That’s the standard of proof because it’s a criminal case, okay. For a ten dollar fine, that’s what we’re talking about.
By the same token when we’re talking about a death penalty case, the most severe type of case we have in our society for the State to win his or her case, the State has to prove the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. It stays the same, doesn’t matter what the punishment is. The burden of proof for the prosecutor doesn’t go up and down based upon punishment.
It’s the same for a traffic ticket, a rape, robbery, burglary, stealing, drug possession, drug sale, murder, mass murder, child abuse, you name the charge, it all stays the same, proof beyond a reasonable doubt. It doesn’t go up and down.
Now many of you would probably say, well, gee, this is a death penalty, I’d sure like all the evidence you have. Well, that’s fine. And, you know, we’d all like a video, a video cassette of someone committing a crime before we put somebody in jail or not, but that’s not the way life works.
Life works sometimes with imperfections and the law basically says that you will accept some of those minor imperfections and the State must therefore reach a burden, a sufficient burden, a strong burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, but they do not have to go past that burden simply because the punishment is more severe than perhaps in a traffic ticket or a robbery case. Does everybody understand that? Okay.
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The next issue I want to discuss is something that’s called acting with another. That’s a legal concept by which a defendant, in fact, in this case the defendant is charged with the murder in two cases, but he’s charged as acting with other people. We don’t have to worry about those other people as it relates to specifics of this issue today. We don’t have to worry about their involvement.
Suffice it to say that he is charged with these two crimes acting with other people. Now let me give you two examples that I think will make the situation easy to follow for you. Joe and Mike are going to rob a bank. Joe’s in the car. He pulls up in front of the bank. Mike’s going to go up, he takes a gun with him, robs the bank, and shoots a teller.
Joe is sitting out in the car with the engine running. He doesn’t have anything to do with shooting anybody, really didn’t shoot, didn’t pull any trigger, didn’t take the money. He’s in the car. He aided and assisted, abetted, was involved in this case. He’s just as guilty of murder, if the jury *379 would have found it such, he would be just as guilty of murder as the guy that pulled the trigger. That’s a similar situation to what the defendant is charged with here, acting with another.
Another example I’ve been giving the jurors, Joe and Mike are in an alley and they find Harry who they don’t like. They get into a fistfight with Harry. Joe’s holding Harry. Mike picks up a knife, stabs Harry. Mike picks up a brick, hits Harry in the head. Mike picks up a gun, shoots Harry. Joe and Mike are both guilty of murder in the first degree even though one guy is holding. The guy that’s holding is just as guilty as the guy shooting, stabbing, or hitting.
Does everybody understand that? That’s what acting with another means. It doesn’t mean, hey, Mike just happened to be walking down the alley and was there. It has to be more than that. He has to be involved in it. It has to be more than just, hey, I’m here on the bridge. Has to be I’m involved in the case, I’m involved, I aided, I assisted, I abetted the murder of these two girls. Everybody understand that? Okay.
No objection was made to the above statements. Thus, review is limited to the standard of plain error.
State v. Hunter,
The trial judge was not making any improper attempt to obtain a prior commitment by jurors to decide a fact issue in the case in advance. The purpose was to discover any juror bias. In order to discover bias of potential jurors, it is often necessary to reveal some factual or legal detail in voir dire.
State v. Antwine,
Despite his well-intended purposes, the judge said far more than was necessary in this case. If the venire must be questioned regarding their attitudes toward accessory liability or toward the concept of reasonable doubt, the question should be brief, clear and carefully crafted in advance to ensure that the questioner, whether the trial court or an attorney, avoids the appearance of giving an instruction of law or commenting on the evidence. Usually a simple, well-prepared question is better than the extemporaneous and occasionally redundant hypothetical cases used here.
The purpose of the Approved Jury Instructions is to avoid confusion among jurors. That purpose is undermined when a judge or lawyer, under the guise of voir dire, makes what seem to be comments on the law or facts in the case. This Court has announced that during delivery of the approved instructions, a trial court’s “lengthy oral explanations, talks, comments, chats, homilies or whatever they may be called, invite[ ] confusion and disagreement later among the jurors as to exactly what the judge did say and whether his oral remarks prevail over the written instructions or vice-versa.”
State v. Cross,
Notwithstanding this criticism of the comments during voir dire, the comments do not constitute plain error. The comments were not made during the delivery of the instructions at trial as was the case in Cross. Also, the jury instructions submitted by the court on the concepts of reasonable doubt and accessory liability had the effect of correcting any potentially misleading statements that might have resulted from the voir dire. *380 However, both judges and lawyers should be circumspect when commenting on facts or concepts of law during voir dire.
IV.
Defendant further argues that counsel was ineffective for failing to object to these comments by the trial judge. Not every failure to object even if the objection might be sustained is tantamount to ineffective assistance of counsel.
Antwine v. State,
V.
Defendant argues that his counsel at trial was ineffective in failing to interview or depose Daniel Winfrey until the eighth day of the trial. Winfrey testified on behalf of the state during the trial. Defendant claims prejudice because an earlier interview or deposition would have disclosed that defendant was not present when the murders occurred and that counsel should have developed a theory of defense around that testimony.
The record reflects that trial counsel was provided with a written copy of Winfrey’s confession many months before trial. In that confession made to juvenile authorities in St. Charles County, Winfrey indicated that defendant was not present when the victims were pushed from the Chain of Rocks bridge. However, the statement implicated defendant as a perpetrator in the rapes and robbery. On September 30, 1992, Winfrey pled guilty to two counts of second degree murder and other offenses and agreed to testify against his codefendants. On October 2, 1992, trial counsel received a copy of Winfrey’s plea agreement indicating his intent to testify at defendant’s trial then set to commence on October 5, 1992. At the same time she was provided with a more extensive statement from Winfrey, again indicating that defendant was not present when the victims were pushed to their deaths.
Trial counsel moved to strike Winfrey as a witness because of the lateness of the new statement. While that motion was denied, counsel’s request for an interview was granted. Winfrey was interviewed by trial counsel for an hour and a half on the evening of October 13, prior to his testimony being given the following day. The prosecutor, co-defense counsel and an investigator for the prosecutor’s office were present at the interview.
Trial counsel testified that defendant informed her from the beginning that he was not only absent when the victims were pushed into the river, but he asserted he was not involved in the rapes or robbery. Defense counsel was aware early on that Winfrey might testify and his testimony was inconsistent with the defendant’s assertions of innocence. Nevertheless, the defense’s primary theory was to prove that defendant took no part in any of the criminal activity. At the same time, the defense theory was designed to portray Winfrey as a liar whose only purpose in testifying was to “save his own hide” from a first degree murder conviction. Defense counsel stated that she chose to rely on the written statements and interviews rather than a deposition of Winfrey, knowing that at a deposition the state would likely take the opportunity to prepare the witness to ensure consistent testimony. Defendant was fully aware of these defense theories in advance of trial.
To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a claimant must
*381
establish (1) counsel’s performance was deficient and (2) that the deficiency prejudiced the defense.
Strickland,
As previously noted, defense counsel had copies of statements made by Winfrey implicating defendant. Winfrey’s testimony at trial was completely consistent with the earlier statements and interviews, and his direct testimony was quite clear in showing that defendant was not present when the murders were committed although he participated in the rapes and robbery. Thus, no purpose would have been served by cross-examining Winfrey further regarding defendant’s absence. Given the great deference which matters of strategy are accorded, trial counsel’s decision not to depose or interview Winfrey and not to rely primarily on the theory of defendant’s absence at the time of the actual murders was not deficient performance of counsel.
Even if counsel should have interviewed or deposed Winfrey earlier than she did, defendant points to no evidence showing such investigation would have disclosed exculpatory or mitigating facts of which counsel was unaware when she made the decision to adopt the primary defense theories. It is not enough that some misstep of counsel had some conceivable effect on the outcome of the case. The particular failure must be so significant as to demonstrate a reasonable probability that but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result would have been different.
Strickland,
VI.
Gray next argues that certain inquiries by the court and state during the voir dire violated constitutional standards and resulted in striking otherwise qualified jurors for cause. The court allowed inquiries of potential jurors to determine whether they could consider the death penalty in cases where the defendant was charged as an accomplice and the state relied in part on circumstantial evidence. Typical of the exchanges on the two topics are the following:
MR. MOSS: Okay. Could you consider the death penalty for a person even though that person, for example, wasn’t the actual — by the way, for your general information, as the Judge has indicated there are three other people also charged here. They’re charged acting together. If you found that the defendant himself did not actually push the individual into the water, could you still consider the death penalty depending upon what other circumstances you hear? Do you understand?
VENIREMAN JEANETT BEIER: (No response.)
MR. MOSS: You know, if he’s charged acting with three other individuals, Daniel Winfrey, Antonio Richardson, and Reginald Clemmons, could you still consider the death penalty if he was not the actual person who pushed these girls into the water?
VENIREMAN BEIER: No.
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MR. MOSS: —Mrs. Beier, if the State’s case depended in part upon circumstantial evidence, would that prevent you from considering the death penalty in this case? Now there’s circumstantial and direct, I explained those types of evidence. Would it prevent you from considering voting to impose the death penalty?
VENIREMAN ANN CRAMER: Not from considering it, but I mean I—
*382 MR. MOSS: Here, let’s put it this way. Okay, if you’re sitting down there in the jury room and there’s eleven other people with you, you know, the question is would you say to yourself well, I personally cannot vote to impose the death penalty because part of the state’s case rested on circumstantial evidence? Would you say I cannot vote for the death penalty because part of their case rested on circumstantial evidence?
VENIREMAN CRAMER: Yes.
A potential juror may be excluded for cause when such person’s views on the death penalty “would prevent or substantially impair the performance of his duties as a juror in accordance with his instructions and his oath.”
Wainwright v. Witt,
While the comments of the court and the state during voir dire might have been more carefully crafted to disclose only those facts essential to the inquiry, there is no abuse of discretion. The purpose of voir dire is “to determine which persons harbor bias or prejudice against either party which would make them unfit to serve as jurors in the case before them.”
Defendant also asserts that counsel’s failure to object to that inquiry during voir dire constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. As noted previously, not every failure to object is tantamount to ineffective assistance of counsel.
Antwine v. State,
VII.
Gray contends that three venirepersons, Passanise, Glover, and Criss were improperly excused for cause because of their views on capital punishment. Glover and Criss indicated during the state’s voir dire that they would require a higher burden of proof than reasonable doubt to impose the death penalty even if the court instructed them differently. However, during defense counsel’s voir dire, each indicated they could set aside personal preferences and consider the death penalty using the reasonable doubt standard. Glover, when directly questioned by the court as to whether he could follow the reasonable doubt instruction in assessing the death penalty, stated, “I don’t think I could follow the instruction.” To the same inquiry, Criss replied, “I probably think that I would need more than reasonable doubt.”
Passanise indicated at one point during the voir dire that it might be possible under certain circumstances for the state to change his long-standing convictions against the death penalty. The prosecutor finally asked, “I’m asking you based upon your opinion, are you always going to vote against the death penalty?” Passanise replied, ‘Tes, sir.”
Each venireperson expressed an inability to determine guilt using the appropriate burden of proof when the death penalty could be imposed. A prospective juror may be excused for cause if the juror’s views on capital punishment would “prevent or sub
*383
stantially impair the performance of his duties as a juror in accordance with his instructions and his oath.”
Wainwright,
VIII.
Defendant next challenges the trial court’s failure to sustain defendant’s motion to strike venirepersons David Kozoloski and Elizabeth Conway for cause. Both venirepersons indicated a preference for the death penalty in a first degree murder case. However, each stated they would be more inclined to impose a life sentence if defendant tried to prevent the other three from pushing the victims. Based on the two venirepersons’ answers that they could “consider the full range of punishment,” and consider life without parole, the court overruled defendant’s motion. Defendant later used peremptory strikes to remove the two venirepersons.
In
State v. Schnick,
IX.
The prosecutor is asserted to have discriminated on the basis of gender and race in the exercise of peremptory strikes. In addition, defendant argues that the trial court erred in sustaining the state’s objection to one of his peremptory strikes.
Defendant’s compliance with Rule 30.06 on this point is questionable, at best. His challenge fails to direct the Court to specific page references from the record to support the argument, as required by our rules.
Rule 36.08(h); State v. Kitson,
A.
The Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution prohibits using peremptory challenges to exclude jurors on the basis of race.
Batson v. Kentucky,
[T]he defendant must object to the prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges as violating Batson and identify the cognizable racial group to which the stricken veni-repersons belong. State v. Parker,836 S.W.2d 930 , 939 (Mo. banc), cert. denied, — U.S. -,113 S.Ct. 636 , 121 *384 L.Ed.2d 566 (1992). The state must then provide race neutral explanations for the peremptory challenges. Id. If the prosecutor articulates an acceptable reason, the defendant must prove that the state’s proffered reasons were merely pretextual and in fact racially motivated. • Id.
The state used eight of its original nine peremptory strikes on black venirepersons. Defense counsel made a timely Batson objection, requesting racially neutral reasons for the strikes. The prosecutor gave the following explanations: (1) Venireperson Kendrick had poor eye contact with the prosecutor and indicated she was not sure whether she could impose the death penalty, she was not sure the felony murder rule was fair, and she did not know if she could follow the instruction on accomplice liability; (2) Venireperson Butler was a psychologist who gave the prosecutor the impression she knew more about people and how they act, she indicated she could “maybe” put aside her feelings on the death penalty, and the prosecutor believed she was a leader who would not lead in his direction; (3) Venireperson Meekie was a teacher and the prosecutor’s office had very bad luck with teachers, she had a friend or relative who had been arrested, she was the same age as Gray’s mother, she had poor eye contact with the prosecutor, and her body language suggested that she was being deceptive in some answers; (4) Venireperson Henderson was unemployed, had a friend who had been convicted or arrested where mistreatment occurred by the police, didn’t wear socks, which seemed to show a lack of respect for the court, and appeared hostile to the prosecutor; (5) Venireperson Gray had a significant problem with reasonable doubt and was weak on the death penalty; (6) Venireperson Fluelen wanted a higher burden of proof than reasonable doubt when the death penalty could be imposed, was the same age as Gray’s mother, and crossed her arms in front of her when the prosecutor addressed her (apparently signaling something negative about her reaction to the prosecutor); (7) Venireperson Long stated she would have difficulty following the felony murder rule, was not strong on the death penalty, and was upset with the state’s witness Winfrey for selling out his friends; and (8) Venireperson Cole had stated she had religious convictions against the death penalty although she eventually stated she could consider it and she was the foreperson of a jury in a police mistreatment case where the burden of proof was lower than in a criminal trial.
Trial judges are vested with considerable discretion in determining the plausibility of the prosecutor’s reasons and whether the prosecutor purposefully discriminated in exercising peremptory strikes.
Shum,
B.
At trial the prosecutor challenged certain peremptory strikes by the defense as based upon race. The trial court refused to permit the defense’s peremptory strike of venireper-son Shoults. Defendant argues that
Georgia v. McCullum,
— U.S.-,
McCullum
has no language limiting its application to minority venirepersons. Indeed, it holds that “the Constitution prohibits a criminal defendant from engaging in purposeful, discrimination on the ground of race in the exercise of peremptory challenges.”
McCullum,
— U.S. at-,
Having determined that
McCullum
applies, the issue is whether the trial court’s decision to refuse the peremptory striking of Shoults was clearly erroneous. The trial court stated, “... My impression is that there was, the only reason I can think of for striking him is him being an older white male.” At that point, defense counsel made no attempt to call to the court’s attention any previous discussion regarding Shoults’ statement that he was a crime victim twenty-five years earlier or that he had previously served on a jury. The trial court’s determination of whether a peremptory strike was exercised on racially neutral grounds is entitled to great deference on appeal.
Batson,
C.
Ten of the state’s eleven peremptory strikes were exercised to strike female veni-repersons. Except for venireperson Henderson, all of the venirepersons excluded by the state’s peremptory strikes discussed in Part A were women. Also, the state exercised peremptory strikes for two additional female venirepersons, Deardorff and Milne. The prosecutor explained that venireperson Milne wanted all doubt excluded and was poor on acting with another. Because defendant did not object to the state’s use of its peremptory strikes on the basis of gender discrimination, no explanation was given for striking venireperson Deardorff.
After defendant’s trial, the United States Supreme Court held that it is impermissible in the exercise of peremptory strikes to purposely discriminate on the basis of gender.
J.E.B. v. Alabama ex rel. T.B.,
-U.S.-,-,
X.
Defendant contends his due process right to a fair trial was violated and plain error occurred when the state cross-examined him about an earlier uncharged theft crime and then called rebuttal witnesses. Defendant further asserts for the first time on appeal that trial counsel’s failure to object constituí ed ineffective assistance of counsel.
Defendant testified he worked for the St. Charles Multijurisdictional Enforcement Group (MEG unit) setting up sting operations. He said he went to St. Louis under the authorization of his MEG unit to develop more drug suspects. He explained he did not report the murders, rapes and robberies *386 on the bridge because he was going to tell his DEA Mends the next time he saw them.
To refute the implication that defendant was acting as an employee of the MEG unit or out of public spmtedness, the state asked the defendant the circumstances of his connection with the police, including his motive for becoming involved with the MEG unit. He denied he acted as an informant in exchange for getting prior stealing charges dismissed. In response, the state called two police officers as rebuttal witnesses to testify regarding defendant’s connection to the MEG unit. The police officers established that defendant worked for the MEG unit as an unpaid informant working off a prior uncharged theft crime, although they were precluded from testifying about the details of that offense. They also testified that defendant never got “authorization” to go to St. Louis to develop drug suspects.
The state could properly cross-examine defendant on his connection with the police.
State v. Rowe,
Given defendant’s testimony that he was not the most upstanding citizen, was involved in drugs and drug trafficking, and specifically admitted smoking marijuana, it cannot be said that the trial court plainly erred by not intervening
sua sponte.
The information elicited concerning his stealing charge did not result in manifest injustice.
Isa,
Defendant’s assertion that his counsel was ineffective for failing to object to cross-examination questions was not raised before the motion court in his petition pursuant to Rule 29.15. Claims of ineffective assistance of counsel raised for the first time on appeal following a post-conviction relief hearing are proeedurally barred.
Shum,
XI.
Defendant next argues that Instruction No. 5 was an improper modification of MAI-CR3d 304.04, the general definition of accomplice liability. He claims the modification of Instruction No. 5 made the first degree murder verdict directing instructions, Instructions No. 6 and 13, confusing regarding deliberation. Instruction No. 5 states:
Under Counts I and II and Instruction Nos. 6 ... 13 [and other specifically numbered instructions] a person is responsible for his own conduct and he’s also responsible for the conduct of other persons in committing an offense if he acts with them with the common purpose of committing that offense, or if, for the purpose of committing that offense, he aids or encourages the other persons in committing it.
The accessory liability paragraph was submitted separately rather than repeating it in the beginning of each verdict director, as provided under Note on Use 3(a) of MAI-CR3d 304.04. Note on Use 3(b) of MAI-CR3d 304.04 authorizes a separate accessory instruction with a cross-reference to more than one verdict director if “the defendant is being tried for some offenses which he committed by himself and some which were committed jointly with another.” Because all verdict directors in this ease stated that the defendant acted with others, the cross-references in Instruction No. 5 were not in technical compliance with the Notes on Use to MAI-CR3d 304.04. When an MAI-CR instruction is applicable and is not given in accordance with the Notes on Use, it shall constitute error and its prejudicial effect is to be judicially determined.
Isa,
Defendant offers several other complaints that are raised for the first time on appeal. *387 More specifically, he argues that it was error to state at the end of Instruction No. 6, regarding Julie Kerry, “If you do find the defendant guilty under Count I of Murder in the First Degree, you will return a verdict finding him guilty of Murder in the First Degree.” He also argues that the jury may have been confused by an extra word “the” that appears before Reginald Clemmons’ name in both Instructions No. 6 and 13 and by including the elements of the crime of robbery and rape in some of the other instructions.
Defendant claims that such complaints constitute plain error and require reversal. When error is raised for the first time on appeal, it is reviewed under the plain error standard and the court will not reverse the conviction unless the alleged error resulted in a manifest injustice or miscarriage of justice.
Rule 30.20; State v. Simpson,
XII.
Defendant’s next point is that the court erred in submitting Instructions No. 35 and 36, the aggravating factors instructions given during the punishment phase, because he claims the instructions are confusing, internally inconsistent, and unsupported by the evidence. The state concedes the instructions asked whether the murder of each victim was committed while the defendant was engaged in the homicide of that same victim. The pertinent part of the Instruction No. 35 reads as follows:
In determining the punishment to be assessed under Count I against the defendant for the murder of Julie Kerry, you must first unanimously determine whether one or more of the following aggravating circumstances exist:
1. Whether the murder of Julie Kerry was committed while the defendant was engaged in the commission of another unlawful homicide of Julie Kerry.
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The aggravating circumstances instruction for Robin Kerry’s murder, Instruction No. 36, repeated Robin’s name in place of Julie’s in the first paragraph. When the jury returned their verdict in the punishment phase finding the aggravating circumstances, they correctly wrote the findings to reflect the intended meaning:
Whether the murder of Julie Kerry was comitted [sic] while the defendendant [sic] was engaged in the comission [sic] of another unlawful homicide of Robin Kerry.
Whether the murder of Robin Kerry was committed while the defendant was engaged in the commission of another unlawful homicide of Julie Kerry.
There was no specific objection at .trial that the name of the victim was repeated in the two instructions. Neither was the claim preserved for review in the motion for new trial. Thus, review is limited to ex gratia review for plain error. Rule 29.12(b). The jury corrected the obvious typographical errors in Instructions No. 35 and 36 and was not misled or confused in any way.
A second complaint regarding the aggravating circumstances instructions was that they impermissibly confused defendant’s acts with his codefendant’s, as in
Isa,
XIII.
Defendant’s next contention asserts plain error due to the trial court’s failure to, sua sponte, interrupt the prosecutor’s closing argument in the punishment phase which is here asserted to be racial in nature. Defendant, an African-American, claims the judge should have stopped the prosecutor from arguing he was a manipulating leader and should have prevented the prosecutor from describing the people defendant led as “normally female ... normally white ... normally middle-class ... normally they had a problem at home, self-esteem, something else ... not ... overly attractive.”
Defendant claims these remarks were racist and should not have been allowed, citing
United States v. Doe,
Defendant also argues that the state’s mention of race was impermissible, citing
McCleskey v. Kemp,
Defendant further takes issue with the prosecutor’s characterization of defendant’s leadership being similar to that of Charles Manson, although Manson’s name was never mentioned. Defendant relies on
Newlon v. Armontrout,
The purpose of the state’s argument was to explain that a person does not have to be present to commit the crime if he has participated in the planning. Using evidence adduced from the defendant’s witnesses, the state made the following argument:
Well, the names, you know, Charles “Tex” Watson, came to me, Patricia Krenwinkle, Squeeky Fromme. You know, these names came to me and I said, what the heck, you know, why did that jump into my mind and I couldn’t understand it. And then basically it came that people who are weaker, younger, problematic, can be manipulated and dealt with by somebody who is apparently stronger, who, like their leader, you know, was a poet, played the guitar, fancied himself a songwriter, but really had a problem.
In
Newlon
the state peppered its “send a message” argument with the names of Manson, Speck, and Son of Sam, even though there was no connection of those crimes to facts in the case under consideration. In contrast to
Newlon,
the state’s reference to the Manson “family” was quite limited and relevant to explain how a leader can manipulate his followers. Additionally, the court in
Newlon
found error in the totality of the state’s argument which also included, “If [defendant] was going to harm your child, would you kill him? ... If you think you would have, kill him now. Kill him now ... I’m talking to you as prosecuting attorney of this county — the top law enforcement officer in St. Louis County.”
In
Whitfield,
the state referred to the defendant as a mass murderer and serial killer because he had two prior homicide convictions.
Defendant makes a tangential argument that the state exceeded permissible bounds of victim impact evidence under
Payne v. Tennessee,
XIV.
In defendant’s next point, he claims the sentence of death was disproportionate pursuant to § 565.035.3(3). He argues that the verdict here violates the requirement of proportionality because of the uncertainty of the evidence of his guilt, the possibility of police or prosecutorial misconduct, and the absence of any evidence of his involvement in the killing, prior knowledge of the killing, use of a weapon or prior convictions.
If the case, taken as a whole, is plainly lacking in circumstances consistent with those in similar eases where the death penalty has been imposed, then a resentenc-ing will be ordered.
State v. Ramsey,
The defendant’s claims of weaknesses of the evidence of his guilt and police misconduct were resolved against him by the trial judge and the jury. Those claims do not serve as a basis for finding the sentence to be disproportionate. In addition, the evidence of the defendant’s absence at the time
*390
of the actual killing is not dispositive of the question of proportionality. The death penalty has been sustained where there was no evidence that the defendant was present at the time of the actual murder.
Six,
Defendant cites several cases in which the death penalty was imposed but which were reversed by this Court on appeal.
Isa,
To summarize, the circumstances of this case are consistent with similar cases in which the death penalty was imposed and nothing in this case indicates that the imposition of the death penalty is wanton or freakish.
Ramsey,
XV.
In his final point, defendant contends that the errors complained of above as well as a litany of additional errors that he asserts have the cumulative effect of depriving him of a fair trial. This Court has rejected such a “cumulative error” theory, stating that “Numerous non-errors cannot add up to error.”
Hunter,
CONCLUSION
The judgments are affirmed.
Notes
. All references to statutes are to RSMo 1986, unless specified otherwise.
