The defendant appeals from convictions for first degree murder, attempted first degree murder, and aggravated burglary in connection with the murder of Kim Chapman and the shooting of Beverly Jones. The defendant assigns as error the trial court’s failure to dismiss two prospective jurors for cause, the form of the jury instructions given, statements made by the prosecutor during his closing argument, and the prosecutor’s failure to disclose evidence about who had possession of the weapon. We reverse and remand.
The conviction arose out of a shooting that occurred on the night of March 11, 1983. The defendant went to the home of Kim Chapman’s parents, where the defendant’s former girlfriend, Beverly Jones (Beverly), and her fiance, Kim Chapman (Kim), were living. Beverly and the defendant were the only surviving witnesses, and they gave conflicting accounts of the shooting. Kim died in the shooting, and Beverly sustained serious injuries. The jury ultimately convicted the defendant of first degree murder for the killing of Kim Chapman, attempted first degree murder for the shooting of Beverly Jones, and aggravated burglary.
The defendant first assigns as error the trial judge’s refusal to dismiss for cause two of the prospective jurors. This Court has held that a trial court commits prejudicial error when a juror exhibits bias and the court refuses to dismiss the juror for cause, thereby compelling a party to use a peremptory challenge on the juror.
State v. Hewitt,
During the voir dire of the jury, two prospective jurors, Ms. Sheppard and Ms. Opheikens, stated that they knew members of Kim’s family and that their associations would affect their impartiality. Ms. Sheppard stated that she worked with Kim’s sister-in-law, Cheryl, and that this association would make her evaluation of some of the evidence difficult because she saw Cheryl at work every day. On further questioning, she also stated that she had never discussed the case with Cheryl, that Cheryl had never discussed with her any specific facts that she would not be able to ignore if they were not brought into evidence, and that she “hoped” she could base her decision in the case solely on the evidence introduced at trial.
The second prospective juror, Ms. Opheikens, described more direct ties to the victim and his family and stated that those ties would have a definite effect upon her decision in the case. During her testimony on voir dire, Ms. Opheikens stated that she knew the Chapman family, that she had attended school with the Chapman children, that her sister went to school with Kim, that she had attended the viewing of Kim’s body, that she had discussed the murder with Kim’s father and older sister at the viewing, and that it would be “hard” for her if the defendant was not found guilty or sentenced to death. Although Ms. Opheikens testified that she could look at the case “fairly,” she later testified that she would expect the defendant to prove his innocence because of what she knew about the case. She reaffirmed this assertion after defense counsel explained that such a position contradicted the defendant’s rights under the law. The trial judge *475 then explained the presumption of innocence to Ms. Opheikens in great detail and then asked her if, given what he had explained to her, she would still want the defendant to prove his innocence or if she could “follow the law.” Ms. Opheikens replied that she could “follow the law.”
Defense counsel challenged both Ms. Sheppard and Ms. Opheikens for cause. The trial judge refused to dismiss these two prospective jurors, and counsel used two of his peremptory challenges to remove them from the panel.
The trial court apparently refused to dismiss the two jurors for cause because they stated that they could act impartially and reach a decision in the case based solely on the evidence presented. The State’s brief relies heavily on these disclaimers of bias to support its contention that the trial court did not err in refusing to dismiss the two jurors for cause. When a prospective juror expresses an attitude of bias, a later assertion by the juror that he or she can render an impartial verdict cannot attenuate the earlier expressions of bias. The court, not the juror, must determine a juror’s qualification.
State v. Brooks,
Unlike the generalized expressions of potential subject-matter bias in Brooks, the expressions of bias in this case focused directly on the defendant and arose out of the prospective jurors’ close associations with members of the murder victim’s family. The prospective jurors’ later statements indicating impartiality could not obviate the strong inference of bias arising from their earlier statements. The trial court committed prejudicial error when it refused to dismiss these two jurors for cause. 1
Although our holding concerning the prospective jurors disposes of the case, we discuss briefly the defendant’s remaining assignments of error in order to prevent a repetition of error and to afford guidance to the trial court on remand.
The defendant challenges two instructions dealing with the elements of first degree and attempted first degree murder. The instructions enumerate the elements of those crimes, using the statutory language of U.C.A., 1953, § 76-5-202 (Supp.1986), but the instructions fail to include the mens rea element in the first aggravating circumstance listed in the instruction. The first aggravating circumstance was based on section 76-5-202(l)(e), which reads, “The actor knowingly created a great risk of death to a person other than the victim and the actor.” The instructions given failed to include the word “knowingly.”
*476
State v. Laine,
The defendant also claims error in the instructions on second degree and attempted second degree murder. The defendant is correct in arguing that the trial court erred in including the term “recklessly” in the depraved indifference to human life instruction. The legislature deleted that term from the statute in 1979, 1979 Utah Laws ch. 74, § 1, and that term should not be included in the instructions on retrial.
The defendant also argues that the trial court erred in the element instructions on second degree and attempted second degree murder by failing to specify that under the alternative mens rea element of causing the death of another while committing specified crimes, the victim must be someone other than “a party.” U.C.A., 1953, § 76-5-203(l)(d) (Supp.1986);
cf. State v. Norton,
Finally, the defendant argues that the trial court erred in not giving a separate instruction defining the State’s burden of proof. In Laine, this Court stated:
In holding the instruction here to be fatally defective, we do not mean to imply that all of the elements of the charged crime must necessarily be contained in one instruction, though the better practice is, we think, to do so. So long as the jury is informed what each element is and that each must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt, the instructions taken as a whole may be adequate even though the essential elements are found in more than one instruction.
In his third assignment of error, the defendant argues that the prosecutor committed prejudicial error in his closing argument. Specifically, the defendant challenges the prosecutor’s statements concerning the defendant’s history of mental illness and attempted suicides and state *477 ments that referred to crimes for which the defendant had not been convicted.
Counsel has considerable latitude in closing argument and “may discuss fully both the evidence and all legitimate inferences arising from the evidence.”
State v. Creviston,
The defendant’s final assignment of error goes to the prosecutor’s alleged suppression of evidence concerning the chain of custody of the murder weapon. We do not discuss this issue because the defendant has apparently received the information the prosecutor allegedly withheld. Our remand on other grounds for a new trial renders this question moot.
Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Notes
. We note that the trial court excused two other prospective jurors for cause because of their statements that they would expect the defendant to prove his innocence. Neither of these other jurors indicated that he had any direct ties to the minder victim or the victim’s family, only that the juror held a generalized belief that a defendant should have to prove his innocence. This makes the trial court!s failure to dismiss Ms. Opheikens for cause even more anomalous in light of her similar statement and her direct ties to the victim’s family.
