delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 A Montana jury found Kim A. Norquay, Jr. (Norquay) guilty of deliberate homicide, § 45-5-102(l)(b), MCA, and tampering with physical evidence, § 45-7-207(l)(a), MCA. Norquay appeals.
¶2 We review the following issues on appeal:
¶3 1. Whether the District Court’s admission of the State’s expert DNA witness through a videotaped deposition violated Norquay’s right to confront the witness.
¶4 2. Whether the District Court’s Alien-instruction given to a deadlocked jury constituted an improperly coercive instruction.
¶5 3. Whether the prosecutor’s comments at trial constituted prosecutorial misconduct.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶6 Nathan Oats (Oats) and Georgetta Oats (Georgetta) found Lloyd Kvelstad (Kvelstad) unconscious and severely beaten at about 1:30 a.m. on November 25,2006. Oats testified that he found Kvelstad lying on a couch with his pants down around his legs at Melissa Snow’s (Snow) house. Kvelstad’s face was beaten beyond recognition and he had a black string around his neck. Oats told Georgetta to call 911.
¶7 Kvelstad, Norquay, James Main Jr. (Main), Billy the Boy (Billy), Jason Skidmore (Skidmore), Joseph Red Elk (Red Elk), and Thomas Anderson (Anderson) had gathered at Snow’s house to drink alcohol earlier that night. Norquay, Main, Snow, and Billy were still at the house when Oats arrived and found Kvelstad. Georgetta announced *259 that the police were coming and Main attempted to leave. Oats restrained Main and held him until the police arrived. Norquay fled out a side door. Paramedics determined that Kvelstad was dead.
¶8 The State charged Norquay with deliberate homicide on the theory that Norquay had participated in the commission of an aggravated assault of Kvelstad. The State also charged Norquay with tampering with physical evidence based upon a witness’s statement that Norquay had wiped blood off his shoe. Norquay had an eight-day jury trial.
¶9 Red Elk testified to the events leading up to Kvelstad’s death. Red Elk testified that several of the men had verbally and physically assaulted Kvelstad. Red Elk watched Main and Skidmore put Kvelstad into several choke holds that caused Kvelstad to lose consciousness. Skidmore pulled up Kvelstad’s underwear until they ripped off. Red Elk testified that Norquay slapped Kvelstad’s face and would not allow Kvelstad to sit down. He also testified that Norquay took his belt off, unbuttoned, and unzipped his pants, attempted to pull down Kvelstad’s pants, and announced that he was going to “fuck” Kvelstad. Another of the revelers forced Norquay to stop. Red Elk also testified that he had heard Norquay talking with Main about whether the two of them should kill Kvelstad.
¶10 Kvelstad eventually passed out from intoxication. Red Elk watched Snow and Skidmore put Kvelstad in a bed. Red Elk left Snow’s house with Skidmore shortly thereafter. Red Elk testified that Kvelstad was still breathing and was not bloody when he last saw him. Snow testified to a similar version of the night’s events. She also testified that she saw Norquay remove the string from his sweatshirt. Another witness testified that Norquay told her that he had strangled Kvelstad using a string from his sweatshirt.
¶11 Several other witnesses testified that Norquay had made incriminating statements after Kvelstad’s death. One witness testified that she overheard Norquay brag to someone on the phone, “Did you hear I’m a murderer?” Norquay voluntarily met with police. Norquay denied kicking, beating, or strangling Kvelstad. Norquay claimed that Kvelstad had passed out from drinking too much. The Deputy State Medical Examiner testified that Kvelstad had likely died as a result of blunt force trauma to the head and probable ligature strangulation.
¶12 One of the State’s experts testified that the tread on Norquay’s shoes corresponded with a bloody shoe impression left on Kvelstad’s sweatshirt. Norquay’s expert refuted this testimony. The State also provided testimony from a DNA expert with the Montana Crime Lab *260 through a videotaped deposition. Norquay originally requested the DNA evidence from the State Crime Lab. The DNA expert provided both potentially exculpatory and potentially inculpatory testimony. Both parties relied on portions of the DNA expert’s testimony to their advantage. The jury convicted Norquay on all counts. Norquay appeals.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶13 This Court reviews a district court’s evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion.
In re T.J.B.,
¶14 We review jury instructions to determine whether, as a whole, they fully and fairly provide instruction on the applicable law.
Id.
at ¶ 16. A district court’s discretion in formulating instructions is reversible only if the instructions prejudicially affect the defendant’s substantial rights.
Id.
The Court conducts plenary review of discretionary rulings when the court bases the discretionary ruling upon an interpretation of the Constitution.
Jacobsen v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
DISCUSSION
¶15 1. Whether the District Court’s admission of the State’s expert DNA witness through a videotaped deposition violated Norquay’s right to confront the witness.
¶16 Officers arrested Norquay in July 2007 and the court originally scheduled Norquay’s trial for May 2008. The court granted several continuances to accommodate witness availability and attempted to set the trial date for January 5, 2009, more than two years after Kvelstad’s death. The parties agreed to reschedule again to accommodate the DNA expert, Megan Ashton (Ashton), who was expecting a baby in mid-December 2008 and would be on maternity leave in January 2009. The court moved up the trial date to November 12, 2008.
¶17 Ashton informed defense counsel in October 2008, that her doctor had prohibited her from traveling from her home in Missoula to Havre for the November trial. Norquay filed another motion to continue the *261 trial until January 2009. The State unsuccessfully attempted to replace Ashton with another DNA expert. The State opposed the motion to continue. The State moved instead for an order to use a videotaped deposition of Ashton at trial in place of her live testimony. Norquay opposed the videotaped deposition. The court granted the State’s motion to depose Ashton and denied Norquay’s motion to continue the trial.
¶18 The court provided several reasons for its decision to allow the videotaped deposition. The court recognized the difficulty in trying to accommodate the schedule of approximately 50 other witnesses. The court cited the fact that two years had elapsed since the victim’s death and the effect that this delay could have on witnesses’ memories. The court further reasoned that Ashton was not a witness with personal knowledge of the facts giving rise to the events. Finally, the court discussed its need to accommodate schedules for the two judicial districts over which it presided. The court concluded that another continuance likely would postpone the trial significantly. The videotaped deposition took place six days before trial. Counsel for both parties were present. Norquay cross-examined Ashton.
¶19 Norquay argues that the court’s admission of Ashton’s videotaped testimony violated his Sixth Amendment right to confront witnesses against him. He contends that the State failed to establish that Ashton was unavailable because the State had not made a good faith effort to present the witness at trial. The court deemed Ashton unavailable and concluded that Norquay’s confrontation rights could be protected adequately through a videotaped deposition with all parties present.
¶20 Both the federal and Montana constitutions provide defendants with the right to confront witnesses against them. U.S. Const, amend. VI; Mont. Const, art. II, § 24. The ability to cross-examine a witness represents the cornerstone of a defendant's right to confront the witnesses against him.
In re
¶ 18. The Confrontation Clause also normally requires that a witness testify in court.
State v. Hart,
¶21 The State satisfied the second element here. Norquay cross-examined Ashton at her deposition. Norquay challenges only the
*262
court’s determination that Ashton was unavailable for trial. A court may deem a witness unavailable if a physical illness renders the witness unable to testify. M. R. Evid. 804(a)(4). The proponent of the testimony of an unavailable witness in a criminal case bears the burden of demonstrating that it made a “good faith effort” to secure the witness’s attendance at trial.
Hart,
¶ 24 (citing
Barber v. Page,
¶22 This Court has not yet decided an unavailability case involving a pregnant witness for Confrontation Clause purposes. We have considered whether the State made a good faith effort to procure a witness in a criminal trial for Confrontation Clause purposes under other circumstances.
Hart,
¶¶ 18-26;
State v. Widenhofer,
¶23 We have also considered whether good cause justified delaying a trial for a pregnant witness in
City of Helena v. Roan,
¶24 Other jurisdictions have addressed the unavailability of the witness question in the context of a late-term pregnancy. Courts have considered factors in determining witness unavailability such as the
*263
nature of the illness, the expected time of recovery, the reliability of the evidence concerning the illness, the importance of the absent witness to the case, and other special circumstances.
United States v. McGuire,
¶25 The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals deemed a witness in her seventh month of pregnancy unavailable to testify at a criminal trial.
McGuire,
¶26 The facts of this case present circumstances more similar to McGuire, Hart, and Roan, than Widenhofer. Pregnancy involves a medical condition that poses special risks to a woman and her unborn child. The court properly relied upon the statements of Ashton’s physician that she could not travel from Missoula to Havre to testify at the November trial. Although Ashton’s doctors set her due date for mid-December, the court could not predict exactly when the baby would arrive or when Ashton would be ready to travel for trial after the birth. The court already had rescheduled once to accommodate Ashton’s pregnancy and previously had rescheduled to accommodate other witnesses’ schedules. The State unsuccessfully had attempted to replace Ashton with another DNA expert. None were available.
¶27 This complex trial involved approximately 50 other witnesses whose schedules the court would have been required to accommodate. Efforts by the court to reschedule likely would have substantially delayed the trial. Ashton’s videotaped deposition took place six days before trial with Norquay present. Nor quay’s counsel cross-examined Ashton. The jury had the opportunity to view the demeanor of the witness and evaluate her credibility. Ashton’s testimony did not address a portion of the State’s case that Norquay contested. In fact, Norquay had insisted that Ashton would provide exculpatory evidence necessary for his defense.
*264 ¶28 Looking to all the facts and circumstances we conclude that the State made a good faith effort to procure Ashton for trial and that the district court properly allowed the videotaped testimony. Unlike Widenhofer, the State had worked to schedule a trial that would accommodate all the witnesses and attempted to replace Ashton with another DNA expert. The court properly relied upon the statement of Ashton’s physician in determining that she was unavailable to testify for trial. The court took the proper procedural steps in the form of a videotaped deposition taken several days before trial to protect Norquay’s confrontation rights.
¶29 2. Whether the District Court’s Alien-instruction given to a deadlocked jury constituted an improperly coercive instruction.
¶30 The jury deliberated for approximately seven hours on the first day of deliberations. The judge sent the jury a note at the end of the day asking whether they had made any progress. The foreman responded, “No deadlock.” The foreman sent the court a note during the next morning’s deliberation to inform the court that the jury was in a stalemate. The court convened the parties and informed them that it intended to read Montana Pattern Jury Instruction Criminal No. 1-121 (MPJIC 1-121) for potentially deadlocked juries.
¶31 Norquay’s counsel objected to the instruction on the grounds that it violated his due process rights and unlawfully coerced the jury to render a verdict. The court overruled the objection and read the instruction to the jury. The jury reached a verdict about an hour and a half after receiving the instruction. Norquay appeals the following language in the District Court’s jury instruction:
The ultimate responsibility of the jury is to render a verdict in this case ... The final test of the quality of your service will be in the verdict which you return to this Court. It is only bv rendering a verdict in this cause that you can make a definite contribution to efficient judicial administration as you arrive at a just and possible verdict. [Emphasis added].
Mont. Pattern Jury Instr. Crim. 1.121 (2009). Norquay argues that the court improperly instructed the jury to consider matters irrelevant to their deliberations, specifically the “quality” of their service, making a “definite contribution to the administration of justice,” and passing the “final test” of rendering a verdict.
¶32 The U.S. Constitution and the Montana Constitution entitle defendants to an uncoerced verdict.
U.S. v. Lowenfield,
¶33 An AZZen,-instruction is a supplemental jury instruction given when jurors are apparently deadlocked. More than a century ago, the U.S. Supreme Court first upheld an AZZere-instruction given to a deadlocked jury that instructed the jurors in the minority to reconsider their views in light of the contrary views held by the majority.
U.S. v. Allen,
¶34 The Court in
Randall
purposefully took “the opposite view” of the U.S. Supreme Court when it did not allow the AZZen-instruction that singled out the minority jurors and asked them to reconsider their views.
Randall,
¶35 The Court allowed Allen-instructions in Montana after
Randall
that did not instruct the minority jurors to surrender their opinions in light of the majority views.
State v. Bieber,
*266
¶36 This Court has approved the language in MPJIC 1-121 on several occasions.
Bieber,
¶ 70;
Cline,
¶37 The AZZera-instruction given at Norquay’s trial did not contain language that instructed the minority jurors to reconsider their views. The instruction was nearly identical to the instruction given in
Cline
and
Bieber.
The instruction thereby comported with the applicable law in Montana.
Bieber,
¶ 70;
Cline,
¶38 We are persuaded, however, to reconsider the “final test” language in MPJIC 1-121 that Norquay challenges. Although we find the instruction unobjectionable in Norquay’s case, we disagree with the conclusion in Cline that MPJIC 1-121 is an “innocuous instruction.” We take this opportunity to carefully evaluate the wisdom of the continued use of the “final test” language in MPJIC 1-121.
¶39 Other courts, commentators, and the American Bar Association have scrutinized the continued use of Allen-instructions.
See U.S. v Brown,
¶40 The Maryland Supreme Court has struck language in an
Allen-
instruction that suggests that the jury’s “final test” requires them to make a determination of guilt or innocence, rather than to stay true to any individual convictions or opinions.
Thompson,
¶41 The Maryland Supreme Court also noted that the final test language did not reasonably adhere to ABA standards.
See ABA Standards for Criminal Justice Discovery and Trial by Jury,
at 255. The court concluded that the concept of a final test implies a standard of service to which a juror should aspire “that requires a verdict to be reached rather than one that requires consideration of individual conviction.”
Thompson,
¶42 The jury’s ultimate responsibility is not to render a unanimous verdict of either guilt or innocence, but to consider carefully the facts *268 presented at trial. Our jury system aspires to produce fair and accurate factual determinations in each case. Although the court here did not exert undue pressure on the jury to render a verdict when it gave MPJIC 1-121, no reason exists to continue to use the “final test” language in Montana’s pattern criminal jury instructions. An Alien-instruction given in Montana courts should closely comport with ABA Standard 15-5.4 and eliminate the “final test” language. See ABA Standards for Criminal Justice Discovery and Trial by Jury, at 255.
¶43 We therefore adopt the following changes to MPJIC 1-121 to be used in future cases in which the court determines an Allen-instruction to be necessary:
The judicial process assigns tasks to the people involved in the case, the various units. It is the task of the witnesses to testify truthfully to the facts as they recall them, as-tfaeyrecall the facts. It is the task of the lawyers to prepare the case for final submission to the trier of the facts, the jury. It is the task of the Judge to preside, to instruct you as to the law, and to rule on the adnussibility-ofithe whether certain evidence will be allowed at trial. It is the task of the jury to decide the case. The ultimate responsibility of the-jury is to-render a verdict- in this cause. You are not partehsan-nor are you-advocates in this matter; you are the neutral iudgesrvou-are the-tndges of the facts. It is you and you alone that can render a verdict in decide this cause. There is no reason to believe that any other 12 men and women people would possess any more ability, intelligence, and courage to do the ultimate task assigned to a jury under the American system of justice.
The-final test-of the quality of your service wHhbe in the verdict which-you return to this-Gourtr Rris-only by rendering a verdict in this cause that-you can make a definite contribution to efficient judicial administration as youarrive at a-justeand-possible verdict. The purpose of this instruction is to encourage you to collaborate with vour fellow jurors in order to reach a iust and fair verdict in this case. This instruction is not meant to coerce or to force a verdict. You should take as much time as needed in vour deliberations.
We-have never-asked, as a matter-of-fact we-faave-instructed- you, that You should not surrender your honest convictions in this matter for the mere purpose of returning a verdict or solely because of the opinion of other jurors. This does not mean, *269 however, that you should avoid the vour task assigned-to-you-of rendering a verdict in this case.
This instruction is not more important than any other instruction I have previously given you. You should consider this instruction together with, and as part of. all the other instructions. Please return to vour jury room and, again, diligently and earnestly resume vour deliberations.
¶44 3. Whether the prosecutor’s comments at trial constituted prosecutorial misconduct.
¶45 Norquay next argues that the prosecutor engaged in misconduct that deprived Norquay of his right to a fair and impartial trial. The parties dispute the State’s characterization of Red Elk’s testimony. Red Elk testified that Norquay had his own pants down, and that Norquay had claimed that “he was going to fuck [Kvelstad] right there.” The State used the word “rape” instead of “fuck” several times at trial. Norquay argues that the prosecutor’s statement that Norquay had threatened to “rape” the victim inflamed the jury. Norquay contends that Red Elk testified that Norquay had been joking, and that Norquay had not threatened Kvelstad. Norquay also argues that the State had misstated the elements of homicide at trial and wrongly attacked the defense’s cross-examination tactics.
¶46 Norquay makes these arguments for the first time on appeal. We generally do not review issues raised for the first time on appeal.
State v. Taylor,
¶47 Affirmed.
