OPINION
Defendant Kevin Scott Roscoe has now twice been convicted of child molestation, kidnapping, and murder in the 1982 abduction and slaying of the seven-year-old victim, Laura. This court affirmed his first conviction and sentence in
State v. Roscoe,
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
At about 6:00 in the evening on May 13, 1982, Laura rode her bicycle from her parents’ rural Gilbert home to look for her cat. Her family began searching for her when she did not return. A short time later, her moth *490 er called the authorities after finding her bike on a nearby farm road. Laura’s bound and gagged nude body was found the next morning along a remote desert road in the San Tan Mountains, approximately twelve miles from her home. Her attacker had sexually molested and strangled her. One of her socks was used to bind her hands behind her back; the other was tied around her head to hold her panties in her mouth as a gag. Her ponytail holders were tightly fastened around her neck. Her clothes and shoes were stacked next to her body.
Roscoe lived nearby and was on parole from California for a sex-related offense. He immediately became a suspect and was questioned by police. Roscoe told the police that on the evening Laura disappeared, he went to a friend’s house at 5:30 p.m., where he stayed until going with others to a party around 9:00 p.m. This story was contradicted by Roscoe’s friends, who said that he did not arrive at the friend’s house until after dark, which would have been at approximately 8:00 p.m. Consequently, Roscoe changed his story and “remembered” that after arriving at the friend’s house at 5:30, he went to a nearby convenience store, and car trouble delayed his return.
A man driving in the area saw a car similаr to Roscoe’s speeding away from the vicinity of the crime at about 7:30 p.m. He said the driver was, like Roscoe, a young Caucasian with long brown hair. A week after the murder, Roscoe hurriedly sold that ear. When police recovered it, they found evidence inside that implicated Roscoe, including hairs similar to Laura’s and traces of human blood.
Other physical evidence implicating Roscoe was discovered and introduced at trial. Carpet fibers similar to the carpet from Roscoe’s car were found near Laura’s body. Roscoe’s pubic hairs were consistent with hairs found on the victim’s blouse. His semen was consistent with samples taken from the victim’s ■ mouth. Finally, the state also introduced several other bad acts involving Roscoe’s sexual improprieties with minor girls. Roscoe stuck to his alibi and challenged the physical evidence, but a Maricopa County jury found him guilty of first degree murder, kidnapping, and child molestation. Concluding that several nofrstatutory mitigating factors did not outweigh the murder’s especially cruel and heinous nature, the trial judge sentenced Roscoe to death and to consecutive, aggravated prison terms for the non-capital offenses.
On appeal, Roscoe raises the following questions:
1. Did the trial judge err by permitting the admission of other bad act evidence?
2. Was the admission of multiple photographs of the child-victim’s naked corpse reversible error?
3. Did the trial judge abuse his discretion by precluding a defense expert’s testimony on witness identification and memory?
4. Should the trial court have granted a mistrial after the prosecutor argued evidence not admitted at trial?
5. Did the trial court err in denying Roscoe’s motion for a new trial on each individual error and on the errors cumulatively?
6. Was Roseoe’s right to a unanimous jury verdict violated by not requiring the jury to agree on a single murder theory?
7. Did the trial court err by ordering Roscoe’s attorneys not to present certain mitigating evidence during the sentencing phase?
8. Was it error for the trial court to find that the especiаlly heinous, cruel, or depraved aggravating circumstance was proven beyond a reasonable doubt?
9. Did the trial court’s failure to consider all relevant mitigating evidence constitute reversible error?
10. Does Arizona’s death penalty statute meet constitutional standards?
We address these issues in the order presented. In addition, we address one issue raised by the state in its cross appeal: whether the trial court abused its discretion by not allowing the victim’s father to testify at the sentencing phase in rebuttal to Roscoe’s mitigating evidence.
*491 DISCUSSION
A. Other bad acts
Before trial, the state filed a motion
in limine
seeking permission to introduce certain other bad acts of Roscoe under Ariz. R.Evid. 404(b), to show identity, a plan to engage in sexual acts with minors, or propensity for aberrant sexual conduct. Roscoe filed a timely response to the motion. The judge allowed the state to admit the following evidence to show modus operandi and Roscoe’s emotional propensity to engage in sexually aberrant acts: (1) a priоr sexual assault in California against Cheryl, (2) a sexual encounter Roscoe had with a fourteen-year-old “girlfriend,” Kristi, and (3) Kristi’s testimony about lewd statements that Roscoe had made to young girls (Cheryl and Kristi incidents respectively). Roscoe claims that the Cheryl and Kristi incidents were erroneously admitted for either purpose.
2
Roscoe also claims that the probative value of the other bad acts was outweighed by unfair prejudice. We look first to the admissibility of the evidence. We review these evidentiary rulings on a discretionary standard.
State v. Rivera,
Other bad acts are generally inadmissible to show the defendant’s bad character. However, evidence of other bad acts may “be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.” Ariz.R.Evid. 404(b). Arizona courts have recognized another specific exception to the general rule: other bad acts involving “sexual aberration” are admissible to show the defendant’s propensity to commit a similar crime.
State ex rel. LaSota v. Corcoran,
Although the court admitted the Cheryl and Kristi incidents to establish both modus operandi and emotional propensity, we will affirm the court’s admission if it is sustainable on either ground.
State v. Perez,
1. Cheryl incident
In California in 1981, Roscoe pleaded guilty to assaulting Cheryl. Over objection, the trial court admitted evidence of this prior assault. Like Laura, Cheryl had long red hair, fair skin, and freckles. She was seventeen at the time of the assault, but by all accounts she appeared younger than her age. Cheryl testified that in March of 1981, after drinking at a party and passing out in Roscoe’s car, she was tied up, sexually assaulted, and left on the side of the road. The following morning, area residents discovered Cheryl sitting naked, blindfolded with a sock tied behind her head, and gagged with another sоck. The knots used to tie the socks were the same type used to tie the socks that bound Laura. Cheryl’s hands were also bound behind her back with a shoelace tied in similarly distinctive knots. Although Roscoe does not deny that he committed the crime, he claims that the incident should not have been admitted in the murder trial to establish modus operandi or to demonstrate an emotional propensity to engage in aberrant sexual behavior.
In
Roscoe I,
the trial court admitted evidence of the Cheryl assault only for the
*492
purpose of establishing modus operandi.
2. Kristi incident
At trial, the state also offered Kristi’s testimony that she and Roscoe were “dating” in June of 1982, several weeks after Laura’s murder, when Kristi was fourteen years old. She testified that one night at her home, she and Roscoe were watching the movie “Lipstick” when Roscoe attempted to engage in sexual contact with her. In the movie, a teacher violently rapes two young girls. Roscoe said, “That’s the way women should be treated” and asked Kristi to re-enact some scenes. When she refused, Roscoe tried to unbutton her blouse. She objected, threatening to wake up her mother, and Roscoe left. Kristi also testified that Roscoe made suggestivе sexual remarks to young neighborhood girls, some as young as eight years old, such as inquiring what color panties they wore.
The trial court allowed Kristi’s testimony as evidence of Roscoe’s modus operandi and of his emotional propensity to engage in aberrant sexual behavior. Roscoe argues that the acts were not sufficiently similar under the identity exception and that no proper expert foundation supported their admission for aberrant sexual propensity. The state properly concedes that the Kristi incident and the statements are not similar enough to show identity.
See Roscoe I,
McFarlin
established the test for the admissibility of other aberrant sexual acts, which allows the admission of some evidence without supporting expert medical testimony.
Although the Kristi incident and the statements to young girls were near in time to the charged crime, we assume for the sake of argument that they are not substantially similar to Laura’s murder. Thus, Treadaway governs and the state was required to present “reliable expert medical testimony that such a [dissimilar] act ... tends to show a continuing emotional propensity to commit the act charged.” Id. In the present case, we believe the state provided proper foundation. Dr. Stephen Gray, a psychologist speciаlizing in the assessment and treatment of sexual offenders and victims of sexual assault, testified for the state at the in limine hearing and at trial regarding the psyche of the person who committed the Cheryl and Kristi incidents.
Dr. Gray reviewed interviews of Kristi regarding the incident that occurred after watching “Lipstick” and the comments Roscoe made to young girls. Based on the interviews and the record before him, Dr. Gray *493 testified that the perpetrator of Kristi’s assault had paraphilia of child molest, sadism, and rape, and concluded that the person involved in the incident with Kristi and the person who made the statements to young girls had a continued propensity to commit sexually deviant acts.
At the
in limine
hearing, Roscoe objected to Dr. Gray’s testimony because Dr. Gray had never interviewed Roscoe and his opinions relating to Kristi and Cheryl were based on “stale” written interviews. However, Roscoe would not make himself available for an examination; nor can he point to any material difference betwеen the written interviews on which Dr. Gray relied and Kristi’s live testimony at trial. Moreover, there is no requirement that such expert testimony always be based on personal interviews to be reliable.
3
We will not disturb a trial court’s ruling on the foundation for expert testimony absent a clear abuse of discretion.
State v. Stanley,
3. Balancing prejudice and probative value
Finally, Roscoe argues that the trial court erred by allowing “bad act [to be] heaped upon bad act” without properly weighing their prejudicial value. Four rules of evidence protect defendants from the admission of unfairly prejudicial other acts: (1) Rule 402’s relevancy requirement; (2) Rule 404(b)’s requirement that the evidence be admitted for a limited proper purpose; (3) Rule 105’s provision for an appropriate limiting instruction if requested; and (4) Rule 403’s requirement that the probative value of similar acts is not substantially outweighed by the potential for unfair prejudice.
Atwood,
The Cheryl and Kristi incidents were clearly relevant under Rule 402. Their purposes fit within the exceptions to Rule 404(b) discussed in the previous section. The incidents are also factually or conditionally relevant because the trial judge could determine that “the evidence in the record ... would permit a reasonable person to believe” that the other acts occurred and that Roscoe was the actor.
State v. Plew,
Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.
When the admission of other bad acts is at issue, the risk of prejudice is great, but trial courts maintain considerable discretion in gauging the prejudicial effect of other bad acts.
State v. Salazar,
The trial court specifically noted that it engaged in a Rule 403 balancing test and found that the probative value of the other acts was not substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice. We agree that the Cheryl incident was extremely probative and clearly appropriate under Rule 403. Although the Kristi incident, and particularly the statements to young girls, were less probative, they were also less inflammatory. Unlike the Cheryl affair, however, they tended to link Roscoe to younger girls like the victim. Although the Kristi incident is a much closer call than the Cheryl incident, we believe the trial court did not abuse its dis
*494
cretion in admitting the evidence with Dr. Gray’s foundation.
See Atwood,
B. Admitting multiple photographs of the child’s naked corpse
Trial courts have broad discretion to admit photographs in criminal trials.
State v. Salazar,
Roscoe argues that fourteen photographs should not have been admitted because they are unduly prejudicial, not relevant to disputed facts, or cumulative. The state claims the judge properly admitted the photographs on disputed issues and that they are not inflammatory or unfairly prejudicial.
Roscoe first challenges the admission of Exhibits 207, 208, and 209: three black and white aerial photographs of the area where Laura’s body was found, taken on May 14, 1982. The photographs are clearly relevant to show the scene of the crime, the remoteness of the area, the relationship of Laura’s body to the road, and the general terrain. They were taken at such a distance that Laura’s body is hardly visible and thus are not inflammatory. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting these photographs.
Exhibits 66 and 67 are autopsy photographs depicting Laura’s face and neck, with the ligature strangulation marks caused by the ponytail holders clearly visible. Although these pictures most graphically display Laura’s injuries, they are relevant to show the similarity between the ligature marks on Laura to those on Cheryl after her assault. Given that the facts were explicitly detailed in live testimony, we do not believe the photographs are so inflammatory that they unduly prejudiced the jury.
The remaining photographs portray Laura’s body at the scene. Exhibit 40 is a side view of Laura lying nude on her stomach with her legs spread apart. Her clothing and shoes are beside her, her hands are tied behind her back with a pink sock, and a pink sock is tied around her head. The photograph is relevant to illustrate the testimony of the witnesses who described Laura’s body at the crime scene, 5 the lividity of her body, and the disturbed soil around her feet. More important, the photograph also depicts the similarity between Laura’s murder and the Cheryl incident, specifically with regard to how one sock was tied around her head and the other used to bind her hands behind her back. Although this picture is difficult to look at given the horrible nature of the crime and the young age of the bound and helpless victim, the picture is not unfairly inflammatory or prejudicial given its important probative purpose and the atrocious nature of the crime. Admission of this photograph was not an abuse of discretion.
Photographs 43 and 44 depict two different angles of Laura’s feet, which show their discoloration, her flexed and dirty toes, and the disturbed soil underneath her feet. The pic *495 tures are somewhat relevant to explain the state in which Laura’s body was found. The pictures show only Laura’s feet and are therefore not gruesome or unduly inflammatory.
Photographs 47, 48, and 49 are close-ups of Laura’s head, shoulder area, and back. The pictures are relevant to illustrate how she was gagged with her underwear, how her ponytail holders were fastened around her neck to strangle her, and how her hands were bound behind her back with her sock. The pictures are particularly relevant to establish the similarity between Laura’s murder and Cheryl’s attack, since both victims were strangled and bound.
Photograph 51 depicts a portion of Laura’s head as it lay at the scene. Outstretched from her forehead is a ruler indicating the distance from her head to a carpet fiber that matched the carpet fibers in Roscoe’s car. This photograph is relevant to explain the testimony regarding the location of important physiсal evidence at the scene.
Photograph 170 is a close up of the back of Laura’s right thigh and buttock, showing a “patterned abrasion” on the back of her thigh similar to a hand print. This picture is relevant to show the application of force prior to death and to explain the medical examiner’s testimony regarding the abrasion.
Photograph 172 depicts Laura’s full body at the scene and its relationship to impressions that were interpreted to be bare footprints in the sand. The photograph is relevant in light of the testimony of a convenience store clerk that Roseoe frequently went into the store barefoot, especially because he had gone to that same convenience store on the evening of Laura’s murder.
As noted, almost all of the photographs are quite relevant to disputed issues, particularly the similarity of Laura’s murder to the Cheryl incident. Additionally, although very disturbing because of the young victim, they are not particularly gruesоme or unduly prejudicial given the nature of the crime. We find no clear abuse of discretion in their admission.
State v. Chapple,
C. Preclusion of a defense expert on eyewitness identification and memory
Eleven days after the murder, a witness told police that he saw a vehicle like Roscoe’s with a driver that looked like Roscoe speeding away from the area of the murder. The witness testified at the first trial, and his testimony was read into the record at Roscoe’s second trial. Roseoe moved to have an expert testify about eyewitness identification and the “forgetting curve,” but the trial court denied the motion. Roseoe argues that precluding this expert’s testimony was an abuse of discretion. We disagree.
Expert testimony is admissible if it “will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence.” Ariz.R.Evid. 702. In
Chappie,
a case dealing with the admission of expert testimony on eyewitness identification, we stated four criteria that should be applied in determining the admissibility of the expert testimony: (1) qualified expert; (2) prоper subject; (3) conformity to a generally accepted explanatory theory; and (4) probative value compared to prejudicial effect.
Key factors in determining the admissibility of expert testimony on eyewitness identification include the importance of the eyewitness testimony and the presence or absence of other evidence linking the defendant to the
crime. State v. Poland,
There are the matching carpet fibers, the pubic hair, the defendant’s admission that he was in the area where the body was found, hair similar to the victim’s in the defendant’s car, and human blood similar to the victim’s in the defendant’s car ... In addition, there are the similarities between the crime alleged and the other acts involving [Cheryl and Kristi].
Roseoe urges that no other evidence linked him to the crime and consequently expert testimony on eyewitness identification was appropriate.
We agree with the trial eoui*t that a substantial amount of additional evidence linked Roseoe to the crime. Thus, the ease against. him did not depend on this eyewitness, who did not positively identify Roseoe or his car. Roseoe himself admitted he was driving in the vicinity on the evening in question, and substantial other physical and circumstantial evidence plaсed him in the area. Moreover, there was substantial cross examination to attack the witness’s testimony. The trial court properly concluded that the jurors could understand the eyewitness evidence based on their common experience. See Ariz.R.Evid. 702. There was no abuse of discretion in denying Roseoe’s motion to present expert testimony on eyewitness identification.
D. Did the trial court improperly deny a mistrial after the state argued evidence not admitted at trial?
At the first trial, Howard Woods testified that at 6:30 on the evening of the murder, he saw a car similar to Roscoe’s turn from the victim’s street and drive erratically toward the location where Laura’s body was found. He noted that the car’s right brake light was inoperative. The state established that Roscoe’s right brake light was also inoperative. Although Woods was deceased at the time of the second trial, defense counsel added Woods to his list of witnesses so that the transcript of his testimony could be read to the jury. For unknown reаsons, defense counsel never introduced Woods’ testimony.
During closing arguments at the second trial, the prosecutor summarized Woods’ testimony despite the fact that it had not been read into the record. Apparently both parties believed it had been read in, since defense counsel had listed Woods as a witness and did not immediately object when the state argued his testimony in closing. Not until the court took a recess did the parties realize that Woods’ testimony was not a part of the record. Based on this fact, during this recess Roseoe moved for a mistrial. The trial court denied Roscoe’s motion, reasoning the testimony was cumulative and the error could be cured by the following instruction:
But I need to instruct you now that during [the prosecutor’s] opening [sic] argument, he made reference to testimony of Howard Woods. There never was any testimony of Howard Woods read to this jury, so you are therefore instructed to disregard anything that was said about Howard Woods’ testimony, thаt whatever comments made by [the prosecutor] are stricken from the record and are not to be considered by you at all, whatsoever, in any way. Just forget that he said them.
This instruction was read to the jury immediately upon reconvening from the recess. Additionally, prior to any closing arguments the court instructed the jury that “any testimony stricken from the court record should not be considered,” and “what the lawyers have said [in opening] and will say [in closing argument] is not evidence.” Roseoe argues that the trial court abused its discretion by denying his motion for a mistrial. The state concedes error but claims it was cured by the instruction.
The trial court “is in the best position to determine whether [an] attorney’s remarks require a mistrial, and its decision will not be disturbed absent plain abuse of discretion.”
State v. Dumaine,
Here, the argument wаs clearly improper because it referred to matters not in evidence. However, Roscoe made no objection until the argument was complete, thus waiving any objection except denial of his subsequent motion for a mistrial, made after he realized what had occurred. We believe, therefore, that the trial court was within its discretion to conclude that the instruction cured the error so that the remarks did not influence the verdict. The testimony mentioned the victim’s home street and tended to place Roscoe near the crime scene at 6:30 p.m., undermining his alibi. However, Roscoe admitted being in the area on the night in question, and another witness saw a car similar to Roscoe’s speeding away from near the scene. Roscoe’s own witnesses were equally harmful to his alibi. Moreover, carpet fibers and other physical evidence directly linked Roscoe’s car to the location of the body.
Roscoe argues that the instruction could nоt cure the error because “the cat was already out of the bag” and the damage could not be erased. However, it was Roscoe’s failure to timely object that allowed the proverbial cat to escape. If the testimony were really as prejudicial as Roscoe now argues, we believe he would have recognized it and objected at the time, given that Woods was listed as a defense witness. The argued portion of Woods’ testimony was largely cumulative to other evidence, and the import of the testimony was' not great compared to the other physical and circumstantial evidence incriminating Roscoe. We conclude the court did not abuse its discretion in denying the mistrial motion based on an untimely objection. 6
E. Did the trial court err in denying Roscoe’s motion for a new trial on each individual error and on the errors cumulatively?
Roscoe moved for a new trial based on the errors alleged in the four previous arguments. He argues the trial court abused its discretion in denying that motion on each ground. Alternatively, he argues that “these numerous errors, taken together, deprived him of a fair trial.”
As explained above, in each of the four previous claims there was either no error at all or no prejudice to Roscoe. Thus, denying Roscoe’s new trial motion was within the court’s discretion.
See State v. Fisher,
F. Was Roscoe’s right to a unanimous jury verdict violated by permitting a capital conviction without requiring the jury to agree on a single murder theory?
The jury received three first degree murder instructions: (1) premeditation, (2) felony murder/kidnapping, and (3) felony murder/child molesting. Six jurors found premeditation and six found felony murder. Roscoe argues he was entitled to unanimity on one theory of capital murder under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, and under article 2, section 23 of the Arizona Constitution.
*498
We reject Roscoe’s argument. This court has held that a defendant is not entitled to unanimity on the theory of first degree murder.
State v. Schad,
G. Did the trial court erroneously order Roscoe’s attorneys not to present all relevant mitigating evidence during the sentencing phase?
After his conviction, Roscoe twice attempted suicide. As a result, several doctors, including Dr. Donald Tatro, evaluated Roscoe and found him competent for the sentencing hearing. Roscoe later filed a
pro se
motion to exclude Dr. Tatro’s seventeen-page report and to preclude his testimony at the mitigation hearing. The trial judge sealed the reports and transferred the motion to another judge, who granted it in part, relying on
People v. Lang,
1. Self-representation
Roscoe now argues that, in complying with the request made in his pro se motion, the court denied him his Sixth Amendment right to counsel by interfering with his counsel’s mitigation strategy. In the alternative, Roscoe claims he was inappropriately permitted to represent himself without a valid waiver of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. To support his argument, Roscoe attempts to distinguish Lang and cites American Bar Association (ABA) guidelines and Arizona law. We are not persuaded.
The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees a defendant the right to self representation.
Faretta v. California,
Rightly or wrongly, the court allowed Roscoe to have self representation by considering and granting his
pro se
motion while appointed counsel continued to represent him. Assuming
arguendo
that hybrid representation occurred here, it was within the court’s sound discretion under the circumstances of this ease.
Id.
at 325, 326,
Even assuming that counsel’s effectiveness is at issue, Roscoe’s authority does not provide relief. Roseoe cites
State v. Lee,
Lee
and the ABA guidelines merely direct that the right to effective assistance “does not include the right to require [one’s] lawyer to perpetrate a fraud on the court” by calling witnesses likely to commit perjury.
Lee,
2. Interference with counsel’s strategy
In dealing with a defendant’s request that counsel not present certain mitigating evidence, this court has stated that “an attorney’s decisions concerning representation can properly be influenced by his client’s wishes.”
State v. Gerlaugh,
No authority supports Roscoe’s view that the procedure here resulted in ineffective assistance or an invalid waiver of counsel. On the contrary, the Supreme Court has suggested that there is no constitutional violation when a defendant chooses to put on no mitigating evidence.
Blystone v. Pennsylvania,
The hallmark of the Eighth Amendment is that the sentencer be allowed to consider any mitigation that the defendant proffers.
Blystone,
H. Did the trial court err in finding that the especially heinous, cruel, or depraved aggravating circumstance was proved beyond a reasonable doubt?
Pursuant to A.R.S. § 13-703(D), the trial court entered a sрecial verdict indicating the existence of aggravating factor (F)(6), “that the murder was committed in an especially heinous, cruel, or depraved manner.” This court has a duty to independently review the existence of aggravating or mitigating factors to determine if imposition of the death penalty is proper.
State v. Richmond,
1. Cruelty
To prove a murder was especially cruel, the state must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the victim consciously suffered physical pain or emotional distress.
State v. Bible,
2. Heinous/Depraved
Although the cruelty finding fully supports the (F)(6) factor, the trial court also found the heinous or depraved element. With a few exceptions not relevant here, heinous or depraved conduct is found by examining five factors: (1) relishing the murder, (2) inflicting gratuitous violence, (3) victim mutilation, (4) senselessness, and (5) helplessness of the victim.
State v. Gretzler,
Senselessness and helplessness clearly apply. However, these factors, absent additional aggravation, are usually insufficient alone to establish heinousness or depravity.
State v. Barreras,
Relishing generally refers to the defendant’s actions or words that show debasement or perversion.
State v. Walton,
However, because this murder was extremely cruel beyond any doubt, we affirm that finding under A.R.S. § 13-703(F)(6), making Roscoe eligible for the death penalty.
I. Failure to consider all relevant mitigating evidence
In its special verdict, the trial court fоund that Roscoe failed to establish the existence of any statutory mitigating factors. 10 The court found that the following non-statutory mitigating circumstances were established by a preponderance of the evidence: (1) adoption of new goals including education and art; (2) employment history; (3) conduct while incarcerated and during trial; and (4) love of family. Roscoe argues that the trial court failed to give proper mitigating weight to his lack of prior felony convictions and his psychological history as documented by Dr. Blackwood. We disagree.
Roscoe is correct that he does not have a prior felony record because his prior assault charge on Cheryl was reduced by a plea bargain from a felony to a misdemeanor. Although not classified as a felony, this prior assault was nonetheless violent. To be considered as a non-statutory mitigating factor, Roscoe must establish that this circumstance exists by a preponderance of the еvidence.
State v. McMurtrey,
' We also find no error in the court’s weighing of Dr. Blackwood’s psychological report. Dr. Blackwood concluded that “the current test results do not document the presence of any neuropsychological condition which would appear to have any relevance in the current case.” There was simply nothing in this report from which the court could have found substantial mitigation. The trial court properly considered and weighed all the statutory and non-statutory mitigating factors, and our independent review does not change those findings.
J. Constitutionality of Arizona’s sentencing scheme and death penalty
Roscoe’s final four arguments address constitutional issues. First, Roscoe argues that A.R.S. § 13-703(F)(6) violates equal protection by permitting the state to give different definitions to the word “cruel.” This argument was rejected by
Walton v. Arizona,
Second, Roscoe argues that Arizona’s death penalty statute fails to adequately channel sentencing discretion and that the (F)(6) factor is unconstitutionally vague. These arguments were considered and rejected in
State v. Gulbrandson,
Third, Roscoe argues that A.R.S. § 13-703 denied him equal protection of the law because in capital eases, a judge determines the existence of aggravating factors while in non-capital cases, a jury makes that determination. The premise that non-capital defendants are afforded a jury determination on aggravating factors is incorrect. See
*502
A.R.S. § 13-702(D). Nonetheless, there is no equal protection right to a jury determination on aggravating circumstances prior to imposing the death penalty.
See Fulminante,
Finally, Roscoe contends that proportionality review is required. This court has rejected that argument.
Salazar,
We are not persuaded to abandon the cited prеcedents in favor of Roscoe’s constitutional arguments and thus we affirm A.R.S. § 13-703 as constitutional.
THE STATE’S CROSS APPEAL
In the sentencing hearing, the state offered the testimony of Laura’s father to rebut Roscoe’s mitigating evidence. The trial court sustained Roscoe’s objection to this testimony. The state argues that rejection of this evidence was an abuse of discretion, basing its argument on Payne v. Tennessee, in which the Court stated:
[I]f the State chooses to permit the admission of victim impact evidence and prosecutorial argument on that subject, the Eighth Amendment erects no per se bar. A State may legitimately conclude that evidence about the victim and about the impact of the murder on the victim’s family is relevant to the jury’s decision as to whether or not the death penalty should be imposed.
According to the state’s response to Roscoe’s motion to preclude the testimony, Laura’s father wоuld have testified about the devastating loss inflicted on Laura’s family by her murder. Roscoe argues that Laura’s father was properly precluded because his testimony was not relevant to rebutting the content of Roscoe’s mitigating evidence. The issue is moot in this case because we have affirmed Roscoe’s sentence.
State v. Johnson,
To the extent that the state’s proffered rebuttal evidence would have focused on the impact of the crime on the victim’s family, and would thus comport with
Payne,
the evidence was relevant. However, it is difficult to think of a casе in which sentencing recommendations by the victim’s survivors would be relevant to rebut mitigating evidence. Although there may be such a case, this is not it, and the court would have erred in admitting such evidence.
State v. Williams,
CONCLUSION
As required by A.R.S. § 13-4035, we have searched the record for fundamental error *503 and have found none. 11 Roscoe’s conviction and death sentence are affirmed.
Notes
. The state called a purported expert in canine scent identification who gave extensive testimony that, approximately six months after Laura’s murder, his tracking dog had linked Roscoe to the crime in a series of allegedly blind scent "line-ups.” Before being revealed as a charlatan, this "expert” gave similar testimony in numerous criminal cases around the country. State v. Roscoe, Maricopa County No. CR-127656, reporter’s transcript of hearing on motion for new trial, Oct. 30, 1990, at 17-25.
. Roscoe claims that the court admitted the evidence to establish
identity
and emotional propensity, although thе court's minute entry clearly states that the evidence was admissible to establish
modus operandi
and emotional propensity. Identity and modus operandi are obviously closely related, if not identical, since an unrelated act with a significantly similar modus operandi may identify the defendant as the person who committed the crime charged.
State v. Jackson,
. In
State v. Rojas,
the court implied that the fact that the medical expert testifying about the defendant's emotional propensity "never met the children or the defendant in this case nor reviewed any of the videotapes of the victims” helped establish that the doctor's testimony was properly limited to the scope of emotional propensity, rather than the doctor’s opinion of the witnesses’ credibility.
. Roscoe also called Dr. Ian Lanyon, an expert witness, to rebut Dr. Gray’s conclusion that Roscoe has an emotional propensity for sexual deviance.
. James Serpa, the Maricopa County Sheriff's Evidence Technician who took the photographs, and Kay Lines, special agent at the Attorney GeneraTs office, testified about the condition of Laura's body as it was found.
. The full text of Dr. Tatro's report is part of the record before us. Thus, we are aware of the nature of the information that Roscoe wanted excluded, and we can well understand Roscoe's wishes that it not be made public. They were reasonable. Honoring those wishes, we do not detail the evidence. However, we believe that the redacted portion of the report is of no significant value to Roscoe’s case.
. The facts do not indicate any intentional impropriety by the prosecutor. On the contrary, the prosecutor’s improper argument is an easily understood inadvertence resulting from testimony that was admitted in a prior trial, that all parties expected would be offered, and apparently believed had been. The error could have been cured by allowing either party to reopen and present the testimony as a housekeeping matter.
State v. Walton,
. Roscoe did not ask for a Faretta hearing on competency, although he was found competent by the trial court pursuant to a Rule 11 hearing. See Ariz.R.Crim.P. 11. Moreover, the judge who granted the motion in limine found that "Dr. *499 Tatro's report leaves little room for doubt that Defendant is competent to make this decision.” After a careful review of the record and the presentencing report, including Dr. Tatro's report in its entirety, we are also wholly convinced of Roscoe’s competence. Roscoe's statement that "nothing in the record shows that [he] was ever cautioned about the dangers and disadvantages of his decision, nor was any inquiry ever made as to whether this was a knowing, voluntary, or intelligent decision,” is entirely without merit.
.
Lee
involved a lawyer who acquiesced to his client’s adamant demands that he present testimony of two witnesses that counsel believed would perjure themselves and undermine the defense case.
. Roscoe only offered evidence of one statutory mitigating factor: age. The court did not find that Roscoe established that his age, nineteen at the time of the murder, was a mitigating factor by a preponderance of the evidence because Roscoe had previously been convicted of a similar violent, though non-fatal, offense.
. The convictions in this capital case were appealed, briefed, and argued before the effective flate of the repeal of A.R.S. § 13-4035. See 1995 Laws, ch. 198, § 1.
