STATE of Missouri, Respondent,
v.
Walter Timothy STOREY, Appellant.
Supreme Court of Missouri, En Banc.
*463 David Hemingway, Asst. Sp. Public Defender, S. Paige Canfield, Asst. Public Defender, St. Louis, for Appellant.
Jeremiah W. (Jay) Nixon, Atty. Gen., Stacy L. Anderson, Asst. Atty. Gen., Jefferson City, for Respondent.
DUANE BENTON, Chief Justice.
Appellant Walter Timothy Storey murdered Jill Frey on February 2, 1990. At his 1991 trial, he was convicted of first degree murder, armed criminal action, second degree burglary, and tampering with evidence. In 1995, this Court affirmed all convictions and sentences except the death sentence, which was reversed and remanded because defense counsel was ineffective for not objecting to improper penalty-phase argument by the State. State v. Storey,
I.
Although he testified at the guilt phase of his original 1991 trial, appellant did not testify at the 1997 penalty phase, nor did the State introduce any of his earlier testimony. Four of appellant's relatives testified for the defense, relating appellant's physical and sexual abuse as a child by his adoptive father. The State adduced physical evidence from the crime, victim impact testimony, and the testimony of appellant's ex-wife, Kim Posey, as to appellant's past abusive behavior.
Appellant requested Jury Instruction H on his right not to testify. Instruction H was based on MAI-Cr.3d 308.14, a guilt-phase instruction:
Under the law, a defendant has the right not to testify. No presumption of guilt may be raised and no inference of any kind may be drawn from the fact that the defendant did not testify.
MAI-Cr.3d 308.14. The requested Instruction H was modified by removing only the words "of guilt" to reflect that the jury was deciding punishment only:
Under the law, a defendant has the right not to testify. No presumption may be raised and no inference of any kind may be drawn from the fact that the defendant did not testify.
The court refused the instruction. Appellant raised this issue in the motion for new trial.
The instructions submitted two statutory aggravating circumstances: whether the murder was done for "money or any other thing of monetary value," and whether the murder "involved depravity of mind." The court also instructed on three nonstatutory aggravating circumstances (about Posey's allegations of abuse). The jury rejected four of these aggravating circumstances. It returned a verdict of death, finding only the aggravating circumstance that the murder involved depravity of mind because "the defendant committed repeated and excessive acts of physical abuse upon Jill Lynn Frey and the killing was therefore unreasonably brutal."
II.
The privilege against self-incrimination guarantees the right to remain silent and the right not to have adverse inferences drawn from exercising the privilege. U.S. Const. amend. V; Mo. Const. art. I, sec. 19; *464 Carter v. Kentucky,
Appellant did not testify in this penalty phase, and requested the no-adverse-inference instruction. The State concedes that the modified instruction was an accurate statement of the law and that the trial court should have given the instruction. However, the State argues that any error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Chapman v. California,
That Court articulated the test for applying Chapman's harmless-error analysis in Arizona v. Fulminante,
Applying Fulminante, the failure to give a requested, no-adverse-inference instruction is subject to harmless-error review. The danger in refusing a no-adverse-inference instruction is that "the jury will give evidentiary weight to a defendant's failure to testify." Carter,
Here, however, the error was not harmless. The one aggravating circumstance found by the jury was based on physical evidence. That finding is undisputed. "This does not end the evaluation of prejudicial effect, however. The evaluation of the aggravating and the mitigating evidence offered during the penalty phase is more complicated than a determination of which side proves the most statutory factors beyond a reasonable doubt. Moreover, under no circumstance must the jury impose a sentence of death." State v. Johnson,
The State further argues that the error was harmless because the prosecutor never commented on appellant's silence to the jury. Adverse comment on a defendant's failure to testify is an independent violation of the Fifth Amendment. Griffin v. California,
The State also asserts that since defense counsel discussed with the jurors appellant's right not to testify, there is no prejudice from the failure to give the instruction. During general voir dire five days before jury deliberations defense counsel told the venire that appellant had the right not to testify and asked whether any veniremember would draw an adverse inference from appellant's silence. Statements by defense counsel, however, "cannot have had the purging effect that an instruction from the judge would have had." Id. at 304,
III.
Because appellant's sentence is reversed, his other arguments need not be reached. However, one other point raises an issue from the 1991 guilt-phase proceedings.
Before appellant's 1991 trial, at a pretrial hearing, the State introduced a prior Georgia burglary conviction, in order to charge appellant as a prior offender. Section 558.021 RSMo 1994. Appellant claimed that the Georgia conviction was invalid because he had no attorney, and, consequently, the prior conviction could not be used at trial. The trial court admitted the Georgia conviction, finding that appellant had waived counsel. The State proffered no other prior convictions.
Appellant testified at trial. During the guilt phase, the State impeached appellant with the conviction. Section 491.050 RSMo 1994. In addition, in the State's guilt-phase closing argument the prosecutor stated: "Lastly, [defense counsel] says you shall assess the credibility of the Defendant. She will match his credibility with anyone. A convicted felon?" The trial court also instructed the jury that they could weigh the prior conviction against appellant's credibility.
In his first appeal, appellant argued that the trial court erred in admitting the Georgia conviction. Appellant cited Johnson v. Mississippi,
Unlike Johnson, Storey's prior conviction has not been reversed. In fact, the record shows no evidence that Storey even filed for post-conviction relief in Georgia. Until Storey secures a reversal, Johnson does not apply. Thus, the trial court did not err plainly or otherwise in admitting the Georgia judgment, certifying Storey as a prior offender, or listing the conviction in Instruction 25.
Moreover, Storey's bare allegation that the Georgia guilty plea was without counsel does not justify a continuance or record extension. Storey's remedy is the same as Johnson's: obtain a reversal of the prior conviction, then challenge the death penalty by post-conviction proceeding.
Storey,
A felony conviction violating the defendant's right to counsel is invalid. Gideon v. Wainwright,
The State concedes error. The question becomes whether the error is harmless. Chapman,
To determine whether constitutional error is harmless, this Court reviews four factors: (1) whether violations were repeated, (2) whether the trial court made any curative effort, (3) whether exculpatory evidence is transparently frivolous, and (4) whether evidence of guilt is overwhelming. State v. Dexter,
Although the trial judge took no curative action, the other three factors are dispositive in this case. The State referred to the prior conviction only twice in front of the jury, once in its cross-examination of appellant and once in closing argument. It is apparent from the record that the State was not attempting to develop a "theme" of emphasizing the prior conviction to infer appellant's guilt. See id. at 340. Moreover, appellant's defense is transparently frivolous, and the evidence of his guilt is overwhelming. At trial, appellant claimed that he was forced into the victim's apartment by his ex-wife's uncle, who committed the murder. He did not mention this at any time to police officers investigating the murder, either in his initial interview or in his confession at the police station. Appellant confessed to arming himself with a knife, climbing the victim's balcony, entering her apartment, and struggling with her. He stated that he took her car. He confessed that the next day he returned to conceal evidence: he wiped down everything he had touched, cleaned under the victim's fingernails with her toothbrush, and removed a briefcase that he had handled. These confessions were corroborated by physical evidence. Police officers found the briefcase and bloody clothes in a paper bag hidden in a dumpster as appellant described. They found the victim's keys in a nearby lake, where appellant confessed to throwing them. Appellant left his bloody palm print at the scene. Soil from the ground beneath the victim's balcony was found on her balcony and in her car. Fibers matching appellant's shirt were also found in the car. Finally, the victim's blood was discovered on appellant's shoes and inside his apartment. The erroneous admission of the invalid conviction was harmless error. This point is denied.
IV.
The death sentence is reversed, and the case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
All concur.
