Introduction and Procedural History
Michael A. Tisius (hereinafter, “Tisius”) was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder, section 565.020, RSMo 2000,
1
for killing Jason Acton (hereinafter, “Officer Acton”) and Leon Egley (hereinafter, “Officer Egley”). This Court affirmed Tisius’ convictions and sentence.
State v. Tisius,
At the penalty phase retrial, Tisius again was sentenced to death. Tisius brings this appeal, raising seven issues. This Court has exclusive jurisdiction pursuant to Mo. Const, art. V, sec. 3. The judgment is affirmed.
Point One: Allegations in the Complaint were Hearsay and Irrelevant
Tisius argues the circuit court abused its discretion in overruling his objection to the admission of State’s Exhibit 53, the certified court record of the complaint of Tisius’ conviction for possession of a prohibited item in the department of corrections. Ti-sius asserts the complaint was not admissi *405 ble pursuant to section 565.030 because: (1) the complaint was inadmissible hearsay; (2) he was denied his right to confront and cross-examine the person who determined the prohibited item to be a “boot shank”; and (3) the complaint was not relevant as it failed to prove specific conduct that he committed. Tisius believes that without this evidence, the jury would have sentenced him to life without parole.
Near the end of trial, the State informed the court it intended to offer the certified copy of Tisius’ conviction of possessing a prohibited item in the department of corrections. The State sought to read the docket entry showing Tisius entered an Alford plea 2 , the complaint to establish the basis of the crime, and his sentence. Tisi-us objected to the portion of the complaint stating he “knowingly possessed a metal object known as a boot shank, a weapon or item [of] personal property that could be used in such manner” as hearsay. The circuit court permitted the State to read the complaint up to the point that it said Tisius was charged with knowingly possessing a metal object “commonly known as a boot shank.”
Standard of Review
Generally, the circuit court is vested with broad discretion to admit or exclude evidence.
State v. Bowman,
Tisius failed to object to the admission of the complaint on the grounds that it violated his confrontation rights or that it was irrelevant. “To properly preserve an issue for an appeal, a timely objection must be made during trial.”
State v. Cooper,
Analysis
(1) Hearsay
“A hearsay statement is any out-of-court statement that is used to prove the truth of the matter asserted and that depends upon the veracity of the statement for its value.”
State v. Winfrey,
In this case, the complaint was admissible as a recognized hearsay exception as a certified record of a judicial proceeding. Section 490.130 provides that certified records of the courts shall be received “as evidence of the acts or proceedings of such court in any court of this state.” The circuit court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the certified record of a prior judicial proceeding as an exception to the hearsay rule.
(2) Confrontation Clause
The Sixth Amendment Confrontation Clause provides that “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to be confronted with the witnesses against him.” U.S. Const, amend. VI. In
Crawford v. Washington,
the United States Supreme Court held that the Confrontation Clause prohibits the “admission of testimonial statements of a witness who did not appear at trial unless [the witness] was unavailable to testify, and the defendant had had a prior opportunity for cross-examination.”
Crawford,
When the primary purpose of a statement is to establish or prove past events that could be potentially relevant to later criminal prosecution, it may be considered testimonial.
Davis v. Washington,
(3) Relevance
Tisius asserts the complaint was irrelevant and did not prove his actual conduct underlying the criminal conviction for possession of the prohibited article. Tisius reasons its admission was prejudicial, citing
State v. Fassero,
“In a death penalty trial, the defendant’s character and prior record are central issues of the penalty phase.”
State v. Williams,
In
Fassero,
the State introduced the defendant’s Illinois indictment, but it never introduced any evidence demonstrating the defendant committed the criminal sexual abuse acts described in the indictment.
Fassero,
While Fassero had not been convicted of the crimes set forth in the Illinois indictment, Tisius pleaded guilty to the complaint that the State admitted. The circuit court did not plainly err in admitting Tisi-us’ prior conviction into evidence as this was relevant to his character.
Middleton v. State,
Point Two: Improper Cross-Examination of Defense Expert
Tisius asserts the circuit court abused its discretion and plainly erred in overruling his objections to the State’s cross-examination of his expert, Dr. Shirley Taylor (hereinafter, “Dr. Taylor”). Tisius believes the State referred to irrelevant and prejudicial information and did not lay a foundation for his questions by: (1) questioning Dr. Taylor about facts in a book by David Pelzer without demonstrating it was an authoritative scientific text; (2) questioning Dr. Taylor about the Rosenhan study (hereinafter, “the study”) without demonstrating it was an authoritative scientific text; and (3) telling the jury that Tisius did not plead guilty.
Tisius failed to object to the State’s questions regarding the foundation of either the book or the study.
It is particularly important that where an inadequate foundation has been laid for admission of evidence that the objection made be specific as such foundation deficiencies can frequently be remedied. We will not review the contention of inadequate foundation raised for the first time on appeal.
State v. Butler,
Tisius preserved the issue regarding cross-examination of Dr. Taylor regarding the relevance of the book for appeal. A circuit court’s decision allowing evidence for the purpose of cross-examination is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
Tyson v. State,
Evidence must be relevant to be admissible.
State v. Davis,
In this case, the evidence was admissible. In questioning a defendant’s expert, the State is afforded wide latitude in “the cross-examination of witnesses to test qualifications, credibility, skill or knowledge, and the value and accuracy of the expert’s opinion.”
State v. Zink,
Tisius next argues the circuit court plainly erred in allowing the State to cross-examine Dr. Taylor regarding the study because it was not relevant to the case at bar. The State cross-examined Dr. Taylor regarding her familiarity with the study. Dr. Taylor was not immediately familiar with the study until the State explained its premise—a number of “normal” patients visited various doctors and each patient received incorrect psychological diagnoses. At that point, Dr. Taylor stated she was familiar with the study, but did not know its name. Further, Dr. Taylor testified she was familiar with “a number of studies like that,” and she concluded that those studies demonstrate “that we can all be fooled.” Tisius believes this line of questioning misled the jury. Since this claim was not included in the motion for new trial, Tisius requests plain error review under the manifest injustice standard of Rule 30.20.
The State’s cross-examination of Dr. Taylor was relevant and admissible. Dr. Taylor admitted the accuracy of a diagnosis is dependant upon truthful self-reporting by a patient as recognized by the study. Here, the issue of Tisius’ accuracy in his self-reporting to Dr. Taylor was contested. The State sought to challenge Dr. Taylor’s diagnosis of Tisius because Dr. Taylor admitted there was some error rate in her profession based upon the need for a patient to self-report truthfully for an accurate diagnosis. Accordingly, the State argued that Tisius attempted to mislead Dr. Taylor in her diagnosis. The circuit court did not plainly err.
Finally, Tisius claims that informing the jury that he did not plead guilty was misleading, especially in light of the other evidence and argument presented by the State that he was not remorseful. Ti-sius asserts on appeal that he wanted to plead guilty but the State would not make any offer less than death. Since this claim was not included in the motion for new trial, Tisius requests plain error review under the manifest injustice standard of Rule 30.20.
On direct examination by Tisius’ counsel, Dr. Taylor testified about how she believed he was sorrowful for his actions, how he wanted to apologize to the families for his actions, and how she thought he demonstrated expressions of remorse. On cross-examination, the State queried into the issue of whether Tisius had a motivation to lie to her, to avoid a potential death sentence. Dr. Taylor believed Tisius’ re-morsefulness indicated he did not care if he were found guilty nor did he have a *409 motivation to lie because “[h]e knew he was guilty of murder.” The State then questioned the extent of his remorse, stating “But did he plead guilty? No. Right? He didn’t plead guilty.” Dr. Taylor never answered this question.
“When a party inquires into part of an act, occurrence, or transaction they have ‘opened the door’ to testimony regarding that act, occurrence, or transaction, and the opposing party is entitled to inquire into other parts of it in order to rebut possible inferences that may be drawn from an incomplete version presented by the adversary or to prove the party’s own version of events.”
State v. Newsom,
Further, had this Court not reversed and remanded the penalty phase of Tisius’ trial, this jury would have sat during the guilt and sentencing portions of his trial. Accordingly, the jury would have known Tisius did not plead guilty as it would have determined his guilt or innocence. The circuit court did not plainly err in allowing this cross-examination.
Point Three: Improper Closing Arguments
Tisius claims the circuit court plainly erred by failing to intercede sua sponte at multiple times during the State’s closing argument. Tisius suggests several of the State’s comments were improper and resulted in manifest injustice.
Tisius acknowledges his trial counsel did not object to the State’s statements during closing argument, and thus, plain error is the review standard. Rule 30.20. It is particularly difficult to obtain relief based on an assertion of plain error concerning closing argument because the failure to object during closing argument is more likely a function of trial strategy than of error.
Anderson,
(1) Right to mercy
Tisius claims the State’s commentary that he did not have a right to ask for mercy misstated the law. “Closing arguments must be examined in the context of the entire record.”
Anderson,
Ladies and gentlemen, you can — and I told you during voir dire a couple of days ago, you can extend mercy for whatever reason to this man. You can do that. But the one thing he does not have the right to do is to ask for it. He forfeited that right on June 22nd when he committed these two murders.
“Prosecutors may discuss the concept of mercy in their closing arguments because mercy is a valid sentencing consideration, and in that connection may argue that the defendant should not be granted mercy.”
State v. Forrest,
183
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S.W.3d 218, 228 (Mo. banc 2006) (quoting
State v. Deck,
(2) Future dangerousness
Tisius alleges the State made an improper argument regarding his future dangerousness in the following three statements:
[W]e all have an obligation to protect jailers ..., those staff members, those doctors, those nurses.
I’m asking you on behalf of the entire law enforcement community, I’m asking you to protect us, protect them from people like [Tisius].
[M]aybe [Tisius] will die in prison. I think our goal is to make sure he’s the only one that does and that no other guard, no other nurse, no other person that works there with him, no other inmate that’s in that facility is going to be vulnerable to the same type of deci-sionmaking that these two officers suffered from.
Tisius asserts these arguments were improper because they suggested the jury had an obligation to impose the death penalty to protect prison employees, guards, and inmates from future harm.
Just as in
State v. Deck,
Here, the State’s argument included Ti-sius’ potential future dangerousness to the community, but it did not “suggest or imply the jurors would be directly responsible or held accountable if [Tisius] harmed anyone else in the future.”
Deck,
(3) Justice for the families
Tisius challenges two statements that he claims implies the victims’ families wanted him sentenced to death. First, during closing argument, the State mentioned that one victim was engaged to be married to a woman with four children. The State commented:
And you know, it’s pretty audacious to come in here now, as [Tisius] is doing, and saying, “I didn’t have a dad and, boy, look[ ] what happened. Do those Miller kids-do those Miller kids get to *411 go kill somebody because their dad, their father figure is gone? If so, [Tisi-us] write down the name. Tell me who they get to kill, because I bet your name would be on that piece of paper.
Looking at the closing argument in context, the State was not commenting upon the victim’s future stepchildren’s desire for Tisius to be executed, but a sarcastic response to his belief he was less responsible for his actions because he was rejected by his father. The State is free to “comment on the evidence and the credibility of the defendant’s case.... Counsel may even belittle and point to the improbability and untruthfulness of specific evidence.”
State v. Storey,
Second, Tisius challenges the State’s statement that the death penalty “is an answer to the plea from the families of [the victims] and Randolph County that you do justice in this case.” Tisius claims that this was inadmissible as family members’ characterizations and opinions about the appropriate sentence and that the circuit court plainly erred in failing to discontinue the State’s closing argument sua sponte.
“[I]t is proper for a prosecutor to seek and request the most severe penalty.”
State v. Clayton,
Tisius provides nothing other than speculation that the exclusion of these statements would have changed the outcome of his sentencing. Therefore, the Court does not believe the State’s closing argument amounted to a manifest injustice; the circuit court did not plainly err in failing to intervene sua sponte during the State’s closing argument with respect to these comments.
Point Four: Required Step in Sentencing Verdict Directors Omitted
Tisius asserts the circuit court plainly erred in submitting instructions 11 and 17, the verdict mechanics instructions, because the instructions omitted language concerning the mitigating evidence. Tisius believes the instructions prevented the jury from returning a sentence of life if it believed the mitigating circumstances outweighed the aggravating circumstances.
“For instructional error to constitute plain error, the defendant must demonstrate the trial court so misdirected or failed to instruct the jury that the error affected the jury’s verdict.”
State v. Celis-Garcia,
*412
This Court has resolved this issue previously.
Anderson,
Point Five: Instructions Failed to State Proper Burden of Proof
Tisius argues the circuit court erred in submitting instructions 9 and 15, based upon MAI-CR3d 313.44A, the mitigating circumstances instructions. Tisius claims these instructions unconstitutionally shifted the burden of proof from the State to the defense. This Court will reverse the circuit court’s decision to submit an instruction only if the instructional error misled the jury and is so prejudicial that it deprives the defendant of a fair trial.
State v. Nash,
Tisius’ allegations that the instructions improperly shifted the burden of proof have been rejected by the United States Supreme Court and this Court. The United States Supreme Court stated:
So long as a State’s method of allocating the burdens of proof does not lessen the State’s burden to prove every element of the offense charged, or in this case to prove the existence of aggravating circumstances, a defendant’s constitutional rights are not violated by placing on him the burden of proving mitigating circumstances sufficiently substantial to call for leniency.
Kansas v. Marsh,
This Court has rejected this argument in
Davis,
Point Six: Apprendi Violation
Tisius asserts the circuit court erred in sentencing him to death because the information did not charge him with aggravated first-degree murder and failed to plead any aggravating circumstances. These assertions are based upon the premise that the aggravating circumstances were additional elements of first-degree murder punishable by death, and'therefore, the State violated
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
Tisius unsuccessfully raised this identical issue in his first appeal.
See Tisius I,
Additionally, this argument has been rejected by this Court in multiple cases. The notice of aggravated circumstances under section 565.005.1 is sufficient to notify a defendant that he or she is
*413
charged with a capital offense.
See Davis,
Point Seven: Proportionality Review
Tisius invokes this Court’s independent duty to review his death sentence under section 565.035. Tisius believes this Court should reduce his sentence to life imprisonment without parole based upon the substantial evidence in mitigation, the nature of his crimes, and similar cases in which death was not imposed.
This Court is obliged to conduct an independent review of all death penalty cases for proportionality pursuant to section 565.035. Section 565.035.3 requires this Court to determine:
(1) Whether the sentence of death was imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor; and
(2) Whether the evidence supports the jury’s or judge’s finding of a statutory aggravating circumstance as enumerated in subsection 2 of section 565.032 and any other circumstance found;
(3) Whether the sentence of death is excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases, considering both the crime, the strength of the evidence and the defendant.
(1) Passion and prejudice
Tisius argues that the allegations of trial error set forth in Points I, II, and III of his appeal establish that his death sentence was the result of passion, prejudice, and other arbitrary factors. However, as previously discussed, Tisius’ allegations of trial error are without merit. Accordingly, he cannot establish these alleged errors resulted in a sentence of death imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor.
(2) Aggravating circumstances
Tisius does not address the second step in the proportionality review. The jury, however, found aggravating circumstances.
With respect to Officer Acton’s murder, the jury found two aggravating circumstances. First, the jury found that the murder of Officer Acton was committed while Tisius was engaged in the commission of another unlawful homicide of Officer Egley. Second, the jury found Tisius committed a murder against Officer Acton, who was a peace officer engaged in the performance of his duty.
With respect to Officer Egley’s murder, the jury found three aggravating circumstances. First, the jury found that the murder of Officer Egley was committed while Tisius was engaged in the commission of another unlawful homicide of Officer Acton. Second, the jury found Tisius committed a murder against Officer Egley, who was a peace officer engaged in the performance of his duty. Third, the jury found the murder of Officer Egley involved depravity of mind and as a result thereof, the murder was outrageously and wantonly vile, horrible, and inhuman.
The evidence supported each of the aggravating circumstances found by the jury. There is no dispute that Officer Acton and Officer Egley were acting as peace officers. The evidence supports the jury’s finding that the murder of Officer Egley, the second victim, was committed while Tisius was engaged in the murder of Officer Acton. Further, the evidence supports the jury’s finding that the murder of Officer Egley was wantonly vile, horrible, *414 and inhuman. Tisius shot Officer Egley at close range at two different times; during the second incident, he was fully conscious and aware he and Officer Acton had been shot.
(3) Similar cases
In
Deck,
This Court affirmed sentences of death when there was more than one victim murdered.
See Dorsey,
Tisius identifies
State v. McIlvoy,
Tisius believes the similarities between himself and Mcllvoy warrant this Court’s reversal of his death sentence. This comparison is without merit. Tisius had an eighth-grade education and confessed to his crimes. Tisius also presented mitigation evidence that, if believed by the jury, demonstrated he had some mental illness issues. However, unlike Mcllvoy, Tisius possesses an average-to-above-average IQ. There was no evidence Tisius was intoxicated at the time of the murders. Tisius fled the scene of the crime.
This Court independently researched both death and life cases and has not identified any similar case involving premeditated murders of two law enforcement officers as committed by Tisius that would support a finding that his sentence is dis *415 proportionate. Tisius’ conduct was calculating and brazen. Tisius entered the county jail, attempting to release an inmate. He shot Officer Acton at close range, killing him instantly. Tisius then shot Officer Egley at close range until he fell to the ground. After unsuccessfully attempting to release the inmate, he again shot Officer Egley while the officer was lying on the floor. Officer Egley was found later gasping for air, lying in a pool of his own blood before he died.
The imposition of the death penalty meets the statutory requirements. There was no error.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment is affirmed.
All concur.
