This is the third appeal of this case, which arises from defendant’s involvement in the 1992 abduction and death of Misty Largo.
1
Defendant was convicted, on retrial, of five counts of attempted aggravated murder and one count of attempted murder. On appeal, defendant argues that the trial court erred in (1) giving an “acquittal first” instruction pursuant to ORS 136.420(2), (2) denying a mistrial based on alleged prosecutorial misconduct, (3) instructing the jury, based on the Oregon Supreme Court’s affirmance of a prior appeal of defendant’s conviction for other felonies arising from this same incident, that the state had proved those crimes for purposes of the jury’s consideration of the aggravated murder charges, (4) refusing to merge the convictions on retrial with those previously affirmed felony convictions, and (5) imposing a consecutive sentence based on judicial findings. We reject all of defendant’s contentions except the last, which is controlled by
State v. Ice,
The circumstances material to our review are -undisputed. In 1992, defendant was charged with, and convicted of, multiple crimes relating to Largo’s kidnapping and murder. Specifically, as pertinent here, a jury convicted defendant of nine counts of aggravated murder, one count of murder, one count of second-degree kidnapping, two counts of first-degree kidnapping, and one count of third-degree assault. The trial court merged the murder conviction into one of the aggravated murder convictions and also merged the various underlying felony assault and kidnapping convictions into other aggravated murder counts and, based on requisite determinations by the jury, imposed a sentence of death on the aggravated murder counts. On direct review, the Oregon Supreme Court reversed defendant’s convictions for murder and aggravated murder based on evidentiary error, but affirmed defendant’s other convictions and remanded the case for further proceedings.
State v. Wilson,
*229
On remand, defendant successfully postponed retrial on the murder and aggravated murder charges while he sought collateral relief. Meanwhile, the state sought to have defendant resentenced on the convictions that had been affirmed by the Oregon Supreme Court. The trial court then sentenced defendant on two counts of first-degree kidnapping (the court merged the second-degree kidnapping count) and one count of third-degree assault. The court imposed a 140-month sentence on one of the first-degree kidnapping counts and a concurrent indeterminate 30-year dangerous offender sentence on the other, as well as a concurrent 18-month sentence for the third-degree assault. In
State v. Wilson,
As noted, defendant’s present appeal concerns his retrial on eight counts of aggravated murder 3 and one count of murder. On retrial, defendant was found guilty of five counts of the lesser-included offense of attempted aggravated murder, each on a different theory, and one count of the lesser-included offense of attempted murder. The jury failed to reach a verdict on three additional counts of aggravated murder, each on a different theory. The court granted a mistrial as to the counts on which the jury had failed to reach a verdict and, at sentencing, merged all of the convictions into a single conviction for attempted aggravated murder and initially imposed an upward departure sentence of 120 months’ imprisonment. The court subsequently amended the judgment to delete the departure sentence and impose a presumptive sentence of 66 months’ imprisonment for attempted aggravated murder, 60 months of which were to run consecutively to defendant’s sentence for first-degree kidnapping, as affirmed by this court in Wilson II. In imposing that consecutive sentence, the trial court determined that *230 the attempted aggravated murder offense “caused a greater or qualitatively different injury or harm to the victim, per ORS 137.123(5)” than the first-degree kidnapping.
We first address defendant’s assignments of error challenging rulings in the course of the retrial on the aggravated murder and murder charges. Defendant first challenges the trial court’s giving of an “acquittal first” instruction pursuant to ORS 136.460(2). As described more fully below, defendant contends that, because his alleged crimes occurred in 1992 and ORS 136.460 was not enacted until 1997, the giving of the statutorily prescribed instruction violated the ex post facto provisions of the state and federal constitutions. ORS 136.460 provides, in pertinent part:
“(1) Upon a charge for a crime consisting of different degrees, the jury may find the defendant not guilty of the degree charged in the accusatory instrument and guilty of any degree inferior thereto or of an attempt to commit the crime or any such inferior degree thereof.
“(2) The jury shall first consider the charged offense. Only if the jury finds the defendant not guilty of the charged offense may the jury consider a lesser included offense.”
That statute was enacted in 1997. Or Laws 1997, ch 511, § 1. Before the enactment of that statute, the Oregon Supreme Court held in
State v. Allen,
Given that timing, defendant argues that giving the “acquittal first” instruction at his retrial violated the
ex post
*231
facto
provisions of Article I, section 21, of the Oregon Constitution and Article I, section 10, of the United States Constitution. In particular, defendant argues that, under both the state and federal constitutional analyses, the giving of the instruction ran afoul of the principle that a law “ ‘that alters the legal rules of evidence, and receives less, or different testimony, than the law required at the time of the commission of the offence,’ ” is an
ex post facto
law.
State v. Fugate,
The state responds, quite cogently, that ORS 136.460 does not alter any legal rule of evidence or alter the type or amount of evidence received at trial at all. In that regard, the state emphasizes that the Oregon Supreme Court has recently explained that the operative species of
ex post facto law
— Colder’s “fourth category” — refers to an evidentiary change that “alters the sufficiency-of-evidence standard or otherwise reduces the quantum of evidence necessary to meet the burden of proof to convict.”
State v. Guzek,
We need not, however, address the dubious proposition that a change in the law concerning the order in which a jury deliberates on charges is tantamount to a law that alters an evidentiary standard. That is so because of the posture in which the matter arises and the manner in which it is framed for our consideration. In particular, defendant contends — or, at least, did in his opening brief — that, as a result of the alleged error, his convictions (for attempted aggravated murder and attempted murder) must be reversed. Defendant also argues, particularly in his reply brief, that the alleged error caused the jury to be unable to reach a verdict on the counts of aggravated murder on which the trial court ultimately granted a mistrial. Thus, defendant seems to argue that the giving of the “acquittal first” instruction both (1) compels reversal of his convictions on lesser-included charges and (2) precludes retrial on charges on which the jury was unable to reach a verdict.
*232 What defendant fails to explain is how any potential error in this instruction could possibly have prejudiced him with regard to the convictions at issue on appeal. That is, the charges at issue here were aggravated murder and murder, but defendant’s convictions were for the lesser-included offenses of attempted aggravated murder and attempted murder. Thus, after receiving the “acquittal first” instruction, the jury (which we presume followed that instruction) proceeded to first acquit defendant of the charged offenses and then considered the lesser-included offenses.
That result in no way implicates the concerns in
Allen.
What the Supreme Court found to be problematic about an “acquittal first” instruction
in. Allen
was that a jury would never reach the point of deliberating on the lesser-included offense, because minority-view jurors would be pressured to convict on the greater offense before the lesser offense could be considered.
To the extent that defendant may be suggesting that
Allen
holds that this type of error can never be harmless— that is, it is something akin to a “structural error” requiring automatic reversal — we disagree. First, the Oregon Supreme Court has repeatedly admonished that the concept of “structural error” is inapposite to Oregon law.
See Ryan v. Palmateer,
In
Allen,
the jury, which had been instructed to consider whether the defendant was guilty of second-degree kidnapping only if it acquitted on the charge of first-degree kidnapping, convicted on the first-degree kidnapping charge.
In the present case, defendant fails to appreciate the substantial difference between what the jury considered in Allen and what the jury considered here. In Allen, after receiving an acquittal first instruction, the jury convicted on the greater offense — and thus never reached the point of deliberating on any lesser offense. Given that the jury never actually considered whether the defendant in Allen had committed second-degree kidnapping, the court declined to affirm a conviction as to that offense. Here, by contrast, the jury acquitted of the greater offenses and convicted on the lesser offenses after due deliberation. Defendant does not explain, and we do not perceive, how any supposed error with regard to the “acquittal first” instruction prejudiced him as to the convictions at issue on appeal.
As noted, defendant also suggests that the “acquittal first” instruction may have impermissibly skewed the jury’s consideration of the three aggravated murder counts on which the jury failed to reach a verdict. The short answer to that suggestion is that it is not cognizable in this appeal. Any “error” in that regard did not, by definition, result in a conviction on those counts, and we do not reverse “hung” juries. 4
In his second assignment of error, defendant challenges the trial court’s failure to grant a mistrial based on alleged prosecutorial misconduct, specifically, allegedly alerting a prosecution witness, who was excluded from the
*234
courtroom during the testimony of other witnesses, to potential lines of inquiry by defense counsel. We review for abuse of discretion,
State v. Bowen,
Defendant next contends that the trial court erred in directing the jury on retrial to accept as already proven that defendant had committed the underlying felonies
{e.g.,
kidnapping and assault) that served as the basis for certain elements of the aggravated murder charges. As noted, the Oregon Supreme Court had affirmed defendant’s convictions on those underlying felonies in
Wilson I,
In his fourth assignment of error, defendant argues that the trial court not only should have merged his convictions on retrial for attempted aggravated murder and attempted murder — which the court did — but should also
*235
have merged those convictions with the convictions for the underlying felonies that were affirmed by this court in
Wilson II,
In
Wilson II,
defendant had taken the position that he could not, in fact, be resentenced on the convictions that the Oregon Supreme Court had affirmed in
Wilson I,
because those convictions originally had merged with his aggravated murder convictions,
see
“We express no opinion on whether separately sentencing those offenses that previously had merged with aggravated murder convictions based on the same criminal conduct may lead to a potential sentencing problem in the future. Defendant appears to be correct that, should he be convicted again on the aggravated murder charges, there is no procedural mechanism for ‘re-merging’ the present sentences into whatever sentence he receives on the aggravated murder convictions, which could implicate the rule of law from [State v. Turner,247 Or 302 ,429 P2d 565 (1967)] that a defendant generally should not be subject to harsher penalties for the same crimes as a result of a successful appeal. Defendant’s argument on this question, however, is not ripe and will not be ripe unless and until he is again convicted of murder or aggravated murder. The error, if any, is not one that has occurred but is one that may occur, depending on future events.”
Id. at 319.
Defendant asserts that that “potential sentencing problem in the future” that we recognized in his previous appeal has now come to pass. He asserts that, under
Turner,
he has been penalized for prevailing in
Wilson I,
because all of his convictions originally were merged into his aggravated murder conviction, but as we noted in
Wilson II,
there exists no mechanism for “re-merging” lesser-included and greater
*236
offenses when they have proceeded separately.
Wilson II,
Defendant’s argument fails for either of two fundamental reasons. First, our speculation in Wilson II about the “potential sentencing problem in the future” was about what might occur should defendant be convicted again of aggravated murder. Defendant, however, was not convicted of aggravated murder. He was convicted of attempted aggravated murder. Defendant appears to assume — incorrectly— either that attempted aggravated murders that happen in the course of committing the felonies of first-degree kidnapping or third-degree assault merge into those offenses or, perhaps, that those offenses merge into the attempted aggravated murder convictions. Either way, defendant is incorrect. Merger of lesser-included offenses into greater offenses is governed by ORS 161.067(1), which provides:
“When the same conduct or criminal episode violates two or more statutory provisions and each provision requires proof of an element that the others do not, there are as many separately punishable offenses as there are separate statutory violations.”
(Emphasis added.)
Kidnapping and assault convictions require proof of the completed crimes of kidnapping and assault; attempted aggravated murder, under any theory, does not require such proof. Attempted aggravated murder, on the other hand, regardless of the theory, requires proof that a defendant “intentionally engages in conduct which constitutes a substantial step toward commission of’ aggravated murder; neither kidnapping nor assault require such proof. Defendant’s assumption that the convictions should have merged therefore is groundless.
Second, even if that problem were somehow surmountable, our observation in
Wilson II
that defendant invokes was based on an incorrect assumption. In particular, the above-quoted statement from
Wilson II
was predicated on our assumption that, under
“State v. Tucker,
315 Or [321, 331,
In his fifth and final assignment of error, defendant challenges the trial court’s imposition of a consecutive sentence based on judicial factfinding, arguing that
Apprendi
and
Blakely
require that facts pertaining to the imposition of consecutive sentences must be found by a jury. Here, as noted,
see
Sentence vacated; remanded for resentencing; otherwise affirmed.
Notes
The details of the incident axe set forth in
State v. Charboneau,
Our analysis and disposition in
Wilson II
are recounted in greater detail below.
See
The prosecution dismissed one of the aggravated murder counts after remand.
Defendant has been diligently pursuing relief in federal courts to prevent the state from retrying him on those counts.
See Wilson v. Czerniak,
