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Mark A. CHRISTESON
State of Missouri vs. Mark A. Christeson
Missouri Supreme Court Case Number: SC82082 (June, 2001)
Missouri Supreme Court Case Number: SC85329 (April, 2004)
Case Facts:
On Saturday, January 31, 1998,
Christeson, 18, and his cousin Jesse Carter, 17, who were living in the
home of a relative, David Bolin, concocted a plan to run away.
The Bolin home was located in a rural area near Vichy, Missouri.
Susan Brouk, along with her children, twelve year old Adrian and nine
year old Kyle, lived about a half mile away.
On Sunday morning, February 1, 1998, after Mr. Bolin left for work,
Christeson and Carter each took shotguns and went to Ms. Brouk's home.
After hiding outside for a few minutes, they entered the home and
found Adrian and Kyle sitting on the living room floor. Ms. Brouk came
in from the kitchen and encountered Carter binding her children's hands
with shoelaces that he had brought for that purpose.
Christeson forced Ms. Brouk into her daughter Adrian's bedroom at
gunpoint, where he then raped her on Adrian's bed. When Christeson
brought her back out to the living room, Carter bound her hands behind
her back with a piece of yellow rope. Ms. Brouk said "you had your fun,
now get out."
At some point during the confrontation, Ms. Brouk and Kyle were both
struck in the head with a blunt object.
About that time, Adrian recognized Carter and said "J.R.," Carter's
nickname, and "Jesse Carter," which prompted Christeson to tell Carter "we
got to get rid of 'em."
They forced Ms. Brouk and her children into the back seat of Ms.
Brouk's Bronco and also loaded her television, VCR, car stereo, video
game player, checkbook, and a few other small items. Christeson drove
down the highway, down a gravel road, and then across a neighbor's field
to a pond at the edge of a wooded area.
They forced Ms. Brouk and her children to the bank of the pond.
Christeson kicked Ms. Brouk just below her ribs with enough force that
she was knocked to the ground.
Christeson then placed his foot on her mid-section, and reached down
and cut her throat with a bone knife. She bled profusely, but she did
not die immediately, and as she lay on the bank of the pond, she told
Adrian and Kyle that she loved them.
Then Christeson cut Kyle's throat twice and held him under the pond
water until he drowned. Carter pushed Kyle's body farther out into the
pond so the body would sink.
At Christeson's direction, Carter retrieved cinder blocks from a
nearby barn, and while there, heard Christeson fire a shot from one of
the shotguns. When Carter returned to the pond, Adrian was struggling to
free herself from Christeson.
Carter held Adrian's feet while Christeson pressed down on her
throat until she suffocated, and Carter then pushed Adrian's body into
the pond. While Ms. Brouk was still alive, but barely breathing,
Christeson grabbed her arms and Carter grabbed her legs, and they threw
her into the pond on top of her children's bodies. As she drowned,
Carter went into the woods to get a long stick, which he used to push
the Brouks' bodies further out into the pond.
Christeson and Carter returned to Mr. Bolin's property in the Bronco
and parked it near a garbage pile. They took one of the shotguns back
into Mr. Bolin's house, loaded their personal belongings into an
Oldsmobile, and then drove the Oldsmobile back to the garbage pile and
transferred their belongings to the Bronco. At that point, they drove
off in the Bronco, eventually heading west on Interstate 44.
Ms. Brouk's sister, Kay Hayes, thought it was unusual that Ms. Brouk
and her children did not come to Sunday dinner, as planned, but she was
not concerned until Tuesday evening, when she called Ms. Brouk's home
and there was no answer. That evening Ms. Hayes called another sister,
Joy Lemoine, to inquire if she had heard from Ms. Brouk, but she had had
no contact either.
When family members went to Ms. Brouk's house the next evening, they
discovered that Ms. Brouk's prescription glasses and the children's and
Ms. Brouk's coats were still in the house and that the television, VCR,
and Bronco were missing. They called the police, and that night officers
from the Maries County Sheriff's Department secured the home and
searched the premises.
The next morning, officers in a Missouri State Highway Patrol
helicopter conducting an aerial search spotted a body floating in a pond
located slightly southeast of the Brouk's residence. After landing the
helicopter in a field just south of the pond, they found the bodies of
Ms. Brouk, Adrian, and Kyle partially submerged.
The officers then investigated the area around the pond and found a
sixteen-gauge shotgun shell on the south bank, some leaves and soil
splattered with blood, shoe impressions, and two cinder blocks on the
west bank near the area where the bodies were recovered. There were also
tire impressions leading from the pond to the garbage pile on Mr.
Bolin's property where Christeson and Carter had parked the Bronco.
In the meantime, Christeson and Carter were driving from Missouri to
California. On the way, they sold several items of Ms. Brouk's property
to pay for gas and food. Christeson also pawned the sixteen-gauge
shotgun at a pawnshop in Amarillo, Texas.
On February 9, 1998, a detective with the Riverside County Sheriff's
Department, stationed in Blythe, California, recognized Christeson and
Carter from their photographs on a flyer that had been circulated by law
enforcement officials, and later that day the fugitives were arrested.
Missouri officials continued to investigate the crimes. A medical
examiner's autopsy report showed that the cuts to Ms. Brouk's neck were
not severe enough to cause her death immediately and that the actual
cause of death was drowning. Autopsies also revealed that Ms. Brouk and
Kyle had hemorrhaging or bleeding under the scalp, indicating a blunt
impact injury or blow to the head, and that there were two superficial
cuts across Kyle's neck, but that he, too, died from drowning. Adrian
died from suffocation, but there also was a small, shallow puncture
wound in Adrian's left arm that could have been caused by a pellet from
a shotgun shell, although no pellet was present. DNA testing performed
by the Missouri State Highway Patrol Crime Laboratory established that
genetic material from semen recovered from Ms. Brouk's body and from
Adrian's sheets matched Christeson's genetic profile. Firearms-identification
testing established conclusively that the sixteen-gauge shotgun that
Christeson pawned in Texas was the one that fired the shell found on the
bank of the pond.
Case Style: State of Missouri, Respondent, v. Mark A.
Christeson, Appellant.
Case Number: SC82082
Handdown Date: 06/26/2001
Appeal From: Circuit Court of Vernon County, Hon. C. David
Darnold
Opinion Summary:
In January 1989 in Maries County, Mark Christeson
raped Susan Brouk and, with his cousin, forced Susan and her two
children -- nine-year old Kyle and twelve-year-old Adrian -- into her
Bronco and drove them to a neighbor's pond. Christeson cut Susan's
throat with a knife. Before Susan died, Christeson cut Kyle's throat and
held him in the pond until he drowned. He also pressed down on Adrian's
throat until she suffocated and pushed her body into the pond.
Christeson and his cousin threw Susan into the pond on top of her
children's bodies, and she drowned. On a change of venue to Vernon
County, a jury found Christeson guilty of three counts of first-degree
murder. He was sentenced to death on each count.
AFFIRMED.
Court en banc holds:
(1) A claim of an attorney's conflict of interest
based on trial court error in failing to grant the attorney's motion to
withdraw -- not on the attorney's alleged misconduct or ineffectiveness
-- is properly brought as part of a direct appeal.
(2) The court did not abuse its discretion in denying a defense
attorney's motion to withdraw where there was no real conflict of
interest between the attorney and the potential state witness she
represented in an unrelated matter.
(3) Christeson failed to prove he was prejudiced by the court's denial
of his request for a continuance. His cousin confessed to his role in
the crime fourteen months before Christeson's trial and was deposed for
more than six hours by Christeson's attorneys. At trial, defense counsel
elicited detailed testimony from the cousin's psychological evaluators.
(4) The court did not abuse its discretion in denying individual voir
dire or motions to strike two jurors where there was no evidence that a
newspaper article published about the crime before jury selection would
prevent any juror from impartially judging Christeson.
(5) The court did not abuse its discretion in striking for cause a
venireperson who equivocated about his ability to impose the death
penalty in a capital case and his unequivocal assertion that he could
not sign a verdict form assessing the death penalty.
(6) No error occurred in statements made by the prosecutor during voir
dire. One is misquoted by Christeson and is not improper. The others
were not preserved by timely objections at trial and do not approach the
manifest injustice standard necessary for plain error relief.
(7) An autopsy photo showing the injuries to Susan Brouk's head was not
improperly admitted because it was relevant to help the jury understand
the nature, location and timing of her injuries.
(8) Testimony of the officer who took the cousin's statement was
properly admitted as a prior consistent statement to rehabilitate the
cousin's testimony.
(9) Juror curiosity about the Bronco, which indisputably was in
Christeson's possession during the crimes, does not constitute juror
misconduct due to deliberation of the facts before the case was
submitted.
(10) No error occurred in statements made by the prosecutor during his
guilt phase closing argument. One is taken out of context by Christeson
and is not improper. The others were not preserved by timely objections
at trial and do not approach the manifest injustice standard necessary
for plain error relief.
(11) No plain error was evident in admitting, during the penalty phase,
testimony about unadjudicated criminal conduct committed by Christeson
while he awaited trial for the Brouk murders.
(12) No error occurred in statements made by the prosecutor during his
penalty phase closing argument. One is merely a statement that murder is
the worst crime in society and that is why it is the only crime for
which the death penalty is available. The others were not preserved by
timely objections at trial and do not show error, plain or otherwise.
(13) The statutory aggravating circumstances are not impermissibly
duplicative.
(14) Christeson is not entitled to a new trial because his trial
transcript is not materially inaccurate. As to most claimed inaccuracies,
he fails to specify what the mistake was or how it affects his appeal.
The rest either are trivial or inconsequential, or no prejudice resulted.
(15) The death penalty in this case passes independent review pursuant
to section 565.035.
Citation:
Opinion Author: Stephen N. Limbaugh, Jr., Judge
Opinion Vote: AFFIRMED. Price, C.J., White,
Holstein, Wolff and Benton, JJ., concur. Stith, J., not participating.
Opinion:
This is an appeal of defendant Mark A. Christeson's
conviction and death sentence for the 1998 murders of Susan Brouk and
her two children, Adrian and Kyle. Because the death penalty was imposed,
this Court has exclusive jurisdiction of the appeal. Mo. Const. art. V,
sec. 3. The judgment is affirmed.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual Overview
The facts, which this Court reviews in the light most
favorable to the verdict, State v. Johns, 34 S.W.3d 93, 103 (Mo.
banc 2000), cert. denied, __ U.S. __, 121 S.Ct. 1745 (2001), are
as follows:
On Saturday, January 31, 1998, Christeson, 18, and
his cousin Jesse Carter, 17, who were living in the home of a relative,
David Bolin, concocted a plan to run away. The Bolin home was located in
a rural area near Vichy, Missouri. Susan Brouk, along with her children,
twelve year old Adrian and nine year old Kyle, lived about a half mile
away. On Sunday morning, February 1, 1998, after Mr. Bolin left for work,
Christeson and Carter each took shotguns and went to Ms. Brouk's home.
After hiding outside for a few minutes, they entered the home and found
Adrian and Kyle sitting on the living room floor. Ms. Brouk came in from
the kitchen and encountered Carter binding her children's hands with
shoelaces that he had brought for that purpose. Christeson forced Ms.
Brouk into her daughter Adrian's bedroom at gunpoint, where he then
raped her on Adrian's bed. When Christeson brought her back out to the
living room, Carter bound her hands behind her back with a piece of
yellow rope. Ms. Brouk said "you had your fun, now get out." At some
point during the confrontation, Ms. Brouk and Kyle were both struck in
the head with a blunt object.
About that time, Adrian recognized Carter and said "J.R.,"
Carter's nickname, and "Jesse Carter," which prompted Christeson to tell
Carter "we got to get rid of 'em." They forced Ms. Brouk and her
children into the back seat of Ms. Brouk's Bronco and also loaded her
television, VCR, car stereo, video game player, checkbook, and a few
other small items. Christeson drove down the highway, down a gravel road,
and then across a neighbor's field to a pond at the edge of a wooded
area.
They forced Ms. Brouk and her children to the bank of
the pond. Christeson kicked Ms. Brouk just below her ribs with enough
force that she was knocked to the ground. Christeson then placed his
foot on her mid-section, and reached down and cut her throat with a bone
knife. She bled profusely, but she did not die immediately, and as she
lay on the bank of the pond, she told Adrian and Kyle that she loved
them. Then Christeson cut Kyle's throat twice and held him under the
pond water until he drowned. Carter pushed Kyle's body farther out into
the pond so the body would sink. At Christeson's direction, Carter
retrieved cinder blocks from a nearby barn, and while there, heard
Christeson fire a shot from one of the shotguns. When Carter returned to
the pond, Adrian was struggling to free herself from Christeson. Carter
held Adrian's feet while Christeson pressed down on her throat until she
suffocated, and Carter then pushed Adrian's body into the pond. While Ms.
Brouk was still alive, but barely breathing, Christeson grabbed her arms
and Carter grabbed her legs, and they threw her into the pond on top of
her children's bodies. As she drowned, Carter went into the woods to get
a long stick, which he used to push the Brouks' bodies further out into
the pond.
Christeson and Carter returned to Mr. Bolin's
property in the Bronco and parked it near a garbage pile. They took one
of the shotguns back into Mr. Bolin's house, loaded their personal
belongings into an Oldsmobile, and then drove the Oldsmobile back to the
garbage pile and transferred their belongings to the Bronco. At that
point, they drove off in the Bronco, eventually heading west on
Interstate 44.
Ms. Brouk's sister, Kay Hayes, thought it was unusual
that Ms. Brouk and her children did not come to Sunday dinner, as
planned, but she was not concerned until Tuesday evening, when she
called Ms. Brouk's home and there was no answer. That evening Ms. Hayes
called another sister, Joy Lemoine, to inquire if she had heard from Ms.
Brouk, but she had had no contact either. When family members went to Ms.
Brouk's house the next evening, they discovered that Ms. Brouk's
prescription glasses and the children's and Ms. Brouk's coats were still
in the house and that the television, VCR, and Bronco were missing. They
called the police, and that night officers from the Maries County
Sheriff's Department secured the home and searched the premises.
The next morning, officers in a Missouri State
Highway Patrol helicopter conducting an aerial search spotted a body
floating in a pond located slightly southeast of the Brouk's residence.
After landing the helicopter in a field just south of the pond, they
found the bodies of Ms. Brouk, Adrian, and Kyle partially submerged. The
officers then investigated the area around the pond and found a sixteen-gauge
shotgun shell on the south bank, some leaves and soil splattered with
blood, shoe impressions, and two cinder blocks on the west bank near the
area where the bodies were recovered. There were also tire impressions
leading from the pond to the garbage pile on Mr. Bolin's property where
Christeson and Carter had parked the Bronco.
In the meantime, Christeson and Carter were driving
from Missouri to California. On the way, they sold several items of Ms.
Brouk's property to pay for gas and food. Christeson also pawned the
sixteen-gauge shotgun at a pawnshop in Amarillo, Texas. On February 9,
1998, a detective with the Riverside County Sheriff's Department,
stationed in Blythe, California, recognized Christeson and Carter from
their photographs on a flyer that had been circulated by law enforcement
officials, and later that day the fugitives were arrested.
Missouri officials continued to investigate the
crimes. A medical examiner's autopsy report showed that the cuts to Ms.
Brouk's neck were not severe enough to cause her death immediately and
that the actual cause of death was drowning. Autopsies also revealed
that Ms. Brouk and Kyle had hemorrhaging or bleeding under the scalp,
indicating a blunt impact injury or blow to the head, and that there
were two superficial cuts across Kyle's neck, but that he, too, died
from drowning. Adrian died from suffocation, but there also was a small,
shallow puncture wound in Adrian's left arm that could have been caused
by a pellet from a shotgun shell, although no pellet was present. DNA
testing performed by the Missouri State Highway Patrol Crime Laboratory
established that genetic material from semen recovered from Ms. Brouk's
body and from Adrian's sheets matched Christeson's genetic profile.
Firearms-identification testing established conclusively that the
sixteen-gauge shotgun that Christeson pawned in Texas was the one that
fired the shell found on the bank of the pond.
B. Proceedings at Trial
The case was tried in Vernon County on a change of
venue from Maries County. The state's evidence was that set out above in
the factual overview. Defendant Christeson took the witness stand to
deny his involvement in the murders. He testified that he had a secret
sexual relationship with Ms. Brouk and that at about noon on Saturday,
January 31, 1998, he had sex with her on Adrian's bed. In addition, he
claimed that on the morning of February 1, 1998, Carter stole Ms.
Brouk's Bronco and asked Christeson to run away with him and that
Christeson did so simply because he, too, wanted to run away.
The jury returned verdicts of guilty for each of the
three counts of murder in the first degree and the case proceeded to the
penalty phase. The state's witnesses included Mike Wagner, who testified
that Christeson sodomized him when they shared a cell in February 1999,
while incarcerated in the Vernon County jail. Among the state's other
witnesses was Ms. Brouk's younger sister, Joy Lemoine, who gave victim
impact testimony. In mitigation, the defense called Christeson's mother,
aunt, and former girlfriend, each of whom testified about Christeson's
difficult, abusive and unhappy upbringing. The defense also called Dr.
Wanda Draper, a psychologist, who confirmed that Christeson had several
unresolved traumatic experiences from his childhood.
At the conclusion of penalty phase, the jury found four aggravating
circumstances in the murder of Ms. Brouk: that the murder was committed
during the unlawful homicide of her daughter, Adrian; that the murder
was committed during the unlawful homicide of her son, Kyle; that the
murder was committed during the perpetration of rape; and that the
murder involved depravity of mind and was therefore outrageously and
wantonly vile, horrible, and inhuman. The jury found three aggravating
circumstances in the murders of Adrian and Kyle: that the murders were
committed during the unlawful homicide of their mother; that the murders
were committed during the unlawful homicide of each other; and that the
murders involved depravity of mind and were therefore outrageously and
wantonly vile, horrible, and inhuman. The jury returned verdicts of
death on all three counts. On October 8, 1999, the trial court imposed
sentence in accordance with the recommendation of the jury. This appeal
followed.
II. ALLEGATIONS OF PRE-TRIAL ERROR
A. Defense Counsel's Motion To Withdraw
Christeson claims that the trial court erred in
denying his trial counsel's motion to withdraw as his attorney, thereby
denying him his rights to due process, a fair trial, conflict-free
counsel, effective assistance of counsel, and freedom from cruel and
unusual punishment as provided under amendments V, VI, VIII, and XIV of
the United States Constitution and article I, sections 10, 18(a), and 21
of the Missouri Constitution. Christeson relies on these same federal
and state constitutional provisions for each point of error on appeal.
The motion to withdraw, filed about three months
before trial, was based on a conflict of interest asserted by Valerie
Leftwich, one of Christeson's two trial attorneys. At the hearing on the
motion, Leftwich explained that several years ago she had represented
Michael Gibbs, whom the state had endorsed as a witness, in an unrelated
matter and that she was in possession of confidential information
regarding that representation. Ms. Leftwich believed that a conflict of
interest existed under the Rules of Professional Conduct because she
might be forced to disclose the confidential information if the state
called Gibbs as a witness and she had to cross-examine him.
Alternatively, Ms. Leftwich believed that if the defense needed to call
Gibbs, the state would be able to cross-examine him to show that he
testified favorably for Christeson because of his connection with Ms.
Leftwich. In response to these concerns, the prosecutor stipulated on
the record that Gibbs would not be called as a witness for the state.
However, one of the state's penalty phase witnesses, Robert Milner,
brought Gibbs into the case, at least tangentially, by testifying that
while he was in jail with Christeson and Gibbs, he overheard Christeson
tell Gibbs, "Of course I did, but they ain't got shit on me." The
statement went unchallenged, although it was unclear whether Christeson
was referring to the murders, the jail house sodomy, or some other
misconduct. In any event, Christeson also claims that Ms. Leftwich's
conflict prevented her from calling Gibbs to dispute that the statement
was made.
As a preliminary matter, the state, citing State v.
Owsley, 959 S.W.2d 789, 793 (Mo. banc 1997), cert. denied,
525 U.S. 882 (1998); State v. Giaimo, 968 S.W.2d 157, 159
(Mo. App. 1998); and State v. Mitchell, 41 S.W.3d 574 (Mo.
App. 2001), argues that this Court need not address the claim because it
is actually a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, which is not
reviewable on direct appeal. Owsley involved a similar claim that
the trial court erred in denying the defendant's motions to dismiss his
counsel because there was an alleged conflict between the defendant and
his lawyer. Owsley, 959 S.W.2d at 792. This Court held that the
claim of conflict should have been presented in a Rule 29.15 motion, but
only to the extent that the claim was based on counsel's alleged
misconduct at trial. Id. at 793. Conversely, to the extent that
the claim of conflict was based on the trial court's actual ruling on
the motion, the claim was properly brought as part of the direct appeal.
Neither Giaimo nor Mitchell holds differently. Here,
Christeson's claim is not based on counsel's alleged misconduct or
ineffectiveness at trial, but rather trial court error in failing to
grant the motion to withdraw, and ineffective assistance of counsel is
only an alleged potential consequence of the trial court error.
On the merits, the determination of whether defense
counsel should be allowed to withdraw is a matter within the discretion
of the trial court, and this Court's review is for abuse of that
discretion. State v. Hornbuckle, 769 S.W.2d 89, 96 (Mo.
banc 1989), cert. denied, 493 U.S. 860 (1989). Judicial
discretion is abused when the trial court's ruling is clearly against
the logic of the circumstances then before the court and is so arbitrary
and unreasonable as to shock the sense of justice and indicate a lack of
careful consideration. State v. Gardner, 8 S.W.3d 66, 73 (Mo.
banc 1999).
Christeson relies on two provisions of the Rules of
Professional Conduct, Rule 4-1.6(a) and Rule 4-1.7(b), to argue that Ms.
Leftwich had a conflict of interest. Rule 4-1.6(a), states in pertinent
part that "[a] lawyer shall not reveal information relating to
representation of a client unless the client consents after consultation.
. . ." Rule 4-1.7(b) states in pertinent part that "[a] lawyer shall not
represent a client if the representation of that client may be
materially limited by the lawyer's responsibilities to another client."
These rules, however, are not implicated in this situation. Because the
state agreed not to call Gibbs as a witness, Ms. Leftwich had no need to
cross-examine him with confidential information she may have obtained
from the earlier representation. Furthermore, there is simply no record
that any of the supposed confidential information was even potentially
relevant to Christeson's case. The alleged conflict based on Gibbs'
availability as a defense witness fares no better. It is pure
speculation that Gibbs would have testified favorably for Christeson,
and the defense made no offer of proof to that effect. Assuming Gibbs
would have so testified, the argument that the State might gain some
counter advantage by cross-examining Gibbs to suggest that his testimony
favored Christeson because of Gibbs' relationship with Ms. Leftwich is
tenuous, at best. The defense fails to explain how or why that prior
relationship could have influenced Gibbs' testimony, much less that the
state would have pursued such a seemingly pointless matter on cross-examination.
In the absence of a real, rather than perceived, conflict of interest,
the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion to
withdraw.
B. Denial of Continuance
Christeson claims that the trial court erred in
denying his request for a continuance based on the state's endorsement
of Carter as a witness only thirteen days before trial. Due to the late
endorsement, Christeson alleges that he was not afforded an adequate
opportunity to investigate and challenge Carter's testimony and to
interview doctors who evaluated Carter's mental health.
The decision to grant a continuance is within the
sound discretion of the trial court. State v. Wolfe, 13
S.W.3d 248, 261 (Mo. banc 2000), cert. denied, __ U.S.__, 121
S.Ct. 114 (2000). Reversal is warranted only upon a very strong showing
that the court abused its discretion and prejudice resulted. State v.
Middleton, 995 S.W.2d 443, 465 (Mo. banc 1999). A continuance for
counsel's trial preparation is not warranted when counsel had adequate
time to prepare. Id.
Carter's identity and involvement were known to
defense counsel for almost a year and a half before the trial began. His
confession was provided fourteen months before trial. Defense counsel
conducted a more than six hour long deposition of Carter two weeks
before he testified. At trial, defense counsel called two of Carter's
psychological evaluators and questioned them in detail about Carter's
mental health issues. Christeson has not shown what evidence he would
have developed had a continuance been granted; thus, he has not made the
required strong showing of prejudice. See State v. Thompson,
985 S.W.2d 779, 785 (Mo. banc 1999); Middleton, 995 S.W.2d at
465.
III. VOIR DIRE
A. Refusal to allow individual questioning.
Christeson argues that the trial court erred by
overruling his motions to allow individual questioning during voir dire,
which, he alleges, was necessitated by pre-trial publicity. Christeson
does not allege that any persons who served on his jury actually held
opinions that prevented them from impartially deciding his guilt or
innocence. Instead, his allegation, as we understand it, is that in
light of a newspaper article published the day before jury selection
began, the questioning the trial court allowed during voir dire was
insufficient to ensure that the jury was impartial.
The newspaper article appeared on the front page of
the Nevada Daily Mail on August 25, 1999. It reported, based on
preliminary hearing testimony later excluded by the court, that trouble
between Christeson and Ms. Brouk began in January 1998, when she asked
Christeson and Carter not to hunt on her property because her son played
outside. The article also stated that Adrian Brouk had tried to escape,
but Christeson captured her, which was not part of the trial testimony.
The article also noted that Christeson would be brought to the courtroom
early each morning so the jurors would not see him in leg irons and
shackles.
Individual voir dire is not required in death penalty
cases. State v. Brown, 998 S.W.2d 531, 546 (Mo. banc 1999),
cert. denied, 528 U.S. 979 (1999). Control of voir dire is
within the discretion of the trial judge; only abuse of discretion and
likely injury justify reversal. State v. Barton, 998 S.W.2d
19, 25 (Mo. banc 1999), cert. denied, 528 U.S. 1121
(1999). The trial court abuses its discretion only if the voir dire
permitted does not allow for the discovery of bias, prejudice, or
partiality. Id. The relevant question is not whether there was
publicity about a case, or even whether a venireperson had formed an
opinion based on pre-trial publicity, but whether the jurors had such
fixed opinions about the case that they could not impartially judge the
defendant's guilt or innocence under the law. Id.
To address the concern about potential publicity, the
court allowed counsel to ask whether any venirepersons had read the
newspaper article or had otherwise been exposed to pre-trial publicity
about Christeson's case and, if so, whether they had formed an opinion
about his guilt or innocence as a result. Additionally, as to those
venirepersons who had formed an opinion, counsel was allowed to ask
whether they could set aside that opinion and decide Christeson's guilt
or innocence based solely on the evidence presented at trial. To
alleviate Christeson's particularized concern that prospective jurors
who had not read the article might be exposed to the content of the
article during voir dire, the court divided the jurors into small groups
for questioning and prohibited inquiries about the jurors' specific
recollections of the content of the article. Most important, the record
is clear that none of the jurors selected for the trial indicated that
they held an opinion about Christeson's guilt before the evidence was
presented or that they could not decide his guilt or innocence based on
the evidence. For these reasons, the trial court did not abuse its
discretion in denying individual voir dire.
Christeson also raises the related claim that the
trial court erred in denying his motions to strike two jurors, Gary
Ashby and Elaine Allen, for cause because of their exposure to the
newspaper article. Contrary to Christeson's assertion, the record shows
that neither juror actually read the article, but that both merely heard
other people talking about it. Furthermore, both jurors said they had
not formed any opinion about Christeson's guilt and would decide the
case on the evidence presented. The trial court did not abuse its
discretion in denying the motions to strike for cause. See State v.
Smith, 32 S.W.3d 532, 544 (Mo. banc 2000); State v. Johnson,
22 S.W.3d 183, 187 (Mo. banc 2000), cert. denied,
__U.S.__, 121 S.Ct. 322 (2000).
B. Venireperson Kent Thompson
Christeson claims that the trial court erred in
striking venireperson Kent Thompson for cause at the state's request. In
response to the voir dire questions, Thompson first indicated that he
could vote to impose the death penalty, then said he was uncertain, then
said he could not sign his name on the verdict form as a foreperson, and
finally said he could "consider" the death penalty. These responses,
according to Christeson, did not disqualify Thompson from serving.
During voir dire, the following dialogue took place:
PROSECUTOR: Having reached the final point of
decision . . . could you vote for life in prison without parole?
VENIREPERSON THOMPSON: Yes.
Q: Could you vote for the other alternative of the death penalty?
A: Yes.
Q: Is there any hesitation, sir? You seem to be
thinking about that as you were getting ready to answer, and
certainly giving something some thought is often a good idea.
A: It would be hard.
Q: Okay. Would it be fair to say you have some uncertainty about one
or the other of those penalties?
A: Uncertainty about death.
The subject was addressed again during later
questioning:
PROSECUTOR: You were saying you had a hard time
with the death penalty if I understood what you were saying; correct?
VENIREPERSON THOMPSON: Yes.
Q: Mr. Thompson, I want you to assume that not only are you on this
jury but that you have been elected foreperson of the jury. I will
tell you that while the jury -- the vote of jury [sic] must be
unanimous as to punishment, either for life or for death, that the
foreperson of the jury would be the person that would come out and
announce the verdict in open court. Do you think you could come out
into open court and announce a death verdict?
MS. LEFTWICH: I'm going to object, your honor. I think is [sic]
inappropriate line of questioning under the law, and it misstates
the law. He doesn't have to come out and announce the verdict. The
foreperson signs on the line.
PROSECUTOR: Well, I'll get to that too, and I think this line of
questioning is specifically approved by the Supreme Court.
THE COURT: The court will overrule that objection. Go ahead.
PROSECUTOR: You may answer, sir.
VENIREPERSON THOMPSON: Would you repeat that again.
Q: All right, understand that while the verdict must be unanimous,
that when the jury comes out, it is the foreperson of the jury who
turns over the verdict and announces the death verdict if that were
your conclusion in open court. Do you think you could do that?
A: No.
Q: No. I'll ask the next question just to make it clear. I will tell
you again that while the verdict must be unanimous, the verdict is
signed by the foreperson alone. Could you sign a death verdict?
A: No.
Thereafter, defense counsel questioned Mr. Thompson
in an attempt to rehabilitate him:
MS. LEFTWICH: One more, Mr. Thompson. I missed
you for a minute. Okay, again are you telling me--you talked to Mr.
Ahsens previously about the death penalty. I think you finally
indicated that you wouldn't be--you didn't think you [could] sign a
verdict form imposing the death penalty; is that correct?
VENIREPERSON THOMPSON: Yes.
Q: Could you--Could you consider the death penalty after you had
found someone guilty of one, two or three first degree murders?
A: Yes.
Q: Okay you will be able to consider it?
A: (Nods head.)
Q: Is that yes?
A: Yes.
In striking venireperson Thompson for cause, the
court stated:
[M]y impression was that he was not . . . for the
death penalty. He had a hard time even saying -- looking at him and
watching him, he'd look down and, very softly, he said -- he finally
said he might be able to vote for the death penalty. But he never
said he could sign a verdict. I think I'm going to strike . . . as
not being able to realistically, I think, substantially comply with
the law.
A trial court's ruling on a challenge for cause will
be upheld on appeal unless it is clearly against the evidence and is a
clear abuse of discretion. State v. Smith, 32 S.W.3d 532,
544 (Mo. banc 2000). "The relevant question is whether a venireperson's
beliefs preclude following the court's instructions so as to 'prevent or
substantially impair the performance of his duties as a juror in
accordance with his instructions and his oath.'" State v.
Johnson, 22 S.W.3d 183, 187 (Mo. banc 2000), cert. denied,
__U.S.__, 121 S.Ct. 322 (2000) (quoting Wainwright v. Witt,
469 U.S. 412, 424 (1985)). A venireperson's qualifications as a
prospective juror are not determined by an answer to a single question,
but by the entire examination. Id. at 188. The trial court is in
the best position to evaluate a venireperson's qualifications to serve
as a juror and has broad discretion in making the evaluation. Id.
A venireperson's equivocation about his ability to
impose the death penalty in a capital case, especially when coupled with
an unequivocal statement that he could not sign a verdict of death,
provides a basis to exclude him from the jury. See Smith, 32 S.W.3d
at 544; Johnson, 22 S.W.3d at 186. Christeson's claim, as we
understand it, is that the trial court's ruling was based solely on
Thompson's unwillingness to sign a verdict of death, which, according to
Christeson's reading of Wainwright v. Witt, 469 U.S. 412
(1985), and other Supreme Court precedents, is alone insufficient to
disqualify Thompson from serving. In fact, the Supreme Court has not
addressed the precise issue here presented: Whether a prospective
juror's unwillingness to sign a death verdict as a jury foreman will "prevent
or substantially impair the performance of his duties as a juror . . .,"
even though that juror is otherwise willing to consider imposition of
the death penalty.
In this case, however, it does not matter. Regardless
of Thompson's unwillingness to sign a death verdict, he was equivocal in
his responses about his ability to impose the death penalty, which is an
independent basis for the trial court's discretionary ruling. State v.
Rousan, 961 S.W.2d 831, 840 (Mo. banc 1998), cert.
denied, 524 U.S. 961 (1998); State v. Roberts, 948 S.W.2d
577, 597 (Mo. banc 1997), cert. denied, 522 U.S. 1056
(1997). Despite Christeson's tacit assumption to the contrary,
Thompson's answers to defense counsel's rehabilitative questions did not
reconcile with his earlier answers to the state's questions, nor was he
asked to reconcile those answers. Under these circumstances, this Court
will not dispute the trial court's evaluation that the answers, on the
whole, were equivocal and, hence, disqualifying. In light of Thompson's
equivocation about imposing the death penalty, and his unequivocal
assertion that he could not sign a verdict form assessing the death
penalty, the record supports the conclusion that his views would have
substantially impaired the performance of his duties as a juror. The
trial court did not abuse its discretion in striking him for cause.
C.Prosecutor's Improper Comments
Christeson next claims that the trial court erred in
overruling his objections, and in not declaring a mistrial sua
sponte, when the prosecutor made nine allegedly improper statements
during voir dire. However, only one of the allegedly improper comments
was actually preserved for review by a timely objection. The others will
be reviewed only for manifest injustice under the plain error rule, Rule
30.20.
The preserved claim is that the prosecutor misstated
the law in reference to penalty phase when he remarked, "You're no
longer interested in whether the defendant is guilty or not guilty; you
have already made that decision." To support this claim, Christeson
cites State v. Chaney, 967 S.W.2d 47, 60 (Mo. banc 1998),
cert. denied, 525 U.S. 1021 (1998), which implies that even when
guilt has been decided, residual doubt may linger and influence the jury
in the penalty phase. Taken in context, however, the prosecutor's remark
was merely an explanation to the jury that in the punishment phase they
were to decide punishment, having already determined guilt in the guilt
phase. Christeson has not shown that the prosecutor misstated the law.
Christeson requests plain error relief regarding the
remaining eight comments. Christeson's challenge to one of the comments
-- that the prosecutor said that the jury's verdict "may" be unanimous
-- misquotes the comment because the prosecutor actually said "must."
The other comments are: 1) "Mr. Garrabrant is a well-trained and
experienced prosecutor. Murder is, however, unusual in Vienna, Missouri,
so he has wisely asked for help;" 2) "The defense will present you
evidence or argue factors that they feel make the death penalty
inappropriate;" 3) ". . . it's very likely in this case there will be
evidence from both sides in the second part;" 4) "You then have to
decide whether mitigating circumstances which are offered by the defense
outweigh it;" 5) "You understand too, that the defense does not have to
prove those mitigating circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt or any
other way;" 6) ". . . any mitigating circumstances that are presented by
the defense . . . They will present that evidence, you will decide
whether you believe it or not;" 7) "The governor has signed them [statutory
aggravating circumstances] into law."
These statements are improper, Christeson contends,
because the prosecutor inserted his personal opinion, compared his case
to others, and/or misstated the law, giving the defense a burden of
proof or production. However, review of the record shows that, in
context, most of these statements were legitimate attempts to explain
the mechanics of the trial process and the role of the jury in assessing
evidence presented by the state or the defendant. The two comments that
may not fit that category are no less innocuous. The comment that "Mr.
Garrabrant is a well-trained and experienced prosecutor. Murder is,
however, unusual in Vienna, Missouri, so he has wisely asked for help"
does not imply any personal opinion about Christeson's case; rather, it
suggested that the local prosecutor was inexperienced. The comment that
"[t]he governor has signed them [statutory aggravating circumstances]
into law" in no way suggested, as Christeson argues, that the governor
had decided the aggravators applied to his case. Even if these comments
were somehow erroneous, they do not approach the standard of manifest
injustice necessary for plain error relief under Rule 30.20.
IV. GUILT PHASE
A. Admission of Photograph
Christeson claims the trial court abused its
discretion by admitting an autopsy photograph depicting Ms. Brouk's
scalp with the skin pulled back to reveal the injury to her head. His
argument is that the photograph should have been excluded because it was
offered only to inflame the passions of the jury, and it was irrelevant
because no evidence tended to show that Christeson caused Ms. Brouk's
head injury.
The trial court has broad discretion in determining
the admissibility of photographs. State v. Middleton, 995
S.W.2d 443, 462 (Mo. banc 1999). "Photographs, although gruesome, may be
admitted where they show the nature and location of wounds, where they
enable the jury to better understand the testimony, and where they aid
in establishing any element of the state's case." Id. (quoting
State v. Murray, 744 S.W.2d 762, 772 (Mo. banc 1988), cert.
denied, 488 U.S. 371 (1988)); State v. Rhodes, 988
S.W.2d 521, 524 (Mo. banc 1999).
As with the victim in Rhodes, Ms. Brouk's hair
obscured the area of the injury, and the photograph helped the jury
understand the nature and location of her injury. Christeson is correct
that no other evidence showed that he inflicted Ms. Brouk's head injury,
but his argument overlooks the fact that the presence of the injury
itself, attested to by the medical examiner, supports the inference that
it was sustained at the time she was murdered. The photograph is
therefore relevant. The point is denied.
B. Improper Bolstering
Christeson claims that the trial court plainly erred
in overruling his objections to portions of the state's direct
examination of Carter and of Sgt. Roark, the officer who took Carter's
confession. His specific claim is that the state was permitted to
improperly bolster Carter's testimony. Christeson concedes that review
is for plain error under Rule 30.20 because his objection to Carter's
testimony was not on the basis of bolstering and his objection to Sgt.
Roark's testimony was not included in his motion for new trial.
Regardless, there was no error in the first place.
"Improper bolstering occurs when an out-of-court
statement of a witness is offered solely to duplicate or corroborate
trial testimony." State v. Wolfe, 13 S.W.3d 248, 257 (Mo. banc
2000), cert. denied, __ U.S. __, 121 S.Ct. 114 (2000).
According to Christeson, improper bolstering took place at the
conclusion of Carter's direct examination when Carter summarized his
testimony. However, this summary did not involve a single out-of-court
statement, so no error occurred.
Christeson contends that by eliciting testimony from
Sgt. Roark after Carter testified that recounted Carter's out-of-court
statements, the prosecution guided the jury by repetition into deciding
his guilt and penalty. However, defense counsel's cross-examination of
Carter, and of other witnesses, tended to show that Carter made
contradictory statements and that he may have fabricated his testimony
in exchange for a plea agreement. In this situation, Sgt. Roark's
testimony was properly admitted as a prior consistent statement. In
State v. Ramsey, 864 S.W.2d 320, 329 (Mo. banc 1993), cert.
denied, 511 U.S. 1078 (1994) (citations omitted), this Court
explained that "[p]rior consistent statements are admissible for the
purpose of rehabilitating a witness whose credibility has been attacked
by an express or implied claim of recent fabrication of trial testimony."
There was no error.
C. Juror Misconduct
Christeson contends that the trial court abused its
discretion in denying his motion for a mistrial when, during the state's
case, a member of the jury sent a note to the court asking if the jury
could see the Bronco. The note, Christeson explains, and the court's
later discussions with the juror, revealed that the jury began
deliberating before the cause was submitted to them. The note stated, "Judge,
Is there any way we can see the actual Bronco? F.J. Jeffries." The court
called Ms. Jeffries to the bench and the following conversation occurred:
THE COURT: I'm guessing this is your note is all
I'm asking you.
MS. JEFFRIES: Yes, sir.
Q: Okay. Ms. Jeffries, it says here, is there any way we can see the
actual Bronco. Is this something that you wanted to see or is this
something where --
A: Well, I think we all kind of wanted to but we didn't -- we're
trying not to discuss it.
Q: You're trying not to discuss it?
A: Right.
Q: But you think we all might want to see it?
A: Yeah.
Q: Okay.
A: We all had a question about whether the windows were tinted or
not.
Q: I understand.
A: Because this seemed significant.
Q: Well I guess what I'm asking you is, are you all -- are you
saying that you're sitting there discussing evidence and what it
means?
A: No, we're not. We're not. We're trying very hard not to.
Christeson then moved for a mistrial based on the
alleged juror misconduct of discussing the facts of the case before all
of the evidence was presented, and the court denied the motion.
A trial court's decision regarding juror misconduct
will not be disturbed unless the court abused its discretion. State
v. Brown, 998 S.W.2d 531, 540 (Mo. banc 1999), cert.
denied, 528 U.S. 979 (1999). Although the colloquy, taken as a whole,
allows for speculation that the jury was indeed discussing the evidence,
the court was entitled to believe the juror's unequivocal assertions
that the jury was not discussing the evidence. Even if the jury was
curious about the windows of the Bronco, Christeson has not cited a
single Missouri case holding that juror curiosity regarding an item of
physical evidence, evidence that was indisputably in the defendant's
possession, constitutes deliberation of the facts and juror misconduct.
There was no abuse of discretion.
D. Prosecutor's Improper Comments
Christeson claims that the trial court erred in
overruling his objections, and in not declaring a mistrial sua
sponte, when the prosecutor made eleven allegedly improper
statements during the guilt phase closing argument. The only one of
these allegations that was actually preserved for review was that the
prosecutor argued contrary to the law when he said, "In order to find
the defendant not guilty, you must believe him." On appeal, Christeson
does not even attempt to show how this statement is contrary to the law,
although at trial defense counsel explained that the determination of
Christeson's guilt or innocence must be based on all of the evidence,
not merely on whether the jury believed his story. Regardless, the point
has no merit. In context, the prosecutor was not making a statement
about the law, but rather about his impression of the facts. The import
of the statement was that only by believing defendant's far-fetched
story could the jury arrive at a conclusion different than that
supported by the overwhelming evidence of guilt. In context, the
statement was not improper.
The remaining ten comments include: 1) "Well I think
probably on the way over there they thought about what they were going
to have to do;" 2) "One of the first things you consider is who has the
most to lose. The defendant does. If he's convicted, we're going to go
on with this trial and you already know I'm going to ask you for the
death penalty. He has a great deal to lose and every reason to lie;" 3)
"You know, there's an old saying in the law business that prosecutors
like to give you the big picture and defendants like to nit-pick on
details. I think that's what we are kind of seeing here;" 4) "On her
daughter's bed? I find that incredible;" 5) You know, there's an old
story I heard one time about the four Gospels of the Bible. And all of
them describe the crucifixion . . . of Christ. And in one of those they
tell you that there was a sign on the cross above Jesus' head that said,
"Jesus Christ, King of the Jews." And there was another -- in another
one of the gospels it says the sign reads, "Jesus of the Jews." And in
the third Gospel, it said, "Christ of the Jews." And the fourth Gospel
doesn't mention the sign at all;" 6) "Folks, I guess what kind of
bothers me the most when you look at this is let's examine what happened
to Susan Brouk and her children;" 7) "You know, I guess, what bothers me
was Susan Brouk was violated sexually;" 8) "She was violated sexually.
I've heard some people call rape murder of the human spirit;" 9) "What
is the suggestion here, that Jesse Carter did this by himself? I don't
know . . . can you imagine that that person would even come up with that
idea? Not a nice man;" 10) "He believes that he can fool you."
Christeson argues that these statements were improper
because the prosecutor injected his personal opinion, argued facts not
based on the evidence, bolstered Carter's testimony, implied improper
conduct by the defense, and/or inserted irrelevant considerations into
the decision-making process. However, the record shows that most of
these statements were reasonable inferences drawn from the evidence, or
matters of common knowledge, or legitimate comments on the credibility
of the defendant's case. A few comments were personalized, but only in a
small, harmless way. The biblical references highlighted the fact that
different accounts of an event may vary in the details while remaining
consistent overall, and they were not improper for that limited purpose.
See State v. Debler, 856 S.W.2d 641, 656 (Mo. banc 1993).
Suffice it to say that none of the statements, even the few that could
be considered improper, gave rise to manifest injustice that would
warrant plain error relief. An extensive discussion of each of these
claims of error would be of no precedential value. Rule 30.25(b).
V. PENALTY PHASE
A. Evidence of Prior Bad Acts
Christeson next claims that the trial court erred in
admitting evidence that he sodomized Wagner, in instructing the jury on
the matter, and in allowing the state to argue the evidence before the
jury. Because none of these alleged errors were properly preserved, this
Court will review only for manifest injustice under the plain error rule.
Rule 30.20. In any event, there were no errors in the first place.
Evidence of a defendant's prior unadjudicated
criminal conduct is admissible during the penalty phase. See State v.
Ferguson, 20 S.W.3d 485, 500 (Mo. banc 2000), cert. denied,
__ U.S. __, 121 S.Ct. 582 (2000); State v. Winfield, 5 S.W.3d
505, 515 (Mo. banc 1999), cert. denied, __ U.S. __, 120 S.Ct. 967
(2000). "During the penalty phase, both the state and the defense may
introduce any evidence pertaining to the defendant's character,"
State v. Ervin, 979 S.W.2d 149, 158 (Mo. banc 1998), cert. denied,
525 U.S. 1169 (1999), including evidence of the defendant's conduct that
occurred subsequent to the crime being adjudicated. State v. Kenley,
952 S.W.2d 250, 274 (Mo. banc 1997), cert. denied, 522 U.S. 1095
(1998). Therefore, the trial court did not commit error in admitting
testimony that Christeson sodomized Wagner.
The alleged instructional error is based on the trial
court's submission of Instructions No. 22, 25, and 28, patterned after
MAI-CR 3d 313.41A. Christeson contends that these instructions permitted
the jury to consider the penalty phase evidence of sodomy without
guidance on how to consider the evidence or what weight to give it.
However, as this Court has recently held, the instructions provide
adequate guidance by correctly apprising the jury of the requirements of
section 565.032.1, RSMo 1994, which authorizes the submission of so-called
"non-statutory" aggravating circumstances. Ervin, 979 S.W.2d at
158-59 . Nonetheless, Christeson relies on State v. Debler, 856
S.W.2d 641 (Mo. banc 1993), for the proposition that the jury should
have been instructed regarding how to consider the evidence of his prior
unadjudicated bad acts, and what weight to give that evidence. Debler
is not helpful to Christeson. This Court has explained that the error in
Debler was lack of notice to the defendant, not lack of guidance
to the jury. Ervin, 979 S.W.2d at 158. The trial court did not
err in submitting the pattern instructions.
Finally, Christeson challenges the state's comment in
closing argument that Christeson's conduct toward Wagner reveals a "predatory
pattern," because he lead Carter to commit murder and also coerced
Wagner. However, this comment was a reasonable inference drawn from the
evidence, so no error occurred.
B. Testimony of Anna Boese
Christeson alleges that the trial court erred in
admitting the testimony of Anna Boese because it duplicated and
improperly bolstered that of Mike Wagner. As noted, Wagner testified
that Christeson sodomized him when they were incarcerated together in
the Vernon County jail. Christeson claims that Ms. Boese, Wagner's
mother, "testified that her son had told her that [Christeson] had
sodomized him." The actual testimony is as follows:
PROSECUTOR: . . . At some point, did you notice
some injury or sign of injury to [Wagner] after he got out of jail?
MS. BOESE: Yes.
Q: And when was this, if you remember?
A: The first time was two days -- I believe two days.
Q: And what did you notice?
A: He had some rectal bleeding.
Q: And how was it you discovered this?
A: He told me.
As is apparent, contrary to Christeson's claim, Ms.
Boese did not testify that Wagner told her that Christeson, or anybody,
sodomized him, but that he told her about his physical condition.
Improper bolstering occurs when an out-of-court statement is offered
solely to corroborate or duplicate testimony. State v. Wolfe,
13 S.W.3d 248, 257 (Mo. banc 2000), cert. denied, __ U.S.
__, 121 S.Ct. 114 (2000). Ms. Boese's testimony did not corroborate or
duplicate Wagner's testimony that Christeson sodomized him.
C. Prosecutor's Improper Comments
Christeson claims that the trial court erred in
permitting the prosecutor to make eight allegedly improper comments
during the penalty phase closing argument. The only preserved allegation
of error with regard to these statements is that the prosecutor injected
his personal opinion when he said, "Again, I tell you, this is the worst
case in our society -- the worst crime in our society, murder in the
first degree."
Christeson's argument is that this statement suggests
that the state compared his case to others, and found it to be the worst,
thus improperly crediting the state's opinion and admitting facts not
before the jury. In context, however, this statement did not refer to
Christeson's case in particular, but, rather, the statement was part of
an argument that murder is the worst crime in our society and that that
is why it is the only crime for which the death penalty is available.
The trial court did not err in permitting the prosecutor to make this
statement.
Christeson also requests plain error relief because
of the following seven comments: 1) "You know, another thing that is --
that I submit to you is tragic in this process is that the family farm
you see along Highway 63 in this photograph no longer belongs to the
Brouk family. The only little part of it is that section of trees where
you see the arrow pointed to where Susan Brouk lived. . . . You know,
that is the only part of this family's history that's left of it. And
it's marred by murder. . . . The impact on this family is -- what little
of the land they grew up on, their heritage, is marred;" 2) "I submit to
you that your duty is to come back with that verdict on three counts;"
3) ". . . it is harder - - hard as it may be for you, imagine how hard
it might be for Judge Darnold if he has to make it alone;" 4) "I suggest
to you that Jesse Carter would have done whatever Mark Christeson told
him to do. He was 17 years old. His mental abilities, I think, were
obvious;" 5) "A lot of people have come up rough. John Paul Jones,
remember during the Revolutionary War, was an orphan. Yet, he was a
famous military leader in the United States Navy. Abraham Lincoln lived
in a one-room cabin, and he was President of the United States;" 6) ". .
. coming up rough, even with a bad family situation, is not an excuse
for murder. It does not temper murder or reduce its severity;" 7) "I'm
sorry, folks, what you've heard about Mark Christeson isn't good enough."
Christeson contends that these statements were
improper because they misstated the law, personalized the state's case,
injected emotion into sentencing, diminished the jury's sense of
responsibility, and/or argued facts outside of the evidence. However,
the record shows that most of the challenged statements were either
reasonable inferences drawn from the evidence or were based on matters
of common knowledge. The other statements have been mischaracterized or
taken out of context. There was no error, plain or otherwise.
D. Statutory Aggravating Circumstances
Christeson contends that the trial court erred in
submitting jury instructions patterned after MAI-CR 3d 313.40 because
those instructions posited the same conduct as separate statutory
aggravating circumstances, "thus allowing the jury to double- and
triple-count that conduct in deciding whether to sentence [Christeson]
to death." The instructions provided, consistent with section
565.032.2(2), that the jury was to determine whether the murder of each
victim occurred during the commission of another unlawful homicide.
This Court has, time and again, considered and
rejected similar arguments that the statutory aggravators are
impermissibly duplicative. See, e.g., State v.
Ringo, 30 S.W.3d 811, 824 (Mo. banc 2000), cert. denied,
__ U.S. __, 121 S.Ct. 1381 (2001); State v. Johnson, 22
S.W.3d 183, 191-92 (Mo. banc 2000), cert. denied, __ U.S.
__, 121 S.Ct. 322 (2000); State v. Worthington, 8 S.W.3d
83, 87-88 (Mo. banc 1999), cert. denied, 529 U.S. 1116
(2000); State v. Barnett, 980 S.W.2d 297, 309 (Mo. banc
1998), cert. denied, 525 U.S. 1161 (1999); State v.
Shafer, 969 S.W.2d 719, 740 (Mo. banc 1998), cert.
denied, 525 U.S. 969 (1998); State v. Morrow, 968 S.W.2d
100, 116-17 (Mo. banc 1998), cert. denied, 525 U.S. 896
(1998).
VI. INACCURATE TRANSCRIPT
Christeson alleges that the trial transcript is
materially inaccurate and prevents this Court from undertaking
meaningful appellate review so that the case must be remanded for a new
trial. Appellants are entitled to a full and complete transcript for the
appellate court's review, but they are entitled to relief only if they
exercised due diligence to correct the deficiency in the record and
they were prejudiced by the alleged defects. Middleton, 995 S.W.2d
at 466. Under Rule 34.04(h), omissions and misstatements in the record
may be corrected by stipulation of the parties or by an order of the
appellate court directing that the defect be corrected. Here, Christeson
attempted to correct alleged defects by requesting an order from this
Court directing the court reporter to produce an accurate transcript.
Thus, Christeson exercised due diligence in attempting to cure the
defects. Nonetheless, he is not entitled to relief because, with the
exception of one statement, discussed below, he has not identified the
inaccuracies, and, in any event, he has not shown that he was prejudiced.
Instead, he merely cites various lines on eighty pages dispersed
throughout a transcript of more than 2,000 pages and alleges that a
mistake occurred, without specifying what the mistake was or how it
affects his appeal. He leaves this Court with the chore of pinpointing
each alleged error and then discerning any prejudicial impact.
The majority of the alleged inaccuracies appears to
be either typographical errors or witness or counsel misstatements.
Typical of these are the following: "Could you volt for the death
penalty"; "they'll surely give you an hour to eat and take a beak"; "[m]ay
I please the court"; "summoned as protected jurors." Other errors are
similarly trivial. On many of the pages Christeson cites, there are no
errors at all. Because the errors that do appear are trivial or
inconsequential, Christeson does not demonstrate the prejudice necessary
to have an actionable claim. See Middleton, 995 S.W.2d at 466.
As to the statement that Christeson claims is "one of
the most significant" errors, no prejudice could have resulted. That
statement -- made by defense counsel while instructing venirepersons
about the death penalty -- was: "if you're chosen to sit on this jury,
at the time whatsoever will the Court through its instructions require
you to give the death penalty. . . ." Any potential prejudice was cured
immediately when counsel, two sentences later, stated that "at no time
would you ever be required to give the death penalty." In addition, the
trial court itself instructed that "[t]he jury is never required to
return a sentence of death."
VII. INDEPENDENT REVIEW
Under section 565.035.3, RSMo 2000, this Court is
required to determine whether:
(1) the sentence of death was imposed under the
influence of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor;
(2) the evidence supports the jury's finding of a statutory
aggravating circumstance;
(3) 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.
Having thoroughly reviewed the record, this Court
concludes that there is no evidence to suggest that the punishment
imposed was a product of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary
factor.
Furthermore, this Court holds that the evidence amply
supports the jury's findings on the aggravating circumstances that each
murder was committed during the course of two other murders and that
each involved depravity of mind because the killings exhibited a callous
disregard for the sanctity of all human life. As noted, the record shows
that Christeson raped Ms. Brouk and then bound her hands. When Ms.
Brouk's daughter Adrian recognized Christeson's accomplice, Christeson
decided to kill Ms. Brouk and her children. He took their personal
property and vehicle and drove them to a pond where he cut Ms. Brouk's
throat and cut Kyle's throat. He suffocated Adrian and then threw Ms.
Brouk, while she was still alive, onto the bodies of her two children
where she drowned.
Finally, this Court concludes that the death
sentences in this case are neither excessive nor disproportionate to the
penalty imposed in similar cases, considering the crime, the strength of
the evidence, and the defendant. Death sentences have often been upheld
where the defendant murdered more than one victim. See, e.g., State
v. Smith, 32 S.W.3d 532, 559 (Mo. banc 2000); State v. Ringo,
30 S.W.3d 811, 826 (Mo. banc 2000), cert. denied, __ U.S.
__, 121 S.Ct. 1381 (2001); State v. Johnson, 22 S.W.3d 183, 192 (Mo.
banc 2000), cert. denied, __ U.S. __, 121 S.Ct. 322
(2000); State v. Wolfe, 13 S.W.3d 248, 265 (Mo. banc 2000),
cert. denied, __ U.S. __, 121 S.Ct. 114 (2000); State v.
Johnson, 968 S.W.2d 123, 135 (Mo. banc 1998), cert.
denied, 525 U.S. 968 (1997); State v. Ramsey, 864 S.W.2d
320, 327 (Mo. banc 1993), cert. denied, 511 U.S. 1078
(1994). This Court has also upheld death sentences when the murder
involved a callous disregard for the sanctity of all human life showing
depravity of mind. See e.g., Wolfe, 13 S.W.3d at 265; State v.
Middleton, 995 S.W.2d 443, 467 (Mo. banc 1999); State v. Johnson,
968 S.W.2d 123, 135 (Mo. banc 1998), cert. denied, 525 U.S. 935
(1998); State v. Rousan, 961 S.W.2d 831, 854 (Mo. banc 1998),
cert. denied, 524 U.S. 961 (1998); State v. Carter, 955 S.W.2d
548, 562 (Mo. banc 1997), cert. denied, 523 U.S. 1052 (1998);
State v. Hall, 955 S.W.2d 198, 211 (Mo. banc 1997), cert. denied,
523 U.S. 1053 (1998). Taking into account the crime, the strength of the
evidence, and the defendant, this Court determines that the death
sentences in this case are proportionate to the death sentences imposed
in similar cases.