Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
David
Lynn SIMONSEN
itchhiking
10 days after
David Lynn Simonsen
Coos County - Oregon
Born: 1/27/68
Sentenced to death: 2/24/1989
Simonsen and Jeffrey Ray Williams were convicted of aggravated
murder and sentenced to death in the 1988 sexual assault and shotgun
slayings of Unna Tuxen, 24, and Kathrin Reith, 22, German tourists
hitchhiking up the West Coast near the Oregon-California border.
Interesting fact: Simonsen is under his third death sentence. Twice
before, the court had thrown out the sentence.
C. Service by a Juror Who Had Been Dismissed from
Prior Service Within Two Years
During voir dire, the trial court questioned a
prospective juror, Johnson, who stated that, in September 1994 -- 21
months earlier -- she had been called to serve as a juror in an
unrelated case. During questioning by defense counsel, Johnson stated
that she had been a member of a jury panel "two years ago," but had not
been selected to serve at trial. Defense counsel did not challenge
Johnson for cause.
Defendant now argues that the trial court erred by
allowing Johnson to serve because she was ineligible under
ORS 10.030(4) (1993), which provided:
"No person is eligible to act as a juror in any
circuit or district court of this state within 24 months after being
discharged from jury service in a federal court in this state or
circuit or district court of this state unless that person's service
as a juror is required because of a need for additional jurors."
However, defendant's failure to object to Johnson's
eligibility during voir dire precludes us from considering his
argument. This court has held that the failure to object to the
eligibility of a juror during voir dire waives a defendant's
right to appeal based upon the juror's service. State v. Benson,
235 Or 291, 293-94, 384 P2d 208 (1963). In State v. Powers, 10 Or
145, 151, 45 Am Rep 138 (1882), this court explained:
"Were a defendant allowed to take his challenge
to the jurors after the trial, he never would do it before, but
would always rather depend upon moving it to the court after the
trial -- for if he should be acquitted he would say nothing about
the disqualification of the juror, and if convicted, he could avoid
judgment by offering his objection. This in fact would be placing
him in a situation totally exempt from danger and from punishment,
so long as he could get a juror sworn against whom he could offer
any legal objection, and would give him the additional advantage of
several chances for his acquittal."
(Internal quotation marks omitted.)
However, even were we to decide that defendant could
raise this issue in behalf of a juror -- a determination we do not make
here -- the risk of improper manipulation of the trial court remains the
same. Thus, to preserve the issue for review, a defendant must object to
the eligibility of a juror during voir dire, regardless of
whether the juror's presence is challenged in the defendant's or the
juror's behalf. Purporting to raise the issue in behalf of a juror will
not allow defendant to circumvent the requirements of preservation.
Defendant's argument is not preserved. Accordingly, we do not consider
this assignment of error.
D. The Trial Court's Refusal to Allow Evidence or
Instruct the Jury that Life Sentences "Would" be Consecutive
Before the third sentencing proceeding, defendant
submitted an "omnibus motion" that included the following:
"Defendant moves that the court allow evidence,
or otherwise instruct the jury, on the full nature of the potential
sentences which defendant could receive as an alternative to death;
including the fact that the court would be required to impose life
sentences with 30-year minimums on each count, with possible parole
consideration under very limited circumstances after 20 or 40 years;
and that the sentences could, and would, be consecutive."
(Emphasis in original.) Significantly, the trial
court neither allowed nor denied defendant's motion; rather, it took the
motion under advisement after the state requested additional time to
conduct research on the issue.
Defendant now assigns error to the trial court's
refusal to allow him to present evidence that, if he were given life
sentences, they would be served consecutively, as well as to the trial
court's refusal to provide jury instructions to the same effect.
Although defendant bases many of his arguments before this court upon
the state and federal constitutions, he made no constitutional arguments
to the trial court. Thus, those arguments were not preserved for appeal.
To the extent that defendant's non-constitutional arguments are
preserved, we consider them in turn.
As to defendant's first argument, that the trial
court denied him the opportunity to introduce evidence that consecutive
sentences would be imposed, defendant has failed to direct us to any
part of the record that demonstrates an attempt to introduce such
evidence. The trial court did not err in denying defendant the
opportunity to introduce evidence regarding consecutive sentences,
because defendant did not attempt to introduce any such evidence.
As to defendant's argument that the trial court erred
by refusing his requested jury instruction, we note that the requested
instruction was legally inaccurate. Because
E. Admission of Statement that Defendant Could be
Managed on the "Outside"
Defendant next argues that the prosecutor made
statements during closing argument that suggested to the jury that, if
defendant received a life sentence, he could be sent to a lower-security
facility than the Oregon State Penitentiary. Although defendant makes
various arguments under this assignment of error -- some of which either
were not preserved for review or have been addressed separately under
other assignments of error -- his point appears to be that the
prosecutor's closing argument "affirmatively" misled the jury, thereby
denying defendant a fair trial.
The statements to which defendant assigns error
occurred during closing arguments. Significantly, those statements
contained information that the state already had introduced as evidence.
Thus, the jury already had heard the evidence at issue here, the
admission of which defendant does not challenge on review. Even if we
were to agree that the prosecutor's statements during closing argument
were improper, defendant has failed to demonstrate how those statements,
which referred to evidence already before the jury, resulted in
prejudice. SeeState v. Hayward, 327 Or 397, 408, 963 P2d
667 (1998) (trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding no
prejudice based upon introduction of evidence that already had been
presented to jury without objection). We see no prejudice in the state's
closing argument.
F. Prosecutor's Statement that an Inmate had
Testified Despite the Risk of Acquiring a "Snitch Jacket"
During the penalty phase, the state called three
witnesses to testify about defendant's attempt to escape from the Coos
County Jail while being held pending trial in this case. One of those
witnesses, McCall, initially had agreed to help defendant escape, but
had changed his mind at the last minute and reported the escape attempt
to prison officials. Defendant sought to impeach the testimony of each
of the witnesses by suggesting that they had testified in order to avoid
prosecution by the state on other charges. During closing arguments, the
prosecutor made the following argument that the three witnesses'
testimony should be believed:
"They make something with Mr. McCall. You know,
we talked about him a little bit. You've heard us mention snitch
jacket. I think the guy that talked about that, was an informant's
jacket -- Mr. [Pinnell], the aggravated murderer that came and
testified and said that's not a good thing. That's not good to have
one of those.
"McCall comes in here. Basically he helps foil
the escape. And yet he was an accomplice in that, but he basically
helps stop the thing. I'm grateful, as a District Attorney, that
somebody bothered to tell us. Because if the jailers hadn't been
alert, Mr. Simonsen would be gone. So, I'm grateful for that. I'm
grateful to Mr. McCall. His motives may not have been the best. He
might have been scared. But he also comes in here and testifies
under oath.
"That was a long time ago that that happened.
He's got a snitch jacket. If he goes to prison, or if Vanessa Mason
goes to prison, or if Robert Brown goes to prison, they are marked
people. And they came in here and testified under oath. Nobody else
in the courtroom had to do that -- to expose themselves to any real
danger.
"You've got to give those people a little bit of
credit. * * *"
Defendant objected to that statement and, outside
the presence of the jury, the following colloquy took place:
"[DEFENSE COUNSEL:] * * * I thought that
counsel alluded to Mr. Simonsen's failure to testify by saying,
'No one else has been forced to come in here and testify,' et
cetera. I move for a mistrial.
"* * * * *
"Okay. He was talking about Ms. Mason and Mr.
McCall. They've come in and they had to testify, they've been
subpoenaed and they had to testify under oath. Then he made a
comment, 'No one else in the Courtroom has been forced to come
in and do that.'
"I heard it, and it's an inadvertent, perhaps,
reference to Mr. Simonsen not taking the stand. I move for a
mistrial on that basis.
"[THE COURT]: Well, I'll deny that. I think
that's a stretch because I think the comments were, no one else has
a snitch jacket or has something to lose, like these people; and
that was the context it was in, not the Defendant failing to
testify.
"So, I don't think that anybody could even draw
that inference from that comment. So I'll deny the Motion for
Mistrial."
Defendant assigns error to the trial court's denial
of his motion for mistrial. We review the trial court's denial of a
motion for mistrial for an abuse of discretion. State v. Wright,
323 Or 8, 12, 913 P2d 321 (1996). Defendant cites several cases from
this court supporting the proposition that an intentional reference to a
defendant's decision not to testify is prohibited by both the state and
federal constitutions. That proposition is not in dispute. Rather, the
central question here is whether the prosecutor's statement, in fact,
constituted such a reference. The trial court concluded that it did not.
We agree. The prosecutor's statement, taken in context, was designed to
rehabilitate the credibility of three witnesses who had been impeached
by the defense; it was not a comment on defendant's silence. The trial
court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion for mistrial.
G. Admission of Prosecutor's Allegedly
Inflammatory Statements During Closing Arguments
Defendant also assigns error to other statements that
the prosecutor made during his closing argument. Specifically, defendant
objects to the following statements: (1) a life sentence would "laugh [defendant's]
crime off"; (2) "[a]ll [the prosecutor wants] in this case is justice, a
punishment that fits the crime according to the law"; (3) defendant
should not "walk away" from the crime and go to the Oregon State
Penitentiary, which "[s]ounds kind of like a racquetball club, to [the
prosecutor]"; and (4) the jurors' "duty" was to sentence defendant to
death.
Defendant admits that he failed to object to any of
those statements before the trial court. He argues, however, that the
prosecutor's arguments were so prejudicial that the trial court had a
duty to declare a mistrial sua sponte. In other words, defendant
argues that the trial court legally was obliged to declare a mistrial on
its own motion. It was not. Indeed, as we explain below, we hold that
the trial court would not have erred in denying such a motion, even had
such a motion been timely made.
We review a trial court's failure to grant an
ordinary motion for mistrial for abuse of discretion. In such
cases, "[e]ven if we find the prosecutor's remarks to be improper,
tasteless, or inappropriate, we will not find an abuse of discretion * *
* unless the effect of the prosecutor's remarks is to deny a defendant a
fair trial." State v. Smith, 310 Or 1, 24, 791 P2d 836 (1990).
The prosecutor's remarks here did not violate that
standard. Defendant relies on two cases as support for his assertion
that they do: Viereck v. United States, 318 US 236, 63 S Ct 561,
87 L Ed 734 (1943), and State v. Blodgett, 50 Or 329, 92 P 820
(1907). In Viereck, a case that occurred during World War II, the
defendants were prosecuted for failing to register as agents of foreign
principals, as was required by statute at the time. In his closing
arguments, the prosecutor in that case made the following statements:
"This is war. It is a fight to the death. The
American people are relying upon you ladies and gentlemen for their
protection against this sort of a crime, just as much as they are
relying upon the protection of the men who man the guns in Bataan
Peninsula, and everywhere else. They are relying upon you ladies and
gentlemen for their protection. We are at war. You have a duty to
perform here.
"As a representative of your Government I am
calling upon every one of you to do your duty."
Viereck, 318 US at 247-48 n 3 (internal
quotation marks omitted). The defendant did not object. Nevertheless,
the United States Supreme Court, after reversing on other grounds,
stated in dictum that the prosecutor's statements "prejudiced
petitioner's right to a fair trial, and * * * might well have placed the
judgment of conviction in jeopardy." Id. at 247.
Defendant asserts that the prosecutor's statements in
this case were of the same inflammatory character as those in Viereck.
We disagree. Viereck involved a blatant appeal to the jurors'
sense of patriotism during a time of war. The prosecutor, in effect,
equated convicting the defendants with contributing to the war effort.
Here, we are confronted with an entirely different situation. The
prosecutor's arguments, even if verging on sensational, were not so
prejudicial that the trial court abused its discretion by failing to
declare a mistrial suasponte.
Defendant's reliance on State v. Blodgett also
is misplaced. Unlike in this case, the defendant in Blodgett
objected to the questionable statements. 50 Or at 342. The dispute in
that case centered around the trial court's failure to respond to the
timely objection. By contrast, defendant in this case never raised any
objection before the trial court. For the foregoing reasons, we reject
defendant's argument under this assignment of error.
H. Constitutionality of Oregon's Death Penalty
Scheme
Finally, defendant assigns error to the trial court's
denial of his omnibus motion to dismiss the penalty phase proceeding, in
which he asserted that Oregon's death penalty scheme is unconstitutional
for various reasons. Many of the arguments set out in the motion were
addressed by this court in Simonsen I and, thus, are the law of
the case. SeeKoch, 274 Or at 512 (discussing the
doctrine). The remaining arguments either were not preserved or have
been rejected by this court in Montez I, 309 Or 564, Wagner,
309 Or 5, State v. Cunningham, 320 Or 47, 880 P2d 431 (1994),
Moore, 324 Or 396, State v. Montez, 324 Or 343, 927 P2d 64
(1996) (Montez II), State ex rel Huddleston v. Sawyer, 324
Or 597, 932 P2d 1145 (1997), State v. Moen, 309 Or 45, 786 P2d
111 (1990), or State v. Guzek, 310 Or 299, 797 P2d 1031 (1990).
The judgment of conviction and sentence of death are
affirmed.