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Jesse
Caleb COMPTON
Jesse Caleb Compton
Lane County - Oregon
Born: 12/31/76
Sentenced to death: 1998
Compton, a Springfield methamphetamine user, killed Tesslynn O'Cull,
the 3-year-old daughter of his live-in girlfriend. The girl, whose body
was found in a grave near Sweet Home in 1997, had been bound, shocked
and sexually assaulted. Prosecutors called it the worst case of child
abuse they had ever seen.
In 1999, Stella Ann Kiser, the girl's mother, was convicted of
aggravated murder for her role in the death and sentenced to life
without the possibility of parole.
Interesting fact: Tesslynn's murder led to the adoption of tougher
child-abuse reporting laws.
Status: Death Row.
From an article at
the beginning of his trial:
In Eugene Oregon, a man accused in the child-abuse death of a 3-year-old
girl was portrayed as a brutal torturer by a prosecutor, but a defense
attorney said the girl's death was a result of "inappropriate, misguided
medical care." The lawyer for Jesse Caleb Compton, 21, said Monday that
the death of Tesslynn O'Cull should not constitute aggravated murder.
Compton could face the death penalty for the June 14, 1997 killing.
Tesslynn's battered body was found in a shallow grave in some woods near
Sweet Home. It was 5 days after her 3rd birthday. Compton is charged
with aggravated murder, murder by abuse, 2 counts of 1st-degree
penetration and abuse of a corpse. The girl's mother, Stella Kiser, 22,
goes on trial next month. Prosecutors say Compton inflicted most of the
injuries, and that Kiser knew about the abuse and occasionally tied up
the child.
Compton sat motionless in Lane County Circuit Court as Assistant
District Attorney Robert Gorham accused him of a series of horrific acts
in the girl's death. In his opening statements, Gorham apologized to
the 6-man, 6-woman jury for the grisly facts he said the testimony and
exhibits will show. "I'm sorry that I have to tell you about these
things," he said. "You must face the reality of this case."
Gorham said Compton and Kiser met and quickly moved in to a
Springfield apartment, where they used methamphetamine daily. Compton
assumed therole of disciplinarian for Tesslynn and abused the child for
months, Gorham said.
Gorham then described some of the injuries the child suffered,
including a broken back, ruptured liver, rope burns around her wrists
and ankles, sexual abuse, stab wounds and bruises. "There are 64
different talking points I have written down on the autopsy report," he
said. "There are more injuries than that. She has an injury on every
part of her body."
Compton reportedly identified round burns on the child's lower back
and buttocks, as well as her vagina and rectum, as chemical burns. He
said that an overzealous spanking he had given Tesslyn had broken her
skin, and that when he and Kiser determined that the sores had become
infected, they poured a large amount of rubbing alcohol on the area,
Gorham said. Gorham told jurors he would prove that the burns came
instead from a hand-held propane torch that Compton kept in the
apartment to smoke methamphetamine.
Mullen, the defense attorney, argued in his opening statements that
Compton should have been charged only with murder by abuse instead of
aggravated murder. A murder by abuse conviction carries a minimum
prison sentence of 25 years without parole.
Both defendants acknowledged in statements to police that they
sought no medical help for the child, even though Compton's mother is a
nurse and the couple's apartment was near a fire station that has medics
on duty around-the-clock. Mullen said Compton and Kiser "were not
equipped emotionally or otherwise to care for a child."
Gorham said the child
likely died from septic shock, internal bleeding from a ruptured kidney,
or a combination of effects from trauma. But Mullen said medical
examiners had not been able to determine a cause of death.
From an article at the end of his trial, read how a juror broke
down and had to be excused from the horror:
In Eugene, convicted child killer Jesse Caleb Compton has been
sentenced to death for the torture slaying of 3-year-old Tesslynn O'Cull.
Compton did not react as Lane County Circuit Judge Lyle Velure read the
ruling by a jury that deliberated just 4 hours Thursday in the penalty
phase of Compton's aggravated murder trial.
Compton, 21, shook hands with defense lawyer Rich Mullen before
being handcuffed by deputies and led from the courtroom. "This is
exactly what we came to Oregon for," said Ken O'Cull, a Californian and
the little girl's grandfather.
Tesslynn died in June 1997 in a Springfield apartment where she
lived with her mother, Stella Ann Kiser, and Compton. Kiser, 23, is
scheduled for trial Nov. 17 on charges including aggravated murder. The
murder was described by Springfield police investigators as the worst
case of child abuse they had ever seen. Tesslynn suffered scores of
injuries from head to foot over a period of up to 8 weeks before she
died. Trial testimony indicated she died of shock caused by a
combination of injuries, including fluid loss from 3rd-degree burns and
from internal bleeding.
Evidence indicated
burns were caused by a propane torch Compton used to smoke
methamphetamine. The internal bleeding came from a heavy blow or from
being stomped within a day of her death. Deputy District Attorney Bob
Gorham called Compton "merciless."
After the verdict,
Gorham acknowledged the extreme brutality of the crime and the impact
the testimony and graphic photographs of the child's injuries had on
jurors. "The injuries to this child were never completely described in
the media. I'm happy the community was not subjected to what was done
to her," Gorham said. One of the women on the jury was excused from
service during the final argument when she began to weep uncontrollably
and to say repeatedly, "God, that poor baby." A man who was one of
four alternates selected for the trial took her place. Ken O'Cull
thanked the 7-man, 5-woman jury, saying, "They had the hardest job in
the world. They just took somebody's life. But he deserved it."
O'Cull was beaten, burned, bound,
sexually assaulted, starved, tortured and brutalized by
her stepfather Jesse Compton and mother Stella Kiser in
the days leading to her death. Her back was broken 2-3
weeks prior to her death and rubbing alcohol had been
poured into open wounds on her body.
Events
Background
Early in 1997, Stella Kiser and her
daughter, 2 and-a-half year-old O'Cull, began living
with Jesse Caleb Compton in his apartment. Compton
hosted "drug parties" at his apartment, some of which
went on for several days. He prepared methamphetamine
for smoking by melting it with a small propane torch. On
at least one occasion, Compton held the lighted torch
close to his hand to show his friends that he could
withstand a great deal of pain.
Abuse
and murder
Soon after Kiser and Tesslynn moved
in with Compton, he began abusing Tesslynn. He hit her
on her buttocks and back with a wooden spoon, a spatula,
and a belt. Visitors to the apartment witnessed Compton
slap her in the face, drag her by her hair, force her to
stand in the corner for long periods of time, and make
her take long, cold baths or showers. He was frequently
angry at Tesslynn, and called her disparaging names.
Visitors also observed that Compton and Kiser usually
kept Tesslynn in the bedroom during the drug parties,
and they could hear the child cry for hours after
Compton had been in the bedroom with her. He would not
permit others to go into the bedroom to help her.
Eventually, Compton and Kiser kept Tesslynn in the
bedroom most of the time.
Approximately two months before
Tesslynn's death, Compton broke four vertebrae in her
back. Sometime thereafter, he forcefully penetrated her
vagina with an object and inflicted burns on the child's
back, buttocks, and genitals using an open flame. Some
of those burns became infected, and Compton poured
rubbing alcohol into them. He also inflicted round burns
on the child's legs. During the two-week period before
Tesslynn died, Compton immobilized her 10 to 15 times by
placing her hands and feet over her head and tying them
together with ropes, cords, or strips of cloth. He left
her tied up for eight to ten hours at a time.
Compton found Tesslynn dead in the
bedroom of the apartment between midnight and 2:00 a.m.
on June 14, 1997. Compton cut Tesslynn loose from her
restraints and tried to revive her by giving her CPR. He
also struck her in the left side of the chest a few
times with his fist, then applied a frayed, live
electrical cord to her chest, and splashed her with cold
water. He was unable to revive her.
Compton and Kiser agreed to leave the
body in the bedroom while they thought about what to do.
Tesslynn's injuries were so extensive that Compton and
Kiser feared that they would go to jail if anyone saw
the body. In the days after they buried Tesslynn,
Compton and Kiser were happy, playful, and affectionate
with one another. They told friends that Tesslynn was
with a babysitter or at Kiser's aunt's house and that
they were planning to move out of town. They also told
friends that they wanted to have a baby boy.
Investigation
On the evening of June 16, 1997,
Compton's sister told the Springfield Police Department
that she had helped Compton and Kiser bury Tesslynn's
body in the Sweet Home, Oregon area two days earlier.
Early on the morning of June 17, Springfield police
officers found the child's body buried in a grave near a
logging road in the area that Compton's sister had
described. They unearthed the body and arranged for an
autopsy. In the grave, they also found, among other
things, a piece of cloth that appeared to be torn from a
curtain, a strip of gray cloth, a blue braided belt, and
a woman's ring with a pink stone in it.
That afternoon, police officers went
to Compton's apartment. They advised Compton of his
Miranda rights and obtained his permission to enter the
apartment and to look around. Most of the apartment was
dirty and smelled bad. There were holes in the walls,
which Compton had made by punching the walls when he was
angry or by throwing knives.
In subsequent searches of the
apartment, the police found drug paraphernalia, drug
residue, and a propane torch. They also found a lamp
with a cut cord, a pair of pliers with burn residue on
it, rubbing alcohol bottles, and white cloths with knots
in them. In a search of a dumpster near defendant's
apartment, the police found two trash bags from
defendant's apartment that contained a Mother's Day card
for Kiser, child's clothing, an electrical cord that had
been cut and had a frayed end, a blue cloth, a white
cloth, and a shoestring with knots in them, and a rope.
The cloth and shoestring had hair mixed in with the
knots. Some of the cloth that the police found was
similar to cloth that had been found in the child's
grave.
Prosecution
The medical examiner who conducted
the autopsy concluded that Tesslynn had died of shock,
and he listed the cause of death as "battered child
syndrome." Compton was indicted on six counts of
aggravated murder, murder by abuse, first-degree sexual
penetration, and second-degree abuse of a corpse. The
jury convicted him of all counts, and he was sentenced
to death. Stella Kiser was found guilty of aggravated
murder, and sentenced to life without possibility of
parole, on April 30, 1999 at her second trial. The first
trial ended in a mistrial.
Poster with the image of the victim,
Tesslynn O'Cull
Early in 1997, Stella Kiser and her daughter,
Tesslynn O'Cull, began living with defendant in defendant's apartment.
The child was approximately two-and-one-half years old when Kiser moved
in with defendant.
Defendant frequently hosted "drug parties" at his
apartment, some of which lasted for several days. Defendant frequently
prepared methamphetamine for smoking by melting it with a small propane
torch. On at least one occasion, defendant held the lighted torch close
to his hand to show his friends that he could withstand a great deal of
pain.
Soon after Kiser and Tesslynn moved in with defendant,
defendant began abusing Tesslynn. Defendant hit her on her buttocks and
back with a wooden spoon, a spatula, and a belt. Visitors to the
apartment observed defendant slap her in the face, drag her by her hair,
force her to stand in the corner for long periods of time, and make her
take long, cold baths or showers.
Defendant frequently was angry at Tesslynn, and he
called her disparaging names. Visitors also observed that defendant and
Kiser usually kept Tesslynn in the bedroom during the drug parties, and
they could hear the child cry for hours after defendant had been in the
bedroom with her. Defendant would not permit others to go into the
bedroom to help her.
Eventually, defendant and Kiser kept Tesslynn in the
bedroom most of the time. When a neighbor complained about the way that
defendant treated Tesslynn, defendant told him that he would kill the
neighbor and the neighbor's girlfriend if they called the police.
Approximately two months before Tesslynn's death,
defendant broke four vertebrae in her back. Sometime thereafter, he
forcefully penetrated her vagina with an object and inflicted large,
gaping burns on the child's back, buttocks, and genitals using an open
flame. Some of those burns became infected, and defendant poured rubbing
alcohol into them. He also inflicted smaller round burns on the child's
legs.
Defendant found Tesslynn dead in the bedroom of the
apartment between midnight and 2:00 a.m. on June 14, 1997. Defendant cut
Tesslynn loose from her restraints and tried to revive her by giving her
CPR. He also struck her in the left side of the chest a few times with
his fist, then applied a frayed, live electrical cord to her chest, and
splashed her with cold water. He was unable to revive her.
Defendant and Kiser agreed to leave the body in the
bedroom while they thought about what to do. Tesslynn's injuries were so
extensive that defendant and Kiser feared that they would go to jail if
anyone saw the body. Eventually, they decided to bury the body, which
they did with the help of defendant's sister.
In the days after they buried Tesslynn, defendant and
Kiser were happy, playful, and affectionate with one another. They told
friends that Tesslynn was with a babysitter or at Kiser's aunt's house
and that they were planning to move out of town. They also told friends
that they wanted to have a baby boy.
That afternoon, police officers went to defendant's
apartment. They advised defendant of his Miranda rights and
obtained his permission to enter the apartment and to look around. Most
of the apartment was dirty and smelled bad. There were many holes in the
walls, which defendant had made by punching the walls when he was angry
or by throwing knives.
In subsequent searches of the apartment, the police
found drug paraphernalia, drug residue, and a propane torch. They also
found a lamp with a cut cord, a pair of pliers with burn residue on it,
rubbing alcohol bottles, and white cloths with knots in them.
In a search of a dumpster near defendant's apartment,
the police found two trash bags from defendant's apartment that
contained a Mother's Day card for Kiser, child's clothing, an electrical
cord that had been cut and had a frayed end, a blue cloth, a white cloth,
and a shoestring with knots in them, and a rope. The cloth and
shoestring had hair mixed in with the knots. Some of the cloth that the
police found was similar to cloth that had been found in the child's
grave.
Defendant was indicted on six counts of aggravated
murder, murder by abuse, first-degree sexual penetration, and second-degree
abuse of a corpse. As noted, the jury convicted him of all counts, and
he was sentenced to death. On review, defendant raises 35 assignments of
error. We analyze defendant's arguments in the context of pretrial
issues, guilt-phase issues, and penalty-phase issues.
Count 1 of the indictment charged defendant with
aggravated murder as follows:
"The defendant, * * * on or about the 14th
day of June, 1997, in the county aforesaid, in the course of or as a
result of intentional maiming or torture of Tesslynn O'Cull, age
three (3) years, did unlawfully and recklessly, under circumstances
manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human life, cause
the death of Tesslynn O'Cull, another human being; and defendant * *
* previously engaged in a pattern or practice of assault or torture
of Tesslynn O'Cull or another child under 14 years of age; contrary
to statute and against the peace and dignity of the State of Oregon[.]"
Before trial, defendant filed a demurrer to that
charge, contending that ORS 163.095(1)(e) is vague under both the Oregon
Constitution and various provisions of the federal constitution. The
trial court denied the demurrer.
On review, defendant contends that ORS 163.095(1)(e),
either alone or in conjunction with ORS 163.115(1)(c), "is vague as to
the mental state required with regard to the result of death when a
homicide occurs as a result of maiming or torture[.]" Therefore, he
argues, the statute violates Article I, sections 20 (equal privileges
and immunities) and 21 (prohibiting expostfacto
laws), of the Oregon Constitution, and the Eighth and Fourteenth
Amendments to the United States Constitution. The state responds that
defendant's claims were not properly raised by demurrer because they did
not in fact raise a vagueness challenge. Instead, those claims raised
questions of statutory construction, which is not a matter that can be
raised by demurrer.
We analyze defendant's challenge as he has framed it,
namely, as a vagueness challenge. The state concedes that a vagueness
challenge is a valid basis for a demurrer. SeeState v.
McKenzie, 307 Or 554, 560, 771 P2d 264 (1989) (holding vagueness
challenge proper basis for demurrer to indictment). On the merits, the
state contends that the statutes defining aggravated murder by abuse are
not vague because they clearly provide that the mental state with regard
to causing death by abuse is recklessness.
This court has held that Article I, sections 20 and
21, of the Oregon Constitution, require the terms of a criminal statute
to be explicit enough "to inform those who are subject to it of what
conduct on their part will render them liable to its penalties."
State v. Plowman, 314 Or 157, 160, 838 P2d 558 (1992) (quoting
State v. Graves, 299 Or 189, 195, 700 P2d 244 (1985)). In addition,
a criminal statute "must not be so vague as to allow a judge or jury
unbridled discretion to decide what conduct to punish." Id. at
161. To prevail on a facial vagueness challenge, a defendant must show
that the statutes creating the crime of aggravated murder by abuse are
vague in all their possible applications. State v. Chakerian,
325 Or 370, 381-82, 938 P2d 756 (1997).
ORS 163.115 defines murder by abuse, in part, as
murder that occurs when a person "recklessly under circumstances
manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human life" causes the
death of a child under the age of 14 years. ORS 163.115(c). The mental
state for causing death by abuse is recklessness.
ORS 163.095 provides that murder by abuse is
aggravated murder if the homicide "occurred in the course of or as a
result of intentional maiming or torture of the victim." ORS
163.095(1)(e). To prove intentional torture, the state must prove that
the person intended to inflict intense physical pain on an unwilling
victim. State v. Cornell/Pinnell, 304 Or 27, 31-32, 741 P2d 501
(1987); see alsoState v. Langley, 314 Or 247, 268,
839 P2d 692 (1992) ("The focus of a torture inquiry is not on the
defendant's intent to cause the victim's death, but on the defendant's
separate intent to cause intense physical pain.").
Read together, ORS 163.115(1)(c) and ORS
163.095(1)(e) make clear that a person commits murder by abuse if the
person recklessly causes the death of a child under 14 years of age
under circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the value of
human life. For murder by abuse to be aggravated murder, the state also
must prove that the homicide occurred in the course of or as a result of
intentional maiming or torture of the victim. ORS 163.095(1)(e).
The requirement that the state prove the intentional
maiming or torture of the victim to prove aggravated murder does not
alter the mental state for causing the victim's death, which is "recklessness."
The statutes defining the crime of aggravated murder by abuse are not
vague regarding the mental state for causing the victim's death.
Accordingly, those statutes do not violate Article I, sections 20 and
21, of the Oregon Constitution.
"In the [sentencing] proceeding, evidence may be
presented as to any matter that the court deems relevant to sentence
including, but not limited to, victim impact evidence * * * and any
aggravating or mitigating evidence relevant to [the fourth question
under ORS 163.150(1)(b)(D), namely, whether the defendant should
receive a death sentence]."
Before trial, defendant filed a "Motion to Prohibit
Death Penalty," arguing that ORS 163.150(1) (1995) fails to provide the
jury with "guided discretion" for making the decision whether a
defendant should receive a death sentence. The trial court denied the
motion.
On review, defendant contends that the
trial court erred in denying his motion to prevent the death penalty
because ORS 163.150(1) (1995), and its related jury instruction,
violate the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States
Constitution. That is so, defendant contends, because neither the
statute nor the instruction informs the jury that it is entitled to
consider aggravating factors only insofar as they relate to defendant's
character or to the circumstances of his crime in deciding whether to
impose a death sentence. The state responds that, under the Eighth and
Fourteenth Amendments, complete jury discretion is permissible regarding
whether a particular defendant should receive a death sentence.
The United States Supreme Court has explained that
there are two aspects of the capital sentencing process: the eligibility
phase and the selection phase. Buchanan v. Angelone, 522 US
269, 275, 118 S Ct 757, 139 L Ed 2d 702 (1998). In the eligibility phase,
"the jury narrows the class of defendants eligible for the death penalty"
by finding a defendant guilty of aggravated murder. Id. In the
selection phase, "the jury determines whether to impose a death sentence
on an eligible defendant." Id.
The Supreme Court has emphasized the need for
channeling and limiting the jury's discretion in the eligibility phase,
to ensure that the death penalty is not imposed arbitrarily or
capriciously. Id. at 275-76. In the selection phase, by
contrast, what is important is that there be "an individualized
determination on the basis of the character of the individual and the
circumstances of the crime." Tuilaepa v. California, 512 US
967, 972, 129 L Ed 2d 750, 114 S Ct 2630 (1994) (emphasis in original) (quoting
Zant v. Stephens, 462 US 862, 879, 103 S Ct 2733, 77 L Ed 2d
235 (1983). In the selection phase, the Court has stated that "our
decisions suggest that complete jury discretion is constitutionally
permissible." Buchanan, 522 US at 276.
Similarly, in California v. Ramos, 463 US
992, 1008, 103 S Ct 3446, 77 L Ed 2d 1171 (1983), the Court held that,
once a defendant has been found eligible for the death penalty, "the
jury then is free to consider a myriad of factors to determine whether
death is the appropriate punishment." Zant provides an example
of the Court's deference to states regarding the selection phase. In
that case, the Court found no constitutional infirmity when a Georgia
court instructed the jury in the selection phase to consider "all facts
and circumstances presented in extenuation, mitigation, and aggravation
of punishment as well as such arguments as have been presented for the
State and for the Defense." Zant, 462 US at 878-80, 889 n 25.
Applying those standards, we cannot say that ORS
163.150(1) and its related jury instruction violate the Eighth or
Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. The federal
constitution does not require the court to instruct the jury in the
penalty phase that it is entitled to consider only aggravating factors
that relate to the defendant's character or to the circumstances of the
defendant's crime in deciding whether to impose a death sentence. The
trial court did not err in denying defendant's motion to prohibit the
death penalty.
C. Failure to Excuse Juror for Cause
In responding to questions on a jury questionnaire
and during initial questions during voirdire, one
prospective juror, Burk, stated that she believed that criminal
defendants should be required to prove their innocence, that the death
penalty is appropriate for a brutal murder, and that she would follow
her own beliefs if she were confronted with a jury instruction that was
contrary to her beliefs. Based on those statements, defendant moved to
excuse Burk from the jury. The prosecutor then explained to Burk that
the state was required to prove defendant guilty of all the charges.
Burk agreed with the prosecutor that, if criminal charges were filed
against her, the state would be required to prove the charges and that
she would not have to disprove them. The following colloquy then
occurred:
"Q. [Prosecutor]: And would you accept that same
circumstance for this defendant?
"A. I see what he is saying now. Yeah, I
understand now.
"Q. If you were to sit on this jury and the State
put on its case and defendant didn't put on any evidence at all,
would you be able to say to all of us now that you wouldn't hold
that against him because it's not his obligation to prove anything?
[Prosecutor repeats question at Burk's request.]
"A. No, I wouldn't hold it against him.
"Q. The State is required to prove to your
satisfaction beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant did it.
"A. Yes.
"Q. We don't want to convict people [who] aren't
guilty.
"A. Right."
Based on Burk's answers to those questions, the
prosecutor opposed defendant's motion to excuse Burk from the jury, and
the trial court denied the motion. Burk was not excused.
Actual bias is a basis for challenging prospective
jurors. See ORCP 57 D(1)(g) (incorporated by reference and made
applicable to criminal trials in ORS 136.210(1)). In deciding whether a
juror should be excused, "the test is whether the prospective juror's
ideas or opinions would impair substantially his or her performance of
the duties of a juror to decide the case fairly and impartially on the
evidence presented in court." State v. Barone, 328 Or 68, 74,
969 P2d 1013 (1998); see alsoPatton v. Yount, 467 US
1025, 1036, 81 L Ed 2d 847, 104 S Ct 2885 (1984) (to same effect).
Whether a prospective juror actually is biased is a factual question "to
be determined by the trial court in the exercise of its discretion."
State v. Montez, 309 Or 564, 574-75, 789 P2d 1352 (1990).
Because the trial court has the advantage of
observing a challenged prospective juror's demeanor, apparent
intelligence, and candor, that court's judgment as to the prospective
juror's ultimate qualifications is entitled to great weight. Id.
at 575. This court will not disturb a trial court's ruling on the matter
absent a manifest abuse of discretion. State v. Nefstad, 309 Or
523, 528, 789 P2d 1326 (1990). We give greatest deference to the trial
court when a juror's answers are contradictory or unclear. SeeBarone, 328 Or at 78 (so stating).
The record reveals that, once she understood the role
of a juror and the responsibility of the state to prove defendant guilty
beyond a reasonable doubt, Burk expressed her willingness to perform the
tasks of a juror in the manner required by law. The trial court, having
had the opportunity to observe Burk's demeanor, candor, and apparent
intelligence, concluded that she would be a fair and impartial juror.
Defendant has not demonstrated that the trial court manifestly abused
its discretion in denying defendant's motion to excuse Burk.
D. Exclusion of Nonregistered Voters and Felons
From Jury
Defendant makes several global arguments challenging
the constitutionality of SB 936. Defendant acknowledges that the same
global challenges were before this court in State v. Fugate,
332 Or 195, 26 P3d 802 (2001), which had not been decided when defendant
filed his brief in this case. In Fugate, the court rejected
those challenges.
In defendant's view, nonregistered voters and felons
are more likely to have a "watchdog" attitude toward an overzealous
government than are registered voters and those who have not been
convicted of a felony, and, therefore, those groups cannot be excluded
from jury service without violating the constitutional requirement that
a jury pool represent a fair cross-section of the community.
We find no cases, and defendant identifies none, in
which a federal circuit court has adopted the Guzman test.
Rather, federal circuit courts have held that a group is distinctive
under Duren if:
"(1) the group is defined and limited by some
factor, (2) a common thread or basic similarity in attitude, ideas,
or experience runs through the group, and (3) there is a community
of interests among members of the group such that the groups
interest cannot be adequately represented if the group is excluded
from the jury selection process."
SeeUnited States v. Fletcher, 965
F2d 781, 782 (9th Cir 1992) (adopting test from Eleventh
Circuit). Federal courts consistently have held that nonregistered
voters do not comprise a distinctive group. SeeMurrah v.
Arkansas, 532 F2d 105 (8th Cir 1976) (so holding and
identifying other courts in accord). Although convicted felons are
defined by a common factor, namely, that they have been found guilty of
violating the law, their reasons and ways of doing so are many and
varied. A person who has committed a felony offense by violating
environmental or tax laws, for example, does not necessarily have the
same "attitude, ideas, or experience" as a person who has committed
robbery or rape.
Thus, although felons as a group arguably might
satisfy the first prong of the Fletcher test, they do not
satisfy the other two prongs. We have little difficulty concluding that
felons, like nonregistered voters, are not a distinctive group for
purposes of the fair cross-section requirement under the Sixth Amendment.
See, e.g., United States v. Barry, 71 F3d 1269 (7th
Cir 1995) (holding persons charged with felonies not distinctive group).
We therefore conclude that defendant's fair cross-section
argument fails under the federal constitution. As explained above,
because defendant has not suggested a different analysis under Article
I, section 11, his fair cross-section argument also fails under the
Oregon Constitution. The trial court did not err in asking potential
jurors if they were not registered voters or had been convicted of a
felony in the last 15 years, and in excusing those who responded
affirmatively.
We do not address defendant's other challenges to SB
936, section 9(b), because he did not raise them below. See
State v. Barone, 329 Or 210, 243 n 23, 986 P2d 5 (1999) (declining
to address argument made for first time on appeal). We have reviewed
those unpreserved challenges and conclude that none reflects error
apparent on the face of the record, because none raises an error of law
that is obvious. SeeState v. Reyes-Camarena, 330 Or
431, 435-36, 7 P3d 522 (2000) (applying doctrine). We have reviewed
defendant's remaining assignments of error regarding pretrial issues and
reject them without further discussion.
We also have reviewed defendant's remaining
assignments of error and reject them without further discussion.
A. Denial of Motion for Mistrial
At sentencing, the state contended that defendant
should receive a death sentence. To impose that sentence, the jury had
to find beyond a reasonable doubt, among other things, that defendant's
conduct that caused Tesslynn's death was committed deliberately and with
the reasonable expectation that her death would result. See ORS
163.150(1)(b)(A) (1995) (describing sentencing factor). In his closing
argument, defense counsel contended that, even assuming that defendant
deliberately had engaged in the conduct that killed Tesslynn, he had not
done so with a reasonable expectation that her death would follow.
Rather, counsel argued, shock had caused the child's death, which is a
phenomenon that a lay person would not know about and which sometimes "sneaks
up" even on doctors.
In response to defendant's argument, the prosecutor
argued as follows:
"Deliberately means a state of mind that examines
and considers the contemplated act * * * [and] whether that act
should or shouldn't be done. Deliberation is present if the thinking
is done in a cool mental state under such circumstances and for such
period of time as to permit a careful weighing of the proposed
decision.
"I want you to - unfortunately, I am going to
draw you back a little bit to what was going on in that home the
last few days of Tesslynn's life.
"What we know pretty clearly is there was a
violent blow at least to her back and perhaps a violent blow to her
abdomen that caused internal bleeding. We know she was sexually
abused as she was vaginally penetrated within the last couple days
of her life.
"We know the night she died she was tied up with
her legs up over her head. We know she had vomited. By all accounts
the abdominal bleed was apparently causing her some distress and we
know, I think logically, that the defendant was well aware that the
child was in some severe distress, and that alone might be enough
for deliberation but I want you to think about the condition that
this little girl was in when those terrible injuries in and of
themselves were inflicted on her.
"You can look at the pictures and see that the
labia is essentially burned off, and whether or not it is burned off
by boiling water poured over her anal area when she was tied up, or
whether or not it's burned off by * * * a propane torch doesn't
really matter.
"When [defendant] is sexually abusing her he
is looking at the full sight, sound[,] smell, package of that child.
She must have begged for mercy. She must have expressed the terrible
pain she felt, and he went on anyway.
"I guess she was probably crying when he stomped
on her back, and think about what he was stomping on, a little girl,
31 pounds, damaged almost beyond repair, beaten repeatedly, fed
occasionally, tied up, sexually abused, burned with cigarettes, for
weeks even months.
"Did he deliberately do those acts? What other
word would you put with it? He extremely deliberately did those
acts. He knew exactly what he was doing. Was it reasonable for him
to expect her to die? Could she survive another week in this
household? Would she have lived another week? Ask yourself that.
Probably not. Would she have lived another month? No. Was he going
to kill her one day or another?
"Think about what she must have felt in the
bedroom, internally bleeding, tied up while her mother and [defendant]
partied in the other room. What a terrible, torturous, brutal way to
die. It would be terrible for all of us for adults, but for a little
girl just turned three years old the week before, it must have been
much more terrifying, much more hard to understand.
"Were the acts deliberate? Absolutely."
(Emphasis added.) During that part of prosecutor's
closing argument, one juror began to cry. Defendant moved for a mistrial
on the ground that the prosecutor intentionally was "inflaming the jury
in the manner and directness of his argument, using voice and everything
else he can to inflame them improperly * * *." The trial court denied
the motion and, with defendant's agreement, selected an alternate juror
to replace the juror who had begun to cry.
Before this court, defendant contends that the trial
court abused its discretion in denying his motion for a mistrial. He
also argues that the parts of the prosecutor's statements emphasized
above violated his right to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment
and deprived the sentencing proceeding of the reliability that the
Eighth Amendment requires. The state responds that defendant's objection
did not preserve the constitutional arguments that he raises here. On
the merits, the state responds that the prosecutor's statements were
relevant to issues at sentencing and that the emotional overtones of the
argument did not make it improper. Therefore, the state contends, the
trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying defendant's motion
for a mistrial, and no constitutional violation occurred.
We conclude that defendant's objection was sufficient
to put the trial court on notice that, in defendant's view, the
prosecutor's statements denied defendant his right to a fair sentencing
proceeding, whether that right is grounded in the Eighth and Fourteenth
Amendments to the United States Constitution or derives from some other
source. We turn to the merits.
Defendant argues that the prosecutor "veered off
topic and exhorted the jury to feel what [Tesslynn] must have felt in
her last moments." That, he contends, was improper, because, in doing
so, the prosecutor "asked the jury to engage in speculation and to rely
on facts not in evidence," and because "the argument's purpose could
only have been to evoke an emotional response from the jury." The state
contends that the prosecutor did not ask the jury to engage in
speculation about Tesslynn's uncommunicated thoughts and feelings.
Rather, he "sought to convey what one can infer that [Tesslynn] did
communicate to defendant." (Emphasis in original.) Therefore, the
prosecutor's statements helped to establish that defendant was aware of
the pain that Tesslynn had suffered from the injuries that he had caused
and that he nonetheless chose to inflict even more severe injuries that
ultimately caused her death.
In our view, the allegedly objectionable remarks in
this case did not violate that standard. The prosecutor's argument
called for the jury to make inferences about how Tesslynn must have
responded to the injuries that defendant had inflicted on her. Those
inferences reasonably were related to the nature and extent of
Tesslynn's injuries.
Moreover, the prosecutor's argument that Tesslynn
must have communicated her suffering and that defendant must have been
aware of it responded to defendant's contention that he had not acted
deliberately and with a reasonable expectation that death would result.
Defendant's willingness to inflict additional injuries the night of
Tesslynn's death, even though he knew that she already was in pain from
internal injuries, extensive burns, and from being tied up, helped to
establish that he acted deliberately and with the reasonable expectation
that her death would result.
Although we question the propriety of the
prosecutor's comments regarding Tesslynn's feelings and inability to
understand what was happening to her, we cannot conclude that those
comments, alone, were egregious enough to make the sentencing proceeding
unfair. SeeSmith, 310 Or at 27 (concluding that
prosecutors's comments, during closing argument of capital sentencing
proceeding, regarding victim's last thoughts and feelings were "more
gratuitous than inflammatory"). Consistent with this court's decision in
Smith, we decline defendant's invitation to create a rule that
requires a new sentencing proceeding whenever a prosecutor makes a
comment that arguably asks jurors to imagine what a victim thought or
felt.
As we have explained above, the prosecutor's
arguments in this case related to an element that was essential to the
jury's deliberation in the penalty phase, namely, whether defendant had
engaged in conduct deliberately and with a reasonable expectation that
Tesslynn's death would result. A certain degree of emotion was
inevitable at defendant's sentencing hearing, given the nature and
extent of Tesslynn's injuries. Even assuming that some of the allegedly
objectionable comments were improper, we do not think that those
comments resulted in a fundamentally unfair sentencing proceeding.
We reject defendant's Eighth Amendment claim for the
same reasons. The statements to which defendant objects did not result
in a sentence that was imposed arbitrarily and capriciously. SeeGregg v. Georgia, 428 US 153, 189, 96 S Ct 2909, 2932, 49 L Ed
2d 859 (1976) (under Eighth Amendment, sentencing discretion must be "suitably
directed and limited so as to minimize the risk of wholly arbitrary and
capricious action").
Defendant contends that the trial court erred when it
imposed a sentence of death for defendant's conviction for aggravated
murder as pleaded in Count 1 of the indictment. The first question under
ORS 163.150(1)(b) (1995) is "[w]hether the conduct of the defendant that
caused the death of the deceased was committed deliberately and with the
reasonable expectation that death of the deceased or another would
result." Defendant maintains that that question is an element of the
crime of aggravated murder that had to be pleaded in the indictment.
Because the element of deliberateness was not pleaded, defendant argues,
the trial court lacked authority to submit defendant's case to the jury
for a finding on that issue and therefore lacked authority to impose a
death sentence.
Defendant admits that he did not object in the trial
court to his sentence on the grounds asserted here. However, defendant
argues that the state's failure to plead "deliberateness" in the
indictment deprived the trial court of subject matter jurisdiction and
that lack of subject matter jurisdiction can be raised at any stage of
the proceedings. SeeAiles v. Portland Meadows, Inc.,
312 Or 376, 383, 823 P2d 956 (1991) (lack of subject matter jurisdiction
may be raised at any time, including on appeal). Defendant also argues
that this court should review the matter as "error apparent on the face
of the record."
Defendant concedes that the identical issue was
before this court in State v. Terry, 333 Or 163, 37 P3d 157
(2001). In that case, this court rejected the defendant's jurisdictional
argument and his argument that the alleged error was "error apparent on
the face of the record." We reject defendant's claim in this case for
the same reasons. We have reviewed each of defendant's other assignments
of error regarding the penalty phase and reject them without further
discussion.