Scottie D. Allen v. State of Florida ( 2021 )


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  •         Supreme Court of Florida
    ____________
    No. SC19-1313
    ____________
    SCOTTIE D. ALLEN,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    STATE OF FLORIDA,
    Appellee.
    June 3, 2021
    PER CURIAM.
    Scottie D. Allen appeals his conviction for first-degree murder
    and his sentence of death. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, §
    3(b)(1), Fla. Const. For the reasons below, we affirm Allen’s
    conviction and sentence of death.
    BACKGROUND
    Allen was indicted for the October 2, 2017, first-degree
    premeditated murder of Ryan Mason on June 25, 2018, and soon
    thereafter began asserting his right to self-representation. After
    finding Allen competent and conducting two inquiries under Faretta
    v. California, 
    422 U.S. 806
     (1975), the trial court ruled that Allen
    could represent himself pro se, without standby counsel. Allen’s
    guilt phase occurred on February 19-20, 2018. In his opening
    statement, Allen told the jury that he would not be presenting any
    evidence or calling any witnesses because it was the State’s burden
    to prove his guilt.
    The evidence presented at trial established that while serving a
    twenty-five-year prison sentence for second-degree murder, Allen
    strangled Mason to death in the cell they shared at Wakulla
    Correctional Institution. Allen confessed to planning and carrying
    out Mason’s murder, including to an investigator from the Florida
    Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) during a recorded
    interview, which was played for the jury, without objection from
    Allen. As the trial court cogently explained in its sentencing order,
    the evidence showed that:
    [Allen] planned the murder for weeks after learning
    Mason had lied to him about the nature of the criminal
    offense that landed Mason in prison. Upon learning that
    Mason was convicted of child molestation, [Allen] decided
    he would kill him. [Allen] raped Mason periodically over
    the following two weeks to make Mason’s life miserable.
    During this time, [Allen] was paying careful attention to
    the timing of the inmate head counts throughout each
    -2-
    day. On October 1, 2017, [Allen] decided the following
    morning would be the day he killed Mr. Mason.
    On the morning of October 2, 2017, in-between
    head counts, [Allen] raised and draped a sheet over the
    cell bars to keep anyone from being able to see into the
    cell. [Allen] then committed the murder and immediately
    made himself a cup of coffee, sat down, ate half of a
    honey bun and finished the cup of coffee.
    Allen then calmly reported to a correctional officer that he had
    murdered his cellmate, which resulted in the discovery of Mason’s
    body.
    During his recorded statement to the FDLE agent, Allen said
    that Mason was “kicking like crazy” and that, during the strangling,
    when Mason was still conscious, Allen told Mason, “I’m going to
    strangle the life out of you. . . . Tell the devil I said hello.”
    The medical examiner testified that Mason was choked with
    such force as to fracture his C6 vertebrae and that after three to five
    minutes of constant pressure, Mason suffered irreversible brain
    damage and died. He further testified that the shirt found around
    Mason’s neck was wrapped and knotted so tightly it was difficult to
    cut through with a surgical scalpel, and that in addition to the
    injuries indicating that Mason’s cause of death was ligature
    -3-
    strangulation, Mason had injuries to his wrist, forearm, and ankle,
    as well as unusual bruising behind his left knee.
    The State presented testimony that the DNA mixture obtained
    from the shirt found around Mason’s neck was 130 billion times
    more likely to come from Allen and Mason than Mason and an
    unrelated individual. In addition, the DNA mixture obtained from
    the victim’s left-hand fingernails was 700 billion times more likely
    to have come from Allen and Mason than Mason and an unrelated
    individual.
    After the State rested, Allen elected not to testify and rested
    without presenting a defense. He also did not present a closing
    argument. The jury found Allen guilty of first-degree murder on
    February 20, 2019. 1
    The penalty phase occurred later the same day, and Allen, who
    continued to represent himself, did not present mitigation or
    argument to the penalty-phase jury. Following the State’s
    presentation, Allen’s jury unanimously found that the State had
    established beyond a reasonable doubt the existence of the
    1. Allen’s jury was instructed on first-degree premeditated
    murder.
    -4-
    following four aggravating factors: (1) Allen was previously convicted
    of a felony and under sentence of imprisonment; (2) Allen was
    previously convicted of a felony involving the use or threat of
    violence to another person; (3) the first-degree murder was
    especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel (HAC); and (4) the first-
    degree murder was committed in a cold, calculated, and
    premeditated manner, without any pretense of moral or legal
    justification (CCP). 2 In addition, the jury unanimously found that
    the aggravating factors it found the State had established beyond a
    reasonable doubt were sufficient to warrant a possible sentence of
    death; found that one or more individual jurors had not found that
    one or more mitigating circumstances was established by the
    greater weight of the evidence; and unanimously found that the
    aggravating factors it found the State had established beyond a
    reasonable doubt outweighed the mitigating circumstances.
    Finally, the jury unanimously found that Allen should be sentenced
    to death.
    2. The jury unanimously found that the State had not
    established beyond a reasonable doubt that the victim’s murder
    was committed for financial gain.
    -5-
    Following the penalty-phase trial, Allen continued to represent
    himself and maintained his desire not to present mitigation during
    the Spencer3 hearing. The trial court ordered a presentence
    investigation report (PSI) pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal
    Procedure 3.710(b). Additionally, the trial court appointed amicus
    counsel to develop and present mitigation to the trial court at the
    Spencer hearing. Amicus counsel retained Dr. Martin Falb as a
    mental health expert, and Allen submitted to and cooperated with
    an evaluation by Dr. Falb.
    At the Spencer hearing, amicus counsel’s mitigation
    presentation included the testimony of a mitigation specialist, who
    testified regarding Allen’s background, and the testimony of Dr.
    Falb, a forensic psychologist. Dr. Falb testified that he did not
    diagnose Allen with antisocial personality disorder because the
    psychologist who performed Allen’s competency evaluation had
    already done so. However, Dr. Falb opined that as a result of
    Allen’s antisocial personality disorder, he is “likely unable” to
    conform his conduct to the requirements of the law. Dr. Falb also
    3. Spencer v. State, 
    615 So. 2d 688
     (Fla. 1993).
    -6-
    testified that Allen “suffered some extreme measures of trauma in
    terms of emotional abuse, physical abuse, and sexual abuse
    beginning at a young enough age, along with substance abuse,” and
    that Allen received a “very, very high” score of six on the ten-
    question Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) test. Based on the
    testimony of the mitigation specialist during the Spencer hearing,
    Dr. Falb testified that Allen’s ACE score could have been as high as
    eight out of ten. Dr. Falb further opined that it was likely Allen
    suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). In explaining
    his PTSD diagnosis, Dr. Falb testified that Allen told him during
    their interview, “I can’t say that what I did to him [the victim] wasn’t
    related to my being angry about what had happened to me [earlier
    in life], but I was mad that he had been lying to me [about why he
    was in prison] for nine months.” Regarding Allen’s statement, “I
    can’t say that what I did to him wasn’t related,” Dr. Falb testified
    that this statement “makes the point” for “a recurrence of the PTSD
    of that experience of what happened to [Allen] when he was being
    molested back at the age of eight to eleven.” However, Dr. Falb
    further testified that Allen’s statement, “I was mad at him for lying
    -7-
    to me for nine months,” was not “inconsistent with somebody rising
    to a level of anger if they’re antisocial.”
    Following amicus counsel’s mitigation presentation, the State
    relied on Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.202 to argue that it
    was entitled to have Allen evaluated by its own mental health
    expert, Dr. Greg Prichard, for purposes of rebutting the testimony of
    Dr. Falb. Allen stated, “I will not submit to an interview by [the]
    prosecution’s doctor.” Despite voicing uncertainty about how to
    proceed in light of Allen’s decision not to present mitigation—a
    circumstance which rule 3.202 does not address—the trial court
    ultimately ordered Allen to submit to an evaluation by the State’s
    mental health expert. The trial court ruled that the evaluation
    would be limited in scope to the mitigation addressed by Dr. Falb
    and further told Allen that his “cooperation is appreciated” but that
    if, during Dr. Prichard’s interview, Allen got “to a situation . . .
    outside what [Allen] want[ed] to answer, then [Allen should] just tell
    them that.” Allen cooperated with Dr. Prichard’s evaluation.
    At the continued Spencer hearing on June 21, 2019, the
    State’s mental health expert, Dr. Prichard, testified that he agreed
    with Dr. Falb that Allen has antisocial personality disorder and
    -8-
    further testified that “antisocial personality disorder is very much a
    driving factor for [Allen].” However, Dr. Prichard disagreed with Dr.
    Falb’s PTSD diagnosis and testified that he did not see any
    indication of dissociation associated with PTSD. Dr. Prichard
    further testified that Allen told him “he was completely sober and
    straight the day the murder occurred,” that Allen “said that he
    actually made the decision . . . on Friday that he was going to kill
    [the victim on] Sunday,” and that Allen’s statements regarding the
    murder indicate that the killing was “very calm and pretty well
    planned out.” Consequently, Dr. Prichard opined that he “didn’t
    see any indication of . . . mental, emotional disturbance anywhere
    around the time of the offense.” Regarding the statutory mitigator
    that Allen’s capacity to appreciate the criminality of his conduct
    and conform his conduct to the requirements of law were
    substantially impaired, Dr. Prichard agreed with Dr. Falb’s
    testimony that “antisocial personality disorder intervenes” when
    considering the mitigator. However, Dr. Prichard testified that Allen
    “could conform and he did understand,” but acted “for his own
    selfish reasons.” Dr. Prichard further opined that he did not see
    -9-
    any indication that Allen was under duress at the time of the
    murder.
    Upon cross-examination by amicus counsel, Dr. Prichard
    acknowledged that his disagreement regarding Dr. Falb’s PTSD
    diagnosis did not mean that Allen had not suffered trauma as a
    result of his background, including childhood sexual abuse.
    However, Dr. Prichard reiterated his position that he “definitely”
    disagrees with Dr. Falb’s PTSD diagnosis.
    Allen, who was still representing himself pro se, also cross-
    examined Dr. Prichard. While doing so, Allen referenced his
    “agreement to be interviewed by [Dr. Prichard] in our last court
    proceeding.” Much of Allen’s cross-examination of Dr. Prichard
    focused on why Dr. Prichard disagreed with Dr. Falb’s PTSD
    diagnosis.
    On redirect, Dr. Prichard reaffirmed that he disagreed with Dr.
    Falb’s PTSD diagnosis and testified that “everything with Mr. Allen
    is better explained by personality issues than any kind of PTSD
    response associated with trauma.” At the conclusion of Dr.
    Prichard’s testimony, the prosecutor stated, “[T]he evidence
    presented at trial is what we’re going to be relying on for the
    - 10 -
    substantial amount of the aggravating -- or for the aggravating
    circumstances. This was just rebuttal to the Amicus case.”
    At the conclusion of the Spencer hearing, the trial court
    discussed sentencing memoranda with the parties. Allen stated
    that he would submit a pro se memorandum, in which he would “be
    arguing toward the findings of Dr. Falb as far as the PTSD
    diagnosis” and the “extreme mental distress . . . mitigator as well.”
    Allen subsequently filed his sentencing memorandum, in which he
    stated, “I cannot refute the evidence that was presented which led
    to a finding of guilt[,] nor can I argue against the four aggravating
    factors . . . which led to a 12-0 jury verdict for a sentence of death.”
    Allen further stated, “I believe the amicus curiae you appointed for
    mitigation did a great job given the material and restrictions they
    had to contend with. So I leave any findings they made or
    established unargued and supported. The one concern I have
    though is the testimony of the State’s witness Dr. Prichard. I found
    it to be made of 3⁄4 truths and spin as he said his ‘job’ was to refute
    the findings of Dr. Falb. I don’t think he did that, as I tried to
    establish during questioning of him during his testimony.”
    - 11 -
    Thereafter, the trial court followed the jury’s recommendation
    and sentenced Allen to death on July 23, 2019. The sentencing
    order reflects that the trial court found and assigned great weight to
    each of the four aggravating factors that Allen’s jury found to exist
    beyond a reasonable doubt.
    The trial court rejected the statutory mitigating circumstance
    proposed by amicus counsel that the capital felony occurred while
    Allen was under the influence of extreme mental or emotional
    disturbance. In so doing, the trial court explained, in pertinent
    part:
    The Court finds competent evidence was presented to
    establish [Allen] has PTSD and Anti-Social Personality
    Disorder. The Court, however, does not find [Allen] was
    under extreme mental or emotional disturbance at the
    time the murder was committed. The murder was
    planned for weeks and was deliberate. The evidence
    clearly established [Allen] was calm and coherent
    immediately following the murder. There was no
    testimony or other credible evidence that [Allen] exhibited
    any signs of being under the influence of drugs, alcohol
    or from an episodic PTSD event at the time of the
    murder.
    However, the trial court found one statutory mitigating
    circumstance to which it assigned moderate weight, namely that
    Allen’s ability to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law
    - 12 -
    is substantially impaired “by adverse childhood experiences that
    have rendered him less than effective at making good decisions.” In
    addition, the trial court found the following five nonstatutory
    mitigating circumstances and assigned them the noted weight: (1)
    the defendant has been diagnosed with alcohol abuse and drug
    dependency (some weight); (2) the defendant was diagnosed with
    major depression (moderate weight); (3) the defendant was raised in
    a dysfunctional family setting (great weight); (4) the defendant was
    courteous, respectful, and considerate to the court during every
    court appearance (some weight); and (5) the defendant did not want
    his family contacted for mitigation purposes (some weight).
    In sentencing Allen to death, the trial court further found as
    follows:
    The Court has conducted its own independent
    evaluation weighing the aggravating factors found by the
    jury in their verdict and weighing the mitigating
    circumstances presented and reasonably established by
    the evidence. The Court assigned great weight to each of
    the four aggravating factors. The Court finds the
    aggravating factors cumulatively outweigh the mitigating
    circumstances and a sentence of death is appropriate for
    the murder of Ryan Mason.
    - 13 -
    ANALYSIS
    In this direct appeal, Allen raises four unpreserved challenges
    to his sentence of death. Specifically, Allen argues that (1) the trial
    court’s failure to renew the offer of counsel before commencing the
    penalty phase constitutes fundamental error; (2) a guilt-phase jury
    instruction and a penalty-phase argument by the prosecutor violate
    Caldwell v. Mississippi, 
    472 U.S. 320
     (1985), and collectively
    amount to fundamental error; (3) fundamental error occurred
    because the State violated Allen’s Fifth Amendment right against
    compelled self-incrimination during the Spencer hearing; and (4) the
    trial court fundamentally erred by failing to instruct the penalty-
    phase jury that it must determine beyond a reasonable doubt that
    the aggravating factors were sufficient to justify the death penalty
    and that those factors outweighed the mitigating circumstances.
    The State raises the sufficiency of the evidence. See Fla. R. App. P.
    9.142(a)(5).
    (1) Failure to Renew Offer of Counsel
    Allen first argues that the trial court’s failure to renew the offer
    of counsel before commencing the penalty phase constitutes
    fundamental error. We review this question of law de novo, see
    - 14 -
    State v. Smith, 
    241 So. 3d 53
    , 55 (Fla. 2018), and hold that Allen is
    not entitled to relief because the trial court cured the error, thereby
    eliminating the need to address whether, had the error not been
    cured, it would amount to fundamental error.
    Contrary to our precedent and Florida Rule of Criminal
    Procedure 3.111(d)(5), the trial court failed to renew the offer of
    counsel between the guilt and penalty phases. See Traylor v. State,
    
    596 So. 2d 957
    , 968 (Fla. 1992) (interpreting article I, section 16 of
    the Florida Constitution as entitling a criminal defendant to “decide
    at each crucial stage of the proceedings whether he or she requires
    the assistance of counsel” and concluding that “[w]here the right to
    counsel has been properly waived, . . . the waiver applies only to the
    present stage and must be renewed at each subsequent crucial
    stage where the defendant is unrepresented”); Fla. R. Crim. P.
    3.111(d)(5) (“If a waiver is accepted at any stage of the proceedings,
    the offer of assistance of counsel shall be renewed by the court at
    each subsequent stage of the proceedings at which the defendant
    appears without counsel.”); see also Muehleman v. State, 
    3 So. 3d 1149
    , 1156-57 (Fla. 2009) (applying Traylor and rule 3.111(d)(5) to
    a penalty-phase trial).
    - 15 -
    Although the offer of counsel was not renewed before the
    penalty phase began, at the State’s urging, immediately after the
    penalty-phase jury returned its recommendation, and again, sua
    sponte, at a hearing the next day, the trial court inquired of Allen as
    to whether, if the offer of counsel had been renewed between the
    guilt and penalty phases, he would have accepted the offer of
    penalty-phase counsel. Further, upon the State’s request that an
    additional Faretta inquiry accompany the renewed offer of counsel,
    the trial court conducted a “nunc pro tunc Faretta inquiry”—the
    third Faretta inquiry in the case. In his responses to the trial court,
    Allen consistently represented that he would have waived penalty-
    phase counsel and that he would have continued to exercise his
    right to self-representation had the trial court renewed the offer of
    counsel before commencing the penalty phase. The trial court
    found that Allen’s decisions, including to waive counsel, were
    knowing, voluntary, and intelligent.
    Because the record demonstrates that the trial court cured the
    error while it still had jurisdiction to do so, by confirming with Allen
    that he had not wavered in his decision to represent himself, see
    Traylor, 
    596 So. 2d at 968
    , we hold that there is no basis for
    - 16 -
    appellate relief. Cf. Sullivan v. State, 
    170 So. 2d 632
    , 635 (Fla.
    1974) (“It is well-established law that where the trial judge has
    extended counsel an opportunity to cure any error, and counsel
    fails to take advantage of the opportunity, such error, if any, was
    invited and will not warrant reversal.”).
    (2) Caldwell
    Next, Allen argues that the trial court’s guilt-phase jury
    instruction that it was “the judge’s job to determine a proper
    sentence” if the jury found Allen guilty of first-degree premeditated
    murder, combined with the prosecutor’s statement during the
    State’s penalty-phase opening argument that it would ask the jury
    to return a “recommendation” of death, violate Caldwell and
    collectively constitute fundamental error requiring a new penalty-
    phase trial. We review this question of law de novo, see Davis v.
    State, 
    136 So. 3d 1169
    , 1201 (Fla. 2018), and hold that Allen is not
    entitled to relief.
    Taking the statements in reverse order, no error, let alone
    fundamental error, occurred as a result of the prosecutor’s
    statement that he would ask the jury to return a “recommendation”
    of death because the statement did not “improperly describe[] the
    - 17 -
    role assigned to the jury by local law.” Romano v. Oklahoma, 
    512 U.S. 1
    , 9 (1994) (“[T]o establish a Caldwell violation, a defendant
    necessarily must show that the remarks to the jury improperly
    described the role assigned to the jury by local law.”) (quoting
    Dugger v. Adams, 
    489 U.S. 401
    , 407 (1989)). Under the plain text
    of Florida’s death penalty statute, a sentencing “recommendation” is
    precisely what the penalty-phase jury provides. See § 921.141(2),
    Fla. Stat. (2018).
    Regarding the guilt-phase instruction, “[w]hen the jury is to be
    involved in a penalty phase,” the standard jury instructions direct
    trial courts to “omit” from the instructions the following italicized
    sentence: “Your duty is to determine if the defendant has been
    proven guilty or not, in accord with the law. It is the judge’s job to
    determine a proper sentence if the defendant is found guilty.” Fla.
    St. Jury Instr. (Crim.) 3.10 (emphasis added). The purpose of the
    italicized sentence is to prevent a jury pardon on the issue of guilt.
    See generally Broughton v. State, 
    790 So. 2d 1118
    , 1119 (Fla. 2d
    DCA 2001) (explaining that the italicized sentence reflects “the
    evolving policy of removing from a noncapital jury any knowledge of
    potential penalties for the crimes with which a defendant is
    - 18 -
    charged” to ensure “ ‘that the jury should decide a case in
    accordance with the law and the evidence and disregard the
    consequences of its verdict’ ”) (quoting Legette v. State, 
    718 So. 2d 878
    , 881 (Fla. 4th DCA 1998)). Precluding an improper jury pardon
    on the issue of guilt is just as relevant in a capital case as a
    noncapital case. However, because the instruction is an incomplete
    statement of Florida law where the jury may go on to participate in
    a penalty phase, the trial court should not have included it in the
    guilt-phase instructions.
    In addressing the instructional error, the State argues that
    Allen “waived” any claim that the guilt-phase instruction
    constitutes fundamental error because he “agreed” to it. The State
    is correct that Allen stated he had “no objection” to the entirety of
    the guilt-phase instructions read by the trial court. However, the
    State’s attempt to label Allen’s statement as a “waiver” fails because
    the statement does not amount to “the voluntary and intentional
    relinquishment of a known right” that is necessary to establish a
    “waiver.” Major League Baseball v. Morasani, 
    790 So. 2d 1071
    ,
    1077 n.12 (Fla. 2001). The record is devoid of any indication that
    - 19 -
    Allen knew the instruction at issue deviated from the standard jury
    instruction, but agreed to its use anyway.
    Although the State’s claim is more properly analyzed as one of
    “invited error,” that label also does not fit the facts. This Court’s
    precedent requires more than “mere acquiescence” to an incorrect
    jury instruction to support the conclusion that the defendant
    invited the error and thereby is precluded from challenging the
    error on appeal, even under a fundamental-error standard. See
    Lowe v. State, 
    259 So. 3d 23
     at 50 (Fla. 2018). More specifically, to
    support a finding of invited error, defense counsel must either
    request the incorrect instruction or be aware an instruction is
    incorrect but agree to it anyway:
    [This Court has] also recognized, in the context of certain
    erroneous jury instructions, a fundamental error analysis
    exception “where defense counsel affirmatively agreed to
    or requested the incomplete instruction.” State v. Lucas,
    
    645 So. 2d 425
    , 427 (Fla. 1994), receded from on other
    grounds by State v. Spencer, 
    216 So. 3d 481
     (Fla. 2017).
    However, [this Court] also recognized in that context that
    the exception did not apply “where defense counsel
    merely acquiesced to [the incomplete] instructions.”
    Spencer, 216 So. 3d at 486.
    - 20 -
    Id. 4
    Applying Lowe to Allen’s case, the conduct necessary to
    support a finding of invited error did not occur. However, we agree
    4. In Lowe, we also cited approvingly to Black v. State, 
    695 So. 2d 459
    , 461 (Fla. 1st DCA 1997), for the proposition that
    “defense counsel [(1)] must be aware that an incorrect instruction is
    being read and [(2)] must affirmatively agree to, or request, the
    incomplete instruction.” 259 So. 3d at 50. However, this language
    has proven to be problematic, as it has caused some courts to
    conflate two different factual scenarios—i.e., acquiescing to an
    incorrect instruction versus requesting or affirmatively agreeing to
    an incorrect instruction—and improperly label unpreserved error as
    unreviewable, invited error. See, e.g., Calloway v. State, 
    37 So. 3d 891
    , 893, 896-97 (Fla. 1st DCA 2010) (concluding that the
    defendant “acquiesced” to alleged errors in jury instructions,
    thereby prohibiting reversal under the invited-error doctrine, where
    “defendant specifically agreed to the instructions and stated he had
    no objections to them as proposed [at the charge conference] and as
    read [to the jury]”). To be clear, acquiescing to an incorrect
    instruction constitutes a failure of preservation that does not
    preclude fundamental-error review. See Crain v. State, 
    894 So. 2d 59
    , 68 (Fla. 2004) (holding that the defendant failed to preserve his
    challenge to a jury instruction for appeal where “trial counsel did
    not object to the instruction when presented with a packet of
    corrected jury instructions before closing arguments”); Suarez v.
    Dugger, 
    527 So. 2d 190
    , 193 (Fla. 1988) (“Because trial counsel
    failed to object to the absence of [certain jury] instructions the
    matter was not properly preserved . . . .”). In contrast,
    unreviewable, invited error occurs when a party either proposes
    (i.e., requests) an instruction and therefore cannot argue against its
    correctness on appeal, or when a party is aware a standard
    instruction or an instruction proposed by another party is incorrect
    but agrees to its use anyway and as a result of having affirmatively
    agreed to the instruction cannot argue against its correctness on
    appeal. See Lowe, 259 So. 3d at 50.
    - 21 -
    with the State on the merits that the trial court’s erroneous
    inclusion of the guilt-phase instruction at issue did not violate
    Caldwell or amount to fundamental error.
    In Caldwell, a plurality of the Supreme Court ruled that “it is
    constitutionally impermissible [under the Eighth Amendment] to
    rest a death sentence on a determination made by a sentencer who
    has been led to believe that the responsibility for determining the
    appropriateness of the defendant’s death rests elsewhere.”
    Caldwell, 
    472 U.S. at 328-29
    . Applying this rule, the Supreme
    Court vacated the defendant’s death sentence after finding that his
    jury was “led to believe that responsibility for determining the
    appropriateness of a death sentence rest[ed] not with the jury but
    with the appellate court which later reviews the case.” 
    Id. at 323
    .
    Since Caldwell, the Supreme Court has explained that, as a result
    of precedent governing its plurality decisions, it “read[s] Caldwell as
    ‘relevant only to certain types of comment--those that mislead the
    jury as to its role in the sentencing process in a way that allows the
    jury to feel less responsible than it should for the sentencing
    decision.’ ” Romano, 
    512 U.S. at 9
     (quoting Darden v. Wainwright,
    
    477 U.S. 168
    , 184 n.15 (1986)).
    - 22 -
    In addressing Caldwell’s application to Florida’s capital
    sentencing scheme, this Court has explained that “[i]n Caldwell, the
    United States Supreme Court was considering the application of the
    Mississippi death penalty procedure which is dissimilar to that
    utilized by Florida” because “[t]he Florida procedure does not
    empower the jury with the final sentencing decision; rather, the
    trial judge imposes the sentence.” Combs v. State, 
    525 So. 2d 853
    ,
    856 (Fla. 1988). More recently, in Davis v. State, 
    136 So. 3d 1169
    ,
    1201 (Fla. 2014), this Court rejected the argument that the same
    guilt-phase jury instruction that Allen challenges here violates
    Caldwell. See also 
    id.
     (rejecting the related claim that the
    prosecutor “improperly disparaged the role of the jury” in violation
    of Caldwell by referencing the jury’s “recommendation” as
    “advisory” and stating that “the final [sentencing] decision rests
    with [the trial court]”).
    We recognize that, since Combs and Davis, Florida’s capital
    sentencing scheme has changed in light of the mandate of Hurst v.
    Florida, 
    577 U.S. 92
    , 102-03 (2016), that the Sixth Amendment
    requires a jury to unanimously find beyond a reasonable doubt the
    fact that renders the defendant eligible for imposition of the death
    - 23 -
    sentence—i.e., the existence of a statutory aggravating
    circumstance, State v. Poole, 
    297 So. 3d 487
    , 501-03 (Fla. 2020);
    see § 921.141(2)(a)-(b), Fla. Stat. (2018). Also, Florida’s capital
    sentencing scheme has since been amended in additional ways,
    including requiring the jury’s recommendation for death to be
    unanimous, see § 921.141(2)(c), and precluding the trial court from
    imposing a sentence of death if the jury recommends a sentence of
    life without the possibility of parole, see § 921.141(3)(a)1. Despite
    these changes and the fact that the guilt-phase instruction in
    Allen’s case was an incomplete statement of Florida law, Florida’s
    statutory scheme remains a hybrid sentencing scheme that does
    not place the ultimate responsibility for sentencing the defendant
    on the jury. See § 921.141(2)-(4).
    Moreover, in analyzing whether the “remarks to the jury
    improperly described the role assigned to the jury by local law” so
    as to violate Caldwell’s mandate against “mislead[ing] the jury as to
    its role in the sentencing process in a way that allows the jury to
    feel less responsible than it should for the sentencing decision,”
    Romano, 
    512 U.S. at 9
     (quoting Dugger, 
    489 U.S. at 407
    , and then
    Darden, 
    477 U.S. at
    184 n.15), we cannot myopically focus on a
    - 24 -
    single statement or instruction. Rather, Caldwell claims are
    properly evaluated by “look[ing] to the ‘total trial scene,’ including
    jury selection, the guilt phase of the trial, and the sentencing
    hearing, examining both the court’s instructions and counsel’s
    arguments to the jury.” Barrientes v. Johnson, 
    221 F.3d 741
    , 777
    (5th Cir. 2000) (quoting Montoya v. Scott, 
    65 F.3d 405
    , 420 (5th Cir.
    1995)).
    In Allen’s case, despite the guilt-phase instructional error, the
    record establishes that the jury was properly informed as to its role
    in Allen’s sentencing, including that if the jury found Allen guilty of
    first-degree premeditated murder, a separate penalty-phase trial
    would occur in which the jury’s role would be to determine Allen’s
    eligibility for the death penalty and recommend the appropriate
    sentence. Large portions of jury selection were devoted to
    addressing the jury’s role should the case proceed to a penalty
    phase, including the death qualification of the jury, and the trial
    court properly instructed the jury regarding its role during the
    penalty phase. Thus, no Caldwell violation occurred.
    Nor did the guilt-phase instructional error amount to
    fundamental error in light of the correct penalty-phase jury
    - 25 -
    instructions and accurate descriptions of the jury’s role in
    sentencing that otherwise permeated Allen’s trial. See Bush v.
    State, 
    295 So. 3d 179
    , 212 (Fla. 2020) (explaining that where, as
    here, the claim of fundamental error relates to the death sentence,
    “fundamental error” is error that “reaches down into the validity of
    the trial itself to the extent that a . . . jury recommendation of death
    could not have been obtained without the assistance of the alleged
    error”) (quoting Card v. State, 
    803 So. 2d 613
    , 622 (Fla. 2001)).
    Accordingly, we deny relief as to this claim.
    (3) Fifth Amendment
    Next, Allen argues that the State’s introduction of his
    statements through Dr. Prichard’s rebuttal testimony during the
    Spencer hearing violated his Fifth Amendment right against
    compelled self-incrimination and that the error was fundamental.
    We review this legal issue de novo. See Smith, 241 So. 3d at 55.
    Compelling the mental health examination of a defendant
    during the penalty phase of a capital trial potentially implicates the
    Fifth Amendment protection against any person being “compelled in
    any criminal case to be a witness against himself.” U.S. Const.
    amend. V; see Estelle v. Smith, 
    451 U.S. 454
    , 468 (1981) (“A
    - 26 -
    criminal defendant, who neither initiates a psychiatric evaluation
    nor attempts to introduce any psychiatric evidence, may not be
    compelled to respond to a psychiatrist if his statements can be used
    against him at a capital sentencing proceeding.”); see also generally
    Burns v. State, 
    699 So. 2d 646
    , 651 (Fla. 1997) (“[T]he Fifth
    Amendment right against self-incrimination, made applicable to the
    States through the Fourteenth Amendment, continues through the
    sentencing phase of a capital murder trial.”).
    However, permitting the State’s mental health expert to
    examine a capital defendant in order to rebut the defense’s penalty
    phase mental health expert testimony does not violate the Fifth
    Amendment right against self-incrimination. Davis v. State, 
    698 So. 2d 1182
    , 1191 (Fla. 1997); see also Philmore v. State, 
    820 So. 2d 919
    , 932-33 (Fla. 2002) (rejecting capital defendant’s argument that
    “a compelled mental health evaluation under Florida Rule of
    Criminal Procedure 3.202 impermissibly requires the defendant to
    forego either his constitutional right to present mitigating evidence
    or forego his constitutional right not to be a witness against
    himself” and “conclud[ing] that there is no error, let alone
    fundamental error, in allowing the State to subject the defendant to
    - 27 -
    a mental health examination after the defendant decides to present
    mitigation”); Dillbeck v. State, 
    643 So. 2d 1027
    , 1030 (Fla. 1994)
    (holding trial court did not abuse discretion “in striving to level the
    playing field by ordering Dillbeck to submit to a prepenalty phase
    interview with the State’s expert” where “Dillbeck planned to, and
    ultimately did, present extensive mitigating evidence in the penalty
    phase through defense mental health experts who had interviewed
    him”).
    Allen’s case presents facts that do not neatly fit within this
    Court’s precedent or the text of rule 3.202, which establishes the
    procedure by which the State’s mental health expert may examine a
    defendant who has been convicted of capital murder with respect to
    the “mitigating circumstances the defendant expects to establish
    through expert testimony” and provides consequences for the
    defendant’s refusal to cooperate. Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.202(d)-(e).
    Here, Allen declined to present any mitigation to the penalty-phase
    jury or to the trial court during the Spencer hearing. However, the
    trial court exercised its discretion to appoint amicus counsel to
    develop and present mitigation during the Spencer hearing. Thus, it
    was the trial court’s decision, not Allen’s, that mitigation should be
    - 28 -
    presented on Allen’s behalf. Consequently, it was the trial court’s
    decision, not Allen’s, that resulted in Allen’s evaluation by amicus
    counsel’s mental health expert, Dr. Falb, which in turn resulted in
    the trial court compelling Allen’s examination by the State’s rebuttal
    mental health expert, Dr. Prichard, and the subsequent
    introduction of Allen’s compelled statements through both experts.
    These facts suggest the making of a Fifth Amendment
    quandary. 5 But, there is more. Allen does not challenge his
    compelled evaluation by amicus counsel’s expert, Dr. Falb. On the
    contrary, in the pro se sentencing memorandum that Allen filed in
    the trial court, he adopted amicus counsel’s mitigation
    presentation. Moreover, in this appeal, to remedy the alleged Fifth
    Amendment violation, Allen seeks to retain the benefit of the mental
    5. As the State’s brief suggests, allowing the trial court to
    force a mitigation presentation upon an unwilling, competent
    defendant in order to avoid a potential Eighth Amendment problem,
    see generally Muhammad v. State, 
    782 So. 2d 343
    , 363-64 (Fla.
    2001), that no United States Supreme Court decision says exists
    also potentially implicates the conformity clause of the Florida
    Constitution, see art. I, § 17, and the right to self-representation
    under both the United States and Florida Constitutions. However,
    these issues were not raised below, and it is unnecessary to
    consider them to resolve the Fifth Amendment claim that Allen
    raises on appeal.
    - 29 -
    health mitigation established through Dr. Falb’s testimony but
    strike the rebuttal mental health testimony that the State presented
    through Dr. Prichard.
    We hold that by making the mental health mitigation
    presented by amicus counsel his own, Allen has forfeited his claim.
    The Fifth Amendment is a shield, not a sword or a scalpel, cf.
    Kansas v. Cheever, 
    571 U.S. 87
    , 94 (2013) (“[W]hen a defendant
    chooses to testify in a criminal case, the Fifth Amendment does not
    allow him to refuse to answer related questions on cross-
    examination.”), and it does not provide cover for unrebutted mental
    health mitigation, cf. Philmore, 
    820 So. 2d at 932-33
     (“[T]here is no
    error, let alone fundamental error, in allowing the State to subject
    the defendant to a mental health examination after the defendant
    decides to present mitigation.”); see also Estelle, 
    451 U.S. at 468
    (limiting availability of Fifth Amendment claim to “[a] criminal
    defendant, who neither initiates a psychiatric evaluation nor
    attempts to introduce any psychiatric evidence”).
    However, even if we were to accept Allen’s argument that the
    Supreme Court’s decision in Estelle requires us to conclude that a
    Fifth Amendment violation occurred, he still would not be entitled
    - 30 -
    to relief. Any Fifth Amendment error in admitting Allen’s compelled
    statements through Dr. Prichard would not satisfy the applicable
    standard of fundamental error that applies to our review of Allen’s
    unpreserved Fifth Amendment claim. See Smith, 241 So. 3d at 55.
    The first-degree murder at issue was substantially aggravated and
    included three of the qualitatively weightiest aggravators in Florida’s
    capital sentencing scheme: CCP, HAC, and prior violent felony. See
    Damas v. State, 
    260 So. 3d 200
    , 216 (Fla. 2018). The mitigation,
    which included the trial court’s crediting of Dr. Falb’s PTSD
    diagnosis over Dr. Prichard’s rebuttal testimony that Allen does not
    have PTSD, was comparatively minimal. Moreover, the record is
    clear that Allen’s statements to Dr. Prichard were used for purposes
    of rebutting mitigation, not to establish aggravation that would have
    rendered Allen eligible for the death penalty. Any error in admitting
    Allen’s statements through the rebuttal testimony of Dr. Prichard
    during the Spencer hearing did not “reach[] down into the validity of
    the trial itself to the extent that [the sentence of death] could not
    have been obtained without the assistance of the alleged error.”
    Bush, 295 So. 3d at 212. Accordingly, any error was not
    fundamental. Id.
    - 31 -
    Therefore, we deny relief as to this claim.
    (4) Penalty-Phase Jury Instructions
    In the last issue Allen raises on appeal, he argues that the trial
    court fundamentally erred by failing to instruct the jury that it must
    determine beyond a reasonable doubt whether the aggravating
    factors were sufficient to justify the death penalty and whether
    those factors outweighed the mitigating circumstances. We have
    repeatedly held that “these determinations are not subject to the
    beyond a reasonable doubt standard of proof.” Newberry v. State,
    
    288 So. 3d 1040
    , 1047 (Fla. 2019) (citing Rogers v. State, 
    285 So. 3d 872
    , 878-79 (Fla. 2019)); see also Rogers, 285 So. 3d at 886
    (holding that “the sufficiency and weight of the aggravating factors
    and the final recommendation of death” are not elements and “are
    not subject to the beyond a reasonable doubt standard of proof”).
    Although Allen urges us to reconsider our precedent, he fails to
    demonstrate that it is “clearly erroneous.” Poole, 297 So. 3d at 507.
    Accordingly, because the trial court did not err, let alone
    fundamentally so, in instructing the penalty-phase jury, we deny
    relief as to this claim.
    - 32 -
    (5) Sufficiency
    “In appeals where the death penalty has been imposed,”
    regardless of whether the defendant raises the sufficiency of the
    evidence as an issue on appeal, this Court “independently reviews
    the record to confirm that the jury’s verdict is supported by
    competent, substantial evidence.” Davis v. State, 
    2 So. 3d 952
    ,
    966-67 (Fla. 2008); see also Fla. R. App. P. 9.142(a)(5). “In
    determining the sufficiency of the evidence, the question is whether,
    after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, a
    rational trier of fact could have found the existence of the elements
    of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Bradley v. State, 
    787 So. 2d 732
    , 738 (Fla. 2001).
    Sufficient evidence supports Allen’s conviction for first-degree
    murder under the theory that the murder was premeditated. See
    Glover v. State, 
    226 So. 3d 795
    , 804 (Fla. 2017) (explaining that to
    prove first-degree premeditated murder, the State must establish
    that (1) the victim is dead, (2) the victim’s death was premeditated,
    and (3) the victim’s death resulted from the criminal act of the
    defendant). Allen confessed multiple times to planning the victim’s
    killing and to strangling the victim to death. DNA evidence
    - 33 -
    collected from the shirt around the victim’s neck and from under
    the victim’s fingernails and testimony from the medical examiner
    corroborate Allen’s confessions. Accordingly, the evidence is
    sufficient to support Allen’s conviction.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm Allen’s conviction for first-
    degree murder and his sentence of death.
    It is so ordered.
    CANADY, C.J., and POLSTON, LAWSON, MUÑIZ, COURIEL, and
    GROSSHANS, JJ., concur.
    LABARGA, J., concurs in result with an opinion.
    NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION
    AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED.
    LABARGA, J., concurring in result.
    Although the trial court failed to renew the offer of counsel
    before Allen’s penalty phase began, the trial court subsequently
    conducted multiple inquiries during which Allen maintained his
    decision to represent himself. Because Allen’s repeated refusals of
    counsel throughout the trial proceedings corroborate his belated
    waiver, I agree that he is not entitled to relief.
    - 34 -
    However, I adhere to the view expressed in my dissenting
    opinion in Lawrence v. State, 
    308 So. 3d 544
     (Fla. 2020) (receding
    from proportionality review requirement in death penalty direct
    appeal cases), and consequently, I can only concur in the result.
    An Appeal from the Circuit Court in and for Wakulla County,
    Ronald Wallace Flury, Judge –652018CF000203CFAXMX
    Jessica Yeary, Public Defender, and Barbara J. Busharis, Assistant
    Public Defender, Second Judicial Circuit, Tallahassee, Florida,
    for Appellant
    Ashley Moody, Attorney General, and Michael T. Kennett, Assistant
    Attorney General, Tallahassee, Florida,
    for Appellee
    - 35 -