State v. Green ( 2020 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    No. 118,366
    STATE OF KANSAS,
    Appellee,
    v.
    THAD CHRISTOPHER GREEN,
    Appellant.
    SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
    1.
    An instruction on voluntary intoxication is unnecessary when there is no evidence
    to support impairment of the defendant that would make it impossible to form the
    necessary criminal intent.
    2.
    An instruction on a lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter is
    unnecessary when the defense relies on a theory of sudden quarrel or heat of passion, and
    no evidence supports that theory.
    3.
    A district judge's refusal to instruct on voluntary intoxication and a lesser included
    offense of voluntary manslaughter when there is no evidence to support either instruction
    is a decision of law, not fact-finding involving weighing of evidence or evaluation of
    witness credibility. It does not violate a criminal defendant's constitutional right to jury
    trial.
    1
    4.
    The rule of Beck v. Alabama, 
    447 U.S. 625
    , 
    100 S. Ct. 2382
    , 
    65 L. Ed. 2d 392
    (1980), does not apply in noncapital criminal cases. If it did, it would give no relief to a
    defendant whose jury was not faced with an all-or-nothing choice between conviction and
    acquittal.
    5.
    Even if it is error to admit a videotape of a criminal defendant's interview by law
    enforcement that is not redacted to remove the interviewers' critical comments on the
    defendant's credibility, the substance of the issue is unpreserved for appellate review in
    this case.
    6.
    A cautionary instruction on informant testimony is not necessary when the
    informants were not acting as agents of the State when they obtained the incriminating
    information and their testimony was corroborated by other testimony and evidence.
    7.
    The cumulative error doctrine does not apply when no errors or only one error is
    identified by an appellate court.
    Appeal from Montgomery District Court; F. WILLIAM CULLINS, judge. Opinion filed August 21,
    2020. Affirmed.
    Peter Maharry, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, argued the cause, and was on the briefs for
    appellant.
    Jodi Litfin, assistant solicitor general, argued the cause, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, was
    with her on the brief for appellee.
    2
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    BEIER, J.: This is defendant Thad Christopher Green's direct appeal of his
    convictions arising out of the death of Cameron Wawrzynaik. Wawrzynaik was the
    boyfriend of the defendant's ex-wife.
    A jury convicted the defendant of first-degree premeditated murder, aggravated
    burglary, and arson. He raises seven issues in this appeal: (1) The jury should have been
    instructed on the defense of voluntary intoxication; (2) the jury should have been
    instructed on voluntary manslaughter as a lesser included offense of first-degree
    premeditated murder; (3) the district court judge's failure to instruct on voluntary
    intoxication and voluntary manslaughter deprived him of his constitutional right to a jury
    trial, because the judge made factual determinations that should have been made by the
    jury; (4) the failure to instruct on voluntary manslaughter pushed the jury to convict him
    of first-degree premeditated murder even if jurors had a reasonable doubt about whether
    the State had proved its case; (5) the district judge erred in admitting a videotaped
    interrogation of the defendant into evidence because law enforcement agents repeatedly
    challenged his honesty and truthfulness during that interrogation; (6) the district judge
    erred in refusing to give a cautionary instruction about testimony from jailhouse
    informants upon whom the State's case relied; and (7) cumulative error requires reversal
    of the defendant's convictions and a new trial.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In the early morning hours of December 23, 2015, Mary Lou Vannoster, who lived
    in rural Montgomery County, Kansas, near Jefferson, looked out her living room window
    3
    and saw her "whole yard was lit up." She ran outside, saw that the house next door was
    on fire, and ran back inside to call 911.
    Montgomery County dispatch sent firefighters and law enforcement, including
    Detective Matthew Hastings of the Montgomery County Sheriff's Office, to the scene of
    the fire. When Hastings arrived, the entire house was in flames and had "lost a lot of its
    height and its shape." An outbuilding north of the house and a pickup in the driveway
    also were on fire.
    After speaking with Vannoster, Hastings found out that Wawrzynaik had been
    renting the burning house from another neighbor's son. Hastings tried to contact
    Wawrzynaik by phone but did not get a response.
    Eventually Ron Cunningham, Wawrzynaik's stepfather, pulled up in a pickup.
    Cunningham believed Wawrzynaik was inside the burning house because Wawrzynaik's
    pickup was in the driveway.
    As this situation evolved just north of the Kansas-Oklahoma border, Martha
    Donelson Green and Fred Green were at home near Burbank, Oklahoma, south of the
    border. About 12:15 a.m., Martha heard Fred answer a phone call.
    Martha could hear "screaming and yelling" coming from the person who had
    called. She could not hear much of what was being said—"just a really serious situation
    was going on." She could hear Fred responding to the caller "really calm." The only word
    from the caller that Martha could make out—a word she "heard real clear"—was "blood."
    She believed Fred was talking to one of his sons—the defendant or his brother, Dustin.
    After the call was over, Fred "started crying." According to Martha, "[H]e was yelling, 'I
    4
    lost my son. I lost my son.'" Martha "thought that whatever happened on the phone . . .
    was, you know, life or death," but Fred would not tell her what had happened.
    Martha was caring for her grandbaby that night and needed help dealing with both
    Fred and the baby; so she sent a text message to her daughter, Tasha Fox. Tasha and her
    husband, Brad, shared an address but not a residence with Martha and Fred. The Foxes
    came over, and Tasha took the baby upstairs, where she called 911.
    Sheriff's Deputy Mike Stasyszen from Osage County, Oklahoma, was dispatched
    to Fred and Martha's house. When he got there, Fred did not want to talk to him and told
    him to go away. Eventually Martha let him into the house. Stasyszen would later testify
    that "[Fred] was very frantic inside the house. He was running around picking up stuff,
    throwing it down. He—like he was looking for something. He just kept saying, 'I've got
    to go. I've got to go.'"
    Fred eventually calmed down: "His face was still red. He still wasn't, like, real
    coherent. He really wasn't his self, and he was trying to calm down. He wanted law
    enforcement to leave." Martha told him, "Well, we've got to figure out what's going on,
    Fred," but "he just wouldn't talk about it."
    Fred left the house, and Martha asked the sheriff's deputies who remained if they
    had heard about any wrecks or about the defendant or his brother "getting into trouble."
    Martha would later testify: "[T]hen I told them about [the defendant] and [Ramanda
    Green] having the divorce case and that Cameron [Wawrzynaik] was in Kansas. And I
    said, 'You need to call Kansas and find out if something's happened up there.'" Martha
    was worried that the defendant had hurt Wawrzynaik. Stasyszen would later testify that
    Fred had told [Martha], "My son just killed somebody," and then became irate and,
    according to her, "went crazy."
    5
    Stasyszen called dispatch to let them know Fred had left his home. The dispatcher
    was Lacy Ferguson, who happened to be Ramanda's sister-in-law. Ferguson told
    Stasyszen that the defendant was separated from Ramanda. She also told him that the
    defendant was mad at Ramanda and her current boyfriend because Ramanda would not
    take the defendant back. Stasyszen asked Ferguson if she knew where the boyfriend
    lived; she told him that the boyfriend lived near Independence, Kansas. Stasyszen then
    asked Ferguson to contact Montgomery County to do a welfare check on the boyfriend.
    Ferguson asked her husband, John, who was on duty as an Osage County deputy,
    to contact Ramanda to make sure she was okay. Ramanda was fine, but she had not been
    able to get in touch Wawrzynaik. When Montgomery County was contacted, the
    Oklahoma authorities learned that there was a fire at Wawrzynaik's house in Kansas.
    Hastings would later testify about receiving a call from Osage County dispatch.
    The dispatcher told him she might have information about the fire and "officers in her
    county had been dispatched to the residence of a Fred Green [on a] report that he was
    mentally distraught. She said that there was a belief that his son may have killed his ex-
    wife's boyfriend."
    When Hastings learned this information, he believed that Wawrzynaik had been in
    the burning house and that it could be the scene of a homicide. Because of this and the
    nature of the fire, Montgomery County contacted the state Fire Marshal to assist.
    While Hastings waited for the state authorities to arrive at the scene of the fire, one
    of the firefighters informed him that human remains had been found in the house. Their
    location was consistent with the reported location of Wawrzynaik's bedroom. Although
    6
    the defendant immediately became a suspect, he was not located by law enforcement
    until about noon on December 23.
    Earlier that day, KBI Special Agent Jeremy Newman followed up on a "ping" of
    the cell phone number believed to be the defendant's. The ping, conducted from
    Independence, Kansas, showed that the phone was near Burbank, and Newman and
    another KBI agent drove to Pawhuska, Oklahoma, where the defendant and Ramanda
    Green each lived.
    When Newman arrived in Pawhuska—about 70 minutes' drive from
    Independence—he sought another ping of Green's cell phone; it again showed that the
    phone was located near Burbank.
    Also early that morning, KBI agent David Falletti interviewed Brayden Green and
    Donna Barnes at the Osage County Sheriff's Office. Brayden is the defendant's son from
    a relationship before his marriage to Ramanda. Barnes is Brayden's mother. Brayden told
    Falletti that his father had awakened him about 1 a.m. and told him he "did something
    bad." His father was upset and starting to cry. Brayden would later testify that his aunt,
    Kimberly Cass, came to the defendant's house later and took him to his uncle's house to
    stay the rest of the night.
    When the defendant later showed up at Cass' home, Cass contacted law
    enforcement, and they arrested him. One of the arresting officers would later testify that
    he heard him "make a comment about he didn't even own a gun. 'How could—could I
    have killed him if I didn't own gun[?]'"
    7
    Newman and Falletti interviewed the defendant after the arrest. The agents first
    gathered general personal information, including that the defendant had left the Army on
    the previous June 2.
    After the defendant's Miranda rights were read, the agents questioned him about
    his relationship with Ramanda. When asked about divorce, the defendant said, "Oh, man.
    This is bad. I'm going to start out with the beginning for you, okay."
    The defendant told the agents that he and Ramanda were living in Washington
    state before his deployment but decided she would move back to Oklahoma with the kids
    while he was gone. A few days before Green left the country, Ramanda flew to
    Washington so he could see her one more time. During that trip, he said, he caught
    Ramanda having sex with another man. Despite this indiscretion, he said, the couple
    "decided, you know, we were going to just enjoy the time that we have. It was a mistake
    that was made I—you know, I always forgive her, I love her."
    When the defendant completed his deployment, Ramanda again flew to
    Washington to see him. He said: "[Y]ou know, and I could tell something was different
    about her. Man knows when his woman's been tampered with. And . . . I don't give a shit,
    you know, I'm glad to be here with her." Again, Ramanda returned to Oklahoma while
    the defendant finished his service time. Then, although Ramanda told him to stay in
    Washington, he returned to Oklahoma.
    Green continued:
    "Anyway I get home and she doesn't want to be around me or nothing. So I was
    kind of like, you know: Mandy, I want to be with you, you know. And she said: All
    right, well, we'll work on you and me. And we did, we was—you know, she acted like it
    8
    anyway. And went over to the house when I had the kids with me. And it was a Father's
    Day weekend and I went over to the house and I sat down on the porch—she wouldn't let
    me stay there, I had to live at my mom's just a couple blocks down the road[].
    "I sat on the porch, and the kids, they ran in the house. I had my cigarette, and I
    was just sitting there. She comes to the door and she shut the door behind her. Not all the
    way, just about that far open. And she, she said: You can't be here. And I was like: What
    are you talking about? I already knew about Cameron, okay, I did. She told me."
    The defendant believed that Ramanda "was wanting to separate from me but I was
    wanting to kind of work on it. She told me she wanted to work on it too but in the
    meantime I—when we was working on it she also let me know that she was seeing
    Cameron." The defendant said he thought: "Well, hell, I got to pick up my game, you
    know." He also claimed that he could accept that she was seeing someone else, "because,
    hell, I did deploy, I left her."
    The defendant then described events from Father's Day weekend.
    "Kids run in, she comes to the house—or the door. She kind of closed it behind her. She
    said: You can't be here. And I thought: Why? She said: I got company. And I was like:
    You got—you got Cameron here? She said: Yes. I said: Well, I want to meet him. She
    said: No. I said: Mandy, I want to meet the man who's fucking my wife, at least give me
    that."
    The defendant said he pushed past Ramanda and opened the door with his foot. By that
    point, he "was pretty heated" and Wawrzynaik
    "raised his hand to hit me and I told him, I said: [']You hit me and you'll see what
    happens.['] Well, he put his arm down. Mandy came in between us and—Mandy came in
    between us, this guy took off running. Running. Well, if you're running I'm going to
    9
    chase you, you know. He's tagging my wife. At the time I was still in love with her
    deeply, you know. And so I chased [him.]"
    The defendant said Wawrzynaik ran across the street to Ramanda's father's home. The
    two men scuffled, and Wawrzynaik grabbed the defendant by his shirt. Eventually
    Ramanda's father was able to break them up. The defendant got into his Jeep with his
    children and drove away. He told the agents that a sheriff's deputy stopped him "about a
    mile down the road" and told him he "was breaking and entering, [committing] assault
    and battery in the presence of a minor." He claimed that he spent three days in jail as a
    result of the incident before charges were dismissed.
    The defendant then insisted he had "moved on" from his relationship with
    Ramanda and was "doing fine." He said he had girlfriends, although he "never
    stabilize[d] with one person. I call them chew toys, you know, because ain't nobody
    going to mean anything to me anymore."
    The defendant next talked about his divorce from Ramanda, which had been
    finalized a few weeks earlier. He said he "pretty much won. Nobody won, it's a lose-lose
    situation. But [he] felt like . . . for a father to get joint custody, [he was] doing pretty
    good."
    The night the divorce was finalized, the defendant was supposed to have time with
    his children. Ramanda brought them to his house, and he claimed that she told him she
    had to "get rid of Cameron." He "figured [she] would," stating "I mean hell, you had to
    choose him—What[,] you going to choose him over the kids? And man, that bitch." He
    said Ramanda then told him again that she wanted to work on her relationship with him.
    Although he said he was initially skeptical, she hugged him and he thought, "Oh, my God
    all right, cool we can do this."
    10
    The defendant then continued his story:
    "She spent a week and a half with me. We—she'd stay with me for several days
    and then I'd go spend the night with her. You know, about a week and a half went by and
    on Friday she came to my work and she said: Thad, I don't want to do this no more. I
    want him. And I thought: Oh, my God, make your damn mind up you're playing with
    people, you know. And that's pretty much the end of it, you know. She—she left to be
    with him and she contacts me all the time and we talk and . . . I'm not one to give up. I
    don't want to give up.
    ....
    "There's nothing wrong with that, that's just the way I was taught, you know.
    And—but it's more than just me and her riding on this, it's those three kids and they want
    to see us together so bad. So I thought I'd fight for them and I kept—every time me and
    Mandy would talk about me and her. I'd say: Hey, you know, remember this in the past
    and what we used to do when we was little and things like that. Well, you know we need
    to work on you—we need to put the family back together.
    "I wasn't buying it about anything. And she would always get kind of upset and it
    would get me upset too, but finally I was just kind of like: I'm done. I mean I'm done. So
    I don't know."
    One of the interviewing KBI agents asked the defendant when he had seen
    Ramanda last. He said she had sent him a text message the afternoon of the day before,
    asking whether he had heard from his divorce attorney. He was not going to talk about
    that with her because "at that time, you know, she was doing her thing[;] I was doing
    mine." But, as the conversation continued, he brought up "me and her kind of doing
    something again" and they "made a decision that he was going to come over and . . .
    going to hang[ out] with her and maybe stay the night, you know. No sex, nothing like
    11
    that, it's just—I just . . . wanted to visit with her and everything. I even took her a
    present."
    Although Ramanda told him she would call him back, he never heard from her. He
    called her about 8 p.m., and she said she was in the middle of putting the children to bed
    and said she would call or text him "in a little bit." When he did not hear from her, he
    texted and she did not reply. He assumed she must have fallen asleep, but he wanted to
    take her present to her. And he "was so excited about going and being with her, you
    know, and I love her." He went to her house and knocked, but she did not come to the
    door. He left the present and a note at Ramanda's door. The present, a knife, was wrapped
    in $1 bills.
    The defendant said he went home and began drinking and fell asleep while
    watching a movie. When he woke up, he "was wanting to go hunting." He was trying to
    prepare but "was still pretty fucked up." Later, when the defendant took his rifle and went
    hunting, he said, he passed out and woke again about 11 a.m. When he realized his phone
    had been off, he turned it on
    "and hell, all hell broke loose. People were texting me or—texting me and asking me
    where I was. And I—and so I was like: I'm going to call Mom, you know. I called my
    mom and she—she enlightened me on some stuff and I was like: Holy dog shit."
    According to the defendant, his mother told him to come to town right away and
    go to the Sheriff's Department. He said that she told him Wawrzynaik had been shot and
    killed and that law enforcement believed he was responsible. The defendant drove to
    town, went to a friend's house and then to his sister's, where he was arrested.
    12
    The agents asked the defendant whether he or his mother had been getting any
    information from Facebook or other social media. He said he did not use Facebook very
    much but, while he was driving to town, a "friend of mine called and she's like: Thad,
    [Ramanda] is posting shit on Facebook saying that you killed Cameron." When asked
    why someone would say he had something to do with Wawrzynaik's death, the defendant
    replied: "Well, I'm her ex, I mean it's reasonable. I can see that, you know."
    When one of the agents asked the defendant if he had been in Kansas within the
    last couple of days, he said it was possible, because he "hit[s] a lot of back roads." The
    next question was whether he had ever been to Wawrzynaik's house. He said that he had
    been there during the divorce proceedings to investigate whether Ramanda was living
    there with the children.
    The defendant denied any involvement in the killing. When asked again why
    people would say he might have been involved, he replied:
    "Because at one time I—I hated him for what he'd done. He knew I was in the
    Army. He knew I was serving the country that he walks on . . . . He was with the woman
    I love, I love her. I mean I do. And he was around the kids.
    "So yeah, I had some anger for him because he knew I was in the Military. He
    knew she was married to me and I was coming home. He knew I wasn't going to be
    happy, no man would be happy. But I backed off, you know. At first I was very pissed.
    That day I went through the door, that was my house. So yeah, I was pissed off. Yeah,
    there was hate there at one time. But hell, . . . I've got girlfriends that look way better than
    her now."
    When the agents told the defendant that they knew he had talked to several people
    about 1 a.m., saying he done something wrong, he conceded that he had talked to
    13
    someone but claimed he was referring to committing suicide. One of the agents pointed
    out that he had not said he was going to do something but that he had done something.
    But the defendant continued to insist that he had not told anyone he had done anything;
    he talked to people only about wanting to kill himself.
    The defendant admitted that he had spoken with his dad and did not have an
    explanation for why his dad would tell law enforcement he had been in Kansas and had
    had "something to do with Cameron's death." He denied being at Wawrzynaik's house
    that night or knowing what had happened there. When the agents pressed, the defendant
    said, "I drink so I get kind of depressed sometimes. Well, like, you know, she kind of
    basically stood me up so I went to drinking and hell."
    When asked about the amount he had drunk, the defendant said he had drunk half
    a bottle of Triple Crown but did not "kill" the bottle; "[Y]ou know, I sip it with my soda."
    The agents continued to confront the defendant about his father's and Brayden's
    statements that he told them he had done something bad, but the defendant continued to
    insist that he was talking only about wanting to kill himself.
    One of the agents then asked the defendant why data from cell phone towers
    showed that he had been near Wawrzynaik's house. The defendant said, "Because I back
    road when I drink. I mean most people—lot of people do. I mean, hell, I get on the road
    and I just go." When reminded that he had said earlier in the interrogation that he passed
    out at home after drinking, the defendant said simply: "I woke up."
    The agents continued pressing the defendant, who continued resisting. Yet he
    eventually said, "I didn't go to Cameron's house but I was—I had been drinking and I
    went down some country roads and I ended up over there and . . . I just came home."
    14
    When the agents returned to the subject of cell phone records, the defendant admitted it
    would be "reasonable" for the records to show that he had been near the house because he
    "was up there around there so it's going to put me close." He admitted, "I was drinking,
    was going down the road, took a back road. I ended up—I did end up in Kansas. I was in
    the vicinity of the house and I turned around and came home." When asked how close he
    had come to Wawrzynaik's house, the defendant said, "I can see the railroad track and I
    knew to get the fuck out of there." At trial, a law enforcement officer would testify there
    were railroad tracks approximately 1,100 feet from Wawrzynaik's house.
    The agents asked the defendant if he owned any firearms. He denied that he did,
    claiming Ramanda had made him pawn all of his guns. When asked why Brayden would
    say that he had a pistol, the defendant initially said that a friend had brought a gun to his
    house and possibly left it there for a time. In response to one of the agents pointing out
    that it was odd the defendant would mention on arrest that Wawrzynaik had been shot,
    because that had not yet been determined, the defendant claimed that his mother had told
    him Wawrzynaik had been shot.
    The agents again asked the defendant to explain the statements his father and
    Brayden had made to law enforcement. The defendant said, "I was protecting Brayden for
    the worst when it comes to me because, you know, I was thinking about—I was going to
    shoot myself." One of the agents immediately asked, "With what?" The defendant
    responded: "My rifle—not my rifle but it's my hunting rifle. It's not really mine, it's
    Dad's, .45-70 lever-action."
    When the defendant recounted purchasing alcohol, one of the KBI agents asked
    whether, when he was driving to Kansas, he was "to the point where you think you would
    have blown over the state legal limit?" The defendant responded: "Oh, yeah, yeah."
    15
    The defendant claimed he did not intend to confront Wawrzynaik when he drove
    to Kansas. He said, "I did not want to do that. I just—I don't really know what I was
    thinking at the time and I had a good idea where I was going but I was just kind of just
    letting—" The defendant attempted to clarify by saying that he meant only that he "knew
    the roads [he] was taking. . . . I mainly just wanted to go for a joy ride but it led me there
    so—somewhere around there and I—and I seen that railroad track and I think: Fuck that
    shit, and I left."
    Throughout the remainder of the interview, as recorded on the videotape
    eventually shown to the jury at trial, the defendant maintained that he had nothing to do
    with Wawrzynaik's death.
    The interview with the agents concluded when the defendant told the agents he
    wanted a lawyer's assistance, but the jury was not made aware of this request or its result.
    The State charged Green with premeditated first-degree murder, arson, and
    aggravated burglary.
    Before trial, the State filed a motion to admit evidence of other crimes or civil
    wrongs under K.S.A. 60-455. The State wanted the district judge to allow the jury to hear
    the defendant's statements about driving under the influence, asserting that the evidence
    would show the defendant was not intoxicated to the level that would prevent him from
    forming the necessary intent. The judge allowed the evidence, saying:
    "The Court would believe that it would go to his state of mind. He does talk
    about intoxication; that's going to come up. And if the Defendant makes a statement in
    there, which he does, that he wasn't too intoxicated to not remember or drive, that shows
    that he was in clear control of his faculties, so the Court's going to find that that is
    admissible.
    16
    "And the Court does not feel that any prejudice would result to the Defendant[,]
    would outweigh the need to admit it and explain to the fact that his intent—or that his
    state of mind was not to an extent that he was so intoxicated he couldn't understand what
    was occurring."
    At trial, Ramanda was the State's first witness. She recounted the difficulties of her
    relationship with Green and admitted her infidelity in Washington right before the
    defendant was deployed. In her view, the marriage continued to deteriorate during the
    deployment, and she began dating Wawrzynaik. When Green came back, she sought a
    divorce.
    Ramanda also described the Father's Day altercation. She was fearful about what
    the defendant would do when he got out of jail and obtained a protective order. She
    continued dating Wawrzynaik, and they moved in together in Kansas. She did not tell the
    defendant. When he found out, he said, "Not happening," and "I'll see you in court." The
    judge in the divorce case ordered her to bring the couple's children back to Oklahoma.
    The divorce was granted the day before Thanksgiving, and Ramanda said she
    rejected the defendant's suggestion that evening to "forget it all" and get married again.
    Later that night, while the children were staying with the defendant, he sent a text to
    Ramanda: "'You're staying the night with him instead of me. I know you're going to have
    sex with him. You just told me that we could work on us. That ain't right. What am I
    supposed to think about that?'" He continued to send similar lovelorn texts: "I can't play
    your games anymore"; "I can't get your voice out of my head. You're driving me crazy.
    I'm always looking out for you. I told you I would always be there for you even when you
    don't want me"; and "Bite your lips. Your words are robbery. Do you grin inside 'cause
    you're killing me? All along we've talked of forever. I kind of think we won't get better."
    17
    Ramanda conceded that she made some effort to work on her relationship with the
    defendant after the divorce, including having sex with him, but insisted that she did not
    want to get back together. She said she was appeasing him and fearful for the children's
    safety in his custody.
    Ramanda and Wawrzynaik split up temporarily during the weeks after the divorce,
    which she attributed to choosing her children over him after the judge in the divorce case
    entered an order preventing him from being around the children. When she began seeing
    Wawrzynaik again, she was concerned the defendant would find out: "I didn't know how
    he was going to react. I was scared."
    In mid-December, Ramanda said, the defendant told her that he would kill
    Wawrzynaik. She testified that he "said it a lot": "[t]ext message, telephone, face to face.
    Any time he got angry, he said it." At one point, the defendant told her he would shoot
    Wawrzynaik. Specifically, on December 17, Ramanda received a text from the defendant
    that read: "You need to get off this shitty Cameron thing. It's getting old and starting to
    piss me off." When Ramanda responded, telling the defendant that the problem was not
    Wawrzynaik, the defendant responded, "'It's always about him. Yes, we are done. But me
    and him are not done. Almost every day I learn or acquire more and more info on him.
    He's a dead duck.'" Ramanda did not think the defendant would follow through on his
    threats, but, she said, Wawrzynaik "took it a little bit more serious."
    Three days later, when Ramanda and the defendant texted about Christmas gifts
    for the children, the defendant asked about a photograph of Ramanda and Wawrzynaik
    together, which, apparently, he had seen on Facebook. Ramanda asked whether he was
    watching Wawrzynaik. He responded that he had other people to do that but that he was
    watching her.
    18
    According to Ramanda, the defendant again said "he was going to kill Cameron"
    in a phone conversation on December 22. He said that "he hated him because he tore his
    family apart." Despite this threat, Ramanda eventually consented to the defendant's
    request to come by that evening; still, she did not answer the door when she heard a
    knock. Via text, Wawrzynaik advised Ramanda to call the police. Instead, Ramanda
    called her father, who was the long-time chief of police in Barnsdall, Oklahoma, hoping
    he would be able to come over and tell the person on the porch to leave. As it turned out,
    the person at the door left without encouragement from anyone, and Ramanda continued
    to communicate with Wawrzynaik, speaking with him on the telephone until about 11
    p.m.
    Two hours later, Ramanda was alerted by her father that "something was going
    on," and she tried unsuccessfully to contact Wawrzynaik by phone. When her father
    reached her house, he found a letter and a gift on her front porch. The gift box was
    wrapped in one dollar bills. Based on what was written in the first couple of lines of the
    letter, the handwriting, and the use of "Mandy," Ramanda was able to identify the letter
    and gift as coming from the defendant.
    Ramanda's father, John L. Ferguson, also testified at trial, describing the Father's
    Day incident and Ramanda's fear for Wawrzynaik's safety after the divorce. Ferguson had
    been on duty in Barnsdall on the night of December 22 when his daughter called him, and
    he could not come to her house in Pawhuska to assist her with the person knocking on her
    door. He advised her to call her brother or the local police. He confirmed Ramanda's
    version of what occurred when he called her later and came to her house to take her and
    the children to his home. Later that day, Ramanda and her family learned that
    Wawrzynaik had died.
    19
    Kevin Young, an Osage County Sheriff's deputy, also testified about a threat the
    defendant had made about Wawrzynaik. Young had interviewed the defendant after the
    Father's Day incident, when the defendant "was real agitated, animated, and upset, mad."
    Young said, "He told me he was going to go—that he wanted to kill Cameron because he
    was committing adultery with his wife." The only reason Wawrzynaik was still alive,
    according to the defendant, was that "he couldn't catch him."
    The State also presented evidence from two witnesses who had known the
    defendant since school days. One, David Dove, testified that the defendant bought a gun
    from him in September or October 2015. The gun "was pink; about three to four inches; a
    six—six-shot revolver." The other, Amber Radford, testified that she had a Facebook
    conversation on November 25, 2015, with the defendant about a pink gun he had "just
    bought." He sent her a picture of it.
    Martha also testified during the State's case, describing the late-night phone call to
    Fred, his extreme reactions to it, the arrival of the Foxes, and law enforcement's eventual
    response to the house she shared with Fred. Before Fred left the house, she took a loaded
    gun from him. She still did not know who had called Fred, but she understood him to be
    on the way to that person's house. She spent the rest of the night with the Foxes,
    contacting Cass to check on the defendant and Dustin. She eventually got word that Cass
    had found Dustin, who was fine, and was told that Cass had gone to the defendant's house
    and picked up Brayden. Cass told Martha that the defendant would not talk to her and
    Cass thought he was under the influence of something.
    Martha also had seen the defendant with a pink pistol on her property on
    Thanksgiving.
    20
    Fred also testified and, on the prosecutor's urging, described the defendant's hurt
    over the divorce and Ramanda's relationship with Wawrzynaik. He admitted that both he
    and the defendant knew where Wawrzynaik lived; he had taken photos at Wawrzynaik's
    place during the pendency of the divorce, and the defendant had been with him when he
    did so.
    According to Fred, the defendant called him just after midnight on December 23,
    and, "Well, he—he acted as though he was kind of—he was drunk. He acted suicidal, and
    he was going to hurt himself. And I thought maybe he might have—had already hurt
    himself." Fred admitted that he was very upset when he got off the phone, because "I
    couldn't help my son. He's drunk. I've never seen him drunk like this. He's never, ever
    been—I've never seen my son drink like this or act like this on alcohol." He said that his
    statement that he had lost his son meant that he thought the defendant was going to
    commit suicide and "as a father, I failed."
    Fred denied knowing during the phone call where the defendant was or had been.
    He said he did not want the defendant to go deer hunting the next morning, as planned,
    but he did not want him driving drunk. Fred also denied that the defendant had mentioned
    Wawrzynaik or Ramanda during the call. He did recall the defendant mentioning
    something about blood, but he assumed that he was cutting himself.
    Fred acknowledged that he did not want to talk with law enforcement that night.
    He said that when he left his house, he intended to go to Pawhuska and look for the
    defendant, "but then if there was something wrong, if he had something, I couldn't face it.
    And if he had done some—if he committed anything, suicide to himself, I can't—I can't
    be there. I can't. I didn't want to be there." As a result, Fred did not end up going to the
    defendant's house. Fred agreed with the prosecutor that he had "probably" tried to call the
    defendant at 12:52 a.m., 1:11 a.m., and 1:24 a.m. to find out where he was.
    21
    Fred said he received a text from the defendant at 2:13 a.m., at which point the
    defendant was at Fred's house and ready to go hunting. Fred was no longer worried
    because his son had driven there safely and seemed to be over his "suicidal thing." Fred
    told the defendant that law enforcement was at the house but figured they must have left
    by that point. Fred was home and in bed about 3 a.m., unconcerned about Martha because
    he thought she would have gone to the Foxes' house.
    The State showed Fred a photograph of a pink revolver. He was initially reluctant
    to answer questions but eventually conceded that he had seen the defendant with a similar
    gun.
    Cunningham, Wawrzynaik's stepfather, testified for the State that his stepson had
    been "afraid of what the ex-husband would do" after the divorce. He also described
    getting a call about the fire about 1:30 a.m. on December 23. When he arrived at the
    scene, the house was basically "gone." When he was told a body had been found, he
    "knew it was my son." After he went home to tell his wife what had happened, he
    returned to the scene to tell law enforcement about the "trouble between Cameron and the
    ex-husband."
    The State also called Brayden to testify. He confirmed that his father had
    awakened him in the early hours of December 23, but he said he could not remember
    what happened, other than being picked up by his aunt and going to his Uncle Dustin's
    house. He also had seen his father with a pink revolver before that night and had not seen
    him with it since.
    The defendant's sister, Cass, testified about a text exchange she had with the
    defendant on November 24 and 25—when the divorce had just become final. The
    22
    defendant told her to look up "'The Chick Lady .38.'" Cass could not remember if she
    actually looked it up, but her text message in response was: "That's nice and pink." She
    conceded that the "Chick Lady" was a gun. Green responded to Cass' text message: "Yea.
    It's very smooth with a laser pointer. I don't have one. Nope. Nope. Nope. Not me. Not at
    all."
    Cass said she and the defendant had planned to go hunting on the morning of
    December 23, but she changed her mind because she had to work. Shortly after midnight
    that morning, she received a call from Martha, who wanted her to check on Dustin and
    the defendant. She checked on Dustin first and everything seemed fine with him. The two
    of them then went to check on the defendant but went to Kum & Go first. Cass said they
    were not in a big hurry, "[b]ecause Thad's a big boy. . . . He's a good kid." When the pair
    arrived at the defendant's house a little after 1 a.m., the defendant told them he was fine.
    Cass thought he "may have been drinking." She told him she needed to work rather than
    go hunting, and he said he still wanted to go. Because he was going to leave, she and
    Dustin took Brayden with them. Cass said she also was "ornery" as she left, putting the
    defendant's hunting gun behind a door. She claimed she did not want him to get a bigger
    deer than she had or would. She "wouldn't say [the defendant was] suicidal, but it
    would—anybody going through a divorce, you know—it's hard on a heart, yes."
    The next morning, while Cass was at work, Brayden's mother, Barnes, came to tell
    her before noon that "the law was looking for Thad." Cass told Barnes that he was
    probably out hunting.
    When the State called Barnes to testify, she confirmed the defendant's upset over
    his divorce and his possession of a pink gun. Barnes said she did not remember telling
    law enforcement, "I know he did something really bad," but she probably told Brayden
    that his dad was "in a lot of trouble."
    23
    Barnes, who was present when the defendant was arrested midday on December
    23, did not remember hearing him say, "I don't own a gun. How could I shoot him if I
    don't own one[?]" as he was being arrested. Before that point, when she had spoken to the
    defendant by phone, she told him Wawrzynaik had been killed; she thought she "said . . .
    he was murdered and his house was burnt." She did not think that she had told the
    defendant that Wawrzynaik had been shot.
    Anthony Celeste, a special agent for the state Fire Marshal, testified about his
    investigation of the cause of the fire at Wawrzynaik's house. Celeste concluded the cause
    was "incendiary," which meant "a person intentionally setting a fire where fire should not
    be." Based on the scene alone, he could not rule out either incendiary or accidental
    causes. His conclusion took into consideration that "[p]rimarily . . . we had a homicide
    right—prior to this fire and then statements that were reported to me made by Thad
    Green."
    Erik Mitchell, a forensic pathologist, testified about the results of Wawrzynaik's
    autopsy. Wawrzynaik had been shot at least four times in the chest. In addition, Mitchell
    identified an injury to Wawrzynaik's head but could not determine its specific nature
    because of fire damage to the body. There was "heat-fixed blood" around some of the
    injuries, which was consistent with trauma rather than fire. This showed "that a lot of
    blood was released into the airway, and then there was fire." Wawrzynaik was "injured
    prior to the time of exposure to significant heat." Mitchell concluded that the manner of
    death was homicide:
    "The gunshots that involved the chest, untreated, would be expected to kill. The
    gunshot that goes through the left kidney, given time, would probably kill. The gunshot
    24
    that just goes through the chest wall, that is—might or might not. . . . The anatomic
    findings, pretty much define that the only reasonable explanation is that it is a homicide."
    Lamar Shoemaker, another special agent with the state Fire Marshal, observed the
    autopsy and testified to establish the time when law enforcement first learned that
    Wawrzynaik had been shot. Mitchell informed Shoemaker of that fact 3:30 p.m. to 4:00
    p.m. on December 23—after the time when the defendant was arrested.
    The State also introduced evidence from multiple cell phone providers. Rhonda
    Woolman from the Mid-States Organized Crime Information Center analyzed the data
    and testified to the results. She concluded that a 7:02 p.m. call on December 22 from the
    defendant's phone was made through a cell tower just outside of Pawhuska; a 12:13 a.m.
    call on December 23 from his phone was made through a tower just outside of
    Coffeyville, Kansas; and a 12:40 p.m. call on December 23 from his phone was made
    through a tower just outside of Pawhuska.
    Newman testified about his December 23 videotaped interview of Green,
    discussed above, as well as an interview of Fred about seven months after the murder.
    Fred told Newman that, when he was unable to find the defendant in Pawhuska on the
    night of the murder, he "stopped by the side of the road, had an emotional breakdown
    until he had received the text message from Thad, and then he returned back to his
    residence." Fred also said that Cass had placed the hunting rifle, which was his, outside
    of the defendant's house when she was there and that Fred had picked it up.
    Christopher Williams, who was a detective with the Montgomery County Sheriff's
    Office at the time of Wawrzynaik's murder, testified about a January 2016 jailhouse call
    between the defendant and members of his family. While talking to Cass, the defendant
    said, "Leviticus 20:10," and then repeated it for her. Williams read Leviticus 20:10 for the
    25
    jury: "If a man commits adultery with another man's wife—with the wife of his
    neighbor—both adulterer and the adulteress are to be put to death."
    Robert Martin, who was in jail in Montgomery County at the same time as the
    defendant, testified that he overheard the defendant "telling the story" of the murder of
    Wawrzynaik. The defendant was acting out his movements, "had his hand up in the shape
    of a gun and was moving like he was pulling the trigger." Martin said,
    "Before I knew it was Cam, he pretty much said that he, you know, he studied
    him. Knew that his Facebook—address that he had on Facebook was the wrong one.
    "He said that . . . he was feeling down, had been drinking, missing his kids, and
    drove from Osage to Cam's house, pulled up, looked in the window, seen Cam sleeping,
    went into the back door and stood over him with a .22 mag revolver and killed him, and
    that he lit the house on fire but did not use an accelerant. And he said he learned that in
    his military background.
    "He said the only mistake he made was the one phone call he made in between
    towers. He said he didn't destroy the gun but they wouldn't find it."
    At the end of this recitation, according to Martin, the defendant mentioned "Cameron," at
    which point Martin asked, "'Cam[?]'" The defendant looked at Martin "real fast and—and
    he said, 'Only people that are close to him know him as Cam.'"
    A cellmate of defendant's, Matthew Herndon, also testified about what the
    defendant had told him about Wawrzynaik's death:
    "That the night of him coming to Kansas—prior to him coming to Kansas that
    he'd gone to Ramanda's house to—to try to get in touch with her and knocked on the
    26
    door. She didn't answer, so he then came to Kansas to—with the intention to just spray-
    paint the house or something.
    ....
    "He said that after he got there—he'd showed up at the residence, he—he, like,
    approached the house and he looked in a window, and he noticed that Cameron was
    asleep in—in a bed in the house."
    On seeing the sleeping Wawrzynaik, the defendant thought "this was his chance."
    Herndon said he understood the defendant to mean that he could pay Wawrzynaik back
    "for what he had done. You know, with getting with Ramanda."
    According to the story Herndon described at trial, the defendant picked the lock to
    one of the doors to Wawrzynaik's house. "And he went in the house. Cameron was asleep
    in bed, and he told him to wake up. Screamed at him to wake up, and shot him three
    times. . . . Well, at the same time, he said he shot him three times, and then Cameron was
    startled from—and jumped up out of bed and—and stumbled on one side of the bed, and
    then he shot him two more times." The defendant had a "pink .38 revolver with a laser
    sight on it." He also had a knife with him.
    After the second set of shots, while Wawrzynaik was on the floor, "[the defendant]
    took the knife he had and stabbed him in the base of his neck." The defendant told
    Herndon, "that the blood just exploded, kind of, you know, all over his hands and stuff.
    And that—then he had realized what you know, something bad had just happened." The
    defendant decided to burn the house down. "[H]e took a lighter and lit a pair of nylon
    shorts that Cameron was wearing on fire first and then different spots inside there—the
    house."
    27
    Herndon further testified that the defendant called his dad and "told him that he'd
    done something bad." According to Herndon, the defendant also described going into his
    own house and waking his son up and saying "a man's got to do what a man's got to do."
    The defendant then washed his clothes and "went somewhere on his father's property."
    Once there, the defendant said, someone "advised" him to return to his own house for his
    clothes. After retrieving them, he went back to his father's, cleaned up his Jeep, and
    dumped bleach on his clothes and hands. He also told Herndon that he met with someone
    and hid the gun on his father's property, under a downed fence near a pond.
    After Herndon testified, Newman was recalled to testify that Herndon had told
    him the defendant described Wawrzynaik's house as sparsely furnished, something not
    previously known to law enforcement. Ramanda confirmed this fact to Newman.
    Although Fred's property was searched, no gun was found. Through the testimony
    of Joseph Dye, the State admitted recordings of several jailhouse calls between Green and
    acquaintances and family. Of note, the defendant and Fred spoke in September 2016,
    shortly after Fred's property had been searched. Fred told the defendant that "company"
    had come the other day and that everything "went fine." Fred also said the company did
    not have a warrant, but, if they wanted to look, he would let them look. Later in the same
    conversation, the defendant asked Fred about the price of metal and said it might be a
    good time to melt metal down and sell it.
    The State also played a recording of a conversation between the defendant and
    Barnes. The call apparently took place before the defendant's September 2016
    conversation with Fred. In the call, Green implored Barnes to get in touch with his father
    and repeatedly told her to tell him to "melt it down."
    28
    After the State rested its case, the court held a jury instructions conference outside
    the presence of the jury. Defense counsel requested a cautionary instruction for
    informants testifying in exchange for benefits. The district judge denied the request,
    saying:
    "The Court would note that the first criteri[on] is if the informant's testimony is
    substantially uncorroborated. It would appear to the Court that Matt Herndon's testimony
    and Bobby Martin's testimony is substantially corroborated."
    The judge also noted that at the time Martin and Herndon got at least their initial
    information from the defendant, they were not agents of the State.
    Based on the evidence presented, defense counsel also asked for voluntary
    manslaughter and voluntary intoxication instructions. Counsel argued that, based on
    Herndon's testimony, "the plan or the information that he obtained was to simply go up
    and maybe spray-paint the property; however, because of the intoxication, drinking, the
    holidays, and the depression, . . . he just snapped."
    Again, the district judge denied the requests, saying:
    "THE COURT: All right. I'll make this simple. The Court's going to deny
    anything below second-degree intentional. The Court does not believe heat of passion
    would apply. This was an ongoing issue that—the divorce between and the relationship
    between the victim, Ramanda Green, and Thad Green—this was an issue that had gone
    on for months, if not a year. It was clearly not done in the heat of passion. As the State
    would indicate, there is evidence that he wrote a note and that he had plans—and planned
    to go up to Kansas. So for those reasons, heat of passion would not apply.
    "As to the intoxication defense, there is evidence in the record as it would relate
    to intoxication, but there's no evidence as to what the Defendant's intox—state of mind
    29
    was at the time the incident occurred—or the act occurred, so the record is completely
    void of any evidence that would show that he was intoxicated at the moment that this
    happened.
    "The Court listened to the Defendant's statement to—talk about how much
    alcohol he had been consuming. He made a lot of statements in there. He said he had just
    killed the alcohol—he didn't just kill the alcohol, he would sip on it. He said he drank his
    normal amount.
    "The Defendant, in a statement to the KBI agent, says that he remembers it all.
    He denies blacking out. Says he was over the legal limit, but he was driving—not to an
    extent that he would be impaired because he didn't draw the attention of law enforcement.
    "His son says that when he was woke up, his dad was drinking but he didn't seem
    intoxicated. His son Brayden testified that when he woke him up he seemed normal. And
    the Court would note in Brayden's taped statement that he did not mention his dad being
    intoxicated.
    "His sister—the same thing. She mentioned that she saw alcoholic bottles; said
    that she smelled alcohol, but his sister never said that he was drunk.
    "And then the Court would note for the record, the Defendant appeared to take
    steps to conceal his crime, which would show that he knew what he did was wrong."
    Defense counsel pointed out evidence from Cass that the defendant was intoxicated and
    Fred's testimony that his son was "slurring his words, that he was drunk and suicidal," but
    the judge rejected its evidentiary value: "[A]s to the last statements about his sister and
    his father, the Court has no idea when the Defendant consumed the alcohol; whether or
    not he consumed it before the crime occurred or after the crime occurred."
    The jury deliberated after receiving final instructions and hearing closing
    arguments from counsel. It found the defendant guilty on all charges. The district judge
    30
    sentenced Green to a hard 50 for first-degree premeditated murder, 34 months for
    aggravated burglary, and 19 months for arson. The district judge ordered that all
    sentences run consecutive.
    DISCUSSION
    Refusal to Instruct on Voluntary Intoxication
    This court analyzes appellate challenges to jury instructions in four steps:
    "'"'(1) First, the appellate court should consider the reviewability of the issue
    from both jurisdiction and preservation viewpoints, exercising an unlimited standard of
    review; (2) next, the court should use an unlimited review to determine whether the
    instruction was legally appropriate; (3) then, the court should determine whether there
    was sufficient evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the defendant or the
    requesting party, that would have supported the instruction; and (4) finally, if the district
    court erred, the appellate court must determine whether the error was harmless, utilizing
    the test and degree of certainty set forth in State v. Ward, 
    292 Kan. 541
    , 
    256 P.3d 801
          (2011), cert. denied [
    565 U.S. 1221
    ] (2012).' [Citation omitted.]
    "'"'Generally, a defendant is entitled to instructions on the law applicable to his or
    her defense theory if there is sufficient evidence for a rational factfinder to find for the
    defendant on that theory. [Citation omitted.] And if that defendant requests an instruction
    at trial, the court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the defendant.
    [Citations omitted.]'
    "'"We examine 'jury instructions as a whole, without focusing on any single
    instruction, in order to determine whether they properly and fairly state the applicable law
    or whether it is reasonable to conclude that they could have misled the jury.' [Citation
    omitted.]" Hilt, 
    299 Kan. 184-85
    .' State v. Mattox, 
    305 Kan. 1015
    , 1020, 
    390 P.3d 514
          (2017)." State v. Murrin, 
    309 Kan. 385
    , 391-92, 
    435 P.3d 1126
    (2019).
    31
    Because the defendant requested a voluntary intoxication instruction at trial, this
    issue is preserved for review. State v. Perez-Medina, 
    310 Kan. 525
    , 533-34, 
    448 P.3d 446
    (2019).
    "To be legally appropriate, 'an instruction must always fairly and accurately state
    the applicable law, and an instruction that does not do so would be legally infirm.'"
    
    Murrin, 309 Kan. at 392
    .
    The extent to which voluntary intoxication is a defense in Kansas is governed by
    K.S.A. 2018 Supp. 21-5205(b), which states:
    "An act committed while in a state of voluntary intoxication is not less criminal
    by reason thereof, but when a particular intent or other state of mind is a necessary
    element to constitute a particular crime, the fact of intoxication may be taken into
    consideration in determining such intent or state of mind."
    See also State v. Dominguez, 
    299 Kan. 567
    , 591-92, 
    328 P.3d 1094
    (2014) (voluntary
    intoxication valid defense when crime requires specific intent). The crime of
    premeditated first-degree murder is a specific intent crime, and "voluntary intoxication
    may be used as a valid 
    defense." 299 Kan. at 591-92
    . A voluntary intoxication instruction
    in this case would have been legally appropriate.
    But this court has held that "simple consumption of drugs or alcohol is not enough
    to support" voluntary intoxication—"[p]roof of impairment is also necessary." State v.
    Davis, 
    306 Kan. 400
    , 414, 
    394 P.3d 817
    (2017).
    "A defendant's ability to recall the circumstances surrounding the charged crime and
    provide a coherent narrative of his or her conduct undercuts a claim of intoxication
    sufficient to warrant a jury instruction. State v. Hernandez, 
    292 Kan. 598
    , 606-07, 257
    
    32 P.3d 767
    (2011) (defendant's ability to recall his or her actions demonstrates faculties
    intact)." 
    Davis, 306 Kan. at 414-15
    .
    See also State v. Kidd, 
    293 Kan. 591
    , 595-96, 
    265 P.3d 1165
    (2011) (evidence defendant
    consumed alcohol from a bottle, made "crazy" statements, may have been "'buzzed'"
    insufficient to require voluntary intoxication instruction). Moreover, a reviewing court
    "'will not infer impairment based on evidence of consumption alone.'" State v. Reed, 
    302 Kan. 390
    , 400, 
    352 P.3d 1043
    (2015) (quoting 
    Hernandez, 292 Kan. at 607
    ). A loss of
    memory or inability to remember events before or during the offense may establish the
    inability to form intent, as can evidence the defendant is "'so impaired that he or she has
    lost the ability to reason, to plan, to recall, or to exercise motor skills as a result of
    voluntary intoxication.'" 
    Reed, 302 Kan. at 400
    (quoting State v. Betancourt, 
    299 Kan. 131
    , 141-42, 
    422 P.3d 353
    [2014]).
    In his brief to this court, the defendant focuses on Fred's testimony that the
    defendant was drunk in the early morning of December 23 when he spoke to him by
    telephone, as well as similar testimony from Cass. As the district judge noted, to the
    extent that such evidence established consumption—or even impairment—it could not
    establish it for the time when the crime was committed. It was evidence only for the
    period after the crime.
    The defendant also relies on his own statements to investigators that he had passed
    out at home on the night of December 22 and that he passed out the next morning while
    hunting. But these statements fail to support the necessary alcohol impairment for the
    same reason that the testimony from Fred and Cass do: They do not deal with the
    relevant time. Even if one credits the claim that the defendant passed out at home, as he
    explained to law enforcement, he "woke up" and started driving around before ultimately
    ending up near Wawrzynaik's house.
    33
    Moreover, the defendant's own statements established that he had not lost the
    ability to "exercise motor skills" at the time of the crime. See 
    Betancourt, 299 Kan. at 142
    . He was able to drive, and he never claimed in his statements to law enforcement that
    he had blacked out or could not remember a portion of the night. He consistently denied
    going all the way up to Wawrzynaik's house, but ultimately there were no gaps in his
    narrative of what happened from the time he left home that night until the time he passed
    out while hunting—in other words, wherever the defendant was during that period, even
    he did not claim to be so impaired that he could not form the necessary criminal intent.
    Finally, the defendant also points to the district judge's allowance of K.S.A. 60-
    455 evidence of his driving while under the influence of alcohol. As the State noted in
    making its pretrial request to admit the evidence, its purpose was to establish that,
    regardless of consumption evidence, the defendant was still able to drive and able to form
    criminal intent.
    We reject the defendant's argument that the district judge erred by refusing to give
    a voluntary intoxication instruction. It was not factually appropriate because of a lack of
    evidence of impairment that would prevent the formation of the necessary criminal intent.
    Refusal to Instruct on Voluntary Manslaughter
    Our standard of review for this issue is the same as that governing the defendant's
    first appellate challenge. See 
    Murrin, 309 Kan. at 391-92
    .
    The defendant properly preserved this issue in the trial court by seeking the
    instruction. See 
    Perez-Medina, 310 Kan. at 533-34
    .
    34
    This court has regularly acknowledged that lesser degrees of homicide qualify as
    lesser included crimes of first-degree premeditated murder. State v. James, 
    309 Kan. 1280
    , 1298, 
    443 P.3d 1063
    (2019).
    "An instruction on a lesser included crime is legally appropriate. State v. Plummer, 
    295 Kan. 156
    , 161, 
    283 P.3d 202
    (2012). And a lesser included crime includes a 'lesser degree
    of the same crime.' K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 21-5109(b)(1). This court has recognized five
    degrees of homicide. In descending magnitude, they are capital murder, first-degree
    murder, second-degree murder, voluntary manslaughter, and involuntary manslaughter.
    State v. Carter, 
    305 Kan. 139
    , 161, 
    380 P.3d 189
    (2016) (citing State v. Cheever, 
    295 Kan. 229
    , 258-59, 
    284 P.3d 1007
    [2012]).' 
    Pulliam, 308 Kan. at 1362
    ." 
    James, 309 Kan. at 1298
    .
    Thus voluntary manslaughter would have been a legally appropriate instruction in this
    case.
    The defendant argues that he was entitled to a voluntary manslaughter lesser
    included instruction because the jury could have found that he knowingly killed
    Wawrzynaik "upon a sudden quarrel or in the heat of passion" under K.S.A. 2018 Supp.
    21-5404(a)(1). "Heat of passion" is defined as "'any intense or vehement emotional
    excitement of the kind prompting violent and aggressive action, such as rage, anger,
    hatred, furious resentment, fright, or terror,' based 'on impulse without reflection.'" State
    v. Johnson, 
    304 Kan. 924
    , 932, 
    376 P.3d 70
    (2016).
    The defendant relies on the testimony of one jailhouse informant who mentioned
    that the defendant's original intention in going to Wawrzynaik's house was to vandalize it
    with spray paint. He argues that the "jury could have concluded that once [the defendant]
    got there, 'because of the intoxication, drinking, the holidays, and the depression, that he
    just snapped.'" But no witness testified that the defendant "snapped" when he reached
    35
    Wawrzynaik's house. The "snapped" scenario was part of defense counsel's argument in
    support of the voluntary manslaughter instruction before the district court, but the judge
    correctly perceived that the great weight of the evidence introduced by the State painted
    an entirely different picture.
    The accumulated evidence from the informants as well as numerous other
    witnesses was that the defendant had been thinking about killing Wawrzynaik for some
    time before the murder. Indeed, it is hard to imagine a more thorough or convincing case
    being made to support first-degree premeditated murder by a jilted spouse. This was not a
    case in which any reasonable juror could conclude that the defendant was motivated to
    kill Wawrzynaik because of a sudden quarrel or heat of passion. There is zero evidence
    that Wawrzynaik did anything as the defendant entered his house that could be
    characterized as provocation. The only evidence is that he was sleeping.
    The district judge correctly denied the requested voluntary manslaughter
    instruction.
    Constitutional Right to Jury Trial
    The defendant also argues on appeal that the district judge's refusal to give his
    requested jury instructions violated his constitutional right to a jury trial. He does not
    specify whether he is relying on the United States Constitution or the Kansas
    Constitution; nor does he state precisely which aspect of a jury trial he was deprived of. It
    appears that he claims the district judge made legally impermissible factual
    determinations in refusing to give the voluntary intoxication and voluntary manslaughter
    instructions.
    36
    The defendant is correct to the extent that he argues, "Prosecutions for violations
    of state criminal statutes unquestionably implicate Section 5 [of the Kansas Constitution
    Bill of Rights]. A defendant is entitled to 'have the truth of [the] charge determined by an
    impartial jury.'" State v. Love, 
    305 Kan. 716
    , 736, 
    387 P.3d 820
    (2017) (quoting In re
    Rolfs, 
    30 Kan. 758
    , 763, 
    1 P. 523
    [1883]).
    But, that being said, the determination of whether there is any evidence making a
    lesser included instruction or an instruction on an affirmative defense factually
    appropriate is a question of law. Neither the district judge who makes such a decision in
    the first instance nor any appellate judge or justice sitting in review of that decision
    engages in weighing evidence or determining witness credibility. The job is merely to
    detect the presence of any evidence to support the instruction sought; the jury takes it
    from there.
    In this particular case, we have already agreed with the district judge on the
    nonexistence of evidence to make a voluntary intoxication or voluntary manslaughter
    instruction factually appropriate. This also settles what we perceive to be the
    constitutional question raised by the defendant under the banner of the right to jury trial.
    A criminal defendant has this right, and, as part of the exercise of it, must be able to
    present his or her theory of the case, supported by legally correct jury instructions. See
    State v. Evans, 
    275 Kan. 95
    , 102, 
    62 P.3d 220
    (2003) (defendant entitled to present
    theory of defense; exclusion of evidence integral to theory violates defendant's
    fundamental right to fair trial). But, without evidence in support of them, neither the
    voluntary intoxication nor the voluntary manslaughter instructions would have been
    legally correct because they were factually inappropriate. See 
    Love, 305 Kan. at 736
    .
    37
    Constitutional Right to Due Process
    The defendant argues for extension of the rule in Beck v. Alabama, 
    447 U.S. 625
    ,
    638, 
    100 S. Ct. 2382
    , 
    65 L. Ed. 2d 392
    (1980), to support his challenge to his murder
    conviction on due process grounds. He argues that the district judge's refusal to instruct
    on voluntary manslaughter forced jurors who might have been reluctant to acquit him
    outright and release him to choose to convict him of a crime more serious than the one he
    committed.
    We have seen this argument before in other cases. See, e.g., State v. Love, 
    305 Kan. 716
    , 729-30, 
    387 P.3d 820
    (2017). And we have rejected the extension of the rule in
    Beck, a capital case, to noncapital cases. 
    Love, 305 Kan. at 734
    ("Unlike the statutory
    scheme in Beck, the Kansas lesser-included-offense statute does not create a 'capital
    specific artificial barrier to the provision of instructions on offenses that actually are
    lesser included offenses under state law.'"); see State v. Becker, 
    311 Kan. 176
    , 186-87,
    
    459 P.3d 173
    (2020); State v. Timley, 311 Kan. __, 
    2020 WL 4555417
    (No. 120,414,
    filed August 7, 2020). The defendant nevertheless argues that this rejection erects an
    "artificial barrier" to instruction on a state law lesser included offense that Beck
    disapproved of.
    We are not convinced by the defendant's argument. As the United States Supreme
    Court later explained its holding in Beck, its primary concern had been
    "that a jury convinced that the defendant had committed some violent crime but not
    convinced that he was guilty of a capital crime might nonetheless vote for a capital
    conviction if the only alternative was to set the defendant free with no punishment at all.
    We explained:
    38
    '[O]n the one hand, the unavailability of the third option of convicting on
    a lesser included offense may encourage the jury to convict for an
    impermissible reason—its belief that the defendant is guilty of some
    serious crime and should be punished. On the other hand, the apparently
    mandatory nature of the death penalty [in Alabama] may encourage it to
    acquit for an equally impermissible reason—that, whatever his crime, the
    defendant does not deserve death. . . . [T]hese two extraneous factors . . .
    introduce a level of uncertainty and unreliability into the factfinding
    process that cannot be tolerated in a capital case.' [447 U.S.] at 642.
    "We repeatedly stressed the all-or-nothing nature of the decision with which the
    jury was presented. See
    id., at 629, 630, 632, 634, 637, 642-643,
    and n. 
    19, 100 S. Ct., at 2385
    , 2386, 2387, 2388, 2389-2390, 2392-2393, and n. 19. As we later explained in
    Spaziano v. Florida, 
    468 U.S. 447
    , 455, 
    104 S. Ct. 3154
    , 3159, 
    82 L. Ed. 2d 340
    (1984),
    '[t]he absence of a lesser included offense instruction increases the risk that the jury will
    convict . . . simply to avoid setting the defendant free. . . . The goal of the Beck rule, in
    other words, is to eliminate the distortion of the factfinding process that is created when
    the jury is forced into an all-or-nothing choice between capital murder and innocence.'
    See also Hopper v. Evans, 
    456 U.S. 605
    , 609, 
    102 S. Ct. 2049
    , 2051-2052, 
    72 L. Ed. 2d 367
    (1982). This central concern of Beck simply is not implicated in the present case, for
    petitioner's jury was not faced with an all-or-nothing choice between the offense of
    conviction (capital murder) and innocence." Schad v. Arizona, 
    501 U.S. 624
    , 646-47, 
    111 S. Ct. 2491
    , 
    115 L. Ed. 2d 555
    (1991).
    Until the United Supreme Court indicates otherwise, we are disinclined to extend
    the Beck rule to noncapital cases.
    Furthermore, in this case, the defendant's appellate argument ignores that his jury
    was not faced with an all-or-nothing scenario on the first-degree premeditated murder
    charge. His jury was given an instruction on the lesser included offense of intentional
    second-degree murder. Had it been unconvinced by the mountain of premeditation
    evidence presented in the State's case detailed above, it could have convicted the
    39
    defendant of another homicide offense that falls between first-degree premeditated
    murder and voluntary manslaughter in gravity and possible punishment. We hold there
    was no error under either Beck's letter or its spirit.
    Admission of Videotaped Statements in Law Enforcement Interview
    The defendant's next allegation of error in the district court has more substantive
    merit than those discussed above. He asserts for the first time on appeal that the videotape
    of his interview by KBI agents included the interviewers' impermissible negative
    comments on his credibility and should have been redacted before being shown to the
    jury at trial. He is correct on this point. See State v. Elnicki, 
    279 Kan. 47
    , Syl. ¶ 4, 
    105 P.3d 1222
    (2005) (error for jury to be shown videotape in which law enforcement officer
    comments on defendant's credibility).
    The problem for the defendant arises from the words "for the first time on appeal."
    The defense failed to object in the district court to the lack of redaction about which it
    now complains. This means the issue was not preserved, and we may refuse to address its
    merits on appeal under the contemporaneous objection rule codified in K.S.A. 60-404.
    The defendant argues in his brief that we should apply an established exception to
    overlook the preservation problem. In his view, this issue raises only a question of law
    arising on proved or admitted facts and is finally determinative of the case, and
    consideration of it is necessary to serve the ends of justice or to prevent denial of
    fundamental rights. See State v. Schroeder, 
    279 Kan. 104
    , 116, 
    105 P.3d 1237
    (2005). He
    also argues that we should reach the substance on this issue because of judicial economy;
    in essence, dealing with the issue now will eliminate the need for the defendant's later
    filing of a K.S.A. 60-1507 motion to reverse his convictions based on defense trial
    counsel's constitutionally deficient performance.
    40
    We are not convinced by any of these arguments for an established exception or a
    judicial economy-based ruling. Even if we agree that the failure to redact the videotape to
    remove the interviewers' comments on credibility was error, that error would be far from
    finally dispositive of this case under the first preservation exception urged upon us by
    appellate defense counsel. It also would be harmless under our state statutory standard.
    See K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 60-261 ("court must disregard all errors and defects that do not
    affect any party's substantial rights").
    Likewise, because of our view on the harmlessness of any error, the second
    preservation exception is inapplicable. The ends of justice and the defendant's
    fundamental rights are not endangered by error that could have made no difference in the
    outcome of his trial.
    And, finally, because even ineffective representation by defense counsel cannot
    lead to reversal of the defendant's convictions without prejudice under Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    (1984), and innumerable
    Kansas decisions following it, see, e.g., State v. Moyer, 
    309 Kan. 268
    , 278-79, 
    434 P.3d 828
    (2019), trial defense counsel's failure to object on this issue cannot support a later
    K.S.A. 60-1507 motion likely to take up much of any court's time.
    One last point bears mention. This case truly is a poster child for the
    contemporaneous objection rule. The videotape of the defendant's statements to the KBI
    agents was already redacted to remove the defendant's invocation of his right to have
    counsel present with him and any material that came after it. That redaction was either
    agreed upon by the prosecution and defense, or it was ordered by the district judge. Either
    way, it prevented the necessity of raising that failure to redact as an issue on appeal. This
    is precisely the way that the contemporaneous objection rule is supposed to work. It is
    41
    designed to give parties incentive to raise legal issues in the district court so that the
    judge presiding over the case has an opportunity to hear from the parties, analyze the law,
    and prevent error from infecting the process. Here, our law that one witness is not
    permitted to comment on the credibility of another is far from new. See State v. Akins,
    
    298 Kan. 592
    , Syl. ¶ 6, 
    315 P.3d 868
    (2014) (determination of truthfulness of witness for
    jury); State v. Drayton, 
    285 Kan. 689
    , 700, 
    175 P.3d 861
    (2008) (witness may not express
    opinion on credibility of another witness; determination of truthfulness of witness for
    jury); State v. Plaskett, 
    271 Kan. 995
    , 1008-09, 
    27 P.3d 890
    (2001) (error to allow
    detective to express opinion on credibility of victim); State v. Jackson, 
    239 Kan. 463
    ,
    470, 
    721 P.2d 232
    (1986) (error to allow two expert witnesses to express views on
    reliability of statements by complaining witness). Our law that the prosecution cannot be
    allowed to achieve the equivalent by exposing a jury to law enforcement agents' negative
    comments about a defendant's credibility during a recorded interview also is not new. See
    Elnicki, 
    279 Kan. 47
    , Syl. ¶ 4. The record in this case makes us confident that the parties
    and the district judge in this case would have had no trouble preventing anyone from
    having to address this issue today if the contemporaneous objection rule had been
    observed. This confidence also makes us more likely to enforce the rule without
    exception.
    Refusal to Give Cautionary Instruction on Informant Testimony
    The standard of review on this issue is the same as that governing the first two
    issues discussed above.
    This challenge was preserved by the defendant's counsel during the jury
    instructions conference at trial.
    Defendant seeks shelter under our rule that "ordinarily it is error to refuse to give a
    cautionary instruction on the testimony of a paid informant or agent where such
    42
    testimony is substantially uncorroborated and is the main basis for defendant's
    conviction." State v. Novotny, 
    252 Kan. 753
    , 760, 
    851 P.2d 365
    (1993). But this shelter is
    unavailable to him.
    In Novotny, we held that failure to give such an instruction was not error or ground
    for reversal when it was not requested and informant testimony had been substantially
    corroborated. 
    Novotny, 252 Kan. at 760
    .
    In addition, in State v. Lowe, 
    276 Kan. 957
    , Syl. ¶ 5, 
    80 P.3d 1156
    (2003), we held
    that a district judge is not obligated to "give a cautionary instruction on informant
    testimony absent evidence that a witness is acting as an agent for the State in procuring
    evidence." See also State v. Ashley, 
    306 Kan. 642
    , 648, 
    396 P.3d 92
    (2017) (declining
    invitation to reconsider Lowe; informant cautionary instruction not required when
    "information was passed to the witness at a time when the witness was not serving as an
    agent of the State—that is to say, the witness had not been contacted by the State and was
    not intentionally given the role of investigator").
    Here, neither jailhouse informant was acting as an agent for the State when he first
    received incriminating information from the defendant. In addition, the testimony of each
    informant was corroborated by multiple witnesses and other evidence presented by the
    State at trial. The district judge did not err in denying the cautionary instruction.
    Cumulative Error
    The defendant's last issue on appeal invokes the doctrine of cumulative error.
    Cumulative trial errors may require reversal if, under the totality of the circumstances,
    they substantially prejudiced the defendant and resulted in an unfair trial. But the doctrine
    is inapplicable if there is no error or only a single error. See 
    Love, 305 Kan. at 737
    .
    43
    We have rejected each of the defendant's appellate challenges, although we saw
    merit in one whose substance we did not reach because of lack of preservation and the
    inapplicability of any exception to the contemporaneous objection rule. Under these
    circumstances, the cumulative error doctrine cannot help the defendant.
    CONCLUSION
    We have thoroughly reviewed the record on appeal and examined each of
    defendant Thad Christopher Green's issues on appeal. No error requires reversal. The
    judgment of the district court is affirmed.
    PATRICK D. MCANANY, Senior Judge, assigned.1
    ***
    ROSEN, J., concurring: I agree with the majority's conclusions in this case and
    nearly all of its analysis. I write separately only to make my position clear on issues
    dealing with affirmative defense instructions.
    The majority has concluded there was no evidence indicating Green was impaired
    at the time of the crime and, consequently, a voluntary intoxication instruction was not
    factually appropriate. I agree with this. However, I part with the majority's discussion on
    this issue to the extent it implies that the presence of any evidence tending to support the
    1
    REPORTER'S NOTE: Senior Judge McAnany was appointed to hear case No.
    118,366 under the authority vested in the Supreme Court by K.S.A. 20-2616 to fill the
    vacancy on the court by the retirement of Chief Justice Lawton R. Nuss.
    44
    defendant's affirmative defense theory will justify an instruction on that defense—no
    matter how slight the evidence or how improbable the theory. The affirmative defense
    statute directs trial judges to instruct on such defenses only when "competent evidence,"
    or "that which could allow a rational fact finder to reasonably conclude that the defense
    applies" is present. (Emphases added.) K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 21-5108(c). As I explained in
    State v. Haygood, 
    308 Kan. 1387
    , 1410, 
    430 P.3d 11
    (2018) (Rosen, J., concurring), the
    language in this statute requires that the court act as a gatekeeper when offering
    instructions by "mak[ing] some assessment of the strength of the evidence on which" an
    affirmative defense assertion stands. While I agree there was no evidence of impairment
    here, I disagree with any portion of the majority decision holding that the presence of any
    evidence, however slight, mandates the district court to instruct and skip this test.
    STEGALL, J., joins the foregoing concurring opinion.
    45