State v. Jarmon ( 2022 )


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  •                            NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
    No. 124,558
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    STATE OF KANSAS,
    Appellee,
    v.
    VINCENT R. JARMON,
    Appellant.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; BRUCE C. BROWN, judge. Opinion filed November 18,
    2022. Affirmed.
    Randall L. Hodgkinson, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.
    Matt J. Maloney, assistant district attorney, Marc Bennett, district attorney, and Derek Schmidt,
    attorney general, for appellee.
    Before ARNOLD-BURGER, C.J., GREEN and MALONE, JJ.
    PER CURIAM: Vincent R. Jarmon was convicted of one count of criminal threat
    based on an alleged interaction he had with the driver of a Wichita city bus. On appeal,
    he argues that the trial court erred in the instructions it gave the jury and in constructively
    denying his right to self-representation. And he argues that these errors cumulatively
    denied him his right to a fair trial. Nevertheless, because he voluntarily waived his right
    to self-representation and fails to show that the jury would have returned a different
    verdict absent the one instructional error that occurred here, we affirm.
    1
    FACTS
    Jarmon was charged in Sedgwick County District Court with two counts of
    criminal threat. As to the first count, the complaint alleged that Jarmon threatened to
    shoot Teresa Bowens, a bus driver for the City of Wichita. As to the second count, the
    complaint alleged that, during the same incident, Jarmon told Bowens and another
    passenger, "'I am going to kill you both.'"
    At Jarmon's jury trial, Bowens testified that while waiting at a stop on her normal
    route, a man approached her bus. After stepping on, Bowens noticed that he might be
    impaired, based on his wobbly stance and his possession of a small bottle of alcohol,
    which Bowens saw as he was digging in his pockets. Because she was worried he was too
    intoxicated to safely ride the bus, Bowens told him to get off.
    At that point, the man started arguing with Bowens. She stated that he initially
    stepped off the bus after she asked him to but forced his way back on once she started to
    shut the door. Bowens stated that he then became aggressive, demanding she give him the
    bus fare and threatening her by saying he was going to shoot her and acting like he had a
    gun. Bowens testified that she told the man to get off her bus several more times and that
    he responded by again threatening to shoot her. Bowens stated that as this was happening,
    the man repeatedly reached behind his back into his pants as though he had a gun. But
    she never actually saw any weapon. Regardless, she said that she was ready to "fight for
    [her] life."
    Bowens testified that a passenger sitting on the bus stood up and told the man to
    get off the bus while brandishing a stun gun. Bowens stated that the man then finally
    exited the bus, but before doing so he told both her and the passenger that he would
    remember their faces and that he would kill them the next time he saw them.
    2
    Bowens testified that her bus was equipped with video cameras and that these
    cameras were operating on the day of the incident. The State then played the surveillance
    video recording of the incident for the jury. This footage largely confirmed Bowens'
    description of events, although it was difficult to make out some of what the man was
    saying, and the man seemed to be trying to keep his pants from falling down, rather than
    reaching for a weapon.
    Bowens testified that she waited to call the police until she got back to the bus
    station and that they interviewed her several hours later. A few months after that, police
    came to her house and presented her with a photo lineup. She testified that she "gave a
    brief description of the gentleman from two pictures and said you put these two together,
    you would have the identification." She also confirmed that she selected one of these two
    photos as the "one . . . [she] felt to be most accurate." Bowens clarified on cross-
    examination that in the photo she picked as the most accurate, the man did not have a
    goatee—which differed from the man who threatened her. Another photo in the lineup
    had a goatee, so she told the police if they combined the two pictures, that would look
    like the person she remembered. She explained that she "did not want to say that that was
    the photo when it wasn't exactly how I remembered, I was not going to prosecute
    someone that I was not for sure."
    Notably, the State never actually had Bowens positively identify Jarmon in court
    as the man who had threatened her. Nevertheless, the framing of its questions to her
    implied that she had. While the State used generic terms to refer to the man who
    threatened Bowens in most of its questioning of her, it identified Jarmon as her assailant
    in its questions several times. For instance, after asking Bowens a string of questions
    identifying her assailant in generic terms, the State asked, "[W]ere you able to get Mr.
    Jarmon off the bus at that point?" The State similarly identified the man who threatened
    her as Jarmon in the framing of its questions four other times during its direct
    examination of Bowens.
    3
    The jury next heard testimony from Wichita Police Officer Ryan O'Neil, who
    interviewed Bowens several hours after the incident. He testified that she described the
    man who threatened her as 6' 3", 170 pounds, with black pants, short hair, and a black
    and silver goatee. He also testified that Bowens told him that although the man threatened
    to shoot her, she did not actually believe that the man had a gun, and that he was so drunk
    that she believed he may not even remember the incident.
    Wichita Police Officer Truman Wiles, who presented the photo lineup to Bowens,
    testified next. He stated that Bowens paused when looking at picture number two but that
    "all she would tell me is this picture looks more fitting, kind of suggesting to me that this
    looks more like the suspect from that day." Picture number two was a picture of Jarmon.
    Wiles testified that Bowens would not give a definite number as to how sure she was. He
    said that when he asked her to rate her confidence in the identification, she "started to tear
    up and get really emotional when she was looking at—pointing at number two, but she
    said she didn't feel comfortable giving . . . a number." He said that she explained her
    hesitancy on the basis that the face was "a little bit chubbier" than she remembered and
    that he had different facial hair. She told him it would be more accurate if you took the
    goatee from picture number one and put it on number two. The photo lineup itself was
    also admitted into evidence.
    The jury next heard from Wichita Detective Maryanna Hoyt. She testified that in
    the process of investigating the case, she pulled still photos from the bus surveillance
    footage and sent them out to all commissioned officers. An officer who saw the photos
    responded back that he recognized the individual as someone who frequented the Lord's
    Diner—a charity that provides free meals to the homeless. Jarmon was later located at
    that location and confronted with photos of the incident. After Jarmon confirmed to the
    officers it was a picture of him, he was arrested and questioned. Hoyt testified that, before
    the interview started, Jarmon told her he was an alcoholic and had drunk two pints that
    day. She testified that he told her he did not remember the incident but admitted that the
    4
    photographs and video appeared to be him. She said that Jarmon denied threatening
    anyone on the date of the incident but admitted that it could have happened without him
    remembering due to his alcoholism. The still photos from the bus surveillance footage
    and a video recording of a portion of Jarmon's interview with police were admitted into
    evidence.
    Finally, Jarmon testified in his own defense. He denied that he was the man
    depicted in the video and stated that he was intoxicated during his interview with
    Detective Hoyt. He also testified that the video and pictures that the detective showed
    him in the interview were different than those displayed in court.
    The jury convicted Jarmon of the first count of criminal threat but acquitted him of
    the second. The trial court sentenced him to 17 months in prison.
    Jarmon timely appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    Did the trial court err in failing to give an eyewitness identification instruction to the
    jury?
    Jarmon first claims that the trial court erred in failing to give the jury a cautionary
    instruction regarding Bowens' eyewitness identification of him as the man who
    threatened her.
    Our Supreme Court has strongly recommended the use of pattern instructions
    unless the facts in a particular case require modification. State v. Mitchell, 
    294 Kan. 469
    ,
    476, 
    275 P.3d 905
     (2012). Additionally, the court has approved PIK Crim. 4th 51.110
    (2020 Supp.) as an accurate description of the factors a jury should consider regarding the
    reliability of an eyewitness identification. See State v. Moore, 
    302 Kan. 685
    , 704-05, 357
    
    5 P.3d 275
     (2015). Here, the instruction was appropriate as a matter of law because this
    was a criminal trial featuring an eyewitness identification.
    The State argues that an eyewitness identification instruction was not required
    here. Alternatively, the State argues that Jarmon has not shown the jury would have
    reached a different verdict even if the instruction was given.
    Jarmon concedes that he did not raise this issue below but argues that we can
    nonetheless review this claim for the first time on appeal.
    K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 22-3414(3) provides that no party may assign as error the
    failure to give an instruction, absent a timely and specific objection, unless the instruction
    or failure to give the instruction is clearly erroneous. Accordingly, Jarmon's failure to
    raise this issue before the trial court does not preclude us from considering his claim, but
    he must demonstrate clear error to be entitled to relief. State v. McLinn, 
    307 Kan. 307
    ,
    317, 
    409 P.3d 1
     (2018).
    In reviewing claims of instructional error, appellate courts apply a multi-step
    analysis:
    "'(1) determining whether the appellate court can or should review the issue, i.e.,
    whether there is a lack of appellate jurisdiction or a failure to preserve the issue for
    appeal;
    '(2) considering the merits of the claim to determine whether error occurred
    below; and
    '(3) assessing whether the error requires reversal, i.e., whether the error can be
    deemed harmless.'" McLinn, 307 Kan. at 317.
    See also State v. Plummer, 
    295 Kan. 156
    , 163, 
    283 P.3d 202
     (2012) (listing four steps).
    6
    At the first step, a reviewing court exercises an unlimited standard of review. At
    the second step, the reviewing court determines whether the instruction was legally and
    factually appropriate. In determining whether the instruction was legally appropriate, the
    reviewing court uses an unlimited standard of review. In determining whether the
    instruction was factually appropriate, the reviewing court must view the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the defendant. Plummer, 
    295 Kan. at 163
    . At the third step, the
    reviewing court exercises an unlimited standard of review, examining the record as a
    whole. State v. Dobbs, 
    297 Kan. 1225
    , 1237, 
    308 P.3d 1258
     (2013).
    We concede that an eyewitness identification jury instruction was legally and
    factually appropriate here.
    Because Jarmon did not request an eyewitness identification jury instruction or
    object to the omission of such an instruction, Jarmon must demonstrate that the failure to
    give this instruction was clearly erroneous. See K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 22-3414(3).
    Was the failure to give an eyewitness identification instruction clearly erroneous?
    Having established that the proposed instruction was legally and factually
    appropriate, next, Jarmon must show that the failure to give the instruction was clearly
    erroneous to be entitled to relief. To show clear error, a defendant must firmly convince
    the reviewing court that the jury would have reached a different verdict had the
    instruction been given. State v. Owens, 
    314 Kan. 210
    , 235, 
    496 P.3d 902
     (2021).
    Jarmon argues that without the guidance of an eyewitness identification
    instruction, the jury lacked the tools to properly weigh the identification and likely
    attached greater weight to the identification than it should have. He further argues that,
    although defense counsel highlighted the inconsistencies in Bowens' testimony on cross-
    examination, this did not counteract the failure to give a cautionary instruction. He argues
    7
    that if the jury had been given the instruction, there is a possibility that the jury would
    have returned a different verdict.
    As the State points out, however, the other evidence in this case was damning and
    would not have been undermined by a cautionary instruction. For example, Jarmon
    confirmed to the police that he was the man in the video. Also, Detective Hoyt
    interviewed Jarmon about the incident. Hoyt testified that, before the interview started,
    Jarmon told her he was an alcoholic and had drunk two pints that day. She further
    testified that he told her he did not remember the incident but admitted that the
    photographs and video appeared to be him. Although she testified that Jarmon denied
    threatening anyone on the date of the incident, she further testified that he admitted that it
    could have happened without him remembering due to his alcoholism. The still photos
    from the bus surveillance footage and a video recording of a portion of Jarmon's
    interview with police were admitted into evidence.
    Finally, the jury watched footage of Jarmon's interview as well as a video of the
    incident. The jury's ability to independently assess this evidence, along with the fact that
    Jarmon's counsel highlighted the inconsistencies in Bowens' identification, cut against
    Jarmon's attempt to show that the jury would have reached a different verdict if it had
    been instructed on the reliability factors under the cautionary instruction. Jarmon's
    arguments, however, have done little to obscure the damaging influence that this other
    evidence would have had on the jury.
    Accordingly, we conclude that Jarmon has not met his burden to demonstrate clear
    error.
    8
    Were the instructions the trial court gave the jury on criminal threat erroneous?
    Jarmon next claims that the instructions the trial court gave on each count of
    criminal threat were erroneous in that they failed to instruct the jury regarding the
    specific alleged acts constituting each charged count of criminal threat.
    The State argues that the instructions given here accurately stated the law and did
    not constitute clear error.
    Jarmon did not object to these instructions below. Nevertheless, as explained
    earlier, his failure to preserve this claim does not prevent us from considering it. But it
    means that he must demonstrate clear error to be entitled to relief. See K.S.A. 2021 Supp.
    22-3414(3).
    In determining whether the instructions given in a criminal trial were clearly
    erroneous, appellate courts employ an unlimited review of the entire record. State v.
    Brown, 
    306 Kan. 1145
    , 1164, 
    401 P.3d 611
     (2017).
    Jarmon notes that while each count of criminal threat he was charged with was
    based on a specific alleged statement, the jury instructions on both only restated the legal
    elements of criminal threat. Importantly, in his view, they did not inform the jury they
    had to find beyond a reasonable doubt that he made the specific charged statements.
    Under count one, the complaint alleged that Jarmon "unlawfully threaten[ed] to
    commit violence, to wit: told [Bowens] 'I am going to shoot you', communicated with the
    intent to place another in fear." Under count two, the complaint alleged that Jarmon
    "unlawfully threaten[ed] to commit violence, to wit: told [Bowens] and another
    passenger 'I am going to remember both of your faces. I am going to kill you both',
    communicated with the intent to place another in fear."
    9
    The trial court gave identical instructions on each count at trial, telling the jury
    that to establish the charge of criminal threat, the State was required to prove that the
    "defendant threatened to commit violence and communicated the threat with the intent to
    place another in fear." This is an accurate statement of the law. See K.S.A. 2021 Supp.
    21-5415(a)(1).
    Citing to State v. Trautloff, 
    289 Kan. 793
    , 802-03, 
    217 P.3d 15
     (2009), Jarmon
    argues that (1) a jury instruction on the elements of a crime that is broader than the
    complaint charging the crime is erroneous and (2) when the State includes a particular
    factual allegation in the charging document, it is bound to prove that factual allegation.
    Jarmon analogizes his case to Trautloff and argues that the jury instructions given
    here allowed the jury to convict him based on any threat to communicate violence, rather
    than the specific conduct alleged in the complaint. Jarmon claims that, based on the
    evidence presented in the case, the jury could have based his conviction on the statements
    alleged in the complaint, other statements presented in evidence, or Bowens' allegation
    that the individual reached behind his back, which she perceived as him possibly reaching
    for a gun.
    In Trautloff, the court reversed a defendant's conviction for sexual exploitation of
    a child because the jury instruction on the crime's elements was broader than the elements
    alleged in the charging document. The State charged Trautloff with "displaying" a
    photograph or video of a child, but the instruction allowed the jury to convict Trautloff
    for "displaying, procuring or producing" such a photograph or video. And as the court
    noted, the evidence presented at trial of "procuring" or "producing" was direct and
    overwhelming, while the evidence of "displaying" was minimal and circumstantial. The
    court found that the instruction, by listing statutory elements that were not included in the
    charging document, was erroneous because it allowed the jury to convict Trautloff of
    sexual exploitation based on conduct that was not charged in the information. Trautloff,
    10
    
    289 Kan. at 801-02
    . And the court concluded that, under the circumstances of the case,
    Trautloff's substantial rights had been prejudiced by the erroneous instruction. 
    289 Kan. at 802-03
    .
    The court has elsewhere characterized Trautloff as a part of a line of cases
    standing for the rule that "if an instruction adds alternate statutory elements of a crime
    that were not included in the complaint or information, the instruction is overly broad
    and, thus, erroneous." See State v. McClelland, 
    301 Kan. 815
    , 829, 
    347 P.3d 211
     (2015).
    Although the Trautloff decision did not explicitly identify how the defendant was unduly
    prejudiced by the broader instruction, the court has since explained that the prejudice lay
    in lack of notice about the accusation that must be defended. See State v. Hart, 
    297 Kan. 494
    , 509, 
    301 P.3d 1279
     (2013).
    As the State points out, however, this case is dissimilar from Trautloff in that the
    jury instructions here did not add statutory elements that were not in the complaint.
    Instead, the jury instructions omitted factual allegations included in the complaint. And
    as the State notes, both our Supreme Court and another panel of this court have refused to
    find error where the jury instructions omitted specific factual allegations included in the
    complaint but otherwise accurately stated the law. See Brown, 306 Kan. at 1165; State v.
    McFarland, 
    60 Kan. App. 2d 1
    , 4, 6-7, 
    485 P.3d 178
    , rev. denied 
    314 Kan. 857
     (2021).
    In Brown, the defendant was charged with committing aggravated robbery based
    on the allegation that he demanded "drugs and cash" from the victim. 306 Kan. at 1165.
    The jury instructions omitted the specific allegation that he committed the charged crime
    by demanding drugs and cash, simply informing the jury that it had to find he had
    committed any overt act. Citing to Trautloff, Brown argued this instruction erroneously
    broadened the crime charged to include any overt act. The court rejected this argument,
    noting that Brown gave no explanation for how the discrepancy between the charging
    document and the jury instructions deprived him of due process. Absent any showing that
    11
    he had, for example, been unfairly surprised by the State's reliance on alternate conduct,
    Brown's claim was unpersuasive. Given this, and the fact that the instructions otherwise
    accurately stated the law, the court refused to find that the instructions were erroneous.
    Brown, 306 Kan. at 1165.
    Similarly, in McFarland, another panel of this court refused to find error where
    the jury instructions omitted facts included in the charging document and instead used a
    generic statement of the statutory elements. In that case, like here, the defendant was
    charged with criminal threat. The complaint alleged that the defendant threatened a
    specific individual with an intent to place her in fear, but the jury instruction told the jury
    it only had to find that the defendant threatened to commit violence with the intent to
    place "another" in fear. After explaining that the question was whether the instructions
    informed the jury of every essential element of the charged crime, the panel noted that the
    statute does not require the State to prove the defendant intended to place a specific
    person in fear, so long as it proves the defendant intended to place "another" in fear.
    Because the instruction, which mirrored the statutory language, accurately reflected the
    elements of criminal threat and was not broader than the complaint, the panel concluded
    it was not erroneous. 60 Kan. App. 2d at 5-6.
    The State argues that this case demands the same result. It claims that the
    instructions given here accurately stated the law and did not prejudice Jarmon, as the
    prosecution's theory at trial was consistent with the allegations in the complaint. As the
    State notes, the prosecutor expressly stated in closing argument, and again in rebuttal
    closing, that count one was based on Jarmon stating, "I am going to shoot you," while
    count two was based on Jarmon saying, "I'm going to remember both your faces, I'm
    gonna kill you both."
    The State is correct. Unlike Trautloff, this is not a case where the State relied on
    different factual allegations at trial than those included in the criminal complaint.
    12
    Furthermore, the instructions here did not include different statutory elements than those
    listed in the complaint. Because the instructions' statement of the statutory elements was
    not broader than the elements alleged in the charging document and the prosecution's
    theory at trial was consistent with the allegations in the complaint, Trautloff is
    distinguishable from this case. Rather, similarly to Brown and McFarland, this case
    involved the omission of factual allegations included in the complaint from the
    instructions in favor of a generic statement of the statutory elements of the charged crime.
    As in those cases, we conclude that the challenged instructions accurately stated the law
    and that the trial court did not err in allowing their use.
    Did the trial court constructively deny Jarmon's right to self-representation?
    Jarmon next claims that the trial court committed structural error by constructively
    denying him his constitutional right to self-representation. The State argues no such error
    occurred here.
    Several months after he was charged, Jarmon filed a pro se motion seeking to
    dismiss his appointed counsel. At the later hearing, however, Jarmon withdrew this
    motion. After several more months, Jarmon filed a second motion to dismiss his counsel,
    but once again withdrew it at the hearing. Jarmon eventually filed a third motion to
    dismiss his counsel. At the hearing on this motion, though, Jarmon told the trial court that
    he wanted to represent himself. After warning Jarmon of the dangers of proceeding to
    trial without an attorney, the trial court determined that Jamon waived his right to counsel
    and knowingly asserted his right to represent himself and allowed him to proceed pro se.
    Several days later, Jarmon filed a motion requesting that he be allowed "to again
    view the video motions where [he was] held at gun point outside of [the] bus." At the
    hearing on this motion, the State submitted a list of the discovery given to Jarmon
    13
    showing that he was provided with the surveillance video recording of the incident
    shortly after electing to represent himself. Jarmon denied receiving the video.
    After the trial court found that the State had indeed provided the video to Jarmon,
    as it was hand receipted as delivered to him at the jail, Jarmon alleged that there were
    multiple videos of the incident and he wanted "the video where [he] was held at
    gunpoint." Jarmon maintained that there was a second video showing that when the bus
    pulled up at the stop where he was waiting, there was a man holding a "Glock firearm"
    who prevented him from getting on the bus. The State maintained that there was only one
    video of the incident. After questioning Jarmon further, the trial court concluded that
    Jarmon was confused by the fact that the single video of the incident contained two
    separate camera angles.
    On the eve of his jury trial, Jarmon filed a second motion seeking to compel the
    State to produce the video of him being "held at gun point outside a bus." When the trial
    court addressed this motion at the start of his trial, Jarmon told the trial court that he no
    longer wanted to represent himself since he had not received the video evidence. The
    State maintained that Jarmon had been provided with the video evidence but stated that it
    would provide him with an opportunity to view the video at that time as well, if the trial
    court so wished. The trial court found that Jarmon had been provided with the video
    evidence and gave Jarmon an opportunity to watch the video. After this Jarmon once
    again asked to be appointed an attorney. The trial court granted this request and
    continued his trial.
    Before the start of the trial, the trial court confirmed with Jarmon's appointed
    counsel that the defense had been provided with all discovery.
    14
    Jarmon acknowledges that he did not raise this issue before the trial court but
    argues that consideration of his claim is necessary to prevent the denial of a fundamental
    right.
    Jarmon is correct that while issues not raised below are generally not preserved for
    review, an exception applies where consideration of an argument is necessary to prevent
    the denial of a fundamental right. State v. Beaman, 
    295 Kan. 853
    , 856, 
    286 P.3d 876
    (2012). And the Sixth Amendment right to self-representation is a fundamental right. See
    State v. Bunyard, 
    307 Kan. 463
    , 471, 
    410 P.3d 902
     (2018) (violation of right to self-
    representation subject to structural error analysis).
    Accordingly, we will consider his claim for the first time on appeal. See, e.g.,
    State v. Owens, No. 112,472, 
    2016 WL 3144176
    , at *6 (Kan. App. 2016) (unpublished
    opinion) (considering unpreserved claim because right to self-representation is a
    fundamental right).
    The extent of the right to assistance of counsel and the related right to self-
    representation is a question of law over which appellate courts exercise unlimited review.
    Bunyard, 307 Kan. at 470.
    Jarmon claims that the trial court constructively denied his right to self-
    representation. Jarmon concedes that he explicitly waived his right to self-representation
    after initially asserting it but argues that this waiver was not voluntary because he was
    denied access to relevant video evidence before trial. He argues that the choice the trial
    court gave him—proceed to trial self-represented but unprepared or accept an appointed
    attorney and receive a continuance—was constitutionally offensive and represented a
    constructive denial of his right to self-representation on the trial court's part. And because
    denial of the right to self-representation is structural error, Jarmon argues that this error
    requires reversal.
    15
    As a necessary pretext to his argument, Jarmon first asks us to revisit the holding
    in State v. Lowe, 
    18 Kan. App. 2d 72
    , 75, 
    847 P.2d 1334
     (1993), that, unlike the right to
    counsel, a defendant can waive the right to self-representation by failing to assert it.
    Jarmon urges us to instead find that the right to self-representation requires a voluntary,
    knowing, and intelligent waiver.
    As the State points out, however, Jarmon ignores the fact that our Supreme Court
    has adopted the Lowe court's position that the right to self-representation can be waived
    by failing to assert it. See Bunyard, 307 Kan. at 470; State v. Collins, 
    257 Kan. 408
    , 414,
    
    893 P.2d 217
     (1995). We are duty-bound to follow Supreme Court precedent absent some
    indication the court is departing from its previous position. State v. Rodriguez, 
    305 Kan. 1139
    , 1144, 
    390 P.3d 903
     (2017).
    Furthermore, Jarmon's contention that the trial court functionally undermined his
    right to self-representation by forcing him to choose between representing himself or
    going to trial adequately prepared misconstrues the facts and the law.
    As the State notes, the fact that it is difficult to adequately prepare for trial while
    incarcerated and unassisted by counsel is one of the dangers and disadvantages of self-
    representation that trial courts are required to make a defendant aware of before accepting
    a waiver of the right to counsel. See Bunyard, 307 Kan. at 475-76.
    And while Jarmon contends that he was denied access to relevant discovery until
    the day of the trial, it seems that he was provided with all the relevant discovery in a
    timely manner. His contention below was not that he was not provided with the video that
    was used against him at trial, but rather that the State was concealing additional
    evidence—a second video of the incident. The trial court, however, determined that
    Jarmon was confused, that only one video existed, and that Jarmon had been provided
    with all the relevant discovery in a timely manner. Jarmon provides no argument on
    16
    appeal as to how this finding was incorrect. Also, he does not explain what additional
    evidence he believes was withheld from him.
    In short, the trial court did not functionally undermine Jarmon's right to self-
    representation because Jarmon was provided with all the relevant discovery well before
    trial. And any difficulty he may have experienced in preparing for trial was an inherent
    risk he accepted when he made the choice to proceed unassisted by counsel. Thus, we
    conclude that the trial court did not constructively deny Jarmon his right to self-
    representation.
    Did these errors cumulatively deny Jarmon his right to a fair trial?
    Finally, Jarmon claims that these errors, when considered cumulatively, denied
    him a fair trial.
    Appellate courts utilize a de novo standard when reviewing claims of cumulative
    error. State v. Brown, 
    298 Kan. 1040
    , 1056, 
    318 P.3d 1005
     (2014).
    "'Cumulative trial errors, when considered collectively, may be so great as to
    require reversal of the defendant's conviction. The test is whether the totality of
    circumstances substantially prejudiced the defendant and denied him a fair trial.'" State v.
    Lumbrera, 
    252 Kan. 54
    , 57, 
    845 P.2d 609
     (1992). Logically, one error cannot support
    reversal under the cumulative effect rule. State v. Nguyen, 
    285 Kan. 418
    , 436, 
    172 P.3d 1165
     (2007).
    Because Jarmon has shown only a nonreversible error under one of his claims, we
    conclude that his claim of cumulative error is fatally flawed.
    Affirmed.
    17