State v. Wynne ( 2016 )


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  • Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library
    www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/
    11/22/2016 09:09 AM CST
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    STATE v. WYNNE
    Cite as 
    24 Neb. Ct. App. 377
    State of Nebraska, appellee, v.
    Mitchell Q. Wynne, appellant.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed November 22, 2016.   No. A-15-840.
    1.	 Rules of Evidence. In proceedings where the Nebraska Evidence Rules
    apply, the admissibility of evidence is controlled by the Nebraska
    Evidence Rules; judicial discretion is involved only when the rules make
    discretion a factor in determining admissibility.
    2.	 Rules of Evidence: Appeal and Error. When the Nebraska Evidence
    Rules commit the evidentiary question at issue to the discretion of the
    trial court, an appellate court reviews the admissibility of evidence for
    an abuse of discretion.
    3.	 Judges: Words and Phrases. A judicial abuse of discretion exists when
    the reasons or rulings of a trial judge are clearly untenable, unfairly
    depriving a litigant of a substantial right and denying just results in mat-
    ters submitted for disposition.
    4.	 Motions for Mistrial: Appeal and Error. The decision whether to
    grant a motion for mistrial is within the discretion of the trial court, and
    an appellate court will not disturb the ruling on appeal in the absence of
    an abuse of discretion.
    5.	 Evidence: Appeal and Error. In reviewing a sufficiency of the evi-
    dence claim, whether the evidence is direct, circumstantial, or a com-
    bination thereof, the standard is the same: An appellate court does not
    resolve conflicts in the evidence, pass on the credibility of witnesses, or
    reweigh the evidence; such matters are for the finder of fact.
    6.	 ____: ____. The relevant question when an appellate court reviews a
    sufficiency of the evidence claim is whether, after viewing the evidence
    in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact
    could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reason-
    able doubt.
    7.	 Rules of Evidence: Telecommunications. Generally, the foundation for
    the admissibility of text messages has two components: (1) whether the
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    text messages were accurately transcribed and (2) who actually sent the
    text messages.
    8.	 Rules of Evidence. Authentication or identification of evidence is a
    condition precedent to its admission and is satisfied by evidence suf-
    ficient to prove that the evidence is what the proponent claims.
    9.	 Rules of Evidence: Identification Procedures. Neb. Rev. Stat.
    § 27-901(1) (Reissue 2008) does not impose a high hurdle for authenti-
    cation or identification.
    10.	 Rules of Evidence: Proof. A proponent of evidence is not required to
    conclusively prove the genuineness of the evidence or to rule out all
    possibilities inconsistent with authenticity.
    11.	 Rules of Evidence. If the proponent’s showing is sufficient to sup-
    port a finding that the evidence is what it purports to be, the pro-
    ponent has satisfied the requirement of Neb. Rev. Stat. § 27-901(1)
    (Reissue 2008).
    12.	 Hearsay. A statement is not hearsay if the proponent offers it to show
    its impact on the listener and the listener’s knowledge, belief, response,
    or state of mind after hearing the statement is relevant to an issue in
    the case.
    13.	 Trial: Prosecuting Attorneys: Appeal and Error. When considering
    a claim of prosecutorial misconduct, an appellate court first considers
    whether the prosecutor’s acts constitute misconduct.
    14.	 Trial: Prosecuting Attorneys: Juries. A prosecutor’s conduct that does
    not mislead and unduly influence the jury is not misconduct.
    15.	 Trial: Prosecuting Attorneys: Appeal and Error. If an appellate court
    concludes that a prosecutor’s acts were misconduct, the court next
    considers whether the misconduct prejudiced the defendant’s right to a
    fair trial.
    16.	 Trial: Prosecuting Attorneys: Due Process. Prosecutorial misconduct
    prejudices a defendant’s right to a fair trial when the misconduct so
    infected the trial that the resulting conviction violates due process.
    17.	 Trial: Prosecuting Attorneys. Whether prosecutorial misconduct is
    prejudicial depends largely on the context of the trial as a whole.
    18.	 Trial: Prosecuting Attorneys: Evidence. A prosecutor must base his or
    her argument on the evidence introduced at trial rather than on matters
    not in evidence.
    19.	 Trial: Evidence. A fact finder can rely only on evidence actually
    offered and admitted at trial and is not permitted to rely on matters not
    in evidence.
    20.	 Juries: Jury Instructions. The purpose of jury instructions is to
    ensure decisions that are consistent with the evidence and the law, to
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    inform the jury clearly and succinctly of the role it is to play and the
    decisions it must make, and to assist and guide the jury in understand-
    ing the case and considering testimony.
    21.	 Verdicts: Juries: Jury Instructions: Presumptions. Absent evidence
    to the contrary, it is presumed that a jury followed the instructions given
    in arriving at its verdict.
    22.	 Trial: Prosecuting Attorneys: Appeal and Error. In determining
    whether a prosecutor’s improper conduct prejudiced the defendant’s
    right to a fair trial, an appellate court considers the following factors:
    (1) the degree to which the prosecutor’s conduct or remarks tended to
    mislead or unduly influence the jury; (2) whether the conduct or remarks
    were extensive or isolated; (3) whether defense counsel invited the
    remarks; (4) whether the court provided a curative instruction; and (5)
    the strength of the evidence supporting the conviction.
    Appeal from the District Court for Douglas County: Leigh
    A nn R etelsdorf, Judge. Affirmed.
    Thomas C. Riley, Douglas County Public Defender, for
    appellant.
    Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and Melissa R.
    Vincent for appellee.
    Moore, Chief Judge, and Pirtle, Judge, and McCormack,
    Retired Justice.
    Moore, Chief Judge.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    Mitchell Q. Wynne appeals from his convictions in the
    district court for Douglas County following a jury trial for
    first degree murder and use of a deadly weapon (firearm) to
    commit a felony. On appeal, Wynne challenges the admission
    of a series of text messages into evidence, the denial of his
    motion for mistrial based on the prosecutor’s comments dur-
    ing closing argument, and the sufficiency of the evidence to
    sustain the murder conviction. For the reasons set forth herein,
    we affirm.
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    II. BACKGROUND
    1. Charges
    On January 29, 2014, the State filed an information in the
    district court, charging Wynne with one count of first degree
    murder, in violation of Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-303(1) or (2)
    (Reissue 2008), a Class IA felony, and one count of use of a
    deadly weapon (firearm) to commit a felony, in violation of
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-1205(1) (Cum. Supp. 2014), a Class IC
    felony. Specifically, the State alleged that on July 14, 2013,
    Wynne killed Darnell Haynes either purposely and with delib-
    erate and premeditated malice or during the perpetration of or
    attempt to perpetrate a robbery, and that Wynne used a firearm
    to commit a felony.
    2. Jury Trial
    A jury trial was held on March 30 through April 3 and April
    6 through 9, 2015. The record on appeal consists of over 2,000
    pages of transcribed testimony and argument (1,360 pages of
    which contain the transcribed testimony of the State’s 34 trial
    witnesses) and nearly 200 exhibits. We have reviewed this
    extensive record in its entirety and summarize those portions
    relevant to Wynne’s arguments on appeal.
    (a) Evidence About Wynne
    At the time of the offense, Wynne was 17 years old and
    had just finished his junior year of high school. He resided in
    Omaha, Nebraska, with his parents and younger siblings; he
    also had an older brother. Wynne’s mother testified that Wynne
    sometimes wore his hair in “single braids” and that it was
    “possible” he was wearing his hair that way during the summer
    of 2013. Wynne also had a girlfriend at that time.
    Wynne’s mother testified that on the morning of Sunday,
    July 14, 2013, she went to church with Wynne and his younger
    siblings. They left church around 12:15 or 12:20 p.m. and
    drove straight home. Wynne’s mother testified that Wynne
    usually went to his girlfriend’s house after lunch and that she
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    thought she drove him there on July 14 sometime between
    1 and 2:30 p.m. When asked about the distance between
    Wynne’s residence and the location of the murder, she testified
    that it was “maybe a six- or seven-minute drive” but might
    take an hour to walk. Wynne’s girlfriend lived three blocks
    from Wynne’s residence. When Wynne’s mother dropped him
    off, Wynne’s girlfriend was not home, but his mother testified
    that he went into the house to wait for her. Wynne’s mother
    was uncertain when exactly she saw Wynne next, but she tes-
    tified that he usually came home for dinner, which they eat
    sometime between 5 and 7 p.m. She did recall watching the
    news with him “later on,” probably at 10 p.m., and seeing a
    news story about Haynes’ death that evening, which was the
    first time she “knew anything about that happening.” She also
    thought Wynne’s girlfriend came back to the house with him
    and watched the news with them. Wynne’s mother testified
    that she did not know Haynes or Haynes’ mother, and she was
    not aware that Wynne ever had an acquaintance with or any-
    thing to do with Haynes. While watching the news story, she
    recalled that she and Wynne had seen Haynes and his vehicle
    (depicted in the news story) at a stoplight earlier in the day on
    their way home from church.
    Wynne’s girlfriend also provided a timeline for events
    occurring on July 14, 2013. That summer, she was working at
    a fast-food restaurant, and she testified that one of her parents
    picked her up from work around 3:20 or 3:30 p.m. on the day
    in question. They drove straight home, and on the way, they
    drove by a crime scene. She observed a red Jeep with “the
    passenger’s side door open with white sheets hanging up” at
    the scene, but she did not recognize the vehicle. When she
    arrived at her house, her cousin and Wynne were there. When
    asked about the distance between her house and the location
    of the murder, Wynne’s girlfriend testified that it was about a
    10- or 15-­minute drive and would be a “long walk.” According
    to Wynne’s girlfriend, after she returned home from work,
    she “sat around and watched movies” with Wynne and her
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    cousin and ate dinner around 5:30 or 6 p.m. She testified that
    her mother took her and Wynne to his house around 8 p.m.
    She recalled watching the 10 p.m. news with Wynne and his
    mother before her mother picked her up again around mid-
    night. Wynne’s girlfriend did not know Haynes and testified
    that she never knew Wynne to “hang out” with Haynes.
    (b) Evidence About Haynes
    In July 2013, Haynes was 29 years old, and he lived in
    Omaha with his mother, his mother’s husband, his brother, and
    two other children. Haynes, who was unemployed and receiv-
    ing disability payments for epilepsy, supplemented his income
    by selling marijuana. That summer, Haynes regularly drove a
    red Jeep Cherokee (Jeep) owned by his mother. His mother
    testified that he washed the Jeep regularly and had probably
    washed it within the week prior to his murder. Haynes’ mother
    did not know Wynne and had never seen Wynne at her resi-
    dence or in the Jeep.
    Haynes’ mother provided testimony about his whereabouts
    in the hours preceding his murder. Haynes spent the night
    of July 13, 2013, away from home. He returned briefly the
    next day around 11 a.m. before leaving again. When Haynes
    returned again around 2 p.m. on July 14, his son and his son’s
    mother were there for a visit. About 30 to 40 minutes later,
    Haynes told his mother that he was going to “make a run”
    and that he would “be right back” before he left in the Jeep. A
    “little after” 3 p.m., Haynes’ brother told Haynes’ mother that
    he had received a telephone call indicating that Haynes’ vehicle
    had been located and that Haynes may have been shot.
    (c) Murder
    At approximately 3:10 p.m. on July 14, 2013, Haynes
    was shot and killed in his Jeep, which was parked outside
    of a beauty supply store located at a particular intersection
    in Omaha. The beauty supply store was surrounded by sev-
    eral other business spaces, including a vacant one physically
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    connected to the east side of the beauty supply store, a fast-
    food restaurant located across the street west of the beauty
    supply store, and an automotive repair business and used car
    lot across the street north and east of the beauty supply store.
    There is a large parking lot on the north side of the beauty
    supply store and the vacant business space. The automotive
    business across the street was equipped with four exterior sur-
    veillance cameras, one of which was pointed in the direction
    of the beauty supply store parking lot. We have set forth an
    account of the murder, compiled primarily from surveillance
    video from the automotive repair business (taking into con-
    sideration testimony indicating that the time reflected on the
    video is 4 minutes 17 seconds ahead of “atomic time”) and
    the testimony of a witness who was in the drive-through at the
    fast-food restaurant when the murder occurred. The witness in
    the drive-through was not able to discern facial features; nor
    is it possible to discern facial features from the surveillance
    video footage.
    Shortly after 3 p.m., Haynes parked the Jeep in front of the
    beauty supply store, leaving the engine running. At approxi-
    mately 3:08 p.m., two black men approached from the east,
    crossed the street curving along the northeast corner of the
    parking lot, and entered the parking lot near the vacant busi-
    ness space. The first man was wearing a white T-shirt and
    tan cargo shorts and had “cornrows or braids” in his hair. As
    the first man began walking across the parking lot toward
    the beauty supply store, the second man, trailing several feet
    behind, approached the garages attached to the vacant busi-
    ness space. The first man stopped briefly and looked back at
    the second man before continuing across the parking lot to the
    beauty supply store. The second man began walking slowly
    along the garages toward the beauty supply store.
    At approximately 3:09 p.m., the first man walked around
    the back end of the Jeep and approached the front passenger-
    side door. Within a minute, he fired two shots, one of which
    struck Haynes in the forehead. The witness in the fast-food
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    drive-through heard the gunshots and immediately looked
    to her left toward the beauty supply store parking lot. She
    observed Haynes fall toward the open passenger-side door.
    She further observed the first man, who was standing outside
    the door, reach into the Jeep and then take off running. He
    fell to the ground behind the Jeep, but he rose quickly and
    continued running east toward the garages. The second man
    began running, and the two men ran around the corner by the
    eastern edge of the vacant business space and disappeared
    from view.
    (d) Evidence at Scene
    Emergency personnel arrived on the scene on July 14, 2013,
    at approximately 3:22 p.m., followed by law enforcement at
    3:23 p.m. They found Haynes lying face down across the front
    seat of the Jeep with his feet by the driver’s-side door and his
    upper body slumped over the outer edge of the passenger’s
    seat. There was a large amount of blood on the ground below
    his head, and small clumps of marijuana were found on the
    back of his T-shirt just below his neck and near his left armpit.
    His wallet was on the driver’s seat and his cell phone was in
    the center console. Haynes did not have a pulse and was pro-
    nounced dead at the scene.
    A search of the area surrounding the Jeep revealed (1) two
    .380-caliber shell casings (later determined to have been fired
    from the same gun) on the ground outside the passenger-side
    door, (2) several small clumps of marijuana on the ground
    outside the Jeep (both on the passenger’s side and behind the
    Jeep), and (3) two small clumps of marijuana on the ground in
    front of the vacant business space (one clump near the beauty
    supply store and the other clump farther east, near the garages).
    No additional evidence was collected at the scene.
    (e) Autopsy and DNA Evidence
    On July 15, 2013, Dr. Robert Bowen performed an autopsy
    on Haynes’ body. Bowen observed a single gunshot wound on
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    the right side of Haynes’ forehead. The condition of the wound
    indicated to Bowen that Haynes had been shot at very close
    range. Bowen retrieved a bullet from “just beneath [Haynes’]
    left ear” and concluded that Haynes died from the gunshot
    wound to the head.
    At the time of the autopsy, a crime laboratory technician
    collected Haynes’ personal effects. Thirty-five dollars in cash
    was recovered from Haynes’ clothing. The technician also col-
    lected DNA swabs taken from Haynes’ fingernails. Subsequent
    tests performed on the DNA swabs disclosed a mixture of DNA
    belonging to two or more people. Wynne could not be excluded
    as a contributor to the DNA mixture on either swab. However,
    the DNA profiles generated from the swabs were fairly com-
    mon. For Wynne, the probability that a random individual’s
    DNA profile matched the DNA profile in question from the
    left-hand swab was 1 in 848 for Caucasians, 1 in 1,540 for
    African-Americans, and 1 in 791 for American Hispanics. And,
    the probability that Wynne expressed the same DNA profile as
    the profile in question from the right-hand swab was 1 in 36
    for Caucasians, 1 in 61 for African-Americans, and 1 in 71 for
    American Hispanics.
    (f) Additional Evidence and
    Fingerprints From Jeep
    The Jeep was towed to the police impound lot for further
    processing. Two baggies of marijuana and a white pill contain-
    ing cocaine HCL were found lying on the center console next
    to the gearshift. Crime laboratory technicians lifted fingerprints
    from the exterior of the Jeep and kept 11 prints they deter-
    mined were “identifiable.” Eight of those prints belonged to
    five of Haynes’ friends, four of whom had recently been inside
    the Jeep. Of the remaining three prints, two were not identified,
    while the third print, found on the rear passenger-side door,
    matched Wynne’s left palm.
    Considerable time was spent at trial exploring the methods
    by which fingerprint evidence is collected and analyzed, the
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    qualifications of the individuals who collected and analyzed
    the prints in this case, and the mishandling of fingerprint evi-
    dence (unassociated with the evidence in this case) in 2012
    by Omaha Police Department crime laboratory employees.
    We have thoroughly reviewed this evidence, but for the sake
    of brevity, we note only the following: In September 2012,
    an Omaha Police Department crime laboratory employee mis-
    identified a fingerprint. Two other employees who reviewed
    the work in 2012 verified her identification of the print at
    that time. The print was not removed from a database used
    by the laboratory as it should have been. In March 2014,
    another crime laboratory employee ran a “reverse search,”
    which revealed the misidentification, which misidentification
    was verified by several other crime laboratory employees.
    The employees involved in the 2012 misidentification were
    suspended from casework for about 6 months after the discov-
    ery of the misidentification, took additional formal training
    in fingerprint identification, and were subject to additional
    monitoring after returning to identification work. The crime
    laboratory manager also initiated an audit of other finger-
    print identifications performed by the individuals involved
    in the misidentification, which audit did not reveal any other
    misidentifications. The crime laboratory is not accredited by
    the American Society of Crime Lab Directors, an entity that
    accredits laboratories “overall” and in “varying concentration
    areas,” but the entire police department, including the labora-
    tory, is accredited by the Commission on Accreditation for
    Law Enforcement Agencies, although that accreditation is not
    specific to “specialties in the crime lab.” The International
    Association for Identification is an accrediting body that certi-
    fies individuals in various aspects of forensic science includ-
    ing the area of fingerprint comparison. One crime laboratory
    employee was certified by that association in the area of
    fingerprint comparison at the time the misidentification was
    discovered, but no crime laboratory employees were certified
    in that area in 2012.
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    The fingerprint identifications resulting from the evalua-
    tions performed by the Omaha Police Department crime labo-
    ratory employees of the 11 prints at issue in this case were
    each verified by another technician in the Omaha laboratory.
    The identification of Wynne’s print was also verified by a
    Lincoln Police Department employee who is a certified latent
    print examiner. We note that the Omaha crime laboratory
    employee who verified the identification of Wynne’s print
    was one of the individuals involved in the 2012 misidentifi-
    cation. She is the only certified print examiner in the Omaha
    laboratory and became certified after the 2012 misidentifica-
    tion but prior to both its discovery and her verification of
    Wynne’s print. After the 2012 misidentification was discov-
    ered, the employee notified the International Association for
    Identification, but the 2012 misidentification did not affect her
    certification status.
    (g) Admission of Telephone Records
    Certain exhibits were admitted into evidence at trial which
    showed details of contacts between the cell phone with the
    telephone number attributed at trial to Wynne and Haynes’
    cell phone found in his Jeep after his murder. Some of these
    exhibits also reflect contacts between Wynne’s cell phone
    and the telephones being used by some of his family mem-
    bers and his girlfriend during July 2013. Given the focus
    of Wynne’s assignments of error on appeal, we discuss the
    admission into evidence of only two of those exhibits: exhibit
    178, a table containing incoming, outgoing, and missed calls
    exchanged by Haynes’ cell phone and Wynne’s cell phone
    and by Haynes’ cell phone and a third telephone between
    July 10 and 14; and exhibit 179, a table containing incom-
    ing and outgoing text messages (including the actual content
    of the text messages) exchanged by Haynes’ cell phone and
    Wynne’s cell phone on July 14 between 12:35 and 12:43 p.m.
    Exhibit 179 reflects a series of text messages in which the
    user of Wynne’s cell phone agreed to purchase marijuana from
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    Haynes. Exhibit 178 shows, among other things, that several
    calls were exchanged by Wynne’s cell phone and Haynes’ cell
    phone between 2:48 and 3:09 p.m. on July 14, shortly before
    Haynes was murdered.
    When the State first offered exhibits 178 and 179, Wynne
    objected to both exhibits on authentication and hearsay
    grounds. The district court overruled Wynne’s objections as
    to exhibit 178 and received that exhibit into evidence, but the
    court sustained Wynne’s hearsay objection as to exhibit 179.
    Wynne also argued that there was not sufficient evidence to
    indicate that he was the author of the text messages contained
    within exhibit 179. With respect to exhibit 179, the court
    noted that nothing in the content of the text messages identi-
    fied Wynne specifically or anyone else as “the maker of those
    text messages” and noted further that the fact that text mes-
    sages were sent from Wynne’s cell phone was not sufficient to
    show Wynne actually authored the messages. The court ruled
    that the fact that text messages were sent from the cell phone
    previously identified as belonging to Wynne to the cell phone
    belonging to Haynes was admissible, but that based on the evi-
    dence at that point in the trial, the content of the text messages
    was not admissible.
    Subsequently, the State offered testimony from a police
    officer which showed that in the days and hours before
    Haynes was murdered, Wynne’s cell phone was in contact
    with the telephones of several of his family members and
    his girlfriend, as well as the telephone of a person unidenti-
    fied at trial who also called Haynes shortly before he was
    murdered. The State again offered exhibit 179 with the text
    message content into evidence, and Wynne renewed his prior
    objections. The district court sustained Wynne’s objections,
    but it agreed to hear additional argument from the parties.
    After the jury was released for the day, the court heard further
    argument with respect to the admissibility of the text mes-
    sage content.
    Finally, the district court ruled as follows:
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    I never like — these close calls that are significant are
    difficult, but I re-looked at a number of cases, and, really
    — although authentication and — really, all that they
    have to authenticate is that this — the authentication
    goes to whether or not it’s actually the [d]efendant that
    made — that sent the text messages or whether there is a
    likelihood that it wasn’t the [d]efendant.
    The case law is pretty clear across the board, and I
    looked at the federal cases that have established this,
    that the government only needs to make a prima facie
    showing of authenticity by a — and it’s merely by a
    preponderance of the evidence, and there [are] cases that
    indicate that it can be proved by circumstantial evidence
    involving the timing of the receipt and the transmission
    of the text messages. I think that because of the burden
    that the government has, that [it] merely only need[s]
    to make a prima facie showing, because of the fact that
    subsequent to this morning, when all we had, I think,
    was [Wynne’s] association with that number, I think now
    there is enough evidence for the government to meet [its]
    preponderance of the evidence and prima facie showing
    of authenticity based on the facts and circumstances sur-
    rounding the timing of the transmission and receipt of
    the text messages, and so I’m going to allow Exhibit 179
    into evidence.
    (h) Details of Telephone Records
    Wynne’s father had an account with a cell phone service
    provider, and Wynne’s mother testified that in July 2013,
    Wynne was using a cell phone with a phone number assigned
    to that account; we have referred to that cell phone in this
    opinion as “Wynne’s cell phone.” She also identified the cell
    phone numbers being used by herself, Wynne’s father, and
    Wynne’s older brother. Wynne’s girlfriend identified her home
    telephone number on the record and testified that she some-
    times called Wynne from that number. Several of the telephone
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    record exhibits admitted into evidence were highlighted with
    different colors used to represent contacts between Wynne’s
    cell phone and the telephones used by other individuals as well
    as contacts between Haynes’ cell phone and the telephones
    used by other individuals. On those exhibits, a telephone num-
    ber is highlighted in gray, and we will refer to it in this opinion
    as “the gray number.” The user or owner of the telephone asso-
    ciated with the gray number was not identified in the evidence
    presented to the jury at trial.
    Police extracted data from Haynes’ cell phone, which dis-
    closed several contacts between Wynne’s and Haynes’ cell
    phones on July 14, 2013. At 12:33 p.m., a call was made from
    Wynne’s cell phone to Haynes. At 12:35 p.m., Haynes sent a
    text message to Wynne’s cell phone stating, “I got Dro.” The
    reply from Wynne’s cell phone at 12:37 p.m. stated, “Ight
    koo.. Im bouta run ta da bank den im get some of both.. U
    gon look out.?” At 12:39 p.m., Haynes sent a text to Wynne’s
    cell phone stating, “call me,” and the reply from Wynne’s cell
    phone at 12:42 p.m. stated, “Ight.” We note testimony in the
    record indicating that “dro” is a slang term for “hydroponic
    marijuana.” Calls from Wynne’s cell phone were logged by
    Haynes’ cell phone at 2:48 p.m. as “[m]issed” and at 2:49 p.m.
    as “[i]ncoming.” Additional calls were exchanged by the two
    cell phones between 3:02 and 3:05 p.m. Between 3:06 and 3:08
    p.m., Haynes’ cell phone logged two incoming calls from the
    gray number. Haynes’ cell phone logged an outgoing call to
    Wynne’s cell phone at 3:08 p.m. As noted above, Haynes was
    murdered at approximately 3:10 p.m.
    A review of the subpoenaed records for Wynne’s cell phone
    confirms the text and call contacts between Wynne’s cell
    phone and Haynes on July 14, 2013, although there are some
    discrepancies in the various telephone record exhibits as to
    the exact contact times and number of contacts made depend-
    ing on which “target number” was used to generate the exhib-
    its. The police officer who testified about these exhibits was
    unable to explain these discrepancies, as he was “not a data
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    person or records keeper for [the cell phone provider used
    by Wynne and Haynes].” In addition to the contacts between
    the two cell phones on July 14, the records for Wynne’s
    cell phone showed that calls were placed from Wynne’s cell
    phone to Haynes on July 10 and 13. Wynne’s cell phone had
    several contacts with the gray number on July 14, including
    texts before and calls both before and after the initial contact
    with Haynes. Wynne’s cell phone also received calls from the
    gray number on June 1 and 29 and sent a text message to it
    on July 13. Finally, although several calls and text messages
    were sent from Wynne’s cell phone to various people on July
    14, including Wynne’s girlfriend, father, and older brother,
    all outgoing communications from Wynne’s cell phone had
    ceased by 3:04 p.m. Wynne’s mother testified that Wynne’s
    cell phone was reported “lost,” but she did not specify when
    this occurred. Wynne’s girlfriend recalled learning at some
    point that Wynne had lost his cell phone, but she did not
    recall the date. Wynne’s cell phone number was “deactivated”
    on July 31.
    (i) Search Warrant and Arrest
    On November 11, 2013, a search warrant for Wynne’s resi-
    dence was executed by law enforcement looking for firearms
    and cell phones. As of the date of trial, neither Wynne’s cell
    phone nor the gun used to shoot Haynes had been found.
    Wynne was arrested on December 20.
    (j) Motion for Mistrial
    During the State’s initial closing argument, the prosecu-
    tor stated:
    And why was it the officers felt they needed to talk to
    this . . . number later determined to be the phone number
    of . . . Wynne . . . ? Because you can see — we will go in
    reverse chronological order — the 14th day of July, 2013,
    at 3:08:29 p.m., . . . Haynes’ phone placed a call to the
    . . . Wynne number.
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    If we think about that, 3:08:29, if the murder occurred
    just immediately before 3:10 p.m., this outgoing phone
    call placed by [Haynes] to [Wynne’s] number was placed
    within a minute, minute and a half of . . . Haynes’ mur-
    der. But that’s not the only call.
    As we continue, you will see that there are — prior to
    that . . . Haynes had received two other incoming phone
    calls from a number we don’t have a name to associate
    it with, [the gray number]. There was never an outgoing
    call from . . . Haynes’ phone to that number. Just two
    incoming calls. And in terms of that number, the [gray
    number], you’ll see in the later records that that’s the
    number highlighted in gray.
    The State discussed the sequence of the contacts between
    the various telephone numbers, including the gray number, at
    length during its initial closing argument and made two more
    references to the gray number. First, the prosecutor stated: “Of
    significance here is now, once again, we start seeing that gray
    number. What’s the gray number again? That’s the number we
    don’t know, that’s the number that contacted [Haynes], and,
    once again, that’s the number that’s also contacting and being
    contacted by [Wynne] from his phone.” Later, the prosecutor
    stated: “This is one of those cases where you don’t have an
    eyewitness saying, ‘This is the person who did it,’ you don’t
    have a co-[d]efendant because we have never been able to
    identify that person in the gray number in terms of the evi-
    dence you heard throughout this trial.”
    Wynne did not object to the prosecutor’s comments at the
    time they were made, but following the State’s closing argu-
    ment and prior to his own closing argument, Wynne made an
    oral motion for mistrial based on prosecutorial misconduct.
    Wynne argued that the State’s assertion that it was unable
    to identify the user of the gray number was false because
    the police had previously identified an individual as the user
    of that number, a fact recently confirmed by that individual
    during a police interview. The district court received into
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    evidence two exhibits offered by Wynne in support of his
    motion: (1) e-mail correspondence regarding a police inter-
    view of the individual on April 3, 2015, and (2) a supplemen-
    tal police report showing police awareness of the individual’s
    association with the gray number. The State argued that its
    assertions with respect to the gray number were not false
    because the prosecutor had specified that the user of the gray
    number was unknown “based upon the evidence in this case.”
    The State argued further that “to the extent that there is a
    concern,” the prosecutor’s cocounsel would “clear that up
    in rebuttal.”
    The district court overruled Wynne’s motion, but it agreed
    to revisit the issue after transcription of the closing arguments.
    The court provided a limiting instruction to the jury prior to
    Wynne’s closing argument, stating:
    Ladies and Gentlemen, I do want to instruct you.
    Arguments of counsel are not evidence. Comments of
    counsel regarding what evidence may or may not exist
    is not evidence. Reference[s] to evidence the State may
    or may not possess that was not put before you are to be
    disregarded completely.
    During Wynne’s closing argument, his attorney made the
    following reference to the prosecutor’s statements about the
    gray number:
    So because their scientific evidence is so lacking,
    we are left with the prosecutors putting together a story
    about what these known [telephone] contacts mean, what
    the content of them is, even though [the prosecutor] has,
    other than these several texts, absolutely no evidence,
    zero, to support his statements. He paints this picture
    about here’s what happened. You know, [Wynne and the
    other individual shown in the surveillance video] said
    they were going to do a robbery with this phone number
    that there is no evidence to support who it is.
    Finally, during the State’s rebuttal closing argument, the
    prosecutor’s cocounsel stated:
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    I want to clarify something that [the prosecutor]
    might have misstated in his closing argument about
    whether there was evidence as to who that gray . . .
    number was [attributable to]. I just want to clarify that
    in this trial you heard no evidence about whose number
    that was.
    But the point of all of those phone numbers — and
    I’m not going to spend a great deal of time talking
    about the phone numbers because I think [the prosecu-
    tor] went through it enough. The point is that that was
    . . . Wynne’s phone. He was talking and texting to all of
    these people who are close to him, all of these people
    who are close to him and . . . Haynes at the time of
    [Haynes’] death.
    3. Convictions
    On April 9, 2015, the jury found Wynne guilty on both
    counts of the information. The district court accepted the
    jury’s verdicts and entered judgment accordingly.
    4. Motion for New Trial
    Wynne filed a motion for new trial, alleging, among
    other things, that the district court erred by denying his
    motion for mistrial based on the prosecutor’s prejudicial
    misconduct during closing arguments and by overruling his
    objections to the admission into evidence of the content of
    the text messages extracted from Haynes’ cell phone. On
    June 23, 2013, the district court entered an order overruling
    Wynne’s motion.
    5. Sentencing
    On August 27, 2015, the district court entered an order
    sentencing Wynne to 40 to 100 years’ imprisonment for first
    degree murder and to a consecutive sentence of 10 to 20
    years’ imprisonment for use of a deadly weapon (firearm) to
    commit a felony. The court gave Wynne 544 days’ credit for
    time served.
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    III. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Wynne asserts that the district court erred in admitting the
    text messages into evidence and in denying his motion for
    mistrial based on prosecutorial misconduct during the State’s
    closing argument. Wynne also asserts that the evidence was
    insufficient to sustain his conviction for first degree murder on
    either of the State’s alternate theories.
    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1-3] In proceedings where the Nebraska Evidence Rules
    apply, the admissibility of evidence is controlled by the
    Nebraska Evidence Rules; judicial discretion is involved only
    when the rules make discretion a factor in determining admis-
    sibility. State v. Ash, 
    293 Neb. 583
    , 
    878 N.W.2d 569
    (2016).
    When the Nebraska Evidence Rules commit the evidentiary
    question at issue to the discretion of the trial court, an appel-
    late court reviews the admissibility of evidence for an abuse
    of discretion. State v. Carpenter, 
    293 Neb. 860
    , 
    880 N.W.2d 630
    (2016). A judicial abuse of discretion exists when the rea-
    sons or rulings of a trial judge are clearly untenable, unfairly
    depriving a litigant of a substantial right and denying just
    results in matters submitted for disposition. State v. Edwards,
    
    294 Neb. 1
    , 
    880 N.W.2d 642
    (2016).
    [4] The decision whether to grant a motion for mistrial is
    within the discretion of the trial court, and an appellate court
    will not disturb the ruling on appeal in the absence of an abuse
    of discretion. See State v. Goynes, 
    278 Neb. 230
    , 
    768 N.W.2d 458
    (2009).
    [5,6] In reviewing a sufficiency of the evidence claim,
    whether the evidence is direct, circumstantial, or a combina-
    tion thereof, the standard is the same: An appellate court does
    not resolve conflicts in the evidence, pass on the credibility of
    witnesses, or reweigh the evidence; such matters are for the
    finder of fact. State v. Jenkins, 
    294 Neb. 475
    , 
    883 N.W.2d 351
    (2016). The relevant question when an appellate court reviews
    a sufficiency of the evidence claim is whether, after viewing
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    the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any
    rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of
    the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. 
    Id. V. ANALYSIS
                    1. A dmission of Text Messages
    Wynne asserts that the district court erred in admitting
    exhibit 179, a series of text messages, into evidence over
    his objections. We first address whether there was sufficient
    foundation for the admissibility of the text messages and then
    whether they were inadmissible hearsay.
    (a) Foundation
    [7] Generally, the foundation for the admissibility of text
    messages has two components: (1) whether the text mes-
    sages were accurately transcribed and (2) who actually sent
    the text messages. State v. Henry, 
    292 Neb. 834
    , 
    875 N.W.2d 374
    (2016).
    [8-11] Authentication or identification of evidence is a con-
    dition precedent to its admission and is satisfied by evidence
    sufficient to prove that the evidence is what the proponent
    claims. State v. Oldson, 
    293 Neb. 718
    , 
    884 N.W.2d 10
    (2016).
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 27-901(1) (Reissue 2008) does not impose
    a high hurdle for authentication or identification. State v.
    Elseman, 
    287 Neb. 134
    , 
    841 N.W.2d 225
    (2014). A proponent
    of evidence is not required to conclusively prove the genuine-
    ness of the evidence or to rule out all possibilities inconsistent
    with authenticity. 
    Id. If the
    proponent’s showing is sufficient
    to support a finding that the evidence is what it purports to
    be, the proponent has satisfied the requirement of § 27-901(1).
    State v. 
    Elseman, supra
    .
    Wynne does not argue that the text messages detailed in
    exhibit 179 were not accurately transcribed from Haynes’
    cell phone. In our review, we find the testimony of the police
    officer who extracted this data from Haynes’ cell phone suf-
    ficient to authenticate the messages as set forth in exhibit
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    179 as accurate transcriptions of the messages from Haynes’
    cell phone.
    At trial and on appeal, Wynne’s primary argument is that
    there was not sufficient foundation to show that he was the
    person who sent the text messages attributed to him. He argues
    that there was no direct evidence presented to show who actu-
    ally authored the messages attributed to him or who was in
    possession of the cell phones at the time the messages were
    sent and received. He notes that while the cell phone from
    which the messages were extracted was found in the Jeep next
    to Haynes following his death, the cell phone attributed to
    Wynne was never recovered, and thus, no data was extracted
    from it. He also notes that the number of the cell phone attrib-
    uted to him was assigned to his father’s cell phone service
    provider account and argues that there is no evidence to show
    that he was the sole user of the cell phone. Finally, he argues
    that there is nothing in the content of the text messages that
    identifies him as the author.
    The Nebraska Supreme Court recently addressed the foun-
    dation for admissibility of text messages in State v. 
    Henry, supra
    . In that case, the defendant argued that there was insuf-
    ficient foundation that he authored the text messages attributed
    to him, noting the lack of evidence that he was the record
    owner of the cell phone in question and the presence of evi-
    dence that the cell phone was found in the post office box
    of another individual who claimed ownership. He also noted
    that through “‘text spoofing,’” a text message can be made to
    appear to have been sent from a telephone number other than
    the number from which it was actually sent. 
    Id. at 868,
    875
    N.W.2d at 399. In addressing these arguments, the Supreme
    Court stated:
    In similar cases, testimony concerning context or
    familiarity with the manner of communication of the
    purported sender is sufficient foundation for the iden-
    tity of the sender of the message. Such testimony is
    typically in combination with testimony that the cell
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    phone number belonged to or was regularly utilized by
    the alleged sender. The proponent of the text messages
    is not required to conclusively prove who authored the
    messages. The possibility of an alteration or misuse by
    another generally goes to weight, not admissibility.
    
    Id. at 868,
    875 N.W.2d at 400. In finding sufficient foundation
    for the admission of the text messages, the Supreme Court in
    State v. Henry noted testimony establishing the defendant as
    a regular user of the cell phone, testimony that the defendant
    answered the cell phone at the number in question when a wit-
    ness called it, and testimony connecting the defendant with the
    messages based on the witness’ familiarity with their context
    and the way the defendant spoke.
    In this case, the evidence showed that Wynne used his cell
    phone, with the number assigned to an account belonging to
    Wynne’s father, during July 2013. There was also evidence
    to show that in the days and hours prior to Haynes’ murder,
    there was contact between the cell phone attributed to Wynne
    and the telephone numbers of various family members and
    also Wynne’s girlfriend. And, there is no evidence in the
    record to suggest that anyone other than Wynne was using
    the cell phone in question at the time of Haynes’ murder. The
    content of the text messages, which arranged a drug transac-
    tion, and the sequence of subsequent call contacts between
    the cell phone attributed to Wynne and Haynes’ cell phone are
    also consistent with the timeline established for the murder.
    All outgoing contacts by the cell phone attributed to Wynne
    ceased just shortly before the murder occurred. The district
    court did not abuse its discretion in overruling Wynne’s
    objections with respect to his authorship of the text messages
    attributed to him.
    (b) Hearsay
    [12] Wynne also objected to exhibit 179 on the basis of
    hearsay, although he does not separately argue this claim
    in his brief on appeal, and as noted above, the focus of his
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    arguments at trial was that the evidence was insufficient to
    show he was the person who sent the text messages. In argu-
    ing his objections to the district court, Wynne’s trial counsel
    conceded that if there were sufficient evidence to indicate that
    Wynne was the author of the messages attributed to him, they
    would not be hearsay. We agree. As discussed above, there
    was sufficient evidence to establish that Wynne authored the
    text messages attributed to him. Because those text messages
    were his own statements, they were not hearsay. See, Neb.
    Rev. Stat. § 27-801(4)(b)(i) (Reissue 2008); State v. Henry,
    
    292 Neb. 834
    , 
    875 N.W.2d 374
    (2016) (finding that defend­
    ant’s text messages offered against him were statements of
    party opponent and not hearsay). Nor were text messages
    attributed to Haynes hearsay. Those messages were offered
    to show their effect on Wynne, i.e., how he responded to
    the proposed drug transaction. A statement is not hearsay
    if the proponent offers it to show its impact on the listener
    and the listener’s knowledge, belief, response, or state of
    mind after hearing the statement is relevant to an issue in the
    case. State v. Poe, 
    292 Neb. 60
    , 
    870 N.W.2d 779
    (2015). To
    the extent that Wynne claims the district court improperly
    overruled his hearsay objection to exhibit 179, that claim is
    without merit.
    2. Motion for Mistrial
    Wynne asserts that the district court erred in denying his
    motion for mistrial based on prosecutorial misconduct during
    the State’s closing argument. He argues that the prosecutor’s
    comments about not knowing whom the gray number belonged
    to were false and misleading. Wynne further argues that the
    State’s rebuttal argument did not clear up the error and was
    further misleading in that the State misstated the gray num-
    ber and went on to speak about Wynne’s cell phone without
    clarifying that the “phone [the prosecutor] was referencing
    was not the ‘unknown’ phone . . . .” Brief for appellant at 24.
    Wynne argues that this statement led to the inference that the
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    unknown telephone was connected to him or was otherwise
    unimportant to the investigation.
    [13-17] When considering a claim of prosecutorial miscon-
    duct, an appellate court first considers whether the prosecu-
    tor’s acts constitute misconduct. State v. McSwine, 
    292 Neb. 565
    , 
    873 N.W.2d 405
    (2016). A prosecutor’s conduct that does
    not mislead and unduly influence the jury is not misconduct.
    
    Id. If an
    appellate court concludes that a prosecutor’s acts were
    misconduct, the court next considers whether the misconduct
    prejudiced the defendant’s right to a fair trial. 
    Id. Prosecutorial misconduct
    prejudices a defendant’s right to a fair trial when
    the misconduct so infected the trial that the resulting convic-
    tion violates due process. 
    Id. Whether prosecutorial
    miscon-
    duct is prejudicial depends largely on the context of the trial
    as a whole. 
    Id. In State
    v. 
    McSwine, supra
    , the Nebraska Supreme Court
    reversed a decision by this court, finding that the prosecu-
    tor’s comments during closing and rebuttal argument did not
    constitute prosecutorial misconduct and that the defendant
    was not prejudiced by the prosecutor’s comments. In that
    case, the comments at issue related to the defense at trial that
    certain text messages did not refer to the crimes charged but
    related to an earlier incident of trespassing by the defend­
    ant. Specifically, the prosecutor observed that there was no
    evidence “‘at all,’” other than the defendant’s testimony,
    about the earlier incident. 
    Id. at 575,
    873 N.W.2d at 413. The
    defendant did not object to the comments at the time. During
    deliberations, the jury inquired about the prosecutor’s com-
    ments, was instructed that it had all of the evidence it would
    receive, and was directed to the jury instruction stating that
    statements, arguments, and questions of the lawyers were not
    evidence. The defendant did not challenge the prosecutor’s
    comments as misleading until his motion for new trial, at
    which time he offered police reports about the trespass inci-
    dent into evidence. On appeal, this court concluded that the
    comments were misleading, reasoning that the prosecutor did
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    not limit the term “evidence” in his comments to the evidence
    presented at trial and that the comments suggested that there
    was no evidence at all to support the defendant’s testimony
    about the trespass incident. See State v. McSwine, 22 Neb.
    App. 791, 
    860 N.W.2d 776
    (2015), reversed 
    292 Neb. 565
    ,
    
    873 N.W.2d 405
    (2016). On further review, the Nebraska
    Supreme Court disagreed.
    [18,19] First, the Nebraska Supreme Court observed that
    while there were police reports about the trespass incident
    and the State was aware of these reports, the reports were not
    offered at trial. The Supreme Court concluded that the jury was
    not misled or unduly influenced by the prosecutor’s comments,
    because the jury was “well instructed as to what ‘evidence’
    was within the context of th[e] trial” and it was undisputed that
    no evidence was presented at trial to corroborate the defend­
    ant’s testimony about the trespass incident. State v. 
    McSwine, 292 Neb. at 576
    , 873 N.W.2d at 414. The Supreme Court
    observed that a prosecutor must base his or her argument on
    the evidence introduced at trial rather than on matters not in
    evidence. 
    Id. Further, a
    fact finder can rely only on evidence
    actually offered and admitted at trial and is not permitted to
    rely on matters not in evidence. 
    Id. Accordingly, the
    Supreme
    Court concluded that the comments were not misconduct, but
    went on to conclude that even if the statements were prejudi-
    cial, they were not so prejudicial as to violate the defendant’s
    due process rights.
    (a) Statements Were Not Misconduct
    In this case, unlike in State v. McSwine, 
    292 Neb. 565
    ,
    
    873 N.W.2d 405
    (2016), the prosecutor did qualify his state-
    ments about the gray number. Although he initially stated
    that the gray number was “the number we don’t know,” he
    went on to state, “[W]e have never been able to identify that
    person in the gray number in terms of the evidence you heard
    throughout this trial.” During rebuttal argument, the prosecu-
    tor’s cocounsel clarified that the jury heard no evidence “in
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    this trial” about “whose number [the gray number] was.”
    Although Wynne presented evidence to the district court dur-
    ing argument on his motion for mistrial, indicating that the
    gray number was associated with a known individual and
    that the State was aware of this connection, it is undisputed
    that no evidence of the connection was presented to the jury
    at trial.
    During the rebuttal argument by the prosecutor’s cocoun-
    sel, she misstated one digit in the prefix of the gray number,
    an error easy enough to make given the plethora of telephone
    numbers discussed at trial, but not one unduly misleading,
    given that she correctly stated the final four digits of the gray
    number. After commenting that there was no evidence at trial
    as to the user of the gray number, the cocounsel continued her
    rebuttal argument and went on to discuss Wynne’s cell phone
    without explicitly stating that she was changing topics and
    was now discussing a different cell phone, the one with the
    telephone number attributed to Wynne at trial. We do not read
    this lack of transition as “an adroit attempt to confuse the jury
    by lumping all the last calls to [Haynes’] phone as coming
    from [Wynne’s] phone.” See brief for appellant at 24. When
    the cocounsel’s remarks are read as a whole, it is clear that she
    was no longer discussing the gray number. And in the context
    of the entire trial, in which all of the various telephone num-
    bers were addressed at length, we do not believe the jury was
    misled or unduly influenced by the cocounsel’s lack of a segue
    between one portion of her rebuttal and the next. We also note
    that Wynne did not object to these particular remarks or renew
    his motion for mistrial. Further, most of Wynne’s argument at
    the hearing on his motion for new trial was addressed to the
    district court’s admission of the content of the text messages.
    His brief argument about the prosecutorial misconduct issue
    focused on the statements made by the prosecutor during the
    State’s initial closing argument.
    Like the jury in State v. 
    McSwine, 292 Neb. at 576
    , 
    577, 873 N.W.2d at 414
    , the jury in this case was “well instructed” as
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    to what was evidence in the context of the trial and was spe-
    cifically instructed that “‘[s]tatements, arguments and ques-
    tions’” of the lawyers are not evidence. After the State’s ini-
    tial closing argument and prior to Wynne’s closing argument,
    the district court instructed the jury that arguments of counsel
    are not evidence and that comments of counsel regarding what
    evidence may or may not exist are not evidence. And, during
    formal jury instructions, the jury was informed of its duty to
    decide the facts and informed that in doing so, it must “rely
    solely upon the evidence in this trial and that general knowl-
    edge that everyone has.” The jury was further instructed that
    the evidence from which it was to find the facts consisted
    of the testimony of the witnesses, the exhibits received in
    evidence, any stipulated facts, and any facts that “[the judge]
    say[s the jurors] may accept but are not required to accept.”
    The jury was again informed that statements, arguments,
    and questions of the lawyers for the State and Wynne were
    not evidence.
    [20,21] The purpose of jury instructions is to ensure deci-
    sions that are consistent with the evidence and the law, to
    inform the jury clearly and succinctly of the role it is to play
    and the decisions it must make, and to assist and guide the jury
    in understanding the case and considering testimony. See State
    v. McSwine, 
    292 Neb. 565
    , 
    873 N.W.2d 405
    (2016). Absent
    evidence to the contrary, it is presumed that a jury followed
    the instructions given in arriving at its verdict. 
    Id. Unlike the
    prosecutor in State v. 
    McSwine, supra
    , both
    the prosecutor and his cocounsel in this case qualified their
    references to “evidence” to indicate they were referring to
    evidence presented at trial. We conclude that the jury was
    not misled or unduly influenced by the comments about there
    having been no evidence presented at trial as to the user of
    the gray number. These statements were not misconduct.
    Nor do we find the cocounsel’s further comments in rebut-
    tal to be misconduct. Nonetheless, as set forth below, even if
    any of these statements, those of either the prosecutor or his
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    cocounsel, were misconduct, they were not so prejudicial as to
    violate Wynne’s due process rights.
    (b) Statements Were Not Prejudicial
    [22] In determining whether a prosecutor’s improper con-
    duct prejudiced the defendant’s right to a fair trial, an appel-
    late court considers the following factors: (1) the degree to
    which the prosecutor’s conduct or remarks tended to mislead or
    unduly influence the jury; (2) whether the conduct or remarks
    were extensive or isolated; (3) whether defense counsel invited
    the remarks; (4) whether the court provided a curative instruc-
    tion; and (5) the strength of the evidence supporting the con-
    viction. State v. 
    McSwine, supra
    .
    The statements of the prosecutor and his cocounsel did not
    mislead or unduly influence the jury to a significant degree.
    Their remarks about the gray number were qualified as being
    about the evidence presented at trial. And, the jury in this
    case was well instructed on what it was to consider in its
    deliberations. It was instructed to consider only evidence pre-
    sented at trial and instructed that counsel’s statements, argu-
    ments, and questions were not evidence. The first factor weighs
    against prejudice.
    Next, the comments in question were not extensive in the
    context of the lengthy initial closing and rebuttal arguments.
    Nor do we see any indication that defense counsel invited the
    remarks, except to the extent that the possibility of clarifying
    rebuttal remarks by the prosecutor’s cocounsel was discussed
    during the arguments on Wynne’s motion for mistrial. The sec-
    ond and third factors weigh against prejudice.
    With regard to the fourth factor, the district court did
    give a curative instruction following the State’s initial clos-
    ing argument. And, as noted above, the possibility of clarify-
    ing remarks by the prosecutor’s cocounsel was discussed in
    connection with Wynne’s motion for mistrial. Wynne did not
    object to the additional comments by the prosecutor’s cocoun-
    sel of which he complains. Nor did he make a further motion
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    for mistrial or explicitly address these additional comments in
    arguing his motion for new trial to the district court. Again,
    however, the jury was instructed on what it was to consider in
    its deliberations. This factor is neutral.
    Finally, as addressed more explicitly below in connection
    with our analysis of Wynne’s third assignment of error, there
    is sufficient evidence to support Wynne’s convictions. The fact
    that there were two individuals involved in the commission of
    these crimes was clearly known throughout the trial, and the
    failure of the State to identify the potential user of the gray
    number did not preclude the possibility that Wynne was one of
    the individuals involved in the crimes.
    Thus, even assuming that the statements by the prosecutor
    and his cocounsel were misconduct, they were not prejudicial.
    3. Sufficiency of Evidence
    Wynne asserts that the evidence was insufficient to sus-
    tain his conviction for first degree murder on either of the
    State’s alternate theories: felony murder in the commission
    of or attempt to commit a robbery or intentional killing with
    premeditation and deliberation. Wynne argues that there was
    no witness to place him at the scene and challenges the cred-
    ibility of the fingerprint evidence and the weight to be given
    to that and the relatively inconclusive DNA evidence. He also
    relies on the timelines established through the testimony of his
    mother and his girlfriend. He argues that there is no evidence
    to support a finding of premeditation or deliberation by him
    and insufficient evidence to support the felony murder theory
    of robbery or attempted robbery.
    Because Wynne does not challenge the sufficiency of the
    evidence to support his conviction for use of a deadly weapon
    to commit a felony, either in his third assignment of error or
    in his arguments, we address the sufficiency of the evidence to
    support only his conviction for first degree murder. Pursuant to
    § 28-303, a person commits murder in the first degree if he or
    she “kills another person (1) purposely and with deliberate and
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    premeditated malice, or (2) in the perpetration of or attempt to
    perpetrate . . . robbery.”
    Wynne essentially urges us to reweigh the evidence and
    pass on the credibility of witnesses, something an appellate
    court does not do, as those matters are for the finder of fact.
    See State v. Jenkins, 
    294 Neb. 475
    , 
    883 N.W.2d 351
    (2016).
    When viewed in the light most favorable to the State, the
    evidence was sufficient to support Wynne’s conviction for
    first degree murder. The evidence showed that Wynne agreed
    via text message to purchase marijuana from Haynes and
    that after exchanging several cell phone calls with Haynes,
    Wynne arrived with another individual at the parking lot of
    the beauty supply store, where Haynes was murdered. The
    evidence also shows that the second individual held back
    while Wynne proceeded to interact with Haynes outside the
    open front passenger door of the Jeep, leaving a palmprint in
    the process, and that Wynne shot Haynes, taking some of his
    marijuana, which was scattered outside of and behind the Jeep
    and in the direction of his travel as Wynne and his companion
    fled the parking lot. In short, the evidence at trial could have
    led a rational juror to find the essential elements of the crime
    beyond a reasonable doubt. Wynne’s third assignment of error
    is without merit.
    VI. CONCLUSION
    The district court did not err in admitting the content of the
    text messages into evidence or abuse its discretion in denying
    Wynne’s motion for mistrial. The evidence was sufficient to
    support Wynne’s murder conviction.
    A ffirmed.