State v. Lobato-Rodriguez ( 2024 )


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    1         IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    2   Opinion Number: __________________
    3   Filing Date: January 22, 2024
    4   NO. S-1-SC-39294
    5   STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
    6         Plaintiff-Petitioner,
    7   v.
    8   ISAIAS LOBATO-RODRIGUEZ,
    9         Defendant-Respondent.
    10   ORIGINAL PROCEEDING ON CERTIORARI
    11   Jarod K. Hofacket, District Judge
    12   Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
    13   Van Snow, Assistant Attorney General
    14   Santa Fe, NM
    15   for Petitioner
    16   Bennett J. Baur, Chief Public Defender
    17   Thomas J. Lewis, Assistant Appellate Defender
    18   Santa Fe, NM
    19   for Respondent
    1                                        OPINION
    2   ZAMORA, Justice.
    3   {1}   Defendant Isaias Lobato-Rodriguez was convicted by a jury of second-degree
    4   murder. The Court of Appeals vacated his conviction on the ground that the
    5   prosecutor, by commenting in the opening statement on Defendant’s failure to speak
    6   to police, had violated Defendant’s right to remain silent under the Fifth and
    7   Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, and that such violation
    8   was not harmless error. State v. Lobato-Rodriguez, A-1-CA-39409, mem. op. ¶¶ 3,
    9   5 (N.M. Ct. App. Mar. 9, 2022) (nonprecedential). While we agree that the
    10   prosecutor’s comment violated Defendant’s constitutional rights, we conclude that
    11   the error was harmless in the context of the trial as a whole. Accordingly, we reverse
    12   the Court of Appeals.
    13   I.    BACKGROUND
    14   {2}   Law enforcement found the body of Connie Lopez inside a van that had
    15   crashed into a fence along a remote stretch of desert highway. She was still strapped
    16   into the driver’s seat, and the engine was running. A pet dog sat in her lap. A belt
    17   was wrapped around her neck.
    18   {3}   Defendant approached law enforcement at the scene on foot. He immediately
    19   and without any prompting admitted to police that he had killed Lopez. He told law
    1   enforcement that he had to kill her because she was going to kill him and kidnap and
    2   kill his daughter. He further claimed that other people were hiding in the bushes. An
    3   exhaustive search found no other people. They arrested Defendant.
    4   {4}   During opening statement, the prosecutor recounted these events, adding that
    5   Defendant invoked his right to remain silent after his arrest. The prosecutor said:
    6         That night after the crime scene was more or less processed, Agent
    7         Mascorro then went to the Deming State Police office which is where
    8         Mr. Lobato-Rodriguez had been taken from that scene. He got brought
    9         back here to Deming. He certainly wasn’t free to leave—he was the
    10         suspect. I mean, that’s it. So Agent Mascorro did engage in
    11         conversation with Mr. Lobato-Rodriguez. Mr. Lobato-Rodriguez
    12         asserted his rights to remain silent.
    13   Defense counsel immediately objected and requested a mistrial. The district court
    14   admonished the prosecutor not to make any further comment on Defendant’s silence
    15   but denied the motion for mistrial, finding that the isolated comment was unlikely to
    16   be a significant factor in the jury’s verdict given the evidence expected at trial. The
    17   prosecutor made no further comment on Defendant’s silence for the remainder of
    18   the four-day trial.
    19   {5}   After the State rested, Defendant testified in his own defense. He described
    20   how he killed Lopez: he took off his belt and wrapped it around Lopez’s neck from
    21   the back seat of the van, causing her to veer off the road. Defendant testified that he
    2
    1   held the belt around Lopez’s neck for “twenty minutes or more,” then squeezed the
    2   belt and tied it in a knot, killing her.
    3   {6}    The defense—exclusively one of mitigation, not denial—rested on
    4   Defendant’s claim that Lopez had provoked him into killing her. Defendant asserted
    5   the following facts to establish provocation. Lopez, a former immigration law
    6   paralegal, ran a private business providing services to migrant workers in Florida.
    7   Defendant hired Lopez to drive him from his home in Florida to Agua Prieta,
    8   Mexico, where he intended to retire after receiving a settlement from a workplace
    9   injury. Lopez helped Defendant withdraw his money, including several thousand
    10   dollars in cash, by translating for him at the bank. Once on the road, Defendant
    11   became suspicious that Lopez intended to rob him, or worse.
    12   {7}    Defendant first became suspicious of Lopez when they stayed at a motel in El
    13   Paso. He noticed four men there who “looked suspicious” and saw Lopez speaking
    14   to someone on the phone. He called his daughter and told her that he did not wish to
    15   continue the journey with Lopez. He walked to a restaurant and asked someone to
    16   call 911. Firefighters responded to the call. A firefighter testified that Defendant
    17   seemed agitated and that Defendant said he wanted to be dropped off at a border
    18   crossing. Firefighters took Defendant’s vitals, calmed him down, and canceled the
    3
    1   call for police assistance. Lopez asked Defendant to get back in the van so that she
    2   could “get[] him to his destination.” Defendant got back into the van.
    3   {8}    After leaving El Paso, Defendant began to suspect that the men from the hotel
    4   were following him. A white pickup truck passed the van twice, and Defendant saw
    5   a man inside the pickup gesture at Lopez as if to wave her forward. He thought that
    6   these men might rob and kill him and harm his daughter.
    7   {9}    While on the highway, Lopez pointed to a mountain in the distance and said,
    8   “Look how pretty that looks. I would like to walk around there. And look, because
    9   this may be the last time you see it in your life.” Defendant interpreted this statement
    10   as a threat to his life, but he calmed down, drank water, and continued the journey
    11   with Lopez. At some point, the white pickup truck reappeared. Defendant then
    12   decided to strangle Lopez because he thought it was the only way he could escape.
    13   On cross-examination, Defendant admitted that Lopez did not directly threaten to
    14   hurt him or his family, nor did she have a weapon.
    15   {10}   At the close of trial, the district court instructed the jury on first-degree
    16   murder, second-degree murder, and voluntary manslaughter. The instructions on
    17   second-degree murder and voluntary manslaughter were identical but for the
    18   voluntary manslaughter element of provocation. The district court instructed the jury
    19   that “[t]he difference between second degree murder and voluntary manslaughter is
    4
    1   sufficient provocation. In second degree murder the defendant kills without having
    2   been sufficiently provoked . . . [, but i]n the case of voluntary manslaughter the
    3   defendant kills after having been sufficiently provoked.” See UJI 14-220 NMRA.
    4   The district court also instructed the jury on the definition of “sufficient provocation”
    5   as follows:
    6          “Sufficient provocation” can be any action, conduct or circumstances
    7          which arouse anger, rage, fear, sudden resentment, terror or other
    8          extreme emotions. The provocation must be such as would affect the
    9          ability to reason and to cause a temporary loss of self control in an
    10          ordinary person of average disposition. The “provocation” is not
    11          sufficient if an ordinary person would have cooled off before acting.
    12   See UJI 14-222 NMRA. The jury found Defendant guilty of second-degree murder.
    13   {11}   Defendant raised five issues on appeal. The Court of Appeals granted
    14   Defendant a new trial based on its determination of a single issue, which was that
    15   the prosecutor’s comment on silence was not harmless error. Lobato-Rodriguez, A-
    16   1-CA-39409, mem. op. ¶ 5. The Court of Appeals did not analyze the comment in
    17   context of all of the evidence presented at trial but nevertheless concluded that
    18   reversal was required because Defendant’s “credibility was crucial since he testified
    19   at trial and the element of provocation was at issue.” Id. The State petitioned this
    20   Court for a writ of certiorari on the single issue of whether “the Court of Appeals
    21   err[ed] by functionally treating a prosecutor’s comment on the right to remain silent
    5
    1   as per se harmful error when the statement did not affect the verdict.” We granted
    2   certiorari.
    3   II.    DISCUSSION
    4   A.     Standard of Review
    5   {12}   Because prosecutorial comment on a defendant’s silence “raises substantial
    6   questions of constitutional law,” our review is de novo. State v. Gutierrez, 2007-
    7   NMSC-033, ¶ 10, 
    142 N.M. 1
    , 
    162 P.3d 156
    . “Where a defendant has made a proper
    8   objection at trial, the appellate court determines whether the prosecution commented
    9   on the defendant’s protected silence, and if so, reverses the conviction unless the
    10   State can demonstrate that ‘the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.’”
    11   State v. DeGraff, 
    2006-NMSC-011
    , ¶ 22, 
    139 N.M. 211
    , 
    131 P.3d 61
     (citation
    12   omitted).
    13   {13}   Under this constitutional harmless error standard, we will deem the error
    14   “harmless only if we conclude that there is no reasonable possibility the error
    15   contributed to the jury’s decision to convict.” State v. Tollardo, 
    2012-NMSC-008
    ,
    16   ¶ 45, 
    275 P.3d 110
    . While “[t]he jury verdict [is] not automatically . . . afforded
    17   deference when a constitutional error has infected the trial,” State v. Alvarez-Lopez,
    18   
    2004-NMSC-030
    , ¶ 30, 
    136 N.M. 309
    , 
    98 P.3d 699
    , neither is the verdict
    6
    1   automatically reversed. See Gutierrez, 
    2007-NMSC-033
    , ¶ 19 (“We decline to adopt
    2   a rule of automatic reversal for every prosecutorial comment on silence.”).
    3   {14}   Instead, the focus of our inquiry is exclusively on “the likely impact of the
    4   error on the jury’s verdict.” Id. ¶ 18 (quoting Alvarez-Lopez, 
    2004-NMSC-030
    ,
    5   ¶ 32). We examine the “basis on which the jury actually rested its verdict. The
    6   inquiry, in other words, is not whether, in a trial that occurred without the error, a
    7   guilty verdict would surely have been rendered, but whether the guilty verdict
    8   actually rendered in this trial was surely unattributable to the error.” Alvarez-Lopez,
    9   
    2004-NMSC-030
    , ¶ 27 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Sullivan v.
    10   Louisiana, 
    508 U.S. 275
    , 279 (1993)). As such, “harmless error review necessarily
    11   requires a case-by-case analysis.” Tollardo, 
    2012-NMSC-008
    , ¶ 44.
    12   {15}   We emphasize that “constitutional error cannot be deemed harmless simply
    13   because there is overwhelming evidence of the defendant’s guilt.” Alvarez-Lopez,
    14   
    2004-NMSC-030
    , ¶ 32. The evidence of a defendant’s guilt apart from the error
    15   “may often be relevant . . . since it will provide context for understanding how the
    16   error arose and what role it may have played in the trial proceedings; but such
    17   evidence . . . can never be the singular focus of the harmless error analysis.”
    18   Tollardo, 
    2012-NMSC-008
    , ¶ 43. Thus, we will not conclude that a constitutional
    19   error was harmless simply because “the right result was reached.” Id. ¶ 42 (internal
    7
    1   quotation marks omitted) (quoting State v. Barr, 
    2009-NMSC-024
    , ¶ 57, 
    146 N.M. 2
       301, 
    210 P.3d 198
    ). If there is a reasonable possibility that the error contributed to
    3   the verdict, then reversal is required. Id. ¶ 45.
    4   B.     The Prosecutor Violated Defendant’s Constitutional Rights by
    5          Commenting on Defendant’s Post-Arrest Silence
    6   {16}   The first step in constitutional harmless error analysis is determining whether
    7   there was an error that infringed upon the defendant’s constitutional rights. See, e.g.,
    8   Alvarez-Lopez, 
    2004-NMSC-030
    , ¶¶ 6, 24-25 (determining that there was a
    9   constitutional error before applying harmless error analysis). Although the State
    10   concedes that the prosecutor’s statement was error, we conduct our own analysis of
    11   this question. See, e.g., State v. Comitz, 
    2019-NMSC-011
    , ¶ 25, 
    443 P.3d 1130
    12   (“[W]e are not bound by the State’s concession [in a criminal appeal], and we
    13   independently assess Defendant’s claims.”).
    14   {17}   When assessing a prosecutor’s statement that could be construed as a
    15   comment on silence, “New Mexico courts . . . consider ‘whether the language used
    16   was manifestly intended to be or was of such a character that the jury would naturally
    17   and necessarily take it to be a comment’ on the accused’s exercise of his or her right
    18   to remain silent.” DeGraff, 
    2006-NMSC-011
    , ¶ 8 (citation omitted). There is no
    19   ambiguity about the nature of the statement in this case. The prosecutor informed
    20   the jury that after Defendant was arrested, he “asserted his rights to remain silent.”
    8
    1   This statement was a direct comment on Defendant’s exercise of his right to remain
    2   silent after arrest and, as such, it was clearly constitutional error. See 
    id.
     ¶ 12
    3   (recognizing that “[t]he Fifth Amendment protects a defendant’s decision not to
    4   testify” and “due process guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment protects post-Miranda
    5   silence”); see also, e.g., State v. McDowell, 
    2018-NMSC-008
    , ¶ 1, 
    411 P.3d 337
    6   (“For decades, prosecutors have been prohibited from commenting on or eliciting
    7   testimony about a defendant’s exercise of his or her right to remain silent.”);
    8   Gutierrez, 
    2007-NMSC-033
    , ¶ 11 (“[W]e have long held that prosecutorial comment
    9   on a defendant’s exercise of his or her right to remain silent violates a defendant’s
    10   rights under the Fifth Amendment to the federal Constitution, as applied to the states
    11   through the Fourteenth Amendment.”).
    12   {18}   We note that in addition to the violation of Defendant’s constitutional right to
    13   remain silent, the prosecutor’s comment here was improper “as a matter of New
    14   Mexico evidentiary law.” McDowell, 
    2018-NMSC-008
    , ¶ 4. Rule 11-403 NMRA
    15   allows courts to exclude otherwise relevant evidence “if its probative value is
    16   substantially outweighed by a danger of . . . misleading the jury.” Silence is
    17   generally inadmissible because no matter when the silence occurred, it “is often too
    18   ambiguous to have great probative force and may be given improper weight by a
    19   jury.” McDowell, 
    2018-NMSC-008
    , ¶ 4 (internal quotation marks and citation
    9
    1   omitted). Post-Miranda silence is even less probative than silence that occurs at
    2   other stages. That is because the Miranda warning—which informs the defendant
    3   that he or she has a “right to remain silent[ and] that anything he says may be used
    4   against him”—implies that “silence will carry no penalty.” Doyle v. Ohio, 
    426 U.S. 5
        610, 617-18 (1976); see also DeGraff, 
    2006-NMSC-011
    , ¶ 12. “Silence in the wake
    6    of these warnings may be nothing more than the arrestee’s exercise of these Miranda
    7    rights. Thus, every post-arrest silence is insolubly ambiguous because of what the
    8    State is required to advise the person arrested.” Doyle, 426 U.S. at 617 (emphasis
    9    added).
    10   {19}   There is no justification for the prosecutor’s comment in this case. As
    11   explained above, the prosecutor’s statement that Defendant “asserted his rights to
    12   remain silent” was a violation of Defendant’s Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment
    13   rights and was irrelevant to any issue at trial. Prosecutors should be aware that they
    14   risk mistrial, “including in cases in which the evidence supporting a conviction is
    15   very strong, if they make inappropriate and constitutionally violative mention of a
    16   defendant’s postarrest silence.” Gutierrez, 
    2007-NMSC-033
    , ¶ 24; see also, e.g.,
    17   State v. Costillo, 
    2020-NMCA-051
    , ¶¶ 21-22, 
    475 P.3d 803
     (discussing the fact that
    18   retrial may be barred by double jeopardy in cases where prosecutorial comment on
    19   silence meets the standard for severe prosecutorial misconduct set forth in State v.
    10
    1   Breit, 
    1996-NMSC-067
    , ¶ 32, 
    122 N.M. 655
    , 
    930 P.2d 792
    ). Such statements may
    2   also violate the rules of professional conduct. See Rule 16-304(E) NMRA (“A
    3   lawyer shall not . . . in trial, allude to any matter that the lawyer does not reasonably
    4   believe is relevant or that will not be supported by admissible evidence.”); see also,
    5   e.g., DeGraff, 
    2006-NMSC-011
    , ¶ 17 (noting that the prosecutor’s comments on
    6   silence “may . . . have constituted prosecutorial misconduct by encouraging the jury
    7   to convict Defendant on improper grounds”).
    8   {20}   Although we conclude that the prosecutor’s comment in this case was patently
    9   improper and violated Defendant’s constitutional rights, we nevertheless must
    10   determine the proper remedy for that violation through the lens of harmless error
    11   review. See Gutierrez, 
    2007-NMSC-033
    , ¶ 19 (“We decline to adopt a rule of
    12   automatic reversal for every prosecutorial comment on silence . . . [because] existing
    13   precedent . . . requires application of a harmless error standard.”). We now address
    14   the effect of the prosecutor’s improper comment on the jury’s verdict in this case.
    15   C.     Under the Unique Circumstances of This Case, the Prosecutor’s
    16          Comment Was Harmless
    17   {21}   To determine whether the prosecutor’s error was harmless, we examine “all
    18   of the circumstances surrounding the error.” Tollardo, 
    2012-NMSC-008
    , ¶ 43. The
    19   relevant circumstances will vary “depending upon the facts of the particular case”
    20   but may include the extent to which the error was emphasized at trial; the role of the
    11
    1   error in the prosecution’s overall case; and—although it is not dispositive—
    2   “evidence of a defendant’s guilt separate from the error.” 
    Id.
     In other words, we
    3   examine the error in the context of the trial as a whole to determine whether there is
    4   a reasonable possibility that it contributed to the jury’s decision to convict.
    5   {22}   We first consider the procedural context. The prosecutor’s comment was an
    6   isolated remark at the beginning of trial that, after admonishment by the district
    7   court, was not repeated or emphasized. However, even if a comment on silence is
    8   “but a brief part of the entire trial,” it is not necessarily harmless. McDowell, 2018-
    9   NMSC-008, ¶ 24. And a comment on silence, even if isolated, may be particularly
    10   prejudicial when it is made in opening statement. Gutierrez, 
    2007-NMSC-033
    , ¶ 20
    11   (“The opening statement holds a uniquely important place in the trial because it is
    12   the lens through which the jury views and evaluates the entire trial. Therefore, the
    13   prosecutor must take special care to refrain from improper comments, including
    14   comments on a defendant’s silence.”). But the procedural context does not resolve
    15   the question whether the error was harmless. Rather, we consider additional
    16   circumstances surrounding the error, such as the relative importance of the error to
    17   the prosecution’s overall case. Id. ¶ 21.
    18   {23}   To determine the relative importance of the error to the prosecution’s overall
    19   case, we look to the disputed issues before the jury. The only material issue in this
    12
    1   case was whether Defendant acted in response to sufficient provocation, which is
    2   the element that distinguishes second-degree murder from voluntary manslaughter.1
    3   Compare UJI 14-210 NMRA (second-degree murder instruction) with UJI 14-220
    4   (voluntary manslaughter instruction); see also State v. Jernigan, 
    2006-NMSC-003
    ,
    5   ¶ 18, 
    139 N.M. 1
    , 
    127 P.3d 537
     (“[V]oluntary manslaughter is second-degree murder
    6   committed with sufficient provocation.”). By returning a verdict of second-degree
    7    murder, the jury determined that Defendant did not act in response to sufficient
    8    provocation.
    9   {24}   Because only provocation was at issue, our harmless error inquiry must focus
    10   on the effect the prosecutor’s error had on the jury’s determination of that element.
    11   The question before this Court is whether there is a reasonable possibility that the
    12   prosecutor’s comment on silence influenced the jury’s finding of insufficient
    13   provocation in light of the evidence presented at trial. To answer this question, we
    14   consider the inferences that the jury may have drawn from the comment on silence
    15   and the evidence before the jury that Defendant acted in response to provocation.
    1
    Because the jury acquitted Defendant of first-degree murder when it returned
    a verdict of guilty on the lesser included offense of second-degree murder, the
    distinction between first- and second-degree murder is not relevant to our analysis.
    And because Defendant admitted to killing Lopez, the potential for a not guilty
    verdict is not relevant to our analysis.
    13
    1   {25}   In general, a prosecutor’s comment on a defendant’s pretrial silence may
    2   impermissibly imply guilt from the fact that the defendant did not supply evidence
    3   of his or her own innocence in the form of an exculpatory statement to police. “This
    4   [is] the classic contrast—the innocent speak, while the guilty remain silent.”
    5   McDowell, 
    2018-NMSC-008
    , ¶ 22. And if the defendant testifies at trial, a
    6   prosecutor’s comment on a defendant’s pretrial silence may impermissibly imply
    7   that the defendant fabricated a false but exculpatory version of events during the
    8   pretrial silence. See, e.g., United States v. Hale, 
    422 U.S. 171
    , 172-73 (1975)
    9   (holding that it was improper for the prosecutor to ask the defendant “why he had
    10   not given the police his alibi when he was questioned shortly after his arrest”); see
    11   also DeGraff, 
    2006-NMSC-011
    , ¶¶ 10, 17 (holding that it was improper for the
    12   prosecutor to imply guilt from a three-week period of silence between that attack
    13   and the defendant coming forward and providing an exculpatory statement to
    14   police).
    15   {26}   However, in this case, the jury could not reasonably have inferred that
    16   Defendant’s silence was evidence that he was hiding the truth or buying time to
    17   invent a false story of provocation because Defendant spoke to police before
    18   invoking his right to remain silent and, importantly, his initial statements were
    19   consistent with his trial testimony. Defendant told the jury, as he had told police, that
    14
    1   he felt he had to kill Lopez to protect his own life and the life of his daughter. Under
    2   these circumstances, there is no logical inference from Defendant’s post-arrest
    3   silence that he attempted to hide or fabricate a story of provocation: his story of
    4   provocation emerged immediately and remained consistent through trial.
    5   {27}   We also examine the evidence before the jury that Defendant acted in response
    6   to provocation. In this case, we conclude that the prosecutor’s comment did not
    7   affect the jury’s verdict because Defendant’s testimony—even if fully credited—
    8   could not establish sufficient provocation as a matter of law. Defendant’s testimony
    9   may have established that he subjectively feared for his life, but it did not establish
    10   that his fear was objectively reasonable. “By definition, provocation includes an
    11   objective component . . . . The question of provocation is not solely a subjective
    12   one.” State v. Taylor, 
    2000-NMCA-072
    , ¶ 27, 
    129 N.M. 376
    , 
    8 P.3d 863
    .
    13   {28}   The jury was instructed that sufficient provocation could be “any action,
    14   conduct or circumstances which arouse anger, rage, fear, sudden resentment, terror
    15   or other extreme emotions,” viewed from the objective standard of “an ordinary
    16   person of average disposition.” UJI 14-222. “The provocation must be such as would
    17   affect the ability to reason and to cause a temporary loss of self-control in” such
    18   person. 
    Id.
     And “if an ordinary person would have cooled off before acting,” then
    19   “[t]he ‘provocation’ is not sufficient.” 
    Id.
    15
    1   {29}   Defendant’s testimony met none of these criteria. Defendant testified that he
    2   was provoked into killing Lopez after he came to believe that Lopez was conspiring
    3   with a group of “suspicious” men to harm him and his daughter. The only facts that
    4   Defendant provided to substantiate this belief were that Lopez made a phone call to
    5   an unknown person, the men appeared to be following them in a pickup truck, and
    6   one of the men made a hand signal at Lopez on the highway. These facts could not
    7   establish that Lopez was connected to the unidentified men in any manner, much
    8   less that they shared a criminal intent to harm Defendant. Lopez’s actions 2 of
    9   speaking on the phone and passively sharing the road with another vehicle would
    10   not cause a reasonable person to experience “anger, rage, fear, sudden resentment,
    11   terror or other extreme emotions.” UJI 14-222.
    12   {30}   Nor would Lopez’s words cause such extreme emotion. Defendant testified
    13   that he was provoked by Lopez’s advice to look at a distant, “pretty” mountain,
    14   “because this may be the last time you see it in your life.” Given that Defendant was
    15   on his way to a new home in a foreign country, Lopez’s statement was innocuous.
    16   In any event, “words alone are not enough to arouse the passions such that murder
    We assess the evidence of provocation in light of Lopez’s acts alone and do
    2
    not consider the acts of third parties. The victim must be the source of the
    provocation, so the appropriate inquiry is whether there is evidence that the victim
    individually provoked the defendant. State v. Jim, 
    2014-NMCA-089
    , ¶ 15, 
    332 P.3d 870
    .
    16
    1   is reduced to manslaughter.” State v. Stills, 
    1998-NMSC-009
    , ¶ 36, 
    125 N.M. 66
    ,
    2   
    957 P.2d 51
    .3
    3   {31}   Finally, even if the jury had determined that Lopez’s words and actions caused
    4   Defendant to experience an extreme emotional state, an alleged “‘provocation’ is not
    5   sufficient if an ordinary person would have cooled off before acting.” UJI 14-222.
    6   Defendant’s testimony that he held the belt around Lopez’s neck for more than
    7   twenty minutes indicates that he had ample time to cool off before killing her. Cf.
    8   State v. Romero, A-1-CA-37979, mem. op. ¶ 21 (N.M. Ct. App. Aug. 5, 2021)
    9   (nonprecedential) (holding that a twenty-minute period provided “more than enough
    10   time” for the defendant to cool off before killing the victim). Not only did Defendant
    11   have ample time, but he had gained control over any apparent threat: Lopez was
    12   confined by her seatbelt and presented no physical danger to Defendant in those
    13   twenty minutes.
    3
    In limited circumstances, “informational words, as distinguished from mere
    insulting words,” can establish sufficient provocation. Sells v. State, 1982-NMSC-
    125, ¶ 7, 
    98 N.M. 786
    , 
    653 P.2d 162
    . That is, the “sudden disclosure of an event (the
    event being recognized by the law as adequate) may be the equivalent of the event
    presently occurring.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). In this case,
    Lopez’s statement did not suddenly disclose any event, so this exception does not
    apply.
    17
    1   {32}   In sum, Defendant did not meet his burden to establish the objective
    2   component of sufficient provocation. Accepting Defendant’s testimony as true,
    3   nothing that Lopez did or said would cause an ordinary person to experience an
    4   extreme emotion. And even if Lopez had caused Defendant to experience an extreme
    5   emotion, Defendant’s lengthy incapacitation of Lopez gave him the opportunity to
    6   cool off from any extreme emotion. Finally, the prosecutor’s isolated comment on
    7   Defendant’s silence could not have led to the inference that Defendant fabricated his
    8   trial testimony because he gave initial statements to police that were entirely
    9   consistent with his trial testimony.
    10   {33}   Under the unique circumstances of this case, we perceive no reasonable
    11   possibility that the prosecutor’s comment on silence affected the jury’s verdict. We
    12   therefore conclude that the prosecutor’s comment on silence is harmless beyond a
    13   reasonable doubt.
    14   III.   CONCLUSION
    15   {34}   For the reasons stated, we hold that the prosecutor’s comment on Defendant’s
    16   silence was harmless error and accordingly reverse the Court of Appeals on that
    17   issue. We remand to the Court of Appeals for further proceedings consistent with
    18   this opinion on the other issues Defendant raised on appeal.
    18
    1   {35}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    2
    3                                          BRIANA H. ZAMORA, Justice
    4   WE CONCUR:
    5
    6   C. SHANNON BACON, Chief Justice
    7
    8   MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Justice
    9
    10   DAVID K. THOMSON, Justice
    11
    12   JANE C. LEVY, Judge
    13   Sitting by designation
    19
    

Document Info

Filed Date: 1/22/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 1/22/2024