People v. Smith, Jr. , 61 Cal. 4th 18 ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 4/27/15
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA
    THE PEOPLE,                          )
    )
    Plaintiff and Respondent, )
    )                              S112442
    v.                        )
    )                         Shasta County
    PAUL GORDON SMITH, JR.,              )                     Super. Ct. No. 98F26452
    )
    Defendant and Appellant.  )
    ____________________________________)
    A jury convicted defendant Paul Gordon Smith, Jr., of the first degree
    murder of Lora Sinner, with the special circumstance of torture.1 The jury also
    found defendant guilty of false imprisonment by violence and conspiracy to
    commit murder. It determined that he used a deadly weapon and inflicted great
    bodily injury.2 The jury decided death was the appropriate penalty, and the court
    imposed that sentence. This appeal is automatic.
    We affirm as to guilt, but reverse the penalty judgment. Defendant‟s
    violent attempt to escape from jail just before his trial began created difficult
    1      Penal Code sections 187, 190.2, subdivision (a)(18). Further statutory
    references are to the Penal Code, unless otherwise indicated.
    2      Sections 182, 187, 236, 1203.075, and 12022, subdivision (b)(1).
    Defendant was originally charged along with codefendants Lori Smith and
    Eric Rubio. Smith and Rubio entered pleas before trial and were witnesses for the
    prosecution. Another participant in the crimes, Amy S., was prosecuted as a
    juvenile, and also testified below.
    1
    problems for the court at various phases of the proceedings. We conclude that
    during the penalty phase, the court improperly excluded expert testimony about
    prison security measures for those sentenced to life without possibility of parole.
    The evidence was admissible to rebut the prosecution‟s evidence and argument
    suggesting that defendant would pose a danger in custody. Because we cannot say,
    beyond a reasonable doubt, that the penalty determination would have been the
    same had the jury heard from defendant‟s expert, we must reverse the penalty
    judgment.
    I. FACTS
    A. Guilt Phase
    1. Prosecution
    In December 1997, defendant was 21 years old and living with his father in
    Redding. During that month he met his younger half sister, Lori Smith, for the
    first time. Lori had been living in Washington State. Defendant‟s older brother,
    Timothy Smith, also arrived from Washington with his fiancée, Lora Sinner.3
    Defendant married Jessica Smith in January 1998. Shortly thereafter, he
    began a relationship with Amy S., a 14-year-old runaway. Defendant‟s friend Eric
    Rubio became romantically involved with defendant‟s sister Lori. Sinner ended
    her engagement with Timothy and began to associate with defendant, Amy, Eric,
    and Lori. Toward the end of February this group, led by defendant, began an
    extended camping trip on private land in Shasta County.
    Of the five, Sinner was the only person without a partner. She flirted with
    defendant, which angered Amy. Defendant returned Sinner‟s attention in order to
    maintain access to her car, which they used to drive into town from camp. About a
    3     For the sake of clarity, hereafter we refer to Lori Smith as “Lori,” and to
    Lora Sinner as “Sinner.”
    2
    week before Sinner‟s murder, Lori and Amy discussed beating her up, and
    defendant told Eric he wanted to “off this bitch,” referring to Sinner. Lori testified
    that during a conversation with everyone except Sinner, defendant said Sinner
    should be killed. Eric remembered the conversation, but not who made the
    comment.
    On the afternoon of the murder, Lori and Amy again spoke about beating
    Sinner. According to Lori, defendant encouraged them because he wanted Amy
    and Sinner to fight over him. Eric testified that defendant told him “the girls”
    wanted to fight Sinner, and he didn‟t know what to do about it. Eric said
    defendant displayed no signs of intoxication that afternoon. Toward the end of the
    day, Amy punched Sinner in the face. Sinner punched back, and Lori joined the
    fight. Defendant and Eric were in a tent about 15 feet away.
    Amy testified that Lori knocked Sinner‟s head against a tree several times.
    Amy struck her in the head five or six times with a large can of chili, which she
    tossed aside after it was dented. Lori slammed Sinner‟s head into a large rock.
    Meanwhile, Amy retrieved two pieces of an automotive dent puller. One piece
    was a metal bar about an inch and a half thick and a foot long. The other was a
    weighted metal piece shaped like a barbell. As Sinner sat on the ground, Amy and
    Lori repeatedly hit her with these implements. Sinner was crying and asking them
    to stop. Amy admitted taunting Sinner during the assault.
    Lori‟s account differed somewhat. She did not remember hitting Sinner‟s
    head on a tree or a rock, nor did she remember any taunting. She testified that
    after punching Sinner with her fists, she retrieved the dent puller bar from the tent.
    Defendant and Eric were watching the assault. Lori hit Sinner with the bar as hard
    as she could two or three times. She also hit her with the chili can after Amy
    dropped it.
    3
    Eric testified that he and defendant were in the tent when the fight started.
    They could hear but not see the beating. Defendant showed no interest, saying,
    “just let them fight.” Amy had taken one piece of the dent puller from the tent, and
    Lori the other. Eventually, defendant intervened.
    Amy confirmed that defendant stopped the fight. He told them to take
    Sinner down to the creek and clean her up. Lori maintained it was her idea to take
    Sinner to the creek. There, she and Amy scooped water onto Sinner‟s head to
    wash the blood from her hair. Eric and defendant also came to the creek.
    According to Lori, defendant took her aside, held out an ax, and said, “Just finish
    her off.” Lori refused. Defendant had no apparent difficulty walking or talking;
    Lori did not know if he had taken any drugs that day. They all returned to the tent.
    Lori did not see what defendant did with the ax. The couples sat in the tent; Sinner
    sat on a mat outside the door.
    Defendant produced a bottle of whiskey, which the couples shared.
    Defendant then gave the bottle to Sinner, telling her it would help with the pain.
    Sinner took a small drink. Defendant became angry, and asked Eric to help tie her
    up. After initially refusing, Eric put a noose around Sinner‟s neck. Defendant tied
    her hands and feet. Sinner was crying. Defendant, still angry, told her she was
    going to kill herself. He said she was in enough pain already and might as well
    join her mother, who had died recently. Declaring that Sinner‟s death was going to
    look like a suicide, defendant untied her hands, handed her a razor blade, and told
    her to cut her wrists. Sinner cried and refused at first, then cut her wrist once.
    Saying the cut wasn‟t deep enough, defendant took the blade, slashed her wrist,
    and handed the blade back to her. Sinner tried to inflict another wound.
    Defendant, unsatisfied, took the blade back and cut her wrist repeatedly.
    Defendant told Sinner to hold her wrists over a fire pit. Lori testified that
    defendant struck Sinner‟s hands several times with the bar when she moved them.
    4
    He also kicked her in the forehead and poured whiskey over the bleeding cuts,
    causing Sinner to scream. He forced her to drink more liquor. Then he wrapped a
    plastic garbage bag around her head, cinching it tightly. Sinner continued crying
    and pleaded for help. Defendant struck her on the neck and back several times
    with the bar, then asked if anyone else wanted to hit her, looking at Lori. Lori was
    scared but wanted to prove she wasn‟t afraid to hurt someone. She hit Sinner with
    the bar twice in the head and neck, and said she was “hard to kill.” Defendant
    snatched the bar, told Lori she wasn‟t doing it right, and hit Sinner several more
    times. When a blow produced a snapping sound, he stopped.
    Eric and defendant buried Sinner. Lori testified that Eric was frightened
    and shaking. When the men returned, defendant said “she knew too much,” and he
    feared she would say something. Lori understood him to mean that Sinner would
    tell the police he had been stealing purses from cars. Defendant warned the others
    that anyone who revealed what had happened would be the next to die. They
    agreed to say they had put Sinner on a Greyhound bus. The next morning, they
    burned her clothing and belongings at the burial site.
    Amy‟s testimony about the events following the fight was roughly
    consistent with Lori‟s, though she was hazy on many details, particularly
    defendant‟s statements. She said defendant did not appear to be drunk or under the
    influence of drugs. She remembered Lori saying, “This bitch won‟t die” as she
    struck Sinner with the bar. Amy did not mention defendant having an ax, or
    asking Lori to “finish her off.” Amy could hear Sinner breathing against the
    plastic wrapped around her head just before defendant and Eric carried her away to
    bury her.
    Eric‟s account was similar. He said he did not join the others at the creek,
    but stayed on the bank with a flashlight, watching. He did not see defendant with
    an ax. Defendant said Sinner wouldn‟t survive because her skull was cracked and
    5
    the back of her head was “mushy.” Eric admitted helping bind Sinner. He related
    that defendant cut Sinner‟s wrist, poured alcohol on the wounds, and kicked her in
    the head when she did not obey his directions. According to Eric, Sinner was still
    breathing after the final blow. Defendant then cinched the bags around her head
    and held them for 30 to 60 seconds, saying she would die more quickly that way.
    Eric initially refused to help dispose of the body. Defendant told him he
    had better, “or I would end up just like her.” Frightened, Eric helped defendant
    bury Sinner. They stripped the body first because, defendant said, it would
    decompose faster. Afterward, defendant instructed the others to say Sinner had
    gone back to Washington. He told them “we would all end up like her if we said
    anything.” In the morning, they burned Sinner‟s clothes on top of the grave.
    Defendant said this would keep animals from digging her up.
    The murder came to light some weeks later when Lori confessed to
    acquaintances that she and defendant had “beat and tortured” Sinner to death.
    While in jail, defendant participated in two videotaped interviews with detectives
    and two audiotaped interviews with a newspaper reporter. The tapes were played
    for the jury. In the first interview, defendant was given Miranda warnings and
    said he understood them. (Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 
    384 U.S. 436
    .) He denied
    committing the murder but said he would take the blame because he was the only
    one of the group who could tolerate prison. Eventually, he began providing
    details. He said Sinner could have died from either a head wound or asphyxiation,
    but “would have died regardless.” He described her injuries, then recounted the
    following events after she was washed in the creek:
    “Went back up to the top of the hill, resumed, she was tied up, laid down,
    by the fire pit, laughed at. Comments were made towards her, she was kicked, her
    hand was broken, she was hit in the back with a metal pipe, bar. She was hit in the
    back of the head, repeatedly in the back of the neck and the back of the head, I
    6
    remember the blood splattering. And she just didn‟t move no more. She wasn‟t
    making no noise. Just kind of like laid there, then . . . a piece of plastic was put
    around her face and then another piece of plastic, but she was already dead.”
    Defendant admitted getting Eric to help him bury the body. He conceded he could
    have stopped the attack, and had no reason why he did not.
    Defendant continued giving details, without identifying his role. He said
    Sinner “was . . . given options, suicide. . . . She was given a razor blade and told to
    cut her own wrists. . . . She uh couldn‟t cut her own wrists she was kind of too
    drunk . . . wrists were cut for her, deeper. A lot of blood. But that wasn‟t
    enough. . . . She was hit again with the pipe or the bar. . . . Either in the back of
    the head or the back of the neck, twenty, thirty, forty, fifty times, I don‟t
    know. . . . [S]he couldn‟t break her neck. Couldn‟t kill her.” Defendant said
    Sinner had cried out in pain, but “it only brought more hits and more and more and
    more she kept trying, after every hit it got quieter and quieter. Then you heard a
    crunch. Something breaking, her neck breaking. . . . There was no more noise.
    She didn‟t move. Just laid there. And then there was a plastic bag or something
    on her head. We just held it there the whole time. She wasn‟t breathing . . . and
    then after a few seconds, it was only a few seconds, long enough to choke her,
    asphyxiate anybody.”
    Defendant said he had been “protecting her, but I couldn‟t protect her
    when it really counted.” He admitted that Sinner had “suffered immense pain,”
    and that “she was tortured.” He said the others would not have said anything to the
    authorities because “they were too scared of me.” He denied fearing that Sinner
    might have reported his crimes, explaining “she liked me way too much” to do
    that.
    The next interview took place the following day. Defendant remembered
    his Miranda rights, repeating them himself for the detectives. They told him that
    7
    Amy and Lori had given them a complete account of what had happened, and
    asked defendant to explain his role. Defendant said the others were trying to
    protect him, commenting, “The only reason they didn‟t say something sooner is
    because they thought I‟d kill them.” Defendant continued to take the blame,
    because “a brother never rats on his sister.” Told that Lori had given a written
    statement, defendant asked if she reported anything Sinner said about trusting him.
    He said that after the initial beating, he knew she would not survive. Defendant
    then offered to tell the detectives “a little story,” if the recorder was turned off.
    Evidently believing he was not being recorded, defendant gave a lengthy
    statement, including an excuse for not intervening to protect Sinner. When the
    assault began, he was in the tent with Eric. After drinking and smoking marijuana,
    defendant took four muscle relaxants. He heard screaming, and saw the attack.
    Lori came to the tent and got the two pieces of the dent puller, which Amy and
    Lori used to hit Sinner. Defendant claimed he was “mesmerized” and
    incapacitated by the drugs. He did not usually use medication, because he did not
    like to lose control. Sinner was calling him for help, but he was unable to move.
    Amy and Lori kicked and taunted her for a long time. After about an hour
    defendant was able to get up and make them take Sinner to the creek.
    The back of Sinner‟s head was “mushy,” the side of her neck was blue, and
    her face was bloody. She said she couldn‟t see. Her hands were swollen.
    Defendant brought her back to the tent and gave her whiskey. He pulled Eric aside
    and asked what they should do. Sinner would not survive, and defendant did not
    want to see her suffer. Eric tied her up, but defendant released her and started
    talking “into her ear.” He asked about her mother, and Sinner said she loved her
    and wished she hadn‟t died. Defendant told her she was “probably going to go see
    [her] mom tonight, you‟re gonna die.” He felt sorry and responsible, and offered
    to “kill her for her, and end the pain quickly, as fast as I could.” He gave her more
    8
    whiskey, and obtained a razor. Sinner “didn‟t really want to die but she accepted
    the fact.” After she tried to cut her wrist, defendant took the razor blade and
    attempted to do it himself, but was hampered by his drug ingestion and the
    flimsiness of the blade.
    Frustrated, defendant “kept making her drink more whiskey,” then sat
    down. Lori began beating Sinner again. Sinner was screaming by the time
    defendant was able to take the bar from Lori. He hit Sinner twice, and realized her
    neck was broken. Because she was still gasping for air, he wrapped the plastic
    bags around her face until she stopped breathing. Defendant told the detectives,
    “If I would have had a gun I would have just killed her faster, but I had no way to
    kill her faster. . . . First time in my life I haven‟t had a gun when I need one, when
    it really counted. She didn‟t want to die. I had to convince her. It‟s not even
    right, but I still feel I was in the right for, I mean, do I kill her or let her suffer
    through the whole night.”
    Defendant‟s interviews with the newspaper reporter took place in jail
    several days later. In the first, he said he had been under the influence of alcohol,
    marijuana, and medication. He had killed Sinner “out of mercy and with her
    permission.” He heard the attack as it occurred but was unable to move because of
    the drugs. He planned to plead guilty if the district attorney dropped charges
    against the others. In the second interview, defendant was upset about the details
    that had appeared in the paper.
    The forensic testimony established blood-alcohol levels of 0.78 and 0.88
    percent in blood extracted from Sinner‟s heart. There were at least nine incisions
    on her left wrist, all superficial. While not life threatening, they would have been
    painful. Pouring alcohol over them would have exacerbated the pain. The cause
    of death was blunt force head injuries, with asphyxiation a possible contributing
    cause. The exceptionally high blood-alcohol level could have been an additional
    9
    fatal factor, but the level detected may have been influenced by postmortem
    migration of alcohol from the stomach to the heart.
    2. Defense
    The defense presented numerous witnesses to impeach the truthfulness and
    reliability of Lori Smith. An investigating detective recounted inconsistent
    statements made by Lori and Eric Rubio. Forensic testimony challenged the
    reliability of the blood-alcohol levels found in Sinner‟s blood samples. A
    psychiatrist testified about the effects of the muscle relaxant and other drugs
    defendant claimed to have ingested.
    B. Penalty Phase
    1. Prosecution
    The victim‟s father, aunt, and brother testified about her life and the impact
    of her death. Similar testimony was given by her minister, her supervisor at a
    program where she worked assisting developmentally disabled adults, and a high
    school counselor.
    Prosecution witnesses related numerous acts of violence defendant
    committed while housed in group homes or juvenile hall. In March 1990, at the
    age of 12, defendant ran away from a work project and swung a broken glass bottle
    at a supervisor. When restrained, he continued to resist. Defendant told the deputy
    who took him to a mental health facility that he wanted to kill himself. Several
    months later defendant was suspected of helping to force one boy to orally
    copulate another resident at a group home. Later, defendant kicked that boy in the
    head, and was expelled from the program.
    In 1991, defendant stabbed a group home staff member with a pen and bit
    him. Five adults restrained defendant while he flailed violently. He was
    subsequently admitted to a mental health facility. In 1992, defendant punched a
    group home resident in the jaw without warning. The victim required surgery and
    10
    his jaw was wired shut for weeks. Defendant was arrested. In 1995, he was
    housed in a high-security unit at juvenile hall. He tapped on his cell door to get the
    attention of a counselor, then slid a knife fashioned from a flattened Pepsi can
    under the door. Shortly thereafter, he struck another resident in the mouth and
    used a racial epithet.
    The prosecution also presented evidence about an assault defendant
    committed shortly before Sinner‟s murder. Michael Murchinson testified that in
    February 1998, he was with defendant and others as they drove back from Reno.
    They were running out of money. Murchinson and defendant first considered
    robbing a convenience store, then decided to target a prostitute. They picked up a
    woman and drove to an industrial area. After having intercourse with her,
    defendant confronted her with a gun. She screamed and ran away. Defendant
    fired a shot. He and Murchinson drove away with the woman‟s purse. However,
    defendant discovered he had dropped his wallet. They went back to look for it and
    were arrested.
    The jury heard about a number of incidents in the county jail after
    defendant‟s arrest for Sinner‟s murder. In April 1999, he wrote his wife about
    escaping, and asked her to take photographs of the jail‟s exterior. He told her he
    would not die in jail, but would “go out in a blaze of glory.” She contacted law
    enforcement. The jury heard a recording of a phone call between defendant and an
    agent who pretended to be his wife‟s friend. They discussed the photographs and
    how to get them to defendant.
    In August 1999, a six-inch steel shank and a corner section of a metal tray
    were found in defendant‟s cell. He admitted these items were his and said he was
    going to use them on a fellow inmate.
    In February 2001, guards noticed water coming from defendant‟s cell. He
    had blocked the window in the cell door. When the water supply to his cell was
    11
    cut off, defendant began yelling and kicking, and threatened a guard. Attempting
    to move defendant to a more secure cell, the guards opened the cell door and
    sprayed him with pepper spray, but he had wrapped a T-shirt around his head and
    covered his eyes with a plastic bag. A cell extraction response team was
    summoned. A videotape of the extraction showed four guards, wearing protective
    gear, removing defendant from his cell after rolling in a “flash bang” grenade that
    scattered hard rubber pellets. Defendant was strapped into a restraint chair and
    examined by a nurse.
    A 28-inch baton, made of tightly rolled newspaper secured with elastic, was
    found in the cell. Hard and dense, the baton did not bend or break when struck
    against a concrete table. A few days later, defendant told a guard that one of his
    ears was still ringing, and that the grenade had surprised him. He had expected
    them to use a beanbag shotgun, which he had planned to take away from them.
    In May 2002, defendant planned an escape with fellow inmate Ben
    Williams. Defendant approached Aaron Cozart, a newly incarcerated inmate, and
    asked him to create a distraction by taking a hostage and forcing a cell extraction.
    Meanwhile, defendant and Williams would knock out a window and use a rope
    made of bedsheets to retrieve weapons and tools brought by a recently released
    inmate named Tim. Tim would place some money in defendant‟s jail account
    when everything was ready. The target date was May 17th or 18th. Cozart made
    some phone calls and spoke to Tim, who failed to appear on the appointed dates.
    Defendant said they would go ahead the following week, but Cozart changed his
    mind and reported the plot. A deputy confirmed that a Timothy Yakiatis had
    deposited funds in defendant‟s account on May 15th. The conspirators were
    moved to different cells.
    In June 2002, defendant became angry with guard Timothy Renault over a
    scheduling issue. Renault overheard defendant tell another guard that if he ever
    12
    got out “there would be a fight, and he would get me.” The next night inmate
    Harold Seems saw defendant walking toward the shower next to Seems‟s cell. He
    heard defendant ask, “Do you have it?” A voice that Seems recognized as Ben
    Williams‟s answered, “Yes.” Defendant said, “We‟re going to have to kill him.”
    Williams replied, “Real fast.” Seems assumed they were planning to assault a
    guard, and wrote a note of warning. Some time later, Renault appeared on his
    rounds. Seems held up the note and made a warning gesture. Renault ran toward a
    nearby door. Williams and defendant emerged from the shower, grabbed Renault,
    and dragged him toward the shower.
    Renault testified that he entered defendant‟s cell pod around 3:50 a.m. He
    noticed Seems at the window of his cell door, with a scared look on his face.
    Seems whispered, “Get out of here.” Renault headed for the door and radioed the
    control room. As he reached for the door, he heard a shower curtain open. He
    turned to see Williams crouching, and a second figure in the shower stall. The two
    men attacked, forcing Renault into a corner and hitting him repeatedly. It felt like
    he was being held and hit by more than one person. The first deputy to respond
    heard screaming and saw defendant walking away from the shower. Williams was
    striking Renault‟s face. Deputies tackled and handcuffed Williams. Renault,
    covered with blood, told them that defendant and Williams had attacked him.
    Nearby, deputies found a metal drain grate backed by a bar of soap wrapped
    in twine and strips of bedsheet, with a handle formed of tightly rolled paper. The
    grate in Williams‟s cell was missing. Renault suffered numerous injuries,
    including lacerations in his scalp and mouth, a skull fracture, a blood clot on the
    brain, fractures of the cheekbone and eye socket, a broken jaw, and a broken tooth.
    Plates and screws were installed in his skull and jaw to stabilize the fractures.
    As defendant walked away from Renault, he passed by Seems‟s cell. Seems
    saw blood on defendant, and a bloody cloth hanging out of his pants. Deputies
    13
    found blood on his hands, forearms, and shoulder. Concealed in his clothing were
    a two-foot-long strip of bedsheet stained with blood and a razor wrapped with
    twine. A piece of torn towel was tucked into the front of his underwear. Blood
    was spattered on his clothes and shoes. In defendant‟s cell, deputies found another
    newspaper baton and a length of string with padded loops on each end, which
    would have protected the fingers if the string was used as a garrote. A paper bag
    bearing defendant‟s name was found in the shower. It contained clothing,
    toiletries, and two lengths of rope made from sheets, one 12 feet long and the other
    nearly 50 feet long.
    2. Defense
    Defendant presented extensive evidence of an abusive childhood. He was
    the third of six children. They lived in a filthy home where they were neglected
    and beaten. Child Protective Services (CPS) was notified, but took no action until
    defendant‟s father told a psychologist that he had been sodomizing defendant and
    his brother Timothy for years. Defendant was victimized from the age of two and
    a half until he was five. His father pleaded guilty to several counts of sodomy and
    served time in prison.
    Defendant was five years old when the children were removed from the
    household. While some of the children were eventually returned, defendant and
    Timothy were not. Defendant was placed with 13 different caretakers from 1983
    to 1990. The county‟s CPS unit was underfunded. Mental health services were
    limited; social workers received no training on the effects of child sexual abuse. A
    supervisor who reviewed defendant‟s file testified that his was the worst situation
    the department had addressed. The damage done to defendant as a child was as
    severe as any the supervisor had encountered.
    Numerous witnesses chronicled defendant‟s increasingly difficult
    progression through foster homes, group homes, and eventually the California
    14
    Youth Authority (CYA). In 1985, after two years with a foster parent who
    considered herself only a temporary caretaker, defendant was placed with a foster
    mother known for her work with boys from difficult backgrounds. He developed a
    close relationship with her, but she decided to go to graduate school. In 1987 her
    foster home was converted to a group home, which was run by her son Ken Sloan.
    Defendant also became close to Sloan, who referred to him as “son” and
    assured defendant he would always be there. However, Sloan became distant as
    time passed. When the principal of defendant‟s elementary school asked Sloan
    about the relationship, he described defendant as “one of the kids at the home.”
    Reminded of his earlier assurances to the child, Sloan replied, “things change.”
    Defendant became angry, hostile, and aggressive. He reported that Sloan hit him
    with a two-by-four. Another resident testified that Sloan regularly imposed harsh
    physical punishments. Defendant ran away several times. Sloan was investigated
    and ultimately barred from employment in any State Department of Social Services
    facility. Defendant told an investigator that Sloan was as close as he had gotten to
    a father figure, and that he repeatedly asked Sloan to adopt him.
    Defendant was transferred from Sloan‟s home in 1989. The new foster
    mother described him as “a very angry little boy.” After two months the placement
    was terminated because defendant threatened the foster mother and another child.
    After one day in another foster home, defendant was moved to a new placement,
    where his brother Timothy joined him. He was removed from that home after
    three months because he was hitting his brother. In the next group home,
    defendant threatened a staff member with a broken bottle and spoke of suicide,
    leading to another transfer. In March 1990 he spent two weeks in a foster home,
    but was removed when he threatened to burn the house down. His subsequent
    placement was the one in which he was suspected of forcing one boy to orally
    copulate another, and from which he was later expelled when he kicked the victim.
    15
    After the kicking incident, defendant‟s social worker recommended that he
    be transferred to the jurisdiction of the juvenile probation department. A
    misdemeanor battery charge was sustained in juvenile court. A supervising
    probation officer testified that he had gotten to know defendant over the course of
    several periods of custody from 1990 through 1994. He liked defendant, and had
    no problems with him. He and his wife had discussed adopting him. The wife,
    who was a counselor at juvenile hall, testified that it was a difficult decision. She
    thought defendant would benefit from a family situation, but they decided against
    adoption. They had two teenage daughters, and adoption would have required
    them to leave their current employment.
    In early 1991, defendant was living in a group home where he became
    acquainted with the bookkeeper, who let him do homework in her office. She
    liked him, found him very bright, and sometimes took him home with her on
    weekends. He got along well with her children. She considered bringing him into
    her home permanently. However, her fiancé objected, she became pregnant, and
    ultimately decided she could not take defendant in. She explained the situation to
    him in a long conversation, and told him they would stay in touch. After she left
    the group home, defendant wrote letters and telephoned, begging her to let him
    live with her. It took him a year to accept her decision. Ultimately she cut off
    contact, feeling it was not good for him to hold on to a dream that would not be
    fulfilled.
    Defendant spent the latter part of 1991 at a residential treatment center. His
    therapist testified that he was disruptive and angry, distrusting any adult. She
    considered him to be severely damaged emotionally. The placement ended when
    defendant assaulted staff members.
    Some months later, defendant was placed in another residential facility.
    The program director testified that he “acted out” from the beginning. He was
    16
    prone to fits of rage, would bang his head on the wall, and was resistant to both
    group and individual counseling. He trusted no one, feared adults, and had no
    serious emotional attachments. One counselor, however, testified that he got along
    well with defendant, and thought they were making progress until defendant
    injured himself playing baseball, which “interfered with his program.” Shortly
    after the injury, defendant was expelled. He and another resident had violated the
    program‟s rules by leaving the facility, taking a staff member‟s rifle from the cab
    of a pickup truck, and using it to shoot at squirrels and other objects in a field.
    In 1994, defendant lived in a group home where, the operator testified, he
    did well. However, on a home visit defendant was involved in an incident that
    resulted in a CYA commitment. A juvenile justice expert testified about
    defendant‟s years under CYA jurisdiction, based on a review of the agency‟s
    records. From February 1995 until his discharge in November 1997, defendant
    was consistently unable to maintain relationships with peers or staff. He was
    rebellious and a constant management problem, receiving increasingly restrictive
    placements. By the time he was paroled, he was in the highest security CYA
    facility. However, he did well in school, earning his high school degree.
    Defendant testified at the penalty phase. He remembered only one incident
    of sodomy by his father. His father said it was punishment for being bad. He and
    his brother had cried beforehand, because they knew what was going to happen.
    He had little memory of his mother. Defendant gave accounts of his various foster
    care placements. He remembered Ken Sloan promising to adopt him, and being
    impatient for that to happen. However, Sloan changed, becoming prone to fits of
    anger and imposing harsh punishments. Defendant‟s social worker did not believe
    him when he reported the abuse. Eventually, defendant began running away.
    At his next placement, defendant said he was unable to handle the freedom
    allowed by the foster mother. He acknowledged that his behavior was
    17
    noncompliant, but did not understand why. Defendant attributed the group home
    kicking incident to a therapy session where the victim was instructed to
    intentionally anger defendant, which he did by bringing up the history of
    defendant‟s abuse by his father. Defendant denied that the forced oral copulation
    occurred. After the age of 12 or 13, he had many problems with lack of self-
    control. Sometimes he would regret his actions, and sometimes he felt they were
    justified.
    Defendant said he was placed with his father in 1994 at his own request.
    The placement was revoked when his father complained to the probation officer
    about defendant‟s disobedience. The incident that led to his CYA commitment
    occurred when he and his cousin were involved in a high-speed car chase. His
    cousin had been driving. Defendant did not like being with gang members in the
    CYA. He preferred school and being kept in isolation, where he would read.
    Defendant tried unsuccessfully to find work when he was paroled in
    November 1997. He did not have much of a relationship with his wife. They had
    married at her insistence, to legitimize their daughter. Regarding the incident with
    the prostitute, he claimed he had procured the gun for his companion, Murchinson,
    and it discharged accidentally during the attempted robbery.
    Defendant denied that he planned or discussed killing Lora Sinner. He only
    decided to kill her after the assault, because he thought she was dying. He said
    Sinner was not tortured. He admitted cutting her wrist, but not pouring alcohol on
    the wounds. Though he felt he deserved to be imprisoned for his role in the
    murder, he conceded that he continuously made plans to escape. However,
    defendant maintained that he never meant to injure a guard. The plan for the final
    escape attempt had been to tackle Renault, restrain him in a cell, and use his key to
    get to an exterior window. He did not know Williams would attack Renault with
    the grate, which was supposed to be used to break the window. Defendant had
    18
    grabbed Renault, but walked away when he realized what Williams was doing. He
    regretted choosing the “unstable” Williams as a coconspirator.
    Several mental health experts testified for the defense. Dr. Steven
    Blankman was the psychologist who reported the molestation by defendant‟s
    father. He assessed defendant in 1983 after his removal from the family home, and
    provided therapy for about a year. Defendant was uncooperative and oppositional.
    He displayed mild developmental problems with symptoms of insecurity, isolation,
    and impulsivity. He had experienced extreme psychosocial stress. By the time
    Blankman moved his practice, there had been little improvement. Defendant‟s
    behavior in temporary foster placement was disobedient, destructive, and
    aggressive. Blankman recommended continuing therapy and a permanent foster
    placement.
    Dr. Myla Young, a clinical neuropsychologist specializing in inmate mental
    health, gave defendant a series of tests and reviewed his placement history. Young
    found defendant‟s intelligence to be “high average,” but his performance on all
    measures of attention and concentration was significantly impaired. These results
    were consistent with his test scores in childhood. Defendant‟s performance on
    memory and learning tests was also poor. It would be reasonable to conclude that
    he suffered from brain damage. He exhibited a serious depressive disorder,
    grossly distorted perceptions of reality, and illogical thinking. He was emotionally
    dependent on others but his anger interfered with his ability to satisfy his
    emotional needs. Young found that defendant suffered from psychosis and
    posttraumatic stress.
    Psychiatrist George Woods interviewed defendant three times for a total of
    six hours, and reviewed defendant‟s records. Woods also concluded that
    defendant suffered from posttraumatic stress disorder. His early childhood history
    had impaired his ability to self-regulate. Without appropriate behavioral control
    19
    and psychological treatment, his aggressive behavior had continued. He was
    traumatized again when his foster placements failed to provide stable family
    connections. His emotional responses tended to fluctuate between numbness and
    explosiveness. The symptoms of defendant‟s mental disorder were present at the
    time of the murder, but Woods said this did not mean defendant was not legally
    responsible for his actions.
    3. Rebuttal
    A social worker testified about the services defendant‟s family received in
    1980. Based on her own observations at the time, she had concluded there was
    only general neglect in the household. More was required to merit court
    involvement.
    A probation officer testified about numerous attempts to provide defendant
    with an appropriate setting. Defendant‟s juvenile placement officer in 1994 also
    spoke to the difficulties of securing a proper placement. Ken Sloan testified,
    admitting he had called defendant “son” and considered adopting him, but denying
    he promised to do so. Defendant had lived with Sloan from about the age of seven
    until he was twelve. His behavior deteriorated as he became older. Several CYA
    employees testified about defendant‟s conduct.
    The prosecution called CYA psychologist Dr. Derek Washington, who had
    interviewed defendant in 1996 for an annual review. He had been surprised at
    defendant‟s hardened attitudes toward authority figures and rules, which were
    more typical of wards from metropolitan areas. Defendant was angry and
    embittered, but thought clearly. Washington saw no symptoms of organic brain
    disease, and concluded that defendant had an antisocial personality disorder.
    Psychiatrist John Shale reviewed defendant‟s records and the reports of the
    defense experts. He did not believe defendant suffered from depression or organic
    20
    brain disorder. In his opinion, defendant had a severely antisocial personality
    rather than posttraumatic stress disorder.
    4. Surrebuttal
    Julie Kriegler, a psychologist who treated children with posttraumatic stress
    disorder, reviewed defendant‟s records and the other experts‟ reports. She
    disputed Shale‟s findings, and agreed with the diagnoses of posttraumatic stress
    disorder.
    II. DISCUSSION
    A. Pretrial Issues
    1. Motion for Change of Venue
    a. Background
    In October 2001, defendant moved to change venue from Shasta County.
    Defense expert Stephen Schoenthaler was a professor of criminal justice and a
    consultant on venue issues. Schoenthaler reviewed local newspaper articles that
    appeared after defendant‟s arrest in April 1998. He was particularly concerned
    about the report of defendant‟s confession. Confessions are strongly linked with
    prejudgment of both guilt and penalty. Schoenthaler also highlighted defendant‟s
    admission that he was using drugs and alcohol at the time of the murder, the
    newspaper‟s discussion of his criminal history, and stories portraying the victim in
    a sympathetic light.
    Subsequent articles had addressed a variety of topics, including the
    prosecutor‟s decision to seek the death penalty, defendant‟s housing in
    administrative lockdown, Amy S.‟s juvenile proceedings, and the following
    details. A psychologist in the juvenile case described defendant as a “cult leader.”
    Though married, he had seduced the fourteen year old shortly after her release
    from a psychiatric hospital and recruited her into his “Charles Manson-like
    lifestyle.” The juvenile court judge described defendant‟s manipulation and
    21
    seduction of Amy, and called him the most brutal participant in the killing. Amy‟s
    statement to the police referred to Sinner‟s “torture.” Defendant threatened to kill
    Amy if she did not keep quiet. Defendant lied to police when he was arrested in a
    stolen car. The prosecutor in Amy‟s case said the murder had been planned for
    weeks, and was motivated by fear that Sinner would tell the authorities about the
    group‟s crimes. Amy was found guilty in the “torture death.” The prosecutor in
    her case agreed with Sinner‟s father that the other participants should receive the
    death penalty. Lori Smith pleaded guilty to the “sadistic killing.” Eric Rubio also
    pleaded guilty. Defendant threatened Lori because she agreed to testify against
    him.
    The court authorized a community survey. Schoenthaler conducted
    telephone interviews with 131 Shasta County residents who qualified for jury
    service. Forty-nine percent of the respondents had concluded defendant was
    guilty. Fifty-two percent thought he deserved the death penalty if convicted.
    Fifty-six percent had prejudged either guilt or penalty. Schoenthaler believed there
    was “far more” than a reasonable likelihood that defendant would not receive a fair
    trial in Shasta County. The court was not persuaded, but acknowledged that a fair
    trial might prove to be impossible. It deferred ruling on the venue motion until
    after prospective jurors were questioned.
    Voir dire began in May 2002. The court asked if prospective jurors had
    heard about certain aspects of the case.4 If they remembered anything, the court
    4      The court inquired about the following subjects: Statements made by
    defendant to the police or the newspaper; one of the participants being a juvenile;
    charges found true in juvenile court; defendant‟s relationship with a 14 year old;
    statements by public officials about his culpability or the appropriate punishment;
    defendant‟s past behavior; the circumstances of the victim‟s life; any details
    involving a chili can, a dent puller, razor blades, washing in a creek, or pouring
    (footnote continued on next page)
    22
    asked whether they had formed any feelings or opinions about defendant‟s guilt or
    the appropriate penalty. It probed whether they could set aside the impact of
    media reports and decide the case based solely on the evidence presented at trial.
    On June 22, 2002, defendant and Williams made the escape attempt in which
    Deputy Renault was assaulted and severely wounded. The next court day was June
    25, 2002. Defense counsel were particularly concerned with two aspects of the
    latest publicity: Renault‟s status as a correctional officer, and defendant‟s
    association with Williams, who was notorious for having set fire to a synagogue in
    Sacramento and allegedly murdering a local gay couple.
    The court agreed it was necessary to reopen the voir dire of the assembled
    juror pool to explore the effect of media accounts of the escape attempt. However,
    it refused to “ask them specifically how would you feel about this kind of evidence
    or that kind of evidence.” It invited counsel to submit questions. Going forward
    with the voir dire of new candidates, it asked if they had seen or heard any media
    reports about defendant since filling out the questionnaire. If they knew about the
    escape attempt, it asked whether they would be able to set aside the information
    during deliberations. In some instances, the court inquired whether news reports
    had caused any feelings about defendant‟s guilt, and whether the prospective jurors
    would be able to set aside those feelings. The court barred counsel from asking
    about the weight they would give to evidence of the escape attempt.
    On June 26, 2002, defense counsel submitted a list of questions for the
    reopened voir dire. The court said its questioning would depend on the
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    alcohol; the names Eric Rubio, Amy S., and Lori Smith; and admissions of guilt by
    two other charged persons.
    23
    prospective jurors‟ exposure to media reports. It rejected a proposed question
    asking how they would be affected by the fact that a correctional officer was the
    victim, because “that would be asking them to prejudge evidence.” Defense
    counsel objected to this limitation, arguing that Deputy Renault‟s status as a
    correctional officer was “relevant to bias and prejudice.” Counsel compared the
    circumstance to a case in which a child was a murder victim. The court recognized
    that evidence of the assault would be admissible in the penalty phase, but
    maintained that questions on the subject would lead to prejudgment. It requested
    further briefing on how the pending motion for a change of venue was affected by
    the incident.
    Over the following two days, the court recalled the 73 prospective jurors
    who had been questioned before the escape attempt. It advised them collectively
    about media reports in general, warning that they were incomplete and often
    inaccurate. It noted that if evidence of reported events is introduced at trial the
    evidence, but not the reports, can be considered for the purposes allowed by law.
    The court then questioned the prospective jurors individually about their media
    exposure. If they were aware of the escape attempt, it sought their assurance that
    they would be able to set the reports aside in determining both guilt and penalty.
    The court continued to resist the defense‟s attempts to ask questions about the
    impact of the victim‟s status as a correctional officer. It did ask one prospective
    juror whether her father‟s employment as a jail deputy would have any effect on
    her evaluation of the case.
    After completing the reopened voir dire, the court resumed questioning new
    prospective jurors, again asking specifically about their awareness of murder
    details and generally about the recent escape attempt. After ruling on challenges
    for cause, the court heard argument on the venue motion. The next day it denied
    the motion in a written ruling. Defendant sought a writ of mandate from the Court
    24
    of Appeal, arguing in part that even if prospective jurors were able to set aside the
    media reports of the escape attempt, there had been no voir dire exploring “the
    biases that unquestionably arise when there is an assault on a correctional officer,
    an escape attempt, or an attempted murder of a correctional officer.” The writ was
    denied.
    Defense counsel then moved unsuccessfully to disqualify the entire jury
    panel or to reopen voir dire, arguing that the court‟s questioning had been
    inadequate.
    b. Analysis
    Defendant argues first that the court erred by failing to grant a change of
    venue at the outset based on the Schoenthaler survey. However, “[t]his court has
    long held „that it is no error for the trial court to postpone the consideration of an
    application for a change of venue until an attempt is made to impanel the
    jury . . . .‟ ” (People v. Bolin (1998) 
    18 Cal. 4th 297
    , 312, quoting People v. Staples
    (1906) 
    149 Cal. 405
    , 412; see People v. Wallace (1936) 
    6 Cal. 2d 759
    , 763.) Here,
    the court performed a preliminary review but deferred a final ruling until after it
    heard challenges for cause. We review the court‟s final ruling.5
    A motion for change of venue must be granted when “there is a reasonable
    likelihood that a fair and impartial trial cannot be had in the county.” (§ 1033,
    5      Defendant relies on People v. Beames (2007) 
    40 Cal. 4th 907
    . There, we
    said, “we do not suggest that trial courts may deny motions to change venue solely
    on the theory that jury voir dire is a better method of assessing the need to change
    venue.” (Id. at p. 922.) However, here the court did not deny defendant‟s motion.
    It merely followed the established practice of deferring its ruling. Moreover, the
    comments in Beames on which defendant relies were dicta. In that case, Beames
    did not seek a change of venue, but only a continuance. (Ibid.) We did not discuss
    the long line of authority noted above, which approves the practice of postponing a
    ruling on a motion to change venue until an attempt is made to impanel a jury.
    25
    subd. (a); see People v. Famalaro (2011) 
    52 Cal. 4th 1
    , 21.) “The phrase
    „reasonable likelihood‟ in this context „means something less than “more probable
    than not,” ‟ and „something more than merely “possible. ” ‟ [Citation.]” (People
    v. Proctor (1992) 
    4 Cal. 4th 499
    , 523 (Proctor).) The relevant factors are settled:
    the nature and gravity of the offense, the nature and extent of the media coverage,
    the size of the community, and the community status of the defendant and the
    victim. On appeal, the defense bears the burden of showing both error and
    prejudice. It must establish a reasonable likelihood both that a fair trial could not
    be had at the time of the motion, and that the defendant did not actually receive a
    fair trial. We accept the trial court‟s factual findings if supported by substantial
    evidence, but independently review the court‟s determination as to the likelihood
    of a fair trial. (Famalaro, at p. 21.)
    Here, defendant does not dispute the court‟s finding that his community
    status and that of the victim did not tend to support a change of venue. He argues,
    however, that the gravity of the offense, the size of the community, and the
    extensive media coverage weighed heavily in favor of moving the trial.
    As we have noted on other occasions, “every capital case presents a serious
    charge. This factor adds weight to a motion for change of venue, but is not
    dispositive. [Citations.]” 
    (Proctor, supra
    , 4 Cal.4th at p. 524; see, e.g., People v.
    Zambrano (2007) 
    41 Cal. 4th 1082
    , 1125.) The court in this case reasonably
    concluded that the gravity of the offense slightly favored granting defendant‟s
    motion, but that the crime was not particularly aggravated in comparison with
    other capital murders. There were certainly gruesome details, but nothing
    approaching the sensational overtones of other cases in which we have upheld the
    denial of venue motions. (E.g., Zambrano, at pp. 1094-1097, 1125; People v.
    Fauber (1992) 
    2 Cal. 4th 792
    , 818.) Nor were the circumstances of the crime apt to
    26
    be particularly prejudicial in Shasta County, as opposed to an alternate venue. (Cf.
    People v. Davis (2009) 
    46 Cal. 4th 539
    , 578.)
    The population of Shasta County, which the court placed at about 168,000,
    was another factor weighing slightly in favor of defendant‟s motion.6 In Proctor,
    we said that Shasta County‟s small population, approximately 122,100 at the time,
    tended to favor a venue change, but was not determinative. 
    (Proctor, supra
    , 4
    Cal.4th at pp. 525-526.) So too here. A change of venue is not required for every
    capital case arising in a sparsely populated county. (Id. at p. 526.)
    The primary factor relied on by the defense below was the nature and extent
    of media coverage, both of the murder and of the escape attempt. However, as to
    the murder reports, the voir dire record supports the court‟s findings that “the
    prospective jurors, in general, had very little knowledge of specific facts of the
    crimes charged, very few opinions that the defendant is guilty, and very good
    compliance with the [court‟s] orders not to read, listen to, view, or talk about the
    charges in this case or anything connected with this case.” The court noted that
    media coverage had been heavy when the crime was discovered in April 1998,
    subsided until September 1998 when Amy S.‟s jurisdictional hearing was held, and
    heightened again from April through July of the following year, with Amy‟s
    dispositional proceeding and the guilty pleas of Lori Smith and Eric Rubio.
    Reports then “all but ceased in June of 2000,” with little media attention as
    defendant‟s trial approached.7
    6       Defense expert Schoenthaler derived a population of 163,000 from the
    United States census in 2000.
    7      The venue motion was filed in October 2001; jury selection began in May
    2002; the escape attempt was on June 22, 2002; the venue motion was denied on
    July 12, 2002; and trial began on July 16, 2002.
    27
    Defendant does not dispute the court‟s summary of the media coverage. He
    argues, however, that five of the sitting jurors had been exposed to the facts of the
    murder. The exposure was minor. None of these jurors had any clearly formed
    memories, and several mentioned how long it had been since the news reports.
    Prompted by the court for specific details, they remembered very few, and all said
    they had formed no preconceptions as to defendant‟s guilt or the appropriate
    punishment.8 Nothing in the voir dire suggests a reasonable likelihood that
    8       Juror No. 1 “just barely” remembered the reports, “no details or no anything
    else.” Asked about specific aspects, he recalled none and said he had no
    preconceptions as to guilt or penalty.
    Juror No. 2 only “vaguely remember[ed]” reading something about the case,
    “because it was so long ago.” She said “the name rang a bell,” but remembered
    none of the details mentioned by the court. The information she did recall
    produced no opinion on guilt or punishment.
    Juror No. 5 wrote on her questionnaire that she remembered hearing four
    people were accused of killing a young girl; the victim was tortured; something
    about her father; two other females were involved; and, with a question mark, the
    victim had begged for mercy. On voir dire, she said she remembered these things
    “vaguely,” noting “it was a long time ago.” Of the details mentioned by the court,
    she remembered only something about the victim‟s father talking about his
    daughter and their family situation, and the chili can. She said this information did
    not create any feelings about defendant‟s guilt or punishment.
    Juror No. 9 remembered having “heard something,” but no details,
    commenting, “My memory ain‟t very good that long back.” Questioned by the
    court, she recalled generally that a juvenile was involved and that defendant may
    have had a relationship with her. She remembered the chili can when the court
    mentioned it, and that it was somehow involved in the killing. She had formed no
    impression regarding guilt or penalty.
    Juror No. 10 remembered hearing about where the murder happened, how
    the girl was beaten, and that “the kids were on drugs.” Prompted by the court, she
    remembered “maybe” that a juvenile was involved, that the victim was about ready
    to go back home, that a chili can and dent puller were used, and “maybe” that
    alcohol was poured. She recognized the names of Eric Rubio, Amy S., and Lori
    Smith, but would not have been able to name them herself. She had formed no
    (footnote continued on next page)
    28
    defendant would not, or did not, receive a fair trial due to media reports of the
    facts of the crime.9
    Defendant raises different arguments as to the publicity arising from his
    escape attempt. He makes no specific claim that reports of the escape prejudiced
    him on the question of guilt, though he generally maintains that the publicity
    denied him a fair trial. His primary argument is that he was deprived of a fair
    penalty trial because of the jurors‟ recent exposure to the news of his attempted
    escape from jail and the violent attack on Deputy Renault. Although defendant
    notes that seven of the sitting jurors had some knowledge of these incidents, he
    does not contend their voir dire responses demonstrate bias. Instead, he claims the
    court‟s limited questioning and its restrictions on counsel‟s voir dire made it
    impossible to determine whether these jurors were able to put aside their
    impressions or opinions and render a verdict based solely on the evidence. (Irvin
    v. Dowd (1961) 
    366 U.S. 717
    , 723; People v. 
    Davis, supra
    , 46 Cal.4th at p. 575.)
    In particular, he contends his counsel were prevented from exploring whether the
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    opinion about guilt or punishment, and said she would be able to base her decision
    solely on the evidence presented in court.
    9       Defendant faults the court for deeming it a “moderating factor” that the
    local paper providing most of the coverage had a circulation of approximately
    35,000, in a county with a population of around 168,000 and a jury pool of about
    70,000. Schoenthaler testified that each newspaper is typically read by an average
    of 2.2 adults. However, we are satisfied by the court‟s careful and thorough voir
    dire that the jury pool was not tainted in any significant way by newspaper
    accounts of the charged offenses. Schoenthaler testified that he gave no weight to
    the six television broadcasts concerning the murder, because “I didn‟t think there
    was a lot there, frankly.”
    29
    escape attempt and the assault on the deputy would cause the jurors invariably to
    vote for death. (See People v. Cash (2002) 
    28 Cal. 4th 703
    , 720-721.)
    Because we reverse the penalty judgment on other grounds, we need not
    consider the question of penalty phase prejudice.10 As for the effect of these
    reports at the guilt phase, we are satisfied it was insignificant. Evidence of the
    escape attempt was not admitted. No jurors were exposed to extensive reports of
    the assault on Deputy Renault.11 Moreover, the court carefully ascertained
    10      Nor do we consider defendant‟s claim that the court erroneously excused a
    prospective juror based on death penalty views expressed in her questionnaire,
    without any voir dire. (See People v. Russell (2010) 
    50 Cal. 4th 1228
    , 1261;
    People v. Stewart (2004) 
    33 Cal. 4th 425
    , 445.)
    11      Juror No. 1 saw a television broadcast and learned that an inmate had
    tricked a sheriff‟s officer and beaten him up. He remembered the sheriff‟s office
    saying it was working on improving security to prevent another such episode.
    However, he did not know the extent of the injuries inflicted, or who was involved.
    He said the incident would not affect him as a juror because he did not know if it
    was related to the trial. Asked if it would make any difference if it were, he said
    “no.”
    Juror No. 2 heard a radio report about two people in the jail, a sheriff‟s
    officer, and an incident involving a shower. She did not remember any other
    details, except for Williams‟s name. She was willing to set this information aside
    for purposes of trial, and disregard it if it were not in evidence.
    Juror No. 4 heard a television broadcast about a deputy who had been
    beaten up, and saw defendant‟s picture. He remembered hearing about a broken
    jaw, and was aware that Williams was involved. He said he could set aside this
    information for purposes of trial.
    Juror No. 5 saw a headline in the newspaper about a jail incident in which a
    deputy was injured, and photos of defendant and Williams. She did not read the
    story, mindful of the court‟s admonitions to avoid news coverage. She could set
    aside the information for purposes of the trial.
    Juror No. 9 had heard a report on the morning news but “shut it off real
    quick.” She heard defendant‟s name and that someone was beaten up, maybe a
    correctional officer, and something about picking a jury. She assured the court she
    could set aside this information and not consider it, and said it had not changed her
    feelings about the case.
    (footnote continued on next page)
    30
    whether prospective jurors would be able to set aside whatever they had learned
    about the escape attempt and base their deliberations solely on the evidence at trial.
    “Although the jurors‟ assurances of impartiality are not dispositive [citations],
    neither are we free to ignore them [citations]. We have in the past relied on jurors‟
    assurances that they could be impartial. [Citations.] Absent a showing that the
    pretrial publicity was so pervasive and damaging that we must presume prejudice
    [citations], we do the same here.” (People v. Lewis (2008) 
    43 Cal. 4th 415
    , 450.)
    Defendant has not shown that pretrial publicity of the escape attempt was “so
    pervasive and damaging” as to cast doubt on the jurors‟ assurances of impartiality.
    (Ibid.; see Patton v. Yount (1984) 
    467 U.S. 1025
    , 1031.)
    Accordingly, defendant has failed to demonstrate a reasonable likelihood
    that the denial of a change of venue resulted in an unfair guilt trial. Although the
    gravity and nature of the murder, the relatively small size of Shasta County, and
    the publicity surrounding the crime are all factors tending to support a change of
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    Juror No. 10 saw headlines and defendant‟s picture, but closed the paper
    and had not listened to the news since. She knew that a guard had been attacked at
    the jail, and that Williams was involved. She was familiar with Williams. She
    said the fact that defendant and Williams were connected in the attack did not
    cause her any concern. She would be able to set aside what she saw in the
    newspaper.
    Juror No. 12 heard a radio report about an incident at the jail. Her mother-
    in-law mentioned that defendant had hurt a guard, but the juror told her she did not
    want to hear anything else. She would be able to set aside this information.
    The other jurors had not heard any news of the escape attempt. Defendant‟s
    claim that three sitting jurors received no admonition about the inaccuracy of
    media reports during voir dire following the escape attempt is baseless. At the
    record page he cites, the court told the assembled pool, “As you know, anything
    reported in the media is only reported in part and often not accurately.”
    31
    venue, the record reflects a jury pool not predisposed against defendant on the
    question of guilt. Memories of media coverage of the murder had faded
    considerably by the time of trial. Nothing indicates that the renewed publicity
    occasioned by defendant‟s escape attempt resulted in any bias that might have
    affected the verdict of guilt.
    2. Imposition of Restraints
    On May 8, 2002, during pretrial proceedings, defense counsel objected to
    the placement of a stun device on defendant‟s arm, in addition to the leg brace the
    court had approved for security purposes. The brace locked the leg in an extended
    position, making it impossible to run. The court observed that the device on
    defendant‟s arm was visible, and that any stun device or visible restraint would
    require a showing of manifest need. The prosecutor referred to defendant‟s
    lengthy record of violence and recalcitrance in jail, and his plans to escape. A
    sergeant with the Shasta County Marshal‟s Office testified briefly about the
    security risk posed by defendant. The court continued the hearing to resume jury
    selection, and ordered the interim removal of the stun device.
    On May 10, the court held a lengthy hearing on the issue of restraints. The
    sergeant returned to the stand. He recounted the incident in which defendant asked
    his wife to take pictures of the jail‟s exterior and told her he was planning to
    escape just before his trial began. The sergeant noted defendant‟s lengthy history
    of misconduct in custody, which resulted in the court‟s ordering him to be held in
    state prison for a period before trial. On the day he returned to county jail,
    defendant had tried to fight with a deputy and was subdued with pepper spray.
    Weapons had been discovered in his possession many times. In the courtroom he
    had access to pens, which could be used as a weapon. The sergeant asked that
    defendant be restrained with belly chains, leg irons, and handcuffs while in court.
    32
    A private investigator testified for the defense regarding his observations
    and understanding of defendant‟s conduct in custody. The court ruled that, in light
    of defendant‟s long history of nonconforming conduct in custody and his
    demonstrated interest in escaping, he would be restrained with the leg brace and a
    stun device on his leg. The court declined to impose any visible restraints.
    A month later, defendant launched the escape attempt in which Deputy
    Renault was assaulted. Three days after that, the court held a hearing on the use of
    additional restraints. The marshal‟s office again asked for belly chains and leg
    irons. The court took testimony about the escape attempt and how the stun device
    worked. Defense counsel argued that the stun device was sufficient, making
    shackles unnecessary. In view of defendant‟s persistent misconduct in custody,
    and especially his recent escape attempt, the court approved the use of belly chains
    and leg irons. It ordered that paper be placed around the defense table so the jurors
    could not see beneath it.
    On September 11, 2002, during the penalty phase, counsel reported that
    defendant was developing painful scabs on his ankles. A medical examination
    conducted the same day revealed minor lacerations over the Achilles tendon on
    both ankles. They were healing without sign of infection, and calluses were
    forming below them. The court reviewed the medical report the next day.
    Defense counsel asked that the leg irons be removed during the lunch break. The
    bailiff objected, noting that security in the court‟s holding facility was less
    comprehensive than in the jail, and emphasizing defendant‟s history of
    manufacturing weapons and attempting to escape. The request was denied.
    Defendant concedes that the showing of manifest need for shackling was
    sufficient. (See People v. Howard (2010) 
    51 Cal. 4th 15
    , 28.) Nevertheless, he
    claims shackling that causes pain and scarring is excessive and violates due
    process. Defendant cites no authority for the proposition that, even when the need
    33
    for shackling is manifest, the restraints must be removed if they cause discomfort
    or abrade the skin. In any event, the record here shows only minor injuries,
    healing without complication. No due process violation can be conjured from this
    scenario. Defendant claims the shackles were visible to the jury, but the record
    does not support his assertion.12
    Defendant argues briefly that the use of a stun device was unwarranted,
    citing People v. Mar (2002) 
    28 Cal. 4th 1201
    . There we held that stun belts, like
    shackles, may be justified by a showing of manifest need. (Id. at pp. 1219-1220;
    see People v. Duran (1976) 
    16 Cal. 3d 282
    , 290-293.) Here, defense counsel
    conceded the stun device was appropriate, forfeiting the claim of error under Mar.
    In any event, defendant does not challenge the court‟s finding of manifest need.
    He fails to show any error in connection with the court‟s authorization of restraints
    in the courtroom.
    12     The only record reference defendant provides is to an advisement given by
    the court during jury selection. The prosecutor requested the admonition, after
    notifying the court that defense counsel had defendant stand up when the panel of
    potential jurors came in, at which point his leg and waist chains were visible.
    Defense counsel said he was “deliberately not requesting” an advisement. He
    thought it unnecessary until a jury was actually impaneled, but did not object to the
    prosecutor‟s request.
    The court told the panel that security measures in the courtroom had
    nothing to do with the issues, and “so to the extent that you see certain security
    measures taken, which can include the number of bailiffs in the courtroom, the
    kinds of restraints that may or may not be placed on the defendant, those are issues
    not for your consideration, and you may not consider them in any way in reaching
    the determination that you‟re asked to make.” This general admonition, given by
    the court before leg irons were employed and before the jury was selected, reflects
    nothing about whether shackles were visible during trial.
    34
    B. Guilt Phase Issues
    1. Admission of Detective’s “Opinion” Testimony
    During the prosecution‟s case-in-chief, Detective Ronald Clemens testified
    that defendant initially maintained his innocence but insisted he would take the
    blame for the murder. The jury watched a videotape of the interview. Afterward,
    the prosecutor noted that defendant seemed to be “breaking down and crying” at
    several points, and asked Clemens what he had observed. Defense counsel
    objected on grounds of irrelevance and undue prejudice. The court barred
    Clemens from giving an opinion based on the videotape, but allowed him to report
    his own observations during the interview. Clemens testified that when defendant
    appeared to be showing emotion, he “would always cover his eyes with his hand.
    And I didn‟t see any tears.” Clemens said defendant‟s eyes and face were not red
    at these times.
    Defendant claims the admission of this testimony violated his federal rights
    to due process and a fair trial. He first contends Clemens‟s observations were
    irrelevant to any issue relating to guilt. To the contrary, defendant‟s demeanor
    when discussing the crimes was relevant to help the jury determine his intent at the
    time of the events, his state of mind thereafter, and the credibility of his account.
    Defendant also argues that the testimony amounted to improper opinion evidence.
    Not so.13 Clemens offered no opinion, but merely recounted his observations of
    defendant‟s actions and appearance. “[A] witness may testify about objective
    behavior and describe behavior as being consistent with a state of mind.” (People
    v. 
    Chatman, supra
    , 38 Cal.4th at p. 397.) Nor was this brief testimony prejudicial;
    13     Defendant‟s claims about Clemens‟s “opinion testimony” are not only
    meritless, but also forfeited by the failure to object on that ground below. (People
    v. Chatman (2006) 
    38 Cal. 4th 344
    , 397.)
    35
    it merely supplemented what the jury had seen on the videotape. (See People v.
    Doolin (2009) 
    45 Cal. 4th 390
    , 438-439.) Defendant offers a cursory argument that
    the prosecutor was also improperly permitted to ask Clemens, in connection with
    the interviews of Eric Rubio and Lori Smith, “Haven‟t we asked all of our
    witnesses to tell the truth?” However, Clemens expressed no opinion as to
    whether Eric and Lori were truthful in their statements. Defendant‟s arguments
    about opinion testimony are baseless.
    2. Admission of Statements by Defendant and Coperpetrators
    Defendant contends his federal due process rights were violated by the
    admission of various statements made by himself and his coperpetrators.
    a. Defendant’s Statements
    Defendant sought to have a number of his statements to Detective Clemens
    redacted. The court agreed to some excisions, but defendant argues that certain
    remaining statements were prejudicial evidence of his bad character. We disagree.
    In the first interview with Clemens, the following exchange occurred:
    “[Defendant]: I can‟t kill somebody like that. [Clemens]: Like what?
    [Defendant]: It‟s unmerciful. [Clemens]: You mean someone who can‟t protect
    themselves? [Defendant]: A lot of people that deserve to die, people who hurt
    other people.” Defense counsel objected that the first and third of these statements
    were of little probative value, and were prejudicial because they indicated
    defendant could kill under other circumstances and was passing judgment on who
    should and should not die. The prosecutor contended the statements were
    probative with respect to defendant‟s knowledge of right from wrong, and were
    part of Clemens‟s efforts to catch him in a lie. The court overruled the objection.
    Later in the same interview, Clemens suggested defendant had killed Sinner
    to keep her from reporting his criminal activity. Defendant said: “No I wouldn‟t
    kill nobody over that. I have specific set down reasons why I would kill
    36
    somebody, and I don‟t know why I killed her.” Counsel claimed this statement
    was inflammatory, prejudicial, and not probative. The prosecutor argued that it
    went to defendant‟s state of mind and motive. The court admitted the statement,
    finding it probative in connection with defendant‟s comment that he did not know
    why he killed Sinner.
    The next statement was made in defendant‟s second interview, before he
    admitted his role in the killing. Counsel objected to the italicized portion of the
    following comments: “I wouldn‟t never abuse her, I wouldn‟t hit her, I give her
    whatever she asks for or wanted. Same as I do any of my friends. So she
    obviously trusted me, now she said something that one night, you know that you
    have to live with your whole life, it’s not killing somebody, I don’t have a problem
    with that. That’s not what bothers me. The killing of her bothers me, killing
    somebody else doesn‟t bother me. I don‟t glorify it, but I don‟t think it would
    bother me as much as this thing did.” The court rejected counsel‟s claim that these
    remarks were irrelevant and inflammatory, observing that defendant was
    explaining his mental state, intent, or feelings about the killing.
    Later in the same interview, after he admitted killing Sinner, defendant said
    he knew she was going to die after he examined her wounds. He added, “If I
    would have had a gun I would have just killed her faster, but I had no way to kill
    her faster. . . . more than willing to do my time, it‟s a damn shame.” Clemens
    said, “Yes, it is.” Defendant commented, “First time in my life I haven‟t had a gun
    when I needed one, when it really counted.” Counsel argued that the latter
    statement was inflammatory, because it indicated the defendant had guns on other
    occasions. The court disagreed, noting, “Sounds like a statement of intent.”
    Defendant contends all these statements were akin to evidence of prior bad
    conduct, which is inadmissible to prove criminal disposition under Evidence Code
    section 1101, subdivision (a). He acknowledges that such evidence may be
    37
    admitted under subdivision (b) of section 1101 for certain purposes, such as to
    prove intent, motive, or identity. However, he claims that here his statements were
    admitted simply to prove his criminal disposition, and were so prejudicial they
    should have been excluded under Evidence Code section 352.
    Defendant offers no authority supporting his analogy between his own
    admissions and evidence of other misconduct under Evidence Code section 1101.
    The prohibition on the use of “other crimes” evidence to prove character is not
    implicated here. Defendant‟s statements reflected his after-the-fact feelings about
    the charged killing itself. They were properly before the jury as statements of a
    party under Evidence Code section 1220, and probative on the issues of motive,
    intent, and consciousness of guilt. Nor were they unduly prejudicial. Any
    inflammatory impact they might have had was dwarfed by the horrific nature of the
    acts defendant admittedly performed. (Cf. People v. Valdez (2012) 
    55 Cal. 4th 82
    ,
    134.) The statements were properly admitted.
    b. Coperpetrators’ Statements
    Defendant challenges the admission of statements regarding “torture” made
    by coperpetrators Eric Rubio and Lori Smith. His briefing on this issue lacks
    sufficient record citations for a thorough review of his argument. “It is the duty of
    counsel to refer us to the portion of the record supporting [defendant‟s]
    contentions on appeal. [Citations.] . . . „It is neither practical nor appropriate for
    us to comb the record on [defendant‟s] behalf.‟ ” (Schmidlin v. City of Palo Alto
    (2007) 
    157 Cal. App. 4th 728
    , 738.) We consider the record to which counsel does
    refer.
    In his opening brief, defendant cites two pages of the transcript where the
    court and counsel discuss defendant’s statements, only one of which includes a
    reference to torture. These citations do not support his claim with respect to
    statements by others. Defendant then cites a passage in the reporter‟s transcript
    38
    where the court resolved counsel‟s objection to a number of references to “torture”
    in a transcribed statement by Lori Smith. However, defendant fails to direct us to
    the clerk‟s transcript where those references appear in Lori‟s statement, nor does
    he discuss their context. Defendant also cites a reporter‟s transcript page on which
    the court refused to redact references to torture by Eric Rubio and, apparently,
    Amy S., again without citing to the transcribed statements themselves. Finally, the
    opening brief refers to pages where the court agreed to strike a torture reference by
    Eric.
    In his reply brief, defendant cites two pages of a statement by Lori Smith,
    where the court struck two questions by the detective employing the word “torture”
    but not Lori‟s answer, “That was before . . . my brother started torturing her.” The
    reply brief also refers to a comment by Lori that defendant “started torturing her,
    pretty much.” However, no reference is made to an objection to the latter
    comment, and it appears none was made. Finally, the reply brief refers to a
    statement by Eric that defendant was “basically torturing” Sinner, but the court
    redacted this statement.
    Thus, the only relevant statement properly presented for the trial court‟s
    consideration and documented in this court with record references is Lori‟s
    comment, “That was before . . . my brother started torturing her.” In any event,
    defendant‟s arguments lack merit. He claims the coperpetrators‟ use of the term
    “torture,” or their answers to questions using that term, amounted to improper lay
    opinion on the ultimate issue of whether defendant tortured Sinner, as alleged in
    the torture special circumstance. This argument was raised below and rejected.
    The court reasoned that while some questions about “torture” might seek to elicit
    an opinion, witnesses may also use the word in a purely descriptive sense to
    explain what they saw. In the latter situation, no improper opinion testimony is
    offered.
    39
    The court‟s reasoning was sound. Lori‟s statement about events before “my
    brother started torturing her” did not include an opinion about defendant‟s
    commission of a special circumstance. It was simply part of her narrative. A
    witness who uses the word “torture” in describing a sequence of events is no more
    testifying “in the form of an opinion” (Evid. Code, § 800) than a witness
    describing a “robbery.” (See People v. Coffman and Marlow (2004) 
    34 Cal. 4th 1
    ,
    76-77.) It is conceivable that an investigator might solicit a witness‟s opinion on
    whether a particular act amounted to “torture” for purposes of the special
    circumstance. But here defendant identifies no questions or statements reflecting
    any such improper lay opinion. The jury was instructed that the torture special
    circumstance required a finding that defendant intended to and did “inflict extreme
    cruel physical pain and suffering upon a living human being for the purpose of
    revenge, extortion, persuasion or for any sadistic purpose.” Defendant fails to
    show that any witness was invited to opine on whether this standard was met.
    3. Display of Enlarged Photographs
    On June 28, 2002, in advance of trial, the court and counsel reviewed a
    series of diagrams and photographs the prosecutor proposed to project onto a
    screen. The photographs were of the crime scene and the corpse. The projected
    images were approximately 6 feet wide and 4 feet high. Defense counsel objected
    that the prosecutor would have control over the size of the photographs when
    showing them at trial. The court said, “If I authorize something it‟s only going to
    be for whatever I see, and the size I say. And if there is a violation of that, then
    obviously that could be grounds for a mistrial.” The court expressed concern
    about the emotional impact very large pictures might have on the jury.
    The photographs were reviewed in sequence, but for unexplained reasons
    those designated People‟s exhibits 17 and 26 had not been loaded onto the
    prosecutor‟s compact disc. The prosecutor said he would give defense counsel a
    40
    copy of the disc he would use at trial. The defense did not object to photographs
    of the grave site before the corpse was fully unearthed, including two in which the
    upper part of the corpse was exposed. It did object to enlarged images of the
    corpse itself. The court sustained the objection, ruling that the magnified pictures
    of the corpse were “unduly prejudicial in terms of their emotional impact on the
    jurors.”
    At trial, on August 1, 2002, the prosecutor used the projector while
    questioning a lieutenant about the crime scene investigation. Before showing any
    images, the prosecutor noted, “My recollection is that the body in the grave was
    not objected to.” The court remembered that the objection was to autopsy photos.
    Defense counsel had no specific recollection but said, “I think it was not objected
    to.” As the prosecutor went through the photographs with the lieutenant on the
    stand, he showed exhibits 17 and 26, which portrayed the corpse exposed in the
    grave from different angles, with a plastic bag wrapped around the head. No
    objection was made, but after displaying these pictures the prosecutor suggested
    taking a break. The court replied that it was 25 minutes until the next scheduled
    break. The prosecutor requested a bench conference and explained, “There are
    several jurors that are in a highly emotional state at this point, and I thought maybe
    a moment so that they could gather themselves.” The court demurred, saying, “I
    don‟t think so.”
    The prosecutor then moved for admission of the exhibits used with this
    witness. The court asked if there were objections, and defense counsel objected to
    “the last” exhibits. The court deferred ruling until the next break. At that time,
    counsel objected to People‟s exhibits 10, 17, 26, and 27.14 Counsel did not
    14     Exhibit 10 showed the grave partially excavated, with some upper portions
    of the corpse exposed. During the pretrial review, defense counsel said he did not
    (footnote continued on next page)
    41
    complain about the size of the projected photographs, or their omission from
    pretrial review. He argued that using this many photographs of the corpse was
    cumulative and prejudicial, and claimed it was obvious from the jury‟s reaction
    that the photographs were “having an impact.” The court overruled the objection.
    Cocounsel then advised the court that defendant had told him some of the
    photographs shown by the prosecutor had not been shown in the pretrial review.
    Counsel asked only for an order that no further photographs be displayed unless
    defense counsel were given an opportunity to review them and make sure they
    were previously approved by the court. The prosecutor had no objection, and the
    court so directed.
    The guilt phase concluded on August 28, 2002. On September 17, during
    the penalty phase, the defense moved for a mistrial on that ground that it was
    prosecutorial misconduct to display exhibits 17 and 26 without prior authorization.
    The prosecutor pointed out that before showing the photographs, he had notified
    the court and counsel of his recollection that no objection had been raised to
    photographs of the body in the grave. Defense counsel responded that the
    prosecutor had violated the court‟s directive regarding photographs that were not
    preapproved. The court denied the motion. It found no indication that any
    violation of its order was intentional, and no prosecutorial misconduct. The court
    also determined that defendant had not been prejudiced. If the photographs had
    been shown in advance, the court “certainly would have approved the use of at
    least one. The other was simply cumulative.”
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    have a problem with this photograph. The other three photographs were not
    included in the pretrial review.
    42
    On appeal, defendant renews his argument that the prosecutor violated the
    court‟s order not to use unapproved photographs. Defendant forfeited this claim
    by failing to promptly object at trial. To preserve a claim of prosecutorial
    misconduct, a defendant must make a timely and specific objection and ask the
    court for a curative instruction. (People v. Clark (2011) 
    52 Cal. 4th 856
    , 960.)
    Here, had a prompt objection been made, the photographs could have been
    removed from view and the jurors admonished. Defendant insists that he did
    object after all the photographs were shown, and that the court‟s overruling of the
    objection showed it would have been futile to object immediately. (See Clark, at
    p. 960.) However, when the court heard argument on the objection, counsel did
    not specifically raise the preapproval point, merely noting belatedly that some
    unspecified photographs had not been included in the pretrial review.
    It was only when seeking a mistrial, as the penalty phase was underway,
    that the defense pointed out that exhibits 17 and 26 had not been approved by the
    court. Defendant does not claim the court erred by failing to grant a mistrial. He
    does, however, object to the court‟s finding that any violation of its order was
    unintentional, noting that prosecutorial misconduct need not be intentional.
    (People v. Hill (1998) 
    17 Cal. 4th 800
    , 822-823.) The Attorney General responds
    on the merits of the mistrial ruling, arguing there was no misconduct because the
    exhibits in question were never ruled inadmissible, and there was no prejudice in
    any event.
    Even if a claim associated with the projection of these photographs had
    been preserved and properly presented here, there was no error. The prosecutor‟s
    apparently inadvertent failure to secure pretrial review of these particular exhibits
    did not infect the trial with such unfairness as to make defendant‟s conviction a
    denial of due process. (People v. 
    Clark, supra
    , 52 Cal.4th at p. 960 [federal
    standard for prosecutorial misconduct].) It did not amount to a deceptive or
    43
    reprehensible method of persuasion. (Ibid. [state law standard for prosecutorial
    misconduct].) Nor were defendant‟s chances of receiving a fair trial irreparably
    damaged. (People v. Ayala (2000) 
    23 Cal. 4th 225
    , 282 [standard for grant of
    mistrial].) Furthermore, given the overwhelming evidence of defendant‟s guilt,
    including his confession and the detailed testimony of three coperpetrators, any
    error would have been harmless under any standard of prejudice.
    4. Sufficiency of the Torture Evidence
    Defendant contends the evidence was insufficient to support the jury‟s
    finding of torture. “The torture-murder special circumstance requires proof that a
    defendant intentionally performed acts that were calculated to cause extreme
    physical pain to the victim. [Citation.] Required is „an intent to cause cruel or
    extreme pain and suffering for the purpose of revenge, extortion, persuasion, or for
    any other sadistic purpose.‟ [Citation.] We review the entire record, in the light
    most favorable to the prosecution, to determine whether a rational trier of fact
    could have found the essential elements of the torture-murder special-circumstance
    allegation beyond a reasonable doubt. [Citations.]” (People v. Mungia (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 1101
    , 1136 (Mungia).) “A premeditated intent to inflict prolonged pain is
    not required.” (People v. Elliot (2005) 
    37 Cal. 4th 453
    , 479.)
    The intent to torture “is a state of mind which, unless established by the
    defendant‟s own statements (or by another witness‟s description of a defendant‟s
    behavior in committing the offenses), must be proved by the circumstances
    surrounding the commission of the offense [citations], which include the nature
    and severity of the victim‟s wounds.” (People v. Crittenden (1994) 
    9 Cal. 4th 83
    ,
    141.)
    Defendant claims the evidence showed no attempt on his part to increase
    the victim‟s suffering or inflict pain in addition to the pain of death. He compares
    this case to Mungia, where evidence of a savage beating did not suggest an attempt
    44
    to torture the victim rather than simply to kill her. 
    (Mungia, supra
    , 44 Cal.4th at p.
    1137.) The comparison is inapt. Here, by his own admission, defendant told
    Sinner she was going to kill herself, and forced her to cut her own wrist. He then
    cut her wrist himself and poured whiskey over the wounds several times, despite
    the obvious pain this caused. He also kicked Sinner and struck her with the metal
    bar when she moved her hands away from the fire pit. His claim that he was only
    trying to ease the way to an inevitable death is undermined by the sadism
    demonstrated by his conduct. The evidence of torture was sufficient.
    5. Constitutionality of the Torture Special Circumstance
    Defendant claims the torture special circumstance fails to perform the
    constitutionally required narrowing function meant to avoid arbitrary imposition of
    the death penalty, and therefore violates the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
    We have rejected this argument on a number of occasions. (E.g., People v.
    Whisenhunt (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 174
    , 223; People v. Barnett (1998) 
    17 Cal. 4th 1044
    ,
    1160-1163; People v. Raley (1992) 
    2 Cal. 4th 870
    , 898-900 (Raley).) Defendant
    argues that the phrase “for any sadistic purpose” in the instruction given to his jury
    is vague and overbroad.15 He notes that in Raley, we quoted dictionary definitions
    focusing on a sexual element in sadism. (Raley, at p. 900.) Defendant contends
    there was no evidence of sexual motivation in this case, and therefore no sadism.
    Insofar as defendant suggests the “sadistic purpose” element of the special
    circumstance is too narrow to apply here, his claim of overbreadth is misplaced.
    In any event, our discussion in Raley was not so limited.
    15      The jury heard CALJIC No. 8.81.18, which included the following element:
    “The defendant intended to inflict extreme cruel physical pain and suffering upon a
    living human being for the purpose of revenge, extortion, persuasion or for any
    sadistic purpose.”
    45
    Raley held there was no need to instruct the jury on the meaning of “sadistic
    purpose” because the phrase is one “in common usage, having a relatively precise
    meaning, that is, the infliction of pain on another person for the purpose of
    experiencing pleasure.” 
    (Raley, supra
    , 2 Cal.4th at p. 901.) Although sadism is
    commonly associated with sexual pleasure, courts have recognized that it does not
    necessarily have a sexual motivation. (People v. Aguilar (1997) 
    58 Cal. App. 4th 1196
    , 1203; People v. Healy (1993) 
    14 Cal. App. 4th 1137
    , 1142.) Defendant fails
    to undermine our settled view on the constitutional sufficiency of the torture
    special circumstance.
    C. Exclusion of Evidence About Prison Conditions at the Penalty Phase
    1. Background
    In his opening statement at the penalty phase, defense counsel told the jury
    that James Park, a former associate warden at San Quentin State Prison, would
    testify about the security conditions imposed on prisoners sentenced to life without
    parole. Park would explain that such prisoners are watched at all times by an
    armed guard from a secure location, and that no guard enters prisoner areas unless
    accompanied by another guard. Prisoners who behave dangerously are placed in
    solitary confinement and locked down for all but short periods of time. Counsel
    also said Park would opine that defendant would adjust to prison life.
    The prosecutor filed a motion to exclude Park‟s testimony. He cited People
    v. Quartermain (1997) 
    16 Cal. 4th 600
    , 632, for the proposition that “evidence of
    the conditions of confinement that a defendant will experience if sentenced to life
    imprisonment without parole is irrelevant to the jury‟s penalty determination
    because it does not relate to the defendant‟s character, culpability, or the
    circumstances of the offense.”
    At the hearing on the motion, defense counsel argued that Park‟s evidence
    was admissible for two separate purposes. First, counsel wanted to inform the jury
    46
    about what he described as “for lack of a better term, the day in the life of a person
    in prison.” The second and principal purpose for Park‟s testimony was to rebut the
    prosecution‟s evidence of defendant‟s violent jail conduct and escape attempts,
    which raised the issue of his future dangerousness in prison. Park would explain
    that because state prison facilities were more secure than county jail, defendant
    would not have the same opportunities for assault and escape. Counsel referred to
    the holding of Skipper v. South Carolina (1986) 
    476 U.S. 1
    , 5 (Skipper):
    “[E]vidence that the defendant would not pose a danger if spared (but
    incarcerated) must be considered potentially mitigating” and thus “may not be
    excluded from the sentencer‟s consideration.” Counsel also relied on People v.
    Fudge (1994) 
    7 Cal. 4th 1075
    , 1117 (Fudge), where this court found Skipper error
    in the exclusion of expert testimony that the defendant was “a likely candidate to
    lead a productive and nonviolent life in prison.”
    The prosecutor responded that he was precluded from arguing defendant‟s
    future dangerousness unless defendant introduced evidence on the subject. The
    court disagreed. It said, “You can certainly argue future dangerousness based
    upon [defendant‟s] conduct,” and advised the prosecutor to “look at the cases.”
    Defense counsel observed that even if the prosecutor did not explicitly argue future
    dangerousness, the jury would draw the inference itself. He noted that in People v.
    Lucero (1988) 
    44 Cal. 3d 1006
    (Lucero), this court held it was reversible error to
    bar a defense expert from testifying that the defendant would be unlikely to
    commit future crimes, and would adjust to the structured setting of prison life. (Id.
    at pp. 1026-1028.)
    After reviewing the authorities submitted by counsel, the court prefaced its
    ruling on the motion by quoting People v. Welch (1999) 
    20 Cal. 4th 701
    , 761:
    “ „[I]t is settled that argument concerning a defendant‟s future dangerousness as a
    life prisoner is proper when it is based on evidence of past crimes admitted under
    47
    one or more statutory factors in aggravation.‟ ” “Keeping that in mind,” the court
    ruled that evidence of “what it‟s like to be in prison” was inadmissible, including
    evidence of security measures in state prison. The court reasoned that this
    evidence had no relevance to the issues of defendant‟s character, culpability, or the
    circumstances of the offense, or to any statutory aggravating or mitigating
    circumstance. Therefore, it “sustain[ed] the People‟s objection to the presentation
    of that witness.”
    In his penalty phase closing argument, the prosecutor emphasized
    defendant‟s persistent escape attempts and his threatening and violent behavior
    toward correctional officers. He argued at length that the evidence showed
    defendant had personally inflicted Deputy Renault‟s injuries. The prosecutor
    mentioned the prospect of future dangerousness, asserting that “defendant has
    shown himself to be violent and dangerous in every setting, and he will continue to
    be so now, and into the future.” He claimed defendant‟s attacks on guards
    reflected his antisocial personality disorder, and said, “He‟s going to get worse.
    We‟ve seen that escalating. Escalating.”
    During deliberations, the jury sent out a note: “A question has arisen as to
    what can be considered as an aggravating factor. We know that anything can be
    considered as a mitigating factor, as specified by item K. Are we required,
    however, to only consider items A & B & C as aggravating factors? In particular,
    the possibility of future escapes and/or violent crimes is a factor weighing on
    several jurors‟ minds. This is not a specified aggravating factor, but can we
    consider it?”
    The court consulted with counsel. Defense counsel argued that the jury
    should be told simply to confine its deliberations to factors (a), (b), and (c) of
    section 190.3. He noted the defense had been barred from presenting Park‟s
    testimony “on the issue of security and adjustment to prison.” Because defendant
    48
    had not been allowed to show that prison would be a safe place from which he
    could not escape, counsel said the jury should not consider “future escape
    attempts.” The prosecutor disagreed, claiming the defense “could have [had]
    testimony to that fact that they can‟t get out of jail.” He argued that the relevant
    consideration was not escape, but “the threat of harm to jailers from escape
    attempts.” The court agreed this threat was a proper inference to be drawn from
    the aggravating evidence.
    Accordingly, the court told the jury that “yes,” its deliberations were limited
    to factors (a), (b), and (c) of section 190.3. Answering the question about future
    dangerousness, the court said: “The prediction of future dangerousness is not a
    type of evidence jurors can consider in determining penalty. However, inferences
    that a defendant will remain a danger to others in the future, or escape in the
    future, which are drawn from evidence of defendant‟s past conduct may be
    considered by a juror for whatever value the juror assigns to such inferences in
    determining penalty.”
    2. Analysis
    Defendant contends the exclusion of Park‟s testimony violated his federal
    constitutional rights to due process, a fair trial, and a reliable sentencing
    determination. He claims he was entitled under Skipper and Fudge to present
    testimony that he would adjust well as a life prisoner. Defendant further argues
    that he was denied the right to rebut the prosecution‟s evidence of his conduct in
    custody by presenting evidence of prison security measures. We agree that the
    exclusion of Park‟s testimony was a violation of due process, because it deprived
    49
    defendant of the opportunity to counter aggravating evidence and argument
    suggesting that he would be a dangerous life prisoner.16
    As a general rule, evidence of prison conditions is not admissible at a
    penalty trial. “[W]e have repeatedly held that evidence concerning conditions of
    confinement for a person serving a sentence of life without possibility of parole is
    not relevant to the penalty determination because it has no bearing on the
    defendant‟s character, culpability, or the circumstances of the offense under either
    the federal Constitution or section 190.3, factor (k). (People v. Jones (2003) 
    29 Cal. 4th 1229
    , 1261, citing People v. Quartermain (1997) 
    16 Cal. 4th 600
    , 632;
    16      Defendant correctly contends he had the right to present Park‟s opinion that
    he would adjust to life in prison. 
    (Skipper, supra
    , 476 U.S. at p. 5; People v.
    Ervine (2009) 
    47 Cal. 4th 745
    , 795; 
    Lucero, supra
    , 44 Cal.3d at pp. 1026-1029;
    
    Fudge, supra
    , 7 Cal.4th at p. 1117.) However, counsel did not argue this ground at
    the hearing on the motion to exclude Park‟s testimony. Although he briefly
    mentioned in his opening statement that Park would give an opinion that defendant
    “will adjust to prison life,” he made no mention of the subject at the hearing.
    Counsel cited Skipper, Fudge, and Lucero, but did not say that Park should be
    allowed to offer opinion testimony on defendant‟s ability to make a successful
    transition to life in custody. Nor did the defense make an offer of proof to
    establish the extent and basis of Park‟s testimony. (Compare Fudge, at pp. 1113-
    1114.)
    Given our conclusion on the exclusion of Park‟s testimony about security
    measures, we need not consider defendant‟s argument on the subject of adjustment
    to prison life, even assuming that claim of error was preserved. (See Evid. Code,
    § 354, subd. (a) [error in exclusion of evidence is not reversible unless “[t]he
    substance, purpose, and relevance of the excluded evidence was made known to
    the court by the questions asked, an offer of proof, or by any other means”];
    People v. Lightsey (2012) 
    54 Cal. 4th 668
    , 727 [abuse of discretion in sustaining
    objection could not be found when defendant made no offer of proof as to why
    witness should have been permitted to answer]; People v. Ramos (1997) 
    15 Cal. 4th 1133
    , 1178 [defendant bears burden of establishing foundation for mitigating
    evidence]; People v. Whitt (1990) 
    51 Cal. 3d 620
    , 647-649 [claim of Skipper error
    was not preserved when defendant failed to establish pertinence of testimony].)
    50
    People v. Daniels (1991) 
    52 Cal. 3d 815
    , 876–878; People v. Thompson (1988) 
    45 Cal. 3d 86
    , 138–139.)” (People v. Martinez (2010) 
    47 Cal. 4th 911
    , 963; accord,
    People v. 
    Ervine, supra
    , 47 Cal.4th at pp. 794-795.) Thus, the court properly
    rejected the defense‟s attempt to have Park provide a generic account of the daily
    routines of life prisoners.
    However, the general rule does not dispose of defendant‟s claim that he was
    entitled to present evidence of prison security measures to rebut the prosecution‟s
    assertion that he would pose a danger in custody. Our cases holding that evidence
    of prison conditions is inadmissible have not addressed this kind of rebuttal
    evidence.17 The right to rebut aggravating evidence in capital cases is settled, and
    of constitutional dimension. The United States Supreme Court has articulated the
    governing principle in cases where the defendant‟s future dangerousness is a
    factor. “[W]here the prosecution relies on a prediction of future dangerousness in
    requesting the death penalty, elemental due process principles operate to require
    admission of the defendant‟s relevant evidence in rebuttal.” (Simmons v. South
    Carolina (1994) 
    512 U.S. 154
    , 164 (plur. opn. of Blackmun, J.) (Simmons).)
    Justice Blackmun‟s opinion in Simmons was signed by only three other
    justices, but Justice O‟Connor‟s concurrence, joined by two others, established a
    17     See People v. 
    Martinez, supra
    , 47 Cal.4th at page 962 (prosecutor
    disclaimed reliance on future dangerousness); People v. 
    Ervine, supra
    , 47 Cal.4th
    at pages 795-796 (prosecutor refrained from arguing inference of future
    dangerousness); People v. 
    Jones, supra
    , 29 Cal.4th at pages 1260-1261
    (prosecutor‟s exploration of prison incidents occurred on cross-examination of
    defense expert); People v. 
    Quartermain, supra
    , 16 Cal.4th at page 634
    (prosecutor‟s brief argument was confined to evidence in mitigation); People v.
    
    Daniels, supra
    , 52 Cal.3d at page 877 (paraplegic defendant sought to show
    conditions he would face in prison); People v. 
    Thompson, supra
    , 45 Cal.3d at
    pages 138-139 (evidence of prison conditions offered to dispel idea that life
    sentence would be “lenient”).
    51
    clear majority for the proposition that “ „[w]here the prosecution specifically relies
    on a prediction of future dangerousness in asking for the death penalty, . . . the
    elemental due process requirement that a defendant not be sentenced to death “on
    the basis of information which he had no opportunity to deny or explain” [requires
    that the defendant be afforded an opportunity to introduce evidence on this
    point].‟ ” 
    (Simmons, supra
    , 512 U.S. at p. 175 (conc. opn. of O‟Connor, J.),
    original brackets, quoting 
    Skipper, supra
    , 476 U.S. at p. 5, fn. 1; see Gardner v.
    Florida (1977) 
    430 U.S. 349
    , 362. See also Kelly v. South Carolina (2002) 
    534 U.S. 246
    , 248 [Simmons rule]; O’Dell v. Netherland (1997) 
    521 U.S. 151
    , 159
    [same].) We have recognized that under Skipper and Gardner, “[w]hen a
    defendant is precluded from introducing evidence rebutting the prosecution‟s
    argument in support of the death penalty, fundamental notions of due process are
    implicated.” (People v. Frye (1998) 
    18 Cal. 4th 894
    , 1017.)
    Here, defendant sought to counter the potent evidence of his persistently
    dangerous conduct in custody by informing the jury about security measures
    imposed on life prisoners. The prosecutor succeeded in keeping that information
    from the jury. As a result, the impact of the aggravating evidence was
    significantly enhanced. Such an unfair advantage on the critical question of
    penalty offends the fundamental principles of due process set out in Simmons and
    Skipper. This conclusion does not mean that evidence of prison security measures
    is relevant in every capital case. It remains the rule that “day in the life” evidence
    is inadmissible. (People v. 
    Martinez, supra
    , 47 Cal.4th at p. 962.) When,
    however, the prosecution raises an inference of future dangerous conduct in prison
    as part of its case in aggravation, the defendant is entitled to respond with evidence
    that his chances to inflict harm in prison will be limited. The prosecution is of
    course free to explore the extent of that limitation on cross-examination, and to
    counter with evidence that life prisoners have opportunities for violence.
    52
    Our reasons for excluding evidence of prison conditions in earlier cases do
    not apply to defense attempts to rebut a showing that reflects future dangerousness.
    The primary rationale, and the one followed by the court below, has been that
    prison conditions are irrelevant to any aspect of the defendant‟s character,
    culpability, or the circumstances of the offense. (E.g., People v. 
    Martinez, supra
    ,
    47 Cal.4th at p. 963; People v. 
    Quartermain, supra
    , 16 Cal.4th at p. 632; People v.
    
    Thompson, supra
    , 45 Cal.3d at p. 139.) That is why the defense may not introduce
    such evidence as a factor in mitigation. The defense may, however, respond to
    aggravating evidence suggesting the defendant will be dangerous in prison.
    Ineligibility for parole is also unrelated to a defendant‟s character, culpability, and
    criminal offense, but it is nevertheless “indisputably relevant” when the
    prosecution raises the issue of the defendant‟s future dangerousness in the
    community. 
    (Simmons, supra
    , 512 U.S. at p. 163 (plur. opn. of Blackmun, J.); see
    
    id. at pp.
    176-177 (conc. opn. of O‟Connor, J.).) Similarly, security measures
    aimed at restraining a defendant from acting on the violent impulses demonstrated
    by the aggravating evidence, or preventing him from inflicting harm, are relevant
    when the prosecution suggests that the defendant‟s violent conduct will continue in
    custody.
    We have also noted that testimony about future conditions of confinement
    involves speculation as to what future officials in another branch of government
    will or will not do. This observation was first made in People v. 
    Thompson, supra
    ,
    45 Cal.3d at page 139, where the defendant sought to provide a general picture of
    prison life in order to persuade the jury that a life sentence is not lenient
    punishment. (Id. at p. 138; see People v. Rundle (2008) 
    43 Cal. 4th 76
    , 186-187.)
    We have repeated Thompson‟s criticism of “ „speculation,‟ ” however, in cases
    where the defense offered more narrowly focused testimony on prison security
    53
    measures. (People v. 
    Martinez, supra
    , 47 Cal.4th at p. 963; People v. 
    Jones, supra
    , 29 Cal.4th at p. 1261.)
    When the defense seeks to rebut an inference of future dangerousness in
    custody, Thompson‟s reasoning is inapposite. The purpose of informing the jury
    about security conditions in such a case is to prevent speculation by the jury about
    the defendant‟s opportunities to inflict harm in the prison setting. (Cf. 
    Simmons, supra
    , 512 U.S. at pp. 165-166 (plur. opn. of Blackmun, J.).) Expert testimony on
    prison security need not involve undue speculation about specific measures that
    might or might not be imposed by penal authorities in the future. Testimony
    explaining security policies followed in California prisons with respect to prisoners
    sentenced to life without parole, from an expert familiar with the penal system, is
    sufficiently reliable to be considered in connection with inferences of future
    dangerousness drawn from a defendant‟s past violent conduct in custody.
    The Attorney General contends this case is controlled by People v.
    
    Martinez, supra
    , 
    47 Cal. 4th 911
    . There, however, the prosecutor offered no
    evidence of future dangerousness. (Id. at p. 962.) Furthermore, the court did not
    bar the defense expert from testifying about prison conditions. Rather, it limited
    his testimony, ruling that detailed evidence of prison operations and exhibits
    depicting prison facilities and safety measures was inadmissible, but allowing the
    expert to give “ „general descriptions of prison life‟ as well as his opinions on
    defendant‟s future dangerousness and whether prison life was the kind of
    structured environment that defendant needed. . . . The court also made clear that
    it would allow [the expert] to describe the level 4 [maximum security]
    classification and its subdividing classifications.” (Ibid.) We rejected Martinez‟s
    claim that the limitations imposed by the court were improper. (Id. at p. 963.)
    Here, the court did not issue a narrow ruling like that in Martinez, which permitted
    the expert to offer his opinions in some areas. The prosecutor sought to exclude
    54
    Park‟s testimony in its entirety, and the court granted the motion without
    qualification.
    Accordingly, defendant was deprived of his due process right to rebut the
    prosecutor‟s evidence and argument suggesting that he would be a dangerous life
    prisoner. “[O]ne of the hallmarks of due process in our adversary system is the
    defendant‟s ability to meet the State‟s case against him.” 
    (Simmons, supra
    , 512
    U.S. at p. 175 (conc. opn. of O‟Connor, J.).) The error is reversible unless it is
    harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. (Chapman v. California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
    ,
    24; People v. 
    Frye, supra
    , 18 Cal.4th at p. 1017; 
    Fudge, supra
    , 7 Cal.4th at p.
    1117.) We conclude there is reasonable doubt as to whether the jury would have
    returned a verdict of death had the defense been allowed to present Park‟s
    testimony.
    The evidence of defendant‟s violence in jail and his persistence in making
    escape attempts was dramatic and compelling. The jury‟s concern about his future
    dangerousness was reflected in its note to the court asking whether his jail conduct
    could be considered. Furthermore, defendant‟s showing in mitigation was
    substantial. Numerous witnesses detailed his difficult life as a child, including
    prolonged molestation at a very young age by his father. In his subsequent journey
    through multiple placements in the social services system, defendant encountered
    further physical abuse and repeated disappointment in his hopes of finding a stable
    family environment. Medical experts testified about the effects of these
    experiences on his development. In weighing the mitigating and aggravating
    factors, some jurors may have felt that defendant had been damaged through no
    fault of his own, but had become so dangerous even in penal custody that death
    was the appropriate verdict. We express no view on the appropriate penalty, but
    we must consider how a jury that heard the excluded evidence might have
    responded differently. We cannot say there is no reasonable doubt that the
    55
    outcome of the penalty trial would have been the same had Park been allowed to
    testify.
    Having reached this conclusion, we need not address defendant‟s claim that
    his counsel were ineffective for promising to present Park‟s testimony in the
    opening statement before securing a ruling from the court on its admissibility. Nor
    is it necessary to address the other penalty phase issues defendant raises.
    III. DISPOSITION
    We affirm the judgment of guilt, and reverse the judgment of death.
    CORRIGAN, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J.
    WERDEGAR, J.
    CHIN, J.
    LIU, J.
    CUÉLLAR, J.
    KRUGER, J.
    56
    See next page for addresses and telephone numbers for counsel who argued in Supreme Court.
    Name of Opinion People v. Smith
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Unpublished Opinion
    Original Appeal XXX
    Original Proceeding
    Review Granted
    Rehearing Granted
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Opinion No. S112442
    Date Filed: April 27, 2015
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Court: Superior
    County: Shasta
    Judge: James Ruggiero
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Counsel:
    Kathy Moreno, under appointment by the Supreme Court, for Defendant and Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Eric L.
    Christoffersen and Angelo S. Edralin, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    1
    Counsel who argued in Supreme Court (not intended for publication with opinion):
    Kathy Moreno
    P.O. Box 9006
    Berkeley, CA 94709
    (510) 649-8602
    Angelo S. Edralin
    Deputy Attorney General
    1300 I Street, Suite 125
    Sacramento, CA 94244-2550
    (916) 445-9909
    2