People v. Seumanu , 61 Cal. 4th 1293 ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 8/24/15
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA
    THE PEOPLE,                          )
    )
    Plaintiff and Respondent, )
    )                            S093803
    v.                        )
    )
    ROPATI SEUMANU,                      )
    )                       Alameda County
    Defendant and Appellant.  )                     Super. Ct. No. H24057
    ____________________________________)
    A jury in Alameda County Superior Court convicted Ropati Seumanu in
    2000 of the first degree murder of Nolan Pamintuan (Pen. Code, § 187; all further
    statutory references are to this code unless otherwise indicated), kidnapping to
    commit robbery (§ 209, subd. (a)), and first degree robbery (§ 211). The jury also
    sustained special circumstance allegations that Seumanu committed a murder
    while engaged in the commission of a robbery and a kidnapping. (§ 190.2, subd.
    (a)(17)(A) & (B).) In addition, the jury found that for all three felonies, defendant
    used a firearm; to wit, a shotgun. (§ 12022.5.) On November 1, 2000, after
    weighing the aggravating and mitigating evidence, the jury set the penalty at death
    under the 1978 death penalty law. (§ 190.1 et seq.) This appeal is automatic.
    (§ 1239, subd. (b).)
    Following the decision in Jones v. Chappell (C.D.Cal. 2014) 
    31 F. Supp. 3d 1050
    , holding that delays in implementing the California death penalty law
    rendered it unconstitutional under the Eighth Amendment to the United States
    1
    Constitution, the parties filed supplemental briefs addressed to that issue. As
    explained below, we reject the Eighth Amendment claim and otherwise affirm the
    judgment in its entirety.
    I. GUILT PHASE
    A. Facts
    Nolan Pamintuan was engaged to marry Rowena Panelo on May 18, 1996.
    He spent the evening before, May 17, with friends and family at the rehearsal
    dinner at a restaurant in Daly City. Panelo gave him a wedding present that night:
    a black Movado watch engraved with their intended wedding date. After dinner,
    Pamintuan drove Panelo to her apartment and continued on to Hayward, where he
    intended to spend the night at his father‘s apartment. Pamintuan was wearing a
    brown Gucci watch, a gold engagement ring, a black leather sport coat, an Old
    Navy-brand pea coat, and boots.
    Shortly before midnight, residents on East 13th Street in Hayward heard a
    gunshot and saw a dark van speeding away with its lights off. One of the
    neighbors, Luis Hurtado, investigated and found a man bleeding to death in the
    street. Police were called but the man died of what the coroner‘s office later
    determined was a shotgun wound to the chest. Police found no identification of
    the victim at the scene.
    Pamintuan‘s father woke at 5:30 the next morning and discovered his son
    had not come home. He located his son‘s car, an Acura, parked nearby with a
    security device locked on the steering wheel but the driver‘s side door was
    unlocked. Pamintuan‘s father called police and reported his son missing. At
    12:15 p.m., police showed photographs to Pamintuan‘s brother, Paul, who
    identified the shotgun victim as his brother, Nolan. Panelo, the victim‘s intended
    2
    bride, was told of his murder around 1:30 p.m.; they had planned to marry at 2:00
    p.m. that day.
    Defendant Ropati Seumanu was also known as Paki, Robert, Afatia Ropati
    Seumanu, and Ropati Afatia Seumanu. Defendant was a member of the Sons of
    Samoa street gang, which is affiliated with the Crips, and his gang moniker was
    alternately ―Smurf‖ or ―Mr. Smurf 1.‖ Defendant lived with his large extended
    family, including his father, in Hayward. Vui Seumanu, defendant‘s father, was
    the equivalent of a tribal chief in Samoa and defendant was a direct heir to that
    title. Approximately 24 people lived in a three-bedroom house with a small 500-
    square-foot outbuilding in the back, including defendant, his wife, Lefea ―Lucy‖
    Masefau, and her daughter, Peggy; defendant‘s younger brother, Tautai Seumanu;
    Galuvae ―Jay‖ Palega, his wife and family; 16-year-old Tony Iuli and his wife,
    Seu Seumanu; and others. Defendant slept in the outbuilding, along with Iuli and
    others; although the sleeping arrangements were somewhat fluid among the family
    members, Jay Palega asserted the outbuilding ―was really [defendant‘s] room,‖
    and defendant kept his belongings in a cabinet there.
    Defendant‘s activities on the night of the murder were described by Tony
    Iuli and Jay Palega, both of whom pleaded guilty to reduced charges and testified
    for the prosecution. That night defendant declared his intention to steal a car in
    order to commit some robberies, so defendant, Iuli, Palega, and Tautai Seumanu
    set off to look for a suitable vehicle to steal. They eventually located a van to their
    liking and Tautai and defendant used a screwdriver to steal it. Back at their family
    compound in Hayward with the stolen van, the group changed out of their Samoan
    clothes and donned dark clothes; defendant brought out firearms from the
    outbuilding. Iuli knew ―something big‖ was going to happen when he saw the
    guns. Defendant spoke of committing robberies and everyone was ―in on the
    deal.‖ The foursome left the house in the stolen van and began looking for a
    3
    robbery victim. Palega was driving, Iuli was in the front passenger seat, and the
    Seumanu brothers, defendant and Tautai, were in the backseat. After considering
    and rejecting a few possibilities, the group spotted a potential victim and
    attempted an armed robbery but the intended victim escaped. When the group
    reentered the stolen van and drove off, defendant chastised Tautai for the botched
    robbery. They then observed Nolan Pamintuan parking his car and defendant said:
    ―Let‘s go back and get that guy who just got out of the car.‖ Palega turned the van
    around.
    Defendant, holding a sawed-off shotgun, jumped out of the van with Iuli
    and confronted the victim. Pamintuan looked shocked and scared and offered
    defendant the inscribed black Movado watch his fiancée had just given him hours
    earlier, saying: ―Just take this, that is all I have.‖ Defendant took it and then
    forced the victim into the van. As they drove off, defendant and Tautai stripped
    the victim of everything he had, including his boots, sport coat, pea coat, ring,
    wallet, and watch. Defendant became angry when he discovered Pamintuan was
    carrying only $3 in cash. The victim offered to withdraw money from the bank
    and was by this time begging for his life.
    They drove to a bank with an automated teller machine and defendant
    warned Pamintuan that if he tried to escape, defendant would kill him. Tautai and
    Iuli accompanied Pamintuan to the ATM, where he withdrew $300 and gave it to
    defendant upon returning to the van. Iuli was worried that the ATM camera had
    photographed him, Tautai, and the van. The foursome wanted the victim to
    withdraw more money, and when Pamintuan told them of the daily $300 limit they
    became angry. Defendant ordered Palega to drive away from the bank and find a
    dark spot. Defendant and Tautai argued over who would kill the victim, while
    Palega advised against killing him. Iuli exited the van in an attempt to stop the
    shooting, seeing no point, as Pamintuan had already given them all of his money.
    4
    Pamintuan continued to beg for his life. Defendant then shot him in the chest with
    a single shot from the shotgun. The four then abandoned the stolen van in the
    neighborhood and went home.
    A neighbor noticed the van around 12:30 a.m., parked, but with its motor
    running. When it was there the next morning, with the motor still running, the
    neighbor called police, who determined that it had been stolen from elsewhere in
    the city. It also bore bloodstains, later identified as belonging to Pamintuan. A
    few days later police determined the van bore Tautai Seumanu‘s fingerprints.
    Further investigation at the bank revealed video footage from the ATM camera
    showing Pamintuan, flanked by two larger men, withdrawing $300 from the ATM
    at 11:45 p.m. The stolen van was also visible in the video. A bank patron who
    used the ATM around the same time told police he saw two men go up to use the
    ATM, while at least one person stayed in the van with the motor running. When
    shown a picture of the victim, the witness thought the smaller of the men was
    Pamintuan but was not sure. Shown a photo lineup, the witness chose a picture of
    Tautai Seumanu as one of the men he saw at the ATM.
    Police obtained a search warrant for the Hayward home where Tautai lived
    with defendant and his extended family. Defendant and Tautai were at a church
    function in San Francisco with their families but Iuli and Palega were present at
    the house and were detained by police. In a search of both the main house and the
    outbuilding, police found Pamintuan‘s brown Gucci watch as well as a variety of
    ammunition, including shotgun shells. Police also found several items from
    Pamintuan‘s wallet, including the receipt for the late-night ATM transaction.
    Police seized defendant‘s leather sport coat and found an Acura car key in the
    pocket; later investigation revealed it was the key to Pamintuan‘s car. Subsequent
    DNA analysis revealed the sport coat was splattered with the victim‘s blood.
    Police also found Pamintuan‘s boots and pea coat. On a coffee table in the
    5
    outbuilding, police found the box for the black Movado watch Panelo had given
    the victim the night he was killed, but it was empty. A criminalist later identified
    defendant‘s thumbprint on a box of Remington shotgun shells. At this point,
    Pamintuan‘s black Movado watch and engagement ring were still missing.
    Police detained Iuli and Palega in a patrol car while they searched the
    family home. In a conversation surreptitiously recorded, Iuli and Palega expressed
    their hope that police would not find the murder weapon and they agreed to tell
    police that Palega‘s mother had given him the Gucci watch. Police interrogated
    Iuli early that afternoon and he described the crime to police, informing them who
    was involved and the role defendant played. Police also questioned Palega, who
    initially told police the Gucci watch was a gift from his mother-in-law. Police
    then informed him they recorded his conversation with Iuli. They also falsely
    informed him the video recording from the ATM showed that Palega was the
    driver in the van. Palega then changed his story and admitted he was in the van at
    the bank, and that defendant was the one who shot and killed Pamintuan.
    Police were waiting for the Seumanu family when they returned to their
    Hayward home after church, and on their arrival arrested defendant and Tautai.
    Defendant had Pamintuan‘s engagement ring and black Movado watch, inscribed
    with the victim‘s intended wedding date, in his shirt pocket. Tautai, interviewed
    by police, initially explained the gun he was holding accidentally fired. Then he
    claimed he shot the victim because he had seen their faces. He eventually
    admitted that defendant shot the victim, and that he (Tautai) had tried to take the
    blame out of loyalty to defendant, his older brother.
    Police, still looking for the murder weapon, returned to the Seumanu family
    home a few days later with a warrant to search defendant‘s brown Dodge. They
    asked defendant‘s wife, Lefea ―Lucy‖ Masefau, if she had the keys to the car but
    she told them defendant had the only set of keys. Detective Cardes had a ―low
    6
    key,‖ ―friendly conversation‖ with her which he recorded on a microcassette
    recorder. Masefau did not mention defendant‘s alleged alibi or otherwise protest
    defendant‘s innocence. Police forced the car‘s trunk and found a sawed-off
    shotgun that was later determined to be the murder weapon.
    In his defense, defendant presented the testimony of his brother, Tautai
    Seumanu, who claimed that he was the one who killed Pamintuan. At the time of
    his testimony, Tautai had pleaded guilty to first degree murder concerning
    Pamintuan‘s killing, and had been sentenced to prison. Tautai admitted he told the
    police many different stories, including that defendant was the actual killer. He
    claimed he wore defendant‘s black leather jacket during the crime (thereby
    explaining how it came to have the victim‘s blood on it), and that he gave
    defendant the victim‘s black Movado watch and engagement ring to sell. Tautai
    also claimed he gave defendant the murder weapon, asking that he dispose of it.
    Defendant‘s wife, Lucy Masefau, testified that defendant was home with
    her the entire night of the murder. She admitted she did not tell anyone about
    defendant‘s alibi for several years, explaining that she was scared. She did not
    remember speaking to Detective Cardes after the crime and, after listening to the
    recording of their conversation, testified she did not think the woman on the
    tape—who identified herself as defendant‘s wife—was she. She admitted she was
    on felony probation for three counts of grand theft auto, and that she had never
    reported her marriage, living arrangements or defendant‘s incarceration, to social
    welfare authorities, which would have reduced her welfare payments. She
    admitted she had placed some of the money from her welfare payments in
    defendant‘s jail account.
    7
    B. Discussion
    1. Evidentiary Issues
    a. Tony Iuli’s Conversation with His Wife
    Tony Iuli, along with Jay Palega, Tautai Seumanu and defendant,
    kidnapped and robbed Nolan Pamintuan, but aside from Tautai‘s testimony, the
    evidence showed that defendant alone fired the shotgun that killed the victim. The
    prosecutor eventually offered plea deals to Iuli and Palega in exchange for their
    testimony against defendant. During Iuli‘s testimony, the prosecutor, Angela
    Backers, questioned him about a conversation he had with his wife immediately
    following the crimes. When Prosecutor Backers asked Iuli what he told his wife,
    defense counsel objected on the ground the evidence was, among other things,
    hearsay. The court overruled the objection and Iuli replied that he told his wife
    that ―your fucking brother blew some dude away.‖1 Defendant contends the trial
    court erred in overruling his objection because the question called for hearsay to
    which no exception applied. Further, he argues for the first time on appeal that the
    trial court‘s alleged evidentiary error substantially undermined the reliability of his
    trial, violating his rights under the Eighth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution. (See, e.g., People v. Martinez (2009) 
    47 Cal. 4th 399
    , 423 [―high
    court decisions state as a general proposition that the Eighth and Fourteenth
    Amendments to the United States Constitution prescribe heightened reliability for
    proceedings in capital cases‖].)
    ― ‗Hearsay evidence‘ is evidence of a statement that was made other than
    by a witness while testifying at the hearing and that is offered to prove the truth of
    the matter stated.‖ (Evid. Code, § 1200, subd. (a).) ―Hearsay is generally
    1      Iuli‘s wife, Seu, was defendant‘s cousin, but Iuli testified that she was
    treated as, and considered, a sister to defendant.
    8
    excluded because the out-of-court declarant is not under oath and cannot be cross-
    examined to test perception, memory, clarity of expression, and veracity, and
    because the jury (or other trier of fact) is unable to observe the declarant‘s
    demeanor.‖ (People v. Cudjo (1993) 
    6 Cal. 4th 585
    , 608.) To challenge a
    testifying witness‘s own prior, out-of-court statement as inadmissible hearsay is
    unusual,2 but we agree with defendant that Iuli‘s own statement to his wife
    constituted hearsay evidence, for it was an out-of-court statement that was offered
    for its truth, i.e., that Seu‘s brother—defendant—killed someone.
    Both defendant and the People discuss the applicability of various
    exceptions to the hearsay rule but we need not address them because, even were
    we to assume the trial court abused its discretion in admitting the evidence (see
    People v. Jones (2013) 
    57 Cal. 4th 899
    , 956 [―a trial court‘s decision to admit . . . a
    hearsay statement . . . will not be disturbed on appeal absent a showing of abuse of
    discretion‖]), any error was harmless under the Watson standard. (People v.
    Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal. 2d 818
    , 836; see People v. Duarte (2000) 
    24 Cal. 4th 603
    ,
    618-619 [Watson standard applies to the erroneous admission of hearsay
    evidence].) Applying that standard, we conclude that, after examining the entire
    cause, including the evidence, it is not ―reasonably probable that a result more
    favorable to the appealing party would have been reached in the absence of the
    error‖ (People v. 
    Watson, supra
    , at p. 836), because the evidence of defendant‘s
    guilt was very strong, if not overwhelming. Iuli testified that he was with
    2       ―Hearsay evidence is usually presented by someone other than the
    declarant. Typically, it consists of the testimony of a witness who heard the
    declarant make the statement . . . . [¶] Sometimes, however, the hearsay declarant
    is also a witness at the proceeding in which the out-of-court statement is
    introduced.‖ (1 Jefferson, Cal. Evidence Benchbook (Cont.Ed.Bar 4th ed. Mar.
    2014) Hearsay and Nonhearsay Evidence, § 1.9, pp. 7–8.)
    9
    defendant when they, along with Palega and Tautai, accosted the victim and
    robbed him, after which defendant shot and killed him. Iuli was thus an
    eyewitness to the crime. This evidence was corroborated by the testimony of
    Palega, also an eyewitness, and by evidence that Tautai told police that defendant
    was the shooter (although he later recanted). That Iuli told his wife the same
    information was cumulative to this eyewitness evidence and was thus not
    particularly prejudicial to defendant. Although defendant argues the admission of
    the challenged statement in Iuli‘s direct testimony, and not on redirect in an
    attempt to rehabilitate the witness‘s credibility, ―unduly magnified‖ the testimony
    such that it served as ―an effective and persuasive, if deceptive, vehicle for
    bolstering Iuli‘s credibility,‖ the claim is overstated. As Iuli‘s testimony was
    corroborated by Palega‘s testimony and evidence of Tautai‘s pretrial statements to
    police, and the jury was apprised of the circumstances and terms of Iuli‘s plea
    bargain, the jury had ample evidence with which to assess his credibility.
    Moreover, although the trier of fact did not observe Iuli when he made the
    statement to his wife, defendant remained free to cross-examine Iuli in front of the
    jury and have him recount the circumstances of the statement. In other words,
    defendant had a fair opportunity to challenge Iuli‘s ―perception, memory, clarity
    of expression, and veracity‖ (People v. 
    Cudjo, supra
    , 6 Cal.4th at p. 608) about his
    assertion that defendant ―blew some dude away.‖ Under the circumstances, it is
    not ―reasonably probable that a result more favorable to the appealing party would
    have been reached in the absence of the error.‖ (People v. 
    Watson, supra
    , at
    p. 836.)
    We reach the same conclusion with regard to defendant‘s Eighth
    Amendment claim. Although the People argue defendant forfeited this claim by
    not specifically raising it at trial, we need not resolve the forfeiture question.
    Assuming for argument the issue was preserved, because there was no prejudicial
    10
    error under state law, any error regarding Iuli‘s testimony about his statements to
    his wife did not render defendant‘s trial so fundamentally unfair as to violate his
    right to a reliable penalty judgment under the Eighth Amendment to the federal
    Constitution. (People v. Carrington (2009) 
    47 Cal. 4th 145
    , 194–195.)
    b. Iuli’s Opinion That Tautai Seumanu Intended to Take the Blame
    During the prosecutor‘s examination of Iuli, the witness described a pretrial
    encounter he had when he, Tautai and defendant were together in a holding cell.
    Iuli testified that defendant asked him and Tautai to ―take the blame off of him and
    that he would be out there taking care of us‖ by sending them money in prison.
    Iuli testified that he told defendant: ―Fuck no. You take your own beef.‖
    According to Iuli, Tautai remained silent and did not appear angry. The following
    then occurred:
    ―Q.    [Prosecutor Backers] What did Tautai do when [defendant] asked
    one of the two young guys to take the beef?
    ―MR. CIRAOLO [defense counsel]: Objection. Hearsay.
    ―THE COURT: Overruled.
    ―MS. BACKERS: Q. You can answer, sir.
    ―A.   He didn‘t do nothing.
    ―Q.   What was the look on his face?
    ―A.   Don‘t know.
    ―Q.   Did he get angry at [defendant] like you did?
    ―A.   No.
    ―Q.   Didn‘t you tell me he looked like he was going for it?
    ―A.   Yes.
    ―MR. CIRAOLO: Calls for opinion and conclusion. Ask it be stricken.
    ―THE COURT: Sustained. It may be stricken.
    11
    ―MS. BACKERS: Q. Have you ever told anybody that Tautai looked like he
    was going to take the beef for somebody?
    ―A.   Yes.
    ―Q.   What made you say that?
    ―MR. CIRAOLO: Calls ultimately for the man‘s opinion and conclusion. It
    has been asked and answered.
    ―THE COURT: No. That is asking for factors he based his conclusion on.
    Overruled.
    ―MS. BACKERS: Q. What made you say that, Mr. Iuli?
    ―A.   I think because it was his brother, his older brother. He wouldn‘t
    want to see his older brother go down.‖ (Italics added.)
    Citing the decision to overrule this last objection, defendant argues the trial
    court abused its discretion under state law, and also violated the Eighth
    Amendment, by permitting the prosecution to introduce improper opinion
    testimony from Iuli regarding Tautai‘s intention to take the blame for the crimes.
    By doing so, defendant claims, the trial court allowed the prosecution to impeach
    Tautai‘s credibility before he was able even to take the stand and because Tautai
    was a key defense witness, such advance impeachment ―had a strength far in
    excess of its actual probative force.‖ Further, defendant argues, the prejudice from
    the error was amplified by the prosecutor‘s reference to Iuli‘s testimony on this
    point in her closing argument.
    Contrary to defendant‘s argument, Iuli‘s testimony regarding his
    perceptions was not improper opinion evidence from a lay witness. Evidence
    Code section 800 provides: ―If a witness is not testifying as an expert, his
    testimony in the form of an opinion is limited to such an opinion as is permitted by
    law, including but not limited to an opinion that is: [¶] (a) Rationally based on the
    perception of the witness; and [¶] (b) Helpful to a clear understanding of his
    12
    testimony.‖ Likewise, we have explained that ―[a] lay witness may testify to an
    opinion if it is rationally based on the witness‘s perception and if it is helpful to a
    clear understanding of his testimony.‖ (People v. Farnam (2002) 
    28 Cal. 4th 107
    ,
    153.) Iuli was a percipient witness to the encounter in the holding cell and he thus
    spoke from personal knowledge gleaned from his own participation in, and
    observation of, the event in question. Moreover, after he answered in the
    affirmative when asked whether he ―ever told anybody that Tautai looked like he
    was going to take the beef‖ for defendant, Iuli could properly describe his own
    motivation for telling someone that information. As noted, ante, the admission of
    evidence is generally tested by the abuse of discretion standard, and we find the
    trial court acted within its discretion in admitting Iuli‘s description of the
    encounter in the holding cell.
    Because there was no error under state evidence law, defendant‘s federal
    constitutional claim is meritless as well. (People v. Carter (2003) 
    30 Cal. 4th 1166
    , 1196 [―Defendant‘s claims of federal constitutional error, entirely dependent
    as they are on his claim of state law error, likewise must fail.‖]; People v. Gurule
    (2002) 
    28 Cal. 4th 557
    , 655 [same].)
    c. Evidence That Defendant Put Out a Contract to Kill Iuli
    During his testimony, Tony Iuli several times mentioned, or referred to, his
    understanding that defendant had taken out a contract on his life, presumably to
    prevent him from testifying or as retaliation for his decision to assist the
    prosecution. Defendant was initially successful in preventing questioning on this
    topic when the trial court sustained his hearsay objection. He did not, however,
    object to Iuli‘s later testimony on the same subject, which referenced the alleged
    contract three different times. He now claims the admission of this ―highly
    inflammatory‖ evidence violated the hearsay rule as well as his right to due
    13
    process of law and a reliable determination of facts in a capital trial, guaranteed by
    the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. We
    address the three instances separately, and conclude no prejudicial error occurred.
    The issue of an alleged contract to have Iuli killed arose following Iuli‘s
    admission that his relationship with defendant soured after he told defendant to
    ―take [his] own beef.‖ The prosecutor then asked: ―Well, didn‘t you get a
    contract put out on you?‖ Defense counsel immediately objected, citing
    ―[h]earsay, opinion and conclusion,‖ which the trial court sustained. The court
    also sustained an immediate follow-up objection of ―no foundation.‖ The
    prosecutor pressed on and asked Iuli about an April 25, 2000, hearing at which
    both Iuli and Tautai were present in court. Iuli admitted he spoke to Tautai in
    Samoan at this hearing and told him of his intention to take an offered plea deal
    from the prosecution. Iuli advised Tautai that if the prosecution should offer him a
    similar deal, he should take it. The following colloquy then occurred:
    ―Q. [Prosecutor Backers] What else did you tell [Tautai]?
    ―A.   I told him I have some heat on me.
    ―Q.   You have some heat on you?
    ―A.   Yes.
    ―Q.   What does that mean?
    ―A.   I have a contract out on me.
    ―Q.   Did you tell him who put that out on you?
    ―A.   Yes.
    ―Q.   What did you tell him?
    ―A.   I told him his brother did.
    ―Q.   His brother Paki [i.e., defendant], right?
    ―A.   Yes.‖ (Italics added.)
    14
    Defense counsel did not object to this first reference to the alleged contract
    on Iuli‘s life, an omission defendant acknowledges. The People argue defendant
    forfeited the claim by failing to object (Evid. Code, § 353, subd. (a); People v.
    Hinton (2006) 
    37 Cal. 4th 839
    , 894), but defendant contends we should find the
    issue is properly before us because his trial attorney was constitutionally
    ineffective for failing to object to the above testimony. As we have often
    observed, whether or not to object to evidence at trial is largely a tactical question
    for counsel, and a case in which the mere failure to object would rise to such a
    level as to implicate one‘s state and federal constitutional right to the effective
    assistance of counsel would be an unusual one. (People v. Abilez (2007) 
    41 Cal. 4th 472
    , 493, fn. 3.) An attorney may well have a reasonable tactical reason
    for declining to object, and ― ‗[i]f the record on appeal sheds no light on why
    counsel acted or failed to act in the manner challenged, an appellate claim of
    ineffective assistance of counsel must be rejected unless counsel was asked for an
    explanation and failed to provide one, or there simply could be no satisfactory
    explanation.‘ ‖ (Ibid.)
    Here we discern two possible reasons why counsel may have refrained
    from objecting. First, counsel may have desired not to highlight the evidence by
    making an objection. ―[T]he decision whether to object, move to strike, or seek
    admonition regarding [undesired] testimony is highly tactical, and depends upon
    counsel‘s evaluation of the gravity of the problem and whether objection or other
    responses would serve only to highlight the undesirable testimony.‖ (People v.
    Catlin (2001) 
    26 Cal. 4th 81
    , 165, italics added.)
    Second, defense counsel may have concluded—despite the trial court‘s
    initial decision to sustain a hearsay objection— that the challenged evidence was
    not hearsay because it was admissible not for its truth but as evidence of Iuli‘s
    state of mind that was relevant to his credibility. ―Evidence is relevant if it has
    15
    any tendency in reason to prove or disprove any disputed fact or consequence,
    including evidence relevant to the credibility of a witness. (Evid. Code, § 210
    [citation.]) Thus, ‗ ―[e]vidence that a witness is afraid to testify or fears retaliation
    for testifying is relevant to the credibility of that witness and is therefore
    admissible. [Citations.] An explanation of the basis for the witness‘s fear is
    likewise relevant to [his] credibility and is well within the discretion of the trial
    court. [Citations.]‖ ‘ [Citation.] ‗Moreover, evidence of a ―third party‖ threat
    may bear on the credibility of the witness, whether or not the threat is directly
    linked to the defendant.‘ ‖ (People v. Abel (2012) 
    53 Cal. 4th 891
    , 924–925.) That
    Iuli ―was willing to testify against a former member of the group despite his fear
    of retaliation was supportive of the credibility of his testimony‖ and thus
    admissible despite the rule against hearsay evidence. (People v. Green (1980) 
    27 Cal. 3d 1
    , 20, overruled on other grounds in People v. Martinez (1999) 
    20 Cal. 4th 225
    , 239.) Where a sound legal basis exists for the admission of evidence, an
    attorney is not ineffective for failing to object to its introduction. (People v.
    Majors (1998) 
    18 Cal. 4th 385
    , 403.)
    The testimony that Iuli believed defendant had taken out a contract on his
    life was admitted not to prove the contract actually existed, but rather to bolster
    Iuli‘s credibility by showing that he believed such a contract existed and was still
    willing to testify against defendant. There being a plausible reason why counsel
    did not object, we cannot conclude on this record that counsel‘s inaction lacked a
    reasonable tactical basis. In sum, not only did defendant‘s failure to object forfeit
    the issue for appeal, but the substantive claim is meritless.
    The issue of the alleged contract on Iuli‘s life arose again when he testified
    concerning what Tautai told him at that April 25, 2000, court hearing. This time,
    defendant adequately preserved the claim by making a timely, and continuing,
    objection:
    16
    ―Q.    And what did Tautai say when you said that his brother Paki had put
    a hit on you, or put some heat on you?
    ―A.     He said —
    ―MR. CIRAOLO [defense counsel]: Hearsay. Objection.
    ―THE COURT: Overruled.
    ―MS. BACKERS [the prosecutor]: Q. You can answer, sir.
    ―A.     He said don‘t take — first he said he was going to take the blame,
    then he said: Don‘t take the deal and he‘ll try to talk to — try to talk to his
    brother.
    ―Q.     To take the heat off of you, right?
    ―A.     Yes.
    ―Q.     So you are sitting here in the courtroom and you are about to take the
    deal, right?
    ―A.     Yes.
    ―Q.     You tell Tautai that his brother has put a hit on you?
    ―A.     Yes.
    ―Q.     You basically got a snitch jacket in this case, right?
    ―A.     Yes.
    ―Q.     You were the first one to confess back in May of ‘96?
    ―A.     Yes.
    ―Q.     And then on April 25th this year, here in this courtroom, when you
    told Tautai that his brother put a hit on you, he said he knew about it, right?
    ―A.     Yes.
    ―Q.     And he was going to try to talk you out of the deal?
    ―MR. CIRAOLO: Excuse me. Continued objection as to what Tautai said
    on hearsay grounds.
    ―THE COURT: Overruled.‖ (Italics added.)
    17
    Defendant contends this passage contains two pieces of inadmissible
    hearsay. The first is that Iuli believed that defendant had taken out a contract to
    have Iuli killed. As explained, ante, this evidence was not hearsay because it was
    admissible as circumstantial evidence of Iuli‘s credibility, i.e., that he was willing
    to testify despite the perceived danger of his being killed as a snitch. The second
    piece of allegedly inadmissible evidence was that Tautai knew about the contract.
    But the significance of Tautai‘s testimony was not simply that he was aware that
    defendant had initiated a contract to have Iuli killed, but that Iuli believed Tautai
    could convince defendant to rescind the contract if Iuli would change his mind and
    refuse to assist the prosecution. Thus, Iuli testified:
    ―MS. BACKERS: Q. Tautai was trying to talk you out of taking the deal,
    right?
    ―A. [by TONY IULI] Yes.
    ―Q. And he told you that if you didn’t take the deal that he could talk to
    his brother about taking the heat off of you, right?
    ―A. Yes.
    ―Q.   What did you understand that to mean?
    ―A.   Excuse me?
    ―Q.   What did you understand that to mean, that Tautai would talk to
    [defendant] about taking the heat off, that he would lift the contract?
    ―A. Yes.‖ (Italics added.)
    Defendant contends the information embedded in this testimony—i.e., that
    defendant had taken out a contract to have Iuli killed—was inadmissible hearsay.
    We assume this claim was preserved by defendant‘s continuing hearsay objection
    ―to what Tautai said,‖ but as we have explained, the hearsay rule was inapplicable
    because the evidence of the contract was admissible not for its truth but to show
    Iuli‘s state of mind. The further point—that Tautai could convince defendant to
    18
    rescind the contract if Iuli changed his mind about testifying—was similarly
    admissible despite the hearsay rule, for this information was also relevant to Iuli‘s
    state of mind and, thus, his overall credibility: Iuli believed he could avoid being
    killed if he would decline to assist the prosecutor, but he was willing to testify
    against defendant anyway.
    The next part of Iuli‘s testimony on which defendant relies for this
    argument occurred just after the trial court overruled defendant‘s continuing
    hearsay objection to Iuli‘s testimony regarding Tautai‘s statements:
    ―Q. [Prosecutor Backers] And [Tautai] told you he was going to take the
    blame?
    ―A. [by Tony Iuli] Yes.
    ―Q.    And part of your deal is that if you requested, you would be housed
    out of state, right?
    ―A.    Yes.
    ―Q.    During that conversation on April 25th, this year, towards the end of
    the conversation, did you tell Tautai that you have been sitting here for four years
    for something his fucking dumb-ass brother did?
    ―A. Yes.‖ (Italics added.)
    Defendant relies on the highlighted portion of this testimony to argue the
    trial court abused its discretion in denying his continuing hearsay objection. This
    was evidence of an out-of-court statement made not by Tautai, but by Iuli, and was
    apparently offered for its truth (i.e., that Iuli had been in pretrial detention for a
    murder actually committed by defendant). We need not determine whether this
    statement was improperly admitted because, like the statement that Iuli told his
    wife that ―your fucking brother blew some dude away,‖ the admission of this
    hearsay statement, if error, was manifestly harmless. Ample evidence, ranging
    from Tony Iuli‘s and Jay Palega‘s eyewitness accounts of the crimes, to evidence
    19
    from Tautai Seumanu (before he recanted), as well as evidence that defendant was
    in possession of property stolen from the victim, that the victim‘s blood was on
    defendant‘s jacket, that the murder weapon was found in a car to which defendant
    had exclusive access, and that defendant‘s thumbprint was on a box of
    ammunition that fit the murder weapon, supported the case against defendant.
    Moreover, the statement evidence—assuming for argument that it was
    inadmissible hearsay—was provided by the declarant himself (Iuli) while on the
    stand, and the jury could thus fairly assess his credibility. In these circumstances,
    it is not ―reasonably probable that a result more favorable to the appealing party
    would have been reached‖ had this stray comment been excluded. (People v.
    
    Watson, supra
    , 46 Cal.2d at p. 836.) Any error was thus harmless.
    We also find that the combined effect of any evidentiary errors in admitting
    certain comments Iuli made while testifying does not require reversal under either
    state law or federal constitutional law. In light of the ample evidence of
    defendant‘s guilt, admission of the various stray comments defendant now
    challenges, even if error, together do not convince us that it was ―reasonably
    probable that a result more favorable to the appealing party would have been
    reached‖ had these comments been excluded. (People v. 
    Watson, supra
    , 46 Cal.2d
    at p. 836.) There being no prejudicial error under state law, we also find that any
    error regarding Iuli‘s testimony did not render defendant‘s trial so fundamentally
    unfair so as to violate defendant‘s right to due process and a reliable penalty
    judgment under the federal Constitution. (People v. 
    Jones, supra
    , 57 Cal.4th at
    p. 933.)3
    3      Defendant also contends the prosecutor‘s subsequent reference during the
    penalty phase to the alleged contract defendant took out to have Iuli killed
    (footnote continued on next page)
    20
    d. Admission of Gang Status List
    Prior to the parties‘ opening statements, the court and attorneys discussed
    the various exhibits. As to exhibit 46, a chart bearing gang nicknames,4 the
    prosecutor made a showing in support of admissibility, saying that after
    Pamintuan‘s murder, while the four participants were in custody, defendant ―wrote
    out, in handwriting, on a piece of paper this particular chart, which named him
    first, ‗Uso for Life‘ means ‗Brothers for Life.‘
    ―It names Paki [defendant] first, Mr. Smurf, and says America‘s Most
    Wanted Samoans. This was a badge of honor for him, a stripe for him. He did
    this after he committed the murder while he was in custody and he gave that to
    Tony [Iuli] and asked him to type it up on the computer at Juvenile Hall.
    ―It is my position that the fact he wrote this out and said his name first, and
    then said Samoan Style America‘s Most Wanted Samoans is an admission he did
    the murder, but indicates consciousness of guilt and indicates absolutely no
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    undermined the reliability of the jury‘s penalty determination. We address that
    issue, post, in part II.B.4., finding the claim was forfeited.
    4       The exhibit appeared like this:
    USO 4 LIFE
    MR. SMURF                               BIG TONE
    MAC.JAY                         RIP     TEO (I LOVE YOU 4-4)
    T. SPOON                                FAGASA
    LIL. VIC                                PETE
    LIL. JAY                                LIL. TONE
    SAMOAN STYLE
    AMERICA‘S  MOST
    WANTED SAMOAN‘S!!!
    21
    remorse.‖ Defense counsel and the trial court both disagreed, the latter saying it
    was a ―stretch‖ to characterize the document as an admission by defendant that he
    had murdered someone. The prosecutor stated she planned on using the document
    when questioning Iuli and the court deferred judgment on it, saying, ―We will
    cover it again.‖
    The prosecutor did not, in fact, utilize exhibit 46 when questioning Iuli.
    When later cross-examining Tautai Seumanu, however, she referred to the exhibit
    in an attempt to impeach the witness. Tautai testified he did not remember the
    chart and had not previously seen the list. The prosecutor noted that if a gang
    member commits a murder, he ―earn[s] [his] stripes‖ and is ―going to be number
    one on that list,‖ and then asked, ―That is the whole idea behind it, right?‖ Tautai
    answered: ―Some.‖ Tautai testified that he killed Pamintuan to earn his ―stripes,‖
    but admitted that although the murder ―[w]ouldn‘t necessarily move me to the
    top,‖ it would earn him respect in the gang. The trial court overruled defense
    objections that the questioning lacked a proper foundation (although it sustained
    some objections the questioning was argumentative or assumed facts not in
    evidence). Tautai confirmed ―uso‖ meant ―brothers for life,‖ and that the first
    person on the list (―MR. SMURF‖) referred to defendant, the third person on the
    list (―MAC.JAY) was Jay Palega, the fourth person (―TEO‖) was Iuli‘s brother,
    Tim Tao, who died in 1998, and the next entry, ―T.SPOON,‖ referred to himself,
    Tautai ―Teaspoon‖ Seumanu. Counsel objected on the basis that the prosecutor
    had failed to lay a proper foundation, and the prosecutor agreed to establish that
    the exhibit was in fact a gang status list. The prosecutor then asked the witness,
    ―Mr. Seumanu, . . . if you pulled the trigger in this murder, explain to the jury why
    you are number five on that list,‖ whereupon the trial court sustained defendant‘s
    renewed objection (based on lack of foundation) and the prosecutor moved on.
    22
    In a somewhat scattershot argument, defendant first contends the admission
    of testimony concerning the meaning of exhibit 46 was evidentiary error because
    the prosecutor failed to properly authenticate the exhibit and because it was
    hearsay. Defendant forfeited his hearsay claim because he failed to object on that
    ground. He did, however, object to the evidence on the ground that it was not
    properly authenticated, thereby preserving the issue for our review. We agree the
    prosecutor never authenticated exhibit 46: ―Authentication of a writing is required
    before it may be received in evidence.‖ (Evid. Code, § 1401, subd. (a).)
    ―Authentication of a writing means (a) the introduction of evidence sufficient to
    sustain a finding that it is the writing that the proponent of the evidence claims it is
    or (b) the establishment of such facts by any other means provided by law.‖
    (Evid. Code, § 1400.) Tautai specifically denied having seen the document
    previously and disclaimed any knowledge that defendant was its author.
    Accordingly, Tautai could not authenticate the document, and because the
    prosecutor did not otherwise introduce evidence showing the list was in fact a
    status list for the Sons of Samoa street gang, the trial court erred in permitting the
    prosecutor to question Tautai about it. (Tony Iuli would later authenticate the
    document when he testified at the penalty phase.) But defendant‘s objection was
    eventually sustained, diminishing the possible prejudice. And Tautai exhibited
    general familiarity with the nicknames in the document and with the hierarchy of
    the Sons of Samoa gang in general, information that could have been elicited
    without reference to the list. Under the circumstances, we find any error in failing
    to authenticate the list was harmless.
    Second, defendant contends the prosecutor committed misconduct by
    capitalizing on the improper evidence, ―inject[ing] herself into this case as a
    witness‖ and ―purveying hearsay,‖ and ―presenting information to the jurors that
    she could not reasonably expect to prove . . . by . . . other evidence.‖ He suggests
    23
    his federal constitutional rights were violated.5 Although defendant did not object
    on grounds of prosecutorial misconduct, we will assume for purposes of argument
    that the futility of an objection excused his failure to do so. Turning to the merits,
    however, we find no misconduct. The evidence of the gang status list was, for a
    time, admitted over defendant‘s objection for lack of foundation so the prosecutor
    did not act unethically by continuing to question Tautai about it until the court
    eventually sustained defendant‘s objection. The further claim Ms. Backers was
    ―purveying hearsay‖ cannot be sustained because the trial court never ruled the
    gang status list was hearsay. Finally, we have examined Backers‘s examination of
    Tautai and find her use of leading questions, which necessarily included stating
    facts she assumed the witness would affirm or deny, was justified because Tautai
    was an obviously hostile witness. We thus reject the claim the prosecutor‘s
    questioning of Tautai about the gang status list constituted misconduct. We
    further find no violation of defendant‘s right to confrontation, due process, and a
    reliable penalty trial under the Sixth, Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
    2. Alleged Judicial Misconduct
    During his direct examination by the prosecutor, Tautai Seumanu proved an
    evasive and difficult witness. Although he previously, and tearfully, had informed
    police that defendant was the shooter, Tautai later pleaded guilty to the charged
    crimes, claimed to be the shooter himself and corroborated defendant‘s alibi
    defense in his testimony. When questioned on the stand, however, Tautai refused
    to provide any specific information about the Sons of Samoa, the street gang to
    which he and defendant belonged. Asked who was in the gang, he replied: ―I
    5      Defendant similarly contends that reference to exhibit 46 during the
    prosecutor‘s penalty phase closing argument deleteriously affected the jury‘s
    penalty decision. We address that issue, post, in part II.B.5.
    24
    can‘t give no names‖ because ―they are not in the case.‖ The prosecutor then
    remarked: ―You are under oath to tell the truth. I know that doesn‘t mean much
    to you.‖ Defense counsel quickly interposed an objection to this gratuitous
    comment, arguing it was improperly argumentative. The trial court sustained the
    objection, saying: ―Ms. Backers, I know the temptation, but sustained.‖ (Italics
    added.) There was no further objection and the prosecutor‘s questioning of Tautai
    continued. Defendant now contends the trial court‘s fleeting comment (―I know
    the temptation‖) was judicial misconduct and demonstrated such profound and
    damaging judicial bias that we must reverse the judgment under both state law and
    the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. For
    several reasons, we disagree.
    At the threshold, we conclude defendant‘s failure to object on this ground
    forfeited the claim for appeal. As a general rule, a specific and timely objection to
    judicial misconduct is required to preserve the claim for appellate review. (People
    v. Geier (2007) 
    41 Cal. 4th 555
    , 613, overruled on other grounds in Melendez-Diaz
    v. Massachusetts (2009) 
    557 U.S. 305
    .) Although defendant argues he may be
    excused from this general rule because an objection would have been futile, the
    circumstances in no way suggest an objection and request to have the jury
    admonished would have found an unsympathetic jurist.
    Were we to reach the claim despite its manifest forfeiture, we would find it
    meritless. A trial court should of course refrain from making comments before the
    jury that might suggest it has allied itself with the prosecution. (See People v.
    Harris (2005) 
    37 Cal. 4th 310
    , 347.) For example, ―[a] trial court commits
    misconduct if it ‗persists in making discourteous and disparaging remarks to a
    defendant‘s counsel . . . and utters frequent comment from which the jury may
    plainly perceive that the testimony of the witnesses is not believed by the judge,
    and in other ways discredits the cause of the defense . . . .‘ ‖ (People v. Fudge
    25
    (1994) 
    7 Cal. 4th 1075
    , 1107.) The trial court‘s comment defendant challenges
    does not contravene this rule. Not only was the comment solitary and fleeting, it
    was also ambiguous in that it may reasonably have been understood by the jury
    not as an expression of where the court‘s sympathies secretly lay, but as merely a
    polite reminder to the prosecutor, upon sustaining the defense objection, to
    maintain her composure in the face of a recalcitrant and combative witness.
    Finally, even if the issue were properly preserved and the remark construed
    as misconduct, the trial court‘s single, brief comment could not possibly have been
    prejudicial. ― ‗ ―[O]ur role . . . is not to determine whether the trial judge‘s
    conduct left something to be desired, or even whether some comments would have
    been better left unsaid. Rather, we must determine whether the judge‘s behavior
    was so prejudicial that it denied [the defendant] a fair, as opposed to a perfect,
    trial.‖ ‘ ‖ (People v. 
    Abel, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th at p. 914.) On this subject it is worth
    noting that the jury was instructed with CALJIC No. 17.30, which instructs the
    jury to disregard any comment by the trial court that might suggest it disbelieved a
    particular witness.6 Under the circumstances, the trial court‘s single, fleeting and
    ambiguous interjection could not have prejudiced defendant in any way.
    3. Alleged Prosecutorial Misconduct: Vouching
    a. Introduction
    As noted above, defendant was charged jointly with codefendants Jay
    Palega, Tony Iuli, and Tautai Seumanu with the murder, aggravated kidnapping,
    and robbery of Nolan Pamintuan. As described in more detail below, the
    6      Thus, the jury was instructed: ―I have not intended by anything I have said
    or done, or by any questions that I may have asked, or by any ruling I may have
    made, to intimate or suggest what you should find to be the facts, or that I believe
    or disbelieve any witness. [¶] If anything I have done or said has seemed to so
    indicate, you will disregard it and form your own conclusion.‖
    26
    prosecutor offered Palega and Iuli a plea deal: in exchange for their testimony
    against defendant, they would be allowed to plead guilty to reduced charges. Both
    Palega and Iuli took the deal and testified against defendant. In his opening
    argument, defense counsel mentioned the plea deal, noted the prosecutor offered
    the deal after defendant withdrew his speedy trial waiver (time waiver), and
    suggested the jury could infer the prosecutor did not believe she had a strong
    enough case to convict defendant without Palega‘s and Iuli‘s testimony. The
    parties thereafter agreed to a set of stipulated statements (stipulations) informing
    the jury the prosecutor‘s decision to offer the plea deals was unrelated to
    defendant‘s decision to hasten his trial, and that she independently decided that
    Palega and Iuli bore reduced moral culpability for the crimes.
    Defendant now contends the evidence of the prosecutor‘s subjective
    motivation for offering the plea deals was inadmissible, and her closing argument
    referencing that evidence was misconduct because she thereby improperly
    vouched for the credibility of her witnesses. As we explain, defendant forfeited
    these arguments by failing to object, and the claims are meritless in any event.
    b. Background
    At the time of the crimes, Tony Iuli was 16 years old. By that time he had
    had multiple contacts with the justice system and knew, when arrested, he would
    not be treated as a juvenile. He also knew he was facing life in prison without
    possibility of parole for the crimes against Pamintuan. Jay Palega was 18 years
    old when Pamintuan was killed and learned while in pretrial detention that the
    prosecution did not intend to pursue the death penalty against him.
    The prosecution filed the information in this case on June 19, 1997.
    Deputy District Attorney Angela Backers was assigned to prosecute the case on or
    around December 28, 1997. Attorney Michael Berger represented Iuli and
    27
    approached Backers at least three times in 1999, attempting to obtain a plea
    bargain for his client. He was at that time unsuccessful.
    Defendant withdrew his time waiver on March 3, 2000, requiring that trial
    begin no later than May 2, 2000. Around this time the prosecution offered, and
    Iuli rejected, two plea bargains. The first deal required that he plead guilty to first
    degree murder, accept a sentence of 25 years to life in prison, and testify against
    defendant at the guilt phase of trial. The second deal required that he plead guilty
    to second degree murder, accept a sentence of 15 years to life in prison, and testify
    against defendant at both the guilt and penalty phases of trial. Iuli rejected both of
    these offers because he believed prisoners with life terms would never be paroled
    by prison authorities. Palega, who was represented by Attorney William Muraoka,
    subsequently rejected the same offers for the same reason.
    The prosecutor then offered a different deal, which Iuli accepted on April
    26, 2000. Pursuant to this new deal, Iuli agreed to plead guilty to voluntary
    manslaughter, simple kidnapping, and attempted robbery, and to admit a firearm
    use enhancement, in return for a determinate prison sentence of 16 years, eight
    months. The plea deal also required Iuli to testify truthfully against defendant at
    both the guilt and penalty phases of the trial. Iuli wrote a letter to Palega urging
    him to accept the same deal, which Palega did on May 15, 2000. Both men
    eventually testified against defendant and identified him as the one who shot
    Pamintuan.
    Defendant was represented at trial by Attorneys Michael Ciraolo and
    Deborah Levy. In Ciraolo‘s opening statement, he referred to the plea deals Iuli
    and Palega received: ―And one thing I want you to remember is a particular day,
    and that is March 3d of this year. Because what occurred on that day is my client
    withdrew his time waiver, which meant he had to commence this trial within 60
    28
    days. And after that date, the prosecution realized that they cannot make the case
    against my client, that they had to get him by testimony.
    ―The prosecution‘s case revolves around two people, Tony Iuli and Jay
    Palega. These men were former co-defendants of the defendant. They were
    charged with the same charges that my client was charged with, only the
    prosecution was not seeking the death penalty. The prosecution was only seeking,
    and has only sought, the death penalty against my client. Those two men were
    faced with prison, with life without possibility of parole. They were to die in
    prison.
    ―The prosecution approached them, through their counsel, and offered
    them, what we say in the criminal vernacular, deals. And the deal was that if they
    testify against my client on the guilt phase of the trial, they would receive first-
    degree murder convictions. They had to plead to first degree, which meant 25
    years to life. If they testified against my client at the penalty phase of the trial,
    they would get a second degree plea bargain, which was 15 years to life.
    ―Both those men refused that offer.
    ―The prosecution was compelled to renegotiate her position and ultimately
    offer both these men a fixed term of a maximum of 17 years in prison, 16 years,
    eight months. So no matter what happened, they would get no more than 17 years
    for their testimony.
    ―When these men testify—they had given statements previously to the
    police. The prosecution worked with them with considerable time and effort to get
    their statements here in court. When they testify, they are testifying under
    complete distrust by the prosecution because they have not been sentenced yet.‖
    (Italics added.)
    The prosecutor did not object to this argument. But later, she expressed
    concern that defense counsel had misled the jury in two ways: (1) by suggesting
    29
    she believed she had a weak case; and (2) by asserting that when she realized that
    defendant‘s withdrawal of his time waiver would require her to go to trial, she
    approached counsel for Iuli and Palega and offered them a deal. Contrary to these
    assertions, she explained, ―The truth of the matter is that I never approached Mr.
    Berger or Mr. Iuli, his client, with a deal until the defense had approached me
    asking for a deal.
    ―Mr. Berger, for over one year, was asking me for a deal that would include
    Tony [Iuli] testifying against the remaining three codefendants and identifying the
    shooter in the murder. [¶] . . . [¶] And the offer of proof is that after the [section]
    1538 [suppression hearing] in this case, . . . Mr. Berger approached me, no less
    than three times, probably more, whenever he would see me, basically he would
    say: Have you put together an offer for my client, Mr. Iuli?‖
    Prosecutor Backers explained that she had been busy trying an unrelated
    capital case when Mr. Berger approached her about a deal and she had not had the
    time to consider a plea deal for Iuli until after that trial. But after defense
    counsel‘s opening statement, she became concerned the jury had been misled
    about the pertinent events. Accordingly, she proposed a stipulation, explaining:
    ―So the impression left with the jury that I got desperate because I thought I
    couldn‘t prove my case against this defendant, and approached them for deals, is
    absolutely not true.
    ―And I am trying to correct that misimpression by a series of stipulations
    that I have offered that indicate that I had been working on the case for two years
    providing discovery, and by the time they pulled [their] time [waiver] on March
    3d, I had, during the same week, provided them with 1,174 pages of penalty phase
    discovery, which obviously indicated that I had already worked up a penalty
    phase, because I was giving them almost 1,200 pages in penalty phase discovery.
    30
    ―And I would anticipate calling Mr. Berger, and Mr. Muraoka, and having
    them testify—well, as far as Mr. Berger is concerned, that Mr. Berger is the one
    who approached me, not me approaching him.
    ―And the question I would propose to ask Mr. Iuli when he is on the stand
    is: You and your lawyer had an agreement that you would take a deal from the
    prosecution that included you testifying against the others, and you had that
    agreement that you would take that deal for over a year before you actually pled
    guilty. And that is the substance of the question I would ask Mr. Iuli.
    ―And there is a series of questions I would ask Mr. Berger, basically that
    would prove the offer of proof that I just made; that he came to me and was asking
    for a deal for quite a long period of time before I made him an offer.‖ (Italics
    added.)
    Defense Counsel Ciraolo protested, arguing his opening statement was ―a
    fair inference on what we believe the evidence would show,‖ and ―[w]hat is
    critical here is that an offer was not made until after we withdrew the time waiver.
    And the offer that was made by Ms. Backers was rejected. They had—there had
    to be a further offer. The subsequent offer was accepted.
    ―Whether Ms. Backers had a case or not, what her rationale was or was not
    for making an offer, I believe is fair comment in opening statement and outline
    and final argument.
    ―If she wants to put her credibility on the line, the evaluation of the case,
    she is doing so here. And I don‘t think that is appropriate.‖
    The court found Mr. Ciraolo‘s argument was permissible, but that the
    prosecutor should also be permitted to rebut the argument with evidence. The
    court agreed with defense counsel, however, that the prosecutor‘s proposed
    stipulation was ―fairly inartful, both the way the stipulation is presented and also
    the way—the question Ms. Backers wants to pose [to Berger, Iuli‘s attorney]. It is
    31
    probably not the best way to approach it.‖ The court then deferred judgment on
    the matter until a later time, saying: ―I think there are other ways to put the
    information in front of the jury without opening an entire Pandora‘s box. And
    what I foresee is the focus of this case being transferred, either intentionally or
    unintentionally, from the facts of the ultimate issue to prosecutorial conduct and
    credibility. And I don‘t think that serves the interest of justice here.
    ―So let me see if I can come up with something else . . . and then readdress
    this [later].‖
    c. The Berger and Muraoka Stipulations
    The trial court thereafter proposed a stipulation that stated: ―The
    information in this case was filed in the Superior Court of Alameda County on
    June 19th of 1997. At that time, California law provided that the defendant had a
    statutory right to demand a trial on the charges contained in the information within
    60 days of June 19th, 1997, or on or before August 18th of 1997.
    ―The defendant entered a general time waiver waiving his right to a trial
    within 60 days of June 19th, 1997.
    ―The defendant withdrew that general time waiver on March 3d of the year
    2000. This required that the trial in this case commence on or before May 2d of
    the year 2000.
    ―Deputy District Attorney Angela Backers was first assigned this case on or
    about December 28th of 1997.
    ―Mr. Michael Ciraolo and Ms. Deborah Levy became attorneys of record
    for the defendant on or about December 11th of 1998.
    ―There has been ongoing discovery and the providing of information on the
    guilt and possible penalty phases of this case by Ms. Backers to Mr. Ciraolo and
    Ms. Levy since December 11th of 1998.
    32
    ―Mr. Michael Berger, who is the attorney sitting over there, has represented
    Mr. Tony Iuli in this matter from on or about May 27th of 1996.
    ―During the year 1999, Mr. Berger approached Ms. Backers on at least
    three occasions regarding a possible plea agreement which would involve Mr. Iuli
    being allowed to plead to a lesser offense in consideration for Mr. Iuli providing
    testimony in this trial.
    ―Mr. Iuli entered such a plea agreement on April 26th of the year 2000.‖
    Defendant‘s attorney, Ciraolo, expressly agreed to this stipulation, which
    was read to the jury.
    Later, the trial court proposed two additional stipulations covering the
    circumstances of Palega‘s plea. The first one provided: ―On May 5th of the year
    2000, during an interview with Ms. Backers, defendant Tony Iuli wrote a letter to
    defendant Jay Palega. The letter was reviewed by Ms. Backers and Mr. Iuli‘s
    attorney, Mr. Michael Berger. Mr. Berger placed a phone call to Mr. Muraoka to
    inform him about the letter. Mr. Muraoka came to the courtroom to pick up the
    letter. At that time, Ms. Backers informed Mr. Muraoka that the same plea
    agreement offered and accepted by Mr. Iuli was now being offered to Mr. Palega.
    Mr. Palega accepted the offer and entered into the plea agreement by pleading
    guilty on May 15th of the year 2000.‖
    The second Muraoka stipulation provided: ―If called to testify, Mr.
    William Muraoka, an assistant public defender in Alameda County, would testify
    that on or about May 15th of the year 2000 he had a conversation with Ms.
    Backers regarding the plea agreement entered into by his client. Ms. Backers
    indicated to Mr. Muraoka that based on her evaluation of the evidence as the
    deputy district attorney assigned to this case, that while she believed all four
    defendants were legally guilty of the murder, her review and evaluation of the
    evidence led her to believe it was appropriate for her to exercise her discretion as
    33
    the prosecutor of the case, to enter into the plea agreements which have been
    stated on the record.‖
    Defendant‘s attorney expressly agreed to both Muraoka stipulations, which
    were read to the jury.
    d. Questioning and Closing Argument
    Iuli and Palega were both questioned about the circumstances of their plea
    bargains on direct and cross-examination. In her closing argument, the prosecutor
    addressed the deals she made with them in exchange for their testimony, saying:
    ―[T]here are some major differences between the men in that van.
    ―And the differences are this: the two men in the front seat of that van [i.e.,
    Iuli and Palega] wanted to let [Pamintuan] go. They wanted to let him live. They
    didn‘t believe [defendant] should shoot him. They even told [him] not to shoot
    him. . . .
    ―If somebody gives up their stuff, you let them go. But [defendant] broke
    their rule, too. Instead of letting [Pamintuan] go, like they told him to, like they
    thought they should, he blew [the victim‘s] chest apart.
    ―There is a moral difference, not a legal difference, but a moral difference
    between the two in the front seat and the two in the backseat. And that is why
    there were different offers made. And that is the only reason why.‖ (Italics
    added.)
    Further: ―So the offers that were made, which you now have heard so
    much about, and you heard the actual conditions of the offer read to the witnesses
    while they were on the stand, is that those two men in the front seat who wanted to
    let [the victim] go, let him live, got 16 years, eight months.
    ―And clearly, after seeing Tautai testify, I think you can see why there is
    such a difference between the two in the front seat and the two in the backseat. I
    34
    am sure you can see that that discretion was exercised with a proper amount of
    integrity. Because once you met Tautai, and you saw his lack of moral fiber, I am
    sure that you could see that there was a big difference between the two in the
    backseat and the two in the front seat.
    ―What you were told is that the reason those offers were lowered from a life
    top to a determinate term was because after [defendant] pulled [his] time [waiver]
    on March 3d, I couldn‘t prove my case. That is what you were told. I want you to
    think about the evidence I have in this case and that you now know is true.‖
    (Italics added.) The prosecutor then listed all the evidence of guilt, aside from
    Iuli‘s and Palega‘s testimony. She then continued: ―You know how compelling
    and how strong the evidence is in this case. So now you know the truth about why
    those offers were made to Tony and Jay.‖ Defendant did not object to this
    argument.
    e. Defendant Forfeited His Claims
    Defendant mounts a two-pronged attack on the evidence of Prosecutor
    Backers‘s subjective motivation for offering plea deals to Iuli and Palega. First,
    he contends the evidence was inadmissible because it was irrelevant and
    immaterial. As we have already explained, challenges to the admission of
    evidence must be preserved for appellate review with a timely and specific
    objection at trial. (Evid. Code, § 353, subd. (a); People v. 
    Hinton, supra
    , 37
    Cal.4th at p. 894.) Here, defendant not only failed to object but his counsel
    stipulated to the Berger and Muraoka stipulations. Under the circumstances, he
    may not now be heard to complain, because ―when a party enters into a voluntary
    stipulation, he generally is precluded from taking an appeal claiming defects in the
    stipulation.‖ (People v. 
    Gurule, supra
    , 28 Cal.4th at p. 623; cf. People v. Duff
    35
    (2014) 
    58 Cal. 4th 527
    , 540 [―a stipulation to the excusal of jurors forfeits any
    subsequent objection to their omission from the jury pool‖].)
    Second, defendant contends the prosecutor committed misconduct by
    improperly vouching for the truthfulness of her witnesses, Tony Iuli and Jay
    Palega, citing three separate incidents: Her direct examination of Iuli, the
    admission of the Muraoka stipulation,7 and her closing argument. None of these
    claims was properly preserved for our review. It is well settled that making a
    timely and specific objection at trial, and requesting the jury be admonished (if
    jury is not waived), is a necessary prerequisite to preserve a claim of prosecutorial
    misconduct for appeal. (People v. Pearson (2013) 
    56 Cal. 4th 393
    , 426; People v.
    Cole (2004) 
    33 Cal. 4th 1158
    , 1201.) ―The primary purpose of the requirement
    that a defendant object at trial to argument constituting prosecutorial misconduct is
    to give the trial court an opportunity, through admonition of the jury, to correct
    any error and mitigate any prejudice.‖ (People v. Williams (1997) 
    16 Cal. 4th 153
    ,
    254.)
    Defendant appears to acknowledge that he failed to object but contends any
    objection would have been futile. ―A defendant will be excused from the
    necessity of either a timely objection and/or a request for admonition if either
    would be futile. [Citations.] In addition, failure to request the jury be admonished
    does not forfeit the issue for appeal if ‗ ―an admonition would not have cured the
    harm caused by the misconduct.‖ ‘ [Citation.] Finally, the absence of a request
    for a curative admonition does not forfeit the issue for appeal if ‗the court
    7       The nature of defendant‘s complaint regarding the Muraoka stipulation is
    unclear. To the extent he complains the stipulation should not have been admitted,
    he forfeited that claim when his trial attorney agreed to the stipulation. To the
    extent defendant means to attack the prosecutor‘s closing argument, he forfeited
    that claim as well by failing to object on that ground.
    36
    immediately overrules an objection to alleged prosecutorial misconduct [and as a
    consequence] the defendant has no opportunity to make such a request.‘ ‖ (People
    v. Hill (1998) 
    17 Cal. 4th 800
    , 820.)
    To the extent the prosecutor‘s questioning of Iuli and her closing argument
    simply relied on information contained in the stipulations, we agree an objection
    would have been futile, for by counsel agreeing to the stipulations, they became
    fair game for questioning and argument. To the extent the prosecutor‘s arguments
    went farther than merely relying on the stipulations, such as when she argued there
    was a ―moral difference‖ between Iuli and Palega, on the one hand, and defendant
    and Tautai, on the other hand, or when she opined that she exercised the ―proper
    amount of integrity,‖ a timely objection would not have been futile, for it would
    have provided the trial court an opportunity to prevent the prosecutor from
    injecting her subjective views into the case. Under the circumstances, we find
    defendant‘s claim of prosecutorial misconduct regarding these latter claims was
    forfeited.
    f. The Merits
    Were we to overlook defendant‘s failure to preserve his misconduct claim
    and address its merits, we would find the prosecutor did not engage in ―deceptive
    or reprehensible methods to attempt to persuade either the trial court or the jury.‖
    (People v. Morales (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 34
    , 44.) As a general matter,
    ―[i]mpermissible ‗vouching‘ may occur where the prosecutor places the prestige of
    the government behind a witness through personal assurances of the witness‘s
    veracity or suggests that information not presented to the jury supports the
    witness‘s testimony.‖ (People v. Fierro (1991) 
    1 Cal. 4th 173
    , 211.) Similarly,
    evidence of a prosecutor‘s subjective motivations when prosecuting a case is not
    37
    relevant,8 for ―[i]t is misconduct for prosecutors to bolster their case ‗by invoking
    their personal prestige, reputation, or depth of experience, or the prestige or
    reputation of their office, in support of it.‘ [Citation.] Similarly, it is misconduct
    ‗to suggest that evidence available to the government, but not before the jury,
    corroborates the testimony of a witness.‘ [Citation.] The vice of such remarks is
    that they ‗may be understood by jurors to permit them to avoid independently
    assessing witness credibility and to rely on the government‘s view of the
    evidence.‘ [Citation.]‖ (People v. Bonilla (2007) 
    41 Cal. 4th 313
    , 336.)
    The prosecutor‘s questioning of Iuli and Palega did not violate these rules.
    The credibility of these witnesses was, of course, of vital importance and the
    prosecutor appropriately touched on the circumstances of their plea bargains
    during her questioning of them on direct examination. (People v. 
    Bonilla, supra
    ,
    41 Cal.4th at p. 337.) We find nothing in the exchanges defendant identifies
    between the prosecutor and the witnesses to suggest the prosecutor vouched for
    the truthfulness of either Iuli or Palega. Although defendant also points to
    passages in Ciraolo‘s cross-examination of Iuli, it is unclear how defense counsel’s
    questioning is relevant to whether the prosecutor improperly vouched for Iuli‘s
    credibility. On this record, then, we find the prosecutor did not, in her questioning
    of either Iuli or Palega, improperly vouch for their credibility.
    8      Defendant quotes from People v. Cain (1995) 
    10 Cal. 4th 1
    (disapproved on
    another ground in People v. Moon (2005) 
    37 Cal. 4th 1
    , 17), but the reference is
    inapt. There, we stated: ―The prosecutor‘s opinion about the various
    coparticipants‘ relative culpability is not relevant to any issue at trial.‖ (Cain, at
    p. 64.) But in Cain, a case in which the jury was informed the defendant‘s
    accomplice had received a lesser sentence, we merely held that the trial court did
    not abuse its discretion in excluding evidence at the penalty phase that the
    prosecution had initially offered the accomplice an even shorter sentence, but later
    withdrew the offer.
    38
    We turn finally to whether the prosecutor improperly vouched for Iuli and
    Palega during her closing argument. The rules are well settled: A criminal
    prosecutor has much latitude when making a closing argument. Her argument
    may be strongly worded and vigorous so long as it fairly comments on the
    evidence admitted at trial or asks the jury to draw reasonable inferences and
    deductions from that evidence. (People v. Ward (2005) 
    36 Cal. 4th 186
    , 215.)
    ― ‗[S]o long as a prosecutor‘s assurances regarding the apparent honesty or
    reliability of prosecution witnesses are based on the ―facts of [the] record and the
    inferences reasonably drawn therefrom, rather than any purported personal
    knowledge or belief,‖ her comments cannot be characterized as improper
    vouching.‘ ‖ (People v. 
    Bonilla, supra
    , 41 Cal.4th at p. 337.)
    Both defendant and the People quote large portions of the prosecutor‘s
    closing argument in which she refers to the information contained in the Berger
    and Muraoka stipulations. We have examined the prosecutor‘s argument and
    conclude her comments were permissible because her ― ‗assurances regarding the
    apparent honesty or reliability of prosecution witnesses [were] based on the ―facts
    of [the] record and the inferences reasonably drawn therefrom, rather than any
    purported personal knowledge or belief.‖ ‘ ‖ (People v. 
    Ward, supra
    , 36 Cal.4th at
    p. 215.) To be sure, at one point the prosecutor refers to her decision to offer plea
    deals to Iuli and Palega and tells the jury ―I am sure you can see that that
    discretion was exercised with a proper amount of integrity,‖ but even this
    argument was based on her express assessment of the evidence showing a
    significant difference between defendant and Tautai (whom she referred to as the
    men in the backseat of the van) and Iuli and Palega (who were in the front of the
    van and urged defendant not to shoot Pamintuan). After listing the evidence of
    defendant‘s guilt aside from Iuli‘s and Palega‘s testimony, she finished the
    thought: ―You know how compelling and how strong the evidence is in this case.
    39
    So now you know the truth about why those offers were made to [Iuli and
    Palega].‖ To the extent defendant complains the prosecutor obliquely referred to
    her personal motivation in offering the deals, no misconduct occurred because the
    trial court had previously ruled such evidence was admissible.
    Defendant urges us to find improper vouching despite the prosecutor‘s
    reliance on the evidence presented to the jury, arguing that even under such
    circumstances, her argument may be considered impermissible vouching if she
    placed the prestige of the government behind the testimony of the two witnesses.
    We find no such improper vouching here. Ms. Backers never suggested she had
    other evidence, unpresented to the jury, to support Iuli‘s and Palega‘s credibility
    (see People v. Turner (2004) 
    34 Cal. 4th 406
    , 433 [prosecutor improperly vouched
    for the credibility of expert witness by referring to the prosecutor‘s personal
    knowledge of the witness and his prior use of the witness]), or that she personally
    believed them independent of the evidence (see People v. Guzman (1988) 
    45 Cal. 3d 915
    , 941, overruled on another point in Price v. Superior Court (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 1046
    , 1069, fn. 13 [having district attorney testify why he offered witness
    immunity ―may well raise‖ a meritorious vouching claim]). Instead, her argument
    referred specifically to evidence and inferences drawn from that evidence.
    We also reject defendant‘s claim that counsel was ineffective for failing to
    object to the prosecutor‘s closing argument. Not only do we find her argument
    permissible, we also observe the record suggests Mr. Ciraolo made a deliberate
    tactical decision to enter into the Berger and Muraoka stipulations. Once those
    matters were before the jury, the prosecutor could fairly rely on them in closing
    argument, for prosecutors are given wide latitude during argument and may urge
    the jury to draw any reasonable inference from the evidence. (See People v. 
    Hill, supra
    , 17 Cal.4th at p. 819.) By declining to object, we assume Ciraolo fairly
    determined that the prosecutor‘s argument was permissible and not subject to
    40
    objection.
    Finally, we reject defendant‘s federal constitutional claims as both forfeited
    for lack of an objection, and meritless as a substantive matter. ― ‗A prosecutor‘s
    conduct violates the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution when it
    infects the trial with such unfairness as to make the conviction a denial of due
    process. Conduct by a prosecutor that does not render a criminal trial
    fundamentally unfair is prosecutorial misconduct under state law only if it
    involves the use of deceptive or reprehensible methods to attempt to persuade
    either the trial court or the jury.‘ ‖ (People v. Gonzales and Soliz (2011) 
    52 Cal. 4th 254
    , 305.) Defendant made no objections expressly or even impliedly
    referring to the federal Constitution and thus forfeited the issue. Were we to
    address these claims despite their forfeiture, we would find that (1) because there
    was no improper vouching under state law, defendant‘s due process claim is also
    meritless; (2) because the prosecutor‘s closing argument was based on the
    evidence admitted at trial, there was no denial of defendant‘s confrontation or
    cross-examination rights under the Sixth Amendment (see People v. Harris (1989)
    
    47 Cal. 3d 1047
    , 1083–1084); and (3) because there was no improper vouching
    under state law, defendant‘s trial was not rendered insufficiently reliable under the
    heightened standards demanded by the Eighth Amendment for capital cases
    (People v. 
    Cudjo, supra
    , 6 Cal.4th at p. 623; see Beck v. Alabama (1980) 
    447 U.S. 625
    , 638).9
    9     We address defendant‘s further claim the prosecutor‘s alleged improper
    vouching infected the penalty phase of trial, post, in part II.B.1.
    41
    4. Other Alleged Prosecutorial Misconduct
    a. Allegedly Impugning Defendant’s Postarrest Silence
    Although defendant did not testify, he presented an alibi defense through
    both his wife, Lucy Masefau, who testified defendant was with her on the night of
    the crimes, and Tautai Seumanu, who testified that he was the primary participant
    in the crimes and that defendant was not in the stolen van with him when he, along
    with Iuli and Palega, robbed and killed Pamintuan. During closing argument, the
    prosecutor referred to defendant‘s proffered alibi defense and argued it was not
    worthy of belief because the circumstances suggested it had been recently
    manufactured. Thus, Ms. Backers argued:
    ―Remember the stipulations you got about the fact that when this
    information was filed against the defendant in June of 1997 that he legally had a
    right to a trial within 60 days?
    ―In June of 1997, if you are sitting here and you are innocent and you have
    an airtight alibi, you can have your trial in 60 days.
    ―But he didn‘t. He waived time. He waived time. And that is proven by
    stipulation in this case.
    ―Real alibi witnesses do not sit on their alibi and keep it secret for four-and-
    a-half years while their allegedly innocent husbands are rotting in jail.‖ Defendant
    did not object to these comments.
    In summing up, the prosecutor returned to this subject: ―Ask yourself if
    [defendant] really had an airtight alibi. If he really wasn‘t there, then how come
    his three accomplices mention his name and bring it up and put him there right
    when they get arrested?
    ―Why would they do that?
    ―Why wouldn‘t they say: No, my brother wasn‘t with us, he was home
    with his wife.
    42
    ―Because he was with them, that is why. That is how a real alibi works.
    They would say: Oh, the fourth guy wasn‘t our brother, he was home.
    ―They tell it right then, the police go check it out, the alibi is true,
    [defendant] doesn‘t get charged. That is how alibis work. They are given up right
    at the time, not four and a half years later.‖ Again there was no objection.
    Defendant contends such argument constituted improper comment on his
    right to remain silent in violation of his constitutional rights under the United
    States Constitution. (Doyle v. Ohio (1976) 
    426 U.S. 610
    ; see People v. Thomas
    (2012) 
    54 Cal. 4th 908
    , 936.) A question of forfeiture is immediately apparent, for
    defendant did not object to the prosecutor‘s argument on Doyle error grounds.
    (People v. Collins (2010) 
    49 Cal. 4th 175
    , 202 [an objection is required to preserve
    Doyle error for appellate review].) Defendant acknowledges this omission but
    contends ―the unusual circumstances of this case would render the application of
    the forfeiture rule itself fundamentally unfair.‖ We are not convinced. The
    prosecutor‘s line of argument connecting defendant‘s willingness to delay the
    commencement of his trial to the credibility of his alibi witnesses (who came
    forward relatively late in the process) was not, as defendant claims, ―sudden and
    unforeseen,‖ and defendant‘s failure to object was not excusable on that ground.
    Nor are we convinced by defendant‘s argument that our adherence to routine state
    procedural law requiring a specific and timely objection to preserve Doyle error
    for appeal (Evid. Code, § 353; People v. 
    Collins, supra
    , 49 Cal.4th at p. 202)
    ―would itself constitute a violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment [by] confer[ring] on one party the power to manipulate mere
    procedure for its own undue and unfair advantage.‖ Defendant could have
    avoided the alleged due process violation by the simple expedient of making a
    timely and specific objection, coupled with a request the jury be admonished.
    43
    Nor do we accept defendant‘s further argument that he may be excused for
    his failure to object because an objection would have been ―useless.‖ Although
    the failure to object to prosecutorial misconduct may be excused on the ground of
    futility (People v. 
    Collins, supra
    , 49 Cal.4th at pp. 202–203 [discussing the futility
    exception in the context of Doyle error]), nothing on this record suggests such
    futility.
    Were we to overlook this procedural obstacle and find the issue properly
    before us, we would reject it on the merits. Assuming for purposes of argument
    the rule in Doyle v. 
    Ohio, supra
    , 
    426 U.S. 610
    , applies to a prosecutor‘s closing
    argument,10 we would find no error even had defendant properly preserved the
    claim for our review. The gist of the prosecutor‘s argument was aimed not at
    defendant‘s silence, but that of his primary alibi witness, Lucy Masefau. Thus,
    when the prosecutor argued that “[r]eal alibi witnesses do not sit on their alibi and
    keep it secret for four and a half years while their allegedly innocent husbands are
    rotting in jail‖ (italics added), she was plainly arguing that Lucy Masefau was not
    a believable alibi witness. Accordingly, the prosecutor‘s argument was not
    intended to have the jury draw negative inferences so much from defendant’s
    silence as from Lucy’s silence. Mere witnesses, of course, have no constitutional
    right to remain silent. We thus conclude that, even had defendant preserved the
    issue, his Doyle error claim is meritless.
    10      The People contend the rule in Doyle v. 
    Ohio, supra
    , 
    426 U.S. 610
    , applies
    to the impeachment of a testifying witness only, and is inapplicable to a
    prosecutor‘s closing argument. Because we conclude the prosecutor‘s argument in
    this case did not constitute Doyle error because the argument was addressed to
    Masefau‘s silence, not defendant‘s, we have no occasion to resolve the question
    regarding the proper scope of the rule in Doyle.
    44
    b. Allegedly Impugning Defense Counsel’s Integrity
    During the presentation of the People‘s case-in-chief, a dispute arose during
    the examination of Dr. Clifford Tschetter, the autopsy surgeon, who testified he
    found both shotgun pellets and wadding from the shotgun shell in the victim‘s
    body. During cross-examination, defense counsel had the witness admit his report
    contained a discrepancy: the written autopsy report made no mention of the
    shotgun shell wadding. Moreover, the witness acknowledged the wadding he
    found in the victim‘s body was not visible in one of the X-rays taken of the
    victim‘s body. On redirect, Dr. Tschetter identified a photo showing the wadding,
    soaked in blood, on a table, presumably in the autopsy room. Detective Cardes
    later corroborated Dr. Tschetter‘s testimony, reporting that he recalled the doctor
    removing the wadding from the victim‘s body, at which time Cardes photographed
    it.
    The prosecutor touched on this subject briefly in her closing argument:
    ―You met Detective Cardes. And he had different things to say about this case.
    The things that are important for this conversation we are having right now is that
    he attended this autopsy. And while he was at the autopsy, he personally saw and
    photographed Dr. Tschetter removing the pellets and wadding from Nolan‘s chest.
    ―There has been a lot said about that wadding in this case. And Mr. Ciraolo
    asked Dr. Tschetter: Well, you didn‘t dictate into your autopsy report, so how do
    you know it actually came out of Nolan‘s chest?
    ―And Dr. Tschetter told you: Because I took it out. I put it in this petri
    dish. I labeled it: Pellets and wadding from Nolan‘s right chest. Then it was
    inside this envelope, which I also signed, which said: Pellets and wadding from
    Nolan‘s right chest.
    ―And now we know there is a photograph of it lying on a table in the
    coroner‘s office covered in blood.
    45
    ―And you might ask yourself: Why is all this hullabaloo being made about
    this wadding?
    ―I will tell you why.
    ―That wadding was imbedded in Nolan‘s chest. And that means this
    shooting was at close range.
    ―Well, why does Mr. Ciraolo care if the shooting was at close range if
    Tautai is the shooter?
    ―Why does he care?
    ―Because he knows you are not going to believe that Tautai is the shooter.
    He knows Paki [defendant] is the shooter. And he is hedging his bets by making
    all this conversation about this wadding because he knows that you know Paki is
    the shooter.‖ (Italics added.) There was no objection.
    Later, during rebuttal argument, the prosecutor briefly returned to the
    subject: ―There are several shams that have been put forward to you in the hopes
    that you might believe one of them. And these are those:
    ―Number one, that the wadding didn‘t really come from Nolan‘s chest;
    ―Number two, that after March 3d the prosecution realized they couldn‘t
    make their case and they approached the two codefendants for a deal because there
    was no evidence in the case;
    ―[Number three], that Paki was home asleep with his wife, who just never
    happened to mention his alibi for four and a half years;
    ―That Tautai is really the triggerman and that Tautai told the police back in
    ‘96 that Paki was the triggerman so he could ascend the royal throne to be the
    tribal chief.
    ―This is what you have been asked to buy by the defense.‖ (Italics added.)
    Again, there was no objection.
    46
    Defendant contends the prosecutor twice improperly impugned the personal
    integrity of defense counsel, once during her closing argument (―[H]e knows you
    are not going to believe that Tautai is the shooter. He knows Paki is the shooter‖),
    and once during her rebuttal argument (―There are several shams that have been
    put forward to you‖). As he acknowledges, however, he did not object to either
    argument, as is required to preserve claims of alleged prosecutorial misconduct for
    review on appeal. (People v. 
    Hill, supra
    , 17 Cal.4th at p. 820.) Absent adequate
    justification for this omission, the claim is forfeited.
    Defendant argues we should overlook his failure to object because any
    objection would have been futile. Arguing that impugning the integrity of defense
    counsel is ―effectively the same error as [a prosecutor‘s] vouching‖ for the
    truthfulness of witnesses, defendant contends that because the trial court permitted
    the prosecutor to put before the jury her personal motivation in offering Iuli and
    Palega plea bargains, the court would almost certainly have rejected any objection
    to the prosecutor‘s closing argument. Defendant‘s attempt to link his claim of
    improper vouching with his assertion the prosecutor improperly attacked the
    personal integrity of defense counsel is unconvincing. First, as we explained,
    ante, no improper vouching occurred. Second, no reason appears why, had
    defendant objected that the prosecutor was improperly impugning the integrity of
    defense counsel, the trial court could not simply have asked the prosecutor to
    reformulate her argument from stating that defense counsel ―knows Paki is the
    shooter‖ to ―the evidence shows Paki is the shooter.‖ Perceiving no linkage
    between the earlier claim of alleged improper vouching and the present claim, we
    reject defendant‘s assertion that the ―two issues [are] substantially the same.‖ We
    also reject as contrary to law defendant‘s further argument that we should assume
    the jury would have been unable to follow a curative admonition. Instead, absent
    some indication to the contrary, we assume a jury will abide by a trial court‘s
    47
    admonitions and instructions. (People v. Stitely (2005) 
    35 Cal. 4th 514
    , 559.) We
    conclude defendant forfeited this issue.
    Were we nevertheless to overlook this procedural defect and address the
    merits, we would find error but no prejudice. ― ‗A prosecutor commits
    misconduct if he or she attacks the integrity of defense counsel, or casts aspersions
    on defense counsel.‘ [Citations.] ‗In evaluating a claim of such misconduct, we
    determine whether the prosecutor‘s comments were a fair response to defense
    counsel‘s remarks‘ [citation], and whether there is a reasonable likelihood the jury
    construed the remarks in an objectionable fashion [citation].‖ (People v. Edwards
    (2013) 
    57 Cal. 4th 658
    , 738.) ―To prevail on a claim of prosecutorial misconduct
    based on remarks to the jury, the defendant must show a reasonable likelihood the
    jury understood or applied the complained-of comments in an improper or
    erroneous manner. [Citations.] In conducting this inquiry, we ‗do not lightly
    infer‘ that the jury drew the most damaging rather than the least damaging
    meaning from the prosecutor‘s statements.‖ (People v. Frye (1998) 
    18 Cal. 4th 894
    , 970, disapproved on another ground in People v. Doolin (2009) 
    45 Cal. 4th 390
    , 421, fn. 22.)
    Defense counsel attempted to undermine Dr. Tschetter‘s credibility by
    focusing on the discrepancy between the witness‘s testimony and his written
    autopsy report. Accordingly, the prosecutor was entitled to address the matter in
    closing argument and attempt to convince the jury the discrepancy was of little
    importance. But although a prosecutor is accorded wide latitude in attacking the
    defense‘s case (People v. Gamache (2010) 
    48 Cal. 4th 347
    , 390), for a prosecutor
    to claim that defense counsel does not believe in his or her client‘s innocence is
    improper (People v. 
    Edwards, supra
    , 57 Cal.4th at p. 740; People v. Thompson
    (1988) 
    45 Cal. 3d 86
    , 112). The prosecutor crossed the ethical line when she
    48
    suggested defense counsel did not personally believe his client‘s story and, in fact,
    believed that defendant personally shot Pamintuan.
    Contrary to the People‘s argument, this is not a case in which the
    prosecutor merely asserted that defense counsel ―was aware of the weakness‖ in
    the proffered defense; Ms. Backers quite clearly stated defense counsel “knows
    Paki is the shooter. And he is hedging his bets by making all this conversation
    about this wadding because he knows that you know Paki is the shooter.‖ (Italics
    added.) This argument makes clear the prosecutor improperly argued defense
    counsel did not believe in his client‘s innocence.
    Also improper was the prosecutor‘s assertion that defense counsel
    presented a ―sham‖ defense. A prosecutor may vigorously challenge the validity
    of any defense, and can characterize the testimony of a witness, including the
    defendant, as untruthful, but to state or imply that defense counsel has fabricated a
    defense is generally misconduct. (People v. 
    Farnam, supra
    , 28 Cal.4th at p. 171;
    People v. Bain (1971) 
    5 Cal. 3d 839
    , 847.) To the extent the prosecutor here did
    not simply argue the defense was unsupported by facts and thus a sham, but that
    defense counsel “put forward” a sham, the argument improperly implied that
    counsel was personally dishonest. ― ‗An attack on the defendant‘s attorney can be
    seriously prejudicial as an attack on the defendant himself, and, in view of the
    accepted doctrines of legal ethics and decorum [citation], it is never excusable.‘ ‖
    (People v. 
    Hill, supra
    , 17 Cal.4th at p. 832, quoted with approval in People v.
    
    Turner, supra
    , 34 Cal.4th at p. 430.)
    The prosecutor thus committed misconduct in closing argument in two
    ways: she implied defense counsel knew his client was guilty, and that counsel
    ―put forward‖ a sham defense, i.e., one he knew was false. Because defendant did
    not interpose timely and specific objections to the improper argument, the errors
    were not preserved for appeal. But even had the claims been preserved, reversal
    49
    would not be required because these two instances of improper argument,
    considered together, could not have prejudiced defendant. As noted earlier, there
    was strong evidence of defendant‘s guilt in the form of Iuli‘s and Palega‘s
    eyewitness testimony, coupled with Tautai‘s initial identification of defendant as
    the shooter, defendant‘s possession of the victim‘s property and his thumbprint on
    the box of shotgun shells.11
    c. Allegedly Appealing to the Jury’s Passions and Prejudices
    That defendant robbed and killed Nolan Pamintuan on the eve of the
    victim‘s wedding formed the basis of the prosecutor‘s narrative of the case. She
    referred to this theme both in her opening remarks to the jury and in her closing
    argument. Defendant contends these comments so appealed to the jury‘s passions
    and prejudices that they strayed into the realm of prosecutorial misconduct
    because they improperly encouraged the jury to decide the case based on emotion
    rather than fact. In support, defendant identifies three categories of alleged
    impropriety, claiming the prosecutor (1) ―invoked the theme of the bridegroom
    murdered on his wedding day, while his bride‘s gift [of an inscribed watch]
    became the ‗trophy‘ of a murderer‖; (2) improperly asked the jury to view the
    crime through the eyes of the victim; and (3) improperly referred to the victim and
    his surviving family as her ―clients.‖ As we explain, defendant did not object to
    these comments and thus failed to preserve any of these claims for appellate
    review. We also conclude that no prejudicial misconduct occurred.
    11     Defendant contends the prosecutor‘s subsequent reference during the
    penalty phase to defense counsel‘s alleged lack of belief in his client, and to the
    defense as a sham, further undermined the correctness of the jury‘s penalty
    determination. We address that issue, post, in part II.B.3.a.
    50
    (i) Defendant Forfeited These Claims
    As explained, ante, in order to preserve a claim of prosecutorial misconduct
    for appeal, a defendant must make a timely and specific objection to the alleged
    misconduct and request the jury be admonished to disregard it. (People v.
    
    Pearson, supra
    , 56 Cal.4th at p. 426; People v. 
    Hill, supra
    , 17 Cal.4th at p. 820.)
    Defendant acknowledges his failure to object to the prosecutor‘s comments but
    argues that he should be excused from complying with this basic precondition to
    appeal because, for two reasons, an objection would have been futile. (
    Hill, supra
    ,
    at pp. 820–821.) First, in denying defense objections to the prosecutor‘s cross-
    examination of defendant‘s wife, Lefea ―Lucy‖ Masefau, the trial court signaled
    that it would not have sustained any defense objections to the prosecutor‘s
    argument based on an improper appeal to the passions and prejudices of the jury.12
    We disagree that the prosecutor‘s examination of Masefau excused defendant from
    the requirement of a timely and specific objection to the prosecutor‘s opening
    statement. Masefau‘s cross-examination occurred more than two weeks after the
    prosecutor‘s opening statement. Defense counsel could not, at the time of the
    12      Defendant relies on this exchange during cross-examination of defendant‘s
    wife:
    ―Q. [Prosecutor Backers] You didn‘t hear about [the crime] during that
    whole week?
    ―A. No.
    ―Q. This sweet Filipino boy with interviews from his family all over the
    news.
    ―MR. CIRAOLO: Your honor, objection.
    ―THE COURT: Overruled.
    ―MS. BACKERS: Q. You never saw it on the news?
    ―A. No.
    ―Q. You never saw how traumatized his family was on the news?
    ―MR. CIRAOLO: Same objection, your honor.
    ―THE COURT: Overruled.
    ―THE WITNESS: No.‖
    51
    opening statements, have known what objections the trial court would later sustain
    or overrule. Nor can we say, based on the trial court‘s overruling of counsel‘s
    objection during Masefau‘s testimony, that it would necessarily have overruled
    counsel‘s objection to the prosecutor‘s closing argument. Significantly,
    defendant‘s objection to Masefau‘s cross-examination did not explain the basis of
    the objection. Accordingly, to conclude the prosecutor‘s cross-examination of
    Masefau and the prosecutor‘s closing argument were objectionable for the same
    reason, such that defendant should now be excused from objecting to the later
    argument, is unjustified.
    As a second reason to support his assertion that an objection to the
    prosecutor‘s argument would have been futile, defendant analogizes to People v.
    Bandhauer (1967) 
    66 Cal. 2d 524
    . He argues the prosecutor‘s ―various appeals to
    passion and prejudice [were] scattered in incremental amounts throughout the
    arguments in this case,‖ and that the grounds for an objection were not fairly
    apparent until it was too late to permit an objection and corrective admonition to
    counteract the prejudice. As he argues: ―Once the Pandora‘s box was opened, no
    admonition could restore the contents and close it.‖
    In People v. 
    Bandhauer, supra
    , 
    66 Cal. 2d 524
    (Bandhauer), the prosecutor
    emphasized his position as a public officer sworn to act with fairness and seek
    justice. But he also opined that in his career he had seldom seen a more depraved
    character than the defendant. (Id. at p. 530). This court concluded the latter
    assertion was improperly testimonial because ―[i]t was not related to the evidence
    in the case and was not subject to cross-examination. It presented to the jury an
    external standard by which to fix the penalty based on the prosecutor‘s long
    experience. The error was aggravated by the prosecutor‘s telling the jury that he
    would recommend life imprisonment in a proper case, for he thus made clear that
    52
    his request for the death penalty was based on his personal judgment and belief.‖
    (Id. at p. 530.)
    Turning then to the People‘s argument that the Bandhauer defendant had
    forfeited the issue for appeal by failing to object on this ground, this court rejected
    it, explaining: ―The argument on the public responsibility of the prosecutor was
    not by itself subject to objection. The testimonial statements were injected
    gradually into the argument so that it was not until the prosecutor made the
    clinching assertion that he had seldom seen a more depraved character that
    grounds for objection were apparent. It was then too late to cure the error by
    admonition, and any effort of the prosecutor to cure the error by formally
    retracting what he obviously believed would only have compounded it. Under
    these circumstances defendant is not precluded from raising the issue for the first
    time on appeal.‖ (People v. 
    Bandhauer, supra
    , 66 Cal.2d at p. 530.)
    Apart from the unique facts in Bandhauer, the notion that an appellate court
    should overlook a defendant‘s failure to alert the trial court to a prosecutor‘s
    improper argument if the impropriety is revealed gradually and incrementally has
    not taken root in our law. We begin by noting the rule requiring claims of
    prosecutorial misconduct be preserved for appellate review by a timely and
    specific objection and request for admonition is well established (see, e.g., People
    v. Linton (2013) 
    56 Cal. 4th 1146
    , 1205; People v. Whalen (2013) 
    56 Cal. 4th 1
    , 52;
    People v. Clark (2011) 
    52 Cal. 4th 856
    , 960; People v. Gonzales and 
    Soliz, supra
    ,
    52 Cal.4th at p. 305; People v. Wilson (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 758
    , 800; People v. 
    Cole, supra
    , 33 Cal.4th at p. 1201; People v. 
    Hill, supra
    , 17 Cal.4th at p. 820; People v.
    Benson (1990) 
    52 Cal. 3d 754
    , 794) and long settled (see, e.g., People v. Brice
    (1957) 
    49 Cal. 2d 434
    , 437; People v. MacDonald (1914) 
    167 Cal. 545
    , 551;
    People v. Ah Fook (1883) 
    64 Cal. 380
    , 383). More than a century ago this court
    declined to review forfeited claims of prosecutorial misconduct, noting: ―It is now
    53
    well settled that an appellate court will not consider a claim as to the misconduct
    of counsel in argument unless objection is so made.‖ (People v. Fleming (1913)
    
    166 Cal. 357
    , 377.) ―The reason for this rule, of course, is that ‗the trial court
    should be given an opportunity to correct the abuse and thus, if possible, prevent
    by suitable instructions the harmful effect upon the minds of the jury.‘ ‖ (People
    v. 
    Green, supra
    , 27 Cal.3d at p. 27, quoting People v. Simon (1927) 
    80 Cal. App. 675
    , 679.)
    Although two cases have discussed the substantive merits of the
    misconduct at issue in 
    Bandhauer, supra
    , 
    66 Cal. 2d 524
    (People v. Medina (1995)
    
    11 Cal. 4th 694
    , 776 [―In the present case, unlike Bandhauer, the prosecutor did
    not purport to rely on his own personal experience, his ‗many, many years‘ as
    prosecutor, or any other facts outside the record.‖]; People v. Ghent (1987) 
    43 Cal. 3d 739
    , 772 [same]), only one case has acknowledged Bandhauer‘s procedural
    holding that a failure to object may be excused if the objectionable material is
    injected into a prosecutor‘s argument slowly and incrementally. (People v.
    Modesto (1967) 
    66 Cal. 2d 695
    , 716–717, disapproved on other grounds in Maine
    v. Superior Court (1968) 
    68 Cal. 2d 375
    , 383, fn. 8.) But that case distinguished
    Bandhauer, saying: ―[I]n this case, unlike Bandhauer, a timely objection by the
    defense would have prevented the most harmful comments from ever reaching the
    jury[;] and an appropriate instruction could have prevented those remarks which
    did reach the jury from exerting any impact beyond that of defense counsel‘s own
    statements. Under such circumstances, an objection may not be made for the first
    time on appeal.‖ (People v. 
    Modesto, supra
    , at pp. 716–717.)
    At base, Bandhauer‘s rationale is that, due to the incremental nature of the
    improper argument, by the time the basis of an objection was apparent it would
    have been ineffective to counteract the prejudice flowing from the misconduct. In
    other words, an objection would have been futile, which is an established
    54
    exception to the rule requiring an objection. (People v. 
    Hill, supra
    , 17 Cal.4th at
    pp. 820–821.) We thus read Bandhauer narrowly to illustrate an unusual
    application of the futility exception, one in which supporting facts are presumably
    rare, but which, if shown, could support a finding that an objection would have
    been futile.
    The instant case is not one of those rare cases. From the outset it was clear
    the prosecutor intended to frame the case as the brutal killing of a man on the eve
    of his wedding, which understandably resulted in extreme anguish for the bride,
    the wedding party and the victim‘s family and friends. The prosecutor may have
    intended to sway the jury to her side as an emotional matter, but her argument was
    based on the facts of the case, not on her opinion of the defendant as depraved.
    This was, therefore, not a situation in which the true basis of an objection was
    unclear until the prosecutor uttered a final clinching comment. As in People v.
    
    Modesto, supra
    , 
    66 Cal. 2d 696
    , we conclude a timely objection would have been
    effective in preventing the harm that could have resulted from the alleged
    improper argument, and the failure to object thus forfeited the issue for appeal.
    (ii) The Prosecutor’s Reliance on the Wedding Theme
    Were we to address defendant‘s claim of prosecutorial misconduct for
    relying on a wedding theme despite its forfeiture, we would find no error. ― ‗The
    purpose of the opening statement is to inform the jury of the evidence the
    prosecution intends to present. . . .‘ [Citation.] ‗Nothing prevents the statement
    from being presented in a story-like manner that holds the attention of lay jurors
    and ties the facts and governing law together in an understandable way.‘ ‖
    (People v. 
    Farnam, supra
    , 28 Cal.4th at p. 168, quoting People v. Millwee (1998)
    
    18 Cal. 4th 96
    , 137.) In turn, ―[c]losing argument presents a legitimate opportunity
    to ‗argue all reasonable inferences from evidence in the record‘ ‖ (People v.
    55
    Bolton (1979) 
    23 Cal. 3d 208
    , 212), and a ― ‗prosecutor has a wide-ranging right to
    discuss the case in closing argument. [She] has the right to fully state [her] views
    as to what the evidence shows and to urge whatever conclusions [she] deems
    proper. Opposing counsel may not complain on appeal if the reasoning is faulty or
    the conclusions are illogical because these are matters for the jury to determine.‘‖
    (People v. Thomas (1992) 
    2 Cal. 4th 489
    , 526.)
    In neither instance is it proper to appeal to the passions and prejudices of
    the jury. ― ‗[A]n appeal for sympathy for the victim is out of place during an
    objective determination of guilt.‘‖ (People v. Kipp (2001) 
    26 Cal. 4th 1100
    , 1130;
    see People v. Pensinger (2001) 
    52 Cal. 3d 1210
    , 1250 [argument urging the jury to
    imagine the crime had happened to their own child held an improper appeal to the
    passion and prejudice of the jury]; People v. Talle (1952) 
    111 Cal. App. 2d 650
    ,
    676 [closing argument asking for a guilty verdict based on sympathy for the victim
    was prosecutorial misconduct].)
    The prosecutor‘s reliance on a wedding theme in her opening statement and
    closing argument did not violate these rules. At the time of the prosecutor‘s
    opening statement, she could reasonably have anticipated the jury would be
    presented with evidence that police found the victim‘s engagement ring and his
    Movado watch, inscribed with his wedding date, in defendant‘s shirt pocket when
    he was arrested. Such evidence served to link defendant to the crimes against
    Pamintuan. The prosecutor could also anticipate she would present to the jury
    evidence showing police found Pamintuan‘s jacket in the outbuilding where
    defendant lived, and that the jacket clearly belonged to the victim because police
    found Pamintuan‘s wedding ―to do‖ list in the pocket. Therefore, the prosecutor‘s
    comments during her opening statement describing the victim as a bridegroom
    who was focused on renting tuxedos and preparing for his wedding the next day
    when defendant robbed, kidnapped and murdered him, and her comments
    56
    regarding his bride‘s gift of the Movado watch as the ―trophy‘‘ of a murderer,
    were fairly based on evidence the prosecutor reasonably intended to present.
    When the prosecutor made similar comments during her closing argument,
    evidence supporting the comments had in fact been introduced. Her argument was
    thus fair comment on the evidence and did not suggest ―that emotion may reign
    over reason‖ or invite ―an irrational, purely subjective response.‖ (People v. Lewis
    (1990) 
    50 Cal. 3d 262
    , 284.)
    (iii) Invoking the Victim
    We reach a slightly different conclusion with regard to defendant‘s second
    contention, that the prosecutor acted improperly by asking the jury to view the
    crime through the eyes of the victim. In closing argument, the prosecutor began
    describing defendant‘s actions, and those of Tony Iuli, Jay Palega and Tautai
    Seumanu, during the last moments of Nolan Pamintuan‘s life, saying: ―Paki starts
    telling him to give it up, give up everything you‘ve got. Give up whatever you
    have on him. And Nolan was saying he didn‘t have anything. Then Tautai and
    Paki took his wallet and stuff. They are stripping him of his belongings. They
    were telling him to take his stuff off.
    ―Paki is starting to go through the wallet. Tautai gets the watch off his
    wrist, the Gucci watch. Both of them are mad.
    ―Imagine begging for your life, begging to be let go, being held captive at
    the end of a shotgun by these four frightening men, and they get mad at you
    because you only have a little cash.‖ (Italics added.)
    The prosecutor later returned to this theme: ―Nolan gives the $300 to Paki.
    Not to anybody else, but to Paki.
    ―Now they are sitting there at the curb with the sliding door closed and
    these men, Paki and Tautai and Jay, tells you — actually all four of them got angry
    57
    at Nolan because they thought he could get more. They still weren‘t satisfied with
    the amount of money he got out of the machine.
    ―And he says: We were all in agreement that he was lying, that he could
    have gotten more. And we were angry at him. And Nolan was saying he wasn‘t
    lying, that he took out the most he could get out of the machine.
    ―So Paki is yelling at him calling him a liar, telling him to stop lying to us.
    ―Imagine trying to save your own life, giving them the most you can give
    them, and you are being called a liar and having a gun pointed at you.‖ (Italics
    added.)
    As is apparent, the prosecutor‘s argument improperly asked the jury to view
    the crime through Pamintuan‘s eyes. ―We have settled that an appeal to the jury to
    view the crime through the eyes of the victim is misconduct at the guilt phase of
    trial; an appeal for sympathy for the victim is out of place during an objective
    determination of guilt.‖ (People v. Stansbury (1993) 
    4 Cal. 4th 1017
    , 1057, revd.
    on other grounds in Stansbury v. California (1994) 
    511 U.S. 318
    ; cited with
    approval in People v. Lopez (2008) 
    42 Cal. 4th 960
    , 969–970; see also People v.
    Leonard (2007) 
    40 Cal. 4th 1370
    , 1406–1407.) Despite this misstep, however, we
    find the prosecutor‘s misconduct in making a few remarks in a much longer
    closing argument, and an even longer trial, could not have prejudiced defendant,
    especially given the strong evidence of his guilt. (See People v. 
    Leonard, supra
    , at
    p. 1407 [finding the misconduct was harmless because ―the prosecutor‘s passing
    remark could not have prejudiced defendant, given the overwhelming evidence of
    guilt‖]; People v. 
    Stansbury, supra
    , at p. 1057 [finding the misconduct was
    harmless because ―we do not believe a brief statement of this sort would sway the
    jury over that long a period‖].)
    58
    (iv) The Prosecutor’s Clients
    The third instance in which defendant contends the prosecutor improperly
    appealed to the passion and prejudice of the jury came in opening statements,
    when the prosecutor referred to the victim and his family as her ―clients.‖ At that
    time, the prosecutor noted that the jury had been introduced to the two defense
    attorneys and their client, defendant Ropati Seumanu. The prosecutor continued:
    ―I have a client too. The chair next to me appears to be empty, but his name is
    Nolan. And I would like to introduce you to him. [¶] This is Nolan Pamintuan.‖
    Later, in closing argument, the prosecutor mentioned some of the victim‘s family,
    although she did not refer to any of them specifically as her ―clients.‖
    Defendant argues the prosecutor‘s assertion the victim was her client was
    an untrue statement (see People v. Von Villas (1992) 
    10 Cal. App. 4th 201
    , 250 [it is
    a ―venerable and long-standing principle that the district attorney represents the
    People of the State of California in criminal proceedings‖]), and ―[h]er
    argumentative purpose [in making such an argument in her opening statement] . . .
    was to cast the prosecution as a private vindication for a terrible loss in order to
    exploit the emotion inherent in such a vivid personalization.‖ Later, defendant
    claims, the prosecutor continued her ―personalization and exploitation of
    sympathetic factors‖ in closing argument.
    Were we to address this claim despite its forfeiture, we would find the
    prosecutor‘s argument was impermissible and thus misconduct. ―The nature of the
    impartiality required of the public prosecutor follows from the prosecutor‘s role as
    representative of the People as a body, rather than as individuals. ‗The prosecutor
    speaks not solely for the victim, or the police, or those who support them, but for
    all the People. That body of ―The People‖ includes the defendant and his family
    and those who care about him. It also includes the vast majority of citizens who
    know nothing about a particular case, but who give over to the prosecutor the
    59
    authority to seek a just result in their name.‘ ‖ (People v. Eubanks (1996) 
    14 Cal. 4th 580
    , 589–590.) But we also conclude that, for several reasons, the
    prosecutor‘s misconduct was harmless. First, as explained, ante, the evidence of
    guilt was strong. Second, the jury was instructed that it ―must not be influenced
    by sentiment, conjecture, sympathy, passion, prejudice, public opinion or public
    feeling. Both the People and a defendant have a right to expect that you will
    consciously consider and weigh the evidence, apply the law, and reach a just
    verdict, regardless of the consequences.‖ Third, the jury was also informed that
    the arguments of counsel are not evidence (see CALJIC No. 1.02; CALCRIM No.
    222), and we assume it followed this instruction. (People v. 
    Stitely, supra
    , 35
    Cal.4th at p. 559.) Contrary to defendant‘s argument that absent the prosecutor‘s
    alleged appeal to the jury‘s passions and prejudices, ―it is reasonably probable that
    [he] would have been acquitted,‖ we find the prosecutor‘s arguments, although
    encouraging the jury to identify with the victim to an improper degree, did not
    render the trial fundamentally unfair or otherwise infect the trial with such
    unfairness as to violate defendant‘s constitutional rights. (People v. 
    Morales, supra
    , 25 Cal.4th at p. 44.)
    d. Allegedly Attempting to Elicit Inadmissible Evidence from
    Tautai Seumanu
    Defendant argues the prosecutor committed further prejudicial misconduct
    by attempting to elicit inadmissible information from Tautai Seumanu on cross-
    examination. Tautai had recanted his previous statement to police identifying
    defendant as Pamintuan‘s killer, pleaded guilty to the charges, and by the time of
    his testimony had been sentenced to 28 years to life in prison. At trial he asserted
    that defendant was not Pamintuan‘s killer, and that in fact he (Tautai) was the
    triggerman. During Tautai‘s cross-examination by the prosecutor, he admitted
    60
    that, as a juvenile, he could not get any additional time in prison for taking the
    blame for the murder. The following colloquy then occurred:
    ―Q. [by Prosecutor Backers] So when you took the deal, you knew Tony
    [Iuli] was going to testify against you?
    ―A. [by TAUTAI SEUMANU] Yes.
    ―Q.    And your big brother [i.e., defendant]?
    ―A.    Yes.
    ―Q.    And you knew that all three of you had said that your big brother was
    the triggerman in ‘96?
    ―A.    Yes.
    ―Q.    And you asked me for the same deal to testify against your big
    brother, didn‘t you?
    ―MR. CIRAOLO [defendant‘s counsel]: Objection. Hearsay, privileged
    communications.
    ―THE COURT: Overruled.
    ―MR. CIRAOLO: No foundation.
    ―THE COURT: Overruled.
    ―THE WITNESS: When did I ask you this?
    ―MS. BACKERS: Q. You wanted the exact same deal that Tony [Iuli] and
    Jay [Palega] got, and I said no way.
    ―MR. CIRAOLO: Your honor, objection. Counsel is testifying and no
    foundation.
    ―THE COURT: Overruled.
    ―MS. BACKERS: Q. You were willing to come in and say that your big
    brother was the triggerman if you could get the ‗L‘ [i.e., life term] taken off of
    your sentence, weren‘t you?
    ―A.    I didn‘t.
    61
    ―Q.   You didn‘t want the same deal Tony and Jay got?
    ―A.   Hell no.
    ―Q.   Hell no?
    ―A.   No.
    ―Q.   You wanted to go down for life?
    ―A.   No.
    ―Q.   You never wanted to get out of jail?
    ―A.   No.
    ―Q.   No, you don‘t want to get out of jail?
    ―A.   No.
    ―Q.   Are you telling this jury that you did not ask me for the same deal
    Tony and Jay got so you could testify against your big brother?
    ―MR. CIRAOLO: Same objection, your honor. [¶] Could we approach the
    bench on this?
    ―THE COURT: Sure.‖
    At side bar, out of the jury‘s hearing, defense counsel made clear the nature
    of his objection:
    ―MR. CIRAOLO: Your honor, I am objecting. No foundation. Counsel is
    trying to establish there was a direct communication between the defendant, who
    is represented by counsel, with her.
    ―THE COURT: I don‘t hear him say it didn‘t happen. I don‘t see — Mr.
    Daley is [Tautai‘s] lawyer. You cannot assert a privilege.
    ―MR. CIRAOLO: I am objecting there is no foundation.
    ―THE COURT: She asked him if it happened. He said no. I don‘t see
    anybody else asserting any privilege.
    ―The objection is overruled.‖
    62
    Sometime later, outside the jury‘s presence, Tautai‘s attorney, Mr. Daley,
    objected to the questioning:
    ―MR. DALEY: . . . My concern is the questions addressed to my client about
    whether or not he had requested a deal. Obviously, he had no communication with
    [the prosecutor], at least none that I am aware of. I don‘t think they ever
    exchanged any words.
    ―I can say that I did make an inquiry, and was abruptly turned down. And
    without getting into confidential communications, I can say I did it without any
    instructions from my client just to see if it was available.
    ―And I think I communicated that to [the prosecutor] at the time. Of
    course, we are going back four or five months at this point.
    ―There was the implication in the record, at this point —
    ―THE COURT: Well, Mr. Daley, I didn‘t hear you objecting at the time.
    ―MR. DALEY: The objection was whether my client had any
    communications and requested an offer and he answered no, which is true.
    ―THE COURT: Okay. So —
    ―MR. DALEY: The implication —
    ―THE COURT: Mr. Daley, I can‘t deal with implications if you sit there and
    don‘t say anything, okay? So you didn‘t say anything, he answered no, so that is
    the end of that story as far as I am concerned.‖
    Based on these exchanges, defendant contends the prosecutor committed
    three different types of misconduct: (1) She asked questions she knew called for
    inadmissible evidence (People v. Pinholster (1992) 
    1 Cal. 4th 865
    , 943,
    disapproved on another ground in People v. Williams (2010) 
    49 Cal. 4th 405
    , 459);
    (2) ―her questions contained representations she knew would not be confirmed by
    Tautai and could not be proved otherwise‖ (see People v. Friend (2009) 
    47 Cal. 4th 1
    , 80; People v. Bolden (2002) 
    29 Cal. 4th 515
    , 562); and (3) she knowingly asked
    63
    questions containing false representations of fact (People v. Sakarias (2000) 
    22 Cal. 4th 596
    , 633).
    Assuming for argument that defendant preserved these claims for appeal by
    making a timely and specific objection, and further assuming the prosecutor
    committed misconduct, we conclude no prejudice resulted. Regarding the claim
    that the prosecutor sought to elicit inadmissible evidence, although the wording of
    the prosecutor‘s questions implied that Tautai unsuccessfully sought a plea deal,
    the witness vehemently denied doing so; when asked whether he wanted the same
    deal as Iuli and Palega, he replied tersely: ―Hell no.‖ Thereafter, the prosecutor
    did not present any evidence suggesting that such plea negotiations ever occurred.
    Prior to its deliberations, the jury was instructed with CALJIC No. 1.02, which
    states in pertinent part: ―Statements made by the attorneys during the trial are not
    evidence‖ and ―Do not assume to be true any insinuation suggested by a question
    asked a witness. A question is not evidence and may be considered only as it
    helps you to understand the answer.‖ We assume the jury followed this instruction
    (People v. 
    Stitely, supra
    , 35 Cal.4th at p. 559), rendering it unlikely under any
    standard that defendant was prejudiced by the prosecutor‘s allegedly improper
    attempt to elicit inadmissible evidence. (See People v. Sandoval (1992) 
    4 Cal. 4th 155
    , 182 [relying on CALJIC No. 1.02 to find prosecutorial misconduct
    harmless]).
    These same jury instructions undermine defendant‘s further argument that
    additional questions constituted prejudicial misconduct. Although he claims the
    prosecutor committed misconduct by asking Tautai questions containing
    ―representations she knew would not be confirmed by Tautai and could not be
    proved otherwise,‖ as well as questions that included false representations of fact,
    these were mere insinuations by the prosecutor that, when not backed up by actual
    evidence, were bound to be disregarded by the jury. We conclude that to the
    64
    extent, if any, the prosecutor‘s cross-examination of Tautai crossed an ethical line,
    any misconduct was not prejudicial.
    5. Combined Prejudice
    Relying on the alleged judicial misconduct flowing from the trial court‘s
    comment, ―I know the temptation‖ (ante, pt. I.B.2.), the allegedly improper
    admission of exhibit 46, the list of ―America‘s Most Wanted Samoans‖ (ante, pt.
    I.B.1.d.), and the prosecutor‘s alleged misconduct in questioning Tautai regarding
    that gang status list, as well as whether he sought a plea deal (ante, pt. I.B.4.d.),
    defendant contends the combined effect of these alleged errors requires reversal
    even if the errors do not individually rise to the level of prejudicial error. We have
    held a number of instances of prosecutorial misconduct may act synergistically to
    create an atmosphere of prejudice more intense than the sum of its parts. (People
    v. 
    Hill, supra
    , 17 Cal.4th at p. 845; see People v. Vance (2010) 
    188 Cal. App. 4th 1182
    , 1207 [reversing judgment based on a combination of errors, citing Hill].)
    Here defendant seeks to combine alleged judicial and evidentiary errors with
    prosecutorial misconduct. But as explained, ante, the claim of judicial misconduct
    (―I know the temptation‖) was forfeited, meritless, and harmless. Nor did
    prejudice occur when the trial court initially admitted exhibit 46 over defendant‘s
    objection. All that remains is defendant‘s claim of prosecutorial misconduct. As
    explained ante, in part I.B.1., the prosecutor did not commit misconduct by
    questioning Tautai about the gang status list. And as explained, ante, in part
    I.B.4.d., any error occurring during the prosecutor‘s questioning of Tautai about
    prior plea bargain negotiations was harmless because Tautai denied seeking a plea
    bargain, the prosecutor did not introduce any evidence of such negotiations, and
    the jury was instructed not to consider insinuations suggested by questions that are
    not supported by evidence. (CALJIC No. 1.02.) Even considering these matters
    65
    together, we find the cumulative prejudice flowing from these errors did not
    render the guilt phase of defendant‘s trial fundamentally unfair.
    6. Alleged Instructional Error: CALJIC No 2.15
    Defendant, having been found in possession of the victim‘s watch and ring,
    was charged with robbery. The jury was accordingly instructed with CALJIC No.
    2.15, which states in pertinent part: ―If you find that a defendant was in conscious
    possession of recently stolen property, the fact of that possession is not by itself
    sufficient to permit an inference that the defendant is guilty of the crimes of
    robbery or receiving stolen property. Before guilt may be inferred, there must be
    corroborating evidence tending to prove defendant‘s guilt. However, this
    corroborating evidence need only be slight, and need not by itself be sufficient to
    warrant an inference of guilt.‖ As we have observed, this instruction is ―generally
    favorable to defendants; its purpose is to emphasize that possession of stolen
    property, alone, is insufficient to sustain a conviction for a theft-related crime.‖
    (People v. 
    Gamache, supra
    , 48 Cal.4th at p. 375.)
    Defendant nevertheless contends this instruction violated his constitutional
    rights by establishing a ―permissive inference of guilt based on evidence of
    conscious possession of recently stolen property‖ and, because the rule provides
    that only slight corroboration is thereafter needed, it dilutes the ―ineluctable rule
    that a criminal conviction may be predicated only on proof beyond a reasonable
    doubt. (In re Winship (1970) 
    397 U.S. 358
    , 364.)‖ We have previously addressed
    and rejected these precise arguments. Regarding the claim the instruction creates
    an unconstitutional permissive inference, we explained in People v. 
    Gamache, supra
    , 
    48 Cal. 4th 347
    , that ―the instruction satisfies the due process requirement
    for permissive inferences, at least for theft-related offenses: the conclusion it
    66
    suggests is ‗ ―one that reason and common sense justify in light of the proven facts
    before the jury.‖ ‘ ‖ (Id. at p. 375.)13
    We have also previously addressed and rejected defendant‘s reasonable
    doubt argument, holding CALJIC No. 2.15 ―does not establish an unconstitutional
    mandatory presumption in favor of guilt [citation] or otherwise shift or lower the
    prosecution‘s burden of establishing guilt beyond a reasonable doubt [citations].‖
    (People v. 
    Gamache, supra
    , 48 Cal.4th at p. 376.) Further, ―nothing in the
    instruction . . . relieves the prosecution of its burden to establish guilt beyond a
    reasonable doubt.‖ (People v. Parson (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 332
    , 355–356; see People
    v. Rogers (2013) 
    57 Cal. 4th 296
    , 336.) Because defendant advances no persuasive
    reason why our previous authority addressing this issue was in error, we adhere to
    them now and reject the claim that CALJIC No. 2.15 violated his constitutional
    rights.
    II. PENALTY PHASE
    A. Facts
    Section 190.3, factor (b) defines as a permissible factor in aggravation
    ―[t]he presence . . . of criminal activity by the defendant which involved the use or
    13     Although defendant focuses on the instruction‘s use of the word ―slight‖
    when describing the corroboration requirement, and analogizes to the
    disparagement by lower federal courts of the rule that, once a criminal conspiracy
    has been shown, the government need show only a slight connection between the
    accused and the conspiracy (see, e.g., United States v. Marsh (1st Cir. 1984) 
    747 F.2d 7
    , 13 & fn. 3), the analogy fails. Whereas a slight connection to a criminal
    conspiracy says little about whether the person entertained the mental state
    necessary to show guilt of conspiracy, ―[p]ossession of recently stolen property is
    so incriminating that to warrant conviction there need only be, in addition to
    possession, slight corroboration in the form of statements or conduct of the
    defendant tending to show his guilt.‖ (People v. McFarland (1962) 
    58 Cal. 2d 748
    ,
    754.)
    67
    attempted use of force or violence or the express or implied threat to use force or
    violence.‖ Accordingly, the prosecution presented evidence of defendant‘s
    numerous prior acts of violence.
    In 1991, defendant, 17 years old, was riding in a car with his father. The
    car in front of them, driven by Jacqueline R., stopped because the car in front of
    her had stopped to allow a passenger out. Defendant and his father blew the horn
    and began ―acting crazy.‖ When they were able to proceed, defendant and his
    father pulled up alongside Jacqueline R.‘s car and began throwing objects at it,
    including a length of pipe and a metal tire rack that landed on her hood and
    narrowly missed the windshield. They chased her as she drove away and
    continued to throw things at her car. Defendant and his father were arrested for
    assault with a deadly weapon.
    Darrell Churish met defendant in 1991 or 1992. Defendant told him he
    ―claimed‖ blue, and was the leader of a Crips-affiliated gang called the Sons of
    Samoa. Churish recalled an incident in which defendant brought a handgun to
    school. People feared him because he was bigger than most students.
    In 1992, still only 17 or 18 years old, defendant and several friends went to
    Arroyo High School, intent on beating up anyone wearing red, the color of the
    rival Bloods street gang. When they encountered some students, defendant was
    the first to throw a punch, starting an all-out melee. He also kicked someone in
    the head and later told his friend Mannix Molia he felt good and wanted to do it
    again.
    Sometime in 1992, defendant saw a man at a bus stop wearing a
    Georgetown University jacket. Defendant confronted the man and knocked him
    down with a single punch, taking his jacket; Darrell Churish confirmed this
    account but said no punch was thrown. On another occasion, Churish and
    defendant were at a mall when Churish admired someone‘s Oakland Raiders
    68
    jacket. Defendant offered to forcibly acquire it for Churish, who declined the
    offer. Mannix Molia testified that defendant had a new jacket ―every other week‖
    and would obtain them by knocking out the jacket‘s owner.
    In 1994, defendant and friends spotted a drunk staggering in a park. For
    fun, they chased him but the friends soon gave up. Defendant persisted, caught
    him, and punched the man in the head, knocking him unconscious. According to
    one of the friends, defendant was ―famous‖ for doing this kind of thing and was
    known for the power of his punch. Mannix Molia testified he had seen defendant
    use this punch four or five times.
    One assault occurred around this time when from an apartment balcony
    Churish saw a man looking into his car‘s window. He commented that the man
    might be considering breaking into his car. By the time he got down to the street,
    the man was ―all bloody‖ and had to go to the hospital. Palega said defendant hit
    the man in the head with a bottle.
    In 1995, defendant and other Samoans attacked Avikash Singh at Mt. Eden
    High School in Hayward. They pulled Singh out of his car and beat and kicked
    him. They also smashed one of the car‘s windows and took Singh‘s wallet and
    pager. Iuli saw defendant stomping on Singh‘s head as he lay on the ground.
    In January 1996, defendant and some friends went in Myron Cruz‘s
    mother‘s van to the San Leandro Marina, which was a known location for teens
    and young adults to have romantic encounters. They began shaking parked cars to
    harass the couples inside and one person took exception, exiting his car and
    yelling profanities. Defendant and two of his friends beat and kicked the man.
    Later, the victim, now in his car, rammed Cruz‘s van, shearing off the side door.
    Defendant and his friends fled. They trashed the van, dumped it in a creek, and
    reported it stolen so they would not have to tell Cruz‘s mother what really
    happened.
    69
    In February 1996, rival gang members shouted insults at Iuli when he and
    others drove down Pompano Avenue in Hayward. Later that evening, Iuli and
    defendant ―decided to pull a drive-by‖ in retaliation for the insults and returned to
    the street, firing three shots from defendant‘s .380-caliber pistol at the house
    where Iuli had been insulted. The bullets struck the front of the house, one of
    them penetrating into the living room.
    A month later, Hayward police encountered defendant with a group of
    suspected gang members in Tennyson Park in Hayward and arrested him after
    finding a .380-caliber pistol in his car, loaded with hollow point bullets.
    Defendant had problems with violence while in jail. In August 1996, while
    in Santa Rita Jail, defendant was written up for making and drinking an intoxicant
    in his cell. When confronted by a deputy sheriff, defendant behaved in an
    aggressive and threatening manner, shaking his fists, removing his shirt and
    throwing chairs around. After he was secured, he threatened the deputy, saying:
    ―I‘ll take care of you later.‖ In 1998, defendant was involved in a fight in the jail
    with at least three other inmates. One deputy saw defendant throw at least three or
    four punches. In 2000, defendant refused to return to his cell during a lockdown.
    When ordered into an isolation cell, he refused and became aggressive and hostile.
    He complied only when threatened with pepper spray. A search of his cell
    uncovered illegal tattooing implements, for which he was assessed a 20-day loss
    of privilege.
    In addition to section 190.3, factor (b) evidence, the prosecution presented
    victim impact evidence in aggravation. (Payne v. Tennessee (1991) 
    501 U.S. 808
    .) The victim‘s brother, Paul Pamintuan, was to be the best man at the
    wedding. Only 18 months younger than Nolan, Paul was very close to the victim
    and went to him for advice, relying on his counsel as an older brother. Rowena
    Panelo testified that the victim was both her fiancé and her best friend. He was a
    70
    caring, thoughtful and loving person. The victim‘s mother, Dr. Clementina
    Manio, gave similar evidence. All three witnesses recounted the difficult
    circumstances of May 18, 1996, when Nolan Pamintuan was missing and how and
    when they learned of his murder. Panelo testified that the experience was ―[r]eally
    difficult to explain. I mean, it is just heartbreaking. You are looking forward to
    something, a really happy part of your life, and to realize that wasn‘t going to
    happen, that you will never see this person you love so much ever again, it is just
    very hard.‖ The victim was buried in the tuxedo he had intended to wear at his
    wedding, and his funeral was held in the church where he was to have been
    married.
    The defense case in mitigation focused on defendant‘s family life and
    cultural heritage. He was born in American Samoa in 1975, the son of Vui
    Seumanu, who was a matai, or tribal chief. Defendant was the heir to this status,
    and he chose to follow tradition and submit to several days of painful ritual
    tattooing in which a shark tooth dipped in ink was used to cover his body in tattoos
    from his knees to above his waist.
    Defendant‘s mother died when he was only two years old and his father left
    him with a relative when he moved from Samoa to the mainland. Defendant later
    joined his father in California after he had remarried. Defendant‘s father had
    seven more children with his new wife (including Tautai Seumanu), defendant‘s
    half siblings. Defendant‘s stepmother, Sao Seumanu, testified defendant was a
    helpful child—her ―right hand‖—helping to take care of the younger children.
    She asserted defendant was ―a really good person‖ who, when he began working,
    gave his entire paycheck to her to help feed the family. She did not know he was
    in a gang, had never seen him with a gun, and denied knowing anything about the
    nine millimeter ammunition and large-capacity ammunition clips found in her
    71
    bedroom in the family compound where she lived with defendant. She admitted
    she had been convicted of welfare fraud.
    Defendant‘s father, Vui Seumanu, was a pastor in the First Samoan Gospel
    Church and defendant eventually became a deacon in the church, helping with the
    younger children and with the choir. Vui said defendant was very responsible in
    taking care of his many siblings while Vui was away on church business. He
    admitted he had a 1998 conviction for welfare fraud.
    According to defendant‘s half sister, Hanna, he was a good husband and
    father, and treated his wife‘s daughter, Peggy, as his own child. When defendant‘s
    grandfather was sick, defendant moved in with him and acted as his caretaker for a
    year. Other relatives testified to defendant‘s good nature.
    A defense expert, Clarence Scanlan, himself a high chief from American
    Samoa, explained that, because of his physical size and status in the Samoan
    community, defendant ―is going to be the protector of his younger brothers,
    sisters, family members, whatever the type of situation, a friend or associate, or
    fellow whatever it is. It is not [his] role to be the aggressor. It is his role to take
    down whoever it is, because he can‘t let the lower subordinate be the one to settle
    the situation, because he will lose his esteem and position within the gang, or the
    organization, or village, or whatever it might be. So his role is more as a
    protector.‖ The witness opined that defendant‘s role in his family and culture
    explained many of the violent incidents admitted in aggravation, noting that many
    were ―for protection of his family members. There [are] some bad ones he did,
    and I think that is reflective of his establishing his name and making people fearful
    of him, the more fearful people become of you, the less you have to flex your
    muscle and go out there and enforce whatever you have.‖
    72
    B. Discussion
    1. Alleged Prosecutorial Vouching
    Emphasizing the jury was instructed at the penalty phase to consider all the
    facts adduced during the entire trial,14 defendant argues the prosecutor‘s closing
    argument in the penalty phase of trial improperly capitalized on her earlier, guilt
    phase, vouching for Iuli‘s and Palega‘s credibility. Defendant did not object to the
    prosecutor‘s penalty phase argument on this ground and thus forfeited the claim
    for appeal. In any event, we found no improper vouching at the guilt phase (ante,
    pt. I.B.3.f.), and the prosecutor‘s penalty phase argument merely emphasized the
    moral decision the jury was required to make. For example, the prosecutor
    asserted that ―[y]ou are charged with returning a moral and just verdict for this
    crime and for this sweet innocent life that was taken so brutally.‖ We previously
    have found similar arguments permissible. (See, e.g., People v. Rountree (2013)
    
    56 Cal. 4th 823
    , 859 [prosecutor could fairly argue ― ‗[c]apital punishment is
    merely society‘s expression of the moral outrage of particularly offensive
    conduct‘ ‖].)
    Aside from whether the prosecutor at trial affirmatively vouched for the
    credibility of her witnesses, defendant also suggests that simply by allowing Iuli
    and Palega to plead to lesser offenses carrying determinate terms, the prosecutor
    implicitly communicated to the jury that she personally viewed their roles in
    Pamintuan‘s murder as less serious than defendant‘s role, and that the death
    penalty was morally appropriate for the criminal actor who was not allowed to
    plead, i.e., defendant. To the extent this could have been an implied message of
    14     See CALJIC Nos. 8.84.1 (―You must determine what the facts are from the
    evidence received during the entire trial . . . .‖), 8.85 (―In determining which
    penalty is to be imposed . . . you shall consider all of the evidence which has been
    received during any part of the trial of this case‖).
    73
    Ms. Backers‘s exercise of prosecutorial discretion, such implications are faint and
    are present whenever a prosecutor draws distinctions between multiple criminal
    actors; as such, they do not rise to the level of improper vouching concerning the
    appropriate sentence for defendant. In any event, any possible prejudice was
    avoided by a special jury instruction, given at the request of the prosecution,
    informing the jury that the sentences of Iuli, Palega and Tautai had no bearing on
    what sentence was appropriate for defendant.15 We assume the jury followed this
    instruction. (People v. 
    Stitely, supra
    , 35 Cal.4th at p. 559.)
    2. Trial Court Comments During Pretrial Voir Dire
    At the penalty phase trial, the jury was instructed pursuant to CALJIC No.
    8.88 as follows: ―It is now your duty to determine which of the two penalties,
    death or imprisonment in the state prison for life without possibility of parole,
    shall be imposed on the defendant.
    ―After having heard all of the evidence, and after having heard and
    considered the arguments of counsel, you shall consider, take into account and be
    guided by the applicable factors of aggravating and mitigating circumstances upon
    which you have been instructed.
    ―An aggravating factor is any fact, condition or event attending the
    commission of a crime which increases its guilt or enormity, or adds to its
    15      That instruction read as follows: ―In deciding the appropriate penalty for
    the defendant, you should consider the character and record of the individual
    offender on trial before you and the circumstances of his particular charged
    offenses. The sentences of the accomplices [are] not a factor in mitigation and it
    has no bearing on the defendant‘s character or record and it is not a circumstance
    of the offense. Therefore, the sentences of the accomplices should not be
    considered in your determination of the appropriate penalty for the defendant in
    this case.‖
    74
    injurious consequences which is above and beyond the elements of the crime
    itself.
    ―A mitigating circumstance is any fact, condition or event which does not
    constitute a justification or excuse for the crime in question, but may be
    considered as an extenuating circumstance in determining the appropriateness of
    the death penalty.
    ―The weighing of aggravating and mitigating circumstances does not mean
    a mere mechanical counting of factors on each side of an imaginary scale, or the
    arbitrary assignment of weights to any of them. You are free to assign whatever
    moral or sympathetic value you deem appropriate to each and all of the various
    factors you are permitted to consider.
    ―In weighing the various circumstances you determine under the relevant
    evidence which penalty is justified and appropriate by considering the totality of
    the aggravating circumstances with the totality of the mitigating circumstances.
    To return a judgment of death, each of you must be persuaded that the aggravating
    circumstances are so substantial in comparison with the mitigating circumstances
    that it warrants death instead of life without parole.‖ (Italics added.)
    Capital defendants often argue the italicized sentence in this standard
    instruction, especially the phrase ―so substantial,‖ is impermissibly vague and
    ambiguous, but we have rejected the claim. (See, e.g., People v. 
    Jones, supra
    , 57
    Cal.4th at p. 980.) Defendant admits the instructional language ―is neither unclear
    nor ambiguous,‖ but complains that during pretrial voir dire proceedings, the trial
    court injected ambiguity into the trial by commenting to the prospective jurors that
    the phrase ―so substantial‖ in CALJIC No. 8.88 was ―fairly ambiguous.‖ Thus, for
    example, the trial court informed a panel of venirepersons: ―The key phrase in
    that instruction is: ‗are so substantial.‘ And that is a fairly ambiguous phrase.
    And the law intends it to be such because the law recognizes that you will be
    75
    engaging in the moral weighing process when you weigh that type of evidence.‖
    (Italics added.) The court repeated this comment several times before different
    panels of venirepersons.
    At the outset, we conclude the issue was not preserved for appeal by a
    timely and specific objection to the trial court‘s comments. (People v. Monterroso
    (2004) 
    34 Cal. 4th 743
    , 759 [claim of judicial error based on a judge‘s comments
    during voir dire proceedings is forfeited by failure to object].) Although defendant
    relies on section 1259 to excuse his failure to object, the argument cannot be
    sustained. That statute permits a defendant to raise on appeal a claim challenging
    ―any instruction . . . even though no objection was made thereto in the lower court,
    if the substantial rights of the defendant were affected thereby.‖ Defendant is not,
    however, challenging the correctness of a jury instruction; indeed, he asserts that
    he is ―defending CALJIC No. 8.88‘s formulation of the ‗so-substantial‘ standard
    against the trial court‘s misleading and erroneous ‗amplification‘ of it.‖ As is
    clear, his claim is one of judicial error, not misinstruction of the jury, and that
    claim is subject to the requirement that a defendant make a timely and specific
    objection in order to preserve the issue for appeal.
    Were we nevertheless to overlook such forfeiture and address the merits of
    the claim, we would find no error. As we explained in another case in which the
    trial court made some nonstandard comments to the venirepersons during jury
    selection: ―The trial court . . . was not instructing the jury at the time it made the
    comments in question. Indeed it was conducting voir dire of prospective jurors.
    Its ‗comments ―were not intended to be, and were not, a substitute for full
    instructions at the end of trial.‖ ‘ [Citation.] ‗ ―The purpose of these comments
    was to give prospective jurors, most of whom had little or no familiarity with
    courts in general and penalty phase death penalty trials in particular, a general idea
    of the nature of the proceeding.‖ ‘ [Citation.] In the context of voir dire, the trial
    76
    court‘s comments in this case were proper.‖ (People v. Romero (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 386
    , 423.)16
    Finally, any error was harmless. ―[A]s a general matter, it is unlikely that
    errors or misconduct occurring during voir dire questioning will unduly influence
    the jury‘s verdict in the case. Any such errors or misconduct ‗prior to the
    presentation of argument or evidence, obviously reach the jury panel at a much
    less critical phase of the proceedings, before its attention has even begun to focus
    upon the penalty issue confronting it.‘ ‖ (People v. 
    Medina, supra
    , 11 Cal.4th at
    p. 741 [addressing the prosecutor‘s comments during voir dire].) This is
    especially true because the trial court, when informing the venirepersons that the
    ―so substantial‖ phrase was ambiguous, also told them it was speaking informally,
    and that if chosen to serve, the jurors would be given formal instructions at the
    16     To the extent defendant claims ―the obfuscation of the so-substantial
    standard by the trial court‘s comments was exacerbated here also by the trial
    court‘s use of ‗good‘ and ‗bad‘ as synonyms for mitigation and aggravation,‖ this
    claim too was forfeited by the failure to object. In any event, this court has itself
    endorsed such comments as substantially correct so long as the jury is also
    informed that it is making a moral choice and not just a mechanical one. (See
    People v. Edwards (1991) 
    54 Cal. 3d 787
    , 841 [―This court in the past has used the
    terms ‗good‘ and ‗bad‘ evidence as shorthand for mitigating and aggravating
    evidence.‖].) The jury in this case was so informed.
    We also reject, as forfeited and without merit, defendant‘s further claim that
    the prosecutor‘s closing argument exacerbated the trial court‘s pretrial comments
    characterizing the ―so substantial‖ phrase as ―fairly ambiguous.‖ The prosecutor
    vigorously argued the jury should reject an anticipated plea from the defense to
    show defendant mercy, compassion and sympathy in light of the many times
    defendant victimized people over the years, ending her argument by asking: ―Isn‘t
    that morally perverted to ask for leniency for somebody like that?‖ Defendant did
    not object to this line of argument, thereby forfeiting the claim, but in any event
    we would reject as both exaggerated and unpersuasive the claim that ―in a case in
    which the so-substantial standard has been severely distorted, [the prosecutor‘s]
    argument would tend both to reflect the [judicial] error and then refract it back
    only to increase the risk of misunderstanding and misapplication.‖
    77
    close of evidence. Because the penalty phase jury was later properly instructed
    with the standard penalty phase instructions, we find that even if error occurred, it
    was not reasonably possible it affected the penalty verdict. (People v. 
    Abilez, supra
    , 41 Cal.4th at pp. 525–526.)
    Finally, defendant‘s attempt to inflate the trial court‘s pretrial comments
    into judicial error that both violated his federal constitutional rights and is
    reversible per se as structural error (see Sullivan v. Louisiana (1993) 508 US. 275,
    279–280 [erroneous reasonable doubt instruction requires reversal]) is baseless.
    As noted, the jury was properly instructed at the penalty phase and the court‘s
    comments during the pretrial phase could not reasonably have undermined the
    efficacy of those instructions.
    3. Alleged Prosecutorial Misconduct
    a. Impugning Defense Counsel’s Integrity
    Reprising a claim of alleged prosecutorial misconduct from the guilt phase,
    defendant claims the prosecutor‘s guilt phase argument suggesting defense
    counsel knew his client was guilty, and that the proffered alibi defense was a
    sham, amplified the prejudicial effect of the prosecutor‘s subsequent penalty phase
    argument suggesting it was ―morally perverted to ask for leniency for somebody
    like [defendant].‖ Defendant argues the earlier guilt-phase misconduct ―referred
    forward to the penalty phase‖ such that ―the substance of the slander against
    defense counsel‘s integrity hovered over the entire trial.‖ Such argument,
    defendant contends, unfairly undermined trial counsel‘s argument in favor of
    mitigation and mercy ―not on the basis of evidence, but rather on the basis of an
    extra-evidentiary animadversion against the integrity of the defense counsel.‖
    According to defendant, such criticism of defense counsel is not a recognized
    aggravating factor under section 190.3 (see People v. Coffman and Marlow (2004)
    78
    
    34 Cal. 4th 1
    , 108 [―Any aggravating evidence not relating to the sentencing
    factors enumerated in section 190.3 is inadmissible in the penalty phase.‖]; see
    People v. Boyd (1985) 
    38 Cal. 3d 762
    , 773–776 [first stating the rule]), and the
    prosecutor‘s reliance on it violated both that statute and his constitutional rights
    under the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution.17
    We agree with the People that defendant forfeited this claim by failing to
    object on the identified ground. We previously explained that the issue of whether
    the prosecutor improperly attacked the integrity of defense counsel was forfeited
    by counsel‘s failure to object at the guilt phase. (Ante, pt. I.B.4.b.) Although
    defendant attempts to tie that issue to the prosecutor‘s rhetorical question (―Isn‘t
    that morally perverted to ask for leniency for somebody like that?‖) during closing
    penalty phase argument, the prosecutor‘s question does not appear linked to the
    earlier comments about counsel‘s integrity. Without an objection explaining this
    theory of exclusion to the trial court, this matter was not properly preserved for
    our review. Even were we to overlook this procedural obstacle, we agree with the
    People that the prosecutor‘s question, either alone or in combination with earlier
    17      For his Eighth Amendment claim, defendant cites Roper v. Simmons (2005)
    
    543 U.S. 551
    , where the United States Supreme Court ruled that states may not,
    consistently with the Eighth Amendment, execute criminal offenders, even those
    convicted of first degree murder, who committed their crimes before their 18th
    birthday. In explaining its ruling, the court said: ―The Eighth Amendment guards
    against the execution of those who are ‗insufficient[ly] culpab[le],‘ [citation], in
    significant part, by requiring sentencing that ‗reflect[s] a reasoned moral response
    to the defendant‘s background, character, and crime.‘ California v. Brown, 
    479 U.S. 538
    , 545 (1987) (O‘Connor, J., concurring). Accordingly, the sentencer in a
    capital case must be permitted to give full effect to all constitutionally relevant
    mitigating evidence.‖ (Id. at p. 603, underscoring added.) By citing and quoting
    this passage, defendant may be understood to argue that the prosecutor‘s argument
    undermined the jury‘s ability to fairly assess his proffered mitigating evidence and
    to reach a reasoned and moral decision on the question of the proper penalty.
    79
    statements made in closing argument at the guilt phase, was harmless because it
    was not reasonably possible the argument affected the penalty verdict. (People v.
    
    Abilez, supra
    , 41 Cal.4th at pp. 525–526.)
    b. Reference to Richard Allen Davis
    Following his conviction at the guilt phase of the trial, defendant decided to
    forgo his right to wear street clothes and to instead appear before the jury in jail
    clothes. The trial court accordingly informed the jury that it was not to consider
    defendant‘s dress as a factor in its deliberations. Thereafter, during the penalty
    phase examination of defense expert Dr. Marlin Griffith, Defense Counsel Levy
    asked him whether, hypothetically speaking, a criminal defendant‘s decision not to
    wear civilian clothes and begin appearing before the jury in jail clothes would
    have ―psychological implications‖ for the expert‘s assessment of the person. Dr.
    Griffith replied: ―Well, given the gravity of Mr. Seumanu‘s case, and given the
    psychological information that I have previously pulled together, yes, I am very
    surprised that Mr. Seumanu is dressed in the county jail uniform as opposed to
    civilian clothes.‖ The prosecutor briefly cross-examined the witness on this point.
    Later, in closing argument, the prosecutor urged the jury to disregard Dr.
    Griffith‘s testimony, characterizing it as ―psychobabble‖ that ―doesn‘t mean a
    thing.‖ Ms. Backers then said this: ―The guy — do you remember what Richard
    Allen Davis did to his jury after he got convicted?
    ―Same thing [defendant] did to you. You convicted him of first degree
    murder and specials. And guess what? He thumbed his nose at you, took down
    his hair, put his jail clothes on and said: You can‘t touch me. I am not afraid of
    you.‖ There was no defense objection.
    Defendant contends the prosecutor‘s reference to Richard Allen Davis, the
    notorious kidnapper and killer of a 12-year-old child in 1993 (see People v. Davis
    80
    (2009) 
    46 Cal. 4th 539
    ), constituted prosecutorial misconduct requiring reversal.18
    That the issue was forfeited by the failure to object is immediately apparent
    (People v. 
    Hill, supra
    , 17 Cal.4th at p. 820) and although defendant claims an
    objection would have been futile (
    id. at p.
    721), no reason suggests such futility.
    The prosecutor did not equate defendant to Davis in terms of comparative moral
    fault, but raised only the side point that both defendants demonstrated contempt
    for their respective juries. Accordingly, even assuming the argument was
    improper, an admonition would likely have been sufficient to cure any harm. We
    thus conclude defendant forfeited the issue.
    Were we to address the issue, we would find no error. ―In general,
    prosecutors should refrain from comparing defendants to historic or fictional
    villains, especially where the comparisons are wholly inappropriate or unlinked to
    the evidence.‖ (People v. Bloom (1989) 
    48 Cal. 3d 1194
    , 1213, quoted with
    approval in People v. Jablonski (2006) 
    37 Cal. 4th 774
    , 836–837.) Although
    defendant‘s choice of attire was not as confrontational as Davis‘s obscene gesture
    to the jury,19 one could fairly argue that, in choosing to wear jail clothes,
    defendant demonstrated disdain for the solemnity of the proceedings. Considering
    18     Defendant also initially claimed the prosecutor‘s reference to jail clothes in
    her closing argument was misconduct, but has since withdrawn that claim in light
    of the People‘s counterargument that it was based on defense counsel‘s
    examination of Dr. Griffith.
    19     Defendant requests we take judicial notice that when the verdicts in Davis‘s
    case were read, he turned to the television camera and raised both hands with his
    middle fingers extended. The request is improper because defendant does not
    comply with California Rules of Court, rules 8.252 and 8.520(g), which require
    requests for judicial notice to be filed under separate cover. It matters little
    because there is no dispute as to Davis‘s actions in gesturing to the jury. (People
    v. 
    Davis, supra
    , 46 Cal.4th at p. 563 [describing these events].)
    81
    the wide latitude afforded prosecutors during argument (People v. 
    Gamache, supra
    , 48 Cal.4th at pp. 371–372), the prosecutor‘s argument comprised fair
    comment on the evidence.
    4. Alleged Improper Exploitation of Evidence of a Contract to Kill Iuli
    During her closing argument at the penalty phase, the prosecutor made this
    remark when addressing the issue of whether defendant deserved the jury‘s mercy:
    ―What mercy did [defendant] show to Tony [Iuli] when he put out a contract on
    his life, when Tony decided to come forward?‖ We previously have addressed the
    admissibility of testimony referencing the alleged contract on Iuli‘s life, and
    concluded the evidence was admissible despite the rule against hearsay because
    the testimony was admitted, not for its truth, but to bolster Iuli‘s credibility. (Ante,
    pt. I.B.1.c.) We also concluded any error was harmless. Defendant now reprises
    the issue, claiming the prosecutor‘s penalty phase argument exploited the
    improper evidence of the alleged contract by inviting the jurors to use it ―as a
    factor in aggravation when there was no competent evidence to support it.‖ Such
    argument, defendant contends, violated his constitutional right to due process and
    to a reliable penalty phase determination as guaranteed by the Eighth and
    Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
    We conclude defendant forfeited this issue by the failing to object.
    Although defendant contends an objection was not required, we disagree. The
    first time the issue of the alleged contract arose, the challenged testimony—
    although not competent evidence that such a contract actually existed—was at
    least partially admissible for the nonhearsay purpose of bolstering Iuli‘s
    credibility. But when the prosecutor mentioned it in her penalty phase closing
    argument, she spoke of the contract as if it had been proven by competent
    evidence. A timely and specific objection would have allowed the trial court to
    82
    consider whether to strike the argument as lacking a proper evidentiary basis and
    to admonish the jury to disregard the argument.
    5. Gang Status List
    We have previously explained that, with the exception of his claim that
    exhibit 46 (the gang status list entitled ―America‘s Most Wanted Samoans‖) was
    not properly authenticated, defendant‘s guilt phase challenges to the admission of
    the exhibit and later prosecutorial argument based on it, were both meritless.
    (Ante, pt. I.B.1.d.) Defendant reprises these arguments, arguing the prosecutor‘s
    penalty phase questioning of Iuli about the list elicited inadmissible evidence, and
    also that her closing argument referencing the list misstated the evidence and thus
    constituted misconduct.
    We first address defendant‘s evidentiary claim. At the penalty phase, Iuli
    confirmed that exhibit 46 was a typewritten copy he made, while in pretrial
    detention at juvenile hall, of a handwritten list defendant had given him. Iuli
    testified the list named the ―brothers in our house‖ and to be on the list was a
    ―badge of honor.‖ On cross-examination by defense counsel, Iuli said the list was
    not intended to name those who participated in Pamintuan‘s murder, that the
    names on the list were people to whom defendant and Iuli were close, and that the
    names were in order of age, oldest to youngest. Iuli said he did not ask defendant
    what he meant by the phrase ―America‘s Most Wanted Samoans,‖ and merely
    typed up what defendant gave him.
    Defendant did not object to this testimony, a point he acknowledges, but
    argues any objection would have been futile in light of the trial court‘s admission
    of exhibit 46 at the guilt phase. We need not resolve the forfeiture point because
    defendant does not in any event identify any ground on which the trial court could
    have excluded Iuli‘s penalty phase testimony. Unlike Tautai‘s testimony at the
    83
    guilt phase, Iuli testified at the penalty phase that he had personal knowledge
    about the list: He typed it up from defendant‘s handwritten list, and he recognized
    the names and explained why they were on the list (i.e., they were ―brothers in our
    house‖). Defendant‘s evidentiary complaint appears to center on what Iuli did not
    say: He did not say the list had anything to do with Pamintuan‘s murder, or that
    the order of names had anything to do with criminal behavior by the Sons of
    Samoa street gang. Defendant complains that the prosecutor made such assertions
    in her closing argument, but whether or not those comments were a fair
    extrapolation from Iuli‘s testimony, Iuli never actually said those things and
    defendant thus posits no ground on which Iuli‘s penalty phase testimony could
    have been excluded even had an objection been made.
    Admission of the evidence aside, defendant contends primarily that the
    prosecutor committed misconduct during her closing penalty phase argument by
    referring to Iuli‘s testimony as evidence defendant lacked remorse for his crimes.
    He claims the prosecutor misstated the evidence and alluded to evidence that did
    not exist. In support, he cites this portion of the prosecutor‘s argument: ―Now
    that you know the real truth, the real evidence, the brutality of this crime, and you
    know how it not only destroyed a single life, not only a single human being‘s life,
    not only a kind, unselfish, compassionate young person‘s life, but his whole
    family and his bride‘s family, and it turned his wedding day into a day of unending
    despair.
    ―All of those who know and love Nolan will never wake up from this
    darkest nightmare. And this nightmare is the handiwork of Afatia Ropati
    Seumanu, for which he has named himself one of America’s most wanted
    Samoans, a badge of honor that he awarded to himself for blowing Nolan’s chest
    to pieces.‖ (Italics added.)
    That this claim was forfeited by failure to object is immediately apparent.
    84
    In contrast to the evidentiary claim, no reason appears to justify the failure to
    object to this argument for—if defendant is correct that Ms. Backers misstated the
    evidence and referred to facts not in evidence—an objection (and request the jury
    be admonished) would not have been rendered futile by the earlier admission of
    the evidence.
    Were we to address the issue, we would find no misconduct. ―The
    prosecution is given wide latitude during closing argument to make fair comment
    on the evidence, including reasonable inferences or deductions to be drawn from
    it.‖ (People v. 
    Harris, supra
    , 37 Cal.4th at p. 345; see People v. 
    Hill, supra
    , 17
    Cal.4th at p. 819.) The phrase ―most wanted‖ is generally associated with the
    Federal Bureau of Investigation‘s list of the most dangerous criminals extant. (See
    People v. 
    Parson, supra
    , 44 Cal.4th at p. 339 [U. S. Marshals placed the defendant
    ―on their list of ‗top 15 most-wanted fugitives‘ ‖].) By labeling himself as
    ―America‘s Most Wanted Samoan[],‖ it was reasonable to infer that defendant was
    boasting of his criminal exploits, including Pamintuan‘s murder, and that he thus
    lacked remorse for his crimes.
    6. Darrell Churish’s Testimony
    Darrell Churish testified that he was driving somewhere with defendant
    when they spotted a large man at a bus stop wearing a Georgetown University
    jacket. Churish reported that defendant exited the car and physically confronted
    the man, who removed the coat and gave it to defendant. The prosecutor then
    asked Churish if defendant had ever offered to take someone‘s coat to give to him.
    Churish replied that one time when he was with defendant, he admired an Oakland
    Raiders jacket someone was wearing and defendant asked him if he wanted it.
    Churish told him no because he would not be able to explain the acquisition of
    such a garment to his mother. The prosecutor asked: ―He was going to take it off
    85
    that guy for you, right?‖ Churish answered: ―Probably, yeah.‖ There was no
    objection.
    Defendant contends Churish‘s assertion that defendant would have forced
    someone to give up his jacket for Churish‘s benefit was mere speculation and
    conjecture and therefore inadmissible. (See People v. Coddington (2000) 
    23 Cal. 4th 529
    , 599, overruled on other grounds in Price v. Superior 
    Court, supra
    , 25
    Cal.4th at p. 1069, fn. 13 [― ‗ ―A finding of fact must be an inference drawn from
    evidence rather than . . . a mere speculation as to probabilities without
    evidence.‖ ‘ ‖].) Defendant further contends the prosecutor‘s question that elicited
    this information was improperly leading and, because she knew it called for
    inadmissible evidence, constituted misconduct. (See People v. Gray (2005) 
    37 Cal. 4th 1
    68, 216 [prosecutor commits misconduct by intentionally eliciting
    inadmissible evidence].) Finally, defendant claims these twin state-law errors
    violated his rights under the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution
    because they diminished the reliability of the jury‘s penalty verdict.
    All of these claims were forfeited by defendant‘s failure to object. An
    objection is necessary to preserve for appeal questions regarding the admissibility
    of evidence (Evid. Code, § 353, subd. (a); People v. 
    Jones, supra
    , 57 Cal.4th at
    p. 977) and prosecutorial misconduct (People v. 
    Hill, supra
    , 17 Cal.4th at p. 820).
    Defense counsel‘s sole objection to the witness‘s testimony came after the
    question asking Churish about the type of jacket he had admired, but can
    reasonably be assumed to have been directed at Churish‘s previous answer. That
    solitary objection was insufficient to alert the trial court that defendant intended to
    challenge the witness‘s further testimony that he believed defendant intended to
    take a stranger‘s property by force to satisfy Churish‘s fashion desires, and that
    defendant further believed the prosecutor was engaging in misconduct by
    86
    intentionally eliciting inadmissible evidence. Accordingly, we find the issues now
    raised were forfeited by the failure to object.
    7. Effect of Alleged Guilt Phase Errors in the Penalty Phase
    Defendant contends three alleged errors occurring at the guilt phase worked
    synergistically to deny him a fair penalty phase trial. Citing his claim the
    prosecutor improperly used his postarrest silence against him (Doyle v. 
    Ohio, supra
    , 
    426 U.S. 610
    ) (ante, pt. I.B.4.a.), the alleged judicial misconduct flowing
    from the trial court‘s offhand comment, ―I know the temptation‖ (ante, pt. I.B.2.),
    and the prosecutor‘s alleged misconduct in questioning Tautai regarding whether
    the witness had sought to obtain a plea deal (ante, pt. I.B.4.d.), defendant argues
    the combined effect of these alleged guilt phase errors requires reversal of the
    penalty judgment because all involve ―[t]he circumstances of the crime of which
    the defendant was convicted‖ under section 190.3, factor (a), and the errors
    improperly inflated the number of aggravating circumstances available for the
    jury‘s consideration. As we explained above, however, defendant‘s claim of
    Doyle error, as well as the argument based on the trial court‘s fleeting comment,
    were forfeited and meritless. Further, the prosecutor‘s use of the failed plea
    negotiations when questioning Tautai was harmless and any claim thereon
    forfeited. We thus reject the claim of cumulative prejudice.
    8. Cumulative Prejudice from Guilt and Penalty Phase Errors
    Defendant contends the accumulation of the many alleged errors and acts of
    misconduct occurring in both the guilt and penalty phases of trial worked together
    to deny him a fair penalty trial. We have previously discussed each allegation
    individually and found most claims were forfeited for appeal, many are
    substantively meritless, and all were nonprejudicial. In particular, the prosecutor‘s
    two possible missteps (asking the jury to view the crime through the eyes of the
    87
    victim, and referring to Pamintuan as her ―client‖) were, as explained, not
    prejudicial in light of the strong evidence of guilt and the instruction informing the
    jury that the arguments of counsel are not evidence. (Ante, pt. I.B.4.c.) Defendant
    argues that balanced against these errors was a ―substantial case in mitigation‖ but
    even if true, the argument ignores the very substantial case in aggravation. On
    balance we find no cumulative prejudice requiring reversal.
    9. Admission of Victim Impact Evidence
    Defendant contends the admission of victim impact evidence, in the form of
    the testimony from the victim‘s intended bride, Rowena Panelo, his brother Paul
    Pamintuan, and his mother, Dr. Clementina Manio, although permissible under the
    Eighth Amendment (Payne v. 
    Tennessee, supra
    , 
    501 U.S. 808
    ), violated Penal
    Code section 190.3, factor (a) because the victim‘s positive qualities do not fairly
    constitute the ―circumstances of the crime.‖ Although defendant admits we have
    held otherwise (see, e.g., People v. 
    Edwards, supra
    , 54 Cal.3d at p. 835 [―factor
    (a) of section 190.3 allows evidence and argument on the specific harm caused by
    the defendant, including the impact on the family of the victim‖]; 
    id. at p.
    836), he
    contends none of our decisions has considered the actual meaning of the statutory
    phrase ―circumstances of the crime‖ as informed by this court‘s interpretation of
    the same phrase in People v. Love (1960) 
    53 Cal. 2d 843
    (disapproved on another
    ground in People v. Williams (1981) 
    29 Cal. 3d 392
    ). Defendant would thus have
    us distinguish a long line of precedent (e.g., People v. 
    Edwards, supra
    , 57 Cal.4th
    at p. 755; People v. Tully (2012) 
    54 Cal. 4th 952
    , 1031; People v. Boyette (2002)
    
    29 Cal. 4th 381
    , 444; People v. Stanley (1995) 
    10 Cal. 4th 764
    , 832),20 on the
    20     Because we agree an objection to the victim impact evidence would have
    been futile in light of the long line of cases permitting the admission of such
    (footnote continued on next page)
    88
    ground that these prior cases did not specifically address the argument he now
    raises (see People v. Brown (2012) 
    54 Cal. 4th 314
    , 330 [―cases are not authority
    for propositions not considered‖]). We thus turn to a consideration of defendant‘s
    claim.
    The centerpiece of defendant‘s claim is People v. 
    Love, supra
    , 
    53 Cal. 2d 843
    . In that case, the defendant, charged with murdering his wife, objected at his
    capital trial to the admission, during the penalty phase, of a ―a photograph
    showing a front view of the deceased lying on a hospital table‖ (
    id. at p.
    854) and
    an audio recording allowing the jury to ―hear the failing voice and the groans of
    the [victim] as she was dying‖ (id. at pp. 854–855). The case, which arose in
    1958, was governed by the death penalty law enacted in 1957, and the
    admissibility of evidence under that law. That law provided in pertinent part that
    after finding the defendant guilty of murder ―there shall thereupon be further
    proceedings on the issue of penalty, and the trier of fact shall fix the penalty.
    Evidence may be presented at the further proceedings on the issue of penalty, of
    the circumstances surrounding the crime, of the defendant‘s background and
    history, and of any facts in aggravation or mitigation of the penalty.‖ (Former
    § 190.1; added by Stats. 1957, ch. 1968, § 2, pp. 3509–3510, italics added.)21
    This court found the admission of the photograph and recording was
    reversible error. ―The determination of penalty . . . must be a rational decision.
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    evidence, we find the issue is properly before us despite the absence of an
    objection.
    21     Former section 190.1 was, for other reasons, declared unconstitutional
    under the California Constitution in People v. Anderson (1972) 
    6 Cal. 3d 628
    , 656-
    657.
    89
    Evidence that serves primarily to inflame the passions of the jurors must therefore
    be excluded, and to insure that it is, the probative value and the inflammatory
    effect of proffered evidence must be carefully weighed.‖ (People v. 
    Love, supra
    ,
    53 Cal.2d at p. 856.) Regarding the photograph and the recording, we found the
    evidence to have ―no significant probative value‖ (ibid.) absent some evidence that
    the victim‘s pain was ―intentionally inflicted‖ (ibid.). ―[E]ven if relevant and
    material, [the victim‘s] pain was more than adequately described by the doctor.
    There was no need to show the jurors the expression of her face in death or to fill
    the courtroom with her groans. Both the photograph and the tape recording served
    primarily to inflame the passions of the jurors and both should have been
    excluded.‖ (Id. at pp. 856–857.)
    Defendant contends the 1957 law‘s use of the phrase ―the circumstances
    surrounding the crime‖ substantially mirrors language used in current section
    190.3, factor (a)—―The circumstances of the crime of which the defendant was
    convicted‖—such that both phrases must be given the same construction. He thus
    seeks to invoke the rule of statutory construction that ―[w]here . . . legislation has
    been judicially construed and a subsequent statute on the same or an analogous
    subject uses identical or substantially similar language, we may presume that the
    Legislature intended the same construction, unless a contrary intent clearly
    appears.‖ (Estate of Griswold (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 904
    , 915–916.) But even were
    we to assume People v. Love concerned victim impact evidence, defendant‘s
    reasoning has a fatal flaw: Love did not purport to interpret the meaning of the
    statutory phrase in question to reach its decision. To be sure, the Love court found
    the evidence had ―no significant probative value‖ unless it could be proved that
    the defendant ―intentionally inflicted‖ the victim‘s pain. (People v. 
    Love, supra
    ,
    53 Cal.2d at p. 856.) But the Love court also reasoned there were ―less
    inflammatory methods of imparting to the jury the same or substantially the same
    90
    information‖ (ibid.), and that the key problem with the evidence was that there
    were other ways to give the jury the same information. There was also a sense the
    challenged evidence was improperly cumulative, as the victim‘s pain had already
    been described by the doctor. (Id. at pp. 756–857.) In short, Love explains, there
    was no particular need to present this information anew to the jury in the form of
    overly emotional evidence. ―Both the photograph and the tape recording served
    primarily to inflame the passions of the jurors and both should have been
    excluded.‖ (Id. at p. 857.) We conclude Love did not purport to give the phrase
    ―the circumstances surrounding the crime‖ a narrow interpretation so as to
    preclude evidence of the crime‘s impact on surviving family and friends. Even
    assuming for argument that Love has not been overtaken by subsequent judicial
    decisions concerning the admissibility of victim impact evidence in capital trials, it
    has no bearing on the meaning of section 190.3, factor (a) as presently written.
    10. The Impact of Delay on the Constitutionality of the California
    Death Penalty Law
    While the appeal in this case was pending, the United States District Court
    for the Central District of California issued its opinion in Jones v. 
    Chappell, supra
    ,
    
    31 F. Supp. 3d 1050
    (Jones), a case in which a California capital defendant
    challenged his sentence of death in a federal habeas corpus petition. Jones
    concluded that systemic delays in implementing the death penalty under California
    law have rendered execution of the penalty so arbitrary that its imposition would
    violate the prisoner‘s rights under the Eighth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution. The state has appealed that decision to the Ninth Circuit Court of
    Appeals and, as of this writing, that appeal is pending. (Jones v. Chappell (9th
    Cir., Aug. 21, 2014, No. 14-56373).) Following the district court‘s decision,
    defendant Seumanu filed a supplemental opening brief in this court, raising the
    same Eighth Amendment/delay issue and relying heavily on the federal court‘s
    91
    reasoning. As we explain, although we do not in this case pass on the viability or
    legitimacy of what we will here call a ―Jones claim,‖ i.e., a claim that systemic
    delay in resolving postconviction challenges to death penalty judgments has led to
    a constitutionally intolerable level of arbitrariness in the implementation of the
    penalty, we conclude that—assuming such a claim exists—it has not been proved
    here.
    The Eighth Amendment provides that ―[e]xcessive bail shall not be
    required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments
    inflicted.‖ Although this key provision of the Bill of Rights applies to the states
    (Glossip v. Gross (2015) ___ U.S. ___ [
    2015 WL 2473454
    , p. 9]; Robinson v.
    California (1962) 
    370 U.S. 660
    , 666–667; In re Anderson (1968) 
    69 Cal. 2d 613
    ,
    629, fn. 6),22 we have, in the past, rejected the claim that delay in deciding
    postconviction challenges in capital cases constitutes cruel and unusual
    punishment. As we explained in People v. Anderson (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 543
    ,
    ―delay inherent in the automatic appeal process is not a basis for concluding that
    either the death penalty itself, or the process leading to its execution, is cruel and
    unusual punishment.‖ (Id., at p. 606, citing People v. Massie (1998) 
    19 Cal. 4th 550
    , 574, and People v. Hill (1992) 
    3 Cal. 4th 959
    , 1016.) ―[T]he automatic appeal
    process following judgments of death is a constitutional safeguard, not a
    constitutional defect [citations], because it assures careful review of the
    22      Although the state Constitution has its own prohibition on cruel or unusual
    punishment (Cal. Const., art. I, § 17), a different section in article I provides in
    part that the ―death penalty . . . shall not be deemed to be, or to constitute, the
    infliction of cruel or unusual punishments within the meaning of Article I, Section
    6 nor shall such punishment . . . be deemed to contravene any other provision of
    this constitution‖ (id., art. I, § 27). Our discussion is thus limited to the Eighth
    Amendment to the United States Constitution, which is in any event the only legal
    authority defendant invokes.
    92
    defendant‘s conviction and sentence [citation]. Moreover, an argument that one
    under judgment of death suffers cruel and unusual punishment by the inherent
    delays in resolving his appeal is untenable. If the appeal results in reversal of the
    death judgment, he has suffered no conceivable prejudice, while if the judgment is
    affirmed, the delay has prolonged his life.‖ (People v. 
    Anderson, supra
    , at p. 606.)
    We have cited Anderson for this proposition many times since it was decided.
    (See People v. McDowell (2012) 
    54 Cal. 4th 395
    , 412; People v. Demetrulias
    (2006) 
    39 Cal. 4th 1
    , 45; People v. Dunkle (2005) 
    36 Cal. 4th 861
    , 942; People v.
    Jones (2003) 
    29 Cal. 4th 1229
    , 1267; see also People v. Bennett (2009) 
    45 Cal. 4th 577
    , 630 [generally rejecting 8th Amend. delay claim]; People v. Panah (2005) 
    35 Cal. 4th 395
    , 500 [same].)
    But although we have consistently, and recently, rejected the Eighth
    Amendment/delay claim, doctrine can evolve. This is especially true when
    interpreting the Eighth Amendment, which was ratified in 1791. The United
    States Supreme Court has recognized that the notion of cruel and unusual
    punishment is not a concept carved in 18th-century stone, instead explaining that
    although ―the words of the [Eighth] Amendment are not precise, . . . their scope is
    not static. The Amendment must draw its meaning from the evolving standards of
    decency that mark the progress of a maturing society.‖ (Trop v. Dulles (1958) 
    356 U.S. 86
    , 100–101, fn. omitted; see People v. Trinh (2014) 
    59 Cal. 4th 216
    , 237
    [holding the California law permitting penalty phase retrials, although rare when
    compared to the statutory schemes of other states, does not violate the Trop
    standard].) ―The basic concept underlying the Eighth Amendment is nothing less
    than the dignity of man. While the State has the power to punish, the Amendment
    stands to assure that this power be exercised within the limits of civilized
    standards.‖ (Trop v. 
    Dulles, supra
    , at p. 100.)
    93
    Accordingly, although this court has consistently rejected the Eighth
    Amendment/delay argument, defendant‘s reliance on the recently decided 
    Jones, supra
    , 
    31 F. Supp. 3d 1050
    , provides an opportunity to reconsider whether our prior
    position on this issue remains valid and supportable. ―As with many rules of law,
    multiple repetitions over time may tend to obscure the original purpose of the
    rule.‖ (In re Harris (1993) 
    5 Cal. 4th 813
    , 826; Hyde v. United States (1912) 
    225 U.S. 347
    , 391, dis. opn. of Holmes, J. [―It is one of the misfortunes of the law that
    ideas become encysted in phrases and thereafter for a long time cease to provoke
    further analysis.‖].)
    Our examination of defendant‘s claim reveals it to be subtly different from
    the Eighth Amendment claim rejected by People v. 
    Anderson, supra
    , 
    25 Cal. 4th 543
    , and its progeny, rendering that line of authority a less than perfect refutation
    of the claim now before the court. Anderson and later cases addressed what is
    known as a ―Lackey claim,‖ which takes its name from a memorandum opinion on
    denial of certiorari by Justice John Paul Stevens in Lackey v. Texas (1995) 
    514 U.S. 1045
    . (See Muhammad v. Florida (2014) ___ U.S. ___ [
    134 S. Ct. 894
    ]
    (Breyer, J., mem. opn. on denial of cert.) [same]; Johnson v. Bredesen, Governor
    of Tennessee, et al. (2009) 
    558 U.S. 1067
    (Stevens, J., with Breyer, J., mem. opn.
    on denial of cert.) [same].) Such a claim argues that a lengthy period of
    incarceration on death row awaiting execution is impermissibly cruel and unusual
    because the long delay robs the ultimate penalty of any legitimate retributive
    value, diminishes to the vanishing point any deterrence value to an execution, and
    is psychologically damaging to the condemned inmate to an unjustifiable degree.
    (See Glossip v. 
    Gross, supra
    , ___ U.S. at p. ___ [
    2015 WL 2473454
    , p. 43] (dis.
    opn. of Breyer, J., joined by Ginsburg, J.) [―lengthy delays both aggravate the
    cruelty of the death penalty and undermine its jurisprudential rationale‖].)
    94
    Lackey claims are usually denied in the lower federal courts, sometimes on
    the merits (see, e.g., Smith v. Mahoney (9th Cir. 2010) 
    611 F.3d 978
    , 998;
    Thompson v. Secretary for Dept. of Corrections (11th Cir. 2008) 
    517 F.3d 1279
    ,
    1284), and sometimes on procedural grounds (e.g., Ibarra v. Thaler (5th Cir.
    2012) 
    687 F.3d 222
    , 224–225 & fn. 1), although not all federal judges are in
    agreement (see Ceja v. Stewart (9th Cir. 1998) 
    134 F.3d 1368
    , 1376 (dis. opn. of
    Fletcher, J. from summary refusal to stay execution) [noting the claim ―that having
    a death sentence hanging over one‘s head subjects one to extraordinary
    psychological duress, as well as the extreme physical and social restrictions that
    inhere in life on death row, and that it constitutes cruel and unusual punishment to
    impose such conditions of stress upon a death row inmate for a period of decades‖
    and concluding the issue is ―of the highest importance‖]; Gretzler v. Stewart (9th
    Cir. 1998) 
    146 F.3d 675
    , 676 (dis. opn. of Pregerson, J.) [opining that he would
    grant a stay and remand to allow the lower court to consider a Lackey claim on the
    merits]; see also McKenzie v. Day (9th Cir. 1995) 
    57 F.3d 1461
    , 1488 (dis. opn. of
    Norris, J.) [Lackey claim ―is substantial, important, and deserving of careful and
    thoughtful adjudication‖]). Although the United States Supreme Court has yet to
    definitively embrace or reject a Lackey claim in a full opinion, two justices
    recently suggested they find the claim potentially meritorious. (Glossip v. 
    Gross, supra
    , ___ U.S. at p. ___ [
    2015 WL 2473454
    , p. 43] (dis opn. of Breyer, J., joined
    by Ginsburg, J.).)
    Although also based on a long postconviction delay, defendant‘s claim is
    different from a Lackey claim. Relying on 
    Jones, supra
    , 
    31 F. Supp. 3d 1050
    , he
    claims the systemic delays in implementing the death penalty in California render
    its implementation arbitrary, thus violating the Eighth Amendment‘s prohibition
    of cruel and unusual punishments. According to Jones, ―California‘s death
    penalty system is so plagued by inordinate and unpredictable delay that the death
    95
    sentence is actually carried out against only a trivial few of those sentenced to
    death.‖ (
    Jones, supra
    , at p. 1062.) Of those few selected to be executed, ―their
    selection for execution will not depend on whether their crime was one of passion
    or of premeditation, on whether they killed one person or ten, or on any other
    proxy for the relative penological value that will be achieved by executing that
    inmate over any other. Nor will it even depend on the perhaps neutral criterion of
    executing inmates in the order in which they arrived on Death Row. Rather, it will
    depend upon a factor largely outside an inmate‘s control, and wholly divorced
    from the penological purposes the State sought to achieve by sentencing him to
    death in the first instance: how quickly the inmate proceeds through the State‘s
    dysfunctional post-conviction review process.‖ (Ibid.) Although the concern over
    the continuing ability of the death penalty to serve the state‘s legitimate interest in
    retribution and deterrence is also relevant to a Lackey claim, the kernel of a Jones
    claim is not the delay per se, but the arbitrariness that such delay injects into the
    system.
    According to 
    Jones, supra
    , 31 F.Supp.3d at page 1063, for a defendant ―to
    be executed in such a system, where so many are sentenced to death but only a
    random few are actually executed, would offend the most fundamental of
    constitutional protections—that the government shall not be permitted to
    arbitrarily inflict the ultimate punishment of death. See Furman [v. Georgia
    (1972)] 408 U.S. [238, 293] (Brennan, J., concurring) (‗When the punishment of
    death is inflicted in a trivial number of the cases in which it is legally available,
    the conclusion is virtually inescapable that it is being inflicted arbitrarily. Indeed,
    it smacks of little more than a lottery system.‘).‖ Although Furman addressed
    arbitrariness as it affected the selection of offenders eligible for the death
    96
    penalty,23 and not—as here—which among those already sentenced to death
    would actually be executed, Jones concluded that ―[t]he Eighth Amendment
    simply cannot be read to proscribe a state from randomly selecting which few
    members of its criminal population it will sentence to death, but to allow that same
    state to randomly select which trivial few of those condemned it will actually
    execute. Arbitrariness in execution is still arbitrary, regardless of when in the
    process the arbitrariness arises.‖ (
    Jones, supra
    , at p. 1063.)
    In sum, although both Lackey and Jones claims stem from a concern over
    how a long postconviction delay in carrying out the death penalty may be squared
    with the Eighth Amendment‘s constitutional limitations, they are distinct. A
    Lackey claim examines how a long postconviction delay affects the state‘s interest
    in retribution and deterrence, as well as the allegedly psychologically brutalizing
    effect on the condemned inmate; a Jones claim, by contrast, examines whether a
    long postconviction delay leads to the infliction of a criminal sanction in a manner
    that is so arbitrary that its imposition can be characterized as cruel and unusual.
    We now turn to this latter issue.
    Assuming for argument we were to agree with the federal judge in 
    Jones, supra
    , 
    31 F. Supp. 3d 1050
    , that long and systemic delays in postconviction review
    of death penalty verdicts could render the capital case system in this state
    impermissibly arbitrary in violation of the Eighth Amendment, an initial obstacle
    to reaching such a conclusion in this case is the inadequate state of the record.
    The issue comes to us on direct appeal and review is limited to facts in the
    23      Furman ―has been authoritatively interpreted as holding that the death
    penalty cannot ‗be imposed under sentencing procedures that created a substantial
    risk that it would be inflicted in an arbitrary and capricious manner.‘ ‖ (People v.
    Frierson (1979) 
    25 Cal. 3d 142
    , 173.)
    97
    appellate record. By contrast, in Jones, the federal court confronted the issue on
    habeas corpus, where the petitioner could produce supporting facts and evidence
    from outside the appellate record. To the extent the petitioner in Jones alleged
    facts by citing the Final Report of the California Commission on the Fair
    Administration of Justice (2008),24 sites maintained by the California Department
    of Corrections and Rehabilitation25 and the Office of the Attorney General,26 and
    articles by legal writers and scholars,27 we can take judicial notice of the same
    facts. (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (h) [court can take judicial notice of ―(h) Facts
    and propositions that are not reasonably subject to dispute and are capable of
    immediate and accurate determination by resort to sources of reasonably
    indisputable accuracy.‖].) But the petitioner in Jones also presented key facts to
    the federal court in the form of two declarations by the Director of the Habeas
    Corpus Resource Center, neither of which is in the record before us or properly
    subject to judicial notice.
    24      (as of August
    24, 2015).
    25   For example:  [as of August 24, 2015].
    26     For example:  [as of August 24, 2015].
    27     For example, Jones v. 
    Chappell, supra
    , 
    31 F. Supp. 3d 1050
    , cites Uelmen,
    Death Penalty Appeals and Habeas Proceedings: The California Experience
    (2009) 93 Marq. L.Rev. 495; Alarcón & Mitchell, Executing the Will of the
    Voters?: A Roadmap to Mend or End the California Legislature’s Multi-Billion-
    Dollar Death Penalty Debacle (2011) 44 Loy. L.A. L.Rev. S41, S61; and Alarcón,
    Remedies for California’s Death Row Deadlock (2007) 80 S.Cal. L.Rev. 697,
    734.
    98
    For example, citing the latter declarations, the federal court found the
    following assertions factually true: (1) ―[A]s of June 2014, 352 inmates—nearly
    half of Death Row—were without habeas corpus counsel.‖ (
    Jones, supra
    , 31
    F.Supp.3d at p. 1058.) (2) ―Currently, of the 352 inmates without habeas counsel,
    159 have been awaiting appointment of such counsel for more than ten years.‖
    (Ibid.) (3) ―[T]here are 76 inmates whose direct appeals have been fully denied by
    the California Supreme Court but still lack habeas counsel.‖ (Ibid.) (4) Such
    inmates ―have already waited an average of 15.8 years after the imposition of their
    death sentence for habeas counsel to be appointed, and are still waiting.‖ (Ibid.).
    Given that the People do not contest the accuracy of these alleged facts,
    however, we will assume for purposes of argument that the facts before the Jones
    court are accurate. We will further assume for purposes of argument that Furman
    v. 
    Georgia, supra
    , 
    408 U.S. 238
    , and its progeny are not limited to the earlier
    selection process from among the class of all murderers, but prohibit as well
    arbitrariness in the selection for execution from among those already adjudged
    guilty and deserving of the death penalty.28 (But see, Glossip v. 
    Gross, supra
    , ___
    U.S. at p. ___ [
    2015 WL 2473454
    , p. 23] (conc. opn. of Thomas, J., joined by
    28      ―As long as a state‘s capital sentencing scheme ‗narrows the class of death-
    eligible murderers‘ and then during sentence selection permits the exercise of
    discretion and does not limit consideration of evidence in mitigation, the United
    States Supreme Court has stated that the Eighth Amendment ‗requires no more.‘
    (Lowenfield v. Phelps [(1988)] 484 U.S. [231] at p. 246; accord, California v.
    Brown (1987) 
    479 U.S. 538
    , 541.) Indeed, the high court found no constitutional
    defect in a capital sentencing scheme that in the sentence selection process
    afforded the sentencer ‗unbridled discretion‘ in deciding what sentence to impose
    on a defendant within the narrowed class of persons eligible for the death penalty.
    (Zant v. Stephens [(1983)] 462 U.S. [862] at p. 875.)‖ (People v. Bacigalupo
    (1993) 
    6 Cal. 4th 457
    , 466–467.)
    99
    Scalia, J.) [describing the rule against arbitrariness in imposing the death penalty
    ―an imaginary constitutional rule‖].)
    Even operating under these twin assumptions, we conclude defendant has
    not, on this record, demonstrated that systemic delays have produced arbitrariness
    that is violative of the Eighth Amendment. Our conclusion would be different
    were the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to ask all capital
    inmates who have exhausted their appeals to draw straws or roll dice to determine
    who would be the first in line for execution. But the record in this case does not
    demonstrate such arbitrariness. Unquestionably, some delay occurs while this
    court locates and appoints qualified appellate counsel, permits those appointed
    attorneys to prepare detailed briefs, allows the Attorney General to respond, and
    then carefully evaluates the arguments raised, holds oral argument, and prepares a
    written opinion. Further delays occur when this court locates and appoints
    qualified counsel for habeas corpus, allows ample time for counsel to prepare a
    petition, and then evaluates the resulting petition and successive petitions. But
    such delays are the product of ―a constitutional safeguard, not a constitutional
    defect [citations], because [they] assure[] careful review of the defendant‘s
    conviction and sentence.‖ (People v. 
    Anderson, supra
    , 25 Cal.4th at p. 606.)
    Although the Jones court found that systemic delays cause the state to
    apply an arbitrary and irrational standard for deciding whom to execute (see 
    Jones, supra
    , 31 F.Supp.3d at p. 1062 [choosing whom to execute depends on factors
    ―wholly divorced‖ from any valid ―penological purposes‖]), the facts before that
    court did not explain why the death penalty review process takes as long as it does
    at certain points, nor do they shed light on the reasons behind the variability in the
    time it takes for cases to progress through the review process. That some inmates
    will exhaust their appeals and collateral attacks sooner than others, that some will
    obtain relief on appeal or on habeas corpus and others not, is inevitable given the
    100
    complexity of the judicial review process. These differences are not necessarily
    attributable to arbitrariness in the process of review under state law, but may
    instead represent the legitimate variances present in each individual case. Such
    differences may include variances in the nature of the underlying facts, the length
    of record, the quality of the briefing, and the complexity and number of issues
    raised by the parties. For some defendants the appointed attorneys will need more
    time to prepare and file an opening brief or habeas corpus petition due to the
    relative complexity of the issues involved, and the Attorney General will for the
    same reasons in some cases need additional time to respond. In some cases the
    trial record will take longer to certify as correct due to length or legitimate
    accuracy concerns. That capital case appeals and habeas corpus petitions are not
    decided in a purely chronological first in, first out manner may simply reflect the
    variation in the cases and this court‘s individual consideration of each case, and
    thus not demonstrate any intrinsic arbitrariness within the meaning of the Eighth
    Amendment.
    Nor is it clear from the record before us (even assuming we may consider
    the facts before the Jones court) how the process may be labeled ―arbitrary,‖ given
    the innumerable variables in play that affect the overall delay in this court in
    resolving capital appeals and habeas corpus petitions. To characterize the system
    of reviewing death penalty judgments as arbitrary as a result of long
    postconviction delays suggests randomness or a lack of rationality. But allowing
    each case the necessary time, based on its individual facts and circumstances, to
    permit this court‘s careful examination of the claims raised is the opposite of a
    system of random and arbitrary review. As one federal appellate court has stated:
    ―The essential point for our purposes, of course, is whether or not the Eighth
    Amendment is being violated. We believe that delay in capital cases is too long.
    But delay, in large part, is a function of the desire of our courts, state and federal,
    101
    to get it right, to explore exhaustively, or at least sufficiently, any argument that
    might save someone‘s life.‖ (Chambers v. Bowersox (8th Cir. 1998) 
    157 F.3d 560
    , 570, fn. omitted.; see Zant v. Stephens (1983) 
    462 U.S. 862
    , 885 [―although
    not every imperfection in the deliberative process is sufficient, even in a capital
    case, to set aside a state court judgment, the severity of the sentence mandates
    careful scrutiny in the review of any colorable claim of error.‖].) Without
    concrete evidence of the reasons why cases take as long as they do and why some
    cases take so much longer than others, we cannot conclude that postconviction
    delays affecting the imposition of a death sentence are arbitrary, let alone so
    arbitrary as to violate the Eighth Amendment.
    In sum, assuming for argument the facts before the court in Jones v.
    
    Chappell, supra
    , 
    31 F. Supp. 3d 1050
    , were before this court, and further assuming
    that evidence of systemic delay could implicate a capital defendant‘s rights under
    the Eighth Amendment (i.e., a Jones claim), we conclude defendant has not on this
    record demonstrated that delays in implementing the death penalty under
    California law have rendered that penalty impermissibly arbitrary. We thus reject
    his Jones claim for purposes of this appeal. Any such claim is more appropriately
    presented in a petition for habeas corpus, where a defendant can present necessary
    evidence outside the appellate record.
    11. Constitutional Challenges to California’s Death Penalty Statute
    Defendant contends several features of California‘s death penalty law, as
    interpreted by this court, violate the United States Constitution. He concedes
    ―most of these features [of the law] have been rejected by this Court‖ and so
    ―presents these arguments here in an abbreviated fashion,‖ presumably in order to
    preserve his rights in federal court. We address and reject them in a similarly brief
    manner:
    102
    1. ―California‘s special circumstances (see § 190.2) adequately narrow the
    class of murderers eligible for the death penalty.‖ (People v. 
    Duff, supra
    , 58
    Cal.4th at p. 568.)
    2. ―Section 190.3, factor (a), which permits the jury to consider the
    circumstances of the crime in deciding whether to impose the death penalty, does
    not license the arbitrary and capricious imposition of the death penalty.‖ (People
    v. 
    Duff, supra
    , 59 Cal.4th at p. 569.)
    3. Neither the state nor federal Constitution requires the prosecution bear
    the burden of proof or persuasion at the penalty phase of a capital trial, or requires
    the jury find beyond a reasonable doubt that (1) the aggravating factors have been
    proved, (2) the aggravating factors outweigh the mitigating factors, or (3) death is
    the appropriate sentence. Moreover, none of the United States Supreme Court‘s
    recent decisions interpreting the Sixth Amendment‘s jury trial guarantee
    (Cunningham v. California (2007) 
    549 U.S. 270
    ; United States v. Booker (2005)
    
    543 U.S. 220
    ; Blakely v. Washington (2004) 
    542 U.S. 296
    ; Ring v. Arizona (2002)
    
    536 U.S. 584
    ; Apprendi v. New Jersey (2000) 
    530 U.S. 466
    ) require a different
    result (People v. 
    Jones, supra
    , 57 Cal.4th at pp. 979–980).
    4. Neither ―the Sixth, Eighth, or Fourteenth Amendment require[s] written
    findings or other specific findings by the jury regarding the aggravating factors.‖
    (People v. Bunyard (2009) 
    45 Cal. 4th 836
    , 861.)
    5. ―The federal constitutional guarantees of due process and equal
    protection, and against cruel and unusual punishment (U.S. Const., 6th, 8th, &
    14th Amends.), do not require intercase proportionality review on appeal.‖
    (People v. Mai (2013) 
    57 Cal. 4th 986
    , 1057.)
    6. ―Admitting evidence of prior unadjudicated crimes in aggravation does
    not violate the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, or Fourteenth Amendment guarantees of fair
    103
    trial, trial by an impartial jury . . . and reliability. . . .‖ (People v. Prince (2007) 
    40 Cal. 4th 1179
    , 1297.)
    7. ―The Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments are not violated
    by the use of the adjectives ‗extreme‘ and ‗substantial‘ in connection with section
    190.3, factors (g) and (d).‖ (People v. 
    Bunyard, supra
    , 45 Cal.4th at p. 861.)
    8. ―The trial court was not constitutionally required to inform the jury that
    certain sentencing factors are relevant only in mitigation, and the statutory
    instruction to the jury to consider ‗whether or not‘ certain mitigating factors were
    present did not unconstitutionally suggest that the absence of such factors
    amounted to aggravation.‖ (People v. Whisenhunt (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 174
    , 228.)
    9. California‘s use of the death penalty law does not violate international
    norms of humanity and decency. (People v. 
    Jones, supra
    , 57 Cal.4th at p. 981.)
    104
    III. CONCLUSION
    The guilt and penalty phase judgments are affirmed in their entirety.
    WERDEGAR, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J.
    CHIN, J.
    LIU, J.
    CUÉLLAR, J.
    KRUGER, J.
    PERLUSS, J.
          Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District,
    Division Seven, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of
    the California Constitution.
    105
    See next page for addresses and telephone numbers for counsel who argued in Supreme Court.
    Name of Opinion People v. Seumanu
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Unpublished Opinion
    Original Appeal XXX
    Original Proceeding
    Review Granted
    Rehearing Granted
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Opinion No. S093803
    Date Filed: August 24, 2015
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Court: Superior
    County: Alameda
    Judge: Larry J. Goodman
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Counsel:
    Mark David Greenberg, under appointment by the Supreme Court, for Defendant and Appellant.
    Edmund G. Brown and Kamala D. Harris, Attorneys General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney
    General, Gerald A. Engler and Ronald S. Matthias, Assistant Attorneys General, Nanette Winaker, Kelly
    Croxton and Glenn R. Pruden, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    1
    Counsel who argued in Supreme Court (not intended for publication with opinion):
    Mark David Greenberg
    484 Lake Park Avenue, No. 429
    Oakland, CA 94610
    (510) 452-3126
    Nanette Winaker
    Deputy Attorney General
    455 Golden Gate Avenue, Suite 11000
    San Francisco, CA 94102-7004
    (415) 703-5934
    2
    

Document Info

Docket Number: S093803

Citation Numbers: 61 Cal. 4th 1293, 355 P.3d 384, 192 Cal. Rptr. 3d 195, 2015 Cal. LEXIS 5634

Judges: Werdegar, Cantil-Sakauye, Chin, Liu, Cuéllar, Kruger, Perluss

Filed Date: 8/24/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (73)

People v. Panah , 25 Cal. Rptr. 3d 672 ( 2005 )

People v. Morales , 104 Cal. Rptr. 2d 582 ( 2001 )

Hyde v. United States , 32 S. Ct. 793 ( 1912 )

Furman v. Georgia , 92 S. Ct. 2726 ( 1972 )

People v. Anderson , 106 Cal. Rptr. 2d 575 ( 2001 )

People v. Fierro , 1 Cal. 4th 173 ( 1991 )

People v. Carrington , 47 Cal. 4th 145 ( 2009 )

People v. Anderson , 6 Cal. 3d 628 ( 1972 )

People v. Fleming , 166 Cal. 357 ( 1913 )

Doyle v. Ohio , 96 S. Ct. 2240 ( 1976 )

Payne v. Tennessee , 111 S. Ct. 2597 ( 1991 )

People v. Gamache , 48 Cal. 4th 347 ( 2010 )

Apprendi v. New Jersey , 120 S. Ct. 2348 ( 2000 )

People v. Farnam , 121 Cal. Rptr. 2d 106 ( 2002 )

Zant v. Stephens , 103 S. Ct. 2733 ( 1983 )

People v. Bacigalupo , 6 Cal. 4th 457 ( 1993 )

People v. Cudjo , 6 Cal. 4th 585 ( 1993 )

United States v. Booker , 125 S. Ct. 738 ( 2004 )

People v. Martinez , 83 Cal. Rptr. 2d 533 ( 1999 )

People v. Ralph International Thomas , 2 Cal. 4th 489 ( 1992 )

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