State v. White , 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 253 ( 2016 )


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    2016 UT App 241
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Appellee,
    v.
    COY BRANDON WHITE,
    Appellant.
    Opinion
    No. 20141003-CA
    Filed December 15, 2016
    Third District Court, Salt Lake Department
    The Honorable Elizabeth A. Hruby-Mills
    No. 121908920
    Nicole G. Farrell, Alan S. Mouritsen, and Adam E.
    Weinacker, Attorneys for Appellant
    Sean D. Reyes and Marian Decker, Attorneys
    for Appellee
    JUDGE DAVID N. MORTENSEN authored this Opinion, in which
    JUDGES GREGORY K. ORME and J. FREDERIC VOROS JR. concurred.
    MORTENSEN, Judge:
    ¶1    Defendant Coy Brandon White was found uninvited and
    without pants in a darkened bathroom by Victim, who engaged
    in combat with his newfound adversary. A jury convicted
    Defendant of aggravated burglary and aggravated assault, and
    he now appeals. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2    On the evening of May 11, 2012, Victim arrived home and
    greeted his son (Son) before making his way to the master
    bathroom to wash his hands. As Victim approached the
    bathroom, he saw the silhouette of a man in his underwear.
    State v. White
    Victim asked the man who he was and what he was doing, to
    which the man replied, ‚I’m here for your daughter.‛ Victim’s
    daughter was not home at the time. Using the bedroom door,
    which is adjacent to the bathroom, Victim attempted to trap the
    man in the bathroom. The man ‚stuck the end of a broom
    through an opening in the doorway‛ and hit Victim. Victim then
    opened the bedroom door, and the two men engaged in a
    physical struggle. At some point Son came in, and Victim
    instructed him to go get a knife. Son returned with two, giving
    one to Victim. Victim did not immediately use the knife against
    the man because he felt ‚compassion not to kill him.‛ The man
    momentarily retreated to retrieve a clothes iron from the hall,
    which he used to strike Victim. When Victim countered with the
    knife, the man ‚started backing up defending himself with the
    iron,‛ then dropped the iron and fled the apartment.
    ¶3     Police found blood on the iron and sent the blood to the
    Utah State Crime Lab for testing. The DNA from the blood
    matched a DNA sample in Utah’s Combined DNA Index
    System. The sample belonged to Defendant. Neither Victim nor
    Son could identify Defendant at trial as the man in their home,
    and Victim failed to select Defendant’s picture from a photo
    array following the incident. No one in Victim’s family knew
    Defendant; he had never been invited to enter their home.
    ¶4      The State charged Defendant with aggravated burglary
    and aggravated assault, first and third degree felonies
    respectively. See 
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-203
     (LexisNexis 2012);
    
    id.
     § 76-5-103. During discovery, the State filed a motion under
    rule 16 of the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure requesting a
    sample of Defendant’s DNA via buccal swab—a method of
    collecting DNA by swabbing the interior surface of a person’s
    cheek. The motion was supported by an affidavit from the
    investigating officer. Defendant objected to the motion. The trial
    court overruled Defendant’s objection, and after hearing
    argument, granted the State’s motion, ordering Defendant to
    provide the sample. Defendant refused. The State then filed a
    second motion, again under rule 16, requesting an order
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    State v. White
    allowing it to use force to obtain Defendant’s DNA sample.
    Again Defendant objected, arguing that rule 16 does not
    authorize the use of force in obtaining a DNA sample, and again
    the trial court granted the State’s motion. Defendant thereafter
    allowed investigators to take a sample of his DNA without force,
    and this was the only evidence the State presented at trial to
    prove Defendant’s identity as the man in Victim’s apartment.
    ¶5     Defendant’s trial strategy involved alternative defenses.
    Either (1) Defendant was not the man who Victim found in his
    bathroom or (2) Defendant’s actions were justified as a result of
    self-defense or compulsion. As Defendant explains,
    ‚Accordingly, the actions of [Victim] the night of the incident
    were relevant to *Defendant’s+ defense.‛ For this reason,
    Defendant informed the trial court that Victim had entered a
    plea in abeyance on a 2010 assault charge and stated that if
    Victim put his own character at issue, Defendant would question
    him about the 2010 charge.
    ¶6      In the course of Victim’s testimony, he stated that he had
    ‚felt compassion not to kill‛ the man in his bathroom and that he
    did not ‚have a criminal mind.‛ Defense counsel, during a bench
    conference, asserted that these statements were ‚somewhat
    ambiguous, [and] may be a question of interpretation‛ and
    asked permission to cross-examine Victim on ‚what it is that he
    meant.‛ In defense counsel’s view, ‚depending on *Victim’s+
    answer,‛ that could ‚open the door to some discussion of the‛
    plea in abeyance. The trial court refused the request.
    ¶7      Also during his testimony, Victim twice made comments
    indicating that he ‚felt more accused than the defendant.‛ 1 After
    the first comment, Defendant requested, and the trial court gave,
    1. Only one of these comments is explicitly indicated in the trial
    transcript. The parties’ briefs and the context of the second
    comment indicate that Victim made an earlier comment along
    the same lines, which for some reason was not recorded.
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    State v. White
    a curative instruction to the jury to disregard the comment.
    Following the second comment, Defendant moved for a mistrial.
    The trial court denied the motion but indicated its willingness to
    give a second curative instruction; Defendant never requested
    this second instruction.
    ¶8      Finally, Defendant raised the issue of Victim’s status as an
    undocumented immigrant. Victim had filed I-918 petitions—
    used to obtain what are commonly called U visas—for himself
    and his family. Defendant presented an expert at trial who
    explained that U visas confer legal status on victims of violent
    crimes. Defendant used this evidence to suggest a possible
    motive for Victim to fabricate the details of that night, namely,
    obtaining a more favorable immigration status. Defendant also
    sought to question Victim concerning his refusal to provide
    defense counsel with a copy of the I-918 petitions. The trial court
    had reviewed the petitions in camera and concluded that there
    was nothing potentially exculpatory in them. It therefore barred
    that line of questioning, explaining, ‚*T+hat is not coming in,
    that’s not relevant for any purpose. . . . That’s his right.‛
    ¶9    The jury convicted Defendant of aggravated burglary and
    aggravated assault. Defendant now appeals.
    ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶10 Defendant first argues that the trial court erred in
    granting the State’s rule 16 motions to obtain a sample of his
    DNA—particularly the second motion, which sought to obtain
    the sample by force—because the State should have been
    required to obtain a warrant. Normally, ‚rulings on motions to
    compel . . . are reviewed for an abuse of discretion.‛ Macris
    & Assocs., Inc. v. Neways, Inc., 
    2006 UT App 33
    , ¶ 8, 
    131 P.3d 263
    ;
    see also State v. Tanner, 
    2011 UT App 39
    , ¶ 5, 
    248 P.3d 61
    . But
    because Defendant’s argument rests on whether rule 16 is a
    proper mechanism for obtaining DNA evidence by force,
    resolution of this issue requires us to interpret the language of
    rule 16 and decide whether Defendant was afforded necessary
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    State v. White
    constitutional protections. We therefore review the trial court’s
    grant of the State’s motions for correctness. See Ostler v. Buhler,
    
    1999 UT 99
    , ¶ 5, 
    989 P.2d 1073
     (‚The proper interpretation of a
    rule of procedure is a question of law, and we review the trial
    court’s decision for correctness.‛); State v. Holland, 
    921 P.2d 430
    ,
    433 (Utah 1996) (‚*T+he ultimate question of whether the trial
    court strictly complied with constitutional and procedural
    requirements . . . is a question of law that is reviewed for
    correctness.‛).
    ¶11 The second and third issues on appeal concern the trial
    court’s restriction of Defendant’s cross-examination of Victim,
    particularly regarding Victim’s 2010 assault charge and his I-918
    petitions. We generally review the trial court’s decisions
    concerning the scope of cross-examination, including its
    decisions to allow or exclude evidence, for an abuse of
    discretion. State v. Gomez, 
    2002 UT 120
    , ¶ 12, 
    63 P.3d 72
    .
    ¶12 Defendant also argues that the trial court should have
    granted his motion for a mistrial following Victim’s statements
    that he felt more accused than Defendant.
    Because a district judge is in an advantaged
    position to determine the impact of courtroom
    events on the total proceedings, once a district
    court has exercised its discretion and denied a
    motion for a mistrial, we will not reverse the
    court’s decision unless it ‚is plainly wrong in that
    the incident so likely influenced the jury that the
    defendant cannot be said to have had a fair trial.‛
    State v. Allen, 
    2005 UT 11
    , ¶ 39, 
    108 P.3d 730
     (quoting State v.
    Wach, 
    2001 UT 35
    , ¶ 45, 
    24 P.3d 948
    ).
    ¶13 Notwithstanding the standards of review just outlined,
    we will reverse Defendant’s convictions only if we are convinced
    that the trial court’s errors made ‚the likelihood of a different
    outcome . . . sufficiently high to undermine confidence in the
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    State v. White
    verdict.‛ State v. Knight, 
    734 P.2d 913
    , 920 (Utah 1987); see State v.
    Draper-Roberts, 
    2016 UT App 151
    , ¶ 16, 
    378 P.3d 1261
     (dealing
    with harmlessness in an abuse-of-discretion context); State v.
    Hawkins, 
    2016 UT App 9
    , ¶ 33, 
    366 P.3d 884
     (dealing with
    harmlessness in a correctness context); see also Utah R. Crim. P.
    30(a) (‚Any error, defect, irregularity or variance which does not
    affect the substantial rights of a party shall be disregarded.‛);
    State v. Jimenez, 
    2016 UT App 138
    , ¶ 9, 
    379 P.3d 50
     (explaining
    that even if we determine certain evidence should have been
    admitted, we will reverse only if admission of that evidence
    would likely have led to a different result at trial). Thus, even if
    we determine or assume that the trial court erred in one of the
    ways Defendant identifies, we will reverse only if there is a
    reasonable likelihood that Defendant was harmed by the error or
    by the cumulative effect of several errors. When it is more
    expedient to do so, we focus our attention first on what harm, if
    any, Defendant suffered as a result of the alleged errors. See State
    v. Cox, 
    2012 UT App 234
    , ¶ 5, 
    286 P.3d 15
     (indicating that we
    need not decide whether an ‚error was obvious or invited, or
    whether counsel was deficient in failing to object to it because
    we conclude that the error was harmless‛ (footnote omitted)); cf.
    Archuleta v. Galetka, 
    2011 UT 73
    , ¶ 41, 
    267 P.3d 232
     (explaining
    that under the ineffective-assistance-of-counsel standard, where
    it is easier to dispose of a claim on prejudice grounds, the court
    will do so without analyzing the reasonableness of counsel’s
    performance).
    ¶14 Finally, Defendant contends that ‚the errors presented on
    appeal warrant reversal of [his] convictions under the
    cumulative error doctrine.‛ ‚Under the cumulative error
    doctrine, we apply the standard of review applicable to each
    underlying claim or error‛ and ‚reverse only if the cumulative
    effect of multiple errors undermines our confidence that a fair
    trial was had.‛ State v. Davis, 
    2013 UT App 228
    , ¶ 16, 
    311 P.3d 538
     (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
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    State v. White
    ANALYSIS
    I. Authorization of Use of Force To Retrieve Defendant’s DNA
    ¶15 Defendant contends that the State violated his
    constitutional protection against unreasonable searches and
    seizures, see Utah Const. art. I, § 14,2 when it relied on rule 16 of
    the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure to obtain authorization for
    the use of force in securing a sample of his DNA. We conclude
    that the trial court appropriately granted the State’s rule 16
    motion, authorizing the use of force in obtaining a sample of
    Defendant’s DNA.3
    ¶16 State v. Easthope, 
    668 P.2d 528
     (Utah 1983), addressed a
    nearly identical issue. There, the district court had ordered the
    defendant to surrender body and pubic hair, saliva, and blood
    samples under the predecessor to rule 16. Id. at 530, 531; see also
    
    Utah Code Ann. § 77-35-16
     (Allen Smith Co. 1982). The
    defendant argued that ‚the taking of his blood sample without a
    search warrant was . . . unconstitutional.‛ Easthope, 668 P.2d at
    531–32 (footnote omitted). The Utah Supreme Court reasoned
    that ‚the purpose of the warrant requirement . . . was not to exalt
    the formality of the warrant but to assure that the decision to
    compel an invasion of a person’s body in search of evidence of
    guilt was made by a neutral and detached magistrate.‛ Id. at 532
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). The court then
    2. Defendant does not allege a violation of the Fourth
    Amendment to the United States Constitution.
    3. We note that although the State ultimately did not need to
    resort to the use of force, see supra ¶ 4, Defendant’s argument is
    that ‚Rule 16 does not permit the warrantless taking of DNA by
    force.‛ Defendant is not precluded from pursuing this argument
    simply because he cooperated instead of risking injury by
    requiring the State to take his DNA by force.
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    State v. White
    set forth the following analysis, which applies directly to this
    case:
    That concern was fully satisfied in the
    circumstances of this case. Following defendant’s
    arrest on a warrant, the State filed a motion to
    compel discovery of body fluids. Defendant and
    his counsel were notified, an adversary hearing
    was held, and . . . the magistrate ordered the taking
    of a blood sample. That course of events, which
    provided the defendant greater procedural
    protection than he has under a search warrant
    (notably his participation in the hearing), satisfied
    the constitutional requirements for the invasion of
    a person’s body.
    
    Id.
    ¶17 Not only does this analysis from Easthope support the
    conclusion that the trial court did not err in granting the State’s
    motion in this case, but it also echoes the outcome of similar
    cases throughout the country. See, e.g., United States v. Pipito, 
    861 F.2d 1006
    , 1009–10 (7th Cir. 1987) (comparing retrieving
    fingerprints to retrieving blood samples and concluding that
    force may be used to obtain such materials because ‚while it
    may not enhance the image of justice to force a witness kicking
    and screaming . . . the choice has been made by the witness, not
    the court‛ (omission in original) (citation and internal quotation
    marks omitted)); Simmons v. Secretary, Dept. of Corr., No. 8:08-cv-
    2433-T-17EAJ, 
    2010 WL 1408434
    , at *12 (M.D. Fla. April 6, 2010)
    (deciding, where the Florida Rules of Criminal Procedure
    authorized a court to require the defendant to ‚‘permit the
    taking of samples of the defendant’s blood, hair, and other
    materials of the defendant’s body that involves no unreasonable
    intrusion,’‛ that ‚the Court had the ability to require the
    Defendant to provide a saliva sample without needing a search
    warrant‛ (quoting Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.220)); People v. Treece, 
    511 N.E.2d 1361
    , 1367 (Ill. App. Ct. 1987) (concluding that Illinois
    20141003-CA                      8               
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    State v. White
    Supreme Court Rule 413 ‚can be used to obtain a blood sample
    from a defendant without resort to a search warrant following
    indictment or information‛).
    ¶18 Defendant’s attempts to distinguish Easthope are
    unavailing. He claims that ‚the Easthope court did not analyze
    the precise language of Rule 16(h) or its interplay with the State’s
    more recent constitutional jurisprudence and protection of
    individual rights.‛ But as we explained, see supra ¶ 16, the statute
    relied on in Easthope was simply an earlier version of rule 16, and
    Defendant does not attempt to explain how the existence of two
    versions of the same rule, nearly identical in substance but
    different in name, affects the outcome on appeal. And the mere
    passage of time since it was decided, without more, does not
    make Easthope any less controlling.
    ¶19 As in Easthope, the trial court in this case used the then-
    current discovery rules to provide Defendant more protection
    than he would have received if the State had simply obtained a
    warrant for a sample of his DNA. See infra ¶ 24. In this we see no
    error.
    ¶20 Even without reference to the Easthope analysis,
    application of the relevant criminal discovery rules yields the
    same result. Rule 16 of the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure
    provides that, ‚*s+ubject to constitutional limitations, the accused
    may be required to . . . permit the taking of samples of blood,
    hair, fingernail scrapings, and other bodily materials which can
    be obtained without unreasonable intrusion.‛ Utah R. Crim. P.
    16(h)(6). That same rule provides that if a party fails to comply,
    ‚the court may order such party to permit the discovery or
    inspection, . . . or it may enter such other order as it deems just
    under the circumstances.‛ Id. R. 16(g). Here, the trial court
    required Defendant to provide ‚other bodily materials‛ when it
    ordered him to submit to a buccal swab. See id. R. 16(h)(6). Then,
    when Defendant failed to submit to such procedure, the trial
    court authorized the State to use force in obtaining the DNA
    sample.
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    State v. White
    ¶21 Other courts have consistently described buccal swabs as
    minor intrusions. See, e.g., Maryland v. King, 
    133 S. Ct. 1958
    , 1980
    (2013) (‚minor intrusion of a brief swab of his cheeks‛); Haskell v.
    Harris, 
    669 F.3d 1049
    , 1050 (9th Cir. 2012) (‚a de minimis
    intrusion‛), aff’d, 
    745 F.3d 1269
     (9th Cir. 2014) (en banc); Friedman
    v. Boucher, 
    580 F.3d 847
    , 863 (9th Cir. 2009) (‚far less intrusive
    than drawing blood and a relatively minor intrusion‛). And
    Defendant does not contend that the State’s buccal swab
    procedure resulted in an ‚unreasonable intrusion.‛ See Utah R.
    Crim. P. 16(h)(6). Instead, Defendant argues that the trial court’s
    order failed to comport with ‚constitutional limitations‛ by
    authorizing the use of force. See 
    id.
     He further claims that
    discovery rules cannot be used to circumvent the warrant
    requirement for searches. In Defendant’s view, while rule 16 can
    be used to ‚require* the accused+ to permit the taking of . . .
    bodily materials that can be obtained without unreasonable
    intrusion,‛ ‚the accused can decide to comply with the order, or
    refuse to comply and face the consequences.‛ According to
    Defendant, those consequences cannot include ‚use of
    reasonable force.‛4
    4. Defendant suggests that State v. Bakalov, 
    1999 UT 45
    , 
    979 P.2d 799
    , supports this argument. Bakalov involved a rape defendant
    who sought to have an expert evaluate a semen sample found on
    his victim. Id. ¶ 54. The trial court ‚granted the request subject to
    *the defendant’s+ first submitting a sample of his blood to the
    State.‛ Id. ¶ 10. Because the defendant refused to provide the
    sample, the court denied his motion. Id. On appeal, our supreme
    court concluded that the trial court’s imposed condition for
    testing ‚comported with Utah Rule of Criminal Procedure
    16(h)(6).‛ Id. ¶ 54. Specifically, recognizing the significant
    discretion afforded trial courts ‚to remedy any prejudice to a
    party resulting from a breach of the criminal discovery rules,‛
    the supreme court determined that forcing the defendant to
    choose between providing a sample of his DNA or not having
    the semen sample evaluated did not ‚violate the constitution or
    (continued<)
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    State v. White
    ¶22 We cannot agree with Defendant’s interpretation of the
    rule, which would effectively preclude the State from seeking
    information through discovery if that information could
    properly be the subject of a warrant. Instead, the rule grants the
    trial court considerable discretion to make discovery orders, so
    long as those orders comply with constitutional requirements.
    The constitutional requirement applicable to searches of a
    defendant’s person and seizure of his or her DNA is one of
    reasonableness: ‚The right of the people to be secure in their
    persons . . . against unreasonable searches and seizures shall not
    be violated . . . .‛ Utah Const. art. I, § 14.
    ¶23 The most common way the law ensures that a search and
    seizure is reasonable is to require a warrant, which ‚shall *not+
    issue but upon probable cause supported by oath or affirmation,
    particularly describing the place to be searched, and the person
    or thing to be seized.‛ Id. Probable cause ‚undoubtedly requires
    a nexus between suspected criminal activity and the place to be
    searched.‛ State v. Dable, 
    2003 UT App 389
    , ¶ 5, 
    81 P.3d 783
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Probable cause
    is typically established by affidavit, as occurred here. In the
    present case, the suspected criminal activity was a man’s
    unlawful entry into Victim’s home and the ensuing altercation,
    which left blood on the clothes iron. The place to be searched
    was Defendant’s person via a buccal swab for DNA. The strong
    nexus between the criminal activity and the place to be searched
    was the match between the DNA in the blood found on the iron
    (Id.
     (citations and internal quotation
    marks omitted). But this holding from Bakalov—that a particular
    sanction was an appropriate response to that defendant’s refusal
    to provide a DNA sample—cannot be interpreted to mean that
    no other condition or sanction would have been appropriate. In
    short, Bakalov has no application here except to underscore that a
    trial court has significant discretion in fashioning an appropriate
    sanction.
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    State v. White
    and Defendant’s preexisting DNA sample in Utah’s Combined
    DNA Index System. Probable cause existed for the retrieval of
    Defendant’s DNA,5 and we are confident that if the trial court
    had required the State to obtain a warrant—rather than granting
    the rule 16 motion—the State would have been readily able to do
    so. For this reason, we have no difficulty concluding that the trial
    court’s order complied with the ‚constitutional limitations‛
    imposed on rule 16 discovery orders. See Utah R. Crim. P. 16(h).
    ¶24 This is to say nothing of the fact that Defendant was likely
    afforded more protection than if the State had simply obtained a
    warrant, which is typically accomplished ex parte. Utah law
    requires the State, when seeking a search warrant, to
    demonstrate ‚probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation‛
    and to ‚particularly describe the person or place to be searched
    and the person, property, or evidence to be seized.‛ Utah R.
    Crim. P. 40(c)(2). Here, the State attached such an affidavit to its
    first rule 16 motion. Additionally, Defendant was given the
    opportunity to participate in two separate hearings regarding
    the State’s rule 16 motions before he surrendered a sample of his
    DNA—something search-warrant subjects do not have the
    opportunity to do. See State v. Easthope, 
    668 P.2d 528
    , 531–32
    (Utah 1983).
    ¶25 Finally, subsection (g) of rule 16 provides that where a
    party fails to comply with a discovery obligation, ‚the court may
    order such party to permit the discovery or inspection, grant a
    continuance, or prohibit the party from introducing evidence not
    disclosed, or it may enter such other order as it deems just under the
    circumstances.‛ Utah R. Crim. P. 16(g) (emphases added). Thus,
    rather than limiting a trial court’s discretion, the rule provides
    for a number of specific options for the trial court to consider,
    including any order that circumstances might justify.
    Accordingly, when Defendant refused the order for a buccal
    5. On appeal, Defendant does not argue that probable cause did
    not exist.
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    swab, the trial court was well within its discretion in ordering
    the non-intrusive sampling by force, if necessary.
    II. Victim’s Prior Assault Charge
    ¶26 We next consider whether the trial court abused its
    discretion when it limited Defendant’s cross-examination of
    Victim about two specific statements. These statements,
    Defendant contends, ‚bolstered *Victim’s+ character for
    peacefulness.‛ First, on direct examination, Victim explained
    that while he was fighting with the intruder, ‚I noticed that he
    was a young man. . . . And I felt compassion not to kill him,
    because I imagine my son, so I threw the knife to the ground.‛
    Then, he reiterated, ‚I repeat, I didn’t want to cause any harm to
    him because I don’t have a criminal mind.‛ Defendant’s counsel
    asked permission ‚to inquire into what it is he meant,‛ and
    indicated that ‚depending on his answer, what that might be, it
    may, in fact, open the door to some discussion of‛ Victim’s prior
    assault charge.6 The trial court decided it would not allow such
    an inquiry, explaining, ‚I don’t think that was sufficient opening
    up [of] any door to allow further follow up at this time.‛
    Defendant’s arguments that this decision was erroneous are
    unpreserved.
    ¶27 Defendant first argues that he should have been allowed
    to question Victim as requested under rule 405 of the Utah Rules
    of Evidence, particularly under the rule’s provision that ‚*o+n
    cross-examination of the character witness, the court may allow
    an inquiry into relevant specific instances of the person’s
    conduct.‛ See Utah R. Evid. 405(a). This rule is intertwined with
    rule 404, which governs the admission of character evidence.
    Courts use rule 404 to determine when character evidence is
    admissible and rule 405 to determine how that evidence is to be
    admitted. Compare 
    id.
     R. 404, with 
    id.
     R. 405.
    6. The statement of counsel is unambiguous in context. Counsel
    maintained that ‚the door‛ had not yet been opened.
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    ¶28 But Defendant never raised below—and thus did not
    preserve for appeal—any argument regarding rule 404 or 405
    admissibility. To have preserved his challenge for our review,
    Defendant must have ‚provide*d+ the trial court with the
    opportunity to address, and correct, a claimed error‛ by
    ‚specifically‛ raising it. See State v. Crabb, 
    2011 UT App 440
    , ¶ 2,
    
    268 P.3d 193
     (per curiam).
    Issues that are not raised at trial are usually
    deemed waived. An issue is preserved for appeal
    only if it was presented to the trial court in such a
    way that the trial court had an opportunity to rule
    on it. The appellant must present the legal basis for
    a claim to the trial court, not merely the underlying
    facts or a tangentially related claim.
    State v. Martinez, 
    2015 UT App 193
    , ¶ 27, 
    357 P.3d 27
     (alterations,
    citations, and internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶29 A review of the transcript in this matter shows that rules
    404 and 405 of the Utah Rules of Evidence were not the bases of
    any objection or ruling. As quoted above, the only request was to
    question the witness to see if further questioning ‚may, in fact,
    open the door.‛ This is a different question entirely and is
    governed by rule 611(b) of the Utah Rules of Evidence (which
    addresses the scope of cross-examination), not rules 404 or 405.
    Further, Defendant does not argue on appeal that further
    questioning might have opened the door. Thus, Defendant both
    does not appeal the actual ruling of the trial court and did not
    provide the trial court with the opportunity to make any rulings
    under rules 404 or 405. Therefore, this argument was not
    preserved, and we decline to address it further.
    ¶30 Defendant next argues that Victim’s assault charge was
    admissible under rule 608 of the Utah Rules of Evidence, which
    allows introduction of evidence about a witness’s character for
    untruthfulness. See Utah R. Evid. 608. Defendant maintains that
    when Victim claimed on the witness stand to be compassionate
    20141003-CA                     14               
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    State v. White
    and to lack a criminal mind, the assault charge became evidence
    of Victim’s character for untruthfulness because it showed that
    this testimony was not true. Furthermore, Defendant argues that
    such evidence did not run afoul of rule 404(b), citing the Utah
    Supreme Court’s decision in State v. Houskeeper, 
    2002 UT 118
    , 
    62 P.3d 444
    .
    ¶31 We decline to review this issue because it, too, is
    unpreserved. Defendant never informed the trial court that the
    assault charge could potentially be used to demonstrate a lack of
    credibility on the part of Victim, except in the limited context of
    Victim’s I-918 petition. See infra ¶¶ 32–40. Thus, as it relates to
    Victim’s statements of his compassion and lack of a criminal
    mind, the assault charge, and its bearing on rule 608, was not
    ‚sufficiently raised to a level of consciousness before the trial
    court,‛ and we will not consider it. See State v. Richins, 
    2004 UT App 36
    , ¶ 8, 
    86 P.3d 759
     (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted).7
    III. Victim’s I-918 Petitions
    ¶32 Defendant next challenges his inability to cross-examine
    Victim about Victim’s refusal to disclose a copy of his I-918
    petitions. We conclude that the requested cross-examination was
    irrelevant. In any event, Defendant was not harmed by the trial
    court’s refusal to allow the questioning. I-918 petitions help
    ‚provide temporary immigration benefits to aliens who are
    victims of qualifying criminal activity, and to their qualifying
    family members, as appropriate.‛ I-918, Petition for U
    Nonimmigrant Status, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
    Services, https://www.uscis.gov/i-918 [https://perma.cc/LJ99-
    VBTA]. As Defendant explains, ‚one of defense counsel’s trial
    strategies was to suggest that [Victim] had a motive for being
    7. Defendant does not ask us to consider either his rule 405
    challenge or his rule 608 challenge under the plain error
    doctrine.
    20141003-CA                    15                  
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    State v. White
    deceptive about the details of the May 11, 2012 incident,‛
    namely, ‚to gain legal status in the United States.‛ To help
    develop this trial strategy, Defendant sought to cross-examine
    Victim concerning whether he ‚had been given the opportunity
    to release his I-918 documents to the defense and had declined to
    do so.‛ The trial court refused to allow this questioning,
    determining that it was ‚not relevant for any purpose,‛ because
    it was Victim’s right not to provide those documents to the
    defense. The trial court instead allowed Defendant to have an
    expert witness provide ‚general information as to how this
    process works‛ and to elicit from Victim ‚the simple fact‛ that
    he and members of his family had filed I-918 petitions.
    ¶33 On appeal, Defendant asserts that the trial court’s ruling
    exceeded its discretion, as Victim’s ‚decision not to disclose the
    contents of his I-918 documents was unquestionably relevant‛
    and the ‚jury could reasonably have inferred from *Victim’s+
    decision not to disclose the I-918 documents that they contained
    allegations inconsistent with what [Victim] told investigators,
    and which might be inconsistent with his preliminary hearing
    and trial testimony.‛ We disagree with Defendant and conclude
    that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in ruling that the
    requested cross-examination was irrelevant.
    ¶34 ‚Evidence is relevant if: (a) it has any tendency to make a
    fact more or less probable than it would be without the evidence;
    and (b) the fact is of consequence in determining the action.‛
    Utah R. Evid. 401. Defendant argues that Victim’s failure to
    disclose the I-918 petitions to the defense makes it more probable
    that Victim fabricated his account of the events in question.
    ¶35 First, Defendant has not shown—or even attempted to
    show—that he was entitled to receive those documents. And as
    the State points out, ‚there are a number of legitimate reasons
    why [Victim] would not want to give his immigration forms
    directly to the defense.‛ Consider, for example, the fact that
    Victim found Defendant—a stranger—in the bathroom of his
    home, without pants on. This discovery was made shortly before
    Defendant declared that he was there for Victim’s daughter. And
    20141003-CA                     16               
    2016 UT App 241
    State v. White
    this declaration was made shortly before Defendant engaged in a
    physical altercation with Victim. Under these circumstances,
    Victim’s decision to withhold the sort of personal information
    contained in the I-918 petitions, including information about his
    daughter, from the defense seems wholly reasonable.
    ¶36 In any event, the inference that Defendant argues the jury
    would have made constitutes speculation, especially considering
    the trial court’s in camera review of the documents. See supra ¶ 8.
    Defendant has not challenged the trial court’s in camera finding
    that the petitions contained no exculpatory information, nor
    does Defendant argue that the trial court erred in failing to order
    production or disclosure of the application documents.
    ¶37 It follows that cross-examination about Victim’s refusal to
    provide copies of the petitions directly to the defense had no
    tendency to make it more probable that Victim had fabricated
    his story. Thus, the trial court did not abuse its discretion when
    it concluded that the requested line of questioning was ‚not
    relevant for any purpose.‛
    ¶38 But even if we agreed with Defendant that the trial court
    should have allowed the cross-examination, we see no
    reasonable likelihood that the cross-examination would have
    changed the outcome of the trial.
    ¶39 Defendant’s assumption about what the jury would have
    inferred is not based in fact. There is no evidence on the record
    that the petition contained falsehoods. The trial court even
    performed its own in camera review of these documents and did
    not ‚find anything potentially exculpatory in the information
    provided.‛ Most importantly here, Defendant actually presented
    the evidence necessary to develop his stated trial strategy: his
    expert witness testified regarding the process and purpose of
    obtaining a U visa and Defendant asked Victim whether he had
    filed I-918 petitions. Then, in his closing argument, defense
    counsel argued that Victim had ‚a reason to make this look as
    bad as it can be‛ to take advantage of the U visa process.
    20141003-CA                    17               
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    State v. White
    ¶40 Because Defendant cannot show that there was anything
    suspicious in Victim’s I-918 petitions, he cannot show that
    further questioning Victim on the subject would have led to any
    evidence different from the evidence that was actually
    presented. Defendant was not harmed by an inability to present
    what would have, at best, constituted cumulative evidence. In
    other words, even if the trial court erred by concluding that
    Defendant’s potential questions were irrelevant, that error was
    harmless.
    IV. Victim’s Statements That He Felt Accused
    ¶41     Defendant next argues that the trial court should have
    granted his motion for a mistrial. During the course of his
    testimony, Victim indicated, without being asked, that he felt
    more accused than Defendant. See supra ¶ 7 & note 1. Defense
    counsel objected. The trial court instructed that the comment
    ‚will be stricken from the record and the jury is to disregard the
    last comment,‛ and it admonished Victim, ‚I’m going to ask you
    not to have any further comments that are not in response to a
    direct question.‛ Then, mistakenly believing that he was being
    asked what he had said before—the comment he made that had
    been stricken—Victim explained, ‚I said that I felt more accused
    than the defendant.‛ The prosecutor, defense attorney, and the
    trial court all interjected and agreed that there ‚was a
    misunderstanding with regard to *the+ question.‛ Defense
    counsel then clarified, ‚I’m not talking about the comment you
    may have made. What I’m talking about is . . .‛ and continued
    his questioning.
    ¶42 After Victim was excused from the witness stand, and
    after the jurors were sent home for the day, Defendant moved
    for a mistrial ‚based on that comment.‛ The court denied the
    motion but said, ‚To the extent you think a curative instruction
    is needed in writing to go to the final set, I’d be happy to look at
    that and we can discuss that further.‛ Defendant never asked for
    such a curative instruction, and no further reference was made
    to Victim’s comments.
    20141003-CA                     18               
    2016 UT App 241
    State v. White
    ¶43 Our supreme court has explained ‚that a mistrial is not
    required where an improper statement is not intentionally
    elicited, is made in passing, and is relatively innocuous in light
    of all the testimony presented.‛ State v. Allen, 
    2005 UT 11
    , ¶ 40,
    
    108 P.3d 730
    . Defendant acknowledges that the statements were
    not intentionally elicited. And we consider the two statements—
    one not captured on the record and one clarifying what was not
    captured on the record, unfortunately causing it to be repeated
    in the process—to have been made in passing. But perhaps most
    importantly, even if we assume that there was some error in how
    the trial court handled the statements, Defendant cannot show
    that he was harmed by the error; he cannot show that Victim’s
    statements were not ‚relatively innocuous in light of all the
    testimony presented.‛ See 
    id.
    ¶44 As the State points out, ‚given the strength of the State’s
    case, it is unlikely that *Victim’s+ comment influenced the
    verdict.‛ Victim was one of nearly a dozen witnesses who
    testified at trial over a period of three days. The two
    statements—or references to them—appear on just two of more
    than 800 transcript pages. There was no dispute that Victim and
    his family did not personally know Defendant, nor did they ever
    invite him into their home. Yet Defendant’s DNA was found on
    the clothes iron the intruder used in his altercation with Victim.
    Simply put, our confidence in the jury’s verdict has not been
    undermined. See State v. Knight, 
    734 P.2d 913
    , 920 (Utah 1987).
    Instead, the record reflects that the comments were not
    intentionally elicited, were made in passing, and were relatively
    innocuous in light of all the other testimony presented.8
    8. Defendant argues that the statements were harmful because
    they ‚sought to negate *Defendant’s+ claim of self-defense.‛
    Specifically, he contends that ‚defense counsel’s effort to
    demonstrate that the primary alleged victim may have actually
    been the aggressor*+ was undermined by that individual’s
    statements that he was feeling as if he were an accused.‛
    (continued<)
    20141003-CA                    19              
    2016 UT App 241
    State v. White
    V. Cumulative Error
    ¶45 Finally, we consider Defendant’s argument that his
    convictions ‚must be reversed under the cumulative error
    doctrine.‛ ‚Under the cumulative error doctrine, we will reverse
    only if the cumulative effect of the several errors undermines our
    confidence . . . that a fair trial was had.‛ State v. Dunn, 
    850 P.2d 1201
    , 1229 (Utah 1993) (omission in original) (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted). Defendant claims that the
    errors he alleges undermine confidence in his convictions
    because they prevented him from effectively presenting his
    affirmative defenses.
    ¶46 ‚In assessing a claim of cumulative error, we consider all
    the identified errors, as well as any errors we assume may have
    occurred.‛ 
    Id.
     For purposes of our earlier analysis, we decided
    certain issues, in part, by assuming that error had occurred. See
    supra ¶¶ 38–40, 43–44. Thus, our cumulative error analysis
    requires that we consider those assumed errors, along with their
    harmful effect. See Dunn, 850 P.2d at 1229.
    ¶47 In so doing, we conclude that the cumulative effect of any
    assumed errors has not diminished our confidence in
    Defendant’s convictions. None of the evidence that Defendant
    either sought to admit or exclude would have undermined
    Victim’s testimony that Defendant was not invited into his
    home. Similarly, it would have done nothing to prevent the
    jury’s finding that he entered Victim’s home with the intent
    necessary to be convicted of burglary.9 See Utah Code Ann.
    (2016 UT App 241
    State v. White
    §§ 76-6-202, 76-6-203 (LexisNexis 2012) (outlining the elements of
    burglary and aggravated burglary). From there, the case against
    Defendant solidifies. As defense counsel acknowledged in his
    closing argument, ‚*I+f the man by the time he is discovered in
    the bathroom, has escalated [to] burglary, then game over. . . .
    *Y+ou don’t get to defend yourself when you . . . are committing
    burglary.‛ See State v. Standiford, 
    769 P.2d 254
    , 265 (Utah 1988)
    (analyzing without disapproving a self-defense jury instruction
    that ‚stated that the defense was not available if defendant was
    committing or fleeing from the commission of a burglary‛); see
    also Pitts v. State, 
    989 So. 2d 27
    , 31 n.3 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2008)
    (‚*I+f a defendant enters a conveyance or dwelling to commit an
    offense other than battery, but then commits a battery when
    confronted . . . [t]he defendant would not be entitled to assert
    self-defense on the battery because the battery occurred when
    the defendant was involved in the commission of a burglary
    . . . .‛); State v. Evans, 
    755 S.W.2d 673
    , 674 (Mo. Ct. App. 1988)
    (rejecting a challenge on appeal where ‚Defendant would have
    us believe a criminal caught in the commission of a burglary has
    the right to resist apprehension by the victim and has the right to
    use a weapon in this resistance‛). Compare 
    Utah Code Ann. § 76
    -
    2-402 (LexisNexis 2012) (‚A person is justified in threatening or
    using force against another when and to the extent that the
    person reasonably believes that force or a threat of force is
    necessary to defend the person or a third person against another
    person’s imminent use of unlawful force.‛ (emphasis added)),
    with 
    id.
     § 76-2-405 (‚A person is justified in using force against
    another when and to the extent that he reasonably believes that
    the force is necessary to prevent or terminate the other’s
    unlawful entry into or attack upon his habitation . . . .‛).
    ¶48 None of the assumed errors, if corrected, would have led
    the jury to believe that Defendant was not in Victim’s home.
    Similarly, no correction of the assumed errors would have
    convinced the jury that he was there lawfully. Thus, we cannot
    conclude that the cumulative effect of these assumed errors
    undermines our confidence in Defendant’s convictions.
    20141003-CA                     21               
    2016 UT App 241
    State v. White
    CONCLUSION
    ¶49 The arguments Defendant makes on appeal are either
    unpreserved or unpersuasive, or the errors assumed did not
    result in harm to Defendant. We therefore affirm his convictions.
    20141003-CA                    22              
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