Won Yung Jung v. Commonwealth of Virginia ( 2023 )


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  •                                             COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    UNPUBLISHED
    Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges AtLee and Friedman
    Argued at Fredericksburg, Virginia
    WON YUNG JUNG
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 0529-22-4                              CHIEF JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER
    MARCH 21, 2023
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAUQUIER COUNTY
    Herman A. Whisenant, Jr., Judge Designate
    Ryan D. Ruzic, Public Defender, for appellant.
    Jason D. Reed, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares,
    Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    Won Yung Jung appeals his conviction for second-degree murder in violation of Code
    § 18.2-32. The appellant contends that the trial court abused its discretion by granting the
    Commonwealth’s motion in limine to exclude certain evidence during trial. He also argues that the
    court erroneously allowed the Commonwealth to introduce hearsay evidence in its opening
    statement. In addition, the appellant challenges the admission of six photographs depicting his
    residence. Last, he argues that the court erred by instructing the jury that it could consider evidence
    of his character in determining his guilt or innocence. For the following reasons, we affirm the
    conviction.
    *
    This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413.
    BACKGROUND
    I. The Offense and Investigation1
    Du Chil Park operated a Buddhist temple from his residence in Fauquier County. On
    June 29, 2008, Fauquier County deputies went to the temple after receiving a report of a
    “suspicious death.” They found Park’s body in “severe stages of decomposition.” Park had been
    last seen alive on June 20, 2008, and law enforcement later determined he had been killed on
    June 24, 2008. Park’s autopsy revealed that his death was caused by at least six stab wounds in
    the neck.
    Albert Stapf, a friend of Park’s, identified the appellant to the police as a possible suspect
    in the murder. Stapf had visited Park three or four times a week at Park’s residence where he
    sometimes encountered the appellant. The appellant was a “director of the temple” when Stapf first
    met him. However, at Park’s request, Stapf replaced the appellant as a director in 2006. According
    to Stapf, at that time, Park’s behavior changed. Stapf said that Park became “paranoid” and asked
    him to be at the temple any time the appellant was there. After a “very heated” argument between
    Park and the appellant in 2007, which Stapf overheard but did not understand because they were
    speaking Korean, Park ordered the appellant to leave the premises. Stapf never saw the appellant at
    the temple again.
    Two F.B.I. agents assisted the Fauquier County Sheriff’s Office in investigating Park’s
    murder. After several attempts to contact the appellant, Special Agent Song spoke with him by
    telephone two months after the murder in August 2008. During the phone call, the appellant told
    Song that he wrote “a bad check” from his girlfriend’s account for about $3,000 and used the money
    1
    In accordance with familiar appellate principles, we review the facts in the light most
    favorable to the Commonwealth, as the prevailing party at trial and proponent of the jury
    instruction. See Davison v. Commonwealth, 
    69 Va. App. 321
    , 327 (2018) (jury instruction),
    aff’d, 
    298 Va. 177
     (2019); Lynch v. Commonwealth, 
    46 Va. App. 342
    , 345 (2005) (admissibility
    of evidence).
    -2-
    “for gambling.” The appellant said that he was in New York at the time of the phone call. They
    then agreed to meet in McLean, Virginia, but the appellant never went to the arranged meeting.
    Almost two years later, in July 2010, Song and Special Agent Sohn met with the appellant
    in Las Vegas, Nevada, where he was in police custody on unrelated charges. During that meeting,
    the appellant stated that on the day Park died, he went to Park’s house “in the noontime to drink
    with him.” According to the appellant, the two drank beer and liquor that day and into the night.
    The appellant asked Park to accompany him to Atlanta, Georgia, “as a support” to convince the
    appellant’s brother to lend him money to pay his gambling debts.2 The appellant admitted that “he
    drinks a lot” of alcohol and, because of this excess, that “his friends refer to him as [C]oma.” The
    appellant explained that he slept on the couch at the temple on the night of the murder. He recalled
    Park “putting a blanket over him.” He told the F.B.I. agents that “when he awoke, he saw a dead
    body.” He described his state upon waking as “dazed and confused.” Although the appellant
    concluded that he “must have killed” Park, he could not remember doing so. When he discovered
    Park’s body, the appellant decided to “run away” and immediately drove to New York.
    The Sheriff’s Office obtained an arrest warrant for the appellant in 2020.
    II. Relevant Trial Proceedings
    The Commonwealth filed a pretrial motion in limine to bar the defense from eliciting
    testimony about whether the prosecution had been “previously declined or refused.” The
    Commonwealth asserted that “[s]uch testimony would be inappropriate, irrelevant and would serve
    only to confuse and distract the jury.” The appellant argued he should be able to show that he was
    not “fleeing from prosecution because there hadn’t been a prosecution that had been initiated.”
    Following a hearing, the trial court granted the Commonwealth’s motion, but allowed the appellant
    2
    The appellant believed that Park’s support would bolster his persuasiveness with his
    brother because in Korean culture, accompanying a Buddhist monk “brings a little bit of status, or it
    shows credibility.”
    -3-
    to “show that there was no outstanding warrant” between 2008 and 2020. The court emphasized
    that the parties were not permitted to discuss “whether the Commonwealth had agreed to prosecute
    or not prosecute or how many Commonwealth’s attorneys were involved.”3
    In its opening statement, the Commonwealth referred to expected testimony from Stapf that
    Park feared the appellant after Park removed him as a temple director. The appellant objected,
    arguing that the statement was inadmissible hearsay. The trial court overruled the objection.
    During Stapf’s testimony, the appellant again objected based on hearsay, arguing that Stapf could
    not testify about anything Park said. The trial court sustained the objection. Stapf testified that Park
    was “paranoid” after the appellant was removed as a director and wanted Stapf to be present at the
    temple when the appellant was there. He did not repeat specific statements that Park made to him.
    In the Commonwealth’s case-in-chief, over the appellant’s objection, the prosecutor
    introduced six photographs of the appellant’s former residence. The photos were taken in July 2008
    when the police searched the house. They showed that the house was vacant. The appellant argued
    that the photos were not relevant. The trial court admitted the photographs into evidence, stating
    that the jury could determine the weight to give them.
    During the jury instruction phase, the Commonwealth offered an instruction that the jury
    could “consider the character of Won Yung Jung when proven by the evidence, whether good or
    bad, along with the other facts and circumstances in the case in determining his guilt or innocence.”
    The appellant objected to the instruction. In granting the instruction, the trial court found there was
    “evidence concerning some checks and other things that c[a]me in that obviously would go to
    character.”
    3
    In closing argument, defense counsel told the jury that the appellant had not been evading
    arrest or prosecution “for the last ten years” and was not charged with Park’s murder until
    November 2020.
    -4-
    The jury convicted the appellant of second-degree murder. He was sentenced to thirty years
    in prison, with ten years suspended.
    ANALYSIS
    I. Motion in Limine
    The appellant argues that the trial court abused its discretion by preventing him “from
    introducing evidence that significant time had passed between the incident and the trial because
    previous Commonwealth’s Attorneys had declined to prosecute the case.” Acknowledging that
    the trial court permitted him “to comment on the timing of the [2020] warrant,” he asserts that
    granting the motion in limine limited his ability to explore fully the lengthy delay between the
    killing and the prosecution.
    At the outset, we address the Commonwealth’s contention that the appellant failed to
    proffer the specific evidence he expected to present and therefore this Court cannot reach the
    merits of his claim. Absent a proper proffer of the expected evidence, the appellate court cannot
    determine its admissibility and “whether the exclusion of the evidence was prejudicial to the
    proffering party.” See Murray v. Commonwealth, 
    71 Va. App. 449
    , 458 (2020). The purpose of
    a proffer is “to allow the trial court a fair opportunity ‘to resolve the issue at trial’ and ‘to provide a
    sufficient record for . . . review [on appeal].’” Creamer v. Commonwealth, 
    64 Va. App. 185
    , 195
    (2015) (alteration in original) (quoting Albert v. Albert, 
    38 Va. App. 284
    , 290 n.1 (2002)). Defense
    counsel explained at the hearing on the motion in limine that the delay in prosecuting the
    appellant was due to three prior Commonwealth’s Attorneys declining to pursue the case. The
    court understood the basis of the appellant’s argument and ruled that evidence about the
    decisions of prior prosecutors was improper and would not be admitted. Based on the record, the
    appellant made an adequate proffer to the trial court, and it is sufficient for this Court to rule on
    the merits of the claim.
    -5-
    “Decisions regarding the admissibility of evidence ‘lie within the trial court’s sound
    discretion and will not be disturbed on appeal absent an abuse of discretion.’” Blankenship v.
    Commonwealth, 
    69 Va. App. 692
    , 697 (2019) (quoting Michels v. Commonwealth, 
    47 Va. App. 461
    , 465 (2006)). “This bell-shaped curve of reasonability” guiding appellate review “rests on
    the venerable belief that the judge closest to the contest is the judge best able to discern where
    the equities lie.” Minh Duy Du v. Commonwealth, 
    292 Va. 555
    , 564 (2016) (quoting Sauder v.
    Ferguson, 
    289 Va. 449
    , 459 (2015)). A reviewing court can conclude that “an abuse of
    discretion has occurred” only when “reasonable jurists could not differ” about the correct result.
    Commonwealth v. Swann, 
    290 Va. 194
    , 197 (2015) (quoting Grattan v. Commonwealth, 
    278 Va. 602
    , 620 (2009)).
    Generally, absent other constraints, evidence is admissible as long as it is relevant. Va. R.
    Evid. 2:402. “‘Relevant evidence’ means evidence having any tendency to make the existence of
    any fact in issue more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.” Va. R.
    Evid. 2:401. “The scope of relevant evidence in Virginia is quite broad . . . .” Commonwealth v.
    Proffitt, 
    292 Va. 626
    , 634 (2016). In order to be admissible as relevant, evidence must “tend[ ] to
    prove a matter that is properly at issue in the case.” 
    Id. at 635
     (alteration in original) (quoting Brugh
    v. Jones, 
    265 Va. 136
    , 139 (2003)).
    Here, although the court did not permit the precise evidence the appellant proffered about
    previous Commonwealth’s Attorneys not bringing charges against him, it allowed proper evidence
    that made the appellant’s point. The court allowed into evidence the information that the Fauquier
    County Sheriff’s Office did not obtain an arrest warrant until 2020, ten years after the appellant’s
    statement to F.B.I. agents that he believed he had murdered Park, and twelve years after Park’s
    murder. The court admitted this evidence as relevant to the length of time that passed before the
    state pursued charges against the appellant, so he could argue that he had not fled from prosecution.
    -6-
    In contrast, the court excluded evidence about the decisions made by prior prosecutors about
    the appellant’s case. Those decisions, rooted in prosecutorial discretion, were not relevant to the
    jury’s determination of guilt or innocence based on the evidence presented at trial in 2021. See
    generally Lilly v. Commonwealth, 
    50 Va. App. 173
    , 185-86 (2007) (holding that in the defendant’s
    trial for driving as a habitual offender, information about the mandatory minimum sentence and the
    partial repeal of the habitual offender statute was not relevant to the factual issues before the jury).
    In addition, informing the jury that prior Commonwealth’s Attorneys had elected not to
    prosecute the case would have impermissibly colored the jury’s interpretation of the evidence. See
    United States v. Young, 
    470 U.S. 1
    , 18-19 (1985) (holding that comments made by the prosecutor
    reflecting his or her opinion regarding the evidence at trial or the defendant’s guilt were
    inappropriate because “the prosecutor’s opinion carries with it the imprimatur of the Government
    and may induce the jury to trust the Government’s judgment rather than its own view of the
    evidence”); White v. State, 
    258 A.3d 147
    , 159 (Del. 2021) (same); State v. Stricklin, 
    916 N.W.2d 413
    , 427 (Neb. 2018) (same); see also Artis v. Commonwealth, 
    213 Va. 220
    , 227 (1972) (holding
    that counsel’s comment in closing argument was improper because “attorneys should assiduously
    refrain from injecting their own personal opinion of the evidence, or personal opinion as to the
    competency of witnesses and the weight to be accorded their testimony”).
    The trial court correctly excluded improper and confusing evidence. Instead, it permitted
    proper information for the jury to consider that supported the appellant’s factual point that the
    lengthy delay was not due to him absconding. For these reasons, we hold that the trial court did not
    abuse its discretion in granting the motion in limine.
    -7-
    II. Hearsay Evidence in Opening Statement
    The appellant argues that by allowing the prosecutor to say in the opening statement that
    Park feared the appellant after he was removed as a director of the temple, the trial court put “an
    incredibly damaging, and inadmissible, fact in the [j]ury’s collective mind.”
    “A trial court has broad discretion in the supervision of opening statements and closing
    argument.” Jones v. Commonwealth, 
    71 Va. App. 70
    , 92 (2019) (quoting O’Dell v. Commonwealth,
    
    234 Va. 672
    , 703 (1988)). “This Court will not reverse the [trial] court’s ruling ‘unless it
    affirmatively appears that such discretion has been abused and that the rights of the complaining
    litigant have been prejudiced.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Canipe v. Commonwealth, 
    25 Va. App. 629
    , 639
    (1997)).
    The appellant’s argument relates to a specific comment by the prosecutor during opening
    statements.4 “An opening statement is not evidence . . . .” Arrington v. Commonwealth, 
    10 Va. App. 446
    , 448 (1990). “[I]ts purpose is ‘merely to inform the jury of what counsel expects
    the evidence to be so that they may better understand the evidence.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Fields v.
    Commonwealth, 
    2 Va. App. 300
    , 307 (1986)).
    The challenged statement is that Park would call Stapf “to come when he feared that [the
    appellant] was coming over.” During Stapf’s testimony, he did not repeat what Park had told
    him, but instead he said that Park became “paranoid” after the appellant was removed as a director
    of the temple. Stapf also stated that Park asked him to be at the temple whenever the appellant was
    there. His testimony supported the prosecutor’s opening remark in sum and substance that Park
    4
    We assume without deciding that the appellant did not waive his challenge to the
    opening statement despite his failure to make a motion for a mistrial. See McGinnis v.
    Commonwealth, 
    296 Va. 489
    , 501 (2018). See generally Tizon v. Commonwealth, 
    60 Va. App. 1
    , 13 (2012) (holding that the defendant waived “any appellate challenge to the prosecutor’s
    allegedly improper remark during opening statement” by not making a “timely motion for a
    mistrial”).
    -8-
    feared the appellant, and it was relevant to explain the relationship between the two men. See 
    id.
    (“A prosecutor should confine his or her opening statement to a description of evidence which
    will be offered and which he or she believes in good faith will be available and admissible.”).
    Additionally, the trial court specifically instructed the jury prior to opening statements
    that they are “what [the attorneys] expect the evidence to be” but are “not evidence and you must
    not consider [them] evidence.” It is well settled that jurors are presumed to follow the
    instructions they are given. Bryant v. Commonwealth, 
    295 Va. 302
    , 311 (2018). Consequently,
    “no prejudice could have resulted.” Arrington, 10 Va. App. at 449.
    For these reasons, the court did not abuse its discretion by allowing the prosecutor to say
    in the opening statement that the victim feared the appellant.
    III. Admission of Photographs
    The appellant challenges the admission of the Commonwealth’s exhibits 92 through 97,
    the photographs of his former residence showing that the house was vacant in July 2008. He argues
    that these photos were irrelevant and therefore not admissible evidence.
    The law regarding relevance is broad. Evidence is relevant if it has “any tendency to
    make the existence of any fact in issue more probable or less probable than it would be without
    the evidence.” Va. R. Evid. 2:401; see Jones, 71 Va. App. at 88-89.
    The challenged photographs were relevant to the appellant’s consciousness of guilt.
    Taken within weeks of the murder, they showed that the residence was empty. The appellant
    told investigators that when he discovered Park’s body, he decided to “run away” and immediately
    drove to New York. The photos were relevant to support the Commonwealth’s theory that the
    appellant did not intend to return after fleeing to New York. “[I]t is today universally conceded
    that the fact of an accused’s flight . . . and related conduct[] are admissible as evidence of
    consciousness of guilt, and thus of guilt itself.” Lambert v. Commonwealth, 
    70 Va. App. 740
    ,
    -9-
    760 (2019) (quoting Leonard v. Commonwealth, 
    39 Va. App. 134
    , 149 (2002)). Consequently,
    the trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting the photos. See Nottingham v.
    Commonwealth, 
    73 Va. App. 221
    , 231 (2021) (stating that absent an abuse of discretion, a trial
    court’s evidentiary ruling will be upheld on appeal). Once the threshold for admissibility of the
    photos was met, it was up to the jury to determine what weight to give them. See Church v.
    Commonwealth, 
    71 Va. App. 107
    , 122-23 (2019).
    IV. Jury Instruction
    The appellant argues that the trial court erred by instructing the jury that it could consider his
    character “when proven by the evidence.” He contends that the record did not support the
    instruction.
    Whether to grant or deny a proposed instruction “generally rests ‘in the sound discretion
    of the trial court.’” Graves v. Commonwealth, 
    65 Va. App. 702
    , 707 (2016) (quoting Cooper v.
    Commonwealth, 
    277 Va. 377
    , 381 (2009)); cf. Lindsey v. Commonwealth, 
    293 Va. 1
    , 5 (2017)
    (noting that an appellate court reviews de novo whether a jury instruction accurately states the
    relevant law). In giving jury instructions, a trial court should “clearly state[]” the law and “cover all
    issues which the evidence fairly raises.” Conley v. Commonwealth, 
    74 Va. App. 658
    , 674-75 (2022)
    (quoting Fahringer v. Commonwealth, 
    70 Va. App. 208
    , 211 (2019)). On appeal, this Court views
    the facts relating to this specific claim in the light most favorable to the proponent of the
    instruction, in this case the Commonwealth. See Davison v. Commonwealth, 
    69 Va. App. 321
    ,
    327 (2018), aff’d, 
    298 Va. 177
     (2019). A proposed instruction must be supported by “more than
    a scintilla of evidence.” Pena Pinedo v. Commonwealth, 
    300 Va. 116
    , 121 (2021) (quoting
    Commonwealth v. Sands, 
    262 Va. 724
    , 729 (2001)). This is a determination “resolved on a
    case-by-case basis.” Williams v. Commonwealth, 
    64 Va. App. 240
    , 247 (2015) (quoting
    Brandau v. Commonwealth, 
    16 Va. App. 408
    , 412 (1993)).
    - 10 -
    The Commonwealth presented evidence that the appellant wrote a bad check, drank
    alcohol excessively, and gambled. The trial court considered that evidence to be character
    evidence. Accordingly, the court instructed the jury that it could consider evidence of the
    appellant’s character, “whether good or bad, along with the other facts and circumstances in the
    case in determining his guilt or innocence.”
    Although the instruction was based on Virginia Criminal Model Jury Instruction 2.200
    and a correct statement of the law, the trial court abused its discretion in giving the instruction
    because it applies only when “the defendant has offered character evidence.”5 See Comment,
    Virginia Criminal Model Jury Instruction 2.200 (emphasis added). “The weight of authority is to
    the effect that character is not in issue unless put there by the defendant.” Robinson v.
    Commonwealth, 
    118 Va. 785
    , 790 (1916); see Zirkle v. Commonwealth, 
    189 Va. 862
    , 871 (1949)
    (holding that the Commonwealth may not “introduce any testimony of the bad reputation of the
    accused until the accused has put the pertinent traits of his character in issue”); Pughsley v.
    Commonwealth, 
    33 Va. App. 640
    , 645-46 (2000) (stating that the Commonwealth can present
    evidence of a defendant’s bad character only if the defendant put his character into issue by
    offering his own evidence of his good character); see also Va. R. Evid. 2:404(a)(1) (stating that
    “[e]vidence of a pertinent character trait of the accused offered by the accused, or by the
    prosecution to rebut the same” may be admissible). The appellant did not testify or offer
    evidence of his good character, and consequently the instruction did not apply.
    While we hold that giving the instruction in this case was error, that conclusion does not
    end the inquiry. “Virginia law requires that in all criminal cases in which the appellate court
    finds that error occurred in the trial court, it must consider whether the error was harmless.”
    5
    Based on our resolution of this issue, we will assume without deciding the appellant
    properly raised the specific challenge in the trial court. See Commonwealth v. White, 
    293 Va. 411
    , 419 (2017).
    - 11 -
    Castillo v. Commonwealth, 
    70 Va. App. 394
    , 429 (2019) (quoting Graves, 65 Va. App. at 711);
    see Commonwealth v. White, 
    293 Va. 411
    , 420 (2017) (stating that it is “the duty of a reviewing
    court to consider the trial record as a whole and to ignore errors that are harmless” (quoting
    United States v. Hasting, 
    461 U.S. 499
    , 509 (1983))). “There are two distinct tests for
    determining harmless error. One applies when the claim involves constitutional error and the
    other when it involves non-constitutional error.” Castillo, 70 Va. App. at 429-30 (quoting
    Graves, 65 Va. App. at 711). In this case, the non-constitutional standard applies because the
    assignment of error challenges “the propriety of the [character evidence] instruction.” See
    Graves, 65 Va. App. at 711; see also Velasquez v. Commonwealth, 
    276 Va. 326
    , 331 n.5 (2008)
    (applying the test for non-constitutional harmless error in holding that the trial court’s error in
    instructing the jury was harmless).
    A non-constitutional error is harmless when “it plainly appears from the record and the
    evidence given at the trial that the parties have had a fair trial on the merits and substantial
    justice has been reached.” Code § 8.01-678. “This Court may uphold a decision on the ground
    that any error involved is harmless only if it can conclude, without usurping the jury’s
    fact-finding function, ‘that the error did not influence the jury[] or had but slight effect.’”
    Graves, 65 Va. App. at 712 (alteration in original) (quoting Clay v. Commonwealth, 
    262 Va. 253
    ,
    260 (2001)); see Kotteakos v. United States, 
    328 U.S. 750
    , 764 (1946).
    An error does not substantially affect the verdict where the evidence of guilt is so
    overwhelming that it renders the error insignificant by comparison and thus could not have affected
    the verdict. See Haas v. Commonwealth, 
    299 Va. 465
    , 469 (2021). We conclude that here the error
    could not have substantially affected the verdict and was harmless.
    Evidence of the appellant’s bad check, alcohol use, and gambling was introduced at trial,
    and he did not object to its admission. That evidence was squarely before the jury for its
    - 12 -
    consideration whether or not the character evidence instruction was given. Cf. Gravely v.
    Commonwealth, 
    13 Va. App. 560
    , 564 (1992) (holding that the Commonwealth’s improper
    cross-examination of the defendant’s witnesses was not harmless error because the jury would not
    have heard the challenged evidence but for the cross-examination).
    Additionally, the appellant told the F.B.I. agents several times that he must have killed Park
    because he was the only person in the locked house with Park on June 24, 2008, albeit he did not
    remember doing so.6 He told them he was concerned that his children would know what he had
    done. The appellant also said he must have told other people that he killed Park and “would tell the
    truth” when he was in court, “that he killed [Park].” Further, the appellant fled when he awoke and
    found Park’s dead body. After the F.B.I. agents contacted the appellant in New York in August
    2008, he failed to attend a later meeting scheduled during the phone call. In fact, the agents did not
    locate him until 2010 after he was in custody on unrelated charges in another state.
    We recognize that the appellant also told the agents he did not kill Park and that no
    forensic evidence linked him to the crime scene. Nonetheless, the record contains
    “overwhelming” evidence of guilt. See Commonwealth v. Kilpatrick, __ Va. __, __ (Aug. 4, 2022).
    Consequently, the jury instruction error is “insignificant by comparison” and could not have
    affected the verdict. See 
    id.
    In light of the entire record, instructing the jury on considering the appellant’s character in
    determining his guilt or innocence was harmless.7 See Velasquez, 276 Va. at 330-31 (finding that
    6
    The appellant admitted to drinking alcohol heavily the day before and into the night
    with Park.
    7
    The Commonwealth argues that the character evidence was admitted under Virginia
    Rule of Evidence 2:404(b) to show the appellant’s motive in killing Park and also explained that
    he did not remember the killing because he had blacked out from excessive alcohol consumption.
    However, we resolve the issue on harmless error grounds, and therefore we do not address this
    argument. See White, 
    293 Va. at 419
    .
    - 13 -
    the error in instructing the jury was harmless because the result would have been the same if the
    instruction had been refused); Conley, 74 Va. App. at 684 (same); Graves, 65 Va. App. at 713
    (same).
    CONCLUSION
    The trial court acted within its discretion in granting the Commonwealth’s motion in limine,
    allowing the Commonwealth to mention hearsay in its opening statement, and admitting the
    photographs of the appellant’s vacant residence. Further, any error in giving the character evidence
    jury instruction was harmless. Accordingly, we affirm the appellant’s conviction for second-degree
    murder.
    Affirmed.
    - 14 -