Shey Elan Bruce , 2015 WY 46 ( 2015 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WYOMING
    
    2015 WY 46
    OCTOBER TERM, A.D. 2014
    March 26, 2015
    SHEY ELAN BRUCE,
    Appellant
    (Defendant),
    v.                                                   S-14-0138
    THE STATE OF WYOMING,
    Appellee
    (Plaintiff).
    Appeal from the District Court of Fremont County
    The Honorable Norman E. Young, Judge
    Representing Appellant:
    Office of the State Public Defender: Diane Lozano, State Public Defender; and
    Tina N. Olson, Chief Appellate Counsel. Argument by Ms. Olson.
    Representing Appellee:
    Peter K. Michael, Wyoming Attorney General; David L. Delicath, Deputy
    Attorney General; Jenny L. Craig, Senior Assistant Attorney General; and
    Mackenzie Williams, Senior Assistant Attorney General. Argument by Mr.
    Williams.
    Before BURKE, C.J., and HILL, KITE, DAVIS, and FOX, JJ.
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in Pacific Reporter Third.
    Readers are requested to notify the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Supreme Court Building,
    Cheyenne, Wyoming 82002, of any typographical or other formal errors so that correction may be
    made before final publication in the permanent volume.
    HILL, Justice.
    [¶1] A jury convicted Appellant Shey Bruce of manslaughter and battery of a
    household member. Mr. Bruce appeals his manslaughter conviction, claiming that the
    district court erred in denying his motion for judgment of acquittal in relation to the
    charge of second degree murder and his post-trial motion for judgment of acquittal in
    relation to the manslaughter conviction. He also alleges error in the district court’s denial
    of his motion for new trial, its refusal to instruct the jury on his claim of self defense, and
    its admission of the deceased victim’s 911 call. We affirm.
    ISSUES
    [¶2]   Mr. Bruce states the issues on appeal as follows:
    I.      Did the trial court err in denying the motions for
    judgment of acquittal with regard to the charge of second
    degree murder and in denying the motion for judgment of
    acquittal, post-trial, of Appellant’s conviction of
    manslaughter?
    II.     Did the trial court err in denying Appellant’s motion
    for new trial, based upon undisclosed statements of the
    deceased, which the jury heard?
    III.    Did the trial court err in refusing to instruct the jury as
    to self-defense?
    IV. Did the trial court err in admitting the 911 call made
    by the decedent?
    FACTS
    [¶3] Charles Darrell Laster and Lavena Laster were originally married in 1996,
    divorced in 2004, remarried in 2007, and separated again, though not divorced, in 2010.
    In 2010, the Lasters were living in Shoshoni, Wyoming, and when they separated, Mrs.
    Laster moved to Mesa, Arizona. Mrs. Laster lived in Arizona until March 2013, when
    Mr. Laster bought her a bus ticket so she could return to Shoshoni. When Mrs. Laster
    returned to Shoshoni, she stayed with her daughter, Teri Hughes. Mr. and Mrs. Laster
    did not reunite, but they remained good friends.
    [¶4] While living in Arizona, Mrs. Laster met and began dating Mr. Bruce. The two
    were still dating when Mrs. Laster returned to Shoshoni, and Mr. Bruce joined Mrs.
    Laster in Shoshoni about a month after her return. Mrs. Laster and Mr. Bruce initially
    stayed with Mrs. Laster’s daughter, Teri Hughes, and then eventually moved into a one-
    bedroom home. Mrs. Laster and Mr. Bruce could not afford to rent the home, so Mrs.
    1
    Laster asked Mr. Laster to rent the home for them, which he agreed to do. Mrs. Laster
    and Mr. Bruce did odd jobs around Mr. Laster’s place to help work off the rent.
    [¶5] On May 14, 2013, Mrs. Laster was at Mr. Laster’s home drinking. She had been
    drinking for several days and described herself as a “blackout drinker.” At about 9:00 or
    9:30 that morning, Mr. Bruce had coffee at the home of Mr. Laster’s next door neighbor,
    Norman Hughes, who is also the father-in-law of Teri Hughes. Mr. Hughes reported that
    Mr. Bruce was intoxicated, and angry and distraught, because Mr. Laster had put his hand
    on Mrs. Laster’s leg. Mr. Bruce spent the day at Mr. Hughes’ home and went back and
    forth between the homes of Mr. Laster and Mr. Hughes several times throughout the day.
    [¶6] At one point, Mr. Bruce told Mr. Hughes that he was going to return to Arizona
    and he had a check that Mr. Laster had given him to pay for his return trip. Mr. Bruce
    left Mr. Hughes’ home at about 5:00 or 6:00 on the evening of May 14th, and Mr.
    Hughes described his departure:
    Q.    Tell us about that. Tell us about him leaving, if
    you would.
    A.    Well, like I said, I kept telling him, you’re not
    going to get a bus ticket. The best thing you can do is,
    intoxicated, you can always go home and sleep it off. If you
    feel like you still want to leave in the morning, then by all
    means, do it.
    Q.    And did he leave?
    A.    Yes, he did.
    Q.    Tell us about that.
    A.    He got into Darrell’s [Mr. Laster’s] bright blue
    Mustang, spun gravel as he was leaving, and then he left.
    [¶7] At some point after Mr. Bruce left, Mrs. Laster looked outside Mr. Laster’s home
    and saw that Mr. Laster’s blue Mustang was gone. Mrs. Laster reported this to Mr.
    Laster, and in response, Mr. Laster loaded two rifles and two handguns. When Mrs.
    Laster asked Mr. Laster why he was preparing the firearms, Mr. Laster replied that he
    was “not going to take an ass whooping from a young man.”1 The Lasters placed the
    firearms in Mr. Laster’s truck and drove over to the home that Mrs. Laster and Mr. Bruce
    shared. Once there, Mrs. Laster saw that the keys were in the Mustang, so she did not go
    in the home and instead got in the car and followed Mr. Laster back to his home.
    [¶8] Upon their return to Mr. Laster’s home, the Lasters carried the firearms into the
    home and into the back bedroom. Mr. Laster unloaded the firearms, leaving the
    1
    The record indicates that on May 14, 2013, Mr. Laster was sixty-five years old and Mr. Bruce was forty-
    five years old.
    2
    ammunition in a pile on the floor. At some point, while the Lasters were in the back
    bedroom, Mr. Bruce entered the home and came to the back bedroom. Mr. Bruce had a
    beer bottle in his hand, and he and Mr. Laster talked about something that Mrs. Laster
    could not recall. Mr. Bruce then struck Mrs. Laster on the left side of her head with the
    beer bottle, rendering her unconscious.
    [¶9] When Mrs. Laster awoke, Mr. Laster was on the telephone speaking to a 911
    dispatcher. During Mr. Laster’s conversation with the 911 dispatcher he reported that he
    needed medical assistance for his wife. Mr. Laster also reported to the 911 dispatcher
    that he also was hit a couple of times on the head with a beer bottle, that “Shay
    something” was the person who assaulted him, and that the assailant was no longer in the
    home.
    [¶10] EMTs and a deputy sheriff responded to the call for emergency assistance. The
    deputy reported that both the Lasters were intoxicated, with slurred speech, but Mr.
    Laster was not at a “high level” of intoxication for him. Mrs. Laster was unwilling to
    speak with the sheriff’s deputy, and when the deputy began to interview Mr. Laster, she
    told him not to tell the deputy anything. The deputy separated the Lasters, and Mr. Laster
    then cooperated and answered the deputy’s questions, speaking with him for about ten or
    fifteen minutes. Mrs. Laster initially refused any medical treatment, but then when the
    deputy threatened to take her into protective custody, she agreed to be examined by the
    EMTs but refused transport to the hospital.
    [¶11] Teri Hughes arrived at Mr. Laster’s home about ten minutes after the sheriff’s
    deputy. Ms. Hughes went to the home because she was worried about her mother (Mrs.
    Laster) and her stepfather (Mr. Laster). Ms. Hughes reported that she was worried
    because at about 10:30 that evening, Mr. Bruce had called her from the Fast Lane
    convenience store and asked her to pick him up. When Ms. Hughes arrived to pick up
    Mr. Bruce, he was upset, intoxicated, and had a beer in his hand. Mr. Bruce told Ms.
    Hughes that Mr. Laster hit him with a Maglite flashlight, and he had her feel the lump on
    the back of his head. Ms. Hughes testified:
    Q.     Okay. All right. So he’s upset. He tells you
    that your dad hit him with a Maglite flashlight. Did you
    notice – did you notice anything else about him?
    A.     He had bloody knuckles.
    Q.     Okay. Do you remember if it was his right
    hand or his left hand?
    A.     No, I don’t.
    Q.     Okay. Is he talking about anything else besides
    that at this point?
    A.     He says he’s – I knew he was mad at my mom.
    3
    Q.     Okay. How did you know he was mad at your
    mom?
    A.      Because she’s over at my dad’s.
    Q.      Okay. How do you know that?
    A.      Because he said.
    Q.      Okay. So did you just drop him off at his
    house?
    A.      No.
    Q.      Okay. Why not?
    A.      He wanted me to go inside.
    Q.      Why did you go inside with him if he was
    upset?
    A.      I thought I could calm him down.
    Q.      So what happens when you get inside?
    A.      He starts hollering about my mom and dad.
    Q.      What did he say?
    A.      He said that they – that they fucked him, and
    that he hurt them.
    Q.      Besides – in addition, did he say anything else
    besides that he had f’d them and he had hurt them?
    A.      He said that they got what they deserved.
    Q.      Okay. Did he say – did he say where – did he
    say where they were at when he hurt them and he f’d them?
    A.      He said he walked into dad’s house and didn’t
    see mom and dad nowhere, and that he walked into the back
    bedroom and that he thought my mom and dad were having
    sex.
    Q.      What else did he say?
    A.      He just kept repeating that he was mad and kept
    ranting.
    [¶12] When Ms. Hughes arrived at Mr. Laster’s home, she checked on both of her
    parents. Mrs. Laster would not let Ms. Hughes look closely at her, but she was able to
    closely check over Mr. Laster. She found no blood, no bruises, and no scratches, and she
    found that he looked and seemed fine. She then returned home.
    [¶13] After the EMTs, the deputy sheriff, and Ms. Hughes left Mr. Laster’s home, Mrs.
    Laster fell asleep on a futon in Mr. Laster’s home. When she awoke in the morning, the
    morning of May 15, 2013, she found Mr. Laster face down on the floor and unresponsive.
    EMTs eventually arrived and confirmed that Mr. Laster was deceased. An autopsy
    revealed that Mr. Laster died of a right subdural hemorrhage caused by blunt force
    trauma.
    4
    [¶14] On May 16, 2013, the State filed a criminal information charging Mr. Bruce with
    second degree murder in the death of Mr. Laster and domestic violence battery for the
    injury to Mrs. Laster. Mr. Bruce was bound over to the district court, where he pled not
    guilty to both charges.
    [¶15] On October 10, 2013, the State filed a motion requesting a pretrial ruling on the
    admissibility of the 911 call Mr. Laster made on the evening of May 14, 2013. Mr. Bruce
    responded with a motion in limine to exclude the 911 call on the ground that admitting
    the evidence would violate his Sixth Amendment right to confrontation. Following a
    hearing on the issue, the district court ruled that the 911 call was admissible hearsay and
    that admission of the call would not violate Mr. Bruce’s Sixth Amendment right to
    confrontation.
    [¶16] A jury trial was held on November 18-22, 2013. At the close of the State’s case,
    Mr. Bruce made a motion for judgment of acquittal on the second degree murder charge,
    and the district court denied the motion. Mr. Bruce renewed his motion at the close of all
    evidence, and the court again denied the motion. The jury returned a verdict finding Mr.
    Bruce not guilty on the second degree murder charge, guilty on the lesser included
    offense of manslaughter, and guilty on the domestic violence battery charge. On
    December 6, 2013, Mr. Bruce filed a written motion for judgment of acquittal and for a
    new trial based on the jury’s exposure to inadmissible hearsay testimony and on the
    district court’s failure to instruct the jury on self defense. The court denied Mr. Bruce’s
    motion.
    [¶17] On March 14, 2014, the district court entered its Judgment and Sentence. The
    court sentenced Mr. Bruce to a prison term of four to ten years on the manslaughter count
    and 180 days on the domestic violence battery count, both sentences to be served
    concurrently. Mr. Bruce thereafter timely filed a notice of appeal to this Court.
    DISCUSSION
    [¶18] Mr. Bruce challenges his manslaughter conviction on several grounds: 1) the
    district court’s denial of his motion for judgment of acquittal on the second degree
    murder charge; 2) sufficiency of the evidence to support his manslaughter conviction; 3)
    the district court’s denial of his new trial motion based on the jury’s exposure to
    inadmissible hearsay; 4) the district court’s failure to give the jury a self defense
    instruction; and 5) the district court’s admission of Mr. Laster’s 911 call. Mr. Bruce
    presents the district court’s ruling on the 911 call as his last assignment of error, but
    because our resolution of that issue may affect our consideration of the other alleged
    errors, we will address the ruling on the 911 call first and then turn to Mr. Bruce’s
    remaining arguments.
    5
    A.    Admissibility of 911 Call
    [¶19] In arguing that the district court erred in admitting Mr. Laster’s 911 call, Mr.
    Bruce contends that the evidence was admitted in violation of his Sixth Amendment right
    of confrontation and was inadmissible hearsay. Whether an evidentiary ruling violates a
    defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to confront witnesses against him is a question of
    law that this Court reviews de novo. Counts v. State, 
    2012 WY 70
    , ¶ 31, 
    277 P.3d 94
    ,
    104 (Wyo. 2012); Hannon v. State, 
    2004 WY 8
    , ¶ 11, 
    84 P.3d 320
    , 328 (Wyo. 2004). We
    review rulings on the admissibility of evidence for an abuse of discretion:
    This Court reviews alleged errors relating to the
    admission of evidence for an abuse of discretion. Marquess
    v. State, 
    2011 WY 95
    , ¶ 12, 
    256 P.3d 506
    , 510 (Wyo.2011).
    “Determining whether the trial court abused its discretion
    involves the consideration of whether the court could
    reasonably conclude as it did, and whether it acted in an
    arbitrary and capricious manner.” Lancaster v. State, 
    2002 WY 45
    , ¶ 11, 
    43 P.3d 80
    , 87 (Wyo.2002) (citing Trujillo v.
    State, 
    2 P.3d 567
    , 571 (Wyo.2000)). A trial court’s
    evidentiary rulings “are entitled to considerable deference,”
    and will not be reversed “so long as there exists a legitimate
    basis for the trial court’s ruling....” Armstrong v. Hrabal,
    
    2004 WY 39
    , ¶ 10, 
    87 P.3d 1226
    , 1230 (Wyo.2004) (internal
    quotes and citations omitted).
    Ortiz v. State, 
    2014 WY 60
    , ¶ 67, 
    326 P.3d 883
    , 897 (Wyo. 2014).
    [¶20] While Mr. Bruce’s arguments are directed at particular isolated statements within
    Mr. Laster’s 911 call, the context of those statements is important in our consideration of
    both of Mr. Bruce’s arguments. We therefore set forth the entire text of the call against
    which we will consider Mr. Bruce’s confrontation clause and hearsay arguments.
    Shey Bruce Criminal No. 6912
    911 call on assault
    Dispatcher: 911 what’s the address of the emergency?
    C. Laster:     My Wife (sic) has been assaulted, and she was
    hit real hard in the temple lobe. I don’t know if we need an
    ambulance or if I should just bring her in, but I’ll let you talk
    to her and then she can explain it.
    Dispatcher: Okay.
    6
    L. Laster:   Hello.
    Dispatcher: Hi this is the 911 Center, What’s the address
    that you're at?
    L. Laster:   115 Main Street.
    Dispatcher: Okay and what is your name?
    C. Laster:   We live in the alley.
    L. Laster:   Lavena Laster.
    Dispatcher: What was your name again?
    L. Laster:   Lavena Laster.
    Dispatcher: Lavena, Okay.
    C. Laster:   Hello.
    Dispatcher: Okay what’s the phone number your (sic)
    calling me from Lavena?
    C. Laster:   A guy was over here and hit her temple lobe
    and she’s having severe headaches now.
    L. Laster:   My head hurts.
    C. Laster:   And I think we might need to get her to a
    hospital.
    Dispatcher: Okay, what’s the phone number that you’re
    calling me from?
    C. Laster:   I’m calling from [telephone number redacted].
    Dispatcher: Okay, now is the person that assaulted her, are
    they still there?
    C. Laster:   Beg your pardon?
    Dispatcher: The person that assaulted her, are they still
    there?
    C. Laster:     No, I got hit a couple times in the head with a
    beer bottle, but they have left ...
    7
    (L. Laster repeatedly yelling her head hurts in background)
    C. Laster:    Hun, [we're] gonna try to get you to the hospital
    here as quick as we can.
    Dispatcher: Okay, how old is your wife?
    C. Laster:    49.
    Dispatcher: Okay. Is her breathing normal?
    C. Laster:    Beg your pardon?
    Dispatcher: Is she breathing normally?
    C. Laster:    Ya she’s just got severe headaches.
    Dispatcher: Okay.
    C. Laster:    And . . .
    Dispatcher: Okay does she . . .
    C. Laster:    I don’t know if she’s got blood clots or what in
    her head.
    Dispatcher: Okay. When did this happen?
    C. Laster:    About 20 minutes ago.
    Dispatcher: Okay does        she    have any     numbness or
    paralysis[?]
    C. Laster:        Your (sic) gonna have to talk to her. Hun, Hun
    talk to . . . this is 911, Hun you gotta talk to them.
    L. Laster:    No.
    C. Laster:    You gotta talk to them.
    Dispatcher: Lavena?
    L. Laster:    What? Yes, What?
    Dispatcher: Lavena do have any numbness or paralysis?
    L. Laster:    No you know my head fucking hurts . . .
    8
    Repeatedly yelling ouch . . .
    Dispatcher: Lavena . . .
    L. Laster:     . . . Repeatedly yelling ouch. . .
    Dispatcher: Have you had any recent changes in your
    behavior[?]
    C. Laster:    Maybe she wasn’t much information but she’s
    hurting pretty bad.
    Dispatcher: Okay, where did this happen at Charles?
    C. Laster:     Beg your pardon.
    Dispatcher: Where did this happen at?
    C. Laster:     In my house.
    Dispatcher: At your house, okay. Where’s the person that
    assaulted you guys?
    C. Laster:     Shay something, I don’t know his last name, but
    I’m alright.
    Dispatcher: Okay. Where did the person go that assaulted
    you?
    C. Laster:     I don’t know exactly what the address but it[’]s
    right across from the high school in Shoshoni.
    Dispatcher: Okay.
    C. Laster:     Hun we’ve got help coming it’s on the way.
    Dispatcher: Okay. I’m sending the ambulance now. Stay
    on the line and I will tell you exactly what to do.
    C. Laster:     Okay. I’m at 115 Main . . .
    Dispatcher: Are you at 115 or 117 Main?
    C. Laster:      Either one, I own two pieces of property, and I
    live in a trailer in the back, in the alley.
    Dispatcher: Okay, and you’re at the trailer in the back?
    9
    C. Laster:   I live in the mobile home in the back.
    Dispatcher: Okay. Okay, reassure her that help is on the
    way, don’t let her have anything . . .
    C. Laster:   Hey babe, help[’]s on the way.
    Dispatcher: Okay don’t let her have anything to eat or drink,
    as it might make her sick or cause problems for the doctor.
    C. Laster:   I’m hard of hearing . . . Hun help is on the way
    babe, Hun helps on the way.
    L. Laster:   Right now (inaudible).
    C. Laster:   There’s nothing I can do for you [now], helps
    on the way. Hun .. .
    Dispatcher: Okay, are you still there Charles?
    C. Laster:   Beg your pardon.
    Dispatcher: Don’t let her have anything to eat or drink, as it
    might make her sick or cause problems for the doctor.
    C. Laster:    Okay well just get some help over here and give
    me the instructions when they get here.
    Dispatcher: Okay.
    C. Laster:     And right now I’m worried about my wife, and
    I’m not listening to instructions.
    Dispatcher: Okay Charles we’ve got the ambulance paged
    and I’ve got a deputy on his way over there right now.
    C. Laster:   Okay sounds good.
    Dispatcher: Okay.
    C. Laster:   Okay thanks ma’am.
    Dispatcher: You’re welcome.
    C. Laster:   I appreciate it.
    Dispatcher: Not a problem.
    10
    C. Laster:    Okay.
    Dispatcher: Alright.
    C. Laster:    Okay, bye.
    Dispatcher: Bye.
    RECORDING ENDS
    1.    Sixth Amendment Ruling
    [¶21] The Sixth Amendment protects a defendant’s right to confront witnesses against
    him, and owing to that protection, testimonial statements of a witness absent from trial
    are admissible “only where the declarant is unavailable, and only where the defendant has
    had a prior opportunity to cross-examine.” Crawford v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    , 59,
    
    124 S.Ct. 1354
    , 1369, 
    158 L.Ed.2d 177
     (2004); see also Anderson v. State, 
    2014 WY 13
    ,
    ¶ 27, 
    317 P.3d 1108
    , 1118 (Wyo. 2014); Rodriguez v. State, 
    2010 WY 170
    , ¶ 9, 
    245 P.3d 818
    , 823 (Wyo. 2010); Szymanski v. State, 
    2007 WY 139
    , ¶ 16, 
    166 P.3d 879
    , 883 (Wyo.
    2007). Stated as a three-part test, the Sixth Amendment confrontation clause bars the
    admission of an out-of-court statement if the statement is testimonial, the declarant is
    unavailable, and the defendant had no opportunity to cross-examine the declarant
    concerning the statement. Crawford, 
    541 U.S. at 68
    , 
    124 S.Ct. at 1374
    ; Szymanski, ¶ 16,
    166 P.3d at 883.
    [¶22] In Crawford, the Supreme Court abandoned consideration of a statement’s
    reliability in determining admissibility under the Sixth Amendment. Crawford, 
    541 U.S. at 60-62
    , 
    124 S.Ct. at 1369-70
    ; Teniente v. State, 
    2007 WY 165
    , ¶ 77, 
    169 P.3d 512
    , 533-
    34 (Wyo. 2007); Vigil v. State, 
    2004 WY 110
    , ¶ 18, 
    98 P.3d 172
    , 177-78 (Wyo. 2004).
    The Court explained that while the reliability of a statement may be a proper
    consideration in the application of hearsay rules, it is not a factor to be considered in
    determining the admissibility of a statement under the Sixth Amendment. Crawford, 
    541 U.S. at 60-62
    , 
    124 S.Ct. at 1369-70
    . If the statement is testimonial, “the only indicium
    of reliability sufficient to satisfy constitutional demands is the one the Constitution
    actually prescribes: confrontation.” 
    Id.,
     
    541 U.S. at 69
    , 
    124 S.Ct. at 1374
    ; see also Bush
    v. State, 
    2008 WY 108
    , ¶ 34, 
    193 P.3d 203
    , 211-12 (Wyo. 2008); Teniente, ¶ 77, 169
    P.3d at 535; Vigil, ¶ 18, 98 P.3d at 179.
    [¶23] The Supreme Court did not in Crawford attempt to fully define the difference
    between a testimonial statement and a non-testimonial statement. The Court stated:
    We leave for another day any effort to spell out a
    comprehensive definition of “testimonial.” Whatever else the
    term covers, it applies at a minimum to prior testimony at a
    preliminary hearing, before a grand jury, or at a former trial;
    11
    and to police interrogations.
    Crawford, 
    541 U.S. at 68
    , 
    124 S.Ct. at 1374
     (footnote omitted).
    [¶24] A couple of years after Crawford, the Supreme Court did flesh out the distinction
    between testimonial and non-testimonial statements:
    Statements are nontestimonial when made in the course of
    police interrogation under circumstances objectively
    indicating that the primary purpose of the interrogation is to
    enable police assistance to meet an ongoing emergency.
    They are testimonial when the circumstances objectively
    indicate that there is no such ongoing emergency, and that the
    primary purpose of the interrogation is to establish or prove
    past events potentially relevant to later criminal prosecution.
    Davis v. Washington, 
    547 U.S. 813
    , 822, 
    126 S.Ct. 2266
    , 2273-74, 
    165 L.Ed.2d 224
    (2006) (footnote omitted); see also Szymanski, ¶ 18, 166 P.3d at 884.
    [¶25] In Michigan v. Bryant, 
    562 U.S. 344
    , 
    131 S.Ct. 1143
    , 
    179 L.Ed.2d 93
     (2011), the
    Supreme Court again addressed the distinction between testimonial and non-testimonial
    statements. The Court did not expand the definition but provided guidance in making the
    determination, emphasizing in particular the objective nature of the inquiry:
    An objective analysis of the circumstances of an encounter
    and the statements and actions of the parties to it provides the
    most accurate assessment of the “primary purpose of the
    interrogation.” The circumstances in which an encounter
    occurs—e.g., at or near the scene of the crime versus at a
    police station, during an ongoing emergency or afterwards—
    are clearly matters of objective fact. The statements and
    actions of the parties must also be objectively evaluated. That
    is, the relevant inquiry is not the subjective or actual purpose
    of the individuals involved in a particular encounter, but
    rather the purpose that reasonable participants would have
    had, as ascertained from the individuals’ statements and
    actions and the circumstances in which the encounter
    occurred.
    Bryant, 562 U.S. at ___, 
    131 S.Ct. at 1156
     (footnote omitted).
    [¶26] The Court explained why the existence of an ongoing emergency is an important
    factor in determining the primary purpose of an interrogation.
    12
    As our recent Confrontation Clause cases have explained, the
    existence of an “ongoing emergency” at the time of an
    encounter between an individual and the police is among the
    most important circumstances informing the “primary
    purpose” of an interrogation. The existence of an ongoing
    emergency is relevant to determining the primary purpose of
    the interrogation because an emergency focuses the
    participants on something other than “prov[ing] past events
    potentially relevant to later criminal prosecution.” Rather, it
    focuses them on “end[ing] a threatening situation.”
    Bryant, 562 U.S. at ___, 
    131 S.Ct. at 1157
     (footnote and internal citations omitted).
    [¶27] To summarize, the Sixth Amendment analysis requires an objective determination
    of an interrogation’s “primary purpose” based on the circumstances in which the
    interrogation takes place as well as the statements and actions of both the interrogator and
    the declarant. Bryant, 562 U.S. at ___, 
    131 S.Ct. at 1156
    . In particular, the inquiry must
    determine whether the interrogation’s primary purpose was to enable assistance to meet
    an ongoing emergency, or whether it was “to establish or prove past events potentially
    relevant to later criminal prosecution.” Id. at 1165 (quoting Davis, 
    547 U.S. at 822
    , 
    126 S.Ct. 2266
    ); see also Bush, ¶ 39, 193 P.3d at 213; Szymanski, ¶ 16, 166 P.3d at 883.
    [¶28] Against this backdrop, we review the district court’s ruling on the admissibility of
    Mr. Laster’s 911 call under the Sixth Amendment. In ruling that the 911 call was
    admissible, the court found that it was a non-testimonial statement. The court reasoned:
    In listening to the 911 call, and reading the transcript
    provided by the defendant the Dispatcher asks several
    questions concerning the location of the emergency, the
    names of the people on the call, the phone number of the
    emergency location, when the injury occurred, and lastly the
    location of the person who committed or caused the injury.
    The Dispatcher asks these same questions several times, and
    in different manners; however, what is glaringly absent is the
    who. One of the most important elements of proof of any
    crime is the identity of the defendant. In this instance, the
    Dispatcher never asks the Lasters who hurt them. All of her
    questions were to appropriately respond to [the] ongoing
    medical emergency. Even after Mr. Laster apparently
    misunderstood the Dispatcher’s question “Where’s the person
    that assaulted you guys?” and answered “Shay something,
    . . .”[,] [t]he Dispatcher reiterated the location question and
    she did not illicit information about the identity of the
    perpetrator.       She does not ask any other potentially
    13
    identifying or criminal investigative type questions. The
    Court finds that taken as a whole, and viewed objectively, the
    questions posed by the 911 operator were primarily, if not
    exclusively, posed in response to the medical emergency
    perceived by Mr. Laster.
    [¶29] Mr. Bruce takes issue with the district court’s ruling, arguing there was no on-
    going emergency because the call was made over twenty minutes after the assault, and
    that if there were an emergency, it was Mrs. Laster’s emergency, not Mr. Laster’s
    emergency. Mr. Bruce further argues the district court placed too much emphasis on the
    dispatcher’s statements and too little on Mr. Laster’s statements. We reject Mr. Bruce’s
    arguments and agree with the district court that Mr. Laster’s statements during the 911
    call were non-testimonial.
    [¶30] First, we reject Mr. Bruce’s contention that there was not an on-going emergency.
    On the recording of the 911 call, Mrs. Laster can be heard, sometimes speaking to the
    dispatcher and sometimes in the background, repeatedly stating that her head hurts,
    crying ouch, moaning and making sounds of distress. For his part, Mr. Laster repeatedly
    expresses his concern with Mrs. Laster’s severe headaches and expresses a concern that
    she may have blood clots in her head. While the assault itself had ended, the medical
    emergency clearly continued.
    [¶31] We likewise find no merit in the assertion that the emergency should be rejected as
    a consideration in the Sixth Amendment analysis because the emergency was Mrs.
    Laster’s and not Mr. Laster’s. The focus of the “primary purpose” analysis is on the
    reason for the interrogation and the reason for the declarant’s statements. While there
    may be instances where a declarant’s relationship to an emergency may call into question
    the declarant’s motives and whether the declarant’s statements stemmed from a true
    concern regarding the emergency, the record does not support that suggestion in this case.
    Mrs. Laster testified that when she regained consciousness, Mr. Laster was already
    making the 911 call to get her help. Additionally, during the call, Mr. Laster tried to have
    Mrs. Laster provide information to the dispatcher, only to have Mrs. Laster persist in
    moaning and making other sounds of distress. Throughout the call, Mr. Laster spoke
    words of comfort to his wife and repeatedly expressed his concern with his wife’s head
    injury and the need to get her medical help. Given the circumstances and Mr. Laster’s
    focus on his wife’s condition, we conclude that Mr. Laster made the 911 call because his
    wife was unable to make the call for herself, because he was concerned about his wife’s
    head injury, and because he was seeking immediate medical assistance for his wife. The
    on-going emergency is thus properly considered in the Sixth Amendment analysis even
    though it was Mrs. Laster’s injuries that created the emergency and Mr. Laster who made
    the 911 call.
    [¶32] Finally, we address Mr. Bruce’s contention that the district court placed too much
    emphasis on the dispatcher’s questions and not enough emphasis on Mr. Laster’s
    14
    statements. In particular, Mr. Bruce argues that Mr. Laster’s statements in which he
    reported he was “hit a couple times in the head with a beer bottle,” and in which he
    identified his assailant as “Shay something,” were testimonial statements and should have
    been redacted from the recording and transcript presented to the jury. We reject this
    argument because it fails to take into consideration the entirety of the circumstances in
    which the statements were made.
    [¶33] In holding that the statements of both the interrogator and the declarant must be
    considered when conducting a Sixth Amendment analysis, the Supreme Court did not
    suggest that the questions and statements of each participant be considered in isolation.
    The Court instead emphasized the need to consider the questions and statements together
    and in light of the circumstances.
    In addition to the circumstances in which an encounter
    occurs, the statements and actions of both the declarant and
    interrogators provide objective evidence of the primary
    purpose of the interrogation. See, e.g., Davis, 
    547 U.S., at 827
    , 
    126 S.Ct. 2266
     (“[T]he nature of what was asked and
    answered in Davis, again viewed objectively, was such that
    the elicited statements were necessary to be able to resolve
    the present emergency, rather than simply to learn (as in
    Crawford ) what had happened in the past” (first emphasis
    added)). . . .
    . . . In many instances, the primary purpose of the
    interrogation will be most accurately ascertained by looking
    to the contents of both the questions and the answers. To give
    an extreme example, if the police say to a victim, “Tell us
    who did this to you so that we can arrest and prosecute them,”
    the victim’s response that “Rick did it,” appears purely
    accusatory because by virtue of the phrasing of the question,
    the victim necessarily has prosecution in mind when she
    answers.
    ....
    . . . During an ongoing emergency, a victim is most likely to
    want the threat to her and to other potential victims to end,
    but that does not necessarily mean that the victim wants or
    envisions prosecution of the assailant. A victim may want the
    attacker to be incapacitated temporarily or rehabilitated.
    Alternatively, a severely injured victim may have no purpose
    at all in answering questions posed; the answers may be
    15
    simply reflexive.     The victim’s injuries could be so
    debilitating as to prevent her from thinking sufficiently
    clearly to understand whether her statements are for the
    purpose of addressing an ongoing emergency or for the
    purpose of future prosecution. Taking into account a victim’s
    injuries does not transform this objective inquiry into a
    subjective one. The inquiry is still objective because it
    focuses on the understanding and purpose of a reasonable
    victim in the circumstances of the actual victim—
    circumstances that prominently include the victim’s physical
    state.
    Bryant, 562 U.S. at ___, 
    131 S.Ct. at 1160-62
     (footnote omitted).
    [¶34] As the foregoing discussion illustrates, the focus of the Sixth Amendment analysis
    is not on the statements in isolation but on the purpose of those statements as framed by
    their context. The fact then that Mr. Laster reported what happened to him and the
    identity of his assailant does not make those statements testimonial. The statements are
    testimonial only if the context in which they were made indicates that Mr. Laster’s
    purpose in making the statements was to assist in a future prosecution, and in this case,
    we find nothing to suggest such a purpose.
    [¶35] First, none of the dispatcher’s questions were prosecution oriented. The
    dispatcher’s questions were directed at determining the location of the emergency, the
    nature of the injury, and whether the assailant was still in the area. These are questions
    directed at enabling the dispatcher to send assistance efficiently and safely. As the
    district court observed, the dispatcher at no time asked for the identity of the assailant.
    Nor did the dispatcher ask questions concerning what happened during the altercation or
    why. Thus, none of the dispatcher’s questions would have signaled Mr. Laster that he
    was providing information for a future prosecution.
    [¶36] The remaining circumstances likewise weigh against finding any prosecutorial
    purpose in Mr. Laster’s statements. Throughout most of the call, Mrs. Laster can be
    heard in the background yelling and moaning in pain. Mr. Laster himself was hard of
    hearing, intoxicated, and was dividing his attention between the dispatcher and his wife.
    For example, immediately after Mr. Laster told the dispatcher that he had been hit a
    couple of times with a beer bottle, he turned his attention to Mrs. Laster and told her he
    was trying to get her help as quick as he could. Likewise, shortly after identifying “Shay
    something” as his assailant, Mr. Laster again spoke to his wife, telling her that help was
    on the way.
    [¶37] It is clear from the entirety of the 911 call, that Mr. Laster did not call 911 to
    report that a crime had been committed. He called to seek medical assistance for his
    wife. When Mr. Laster’s statements concerning what happened to him and the identity of
    16
    his assailant are considered in the context in which they were made, we cannot conclude
    that those statements changed the primary purpose of the call from seeking medical
    assistance to assisting in a future prosecution. Mr. Laster’s focus throughout the call
    remained on his wife’s injury, and to the extent he provided additional information, the
    circumstances indicate that the information was offered “reflexively,” with no change in
    Mr. Laster’s purpose for providing the information. See Bryant, 562 U.S. at ___, 
    131 S.Ct. at 1161
    .
    [¶38] The facts of this case are analogous to those addressed by the Supreme Court in
    Bryant. In Bryant, the victim suffered a mortal gunshot wound at one location and then
    drove to a gas station. Bryant, 562 U.S. at ___, 
    131 S.Ct. at 1150
    . Police officers
    reported to the gas station and found the victim on the ground bleeding from the wound.
    
    Id.
     The officers asked the victim, “what had happened, who had shot him, and where the
    shooting had occurred.” 
    Id.
     The victim answered those questions, and the Court held the
    victim’s statements were admissible because the purpose of the interrogation was to
    address an ongoing emergency. 
    Id.
     The Court explained, in part:
    The circumstances of the encounter provide important context
    for understanding [the victim’s] statements to the police.
    When the police arrived at [the victim’s] side, their first
    question to him was “What happened?” [The victim’s]
    response was either “Rick shot me” or “I was shot,” followed
    very quickly by an identification of “Rick” as the shooter. In
    response to further questions, [the victim] explained that the
    shooting occurred through the back door of Bryant’s house
    and provided a physical description of the shooter. When he
    made the statements, [the victim] was lying in a gas station
    parking lot bleeding from a mortal gunshot wound to his
    abdomen. His answers to the police officers’ questions were
    punctuated with questions about when emergency medical
    services would arrive. He was obviously in considerable pain
    and had difficulty breathing and talking.            From this
    description of his condition and report of his statements, we
    cannot say that a person in [the victim’s] situation would have
    had a “primary purpose” “to establish or prove past events
    potentially relevant to later criminal prosecution.”
    For their part, the police responded to a call that a man had
    been shot. As discussed above, they did not know why,
    where, or when the shooting had occurred. Nor did they
    know the location of the shooter or anything else about the
    circumstances in which the crime occurred. The questions
    they asked—“what had happened, who had shot him, and
    17
    where the shooting occurred,”—were the exact type of
    questions necessary to allow the police to “‘assess the
    situation, the threat to their own safety, and possible danger to
    the potential victim’” and to the public, including to allow
    them to ascertain “whether they would be encountering a
    violent felon[.]”       In other words, they solicited the
    information necessary to enable them “to meet an ongoing
    emergency.”
    Bryant, 562 U.S. at ___, 
    131 S.Ct. at 1165-66
     (footnotes and internal citations omitted).
    [¶39] For the foregoing reasons, we find Mr. Laster’s statements during the 911 call
    were non-testimonial and that the district court did not err in ruling that the statements
    were admissible under the Sixth Amendment. Having concluded that the district court
    did not err in its Sixth Amendment analysis, we next consider whether the court abused
    its discretion in admitting Mr. Laster’s statements over Mr. Bruce’s hearsay objections.
    See Davis, 
    547 U.S. at 821
    , 
    126 S.Ct. at 2273
     (though not barred by the confrontation
    clause, non-testimonial statement remains subject to traditional limitations on hearsay
    evidence); see also Majors v. State, 
    2011 WY 63
    , ¶ 24, 
    252 P.3d 435
    , 441, n.2 (Wyo.
    2011); Bush, ¶ 28, 193 P.3d at 210.
    2.     Hearsay Ruling
    [¶40] Hearsay is “a statement, other than one made by the declarant while testifying at
    the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted.” W.R.E.
    801(c). “Hearsay statements are generally inadmissible because they are made outside of
    court and, therefore, presumed to be unreliable.” Moore v. State, 
    2013 WY 146
    , ¶ 11,
    
    313 P.3d 505
    , 508 (Wyo. 2013) (citing W.R.E. 802). A hearsay statement is admissible,
    however, if it fits a recognized exception to the hearsay rule making it sufficiently
    reliable. Moore, ¶ 11, 313 P.3d at 508 (citing Sanders v. State, 
    7 P.3d 891
    , 895 (Wyo.
    2000); Johnson v. State, 
    930 P.2d 358
    , 361–62 (Wyo. 1996)).
    [¶41] The State argued that Mr. Laster’s statements were admissible under four hearsay
    exceptions: 1) as a present sense impression under Wyoming Rule of Evidence 803(1);
    2) as an excited utterance under W.R.E. 803(2); 3) as a statement of then-existing mental,
    emotional or physical condition under W.R.E. 803(3); and 4), under the catchall
    provisions of W.R.E. 804(b)(6). The district court found the statements admissible
    “under a combination of the exceptions to the hearsay rule,” and specifically referred to
    the exception for statements concerning then-existing mental and emotional condition
    and the Rule 804(b)(6 ) catchall. Though not specifically cited by the district court as an
    exception applicable to Mr. Laster’s statements, the district court’s analysis also
    incorporated a discussion of the present sense impression exception.
    18
    [¶42] We disagree with the district court’s application of the exception for the
    declarant’s then-existing mental, physical, or emotional condition. The testimony the
    State sought to rely upon related to a fact, that Mr. Laster had been hit by a beer bottle by
    a man named Shey. The rule specifically excludes a statement “of memory or belief to
    prove the fact remembered or believed” unless the statement relates to the execution of a
    will. W.R.E. 803(3); 4 Christopher B. Mueller and Laird C. Kirkpatrick, Federal
    Evidence § 8:70 (4th ed. 2013).
    [¶43] We also reject application of the Rule 803(1) present sense impression exception
    to Mr. Laster’s statements. That rule requires that the statement describe or explain an
    event “while the declarant was perceiving the event or condition, or immediately
    thereafter.” W.R.E. 803(1). We have explained:
    The phrase “immediately thereafter” accommodates the
    human realities that the condition or event may happen so fast
    that the words do not quite keep pace, and proving a true
    match of words and events may be impossible for ordinary
    witnesses, so it would be foolish to require a statement to be
    truly simultaneous with the event or condition. The exception
    allows enough flexibility to reach statements made a moment
    after the fact, where a small delay or “slight lapse” ... is not
    enough to allow reflection, which would raise doubts about
    trustworthiness.
    Schultz v. State, 
    2007 WY 162
    , ¶ 23, 
    169 P.3d 81
    , 88 (Wyo. 2007) (quoting 4 Christopher
    B. Mueller and Laird C. Kirkpatrick, Federal Evidence § 434, at 384–85 (2d ed. 1994)).
    In this case, Mr. Laster’s statements were made twenty to twenty-five minutes earlier.
    This is not contemporaneous enough to fall within the Rule 803(1) exception.
    [¶44] In terms of the exceptions applied by the district court, that brings us to
    application of W.R.E. 804(b)(6), one of the “catchall” exceptions. This Court has,
    however, observed that the catchall exceptions, W.R.E. 803(24) and 804(b)(6), are to be
    cautiously used only in exceptional cases, in the interest of justice. Williams v. Collins
    Communications, 
    720 P.2d 880
    , 888 (Wyo. 1986). The catchalls under both Rules 803
    and 804 specifically say that they apply to statements “not specifically covered by any of
    the foregoing exceptions but having equivalent circumstantial guarantees of
    trustworthiness . . . .” The two rules, read together, suggest that the catchall exception is
    only to be used if there is no other well-established hearsay exception. One evidence
    treatise concludes that the placement of the catchall in the federal rules suggests that it
    was intended as a rule of last resort. 5 Christopher B. Mueller and Laird C. Kirkpatrick,
    19
    Federal Evidence § 8:108 (4th ed. 2013).2
    [¶45] In a pre-Crawford Confrontation Clause case, the United States Supreme Court
    explained the reliability of traditional hearsay exceptions:
    We note at the outset that Idaho’s residual hearsay exception,
    Idaho Rule Evid. 803(24), under which the challenged
    statements were admitted, is not a firmly rooted hearsay
    exception for Confrontation Clause purposes. Admission
    under a firmly rooted hearsay exception satisfies the
    constitutional requirement of reliability because of the weight
    accorded longstanding judicial and legislative experience in
    assessing the trustworthiness of certain types of out-of-court
    statements. The residual hearsay exception, by contrast,
    accommodates ad hoc instances in which statements not
    otherwise falling within a recognized hearsay exception might
    nevertheless be sufficiently reliable to be admissible at trial.
    See, e.g., Senate Judiciary Committee’s Note on Fed.Rule
    Evid. 803(24), 28 U.S.C.App., pp. 786–787; E. Cleary,
    McCormick on Evidence § 324.1, pp. 907–909 (3d ed. 1984).
    Hearsay statements admitted under the residual exception,
    almost by definition, therefore do not share the same tradition
    of reliability that supports the admissibility of statements
    under a firmly rooted hearsay exception.
    Idaho v. Wright, 
    497 U.S. 805
    , 817-18, 
    110 S.Ct. 3139
    , 3147-48, 
    111 L.Ed.2d 638
     (1990)
    (some citations omitted).3
    [¶46] Based on the foregoing, we believe that the catchall exceptions, Rules 803(24) and
    804(b)(6), should be rules of last resort, and that particularly in criminal cases, they
    should not be used if a traditional exception applies. In this case, we find a traditional
    exception in the Rule 803(2) excited utterance exception. Although the district court did
    not rely on this exception, we may affirm the court’s decision on any basis appearing in
    the record. Leach v. State, 
    2013 WY 139
    , ¶ 19, 
    312 P.3d 795
    , 799 (Wyo. 2013).
    2
    The Federal Rules of Evidence originally had two separate catchall provisions as the Wyoming rules
    still do. They were consolidated into F.R.E. 807 in 1997. 5 Christopher B. Mueller and Laird C.
    Kirkpatrick, supra, § 8:139.
    3
    Crawford overruled Wright and Ohio v. Roberts, 
    448 U.S. 56
    , 
    100 S.Ct. 2531
    , 
    65 L.Ed. 2d 597
     (1980)
    by holding that testimonial statements were not admissible even if they were reliable under the criteria of
    those cases. Those cases may have continued vitality as to non-testimonial hearsay like that in this case,
    although that is not clearly resolved. 5 Christopher B. Mueller and Laird C. Kirkpatrick, supra, § 8:31.
    20
    [¶47] An excited utterance is a “statement relating to a startling event or condition made
    while the declarant was under the stress of excitement caused by the event or condition.”
    W.R.E. 803(2). We have said:
    The exception is founded upon the proposition that a
    statement made during the stress of excitement resulting from
    a startling event is probably trustworthy, since there is not
    leisure to reflect, contrive or fabricate. The rule assumes the
    presence of a startling event which temporarily stills the
    senses and alleviates any motive to fabricate.
    Marquess v. State, 
    2011 WY 95
    , ¶ 17, 
    256 P.3d 506
    , 512 (Wyo. 2011) (quoting Boykin v.
    State, 
    2005 WY 15
    , ¶ 7, 
    105 P.3d 481
    , 483 (Wyo. 2005)).
    [¶48] This Court has identified five factors to be considered in applying the excited
    utterance exception: (1) the nature of the startling event; (2) the declarant’s physical
    manifestation of excitement; (3) the declarant’s age; (4) the lapse of time between the
    event and the hearsay statement; and (5) whether the statement was made in response to
    an inquiry. Marquess, ¶ 17, 
    256 P.3d at 512
    ; Sanchez v. State, 
    2011 WY 77
    , ¶ 22, 
    253 P.3d 136
    , 143 (Wyo. 2011). We have also observed that while these factors are helpful,
    the ultimate inquiry remains whether the “declarant’s condition at the time was such that
    the statement was spontaneous, excited or impulsive rather than the product of reflection
    and deliberation.” Sanchez, ¶ 22, 253 P.3d at 143 (quoting Boykin, ¶ 8, 105 P.3d at 483);
    see also Dike v. State, 
    990 P.2d 1012
    , 1021 (Wyo. 1999).
    [¶49] A review of the 911 call reveals that a reasonable judge could find that Mr.
    Laster’s statements fit within the excited utterance exception. Seeing one’s spouse struck
    by a beer bottle and being struck oneself is undoubtedly startling, and the statements at
    issue related to the startling event. The content of the call, and in particular Mrs. Laster’s
    cries of pain and distress, and Mr. Laster’s attempts to comfort her, establishes that Mr.
    Laster was still under the stress of excitement caused by the event. Although Mr.
    Laster’s statements were made in response to an inquiry by the 911 dispatcher, we do not
    in this case find this fact sufficient to take the statements outside the excited utterance
    exception. Mr. Laster’s statements were not responsive to the questions being asked, and
    in this type of circumstance, we have explained:
    The fact that she made the challenged statement in response
    to an inquiry is not sufficient under the circumstances to take
    the statement outside the excited utterance exception. The
    convenience store clerk asked, “Are you all right?” Ms. Potter
    responded according to the store clerk that her boyfriend
    assaulted her when he could not find the cheese. This non-
    21
    responsive answer to the store clerk’s inquiry further suggests
    that Ms. Potter’s statement was spontaneous and not the result
    of reflection, deliberation, or fabrication.
    Boykin, ¶ 10, 105 P.3d at 484.
    [¶50] As to the lapse of time between the startling event and the hearsay statements, the
    excited utterance exception, unlike the present sense impression exception, does not
    require immediacy.
    Time factor. Other things being equal, the more
    quickly a statement follows the occasion, the more likely it is
    to be a spontaneous reaction.         Statements during or
    immediately after an exciting occurrence clearly can satisfy
    the exception in being the product of stress or excitement.
    This kind of close connection, however, is only indispensable
    in the exception for present sense impressions, and such
    immediacy is not required by the excited utterance exception.
    Resort to the excited utterance exception is entirely
    appropriate in the face of lapses of minutes between event
    and utterance, where it is clear that the speaker was still
    laboring under stress that stilled reflective capacity, as is
    likely if the event was sudden or violent or frightening, or
    caused injury or pain to the speaker or someone he knows.
    Even much longer lapses, on the order of several
    hours, do not necessarily dissipate the stress or excitement
    caused by an act or event, particularly in cases that result in
    injury or trauma to the speaker. Here the condition of the
    speaker between the event and the statement is important, and
    continuing emotional or physical shock, loss of
    consciousness, persistent pain, unabated fright, isolation, and
    other factors may prolong the impact of a stressful event,
    particularly one that is long lasting and arduous. Sensible
    decisions apply the exception despite time lapses of this sort
    when it comes to statements by victims of brutal or terrifying
    crimes, including assault and kidnap, particularly when they
    are of tender years.
    22
    4 Christopher B. Mueller and Laird C. Kirkpatrick, supra, § 8:684; see also Dike, 990
    P.2d at 1021 (applying exception where statements were made thirty minutes after event);
    Streitmatter v. State, 
    981 P.2d 921
    , 927 (Wyo. 1999) (applying exception where
    statements were made forty-five minutes after event); James v. State, 
    888 P.2d 200
    , 206
    (Wyo. 1994) (applying exception where statements were made fifteen to thirty minutes
    after event).
    [¶51] In this case, the lapse of time between the startling event and Mr. Laster’s 911 call
    was twenty to twenty-five minutes. Based on this time lapse and the other factors, we
    find that Mr. Laster’s statements fall within the requirements of the “excited utterance”
    exception of W.R.E. 803(2). We therefore conclude that they were properly admitted
    into evidence.
    B.      Motion for Judgment of Acquittal on Second Degree Murder Charge
    [¶52] We next address Mr. Bruce’s argument that the district court erred in denying his
    motion for judgment of acquittal on the charge of second degree murder. We review the
    denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal using the following standard of review:
    In reviewing the denial of a motion for judgment of
    acquittal, we examine and accept as true the evidence of the
    prosecution together with all logical and reasonable
    inferences to be drawn therefrom, leaving out entirely the
    evidence of the defendant in conflict therewith.
    A motion for judgment of acquittal is to be granted
    only when the evidence is such that a reasonable juror must
    have a reasonable doubt as to the existence of any of the
    essential elements of the crime. Or, stated another way, if
    there is substantial evidence to sustain a conviction of the
    crime, the motion should not be granted. This standard
    applies whether the supporting evidence is direct or
    circumstantial.
    Butcher v. State, 
    2005 WY 146
    , ¶ 11, 
    123 P.3d 543
    , 548 (Wyo. 2005).
    [¶53] At the close of the State’s case, Mr. Bruce moved for a judgment of acquittal, and
    the district court denied that motion. Mr. Bruce then presented evidence, including the
    testimony of four defense witnesses. At the close of evidence, Mr. Bruce again moved
    4
    This discussion of the allowable time lapse points to consideration of the declarant’s age as a factor that
    may require consideration where the declarant’s age may influence the response to the startling event.
    Mr. Laster’s age in a neutral factor in our analysis.
    23
    for a judgment of acquittal, and the district court again denied the motion. The jury then
    returned a verdict finding Mr. Bruce not guilty of second degree murder but guilty of the
    lesser included offense of manslaughter. Following the jury verdict, Mr. Bruce filed a
    written motion for judgment of acquittal challenging the sufficiency of the evidence to
    support the manslaughter conviction.
    [¶54] Based on the foregoing sequence of motions, Mr. Bruce argues that “[t]here is no
    issue of waiver” with respect to his request that this Court reverse the district court’s
    rulings on his motions for judgment of acquittal on the charge of second degree murder.
    Based upon our precedent, however, we find this assertion to be overly broad.
    [¶55] This Court has repeatedly held that a defendant’s introduction of evidence
    following denial of a judgment of acquittal is a waiver of the appeal of that motion.
    Hawes v. State, 
    2014 WY 127
    , ¶ 8, 
    335 P.3d 1073
    , 1076 (Wyo. 2014); Granzer v. State,
    
    2010 WY 130
    , ¶ 7, 
    239 P.3d 640
    , 643–44 (Wyo. 2010); Butcher, ¶ 12, 123 P.3d at 548;
    Robinson v. State, 
    11 P.3d 361
    , 368 (Wyo. 2000); Hodges v. State, 
    904 P.2d 334
    , 339
    (Wyo. 1995). We have explained:
    Where a defendant introduces evidence after denial of a
    motion for judgment of acquittal made at the end of the
    State’s case, he waives that motion, and only a similar motion
    made after return of the verdict may be claimed as error.
    Butcher, ¶ 12, 123 P.3d at 548.
    [¶56] Mr. Bruce’s appeal from the denial of his motion for judgment of acquittal on the
    second degree murder charge for which he was ultimately acquitted is similar to the
    appeal we addressed in Robinson. In Robinson, the defendant was acquitted of the
    charged offense of first degree murder and the lesser included offense of second degree
    murder but was convicted of the lesser included offense of manslaughter. Robinson, 11
    P.3d at 368. The defendant appealed the denial of his motion for judgment of acquittal
    on the first and second degree murder charges, and this Court addressed the appeal by
    limiting its review to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the manslaughter charge
    on which the defendant was convicted:
    Robinson contends that the trial court’s failure to grant
    his motion for judgment of acquittal on the counts for first
    and second degree murder gave rise to the additional
    instruction on voluntary manslaughter for which he was
    convicted. In reply, the State contends that one cannot appeal
    the denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal on charges
    for which the jury ultimately acquits.
    24
    W.R.Cr.P. 29 permits motions for judgment of
    acquittal at the close of evidence by either side and after
    discharge of the jury. In this case, Robinson made three
    motions for judgment of acquittal, but it is our rule of law that
    introducing evidence waives the earlier motion and only the
    later motion may be claimed as error. Hodges v. State, 
    904 P.2d 334
    , 339 (Wyo.1995). The motion made after the jury
    returned its verdict indicates that at the close of all evidence
    during the jury instruction conference, the State requested and
    received an instruction on second degree murder and the
    defense then requested and received an instruction on
    voluntary manslaughter. Because of his acquittal on first and
    second degree murder, the last motion was limited to the
    conviction for voluntary manslaughter. We, therefore, will
    consider whether the evidence was sufficient to support the
    conviction for voluntary manslaughter.
    Robinson, 11 P.3d at 368.
    [¶57] We again addressed a similar issue in Butcher, where the defendant was acquitted
    of first degree murder but convicted on the lesser included offense of second degree
    murder. Butcher, ¶ 14, 123 P.3d at 548. In addressing the defendant’s appeal from the
    denial of his motion for judgment of acquittal, we observed:
    At the close of the State’s case, defense counsel moved
    for judgment of acquittal on the ground that “the State has not
    met its burden to show either premeditated malice or malice.”
    The district court denied that motion, and the appellant
    proceeded to present evidence. Consequently, he has waived
    his right to challenge that denial on appeal. After trial,
    however, the appellant renewed his motion for judgment of
    acquittal, on the same grounds as his earlier motion. Despite
    the intervening conviction for the lesser-included offense of
    second-degree murder, the latter motion sought “judgment of
    acquittal on the single count contained in the information.”
    That motion, like the earlier one, was denied.
    This Court must confess a certain amount of confusion
    as it addresses this issue. The appellant’s brief contains
    nineteen pages of argument in which it is contended that the
    State did not prove either premeditation or deliberation, and
    that, therefore, the charge of first-degree murder should not
    have gone to the jury. Our confusion arises out of the fact
    25
    that, by finding the appellant guilty of the lesser-included
    offense of second-degree murder, the jury had, in effect,
    acquitted him of the charged offense of first-degree murder.
    There can be no possible error or prejudice here. Even if the
    district court had granted the appellant’s post-verdict motion
    for judgment of acquittal on the charge of first-degree
    murder, that would have had no effect upon the finding of
    guilt on the lesser-included offense.
    Butcher, ¶¶ 14-15, 123 P.3d at 548-49 (footnote omitted).
    [¶58] Our decisions in Robinson and Butcher instruct that there is simply no basis for
    this Court to review the denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal where a jury has
    acquitted the defendant on the charge for which the motion was denied. Mr. Bruce
    attempts to distinguish Butcher by arguing the following prejudice from the denial of his
    motion at the close of evidence:
    This prejudice arises from the fact that the evidence was not
    sufficient to support the offense charged. Yes, the jury
    ultimately acquitted him of the more serious offense, but the
    jury was given the opportunity to consider the lesser included
    offense (an uncharged offense) when there was not enough
    evidence to go forward on the charged offense. To deny that
    prejudice can exist in this circumstance is to chip away or
    diminish the meaning and purpose of Rule 29, as well as any
    level of protection it affords to criminal defendants. It is, in a
    sense, already a great burden for defense counsel to defend
    against every possible lesser (but uncharged) offense the State
    may ask to submit to the jury. Defense counsel here
    aggressively defended against the charge of second degree
    murder, and the State failed to meet its burden. Mr. Bruce
    should not then be penalized by the fact that the jury
    recognized this failure, though the trial court did not. If the
    State has not met its burden, the ultimate verdict should not
    affect the relief to which Mr. Bruce was due.
    [¶59] We reject this alleged prejudice as a basis to revisit the district court’s denial of
    Mr. Bruce’s motion for judgment of acquittal on the second degree murder charge. First,
    the argument presumes that a not guilty verdict equates to error in the denial of the
    motion. This presumption ignores the standard a court must follow in ruling on a motion
    for judgment of acquittal, which requires it to disregard the defendant’s evidence, assume
    the prosecution’s evidence is true, and give that evidence all logical and reasonable
    26
    inferences. See Butcher, ¶ 11, 123 P.3d at 548. Obviously, a jury does not approach its
    task with the same constraints.
    [¶60] Mr. Bruce’s alleged prejudice also strays from the purpose to be served by a
    motion for judgment of acquittal, which has been described as follows:
    A directed verdict for defendant, however, or judgment for
    acquittal as it is now called, is an important safeguard to the
    defendant. It tests the sufficiency of the evidence against
    defendant, and avoids the risk that a jury may capriciously
    find him guilty though there is no legally sufficient evidence
    of guilt.
    2A Charles Alan Wright and Peter J. Henning, Federal Practice and Procedure:
    Criminal § 461, at 325 (4th ed. 2009) (footnotes omitted). Here, because the jury
    acquitted Mr. Bruce of the second degree murder charge, the potential harm the motion
    was intended to guard against plainly did not come to pass.
    [¶61] Finally, Mr. Bruce’s argument implies that had the motion for judgment of
    acquittal been granted on the charged count of second degree murder, the lesser included
    offense would not have been submitted to the jury. Our decisions in Butcher and
    Robinson implicitly recognized that this is not the case. See Butcher, ¶ 15, 123 P.3d at
    549 (“Even if the district court had granted the appellant’s post-verdict motion for
    judgment of acquittal on the charge of first-degree murder, that would have had no effect
    upon the finding of guilt on the lesser-included offense.”); Robinson, 11 P.3d at 368
    (considering sufficiency of the evidence on lesser included offense with no consideration
    given to denied motion for judgment of acquittal on charged offense). We agree with the
    reasoning of the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals:
    When ruling on a motion for judgment of acquittal, a district
    court should consider not only whether the evidence would be
    sufficient to sustain a conviction of the offense charged, but
    also whether it would be sufficient to sustain a conviction on
    a lesser included offense. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 31(c) (“The
    defendant may be found guilty of an offense necessarily
    included in the offense charged....”); United States v.
    Cavanaugh, 
    948 F.2d 405
    , 409 (8th Cir.1991) (holding that if
    a court grants judgment of acquittal following a jury verdict
    of guilty, it may enter judgment of conviction on a lesser
    included offense); 2 Charles Alan Wright, Federal Practice
    and Procedure: Criminal 2d § 467 (2d ed. 1982) (“[O]n a
    motion for judgment of acquittal the court must consider
    whether the evidence would be sufficient to sustain a
    27
    conviction of [ ] a lesser offense.”). If the evidence is
    sufficient to sustain a conviction on the lesser but not the
    greater offense, the judge may submit only the lesser charge
    to the jury. See United States v. LoRusso, 
    695 F.2d 45
    , 52 (2d
    Cir.1982).
    United States v. Wood, 
    207 F.3d 1222
    , 1229 (10th Cir. 2000); see also People v. Scott, 
    10 P.3d 686
    , 688 (Colo. App. 2000) (where trial court grants motion for judgment of
    acquittal on greater offense, it retains authority to submit lesser included offense to jury);
    State v. Morris, 
    331 N.W.2d 48
    , 56 (N.D. 1983) (“A trial court’s granting of a motion for
    judgment of acquittal with respect to the major offense charged does not preclude
    submission of the case to the jury on the basis of the lesser included offense
    instruction[.]”).5
    [¶62] For the foregoing reasons, we will not address the district court’s denial of Mr.
    Bruce’s motion for judgment of acquittal as it pertains to the second degree murder
    charge.
    C.     Sufficiency of Evidence to Support Manslaughter Conviction
    [¶63] We agree with Mr. Bruce that there is no question of waiver respecting his
    challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his manslaughter conviction. We
    review a sufficiency of the evidence claim as follows:
    We review that evidence with the assumption that the
    evidence of the prevailing party is true, disregard the
    evidence favoring the unsuccessful party, and give the
    prevailing party the benefit of every favorable inference that
    we may reasonably draw from the evidence. We will not
    reweigh the evidence nor will we re-examine the credibility
    of the witnesses.
    Hawes, ¶ 8, 335 P.3d at 1076 (quoting Brown v. State, 
    2014 WY 104
    , ¶ 8, 
    332 P.3d 1168
    ,
    1171–72 (Wyo. 2014)).
    5
    As a final observation, to the extent Mr. Bruce’s argument implies that submission of both the second
    degree murder and manslaughter charges to the jury was unfair because it presented the jury with a
    compromise it would not have felt compelled to make had the second degree murder charge not been
    submitted, we rejected such a suggestion in Butcher: “Perhaps the appellant is attempting through this
    argument to hint that this was a compromise verdict, and that he would have preferred a compromise
    between second-degree murder and manslaughter. There is no legitimacy to such an argument.” Butcher,
    ¶ 15, 123 P.3d at 549, n.1.
    28
    [¶64] Mr. Bruce was convicted of voluntary manslaughter pursuant to 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 6-2-105
    (a)(i), which provides that a person is guilty of manslaughter “if he unlawfully
    kills any human being without malice, expressed or implied, . . . [v]oluntarily, upon a
    sudden heat of passion[.]” 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 6-2-105
    (a)(i) (LexisNexis 2013). The
    district court instructed the jury that “heat of passion” means:
    [S]uch passion as naturally would be aroused in the mind of
    an ordinarily reasonable person in the same or similar
    circumstances as those in question which would cause him to
    act rashly, without reflection of deliberation, and from
    passion rather than from judgment. The heat of passion must
    be aroused suddenly, and the act resulting in death must occur
    while the defendant was acting under the direct and
    immediate influence of such heat of passion, and before
    sufficient time has elapsed to permit the heat of passion to
    cool.
    [¶65] Mr. Bruce argues there was insufficient evidence to establish the statutory
    elements of manslaughter, insufficient evidence to establish his state of mind when he
    struck Mr. Laster, and “absolutely no evidence whatsoever that Mr. Bruce intended to kill
    Mr. Laster, or even, for that matter, that he was acting voluntarily as opposed to
    reflexively.” Based on our review of the record, we find the evidence was sufficient to
    support the jury verdict finding Mr. Bruce guilty of manslaughter.
    [¶66] At the outset, we reject the assertions framing Mr. Bruce’s state of mind and intent
    arguments. First, the argument that there is no evidence that Mr. Bruce intended to kill
    Mr. Laster is not relevant to our review because voluntary manslaughter is “a general
    intent crime that does not require a deliberate intent to kill.” Noel v. State, 
    2014 WY 30
    ,
    ¶ 35, 
    319 P.3d 134
    , 146 (Wyo. 2014) (quoting State v. Keffer, 
    860 P.2d 1118
    , 1138–39
    (Wyo. 1993)). Second, we disagree with Mr. Bruce’s suggestion that evidence of his
    state of mind is necessarily insufficient unless it is direct evidence of state of mind at the
    moment he struck Mr. Laster. This Court has observed that “in all cases, civil or
    criminal, turning upon the state of an individual’s mind, direct evidence may be rare;
    usually the trier of facts is required to draw inferences of the state of mind at issue from
    surrounding acts, utterances, writings, or other indicia.” Benjamin v. State, 
    2011 WY 147
    , ¶ 46, 
    264 P.3d 1
    , 12 (Wyo. 2011) (quoting MacGuire v. Harriscope Broadcasting
    Co., 
    612 P.2d 830
    , 843 (Wyo. 1980)). Our consideration of the evidence may therefore
    include both direct and circumstantial evidence of the statutory elements and Mr. Bruce’s
    state of mind.
    [¶67] When we accept the State’s evidence as true and give the State every favorable
    inference that may reasonably be drawn from that evidence, the evidence shows that Mr.
    Bruce entered Mr. Laster’s home, proceeded to the back bedroom, struck Mrs. Laster in
    29
    the temple with a beer bottle, and thereafter struck Mr. Laster a couple of times with the
    beer bottle, which blunt force trauma caused Mr. Laster’s death from a subdural
    hematoma. As to Mr. Bruce’s state of mind, the State’s evidence showed that Mr. Bruce
    had been upset most of the day because of his concern that the Lasters might be
    reconciling. The State’s evidence also showed that just after the assault, Mr. Bruce
    contacted Mrs. Laster’s daughter, Teri Hughes, and was ranting and hollering. During
    that encounter, which occurred shortly after the assault, Mr. Bruce told Ms. Hughes: that
    he was angry when he went to Mr. Laster’s home because Mrs. Laster was there; that
    when he went to the back bedroom in Mr. Laster’s home he thought the Lasters were
    having sex; that he hurt the Lasters because they “fucked him;” and the Lasters got what
    they deserved.
    [¶68] The evidence was sufficient to support a finding that Mr. Bruce voluntarily struck
    Mr. Laster with a beer bottle, that he struck Mr. Laster in the heat of passion, and that in
    doing so, he unlawfully killed Mr. Laster. The district court therefore did not err in
    denying Mr. Laster’s motion for judgment of acquittal on the charge of manslaughter.
    D.     Denial of Motion for New Trial based on Inadmissible Hearsay
    [¶69] Before addressing the substance of Mr. Bruce’s argument that the district court
    erred in denying his motion for a new trial, we must determine the appropriate standard
    of review. Mr. Bruce filed his new trial motion based upon a prosecution witness’
    testimony, which the district court struck as inadmissible hearsay. When the offending
    testimony was given, defense counsel objected and asked that the testimony be stricken,
    but counsel did not object to the court’s curative instruction or move for a mistrial. In
    moving for a new trial, Mr. Bruce did not assert any particular defect in the court’s
    curative instruction or even reference the instruction and instead generally asserted a new
    trial was warranted because, although the inadmissible hearsay had been stricken, the
    damage had been done, and the bell could not be un-rung.
    [¶70] In Mendoza v. State, 
    2013 WY 55
    , 
    300 P.3d 487
     (Wyo. 2013), this Court reviewed
    the denial of a new trial motion, which motion was based on what the defendant alleged
    to be an erroneous jury instruction. Because the defendant had not objected to the jury
    instruction, we held that the district court’s denial of the new trial motion would be
    reviewed for an abuse of discretion, but the alleged underlying error in the jury
    instruction itself would be subject to our plain error standard of review. Id., ¶¶ 8-9, 300
    P.3d at 489-90. Because Mr. Bruce likewise did not object to the district court’s curative
    instruction, we will take the same approach. We shall review the denial of the new trial
    motion for an abuse of discretion and the adequacy of the district court’s curative
    instruction for plain error.
    [¶71] “A district court abuses its discretion when it could not have reasonably concluded
    as it did.” Mendoza, ¶ 8, 300 P.3d at 489 (citing Majors v. State, 
    2011 WY 63
    , ¶ 24, 252
    
    30 P.3d 435
    , 441 (Wyo. 2011)). Our plain error analysis requires that an appellant
    “establish, by reference to the record, a violation of a clear and unequivocal rule of law in
    a clear and obvious, not merely arguable, way and that the violation adversely affected a
    substantial right resulting in material prejudice.” Joreski v. State, 
    2012 WY 143
    , ¶ 11,
    
    288 P.3d 413
    , 416 (Wyo. 2012) (quoting Jealous v. State, 
    2011 WY 171
    , ¶ 11, 
    267 P.3d 1101
    , 1104 (Wyo. 2011)). Material prejudice means a reasonable probability exists that
    the result would have been more favorable in the absence of the alleged error. 
    Id.
    [¶72] The testimony that was the basis of Mr. Bruce’s new trial motion was testimony
    given by Teri Hughes, daughter of Mrs. Laster and stepdaughter of Mr. Laster. The
    testimony, defense objection, and ruling on the defense objection went as follows:
    Q. Did you talk to your dad after he got done speaking
    to the deputy?
    A. Yes.
    Q. Okay. Did you ask him if he was okay?
    A. Yes.
    Q. And why did you ask him if he was okay?
    A. Because I heard him tell the deputy that Shey hit
    him with a bottle.
    THE COURT: Just a minute.
    [Defense Counsel]: Well –
    THE COURT: You’re on your feet, Counsel. Is there
    something you want?
    [Defense Counsel]: To the extent that she was – said
    anything about what her dad told her that the jury heard, I
    would ask the Court to strike that and object that I don’t think
    counsel asked her a hearsay question, but she was
    nonresponsive.
    * * * [proceedings outside presence of jury] * * *
    [Defense Counsel]: Thank you, Your Honor.
    Obviously, the defendant objects to Ms. Hughes testifying
    what her father told her about the incidents of that evening.
    And I did not object when [Prosecutor] asked her the
    question, because I believe he asked her – I can’t remember
    what it was, but I don’t think it directly called for hearsay.
    THE COURT: [Reads back testimony] And at that
    point, I interjected and tried to stop the answer.
    [Defense Counsel]: And thank you for doing that,
    Your Honor. I was making a note or something at that time
    and, perhaps, I should’ve objected before.
    But, so, again, we move to strike whatever she said in
    response to that, and also on the grounds of hearsay.
    31
    ....
    THE COURT: Well, I have some thoughts about how
    to deal with it, too. First of all, I’m going to deal with the
    objection and sustain it. And I’m going to caution – I’m
    going to strike her testimony as to what her father told her
    outside, and caution the jury not to consider it. . . .
    [Defense Counsel]: Okay. Thank you, Your Honor.
    [¶73] The district court thereafter explained the meaning of hearsay to the witness and
    cautioned her to refrain from providing such testimony and to answer only the question
    she is asked. The court then instructed the jury:
    . . . The ladies and gentlemen of the jury are back
    with us. And ladies and gentlemen, just before you were
    escorted to the jury room, Ms. Hughes was asked a question
    to the effect of why was she concerned about her father. And
    her answer – and I’m paraphrasing a bit here – was that she
    was concerned because she heard her father say to the
    policeman present that the defendant had hit him with a
    bottle.
    I attempted to stop that testimony, as I think all of us
    did, because it’s hearsay. That is a classic hearsay statement,
    and it’s not admissible. And the Court has sustained the
    defendant’s objection to that testimony. And you are
    instructed that – specifically that you must disregard that
    particular testimony.
    [¶74] Applying our plain error analysis, we find that the first element of the test is
    satisfied. Mr. Bruce alleges the district court’s jury instruction was inadequate to cure the
    harm caused by the inadmissible hearsay. The record clearly depicts the hearsay
    testimony and the curative instruction.
    [¶75] The second element of the plain error analysis requires that Mr. Bruce establish a
    violation of a clear and unequivocal rule, and that the violation be clear and obvious, not
    merely arguable. Mr. Bruce has not made this showing. “We have said many times that
    a trial error may be corrected by an appropriate curative instruction, and that we presume
    that jurors follow the court’s instructions.” Willoughby v. State, 
    2011 WY 92
    , ¶ 11, 
    253 P.3d 157
    , 161 (Wyo. 2011) (citing Janpol v. State, 
    2008 WY 21
    , ¶ 24, 
    178 P.3d 396
    , 405
    (Wyo. 2008); Brown v. State, 
    953 P.2d 1170
    , 1177 (Wyo. 1998); Rubio v. State, 
    939 P.2d 238
    , 243 (Wyo. 1997); and Burke v. State, 
    746 P.2d 852
    , 857 (Wyo. 1987)). Mr. Bruce
    has provided no basis to deviate from this approach. In particular, he has cited no
    authority that would establish that the curative instruction in this case was clearly
    32
    inadequate, and our precedent is in fact to the contrary. See Metzger v. State, 
    4 P.3d 901
    (Wyo. 2000).
    [¶76] In Metzger, a witness testified to statements the victim made to her concerning the
    defendant’s sexual abuse of the victim. 
    Id.,
     4 P.3d at 907-08. The trial court sustained
    hearsay objections to the testimony, struck the testimony, and instructed the jury: “I’d ask
    the jury to disregard the hearsay statements.” Id. On appeal, the defendant asserted the
    curative instruction was inadequate to remedy the harm caused by the testimony. Id. at
    908. This Court disagreed, explaining:
    Keeping in mind that this was a witness who was nine years
    old at the time she testified, and the overall context of AG’s
    testimony, we conclude that the witness’s hearsay statements
    were inadvertent and not a deliberate effort by the prosecutor
    to get the witness to introduce that hearsay into evidence. The
    trial court immediately corrected the problem by instructing
    the jury to disregard both of AG’s hearsay responses. We
    must assume that the jury followed the court’s curative
    instruction. Burke v. State, 
    746 P.2d 852
    , 857 (Wyo.1987).
    Metzger asks that we rely instead on our holding in Zabel v.
    State, 
    765 P.2d 357
    , 363 (Wyo.1988) that curative action
    cannot take the sting out of every mistake, i.e., we do not
    always presume that the jury will follow the court’s curative
    instructions. In Zabel, we declined to follow our usual rule
    because an expert’s testimony led the jury through a
    truthfulness evaluation (of a victim under circumstances
    similar to this case) which ultimately told the jury that the
    victim was truthful and the defendant was guilty. In this case,
    AG’s stricken statements did tend to corroborate EM’s
    accusations; however, the trial court’s remedial action was
    immediate and comprehensive. Under the circumstances of
    this case, we opt to follow our general rule that the jury did
    obey the corrective instructions utilized by the trial court.
    Metzger, 4 P.3d at 908.
    [¶77] Given this precedent, we cannot find plain error in the district court’s response to
    the inadmissible hearsay and its curative instruction. Defense counsel agreed that the
    hearsay testimony given in this case was not deliberately drawn out by the prosecutor.
    Additionally, when the witness offered the offending testimony, the district court
    immediately intervened and then gave the jury a curative instruction that was much more
    detailed and comprehensive than the instruction upheld in Metzger. Because we find no
    33
    plain error in the court’s curative instruction, we find no abuse of discretion in the court’s
    denial of Mr. Bruce’s motion for a new trial.
    E.     Failure to Instruct the Jury on Self Defense
    [¶78] Mr. Bruce argues that self-defense was part of his defense theory and the district
    court erred in failing to give the jury a self-defense instruction. “The failure to give an
    instruction on the law related to a theory of defense is a due process issue, which this
    Court reviews de novo.” Nelson v. State, 
    2010 WY 159
    , ¶ 13, 
    245 P.3d 282
    , 285 (Wyo.
    2010); Ewing v. State, 
    2007 WY 78
    , ¶ 7, 
    157 P.3d 943
    , 945 (Wyo. 2007).
    [¶79] Wyoming law is well settled with respect to instructing a jury on a defendant’s
    theory of the case:
    “[A] defendant has the right to have instructions on his theory
    of the case or his theory of defense presented to the jury if the
    instructions sufficiently inform the jury of the theory of
    defense and if competent evidence exists which supports the
    law expressed in the instructions.” Thom v. State, 
    792 P.2d 192
    , 195 (Wyo.1990). However, we have also noted that
    “[n]ot every instruction must be given simply because there is
    a claim that it incorporates a theory of the case.” Wilkening v.
    State, 
    922 P.2d 1381
    , 1383 (Wyo.1996). A trial court may
    properly refuse to give a proposed instruction if it is
    erroneous, confusing, argumentative, or if the instruction
    unduly emphasizes one aspect of the case, the law, or the
    defendant’s version of the events. Madrid v. State, 
    910 P.2d 1340
    , 1346 (Wyo.1996); Jansen v. State, 
    892 P.2d 1131
    , 1140
    (Wyo.1995); Virgilio v. State, 
    834 P.2d 1125
    , 1128
    (Wyo.1992). Additionally, “instructions not based on the
    evidence can be properly refused.” Chavez-Becerra v. State,
    
    924 P.2d 63
    , 67 (Wyo.1996).
    Drennen v. State, 
    2013 WY 118
    , ¶ 20, 
    311 P.3d 116
    , 124 (Wyo. 2013) (quoting Farmer
    v. State, 
    2005 WY 162
    , ¶ 23, 
    124 P.3d 699
    , 707 (Wyo. 2005)).
    [¶80] We have also said:
    Any competent evidence is sufficient to establish a defense
    theory even if it consists only of testimony of the defendant.
    Best v. State, 
    736 P.2d 739
    , 745 (Wyo.1987). We view the
    evidence in a light favorable to the accused and the accused’s
    testimony must be taken as entirely true to determine if the
    34
    evidence is competent. Duckett v. State, 
    966 P.2d 941
    , 944
    (Wyo.1998). Even if the court deems the evidence to be
    weak, or unworthy of belief, the instruction must be given if a
    jury could reasonably conclude the evidence supports the
    defendant’s position. 
    Id.
    Nelson, ¶ 14, 245 P.3d at 286 (quoting Iseli v. State, 
    2007 WY 102
    , ¶ 10, 
    160 P.3d 1133
    ,
    1136 (Wyo. 2007)). On the other hand, an instruction is properly refused if it invites the
    jury to engage in speculation or conjecture. Young v. State, 
    849 P.2d 754
    , 766 (Wyo.
    1993).
    [¶81] Mr. Bruce cites the following as evidence that supported giving a self-defense
    instruction in this case:
    Mr. Laster took four loaded weapons over to Mr.
    Bruce’s just before the altercation, and expressed that he was
    not going to take an “ass whooping” from a younger man. It
    was within ten or fifteen minutes of Mr. Laster’s return to his
    trailer from Mr. Bruce’s home that Mr. Bruce came over.
    When Ms. Hughes picked Mr. Bruce up at the Fast
    Lane, he was upset, and said Mr. Laster had hit him in the
    back of the head with a Maglite flashlight. In fact, Ms.
    Hughes felt the bump on Mr. Bruce’s head from the injury
    through his hair.
    Ms. Hughes also testified that Mr. Bruce had bloody
    knuckles, and that Mr. and Mrs. Laster had “fucked him.”
    [¶82] We disagree that the above-cited evidence was sufficient to warrant the giving of a
    self-defense instruction. This Court has held that a person who is the aggressor in an
    altercation has a duty to retreat before using deadly force:
    Self-defense is one of the rights which the law of necessity
    gives to man. It is founded and based on necessity-on the
    inability of the executive machinery of the law to be always
    with the citizen to protect him from the aggression of others.
    A right of such a high character must also, of necessity, be
    attended with high responsibilities; and that is the obligation
    on the part of one who exercises the right to be the
    executioner of his fellow man to see that his own conduct is
    exemplary. Self-defense is a legal right, not an excuse for a
    homicide, and it can be exercised only where he who employs
    it is himself in the right at the time or moment of its use. The
    aggressor-one who strikes another, and thereby brings on a
    35
    combat, or one who by the use of vile and opprobrious
    language almost as surely brings on a combat-is not clothed
    with the right of self-defense, so long as he continues to
    persist in his own wrongdoing. He must discontinue his own
    assault, whether by violence or by word, before the law of
    necessity says that he can strike down his assailant; and
    whether or not he is required to retreat before resorting to the
    awful extremity of taking human life, when he is in the right,
    he certainly must resort to that simple expedient, if it is
    consistent with his safety, when he is in the wrong.
    Drennan, ¶ 24, 311 P.3d at 125-26 (quoting State v. Flory, 
    276 P. 458
    , 462 (Wyo. 1929)).
    [¶83] While it is true that the State carries the burden of proving that the defendant did
    not act in self-defense, we have also held:
    A defendant must first present a prima facie case of each
    element of the affirmative defense before the jury is
    instructed on the theory, including that the victim acted as the
    aggressor. Only then does the burden shift to the State to
    prove that a defendant was not acting in self-defense.
    Brown v. State, 
    2014 WY 104
    , ¶ 16, 
    332 P.3d 1168
    , 1174 (Wyo. 2014) (citing Drennen,
    ¶ 39, 311 P.3d at 129).
    [¶84] There is no question that when the incident in Mr. Laster’s home began, Mr. Bruce
    was the aggressor. While much of the evidence in this case was hearsay evidence, Mrs.
    Laster testified to the events she witnessed that initiated the violence at Mr. Laster’s
    home. Mrs. Laster testified that Mr. Bruce entered Mr. Laster’s home unbidden, came
    into to the back bedroom where Mr. and Mrs. Laster were located, talked to some extent
    with Mr. Laster, and then suddenly struck Mrs. Laster with a beer bottle hard enough to
    cause her to lose consciousness. Thereafter, the evidence shows that Mr. Bruce struck
    Mr. Laster a couple of times with a beer bottle, and accepting Mr. Bruce’s evidence as
    true, Mr. Laster struck Mr. Bruce with a Maglite flashlight. As to how those events
    unfolded, we agree with defense counsel’s observation during the instructions conference
    that “we’re guessing about whatever happened in those moments.”
    [¶85] What is critical here is that the record is entirely devoid of evidence that Mr. Bruce
    stopped being the aggressor and that Mr. Laster became the aggressor. That is, Mr.
    Bruce presented no evidence that at some point during the altercation, he attempted to
    stop his own aggression and withdraw or retreat from the situation. None of the evidence
    cited by Mr. Bruce addresses this controlling question. Mr. Laster’s possession of
    firearms is not relevant to the inquiry because Mr. Bruce presented no evidence that Mr.
    36
    Laster threatened him with the weapons or that Mr. Bruce was even aware of the
    weapons. Likewise, Mr. Bruce’s own injuries, the bloody knuckles and the bump on his
    head, and his statements that the Lasters “fucked him,” reveal nothing concerning who
    acted as the aggressor during the continuing altercation. In the absence of evidence that
    Mr. Bruce stopped being the aggressor and Mr. Laster became the aggressor, Mr. Bruce
    failed to make a prima facie case that would have supported the giving of a self-defense
    instruction. The self-defense instruction requested by Mr. Bruce would have simply been
    an invitation to the jury to engage in speculation or conjecture, and the district court thus
    properly refused to give the instruction.
    CONCLUSION
    [¶86] We find no error in the district court’s admission of the deceased victim’s 911 call,
    its rulings on Mr. Bruce’s motions for judgment of acquittal, its curative instruction
    regarding the inadmissible hearsay, or its refusal to instruct the jury on self-defense.
    Affirmed.
    37