Jett Garriott Adams v. The State of Wyoming , 2023 WY 85 ( 2023 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WYOMING
    
    2023 WY 85
    APRIL TERM, A.D. 2023
    August 24, 2023
    JETT GARRIOTT ADAMS,
    Appellant
    (Defendant),
    v.                                                         S-22-0285
    THE STATE OF WYOMING,
    Appellee
    (Plaintiff).
    Appeal from the District Court of Carbon County
    The Honorable Dawnessa A. Snyder, Judge
    Representing Appellant:
    Office of the State Public Defender: Diane Lozano, State Public Defender; Kirk A.
    Morgan, Chief Appellate Counsel. Argument by Mr. Morgan.
    Representing Appellee:
    Bridget L. Hill, Attorney General; Jenny L. Craig, Deputy Attorney General;
    Kristen R. Jones, Senior Assistant Attorney General. Argument by Ms. Jones.
    Before FOX, C.J., and KAUTZ, BOOMGAARDEN, GRAY, and FENN 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.
    BOOMGAARDEN, Justice.
    [¶1] Following a bench trial, the district court convicted Jett Garriott Adams of attempted
    murder, aggravated assault and battery, and other charges stemming from a high-speed car
    chase and shootout with law enforcement. On appeal, Mr. Adams asserts the State
    committed prosecutorial misconduct when it presented certain testimony from the
    psychologists who conducted his competency and mental health evaluations pursuant to
    
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. §§ 7-11-303
     and 7-11-304 (LexisNexis 2023). Finding no misconduct,
    we affirm.
    ISSUE
    [¶2]   We restate the single issue presented as:
    Did the State commit prosecutorial misconduct by introducing
    statements and information obtained during Mr. Adams’s
    competency evaluation and subsequent mental illness or
    deficiency evaluation?
    FACTS
    [¶3] The events leading to Mr. Adams’s arrest and conviction began in Kansas City,
    Missouri. Mr. Adams was serving a period of probation after a felony conviction. He
    received notice of an alleged probation violation but decided not to attend his probation
    revocation hearing. Instead, he purchased a firearm and made plans to buy more weapons.
    He testified he intended to shoot law enforcement, the prosecutor, and the judge in Missouri
    to avoid going to prison, but a friend talked him out of that plan and suggested he leave
    Missouri instead. The day before his probation revocation hearing, Mr. Adams cut off his
    GPS monitor and began driving to Idaho to start a new life, get a job, and “lay low” in the
    hopes that law enforcement would not find him.
    [¶4] While driving west across Wyoming on Interstate 80, Mr. Adams exceeded the
    posted speed limit in a variable speed zone on icy roads. Highway Patrol Trooper Hobbs
    observed the speeding violation and initiated a traffic stop. Trooper Hobbs asked Mr.
    Adams for his license, registration, and insurance. Mr. Adams could not produce his
    registration or insurance. Trooper Hobbs asked Mr. Adams to come with him to his patrol
    vehicle. Mr. Adams feared that Trooper Hobbs had seen his firearm or ammunition in the
    car and that Trooper Hobbs would soon know he was a felon in possession of a firearm,
    arrest him, and take him to jail. Instead of going to the patrol car as directed, Mr. Adams
    sped away.
    [¶5] A short high-speed chase followed. Mr. Adams soon pulled over again. Trooper
    Hobbs treated this stop as a felony stop, thus drawing his sidearm when he opened the door
    1
    of his vehicle. Mr. Adams exited his vehicle, holding his own firearm. A shootout ensued.
    Trooper Hobbs remained at his vehicle, at times either crouching or standing behind the
    open driver’s side door for cover and concealment. The shootout was short in duration but
    long enough for both participants to empty their magazines: Trooper Hobbs fired sixteen
    rounds and Mr. Adams fired seven rounds. Multiple bullets hit Trooper Hobbs’s vehicle
    close to the driver’s side door. Some shrapnel cut his forehead, but neither person was
    shot. Mr. Adams re-entered his vehicle and sped away.
    [¶6] A second high-speed chase began, with a Carbon County Sheriff’s Deputy and
    another Highway Patrol vehicle joining Trooper Hobbs in pursuit of Mr. Adams. The
    vehicles exceeded 100 miles per hour, often swerving or using the emergency lane to avoid
    other vehicles and semi-truck traffic. During this chase, Mr. Adams continued shooting at
    Trooper Hobbs through the back windshield of Mr. Adams’s vehicle. Mr. Adams
    discharged his weapon at least 28 times.
    [¶7] Mr. Adams eventually drove off the interstate highway, through a fence, and across
    the roadless desert, untracked snow, and sagebrush. The Troopers and Deputy followed in
    the Deputy’s four-wheel drive vehicle. Mr. Adams’s car soon stopped, unable to proceed
    in the terrain and snow. He continued fleeing on foot but left his gun in the car. He
    promptly surrendered when law enforcement caught up to him.
    [¶8] The State charged Mr. Adams with ten counts: attempted murder (against Trooper
    Hobbs), two counts of aggravated assault and battery, felony interference with a peace
    officer, felony property destruction, aggravated fleeing or eluding a police officer, use of a
    firearm while committing a felony, reckless driving, reckless endangerment, and speeding.
    [¶9] Mr. Adams initially pleaded not guilty to all charges, and defense counsel asked for
    a competency evaluation pursuant to 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7-11-303
    . The court suspended
    proceedings while Dr. Paul Murdock conducted the competency evaluation. Dr. Murdock
    found Mr. Adams was competent to proceed.
    [¶10] Mr. Adams then entered a new plea of not guilty by reason of mental illness or
    deficiency (NGMI), requiring an evaluation pursuant to Wyo. Stat. § 7-11-304. Dr. Renee
    Wilkinson conducted the NGMI evaluation. Dr. Wilkinson diagnosed Mr. Adams with
    depression, anxiety, and borderline personality disorder but concluded Mr. Adams did not
    lack the mental capacity to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct or to conform his
    conduct to the requirements of the law at the time of the alleged events. Defense counsel
    then asked the Public Defender’s office to pay for a second NGMI evaluation. That request
    was denied. Mr. Adams also wrote a pro se letter to the court asking for assistance to obtain
    a second evaluation. No second evaluation occurred.
    [¶11] Mr. Adams then requested a bench trial, and the State ultimately agreed to try this
    case without a jury. The State presented the testimony of Dr. Wilkinson. Trooper Hobbs
    2
    and the two other law enforcement officers involved in the second high-speed chase also
    testified, as did other witnesses related to the arrest, the investigation, and the alleged
    property damage. The State also played Mr. Adams’s post-arrest interview with the
    Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation and law enforcement’s dash cam video to the
    court. Following the close of the State’s evidence, Mr. Adams testified for several hours
    in his own defense. He also presented the testimony of Ms. Rice, a mental health examiner
    at the local jail. The State then called one rebuttal witness, Dr. Murdock. Defense counsel
    cross-examined Dr. Murdock and the State followed with limited redirect examination.
    [¶12] The court took the matter under advisement at the conclusion of the three-day trial.
    In its written verdict and decision letter issued a few weeks later, the court found Mr.
    Adams guilty on nine counts. It sentenced Mr. Adams to life in prison without the
    possibility of parole on the charges of attempted murder and aggravated assault and battery,
    with consecutive sentences of various lengths on the other counts. This appeal timely
    followed to challenge, as noted above, whether the prosecutor improperly introduced
    certain information from the two mental health examiners.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [¶13] Mr. Adams did not contemporaneously object to the prosecutor’s questioning of
    either examiner, so we review the alleged misconduct for plain error. King v. State, 
    2023 WY 36
    , ¶ 33, 
    527 P.3d 1229
    , 1242 (Wyo. 2023). Mr. Adams has the burden to show (1)
    the record is clear about the incident alleged as error; (2) a violation of a clear and
    unequivocal rule of law; and (3) he was denied a substantial right resulting in material
    prejudice. 
    Id.
     (quoting Ridinger v. State, 
    2021 WY 4
    , ¶ 33, 
    478 P.3d 1160
    , 1168 (Wyo.
    2021)); Lott v. State, 
    2022 WY 143
    , ¶ 10, 
    519 P.3d 646
    , 649 (Wyo. 2022).
    DISCUSSION
    [¶14] The record is clear the State called Dr. Wilkinson and Dr. Murdock to testify at trial,
    and their testimony included statements and information they obtained during their
    respective examinations of Mr. Adams. Thus, we proceed to consider whether the State
    elicited that testimony in violation of a clear and unequivocal rule of law and whether Mr.
    Adams was denied a substantial right resulting in material prejudice. King, 
    2023 WY 36
    ,
    ¶ 33, 527 P.3d at 1242 (citation omitted).
    [¶15] We have characterized prosecutorial misconduct as:
    [A] prosecutor’s improper or illegal act (or failure to act),
    especially involving an attempt to persuade the jury to wrongly
    convict a defendant or assess an unjustified punishment.
    Prosecutorial misconduct claims are not intended to provide an
    avenue for tactical sandbagging of the trial courts, but rather,
    3
    to address gross prosecutorial improprieties that have deprived
    a criminal defendant of his or her right to a fair trial. A
    prosecutor’s conduct is not misconduct unless he knew or
    should have known it would deprive the defendant of the right
    to a fair trial. It is something more than evidentiary error. We
    distinguish prosecutorial misconduct from evidentiary error
    because otherwise, any evidentiary error which favors the State
    would be considered prosecutorial misconduct.
    Id. ¶ 16, 527 P.3d at 1238 (citations and internal quotations omitted).
    [¶16] The distinction between evidentiary error and prosecutorial misconduct is an
    important one—the gravamen of Mr. Adams’s appeal is that certain testimony by two
    mental health evaluators was inadmissible evidence pursuant to statutory limitations in
    
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. §§ 7-11-303
     and 7-11-304. Misconduct occurs when a prosecutor
    knowingly uses inadmissible evidence or asks legally objectionable questions. Bogard v.
    State, 
    2019 WY 96
    , ¶ 51, 
    449 P.3d 315
    , 327 (Wyo. 2019) (discussing ABA Standards for
    Criminal Justice: Prosecution Function and Defense Function (3d ed. 1993)); Wilde v.
    State, 
    2003 WY 93
    , ¶ 27, 
    74 P.3d 699
    , 711 (Wyo. 2003) (citations omitted).
    (d) The prosecutor should not bring to the attention of the trier
    of fact matters that the prosecutor knows to be inadmissible,
    whether by offering or displaying inadmissible evidence,
    asking legally objectionable questions, or making
    impermissible comments or arguments. If the prosecutor is
    uncertain about the admissibility of evidence, the prosecutor
    should seek and obtain resolution from the court before the
    hearing or trial if possible, and reasonably in advance of the
    time for proffering the evidence before a jury.
    ABA Standards for Criminal Justice: Prosecution Function and Defense Function (4th ed.
    2017) at § 3-6.6(d). Prosecutorial misconduct—as opposed to evidentiary error by the trial
    court—requires the prosecutor’s conduct offering inadmissible evidence be improper, such
    that it was an attempt to wrongfully convict Mr. Adams. King, ¶ 16, 527 P.3d at 1238
    (citations and internal quotations omitted). While a prosecutor “may strike hard blows, he
    is not at liberty to strike foul ones. It is as much his duty to refrain from improper methods
    calculated to produce a wrongful conviction as it is to use every legitimate means to bring
    about a just one.” Berger v. United States, 
    295 U.S. 78
    , 88, 
    55 S. Ct. 629
    , 633, 
    79 L. Ed. 1314
     (1935).
    [¶17] The two elements of plain error we evaluate in this case—clear and unequivocal
    rule of law and material prejudice—are central to us determining whether the prosecutor’s
    questioning of Drs. Wilkinson and Murdock was improper or calculated to produce a
    4
    wrongful conviction. We have not evaluated the scope of the admissibility limitations in
    
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. §§ 7-11-303
     and 7-11-304. That lack of Wyoming precedent calls into
    question whether we can find a violation of a “clear and unequivocal” rule of law at the
    time of trial. See Schmuck v. State, 
    2017 WY 140
    , ¶¶ 34–35, 
    406 P.3d 286
    , 298 (Wyo.
    2017). We have consistently declined to state when a rule of law must be “clear and
    unequivocal”—at the time of trial when the alleged error or misconduct occurred, or at the
    time of appellate review. 
    Id.
     (discussing Johnson v. State, 
    2015 WY 118
    , ¶ 21, 
    356 P.3d 767
    , 773 (Wyo. 2015) and Miller v. State, 
    2015 WY 68
    , ¶ 7–8, 
    350 P.3d 264
    , 266 (Wyo.
    2015)). We again decline to answer that question because the prosecutor did not violate
    the limits of 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. §§ 7-11-303
     or 7-11-304 and because Mr. Adams cannot meet
    the third prong of plain error review, prejudice. See id. ¶ 35, 406 P.3d at 298 (“[I]t remains
    unnecessary to decide when a rule of law must be ‘clear and unequivocal’ under the second
    prong of plain error review. [Appellant] suffered no prejudice from the instruction given
    and cannot satisfy the third prong.”).
    [¶18] The testimony the prosecutor elicited from Dr. Wilkinson did not introduce the type
    of self-incriminating statements or evidence of guilt the statutory limitations are designed
    to protect against. The statement about Mr. Adams’s intent when he shot at Trooper Hobbs
    elicited from Dr. Murdock as a rebuttal witness was an unsolicited statement which the
    prosecutor did not point to during trial. Moreover, that statement was limited to the issue
    of Mr. Adams’s mental condition at the time of the events—a door defense counsel opened
    during its cross-examination of Dr. Murdock on rebuttal. Equally important, we conclude
    that neither doctor’s testimony materially prejudiced Mr. Adams. The record discloses no
    gross prosecutorial impropriety that deprived Mr. Adams of his right to a fair trial or
    attempt to persuade the trial court to wrongly convict him.
    I. Dr. Wilkinson’s Testimony Did Not Violate a Clear and Unequivocal Rule of Law.
    [¶19] Dr. Wilkinson, by court order, conducted the NGMI evaluation for Mr. Adams.
    When a defendant enters a plea of not guilty by reason of mental illness or deficiency, he
    has the burden to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that as a result of that mental
    illness or deficiency he lacked “mental responsibility” for his criminal conduct, meaning
    he lacked the mental capacity to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct or to conform
    his conduct to the requirements of the law. 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7-11-305
    (b); Gabbert v.
    State, 
    2018 WY 69
    , ¶ 15, 
    420 P.3d 172
    , 176 (Wyo. 2018) (adopting preponderance of the
    evidence as the standard of proof for NGMI defenses). Only designated examiners are
    competent to testify about the defendant’s mental responsibility. 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7-11
    -
    305(c). Those examiners can testify about the nature of their examination and diagnosis
    and provide opinion testimony. 
    Id.
     § 7-11-305(e). They may also be cross-examined about
    their competence as an examiner and the credibility of their diagnosis and opinion. Id.
    5
    [¶20] However, 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7-11-304
    (h) limits how information the examiner may
    receive during an NGMI evaluation can be used in evidence:
    (h) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, no
    statement made by the defendant in the course of any
    examination or treatment pursuant to this section and no
    information received by any person in the course thereof is
    admissible in evidence in any criminal proceeding on any
    issue other than that of the mental condition of the
    defendant. If the defendant testifies in his own behalf, any
    statement made by him in the course of any examination or
    treatment pursuant to this section may be admitted:
    (i) For impeachment purposes; or
    (ii) As evidence in a criminal prosecution for perjury.
    (emphasis added).
    [¶21] To evaluate the limits of 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7-11-304
    (h), and later in this opinion
    to evaluate § 7-11-303(h), we can look to federal precedent interpreting similar rules as
    persuasive authority. Pena v. State, 
    2013 WY 4
    , ¶ 48, 
    294 P.3d 13
    , 22–23 (Wyo. 2013).
    The federal counterpart is found in Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 12.2(c)(4):
    No statement made by a defendant in the course of any
    examination conducted under this rule (whether conducted
    with or without the defendant’s consent), no testimony by the
    expert based on the statement, and no other fruits of the
    statement may be admitted into evidence against the defendant
    in any criminal proceeding except on an issue regarding mental
    condition on which the defendant:
    (A) has introduced evidence of incompetency or
    evidence requiring notice under Rule 12.2(a) or (b)(1),
    or
    (B) has introduced expert evidence in a capital
    sentencing proceeding requiring notice under Rule
    12.2(b)(2).
    F.R.Cr.P. 12.2(c)(4). This rule is rooted in the Fifth Amendment’s protection against self-
    incrimination. E.g., United States v. Troya, 
    733 F.3d 1125
    , 1138 (11th Cir. 2013); United
    6
    States v. Henderson, 
    770 F.2d 724
    , 729 (8th Cir. 1985); 14A Wright & Miller, Fed. Prac.
    & Proc. Crim. § 206 (5th ed) (April 2023 update).
    [¶22] Federal courts recognize the tension with the right against self-incrimination when
    examining psychiatrists are asked to testify about information they gathered from
    conversations with the defendant. See Troya, 
    733 F.3d at 1138
    ; Henderson, 
    770 F.2d at 729
    . “For this reason Congress could have elected to completely forbid the examining
    psychiatrist from testifying on the merits at trial.” Henderson, 
    770 F.2d at 729
    . Instead,
    however, Congress “chose only to limit the testimony,” id.; H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 94-414,
    94th Cong., 1st Sess.1975, p. 10, reprinted in 1975 U.S. Code Cong. & Adm. News 1358,
    1399 (“The rule does not preclude use of statements made by a defendant during a court-
    ordered psychiatric examination. The statements may be relevant to the issue of
    defendant’s sanity and admissible on that issue.”), recognizing that “issues of mental
    capacity and guilt will necessarily overlap.” Henderson, 
    770 F.2d at
    729 (citing United
    States v. Halbert, 
    712 F.2d 388
    , 390 (9th Cir. 1983)). “While the government should
    exercise caution when presenting psychiatric testimony it should not be bound by a strict
    interpretation of the limitation.” 
    Id.
    [¶23] Accordingly, a defendant’s statements offered as a basis for an expert’s opinion on
    the issue of his mental condition—whether sanity, competency, or other mental illness or
    deficiency—are admissible and fall within the limitations prescribed by Rule 12.2(c).
    United States v. Madrid, 
    673 F.2d 1114
    , 1120–21 (10th Cir. 1982) (“Thus, the statements
    made by the defendant during the Rule 12.2(c) examination were admissible at trial as a
    basis for the expert’s opinion on the issue of sanity.”); United States v. Hinckley, 
    525 F. Supp. 1342
    , 1348–49 (D.D.C. 1981) (“The verbal content of any communication between
    the defendant and mental health experts may well be an essential basis for a meaningful
    psychiatric examination. While this suggests that the psychiatric conclusions . . . are
    composed largely of testimonial evidence, the Court cannot agree that use of this evidence
    to controvert defendant’s insanity defense would be incriminating within the terms of the
    privilege.”). See also United States v. Miller, 
    267 F. Supp. 2d 104
    , 107–08 (D. Me. 2003)
    (recognizing that Rule 12.2(c)(4) applies to “any statements made in any psychiatric or
    psychological examinations, be they examinations to determine competency, insanity, or
    some other mental defect.”). “[W]hen the defendant has raised the issue of insanity and
    the psychiatrist is called to testify on this question, the defendant must not be allowed to
    muzzle him at his option.” Madrid, 
    673 F.2d at 1121
     (quoting United States v. Julian, 
    469 F.2d 371
    , 376 (10th Cir. 1972)); United States v. Curtis, 
    328 F.3d 141
    , 145 (4th Cir. 2003)
    (“Fed.R.Crim.P. 12.2(c) clearly provides that the government may introduce expert
    testimony if the defendant has raised the issue of his mental condition.”); see also
    Commonwealth v. Morley, 
    658 A.2d 1357
    , 1360–61 (Penn. 1995) (reviewing this area of
    federal law as persuasive authority in a state prosecution).
    [¶24] Mr. Adams asserts the following testimony from Dr. Wilkinson during the State’s
    case-in-chief violated the limits prescribed by 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7-11-304
    (h):
    7
    Q. [Doctor] Wilkinson, did you get background information
    from Mr. Adams?
    A. Yes, I did ask him about this background.
    Q. And what information did he provide?
    A. Yeah. Initially when I do an interview, I talk about, you
    know kind of family and childhood. And he mentioned a pretty
    significant history of abuse and being in foster care. And he
    seemed pretty resentful about his childhood and the abuse and
    neglect that he recalls.
    Let’s see. He -- we talked about his education, and he
    mentioned that he had moved schools a lot and, you know,
    probably didn’t do that well, but he ended up getting his GED.
    And he had some various jobs along the way, maybe a couple
    of months or five months at the most, maybe.
    A bit of homelessness, and he -- although he had been able to
    support himself for a while, he hasn’t received disability for
    any type of mental disorder in the past.
    He wasn’t married. He denied a history of alcohol and drug
    use. And he told me about some of the counseling that he did
    when he was on probation in 2019.
    [¶25] To evaluate Mr. Adams’s claim, we review the challenged testimony in relation to
    the rest of the trial testimony and ask whether the prosecutor asked about, or Dr. Wilkinson
    spoke to, any issue(s) other than Mr. Adams’s mental condition or the nature of her
    examination and diagnosis. We conclude the questions and responses were appropriately
    limited to the confines of 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7-11-304
    (h). As a threshold matter, we note
    that Dr. Wilkinson did not relay any self-incriminating statements. She relayed
    information about Mr. Adams’s childhood and background. Even considering that
    information as fruits of Mr. Adams’s statements, none of the information was self-
    incriminating.
    [¶26] Second, it is clear from the trial transcript that the State offered this testimony to
    establish the foundation for Dr. Wilkinson’s opinion, namely to illustrate how Dr.
    Wilkinson typically gathers information for her evaluation and how that information fits in
    to her diagnosis. The prosecutor first asked Dr. Wilkinson to describe the purpose of an
    NGMI evaluation. She responded that she looks at whether the person has a mental illness
    or disorder; if that illness or disorder was present at the time of the events; and if it was
    8
    present, whether as a result of that illness or disorder, the person lacked the mental capacity
    to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements
    of the law. Dr. Wilkinson was then asked to describe what information she looks at as part
    of her evaluation. That information includes, among other things, information about the
    defendant’s pre-event mental health status, related records, and life history; information
    about the alleged events; and information about the defendant after the alleged events.
    [¶27] After describing the scope of information she would review for any evaluation, Dr.
    Wilkinson affirmed she obtained that same information for her evaluation of Mr. Adams.
    She reviewed information about his arrest and jail records including mental health notes
    by jail staff. She reviewed recordings of Mr. Adams’s telephone calls made from jail,
    police reports, and the interview recorded the day of the arrest. She also interviewed Mr.
    Adams. During that interview, she asked Mr. Adams about his background, which led to
    the testimony that Mr. Adams now asserts was improper. After gathering the body of
    information she described, Dr. Wilkinson concluded that Mr. Adams suffers from
    depression, anxiety, and borderline personality disorder. She went on to conclude those
    conditions did not leave him unable to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct or
    conform his conduct to the requirements of the law.
    [¶28] Because Mr. Adams’s mental health history, childhood and other background
    information formed part of the foundation for Dr. Wilkinson’s diagnosis that Mr. Adams
    suffers from depression, anxiety, and borderline personality disorder, it was admissible
    under 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7-11-304
    (h). To conclude otherwise and prohibit this information,
    we risk eliminating the ability of counsel to establish the foundation and bases for mental
    health examiners’ opinions, which only the examiners are permitted to provide, and we
    limit the ability of opposing counsel to cross-examine the examiners about their opinions,
    which counsel has a statutory right to do. 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7-11-305
    (c), (e). While, as in
    federal court, the government should exercise some caution in this area, Henderson, 
    770 F.2d at 729
    , we are unable to find in the facts of this case that the prosecutor’s questions
    of Dr. Wilkinson violated a clear or unequivocal rule of law.
    [¶29] Our conclusion is bolstered by the limited use of this background information by
    the State and the trial court. The State did not offer, and the court did not admit, Dr.
    Wilkinson’s testimony on any issue other than that of Mr. Adams’s mental condition. As
    noted above, it was offered to describe the information used to make a diagnosis about Mr.
    Adams’s depression, anxiety, and borderline personality disorder. In closing arguments,
    the prosecutor only briefly mentioned that Dr. Wilkinson took into account Mr. Adams’s
    background when she determined he was criminally responsible at the time of the events,
    meaning he did not lack the mental capacity to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct
    or to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law.
    [¶30] The trial court’s decision letter likewise reflects the limited proffer of Mr. Adams’s
    background information by Dr. Wilkinson to inform the mental health diagnosis of anxiety,
    9
    depression, and borderline personality disorder—“She makes this diagnosis due to the
    report of abandonment, emptiness, self-harm, suicidal feelings, and relationship issues
    reported to her.” The trial court did note additional, and more detailed, background history
    about Mr. Adams’s childhood but only when summarizing his own, more lengthy trial
    testimony about his childhood and periods of abuse. We further address Mr. Adams’s own
    testimony, and his counsel’s use of that testimony, in relation to prejudice.
    II. Dr. Wilkinson’s Testimony Did Not Materially Prejudice Mr. Adams.
    [¶31] Material prejudice is the third prong of our plain error analysis. King, 
    2023 WY 36
    ,
    ¶ 33, 527 P.3d at 1242. Under the plain error standard, Mr. Adams must show that the
    alleged error denied him a substantial right resulting in material prejudice. Id. The
    accused’s right to a fair trial is a substantial right. Black v. State, 
    2017 WY 135
    , ¶ 13, 
    405 P.3d 1045
    , 1050 (Wyo. 2017) (quoting McGinn v. State 
    2015 WY 140
    , ¶ 13, 
    361 P.3d 295
    ,
    299 (Wyo. 2015)). We evaluate the entire record to determine if “a reasonable possibility
    exists that, in the absence of the error, the verdict might have been more favorable” to Mr.
    Adams. McGinn, ¶ 13, 361 P.3d at 299; Gutierrez v. State, 
    2020 WY 150
    , ¶ 5, 
    477 P.3d 528
    , 531 (Wyo. 2020). Mr. Adams’s own trial testimony and his counsel’s cross-
    examination of Dr. Wilkinson elicited more information about Mr. Adams’s childhood
    traumas and his background than that which he complains of on appeal. Therefore,
    excluding the foundation information the prosecutor elicited from Dr. Wilkinson about Mr.
    Adams’s childhood history and past abuse would not have changed the outcome of trial.
    [¶32] Defense counsel began her cross-examination of Dr. Wilkinson by asking about
    certain mental health records that reflected a long history of mental health evaluations for
    Mr. Adams. Those mental health records were obtained by the defense and disclosed to
    the State a few weeks prior to trial in preparation of presenting Mr. Adams’s NGMI
    defense. The records were provided to Dr. Wilkinson about a week before trial. She agreed
    with defense counsel that the new records strengthened her diagnosis of borderline
    personality disorder. Defense counsel then asked Dr. Wilkinson about the role of
    childhood trauma and abuse, including that reported to her by Mr. Adams, in borderline
    personality disorder and other mental health diagnoses.
    [¶33] When Mr. Adams testified at trial, he also testified at some length about his
    childhood and history of abuse. Relying in part on Dr. Wilkinson’s testimony and in part
    of Mr. Adams’s testimony, defense counsel then argued at closing that Mr. Adams’s fight
    or flight response on the day of his arrest was linked to his mental and emotional health,
    which was informed by a lifetime of sustained trauma, various types of abuse, lack of
    nurturing, and a history of institutional living.
    [¶34] Looking at the contested portions of Dr. Wilkinson’s testimony within the larger
    record, we conclude that had the court excluded the State’s questioning of Dr. Wilkinson
    on direct examination about the foundations for her diagnoses, the court’s decision would
    10
    not have been different. If prejudice occurred at trial related to Mr. Adams’s background,
    it was through his own testimony and the use his counsel made of it while advocating the
    NGMI defense.
    III.   Dr. Murdock’s Testimony as a Rebuttal Witness and on Re-Direct
    Examination Did Not Violate a Clear and Unequivocal Rule of Law.
    [¶35] Dr. Murdock, by court order, conducted Mr. Adams’s competency evaluation early
    in this case, prior to the entry of Mr. Adams’s NGMI plea. Dr. Murdock testified as a
    rebuttal witness after the defense presented its testimony and evidence for Mr. Adams’s
    NGMI defense.
    [¶36] 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7-11-303
    (h) limits how information the examiner receives during
    a competency evaluation can be used in evidence:
    (h) A finding by the court that the accused is mentally fit to
    proceed shall not prejudice the accused in a defense to the
    crime charged on the ground that at the time of the act he was
    afflicted with a mental illness or deficiency excluding
    responsibility. Nor shall the finding be introduced in evidence
    on that issue or otherwise brought to the notice of the jury. No
    statement made by the accused in the course of any
    examination or treatment pursuant to this section and no
    information received by any person in the course of the
    examination or treatment shall be admitted in evidence in
    any criminal proceeding then or thereafter pending on any
    issue other than that of the mental condition of the accused.
    (emphasis added). As with our analysis of Wyo. Stat. Ann § 7-11-304(h), we have not
    evaluated the limits of this subsection before. Again, we can look to federal authority
    interpreting similar rules as persuasive authority. Pena, 
    2013 WY 4
    , ¶ 48, 
    294 P.3d at
    22–
    23. The federal counterpart remains Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 12.2(c)(4), which
    applies to competency as well as pleas of insanity. Madrid, 
    673 F.2d at 1121
     (discussing
    the application of this body of law in competency proceedings (citations omitted)); Miller,
    
    267 F. Supp. 2d at
    106–08 (discussing the history of Rule 12.2(c) and its application to
    “any psychiatric or psychological examinations, be they examinations to determine
    competency, insanity, or some other mental defect”).
    [¶37] Mr. Adams asserts the following testimony, elicited by the prosecutor during
    redirect examination of Dr. Murdock, violated the limits set forth in 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7
    -
    11-303(h):
    Q. [Doctor] Murdock, when you first met with Mr. Adams, did
    he discuss with you the facts of his case?
    11
    A. Yes. He provided -- I asked him for a brief narrative of the
    offense of what happened.
    Q. And so he told you he had shot at a law enforcement officer?
    A. Yeah. He said he was on his way to, I believe, Idaho Falls
    or Idaho, and that he was pulled over. They asked him for his
    driver’s license and registration, I believe. He told me that he
    didn’t have insurance, that he had let that drop. The officer
    asked him to get out of the car and speak with him.
    And then Mr. Adams told me that he was wanted back in
    Missouri, that he had a pistol in the door. He said he freaked
    out. He said -- I think he said, quote, I had a console full of
    ammo. And he thought it was all over, and so he took off.
    Q. Did he ever tell you that he was, I guess, confused or in the
    middle of a flashback?
    A. No.
    Q. Did he ever tell you he was shooting at a parent or a care
    provider?
    A. No.
    Q. Did he ever tell you he misunderstood what was happening?
    A. No. In fact, he told me that, “If I shoot him, I can end
    this and get away.”
    (emphasis added). This line of questioning continued with one more question and answer:
    Q: And never during the discussions with him did he disclose
    anything about having episodes of disassociation?
    A: No, nor did I observe that rationale or explanation anywhere
    in the police report.
    [¶38] At first glance, this testimony, which relayed a statement by Mr. Adams about his
    intent, might appear to violate the limits of 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7-11-303
    (h). It is, after all,
    a statement, and it implicates the Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination.
    However, we find no prosecutorial misconduct for three reasons.
    12
    [¶39] First, we must again confront the distinction between evidentiary error, by the trial
    court, and prosecutorial misconduct. To analyze Mr. Adams’s prosecutorial misconduct
    claim, we examine whether the prosecutor’s conduct was improper such that it was an
    attempt to wrongfully convict Mr. Adams. King, ¶ 16, 527 P.3d at 1238 (citations and
    internal quotations omitted). Here, consistent with prior yes–no questions, each of which
    produced a short answer “no,” the prosecutor asked Dr. Murdock a yes–no question—“Did
    he ever tell you he misunderstood what was happening?” Dr. Murdock answered “no” and
    then, without prompting, offered additional testimony by sharing Mr. Adams’s
    incriminating statement. The trial transcript gives no indication the prosecutor knowingly
    elicited the additional statement or any other self-incriminating statement by Mr. Adams
    through Dr. Murdock’s testimony.
    [¶40] Our review of closing arguments bolsters our finding that the prosecutor did not rely
    upon or draw attention to Mr. Adams’s statement, “[i]f I shoot him, I can end this and get
    away,” relayed through Dr. Murdock. Summation of Dr. Murdock’s testimony was more
    cursory than the summation of Dr. Wilkinson’s testimony; it related only to Dr. Murdock’s
    diagnosis of antisocial disorder and his description of PTSD characteristics, with no
    summation of the facts from Mr. Adams’s interview that Dr. Murdock relied upon. While,
    as noted earlier, the government should exercise some caution when questioning mental
    health examiners, Henderson, 
    770 F.2d at 729
    , we are unable to find this yes–no question
    by the prosecutor was an attempt to elicit inadmissible testimony or an attempt to convict
    Mr. Adams on inadmissible evidence.
    [¶41] Second, we conclude Dr. Murdock’s testimony was offered on the issue of Mr.
    Adams’s mental condition as raised by defense counsel during cross-examination. After
    the State finished its case in chief, Mr. Adams testified at trial. Mr. Adams testified in
    some detail about his thought processes when he decided to shoot at Trooper Hobbs. He
    thought about shooting Trooper Hobbs so he could evade arrest and not be “put in a cage.”
    After the first car chase, he decided to shoot Trooper Hobbs to “stop him somehow, just
    stop him, stop coming after me.” During the second car chase, Mr. Adams continued
    shooting in an effort to either stop Trooper Hobbs or stop his vehicle:
    And I start shooting because it is a big object; it is a car. You
    hit him, you stop him. You hit the car, and you stop him. It is
    a whole lot easier to hit the Charger than it is to hit him,
    obviously.
    I don’t particularly care. Well, if I kill him, well, guess what?
    I kill him. But if I don’t kill him and I put a bullet through his
    hood, well, I stopped him.
    [¶42] After Mr. Adams’s testified, Ms. Rice, a mental health examiner at the local jail,
    testified about her evaluation of Mr. Adams, her conversations with him over the course of
    13
    his incarceration, and his frustrations with Dr. Wilkinson’s evaluation. She also testified
    about her review of Dr. Murdock’s competency evaluation, the diagnoses within that
    document, and her understanding that Mr. Adams preferred Dr. Murdock’s evaluation over
    Dr. Wilkinson’s evaluation. The defense closed its case, and the State called one rebuttal
    witness, Dr. Murdock.
    [¶43] On direct rebuttal examination, the prosecutor asked Dr. Murdock to describe the
    scope of information he reviews when asked to make a competency evaluation. He
    identified the information he reviews and explained that he also interviews the individual
    being examined at least once. Dr. Murdock confirmed that he interviewed Mr. Adams and
    described how the information from that interview fit within his diagnosis and conclusion.
    Dr. Murdock went on to explain that Mr. Adams reported no history of flashbacks, post-
    traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), mania, delusions, hallucinations, or dissociative
    episodes. The prosecutor’s questions in direct examination, and Dr. Murdock’s answers,
    appear consistent with the format used for Dr. Wilkinson’s testimony, limited to the mental
    condition of Mr. Adams related to the competency evaluation.
    [¶44] Then, the defense’s cross-examination solicited additional information from Dr.
    Murdock about PTSD, and particularly about flashbacks and dissociative disorders as a
    result of PTSD. This comprised approximately half of the cross-examination. Next, the
    prosecutor’s redirect examination responded to defense counsel’s questions about PTSD,
    flashbacks, and disassociation. The prosecutor asked a series of questions to determine if
    Dr. Murdock opined that Mr. Adams was “confused,” “in the middle of a flashback,”
    thought he was “shooting at a parent or care provider,” or “misunderstood what was
    happening.” In response to the question about whether Mr. Adams misunderstood what
    was happening, Dr. Murdock answered no and then shared that Mr. Adams said, “If I shoot
    him, I can end this and get away.” Dr. Murdock shared that statement in the context of
    discussing Mr. Adams’s mental condition—PTSD, flashbacks, and dissociative
    disorders—in direct follow up to defense counsel’s cross-examination questions about
    those mental conditions. This testimony was within the limits of 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7-11
    -
    303(h). See, e.g., United States v. Coonce, 
    932 F.3d 632
    , 636 (8th Cir. 2019) (“When a
    defendant introduces psychiatric evidence for a mental-status defense, though, the
    prosecution may then present its own psychiatric evidence in rebuttal. . . . [Rule 12.2(c)(4)]
    prohibit[s] the government from using any statement made by the defendant in the course
    of the government’s examination, or any opinion based on such a statement, unless the
    defendant has introduced evidence on that particular issue.”); 14A Wright & Miller, Fed.
    Prac. & Proc. Crim. § 206 (“The government is still permitted to use the defendant’s
    statements made during a mental exam against him where the defendant has introduced
    ‘evidence’ of incompetency, insanity, or a mental condition that has a bearing on guilt.”)
    [¶45] We also note that Mr. Adams relayed the same self-incriminating statements about
    his intent in his own testimony, which moderates the Fifth Amendment protections inherent
    in Wyo. Stat. § 7-11-303(h). See Powell v. Texas, 
    492 U.S. 680
    , 684, 
    109 S. Ct. 3146
    , 106
    
    14 L. Ed. 2d 551
     (“[I]f a defendant requests a psychiatric examination in order to prove a
    mental-status defense, he waives the right to raise a Fifth Amendment challenge to the
    prosecution’s use of evidence obtained through that examination to rebut the defense.”
    (discussing Buchanan v. Kentucky, 
    483 U.S. 402
    , 422–23, 
    107 S. Ct. 2906
    , 
    97 L. Ed. 2d 336
     (1987))); Brown v. United States, 
    356 U.S. 148
    , 154–56, 
    78 S. Ct. 622
    , 
    2 L. Ed. 2d 589
    (1958) (discussing waiver of the privilege against self-incrimination when a defendant
    elects to testify); Troya, 
    733 F.3d at
    1138–39 (reviewing the waiver of Rule 12.2(c)’s Fifth
    Amendment protections after a defendant puts forth a mental-status defense). The 1983
    amendments to the federal analogue, F.R.Cr.P. 12.2, reflect that the limitations in the rule
    are not a hard limit when a defendant presents a defense based on his mental condition.
    14A Wright & Miller, Fed. Prac. & Proc. Crim. § 206 (“The rule was qualified [in the 1983
    amendments], however, to say that the statements could not be used in evidence against
    the defendant except on an issue concerning the defendant’s mental condition on which the
    defendant has introduced testimony.”).
    [¶46] Third, Dr. Murdock’s testimony was permissible through the open-door doctrine.
    We approach this issue by considering the propriety of Dr. Murdock’s testimony offered
    on the defendant’s mental state at the time of the events, which Dr. Wilkinson was tasked
    to evaluate, as opposed to competency, which Dr. Murdock was ordered to evaluate.
    “Opening the door” refers to the principle that “when one litigant offers evidence on an
    issue that is otherwise irrelevant or inadmissible, he cannot complain on appeal ‘if the
    opposing party introduces evidence on the same subject.’” Bonds v. State, 
    2020 WY 61
    , ¶
    13, 
    463 P.3d 162
    , 165 (Wyo. 2020) (quoting Singer v. Lajaunie, 
    2014 WY 159
    , ¶ 37, 
    339 P.3d 277
    , 287 (Wyo. 2014)). The open-door doctrine has limits. Id. ¶ 15, 463 P.3d at 166
    (citations omitted). A party may not engage in “overkill which is only moderately
    justified,” and a party may not exceed the scope of the open door. Id. (citations omitted).
    When a defendant initiates a line of questioning, the prosecutor is entitled on redirect
    examination “to make a permissible inquiry without crossing into prosecutorial overkill”
    where that redirect examination is narrow and brief. White v. State, 
    2003 WY 163
    , ¶¶ 11–
    12, 
    80 P.3d 642
    , 648–49 (Wyo. 2003) (describing the scope of redirect examination)
    (citations omitted).
    [¶47] The open-door doctrine applies in the context of psychiatric testimony pursuant to
    F.R.Cr.P. 12.2(c). “If one party introduces inadmissible testimony, then, at the discretion
    of the court, the opposing party may also introduce testimony on this same issue to rebut
    any false impression that may have resulted from the original testimony.” United States v.
    Kessi, 
    868 F.2d 1097
    , 1108 (9th Cir. 1989) (citation omitted).
    . . . Kessi initially offered testimony on the ultimate issue of his
    ability to form the requisite intent. Kessi opened the door for
    Dr. Risse’s testimony to rebut that of Dr. Wilson, . . . Dr.
    Risse’s testimony did not violate Rule 12.2(c) because Kessi
    initially introduced testimony on the issue.
    15
    
    Id.
    [¶48] Defense counsel opened the door to Dr. Murdock testifying about Mr. Adams’s
    mental status at the time of the events, outside the scope of the competency evaluation.
    The redirect questioning by the prosecutor was brief and limited to the PTSD issues raised
    by defense counsel on cross-examination. In conclusion, the self-incriminating statement
    admitted through Dr. Murdock’s testimony, even if it were inadmissible by 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7-11-303
    (h), was admissible through the open-door doctrine, and the prosecutor did not
    cross any line during redirect examination.
    IV. Dr. Murdock’s Testimony Did Not Materially Prejudice Mr. Adams.
    [¶49] We briefly address material prejudice related to Dr. Murdock’s testimony as the
    third prong of our plain error analysis. King, 
    2023 WY 36
    , ¶ 33, 527 P.3d at 1242. Mr.
    Adams testified first to his intent when he shot at Trooper Adams. His own statements,
    which we set forth above, were consistent with the statement he asserts Dr. Murdock should
    not have shared. We can find no prejudice by Dr. Murdock’s statement where Mr. Adams
    already testified to the same.
    [¶50] Our conclusion is corroborated by the trial court’s Decision Letter. Contrary to what
    Mr. Adams argues, the trial court in no way relied on the statements Mr. Adams made to
    Dr. Murdock when it determined Mr. Adams’s guilt. Dr. Murdock is not mentioned in the
    district court’s detailed findings, which identified the evidence the court relied on to
    support each conviction. The court relied on Mr. Adams’s extensive trial testimony about
    his intent during the events and the lack of evidence to support his defense of mental illness
    or deficiency. Excluding Dr. Murdock’s testimony would have had no impact on the trial
    court’s conviction of Mr. Adams in this case.
    [¶51] We find no prosecutorial misconduct related to Dr. Murdock’s testimony. Having
    found no violation of a clear rule of law or material prejudice through either witness’s
    testimony, we decline to consider Mr. Adams’s allegations of cumulative error. Black,
    
    2017 WY 135
    , ¶ 46, 405 P.3d at 1060 (“In reviewing for cumulative error, we consider
    only those matters which we have concluded constitute error.”) (quoting Watts v. State,
    
    2016 WY 40
    , ¶ 23, 
    370 P.3d 104
    , 112 (Wyo. 2016)).
    CONCLUSION
    [¶52] The challenged testimony of Drs. Wilkinson and Murdock was permissible under
    
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. §§ 7-11-303
    (h) and -304(h). Mr. Adams was not prejudiced by the
    testimony of either examiner. Finding no prosecutorial misconduct, we affirm.
    16