DocketNumber: 17130
Judges: Mowbray, Gunderson, Steffen, Young, Springer
Filed Date: 5/18/1988
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
OPINION
By the Court,
A jury convicted Dale Edward Flanagan of murdering his
On the afternoon of November 6, 1984, Carl and Colleen Gordon were found dead in their Las Vegas residence. Mr. Gordon, a fifty-eight year old air traffic controller, had been shot seven times in the back and chest. Mrs. Gordon, a fifty-seven year old housewife, had been shot three times in the head. The record contains overwhelming evidence that nineteen year old Flanagan and his co-defendants planned to kill the Gordons in an effort to obtain insurance proceeds and an inheritance. With the express purpose of killing the Gordons, Flanagan and the others broke into the Gordon residence and accomplished their deadly objective.
This appeal, once again, focuses our attention on the troubling and recurring issue of prosecutorial misconduct. Flanagan contends that prosecutorial misconduct at the guilt and sentencing phases of his trial denied him a fundamentally fair trial. Having carefully reviewed Flanagan’s claims of misconduct at the guilt phase, we conclude that the prosecutor’s actions were not so prejudicial as to mandate reversal. When a guilty verdict is free from doubt, even aggravated prosecutorial remarks will not justify reversal. Yates v. State, 103 Nev. 200, 734 P.2d 1252 (1987); Dearman v. State, 93 Nev. 364, 566 P.2d 407 (1977). Here, there was overwhelming evidence of Flanagan’s involvement in the planning and execution of the murders. Given the strength of the State’s case, we hold that the prosecutor’s conduct did not render the determination of Flanagan’s guilt fundamentally unfair.
We cannot, however, reach the same conclusion when considering the allegations of prosecutorial misconduct at the sentencing phase of Flanagan’s trial. At the sentencing phase, it is most important that the jury not be influenced by passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor. Hance v. Zant, 696 F.2d 940, 951 (11th Cir. 1983). “With a man’s life at stake, a prosecutor should not play on the passions of the jury.” Id. Even in what was apparently intended to be a review of the facts, the prosecutor could not resist the temptation to weave in an inappropriate appeal to passion when he stated:
Well, I remember grandma. I remember my kindly Swedish grandmother. I remember the cookies and milk and I remember crawling up into her lap, a warm ample lap.
But I don’t ever remember crawling into that lap and wrestling her down and holding my hand over her mouth and shooting her three times in the head with a .22 pistol. I don’t remember that about my grandmother. That is what [the defendant] remembers about his grandmother.
While objections by defense counsel were hardly an exemplar of a properly made contemporaneous objection, the delay was caused by what was perceived to be the court’s wish that counsel not interrupt the continuity of proceedings but rather wait until a recess. This procedure apparently was acquiesced in by the prosecution, which stated, “We have all pretty much stayed away from objecting; I will go along with that.”
Moreover, the State did not argue this as an issue in its brief. Accordingly, under these circumstances, where a life is at stake, we will consider the allegations of misconduct as if there had been compliance with the contemporaneous objection rule.
REFERENCE TO IMPROBABLE REHABILITATION AND FUTURE KILLINGS
We find particularly objectionable, the prosecutor’s repeated references to Flanagan’s improbable rehabilitation and future killings. In direct contravention of our ruling in Collier v. State, 101 Nev. 473, 705 P.2d 1126 (1985), in which we stated that such comments were highly inappropriate, the prosecutor in the instant case made the following egregious remarks:
Now, there are three reasons for the death penalty. One is to keep a particular defendant from ever killing again. Now, if they are given parole, they can go out into society and kill again. If they escape, they can go into society and kill again. If they are kept in prison forever, they can kill again, prison guards, other inmates. . . .
And I don’t like the burglary and robbery and sexual assault inmates that I and others have sent to the Nevada State Prison, but I don’t suggest they should ever have to die at the hands of a Dale Flanagan or a Randolph Moore.
And I suggest to you these two, as well as anyone else who have proved their ability, their capability, their willingness to murder, is capable of doing it again. And so that is one reason that we can give to give the death penalty so that an individual will never kill again.
Moreover, we note that the prosecutor’s above reference to the possibility of escape is improper. “The prospect of escape is not part of the calculus that the jury should consider in determining a defendant’s sentence.” Id. at 479.
EXPRESSION OF PERSONAL BELIEFS
This court has consistently held that it is improper for a prosecutor to inject his opinion or personal beliefs into his argument. Aesoph v. State, 102 Nev. 316, 322-23, 721 P.2d 379, 383 (1986); McGuire v. State, 100 Nev. 153, 677 P.2d 1060 (1984). In Collier, 101 Nev. at 480, 705 P.2d at 1130, we stated:
Such an injection of personal beliefs into the argument detracts from the “unprejudiced, impartial, and nonpartisan” role that a prosecuting attorney assumes in the courtroom. (Citations omitted.) By stepping out of the prosecutor’s role, which is to seek justice (citations omitted), and by invoking the authority of his or her own supposedly greater experience and knowledge, a prosecutor invites undue jury reliance on the conclusions personally endorsed by the prosecuting attorney.
Accordingly, we find it was impermissible for the prosecutor in the case at bar, to inform the jury that he did not take his responsibilities lightly, that he tried to discriminate between penalties, and that the death penalty was the only penalty that he would even suggest that the jury consider.
The prosecutor tendered his own credentials by telling the jury that he had been “doing these kinds of cases” for fifteen years. In urging the death penalty, he said the defendants “may con this jury but [they] haven’t conned this prosecutor.” He further suggested that a death penalty in this case would avoid the error committed when a jury just one month earlier gave only a life sentence to Scotty Sloane for the “horrible crime” of killing Nancy Menke.
Remarks such as these are prime examples of a prosecutor’s invoking the authority of his office. The effect of these arguments is to assure the jurors that “someone with greater experience has already made the decision that the law imposes on them.” Tucker
REFERENCES TO ANOTHER CONVICTED MURDERER
During the trial, one of Flanagan’s co-defendants called sixteen year old convicted murderer Scott Sloane as a defense witness.
In Collier, 101 Nev. at 478, 705 P.2d at 1128, we held that a prosecutor’s references to a notorious Nevada criminal were improper because they discussed matters not in evidence and because there was no factual basis to suggest a relationship between the defendant and the notorious criminal. Here, Scott Sloane had absolutely no connection with the defendants. Sloane and the defendants were similar in that they were all very young
REFERENCES TO FLANAGAN’S FAILURE TO TESTIFY
The established test for determining whether prosecutorial comment constitutes a prohibited direct reference to a defendant’s failure to testify is whether the language used was “manifestly intended or was of such character that the jury would naturally and necessarily take it to be a comment on the failure of the accused to respond.” Deutscher v. State, 95 Nev. 669, 682, 601 P.2d 407, 416 (1979). Here, the prosecutor first made reference to Scott Sloane’s testimony under oath and then argued that “these fellows [the defendants] for the most part, by the way, didn’t even do that.” Our close examination of this language indicates that this remark is a direct comment on Flanagan’s failure to testify. Next, the prosecutor stated that “[t]hey [the defendants] could or could not take the stand, whatever they wanted.” While we note that this comment is not so direct that the jury would necessarily take it to be a comment on Flanagan’s failure to respond, we find that, when taken in context, this comment as well, is an impermissible reference to Flanagan’s silence. We conclude that the prosecutor’s remarks were a violation of Flanagan’s fifth amendment right to remain silent and constitute reversible error.
REFERENCES REGARDING COMMUNITY STANDARDS
We finally wish to express our strong disapproval of the prosecutor’s statement “If we don’t punish, then society is going to laugh at us.”
We are compelled to conclude that the cumulative effect of the prosecutor’s extensive misconduct was of such magnitude as to render Flanagan’s sentencing hearing fundamentally unfair. Given the uncontroverted evidence of guilt, there is simply no justification for such outrageous behavior. See State v. Cyty, 50 Nev. 256, 256 P. 793 (1927). This case is remanded for a new penalty hearing.
We have examined Flanagan’s other assignments of error and find them to be without merit.
Sloane’s conviction stemmed from the kidnap, rape, and murder of a woman in Las Vegas. Sloane received a life sentence with the possibility of parole.
The substance of Sloane’s testimony was that he had been in detention with co-defendant Luckett for five months and that Luckett had discussed various details of the crime with him. Prior to this period of incarceration, Sloane had not known any of the defendants in this case.
The comment in its entirety reads:
You never saw in that trial the Scotty Sloane we saw in this stand. He even stood up here in front of the jury and he pawed at the ground and made the same kind of noises that these fellows have made. And it worked. That jury gave him life with the possibility of parole for the killing of Nancy Menke.
And until today, I have not criticized that jury and it is not my habit ever to do so. And irrespective of your verdict, I would never criticize a jury.
But looking at it from the other side of the coin, I think we can guess that the jury didn’t have all the information before it it needed. It was wrong about Scott Sloane.
The entire remark is as follows:
There is a third reason. Simply to punish. ... If we don’t punish, then society is going to laugh at us. They are going to say “Well, it’s just another case of —” we read all about the stuff about society complaining about the ills of the world and crimes taking over and they refuse to do anything about it. Well, as has been said before in this courtroom today, now is your chance.