DocketNumber: NO. PD-0207-18
Citation Numbers: 572 S.W.3d 234
Judges: Newell
Filed Date: 4/3/2019
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Can a demonstrative video for an otherwise proper closing argument go too far? In this case, yes. During closing argument for the punishment phase of a non-violent robbery case, the State played a YouTube video of a lion at a zoo trying to eat a human baby through protective glass. A copy of the video was included in the record and is available for viewing on the Court's website here. Additionally, here are three screen captures from the video that were also included in the record:
*236The State argued that Appellant deserved a lengthy sentence in light of his crime and criminal background. This was certainly a proper plea for law enforcement. But the demonstrative video went beyond that argument because it encouraged the jury to make its decision upon matters outside the record by inviting a comparison between Appellant and a hungry lion. Consequently, we reverse the court of appeals opinion and remand for that court to perform a harm analysis.
Background
The relevant facts here are undisputed on appeal. In 2015, Appellant entered a CVS drug store and looked around the store for about 10 to 15 minutes. At first, Appellant acted like "any other customer." He waited "until no one else was around" and then approached the counter with some "candy" and "soda." The cashier scanned the items, placed them in a bag, and handed the bag to Appellant. Then, with his hands on the counter, Appellant leaned over and told the cashier: "[T]his is a stick up, give me whatever is in the register, do not try anything, or I will kill you."
Appellant then reached his arm over the counter and grabbed another plastic bag. The cashier opened the register and handed the bills to Appellant, who stuffed them in his pockets. Next, Appellant held open the plastic bag while the cashier filled it with the coins from the register. Appellant took the bag with his food items and the bag with the coins and walked over to the beverage aisle, where he grabbed additional food and drink items. The cashier "calmly waited" until Appellant walked out of the store before calling the manager who, in turn, called the police.
During the entire incident, Appellant's hands stayed within the cashier's sight. Appellant did not display a weapon or "mess" with the waistband of his pants. Shortly after leaving the drug store, Appellant was apprehended in the area. In Appellant's backpack, officers found plastic CVS bags containing assorted rolls of coins as well as $ 17.53 worth of food and drink products. The backpack also contained some of Appellant's personal items (i.e., clothes, reading glasses, and parole papers). Appellant had "a very large wad of *237American cash stuffed" in his pocket. He had no weapons.
Appellant was charged with robbery. At trial, the State introduced evidence that Appellant had previously robbed the same CVS the day before the charged robbery. The facts of the extraneous robbery were nearly identical to the charged robbery and involved the same cashier.
During the punishment phase, the State introduced evidence of Appellant's criminal history. This included: a 2013 conviction for forgery with a sentence of 10 months in state jail; a 2007 conviction for attempted unauthorized use of a motor vehicle with a sentence of eight months in county jail; a 2002 conviction for evading arrest with a sentence of 10 months in state jail; a 1994 conviction for theft from a person enhanced to a third degree felony and resulting in a sentence of 14 years' imprisonment; and two 1993 convictions for robbery by threat, each with a sentence of seven years' imprisonment. Though he had two convictions for robbery by threat, Appellant's criminal history predominately featured crimes of theft rather than violence. There is no indication that any of his past convictions involved crimes that were particularly brutal or gruesome. Neither is there any indication that Appellant's past convictions involved crimes against children.
For its closing argument at punishment, the State sought the trial court's permission to play for the jury a YouTube video "as a demonstrative." The video is 35 seconds long and depicts a lion trying to eat a human baby through a glass wall at the zoo.
The State responded that the video illustrated that "motive plus opportunity equals behavior" (i.e., Appellant's desire to commit crime would be irrelevant if Appellant were in prison because it removes his opportunity). The State described the video as "comical," stating that there are "people laughing light-heartily about the lion trying to get to a baby." Significantly, the State assured the trial court that it was "not going to compare the defendant to the lion, or society to the baby, no comparisons like that." The trial court overruled Appellant's objection without viewing the video itself.
During closing argument, the State played the video for the jury and then argued:
Ladies and gentleman, I know you're thinking, that was weird, what was that about? Anybody would think that. But that 30-second clip is exactly what this punishment phase is about.
...
Let me talk to you about that video. That lion was cute, and it was laughable, and it was funny because he's behind that piece of glass. That motive of that lion is never changing, never changing. It's innate. Given the opportunity, remove that glass, it's no[ ] longer funny, it's a tragedy. That's what's going to happen, that's a tragedy. That's what [is] going on with this case.
...
*238In a vacuum, that resume right there, a sterile courtroom, it's almost laughable because we know [Appellant is] such a bad guy. It's almost laughable, just like that lion. You're laughing at that lion because he's behind that piece of glass. Nothing funny about that lion when he's outside that piece of glass, that's a tragedy. Nothing funny when [Appellant] is outside of prison, that's a tragedy. That's what I meant when I said that video has everything to do with this case, because [Appellant is] never changing his motive.
...
This isn't a 25-year case, this isn't a 35-year case, maybe it's a 40-year case. The Legislat[ure] said two convictions, 25, that's where you start. When you've got five and another one reduced, quit giving him chances, quit removing that glass. Keep that glass there, remove the opportunity, and send him to prison for every second that he deserves.
After finding both enhancement provisions "true," the jury assessed Appellant's punishment at 50 years' imprisonment.
On appeal, Appellant complained that the trial court abused its discretion by allowing the State to play the video.
Before this Court, Appellant's main contention is that the trial court abused its discretion in allowing the State to play a video that was highly prejudicial and inflammatory because it presented facts outside the record.
The State is correct that the trial prosecutor initially sought to make a proper plea for law enforcement in his closing argument. In support of his request to play the video, the State argued that it only intended to use the video to illustrate that Appellant's motive was unchanging; the State did not suggest that Appellant's crime or criminal history demonstrated a motive to eat babies. However, Appellant is also correct that the State's use of the video to make the intended argument was highly prejudicial because the video nevertheless encouraged the jury to draw the very analogy the State claimed it was not trying to draw-that Appellant was like a hungry lion trying to eat a small child. Consequently, we reverse the court of appeals.
Standard of Review-Jury Arguments and Demonstrative Aids
The purpose of closing argument is to facilitate the jury in properly analyzing the evidence presented at trial so that it may "arrive at a just and reasonable conclusion based on the evidence alone, and not on any fact not admitted in evidence."
But it appears our reliance upon these four areas of permissible argument was born out of the prohibition against introducing matters in argument that were not presented as evidence. In Alejandro v. State , we held that a State's punishment argument that injected facts outside the record was error even though it was a response to defense counsel's request that the jury assess probation.
The focus, therefore, has always been upon encouraging the jury to decide the case on the evidence in front of it rather than encouraging juries to reach a decision based upon information outside the record. This is because improper references to information outside the record are generally designed to arouse the passion and prejudice of the jury, and, as such, are inappropriate.
This prohibition against arguing outside the record is equally present when evaluating the use of demonstrative aids to assist in argument. It is certainly proper to demonstrate evidence before the jury to clarify it for the jury.
The Video Encouraged The Jury to Base its Decision on Matters That Were Not Deductions From the Evidence
Here, the State asserts that use of the video was permissible as a proper plea for law enforcement. A classic example of a proper plea for law enforcement is arguing that a jury should impose a particular punishment because the defendant will continue to commit crimes.
But there are limits.
Cases involving non-record facts inserted during closing argument generally fall into two categories. First, there are cases where the State, through non-record facts, essentially testifies as a witness (e.g., arguing that "sixty percent of the crime in Dallas County [is] attributable to narcotics").
*242The second line of cases involves the State using non-record facts to make analogies, tell anecdotes, or appeal to common knowledge (e.g., comparing the defendant to a dormant volcano that will likely erupt again), which is sometimes proper, sometimes not. The non-record facts are not asserted for the truth of the matter (e.g., that the defendant is literally a volcano that will erupt). The cases in the second category that deal with drawing analogies focus not on whether the State used non-record facts but instead on whether the analogy was a proper deduction from the evidence.
We have previously decided cases in which the State, in closing argument, analogized the defendant to an "animal" or "beast." For example, in Marx v. State , the victim and his friend went to the defendant's house at 10:00 p.m., demanding to talk to the defendant.
Yet, we later distinguished Marx in Burns v. State . In Burns , the defendant was charged with capital murder after he and another man robbed the victim and brutally beat him to death.
Here, the State relied upon the demonstrative video to help the jury understand its argument, not to highlight any real, testimonial, or documentary evidence presented at trial or to help jurors better understand that evidence.
According to the prosecutor, he intended to use the video to show that the lion's motive was unchanging and, by analogy, so was Appellant's. But the problem is that the most visually striking aspect of the video is not the lion's determination. It is the lion's objective, and the video invites jurors to imagine the lion achieving its objective by closing its jaws around the small child's head. Even if it can be said that the lion had a "motive," as the prosecutor suggested, the video revealed that the lion had a different, and exponentially more dangerous one than Appellant did. Displaying a video of a lion's efforts to bite through safety glass in order to eat a baby encouraged the jury to liken Appellant's intent to the lion's without a basis for such a comparison in the record. Whatever threats of violence Appellant made, none of the evidence presented in this case suggested that Appellant harbored the same type of animal blood-lust displayed by the lion in the video. Though we recognize the seriousness of the crime here, the facts of this case simply do not reflect a "bestial aspect" as they did in Burns .
We have previously held that a party can make a brief reference to non-record facts in order to make an analogy. For example, in Broussard v. State , the State, during closing argument, told the story of Pompeii and compared the defendant to a dormant volcano that would likely erupt again.
When a party draws a verbal analogy through a discrete reference, as the prosecutor did in Broussard , the party is able to limit its argument to provide only those facts necessary to tie the analogy to either the facts of the case or reasonable deductions from those facts. But relying upon a video of a collateral event can present more facts than necessary to draw the analogy, which, in turn, carries more risk that the jury will be persuaded by collateral matters outside the record. Of course, jurors are not dumb, and we can trust them to differentiate between facts and analogy. But they are human, which is why courts prohibit overly inflammatory and unfairly prejudicial evidence or arguments, because of the risk that jurors might make a decision based upon passions and prejudices rather than the case before them.
Ultimately, the video at issue here presents a significant potential for unfair prejudice, just as the video displayed during punishment in Salazar v. State did. There, the State introduced as punishment evidence a video montage of a murder victim that had been prepared for that victim's memorial service.
The video in this case carried with it a similar potential to "unconsciously mislead" the jury, though the potential in this case was that the jury might punish Appellant for a more heinous crime than the simple robbery he had committed. Or, as Justice Bland explained in her dissent below, "[t]he video was not merely argument by analogy, but instead placed central emphasis on a wholly collateral matter through a powerful medium, to incite the protective instincts of the jury."
Conclusion
Playing a video of a lion trying to eat a baby to argue for a high prison sentence in a simple robbery case was an improper use of a demonstrative aid because the video invited an analogy that was not anchored to the evidence presented at trial. While the State's intended argument was a proper plea for law enforcement, the State, by playing the video, improperly invited the jury to view Appellant's crime and criminal history as more brutal than they were. Consequently, the trial court abused its discretion in allowing the State to play the video. We reverse the court of appeals and remand the case for a harm analysis.
At trial, the cashier explained that she did not tell any of the responding officers that Appellant threatened to kill her. The first time she stated that Appellant threatened to kill her was at trial.
During the extraneous robbery: Appellant claimed he had a weapon, but the cashier never saw one. Appellant wore the same shirt, jeans, and shoes, and spoke essentially the same words to the cashier as he did in the charged robbery. Appellant's hands were also in the cashier's sight for most of the encounter.
As mentioned above, the video can be viewed on the Court's website at the following link: http://www.txcourts.gov/cca/media/.
According to the court of appeals, Appellant argued that the "use of the video to compare the prospect of appellant's presence outside of prison to that of a lion that would be mauling an infant was inflammatory and suggested to the jury an improper basis for determining appellant's punishment." Milton v. State , No. 01-16-0434-CR,
Demonstrative aids have many different names (e.g., demonstrative evidence, visual aids). Throughout this opinion, we will refer to them only as demonstrative aids.
Milton ,
State's Br. 26.
Milton ,
Milton v. State ,
Appellant and the State both agree that the court of appeals erroneously focused on the substance of the closing argument rather than the content of the video.
State's Br. 26.
Campbell v. State ,
Freeman v. State ,
Alejandro v. State ,
Borjan v. State ,
See Davis v. State ,
Lewis v. State ,
McCormick on Evidence § 214 (7th ed. 2016).
See Simmons v. State ,
See, e.g. , Tex. R. Evid. 1006 ("The proponent may use a summary, chart, or calculation to prove the content of voluminous writings, recordings, or photographs that cannot be conveniently examined in court."). See also Wheatfall v. State ,
Simmons ,
Jarnigan v. State ,
Rocha v. State ,
Rocha ,
Cf. Wayne R. Lafave et al., Criminal Procedure 604 (4th ed. 2015) ("Closing arguments traditionally have included appeals to emotion. It is said to be the 'time honored privilege' of counsel to 'drown the stage in tears.' Such appeals, however, are not without bounds.") (quoting Dunlop v. United States ,
Jordan v. State ,
Grant v. State ,
White v. State ,
See , e.g. , Freeman ,
Broussard v. State ,
Marx ,
Burns ,
McCormick on Evidence § 214 (7th ed. 2016) (stating that demonstrative aids are relevant in theory "only because of the assistance they give to the trier in understanding other real, testimonial and documentary evidence").
The prosecutor acknowledged as much when he stated in reference to the video, "Ladies and gentlemen, I know you're thinking, that was weird, what was that about? Anybody would think that."
Broussard ,
Casey v. State ,
Salazar ,
Milton ,
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