Marquinn Jones-Nelson v. State of Alaska ( 2022 )


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    Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,
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    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    MARQUINN JONES-NELSON,                               )
    )   Supreme Court No. S-17555
    Petitioner,                   )
    )   Court of Appeals No. A-11966
    v.                                            )   Superior Court No. 3AN-11-05289 CR
    )
    STATE OF ALASKA,                                     )   OPINION
    )
    Respondent.                   )   No. 7599 – June 24, 2022
    )
    Petition for Hearing from the Court of Appeals of the State of
    Alaska, on appeal from the Superior Court of the State of
    Alaska, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Gregory Miller,
    Judge.
    Appearances: Cynthia Strout, Anchorage, for Petitioner.
    Timothy W. Terrell, Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage,
    and Kevin G. Clarkson, Attorney General, Juneau, for
    Respondent.
    Before: Bolger, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Carney,
    and Borghesan, Justices.
    CARNEY, Justice.
    BORGHESAN, Justice, concurring.
    BOLGER, Chief Justice, dissenting.
    I.     INTRODUCTION
    A defendant convicted of first-degree murder appealed his conviction to the
    court of appeals, arguing that the trial court erroneously instructed the jury on the law of
    self-defense. The court of appeals agreed the instruction was erroneous but concluded
    that the error was harmless and affirmed the defendant’s conviction.
    The defendant petitioned us, asking that we reverse the court of appeals’
    decision and his conviction because the erroneous instruction relieved the State of its
    burden to disprove self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt. We agree. We therefore
    reverse the decisions of the superior court and court of appeals and vacate the
    defendant’s conviction because the challenged instruction is legally incorrect and
    impermissibly lightens the prosecution’s burden to disprove self-defense.
    II.   FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS1
    A.     Facts
    Marquinn Jones-Nelson shot and killed Devante Jordan in March 2011.
    Both young men were at a party at the home of an acquaintance. At some point Jordan
    confronted Jones-Nelson in a bedroom, alleging that Jones-Nelson had spread a rumor
    that Jordan was a “snitch.” Jordan then left the bedroom.
    Jones-Nelson later called a friend of Jordan’s into the bedroom and asked
    him to get Jordan. When Jordan returned, he approached Jones-Nelson aggressively;
    Jordan was significantly larger than Jones-Nelson and had previously knocked him
    unconscious in a fight. Accounts of what happened next differed. Jones-Nelson and a
    friend testified at trial that Jordan reached into his waistband for a handgun. Another
    witness testified that he did not see Jordan reach for a gun.
    It is undisputed that Jones-Nelson then pulled out a handgun and shot
    Jordan repeatedly. He disposed of the gun used in the shooting, asked friends to lie
    about his whereabouts, and attempted to secure false identity documents to flee the state.
    1
    The factual details are laid out in greater detail in the court of appeals’
    decision, Jones-Nelson v. State, 
    446 P.3d 797
    , 798-801 (Alaska App. 2019).
    -2-                                      7599
    He was arrested the next day and charged with first-degree murder as well as other
    offenses that are not at issue here.
    B.     Trial
    Jones-Nelson gave notice before trial that he would claim self-defense. At
    the end of the four-week-long trial, the trial court gave the jury three instructions on the
    law of self-defense. The first two, numbered 30 and 31, were pattern instructions that
    described the use of nondeadly force and deadly force in self-defense.2              These
    instructions correctly stated the relevant law.3 The deadly force instruction explained
    that if a person is justified in using nondeadly force in self-defense, the person can also
    use deadly force “when the person reasonably believes the use of deadly force is
    necessary for self-defense.”
    At the prosecution’s request and over Jones-Nelson’s objection, the court
    also gave the following instruction, drafted by the prosecutor:
    A basic tenet of the doctrine of self-defense is that [the] use
    of deadly force is unreasonable . . . if non-deadly force is
    obviously sufficient to avert the threatened harm. Even in
    circumstances when a person is permitted to use deadly force
    in self-defense[,] that person may still not be authorized to
    employ all-out deadly force because such extreme force is not
    necessary to avert the danger.[4]
    2
    See Alaska Pattern Jury Instructions – Crim. 11.81.330 (nondeadly force);
    former Alaska Pattern Jury Instructions – Crim. 11.81.335 (2013) (deadly force).
    3
    See AS 11.81.330, 11.81.335.
    4
    Jones-Nelson, 446 P.3d at 803 (alterations in original).
    -3-                                       7599
    Jones-Nelson’s attorney argued that the instruction was “dicta from
    Walker[5] and it’s from the dissenting opinion in Weston.[6] So . . . I think it’s an
    inaccurate or incorrect statement of the law. It’s not necessary. It’s not a pattern
    instruction . . . .”
    The prosecutor responded, “Counsel hasn’t articulated how it’s incorrect.
    It is dicta from Weston but it is a direct quote from . . . Walker. It is not an incorrect
    statement of the law, and it should be given . . . .”
    The trial court decided to give the instruction. “I’m going to give this. . . .
    [A]nd I’ve given this before. I find that this is a nice, clear statement of the difference
    between . . . deadly and non-deadly force. I find that the . . . pattern instructions . . . are
    a little confusing and this one clarifies them.”
    Neither counsel explicitly discussed the third self-defense instruction in
    their closing arguments, but both devoted time to discussing self-defense. After
    explaining to the jury the requirement that a defendant “reasonably believe” deadly force
    was necessary, the prosecutor argued that the jury had to conclude “that’s the level of
    violence that I am prepared to excuse, forgive, condone, and acquit in the community
    where I live, that’s the standard.” He continued by urging the jurors to “decline the
    invitation to say that the conduct you’ve heard described in this case is reasonable.”
    Jones-Nelson’s attorney then countered the prosecutor’s argument, concluding that his
    client knew “[i]t was either kill or be killed.” In rebuttal, the prosecutor argued that the
    defense was asking the jury to conclude that Jones-Nelson’s actions were “reasonable
    — the level of violence that you would approve of, condone, and vote to acquit . . . —
    5
    State v. Walker, 
    887 P.2d 971
    , 978 (Alaska App. 1994).
    6
    Weston v. State, 
    682 P.2d 1119
    , 1124 (Alaska 1984) (Compton, J.,
    dissenting).
    -4-                                         7599
    in the community where you live.” He continued, telling the jurors, “You can’t make
    that finding. You can’t make that finding. It’s not reasonable . . .” because the level of
    force was not necessary.
    The jury rejected Jones-Nelson’s self-defense claim and convicted him of
    first-degree murder.
    C.     Appeal
    Jones-Nelson raised two issues on appeal but raises only one in his petition
    to us.7 That issue is the self-defense instruction drafted by the prosecutor. Jones-Nelson
    argued before the court of appeals that the instruction erroneously suggested that the jury
    evaluate the use of deadly force retrospectively “to determine whether deadly force was
    in fact objectively necessary, rather than . . . whether the defendant’s use of deadly force
    was reasonable under the circumstances known to the defendant at the time.”8
    The appeals court first agreed with Jones-Nelson that “a defendant may be
    justified in using deadly force (even ‘all-out’ deadly force) if, under the circumstances
    known to the defendant, the defendant reasonably believed that this amount of force was
    necessary — even if it later turns out that this belief was mistaken, and that lesser force
    would have sufficed.”9 It also “agree[d] with Jones-Nelson that the wording of the
    challenged instruction failed to unambiguously recite the concept of ‘reasonableness’
    7
    Jones-Nelson, 446 P.3d at 798-99. In addition to the self-defense issue
    raised here, Jones-Nelson argued (and the State conceded) that the trial court improperly
    prohibited him from eliciting testimony about Jordan’s reputation for violence or past
    acts of violence. Id. The court of appeals held that the error was harmless. Id.
    8
    Id. at 803 (emphasis in original).
    9
    Id. at 803-04.
    -5-                                       7599
    that is central to the law of self-defense.”10 But the court concluded that when the
    instruction “is read in conjunction with the other jury instructions on self-defense, and
    in the context of the parties’ closing arguments . . . , there is little chance that the jurors
    would have been misled on this issue.”11 The court pointed out that neither counsel had
    referred to the instruction in closing arguments and affirmed Jones-Nelson’s
    conviction.12
    In a concurring opinion, Judge Allard commented on “the danger of lifting
    language from appellate court decisions and then asking jurors to interpret and apply this
    language without the benefit of its original context.”13 Addressing the prosecutor’s
    argument that some of the language in the instruction “was, drawn, essentially verbatim,”
    from an instruction the court of appeals had upheld in a previous case, she cautioned,
    “The fact that a jury instruction contains a verbatim quote from one of this Court’s
    decisions does not guarantee that the instruction is an accurate or complete statement of
    the law.”14
    III.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The parties dispute the applicable standard of review. The adequacy of jury
    instructions is generally a legal question, which is reviewed de novo.15 But if a party
    10
    Id. at 803.
    11
    Id. at 803-04.
    12
    Id. at 804.
    13
    Id. at 805 (Allard, J., concurring).
    14
    Id.
    15
    Young v. State, 
    374 P.3d 395
    , 405 (Alaska 2016).
    -6-                                        7599
    fails to preserve the issue for appeal, we review for plain error.16 Jones-Nelson argues
    that he preserved his argument for appeal, while the State argues that Jones-Nelson failed
    to preserve his objection by inadequately explaining his grounds for objecting. We
    review de novo the issue of whether a claim has been preserved for appeal.17 Under the
    de novo review standard, “we exercise our independent judgment.”18 Finally, questions
    of law involving the interpretation of a statute are reviewed by using a sliding scale
    approach where “the plainer the language of the statute, the more convincing the contrary
    legislative history must be.”19
    IV.    DISCUSSION
    Jones-Nelson argues that the court of appeals was wrong to conclude that
    the incorrect jury instruction was harmless. And he argues that the instruction reduced
    the State’s duty to disprove self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt. The State argues
    that the jury instruction correctly stated the law and that any imperfections in the jury
    instruction did not affect the verdict. We agree with Jones-Nelson that the instruction
    erroneously described the law of self-defense, the error was constitutional in nature, and
    the error was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
    A.     Jones-Nelson Preserved His Right To Appeal The Jury Instruction.
    We first decide which standard of review to apply. “To preserve an issue
    for appeal, a party must clearly state the grounds for [the] objection ‘so that the [superior]
    16
    Jordan v. State, 
    420 P.3d 1143
    , 1151 (Alaska 2018).
    17
    Id. at 1148.
    18
    Johnson v. State, 
    328 P.3d 77
    , 81 (Alaska 2014).
    19
    State v. Groppel, 
    433 P.3d 1113
    , 1116 (Alaska 2018) (quoting Alaska
    Airlines, Inc. v. Darrow, 
    403 P.3d 1116
    , 1121-22 (Alaska 2017)).
    -7-                                        7599
    court may intelligently rule upon the objection.’ ”20 The State argues that Jones-Nelson
    failed to clearly state the grounds for his objection. We disagree. We have held that an
    objection was not properly preserved where a party objected to one witness’s testimony
    and relied on that objection to challenge a different witness’s testimony,21 and when a
    party, having been asked by a judge what his grounds were for objecting, failed to
    articulate them.22 But we have also held that a verbal objection was sufficient to
    preserve an objection for appeal even where it “did not articulate the finer points of [a
    party’s] argument on appeal.”23
    Jones-Nelson’s attorney timely objected to the instruction, saying, “[I]t’s
    dicta from Walker and it’s from the dissenting opinion in Weston. So, I mean, it’s . . . an
    inaccurate or incorrect statement of the law. It’s not necessary. It’s not a pattern
    instruction; [I] would ask [it] not be given.” The court heard a response from the State
    before admitting the instruction and moving on to other instructions. Jones-Nelson’s
    attorney was not asked for further explanation or given the opportunity to clarify his
    objection before the superior court ruled. Although Jones-Nelson’s objection could have
    been more detailed, it clearly identified the instruction objected to and indicated
    counsel’s belief that the instruction was an inaccurate statement of the law because it was
    drawn from dicta from one case and a dissent from another.
    20
    Davison v. State, 
    282 P.3d 1262
    , 1267 (Alaska 2012) (alteration in original)
    (quoting Williams v. State, 
    629 P.2d 54
    , 62 (Alaska 1981)).
    21
    Leopold v. State, 
    278 P.3d 286
    , 292-93 (Alaska 2012).
    
    22 Williams, 629
     P.2d at 61-62.
    23
    Davison, 282 P.3d at 1267; see also Manes v. Coats, 
    941 P.2d 120
    , 125 n.4
    (Alaska 1997) (holding objection was preserved where counsel’s “remarks indicate[d]
    counsel’s opposition to the omission, as well as the basis for that opposition,” even
    though objection was “oblique”).
    -8-                                       7599
    In Young v. State, we cautioned that “as long as the instructions actually
    given . . . adequately set forth the applicable law,” trial courts should refrain from giving
    additional instructions drafted by parties “unless [such an instruction] ‘would
    substantially aid the jury in arriving at a just verdict.’ ”24 In addition to objecting to the
    combination of language pulled from dicta in one case and the dissenting opinion in
    another, Jones-Nelson’s attorney argued that the State’s instruction did not correctly state
    the law and was “not a pattern instruction” and “not necessary.”
    Alaska Criminal Rule 30(a)’s test to determine whether an objection is
    sufficient to preserve an issue for appeal is borrowed from cases construing the similar
    provisions of Alaska Civil Rule 51(a).25 The objection must “enable the trial judge to
    avoid error by affording [the judge] an opportunity to correct [the] charge before it goes
    to the jury.”26 An objection is sufficient to preserve an issue “only if the judge is clearly
    made aware of the alleged error in or omission from the instructions. Counsel’s
    objections must be specific enough to clearly bring into focus the precise nature of the
    asserted error.”27
    Jones-Nelson alerted the trial court that there was no need to provide further
    instruction on self-defense beyond the pattern instructions and that there was a danger
    that doing so would be “an inaccurate or incorrect statement of the law” resulting from
    24
    
    374 P.3d 395
    , 428 (Alaska 2016) (alteration omitted) (quoting Robart v.
    State, 
    82 P.3d 787
    , 795 (Alaska App. 2004)).
    25
    Lengele v. State, 
    295 P.3d 931
    , 935 (Alaska App. 2013); see also Saxton
    v. Harris, 
    395 P.2d 71
    , 73 (Alaska 1964) (detailing the civil standard).
    26
    Saxton, 395 P.2d at 73.
    27
    Id. (citing Mitchell v. Knight, 
    394 P.2d 892
     (Alaska 1964)).
    -9-                                        7599
    the way the instruction had been drafted. He sufficiently preserved this issue for appeal.
    We therefore review the jury instruction de novo.28
    B.     The Instruction Incorrectly Directed The Jury To Retroactively Assess
    The Reasonableness Of Jones-Nelson’s Use Of Force.
    Jones-Nelson argues that the instruction improperly directed the jury to
    retroactively assess his use of force. Alaska has codified the common law of self-
    defense. The use of nondeadly force is governed by AS 11.81.330. When a defendant
    uses deadly force as defined in AS 11.81.900(b)(16), the defendant must show that the
    additional requirements of AS 11.81.335 are satisfied.29 A person is entitled to use
    deadly force in self-defense if nondeadly force is justified under AS 11.81.330 and the
    person “reasonably believes the use of deadly force is necessary for self-defense against
    . . . death[,] . . . serious physical injury,” or one of the crimes listed in the statute.30
    Whether such force is necessary must be evaluated based on the
    circumstances as they appeared to the defendant at the time the force was used.31 We
    have recognized that “[d]etached reflection cannot be demanded in the presence of an
    uplifted knife.”32 For that reason, “[e]ven if the defendant’s fear turns out to have been
    mistaken, [self-defense] still may be established if the defendant proves that, under the
    28
    Jordan v. State, 
    420 P.3d 1143
    , 1152 (Alaska 2018).
    29
    See Ha v. State, 
    892 P.2d 184
    , 190 (Alaska App. 1995).
    30
    AS 11.81.335(a).
    31
    McCracken v. State, 
    914 P.2d 893
    , 898 (Alaska App. 1996) (citing Weston
    v. State, 
    682 P.2d 1119
    , 1121 (Alaska 1984)).
    32
    Weston, 682 P.2d at 1121-22 (alteration in original) (quoting Brown v.
    United States, 
    256 U.S. 335
    , 343 (1921)).
    -10-                                         7599
    circumstances, he or she reasonably feared imminent deadly attack at the hand of the
    victim.”33
    Once a defendant has introduced “some evidence” placing self-defense at
    issue, the State has the burden of disproving the defense beyond a reasonable doubt.34
    The burden upon a defendant to place self-defense at issue is thus significantly less than
    the prosecution’s resulting obligation to disprove it in order to convict the defendant of
    an offense.
    In this case, the first two self-defense instructions were pattern instructions
    presenting the jury with the definitions of nondeadly and then deadly force.35 The
    pattern instructions closely tracked the statutory language.36 The third instruction,
    number 34, was drafted by the prosecutor. In a 2006 article written “by a prosecutor for
    prosecutors . . . [from] a prosecutorial focus,”37 the prosecutor addressed “the daunting
    task of disproving self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt.”38 Among the topics
    explored in the article was the use of excessive force.39
    33
    McCracken, 
    914 P.2d at 898
    .
    34
    Morrell v. State, 
    216 P.3d 574
    , 577-78 (Alaska App. 2009).
    35
    See Alaska Pattern Jury Instructions – Crim. 11.81.330 (nondeadly force);
    former Alaska Pattern Jury Instructions – Crim. 11.81.335 (2013) (deadly force).
    36
    Instruction 30 corresponds to AS 11.81.330, which governs use of
    nondeadly force in self-defense. Instruction 31 corresponds to AS 11.81.335, which
    governs use of deadly force in self-defense.
    37
    James Fayette, “If You Knew Him Like I Did, You’d Have Shot Him,
    Too . . .” A Survey of Alaska’s Law of Self-Defense, 23 ALASKA L. REV. 171, 174 (2006).
    38
    Id. at 233.
    39
    Id. at 202-03.
    -11-                                       7599
    The article correctly stated that because the use of force in self-defense is
    permitted only “when and to the extent” necessary, it is possible that a defendant’s use
    of force could become excessive at some point.40 The article then offered the following
    advice: “When faced with an excessive force scenario, a court could find useful
    language in Justice Matthews’s Weston opinion and Judge Mannheimer’s Walker
    opinion, and from these two could craft a useful ‘excessive force’ instruction.”41 What
    followed was a three-sentence jury instruction, the last two sentences of which are
    identical to Instruction 34:
    A basic tenet of the doctrine of self-defense is that use of
    deadly force is unreasonable if non-deadly force is obviously
    sufficient to avert the threatened harm.             Even in
    circumstances when a person is permitted to use deadly force
    in self-defense, that person may still not be authorized to
    employ all-out deadly force because such extreme force is not
    necessary to avert the danger.[42]
    The court of appeals concluded that the error in Instruction 34 was that “the
    wording . . . failed to unambiguously recite the concept of ‘reasonableness’ that is central
    to the law of self-defense.”43 The court observed that the question before the jury “is not
    whether a defendant’s use of force, and the level of force used, was necessary in
    hindsight (or, using the language of the challenged instruction, whether some lesser
    amount of force can now be seen to be ‘obviously sufficient to avert the threatened
    40
    Id. at 202.
    41
    Id. at 203.
    42
    Id.
    43
    Jones-Nelson v. State, 
    446 P.3d 797
    , 803 (Alaska App. 2019).
    -12-                                       7599
    harm’).”44 We agree. Because the instruction implied that reasonableness could be
    assessed in hindsight, the instruction was in error.
    C.     The Instruction Erroneously Distinguished Between Deadly And “All-
    Out Deadly” Force.
    Jones-Nelson also argues that the instruction improperly distinguished
    between deadly force and “all-out deadly force” or “extreme force.” The second
    sentence of the instruction directed that “[e]ven in circumstances when a person is
    permitted to use deadly force in self-defense[,] that person may still not be authorized to
    employ all-out deadly force because such extreme force is not necessary to avert the
    danger.”45 The instruction is derived from language in State v. Walker.46 Jones-Nelson
    contends that language was taken out of context and was “quite specific to the facts of
    that case.” The court of appeals rejected this argument, noting that the “instruction
    correctly captured the concept that the defendant’s use of force must be proportionate to
    the perceived danger.”47
    Alaska law permits the use of deadly force “when and to the extent the
    person reasonably believes the use of deadly force is necessary.”48 The State argues that
    this “when and to the extent” language requires courts to distinguish not only between
    deadly and nondeadly force, but also between different degrees of deadly force.49 In
    44
    
    Id.
    45
    
    Id.
     (second alteration in original) (emphasis added).
    46
    
    887 P.2d 971
    , 978 (Alaska App. 1994).
    47
    Jones-Nelson, 446 P.3d at 803.
    48
    AS 11.81.335(a) (emphasis added).
    49
    The State concedes that defendants are not required to “use the least amount
    (continued...)
    -13-                                      7599
    addition to Walker, the State bases its argument on the common law principle of
    proportionality. We have not previously addressed whether the “when and to the extent”
    language in AS 11.81.335(a) requires a defendant authorized to use deadly force to
    distinguish between different degrees of deadly force. We hold that it does not.
    Alaska’s law of self-defense is contained in a pair of interlocking statutes.
    The first, AS 11.81.330, sets out the general principles authorizing the use of nondeadly
    force: “A person is justified in using nondeadly force upon another when and to the
    extent the person reasonably believes it is necessary for self-defense against what the
    person reasonably believes to be the use of unlawful force by the other person,” unless
    a specified exception applies.50 Alaska Statute 11.81.335(a) provides for the use of
    deadly force in self-defense: “[A] person who is justified in using nondeadly force in
    self-defense under AS 11.81.330 may use deadly force in self-defense . . . when and to
    the extent the person reasonably believes the use of deadly force is necessary for self-
    defense against (1) death; [or] (2) serious physical injury . . . .”51 Both statutes require
    that the person using force in self-defense reasonably believe that the force is necessary
    and that the person reasonably believe that the other person is using unlawful force. The
    plain language of both statutes makes clear that if either of these beliefs is unreasonable
    at the time the person uses force in self-defense, then the use of force in self-defense is
    not permitted. Nothing in the plain language of AS 11.85.335(a) even implies an
    49
    (...continued)
    of force possible” but argues that a reviewing court must consider “how closely the
    defendant’s use of force corresponds with the minimum force necessary to meet the
    threat.”
    50
    AS 11.81.330 (emphasis added).
    51
    AS 11.81.335(a) (emphasis added).
    -14-                                       7599
    additional reasonable belief about the level of deadly force necessary to defend against
    death or serious physical injury.
    Although the dissent asserts that our decision removes a “proportionality”
    requirement in Alaska’s law of self-defense which implies levels of deadly force, its
    discussion actually supports the premise that the use of any force in self-defense is
    justified only when necessary.52 State v. Walker presented a similar scenario. Although
    the trial judge ruled the verdicts inconsistent after the jury acquitted Walker of stabbing
    one man in the arm but convicted him for stabbing a second man repeatedly in the back,
    the jury found Walker’s second use of deadly force was not necessary for self-defense.53
    Jones-Nelson’s case also raises the question of the necessity of firing shots at Jordan
    after he fled the room, but that issue has nothing to do with the degree of force Jones-
    Nelson used.54
    52
    Dissent at 42-47. Our interpretation of the “to the extent necessary”
    language is temporal — deadly force is not justified after its use for self-defense has
    ended. The dissent, in contrast, interprets it to mean that only a proportionally necessary
    amount of deadly force can be justified, using the example of a police officer continuing
    a choke-hold after subduing a subject. But neither interpretation would allow an officer
    to continue using deadly force against a subdued subject.
    53
    State v. Walker, 
    887 P.2d 971
    , 976-77 (Alaska App. 1994).
    54
    The dissent refers to statutes governing the use of force by police officers
    against suspects and by parents against children to argue that the self-defense statutes
    contain an element of proportionality. See Dissent at 42-45 (first citing AS 11.81.370;
    and then citing AS 11.81.430(a)(1)). Those different statutory schemes address different
    policy concerns and explicitly incorporate the concept of proportionality; the self-defense
    statutes do not. Compare AS 12.25.070 (limiting an arresting officer or person to
    “necessary and proper” force (emphasis added)), and AS 11.81.430 (limiting parents to
    “reasonable and appropriate nondeadly force” (emphasis added)), with AS 11.81.335
    (permitting the use of deadly force “when and to the extent the person reasonably
    believes the use of deadly force is necessary”).
    -15-                                      7599
    The legislative history of these statutes indicates that the legislature meant
    the “when and to the extent” language to refer to a binary distinction between deadly and
    nondeadly force.55 The commentary to the Tentative Draft for the Alaska Criminal Code
    Revision of 1977 refers to the language of both AS 11.81.330 and AS 11.81.335, which
    the tentative draft had originally merged into a single provision.56 While the draft
    mentions both levels and degrees of force, the commentary portrays “deadly force” as
    a singular degree or level of force.57 It uses the term “level” to explain the dichotomy
    between deadly and nondeadly force. “The use of force is classified according to
    whether it is ‘physical force’ or, a special level of physical force: ‘deadly physical
    55
    The dissent argues that AS 11.81.900(b)(16)’s definition of “deadly force”
    mandates consideration of varying degrees of deadly force when deciding whether
    deadly force was justified because the definition “includes intentionally . . . pointing a
    firearm in the direction of another person . . . and intentionally placing another person
    in fear of imminent serious physical injury by means of a dangerous instrument[.]” But
    this language was added two years after the self-defense statutes were enacted. Ch. 102,
    §§ 29-32, SLA 1980. To reduce the possibility that threatening deadly force would
    “tragically escalate a conflict, the legislature concluded that only peace officers making
    an arrest should have the authority to threaten deadly force in situations where the actual
    use of deadly force was not justified.” Comment. & Sectional Analysis on the
    Amendments to Alaska’s Revised Crim. Code, S. Journal Supp. No. 44 at 20, 1980 S.
    Journal (May 29, 1980).
    The definition of “deadly force” in AS 11.81.900(b)(16) does not
    differentiate these examples by degree of deadliness; rather, it lists them all because they
    are all deadly. Including varying degrees of deadliness within the statutory definition of
    “deadly force” confirms the binary distinction between nondeadly and deadly force.
    56
    Alaska Criminal Code Revision Part II, at 39 (Tent. Draft 1977) (hereinafter
    Tentative Draft).
    57
    Id. at 45-47.
    -16-                                       7599
    force.’ ”58 The commentary mentions “situations in which any degree of force may be
    appropriate including deadly force.”59 Even the commentary’s explication of the “when
    and to the extent . . . necessary” language suggests a split between deadly and nondeadly
    force, rather than a spectrum of degrees of deadly force:
    Any use of force is justifiable only “when and to the extent
    [the person claiming the defense] reasonably believes it
    necessary.” Therefore, even though the use of “deadly
    physical force” may be authorized in a particular section, it is
    not justified if the person claiming the defense believed at
    that time that he could accomplish his purpose by the use of
    non-deadly force.[60]
    The commentary explains “to what degree a person is justified in using physical force
    against another in self-defense” by saying, “Subject to the limitations on the use of
    deadly physical force, [a person] may exercise that degree of force which he reasonably
    believes to be necessary.”61
    58
    Id. at 45.
    59
    Id. at 47.
    60
    Id. at 48 (first alteration in original) (emphasis added). The State claims
    that the staff counsel for the revision commission acknowledged that the “when and to
    the extent” language reflects a proportionality requirement, but the article it cites merely
    echoes the passages quoted in this paragraph. For instance, staff counsel wrote that
    because of the “when and to the extent” language, use of deadly force “will not be
    justified if [the claimant] believed at the time that he could have accomplished his
    purpose by the use of ‘non-deadly physical force’ ” and that “where the [claimant]
    believes a verbal request would be adequate, even ‘non-deadly physical force’ may not
    be used or threatened.” See Barry Jeffrey Stern, The Proposed Alaska Revised Criminal
    Code, 7 UCLA ALASKA L. REV. 1, 26 (1977).
    61
    Tentative Draft, at 51 (emphasis added).
    -17-                                       7599
    There is little support for the State’s argument that common law principles
    of proportionality require a distinction between different degrees of deadly force.62 In
    Rowe v. United States, the United States Supreme Court held that a defendant wielding
    deadly force in self-defense had no duty to “so carefully aim[] his pistol as to paralyze
    the arm of his assailant, without more seriously wounding him.”63 Many courts have
    applied general principles of proportionality to self-defense without distinguishing
    between subcategories of deadly force.64
    We have adopted the United States Supreme Court’s view that “[d]etached
    reflection cannot be demanded in the presence of an uplifted knife.”65 We agree with the
    Court’s observation that a person justified in using deadly force need not “consider
    whether a reasonable man might not think it possible to fly with safety or to disable his
    62
    But see Rajnic v. State, 
    664 A.2d 432
    , 435-36 (Md. App. 1995) (holding
    that evidence was sufficient for jury to conclude that appellant did not reasonably believe
    he was in danger of death or serious bodily harm or that he used excessive force);
    Fersner v. United States, 
    482 A.2d 387
    , 393 (D.C. 1984) (interpreting jury instruction
    defining deadly force as force “likely to cause death or serious bodily harm” to mean
    there are “degrees of deadly force”).
    63
    
    164 U.S. 546
    , 558 (1896).
    64
    See, e.g., State v. Etienne, 
    35 A.3d 523
    , 537 (N.H. 2011) (applying common
    law principles of proportionality to require “reasonable necessity to justify the use of
    deadly force” absent explicit statutory language to that effect); State v. Walden, 
    932 P.2d 1237
    , 1240 (Wash. 1997) (en banc) (approving portion of jury instruction explaining that
    defendant “has no right to repel a threatened assault” with deadly force when he does not
    have reasonable grounds to believe he “is in imminent danger of death or great bodily
    harm” (emphasis omitted)); State v. Rader, 186 P.79, 85-86 (Or. 1919) (making no
    distinctions between different forms of deadly force); Geralds v. State, 
    647 N.E.2d 369
    ,
    373 (Ind. App. 1995) (holding that defendant’s use of deadly force was “excessive in the
    face of [the victim’s] obvious retreat and lack of aggression towards him”).
    65
    Weston v. State, 
    682 P.2d 1119
    , 1121-22 (Alaska 1984) (alteration in
    original) (quoting Brown v. United States, 
    256 U.S. 335
    , 343 (1921)).
    -18-                                      7599
    assailant rather than to kill him.”66 Legislative history and the common law do not
    support the State’s argument that AS 11.81.335(a) distinguishes between regular and
    “all-out” deadly force. The State concedes that a defendant “faced with a knife-wielding
    assailant” need not “analyze each [defensive] option and decide which would best do the
    defensive job while minimizing the harm to one’s assailant, at risk of getting stabbed . . .
    while pondering the options.” But distinguishing between ordinary deadly force and
    “all-out deadly force” would require defendants to do just that.
    The Walker decision from which the jury instruction was drawn involved
    an unusual context; the defendant in Walker claimed self-defense against one victim who
    was stabbed in the arm and one who was stabbed in the back.67 But to the extent Walker
    stands for the proposition that there are different levels of deadly force, it misstates
    Alaska law. Alaska law recognizes only two categories of force: nondeadly and deadly.
    It is a binary choice: either the force used is deadly or it is not. The instruction implies
    that there is an additional distinction — that there can be more or less deadly versions
    of deadly force. This is legal error.
    D.     The Jury Instruction Was Not Harmless Error.
    The court of appeals held that the error of including Instruction 34 was
    harmless, reasoning that “when the supplemental instruction is read in conjunction with
    the other jury instructions . . . and in the context of the parties’ closing arguments . . .
    66
    Brown, 
    256 U.S. at 343
    .
    67
    State v. Walker, 
    887 P.2d 971
    , 976 (Alaska App. 1994).
    -19­                                       7599
    there is little chance that the jurors would have been misled on this issue.”68 We
    disagree.
    Where an error is not structural,69 the defendant must show that the error
    was prejudicial to obtain relief.70 If the error is a constitutional violation, it “will always
    affect substantial rights and will be prejudicial unless the State proves that it was
    harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.”71 Errors undermining the State’s burden to prove
    68
    Jones-Nelson v. State, 
    446 P.3d 797
    , 803-04 (Alaska App. 2019). The
    court of appeals held the jury instruction was harmless because “there [was] little chance
    that the jurors would have been misled on this issue.” 
    Id.
     But the court’s analysis itself
    was mistaken: it should have analyzed whether the error was “harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt.” See Adams v. State, 
    261 P.3d 758
    , 771 (Alaska 2011) (explaining
    harmless beyond a reasonable doubt standard is used to analyze constitutional
    violations).
    69
    Jones-Nelson implies that the jury instruction may constitute structural
    error, which is not subject to harmlessness review. See Jordan v. State, 
    420 P.3d 1143
    ,
    1148 (Alaska 2018) (“Structural errors require automatic reversal and a new trial.”).
    Jones-Nelson only hints at this argument in his briefing and does not discuss the factors
    considered when deciding whether to classify an error as structural. See 
    id.
     (listing “ ‘the
    difficulty of assessing the effect of the error’ and . . . other factors, including fundamental
    fairness and whether harmlessness is irrelevant under the circumstances” as factors to be
    considered when determining whether error is structural). We consider this argument
    waived due to inadequate briefing by Jones-Nelson. See Windel v. Carnahan, 
    379 P.3d 971
    , 980 (Alaska 2016) (holding argument was waived where it was “given only a
    cursory statement in the argument portion of [the] brief” (quoting Burts v. Burts, 
    266 P.3d 337
    , 344 (Alaska 2011))).
    70
    See Young v. State, 
    374 P.3d 395
    , 429-30 (Alaska 2016) (holding that
    failure to give requested jury instruction was harmless error).
    71
    Khan v. State, 
    278 P.3d 893
    , 900 (Alaska 2012) (emphasis omitted)
    (quoting Adams, 261 P.3d at 773).
    -20-                                        7599
    its case beyond a reasonable doubt are constitutional errors.72 We have previously
    applied the constitutional error standard to errors that limited a defendant’s evidence and
    argument.73 We agree with the court of appeals that jury instructions erroneously
    defining an offense’s or affirmative defense’s elements in a way that eases the State’s
    burden of proof are constitutional error.74 In this case, the erroneous instruction
    lightened the State’s burden to disprove self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt.
    Therefore the error was constitutional and the State has the burden of proving that the
    error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
    Jones-Nelson argues that Instruction 34 was prejudicial because it could
    have led the jury to “weigh whether, in hindsight, the force and degree of force Jones-
    Nelson used was actually necessary,” or to conclude that Jones-Nelson was barred from
    claiming self-defense because “he could have exercised other, less violent options.”
    (Emphasis added.) The State argues that the instruction was not prejudicial because
    “Jones-Nelson’s version of events was highly implausible” when considered against the
    evidence and because any error was cured by counsel’s statements in closing arguments.
    The State argues the jury most likely rejected Jones-Nelson’s self-defense
    claim because Jones-Nelson did not sincerely believe he was in danger of death or
    serious bodily injury. If that were the case, the erroneous instruction would not have
    affected the jury’s verdict, because the jury would have rejected Jones-Nelson’s self-
    defense claim “at a higher level on the decision tree.” The State argues that Jones­
    72
    Adams v. State, 
    440 P.3d 337
    , 344-45 (Alaska App. 2019), abrogated on
    other grounds by Phornsavanh v. State, 
    481 P.3d 1145
    , 1159-60 (Alaska App. 2021).
    73
    Smithart v. State, 
    988 P.2d 583
    , 589 (Alaska 1999).
    74
    See, e.g., Adams, 440 P.3d at 344-45; Brown v. State, 
    698 P.2d 671
    , 673
    (Alaska App. 1985); Coney v. State, 
    699 P.2d 899
    , 904 (Alaska App. 1985)
    (disapproving instruction that reduced prosecution’s burden of proof).
    -21-                                      7599
    Nelson’s self-defense claim was “completely implausible” for several reasons. First, the
    State argues that it is implausible that Jones-Nelson could have seen Jordan reach for a
    silver gun and in the same moment taken a black gun off a window ledge, turned back
    to Jordan, and shot him, all before Jordan could get off a single shot. Even though this
    version of events may seem unlikely, the jury is the arbiter of credibility and Jones­
    Nelson’s testimony on this point did not stand alone. It was corroborated by another
    witness’s testimony that Jones-Nelson shot after Jordan reached for a silver gun while
    moving threateningly toward Jones-Nelson and that Jones-Nelson then picked up the
    silver gun and carried it away. This version of events was also corroborated by the
    physical evidence of both a black gun and a silver gun recovered in the case and by
    another witness’s testimony that she saw Jones-Nelson with a silver gun the night of the
    shooting. While deliberating, the jury requested to re-hear testimony “regarding the
    silver gun,” so the jury appeared to at least consider the possibility that Jones-Nelson’s
    story was true.
    Second, the State points out that Jones-Nelson’s actions after the shooting
    show consciousness of guilt. The State points to evidence that Jones-Nelson lied and
    asked others to lie about his whereabouts, sought false identity papers to flee the state,
    and had a friend dispose of the gun used in the shooting. The State points out that
    “courts have recognized that flight and suppression of evidence are probative of a
    defendant’s lack of . . . belief that their crime was justified as self-defense.” But, as the
    court of appeals has recognized, “[t]here are . . . many reasons why a person might flee
    a crime scene, and consciousness of guilt is only one potential reason.”75 The jury could
    have agreed with the State that Jones-Nelson’s actions after the shooting were probative
    75
    Wilkerson v. State, 
    271 P.3d 471
    , 475 (Alaska App. 2012).
    -22-                                       7599
    of a guilty conscience, but it could also have concluded that Jones-Nelson feared the
    police or retaliation from Jordan’s associates even if he had acted in self-defense.
    Third, the State argues that Jones-Nelson’s story is inconsistent with his
    statements after the shooting, including a statement that he had “smoked” Jordan. In a
    recorded call with a friend, Jones-Nelson implied that he shot Jordan because Jordan
    “disrespected” him and because Jordan was a “snitch.” On the same call, Jones-Nelson
    said, “[Jordan] came at me disrespectful, like, he towering over me,” and that “he came
    at me like he wanted to box” so “I just popped him point blank right there.” Although
    this evidence strongly supported the State’s version of events, it is not inconceivable that
    the jury could have viewed these statements as after-the-fact posturing to a woman
    Jones-Nelson was trying to impress. When cross-examined about the statements, Jones-
    Nelson explained, “I like her . . . . I don’t want her to know I’m really scared like that,
    you know what I’m saying?” Pressed further, he stated that he was on drugs at the time
    and “on the phone venting” to “a female I’ve been talking to.” While Jones-Nelson’s
    statements in the phone call are strong evidence against him, the jury could still
    reasonably have interpreted them differently than the State suggests.
    The State also argues that any harm from Instruction 34 was cured by
    arguments of counsel, namely the prosecutor’s explanation of the objective
    reasonableness standard during closing argument. The court of appeals has “repeatedly
    held that [closing arguments] can cure flaws or omissions in the jury instructions.”76
    Jones-Nelson counters that precedent from the court of appeals establishes only that
    closing arguments can cure flaws in jury instructions if they correct those flaws directly.
    76
    Buckwalter v. State, 
    23 P.3d 81
    , 87 (Alaska App. 2001).
    -23-                                        7599
    In this case, Jones-Nelson contends, the prosecutor’s arguments actually compounded
    the instruction’s defects.77
    The State did concede that reasonable belief must be assessed from the
    defendant’s point of view. But the prosecutor also invited jurors to assess reasonableness
    from a removed perspective, saying that a defendant’s belief being reasonable means “[a]
    reasonable person would do exactly what [the defendant] did.” Further, the prosecutor
    argued that Jones-Nelson’s behavior was not reasonable because it “doesn’t reflect
    community standards.” He also argued that finding Jones-Nelson had acted in self-
    defense would be equivalent to saying, “[T]hat’s the level of violence that I am prepared
    to excuse, forgive, condone, and acquit in the community where I live.” In rebuttal, the
    prosecutor reiterated that finding Jones-Nelson acted in self-defense required the jury to
    conclude that his actions were “the level of violence that you would approve of.” This
    is not what the law requires.
    The prosecutor’s argument also compounded the erroneous instruction that
    “all-out” deadly force is not authorized even if deadly force is. The law does not require
    that deadly force used in self-defense be a “level of violence that [a juror] would approve
    of.” By tying the permitted level of deadly force to community standards rather than
    what the defendant reasonably believed was necessary, the prosecutor invited the jury
    to approve only certain “levels” of deadly force. And he told the jury, “[Y]ou need not
    77
    Jones-Nelson also argues in his reply brief that it is “impossible to square”
    case law holding that defective jury instructions can be cured by closing arguments with
    case law holding that jurors are presumed to follow jury instructions and with the court’s
    instruction that the jury must “follow the court’s instructions and not the arguments of
    counsel.” See Pralle v. Milwicz, 
    324 P.3d 286
    , 289 (Alaska 2014) (“We presume that
    a jury follows the court’s instructions”). Because Jones-Nelson first raised this argument
    in his reply brief, the argument is waived and we do not consider it. State v. Parker, 
    147 P.3d 690
    , 698 (Alaska 2006) (“[W]e do not consider arguments raised for the first time
    in a reply brief.”).
    -24-                                       7599
    be unanimous about why self-defense does not [apply]. Six of you could say force is
    excessive. Six of you could say not reasonable, and so forth. Doesn’t matter.” This
    suggests that even if deadly force were reasonable, the jury could still reject the self-
    defense claim if they thought the degree of deadly force was excessive. Far from curing
    the instruction, this argument exacerbated it.
    Nor is the erroneous instruction cured by the use of Instructions 30 and 31,
    which correctly stated the law of self-defense. The jury could have been confused about
    the reasonableness standard even in light of these correct instructions. And Instructions
    30 and 31 did nothing to correct Instruction 34’s “all-out deadly force” language.
    The State has failed to show that the erroneous instruction was harmless
    beyond a reasonable doubt. Therefore, we reverse the court of appeals’ holding that the
    error was harmless.
    V.    CONCLUSION
    We REVERSE the court of appeals’ decision that the erroneous jury
    instruction was harmless error.      Accordingly, we VACATE the conviction and
    REMAND the case to the superior court for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    -25-                                     7599
    BORGHESAN, Justice, concurring.
    I join the vast majority of the court’s opinion and disagree only with one
    aspect of the court’s harmless error analysis. Although true that Jury Instruction 34
    “failed to unambiguously recite the concept of ‘reasonableness’ that is central to the law
    of self-defense,”1 I believe this error is harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. It is hard
    to see how the jury could have failed to consider whether using deadly force was
    reasonable from Jones-Nelson’s perspective: jury instructions must be read as a whole;2
    the preceding jury instructions explained that the jury must decide whether the defendant
    reasonably believed deadly force was necessary; and we presume that the jury follows
    the instructions as written.3 But because I agree with the court’s reasoning that the error
    concerning the degree of force permitted is not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, I
    agree with its ultimate conclusion to reverse the judgment.
    1
    Jones-Nelson v. State, 
    446 P.3d 797
    , 803 (Alaska App. 2019).
    2
    Geisinger v. State, 
    498 P.3d 92
    , 111 (Alaska App. 2021) (“[A] claim of
    error relating to jury instructions must be evaluated by reference to the content of the
    instructions as a whole.”).
    3
    Coffin v. State, 
    425 P.3d 172
    , 175 (Alaska App. 2018) (“As a general
    matter, jurors are presumed to follow the instructions that they are given . . . .”).
    -26-                                      7599
    BOLGER, Chief Justice, dissenting.
    The vital question raised by the court’s opinion is whether a person who
    uses deadly force in self-defense is authorized to kill his attacker when killing is not
    reasonably necessary. The court’s opinion concludes that such force may be justified
    even if it is unnecessary, reasoning that the self-defense statute does “not” require “a
    defendant authorized to use deadly force to distinguish between different degrees of
    deadly force”1 and that “[n]othing in the plain language of [the self-defense statute] even
    implies an additional reasonable belief about the level of deadly force necessary to
    defend against death or serious physical injury.”2
    I disagree with these conclusions. Throughout the justification statutes, the
    legislature consistently limits the use of force “to the extent” the defendant reasonably
    believes it is necessary. This language prevents a defendant from using excessive force
    in a variety of circumstances when the use of lesser force may be justified. The drafters
    specifically intended to follow our prior case law to avoid the implication that an
    unnecessary homicide could be justified as self-defense. Our courts have thus previously
    interpreted these statutes to require the use of force to be reasonably proportionate to the
    perceived threat.
    A.     Background
    As noted in the court’s opinion, Jones-Nelson shot Devante Jordan after a
    confrontation in the bedroom of an apartment during a party.3 The prosecution also
    presented strong evidence that Jones-Nelson continued to shoot Jordan in the back as he
    was trying to flee. One tenant, Nikita Sanders, testified that Jones-Nelson followed
    1
    Slip Op. at 14.
    2
    Slip Op. at 14-15.
    3
    Slip Op. at 2.
    -27-                                       7599
    Jordan out of the bedroom and shot him four times in the back as he ran into the kitchen.
    On cross-examination, Jones-Nelson agreed with the prosecutor’s suggestion that he
    “fired shots at a man who was running away from [him], who had dropped his own gun,
    and who was yelling for help.” Another witness testified that Jones-Nelson admitted to
    him that, after Jordan began to run away, Jones-Nelson ran behind him and shot him five
    more times. And the photographs from Jordan’s autopsy showed that he had indeed been
    shot four times in the back.
    At the end of the trial, the prosecution proposed an instruction to deal with
    this evidence:
    A basic tenet of the doctrine of self-defense is that use
    of deadly force is unreasonable, if non-deadly force is
    obviously sufficient to avert the threatened harm. Even in
    circumstances when a person is permitted to use deadly force
    in self-defense that person may still not be authorized to
    employ all-out deadly force because such extreme force is not
    necessary to avert the danger.
    The proposed instruction noted that the first sentence was drawn from the dissenting
    opinion in Weston v. State4 and that the second sentence was drawn from Walker v.
    State.5
    Jones-Nelson’s attorney objected to this instruction, stating, “[I]t’s dicta
    from Walker and it’s from the dissenting opinion in Weston. So . . . I think it’s an
    inaccurate or incorrect statement of the law. It’s not necessary. It’s not a pattern
    instruction . . . .”
    4
    
    682 P.2d 1119
    , 1124 (Alaska 1984) (Compton, J., dissenting).
    5
    
    887 P.2d 971
    , 978 (Alaska App. 1994).
    -28­                                      7599
    In response, the prosecutor disagreed and explained the reason for his
    request,
    Counsel hasn’t articulated how it’s incorrect. It is dicta from
    Weston but it is a direct quote from what Judge Mannheimer
    wrote in Walker. It is not an incorrect statement of the law,
    and it should be given, particularly in a case here where one
    of the themes is excessive force and shooting an unarmed
    man in the back as he ran away.
    (Emphasis added.) Defense counsel did reply to the prosecutor’s argument, but he did
    not clarify his objection or offer any explanation about why the instruction was legally
    incorrect. Defense counsel simply replied that the instruction may have come from an
    Arizona case. The trial judge overruled the objection, observing that he had given the
    instruction before, and gave the instruction to the jury.
    B.     Jones-Nelson Did Not Preserve These Issues For Appeal.
    Alaska Criminal Rule 30(a) requires counsel to make a specific objection
    to preserve a dispute over a jury instruction: “No party may assign as error any portion
    of the charge or omission therefrom unless the party objects thereto before the jury
    retires to consider its verdict, stating distinctly the matter to which the party objects and
    the grounds of the objections.”6 We have construed this language to require counsel to
    state the specific legal grounds for such an objection:
    The purpose of this rule is to enable the trial judge to avoid
    error by affording him an opportunity to correct his charge
    before it goes to the jury. The dictates of the rule are satisfied
    only if the judge is clearly made aware of the alleged error in
    or omission from the instructions. Counsel’s objections must
    6
    Alaska R. Cr. P. 30(a) (emphasis added). Alaska Civil Rule 51(a) contains
    nearly identical language.
    -29-                                       7599
    be specific enough to clearly bring into focus the precise
    nature of the asserted error.[7]
    For example, in Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Aurora Air Service, Inc.,
    the appellant made only a general objection to the instructions on tortious interference
    with contract.8 We concluded that a general objection that did not state specific legal
    grounds was insufficient to preserve any issue for appeal.9 In Roderer v. Dash, the
    appellant made a similar general objection to an instruction recognizing that a physician
    is required to maintain treatment records, stating, “[J]ust for the record, I object to the
    whole instruction.”10 We declined to review the instruction because of the lack of a
    specific objection.11
    Similarly in this case, Jones-Nelson made only a general objection to the
    instruction, stating, “I think it’s an inaccurate or incorrect statement of the law.” Under
    our case law, this objection was insufficient to preserve these issues for appeal.
    The court’s opinion relies on two other parts of Jones-Nelson’s objection,
    but neither part would be sufficient to alert the superior court to any specific error.12 The
    court first relies on counsel’s statement that the instruction was “dicta from Walker and
    it’s from the dissenting opinion in Weston.” But many of our jury instructions are drawn
    7
    Saxton v. Harris, 
    395 P.2d 71
    , 73 (Alaska 1964).
    8
    
    604 P.2d 1090
    , 1094-95 (Alaska 1979).
    9
    Id.; see also 9C CHARLES ALAN WRIGHT & ARTHUR R. MILLER, FEDERAL
    PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE § 2554, at 80-81 (3d ed. 2008) (stating “the case law is quite
    clear; a general objection stating no grounds is insufficient to satisfy the requirement of
    Rule 51(c)(1)”).
    10
    
    233 P.3d 1101
    , 1110 (Alaska 2010).
    11
    
    Id.
    12
    Slip Op. at 8-9.
    -30-                                       7599
    from case law, so simply repeating the source of the text did not tell the trial judge
    anything about why the instruction was legally incorrect. And there was likewise
    nothing in counsel’s objection to suggest that the combination of these two statements
    was misleading. The court of appeals had previously approved a single jury instruction
    containing the same combination of text from these two cases.13
    The court’s opinion also relies on counsel’s statement that the instruction
    was “not necessary” and “not a pattern instruction.”14 Again, this objection told the
    superior court nothing about why the instruction was legally incorrect. The Preface to
    the Alaska Criminal Pattern Jury Instructions makes it clear that the pattern instructions
    are not legally binding: “These instructions are not submitted for approval to nor
    adopted by the Alaska Supreme Court. Rather the instructions . . . are offered as a basis
    for trial judges and practitioners to tailor instructions for a particular case.”15
    The court’s opinion quotes Young v. State to support the argument that this
    objection was sufficient.16 But the quote from Young says nothing about pattern
    instructions; it only refers to the “instructions actually given” by the court.17 In Young,
    the superior court rejected a jury instruction on eyewitness identification requested by
    the defendant, concluding that this issue was adequately addressed by the pattern jury
    instructions regarding the credibility of witnesses generally and the State’s burden of
    13
    Wilkerson v. State, 
    271 P.3d 471
    , 474-75 (Alaska App. 2012).
    14
    Slip Op. at 8-9.
    15
    Alaska Court System, Alaska Pattern Jury Instructions – Crim. Preface
    (2011).
    16
    Slip Op. at 9 (quoting Young v. State, 
    374 P.3d 395
    , 428 (Alaska 2016)).
    17
    Young, 374 P.3d at 428.
    -31-                                      7599
    proof.18 But we held that the pattern instructions were inadequate and that the superior
    court erred when it failed to give a specific jury instruction on the reliability of
    eyewitness identifications.19 Young supports the proposition that it may be insufficient
    for the trial court to rely on the pattern instructions when additional explanation is
    needed. Therefore, Jones-Nelson’s argument that Instruction 34 was “not a pattern
    instruction” did not give the trial court any indication why the instruction was incorrect.
    There was nothing in Jones-Nelson’s objection that identified a specific
    legal error as required by court rule. If this objection is deemed sufficient, then the rule
    will no longer require a litigant to state the specific grounds supporting an objection. A
    trial attorney with a losing case may simply argue that the opponent’s proposals are
    “legally incorrect” or “not pattern instructions” without advising the trial judge about
    why they are wrong or how they can be fixed. Then these Easter eggs can be uncovered
    during appeal to reverse the loss and require a second trial.
    There is another reason Jones-Nelson’s “objections” were inadequate. On
    appeal, an appellant may only rely on the specific reasons for an objection that were
    raised in the trial court: “the reason for appealing an instruction cannot be ‘entirely
    different’ from the objection raised before the trial court.”20
    The court’s opinion identifies two portions of Jones-Nelson’s objection that
    are deemed sufficient: that this instruction was based on a combination of prior case law
    18
    Id. at 403.
    19
    Id. at 428-29.
    20
    ASRC Energy Servs. Power & Commc’ns, LLC v. Golden Valley Elec.
    Ass’n, Inc., 
    267 P.3d 1151
    , 1160 (Alaska 2011) (quoting Van Huff v. Sohio Alaska
    Petrol. Co., 
    835 P.2d 1181
    , 1187 (Alaska 1992)); see also Chilcote v. State, 
    471 P.3d 599
    , 603 (Alaska App. 2020) (declining review of an issue not raised in the trial court).
    -32-                                       7599
    and that the instruction was not a pattern instruction.21 But these are not the issues
    Jones-Nelson raises on appeal. On appeal Jones-Nelson argues that this instruction was
    improperly retroactive and that there is no limit on the extent of force a person may use
    to repel a serious attack. There was nothing in Jones-Nelson’s objection that would alert
    the superior court to these issues. Jones-Nelson did not preserve the issues the court’s
    opinion addresses because he did not raise them in a way that could be recognized and
    addressed by the superior court.
    C.     The Instruction Was Not Improperly Retroactive.
    The instruction in question addressed the use of deadly force in
    self-defense, a defense that is governed by statute:
    [A] person who is justified in using nondeadly force in
    self-defense . . . may use deadly force in self-defense upon
    another person when and to the extent the person reasonably
    believes the use of deadly force is necessary for self-defense
    against
    (1) death;
    (2) serious physical injury;
    (3) kidnapping; [or other serious crimes].[22]
    Under this statute, “a defendant must satisfy both an objective and subjective standard;
    he must have actually believed deadly force was necessary to protect himself, and his
    belief must be one that a reasonable person would have held under the circumstances.”23
    21
    Slip Op. at 8-10.
    22
    AS 11.81.335(a).
    23
    Weston v. State, 
    682 P.2d 1119
    , 1121 (Alaska 1984).
    -33-                                   7599
    Applying the objective standard, the question for the jury is “whether a reasonable
    person would have acted in self-defense under the circumstances.”24
    In this case, the instructions on self-defense are included in a section of the
    written instructions describing all of the charges and defenses that applied to
    Jones-Nelson and his codefendant Parrish Harris. Instructions 17-23 detail the elements
    of each of the charges the jury was required to consider. Immediately following the
    elements of the charges, Instructions 24-29 define and explain the terms used in those
    elements. For example, Instruction 25 explains that “[m]otive is not an element of the
    crime charged.” And Instruction 27 defines the term “intentionally,” a term that is used
    in the elements of first-degree murder in Instruction 17.
    The instructions on self-defense follow the same pattern. Instructions 30
    and 31 define the elements that justify the use of nondeadly force and deadly force in
    self-defense. Instruction 32 explains that the term “reasonably believes” that is used in
    the self-defense instructions “refers to the reasonable belief of a sober person.”
    Instruction 33 explains which charges the self-defense instructions apply to. And
    Instruction 34 returns to an explanation of reasonableness, beginning with the
    explanation that “use of deadly force is unreasonable, if non-deadly force is obviously
    sufficient to avert the threatened harm.”
    The court’s opinion adopts the court of appeals’ conclusion that Instruction
    34 is improperly retroactive.25 But there is no basis for this conclusion in the text of this
    instruction. This instruction applies the same temporal perspective as all of the other
    instructions on the charges and defenses. Each of these instructions is phrased in the
    present tense, requiring the jury to apply the stated legal standards to the defendant’s
    24
    
    Id.
    25
    Slip Op. at 12-13.
    -34-                                       7599
    mental state, conduct, and the other circumstances of the charged offense. For example,
    Instruction 30 advises the jury that “[a] person is justified in using nondeadly force upon
    another when and to the extent the person reasonably believes it is necessary for
    self-defense.” Telling the jury that “use of deadly force is unreasonable, if non-deadly
    force is obviously sufficient” merely requires the jury to apply the same approach to a
    slightly different legal requirement. There is nothing in the wording of this instruction
    that suggests that the jury should apply this instruction to anything other than the
    circumstances as they existed at the time of the charged offenses. And since a self-
    defense claim must be both sincere and reasonable it was no error for the instructions to
    clarify those requirements separately.
    Our focus should be on “whether the instructions given, when read as a
    whole, adequately inform the jury of the relevant law.”26 Here, the instructions made it
    clear that the reasonableness of the defendant’s reaction to a threat must be judged from
    his perspective. Instruction 30 states, “A person is justified in using nondeadly force
    upon another when and to the extent the person reasonably believes it is necessary for
    self-defense against what the person reasonably believes to be the use of unlawful force
    by the other person . . . .” (Emphasis added.) Instruction 31 allows the use of deadly
    force “when the person reasonably believes the use of deadly force is necessary for self-
    defense.” (Emphasis added.) Instruction 32 explains the term “reasonably believes” as
    used in these previous instructions. And Instruction 34 begins with a sentence describing
    when the use of deadly force is “unreasonable.” Anyone hearing or reading these
    instructions one after another would understand that Instruction 34 (just like Instruction
    32) is an explanation of the requirement of reasonableness stated in Instructions 30 and
    26
    Gov’t Emps. Ins. Co. v. Gonzalez, 
    403 P.3d 1153
    , 1161 n.22 (Alaska 2017)
    (quoting City of Hooper Bay v. Bunyan, 
    359 P.3d 972
    , 978 (Alaska 2015)).
    -35-                                      7599
    31. I agree with the court of appeals’ conclusion that the proper perspective is clear from
    these instructions when they are read as a whole.27
    D.     The Self-Defense Statute Places A Reasonable Limit On The
    Justifiable Extent Of Deadly Force.
    “Statutory interpretation . . . begins with the plain meaning of the statute’s
    text.”28 We presume that “the legislature intended every word, sentence, or provision
    of a statute to have some purpose, force, and effect, and that no words or provisions are
    superfluous.”29 In this case, the self-defense statutes were part of a set of justification
    provisions enacted in a comprehensive revision of the criminal code in 1978.30 We
    should therefore construe the terms used in these statutes together.31
    These justification statutes refer to the use of “force,” which includes both
    “deadly and non-deadly force.”32 There is a broad range of severity for either type of
    force. At a minimum, “force” includes “any bodily impact, restraint, or confinement or
    27
    Jones-Nelson v. State, 
    446 P.3d 797
    , 803-04 (Alaska App. 2019)
    (concluding that “when the supplemental instruction is read in conjunction with the other
    jury instructions on self-defense, and in the context of the parties’ closing arguments at
    Jones-Nelson’s trial, there is little chance that the jurors would have been misled on this
    issue”).
    28
    Ward v. State, Dep’t of Pub. Safety, 
    288 P.3d 94
    , 98 (Alaska 2012).
    29
    Nelson v. Mun. of Anchorage, 
    267 P.3d 636
    , 642 (Alaska 2011) (quoting
    Mech. Contractors of Alaska, Inc. v. State, Dep’t of Pub. Safety, 
    91 P.3d 240
    , 248
    (Alaska 2004)).
    30
    See ch. 166, § 10, SLA 1978.
    31
    Bullock v. State, Dep’t of Cmty. & Reg’l Affs., 
    19 P.3d 1209
    , 1214-15
    (Alaska 2001) (stating that we construe “statutes in pari materia where two statutes were
    enacted at the same time, or deal with the same subject matter” (quoting Underwater
    Constr., Inc. v. Shirley, 
    884 P.2d 150
    , 155 (Alaska 1994))).
    32
    AS 11.81.900(b)(28).
    -36-                                       7599
    the threat of any bodily impact, restraint, or confinement.”33 And “deadly force” is
    likewise defined quite broadly:
    “[D]eadly force” means force that the person uses with the
    intent of causing, or uses under circumstances that the person
    knows create a substantial risk of causing, death or serious
    physical injury; “deadly force” includes intentionally
    discharging or pointing a firearm in the direction of another
    person or in the direction in which another person is believed
    to be and intentionally placing another person in fear of
    imminent serious physical injury by means of a dangerous
    instrument[.][34]
    So “deadly force” is not necessarily lethal. Intentionally pointing a gun at someone or
    intentionally threatening to shoot someone are both examples of “deadly force,” even if
    no shots are fired.35
    The broad extent of these definitions undercuts the court’s assumption that
    there can be no varying degrees of force. As we have recognized previously, “Even
    someone lawfully refusing to retreat cannot meet a light push or grab with a knockout
    33
    
    Id.
    34
    AS 11.81.900(b)(16).
    35
    The court’s opinion misinterprets the commentary that applies to the 1980
    amendment to this statutory definition. Slip Op. at 16 n.55. The commentary explains
    that when the legislature adopted AS 11.81.370 in 1978 (ch. 166, § 10, SLA 1978), “the
    legislature concluded that only peace officers making an arrest should have the authority
    to threaten deadly force in situations where the actual use of deadly force was not
    justified.” Comment. & Sectional Analysis on the Amendments to Alaska’s Revised
    Crim. Code, S. Journal Supp. No. 44 at 20, 1980 S. Journal (May 29, 1980). Although
    AS 11.81.370 thus implied that “nondeadly force does not include a threat of deadly
    force,” the 1980 legislature decided to amend the statute to clarify that the definition of
    “deadly force” includes these threats. Id. In any event, it is the current version of this
    definition that applies to the justification statutes that we interpret in this case.
    -37-                                      7599
    blow.”36 And this also holds true for deadly force; the consequences of holding a
    wrongdoer at gunpoint are much less serious than shooting him until he is dead.
    The justification statutes allow a person to use force in a variety of
    situations: in self-defense,37 to defend another person,38 in defense of property,39 in
    making an arrest,40 or to prevent an escape.41 Parents may use force to promote the
    welfare of a child;42 a schoolteacher or a bus driver may use force to maintain order.43
    But there is a similar limit on every justifiable use of force: a person may use force only
    “when and to the extent the person reasonably believes” the use of force is “necessary.”44
    The Alaska Criminal Code Revision Subcommission recommended this
    language in part to correct a problem with the former justifiable homicide statute. Before
    the code revision, this statute appeared to justify any homicide committed to prevent a
    felony or to arrest a felony suspect.45 We had noted that “[t]his statute on its face seems
    36
    Dennis Q. v. Monika M., No. S-15084, 
    2014 WL 1888270
    , at *6 (Alaska
    May 7, 2014).
    37
    AS 11.81.330-.335.
    38
    AS 11.81.340.
    39
    AS 11.81.350.
    40
    AS 11.81.370-.390.
    41
    
    Id.
    42
    AS 11.81.430(a)(1).
    43
    AS 11.81.430(a)(2).
    44
    AS 11.81.330-.400; see also AS 11.81.430(a) (authorizing force in specific
    circumstances “[w]hen and to the extent reasonably necessary and appropriate”).
    45
    Former AS 11.15.100 (1970) provided:
    (continued...)
    -38-                                      7599
    to eliminate the requirement that the killing be necessary to effect the arrest or to prevent
    the felony.”46 We therefore adopted the Oregon interpretation of this statute, requiring
    a finding of necessity before such a killing could be justified.47 Our decision also
    recognized the fundamental difficulty with allowing an unlimited right of self-defense:
    The control of man’s destructive and aggressive impulses is
    one of the great unsolved problems of our society. Our rules
    of law should discourage the unnecessary use of physical
    force between man and man. Any rule which promotes rather
    than inhibits violence should be re-examined.[48]
    Seven years later, the subcommission adopted this reasoning for its recommendations,
    noting that “while the existing statute seems to provide an unchecked grant of authority
    45
    (...continued)
    Justifiable homicide. The killing of a human being is
    justifiable when committed by any person
    (1) to prevent the commission of a felony upon him, or upon
    his husband, wife, parent, child, master, mistress, or servant;
    (2) to prevent the commission of a felony upon his property,
    or upon property in his possession, or upon or in a dwelling
    house where he may be;
    (3) in the attempt, by lawful means, to arrest a person who
    has committed a felony, or in the lawful attempt to suppress
    a riot or preserve the peace.
    46
    Gray v. State, 
    463 P.2d 897
    , 908 n.16 (Alaska 1970).
    47
    
    Id.
    48
    
    Id. at 909
     (quoting Miller v. State, 
    462 P.2d 421
    , 426 (Alaska 1969)).
    -39-                                       7599
    to use deadly physical force in self-defense, that authority is significantly limited by the
    implied requirement of ‘necessity’ found by the Supreme Court.”49
    The subcommission also noted that the justifiable homicide statute “might
    lead a person to believe that he may kill another to prevent the commission of any felony
    upon his property.”50 The subcommission therefore recommended the legislature limit
    the use of deadly force in property defense to the most dangerous property crimes: arson
    or burglary of an occupied building.51            But even in those circumstances the
    subcommission maintained “the requirement that the force is ‘reasonably believed
    necessary’ to accomplish the prevention or termination” of the crime.52
    Despite these explanations, the court’s opinion concludes that the
    subcommission was recommending that there should be no limit on the degree of force
    a person can use to respond to one of the statutory threats.53 But this is a misreading of
    this commentary; overall the subcommission recommended a consistent requirement that
    the extent of the force must be necessary. For example, the subcommission concluded
    its introduction to this chapter with an emphasis on the necessity requirement:
    Any use of force is justifiable only “when and to the
    extent [the person claiming the defense] reasonably believes
    it necessary.” Therefore, even though the use of “deadly
    physical force” may be authorized in a particular section, it is
    not justified if the person claiming the defense believed at
    49
    Alaska Criminal Code Revision Part II, at 50 (Tentative Draft 1977),
    [hereinafter Tentative Draft].
    50
    Id. at 54.
    51
    Id. at 56-57.
    52
    Id. at 57.
    53
    Slip Op. at 13-19.
    -40-                                       7599
    that time that he could accomplish his purpose by the use of
    non-deadly force.[54]
    The court’s opinion concludes that this language “suggests a split between deadly and
    nondeadly force, rather than a spectrum of degrees of deadly force.”55 But this reading
    unnecessarily eliminates the subcommission’s recommendation that the use of any force
    (including deadly physical force) is justifiable only “to the extent” the force is
    necessary.56
    A better reading of this quoted text preserves all of the language of the
    subcommission’s proposal. The first sentence states the general rule that limits the extent
    of any use of force (even deadly force), and the second sentence states an example
    showing when the use of excessive force is obviously unjustified. Just as the jury was
    instructed in this case, the “use of deadly force is unreasonable, if non-deadly force is
    obviously sufficient to avert the threatened harm.”
    The subcommission also specifically discussed “to what degree a person
    is justified in using physical force against another in self-defense.”57
    Subsection (a) allows a person to defend himself from
    what he reasonably believes to be the use or imminent use of
    unlawful physical force. Subject to the limitations on the use
    of deadly physical force, he may exercise that degree of force
    which he reasonably believes to be necessary.[58]
    54
    Tentative Draft, at 48 (alteration in original).
    55
    Slip Op. at 17.
    56
    Tentative Draft, at 39.
    57
    Id. at 51.
    58
    Id.
    -41-                                     7599
    Again the court’s opinion concludes that the second sentence of this quote eliminates any
    requirement that the extent of any self-defense must be limited by necessity.59
    But the second sentence of this quote does not support this construction.
    The second sentence recognizes two limitations on the use of force in self-defense. The
    use of force is “subject to the limitations on the use of deadly physical force” which are
    later explained to include defending against deadly force, a kidnapping, a robbery, or a
    forcible sexual assault.60 But the limitation on the extent of justifiable force applies to
    all self-defense situations: the defendant may exercise only “that degree of force which
    he reasonably believes to be necessary.”
    We may consider legislative history to construe a statute, but “[t]he plainer
    the statutory language is, the more convincing the evidence of contrary legislative
    purpose or intent must be.”61 Here there is nothing in the revision subcommission’s draft
    or its commentary that is inconsistent with the comprehensive statutory requirement that,
    to be justified, force must be no greater than the extent reasonably necessary to respond
    to a threat.
    As noted above, the subcommission’s recommendation for a reasonable
    necessity requirement was eventually included in each section of the justification
    statutes. So it may help to consider how this requirement works in various scenarios.
    For example, one section allows a peace officer to use deadly force to make an arrest of
    59
    Slip Op. at 16-17.
    60
    Tentative Draft, at 52.
    61
    State, Dep’t of Com., Cmty. & Econ. Dev., Div. of Ins. v. Alyeska Pipeline
    Serv. Co., 
    262 P.3d 593
    , 597 (Alaska 2011) (quoting Gov’t Emps. Ins. Co. v.
    Graham-Gonzalez, 
    107 P.3d 279
    , 284 (Alaska 2005)).
    -42-                                      7599
    a person who has committed a felony involving the use of force.62 Suppose that an
    officer is able to catch and subdue such a suspect by using a chokehold. Can the officer
    continue to strangle the suspect until his heart stops beating? The answer is no because
    the officer may use deadly force “only when and to the extent the officer reasonably
    believes the use of deadly force is necessary to make the arrest.”63
    The court’s opinion appears to agree that the duration of the officer’s
    chokehold is limited by the language that allows the use of deadly force only “when
    necessary.”64 This interpretation gives vitality to the first limitation required by the
    statute.
    But there is a second important limitation in the statute: the officer may use
    deadly force only “to the extent the officer reasonably believes the use of deadly force
    is necessary.”65 Since there is no statutory definition of the word “extent,” it must be
    construed “according to [its] common and approved usage.”66 At the time of this
    legislation, the word “extent” was defined as “[a]mount; scope; range; magnitude.”67
    This second limitation therefore requires that the officer must reasonably believe that the
    amount or magnitude of the force he uses is necessary to make the arrest.
    62
    AS 11.81.370(a)(1).
    63
    AS 11.81.370(a). This limitation is consistent with a statute, first enacted
    in 1962, ch. 34, § 2.08, SLA 1962, providing that “[a] peace officer or private person
    may not subject a person arrested to greater restraint than is necessary and proper for the
    arrest and detention of the person.” AS 12.25.070.
    64
    Slip Op. at 15.
    65
    AS 11.81.370(a).
    66
    AS 01.10.040(a).
    67
    Extent, Black’s Law Dictionary (5th ed. 1979).
    -43-                                       7599
    The court’s opinion interprets this second limitation to be only “temporal”
    — deadly force is not justified after the necessity has ended.68 But there is nothing in
    the text of the statute, the legislative history, or the common usage of this term to suggest
    such a narrow definition. And the court’s interpretation makes the limitation on the
    “extent” of the force into a limit on the timing and duration of the force — the same
    limitation as the language requiring the force to be used only “when” necessary. The
    court’s interpretation thus violates the presumption that “the legislature intended every
    word, sentence, or provision of a statute to have some purpose, force, and effect, and that
    no words or provisions are superfluous.”69
    We can modify the forgoing example to isolate the importance of this
    second limitation on the amount or magnitude of justifiable force. As noted, a peace
    office may use deadly force to make an arrest of a person who has committed a felony
    involving the use of force against a person.70 Suppose that the officer believes that he
    can restrain a fleeing suspect using a minimal amount of deadly force: he must draw his
    service revolver and shout, “Stop or I will shoot!” Instead of restraining the suspect, can
    the officer simply shoot the suspect in the back without a warning? The answer is no
    because the officer may use deadly force “only . . . to the extent the officer reasonably
    believes the use of deadly force is necessary to make the arrest.”71
    68
    Slip Op. at 15 n.52.
    69
    Nelson v. Mun. of Anchorage, 
    267 P.3d 636
    , 642 (Alaska 2011) (quoting
    Mech. Contractors of Alaska, Inc. v. State, Dep’t of Pub. Safety, 
    91 P.3d 240
    , 248
    (Alaska 2004)).
    70
    AS 11.81.370(a)(1).
    71
    AS 11.81.370(a).
    -44-                                       7599
    Another section of the justification statutes allows a parent or guardian to
    use force to promote the welfare of a child.72 Suppose a parent decides to give a child
    a spanking as punishment for misconduct. Can the parent give the child a violent
    beating? The answer is no because the parent may use force only “[w]hen and to the
    extent reasonably necessary and appropriate to promote the welfare of the child.”73
    The text of this child welfare section is slightly different than the other
    justification statutes, but the same reasoning applies. The justification statutes limit both
    the timing and the magnitude of justifiable force. Just as the magnitude of a parent’s
    discipline is limited “to the extent necessary and appropriate,” the magnitude of deadly
    force is limited to the extent necessary to make an arrest or to repel an attack.
    The court of appeals has interpreted the self-defense statutes consistently
    with the statutory limitations on the extent of justifiable force. One example is a case
    where the court of appeals used the language that became the second sentence of
    Instruction No. 34. In State v. Walker, a defendant was charged with assault for
    stabbing two men with a knife during a fight that broke out at a party.74 At trial, Walker
    claimed self-defense.75 He was convicted of stabbing one man three times in the back,
    but acquitted of stabbing another man a single time in the arm.76 The superior court
    granted Walker’s motion for a new trial, reasoning that these two verdicts were
    72
    AS 11.81.430(a)(1).
    73
    
    Id.
    74
    
    887 P.2d 971
    , 976 (Alaska App. 1994).
    75
    
    Id.
    76
    
    Id.
    -45-                                       7599
    inconsistent, since both victims were involved with Walker in the same brief melee.77
    But the court of appeals reversed.
    The court of appeals recognized that the common law allowed force in
    self-defense only “to the extent necessary” to respond to the danger, the same limitation
    expressed in the Alaska justification statutes.78 The court concluded that Walker’s jury
    may have reasoned that the circumstances required Walker to stab one man in the arm,
    but that stabbing the other man three times in the back “was not necessary and was
    therefore not legally justified.”79 The court explained its decision with the same
    language that the superior court used for the instruction in this case: “even in
    circumstances when a person is permitted to use deadly force in self-defense . . . that
    person may still not be authorized to employ all-out deadly force because such extreme
    force is not necessary to avert the danger.”80
    The Walker decision demonstrates the need for a proportionality instruction
    in a case like this one. If the jury chose to believe Jones-Nelson, then it may have
    concluded that his initial shot was justified. But the jury could also conclude that it was
    unnecessary for Jones-Nelson to shoot Jordan four times in the back as he was running
    away.
    77
    
    Id. at 976-77
    .
    78
    
    Id.
     at 978 (citing 2 PAUL H. ROBINSON, CRIMINAL LAW DEFENSES § 131(c),
    at 77 (1984)).
    79
    Id.
    80
    Id. The court’s opinion suggests that this result was required by the timing
    of the attacks on Walker’s two victims. Slip Op. at 15. But the court of appeals did not
    specify which victim was stabbed first, and the trial judge indicated the stabbings all
    happened “in the space of approximately one second.” Walker, 
    887 P.2d at 977
    . The
    court of appeals reasoned that the jury may have returned different verdicts based on the
    relative “severity” of the two attacks. 
    Id. at 978
    .
    -46-                                      7599
    The recent decision in Ledbetter v. State shows another example of this
    proportionality requirement.81 Ledbetter testified that he stabbed another man during a
    fight when the man began to strangle him, and that “he deliberately chose to stab [the
    man] in the leg, rather than another part of the body, because he ‘wanted to make [him]
    let go’ but ‘didn’t want to kill the guy.’ ”82 In response, the prosecutor argued that
    Ledbetter’s intentions were irrelevant because Ledbetter’s asserted “right to stab” was
    the same as a “right to kill.”83 The court of appeals reversed Ledbetter’s conviction
    based on this statement and other misleading arguments, noting that in Alaska, “the
    person’s use of force must be proportionate to the perceived danger.”84
    In summary, when the legislature adopted the justification statutes, it
    included in every section the revision subcommission’s recommendation that justifiable
    force is limited to the extent necessary to respond to dangerous circumstances. The
    subcommission included this language in part to incorporate our decision that the
    common law required that a killing must be necessary before a homicide can be
    justifiable. Subsequent decisions have promoted this goal by consistently applying the
    statutory language that requires the use of force to be proportionate to the perceived
    danger. We should continue to recognize this limitation to follow the legislature’s intent
    and to mitigate the harsh consequences of an unlimited right of self-defense.
    81
    
    482 P.3d 1033
     (Alaska App. 2021).
    82
    Id. at 1035-36.
    83
    Id. at 1036.
    84
    Id. This court has likewise recognized that “domestic violence self-defense
    claims are ‘subject to the necessity and proportionality requirements that apply to all
    other self-defense claims involving non-deadly force.’ ” See Sarah D. v. John D., 
    352 P.3d 419
    , 432 n.50 (Alaska 2015) (quoting Dennis Q. v. Monika M., No. S-15084, 
    2014 WL 1888270
    , at *6 (Alaska May 7, 2014)).
    -47-                                      7599