Alvarez-Perdomo v. State , 425 P.3d 221 ( 2018 )


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    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    PAINO MANUEL ALVAREZ-PERDOMO,
    Court of Appeals No. A-12060
    Appellant,               Trial Court No. 3AN-12-8080 CR
    v.
    O P I N I O N
    STATE OF ALASKA,
    Appellee.                    No. 2604 — June 22, 2018
    Appeal from the Superior Court, Third Judicial District,
    Anchorage, Michael L. Wolverton, Judge.
    Appearances: Marjorie A. Mock, Anchorage, under contract
    with the Public Defender Agency, and Quinlan Steiner, Public
    Defender, Anchorage, for the Appellant. Donald Soderstrom,
    Assistant Attorney General, Office of Criminal Appeals,
    Anchorage, and Jahna Lindemuth, Attorney General, Juneau, for
    the Appellee.
    Before: Mannheimer, Chief Judge, Allard, Judge, and Suddock,
    Superior Court Judge. *
    Judge MANNHEIMER.
    *
    Sitting by assignment made pursuant to Article IV, Section 16 of the Alaska
    Constitution and Administrative Rule 24(d).
    Paino Manuel Alvarez-Perdomo was convicted of first-degree assault for
    shooting his mother in the side, and also third-degree weapons misconduct for being a
    felon in possession of a concealable firearm.
    Alvarez-Perdomo appeals his convictions, arguing that the trial judge
    forced him to testify at his trial, thus violating his constitutional right not to be compelled
    to incriminate himself. We agree that the trial judge committed error by forcing Alvarez-
    Perdomo to take the stand when he never clearly stated that he wished to testify.
    However, we conclude that, given the facts of Alvarez-Perdomo’s case, this error was
    harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, and we therefore affirm Alvarez-Perdomo’s
    convictions.
    Underlying facts
    On the afternoon of August 8, 2012, Alvarez-Perdomo called his mother,
    Altagracia Guillen, and asked if she would come over to his apartment. When Guillen
    arrived, Alvarez-Perdomo answered the door, but he remained inside the apartment and
    Guillen remained outside the door. According to Guillen’s later testimony, Alvarez-
    Perdomo was holding his right hand behind his back, and “his eyes looked sad”. Guillen
    thought that something was not quite right, and she decided not to enter the apartment.
    Guillen then heard a loud noise, as if a weapon of some kind had been fired.
    She later told the police and medical personnel that she felt something hit her in the
    abdomen, although she did not immediately feel any pain. Guillen then started running
    away from her son’s apartment, through a parking lot. As Guillen was running through
    the parking lot, she heard another gunshot. She finally reached a nearby restaurant,
    where she stopped to seek help and to call her daughter. By this time, Guillen was
    bleeding profusely, and an ambulance was summoned.
    –2–                                          2604
    The police soon responded to the scene, and they could see that Guillen was
    wounded and bleeding. When Guillen was asked what happened, she replied that her
    son had just shot her.
    A later medical examination revealed that Guillen had suffered a through-
    and-through gunshot wound to her lower abdomen. She was lucky: somehow the bullet
    had passed through her body without hitting any major organs.
    The police went to Alvarez-Perdomo’s apartment, and Alvarez-Perdomo
    surrendered to the police without incident. As soon as the police entered the apartment,
    they could smell the odor of a recently fired gun, and they found a revolver in Alvarez­
    Perdomo’s bedroom. This revolver contained five cartridges — two of which had been
    fired.
    Based on this evidence, Alvarez-Perdomo was convicted of first-degree
    assault (for shooting his mother) and third-degree weapons misconduct (for being a felon
    in possession of a concealable firearm).
    The issue presented in this appeal arose toward the end of Alvarez­
    Perdomo’s trial, when his attorney announced that he did not intend to present a defense
    case.     Under the rule established in LaVigne v. State, 1 the defense attorney’s
    announcement triggered the trial judge’s obligation to question Alvarez-Perdomo
    personally — to make sure that Alvarez-Perdomo understood that he had the right to
    testify at his trial, and that the decision whether to testify lay solely with him, regardless
    of his defense attorney’s wishes.
    This LaVigne inquiry began with the trial judge explaining (actually, re­
    explaining) that Alvarez-Perdomo had the right to testify or the right to remain silent, and
    that this was Alvarez-Perdomo’s personal decision. But when the judge asked Alvarez­
    1
    
    812 P.2d 217
    (Alaska 1991).
    –3–                                          2604
    Perdomo whether he had decided to remain silent, Alvarez-Perdomo did not offer a
    definite answer:
    The Court: Mr. Alvarez-Perdomo, you might
    remember that, at the beginning of the trial, I talked to you
    about the issue of whether you would or would not testify.
    And ... I want to emphasize again that, by talking to you
    about your decision, I don’t mean to suggest that I think you
    should do one thing or another. I just need to make sure,
    once again, that you understand what your rights are in this
    area.
    As I told you before, this jury has been instructed that
    ... you have an absolute right to remain silent. And if you
    choose to remain silent, the jury may not discuss that matter.
    They can’t hold it against you or consider it in any way. And
    your attorney ... has advised me that you have chosen to not
    testify. Is that correct?
    Alvarez-Perdomo: I think so.
    The Court: All right. Do you know so?
    Alvarez-Perdomo: I don’t know.
    The Court: All right. [To the defense attorney] You
    need some more time to talk to him?
    Defense Attorney: Apparently, Your Honor. If I could
    have a few moments.
    When court reconvened, Alvarez-Perdomo’s defense attorney informed the
    judge that he had counseled Alvarez-Perdomo to refrain from testifying, since it appeared
    that there was nothing to be gained through his testimony. However, the defense
    –4–                                       2604
    attorney also informed the judge that Alvarez-Perdomo “resent[ed] the fact” that the
    defense attorney kept telling him that this decision was up to him (i.e., up to Alvarez-
    Perdomo). Apparently, Alvarez-Perdomo believed that it was part of the defense
    attorney’s duty (as his legal representative) to make this decision for him.
    When the judge asked Alvarez-Perdomo whether he needed still more time
    to discuss this matter with his attorney, Alvarez-Perdomo gave a rambling, non-
    responsive answer:
    Alvarez-Perdomo: I don’t know. No, because the
    paperwork — they have been givingme the documents, [and]
    I do not understand them. They are — they just say I am
    guilty, I am guilty. And I don’t know why they want to —
    they want to make me guilty about strange things.
    At this point, the judge called another recess so that Alvarez-Perdomo could again confer
    with his attorney.
    When court reconvened, the defense attorney apprised the judge of his
    renewed conversation with his client:
    Defense Attorney: Your Honor, I’ve spoken with
    Mr. Alvarez-Perdomo, and ... I indicated my advice was not
    to testify. He indicated he agreed with that advice. [But] I
    think I understand his position: he’s frustrated that I keep
    asking him the same question, and that I’m not protecting
    him in [the] courtroom, and just [keep] putting him on the
    spot with the judge. I don’t know if the Court’s obligation
    [under LaVigne] can be satisfied on my representation, but he
    has indicated to me that he accepts my advice not to testify.
    And I think, because he has an absolute right not to testify,
    even though we can’t stop him from testifying if he’d like to,
    [that] unless he [affirmatively] indicates right now that he
    wants to testify, or that I’m misrepresenting [his position],
    –5–                                       2604
    I think that we’re legally sound to proceed without his
    testimony.
    After hearingthe defense attorney’s explanation, the judge repeatedly asked
    Alvarez-Perdomo if it was correct (1) that he had spoken with his attorney, and (2) that
    his attorney had advised him not to testify. Alvarez-Perdomo would not answer the
    judge’s questions.
    When the judge pressed Alvarez-Perdomo for an answer, Alvarez-Perdomo
    eventually said that he remembered speaking to his attorney, but that he did not
    remember what they had talked about. Alvarez-Perdomo then commenced a long
    monologue about the conditions at the jail.
    When Alvarez-Perdomo finished, the judge again directed his attention to
    the matter of whether he would testify at his trial:
    The Court: [Your attorney] has told you he does not
    think you should testify, correct?
    Alvarez-Perdomo: Yes, that is what he has been
    telling me.
    The Court: Do you want to accept this advice?
    Alvarez-Perdomo: No.
    The Court: So do you want to testify?
    Alvarez-Perdomo: It seems so. I don’t know. I am
    not a lawyer.
    At this point, the judge said, “All right,” and he then directed a judicial
    services officer to escort Alvarez-Perdomo to the witness stand.
    –6–                                      2604
    After Alvarez-Perdomo was seated in the witness stand, the judge and
    Alvarez-Perdomo had the following conversation:
    The Court: Mr. Alvarez-Perdomo, are you ready to
    testify to the jury?
    Alvarez-Perdomo: Is the Court asking me?
    The Court: Yes.
    Alvarez-Perdomo: No.
    The Court: Are you ready to testify to the jury?
    Alvarez-Perdomo: Are we ready?
    The Court: When the jury comes in. Okay.
    Alvarez-Perdomo: Let’s go. Let’s go.
    The Court: We’ll bring the jury panel in.
    Alvarez-Perdomo: I don’t know have your time. [sic]
    The Court: I’m sorry?
    Alvarez-Perdomo: I don’t know have your time. [sic]
    The Court: I don’t understand.
    Alvarez-Perdomo: I do not speak English. Let’s keep
    going because I’m getting cold.
    The Court: All right.
    –7–                              2604
    At this point, the defense attorney interjected that he was worried about
    what the judge was doing, because Alvarez-Perdomo’s initial answer to the question,
    “Are you ready to testify?” was “No”. Based on that initial answer, the defense attorney
    expressed concern that Alvarez-Perdomo was, in fact, not willing to testify. The judge
    responded, “I didn’t sense that.”
    The judge then addressed Alvarez-Perdomo, explainingthe procedures that
    would be followed when the jury was summoned back to the courtroom: “You’re going
    to stand, raise your right hand, and be sworn by Madam Clerk. ... And then you’re
    going to have a seat, [and your attorney] will ask you questions.” When the judge asked
    Alvarez-Perdomo if he understood, Alvarez-Perdomo answered, “Okay, that’s fine.”
    The jury was then brought back to the courtroom, and Alvarez-Perdomo
    gave his testimony. His direct examination was fairly brief, and his cross-examination
    was even briefer. Here are the relevant questions and answers:
    Defense Attorney: [Mr. Alvarez], where’d you live on
    August 8th, 2012?
    Alvarez-Perdomo: In Alaska.
    Defense Attorney: Okay. Did you live at 615 West
    45th?
    Alvarez-Perdomo: Anchorage.
    Defense Attorney: Okay. So 615 West 45th in
    Anchorage. Is that fair to say?
    Alvarez-Perdomo: I don’t know.
    Defense Attorney: Okay. Is your mother Altagracia
    Guillen?
    –8–                                       2604
    Alvarez-Perdomo: I don’t know.
    Defense Attorney: Did you see Ms. Guillen — well,
    do you know who Ms. Guillen is?
    Alvarez-Perdomo: No.
    Defense Attorney: Well, then, I think this is probably
    pretty easy. Did you shoot Altagracia Guillen on August 8th,
    2012?
    Alvarez-Perdomo: I am not — the thing is, I am not an
    assassin. I am not an assassin. I am not, you know, this
    kind of guy. I don’t know how to say it in Spanish. [sic:
    “English”]
    Defense Attorney: Do you want to try saying it in
    English?
    Alvarez-Perdomo: I do not speak English.
    Defense Attorney: Okay.
    Alvarez-Perdomo: I am Dominican.
    Defense Attorney: Okay; all right. Thank you, Mr.
    Alvarez.
    The Court: [to the prosecutor] Cross-examination.
    Prosecutor: Good morning, sir. Why did you shoot
    your mom?
    [Defense attorney’s objection overruled]
    –9–                                 2604
    Alvarez-Perdomo: I don’t know what is it that you are
    asking me. I don’t know. He’s saying Altagracia Guillen,
    and what is it that you want to ask me?
    Prosecutor: Okay. You see your mother here in court,
    right? Why did you shoot her?
    [Defense attorney’s objection overruled]
    Alvarez-Perdomo: I do not know that lady.
    Prosecutor: Okay. Thank you. I have no further
    questions.
    Following deliberations, the jury found Alvarez-Perdomo guilty of both
    first-degree assault (recklessly causing serious physical injury to another person by
    means of a dangerous instrument) and third-degree weapons misconduct (felon in
    possession of a concealable firearm). 2
    The trial judge committed error when he had Alvarez-Perdomo take the
    stand and testify
    In LaVigne v. State, 3 the Alaska Supreme Court established the procedural
    rule that, whenever the attorney representing a criminal defendant announces that the
    defense intends to rest without presenting the defendant’s testimony, the trial judge must
    personally address the defendant to make sure the defendant understands (1) that they
    have the right to testify, and (2) that the decision whether to testify rests solely with the
    defendant, regardless of their defense attorney’s advice or wishes.
    2
    AS 11.41.200(a)(1) and AS 11.61.200(a)(1), respectively.
    3
    
    812 P.2d 217
    , 219, 222 (Alaska 1991).
    – 10 –                                       2604
    LaVigne was a case where the defendant told his attorney that he wanted
    to testify on his own behalf, but the defense attorney unilaterally decided that LaVigne
    should not testify, without informing LaVigne that he had a right to insist on testifying
    despite his counsel’s advice. 4 The LaVigne rule is designed to ensure that a defense
    attorney does not “effectively waive a defendant’s right to testify against the defendant’s
    will.” 
    Id., 812 P.2d
    at 219.
    But the LaVigne rule does not require a trial judge to obtain the defendant’s
    affirmative waiver of the right to testify. Rather, the crucial aspect of the LaVigne
    inquiry is simply to make sure that the defendant understands that they have a legal right
    to testify and that they can assert this right regardless of what their attorney wants them
    to do. 5
    As subsequent cases have shown, there are occasionally times when a
    defendant will refuse to give a direct or unequivocal answer when the judge asks the
    defendant whether they wish to testify. In such circumstances, the LaVigne rule requires
    only that the judge fully inform the defendant of their right to testify. If the defendant
    then refuses to explicitly waive their right to testify, the trial judge cannot order the
    defendant to take the stand. 6 Rather, the judge should order the trial to proceed without
    the defendant’s testimony. 7
    4
    
    LaVigne, 812 P.2d at 218
    .
    5
    Tall v. State, 
    25 P.3d 704
    , 708-09 (Alaska App. 2001); Mute v. State, 
    954 P.2d 1384
    ,
    1386 (Alaska App. 1998).
    6
    Knix v. State, 
    922 P.2d 913
    , 918-19 (Alaska App. 1996).
    7
    Wyatt v. State, 
    393 P.3d 442
    , 446 (Alaska App. 2017); Zemljich v. Anchorage, 
    151 P.3d 471
    , 478 (Alaska App. 2006); Knix v. 
    State, 922 P.2d at 919
    .
    – 11 –                                      2604
    In the present case, the record shows that Alvarez-Perdomo was having
    obvious cognitive difficulties — both in understanding the law that the judge and his
    defense attorney were trying to explain to him, and in deciding whether to testify.
    Some of Alvarez-Perdomo’s statements, taken in isolation, appear to
    support the trial judge’s conclusion that Alvarez-Perdomo wanted to testify. But we
    cannot take Alvarez-Perdomo’s statements in isolation. Every one of those statements
    was accompanied by other statements that either directly contradicted the notion that
    Alvarez-Perdomo wanted to testify, or at least placed that notion in doubt.
    The State argues that even if Alvarez-Perdomo’s statements are ambiguous
    or equivocal, the question of whether Alvarez-Perdomo subjectively wanted to testify is
    a question of fact — and that, when we review the judge’s finding on this issue of fact,
    we must construe the record in the light most favorable to the judge’s finding, and we
    must affirm that finding unless it is clearly erroneous. 8
    But the rule to be drawn from our prior cases interpreting LaVigne is that,
    when a judge asks a defendant whether they wish to testify and the defendant offers only
    equivocal responses, a judge must order the trial to proceed without the defendant’s
    testimony, rather than risking the prospect of forcing a defendant to testify. 9 In other
    words, a defendant must clearly state their desire to testify before a judge directs them
    to take the stand.
    Thus, the question here is not whether the trialjudge was potentially correct
    when he concluded that Alvarez-Perdomo wanted to testify. Rather, the question is
    whether the trialjudge was correct when he concluded that Alvarez-Perdomo had clearly
    8
    See Booth v. State, 
    251 P.3d 369
    , 373 (Alaska App. 2011) (explaining that a trial
    court’s findings of historical fact are reviewed under the “clearly erroneous” standard of
    review).
    9
    See Knix v. State, 
    922 P.2d 913
    , 918-19 (Alaska App. 1996).
    – 12 –                                     2604
    expressed his desire to testify, by retracting or otherwise clarifying his earlier equivocal
    statements regarding this matter. And the answer to that question is “no”.
    We therefore conclude that the trial judge committed constitutional error
    when he directed the judicial services officer to escort Alvarez-Perdomo to the stand, and
    when he then summoned the jury to hear Alvarez-Perdomo’s testimony.
    The remaining question is whether this error requires reversal of Alvarez­
    Perdomo’s convictions.
    For the reasons we are about to explain, we conclude that this constitutional
    error is amenable to a harmless error analysis, using the “harmless beyond a reasonable
    doubt” test adopted in Chapman v. California 10 and Love v. State. 11
    This error is amenable to a harmless error analysis
    In his brief, Alvarez-Perdomo argues that if he was improperly brought to
    the stand and asked to testify, this error should be deemed “structural” — that is, it
    should automatically require reversal of his convictions, without any consideration of
    whether the error might be harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
    There are few cases that address this issue directly, because the error itself
    is so infrequent. But there are at least three published cases which deal with instances
    where a judge coerced or improperly influenced a defendant to testify. In these cases,
    the appellate courts held that the error was not structural; rather, it was a constitutional
    error that required reversal of the lower court’s judgement unless the error was shown
    to be harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. See United States v. Goodwin, 
    770 F.2d 631
    ,
    10
    
    386 U.S. 18
    , 23-24; 
    87 S. Ct. 824
    , 827-28; 
    17 L. Ed. 2d 705
    (1967).
    11
    
    457 P.2d 622
    , 631 (Alaska 1969).
    – 13 –                                     2604
    636-38 (7th Cir. 1985); People v. Cuccia, 
    118 Cal. Rptr. 2d 668
    , 673 (Cal. App. 2002);
    People v. Watkins, 
    634 N.W.2d 370
    , 378-79 (Mich. App. 2001).
    (For unpublished decisions reaching this same conclusion, see City of
    Shawnee v. Valle, 
    2012 WL 2620549
    at *5 (Kan. App. 2012); State v. Carter, 
    2004 WL 5582079
    at *2 (Vt. 2004); State v. Spooner, 
    1997 WL 344834
    at *5 (Wash. App. 1997).)
    We conclude that this “harmless beyond a reasonable doubt” analysis is the
    proper approach to Alvarez-Perdomo’s case.
    The classification of an error as “structural” is designed for instances where
    a constitutional error affects the criminal adjudication process at such a fundamental
    level that it is essentially impossible for an appellate court to assess the ways in which
    the error might have affected the outcome — circumstances where an appellate court
    cannot meaningfully apply the “harmless beyond a reasonable doubt” rule that normally
    attaches to constitutional error.
    But in Alvarez-Perdomo’s case, we know what the State’s evidence was,
    and we know what Alvarez-Perdomo’s testimony was. Because of this, Alvarez­
    Perdomo’s case is analogous to cases where the government improperly introduces a
    defendant’s involuntary confession or a defendant’s statements taken in violation of
    Miranda v. Arizona. 12 In such cases, appellate courts will reverse the defendant’s
    conviction unless the error is shown to be harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. 13
    We apply the same harmless error analysis to Alvarez-Perdomo’s case. The
    question is whether the admission of Alvarez-Perdomo’s testimony was harmless beyond
    12
    
    384 U.S. 436
    , 
    86 S. Ct. 1602
    , 
    16 L. Ed. 2d 694
    (1966).
    13
    See Kalmakoff v.State,257 P.3d 108, 130 (Alaska 2011), and Motta v. State,911 P.2d
    34, 39-40 (Alaska App. 1996) (statements taken in violation of Miranda); Jones v. State, 
    65 P.3d 903
    , 909 (Alaska App. 2003), and Cole v. State, 
    923 P.2d 820
    , 832 n. 20 (Alaska App.
    1996) (involuntary confession or involuntary incriminating statements).
    – 14 –                                       2604
    a reasonable doubt — or, phrased another way, we ask whether there is a reasonable
    possibility that the jury might have returned a different verdict on the charges of first-
    degree assault and third-degree weapons misconduct (i.e., felon in possession of a
    concealable firearm) if Alvarez-Perdomo had not given his testimony. 14
    Why we conclude that the error in Alvarez-Perdomo’s case is harmless
    beyond a reasonable doubt
    In both the defense opening statement and the defense summation to the
    jury, Alvarez-Perdomo’s attorney conceded that Alvarez-Perdomo shot his mother. But
    the defense attorney argued that the shooting was accidental, and that Alvarez-Perdomo
    was not guilty of first-degree assault because he acted only negligently, not “recklessly”
    (or intentionally) as required by the first-degree assault statute, and because the resulting
    injury to Alvarez-Perdomo’s mother was not sufficiently serious to qualify as a “serious
    physical injury”.
    On the other hand, the defense attorney offered no defense to the weapons
    misconduct charge (felon in possession of a handgun). The defense attorney conceded
    that Alvarez-Perdomo shot his mother with the revolver that the police found in his
    residence, and the attorney did not dispute that Alvarez-Perdomo was a convicted felon.
    Thus, with regard to the weapons misconduct conviction, we have no
    difficulty in concluding that the trial judge’s error in forcing Alvarez-Perdomo to take
    the stand was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
    We also agree with the State that the error in having Alvarez-Perdomo
    testify was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt with respect to the question of whether
    Guillen’s wound constituted a “serious physical injury”.
    14
    Anderson v. State, 
    337 P.3d 534
    , 540 (Alaska App. 2014).
    – 15 –                                       2604
    The issue is closer with respect to the jury’s conclusion that Alvarez-
    Perdomo acted with the recklessness required for first-degree assault. As we just
    explained, the defense theory of the case was that the shootingwas purely accidental, and
    that Alvarez-Perdomo acted only negligently — i.e., that he did not subjectively perceive
    and consciously disregard the risk to his mother. 15
    We acknowledge that Alvarez-Perdomo’s testimony could conceivably
    have made a difference to the jury’s assessment of Alvarez-Perdomo’s mentalstate when
    he shot his mother. Although Alvarez-Perdomo declared on the stand that he was no
    “assassin”, he did not offer the jury an exculpatory explanation of the events that led to
    the wounding of his mother. Instead, Alvarez-Perdomo declared that he did not know
    his mother, and he stated that he did not recognize Guillen as she sat in the courtroom.
    Based on this testimony, the jurors might reasonably have concluded either
    that Alvarez-Perdomo was lying or that he was seriously mentally ill. Either conclusion
    might conceivably have affected the jurors’ discussion of the defense claim that the
    shooting was purely an accident.
    But the question is not whether the content of the jurors’ deliberations
    might have been different if Alvarez-Perdomo had not given this testimony. Rather, the
    question is whether there is a reasonable possibility that the outcome of the jury’s
    deliberations would have been different. 16
    On this question, we agree with the State that, even without Alvarez­
    Perdomo’s testimony, the evidence was overwhelming that Alvarez-Perdomo acted at
    least recklessly when he shot his mother. When Guillen arrived at the apartment and
    15
    See the definition of “recklessly”, AS 11.81.900(a)(3).
    16
    Cunningham v. State, 
    408 P.3d 1238
    , 1246 (Alaska App. 2017); Anderson v. State,
    
    337 P.3d 534
    , 538, 540 (Alaska App. 2014).
    – 16 –                                    2604
    looked at her son through the open door, she saw that he was concealing his right hand
    behind his back. Because Guillen felt that something was wrong, she decided not to
    enter her son’s apartment. As soon as she started to leave, she felt the bullet strike her
    in the abdomen.
    Although Guillen did not actually see her son bring his hand around to the
    front of his body, the only reasonable explanation is that Alvarez-Perdomo was holding
    a gun behind his back, and that he brought his hand forward and shot his mother. And
    after Alvarez-Perdomo wounded his mother, he did not try to help her. Instead, as
    Guillen ran away across the parking lot, Alvarez-Perdomo fired another shot.
    Given these facts, we conclude that even if the trial judge had not called
    Alvarez-Perdomo to the witness stand, there is no reasonable possibility that the jury
    would have reached a different verdict on the first-degree assault charge.
    This is not to say that we condone what happened here. Having a trial
    judge force a reluctant or indecisive defendant to take the stand is inconsistent with the
    Fifth Amendment and the basic principles of our adversary system of justice.
    As we have repeatedly explained, when a trial judge conducts a LaVigne
    inquiry, the judge’s duty is to make sure that the defendant is apprised that he or she has
    the ultimate authority to decide whether to take the stand, regardless of what the defense
    attorney may desire or advise. Once this information has been imparted to the defendant,
    the judge’s duty is fulfilled. If the defendant is then unwilling or unable to make an
    unequivocal decision to testify, the trial should go forward without the defendant’s
    testimony. 17
    17
    Wyatt v. State, 
    393 P.3d 442
    , 446 (Alaska App. 2017); Tall v. State, 
    25 P.3d 704
    , 709
    (Alaska App. 2001); Mute v. State, 
    954 P.2d 1384
    , 1388 (Alaska App. 1998); Knix v. State,
    
    922 P.2d 913
    , 918-19 (Alaska App. 1996).
    – 17 –                                      2604
    In such circumstances, a judge must not badger or coerce a defendant to
    take the stand. That is what happened in this case, and it was constitutional error.
    Conclusion
    Although the trial judge committed constitutional error by coercing
    Alvarez-Perdomo to take the stand, we conclude that this error was harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt, given the other evidence in this case. That is, we conclude that there
    is no reasonable possibility that this error altered the jury’s verdict. The judgement of
    the superior court is therefore AFFIRMED.
    – 18 –                                        2604