State of Arizona v. Thomas Michael Riley ( 2020 )


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  •                                  IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA
    STATE OF ARIZONA,
    Appellee,
    v.
    THOMAS MICHAEL RILEY,
    Appellant,
    No. CR-15-0411-AP
    Filed March 10, 2020
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    The Honorable Peter C. Reinstein, Judge
    No. CR2011-008004-002
    CR2013-002559-002
    AFFIRMED
    COUNSEL:
    Mark Brnovich, Arizona Attorney General, O.H. Skinner, Solicitor General,
    Lacey Stover Gard (argued), Chief Counsel, Capital Litigation Section,
    Tucson, Attorneys for State of Arizona
    James J. Haas, Maricopa County Public Defender, Mikel Steinfeld (argued),
    Deputy Public Defender, Phoenix; Attorneys for Thomas Michael Riley
    JUSTICE LOPEZ authored the opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF
    JUSTICE BRUTINEL, VICE CHIEF JUSTICE TIMMER, AND JUSTICES
    BOLICK, GOULD, BEENE, and PELANDER (RETIRED) * joined.
    JUSTICE LOPEZ, opinion of the Court:
    ¶1           This automatic appeal arises from Thomas Michael Riley’s
    convictions and death sentence for the murder of Sean Kelly. We have
    *
    Justice William G. Montgomery has recused himself from this case.
    Pursuant to article 6, section 3 of the Arizona Constitution, the Honorable
    John Pelander, Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court (Retired), was
    designated to sit in this matter.
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    jurisdiction under article 6, section 5(3) of the Arizona Constitution and
    A.R.S. §§ 13-4031, -4033(A)(1).
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2             In June 2008, Riley and Kelly were inmates at the Arizona
    State Prison Complex-Lewis in Buckeye. With the intent of gaining full
    membership into the Aryan Brotherhood (“AB”), a violent prison gang
    composed of white inmates, Riley requested and received authorization
    from the AB to assault Kelly. On June 29, after divulging his plan to three
    other AB prospective members (“probates”), all of whom refused to assist
    and tried to talk him out of the murder, Riley and two accomplices sneaked
    into Kelly’s cell and stabbed him with homemade prison knives 114 times. 1
    Riley then changed into Kelly’s clothing from his cell, washed up, and
    returned to his cell. Kelly was dead by the time correctional officers and
    medical staff responded to his cell.
    ¶3            In the subsequent investigation, correctional officers found
    blood on Riley’s elbows and forearm. Inside Kelly’s cell, investigators
    found a bloody pair of pants with Riley’s inmate card inside its pocket and
    a bloody shirt imprinted with Riley’s inmate number. Inside Riley’s cell,
    investigators found a pair of socks and a t-shirt with Riley’s inmate number,
    both of which had blood on them. Subsequent DNA testing confirmed that
    the blood on Riley, as well as the blood on the socks and t-shirt in his cell,
    matched Kelly’s DNA profile.
    ¶4             An investigator discovered that Riley had sent a change-of-
    address form to a book publisher listing his new address as a maximum-
    security facility. The investigator surmised that Riley mailed the form
    before Kelly’s murder because he had been in lockdown since the incident.
    At the time, Riley had not been scheduled for relocation.
    ¶5            Nearly two years after Kelly’s murder, another inmate gave
    investigators a letter he had received from Riley, explicitly describing the
    murder. Handwriting analysis, as well as the identification of Riley’s
    fingerprint on the letter, confirmed that he wrote it. In the letter, Riley
    1Investigators suspected that one of Riley’s accomplices was Eric Olsen, an
    inmate living in C Pod in a cell immediately above Kelly’s, who was
    affiliated with the AB.
    2
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    claimed he had stabbed Kelly fifty times and his accomplices had stabbed
    Kelly twenty times each. He also listed three “defining moments” from the
    murder: (1) passing a frightened, young inmate on his way into Kelly’s
    housing area; (2) the look on the face of an inmate who had stumbled onto
    the scene while Riley was washing up; and (3) the sound of Kelly’s last
    breath leaving his limp body. Riley drew a large smiley face after that final
    sentence and signed the letter “Your hero the butcher” in both German and
    English.
    ¶6             A jury found Riley guilty of first degree murder and assisting
    a criminal street gang. The jury also found five aggravating circumstances:
    Riley was previously convicted of a serious offense; he committed the
    murder in an especially heinous, cruel, or depraved manner; he committed
    the murder while in the custody of the Arizona Department of Corrections
    (“ADOC”); he committed the murder to promote, further or assist a
    criminal street gang; and he committed the murder in a cold and calculated
    manner without pretense of moral or legal justification. A.R.S. §§ 13-
    751(F)(2), (F)(6), (F)(7)(a), (F)(11), and (F)(13) (2012). Considering these
    factors and the mitigation evidence, the jury found death was the
    appropriate sentence for Kelly’s murder. The trial court also sentenced
    Riley to 11.25 years’ imprisonment, consecutive to the death sentence, for
    the criminal street gang offense.
    DISCUSSION
    A.     Denial of Motion to Change Counsel
    ¶7             Riley argues the trial court erroneously denied his motion to
    change counsel. We review the court’s denial of a request for new counsel
    for abuse of discretion. State v. Hernandez, 
    232 Ariz. 313
    , 318 ¶ 11 (2013).
    An abuse of discretion occurs when “the reasons given by the court for its
    action are clearly untenable, legally incorrect, or amount to a denial of
    justice.” State v. Chapple, 
    135 Ariz. 281
    , 297 n.18 (1983), superseded by statute
    on other grounds.
    ¶8            On August 25, 2013, nearly two years after the initial
    indictment and two years before trial, Riley filed a motion to change his
    lead counsel, Randall Craig, on a pre-prepared form that provided no
    factual basis for the request. Craig responded by informing the court in
    writing “that communication between Defendant and Counsel now ceases
    3
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    to exist. Defendant is no longer accepting Counsel’s advice.” Craig also
    stated, “A mutual distrust exists between Defendant and Counsel. Counsel
    has tried to repair the damaged relationship but has been unable to do so.”
    Ultimately, he urged the court to grant the motion to ensure Riley
    “receive[d] adequate assistance of counsel.”
    ¶9             On September 11, the trial court held a hearing to address
    Riley’s motion. After noting the lack of grounds supporting the motion, the
    court asked Riley if he had anything to add. Riley made general statements
    regarding the lack of communication, cooperation, and trust between him
    and Craig, dating back six to eight months. The court informed Riley he
    was entitled to competent counsel, not “a great relationship,” and observed
    that both of Riley’s attorneys were competent. Riley complained Craig was
    frequently unreachable and had only spent four hours at the prison
    discussing Riley’s case with him in the preceding year-and-a-half. Riley
    stated that his relationship with Craig had “clearly deteriorated to where
    there is no trust at all.”
    ¶10           When questioned by the court, Craig stated, “[W]ith all
    candor to the court, I must say we aren’t communicating. I have to be
    honest with that fact. We are not. He doesn’t seem to like me.” After the
    court noted that Riley did not have to like his attorneys, Craig stated, “I
    understand. And that’s all that I am going to say at this point.” The court
    then informed Riley that it was not inclined to grant the motion “without
    more.” Riley added that Craig had failed to show up to four or five
    scheduled meetings at the prison, had failed to conduct witness interviews,
    and had failed to appear at an appointment to view the crime scene. In
    response to the trial court’s observation that Craig appeared to be preparing
    his defense, as evidenced by his hiring mitigation specialists and an
    investigator, Riley conceded that “[t]he mitigation aspect is ahead of
    schedule. I will give him credit.” After Riley finished his argument and
    after a brief recess, the trial court denied Riley’s motion to change lead
    counsel.
    ¶11           Craig continued as Riley’s counsel after the trial court denied
    the motion to change counsel. Craig served as Riley’s advisory counsel
    during his brief period of self-representation (April 1, 2015–October 5, 2015)
    and then resumed his role as lead counsel during the trial. Riley did not
    renew his motion to change counsel.
    4
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶12            The Federal and Arizona Constitutions guarantee criminal
    defendants the right to representation by competent counsel. State v.
    Goudeau, 
    239 Ariz. 421
    , 447 ¶ 77 (2016) (citing U.S. Const. amend. VI; Ariz.
    Const. art. 2, § 24; A.R.S. § 13-114(2); State v. LaGrand, 
    152 Ariz. 483
    , 486
    (1987)). An indigent defendant, however, is not “entitled to counsel of
    choice, or to a meaningful relationship with his or her attorney.” State v.
    Torres, 
    208 Ariz. 340
    , 342 ¶ 6 (2004) (quoting State v. Moody (“Moody I”), 
    192 Ariz. 505
    , 507 ¶ 11 (1998)). “But when there is a complete breakdown in
    communication or an irreconcilable conflict between a defendant and his
    appointed counsel, that defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel has
    been violated” and a resulting conviction must be reversed. Id.; accord
    Moody I, 192 Ariz. at 509 ¶ 23.
    ¶13            To preserve a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel,
    the trial court has a “duty to inquire as to the basis of a defendant’s request
    for substitution of counsel.” Torres, 
    208 Ariz. at
    343 ¶ 7. During this
    inquiry, the defendant bears the burden of proving either a “complete
    breakdown in communication or an irreconcilable conflict.” 
    Id.
     at 342 ¶ 6.
    “To satisfy this burden, the defendant must present evidence of a ‘severe
    and pervasive conflict with his attorney or evidence that he had such
    minimal contact with the attorney that meaningful communication was not
    possible.’” Hernandez, 232 Ariz. at 318 ¶ 15 (quoting United States v. Lott,
    
    310 F.3d 1231
    , 1249 (10th Cir. 2002)). A defendant must show more than
    “personality conflicts or disagreements with counsel over trial strategy.”
    State v. Cromwell, 
    211 Ariz. 181
    , 187 ¶ 30 (2005). A defendant’s claims
    against his attorney of ineffective trial preparation and failure to
    communicate, when unsupported by the record, are generally
    characterized as disagreements over trial strategy. See Hernandez, 232 Ariz.
    at 321 ¶ 33.
    ¶14             In response to Riley’s complaints, Craig acknowledged that
    “communication between Defendant and counsel now ceases to exist,”
    which is precisely the situation that, if true, would entitle Riley to
    substitution of counsel. Craig added that mutual distrust existed with his
    client, that efforts to repair the relationship were unsuccessful, and that the
    motion should be granted to ensure Riley received adequate counsel. But
    the “mere possibility that the defendant had a fractured relationship with
    counsel does not amount to structural error.” Torres, 
    208 Ariz. at
    344 ¶ 12.
    The trial court was entitled to delve into the substance behind the assertions
    and, in doing so, it found the basis for substitution wanting.
    5
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶15             At the hearing, Riley alleged that Craig failed to conduct any
    interviews and failed to appear for an appointment to view the crime scene.
    We have repeatedly rejected these types of complaints as disagreements
    over trial strategy, which do not amount to irreconcilable differences. See
    Goudeau, 239 Ariz. at 447 ¶ 76, 448 ¶ 84; State v. Henry, 
    189 Ariz. 542
    , 547
    (1997). Riley’s primary complaint against Craig at the hearing, however,
    was lack of communication. Riley alleged Craig had only met with him for
    a total of four hours in the preceding year and a half and had missed several
    appointments to meet with him in prison. Craig agreed in his response to
    Riley’s motion and at the hearing that his communications with Riley had
    ceased to exist.
    ¶16            We have historically required “intense acrimony and depth of
    conflict” before finding a complete breakdown in communication and
    requiring new counsel. See Cromwell, 211 Ariz. at 188 ¶ 37; see also
    Hernandez, 232 Ariz. at 318 ¶ 16, 321 ¶ 36 (finding no abuse of discretion
    even though defendant alleged only four visits with counsel over the course
    of two years). Riley attempts to compare his minimal interactions with his
    attorney to those between the defendant and his attorney in Moody I. But
    the Moody I record was “replete with examples of a deep and irreconcilable
    conflict” between the defendant and his attorney. 192 Ariz. at 507
    ¶ 13. Moody accused his lawyer and the lead public defender of being
    “incompetent and crazy.” Id. at 508 ¶ 16. He developed an “obsessive
    hatred” for his attorney and the public defender’s office and, on at least one
    occasion, he and his attorney were “almost at blows” with one
    another. Id. Moody believed his lawyers were conspiring with the
    prosecutor, the court, and the doctor tasked with evaluating his
    competency to have him declared insane. Id. He also threatened to file
    ethical complaints against his lawyer and the public defender’s
    office. Id. ¶ 18. None of these examples of “intense acrimony and depth of
    conflict” is present here. See also Torres, 
    208 Ariz. at
    343 ¶ 9 (“[Defendant]
    presented specific factual allegations that raised a colorable claim that he
    had an irreconcilable conflict with his appointed counsel.”).
    ¶17           On the contrary, despite Riley’s and Craig’s claim of an
    irreconcilable conflict or a complete breakdown in communications, the
    record belies their stark characterization of their relationship. Riley gave
    Craig’s defense team “credit” for their efforts in preparing mitigation.
    Riley’s knowledge of the status of his case further demonstrates that he and
    6
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    Craig were communicating about his defense. In fact, Riley regularly
    corresponded with Craig in writing before the change of counsel hearing,
    albeit primarily to complain about the frequency of Craig’s visitation and
    status reports, but their substantive written correspondence continued after
    denial of his motion. Thus, because Riley failed to demonstrate an
    irreconcilable conflict or a completely fractured relationship with Craig, the
    trial court was not required to appoint new counsel. See Cromwell, 211 Ariz.
    at 186 ¶ 29.
    ¶18           To the extent Riley faults the trial court for failing to conduct
    further inquiry into the source of his alleged conflict with Craig, Riley and
    Craig effectively foreclosed further inquiry. For his part, Riley explained
    the reasons for his dissatisfaction, which the trial court deemed insufficient
    to require new counsel. Craig simply noted that “[Riley] doesn’t seem to
    like me” and “that’s all I’m going to say at this point.” Moreover, neither
    Riley nor Craig requested or intimated that an ex parte hearing was
    necessary to determine the source of the alleged conflict. Under these
    circumstances, the record does not support Riley’s assertion of an
    irreconcilable conflict or complete breakdown in communications.
    ¶19           If the defendant shows “[c]onflict that is less than
    irreconcilable,” a trial court should consider the conflict as a factor among
    several other factors in determining whether to appoint new counsel. Id.
    ¶ 29. The other factors—often referred to as the LaGrand factors—are:
    (1) “whether new counsel would be confronted with the same conflict;”
    (2) “the timing of the motion;” (3) “inconvenience to witnesses;” (4) “the
    time period already elapsed between the alleged offense and trial;” (5) “the
    proclivity of the defendant to change counsel;” and (6) the “quality of
    counsel.” Id. at 187 ¶ 31 (quoting LaGrand, 
    152 Ariz. at
    486–87).
    ¶20           These factors tend to favor substitution here, save the last,
    given that no dispute exists that Riley’s counsel was competent. But
    “quality of counsel” was the only one of the six factors that the trial court
    expressly considered. The State acknowledged that different counsel
    would probably not have the same conflict. Although the request for
    substitution occurred well into trial preparation, no trial date was yet
    scheduled, so the case presumably could have proceeded without
    significant disruption as Riley showed no prior proclivity toward
    substituting counsel. See Moody I, 192 Ariz. at 509–10 ¶ 21.
    7
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶21           Applying the LaGrand factors against the backdrop of Craig’s
    avowal of a complete breakdown in communication, there were clear
    grounds to grant the motion. However, because the trial court conducted
    a hearing to determine whether there was an actual breakdown in the
    attorney/client relationship, we review the trial court’s decision to deny the
    request for an abuse of discretion. Goudeau, 239 Ariz. at 446 ¶ 68. In
    denying Riley’s motion to change counsel, the trial court did not refer to the
    LaGrand factors and gave no explicit reasons for denying the motion. But
    this Court may affirm on any basis in the record. See, e.g., State v. Robinson,
    
    153 Ariz. 191
    , 199 (1987).
    ¶22            Based on the hearing, it appears that the core of Riley’s claims
    against Craig regarding the cause of their asserted breakdown in
    communication was rooted in disagreements over trial strategy. 2 But “[a]
    single allegation of lost confidence in counsel does not require the
    appointment of new counsel, and disagreements over defense strategies do
    not constitute an irreconcilable conflict.” Cromwell, 211 Ariz. at 186 ¶ 29;
    Hernandez, 232 Ariz. at 321 ¶ 33. Moreover, the trial court witnessed Riley
    and Craig interact for more than a year which led to the trial court’s
    conclusion that Riley’s lead counsel was providing competent
    representation. Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion
    when it denied Riley’s motion to change lead counsel, and Riley is not
    entitled to relief on this issue.
    ¶23           Finally, even if the trial court abused its discretion in denying
    Riley’s change of counsel motion, it is subject to harmless error review
    because Riley failed to prove an irreconcilable conflict or complete
    breakdown in communication. Cf. Torres, 
    208 Ariz. at
    343–44 ¶¶ 11–13
    (holding that structural error applies to only a few enumerated situations
    and the harmless error standard applies to a trial judge’s summary denial
    of a motion to change counsel); see also State v. Ring (III), 
    204 Ariz. 534
    , 552–
    53 ¶ 46 (2003) (“The Supreme Court has defined relatively few instances in
    2 Riley’s trial strategy dispute with Craig persisted after the trial court
    denied his motion for new counsel. On April 1, 2015, when the trial court
    granted Riley’s motion for self-representation, Riley clarified that the basis
    for his motion was that he and Craig were “at odds with strategy and the
    direction of the case.” But Riley also emphasized the importance of
    retaining “the same team as [his] legal advisors” because they had been
    working on the case together for three and a half years.
    8
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    which we should regard error as structural.”). It is difficult to understand
    how any error caused an unfair trial given that Riley does not contest that
    his counsel was competent; and indeed, Riley complains here about issues
    that arose when he self-represented or rejected his attorney’s advice. Riley
    is not foreclosed from raising issues concerning inadequate representation
    in subsequent proceedings, but we conclude that his Sixth Amendment
    right to counsel was not violated in light of the evidence before the trial
    court.
    B.     Description of Aggravating Factors in Juror Questionnaire
    ¶24            Riley argues the juror questionnaires erroneously described
    Arizona’s aggravating factors as “very few” and “very specific,” which
    created an illegitimate eligibility factor that the State never proved. Because
    Riley did not object to the language in the questionnaires at trial, we review
    for fundamental error. See State v. Anderson, 
    210 Ariz. 327
    , 341 ¶ 45 (2005).
    Under fundamental error review, the defendant bears the burden to
    establish that (1) error exists, (2) the error is fundamental, and (3) the error
    caused him prejudice. State v. Escalante, 
    245 Ariz. 135
    , 140 ¶ 21 (2018); State
    v. Bearup, 
    221 Ariz. 163
    , 168 ¶ 21 (2009); see also State v. Henderson, 
    210 Ariz. 561
    , 567–68 ¶¶ 19–20 (2005). An error is fundamental when it “goes to the
    foundation of [the defendant’s] case, takes away a right that is essential to
    [the defendant’s] defense, [or] is of such magnitude that [the defendant]
    could not have received a fair trial.” Henderson, 
    210 Ariz. at
    568 ¶ 24 (citing
    State v. Hunter, 
    142 Ariz. 88
    , 90 (1984)); see also Escalante, 245 Ariz. at 140
    ¶ 16 (holding that the three prongs for determining when an error is
    fundamental are disjunctive).
    ¶25             At the beginning of jury selection, the trial court provided
    jurors with written questionnaires. Both Riley (then pro per) and the
    prosecutor reviewed and approved the questionnaire at a status conference
    prior to trial. In describing the penalty phase of the trial, the questionnaire
    stated:
    The penalty phase of the trial may contain two
    parts. The state must first prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt that one or more aggravating
    circumstances exist for a defendant to be eligible
    for a death sentence.               Aggravating
    circumstances are set forth in the law. The law
    9
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    allows only a very few and very specific aggravating
    circumstances to be used, if proven beyond a
    reasonable doubt, to make a defendant convicted of
    Murder in the First Degree eligible for a death
    sentence.
    (emphasis added). The portion emphasized above was also repeated as an
    introduction to Question 59 of the questionnaire.
    ¶26           While questioning one of the jurors during voir dire, Riley
    highlighted the “very few” and “very specific” language, asking the
    prospective juror whether he or she agreed with the statement made in the
    preamble to Question 59. After reading the statement twice verbatim, Riley
    reworded the statement as follows:
    In layman’s terms, there is a [sic] very few
    criteria that qualify a murder from being a
    murder to being a capital murder warranting
    the death penalty, and you would have to agree
    and follow those rules and not allow other
    subjectivity to come in to make your decision on
    that.
    Riley then asked the prospective juror whether he or she would follow
    those instructions.
    i.     Legal Accuracy of the Statement
    ¶27           Although the court provided further instructions to the jurors
    regarding the aggravating factors during both the aggravation and penalty
    phases of the trial, neither the court nor the parties ever used the “very few”
    or “very specific” language again during the trial.
    ¶28           Riley argues (1) the statement in the jury questionnaire
    describing Arizona’s aggravating factors as “very few” and “very specific”
    misstates the law; (2) that misstatement created an unproven, invalid
    sentencing factor that constituted fundamental error; and (3) he was
    prejudiced by this error because it led the jury to believe that he was one of
    only a “very few” individuals eligible for the death penalty.
    10
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶29            The legal accuracy of the description of Arizona’s aggravators
    as “very few” is debatable. Both Riley and the State recognize that the
    statement provided a subjective description of the number of statutory
    aggravating factors in Arizona. But while Riley argues that thirty different
    aggravating circumstances (ten individual circumstances with a total of
    twenty sub-parts) cannot reasonably equate to a “very few,” the State,
    ironically, relies solely on the semantic ambiguity of the description to
    defend the statement’s legal accuracy. At most, the description of Arizona’s
    aggravators as “very few” is ambiguous and irrelevant.
    ¶30            The description of Arizona’s aggravators as “very specific,”
    however, likely misstates the law. To pass constitutional muster,
    aggravators must “not apply to every defendant convicted of a murder, but
    only to a subclass, and the aggravating circumstance may not be overly
    vague.” State v. Hausner, 
    230 Ariz. 60
    , 82 ¶ 99 (2012) (citing Tuilaepa v.
    California, 
    512 U.S. 967
    , 972 (1994)). We have repeatedly upheld the
    constitutionality of Arizona’s aggravators, especially those deemed facially
    vague, based on the “adequate specificity” of narrowing constructions in
    jury instructions. See, e.g., Anderson, 
    210 Ariz. at
    352–53 ¶¶ 109–14
    (addressing constitutionality of (F)(6) aggravator). Undoubtedly then,
    Arizona’s aggravators must contain some specificity to overcome challenges
    for vagueness. But there is a substantial semantic difference between “not
    overly vague” and “very specific.” More to the point, there is a noteworthy
    distinction between “adequately specific” and “very specific.”
    ¶31          Accordingly, because all or part of the statement likely
    misstates the law, Riley has fulfilled the first requirement to prove
    fundamental error. See supra ¶ 24
    ii.     Fundamental Nature of the Error
    ¶32           Assuming the statement misstates the law, its single
    appearance in the jury questionnaire was insufficient to constitute
    fundamental error. Riley must also prove that the error went to the
    foundation of his case, took away a right essential to his defense, or was of
    such magnitude that he could not have received a fair trial. See Henderson,
    
    210 Ariz. at
    568 ¶ 24 (citing State v. Hunter, 
    142 Ariz. 88
    , 90 (1984)); see also
    Escalante, 245 Ariz. at 140 ¶ 16 (holding that the three prongs for
    determining when an error is fundamental are disjunctive).
    11
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶33             Riley contends the error was fundamental as it prevented him
    from receiving a fair trial because (1) the statement implied that the court
    had conducted some narrowing function that identified Riley as “one of
    only ‘a very few’ individuals that could actually be put to death” and (2) the
    subjective nature of the statement left its meaning “open to any
    interpretation each juror wished to assign.” According to Riley, this
    implication—and the jury’s acceptance of it—created an unproven
    eligibility factor or aggravator.
    ¶34            Riley exaggerates the impact of the statement. Immediately
    before the statement, the questionnaire stated, “The state must first prove
    beyond a reasonable doubt that one or more aggravating circumstances
    exist.” This informed the jurors of the proper order of proceedings and the
    State’s burden to prove at least one aggravating factor, rendering the
    subsequent challenged statement irrelevant. Moreover, during voir dire,
    after the jurors had completed the questionnaire, Riley explained the
    statement “in layman’s terms,” emphasizing that jurors had to rely on the
    aggravating factors, not “other subjectivity,” to impose the death penalty.
    After voir dire, neither the trial court nor the State ever repeated the
    statement at issue; instead the trial court reiterated the State’s burden of
    proof in both the aggravation and penalty phases of the trial.
    ¶35            Contrary to Riley’s assertion, the statement did not insert an
    additional eligibility factor or aggravator. At no point did the trial court or
    the State assert—or even imply—that Riley’s eligibility for the death
    penalty had been predetermined before trial based on the number or
    specificity of Arizona’s aggravators. In the unlikely event that a juror
    inferred as much from the jury questionnaire on the first day of trial, the
    trial court’s repeated instructions regarding the State’s burden of proof in
    the subsequent months of trial surely disavowed any such inference by the
    time the jury found more than a month later that the State had proven all
    five alleged aggravating circumstances.
    ¶36            Accordingly, because the misstatement error did not go to the
    foundation of Riley’s case, did not take away a right that was essential to
    his defense, and was too insignificant to impact the fairness of his trial, Riley
    has failed to meet his burden to prove fundamental error and is not entitled
    to relief on this issue.
    12
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    C.     Failure to Question Jurors on Questionnaire Answers Sua
    Sponte
    ¶37          Riley argues the trial court erred by failing to question Jurors
    1 and 16 sua sponte based upon their answers on the juror questionnaires.
    Because Riley did not raise a challenge to either of these jurors for cause,
    we review this claim for fundamental error. See State v. Bible, 
    175 Ariz. 549
    ,
    573 (1993).
    ¶38          On the juror questionnaire, Juror 1 answered “no” to
    Question 40, which asked whether she agreed that a defendant is not
    required to present any evidence. In explaining her disagreement on the
    questionnaire, she asked, “Without being totally familiar with the law—
    how can a defendant defend themselves without presenting evidence?” In
    a follow-up question asking whether she could follow this law even if she
    disagreed with it, Juror 1 answered “yes.”
    ¶39           During voir dire involving Juror 1, the court, the prosecutor,
    and Riley all explained the State’s burden of proving all elements beyond a
    reasonable doubt and that the defendant had no obligation to testify or
    present evidence. The prosecutor asked all jurors whether any of them had
    any questions about the process or any additional information relevant to
    whether he or she should serve as a juror. No juror replied affirmatively.
    ¶40            On her questionnaire, Juror 16 answered “yes” to Question
    51, which asked whether she believed that a law enforcement officer is
    always more believable in giving testimony than is a lay person. In
    answering Question 52, she stated she could follow the court’s instruction
    that a law enforcement officer is not entitled to any greater believability
    than any other witness by virtue of his or her position as a law enforcement
    officer. She also disclosed that her father is a retired sheriff’s deputy and
    her sister-in-law is an attorney with the San Francisco District Attorney’s
    Office.
    ¶41          The prosecutor did not question Juror 16 directly during voir
    dire. But he questioned two other jurors who also answered affirmatively
    for Question 51, and he acknowledged there were other jurors who had
    answered similarly. The prosecutor asked the panel whether they could
    follow the court’s instruction that all witnesses were initially entitled to the
    same credibility, and all the jurors agreed.
    13
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶42           After several jurors mentioned having family members who
    worked in law enforcement, the prosecutor asked “everyone who has law
    enforcement in their family or friends” whether there was “[a]nything
    about those relationships that would affect your ability to be [a] fair and
    impartial juror?” All prospective jurors except one—who was not
    impaneled on the jury—shook their heads in the negative. During the voir
    dire proceedings involving Jurors 1 and 16, Riley failed to question either
    of them about their answers at issue here, and he did not move to strike
    either juror.
    i.     Failure to Question or Strike Jurors
    ¶43             Riley argues that the trial court erred by failing to question,
    sua sponte, Jurors 1 and 16 to determine whether those jurors could render
    a fair and impartial verdict. By alleging that both jurors had biases that
    prevented them from rendering such a verdict, Riley necessarily implies
    that the trial court erred by failing to strike these jurors. See State v.
    Velazquez, 
    216 Ariz. 300
    , 306–07 ¶ 18 (2007) (“A defendant is entitled to ‘a
    fair trial by a panel of impartial, indifferent jurors.’” (quoting Morgan v.
    Illinois, 
    504 U.S. 719
    , 727 (1992))). Riley’s argument is unpersuasive.
    ¶44            A trial court does not err by failing to question a juror who
    indicates a disagreement with, or a misunderstanding of, the law if that
    juror also indicates that he can be fair and impartial, that he will follow the
    law, and that he has gained understanding of the law he previously
    misunderstood. See Bible, 
    175 Ariz. at 573
    . Furthermore, “the trial judge’s
    invitation to counsel to ask follow-up questions mitigates any deficiency in
    the court’s questioning.” State v. Moody (“Moody II”), 
    208 Ariz. 424
    , 452 ¶ 98
    (2004).
    ¶45            In Bible, one of the seated jurors in a death penalty case
    indicated on the jury questionnaire that “he would not treat the testimony
    of police officers as he would other witnesses, did not understand that the
    State had the burden of proof for each element, and did not agree with the
    presumption of innocence.” 
    175 Ariz. at 573
    . Neither the trial court nor the
    parties conducted follow-up oral inquiry with the juror. 
    Id.
     We held that it
    was not fundamental error to allow the juror to sit because he subsequently
    “indicated that he could fairly and impartially listen to and weigh the
    evidence and render a verdict in accordance with the law,” he “understood
    14
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    that the State had the burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt,” and he
    “expressed no disagreement with the presumption of innocence, the jury’s
    duty to judge credibility, or the State’s burden to prove guilt beyond a
    reasonable doubt.” 
    Id.
     We concluded “follow-up oral inquiry of [the] juror
    would have been appropriate,” but it was “[n]either error [n]or
    fundamental error for the judge to have failed to sua sponte strike the
    [juror] for cause.” 
    Id.
     at 573–74.
    ¶46           Here, although Juror 1 initially disagreed that a defendant
    need not present evidence, she clarified that her disagreement was based
    on a lack of understanding of the law. Addressing the very next question,
    the juror indicated affirmatively that she would follow this law even if she
    did not agree with it. During subsequent voir dire, she gave no indication
    that she could not or would not hold the State to its burden of proof.
    ¶47            Juror 16 answered in her questionnaire that a law
    enforcement officer is more believable than a lay witness. She also
    indicated that she had family who worked in law enforcement, but unlike
    the juror in Bible, Juror 16 answered affirmatively that she would consider
    the testimony of law enforcement as she would the testimony of any other
    witness. Along with other jurors on the panel, she also agreed to follow the
    court’s instructions to gauge the credibility of witnesses equally. When
    asked whether anything about her relationship with law enforcement
    would affect her ability to be fair and impartial, she responded “no” with
    the rest of the panel.
    ¶48            Furthermore, Riley had full opportunity to question Jurors 1
    and 16 regarding their answers on the questionnaire, but he failed to do so.
    Both jurors gave sufficient indication that they would be fair and impartial,
    and the trial court did not err by failing to question or strike them from the
    jury.
    ¶49           Riley relies on Morgan v. Illinois, 
    504 U.S. 719
     (1992) for the
    proposition that a juror’s acknowledgement on a jury form that he could
    follow the law is insufficient to adequately examine a juror’s potential
    biases. Although the United States Supreme Court held that such an
    acknowledgement would be insufficient to ascertain a potential juror’s
    beliefs about the death penalty, Morgan, 
    504 U.S. at
    734–35, neither of the
    juror questions at issue queried the jurors’ death penalty views.
    Accordingly, Morgan has no bearing on this issue.
    15
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶50            Riley also argues that Arizona Rule of Criminal Procedure
    18.5(d) requires trial courts to conduct oral examinations of each juror.
    Although the rule requires a court to “conduct a thorough oral examination
    of the prospective jurors and control the voir dire examination,” it only
    requires a court to probe a prospective juror’s willingness to follow the law
    “where the trial judge is left with the definite impression that a prospective
    juror would be unable to faithfully and impartially apply the law” or in
    cases of “heightened danger of juror prejudice or bias” from media exposure.
    See Wainright v. Witt, 
    469 U.S. 412
    , 425–26 (1985) (emphasis added); Bible,
    
    175 Ariz. at
    572 n.12 (emphasis added). These factors are not present here.
    ii.    Lack of Prejudice
    ¶51           Even if the trial court erred, Riley “must demonstrate not only
    that the voir dire examination was inadequate, but also that, as a result of
    the inadequate questioning, the jury selected was not fair, unbiased, and
    impartial.” Moody II, 208 Ariz. at 451 ¶ 95. “Prejudice will not be presumed
    but must appear affirmatively from the record.” State v. Hoskins, 
    199 Ariz. 127
    , 141 ¶ 48 (2000). Riley fails to meet this burden.
    ¶52            Riley claims that the record supports a finding of prejudice
    resulting from Juror 1’s response because it indicated that even though she
    was willing to follow the law, she did not understand or agree with it. This
    argument is unpersuasive. Juror 1’s initial response indicates that she did
    not understand the law and was, therefore, confused as to how a defendant
    could win his case without presenting evidence. This confusion was
    unquestionably dispelled by the trial court’s and both parties’ repeated
    reference to the burden of proof. After being informed of this burden, Juror
    1—along with the rest of the panel on October 5, 2015—raised no further
    questions for clarification.
    ¶53            Riley also claims the prosecutor’s rebuttal closing argument
    in the guilt phase contributed to the prejudice. At that time, the prosecutor
    stated:
    I have to say, [the defense attorney]’s right. I’ve
    got news for you. Every party has the power to
    subpoena through the Court any witness. He’s
    right. He has subpoena power. Does that mean
    16
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    he has to do it? No. Of course not. I have the
    burden of proof. I always do. But just as we can
    say no inmates testified to—that Tommy Riley
    did it, no inmates testified that Tommy Riley
    wasn’t there. No inmates from A Pod testified
    that, “Hey, you know what? I saw him. He
    wasn’t in C Pod.”
    According to Riley, these statements were “tailored to appeal to Juror 1’s
    belief” because they insinuated that Riley failed to call witnesses to support
    his defense. This argument is equally unpersuasive. A prosecutor may
    properly comment on a defendant’s failure to present exculpatory evidence
    which would substantiate defendant’s theory, provided the remark is not a
    comment on the defendant’s silence. State ex rel. McDougall v. Corcoran, 
    153 Ariz. 157
    , 160 (1987).
    ¶54            Here, the prosecutor merely commented on Riley’s failure to
    present witnesses to support the theory of his defense. In his closing
    argument, Riley’s attorney stated, “[N]obody came forward to say Riley
    and [his cellmate Dennis] Levis did this. You heard no eyewitness
    testimony.” Before making the statements at issue, the prosecutor explicitly
    told the jury, “[A]s the judge told you, [the defendants] are not obligated to
    put on anything and that never changes. And nothing I say, suggest, it is
    not a wink and a nod. That never ever changes. We always have the
    burden.” During closing arguments alone, the jury heard numerous
    times—from the judge, Riley’s attorney, and the prosecutor—that the State
    bore the burden of proof. Nothing in the prosecutor’s statements expressly
    or impliedly directed the jury’s attention to Riley’s failure to testify. Rather,
    the prosecutor simply maintained that Riley was free to produce witness
    testimony favorable to his defense.
    ¶55            Regarding Juror 16, Riley asserts that he was prejudiced by
    the juror’s bias in favor of law enforcement officers because the “trial court
    did not ascertain how deeply held her bias was or if she would feel
    pressured to return a guilty verdict because she was concerned about her
    deputy father’s or her prosecutor sister-in-law’s opinion if she did not.” But
    this is not evidence of bias; it is an expression of potential or presumed bias.
    See Hoskins, 
    199 Ariz. at
    141 ¶ 48 (“Prejudice will not be presumed but must
    appear affirmatively from the record.”).
    17
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶56            In sum, Riley has failed to show that he was prejudiced, and
    he is not entitled to relief.
    D.     Admission of Alleged Inadmissible Evidence
    ¶57           Riley argues the trial court erred by admitting evidence in
    violation of the Arizona Rules of Evidence that, coupled with the
    prosecutor’s arguments, deprived him of a fair trial.
    i.     Evidence of Kelly’s Time in Protective Custody
    ¶58             The State presented evidence that Kelly was placed in
    protective custody in 2002, six years before his murder, because he had
    refused an order to commit violence against another inmate and that his
    prior protective custody status made him a target of the AB. Riley argues
    that the trial court erred in admitting this evidence because (1) Kelly’s prior
    custody status was irrelevant; (2) since Kelly’s prior protective custody
    status was irrelevant, the reason given for it—that Kelly was put in
    protective custody because he “had a target on his back” because he refused
    to commit a violent act during a previous incarceration—was also
    irrelevant; and (3) the State failed to establish a foundation that Riley knew
    that Kelly was previously in protective custody which was a prerequisite to
    proving Riley’s motive. Because Riley did not object to the admission of
    this evidence at trial, we review these claims for fundamental error. See
    Anderson, 
    210 Ariz. at
    341 ¶ 45.
    ¶59            Keland Boggs, a special investigator for the ADOC, testified
    for the State that “the only sure way to gain membership into the [AB] is to
    commit a homicide of a target of the [AB].” Boggs further explained that
    inmates who entered an Arizona prison with gang-related “political ink”
    and who refused to commit an act of violence to earn that tattoo “could be
    targeted to be killed” and that they commonly requested protective
    custody.
    ¶60           Officer William Dziadura, an ADOC criminal investigations
    manager, testified for the State that Kelly had been in protective custody in
    2002 after refusing a request from “influential white inmates to assault
    another inmate.” When Kelly refused the request, he was told “to cover up
    some lightning bolts tattoo that he had on his person or be injured.” Officer
    18
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    Dziadura also testified that inmates in protective custody were “perceived
    as being weak.”
    ¶61           During his opening statement, the prosecutor noted that Kelly
    “had a target on his back” because “he refused to commit an act of violence
    on another inmate.” He declared that “in the world of the [AB], that’s
    weakness. And weak inmates are targets for men who want membership
    in the [AB].” The prosecutor later stated in his penalty phase rebuttal
    closing argument that “[y]ou don’t have two more different people, Sean
    Kelly, who had to go to protective custody because he wouldn’t be a part
    of that world, and the defendant, who executed him.”
    ¶62           Evidence is relevant if “it has any tendency to make a fact
    more or less probable than it would be without the evidence . . . .” Ariz. R.
    Evid. 401(a). “[M]otive is relevant in a murder prosecution.” State v.
    Hargrave, 
    225 Ariz. 1
    , 8 ¶ 14 (2010).
    ¶63           The State’s theory was that Riley targeted Kelly because he
    had spent time in protective custody, which gangs like the AB viewed as a
    weakness. In fact, Riley described in a letter to another inmate how he was
    looking for a “golden goose” before he was segregated and how he had to
    move fast once he got the “green light.” More importantly, the State’s
    theory was that Kelly had been in protective custody for refusing to carry
    out an order from “influential white inmates” and refusing such an order
    could get an inmate targeted to be killed. This testimony allowed the State
    to establish Riley’s motive for killing Kelly; therefore, Kelly’s prior stay in
    protective custody was relevant.
    ¶64             Similarly, Riley’s argument that the State failed to lay a proper
    relevance foundation for motive by not proving that he knew that Kelly was
    previously held in protective custody is unpersuasive. Motive may be
    proven by circumstantial evidence. State v. Parker, 
    231 Ariz. 391
    , 407 ¶ 71
    (2013). Here, Officer Dziadura testified that Kelly was previously put into
    protective custody for refusing an order to assault another inmate from
    “influential white inmates.” This supports an inference that Kelly was an
    AB target. Further, Riley’s own letter said that he was “hunting big time”
    for his “golden goose” and that he was constantly “sending names” for
    approval but kept being told “no” before he got the “green light.” In this
    context, Riley’s lack of direct knowledge of Kelly’s prior protective custody
    status is irrelevant because Riley killed Kelly not because he had previously
    19
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    targeted him, but because the AB sanctioned the murder and rewarded
    Riley for killing Kelly. In other words, as Riley’s letter makes clear, the AB’s
    motive in killing Kelly may be imputed to Riley. This is strong
    circumstantial evidence of motive that was properly presented for the jury
    to weigh its merits.
    ii.    Evidence of Kelly’s Character
    ¶65           Riley also objects to portions of Officer Melissa Vincent’s
    testimony. At one point, Officer Vincent, a Correctional Officer who
    worked in the control room for Kelly’s prison pod, testified regarding
    Kelly’s character, stating “I thought he was one of the better inmates.
    Always very polite to me, never disrespected me, which a lot of them did.
    Very easy to get along with, quiet.” Riley argues that this testimony
    regarding Kelly’s character was irrelevant. Riley claims this implicitly
    invited the jury to compare Kelly’s character with Riley’s.
    ¶66           Because Riley objected to the relevance of this portion of
    Officer Vincent’s trial testimony, we examine the trial court’s decision
    regarding those statements for abuse of discretion. See State v. Steinle, 
    239 Ariz. 415
    , 417 ¶ 6 (2016).
    ¶67            Under Arizona Rule of Evidence 404(a)(2), a victim’s
    character for peacefulness may be presented only to rebut a claim that the
    victim was the first aggressor. If the defendant does not claim self-defense
    and there is no evidence that the victim was the initial aggressor, the
    victim’s aggressive or peaceful character is irrelevant. State v. Hicks, 
    133 Ariz. 64
    , 68–69 (1982). Here, Riley never admitted that he killed Kelly, in
    self-defense or otherwise. Riley’s defense was that he found Kelly dead in
    his cell and tried to revive him. Thus, the trial court erroneously admitted
    evidence of Kelly’s character.
    ¶68           Because the trial court erred, we must determine if it was
    harmless error. State v. Bass, 
    198 Ariz. 571
    , 580 ¶ 39 (2000). As such, the
    State must show “beyond a reasonable doubt that the error did not
    contribute to or affect the verdict or sentence.” Escalante, 245 Ariz. at 144
    ¶ 30 (quoting State v. Escalante-Orozco, 
    241 Ariz. 254
    , 286 ¶ 126 (2017)). “The
    standard is an objective one, and requires a showing that without the error,
    a reasonable jury could have plausibly and intelligently returned a different
    verdict.” Id. ¶ 31. “The inquiry . . . is not whether, in a trial that occurred
    20
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    without the error, a guilty verdict would surely have been rendered, but
    whether the guilty verdict actually rendered in this trial was surely
    unattributable to the error.” Bible, 
    175 Ariz. at 588
     (quoting Sullivan v.
    Louisiana, 
    508 U.S. 275
    , 279 (1993)).
    ¶69            Here, a reasonable jury could not have reached a different
    verdict. The improperly admitted evidence is inconsequential compared to
    the properly admitted evidence of Riley’s guilt, including that (1) Riley was
    found with Kelly’s blood on him; (2) Riley was found with blood on his
    clothes; (3) Riley’s clothes and ID badge were found at the murder scene;
    (4) an eyewitness saw Riley in Kelly’s housing pod the night of the murder;
    and (5) Riley hand-wrote a letter graphically detailing Kelly’s murder and
    Riley’s quest to become a “patched” AB member by looking for a “golden
    goose.” For these reasons, improper admission of two sentences of
    testimony concerning Kelly’s character for peacefulness was harmless
    error.
    iii.   Rule 403 Violations
    ¶70             Riley argues the trial court erred in admitting evidence of
    Kelly’s time in protective custody in violation of Arizona Rule of Evidence
    403, which prohibits admission of relevant evidence whose probative value
    is substantially outweighed by the risk of unfair prejudice. “Unfair
    prejudice means an undue tendency to suggest decision on an improper
    basis . . . such as emotion, sympathy or horror.” State v. Schurz, 
    176 Ariz. 46
    , 52 (1993) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Fed. R. Evid. 403).
    ¶71          Here, Riley’s Rule 403 argument is unavailing because the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting relevant motive
    evidence. Although such evidence likely undermined Riley’s defense, it
    was not admitted to evoke “emotion, sympathy, or horror.” 
    Id.
     (“[N]ot all
    harmful evidence is unfairly prejudicial. After all, evidence which is
    relevant and material will generally be adverse to the opponent.”). There
    was no Rule 403 violation.
    iv.    Officer Vincent’s Testimony Regarding the “Atta-Boy”
    Gesture
    ¶72          Officer Vincent also testified that, on the night of the murder,
    as Riley and Levis were exiting C Pod, she saw Riley pat Levis on the
    shoulder “kind of atta-boying him” and that Riley looked “happy.” Riley
    21
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    argues that the trial court violated several Arizona Rules of Evidence in
    admitting this testimony, including Rule 602 because Officer Vincent did
    not know the significance of Riley’s pat on Levis’s shoulder; Rule 701(a)
    because the testimony was not rationally based on Officer Vincent’s
    perception; and Rule 701(b) because the testimony was not helpful to the
    jury. In sum, Riley contends that Officer Vincent’s testimony was not
    necessary because the jury could determine on its own the significance of
    Riley’s gestures and interactions with Levis.
    ¶73            Because Riley did not object to the admission of this evidence
    at trial, we review these claims for fundamental error. See Anderson, 
    210 Ariz. at
    341 ¶ 45.
    ¶74          Riley’s argument that Officer Vincent’s testimony does not
    pass muster under Rule 602 is unpersuasive. The rule provides that “[a]
    witness may testify to a matter only if evidence is introduced sufficient to
    support a finding that the witness has personal knowledge of the matter.”
    Ariz. R. Evid. 602. In essence, Rule 602 permits a witness’s observation
    testimony. Here, Officer Vincent’s testimony was based on her own
    perception and her characterization of a pat on the back and a smile as a
    congratulatory gesture is unremarkable.
    ¶75         Officer Vincent’s testimony also did not violate Rule 701,
    which provides:
    If a witness is not testifying as an expert,
    testimony in the form of an opinion is limited to
    one that is:
    (a) rationally based on the witness’s perception;
    (b) helpful to clearly understanding the
    witness’s testimony or to determining a fact in
    issue . . . .
    See State v. King, 
    180 Ariz. 268
    , 280 (1994) (reasoning that a witness’s opinion
    as to whether a person depicted on video was the defendant was admissible
    under Rule 701 because it was based on his perception and “assisted the
    jury in determining a fact in issue—the identity of the person on the
    videotape”). Officer Vincent’s testimony did not violate Rule 701(a)
    because her opinion was rationally based on her perception that Riley’s
    smile and pat of Levis’s back was congratulatory.
    22
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶76            Officer Vincent’s testimony was also admissible under Rule
    701(b) because it was helpful to aid the jury’s understanding of a fact at
    issue. Riley contends that he was in Kelly’s housing pod the night of the
    murder because he intended to warn him of the murder plot. Upon
    discovering that Kelly was dead, Riley claimed that he panicked and “took
    off.” The State contested Riley’s explanation. Officer Vincent’s testimony
    assisted the jury in determining this fact because her description of Riley’s
    behavior is inconsistent with a panicked man—as Riley claimed to be—and
    tended to prove the State’s theory of the case. Further, contrary to Riley’s
    claim, the jury was not in the same position as Officer Vincent to discern
    the significance of Riley’s “atta-boy” or “happy” expression because she
    was the only percipient witness to the interaction. Officer Vincent’s
    testimony provided information to assist the jury in determining Riley’s
    role in Kelly’s murder. For these reasons, the trial court did not err in
    admitting Officer Vincent’s testimony.
    v.     Comparison of the Worth of Kelly’s Life with Riley’s
    ¶77           Riley argues that when the prosecutor stated in his penalty
    phase rebuttal closing argument “[y]ou don’t have two more different
    people, Sean Kelly, who had to go to protective custody because he
    wouldn’t be a part of that world, and the defendant, who executed him,”
    he impermissibly compared the value of Riley’s and Kelly’s lives. Riley did
    not object so we review for fundamental error. See Anderson, 
    210 Ariz. at
    341 ¶ 45.
    ¶78           This argument is unpersuasive because the statement did not
    compare the value of Kelly’s and Riley’s lives. Instead, the prosecutor
    merely urged the jury to reject Riley’s suggestion that it should consider the
    violent prison environment as mitigation because Riley and others involved
    in the AB created the “kill-or-be-killed” environment and that, unlike Riley,
    Kelly had rejected that culture. Likewise, any error was harmless in light
    of the substantial evidence of Riley’s guilt.
    E.     Inclusion of      Duress     Defense    in   Guilt-Phase      Jury
    Instructions
    ¶79           Riley argues the trial court erred by instructing the jurors that
    duress is not a defense to first degree murder. Because Riley did not object
    23
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    to the jury instructions, we review this claim for fundamental error. See
    Hunter, 
    142 Ariz. at 90
    .
    ¶80            On November 2, 2015, during a conference to discuss jury
    instructions, the prosecutor requested to add an instruction that duress is
    not a defense to first degree murder. Defense counsel claimed they would
    not be raising the duress defense, but agreed to the instruction’s inclusion.
    Before the trial court read the final instructions to the jury, defense counsel
    again approved the instruction. The court instructed the jurors that “[a]
    person compelled to commit a crime by the threat or use of immediate force
    against that person is not justified in committing the crime if it involved
    homicide or serious physical injury.”
    ¶81           Throughout the trial, the State produced evidence that AB
    probates, like Riley at the time of the murder, were not at liberty to refuse
    orders and that Kelly had previously been in protective custody after he
    received threats from “influential white inmates” for refusing to carry out
    an assault on another inmate. The State argues that the duress instruction
    “clarified any misconception the jurors may have developed that Riley
    would not be criminally responsible for killing Kelly if he had acted under
    threat from the [AB].”
    ¶82           The State concedes that no reasonable juror would have
    believed that Riley acted under duress, and neither the State nor Riley relied
    on a theory of duress. During closing arguments, defense counsel
    specifically addressed the duress instruction and noted that it would not
    “come into play” because “nobody has said that Mr. Riley was compelled
    to commit this crime by threats or use of force. That has never come out
    ever, not even in the slightest.”
    ¶83            “A party is entitled to any jury instruction reasonably
    supported by the evidence.” State v. Burns, 
    237 Ariz. 1
    , 17 ¶ 48 (2015). But
    the giving of an abstract instruction, which “broadens the issues beyond the
    scope of the evidence and thus impliedly submits to the jury issues and
    questions not properly before it,” constitutes error. See State v. Willits, 
    96 Ariz. 184
    , 190–91 (1964); Glenn v. Chenowth, 
    71 Ariz. 271
    , 273–74 (1951)
    (holding a self-defense instruction was improper in a civil suit where
    neither party asserted such a claim and “[t]he instruction was susceptible
    of conveying the impression to the jury that the trial judge may possibly
    have thought that [the plaintiff] had been attacked by [the defendant]”).
    24
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶84            Here, although neither party relied on a theory of duress, the
    trial court did not err in giving the duress instruction because, without it,
    the jury could have improperly concluded that Riley killed Kelly to avoid
    physical harm by the AB. Courts may instruct a jury under these
    circumstances to minimize the risk that a jury will base its verdict on an
    erroneous legal assumption. See, e.g., State v. Champagne, 
    247 Ariz. 116
    , 137
    ¶ 60 (2019) (holding the trial court did not commit instructional error when,
    “without the voluntary intoxication instruction the jury could have rejected
    [defendant]’s claim of innocence but improperly concluded that his
    voluntary intoxication prevented him from forming the necessary intent for
    criminal liability”).
    ¶85            Nevertheless, even if the trial court erred in giving the duress
    instruction, such error was not fundamental because it did not amount to a
    comment on the evidence by the trial judge. A judge violates Arizona’s
    constitutional prohibition against commenting on evidence by expressing
    “an opinion as to what the evidence proves,” in a way that interferes “with
    the jury’s independent evaluation of that evidence.” State v. Rodriguez, 
    192 Ariz. 58
    , 63 ¶¶ 28–29 (1998); see also Ariz. Const. art. 6, § 27. An abstract
    instruction may amount to a comment on the evidence if the instruction
    indicates the trial judge’s opinion regarding some evidence of the case. See
    Chenowth, 
    71 Ariz. at
    273–74.
    ¶86           Contrary to Riley’s argument, the duress instruction did not
    amount to a comment on the evidence. Unlike the instruction in Chenowth,
    where the self-defense instruction could have indicated to the jury that the
    judge had formed an opinion about who hit whom first, the duress
    instruction here carried no such implication. Riley asserts that the
    instruction implied that the judge believed there was evidence of duress,
    and because Riley’s defense that he intended to warn Kelly of an impending
    attack was the only evidence that came close to the issue of duress, the
    instruction further implied that the jury should not consider Riley’s
    defense.
    ¶87            But this argument is unpersuasive for several reasons. First,
    the trial court expressly informed the jury, prior to closing arguments, that
    they could disregard inapplicable instructions. Second, the prosecutor did
    not state or imply that Riley may have acted under duress, and defense
    counsel expressly informed the jury that the duress instruction did not
    25
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    apply.     Third, Riley’s letter discussing Kelly’s murder provided
    overwhelming evidence that Riley did not act under duress. Finally, no
    reasonable juror would have discounted Riley’s defense based on the
    duress instruction because Riley’s entire defense rested on the premise that
    he did not kill Kelly. The sole purpose of the duress instruction was to
    accurately inform the jury that a defendant cannot rely on duress to justify
    a killing. See A.R.S. § 13-412(C). Because Riley’s defense did not rely on
    any such justification, the instruction did not impact his defense.
    ¶88            In any event, even if the error were fundamental because it
    went to the foundation of the case or deprived him of an essential right, see
    Escalante, 245 Ariz. at 142 ¶ 21, Riley failed to show prejudice. Riley argues
    that the abstract instruction was prejudicial by misleading and confusing
    the jury because it raised a significant possibility that jurors believed they
    could not consider Riley’s defense. For the same reasons stated above, this
    argument is unpersuasive. The trial court informed the jurors that they
    could—and they presumably did—disregard any inapplicable instructions.
    Moreover, Riley has pointed to no evidence in the record indicating he was
    prejudiced by the duress instruction, but rather asks us to speculate that the
    jurors were misled or confused by the instruction. See State v. Broughton,
    
    156 Ariz. 394
    , 397–98 (1988) (holding that prejudice requires a showing of
    more than mere speculation); State v. Munninger, 
    213 Ariz. 393
    , 397 ¶ 14
    (App. 2006) (holding that defendant could not show prejudice through
    speculation). Accordingly, Riley is not entitled to relief on this issue.
    F.     Sufficiency of the (F)(13) Aggravator Instruction
    ¶89           Riley argues that the trial court’s failure to include, in the § 13-
    751(F)(13) aggravator jury instruction, a baseline statement that all first
    degree murders are cold and calculating to some extent rendered the
    instruction insufficient to narrow the aggravator because it allowed the jury
    “to begin with the assumption that there are premeditated first degree
    murders that are not cold and calculating and that any evidence of the cold
    and calculating component would be sufficient to find the aggravator.”
    ¶90           Although we generally “review de novo whether jury
    instructions adequately state the law,” State v. Gallardo, 
    225 Ariz. 560
    , 567
    ¶ 30 (2010) (quoting State v. Tucker, 
    215 Ariz. 298
    , 310 ¶ 27 (2007)), “absent
    an objection by the defendant, we review for fundamental error,” Velazquez,
    216 Ariz. at 309–10. Here, because Riley does not challenge the instruction
    26
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    as an inadequate statement of the law but rather as an inadequate
    narrowing of a facially vague aggravator, his failure to object to the
    instruction means “he is not entitled to relief unless he can show
    fundamental error.” See Hausner, 230 Ariz. at 83 ¶ 107.
    ¶91            Concerning the (F)(13) aggravator, the trial court instructed
    the jurors as follows:
    The State alleges that the murder was
    committed in a cold, calculated manner without
    pretense of moral or legal justification. This
    aggravating circumstance requires more than
    the premeditation necessary to find a defendant
    guilty of first degree murder. This aggravating
    circumstance cannot be found to exist unless the
    State has proved beyond a reasonable doubt
    that the defendant exhibited a cold-blooded
    intent to kill that is more contemplative, more
    methodical, more controlled than that necessary
    to prove premeditated first degree murder. In
    other words, a heightened degree of
    premeditation is required.
    “Cold” means the murder was the product of
    calm and cool reflections.
    “Calculated” means having a careful plan or
    prearranged design to commit murder.
    This aggravating circumstance focuses on the
    defendant’s state of mind at the time of the
    offense, as reflected by the defendant’s words
    and acts. To determine whether a murder was
    committed in a cold, calculated manner without
    pretense of moral or legal justification, you
    must find that the State proved beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the defendant:
    27
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    1. Had a careful plan or prearranged
    design to commit murder before the fatal
    incident; and
    2. Exhibited a cool and calm reflection
    for a substantial period of time before killing;
    and
    3. Had no pretense of moral or legal
    justification or excuse.
    A “pretense of moral or legal
    justification” is any claim of justification or
    excuse that, though insufficient to reduce the
    degree of murder, nevertheless rebuts the
    otherwise cold, calculated nature of the murder.
    Thus, the (F)(13) aggravator qualifies a first degree murder for the death
    penalty if “[t]he offense was committed in a cold, calculated manner
    without pretense of moral or legal justification.” A.R.S. § 13–751(F)(13)
    (2012). The jury found this aggravator beyond a reasonable doubt.
    ¶92            We addressed the constitutionality of Arizona’s (F)(13)
    aggravator in Hausner. Relying on the rationale of a Florida case that
    analyzed the constitutionality of a substantially similar aggravator, we held
    that the (F)(13) aggravator was facially vague. Hausner, 230 Ariz. at 82 ¶ 102
    (citing Jackson v. State, 
    648 So. 2d 85
     (Fla. 1994)). But, like the court in Jackson,
    we subsequently held that the instruction provided to the jury there
    adequately narrowed the aggravator. 
    Id.
     at 83 ¶ 105. Noting that the trial
    court provided “narrowing instructions substantially the same as those
    approved in Jackson,” we reasoned that the (F)(13) instruction “clarified to
    the jury that ‘all first degree premeditated murders are, to some extent,
    committed in a cold, calculated manner,’ but distinguished this aggravator
    as one that ‘cannot be found to exist unless . . . the defendant exhibited a
    cold intent to kill and is more contemplative, more methodical, more
    controlled than that necessary to commit premeditated first degree
    murder.’” Id. ¶ 104 (citation omitted).
    ¶93          The instruction further defined the terms “cold” and
    “calculated” and “emphasized that the jury must look to the defendant’s
    28
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    state of mind at the time of the offense to determine whether there exists
    any pretense of moral or legal justification that rebuts cold and
    calculated . . . .” Id. The instruction also required the jury to “find beyond
    a reasonable doubt that there is (1) a careful plan or prearranged design
    before the murder, and (2) a cool and calm reflection for a substantial period
    of time before the murder.” Id. We ultimately concluded “[t]his instruction
    adequately narrowed the aggravator, making it clear that it is not the cold
    and calculated nature of every murder that will satisfy it, but that the jury
    must find some degree of reflection and planning that goes beyond the
    premeditation required to find first degree murder.” Id. ¶ 105.
    ¶94           Here, the (F)(13) instruction provided to Riley’s jury was
    materially identical to the Hausner instruction with one exception: the
    instruction here did not include the baseline statement that all first degree
    murders are cold and calculating to some extent. Riley’s argument that the
    absence of this statement renders the instruction insufficient to
    constitutionally narrow the aggravator is unpersuasive for several reasons.
    ¶95           First, the instruction from the Florida Supreme Court to
    which we approvingly compared the Hausner instruction did not contain
    any such baseline statement. See Jackson, 
    648 So. 2d at
    89–90, 89 n.8. Second,
    the instruction here expressly stated that the aggravator “require[d] more
    than the premeditation necessary to find a defendant guilty of first degree
    murder” and required the jury to find “a heightened degree of
    premeditation” as compared to first degree murder. Finally, like the
    instruction in Hausner, it expressly defined “cold” and “calculated” and
    further distinguished the aggravator from other first degree murders by
    requiring a finding that the murder was “more contemplative, more
    methodical, [and] more controlled than that necessary to prove
    premeditated first degree murder.” These numerous distinctions between
    the aggravator and other first degree murders satisfy Hausner’s
    requirement that a proper instruction must inform the jury that it “must
    find some degree of reflection and planning that goes beyond the
    premeditation required to find first degree murder.” See Hausner, 230 Ariz.
    at 83 ¶ 105.
    ¶96          If we were to determine that the absence of the baseline
    statement renders the instruction insufficient to narrow the aggravator,
    such an error would unquestionably be fundamental. See, e.g., Maynard v.
    Cartwright, 
    486 U.S. 356
    , 362 (1988) (“[C]hanneling and limiting of the
    29
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    sentencer’s discretion in imposing the death penalty is a fundamental
    constitutional requirement for sufficiently minimizing the risk of wholly
    arbitrary and capricious action.”). But because Riley contends that this
    error went to the foundation of his case or deprived him of a right essential
    to his defense, it would not require reversal because Riley failed to show
    prejudice. Escalante, 245 Ariz. at 140 ¶ 16; see also Henderson, 
    210 Ariz. at
    568
    ¶ 24. The evidence produced at trial overwhelmingly established that Riley
    acted in a cold and calculated manner that exceeded the norm of first degree
    murders. The contents of his letter, corroborated by the evidence from the
    night of the murder, show that Riley actively sought out a potential target,
    requested permission from the AB leadership to kill his target, ignored the
    advice from other inmates who discouraged his plans, and concocted a plan
    to get in and out of Kelly’s pod and cell. He also packed his belongings and
    changed his mailing address in anticipation of repercussions from
    completing the murder.
    ¶97           In sum, the (F)(13) instruction provided to the jury sufficiently
    narrowed the facially vague aggravator; therefore, the instruction, as
    provided, did not constitute error. Even if the lack of a baseline statement
    did constitute fundamental error, Riley did not suffer prejudice.
    G.     Constitutionality of the (F)(6) Aggravating Factor
    ¶98           The § 13-751(F)(6) aggravator provides: “The defendant
    committed the offense in an especially heinous, cruel or depraved manner.”
    Riley argues that the (F)(6) aggravator is unconstitutional for two reasons:
    (1) this Court’s lack of finite limitations on the (F)(6) aggravator render it
    unconstitutionally vague; and (2) any meaningful guidance, if it does exist,
    cannot be adequately conveyed through jury instructions. We review the
    constitutionality of aggravating factors de novo. State v. Nelson, 
    229 Ariz. 180
    , 186 ¶ 25 (2012).
    ¶99           In January 2015, Riley filed a pre-trial motion to strike the
    (F)(6) aggravator, in part, for the same reasons articulated above. The trial
    court subsequently rejected Riley’s motion. At trial, the jury instructions—
    approved by Riley—read as follows:
    Concerning this aggravating circumstance, all
    first degree murders are, to some extent,
    heinous, cruel or depraved. However, this
    30
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    aggravating circumstance cannot be found to
    exist unless the State has proved beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the murder was
    “especially” cruel, “especially” heinous or
    “especially” depraved. “Especially” means
    “unusually great or significant.”
    The term “especially cruel,” or “especially
    heinous or depraved” are considered
    separately; therefore, the presence of any one
    circumstance is sufficient to establish this
    aggravating circumstance. However, to find
    that this aggravating circumstance is proven,
    you must find that “especially cruel” has been
    proven unanimously beyond a reasonable
    doubt or that “especially heinous or depraved”
    has been proven unanimously beyond a
    reasonable doubt.
    The term “cruel” focuses on the victim’s pain
    and suffering. To find that the murder was
    committed in an “especially cruel” manner, you
    must find that the victim consciously suffered
    physical or mental pain, distress or anguish
    prior to death. The defendant must know or
    should have known that the victim would
    suffer.
    The term “especially heinous or depraved”
    focuses upon the defendant’s state of mind at
    the time of the offense, as reflected by the
    defendant’s words and acts. A murder is
    especially heinous if it is hatefully or shockingly
    evil; in other words, grossly bad. A murder is
    especially depraved if it is marked by
    debasement,     corruption,       perversion     or
    deterioration.
    The instructions further defined “relishing,” “gratuitous violence,” and
    “mutilation.” At the end of the aggravation phase, the jury unanimously
    31
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    found that the State had proved that Riley committed the murder in both
    an especially cruel manner and an especially heinous or depraved manner.
    ¶100            In State v. Gretzler, this Court described circumstances, or
    factors, which narrowed the meaning and constitutional application of the
    “especially heinous, cruel, or depraved” aggravators. 
    135 Ariz. 42
    , 50–53
    (1983). In Walton v. Arizona, the Supreme Court found this aggravating
    factor facially vague, but it held that Gretzler’s definition of the provision
    rendered it “constitutionally sufficient because it [gave] meaningful
    guidance to the sentencer.” 
    497 U.S. 639
    , 654, 655 (1990), overruled on other
    grounds by Ring v. Arizona, 
    536 U.S. 584
     (2002). Although Riley does not
    argue that Walton was wrongly decided, he contends it no longer protects
    the constitutionality of Arizona’s (F)(6) aggravator because “[t]he Supreme
    Court’s . . . justifications for upholding Arizona’s vague [(F)(6)] aggravator
    no longer exist.”
    ¶101            First, Riley contends that our interpretation of the Gretzler
    factors as non-exclusive guides contradicts the Supreme Court’s reliance on
    Gretzler as a finite list of limiting factors. See Walton, 
    497 U.S. at 655
     (finding
    this Court’s definitions of the (F)(6) aggravators to be constitutionally
    sufficient). Contrary to Riley’s argument, the Supreme Court has noted that
    this Court did not view the Gretzler factors as an exclusive list. Indeed,
    Walton expressly noted the availability of multiple constructions of the
    (F)(6) aggravator that would be “constitutionally acceptable.” 
    Id.
     (citing
    Maynard, 
    486 U.S. at 365
    ); id. at 695 (Blackmun, J., dissenting) (“Since its
    decision in Gretzler, the Arizona Supreme Court has continued to identify
    new factors which support a finding that a particular murder was heinous
    or depraved.”). Our expansion of the Gretzler factors, therefore, does not
    render its guidance—embodied in the jury instructions—any less
    meaningful.
    ¶102          Second, Riley contends “[t]his Court has affirmatively created
    more of a constitutional problem by removing any meaning from the word
    ‘especially.’” He argues the dictionary definition of especial and our
    historical analysis of the (F)(6) aggravator requires that a “jury must be able
    to compare the factor against the norm” or the “prototypical murder.”
    Although the jury instructions included a definition of “especially,” Riley
    maintains a mere definition of the word “give[s] the jury no way to
    determine whether the [defendant’s] conduct meets this definition.”
    Effectively, Riley is making an argument we rejected in State v. Johnson:
    32
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    “that the term ‘especially’ in [§ 13-751(F)(6)] 3 essentially requires some kind
    of comparison between death-eligible murder cases and the ‘norm.’” 
    212 Ariz. 425
    , 431–32 ¶¶ 19–20 (2006) (rejecting that argument based on this
    Court’s prior rejection of proportionality review).
    ¶103           Riley errs here by patching together a non-existent “above the
    norm test” that effectively revives proportionality review, which we
    abandoned in State v. Salazar, 
    173 Ariz. 399
    , 416–17 (1992). Undoubtedly, as
    Riley argues, the death penalty “should be reserved for cases in which
    either the manner of the commission of the offense or the background of the
    defendant places the crime ‘above the norm of first-degree murders.’” See
    State v. Carlson, 
    202 Ariz. 570
    , 582 ¶ 45 (2002) (quoting Hoskins, 
    199 Ariz. at
    163 ¶ 169); see also State v. Andriano, 
    215 Ariz. 497
    , 506 ¶ 43 (2007) abrogated
    on other grounds by State v. Ferrero, 
    229 Ariz. 239
     (2012) (“[J]urors must assess
    whether the murder was so cruel that it rose above the norm of first degree
    murders.”). But we have never held that a jury must compare one murder
    to another, and we have expressly rejected the argument that juries must be
    informed of any comparison to the “norm.” See State v. Bocharski, 
    218 Ariz. 476
    , 487–88 ¶¶ 47–50 (2008).
    ¶104          Indeed, by providing statutory aggravators and
    constitutionally acceptable definitions to the terms “especially heinous,
    cruel, or depraved,” the legislature and this Court have provided juries
    with the means to distinguish a murder that satisfies the (F)(6) aggravator
    from the “norm.” See Carlson, 
    202 Ariz. at
    582 ¶ 45; see also State v. Hidalgo,
    
    241 Ariz. 543
    , 551–52 ¶¶ 27–28 (2017) (noting that Arizona’s death penalty
    scheme provides several means of narrowing the class of death-eligible
    persons). In other words, the specific, thorough definitions as to what
    constitutes “especially heinous, cruel, or depraved” murder necessarily
    imply that “normal” murders do not meet these definitions; thus, juries do
    not require any comparison of the facts before them to other murders.
    Although Riley may be correct in stating “[t]he ‘above the norm’ standard
    in the (F)(6) is not and never has been a proportionality review,” the
    standard to which he is referring has never required juries to compare the
    facts of one murder against another. This standard is satisfied by
    constitutionally acceptable jury instructions that provide meaningful
    guidance to the jury.
    3   Previously A.R.S. § 13-703(F)(6).
    33
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶105            Finally, to the extent that Riley challenges the constitutional
    sufficiency of the definitions provided in the jury instructions, we have
    repeatedly upheld jury instructions materially identical to those here. See,
    e.g., State v. Medina, 
    232 Ariz. 391
    , 408–09 ¶¶ 74–75 (2013); State v. Prince,
    
    226 Ariz. 516
    , 531–33 ¶¶ 48–54 (2011); Gallardo, 225 Ariz. at 566 ¶¶ 21–23;
    State v. Chappell, 
    225 Ariz. 229
    , 237–38 ¶ 27 (2010); State v. Pandeli (“Pandeli
    III”), 
    215 Ariz. 514
    , 523–24 ¶¶ 20–21 (2007).
    ¶106           Assuming our jurisprudence has provided meaningful
    guidance, Riley argues that guidance cannot be “adequately reduced to a
    jury instruction.” Although Riley attempts to introduce a novel argument
    here—contrasting the descriptive nature of this guidance against the
    prescriptive nature of jury instructions—we have repeatedly held that the
    (F)(6) aggravator may be constitutionally applied if given substance and
    specificity by jury instructions that follow our constructions. See Anderson,
    
    210 Ariz. at
    352–53 ¶¶ 109–14; see also Hargrave, 225 Ariz. at 13 ¶ 44;
    Andriano, 215 Ariz. at 505 ¶ 38; State v. Tucker, 
    215 Ariz. 298
    , 310 ¶ 28 (2007);
    Cromwell, 211 Ariz. at 188–89 ¶¶ 40–42.
    ¶107          Riley first posits “[t]he rationale of Walton does not apply to
    jury sentencing” because Walton was decided at a time when the sentencers
    in Arizona were trial judges, who “are presumed to know the law and
    apply it in making their decisions.” He focuses once more on the word
    “especially,” arguing that the descriptive nature of our guidance grants trial
    judges—but not juries—the necessary context to distinguish between
    “normal” murders and “especially heinous, cruel, or depraved” murders.
    But we rejected a similar argument in Cromwell, stating “Supreme Court
    case law . . . dispels that notion because it distinguishes constitutional
    statutes from unconstitutional statutes on the basis of the clarifying
    definition, not on the supposition that judges may apply the statute one
    way and jurors another.” 211 Ariz. at 189 ¶ 44 (citing Maynard, 
    486 U.S. at 365
    ). Because the Supreme Court has held constitutional our definitions of
    the (F)(6) aggravator, jury instructions that convey those definitions with
    adequate specificity protect the constitutionality of the (F)(6) aggravator
    when a jury, rather than a judge, conducts the fact-finding.
    ¶108         Relying on one sentence from Newton v. Main, Riley also
    contends jury instructions must be prescriptive. See 
    96 Ariz. 319
    , 321 (1964)
    (“The test to be used in determining the correctness of instructions is
    whether upon the whole charge the jury will gather the proper rules to be
    34
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    applied in arriving at a correct decision.”). He argues that jury instructions
    must “establish a formula into which a sentencer might insert facts to
    determine the existence of an . . . aggravating factor.” Therefore, according
    to Riley, our descriptive guidance cannot satisfy this requirement.
    ¶109          Our discussion on jury instructions in Newton does not
    support this novel proposition. Both Newton and the cases upon which it
    relied examined jury instructions for correctness—that is, for correct
    statements of the law. See Newton, 
    96 Ariz. at 320
    ; see also Musgrave v.
    Githens, 
    80 Ariz. 188
    , 192–93 (1956); Daly v. Williams, 
    78 Ariz. 382
    , 387 (1955).
    Nothing in Newton or any other Arizona case suggests that courts must
    provide juries with formulaic plug-and-play instructions.
    ¶110           In sum, Riley has provided no valid arguments challenging
    the constitutional sufficiency of our guidance regarding Arizona’s (F)(6)
    aggravator or the constitutional applicability of the aggravator by a jury,
    rather than a judge. Accordingly, Riley is not entitled to relief on this issue.
    H.     Inclusion of the Accomplice Liability Instruction During
    Aggravation Phase
    ¶111          Riley argues that the prosecutor’s recitation of the guilt-phase
    accomplice liability instruction (“accomplice instruction”) in the
    aggravation phase violated the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, and Fourteenth
    Amendments to the United States Constitution because they contradicted
    the jury instructions for the (F)(6) and (F)(13) aggravators and lessened the
    State’s burden to prove those aggravators beyond a reasonable doubt.
    Although Riley initially objected to the prosecutor’s introduction of the
    accomplice instruction, he withdrew that objection. Because Riley did not
    object to the reference to the accomplice jury instruction, we review for
    fundamental error. See Anderson, 
    210 Ariz. at
    341 ¶ 45.
    ¶112          During the trial’s aggravation phase, Riley’s attorney made
    several statements that seemed to contest his guilt. Specifically, Riley’s
    attorney stated:
    Let’s look at the evidence. When Dr. Hu
    testified, he can’t say what wounds—or who
    caused the wound exactly. And he can’t say
    35
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    when Sean Kelly was unconscious. It could
    have been the first wound.
    ....
    No gratuitous violence. You see [sic] and you
    heard testimony there were other people
    involved in this. Other people involved. If
    there is [sic] other people involved, how do we
    know beyond a reasonable doubt—which is the
    law—that Mr. Riley was the one who caused all
    this infliction or violence to Mr. Riley? [sic]
    Who can say that? I wasn’t there. The State
    wasn’t there.
    ¶113          To counter these statements, the prosecutor read, on rebuttal,
    an excerpt from the guilt-phase accomplice instruction, stating:
    The defendant is criminally accountable for the
    conduct of another if the defendant is an
    accomplice of such other person in the
    commission of the offense, including any
    offense that is a natural and probable or
    reasonably foreseeable consequence of the
    offense for which the person was an accomplice.
    Riley initially objected to the prosecutor’s statement, but he withdrew his
    objection once he understood that the prosecutor was reading from the
    guilt-phase instruction.
    ¶114         After reading the accomplice instruction, the prosecutor
    remarked:
    In other words, if you’re in for a penny, you’re
    in for a pound. You do not need to know which
    wound was inflicted by Thomas Riley. That’s
    not the law that the judge gave you.
    The law in the state of Arizona is that if you and
    your accomplices go out and start stabbing
    somebody, you don’t get to run to the jury and
    say: Oh, I don’t know which one I inflicted.
    36
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    In for a penny, in for a pound. That is the law.
    And these guys were working in concert with
    each other. By the defendant’s own admission,
    he stabbed the most. You do not need to focus
    on which one did what. The law doesn’t make
    that distinction.
    And that makes sense. You don’t get the benefit
    that: I stabbed him too many times. I couldn’t
    keep track.
    You don’t get that benefit. That is not the law.
    So go back and look at your instructions. But on
    page 29, you will see: If you and your
    accomplices are—if you’re the lookout and
    they’re in there, you are still accountable. That’s
    the law. And it’s right there in black and white,
    page 29.
    ¶115           Riley argues that the prosecutor’s reading of the accomplice
    instruction, combined with his statements on accountability, amounted to
    an instruction to the jury about how it should weigh the evidence presented
    during the aggravation phase. Riley contends this was fundamental error
    because the accomplice instruction and the aggravation-phase instructions
    conflict: The accomplice instruction allows for a conviction based on a co-
    conspirator’s actions, but the aggravation instructions require the jury to
    find that the defendant individually had the requisite mens rea. He further
    argues that this was fundamental error because it relieved the State of its
    burden to prove Riley had the requisite mens rea for the (F)(6) and (F)(13)
    aggravators. Finally, Riley argues that the inclusion of the accomplice
    instruction was prejudicial because the (F)(6) and (F)(13) aggravators were
    the “most powerful aggravators” found, and without them a reasonable
    jury could have sentenced Riley to life, not death.
    ¶116          The State’s introduction of the guilt-phase accomplice
    instruction in the aggravation phase did not constitute an error, much less
    a fundamental one. Riley’s statements regarding causation could be
    construed to contest his guilt rather than the aggravating factors. It was
    37
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    proper, therefore, for the prosecutor to rebut those statements by drawing
    the jury’s attention to the guilt-phase accomplice instruction. See A.R.S.
    § 13-751(D) (“The prosecution and the defendant shall be permitted to rebut
    any information received at the aggravation or penalty phase of the
    sentencing proceeding and shall be given fair opportunity to present
    argument as to whether the information is sufficient to establish the
    existence of any of the circumstances included in subsections F and G of
    this section.”).
    ¶117          But even assuming that the introduction of the accomplice
    instruction constituted fundamental error that went to the foundation of his
    case or deprived him of a right essential to his defense, Riley failed to show
    that he was prejudiced. To prove prejudice, he has the burden of showing
    that a reasonable jury could have come to a different verdict. See Escalante,
    245 Ariz. at 144 ¶ 29. Riley failed to meet that burden.
    ¶118           After the aggravation phase, the jury had sufficient evidence
    to find the State proved the (F)(6) and (F)(13) aggravators beyond a
    reasonable doubt. No reasonable jury would have found the murder—a
    stabbing death with over 100 stab wounds inflicted with prison shanks—
    was not conducted in a cruel, heinous, and depraved manner. Likewise,
    Riley’s letter shows that he planned the murder beforehand and that his
    motive was to become a patched member of the AB, demonstrating along
    with other evidence that the murder was “committed in a cold, calculated
    manner without pretense of moral or legal justification.” A.R.S. § 13-
    751(F)(13) (2012).
    ¶119            Although Riley asserts that the jury would not have found
    these aggravators absent the accomplice instruction, nothing in the record
    supports that assertion. Taken altogether, the evidence discussed above
    was more than sufficient to allow the jury to find beyond a reasonable
    doubt—before the prosecutor introduced the accomplice instruction—that
    the State proved the (F)(6) and (F)(13) aggravators. Even if this Court
    ignores the fact that the prosecutor read the accomplice instruction to rebut
    Riley’s re-litigation of his guilt during the aggravation phase, Riley’s letter
    served to prove these aggravators regardless of whether the accomplice
    instruction was presented erroneously.
    ¶120          Accepting Riley’s argument that the jury would not have
    found the (F)(6) and (F)(13) aggravators absent the accomplice instruction,
    38
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    Riley still would be unable to prove that the outcome (i.e., the jury’s death
    sentence verdict) could have been different. The jury found the State
    proved three other aggravators beyond a reasonable doubt, and Riley does
    not challenge them. Rather, he argues that the remaining aggravators—
    conviction of a prior serious offense, current offense committed in custody,
    and current offense committed to promote a criminal street gang—were
    weaker aggravators and intrinsic to the offense. And according to Riley, a
    reasonable jury left with only these “weaker” aggravators could have
    rendered a life sentence rather than a death sentence.
    ¶121           To support his argument, Riley cites to State v. Willoughby,
    where we stated that the quality of the aggravating factor should be
    considered when weighing aggravators against mitigation evidence. 
    181 Ariz. 530
    , 549 (1995). But against his counsel’s advice, Riley waived his
    right to present mitigation evidence—there was little for the jury to weigh
    the aggravators against. Under these circumstances, in which Riley
    committed an in-custody murder to promote a violent gang, even absent
    the (F)(6) and (F)(13) aggravators, he failed to carry his burden to show that
    a reasonable jury could have reached a different conclusion. See Escalante,
    245 Ariz. at 144 ¶ 29; see also Hausner, 230 Ariz. at 84 ¶ 114 (finding that even
    if an (F)(13) aggravator was improperly considered by the jury, the three
    remaining, proven aggravators were sufficient for the jury to render a death
    sentence).
    ¶122           Riley also challenges the prosecutor’s statement
    accompanying his introduction of the guilt-phase accomplice instruction
    wherein he told the jury that Riley was accountable for the actions of his co-
    conspirators. As discussed, supra ¶ 116, the prosecutor’s comments are not
    improper because they properly rebutted Riley’s counsel’s statements
    which addressed Riley’s guilt, not his mindset. See § 13-751(D). But Riley
    is correct that his guilty verdict for first degree murder does not relieve the
    State of its burden of proving, at the aggravation stage, his level of
    involvement in the murder and his mindset in relation to the (F)(6) and
    (F)(13) aggravators. See State v. Garcia, 
    224 Ariz. 1
    , 13 ¶ 44 (2010) (noting
    that Arizona law “specifically requires the trier of fact to make
    Enmund/Tison findings in the aggravation phase.”) (quoting State v. Garza,
    
    216 Ariz. 56
    , 67 ¶ 46 (2007)). However, we find no error, fundamental or
    otherwise, because Riley does not allege Enmund/Tison error and evidence
    of his involvement in Kelly’s murder is overwhelming.
    39
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶123           In sum, the prosecutor’s comments were proper to rebut the
    re-litigation of Riley’s guilt. Even if the comments were an error, Riley has
    failed to carry his burden of proving a reasonable jury could have found a
    death sentence inappropriate.
    I.     Prosecutorial Misconduct
    ¶124            Riley argues that several of the prosecutor’s statements
    constitute misconduct because they deprived him of his due process and
    fair trial rights guaranteed by the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the
    United States Constitution and article 2, sections 4 and 24 of the Arizona
    Constitution.
    ¶125          “In determining whether an argument is misconduct, we
    consider two factors: (1) whether the prosecutor’s statements called to the
    jury’s attention matters it should not have considered in reaching its
    decision and (2) the probability that the jurors were in fact influenced by
    the remarks.” Goudeau, 239 Ariz. at 466 ¶ 196 (internal quotation marks
    omitted). Because Riley did not object to the statements below, we review
    for fundamental error. See Anderson, 
    210 Ariz. at
    341¶ 45.
    i.      Juror Questionnaire’s Description of Aggravating Factors
    and Inclusion of Accomplice Liability Instructions in
    Aggravation Phase
    ¶126           Riley contends that the jury questionnaire’s description of
    aggravating factors as “very few” and “very specific” constitutes
    prosecutorial misconduct. We note this is barren soil for such a claim since
    the trial court must approve the questionnaire. In any event, as discussed,
    supra ¶¶ 24–36, while there was error in this description of Arizona’s
    aggravating factors, it was not fundamental. Similarly, Riley argues that
    the prosecutor’s inclusion of the accomplice liability instruction during
    aggravation phase constitutes prosecutorial misconduct. As we explain
    above, supra ¶¶ 111–23, there was no error, and even if there were, it was
    not fundamental.       Accordingly, Riley’s argument on this point is
    unavailing.
    ii.    Prosecutor’s Statements Regarding “Crossing the Line”
    ¶127        During the defense’s penalty-phase closing argument,
    defense counsel argued that the death penalty is meant for truly heinous
    40
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    murderers like Ted Bundy, Jeffrey Dahmer, Charles Manson, Timothy
    McVey, etc., stating:
    The worst of the worst. That is what [the death
    penalty] is reserved for. That is who the death
    penalty was founded for, the worst of the worst.
    It was founded for Timothy McVey, the
    Oklahoma Bomber. You see how the death
    sentence is applied to the worst of the worst.
    Mr. Riley is not the worst of the worst for our
    society.
    In rebuttal, the prosecutor stated, “[I]t is standard practice to talk about
    Jeffrey Dahmer and Charles Manson and everything else, but the law
    doesn’t care how far you cross the line. The law only matters [sic] that you
    cross it.” Riley argues that this comment misstated the law because simply
    killing another person does not mean that the death penalty is warranted
    and that the misstatement “so infected the trial with unfairness as to make
    the resulting conviction a denial of due process” because the trial court did
    not correct it.
    ¶128         Riley also argues that these statements constitute
    fundamental error because they lessened the burden on the State to prove
    aggravators. However, as the State points out, the statements were made
    in the penalty phase—after the jury had already found aggravators—so
    they could not have lessened the burden of proving aggravators.
    ¶129           “Prosecutors are given ‘wide latitude’ in presenting closing
    argument to the jury.” Goudeau, 239 Ariz. at 466 ¶ 196. “[I]f the prosecutor’s
    remarks were ‘invited,’ and did no more than respond substantially in
    order to ‘right the scale,’ such comments would not warrant reversing a
    conviction.” United States v. Young, 
    470 U.S. 1
    , 12–13 (1985); see also State v.
    Alvarez, 
    145 Ariz. 370
    , 373 (1985) (“Prosecutorial comments which are a fair
    rebuttal to areas opened by the defense are proper.”).
    ¶130         Riley’s argument is unpersuasive. Riley’s comments that the
    death penalty is “reserved” for the “worst of the worst” like mass
    murderers and serial killers is clearly contrary to the law, and those
    comments could have led the jury to believe that they could not vote for the
    death penalty because Riley is neither a mass murderer nor a serial killer.
    41
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    Riley’s comments invited the prosecutor to respond to “right the scale.” See
    Young, 
    470 U.S. at
    12–13. Thus, the prosecutor’s comments did not draw
    “the jury’s attention [to] matters it should not have considered in reaching
    its decision.” See Goudeau, 239 Ariz. at 466 ¶ 196 (quoting Nelson, 229 Ariz.
    at 189 ¶ 39). And if the statement influenced the jury, it influenced it to the
    legally correct conclusion: One does not have to be a mass murderer or
    serial killer to receive the death penalty. The prosecutor acted well within
    his “wide latitude” in his response and there is no error here.
    iii.   Prosecutor’s   Statements   Allegedly   Unsupported    by
    Evidence
    ¶131          Riley contends that the prosecutor engaged in misconduct by
    making several comments unsupported by the evidence during the guilt
    and penalty trial phases, resulting in fundamental, prejudicial error.
    “Specific evidence may be referenced in the opening statement as long as
    the proponent has a good faith basis for believing the proposed evidence
    exists and will be admissible.” State v. Pedroza-Perez, 
    240 Ariz. 114
    , 116 ¶ 12
    (2016). We address in turn each of the prosecutor’s contested statements.
    ¶132           First, the prosecutor stated in his guilt-phase opening
    statement, “Now, Sean Kelly was just a guy. He was in prison because he’s
    [sic] a drug addict and he was caught in the revolving door of prison,
    addiction, prison, even though he had a loving family that cared for him.”
    That Kelly had a loving family was later corroborated by the victim impact
    statements of his former fiancé and their daughter. Although no evidence
    was presented to show that Kelly was a drug addict or that he was caught
    in a “revolving door of prison,” no misconduct occurred because there was
    a very low probability that the prosecutor’s statement would improperly
    influence the jury by characterizing Kelly as a sympathetic victim. See
    Goudeau, 239 Ariz. at 466 ¶ 196. If anything, the statement made Kelly a
    less-sympathetic victim because it described him as a drug addict and
    recidivist criminal.
    ¶133          Second, the prosecutor stated in his guilt-phase opening
    statement:
    Sean [Kelly] had to go into protective custody
    because while he was in prison once, he refused
    42
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    to commit an act of violence on another inmate,
    so he was forced to go into PC.
    Now in the outside world, that would be
    normal. But to the world that the defendant
    lived in and the world of the [AB], that’s
    weakness. And weak inmates are targets for
    men who want membership in the [AB].
    This statement was later corroborated by expert witness testimony on gang
    culture as well as Riley’s letter. The prosecutor’s good faith is evinced by
    this corroboration. There is no misconduct here.
    ¶134           Third, the prosecutor stated in his guilt-phase opening
    statement, “[A shank is] designed for one purpose and one purpose only
    and that is to kill.” This statement is corroborated by expert testimony that
    shanks are weapons. Certainly, the lethal purpose of the shanks in this case
    is evinced by the fact that Kelly was killed with them. No misconduct
    occurred here.
    ¶135           Fourth, the prosecutor stated in his guilt-phase opening
    statement, “The door to Sean’s cell had been left open probably by Sean’s
    cellmate Kenneth Severns who was not inside the cell.” Riley interprets this
    statement as meaning that “[Sean Kelly’s] cellmate left open the cell door in
    order to facilitate the offense.” Riley misinterprets the prosecutor’s
    statement. The prosecutor said that Severns probably left the cell door
    open—he did not assert that Severns did so to facilitate the murder. That
    Severns probably left the door open was later corroborated by Officer
    Vincent’s testimony that Severns was outside his cell during the time when
    Kelly was murdered. The statement did not imply that Severns left the door
    open to facilitate Kelly’s murder. No misconduct occurred here.
    ¶136         Fifth, the prosecutor stated in his guilt-phase opening
    statement:
    Now Eric Olsen lived in the C Pod so he was
    able to slither away quickly back to his cell
    unnoticed. But the defendant and his cellmate
    and accomplice, Dennis Levis, had farther to go.
    43
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    They had to cross from Cell 6 back to Cell A—
    or back from Cell 6 to A Pod to Cell 9.
    Riley interprets this statement to mean that Olsen was an accomplice “and
    was able to get back to his cell without being seen.” That Olsen lived in C
    Pod while Levis and Riley lived in A Pod was later corroborated by Officer
    Todd Springsteen and Officer Dziadura. Further, the State charged Riley
    with first degree murder. An element of first degree murder is
    premeditation. A.R.S. § 13-1105(A)(1). Olsen’s alleged participation shows
    premeditation because it would tend to show that the murder was planned
    beforehand, so the prosecutor’s comments did not “call[] to the jury’s
    attention matters it should not have considered in reaching its decision.”
    See Goudeau, 239 Ariz. at 466 ¶ 196 (quoting Nelson, 229 Ariz. at 189 ¶ 39).
    Rather, the comments appropriately drew the jury’s attention to an element
    of the charged crime. No misconduct occurred here.
    ¶137           Sixth, the prosecutor stated in his guilt-phase closing
    argument, “Where did they stab? What did Dr. Hu tell you? . . . Where are
    they stabbing with these knives? The neck, the heart, the kidney. There is
    nowhere that you can put this in your neck and not be lethal.” The last
    sentence was not supported by Dr. Hu’s testimony because he did not
    testify that every neck stab wound is lethal; however, it is not clear that the
    prosecutor intended to attribute his comment on the lethality of neck
    wounds to Dr. Hu. More importantly, the statement was not misconduct
    because it did not “call[] to the jury’s attention matters it should not have
    considered in reaching its decision.” See id. Taken in context, this statement
    was meant to impress upon the jury that stabbing someone in the neck is
    generally lethal, evincing Riley’s intent to murder Kelly. Intent is an
    element of first degree murder. See § 13-1105(A)(1). Further, there is no
    reasonable probability that the jury was “influenced by the remarks” to find
    intent where there was none. See Goudeau, 239 Ariz. at 466 ¶ 196. Kelly was
    stabbed 114 times. Even without the prosecutor’s characterization of neck
    wounds as always being fatal, the jury could find intent to murder from the
    number and location of Kelly’s stab wounds. Thus, this statement was well
    within the “wide latitude” given to parties in closing argument and was not
    misconduct. See id.
    ¶138          Seventh, the prosecutor stated in his guilt-phase closing
    argument, “But what Dr. Hu told you is that it’s impossible, impossible for
    blood spatter to get behind your ear and onto—the small little particles onto
    44
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    your body if the victim is dead.” This is a reasonable inference from Dr.
    Hu’s testimony that bleeding does not occur if the heart is not beating. See
    id. No misconduct occurred here.
    ¶139         Finally, the prosecutor stated in his guilt-phase closing
    argument:
    So the question is who did it. We constantly
    heard about cell seven and cell one. Cell seven
    we can eliminate right off the bat. But the
    moment CO [correctional officer] Franco—the
    idea cell seven had anything to do with this
    crime was blown out the window. It was
    impossible. CO Franco told you that she stood
    at that cell, she spoke to the inmates—to those
    inmates and she shut the door.
    So that only leaves whoever was up on the
    second tier and CO Vincent told you that she
    had an eye on them. And it’s just common
    sense. There was no way they could rush down,
    whoever these mystery little inmate ninjas are,
    completely undetected, stab, stab, stab, rush
    back up and do this without leaving a lick of
    blood.
    Riley interprets this statement to mean that “[n]o one could come down
    from the second tier of the cell block without CO Vincent’s knowledge.”
    But the prosecutor’s statements are “reasonable inferences from the
    evidence.” See id. Specifically, Officer Vincent testified that she was
    watching the area, and Exhibit 14 shows that she had a full vantage point
    of both tiers of C Pod. No misconduct occurred here.
    iv.    Consistency of Prosecutor’s Remarks During Guilt-Phase
    Opening Statements and Aggravation-Phase Closing
    Arguments
    ¶140         Riley briefly argues that the prosecutor committed
    misconduct when he made inconsistent statements during guilt-phase
    opening statements and aggravation-phase closing arguments concerning
    45
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    whether Riley targeted Kelly or whether Kelly’s murder was at random.
    The guilt-phase opening statements are the following:
    Sean had to go into protective custody because
    while he was in prison once, he refused to
    commit an act of violence on another inmate, so
    he was forced to go into PC.
    Now in the outside world, that would be
    normal. But to the world that the defendant
    lived in and the world of the [AB], that’s
    weakness. And weak inmates are targets for
    men who want membership in the [AB].
    The aggravation-phase closing statements at issue are the following:
    He [Riley] says—I believe it’s on page 2 or 3 [of
    his letter]—that he is hunting big time. He is
    hunting. He is not hunting for one person,
    specifically. He is coldly and dispassionately
    laying out any target that he can get. It doesn’t
    matter who. Any golden goose.
    ¶141          These statements are not inconsistent. The prosecutor’s
    statements reflect the State’s theory that the AB targeted Kelly because of
    his previous actions and that Riley did not care who he killed so long as it
    gained him admission to the AB. Once Riley received AB approval, he
    killed Kelly not because he had previously targeted him, but because the AB
    sanctioned the murder and rewarded Riley for killing Kelly. No error
    occurred here.
    ¶142           Riley asserts there was another inconsistency in the guilt-
    phase opening statement and closing arguments. In the opening statement,
    the prosecutor told the jury Olsen was able to “slither away quickly back to
    his cell unnoticed.” See supra ¶ 136. However, in the closing, the prosecutor
    stated that CO Vincent had a view of the second tier and none of the
    prisoners could have rushed down to commit the murder. See supra ¶ 139.
    Because Olsen lived on the second tier, Riley argues the comments were
    inconsistent.
    46
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶143          These statements may be inconsistent; however, Riley cites to
    no case law, and we have found none, which holds that inconsistent
    statements per se constitute misconduct. Rather, the standard for
    determining misconduct remains the two-prong Goudeau test. 239 Ariz. at
    466 ¶ 196. Evidence of Olsen’s participation, as discussed in the first
    statement, was proper because it tended to show premeditation, which is
    an element of first degree murder. See § 13-1105(A)(1). As for the second
    statement, suggestion of Olsen’s non-participation did not bring anything
    to the attention of the jury, for or against Riley. If anything, such an
    inconsistency likely inured to Riley’s benefit to the extent it undermined the
    State’s theory. In any event, any inconsistency in the prosecutor’s
    statements regarding Olsen’s participation in Kelly’s murder was unlikely
    to influence the jury as to Riley’s guilt given the weight of the evidence. See
    Goudeau, 239 Ariz. at 466 ¶ 196.
    ¶144           As a final note on the prosecutor’s opening statement and
    closing argument, any prejudice was ameliorated by the trial court’s
    curative instructions. When a trial court instructs the jury that the
    statements made by the attorneys are not evidence, the instructions
    “generally cure any possible prejudice from argumentative comments
    during opening statements.” State v. Manuel, 
    229 Ariz. 1
    , 6 ¶¶ 23–24 (2011).
    Here, the trial court instructed the jury three times that the statements made
    by the attorneys were not evidence. Thus, any prejudice that Riley may
    have suffered due to the prosecutor’s comments during opening statement
    or closing argument is ameliorated by the trial court’s curative instructions.
    v.     Prosecutor’s Statements Regarding Lack of Witnesses for
    Riley
    ¶145          Riley argues that the prosecutor committed misconduct by
    asserting that no witnesses had come forward to testify due to AB
    intimidation. In his guilt-phase closing argument, Riley said, “Now, all of
    these guys are neighbors. Look at the photo in that exhibit. You’re telling
    me that nobody heard any screaming. Nobody came forward and said that
    they saw something or heard something. This was an inside-of-C-Pod job,
    and their silence speaks volumes.” On rebuttal, the prosecutor said, “Why
    wouldn’t people testify against Tommy Riley? . . . Maybe because the [AB]
    did their job that day. What did Keland Boggs tell you? Fear and
    intimidation is how they run the prisons.”
    47
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶146          Here, Riley’s closing argument invited the prosecutor’s
    response. See Young, 
    470 U.S. at
    12–13; see also Alvarez, 
    145 Ariz. at 373
    .
    Riley implied that no witnesses had come forward because the murder was
    an “inside job,” thus evincing Riley’s innocence. The prosecutor rebutted
    that the lack of witnesses was likely due to the AB’s intimidation tactics.
    Further, this statement was a fair inference from the evidence. No
    misconduct occurred here.
    vi.    Prosecutor’s Statements About Kelly’s Time in Protective
    Custody
    ¶147         During the guilt-phase of the trial, the following colloquy
    occurred between the prosecutor and Officer Dziadura:
    Q. With respect to Sean Kelly, what did you
    learn about the reasons why he had went into
    protective custody?
    A. Well, he was at our Douglas facility. He was
    asked by influential white inmates to assault
    another inmate. He refused to do so. They
    came back to him and told him if he wasn’t
    going to do it he needed to cover up some
    lightning bolts tattoo that he had on his person
    or be injured.
    In his closing argument in the mitigation phase, the prosecutor said:
    They honestly got up there and asked you about
    how about it is [sic] the Department of
    Correction’s fault, how they create a kill-or-kill-
    be killed environment. You want to talk about
    kill-or-be-killed environment; he [Riley] is the
    kill-or-get-killed environment.
    You don’t have two more different people, Sean
    Kelly, who had to go to protective custody
    because he wouldn’t be a part of that world, and
    the defendant, who executed him. It is not kill
    or get killed. It is like that because people like
    48
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    Tommy Riley control the prisons. Men like
    Sean Kelly put their head down and do their
    time and they won’t attack another inmate.
    People like the defendant prey on that and they
    show no mercy.
    ¶148          Riley specifically challenges the statements that Kelly went
    into protective custody to avoid the “kill-or-get-killed environment.” Riley
    interprets the prosecutor’s commentary as asserting that Kelly had
    renounced violence and argues that the prosecutor intended to portray
    Kelly in a more positive light. Riley asserts this was intentional misconduct,
    was fundamental error, and ultimately prejudiced him because Kelly’s
    renunciation of violence was not in evidence, was irrelevant and, thus,
    called the attention of the jury to matters which it should not have
    considered.
    ¶149         Riley’s arguments are unpersuasive. First, the evidence of
    why Kelly went into protective custody is relevant. See Ariz. R. Evid. 401.
    The State’s theory was that Kelly was targeted because he entered
    protective custody to avoid the AB’s directive to assault another inmate.
    The comment, thus, tends to make Riley’s guilt more probable because it
    shows motive which is relevant when determining guilt.
    ¶150          Second, the prosecutor’s commentary in his mitigation-phase
    closing argument was a reasonable inference from the trial evidence,
    namely Officer Dziadura’s testimony that Kelly went into protective
    custody because he refused to assault another inmate and Boggs’s
    testimony that refusing to earn a “political tattoo” could result in murder
    of the refusing party. See Goudeau, 239 Ariz. at 466 ¶ 196. Accordingly, no
    misconduct occurred here, much less fundamental error.
    vii.   Prosecutor’s Statements That Allegedly Inflamed the Jury’s
    Passions
    ¶151          During the guilt-phase opening statement, the prosecutor
    stated:
    Now Sean wasn’t a child molester, he wasn’t a
    rapist and he wasn’t a snitch. Sean had to go
    into protective custody because while he was in
    49
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    prison once, he refused to commit an act of
    violence on another inmate, so he was forced to
    go into PC.
    ...
    The man that the defendant chose to hunt and
    murder was a man by the name of Sean Kelly.
    Now, Sean Kelly was just a guy. He was in
    prison because he’s a drug addict and he was
    caught in the revolving door of prison,
    addiction, prison, even though he had a loving
    family that cared for him.
    During the penalty-phase closing argument, the prosecutor illustrated the
    differences between the victim, who went into protective custody to avoid
    prison violence, and the defendant, who embraced it. See supra ¶ 147. Riley
    argues that the prosecutor improperly intended “to promote a verdict
    based on sympathy for the victim.”
    ¶152           Riley’s argument is unpersuasive. Even if we accept the
    premise that these statements brought to the jury’s attention matters it
    should not have considered—i.e., sympathy for the victim—there is little-
    to-no probability that the statements—which characterized Kelly as a drug
    addict and a recidivist offender—influenced the jury. See Goudeau, 239 Ariz.
    at 466 ¶ 196. The statements were fleeting and unconnected, and the jury
    was instructed four times to not take sympathy for the victim into account
    when making its decision. See Escalante-Orozco, 241 Ariz. at 282 ¶ 102
    (finding that fleeting comments made by the State did not constitute
    fundamental, reversible error especially because the court instructed the
    jury to not take sympathy for the victim into consideration).
    ¶153        Riley also objects to the prosecutor’s comments during the
    penalty-phase closing argument. There, the prosecutor said:
    But he did not die alone. He did not die alone,
    because the defendant, like a jackal standing
    over a fresh kill, turned over his dying body and
    picked him clean from his clothing so that he
    could get away with this murder. That is how
    Sean Kelly died.
    50
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    But unflattering analogies during closing arguments that are supported by
    facts in common knowledge are permissible. State v. Jones, 
    197 Ariz. 290
    ,
    306 ¶ 41 (2000). In Jones, the prosecutor told the jury that just because the
    defendant was a “nice guy” and “polite” did not mean that he could not
    have committed the charged murders and mentioned that Ted Bundy and
    John Wayne Gacy were also polite. 
    Id.
     We found these statements to be
    permissible because “jurors may be reminded of facts that are common
    knowledge” and because the statement “drew an analogy between Jones’s
    attitude at trial and that of well-known murderers.” Id.; see also Goudeau,
    239 Ariz. at 465-66 ¶¶ 195–97 (referring to a defendant as a “wolf in sheep’s
    clothing” during closing argument was not improper). Here, it is common
    knowledge that jackals are opportunistic, predatory animals. Comparing
    Riley’s cold act of divesting a dying man of his clothing from his cell to a
    jackal’s actions was within the range of permissible argument.
    ¶154           Finally, Riley contends the prosecutor’s comment near the
    conclusion of the penalty-phase closing argument invited the jury to convict
    him based on anger rather than on the evidence presented. The prosecutor
    said:
    You are here to uphold the law, and that is the
    law that the judge gave you. We can show our
    outrage at this crime through your verdict. We
    can show outrage at this crime through the
    punishment of the defendant.
    ¶155           First, it is not clear that this statement appealed to the jury’s
    passions at all. The prosecutor urged the jury to express its outrage at the
    crime for which Riley was already convicted by punishing him. Certainly,
    it is proper for the State to urge the jury to punish a defendant for his crimes.
    An invitation to show “outrage” at the crime does not invite the jury to
    punish the defendant on anything other than the evidence presented at
    trial.
    ¶156         Second, even if the statement were misconduct, it did not
    amount to fundamental error. In Jones, the State asked the jury to convict
    the defendant on behalf of the victim, their families, and the people of
    Arizona. 
    197 Ariz. at
    307 ¶ 43. Even though we acknowledged that such a
    statement may have improperly evoked emotion in the jury, we found that
    any error did not amount to reversible error because it was a single
    51
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    statement, the evidence against the defendant was substantial, and any
    error was cured by the trial judge instructing the jury to ignore statements
    “invoking sympathy.” 
    Id.
     at 306–07 ¶¶ 42–43. Here, the prosecutor made a
    much less provocative statement, and the trial judge instructed the jury to
    not be influenced by sympathy or passion on four separate occasions. Thus,
    any error was cured by the trial court’s instructions.
    viii.   Prosecutor’s Elicitation of Testimony in Violation of Rules
    of Evidence
    ¶157          Riley asserts that the prosecutor improperly elicited
    testimony regarding Kelly’s time in protective custody and other evidence
    in violation of Arizona’s Rules of Evidence. As discussed, supra ¶¶ 57–78,
    any error that may have arisen from the admission of that evidence was not
    fundamental. For this reason, Riley’s argument on this point fails.
    ix.     Cumulative Effect
    ¶158           We may reverse a conviction due to prosecutorial misconduct
    if “the cumulative effect of the alleged acts of misconduct shows that the
    prosecutor intentionally engaged in improper conduct and did so with
    indifference, if not a specific intent, to prejudice the defendant.” Escalante-
    Orozco, 241 Ariz. at 280 ¶ 91 (quoting Bocharski, 218 Ariz. at 492 ¶ 74). Riley
    argues that the cumulative effect of the alleged misconduct proves the
    prosecutor’s intent to prejudice him and his conviction should be reversed.
    For the reasons discussed, we reject Riley’s claim; there was no error in the
    prosecutor’s contested statements. Even if there were error, Riley has failed
    to prove that the prosecutor did so with “indifference” or “specific intent.”
    For these reasons, Riley is not entitled to relief on these grounds.
    J.     Failure to Instruct Jurors of Ineligibility for Parole
    ¶159          Riley argues that the trial court committed error by failing to
    issue a Simmons instruction regarding his ineligibility for parole. See
    Simmons v. South Carolina, 
    512 U.S. 154
     (1994). Because Riley failed to object
    on Simmons grounds during his trial, “our review [is limited] to
    fundamental error.” State v. Bush, 
    244 Ariz. 575
    , 591 ¶¶ 66–68 (2018) (citing
    State v. Valverde, 
    220 Ariz. 582
    , 584–85 ¶¶ 9–12 (2009), abrogated on other
    grounds by Escalante, 
    245 Ariz. 135
    ); see also Hargrave, 225 Ariz. at 14 ¶¶ 50–
    51.
    52
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶160          Riley argues that he sufficiently objected by submitting his
    own Proposed Preliminary Instructions (guilt phase) that did not “include
    the objectionable reference to release,” which the trial court rejected. This
    argument is unpersuasive for two reasons. First, neither Riley’s nor the trial
    court’s preliminary instructions read to the jury contained the
    “objectionable reference to release” because the guilt phase instructions did
    not pertain to the prospective penalty following conviction; thus, Riley’s
    proposed guilt phase jury instructions cannot reasonably be construed as
    an objection to the reference to release. Second, as discussed below, at no
    point did Riley object to any reference to the possibility of release nor did
    he affirmatively request an alternative instruction regarding his ineligibility
    for parole.4
    ¶161           During jury selection, the trial court provided prospective
    jurors with written questionnaires. Both Riley and the prosecutor reviewed
    and approved the questionnaire at a pre-trial status conference. In
    describing the penalty phase of the trial, the questionnaire stated, in
    relevant part:
    If you unanimously find the mitigation is
    sufficiently substantial to call for leniency, the
    Court will sentence the defendant to either life
    imprisonment without the possibility of release
    or life without release until at least twenty-five years
    have passed.
    Question 62 substantially reiterated that statement and asked the jurors if
    they “agree[d] with the law that requires the judge, not the jury, to make
    the decision about which type of life sentence to impose.”
    ¶162           On September 29, 2015, on the second day of voir dire, the
    trial court discussed with the parties whether they wanted the trial court to
    read an overview of the death penalty process to each juror panel before
    questioning them. Riley stated that he was “comfortable” with the contents
    4 Riley raises several other arguments for de novo or fundamental error
    review, most of which are based on the proposition that a court must sua
    sponte issue a Simmons instruction. Riley’s arguments are unavailing
    because he fails to distinguish Bush, which expressly forecloses his claim in
    light of his failure to object to his possibility of release. 244 Ariz. at 593 ¶ 75.
    53
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    of the overview and, along with his counsel, agreed that the trial court
    should read the overview to each panel. Two days later, during a
    conference to settle miscellaneous matters, the trial court reiterated its
    intent to read the overview to the jurors, and neither side objected nor
    raised any concerns.
    ¶163           On October 5, before the first juror panel entered the
    courtroom, the trial judge again reiterated his intent to read the overview
    to the jurors, and neither side objected. As part of the overview, the trial
    court informed the first juror panel that:
    If your sentence is death, he will be sentenced to
    death. If your verdict is that the defendant
    should be sentenced to life, he will not be
    sentenced to death, and the Court will sentence
    him to either life without the possibility of release
    until 35 calendar years are served, or natural life,
    which means the defendant would never be
    released from prison.
    Later the same day and over the next few days of voir dire, the trial court
    continued to instruct each juror panel with the same language from the
    overview.
    ¶164          On November 4, following Riley’s conviction and during a
    telephonic status conference before the aggravation phase, the trial court
    stated, “[M]y JA [Judicial Assistant] sent out the instructions and she didn’t
    hear back from either lawyer as far as the eligibility phase instructions that
    she sent out.” In response, both the State and Riley’s counsel stated that
    they had received the instructions and had no corrections.
    ¶165          On November 5, at the start of the aggravation phase, the trial
    court informed counsel for both sides that it would begin by reading the
    instructions. Both parties acknowledged that they had reviewed the
    instructions, and neither party objected to their contents. The approved
    instructions the trial court read to the jury expressly stated that Riley could
    be sentenced to life imprisonment “with the possibility of release after 25
    years.”
    54
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶166            On November 12, at the end of the penalty phase, the trial
    court read and explained the verdict form before releasing the jury to
    deliberate. As part of its explanation, the trial court stated that if the jury
    found that Riley should be sentenced to life, then Riley could be “sentenced
    to life in prison with the possibility of release in 25 years.” Riley’s counsel
    reviewed and approved the verdict form.
    ¶167          Riley argues the trial court violated his right to due process
    by failing to provide the jury with a Simmons instruction—one that
    informed the jury that Riley was ineligible for parole if given a life sentence.
    Riley’s argument, however, is premised on authority that predates our
    decision in Bush, which forecloses his claim. See 244 Ariz. at 593 ¶ 74.
    ¶168          In Bush, we adopted a “narrow interpretation of Simmons,”
    reasoning that “the due process right under Simmons merely affords a
    parole-ineligible capital defendant the right to ‘rebut the State’s case’ (if
    future dangerousness is at issue) by informing the jury that ‘he will never
    be released from prison’ if sentenced to life.” 244 Ariz. at 592–93 ¶¶ 73–74
    (quoting Simmons, 
    512 U.S. at 177
     (O’Connor, J., concurring in judgment)).
    We noted that relief under Simmons “is foreclosed by [the defendant’s]
    failure to request a parole ineligibility instruction at trial.” 
    Id.
     at 593 ¶ 74
    (quoting Campbell v. Polk, 
    447 F.3d 270
    , 289 (4th Cir. 2006)). Ultimately, we
    held that despite the trial court’s repeated instructions to the jury that Bush
    would be eligible for parole, and defense counsel’s brief and “vaguely
    voiced disagreement before jury selection over whether jurors should ‘be
    advised as to the possibility of release,’” no fundamental Simmons error
    occurred because Bush failed to show “that he was deprived of the right to
    inform the jury of his parole ineligibility.” 
    Id.
     at 590 ¶ 64, 592 ¶ 70, 593 ¶ 75
    (“Unlike in the aforementioned cases [in which courts found reversible
    Simmons error], the trial court neither refused to instruct, nor prevented
    Bush from informing, the jury regarding his parole ineligibility.”).
    ¶169           Here, the trial court afforded Riley numerous opportunities
    to object to, or modify, the jury questionnaire, the death penalty overview,
    the eligibility phase jury instructions, and the verdict form, but Riley and
    his counsel declined. More importantly, at no point did Riley or his counsel
    offer parole ineligibility instructions orally or in writing. As in Bush, Riley
    “has not shown that he was deprived of the right to inform the jury of his
    parole ineligibility.” 244 Ariz. at 593 ¶ 75. Despite the trial court’s
    numerous references to Riley’s release eligibility, “the trial court neither
    55
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    refused to instruct, nor prevented [him] from informing, the jury regarding
    his parole ineligibility.” See id. In fact, Riley’s counsel repeatedly informed
    the jury that Riley would never be released from prison if given a life
    sentence and the prosecutor never disputed the point. Thus, Riley failed to
    establish a Simmons error and is not entitled to relief on this issue.
    ¶170          Consequently, because Riley failed to establish error even if
    he would have been entitled to a requested Simmons instruction because
    future dangerousness was at issue, we need not address that issue.
    Similarly, we need not address whether Riley “carried his burden of
    establishing prejudice resulting from any alleged Simmons error.” Id.
    K.     Request to Revisit Decisions Made in Hidalgo
    ¶171           Riley argues Arizona’s capital punishment scheme is
    unconstitutional because it fails to legislatively narrow the class of first
    degree murders eligible for the death penalty and the trial court abused its
    discretion by refusing to grant an evidentiary hearing on this issue. We
    recently rejected substantially similar claims in Hidalgo. 241 Ariz. at 549–52
    ¶¶ 14–29.
    ¶172          We review constitutional questions de novo, State v. Smith,
    
    215 Ariz. 221
    , 228 ¶ 20 (2007), and a trial court’s failure to grant an
    evidentiary hearing for an abuse of discretion, State v. Gomez, 
    231 Ariz. 219
    ,
    226 ¶ 29 (2012).
    ¶173          In Hidalgo, we rejected the argument that Arizona’s death
    penalty scheme does not sufficiently narrow the class of defendants eligible
    for the death penalty. 241 Ariz. at 549–52 ¶¶ 14–29. That argument was
    premised, in part, on the same statistical evidence put forth by Riley. Id. at
    551 ¶ 25. We also rejected the argument that the trial court’s refusal to grant
    an evidentiary hearing when the previous issue was raised below was an
    abuse of discretion. Id. at 548–49 ¶¶ 8–13.
    i.     Constitutionality of Arizona’s Death Penalty Statutes
    ¶174          We have repeatedly rejected the argument “that our
    legislature has not narrowed the class of persons eligible for the death
    penalty.” State v. Greenway, 
    170 Ariz. 155
    , 164 (1991); see Hidalgo, 241 Ariz.
    at 551 ¶ 27. But Riley asks us to reconsider that argument based primarily
    56
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    on statements by Justice Breyer in the denial for certiorari for Hidalgo.
    Hidalgo v. Arizona, 
    138 S. Ct. 1054
    , 1057 (2018) (mem.) (Breyer, J., statement).
    We are not persuaded.
    ¶175          “To pass constitutional muster, a capital sentencing scheme
    must ‘genuinely narrow the class of persons eligible for the death penalty
    and must reasonably justify the imposition of a more severe sentence on the
    defendant compared to others found guilty of murder.’” Lowenfield v.
    Phelps, 
    484 U.S. 231
    , 244 (1988) (quoting Zant v. Stephens, 
    462 U.S. 862
    , 877
    (1983)). State legislatures can provide this narrowing function by either
    narrowly defining capital offenses “so that the jury finding of guilt
    responds to this concern,” or by “broadly defin[ing] capital offenses and
    provid[ing] for narrowing by jury findings of aggravating circumstances at
    the penalty phase.” Id. at 246.
    ¶176          Riley first asks us to “review the holistic aggravation
    scheme.” Although this argument is somewhat unclear, Riley appears to
    be urging us to examine the aggravating factors in their entirety—as
    opposed to individually—when considering whether the legislature has
    sufficiently narrowed the class of persons eligible for the death penalty. If
    that is the case, we rejected a similar argument in Hidalgo, noting that
    Supreme Court precedents undermine such a position. 241 Ariz. at 550–51
    ¶¶ 19–20, 26 (“Observing that at least one of several aggravating
    circumstances could apply to nearly every murder is not the same as saying
    that a particular aggravating circumstance is present in every murder.”).
    ¶177            Riley next argues that Arizona’s broad definition of first
    degree murder does not satisfy the legislative duty to narrow the class of
    persons eligible for the death penalty. On this point, Riley is likely correct.
    In Hidalgo, we referenced Arizona’s limitation of the death penalty to first
    degree murder as one of several factors to support our holding. 241 Ariz.
    at 552 ¶ 28 (citing Greenway, 
    170 Ariz. at 164
    ). But Arizona’s definition of
    first degree murder is overly broad, encompassing all intentional,
    premeditated murders. See § 13-1105(A); cf. Lowenfield, 424 U.S. at 245
    (discussing, with approval, the constitutionality of the death penalty
    statutes of Texas and Louisiana which “narrowly defined the categories of
    murders for which a death sentence could be imposed”). Nevertheless, we
    expressly rejected that argument in Greenway, and the lack of a narrow
    definition of first degree murder is not dispositive. See Greenway, 
    170 Ariz. at 164
    ; see also Lowenfield, 
    484 U.S. at 246
    .
    57
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶178           Next, relying on the statistical analysis presented to the trial
    court, Riley contends those results directly contradict our holding in Hidalgo
    that Arizona’s death penalty scheme sufficiently narrows the class of
    persons eligible for the death penalty. In addressing this argument in
    Hidalgo, we stated:
    The Court has not looked beyond the particular
    case to consider whether, in aggregate, the
    statutory     scheme     limits  death-sentence
    eligibility to a small percentage of first degree
    murders. Even if Hidalgo is right in his factual
    assertion that nearly every charged first degree
    murder could support at least one aggravating
    circumstance, no defendant will be subject to a
    death sentence merely by virtue of being found
    guilty of first degree murder and, as Hidalgo
    acknowledges, death sentences are in fact not
    sought in most first degree murder
    cases. Observing that at least one of several
    aggravating circumstances could apply to
    nearly every murder is not the same as saying
    that a particular aggravating circumstance is
    present in every murder.
    241 Ariz. at 551 ¶ 26. Justice Breyer interpreted these statements to mean
    we “assum[ed] that the aggravating circumstances fail to materially narrow
    the class of death-eligible first-degree murder defendants.” Hidalgo v.
    Arizona, 138 S. Ct. at 1056. This suggests that our rejection of the “holistic
    view” of aggravating circumstances in favor of the narrowing nature of
    individual aggravating circumstances is contrary to at least four of the
    Justices’ interpretation of Supreme Court precedent. But because we
    decline to overrule our holding in Hidalgo in favor of a minority opinion
    from the Supreme Court, this argument carries little weight. See Teague v.
    Lane, 
    489 U.S. 288
    , 296 (1989) (noting that opinions accompanying certiorari
    denials have no precedential value).
    ¶179            Finally, Riley argues we erroneously relied on jury functions
    (i.e., finding the existence of an alleged aggravating circumstance beyond a
    reasonable doubt) and individualized sentencing to support our holding in
    58
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    Hidalgo because the former “do[es] not show the necessary legislative
    narrowing that [U.S. Supreme Court] precedents require” and the latter
    “concerns an entirely different capital punishment requirement.” Both
    arguments are supported by Supreme Court precedents, which require the
    legislature to provide the narrowing function within the statutory
    definitions of the capital offenses or the aggravating circumstances. See
    Tuilaepa, 
    512 U.S. at 979
    ; Lowenfield, 
    484 U.S. at 246
    ; Zant, 
    462 U.S. at 878
    .
    But, as stated previously, we held in Hidalgo that the aggravating
    circumstances set forth by the Arizona Legislature provide the
    constitutionally required narrowing function, and that holding remains
    binding precedent. Thus, the fact that some of the arguments put forth to
    support that holding may be contradicted by some Supreme Court
    precedents does not invalidate that holding.
    ¶180          In sum, the arguments and accompanying conclusions of law
    enunciated by Justice Breyer and embraced by Riley are not mandated by
    any current, binding precedents. Accordingly, because Riley has not
    established that Hidalgo’s holding is incorrect, he is not entitled to relief on
    this issue.
    ii.    Denial of Evidentiary Hearing
    ¶181          Riley provides three reasons to support his argument that the
    trial court abused its discretion by failing to grant an evidentiary hearing
    on the facts supporting his claim that Arizona’s death penalty scheme was
    unconstitutional. None of them is persuasive.
    ¶182          First, Riley argues the trial court’s refusal to conduct an
    evidentiary hearing infringed his right to a meaningful appeal because the
    lack of a hearing resulted in a record that was insufficiently complete to
    allow an adequate appeal of the issue. Riley relies on Justice Breyer’s
    statement respecting denial of certiorari in Hidalgo to show the impact the
    lack of hearing had on his appeal. See Hidalgo, 138 S. Ct. at 1056 (Breyer, J.,
    statement) (noting that the trial court’s refusal to grant a hearing denied the
    defendant the opportunity to develop the record). Riley contends that
    Justice Breyer’s statement contradicts our conclusion that Hidalgo was
    afforded an opportunity to be heard.
    ¶183         A record that is of “sufficient completeness for adequate
    consideration of the errors assigned” is “satisfactory to afford [a] defendant
    59
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    a meaningful right of appeal.” State v. Schackart, 
    175 Ariz. 494
    , 499 (1993)
    (quoting in part State v. Moore, 
    108 Ariz. 532
    , 534 (1972)). Because the trial
    court assumed as true the evidence Riley and the other defendants
    presented for the constitutional issue, and we addressed the same issue on
    appeal in Hidalgo, there was no error for which the record was lacking.
    ¶184          Second, Riley argues that the refusal to conduct a hearing
    violated his right to due process because the right fundamentally requires
    an opportunity to be heard at a meaningful time and in a meaningful
    manner. He further contends that capital cases are entitled to a heightened
    due process protection because they are unique in their finality. Riley also
    cites the Arizona Constitution, stating that article 2, section 24 “provides
    broader protections for criminal appeals” than the Federal Constitution,
    which therefore “carries with it a greater demand for process.”
    ¶185          To support this argument, Riley relies on the same cases relied
    upon by Hidalgo. In Hidalgo, we agreed that “due process entitles parties
    to notice and a meaningful opportunity to be heard” and “capital
    defendants are accorded heightened procedural safeguards,” but we found
    the cases upon which Hidalgo relied were inapposite. 241 Ariz. at 548 ¶¶ 9–
    10. We also “recognized that evidentiary hearings are not required when
    courts need not resolve factual disputes to decide constitutional issues.” Id.
    at 548 ¶ 8. And we rejected the argument “that a capital defendant is
    entitled to an evidentiary hearing on a pretrial motion even if the court’s
    ruling does not turn on disputed facts.” Id. ¶ 9. Although Hidalgo may not
    have relied on the Arizona Constitution to support his arguments, we
    clearly stated that “[p]rocedural due process does not require an
    evidentiary hearing on a motion when the legal claims do not turn on
    disputed facts.” Id. at 549 ¶ 11. Riley has provided no case law to support
    his proposition that the Arizona Constitution would contradict this
    holding. Therefore, the trial court’s refusal to conduct an evidentiary
    hearing did not violate his right to due process.
    ¶186           Finally, Riley argues under Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
     (1984), that the refusal to conduct a hearing violated his right to effective
    counsel because it impeded his counsel’s ability “to make independent
    decisions about how to conduct the defense.” This argument is likewise
    unpersuasive. The examples of government interference with a counsel’s
    independent decisions discussed in Strickland reflect a direct interference
    with the rights of a defendant. See, e.g., Geders v. United States, 
    425 U.S. 80
    ,
    60
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    88–89 (1976) (bar on attorney-client consultation during overnight recess
    denied defendant his right to confer with counsel); Herring v. New York, 
    422 U.S. 853
    , 864–65 (1975) (bar on summation at bench trial denied defendant
    his right to be heard). Here, as discussed previously, Riley did not have a
    right to an evidentiary hearing. Therefore, the trial court’s refusal to
    conduct one did not violate his right to effective counsel.
    ¶187           Because the trial court did not abuse its discretion by refusing
    to grant an evidentiary hearing on the facts supporting Riley’s claim that
    Arizona’s death penalty scheme was unconstitutional, Riley is not entitled
    to relief on this issue.
    L.     Constitutionality of A.R.S. § 13-752(G) and Defendant’s
    Right to Waive Presentation of Mitigating Evidence
    ¶188           Riley argues that A.R.S. § 13-752(G) is unconstitutional
    because it fails to provide a process to allow jurors to consider mitigating
    evidence when a defendant waives his right to present such evidence. He
    also argues that the trial court erred by allowing him to waive his right to
    present mitigating evidence during the penalty phase of the trial.
    ¶189          We “review constitutional issues de novo, and, when
    possible, construe statutes to uphold their constitutionality.” Hausner, 230
    Ariz. at 82 ¶ 99. Because Riley failed to raise his second claim below, we
    review that challenge for fundamental error. Henderson, 
    210 Ariz. at
    567
    ¶ 19.
    ¶190          In the aggravation phase, Riley’s counsel told the trial court
    that Riley wanted to waive mitigation, against his counsel’s advice. Riley’s
    counsel declared that he had intended to call several witnesses to testify
    about various mitigating circumstances. The trial court then engaged Riley
    in a colloquy, and Riley avowed that he understood his right to present
    mitigation, he was aware of the evidence his attorneys intended to present,
    he had discussed his waiver with his attorneys, he understood that the State
    could still argue for the death penalty even if Riley waived his right to
    present mitigating evidence, and he understood that the jurors would still
    make the decision on whether death was the appropriate sentence. Riley
    confirmed his decision to waive mitigation and avowed he was doing so
    voluntarily.
    61
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶191          The trial court found that Riley’s waiver was made
    knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily, but it approved Riley’s counsel’s
    motion to have Riley prescreened for competency. After receiving the
    results confirming Riley’s competency, the court denied Riley’s counsel’s
    request for another competency evaluation, but it reengaged Riley in
    another mitigation waiver colloquy, which substantially mirrored its
    previous discussion with him. The court again found that Riley waived his
    right to present mitigation knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily.
    ¶192         During the penalty phase, the court instructed the jury as
    follows:
    During this part of the sentencing hearing, the
    defendant and the State may present any
    evidence that is relevant to the determination of
    whether there is mitigation that is sufficiently
    substantial to call for a sentence less than death.
    ...
    Mitigating circumstances may be found from
    any evidence presented during the trial, during
    the first part of the sentencing hearing, or
    during the second part of the sentencing
    hearing.
    You should consider all of the evidence without
    regard to which party presented it. Each party
    is entitled to consideration of the evidence
    whether produced by that party or by another
    party.
    ...
    Mitigating circumstances may be offered by the
    defendant or State or be apparent from the
    evidence presented in any phase of these
    proceedings. You are not required to find that
    there is a connection between a mitigating
    circumstance and the crime committed in order
    to consider the mitigation evidence. Any
    connection or lack of connection may impact the
    62
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    quality and strength of the mitigation evidence.
    ...
    The fact that the defendant has been convicted
    of first degree murder is unrelated to the
    existence of mitigating circumstances. You
    must give independent consideration to all of
    the     evidence      concerning      mitigating
    circumstances despite the conviction. You may
    also consider anything related to the
    defendant’s character, propensity, history or
    record, or circumstances of the offense.
    ...
    You are not limited to mitigating circumstances
    offered by the defendant. You must also
    consider any other information that you find is
    relevant in determining whether to impose a life
    sentence, so long as it relates to an aspect of the
    defendant’s        background,           character,
    propensities, record, or circumstances of the
    offense.
    ¶193          Riley argues that § 13-752(G) is unconstitutional because the
    Eighth Amendment requires the sentencer in a capital case to consider all
    available mitigating evidence, regardless of the defendant’s desire to have
    that information presented, and the statute does not provide a process to
    allow jurors to consider mitigating evidence when a defendant waives his
    right to present such evidence. He asserts that a jury cannot perform the
    requisite individualized determination in a consistent manner if
    consideration of mitigating circumstances is subject to “the whim of the
    defendant.”
    ¶194          The cases upon which Riley relies do indeed hold that the
    Eighth Amendment requires individualized consideration of mitigating
    factors by the sentencer, but none of them suggests that when a defendant
    waives his right to present mitigation, the court must provide some other
    means by which the sentencer can consider that potentially available but
    unoffered mitigating evidence. See Tuilaepa, 
    512 U.S. at
    972–73 (noting the
    requirement for individualized consideration is satisfied “when the jury can
    63
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    consider relevant mitigating evidence” (emphasis added)); Lockett v. Ohio,
    
    438 U.S. 586
    , 608 (1978) (holding unconstitutional a statute that limited the
    “range of mitigating circumstances which may be considered by the
    sentencer” (emphasis added)).
    ¶195           In fact, the Supreme Court expressly rejected the argument
    that a jury’s failure to consider mitigating circumstances due to the
    defendant’s waiver of his right to present evidence of those circumstances
    violates the Eighth Amendment. See Blystone v. Pennsylvania, 
    494 U.S. 299
    ,
    306–08, 206 n.4 (1990). The Eighth Amendment requires only that juries in
    capital cases be allowed to consider all relevant mitigating evidence, and that
    requirement is satisfied when the jury “[is] specifically instructed to
    consider, as mitigating evidence, any matter concerning the character or
    record of the defendant, or the circumstances of his offense.” 
    Id.
     at 307–08
    (internal quotations marks omitted). Similarly, relying on Blystone, we have
    repeatedly held that a defendant’s knowing, intelligent, and voluntary
    waiver of his right to present mitigation does not violate the Eighth
    Amendment even when it precludes a jury from considering all relevant
    mitigation in determining whether to impose the death penalty. See
    Gunches, 240 Ariz. at 203–04 ¶¶ 15–20; Goudeau, 239 Ariz. at 473–74 ¶¶ 244–
    45; Hausner, 230 Ariz. at 85 ¶ 118; State v. Murdaugh, 
    209 Ariz. 19
    , 33–34
    ¶¶ 70–71 (2004).
    ¶196            Riley attempts to incorporate our analysis in State v. Prince,
    
    226 Ariz. 516
     (2011), to support his arguments, asserting that juries have a
    duty to consider, and therefore must consider, all mitigating evidence. But
    that case is inapposite. Although we did discuss the jury’s “duty” to
    consider mitigating evidence, it did not suggest in any way that a
    defendant’s waiver of his right to present mitigating evidence impedes that
    duty. See 
    id.
     at 526–27 ¶¶ 15–20. In discussing the jury’s duty, we cited to
    State ex rel. Thomas v. Granville. Id. ¶ 16. Granville emphasized that any
    mitigating circumstances to be considered by the jury must be “proved by
    the defendant or present in the record.” 
    211 Ariz. 468
    , 472–73 ¶¶ 17–18
    (2005); see also State v. Roscoe, 
    184 Ariz. 484
    , 499 (1996) (“That the burden is
    on the defendant reinforces the conclusion that his personal decision not to
    present certain mitigating evidence is within his discretion.”). Indeed, this
    Court impliedly held § 13-752(G) to be constitutionally sound when we
    ultimately concluded that the “liberal admission of . . . evidence” under
    § 13-752(G) “preserves the entire statutory scheme’s constitutionality.”
    Prince, 226 Ariz. at 526 ¶ 16, 527 ¶ 20.
    64
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶197          Riley argues that we should reconsider our numerous
    holdings on this issue and adopt a procedure from Florida that requires
    prosecutors to compile comprehensive reports of potentially mitigating
    evidence when a defendant refuses to present his own mitigation. See
    Marquardt v. State, 
    156 So. 3d 464
    , 491 (Fla. 2015). But we rejected a similar
    argument in Hausner, refusing to follow the decisions of a minority of courts
    that held that mitigation must be presented even over a defendant’s
    objection to satisfy the state’s interest in a fair and reliable sentencing
    determination. 230 Ariz. at 85 ¶ 120 (citing State v. Koedatich, 
    548 A.2d 939
    ,
    992–97 (N.J. 1988), which Florida courts relied on to adopt their mitigation
    procedures).
    ¶198         In sum, both the Supreme Court and this Court have
    repeatedly held that the Eighth Amendment requires only that a jury be
    allowed to consider mitigating evidence; it does not require a jury to be
    presented with that evidence over a defendant’s objections. More
    importantly, we have already implicitly found § 13-752(G) constitutional.
    Accordingly, the failure of the statute to provide a process for presenting
    mitigating evidence over a defendant’s objections does not render that
    statute unconstitutional, and Riley is not entitled to relief on this issue.
    ¶199          Riley’s argument that the trial court erred by allowing him to
    preclude the presentation of mitigating evidence relies on his proposed
    solution to resolving the potential conflict between a defendant’s right to
    self-representation under the Sixth Amendment and a trial court’s authority
    to “requir[e] the defense to present mitigating evidence over the
    defendant’s opposition.” See Hausner, 230 Ariz. at 85 ¶ 119. Riley argues
    that Sixth Amendment rights are not absolute and must give way to the
    Eighth Amendment requirement for individualized consideration. In the
    alternative, Riley argues that the trial court should have denied Riley’s
    request to preclude mitigating evidence because he effectively revoked his
    waiver of self-representation.
    ¶200          But even accepting Riley’s arguments as true, thereby
    resolving the Sixth Amendment conflict identified in Hausner, Riley has
    failed to provide any persuasive arguments that support his underlying
    premise—that juries are constitutionally required to consider all mitigating
    evidence, even if that means presenting such evidence over the defendant’s
    objections. No such constitutional requirement exists, and we expressly
    65
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    rejected adopting any procedure that would impose such a requirement.
    See id. ¶ 120. In sum, we have repeatedly held that a competent defendant
    may knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waive mitigation. See, e.g.,
    Gunches, 240 Ariz. at 203 ¶ 17; Goudeau, 239 Ariz. at 473 ¶ 240; Hausner, 230
    Ariz. at 84 ¶ 116. Absent any constitutional prohibition on defendants
    waiving their right to present mitigation, Riley is entitled to relief on this
    issue only if he did not knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waive
    mitigation.
    ¶201         Here, Riley unquestionably waived his right to present
    mitigation. After multiple colloquies with Riley, the trial court determined
    he waived his right knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily. The court’s
    determination was further supported by the results of a competency
    evaluation requested by Riley’s counsel. Before the jury’s deliberations in
    the penalty phase, the trial court also properly instructed the jury, at length
    and in various ways, to consider all mitigating evidence from the parties
    and from the record, regardless of the source.
    ¶202          The trial court did not err by finding that Riley waived his
    right to present mitigating evidence, and Riley has not persuaded us to
    reconsider our numerous precedents supporting a competent defendant’s
    choice to waive mitigation. Accordingly, Riley is not entitled to relief on
    this issue.
    M.     Abuse of Discretion in Jury’s Imposition of Death Penalty
    ¶203          Riley argues that the jury abused its discretion in finding he
    should be sentenced to death because there was no reasonable evidence in
    the record to sustain that decision. Because Riley committed the murder
    after August 1, 2002, we must review the jury’s findings of aggravating
    circumstances and the imposition of death sentences for abuse of discretion,
    A.R.S. § 13-756(A), viewing the facts in the light most favorable to
    sustaining the verdicts. State v. Naranjo, 
    234 Ariz. 233
    , 249 ¶ 81 (2014). “A
    finding of aggravating circumstances or the imposition of a death sentence
    is not an abuse of discretion if ‘there is any reasonable evidence in the
    record to sustain it.’” State v. Delahanty, 
    226 Ariz. 502
    , 508 ¶ 36 (2011)
    (quoting State v. Morris, 
    215 Ariz. 324
    , 341 ¶ 77 (2007)).
    66
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    i.      Aggravating Circumstances
    ¶204          As to Kelly’s murder, the prosecution alleged, and the jury
    found beyond a reasonable doubt, five aggravating circumstances: (1) Riley
    was previously convicted of a serious offense, § 13-751(F)(2); (2) Riley
    committed the murder in an especially heinous, cruel, or depraved manner,
    § 13-751(F)(6); (3) Riley committed the murder while in the custody of the
    ADOC, § 13-751(F)(7)(a); (4) Riley committed the murder to promote,
    further or assist a criminal street gang, § 13-751(F)(11); and (5) Riley
    committed the murder in a cold and calculated manner without pretense of
    moral or legal justification, § 13-751(F)(13).
    ¶205           For the (F)(2) aggravator, the prosecution provided
    undisputed evidence that Riley was previously convicted of multiple
    counts of aggravated assault, kidnapping, and armed robbery. For the
    (F)(6) aggravator, the prosecution provided sufficient evidence for the jury
    to determine that Riley murdered Kelly in an especially cruel manner. On
    the cruelty prong, the prosecution provided evidence of Kelly’s defensive
    wounds and his attempt to flee his attackers by wedging himself under the
    toilet in his cell. The prosecution also produced evidence of Riley’s own
    written account of the murder, in which he recounted Kelly’s final words
    as he died. On the heinous or depraved prong, the prosecution provided
    evidence that Riley relished the attack immediately afterwards and
    engaged in gratuitous violence. The prosecution also relied again on Riley’s
    letter, focusing on Riley’s graphic and celebratory account of the murder.
    ¶206          For the (F)(7)(a) aggravator, the prosecution provided
    undisputed evidence that Riley was in the custody of the ADOC when he
    committed the murder. For the (F)(11) aggravator, the prosecution
    provided evidence of Riley’s affiliation with the AB with pictures of his
    gang tattoos, his own written account of why he committed the murder,
    and testimony from Boggs—the special investigator—who identified the
    AB as a criminal street gang and testified that Riley met certain criteria as a
    member. Finally, for the (F)(13) aggravator, the prosecution relied once
    more on Riley’s written account of the murder, focusing on Riley’s lengthy
    planning and “hunting” for a target.
    ¶207           In sum, because the record provides substantial, reasonable
    evidence to support these uncontested findings, the jury did not abuse its
    discretion in finding the five aggravating circumstances.
    67
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    ii.    Imposition of Death Sentence
    ¶208           Based on the record, the jury did not abuse its discretion when
    it sentenced Riley to death for murdering Kelly. Because each juror makes
    an individual finding of whether any mitigating circumstances were
    sufficient to warrant leniency, we must uphold a death sentence “if any
    reasonable juror could conclude that the mitigation presented was not
    sufficiently substantial to call for leniency.” Naranjo, 234 Ariz. at 250 ¶ 89
    (citation omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Morris, 215
    Ariz. at 341 ¶ 81. Riley waived his right to present mitigation during the
    penalty phase, but “evidence admitted at the guilt phase is admitted for
    purposes of the sentencing phase, A.R.S. § 13–752(I), and the jury must
    ‘consider the mitigating circumstances, whether proved by the defendant
    or present in the record, in determining whether death is the appropriate
    sentence.’” Hausner, 230 Ariz. at 87 ¶ 129 (quoting Granville, 
    211 Ariz. at
    473 ¶ 18).
    ¶209           Most of the mitigating evidence upon which Riley relies from
    the guilt phase of the trial is actually a lack of evidence. Riley contends that
    the lack of evidence of his direct participation in Kelly’s murder and general
    prison gang activity “reduced his moral culpability in the offense”
    sufficient to constitute an abuse of discretion on the jury’s imposition of a
    death sentence. The core of Riley’s argument appears to suggest there may
    have been residual doubt about his participation in Kelly’s murder. But
    any such “claim[] of . . . residual doubt do[es] not constitute mitigation for
    sentencing purposes.” State v. Moore, 
    222 Ariz. 1
    , 22 ¶ 133 (2009).
    ¶210          Riley also argues that the evidence that prison gangs could
    intimidate other prisoners into committing violent crimes on their behalf
    “did not support a conclusion that [he] had a ‘choice’ to refrain from
    participating in gang activity.” But Riley’s own written account of the
    murder conclusively counters this argument. In his letter, Riley explained
    in detail how he sought to identify and obtain approval to kill a victim to
    earn full membership with the AB.
    ¶211           Most importantly, Riley does not challenge the sufficiency of
    the evidence supporting the jury’s finding of any aggravating
    circumstances, except for a vague reference to the accomplice liability issue.
    See State v. Cruz, 
    218 Ariz. 149
    , 170 ¶ 136 (2008) (holding that a jury did not
    68
    STATE V. RILEY
    Opinion of the Court
    abuse its discretion by finding a particular aggravator because the
    defendant did not contest the evidence supporting the existence of that
    aggravator). Accordingly, because we conclude that a reasonable juror
    could find that Riley failed to establish sufficient and credible mitigation
    evidence, the jury did not abuse its discretion in returning a death sentence.
    N.     Issues Raised to Avoid Preclusion
    ¶212         Riley identifies thirty-four issues he seeks to preserve for
    federal review. As he concedes, we have previously rejected each of his
    claims. We decline to revisit them.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶213          We affirm Riley’s convictions and sentences.
    69