People v. Armstrong , 6 Cal. 5th 735 ( 2019 )


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  •         IN THE SUPREME COURT OF
    CALIFORNIA
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.
    JAMELLE EDWARD ARMSTRONG,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    S126560
    Los Angeles County Superior Court
    NA051938-01
    February 4, 2019
    Justice Corrigan authored the opinion of the court, in which
    Chief Justice Cantil-Sakauye and Justices Chin and Kruger
    concurred.
    Justice Liu filed a dissenting opinion in which Justices Cuéllar
    and Perluss* concurred.
    _____________________
    *     Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeal, Second Appellate
    District, Division Seven, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant
    to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    S126560
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    After a jury convicted defendant Jamelle Edward
    Armstrong of kidnapping, robbing, raping, torturing, and
    murdering Penny Sigler, it returned a death verdict. On
    automatic appeal, we affirm Armstrong’s convictions but
    reverse his death sentence because, under the standards of
    Witherspoon v. Illinois (1968) 
    391 U.S. 510
    and Wainwright v.
    Witt (1985) 
    469 U.S. 412
    , multiple prospective jurors were
    improperly excused for cause.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A. Guilt Phase Trial
    On the night of December 29, 1998, Penny Sigler, a 45-
    year-old Long Beach woman, was attacked and killed by three
    strangers: Kevin Pearson, Armstrong, and Armstrong’s older
    half-brother, Warren Hardy. Each of them was tried separately,
    convicted, and sentenced to death. We have previously resolved
    the Hardy and Pearson appeals. (See People v. Hardy (2018) 5
    Cal.5th 56; People v. Pearson (2012) 
    53 Cal. 4th 306
    .)
    1. Prosecution Evidence
    Sigler lived with her husband and Joseph O’Brien in Long
    Beach. On the evening of December 29, 1998, O’Brien asked
    Sigler to buy him cereal and milk. She took the food stamps he
    offered and left on foot between 10:00 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. She
    never returned.
    1
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    The following morning, a Caltrans worker found Sigler’s
    body on an embankment near the 405 Freeway. The body was
    in an area surrounded by a chain link fence and concrete
    retaining wall. The body would have been difficult to see from
    the road. There were blood spatters and drag marks near the
    corpse. Shoe impressions were later identified as similar to the
    treads on Hardy’s and Pearson’s shoes. Police noted a broken
    wooden stake at the base of a nearby fence and recovered a food
    stamp book cover matching the serial number of the stamps
    O’Brien had given Sigler.
    Sigler died from asphyxiation and multiple other injuries.
    Before she died, she suffered 11 broken bones, 20 distinct
    internal injuries, and 94 separate external injuries. Her right
    ear was partially torn. Lacerations and bruising of the genitalia
    were consistent with forcible penetration. A large wooden
    splinter was embedded in her vaginal tissue.
    Pearson, Hardy, and Armstrong were arrested the
    following week, and Armstrong confessed. Detective Steven
    Lasiter related remarks Armstrong made before the taping of
    his statement began. The taped confession was played for the
    jury.
    Armstrong told investigators that he, Pearson, and Hardy
    were drinking with others at the house of a friend, Monte Gmur,
    on the night of December 29. Sometime after 10:00 p.m.,
    Pearson, Hardy, and Armstrong left. After failing to find
    someone to buy alcohol for them, the three decided to go to the
    home of Hardy’s girlfriend in Los Angeles. They rode a metro
    train to its last stop, then proceeded toward a bus stop. Walking
    under the 405 Freeway, Armstrong called out, “I can’t wait ‘til
    ’99.” A female voice responded. The three men approached the
    2
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    woman, Sigler, who said something like, “I hate you.” Hardy
    offered Sigler money for oral sex. Sigler said no, pushed past
    Pearson and Hardy, and slapped Armstrong as she went by.
    Sigler reached a leafy area near the street, turned, and
    stuck out the middle fingers of both hands. Using racial slurs,
    she said, “I hope they kill you all.” Pearson ran toward her,
    saying, “I’m fixing to BKC this bitch.” Armstrong explained that
    “BKC” was a Long Beach term, “bitch killer connect,” for
    someone the speaker did not like who might get beaten up.
    Pearson punched Sigler and knocked her down. Armstrong and
    Hardy walked toward them. Armstrong heard Pearson say,
    “Give me your money.” Pearson went through Sigler’s pockets,
    found food stamps, then started to remove her pants. When she
    struggled, he asked Hardy and Armstrong to hold her arms and
    legs. They did so. Pearson removed Sigler’s pants and asked
    where her money was. He tore open her shirt and underwear,
    then unzipped his pants and asked for a condom. Hardy stood
    off to the side. Armstrong was still holding Sigler’s arms and
    said it appeared Pearson was engaging in intercourse.
    After he finished, Pearson said, “This ain’t over yet bitch.
    Let’s kill this bitch.” He kicked and stomped her in the chest
    and face. Armstrong also kicked her several times. She made
    gurgling, moaning noises. Armstrong recognized Sigler was in
    considerable pain.
    Pearson asked what to do with Sigler, then told Armstrong
    to jump over a chain link fence and hold it down so they could
    move her behind it. When Pearson and Hardy hoisted Sigler
    over the fence, she landed head first in a concrete ditch. Pearson
    dragged her 20 feet to a dark spot. He tripped over and broke
    off a three-foot long wooden stake. Using the stake, he hit Sigler
    3
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    five to 15 times with a two-handed grip, swinging as hard as he
    could. Sigler blinked and moaned in response to the blows.
    Pearson then inserted the stake in Sigler’s vagina, pulling it in
    and out. Hardy took the stake and did the same. When Sigler
    finally made no more noise, Armstrong held a lighter to her face
    and saw her eyes close.
    Pearson and Armstrong moved the body further up the
    embankment toward the freeway. Armstrong threw away the
    stake and a trash bag filled with Sigler’s clothes. The three men
    caught a bus and spent the night at the residence of Hardy’s
    girlfriend.
    Blood on a pair of Armstrong’s overalls matched Sigler’s
    DNA. A stain on his shirt contained his own semen and blood
    from an indeterminate source.
    Armstrong’s girlfriend, Jeanette Carter, testified that a
    week after the murder Armstrong told her he had done
    something very bad. He said Pearson had beaten and raped a
    woman and put a stick in her vagina while Armstrong held her
    down. A tape of an earlier police interview of Carter was also
    played during which she related similar admissions by
    Armstrong.
    Keith Kendrick, a friend of Pearson’s and Armstrong’s,
    testified he was with them when they saw a news report of the
    murder. Kendrick, to whom Pearson had already confessed,
    said, “I know who did that. [¶] . . . [¶] Killer Kev did it.”
    Armstrong whispered to Pearson, “How did he know?” and then
    sat silently as Pearson recounted the details.
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    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    2. Defense Evidence
    Armstrong was the sole defense witness. He conceded he
    had been with Pearson and Hardy during the crimes but
    minimized his role.
    The three men were out walking the night of December 29,
    1998. Armstrong was in a good mood and yelled out, “We are
    going to have a Happy New Year for ’99.” He then heard Sigler
    yell from across the street, “Fuck you niggers.” Hardy walked
    across the street toward Sigler. Pearson and Armstrong
    followed. Sigler and the three men were the only ones on the
    street. Armstrong thought Sigler was on drugs.
    Hardy offered Sigler $50 to perform fellatio on all three
    men, but Armstrong knew he was joking because Hardy did not
    have that much money. Sigler ran past him, turned, displayed
    the middle fingers of each hand, and said, “Fuck you niggers.
    You niggers should die.” Pearson ran up to Sigler and struck
    her in the face. Armstrong held her down because Pearson
    demanded he do so. He saw Pearson go through her clothes, but
    Armstrong did not intend to steal from her. He saw Pearson
    take food stamps from Sigler’s pocket and place them in his own.
    When Pearson stopped going through Sigler’s clothes,
    Armstrong let her go.
    When Pearson renewed the assault, kicking and stomping
    Sigler, Armstrong said they should leave. He did not leave by
    himself because he had no money for bus fare. Armstrong held
    Sigler down again at Pearson’s direction. Armstrong never
    kicked Sigler himself, but at one point while restraining her he
    had his foot on her chest and pushed her with his foot.
    Armstrong did not try to stop Pearson because he feared
    Pearson would turn on him. When Pearson raped Sigler,
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    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Armstrong was standing behind him, not holding Sigler down.
    Pearson and Hardy threw Sigler over the chain link fence.
    Armstrong thought the attack was scandalous and animal-like,
    but helped Pearson move Sigler up the embankment. He threw
    away both the stake and Sigler’s clothes because Pearson told
    him to, and because he was afraid of Pearson. The encounter
    lasted around 30 minutes.
    3. Charges and Guilt Phase Verdict
    Pearson, Hardy, and Armstrong were tried separately.
    (See People v. 
    Pearson, supra
    , 
    53 Cal. 4th 306
    ; People v. 
    Hardy, supra
    , 5 Cal.5th 56.)
    Armstrong was charged with various counts of murder,
    kidnapping, robbery, rape, and torture, with six attendant
    special circumstances.1 Armstrong was also charged with
    kidnapping and torture as sentence enhancements. (§ 667.61,
    subds. (a), (d).) The jury convicted Armstrong on every count
    and found every special allegation true, except for the special
    circumstance that Armstrong committed murder during a
    kidnapping.
    1
    The charged offenses included first degree murder, second
    degree robbery, kidnapping for purposes of rape, rape, rape
    while acting in concert, sexual penetration with a foreign object,
    sexual penetration with a foreign object while acting in concert,
    and torture. (Pen. Code, §§ 187, subd. (a), 189, 206, 209, subd.
    (b)(1), 211, 261, subd. (a)(2), 264.1, subd. (a), 289, subd.
    (a)(1)(A).)    The special circumstances included robbery,
    kidnapping, kidnapping for purposes of rape, rape, rape by
    instrument, and torture murder. (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(17)(A), (B),
    (C), (K), (a)(18).) All further unlabeled statutory references are
    to the Penal Code.
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    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    B. Penalty Phase Trial
    1. Prosecution Evidence
    Monte Gmur testified that on the evening of the murder,
    Pearson asked him if Pearson, Hardy, and Armstrong could use
    a bedroom to initiate a man named Chris into their gang. Gmur
    refused because he did not want a violent initiation ritual in his
    house. The three men left for 15 to 20 minutes. When they
    returned, Hardy borrowed Gmur’s phone to call a man named
    Capone and tell him Chris was “cool” and would be called
    “Playboy.”
    Janisha Williams, a childhood friend of Armstrong’s,
    testified he was a member of the Capone Thug Soldiers gang.
    The gang required “jumping in,” i.e., fighting a gang member to
    join. On occasion Williams had seen Armstrong kick people, hit
    them with sticks, or stomp on them during fights.
    Sheriff’s Deputy Hugo Baraja testified that Armstrong
    and three other African-American prisoners attacked a Hispanic
    inmate.
    Sigler’s son testified he was unable to finish high school
    after the murder because of the pain of her loss.
    2. Defense Evidence
    Detective Steven Lasiter testified that during his police
    interview Armstrong appeared to feel badly about what he had
    done.
    Reverend Larry Clark testified that he knew Armstrong
    and his family, although he had not seen them since the
    defendant was 14 or 15. The Armstrong family lived in a high-
    crime neighborhood and had financial problems. Armstrong’s
    father, James, was sometimes absent. Armstrong had potential
    7
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    as an artist and would sometimes help with church cleanup or
    charity work.
    James Armstrong admitted he had been a poor parent. He
    earned a living selling drugs and pimping, was frequently
    absent, and never taught Jamelle right from wrong. He
    supplied Jamelle with drugs and alcohol. Jamelle’s mother,
    Pamela, was an alcoholic who drank and used drugs. James
    beat his wife in their son’s presence.
    3. Rebuttal Evidence
    The People called Jamelle’s mother, Pamela, who
    described a different family dynamic. Various police officers
    testified to Jamelle’s gang membership.
    4. Penalty Phase Verdict and Sentence
    The jury returned a death verdict, which the court
    imposed. It added consecutive terms of 30 years, 25 years to life,
    and life with the possibility of parole.2
    2
    The abstract of judgment indicates, incorrectly, that
    Armstrong’s conviction on four counts was pursuant to a plea
    rather than a jury verdict. The abstract of judgment also
    incorrectly indicates Armstrong received nine years on the rape
    count, not eight, and incorrectly lists a determinate term of 56
    years, not 30 years. Finally, the abstract of judgment fails to
    indicate that in addition to the determinate term for rape in
    concert, sexual penetration with a foreign object, and sexual
    penetration with a foreign object while acting in concert,
    Armstrong received a 25-year-to-life term under section 667.61,
    subdivisions (a) and (d), which was then stayed under section
    667.61, subdivision (g). The People ask, without opposition, that
    we order the abstract of judgment corrected. We will do so. (See
    People v. Mitchell (2001) 
    26 Cal. 4th 181
    , 185.)
    8
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    II. DISCUSSION
    A. Juror Selection Issues
    1. Excusal of Prospective Jurors for Cause
    Prospective jurors initially completed a questionnaire.
    The court then conducted Hovey voir dire, during which
    potential jurors were asked outside the presence of others about
    their death penalty views. (See Hovey v. Superior Court (1980)
    
    28 Cal. 3d 1
    , 80–81.) Armstrong contends the court erred by
    excusing multiple jury candidates on the ground they could not
    fairly and impartially consider whether death was the
    appropriate punishment. We agree. During our discussion, we
    refer to both written and oral responses.
    a. Legal Principles
    “[T]he Sixth Amendment’s guarantee of an impartial jury
    confers on capital defendants the right to a jury not
    ‘uncommonly willing to condemn a man to die.’ ” (White v.
    Wheeler (2015) 577 U.S. ___, ___ [
    136 S. Ct. 456
    , 460], quoting
    Witherspoon v. 
    Illinois, supra
    , 391 U.S. at p. 521.)           To
    accommodate this right, “ ‘[p]ast decisions of the United States
    Supreme Court and this court establish that “[a] prospective
    juror may be challenged for cause based upon his or her views
    regarding capital punishment only if those views would
    ‘ “prevent or substantially impair” ’ the performance of the
    juror’s duties as defined by the court’s instructions and the
    juror’s oath. (Wainwright v. 
    Witt[, supra
    ,] 469 U.S. [at p.] 424;
    People v. Crittenden (1994) 
    9 Cal. 4th 83
    , 121; People v. Mincey
    (1992) 
    2 Cal. 4th 408
    , 456.) ‘ “ ‘A prospective juror is properly
    excluded if he or she is unable to conscientiously consider all of
    the sentencing alternatives, including the death penalty where
    9
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    appropriate.’ ” ’ ” ’ ” (People v. 
    Pearson, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th at p.
    327.) The party seeking excusal bears the burden of developing
    evidence for dismissal. (Wainwright, at p. 423; People v. Stewart
    (2004) 
    33 Cal. 4th 425
    , 445.)
    A person’s particular views on the death penalty, the
    strength with which those views are held, and their effect, if any,
    on the person’s ability to perform a juror’s duties are often
    nuanced questions. “ ‘[N]ot all who oppose the death penalty are
    subject to removal . . . ; those who firmly believe that the death
    penalty is unjust may nevertheless serve as jurors in capital
    cases so long as they state clearly that they are willing to
    temporarily set aside their own beliefs in deference to the rule
    of law.’ (Lockhart v. McCree (1986) 
    476 U.S. 162
    , 176.) ‘The
    critical issue is whether a life-leaning prospective juror — that
    is, one generally (but not invariably) favoring life in prison
    instead of the death penalty as an appropriate punishment —
    can set aside his or her personal views about capital punishment
    and follow the law as the trial judge instructs.’ ” (People v. Jones
    (2017) 3 Cal.5th 583, 614.) Jurors are not required to like the
    law, but they are required to follow it. A jury candidate who will
    not, or cannot, follow a statutory framework, is not qualified to
    serve. Yet so long as prospective jurors can obey the court’s
    instructions and determine whether death is appropriate based
    on a sincere consideration of aggravating and mitigating
    circumstances, they are not ineligible to serve. (People v.
    
    Stewart, supra
    , 33 Cal.4th at p. 447; People v. Lewis (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 610
    , 633.)
    Whether a candidate is substantially impaired is an issue
    for the trial court’s determination, and its ruling is entitled to
    deference. (People v. Souza (2012) 
    54 Cal. 4th 90
    , 122.)
    Impairment need not be proven with “ ‘unmistakable clarity.’ ”
    10
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    (Wainwright v. 
    Witt, supra
    , 469 U.S. at p. 424.) Excusal is
    permitted when the trial judge has been “left with the definite
    impression that a prospective juror would be unable to faithfully
    and impartially apply the law.” (Id. at p. 426; accord, People v.
    Thompson (2016) 1 Cal.5th 1043, 1066.) We review the ruling
    for abuse of discretion. (People v. Scott (2015) 
    61 Cal. 4th 363
    ,
    378; People v. Jones (2012) 
    54 Cal. 4th 1
    , 41.)
    Here, the court improperly excused at least four
    candidates. In doing so, it committed two kinds of errors: (1) it
    applied an erroneous standard to the question of qualification;
    and (2) it relied on factual bases not supported by the record. As
    a result, the death verdict must be reversed. (People v. Heard
    (2003) 
    31 Cal. 4th 946
    , 966.)
    b. Prospective Juror S.R.
    S.R. wrote in his questionnaire that he supported the
    death penalty and believed it was “a big deterrent to many
    others who may wish to kill.” The death penalty should not be
    mandatory, but should be available in “special circumstances.”
    S.R. saw death as an appropriate punishment “if the crime was
    horrendous enough,” as in cases of “mutilations [or] torture.” He
    could vote for either life or death, but would not automatically
    vote for either. He considered his “duty as a juror to be fair and
    un-biased.” He was willing to serve because he was “a fair
    person. I have always been one to listen to both sides of an
    argument. I also know people [who] have done good things, and
    people who have done bad things. A defendant/prosecution
    deserves jurors that are not one-sided and biased.”
    During voir dire, S.R. confirmed he could vote for either
    death or life, and would choose neither automatically. He could
    keep an open mind, and would consider whatever factors the
    11
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    court instructed were relevant. S.R. could vote for death if the
    aggravating circumstances substantially outweighed those in
    mitigation, and for life if they were equal. S.R. saw death as a
    “far worse” punishment than life in prison without possibility of
    parole, and would reserve it for “a truly horrible crime.”
    Nevertheless, “if it does fit the crime,” S.R. could choose death.
    The prosecutor focused S.R.’s questioning on three
    hypotheticals involving a liquor store robbery, a beating death,
    and a bank robbery. In the liquor store hypothetical, a
    defendant walking by noticed the cash register was open,
    entered the store on the spur of the moment, killed the cashier,
    and stole the money. S.R. was unsure which penalty he would
    select without having more facts, which the prosecutor declined
    to supply. Based only on the information provided, S.R. said he
    would probably not vote for death. Asked to assume that
    unspecified     aggravating      circumstances      substantially
    outweighed any mitigating circumstances, S.R. said he could
    vote for death. The prosecutor stressed S.R. would be instructed
    that life remained an option even if the aggravating
    circumstances outweighed the mitigating circumstances and
    asked again if S.R. could choose death. S.R. replied, “I’m sure I
    probably could,” but voting for life or death was “not something
    I would take lightly.”
    In the deadly beating hypothetical, one person held a
    victim’s arms while a second person inflicted the beating. S.R.
    thought the one restraining the victim to be nearly as guilty as
    the beater, but not equally so. If the aggravating circumstances
    substantially outweighed any in mitigation, S.R. affirmed he
    could vote for death for the restraining participant. The
    prosecutor challenged the plausibility of this answer in light of
    S.R.’s belief that the restrainer was slightly less culpable and
    12
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    the court’s instruction that death was not mandatory even if the
    aggravating circumstances were substantially greater. S.R.
    replied: “[Y]ou asked if I could [vote for death], if it was possible,
    if [the aggravating circumstances were more than the
    mitigating circumstances]. I could. I’m not saying I would, you
    know, you’re [asking] could I?” The prosecutor challenged his
    answer: “If you don’t think that the two people are equally
    guilty, wouldn’t you give them different punishments, because
    they weren’t equally guilty?”3 To explain why he could vote for
    death, S.R. relied on the additional factor supplied by the
    prosecutor, that the aggravating circumstances outweighed the
    mitigating circumstances. The prosecutor asked a third time:
    “So in your mind, because the person holding the arms is not as
    guilty as the person actually doing the punching, wouldn’t you
    impose life without the possibility of parole on him and give the
    other guy, the one actually doing the punching, the death
    penalty?” S.R. adhered to his answer: “I could do both in that
    [circumstance]. Like I said, you asked, could I do either [life or
    death]?”
    The prosecutor then turned to a scenario involving three
    bank robbers: a getaway driver, a lookout, and the actual killer
    who went inside and shot someone. Asked whether he would
    consider the getaway driver equally or less culpable than the
    3
    It appears the court and prosecutor used the term “guilty”
    with some imprecision. As a matter of law, an aider and abettor
    can be as “guilty” of an offense as a direct perpetrator, in the
    sense that both may be convicted of the same crime. (People v.
    McCoy (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 1111
    , 1116–1117.) The term as used
    here seemed to involve not legal guilt but respective degrees of
    blameworthiness or culpability as that concept relates to
    sentencing.
    13
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    actual killer, S.R. asked whether the driver knew the shooter
    was going to kill someone. When told the driver did not, S.R.
    concluded the driver was less culpable and he would probably
    not impose death. Likewise with the lookout: If neither aider
    and abettor knew a shooting was intended, S.R. would reserve
    death for the actual killer.
    The prosecutor moved to excuse S.R. During argument
    over the motion, defense counsel reasserted a continuing
    objection to the prosecutor’s questioning using aiding and
    abetting hypotheticals without any instruction on when, as a
    matter of law, a person who was not the actual killer could be
    eligible for death. The prosecutor argued against instruction:
    “If a juror knew the law, the juror would then frame his [answer]
    in accordance with the law. A true test of the juror’s state of
    mind with regard to aiding and abetting, and accomplices, is to
    find that out without pre-instructing them, because then we
    know what their true views are. If they know what the law is,
    in advance, we cannot find out what their true views are,
    because they want to follow the law.” (Italics added.)
    The court embraced the prosecutor’s position against pre-
    instruction because it would color the jurors’ responses. It
    reasoned that those who wished to follow the law would shape
    their answers to conform with legal requirements, and asking
    uninstructed jurors would give better insight into their true
    feelings: “By not giving the [aiding and abetting] instruction,
    . . . wouldn’t that be a better way to test their mind, a true test
    of their mind, as to whether or not they would be able to impose
    the penalty of death, whether they could on an aider and
    abettor?” The court further explained: “[N]ormal people . . .
    understand that [there] should be different liabilities for an
    aider and abettor [than] for the perpetrator. [¶] And given that
    14
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    is the case, if that is, in fact, the true state of mind of a particular
    prospective juror, that is a worthy test of whether or not, given
    that they see a difference in liability in their state of mind,
    would that create a variance as to their ability to be able to
    impose punishment? Because that, effectively, would be a fair
    way to determine whether the person would automatically, in
    fact, not impose the penalty of death and would automatically
    impose life without parole, because of their varying views on the
    liability of an accomplice.[4] [¶] And that’s the reason why this
    4
    In referring to what a candidate would “automatically” do,
    the court overlooked how the United States Supreme Court’s
    thinking on disqualification had developed, an evolution that
    has shifted the focus to subtler considerations: “In Wainwright
    v. 
    Witt[, supra
    ,] 
    469 U.S. 412
    . . . , the United States Supreme
    Court reconsidered language in Witherspoon v. 
    Illinois[, supra
    ,]
    
    391 U.S. 510
    . . . , to the effect that prospective jurors may be
    excused for cause if they make it ‘unmistakably clear (1) that
    they would automatically vote against the imposition of capital
    punishment without regard to any evidence that might be
    developed at the trial of the case before them, or (2) that their
    attitude toward the death penalty would prevent them from
    making an impartial decision as to the defendant's guilt.’ (Id. at
    p. 522, fn. 21.) This standard had tended to be applied in
    formulaic terms, with ‘lower courts stat[ing] that a
    veniremember may be excluded only if he or she would
    “automatically” vote against the death penalty, and even then
    this state of mind must be “unambiguous,” or “unmistakably
    clear.” [Citation.]’ (Witt, at p. 419.) [¶] In Witt, the high court
    rejected such a narrow and formalistic approach and discarded
    the Witherspoon formulation. It held instead that a trial court
    may excuse a prospective juror for cause whenever ‘the juror’s
    views would “prevent or substantially impair the performance
    of his duties as a juror in accordance with his instructions and
    his oath.” ’ (
    Witt, supra
    , 469 U.S. at p. 424, fn. omitted.)” (People
    v. 
    Heard, supra
    , 31 Cal.4th at p. 983 (conc. & dis. opn. of Brown,
    J.).)
    15
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    court is not going to give a pre-instruction on aiding and
    abetting. I believe that that is a fair way to test the true state
    of mind of lay people, because that’s exactly what we are trying
    to do. [¶] We don’t want to pre-instruct them just so that they
    can fit their answer with the law.”
    The court excused S.R. for cause, concluding his fitness to
    serve should be determined by his uninstructed views on the
    relative culpabilities of hypothetical aiders and abettors: “[I]n
    terms of an accomplice, or an aider or abettor, it is [S.R.’s] true
    state of mind that they’re not equally guilty, and even if they are
    guilty, they’re not equally guilty. In other words, in these folks’
    eyes, the person is guilty, but there’s a degree of guilt. And that
    is really the true test of whether or not they would be able to
    consider the penalty of death or automatically vote for life
    without parole.”
    We note several things here. First, the prosecutor’s
    argument and the court’s ruling appear to presume that jury
    candidates would violate their oath and commit misconduct by
    shading their answers to secure a place on the jury. They also
    misapprehend the appropriate test for qualification, which
    turns on a willingness and ability to follow the law. It seems
    counterintuitive to conclude that the “true test” of this ability
    involves keeping candidates in the dark as to the law’s
    requirements.     Advocates may certainly inquire about a
    candidate’s broader death penalty views and take them into
    account when exercising peremptory challenges. But those
    broader views, even if leaning significantly toward one side or
    the other, will not support a challenge for cause unless they
    would substantially impair the ability to serve.
    16
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Second, the death penalty statutes reflect, as a matter of
    policy and constitutional mandate, that a decision as to capital
    punishment is to be made on an individualized basis. (Woodson
    v. North Carolina (1976) 
    428 U.S. 280
    , 304.) Jurors are to
    consider the nature of the crime, the circumstances of its
    commission, and a variety of factors relating to the particular
    defendant. These latter factors may include his past criminal
    conduct and a variety of developmental and historical
    experiences. This weighing can result in different degrees of
    blameworthiness being assigned from case to case and among
    co-participants. A juror willing to act in conformance with
    statutory mandates, able to openly and honestly consider both
    sentencing alternatives, may well identify different levels of
    culpability for different participants in the same events. That a
    juror can do so is not grounds for disqualification.
    In determining otherwise, the court applied a test for
    ineligibility that was erroneous as a matter of law. Under
    Witherspoon and Witt, the state is permitted to cull from the jury
    pool only those who would be unable to set aside their personal
    views and follow the law and the court’s instructions. (Lockhart
    v. 
    McCree, supra
    , 476 U.S. at p. 176; People v. 
    Jones, supra
    , 3
    Cal.5th at p. 614; People v. 
    Stewart, supra
    , 33 Cal.4th at
    pp. 446–447.) An unimpaired juror who perceives differences in
    culpability might well be open to a variety of determinations: (1)
    though an aider and abettor was comparatively less
    blameworthy, the crime was sufficiently egregious, and his
    participation and knowledge sufficient, that both he and the
    actual killer merit death; (2) only the actual killer merits death;
    or (3) neither defendant does. That S.R. ascribed different
    degrees of culpability to some aiders and abettors in some
    hypotheticals offered no basis for determining he would be
    17
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    unable to follow the court’s instructions and choose between a
    life or death sentence in accordance with the law. Indeed, his
    answers indicated the contrary.5 By framing the test of
    eligibility to serve as it did, the court risked excluding jurors
    who could follow the court’s instructions and appropriately use
    evidence in aggravation and mitigation to differentiate between
    those who merited the death penalty and those who did not.
    Third, when assessing a candidate’s ability to serve, fact-
    based hypotheticals should be used with caution. “ ‘[T]he
    Witherspoon-Witt . . . voir dire seeks to determine only the views
    of the prospective jurors about capital punishment in the
    abstract. . . . The inquiry is directed to whether, without
    knowing the specifics of the case, the juror has an “open mind”
    on the penalty determination.’ ” (People v. Zambrano (2007) 
    41 Cal. 4th 1082
    , 1120, quoting People v. Clark (1990) 
    50 Cal. 3d 583
    , 597.) Hypotheticals that too closely mirror the expected
    facts of the case at hand may result in jurors prejudging a case
    on a brief summary of the evidence. (Zambrano, at p. 1120;
    People v. Pinholster (1992) 
    1 Cal. 4th 865
    , 915.) Further,
    questions focusing only on specific factual circumstances can
    yield answers that might be used to erroneously cull competent
    jurors. The way a question is posed may skew the answer. For
    example, a hypothetical that emphasizes aggravating factors
    might elicit an answer that leans heavily in favor of execution.
    5
    When asked whether he could comply with the court’s
    instructions, even if he did not agree with them, S.R. checked
    “yes” and wrote: “It’s the court’s instructions, we must follow
    them.” He affirmed that he could “consider all of the relevant
    factors that the court will give you.” He explained that his
    ability to vote for death would depend in part on “what the judge
    says” about the law.
    18
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    (See People v. Mason (1991) 
    52 Cal. 3d 909
    , 940.) Trial courts
    may prohibit such hypotheticals. (People v. Sanders (1995) 
    11 Cal. 4th 475
    , 538–539.)
    This case presents an obverse situation, with
    hypotheticals describing defendants at, or beyond, the outer
    reaches of death eligibility. The United States Constitution and
    California’s sentencing scheme make lookouts, getaway drivers,
    and others involved in, but absent from, a robbery or homicide
    scene categorically ineligible for death without additional
    showings as to the degree of their participation and the extent
    of their awareness or intent that a fatality might result.
    (§ 190.2, subd. (d); Enmund v. Florida (1982) 
    458 U.S. 782
    , 795–
    798; People v. Banks (2015) 
    61 Cal. 4th 788
    , 798–804.) As for the
    prosecutor’s beating hypothetical, assault alone is not a basis for
    special circumstance felony murder. (See § 190.2, subd. (a)(17).)
    By definition, a competent juror who can consider both life and
    death as options would be willing to vote for death in some cases
    and for life in others. Given sufficiently mild hypothetical
    scenarios, many competent jurors might say they would be quite
    likely to vote for life without the possibility of parole. Such
    responses do not necessarily reveal that the same juror would
    not vote for death under more aggravating circumstances. (See
    People v. 
    Mason, supra
    , 52 Cal.3d at p. 940.)
    Here, the prosecutor supplied no additional facts that
    would make the hypothetical robbery and beating aider and
    abettors legally eligible for death or clearly deserving of that
    punishment.      Instead, S.R. was required to assume an
    unspecified special circumstance had been proven and
    unspecified aggravating circumstances were present. Even so,
    S.R., a death penalty supporter, consistently maintained that he
    could vote for death under the appropriate circumstances, both
    19
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    in general and as applied to an aider and abettor. S.R.’s answers
    give no indication he was unfit to serve.
    The court also relied on S.R. being unable to consider
    death as an option for some charged special circumstances. It
    asserted that S.R. “picks and chooses the special circumstances
    that he believes he would be able to consider the penalty of death
    on.” The record does not support this assertion. S.R. never
    indicated he could not consider death as an option for the
    charged special circumstances.           He simply expressed
    uncertainty as to how he would vote if each of several of the
    charged special circumstances was the only one found true. A
    juror who indicates he could vote for death, but is unwilling to
    guarantee he would do so, is not subject to excusal for cause.
    (People v. 
    Pearson, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th at p. 332.)
    A court can abuse its discretion by applying an erroneous
    legal standard or by making a ruling unsupported by
    substantial evidence. (Haraguchi v. Superior Court (2008) 
    43 Cal. 4th 706
    , 712.) Both problems are present here. The court’s
    remarks, and a comparison of its ruling with the record, reflect
    that it was overlooking the crucial question of whether S.R.
    could set aside his personal views and follow the court’s
    instructions. Instead, the court concluded S.R.’s views might
    lead him to vote against death under particular unrelated facts.
    Standing alone, views of that nature do not support a challenge
    for cause. Additionally, the record reveals no substantial
    evidence that S.R. would have had any difficulty following the
    court’s instructions in determining the appropriate sentence.
    The erroneous exclusion of S.R. was not an isolated
    occurrence. The record reflects that the court applied the same
    “true test” to other candidates, focusing on whether they would
    20
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    be equally willing to impose death on an aider and abettor as on
    an actual killer, rather than on whether they could follow the
    law and consider death as an option. Application of this test
    excluded several essentially neutral candidates who professed
    their ability to follow the court’s instructions and impose death
    in an appropriate case.
    We discuss the others in turn.
    c. Prospective Juror M.M.
    In her questionnaire, M.M. agreed that California should
    have a death penalty and should not abolish it because “it serves
    as a deterrent for some offenders.” Death would be an
    appropriate punishment for “repeat murderers,” among others,
    and serves to “provide justice in the cases that warrant it.” M.M.
    repeatedly stated she could vote for death, but would not
    automatically do so. Whether death was appropriate should be
    decided “on a case-by-case” basis. M.M. had no religious or
    moral views that would make it difficult for her to vote for
    execution.
    In voir dire, M.M. said that she was neutral as to sentence
    and could vote for either. On six occasions, she affirmed her
    ability to vote for death. When asked whether she could look at
    the defendant and say, “I kill you,” M.M. replied: “I think that’s
    a very hard position to be put in, but I think the approach I
    would take is that I need to do the right thing, either not guilty
    or guilty and where ever that falls, given the information, then
    I would have to feel comfortable with that.”
    Given that M.M. was neither for nor against the death
    penalty, the prosecutor asked how she could determine whether
    M.M. would vote for death. M.M. said her decision would
    depend on the evidence, not prior leanings: “I don’t know that
    21
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    you can determine that [I would vote for death] at this point. I
    think that determination or decision would be made after the
    information was given to me or any other juror. [¶] At this
    point, I don’t have a say one way or the other, because I haven’t
    heard anything.” She went on: “I certainly would want to do
    the right thing by the defendant or by the other side. [¶] I would
    want to do whatever the evidence or the information warranted.
    . . . [¶] It would be a very difficult decision if I had to decide
    that it was a death penalty. I don’t think anybody would walk
    away feeling great about doing that, but I feel I have to do what
    was warranted by the case.” When asked again how she could
    “impose the death penalty if you don’t even know what your
    feelings are regarding it?,” M.M. said, “I really don’t have a set
    decision like some people [where] I’m all for the death penalty
    or totally opposed. [¶ Q.] You don’t have a feeling one way or
    the other. [¶ A.] I don’t have a feeling one way or the other. I’m
    neutral. My feeling would be each case would be individual and
    unique in itself, and I think you need to go into [it] looking at it
    like [that]. . . . Every case is different and unique.”
    M.M. affirmed that she could vote for death if the
    aggravating circumstances outweighed the mitigating
    circumstances and could impose death on an aider and abettor
    such as a defendant who held a victim’s arms while a second
    defendant beat the victim to death. She repeated that she could
    tell the defendant he was going to die.
    The prosecutor then turned to the bank robbery
    hypothetical with a getaway driver, a lookout, and the actual
    killer. M.M. described the nonkillers as less culpable, but when
    asked if she could impose death on the getaway driver if the
    aggravating circumstances outweighed the mitigating
    circumstances, she said she could. The prosecutor suggested
    22
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    those answers were inconsistent: “How can you impose the
    death penalty on the person who is waiting out in the car, when
    you believe he is not as guilty as the person who pulled the
    trigger?” M.M. explained, “Because you said that . . . the bad
    issues about him were more than the ones that weren’t bad.”
    The prosecutor explained that under the law, a juror could, but
    did not have to, impose death when aggravating circumstances
    outweighed mitigating ones. She then asked, “[K]nowing that,
    would you impose the death penalty on the person waiting in
    the car?” (Italics added.) This time, M.M. said, “No.”
    The prosecutor challenged M.M. on the ground that M.M.
    did not know whether she was for or against the death penalty
    and would be unable to impose death on an aider and abettor.
    The court granted the motion on the basis that M.M. would not
    impose the death penalty in the getaway driver scenario, and
    the People defend the excusal on that basis alone.
    The record offers no support for the prosecutor’s
    assertions. M.M. consistently indicated, in her questionnaire
    and in response to questions from the bench, defense attorney,
    and prosecutor, that she could impose the death penalty in an
    appropriate case based on the evidence submitted. She believed
    California should have the death penalty and that it serves as a
    deterrent. Being “neutral” on the death penalty before hearing
    any evidence is not disqualifying. (People v. 
    Pearson, supra
    , 53
    Cal.4th at p. 332.) Indeed, M.M.’s answers show she was
    unwilling to prejudge the matter. She confirmed that she could
    impose the death penalty on a nonkilling aider and abettor, in
    both the beating and bank robbery hypotheticals.
    M.M. did indicate that, given the option, she would not
    choose death for the getaway driver. That answer did not
    23
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    demonstrate substantial impairment or views that would
    prevent her from serving. Recognizing different degrees of
    culpability, M.M. acknowledged that hypothetically she could,
    but would choose not to, impose death on a less culpable
    defendant. This response does not indicate an inability to follow
    the court’s instructions. Her answers reflect an ability to listen
    to and follow the law. She properly declined to guarantee how
    she would vote based on the facts proven at trial. Her excusal
    was error.
    d. Prospective Juror L.B.
    Prospective juror L.B. described himself as “for” the death
    penalty and thought it was used too seldom. He approved of
    California having the penalty because “[i]f [a] very violent crime
    is committed, [the] death penalty is justified.” Death was
    appropriate for “premeditated, and brutal” crimes; life in prison
    without possibility of parole gave him pause because he was
    “afraid that the law can be changed” so that the defendant could
    get out on parole. L.B. held no religious or moral objections to
    the death penalty and could vote for it. Death should not be
    automatic for intentional murders, but should “depend[] on [the]
    person’s state of mind before and during committing the act.”
    To L.B., a death sentence meant “that society will be somewhat
    safer.”
    Under questioning from the court and counsel, L.B.
    indicated that before hearing the evidence, he was not leaning
    toward life or death, would keep an open mind, could follow the
    court’s instructions, and could vote for either sentence. He
    indicated he could vote for death in the case of someone who,
    seeing a cash register open, opportunistically killed the cashier
    to steal the contents.
    24
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    As she had with other jurors, the prosecutor asked L.B.
    hypothetically about the three participants in a bank robbery
    and the two participants in a beating death. In the bank robbery
    scenario, L.B. agreed the getaway driver, lookout, and actual
    killer were equally responsible. He could impose death on the
    getaway driver or lookout, depending on the balance of
    aggravating and mitigating factors, provided the person knew
    the actual killer was armed. In the beating hypothetical, L.B.
    considered the person holding the victim down equally culpable.
    He hesitated to say that he could impose death on him, however,
    because he “still assume[d] that the guy who is holding him
    didn’t probably know that he is going to be severely beaten.”
    Asked to reconcile that hesitation with his willingness to impose
    death in the armed robbery scenario, L.B. explained: “[W]hen
    you start beating on somebody, I don’t think . . . you [are] doing
    it with the intention that you are killing, but when you have [a]
    weapon then it’s a different story. You have a weapon for one
    reason[,] to hurt somebody, in my opinion.” Based on that
    distinction, he did not feel the person holding another’s arms
    should be executed if the beating victim ultimately died.
    The prosecutor challenged L.B. for cause on the sole basis
    that he could not apply the law with regard to aiding and
    abetting. The court granted the motion on that basis, and the
    People defend the excusal on the same ground.
    The excusal of L.B. was flawed for the same reasons
    discussed in connection with S.R. and M.M. L.B. consistently
    indicated that he could follow the law and the court’s
    instructions and could impose death in a number of factual
    situations. That the prosecutor could construct a murder
    hypothetical for which L.B. thought one perpetrator should be
    spared execution does not mean he was substantially impaired
    25
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    within the meaning of Witt.       The prosecutor offered no
    additional facts that might actually support a special
    circumstance finding, nor sufficient aggravating factors to
    justify a vote for death. Many competent jurors might react to
    such a hypothetical by indicating they would vote for life, not
    death.
    No other evidence supports the court’s ruling. The record
    shows L.B. actively supported the death penalty, thought it was
    used too infrequently, and would be able to consider either life
    or death in a range of circumstances. Even the prosecutor
    described L.B. as “good up until the last hypothetical.” The
    excusal of L.B. was error.
    e. Prospective Juror G.P.
    Prospective juror G.P. had a slight proprosecution leaning,
    but said he would try to avoid any prejudice and could follow the
    court’s instructions. He felt the death penalty “is an appropriate
    punishment in certain cases” and favored California having the
    penalty because “in some cases it is called for,” such as cases
    involving “plan[ned], premeditated” murder. In addition to
    supporting the death penalty, G.P. could vote for it, though he
    would not automatically do so. Neither death nor life should be
    mandatory in all murder cases; instead punishment should
    “depend[] on the circumstances.” G.P. had no philosophical or
    religious convictions that would affect his ability to impose
    death, but sitting on a capital jury would be difficult because
    “[i]t is a very serious thing to have someone’s life in my hands.”
    Still, G.P. could vote for death “[i]f the facts meet the criteria,”
    such as when a defendant had “without any thought taken
    another’s life to gain money [or] property, or hunted down
    another to kill them.” Both death and life without possibility of
    26
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    parole were severe sentences to G.P. He stated in one part of
    his questionnaire that life without parole was worse, but
    reported in another that he was “torn” as to which was worse.
    When asked by the court whether, based on personal
    views, he would refuse to vote for the death penalty without
    considering aggravating and mitigating factors, G.P. replied,
    “No, I don’t think so.” G.P. would not begin by immediately
    favoring life or death; rather, “either defense or prosecution
    would [have to] convince me that [the case] called for the death
    penalty, I’d have to listen to the different circumstances. And
    hopefully keep an open mind . . . .”
    When asked by the prosecutor how he could impose death
    even though he was not sure it was a more severe sentence than
    life in prison, G.P. explained: “I go back to what takes place
    during the trial, during the penalty phase. I would listen to all
    the evidence . . . [¶] [I]f the circumstances surrounding the
    crime and all the factors leading up to it called for the death
    penalty, then I think[] I could do that too.” The prosecutor asked
    again, “[H]ow will we know you are able to impose the
    appropriate punishment?” G.P. replied, “Well, I don’t know how
    you would know. I really don’t. Again, you have to take my word
    that I would listen to all the evidence and make the decision that
    I think is right. And since you are the prosecution side, you
    would have to convince me — not maybe convince me like I’m
    resisting it, but show me that this man deserves the death
    penalty in this case.” Pressed on what the prosecutor would
    have to show him to get a death verdict, G.P. would not agree
    that any single factor would be necessary or sufficient: “[U]ntil
    I hear the evidence, I don’t know [what you would have to show
    me].”     The prosecutor then went through each special
    circumstance one by one and asked whether, if she proved only
    27
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    first degree murder and that one special circumstance, G.P.
    could vote for death. G.P. replied in each case some variation of
    “probably” or “I’m not sure, I think I could,” but “might be
    reluctant” if the only special circumstance was murder in the
    course of a kidnapping.
    G.P. had written on his questionnaire that he thought life
    without possibility of parole might serve as a replacement for
    the death penalty. He explained that “a lot of so-called
    industrial countries feel that life [in prison] is good enough
    punishment for somebody,” but he still believed in execution
    when “the circumstances surrounding the crime call for the
    death penalty.” When asked for circumstances that might call
    for death, he offered, “[M]aybe in [a] case like this case, possibly,
    . . . the way the charges were read with torture and things like
    that[,] rape with using the foreign object, the cruelty of this
    crime, possibly, assuming that this all took place, and the
    defendant committed these crimes, then it could call for the
    death penalty.”
    After G.P. agreed he wasn’t sure how he felt about the
    death penalty, the prosecutor asked, “And since you don’t know
    how you feel about the death penalty, how am I able to
    determine whether or not you could impose the death penalty, if
    the circumstances warrant it?”               G.P. replied, “If the
    circumstances warrant it, I would be able to impose it.” The
    prosecutor described G.P.’s frame of mind as being “torn
    between life without the possibility of parole and between the
    death penalty”; G.P. disagreed, saying, “No, I think my frame of
    mind [is], I’m willing to listen to all the circumstances from both
    sides and make up my mind then about whether to impose the
    death penalty on someone or life in prison.” If the aggravating
    circumstances outweighed any mitigating circumstances, G.P.
    28
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    could impose death. When asked to consider the beating
    hypothetical and assume the aggravating circumstances
    substantially outweighed the mitigating, G.P. affirmed that he
    had “[n]o doubt” he could impose death on the aider and abettor.
    G.P. acknowledged that, as he had written in his
    questionnaire, he did not think the death penalty was an
    effective deterrent. He rejected the prosecutor’s suggestion that
    he therefore would be incapable of imposing death: “Well, I don’t
    think that just because my idea is that [the] death penalty is not
    a deterrent doesn’t keep me from imposing the death penalty [¶]
    . . . [¶] [I]f the circumstances surrounding the crime call for the
    death penalty, then I can make that decision.”
    The prosecutor turned to the bank robbery hypothetical.
    G.P. thought all three “equally guilty of murder,” but “probably
    wouldn’t impose the death penalty” on the getaway driver who,
    as the prosecutor described it, “didn’t go inside[,] he didn’t
    shoot[,] he wasn’t the actual killer.”
    The prosecutor moved to excuse G.P. for cause, and the
    court granted the challenge. The court highlighted two aspects
    of G.P.’s views it was troubled by: G.P.’s belief that life in prison
    without possibility of parole might substitute for the death
    penalty, given that other industrial countries got by without
    capital punishment, and his belief that the death penalty was
    not a deterrent. The first view the court saw as a way many
    “smart” prospective jurors discussed the death penalty,
    discussions the court characterized as “some kind of intellectual
    sophistry.” The second view, that the death penalty was not a
    deterrent, the court saw as a basis for “infer[ring] that he could
    not impose [the death penalty, and] that’s the inference that has
    to be drawn based on the state of mind.”
    29
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    The inference that, simply because one has doubts about
    the efficacy of the death penalty, one would refuse ever to impose
    it and may be excused for cause has long been forbidden. That
    a prospective juror may “voice[] general objections to the death
    penalty or express[] conscientious or religious scruples against
    its infliction” is an insufficient basis for excusal. (Witherspoon
    v. 
    Illinois, supra
    , 391 U.S. at p. 522.) The high court has
    clarified that the prosecution “must demonstrate, through
    questioning, that the potential juror lacks impartiality,” i.e.,
    that the candidate’s views would substantially impair his or her
    ability to follow the court’s instructions and vote for death in
    appropriate cases. (Wainwright v. 
    Witt, supra
    , 469 U.S. at
    p. 423.) A trial court cannot simply assume that, because a
    candidate doubts the death penalty is a deterrent, he or she
    could never impose it. Here, G.P. directly rejected the
    assumption: “Well, I don’t think that just because my idea is
    that [the] death penalty is not a deterrent, [it] doesn’t keep me
    from imposing the death penalty               [¶] . . . [¶] [I]f the
    circumstances surrounding the crime call for the death penalty,
    then I can make that decision.”
    The court also referenced several of G.P.’s specific
    responses to questioning about whether he could impose the
    death penalty. The court noted that when asked whether he
    could give the death penalty based on each of the special
    circumstances charged in the case, G.P. wavered before saying
    he thought he could, or probably could. The court further noted
    that G.P. “flat out said he could not [impose death on a getaway
    driver]. And, if the theory of the People in this case is an aider
    and abettor theory[,] that would preclude consideration of a
    potential penalty.”
    30
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    On the second point, the record is to the contrary. When
    asked, “What penalty would you impose on the person in the car,
    who didn’t go inside? He didn’t shoot. He wasn’t the actual
    killer,” G.P. responded, “I probably wouldn’t impose the death
    penalty.” That a juror “probably wouldn’t impose the death
    penalty” on a hypothetical getaway driver is not evidence the
    same juror could not impose the death penalty in an appropriate
    case. Some getaway drivers, although guilty of first degree
    felony murder, may not even be death eligible. (See People v.
    
    Banks, supra
    , 
    61 Cal. 4th 788
    .) Even those legally eligible might
    rationally be seen by competent jurors as less deserving of death
    than another who pulls the trigger. In contrast, G.P. affirmed
    that he could cast a vote for death in other aiding and abetting
    scenarios and pointed to the facts of this case as circumstances
    that might justify a death sentence.
    The People agree that G.P.’s answers show he could vote
    for death in a range of circumstances, but contend that because
    he “probably wouldn’t” in others, he was impaired. The law does
    not entitle the People to a jury composed only of those who would
    impose death in every factual scenario, but instead to a jury that
    can follow the court’s instructions and conscientiously consider
    the appropriate penalty based on the proven aggravating and
    mitigating circumstances. (See People v. 
    Stewart, supra
    , 33
    Cal.4th at p. 447.)
    The court’s remaining point, that G.P. hesitated before
    affirming he probably could vote for death in various single
    special circumstance hypotheticals, presents a closer question.
    Only the trial court could observe G.P.’s demeanor and “the way
    he answers the questions.” However, even accepting the court’s
    view of G.P.’s demeanor, as we must, the record does not contain
    substantial evidence that G.P. held views that would
    31
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    “substantially impair” his ability to follow the law and the
    court’s instructions. G.P.’s responses uniformly indicate he
    could maintain an open mind as to either life or death. Indeed,
    G.P. offered the facts of this case as precisely the sort of case in
    which he might be able to consider a death sentence.
    “[U]nder applicable law, even a juror who ‘might find it
    very difficult to vote to impose the death penalty’ is not
    necessarily substantially impaired unless he or she was
    unwilling or unable to follow the court’s instructions in
    determining the appropriate penalty.” (People v. Merriman
    (2014) 
    60 Cal. 4th 1
    , 53.) The prosecution, as the party seeking
    G.P.’s removal, had the burden of establishing he lacked
    impartiality and could not follow the court’s instructions.
    (Wainwright v. 
    Witt, supra
    , 469 U.S. at p. 423; People v. 
    Stewart, supra
    , 33 Cal.4th at p. 445.) Here, nothing in the record
    suggests G.P. held inalterable anti-death penalty views or would
    find it difficult to vote for death when appropriate, nor does
    anything in the record give reason to doubt G.P. could act in
    accordance with the law and the court’s instructions, as he
    repeatedly and without reservation indicated he would do. The
    court erred in excusing G.P. for cause.
    f. Harmless Error
    In a capital case, the erroneous excusal of even one
    prospective juror for cause requires automatic reversal of the
    death sentence, although not the preceding guilt
    determinations. (Witherspoon v. 
    Illinois, supra
    , 391 U.S. at
    pp. 516–518, 521–523; People v. Riccardi (2012) 
    54 Cal. 4th 758
    ,
    783; People v. 
    Pearson, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th at p. 333; People v.
    
    Heard, supra
    , 31 Cal.4th at p. 966.)
    32
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    The People ask us to revisit this rule and hold any error
    harmless. The rule is not ours to revisit. It has been established
    in United States Supreme Court case law. (Gray v. Mississippi
    (1987) 
    481 U.S. 648
    , 659–668 (plur. opn. of Blackmun, J.); 
    id. at p.
    672 (conc. opn. of Powell, J.); see People v. 
    Riccardi, supra
    , 54
    Cal.4th at p. 783.) Even if a harmless error standard were to
    apply, the People fail to explain how the erroneous exclusion of
    at least four jurors could be deemed harmless. (See Riccardi, at
    p. 845 & fn. 6 (conc. opn. of Cantil-Sakauye, C. J.) [whatever
    doubt there might be about the impact of a single erroneous
    excusal for cause, the erroneous exclusion of numerous jurors
    inevitably will have an “appreciable impact on the final
    composition of the jury”].)
    2. Wheeler/Batson Motions
    We turn now to a different aspect of jury selection. The
    foregoing Witherspoon/Witt analysis involved the court’s excusal
    of prospective jurors for cause. In this section we consider the
    prosecution’s exercise of peremptory challenges against jurors
    not excused for cause. As we explain, the questions involve
    different principles.
    Penny Sigler was a White woman. Armstrong, like
    Pearson and Hardy, is an African-American man. During jury
    selection, the prosecution exercised four peremptory challenges
    against African-American male prospective jurors. Armstrong
    objected to the first two peremptories as racially discriminatory.
    The court denied these motions, ruling no prima facie case of
    discrimination had yet been established. After the third
    peremptory, the court found a prima facie case, but after
    considering the prosecutor’s proffered explanation, concluded
    the peremptory was being exercised for racially neutral reasons.
    33
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    The court also revisited the two earlier challenges and asked the
    prosecutor to justify these peremptories. In light of the reasons
    given, the court ruled these excusals likewise were not based on
    race.
    The court initially granted a fourth motion, but after a
    recess reversed itself and denied the motion. With the last
    African-American male eliminated from the pool, Armstrong
    moved for a mistrial. The court denied the motion, noting that
    both African-Americans and males were represented on the
    jury. The jury as seated included one African-American woman
    and five Caucasian men, but no African-American men.
    Armstrong renews his objections on appeal, arguing that
    he was deprived of the right to equal protection and trial by a
    representative jury. (U.S. Const., 6th, 8th & 14th Amends.; Cal.
    Const., art. I, §§ 7, 16.) We conclude there was no error.
    a. Legal Principles
    Peremptory challenges are “designed to be used ‘for any
    reason, or no reason at all.’ ” (People v. 
    Scott, supra
    , 61 Cal.4th
    at p. 387, quoting Hernandez v. New York (1991) 
    500 U.S. 352
    ,
    374 (conc. opn. of O’Connor, J.).) But there are limits:
    Peremptory challenges may not be used to exclude prospective
    jurors based on group membership such as race or gender.
    (J.E.B. v. Alabama ex rel. T.B. (1994) 
    511 U.S. 127
    , 129; Batson
    v. Kentucky (1986) 
    476 U.S. 79
    , 97; People v. Wheeler (1978) 
    22 Cal. 3d 258
    , 276; Code Civ. Proc., § 231.5.) Such use of
    peremptory challenges violates both a defendant’s right to a jury
    drawn from a representative cross-section of the community
    under article I, section 16 of the California Constitution, and his
    right to equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment to
    34
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    the United States Constitution.         (People v. Parker (2017) 2
    Cal.5th 1184, 1211.)
    “[T]here ‘is a rebuttable presumption that a peremptory
    challenge is being exercised properly, and the burden is on the
    opposing party to demonstrate impermissible discrimination.’ ”
    (People v. Hensley (2014) 
    59 Cal. 4th 788
    , 802; see Purkett v.
    Elem (1995) 
    514 U.S. 765
    , 768.) Under a now familiar three-
    step process, a defendant must first “make out a prima facie case
    ‘by showing that the totality of the relevant facts gives rise to an
    inference of discriminatory purpose.’ [Citation.] Second, once
    the defendant has made out a prima facie case, the ‘burden
    shifts to the State to explain adequately the racial exclusion’ by
    offering permissible race-neutral justifications for the strikes.
    [Citations.] Third, ‘[i]f a race-neutral explanation is tendered,
    the trial court must then decide . . . whether the opponent of the
    strike has proved purposeful racial discrimination.’ ” (Johnson
    v. California (2005) 
    545 U.S. 162
    , 168, fn. omitted; see People v.
    
    Scott, supra
    , 61 Cal.4th at p. 383.) The defendant’s ultimate
    burden is to demonstrate that “it was more likely than not that
    the challenge was improperly motivated.” (Johnson, at p. 170.)
    The same rules apply to state constitutional claims. (People v.
    Chism (2014) 
    58 Cal. 4th 1266
    , 1313.)
    Different standards apply to the review of first-stage and
    third-stage rulings. (Compare People v. Sánchez (2016) 
    63 Cal. 4th 411
    , 434–435 [first-stage standard] with People v.
    Winbush (2017) 2 Cal.5th 402, 434–435 [third-stage standard].)
    Armstrong and the People agree that the third-stage standard
    applies to Armstrong’s final two motions, but disagree as to the
    standard applicable to Armstrong’s first two motions.
    Armstrong is correct that the third-stage standard applies to all
    four rulings.
    35
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    In response to Armstrong’s first two motions, following
    challenges to prospective jurors S.L. and R.C., the court
    originally found no prima facie case. However, after finding a
    prima facie case in connection with Armstrong’s third motion,
    the court chose to revisit its earlier rulings and asked the
    prosecutor for a statement of reasons as to each. Upon
    reconsideration, the court reaffirmed its determination that
    these peremptories rested on race-neutral grounds. The court’s
    actions were consistent with the law as it stood at the time of
    trial, which required courts finding a prima facie case to solicit
    and consider the prosecution’s reasons for every other challenge
    against a member of the same group. (People v. McGee (2002)
    
    104 Cal. App. 4th 559
    , 570, disapproved by People v. Avila (2006)
    
    38 Cal. 4th 491
    , 549–550.)
    Trial courts are no longer obligated to revisit their rulings
    on earlier Wheeler/Batson motions when they conclude the
    defendant has made out a prima facie case in connection with a
    later motion. (People v. Hamilton (2009) 
    45 Cal. 4th 863
    , 899, fn.
    10; People v. Williams (2006) 
    40 Cal. 4th 287
    , 311; People v.
    
    Avila, supra
    , 38 Cal.4th at p. 549.) However, they have the
    power to do so in cases when a subsequent challenge places an
    earlier challenge in a new light. (Avila, at p. 552.) When a trial
    court revisits an earlier ruling, determines a prima facie case
    has been made, solicits reasons from the prosecutor, and rules
    on those reasons, its ruling is reviewed in the same fashion as
    any other third-stage ruling.
    The court’s reconsidered rulings on prospective jurors S.L.
    and R.C. based on reasons solicited from the prosecutor must be
    reviewed under the standards applicable to third-stage rulings.
    The record does not reveal whether the court reconsidered its
    earlier determination that no prima facie case had been made,
    36
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    but when a trial court solicits reasons for earlier strikes it had
    previously found did not support a prima facie case, we will
    assume the court has reversed its earlier determination unless
    the record affirmatively demonstrates otherwise. Moreover,
    when the sincerity of the reasons given for excusing one juror
    bears on the sincerity of the reasons given for excusing a later
    juror, those reasons may be considered in evaluating the
    peremptory strike against the original juror. (People v. 
    Scott, supra
    , 61 Cal.4th at p. 392; People v. 
    Riccardi, supra
    , 54 Cal.4th
    at pp. 786–787.) There is some overlap in the reasons given for
    striking S.L. and R.C., and for later striking E.W. and R.P.
    Accordingly, we will review all four strikes as third-stage
    rulings.
    At the third stage, the genuineness of the justification
    offered, not its objective reasonableness, is decisive. (Purkett v.
    
    Elem, supra
    , 514 U.S. at p. 769; People v. Gutierrez (2017) 2
    Cal.5th 1150, 1158.) “[T]he issue comes down to whether the
    trial court finds the prosecutor’s race-neutral explanations to be
    credible. Credibility can be measured by, among other factors,
    the prosecutor’s demeanor; by how reasonable, or how
    improbable, the explanations are; and by whether the proffered
    rationale has some basis in accepted trial strategy.” (Miller-El
    v. Cockrell (2003) 
    537 U.S. 322
    , 339; accord, People v. 
    Winbush, supra
    , 2 Cal.5th at p. 434.) Because the trial court’s credibility
    determination may rest in part on contemporaneous
    observations unavailable to the appellate court, we review that
    determination “ ‘ “with great restraint” ’ ” and will accord it
    deference “[s]o long as the trial court makes a sincere and
    reasoned effort to evaluate the nondiscriminatory justifications
    offered,” affirming when substantial evidence supports the
    37
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    ruling. (People v. Burgener (2003) 2
    9 Cal. 4th 83
    3, 864; accord,
    People v. Lenix (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 602
    , 613–614.)
    Armstrong contends no deference is due the trial court’s
    determinations. We cannot cast aside these findings so lightly.
    The record shows that over the course of Armstrong’s four
    motions, the prosecutor made a comprehensive record of her
    reasons for every strike, whether challenged or not. The trial
    judge took the opportunity to debate at length with counsel and
    consider thoughtfully the genuineness of the proffered reasons
    in light of his own observations. Discussion of the final
    Wheeler/Batson challenge alone consumed more than 80 pages
    of transcript. In the trial court, Armstrong bore the burden only
    of showing by a preponderance of the evidence that purposeful
    discrimination was behind the prosecutor’s use of strikes. (See
    Johnson v. 
    California, supra
    , 545 U.S. at p. 170; People v.
    Woodruff (2018) 5 Cal.5th 697, 753.) Once the trial court
    engaged in a reasoned examination of Armstrong’s showing in
    light of the record and determined he had not proven
    discrimination, its findings became entitled to “ ‘ “great
    deference on appeal” and will not be overturned unless clearly
    erroneous.’ ” (People v. 
    Riccardi, supra
    , 54 Cal.4th at p. 787,
    quoting Miller-El v. 
    Cockrell, supra
    , 537 U.S. at p. 340.)
    b. African-American Men Are a Cognizable Class
    In the trial court, Armstrong argued the use of
    peremptories on S.L., R.C., E.W., and R.P. was motivated by
    race. Once all four had been excused and his motions denied,
    Armstrong sought a mistrial on the ground that all African-
    American men had been removed from the jury panel. The court
    denied the motion. In this court, Armstrong contends the
    prosecutor’s peremptories were exercised to discriminate
    38
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    against African-American men specifically, rather than all
    African Americans.
    Motions under Wheeler and Batson protect against the
    systematic exclusion of distinctive and protected groups from
    the jury pool. Armstrong, as the moving party, has the burden
    of establishing the challenged jurors are members of a
    cognizable class. (People v. Jones (2013) 
    57 Cal. 4th 899
    , 916.)
    The record confirms that the four excluded jurors were African-
    American men, and this court’s precedent establishes that, in
    addition to groups defined by either race or gender, groups lying
    at the intersection of race and gender are cognizable under
    Wheeler. (People v. Cleveland (2004) 
    32 Cal. 4th 704
    , 734; People
    v. Boyette (2002) 
    29 Cal. 4th 381
    , 422; People v. Clair (1992) 
    2 Cal. 4th 629
    , 652; People v. Motton (1985) 
    39 Cal. 3d 596
    , 605.) In
    line with that precedent, the Court of Appeal has held African-
    American men a cognizable class for Wheeler purposes. (People
    v. Gray (2001) 
    87 Cal. App. 4th 781
    , 788–790.) The People
    contend that African-American men should not be considered a
    cognizable group, pointing to federal cases and to a concurring
    opinion disagreeing with the approach this court has taken.
    (People v. Young (2005) 
    34 Cal. 4th 1149
    , 1235–1238 (conc. opn.
    of Brown, J.).) Settled law dictates otherwise.
    c. Prospective Juror S.L.
    After Hovey voir dire, the prosecutor moved to excuse S.L.
    for cause. She expressed concern that S.L. “hesitated on quite a
    few of his decisions, especially those asking whether or not he
    could impose the death penalty.” S.L favored rehabilitation, and
    the prosecutor was unsure whether S.L. was for or against the
    death penalty. Based on these and other views, the prosecutor
    39
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    was of the “opinion that [S.L.] would be unable to impose the
    death penalty.” The court denied the motion.
    Following regular voir dire, the prosecutor used a
    peremptory on S.L. When initially denying Armstrong’s
    Wheeler/Batson motion, the court referenced its earlier denial of
    excusal for cause, which it described as “a very close challenge,”
    and concluded based on courtroom observations that the strike
    rested on S.L.’s reluctance to impose death: “I can understand
    why [the prosecutor] would want to excuse this juror, because at
    the Hovey challenge, even though this court did not grant the
    challenge for cause, this juror had some reservations about
    imposing the penalty of death, based on his demeanor, [and] my
    belief is based upon the earlier challenge for cause during the
    Hovey process, that the motive to excuse this juror is not based
    on race, but because of [the prosecutor’s] perceived perception of
    this juror’s inability to be able to impose death at the penalty
    phase.” When denying the challenge for cause, the court had
    anticipated the juror later would be the subject of a peremptory:
    “In making that ruling at that time I realized that there is an
    issue that this juror may, as the prosecutor [had] perceived at
    the time, may not be suitable, because that person waffled on
    whether they could impose death or not, believing in a
    rehabilitation system, and [that the defendant] has to commit a
    hateful crime.”
    As noted, the parties and court returned to the strike of
    S.L. when the court found a prima facie case in response to a
    subsequent Wheeler/Batson motion in connection with a
    different juror. Defending the strike, the prosecutor highlighted
    numerous answers S.L. had given that might suggest reluctance
    to impose the death penalty. The court credited this reason,
    40
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    again noting that in its view S.L. nearly could have been excused
    for cause based on his death penalty views.
    Initially, we note rulings made in response to assertions
    that “the juror did hesitate for [a] very long time before finally
    indicating that he could impose the death penalty” and based in
    part on observations of a juror’s “demeanor” are particularly
    difficult to second guess. Only the trial court is in a position to
    observe these matters. The court can hear the juror’s tone and
    inflection and see whether a juror hesitates or struggles with
    particular answers in a way the record may never reveal. (See
    People v. 
    Lenix, supra
    , 44 Cal.4th at pp. 626–627.) Because the
    “trial court is best situated to evaluate both the words and the
    demeanor of jurors who are peremptorily challenged, as well as
    the credibility of the prosecutor who exercised those strikes[,]
    . . . ‘these determinations of credibility and demeanor lie
    peculiarly within a trial judge's province,’ and ‘in the absence of
    exceptional circumstances, we [will] defer to the trial court.’ ”
    (Davis v. Ayala (2015) 576 U.S. ___, ___ [
    135 S. Ct. 2187
    , 2201].)
    What can be discerned from the record supports the
    prosecutor’s and trial court’s assessments of S.L. As the
    prosecutor recited, S.L. thought rehabilitation “important” and
    said, “[I]f there is anything about [a defendant’s] background
    that I would feel maybe he could be rehabilitated, then I would
    vote for life imprisonment.” For a first time offender without a
    prior history of “hateful decisions,” S.L. thought “maybe life in
    prison would be better” and thus would lean toward voting for
    life. He gave conflicting answers as to whether he would require
    the People to prove just one, multiple, or all special
    circumstances before voting for death. S.L. would require proof
    of an intent to kill. S.L. “probably would” vote for life without
    the possibility of parole absent evidence the defendant would
    41
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    reoffend in prison. S.L. thought life in prison was a more severe
    punishment than death because “the person would have the rest
    of their lives to think about what they had done.”6 S.L. was
    unsure whether California should abolish the death penalty.
    A juror’s reservations about imposing the death penalty
    are an acceptable race-neutral basis for exercising a
    peremptory. (E.g., People v. 
    Winbush, supra
    , 2 Cal.5th at p. 436;
    People v. Lomax (2010) 
    49 Cal. 4th 530
    , 572; People v. Taylor
    (2010) 
    48 Cal. 4th 574
    , 603; People v. 
    Burgener, supra
    , 29 Cal.4th
    at 864.) The view that life without possibility of parole is a more
    severe punishment than death is also an “obvious race-neutral
    ground[]” for challenging a prospective juror. (People v. Davis
    (2009) 
    46 Cal. 4th 539
    , 584.)
    Armstrong models his claim after Miller-El v. Dretke
    (2005) 
    545 U.S. 231
    . Two factors the Supreme Court weighed
    heavily there, the apparently discriminatory use of a Texas
    procedure called “jury shuffling” and direct evidence of a
    systemic, historical policy of excluding African-Americans from
    juries in the county, are absent here. (Miller-El, at pp. 253–255,
    263–265.) Armstrong points to two other factors: the argument
    that similar White jurors were not challenged, and that the
    prosecutor engaged in disparate questioning. Neither of these
    factors is demonstrated in the record.
    Armstrong identifies four jurors and an alternate who, in
    response to one of the two questions on the juror questionnaire
    6
    In his questionnaire, S.L. also said life without possibility
    of parole meant a defendant would “have to live with [his crime]
    for the rest of [his] life” and “you have the rest of your life to be
    punished.”
    42
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    comparing death and life without possibility of parole, indicated
    life was, or were unsure whether it might be, a worse
    punishment for a defendant.7 That these jurors were allowed to
    serve does not refute the trial court’s determination that the
    prosecutor’s concern was sincere. Examining the voir dire as a
    whole, the prosecutor showed by word and deed that she
    afforded significance to whether prospective jurors thought life
    in prison without parole a more severe penalty than death. She
    routinely questioned White jurors of both genders about the
    respective severity of death and life without parole. She
    challenged for cause or used peremptories against many White
    jurors who did not clearly view death as more severe. The
    prosecutor’s concern extended even to jurors who considered the
    question in terms of how they themselves would compare the
    punishments if each were imposed on them.
    In response to Armstrong’s Wheeler/Batson motions, the
    prosecutor articulated her thinking about this consideration: “I
    don’t believe that somebody . . . who believe[s] that life without
    the possibility of parole is a more severe punishment than death
    can actually impose the death penalty, because they believe that
    spending the rest of their life in prison would be the more severe
    punishment that could be imposed. [¶] I have exercised my
    peremptory challenges with respect to those jurors who have
    indicated” they hold that belief. Whether the prosecutor was
    7
    The jury questionnaire asked: “Overall, in considering
    general issues of punishment, which do you think is worse for
    a defendant,” death or life in prison without the possibility of
    parole? A second question asked, “Which do you believe is a
    more severe punishment,” death or life without parole? In
    response to the second question, these jurors and the alternate,
    unlike S.L., indicated death was the more severe punishment.
    43
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    right in her thinking, or whether we would share her concerns,
    is irrelevant. What matters is the genuineness of this view and
    its use as a criterion to distinguish among jurors. Exercising a
    peremptory to strike a juror who thinks death is a less severe
    punishment than life in prison without possibility of parole can
    be a “reasonable,” race-neutral basis (Miller-El v. 
    Dretke, supra
    ,
    545 U.S. at p. 248) if not used in a racially discriminatory way.
    This is not a case like Miller-El where the prosecutor displayed
    only selective concern. Instead, the issue was a frequent part of
    the prosecutor’s questioning of both White and African-
    American jurors throughout the Hovey voir dire.8
    That the prosecutor did not eliminate every juror who had
    even some doubt as to the relative severity of the penalties does
    not demonstrate that the trial court committed clear error in
    finding the concern genuine. The jury questionnaire asked both
    generally whether a death or life sentence was more severe and
    specifically which penalty was worse for the defendant. (See
    ante, fn. 7.) More than 30 percent of the jury pool indicated that
    life was the harsher penalty in response to both questions, and
    nearly half indicated as much on at least one of the two
    questions.9 Based on this representation in the jury pool, one
    would have expected six of the 18 jurors and alternates to think
    8
    In addition to her use of peremptories, the prosecutor
    successfully moved to excuse for cause a juror who believed life
    without possibility of parole was the more severe penalty and
    for that reason would vote for life when the aggravating
    circumstances outweighed the mitigating circumstances.
    9
    By our count, of the 406 prospective jurors who answered,
    fully 190 indicated life was a harsher penalty than death in
    response to one question or the other, and 133 so indicated in
    response to both.
    44
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    a life sentence was harsher both in general and specifically, and
    eight to have answered that way on at least one of the two
    questions. The prosecutor’s focus on the issue produced a jury
    that contained no one in the first category, and only four jurors
    in the second.
    The prosecutor focused on these questions because she
    believed they indicated a reluctance to impose death, but they
    were not the only ones that might reveal reluctance. The
    prosecutor was entitled to consider the full set of each juror’s
    responses in deciding whether they could be persuaded to vote
    for death if appropriate. Each of the jurors who sat had other
    answers that might temper concern. For example, in contrast
    to S.L., each rejected the idea that the death penalty should be
    abolished.
    Armstrong also identifies two jurors and an alternate who
    indicated rehabilitation or redemption might play a role in their
    thinking. Juror No. 4 believed that life might be appropriate for
    a remorseful first time offender who still had something to
    contribute to society, but did not think she could identify
    whether someone was remorseful, and was unequivocal about
    her ability to vote for death for a first time offender; S.L. would
    lean toward life for all first offenders. Juror No. 11 thought of
    death as an acceptable way to punish the unredeemable and
    would consider whether there was “hope for [the defendant] in
    our society” when weighing life and death. But unlike S.L.,
    Juror No. 11 believed death was a more severe punishment.
    Unlike S.L., Juror No. 11 was clear that the death penalty
    should not be abolished. Her collective answers suggest
    openness to the death penalty in a wider range of
    45
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    circumstances.10 Finally, Alternate Juror No. 6 endorsed life in
    prison for those who are “truly sorry and can be rehabilitated to
    some usefulness and good.”          But nothing else in her
    questionnaire or voir dire suggested hesitation about imposing
    the death penalty.
    Armstrong objects that the prosecutor used differential
    questioning for S.L. and other prospective jurors, who were not
    asked whether they could impose the death penalty under
    specific special circumstances and whether they would require
    that more than one special circumstance be proven. The record
    refutes this contention. The prosecutor employed the same
    general line of questioning with numerous prospective jurors
    who were not African-American men.
    Finally, Armstrong argues that S.L.’s answers in his
    questionnaire and on voir dire gave no suggestion he could not
    follow the law. While this may be true, the argument misses the
    point. Unlike a for-cause challenge under Witherspoon and Witt,
    the issue here is not whether a juror held views that would
    impair his or her ability to follow the law. Unimpaired jurors
    may still be the subject of valid peremptory strikes. The issue
    instead is whether the prosecutor held a genuine race-neutral
    reason for exercising a strike.
    “In a capital case, it is not surprising for prospective jurors
    to express varying degrees of hesitancy about voting for a death
    verdict. Few are likely to have experienced a need to make a
    comparable decision at any prior time in their lives. As a result,
    both the prosecution and the defense may be required to make
    10
    S.L. described the death penalty’s only purpose as a tool to
    punish “people [who] murder and can’t or won’t stop even if they
    were in prison for life.”
    46
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    fine judgment calls about which jurors are more or less willing
    to vote for the ultimate punishment. These judgment calls may
    involve a comparison of responses that differ in only nuanced
    respects, as well as a sensitive assessment of jurors’ demeanor.”
    (Davis v. 
    Ayala, supra
    , 576 U.S. at p. ___ [135 S.Ct. at p. 2201].)
    The trial court determined the use of a peremptory to excuse
    S.L. was the product of just such a judgment call. Its
    determination was supported by substantial evidence and thus
    not clear error.11
    d. Prospective Juror R.C.
    Armstrong challenged the prosecution’s use of its eleventh
    peremptory on R.C. The court initially found no prima facie
    case. It noted both R.C.’s failure to give direct answers and a
    developing friction between R.C. and the prosecutor as
    providing neutral reasons for the peremptory. When the court
    retroactively solicited a statement of reasons following use of a
    peremptory to strike a third African-American male, the
    prosecutor explained she struck R.C. because he had memory
    issues, expressed an unwillingness to set aside his belief system,
    repeatedly gave nonanswers or revealed no opinions about the
    death penalty, and clashed with the prosecutor during voir dire.
    11
    Armstrong relies on People v. Silva (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 345
    ,
    385 to argue that no deference is due the trial court’s
    determinations and we should consider de novo the validity of
    this strike. In Silva, we carved out an exception to the usual
    rule of deference because the record contained no support for the
    prosecutor’s stated reasons and the trial court did not inquire
    into those reasons. (Id. at pp. 376–377, 385–386.) No similar
    justification for applying the exception appears here where, as
    discussed, the record supports the prosecutor’s reasons and the
    trial court correctly recalled and considered the Hovey voir dire
    that bore on those reasons.
    47
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    After hearing the prosecutor’s explanations, which aligned with
    the reasons identified in the earlier ruling, the court accepted
    them.
    The record supports the court’s determination. R.C.’s
    questionnaire revealed little to nothing about his death penalty
    views. In voir dire, the prosecutor had an equally difficult time
    discovering his feelings on the subject. R.C. acknowledged he
    had memory difficulties. He also wrote on his questionnaire
    that he would not set aside his religious, social, and
    philosophical beliefs, although he later indicated he had
    misunderstood the question. Finally, review of the voir dire
    transcript confirms that exchanges between the prosecutor and
    R.C. became so combative that counsel and the court needed a
    sidebar to discuss whether the prosecutor could ask ancillary
    questions about why R.C. was resisting her inquiries.12 The
    12
    Sample exchanges:
    Q: . . . what subjects did you teach?
    A: You’re amazing. You’re amazing. . . .
    Q: You said I was amazing.            Did you mean that
    sarcastically?
    A: I don’t think I was laughing.
    Q: Okay. So why did you say I’m amazing?
    A: I think you are. It’s simple to me.
    Q: . . . would you say that you are for or against the death
    penalty?
    A: Lady, I keep telling you the same thing. I don’t
    understand why you keep asking me the same thing.
    Q: Can you —
    A: I do not know your name, that’s why I called you lady.
    48
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Q: That’s nice. At least you didn’t call me something else.
    A: I don’t have any of that other in my heart or in my mind.
    I just want some clear questions, so I can get some clear answers
    and get out of here.
    Q: Okay. The question I have in my mind is based on your
    answers. Are you for or against the death penalty?
    A: My opinion is the same as it was when we started this.
    Q: So you have no opinion one way or the other?
    A: No.
    Q: Based on what you just said, it sounds like, to me, that
    you believe in the death penalty. Is that an accurate statement?
    A: Whatever you want to believe is fine with me.
    Q: But I’ve asked you what your opinion is about the death
    penalty, and you say you have no opinion. So that doesn’t make
    sense to me that you can impose it, but you don’t have an opinion
    about it.
    A: I’m pretty clear, and it’s okay with me. . . . Where I’m
    coming from is that I’m very clear about what I’m saying to you.
    And what you believe is personal, you know, I don’t — I don’t
    even — I’m not even willing to help you, but that’s personal, I
    think.
    Q: Can you come out here, look him in the eye and say
    “Death”?
    A: Why are you asking me that?
    Q: Because that’s what you have to do at the end, if you
    come back with a death verdict. The court is going to poll you,
    he’s going to ask what your verdict is, and the defendant is going
    to be sitting right there looking you in the eye. Can you look
    him back in the eye and say “Death”?
    A: If you were the defendant, I could look you in your eye
    and say “Death.”
    49
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    prosecutor “felt that my client would not be best served by a
    juror who has a personality conflict with me as the lawyer,
    because I think that would get in the way of being able to
    evaluate the evidence . . . and would cause him to sway towards
    the defense.” She was entitled to exercise a peremptory on these
    bases, and the court had ample basis for viewing the reason as
    genuine.
    Armstrong concedes a conflict developed between the
    prosecutor and R.C., but lays blame for that conflict solely on
    the prosecutor for allegedly provocative, confrontational, and
    insulting questions. Our review of the voir dire does not support
    this interpretation. More fundamentally, the trial judge
    observed the questioning and concluded the personality conflict
    was genuine rather than manufactured by the prosecutor. In
    later explaining its ruling, the court said: “This juror . . . was,
    in this court’s observation, a belligerent and hostile juror toward
    the prosecutor during her questioning. He refused to answer
    many of the same reasonable questions posed to the other jurors,
    specifically whether he could impose death . . . . The sum and
    substance of his answers were that You’ll have to find out later.”
    Armstrong dismisses that determination, but it appears to be a
    legitimate conclusion based explicitly on the court’s
    observations.
    Armstrong also contends that comparative juror analysis
    shows the reasons for R.C.’s excusal were pretextual, identifying
    a handful of other jurors who he asserts had similarly ill-formed
    views of the death penalty. That other prospective jurors may
    have been similar in one or two regards is not decisive. (People
    v. 
    Winbush, supra
    , 2 Cal.5th at p. 443.) No other juror engaged
    the prosecutor in pointed verbal sparring in the way R.C. did.
    What occurred here was unique. Consequently, no other juror’s
    50
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    combination of questionnaire and voir dire responses is
    comparable to R.C.’s. The court did not abuse its discretion in
    determining that the prosecutor’s race-neutral reasons for
    excusing R.C., including his nonresponsiveness and the tenor of
    the exchanges during voir dire, were genuine.
    e. Prospective Juror E.W.
    When Armstrong challenged the use of a peremptory on
    prospective juror E.W., the court found a prima facie case and
    solicited the prosecution’s reasons. After discussing a number
    of responses from E.W. that gave her pause, the prosecutor
    identified two as dispositive: “The two things that really bother
    me [are] that he believes that life without the possibility of
    parole is the most severe sentence and he also believes that since
    if the death penalty is imposed it cause[s] so much additional
    litigation, he doesn’t believe it should be, just let it go, is what
    he says. To me that is indicative of what his verdict is going to
    be.” Later, she reiterated that E.W.’s view of life without
    possibility of parole as the more severe sentence was her
    “primary motivation for exercising the peremptory challenge,”
    and she had exercised peremptories against Whites who held
    the same view. The trial court evaluated these concerns and
    concluded they were genuine. Because the prosecutor’s “concern
    has nothing to do with race[,] it has to do with whether or not
    [E.W.] could impose the death penalty,” the court denied the
    motion.
    The record substantiates that E.W. held the views the
    prosecutor ascribed to him. He wrote that the death penalty in
    its “current form is so slow that it’s really useless. Justice
    delayed.” He was “OK [with the death penalty] in principle, but
    if it creates so much additional litigation, maybe [the state]
    51
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    should just let it go.” He circled that life in prison without
    possibility of parole was a more severe punishment than death
    and added, “To me, I’d rather die.” E.W. confirmed this view in
    voir dire. E.W. also thought “the appeals process so long that it
    tends to be life in prison.”
    Armstrong stresses that in E.W.’s questionnaire and voir
    dire, E.W. said his views would not affect his verdict. So does
    the dissenting opinion. (Dis. opn., post, at pp. 18–20.) They are
    correct about the record, but incorrect about its significance.
    E.W. was not excused for cause. Instead, the prosecution was
    entitled to use a peremptory if, as an advocate, she was
    concerned he would resist her view of the case. The ultimate
    issue in a Wheeler/Batson motion is not whether E.W.’s views
    would substantially impair his ability to vote for execution. The
    question instead is whether the prosecutor genuinely believed
    those views would incline E.W. to vote for life, and whether that
    belief was the true basis for the exercise of a peremptory. The
    trial court accepted this reason after voir dire. Armstrong and
    the dissent must do more than argue that the prosecutor’s
    concerns might have been unfounded. The “inquiry is focused
    on whether the proffered neutral reasons are subjectively
    genuine, not on how objectively reasonable they are.” (People v.
    Melendez (2016) 2 Cal.5th 1, 15.) The reasons must be sincere
    and nondiscriminatory, but they need not be universally shared.
    The dissenting opinion accepts that “ ‘we exercise great
    restraint in reviewing a prosecutor’s explanations and typically
    afford deference to a trial court’s Batson/Wheeler rulings.’ ”
    (Dis. opn., post, at p. 23, quoting People v. 
    Gutierrez, supra
    , 2
    Cal.5th at p. 1172; see People v. 
    Melendez, supra
    , 2 Cal.5th at
    p. 15 [“We review the trial court’s determination with restraint,
    presume the prosecutor has exercised the challenges in a
    52
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    constitutional manner, and defer to the trial court’s ability to
    distinguish genuine reasons from sham excuses.”].)           We
    departed from that stance of deference in Gutierrez, but only
    because the proffered reasons lacked inherent plausibility or
    were contradicted by the record, and the trial court did not ask
    the prosecutor to elaborate. (Gutierrez, at pp. 1169–1172; see
    People v. 
    Silva, supra
    , 25 Cal.4th at p. 386.) Here, in contrast,
    the reasons the prosecutor relied upon could well make a juror
    less desirable for a prosecution seeking the death penalty and
    were borne out by the record.
    The dissenting opinion nevertheless offers two reasons for
    according the trial court’s finding no deference. First, it
    suggests the court failed to challenge the prosecutor’s assertion
    that she was striking all prospective jurors who believed life
    without parole was a more severe sentence than death. The
    dissenting opinion accepts that E.W. indicated he thought life
    without parole a more severe penalty than death, and that the
    prosecutor was correct in stating every seated juror had
    answered differently. But, according to the dissent, the trial
    court should have noticed that four other jurors or alternates
    indicated in response to a different question that life without
    possibility of parole was worse for defendants, and these
    answers should have spurred further inquiry from the court.
    (Dis. opn., post, at p. 16.)
    However, when the prosecutor struck E.W. and the trial
    court considered the Wheeler/Batson challenge, only one of the
    four supposedly comparable jurors (Juror No. 5) was in the
    53
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    box.13 That is, no juror in the box save E.W. had indicated life
    was the more severe punishment, and only one other thought
    life worse for a defendant. That the trial court failed to observe
    one juror had answered one of the two questions on the
    questionnaire asking about the two penalties’ relative
    harshness (see ante, fn. 7) in a manner that could have
    concerned the prosecutor does not show that the court’s inquiry
    was insufficiently “ ‘sincere and reasoned.’ ” (People v. 
    Lenix, supra
    , 44 Cal.4th at p. 614.)
    The meager representation of these views on the panel,
    notwithstanding that nearly half the prospective jurors held
    such views, was the product of weeks the prosecutor spent
    pressing, challenging for cause, and striking jurors who did not
    consider death more severe than life in prison without parole.
    (See ante, pp. 42–45.)14 The trial court, unlike this one, observed
    13
    The prospective jurors who ultimately served as Jurors
    No. 4 and No. 9 were drawn randomly late in the process, after
    E.W. had been struck, when both sides were low on strikes and
    had to weigh carefully the pros and cons of the provisional panel
    against the characteristics of the dwindling pool of potential
    replacements. Alternate Juror No. 5 was chosen much later as
    part of a separate process.
    14
    Two examples illustrate the prosecutor’s approach.
    Prospective Juror No. 255, a White female, indicated in her
    questionnaire that life and death were equally severe penalties.
    The prosecutor questioned her about this and got her to agree
    that death was actually more severe.            Unsatisfied, the
    prosecutor later exercised a peremptory against the woman, and
    explained on the record that her sole reason was because she
    thought the juror still felt life was as severe a punishment as
    death.
    Prospective Juror No. 9803, a White male, indicated on his
    questionnaire that life was more severe than death. The
    54
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    those weeks of questioning directed at jurors of all races and
    genders. Its observations informed its judgments about whether
    the prosecutor’s stated concern was genuine. If the deference
    we are required to accord the trial court’s finding (Davis v.
    
    Ayala, supra
    , 576 U.S. at p. ___ [135 S.Ct. at p. 2199]) means
    anything, it means that first-hand experience merits some
    weight. Given a justification that (1) was inherently plausible,
    (2) was largely supported by the record of the prosecutor’s
    behavior, and (3) appeared to the trial court to be subjectively
    genuine, the trial court was not legally obligated to inquire
    further.
    The record offers factual and statistical support for the
    genuineness of the prosecutor’s concern about jurors who, like
    E.W., thought life without parole a more severe penalty. Unable
    to contest that the prosecutor winnowed out all jurors who
    thought life the more severe penalty, and nearly all who thought
    it a fate worse than death for the defendant, the dissent would
    shift the focus from whether the prosecutor’s concern was
    genuine to whether specific statements she made in illustrating
    that concern were not just substantially accurate but
    universally true. This misstates the nature of the trial court’s
    inquiry, and ours. That the prosecutor may have succeeded in
    eliminating only nearly all, rather than all, the jurors the
    prosecutor asked him whether this answer meant he would vote
    for life. The juror said it did not. Again unsatisfied, the
    prosecutor struck him and gave as her sole reason that the juror
    felt life a more severe punishment than death.
    These and other instances also reflect the prosecutor’s
    consistent reluctance, for prospective jurors of all races and
    genders, to put faith in voir dire answers that hedged on views
    expressed in the jurors’ questionnaires.
    55
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    dissent deems comparable does not call into question the
    sincerity of her concern.
    Second, the dissenting opinion concludes that, on its view
    of the cold record, the prosecutor should have been no more
    concerned by E.W.’s death penalty views than those of several
    jurors the prosecutor did not strike. (Dis. opn., post, at pp. 18–
    20.) The conclusion fails because the jurors are not comparable.
    E.W. thought life without possibility of parole the more severe
    penalty; Juror No. 5, the only one of the comparison jurors on
    the panel when E.W. was struck, did not, explaining that
    “[d]eath is the end forever — prison for life is still life.” Where
    E.W. described the death penalty as “useless” and a candidate
    for abandonment, Juror No. 5 saw the death penalty as a
    “needed though sad way to punish someone.” The same is true
    of other jurors later added to the panel and now compared to
    E.W. with the benefit of hindsight. Juror No. 4 thought death
    more severe (“Death is final”) and wrote: “The punishment has
    to fit the crime and I think that some[]times [the death penalty]
    is warranted.” Juror No. 9 believed death the more severe
    penalty and wrote “I have no problem with this law” and “In
    some cases[,] it is justice.” Finally, Alternate Juror No. 5
    thought the death penalty more severe and wrote of the penalty,
    “There may be times when it is necessary.” A prosecutor could
    rationally distinguish between prospective jurors who thought
    death a more severe and necessary penalty and one who thought
    it less severe and useless. The record supports the prosecutor’s
    assertion that she had more reason to be concerned about E.W.’s
    potential verdict than a verdict from jurors the dissent and
    Armstrong posit as comparable.
    Armstrong also identifies jurors who indicated they had
    not thought about their support or opposition for the death
    56
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    penalty before. But the proffered explanation was not that E.W.
    had never thought about the death penalty. The prosecutor was
    concerned instead about the views he had actually developed:
    E.W. could not say he was affirmatively in favor of the death
    penalty, and he thought perhaps it should be abandoned.
    Finally, Armstrong points out other jurors who, like E.W.,
    indicated that they thought the death penalty was imposed too
    seldom or too randomly. But the prosecutor never identified this
    as a basis for striking E.W. Her concern was that E.W. thought
    a life sentence more severe than the death penalty, which should
    perhaps be discontinued. Seated jurors and alternates did not
    share these views.
    Armstrong and the dissenting opinion also highlight that
    the prosecutor mentioned E.W.’s profession, engineering, as an
    area of concern, explaining she feared he might put her to a
    higher standard of proof. (Dis. opn., post, at p. 8.) The
    prosecutor did not identify this as one of the “two things that
    really bother me” about E.W., and the trial court did not
    originally consider the prosecutor to have proffered it as a
    justification. We may infer that in the prosecutor’s eyes the
    juror’s profession alone was an insufficient reason to exercise a
    strike.15
    The fact another engineer, Juror No. 11, remained on the
    jury does not demonstrate the expressed doubt about engineers,
    as part of the overall calculus, was insincere. The seated juror
    15
    Later in voir dire, the prosecutor described her general
    approach to strikes and listed five areas of principal concern,
    none of which focused on a juror’s profession: (1) belief that life
    in prison was as or more severe a punishment than death; (2)
    belief in rehabilitation; (3) bad experiences with the police; (4)
    reluctance to judge others; and (5) prior service on a hung jury.
    57
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    differed from E.W. on each of the two grounds the prosecutor
    gave as her principal reasons for exercising a strike. Unlike
    E.W., Juror No. 11 indicated death was a more severe
    punishment than life in prison. Unlike E.W., Juror No. 11 did
    not think the state should consider abandoning the death
    penalty. An engineer with these views might be acceptable,
    even if not ideal, while an engineer with views like E.W.’s was
    deemed too big a risk to take in selecting the jury. Comparative
    juror analysis has force “when the compared jurors have
    expressed ‘a substantially similar combination of responses,’ in
    all material respects, to the jurors excused.” (People v. 
    Winbush, supra
    , 2 Cal.5th at p. 443.) No such combination appears here.
    The dissenting opinion is unclear how other
    considerations, such as more prosecution-friendly views at the
    penalty phase, might outweigh concerns that a prospective juror
    would be harder to persuade at the guilt phase. (Dis. opn., post,
    at p. 9.) This is not a conundrum. A prosecutor with an
    exceptionally strong guilt phase case but a weaker penalty
    phase case might be willing to trade some small risk of an
    unfavorable guilt phase verdict for better odds of a desired
    penalty phase verdict. A prosecutor need not strike every single
    juror with a particular trait, even those with other redeeming
    qualities, to demonstrate that concerns about the trait are
    genuine.16
    16
    Alternatively, it is possible that in the course of reviewing
    50-page questionnaires, each containing responses to 237
    questions, from more than 400 jurors — more than 20,000 pages
    in all — the prosecutor, defense counsel, and trial court all
    overlooked Juror No. 11’s profession. Neither at the time nor in
    a later new trial motion rearguing the Wheeler/Batson motions
    58
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    This court and the United States Supreme Court have
    previously recognized that comparative juror analysis can be a
    useful tool, but also one that has some “inherent limitations.”
    (People v. 
    Lenix, supra
    , 44 Cal.4th at p. 622; see Snyder v.
    Louisiana (2008) 
    552 U.S. 472
    , 483.) “Moreover, the selection of
    a jury is a fluid process, with challenges for cause and
    peremptory strikes continually changing the composition of the
    jury before it is finally empanelled. As we noted in People v.
    Johnson (1989) 
    47 Cal. 3d 1194
    : ‘[T]he particular combination
    or mix of jurors which a lawyer seeks may, and often does,
    change as certain jurors are removed or seated in the jury box.
    It may be acceptable, for example, to have one juror with a
    particular point of view but unacceptable to have more than one
    with that view. If the panel as seated appears to contain a
    sufficient number of jurors who appear strong-willed and
    favorable to a lawyer’s position, the lawyer might be satisfied
    with a jury that includes one or more passive or timid appearing
    jurors. However, if one or more of the supposed favorable or
    strong jurors is excused either for cause or [by] peremptory
    challenge and the replacement jurors appear to be passive or
    timid types, it would not be unusual or unreasonable for the
    lawyer to peremptorily challenge one of these apparently less
    favorable jurors even though other similar types remain. These
    same considerations apply when considering the age, education,
    training, employment, prior jury service, and experience of the
    prospective jurors.’ (Id. at p. 1220.)” (Lenix, at p. 623.)
    “Each juror becomes, to a certain degree, a risk taken.
    Voir dire is a process of risk assessment. As the Supreme Court
    did defense counsel argue the challenge to E.W. and the failure
    to strike Juror No. 11 were inconsistent.
    59
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    observed, ‘potential jurors are not products of a set of cookie
    cutters.’ (Miller-El [v. 
    Dretke], supra
    , 545 U.S. at p. 247, fn. 6.)
    Two panelists might give a similar answer on a given point. Yet
    the risk posed by one panelist might be offset by other answers,
    behavior, attitudes or experiences that make one juror, on
    balance, more or less desirable. These realities, and the
    complexity of human nature, make a formulaic comparison of
    isolated responses an exceptionally poor medium to overturn a
    trial court’s factual finding.” (People v. 
    Lenix, supra
    , 44 Cal.4th
    at p. 624.)
    Four months later, when denying Armstrong’s motion for
    a new trial, the court determined E.W.’s profession was an
    additional genuine race-neutral basis for the strike. In opposing
    the new trial motion, the People did not identify E.W.’s
    profession as the principal reason for the strike. The court
    compared E.W. to Prospective Juror No. 5128, a White male
    engineer. As with E.W., the prosecutor questioned No. 5128
    about whether his training would lead him to speculate about
    every conceivable possibility. Like E.W. and unlike seated Juror
    No. 11, this prospective juror also gave other answers reflecting
    views on the criminal justice system that concerned the
    prosecutor. She unsuccessfully moved to excuse him for cause,
    and then was able to excuse him by stipulation.17 The
    prosecutor’s approach to No. 5128 is consistent with the
    subjective view that while an engineering background alone
    17
    The prosecution and defense settled on the final set of
    alternate jurors by mutual agreement, rather than by exercising
    alternating peremptory challenges. Prospective Juror No. 5128
    was not on the agreed-upon list.
    60
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    may not warrant a peremptory, in combination with other
    factors it may make the juror less desirable.18
    The prosecutor also mentioned a handful of reasons she
    deemed less significant, which the trial court did not rule on.
    We have cautioned against a trial court “tak[ing] a shortcut in
    its determination of the prosecutor’s credibility, picking one
    plausible item from [a] list and summarily accepting it without
    considering whether the prosecutor’s explanation as a whole”
    suggests pretext. (People v. Smith (2018) 4 Cal.5th 1134, 1157.)
    No cherry-picking was involved here. The prosecutor herself
    highlighted the considerations that concerned her most. The
    trial court took her at her word and evaluated those reasons for
    their genuineness and neutrality. Once they passed muster, it
    was not error to omit express consideration of secondary factors.
    Nor, in any event, do these lesser factors undermine the
    trial court’s credibility finding. The voir dire transcript and
    E.W.’s questionnaire show that E.W. indicated prosecutors
    “tend to be overzealous to convict,” and had had negative
    experiences with the police. He believed misconduct by police
    and lawyers was inadequately punished and that failure was
    one of the most important problems with the criminal justice
    system. In addition, E.W. was neither firmly for nor against the
    18
    The trial court specifically relied on the prosecution’s
    approach to No. 5128 in finding the prosecution’s concerns about
    E.W.’s profession genuine. The dissenting opinion would
    consider the prosecution’s questioning of that prospective juror
    de novo and conclude it demonstrates the prosecution actually
    sought to rehabilitate other engineers. (Dis. opn., post, at
    pp. 12–14.) We do not read the cold record as revealing any
    significant disparity. We should be most hesitant to substitute
    our judgment, long after the fact, for the trial court’s comparison
    of the examinations it observed.
    61
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    death penalty, thought the system needed reform, and was
    familiar with legal terminology. These are factors that,
    considered with all other circumstances, could fairly give an
    advocate pause. They provide no basis for us to substitute our
    judgment for that of the trial court’s and conclude the prosecutor
    acted with racial bias. (See People v. 
    Lenix, supra
    , 44 Cal.4th at
    p. 613.)
    An advocate who chooses jurors based on racial bias
    commits grievous misconduct, for “the very integrity of the
    courts is jeopardized when a prosecutor’s discrimination ‘invites
    cynicism respecting the jury’s neutrality,’ [citation], and
    undermines public confidence in adjudication.” (Miller-El v.
    
    Dretke, supra
    , 545 U.S. at p. 238.) In guarding against such
    corrosive impropriety, judges on the trial court, and on appellate
    panels, must be vigilant. The first line of vigilance rests with
    those in the trial court, who see and hear the questions,
    responses and nuances of the interaction.
    The rules of review also require vigilance, and humility.
    Appellate courts must surely call out misconduct. But we are
    aided in this endeavor by the trial judge who ruled in the first
    instance. In the face of a trial court’s supported factual findings
    regarding the genuineness of the prosecutor’s racially neutral
    reasons for exercising a strike, we should be hesitant to draw a
    contrary conclusion unless well-founded on fair inference,
    rather than surmise.
    The trial court in this case determined that the strike of
    E.W. was made on genuine, race-neutral bases. Reviewing that
    ruling with the deference precedent requires, the record
    supports the trial court’s conclusion.
    62
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    f. Prospective Juror R.P.
    R.P. was the last African-American man in the jury pool.
    Before seeking to excuse him, the prosecutor requested a sidebar
    and offered the reasoning behind every peremptory she had
    exercised. The prosecutor then gave detailed reasons for
    striking R.P. As with S.L. and E.W., she struck him in part
    because he thought life in prison a more severe sentence than
    death. He also believed that the death penalty was overused,
    especially against African-Americans, and that African-
    Americans in general were overincarcerated. Third, R.P. had
    sat on two prior murder cases, and his service had troubled him.
    Finally, one of R.P.’s sons had had a negative experience with
    the Long Beach Police Department. A second son had recently
    been robbed at gunpoint in Long Beach, and the investigation
    was ongoing. The prosecutor feared any future negative
    interactions with the Long Beach police could impair R.P.’s
    impartiality.
    The court concluded that the prosecutor’s peremptory was
    based on her belief R.P. would not impose the death penalty, and
    that reason was race-neutral. Nonetheless, it initially granted
    the Wheeler/Batson motion because it believed R.P. could impose
    a death verdict. Because the prosecutor’s race-neutral reason
    was “mistaken,” the court rejected the prosecutor’s exercise of a
    peremptory.
    The prosecutor pointed out that the court was applying the
    wrong standard. Whether R.P. was unable to vote for death was
    a consideration in a for-cause challenge. A Wheeler/Batson
    motion, by contrast, examines whether the prosecutor genuinely
    believes a juror will be resistant to her side of the case and is
    striking him for that race-neutral reason. After asking the
    prosecutor to restate her reasons, the court reversed itself and
    63
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    denied the Wheeler/Batson motion. The court specifically
    concluded that three of the prosecutor’s reasons were genuine
    and race-neutral: R.P. found judging others disturbing; thought
    the death penalty was overused, especially against African-
    Americans; and was concerned about the overincarceration of
    African-Americans in general.
    The record supports the court’s determination. R.P. had
    served as a juror in two noncapital murder trials. He wrote that
    “the aftermath is always disturbing.” Asked about this answer,
    R.P. explained: “I carry it with me. I go back over it, I guess —
    I don’t want to say second guess, but it’s disturbing. It’s
    disturbing to a certain degree when you do judge your fellow
    man — for me it is.” Twice more in follow-up questioning he
    described the process of jury service as disturbing. In later
    questioning, R.P. described his jury experience as “unsettling.”
    R.P. thought the death penalty was “[s]ometimes
    overused,” especially on “certain segments of our society.” His
    views were informed by other states that imposed moratoriums
    on executions and reports of prisoners released based on DNA
    evidence. In light of this, R.P. believed the death penalty was “a
    serious thing, and we . . . shouldn’t take it lightly. [¶] [M]y
    bottom line is, it’s a very serious thing and . . . we shouldn’t rush
    to anything. I think we should look at all the facts.” Sometimes
    death could be the correct punishment, but “[i]n other instances,
    as we’ve seen — in some instances there have been mistakes
    made, so I think we should be very careful about what we do.”
    R.P. later clarified that his concerns extended to
    incarceration in general: “[T]here are people being released
    across the country, where either evidence was not
    substantiated, DNA, a lot of different avenues, and my thought
    64
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    behind that was we have to look at things beyond just face value,
    we have to make certain that things are true.” R.P. was
    concerned as well that, in his view, the African-American
    community was substantially overrepresented both generally in
    prison, and on death row in particular. This disparity suggested
    something was “fundamentally wrong” with the criminal justice
    system.
    R.P.’s expressed concerns are held by many. Yet they also
    provide a legitimate reason why a prosecutor, tasked with
    securing the conviction of an African-American defendant for a
    crime heavy with racial overtones, might view R.P. as a
    problematic juror. The court’s determination that the reason
    was genuine and race-neutral finds support in the record. The
    concerns R.P. had about the criminal justice system are not
    unique to African-Americans: A prospective juror of any
    ethnicity might equally share them. In exercising peremptory
    challenges, advocates may excuse jurors who have such
    concerns, so long as their reasoning does not rest on
    impermissible group bias. (See People v. 
    Smith, supra
    , 4 Cal.5th
    at p. 1153; People v. 
    Winbush, supra
    , 2 Cal.5th at p. 439.)
    Further, given R.P.’s responses about jury service in
    noncapital cases, the prosecutor might be legitimately
    concerned that he might lean toward a verdict that would be
    emotionally less taxing. The record supports the court’s
    acceptance of that reason. No other juror gave such answers.
    Armstrong relies on comparative juror analysis to argue
    that the prosecutor’s reasons were pretextual. He contends
    seated White Juror Nos. 2, 4, 5, 10, and 11, and Alternate Juror
    Nos. 5 and 6 were likewise apprehensive in varying degrees
    about the prospect of imposing a death verdict. But unlike R.P.,
    65
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    none of these jurors had had the visceral experience of serving
    on two murder juries and dealing with the emotional aftermath.
    Moreover, the court did not rely on a single concern expressed
    by the prosecutor, but on three. None of the jurors Armstrong
    identifies also expressed concern about overuse of the death
    penalty or bias in the criminal justice system. Overlap on one
    concern will seldom be sufficient: “Two panelists might give a
    similar answer on a given point. Yet the risk posed by one
    panelist might be offset by other answers, behavior, attitudes or
    experiences that make one juror, on balance, more or less
    desirable.” (People v. 
    Lenix, supra
    , 44 Cal.4th at p. 624.)
    The Constitution makes clear that group bias is
    unacceptable. Cases decided over decades have condemned it.
    Prospective jurors must be evaluated as individuals, in light of
    all the information gleaned during voir dire. What matters is
    the full range of responses and whether, because of widespread
    similarities aside from race or gender, a reasonable comparison
    casts doubt on the honesty of the neutral reasons offered.
    Armstrong has not identified jurors with such similarities as to
    cast doubt on the trial court’s acceptance of the prosecutor’s
    reasons as genuine. Accordingly, he has failed to carry his
    burden.
    B. Guilt Phase Evidentiary Issues
    1. Refusal to Admit Out-of-court Evidence of Racial
    Slurs
    Before trial, the prosecutor advised that she intended to
    introduce the statement defendant gave to detectives after his
    arrest. She offered it as a statement of a party opponent (Evid.
    Code, § 1220), but sought to redact parts of it as “self-serving
    hearsay.” Armstrong had related that as he, Hardy, and
    66
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Pearson were walking toward the bus stop, “some racial slurs
    were said by somebody that was on the opposite side. [¶] . . . [¶]
    They was like ‘I hope—like I hope you all die niggers.’ ‘Niggers
    I hope you all die.’ ” In response to further questioning,
    Armstrong said he heard: “Like, ‘Fuck you niggers’ or ‘the
    niggers are gonna die.’ ” After the statements were made,
    Hardy started walking across the street and encountered a
    woman, later identified as Sigler. Pearson and Armstrong
    followed him. Over defense objection, the court ordered the
    quoted statements redacted.        Armstrong contends his
    statements as to what he heard should have been admitted. He
    is correct; the ruling was error.
    The interview Armstrong gave to detectives was an out-of-
    court statement offered against him by the prosecution, thus
    falling within the hearsay exception for statements of a party.
    (Evid. Code, § 1220 [“Evidence of a statement is not made
    inadmissible by the hearsay rule when offered against the
    declarant in an action to which he is a party”].)19 The prosecutor
    argued, in essence, that the words Armstrong attributed to
    19
    The text of Evidence Code section 1220 defines the
    exception as embracing “a statement” made by a party offered
    by an opposing party. The exception is listed in Division 10,
    Chapter 2, Article I of the Code, titled “Confessions and
    Admissions,” and section 1220 is titled “Admission of party.”
    However, Evidence Code section 5 provides: “Division, chapter,
    article, and section headings do not in any manner affect the
    scope, meaning, or intent of the provisions of this code.” As a
    result, and as a general rule, any otherwise relevant “statement”
    of a party is admissible against him, regardless of whether the
    statement would meet the narrower definition of a confession or
    admission. (People v. Rodriguez (2014) 
    58 Cal. 4th 587
    , 637;
    People v. Carpenter (1999) 
    21 Cal. 4th 1016
    , 1049; Simons, Cal.
    Evid. Manual (2018) § 2:28, p. 105.)
    67
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Sigler were a second level of hearsay.           They were not
    Armstrong’s statements but those of Sigler, who was not a party
    to the litigation. As a result, Sigler’s statements, recounted by
    Armstrong, did not fall within the exception. If Sigler’s
    statements had been offered for their truth, the prosecutor
    would have been correct. Sigler’s words were nonetheless
    admissible for two reasons: (1) they were not hearsay, and (2)
    they were admissible under Evidence Code section 356.
    In arguing that the redacted statements should remain,
    the defense was not seeking to prove that all members of
    Armstrong’s race, which Sigler rudely maligned, would die, or
    even that Sigler hoped for such an outcome. Accordingly, the
    defense did not seek to offer Sigler’s words for the truth of their
    content. Instead, the defense urged the victim’s statements
    were relevant to explain the subsequent conduct of Armstrong
    and his companions and to support a conclusion that when they
    assaulted Sigler, their motive was revenge, rather than robbery
    or rape. “When evidence that certain words were spoken . . . is
    admitted to prove that the words were uttered and not to prove
    their truth, the evidence is not hearsay. (People v. Smith
    [(2009)] 
    179 Cal. App. 4th 986
    , 1003 . . . .)” (Simons, Cal. Evid.
    Manual, supra, § 2:5, p. 84.)
    To the extent the prosecution argued Sigler’s slurs fell
    outside Evidence Code section 1220, because the prosecution
    was not seeking to introduce them, they nevertheless were
    admissible under section 356, often called the rule of
    completeness. That rule provides: “Where part of an act,
    declaration, conversation, or writing is given in evidence by one
    party, the whole on the same subject may be inquired into by an
    adverse party; when a letter is read, the answer may be given;
    and when a detached act, declaration, conversation, or writing
    68
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    is given in evidence, any other act, declaration, conversation, or
    writing which is necessary to make it understood may also be
    given in evidence.” (Evid. Code, § 356.)
    “The purpose of [Evidence Code section 356] is to prevent
    the use of selected aspects of a conversation, act, declaration, or
    writing, so as to create a misleading impression on the subjects
    addressed. [Citation.] Thus, if a party’s oral admissions have
    been introduced in evidence, he may show other portions of the
    same interview or conversation, even if they are self-serving,
    which ‘have some bearing upon, or connection with, the
    admission . . . in evidence.’ ” (People v. Arias (1996) 
    13 Cal. 4th 92
    , 156.) The rule reflects the “ ‘ “equitable notion” ’ ” that a
    party seeking introduction of one part of a statement cannot
    selectively object to introduction of other parts necessary to give
    context. (People v. 
    Melendez, supra
    , 2 Cal.5th at p. 26.)
    “Although framed as an expansion of the concept of relevancy,
    Evidence Code [section] 356 most often operates in the manner
    of a hearsay exception.” (Simons, Cal. Evid. Manual, supra,
    § 1.16, p. 21.)
    The redaction here allowed the prosecution to create a
    misleading impression. As Armstrong originally recounted, the
    men were walking toward a bus stop when someone shouted
    racial slurs from across the street. The yelling prompted Hardy
    to cross the street and confront the person who had shouted.
    When he approached Sigler, Hardy asked if she would perform
    an act of oral sex on all three men for $50. Sigler responded with
    a grunted “no,” walked past Hardy and Pearson, and slapped
    Armstrong as she passed him as well. Sigler then walked a
    distance away, extended both middle fingers, and hurled
    additional racial epithets. The full version recounts that the
    men were unaware of Sigler’s presence and only approached her
    69
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    after she insulted them in a racially-charged manner. The
    redacted version makes it appear that the men approached
    Sigler because she was a woman walking alone at night and
    began the encounter by asking her to engage in an act of
    prostitution. If the prosecution wanted to introduce the
    remainder of Armstrong’s statement under Evidence Code
    section 1220, Armstrong was entitled to include the redacted
    portion under section 356 to avoid mischaracterization.20
    As we discuss in greater detail when addressing the claim
    of prosecutorial misconduct, we conclude that the error does not
    require reversal of the guilt judgments. (See post, pt. II.D.1.)
    2. Refusal To Admit Victim’s Toxicology Report
    Before trial, the prosecution moved to exclude a medical
    examiner’s toxicology report showing Sigler was intoxicated on
    the night she was killed. Defense counsel argued Sigler’s
    intoxication was relevant to corroborate Armstrong’s testimony
    about the racial epithets, and to support an argument that
    Armstrong acted out of revenge rather than an intent to rob,
    rape, or kill. The court granted the motion, ruling the relevance,
    if any, of Sigler’s potential intoxication was substantially
    outweighed by other considerations. (Evid. Code, § 352.)
    20
    A defendant may not use the prosecution’s introduction of
    his out-of-court-statements as an opportunity to introduce
    “extraneous statements contained in the recording” that might
    favor him, without the burden of testifying and submitting to
    cross-examination. (People v. Gurule (2002) 
    28 Cal. 4th 557
    , 604;
    see 
    id. at p.
    605.) But the rule is different when, as here, the
    portions the prosecution seeks to redact are not extraneous but
    integral to an understanding of the course of conduct the
    admitted portions describe.
    70
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    The toxicology report is the same report we concluded was
    properly excluded as irrelevant in People v. 
    Hardy, supra
    , 5
    Cal.5th at pages 86–87. In Hardy, as here, the defendant
    argued the report tended to corroborate allegations that Sigler
    had issued racial slurs before she was raped and killed. The
    report was properly excluded there because “the prosecution
    never argued that Sigler did not yell a racial slur; indeed, she
    said during her opening statement that the jury would ‘hear
    testimony or evidence that [Sigler] made some racial remarks,
    and that [Hardy] and his companions approached her as a result
    of these.’ ” (Id. at p. 87.) In Hardy’s trial, the prosecution
    acknowledged Sigler’s shouted slurs.           The fact she was
    intoxicated at the time carried little to no relevance because the
    content of her shouting was not a “disputed fact.” (Evid. Code,
    § 210.)
    The calculus is somewhat different here. Unlike Hardy’s
    trial, the prosecution successfully excluded portions of
    Armstrong’s original statement to police about Sigler’s racial
    slurs. It then contended no slurs were made. When the
    prosecution chose to deny the slurs took place, its tactical
    decision put the intoxication question in a different light. Given
    alcohol’s effect on judgment and self-control, her intoxication
    could have a “tendency in reason” (Evid. Code, § 210) to explain
    why a diminutive woman, alone at night on a deserted street,
    would start a confrontation with three larger strangers. That
    explanation would have been consistent with the defense theory
    and Armstrong’s testimony.
    We need not decide whether exclusion of the toxicology
    report was an abuse of discretion. Any error was harmless, as
    explained in greater detail in connection with our discussion of
    prosecutorial misconduct. (See post, pt. II.D.1.)
    71
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    3. Refusal To Admit Evidence of Alternate Theory
    Concerning Semen Deposit
    Armstrong sometimes stayed at his mother’s home, which
    was searched pursuant to warrant. Police recovered a stained
    cream-and-black shirt. Tests revealed the stain consisted of a
    large amount of semen and small amount of blood. DNA in the
    stain matched Armstrong.21 The prosecution argued that
    Armstrong wore the shirt during the attack and the semen
    deposit showed his direct participation in Sigler’s rape.
    The People called Armstrong’s girlfriend, Jeanette Carter,
    to testify. On cross-examination, Carter said she had never seen
    the cream-and-black shirt before. Defense counsel then began
    to ask about Armstrong’s practices after having intercourse.
    The court sustained a relevance objection.
    During a recess, defense counsel offered that he was trying
    to find out whether Armstrong sometimes put his shirt back on
    after intimacy with Carter. If he did, the presence of semen on
    the shirt might be explained. The court adhered to its ruling.
    Carter had never seen the shirt, so any response to such a
    question would have been irrelevant.
    Armstrong renews his evidentiary claim, but the court’s
    ruling was correct. Carter twice said she had never seen the
    shirt. Whether Carter had ever seen Armstrong put on a
    different shirt after intercourse with her could have no bearing
    on how semen found its way on to that shirt. Nor did Armstrong
    21
    The laboratory was unable to determine the source of the
    blood.
    72
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    urge that the semen might have been deposited after a liaison
    with a different partner.22
    4. Admission of Kendrick’s Testimony
    Keith Kendrick testified that on December 30 or 31, 1998,
    he was watching the news with Pearson, Armstrong, and a third
    man when a report about the Sigler murder came on the air.
    Kendrick said, “Oh, I know who did that. [¶] . . . [¶] Killer Kev
    [Kevin Pearson] did it.” Armstrong whispered to Pearson, “How
    did [Kendrick] know?” Pearson then recounted details of the
    crime, including that Hardy, Armstrong, and he had
    encountered a woman, raped her in the bushes, and then beat
    her with a stick. The People introduced a tape of Kendrick’s
    January 1999 police interview, which included additional
    specifics from Pearson and Kendrick’s conversation in
    Armstrong’s presence. Armstrong sat silently throughout the
    discussion.
    Before Kendrick’s testimony, Armstrong objected that
    Pearson’s statements were inadmissible hearsay and allowing
    Kendrick to testify about them would violate his confrontation
    clause and due process rights. The People argued that
    Armstrong, by listening and saying nothing, had adopted
    Pearson’s statements as his own admissions. The court agreed,
    finding neither a hearsay bar nor a confrontation clause
    problem. Armstrong renews his constitutional claims on appeal.
    22
    Armstrong did not offer this evidence as that of “habit or
    custom” under Evidence Code section 1105. Thus, the record
    contains no evidence he could have satisfied the foundational
    requirements of that provision.
    73
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    The court was correct. “Evidence of a statement offered
    against a party is not made inadmissible by the hearsay rule if
    the statement is one of which the party, with knowledge of the
    content thereof, has by words or other conduct manifested his
    adoption or his belief in its truth.” (Evid. Code, § 1221.)
    “ ‘Under this provision, “[i]f a person is accused of having
    committed a crime, under circumstances which fairly afford him
    an opportunity to hear, understand, and to reply, and which do
    not lend themselves to an inference that he was relying on the
    right of silence guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment to the
    United States Constitution, and he fails to speak, or he makes
    an evasive or equivocal reply, both the accusatory statement and
    the fact of silence or equivocation may be offered as an implied
    or adoptive admission of guilt.” ’ ” (People v. 
    Chism, supra
    , 58
    Cal.4th at p. 1297.)       Armstrong implied that Kendrick’s
    accusation of Pearson was true when he asked, “How did he
    know?” Armstrong then did not challenge the recitation of
    events, instead sitting silently as Pearson recounted
    Armstrong’s participation in the crime. Kendrick’s recitation of
    Pearson’s statements fell within the adoptive admission
    exception to the hearsay rule.
    Nor does introduction of this testimony raise
    constitutional concerns. Adoptive admissions pose no problem
    under the Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution
    and Crawford v. Washington (2004) 
    541 U.S. 36
    because “ ‘[t]he
    “witness” against the defendant is the defendant himself,’ ”
    notwithstanding that the words the defendant adoptively
    admitted were spoken by someone else. (People v. Jennings
    (2010) 
    50 Cal. 4th 616
    , 662; see People v. Cruz (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 636
    , 672–673; People v. Roldan (2005) 
    35 Cal. 4th 646
    , 711,
    74
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    fn. 25.) The high court has never suggested that the Crawford
    rule bars admission of a defendant’s own statement.
    Armstrong objects that Pearson was potentially
    unavailable for cross-examination because he might choose to
    invoke his right against self-incrimination. But Pearson’s
    availability is immaterial. Through his silence, Armstrong
    adopted Pearson’s statements as his own and bore witness
    against himself. Armstrong cannot complain that he was
    deprived of his confrontation clause rights by the introduction of
    his own admissions.
    Moreover, only testimonial hearsay falls under the
    Crawford doctrine. (Ohio v. Clark (2015) 576 U.S. __, __ [
    135 S. Ct. 2173
    , 2179–2180]; People v. Rangel (2016) 
    62 Cal. 4th 1192
    ,
    1214.) Whether a statement is testimonial turns on “ ‘whether,
    in light of all the circumstances, viewed objectively, the
    “primary purpose” of the conversation was to “creat[e] an out-of-
    court substitute for trial testimony.” ’ ” (Rangel, at pp. 1214–
    1215, quoting Clark, at p. 2180.) Determining whether a
    statement is testimonial can often be challenging, but is
    straightforward here:        Pearson’s casual, conversational
    statements to Kendrick, adopted by Armstrong, were not
    intended to substitute for court testimony. Because the hearsay
    was not testimonial, its admission did not give rise to a
    Crawford violation.
    5. Refusal To Admit Evidence of Pearson’s
    Reputation
    On direct examination, Armstrong described things he did
    at Pearson’s direction. After Armstrong testified he was afraid
    of Pearson, counsel asked why. The court overruled the
    prosecutor’s relevance objection, but when Armstrong
    75
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    answered, “Because of his reputation —,” the court interrupted
    and directed a sidebar. This exchange followed:
    “The Court: The defendant was ready to testify about
    Kevin Pearson’s reputation.
    “[Defense Counsel]: I was not aware of that.
    “The Court: It would be hearsay, obviously, because it
    would be something that he heard from sources. There’s no
    foundation for reputation evidence. We’re not going to have a
    trial on Kevin Pearson’s reputation, are we?
    “[Defense Counsel]: No.
    “The Court: I just want to make sure it’s not an area that
    I cut you off.
    “[Defense Counsel]: No. [¶] . . . [¶]
    “The Court: After the word ‘Yes,’ the rest of the answer is
    stricken.
    “[Defense Counsel]: Okay.”
    Armstrong argues that his fear of Pearson and the reason
    for it was improperly excluded. The argument fails. His
    testimony that he was afraid of Pearson was allowed to stand.
    As for evidence of Pearson’s reputation, counsel indicated he did
    not intend to explore this subject and lodged no objection to its
    exclusion. Accordingly, the claim is forfeited. (Evid. Code,
    § 354, subd. (a); People v. Capistrano (2014) 5
    9 Cal. 4th 83
    0, 867.)
    Nor, as Armstrong now argues, would an objection and offer of
    proof have been futile. (See Evid. Code, § 354, subd. (b).)
    Throughout the trial, the court showed a willingness to rethink
    its rulings in light of arguments from counsel. If counsel had
    wanted to explain what Armstrong would say and why it was
    76
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    either not based on hearsay or otherwise properly admissible,
    he could have done so.
    Further, Armstrong fails to show how the omitted
    testimony would have significantly altered the evidentiary
    picture. The jury heard a great deal about Pearson’s callous
    violence on the night of the crime and that Kendrick called him
    “Killer Kev.” Nothing in this record undermines the conclusion
    that Pearson was a man rightly to be feared.
    6. Sufficiency of the Evidence To Support the
    Torture-murder Special Circumstance
    Armstrong contends there was insufficient evidence to
    support the torture-murder special-circumstance finding. On
    review, we examine the entire record in the light most favorable
    to the prosecution to determine whether a rational jury could
    have found the circumstance true beyond a reasonable doubt.
    (People v. 
    Hardy, supra
    , 5 Cal.5th at p. 89.)
    To prove a torture-murder special circumstance, the
    prosecution must show that the defendant intended both to kill
    and “ ‘to cause extreme pain or suffering for the purpose of
    revenge, extortion, persuasion, or another sadistic purpose.’ ”
    (People v. Brooks (2017) 3 Cal.5th 1, 65.) Intent may be inferred
    “ ‘from the circumstances of the crime, the nature of the killing,
    and the condition of the victim’s body.’ ” (People v. Hajek and Vo
    (2014) 
    58 Cal. 4th 1144
    , 1187.)
    Here, there was ample evidence that Armstrong intended
    to cause extreme pain. Prosecution evidence showed Armstrong
    assisted Pearson and Hardy in raping, stomping, and beating
    Sigler, and repeatedly inserting a wooden stake into her vagina.
    Armstrong himself kicked the victim several times. Armstrong
    had reason to know Sigler was alive until the end of the assault
    77
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    and that she was in considerable pain. The autopsy showed 11
    broken bones and more than 100 distinct injuries. Contrary to
    Armstrong’s assertion, the jury was not limited to considering
    only his self-serving statements that he thought Hardy’s and
    Pearson’s actions were “wrong” and “scandalous.” Given the
    extended duration of the encounter, the brutal escalation of the
    attack, and Sigler’s extraordinary pre-mortem injuries, a
    rational jury could conclude that Armstrong intended to inflict
    extreme pain and suffering.
    C. Instructional Issues
    1. Circumstantial Evidence Instructions
    The jury received four standard instructions on
    circumstantial evidence, CALJIC Nos. 2.01, 2.02, 8.83, and
    8.83.1. These instructions advised that if circumstantial
    evidence supported two reasonable interpretations, the jury
    “must” adopt the interpretation more favorable to the
    defendant. If, instead, one interpretation appeared reasonable
    and the other unreasonable, the jury “must” adopt the
    reasonable interpretation. Armstrong argues that telling the
    jury it must adopt a reasonable interpretation of the evidence if
    the alternative was unreasonable deprived him of the right to
    have a jury convict only upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
    We have repeatedly rejected this contention. (E.g., People
    v. Delgado (2017) 2 Cal.5th 544, 572–573; People v. Watkins
    (2012) 
    55 Cal. 4th 999
    , 1030; People v. Bonilla (2007) 
    41 Cal. 4th 313
    , 338; People v. Koontz (2002) 
    27 Cal. 4th 1041
    , 1084–1085.)
    “[T]hese instructions properly direct the jury to accept an
    interpretation of the evidence favorable to the prosecution and
    unfavorable to the defense only if no other ‘reasonable’
    interpretation can be drawn. Particularly when viewed in
    78
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    conjunction with other instructions correctly stating the
    prosecution’s burden to prove defendant’s guilt beyond a
    reasonable doubt, these circumstantial evidence instructions do
    not reduce or weaken the prosecution’s constitutionally
    mandated burden of proof or amount to an improper mandatory
    presumption of guilt.” (People v. Kipp (1998) 
    18 Cal. 4th 349
    ,
    375.) Armstrong offers no new authority that would support
    reconsideration.
    2. Instruction on Juror Unanimity Concerning the
    Theory of Murder
    The jury was instructed on three different theories:
    deliberate and premeditated murder (CALJIC No. 8.20), felony
    murder (CALJIC No. 8.21), and murder by torture (CALJIC No.
    8.24). (See Pen. Code, § 189.) At the People’s request, the court
    instructed the jury that it need not unanimously agree on which
    theory was correct in order to find Armstrong guilty of murder
    in the first degree.
    Armstrong contends the court was required to instruct
    that the jury must agree unanimously on which theory, if any,
    supported a guilty finding, and the failure to do so violated the
    state and federal Constitutions. He acknowledges that we have
    repeatedly rejected this claim, but seeks to preserve the issue
    for federal court review. Armstrong relies on People v. Dillon
    (1983) 34 Cal.3th 441, which, he contends, establishes that
    premeditated murder and felony murder have distinct elements
    and must be distinct crimes. He then urges that under Schad v.
    Arizona (1991) 
    501 U.S. 624
    , 636–637, due process required the
    jury be instructed it must unanimously agree on one theory or
    another.
    79
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    We have consistently stated this argument is a misreading
    of Dillon. While it is true that under Dillon “ ‘the two forms of
    murder have different elements[, nevertheless] there is but a
    single statutory offense of murder.’ [Citations.] When, as here,
    the evidence shows only a single discrete crime but leaves room
    for disagreement as to exactly how that crime was committed,
    the jury need not unanimously agree on the theory under which
    the defendant is guilty.” (People v. Benavides (2005) 
    35 Cal. 4th 69
    , 101; see People v. Sattiewhite (2014) 
    59 Cal. 4th 446
    , 479.)
    Schad v. 
    Arizona, supra
    , 
    501 U.S. 624
    , does not require
    otherwise. (People v. Grimes (2016) 1 Cal.5th 698, 727–728;
    Benavides, at p. 101.)
    3. Instructions on Conspiracy
    Although no conspiracy was charged, the jury was
    instructed on its elements. (CALJIC Nos. 6.10.5, 6.11, 6.12.)
    Armstrong contends the instructions should not have been
    given. The claim is forfeited for lack of objection. (People v.
    Virgil (2011) 
    51 Cal. 4th 1210
    , 1260.) Armstrong does not argue
    that the forfeiture should be excused on the ground his
    substantial rights were affected. (See Pen. Code, § 1259; People
    v. Henriquez (2017) 4 Cal.5th 1, 33.)
    The claim is also meritless. Armstrong’s undeveloped
    assertion is unclear. To the extent he argues a conspiracy
    charge is a prerequisite to these instructions, the law is to the
    contrary. The prosecution may prove an uncharged conspiracy
    as a means of establishing liability for the underlying
    substantive crime. (People v. Hajek and 
    Vo, supra
    , 58 Cal.4th
    at pp. 1200–1201; People v. Valdez (2012) 
    55 Cal. 4th 82
    , 150.)
    Evidence of a conspiracy, whether charged or not, is sufficient to
    support the giving of conspiracy instructions. (People v.
    80
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Rodrigues (1994) 
    8 Cal. 4th 1060
    , 1134.)           To the extent
    Armstrong argues “there was no evidence that such a conspiracy
    ever existed,” he concedes otherwise in his briefing, complaining
    that the court “permitted the jury to hear extensive evidence of
    the uncharged conspiracy.”
    Armstrong also urges that the instructions reduced the
    prosecution’s burden of proof. We have rejected this argument
    before and do so again. (People v. Hajek and 
    Vo, supra
    , 58
    Cal.4th at pp. 1201–1202; People v. 
    Valdez, supra
    , 55 Cal.4th at
    p. 150.) He contends the lack of a charged conspiracy deprived
    him of notice and an opportunity to defend himself. He did not
    make this argument below, and it is likewise without merit.
    Armstrong had ample pretrial notice that the prosecution would
    proceed in part on the theory that Armstrong, Pearson, and
    Hardy conspired to rob and murder Sigler. The prosecutor’s voir
    dire questioning and the preceding trials of Pearson and Hardy
    demonstrated this theory was likely to be pursued. Given
    Armstrong’s awareness of the prosecution’s theory, there was no
    unfair surprise and no due process violation. (See Hajek and Vo,
    at pp. 1201–1202.)
    Finally, Armstrong argues that the conspiracy
    instructions allowed the jury to find him death-eligible based on
    a crime that cannot be subject to the death penalty. It is true
    conspiracy to commit murder will not support a death sentence
    in California. (People v. Hernandez (2003) 
    30 Cal. 4th 835
    , 864–
    870.) However, Armstrong was not found eligible for the death
    penalty based on conspiracy, but on a jury determination that
    he was guilty of first degree murder with special circumstances.
    81
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    D. Misconduct and Bias
    1. Prosecutorial Misconduct
    Armstrong contends that the prosecutor committed
    misconduct in empaneling the jury, seeking to exclude
    admissible evidence, and engaging in other improper conduct
    throughout trial. Most challenges fail. One is well-founded but
    did not prejudice Armstrong.
    Prosecutorial misconduct requires reversal when it “so
    infect[s] a trial with unfairness [as to] create a denial of due
    process. [Citations.] Conduct by a prosecutor that does not
    reach that level nevertheless constitutes misconduct under state
    law, but only if it involves the use of deceptive or reprehensible
    methods to persuade the court or jury.” (People v. 
    Watkins, supra
    , 55 Cal.4th at p. 1031.)
    Armstrong’s first few claims derive from and duplicate his
    other assignments of error. He objects that the prosecutor
    improperly had qualified jurors excused. Several jurors were
    erroneously excused for cause, an error requiring reversal of the
    penalty verdict. He is obtaining relief on that basis. He
    contends that the prosecutor based peremptory challenges on
    race and gender. This argument has been rejected. (See ante,
    pt. II.A.)
    Most of the allegations of misconduct not tied to claims we
    have already addressed are also without merit. Armstrong
    contends that the prosecutor was aggressive and hostile toward
    defense counsel and twice accused counsel of lying to the court.
    Defense counsel responded in equal measure with his own
    accusations of lying. Because it occurred outside the jury’s
    presence, this acrimony could not have affected the verdict.
    82
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Armstrong complains the prosecutor used “hypertechnical
    and unnecessary objections” during his direct testimony. To the
    extent these objections were meritorious, making them could not
    have been misconduct.         Evidentiary objections often are
    technical and their “necessity” a question of tactics and
    perspective. While a handful of objections were overruled, there
    is no reason to conclude they would have injected unfairness into
    the trial.     Armstrong also takes issue with the cross-
    examination, which he characterizes as hostile, repetitive, and
    argumentative, with frequent accusations of lying. Even
    accepting this characterization at face value, it supplies no basis
    for a claim of misconduct. This was the cross-examination of the
    defendant in a capital murder case. Effective and legitimate
    cross-examination may involve assertive and even harsh
    questioning. It is permissible to accuse a witness of being
    untruthful. Simply because an examination is confrontational
    does not make it argumentative.23 Armstrong identifies no line
    of questioning, and the transcript reveals none, that crossed
    over any boundaries of fair play or that would have led the jury
    to decide this case on anything other than the facts and the law.
    Armstrong objects that the prosecutor asked leading
    questions of direct witnesses. He cites no question or questions,
    simply pointing to the entire transcript for a half-dozen
    witnesses. To the extent Armstrong failed to object, the claim is
    forfeited. (People v. Pearson (2013) 
    56 Cal. 4th 393
    , 426.) To the
    23
    “An argumentative question is a speech to the jury
    masquerading as a question. . . . An argumentative question
    that essentially talks past the witness, and makes an argument
    to the jury, is improper because it does not seek to elicit relevant,
    competent testimony . . . .” (People v. Chatman (2006) 
    38 Cal. 4th 344
    , 384.)
    83
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    extent Armstrong objected and the court sustained the
    objection, we discern no effect on the jury or its verdict. As for
    the third possible category, leading questions and answers
    erroneously allowed to stand, Armstrong identifies not a single
    such question and does not explain how any such questions or
    their answers could have engendered unfairness.
    However, Armstrong is correct that the prosecutor misled
    the jury during closing argument. She told the jury, as a matter
    of fact, that in response to Armstrong’s loud comments about the
    coming new year, Sigler called back, “Happy New Year.” There
    was no such evidence. The prosecutor directly asked Armstrong
    during cross-examination whether Sigler had made such a
    statement. He unequivocally denied it and no other testimony
    supported the prosecutor’s assertion.
    Some inaccuracies in closing argument may flow from
    innocent misrecollection, but it is difficult to credit that
    explanation here when what Sigler said was a principal point of
    contention. The prosecutor moved to redact from Armstrong’s
    initial police statement the assertion that Sigler yelled racial
    slurs before the attackers encountered her on the street. (Ante,
    pt. II.B.1.) She also persuaded the court to exclude evidence of
    Sigler’s intoxication. (Ante, pt. II.B.2.)
    To be clear, assertively arguing fine points of evidence will
    seldom constitute misconduct, and an advocate is generally
    entitled to rely on a court’s ruling, even one held erroneous on
    appeal. What an advocate cannot do is knowingly mislead the
    jury. (People v. Daggett (1990) 
    225 Cal. App. 3d 751
    , 758.)
    “[S]tatements of facts not in evidence by the prosecuting
    attorney in his argument to the jury constitute misconduct.”
    (People v. Kirkes (1952) 
    39 Cal. 2d 719
    , 724; accord, People v. Hill
    84
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    (1998) 
    17 Cal. 4th 800
    , 828 [“ ‘Statements of supposed facts not
    in evidence . . . are a highly prejudicial form of misconduct’ ”];
    People v. Bolton (1979) 
    23 Cal. 3d 208
    , 212.)
    These principles are not new ones. In People v. Kelley
    (1977) 
    75 Cal. App. 3d 672
    , 680, Justice Fleming observed, “As
    the representative of the government a public prosecutor is not
    only obligated to fight earnestly and vigorously to convict the
    guilty, but also to uphold the orderly administration of justice
    as a servant and representative of the law. . . . As the court said
    in Berger v. United States (1935) 
    295 U.S. 78
    , 88: . . . . ‘[The
    Prosecutor] may prosecute with earnestness and vigor —
    indeed, he should do so. But, while he may strike hard blows,
    he is not at liberty to strike foul ones.’ ”
    A prosecutor may honestly urge that a defendant lied.
    Convincing the jury that he did so is a potent weapon. An
    advocate may argue that the record contains no evidence of a
    given fact when that is the case. She may invite the jury to
    accept reasonable inferences from the record, even if the
    evidence is in dispute. (People v. 
    Daggett, supra
    , 225 Cal.App.3d
    at p. 757.) But she may not mislead the jury as to what the
    record actually contains.
    However, as inappropriate as the prosecutor’s argument
    was here, that argument and the actual or assumed evidentiary
    errors that preceded it (see ante, parts II.B.1 and II.B.2) are
    insufficient to warrant reversal of the guilt determinations.
    Defense counsel conceded in closing argument that there was
    ample evidence of Armstrong’s guilt on charges of robbery, rape,
    rape in concert and kidnapping. Even under Armstrong’s own
    version of events, he facilitated each of the crimes he attributed
    to his compatriots. After Pearson said he was “fixing to BKC
    85
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    this bitch,” Armstrong held Sigler down while Pearson robbed,
    beat, and raped her. After Pearson said, “This ain’t over yet,
    bitch. Let’s kill this bitch,” Armstrong kicked Sigler repeatedly,
    knowing she was in great pain. Aware of Pearson’s intent to kill
    Sigler, Armstrong jumped over a fence and held it down so Sigler
    could be thrown over it and moved to a more remote area.
    Rather than leaving, he stood at the ready while Pearson beat
    Sigler with the stake and while Pearson and Hardy sexually
    penetrated her with it. Armstrong then helped Pearson move
    Sigler a second time, further up the freeway embankment. After
    they abandoned the body, Armstrong disposed of both the stake
    and Sigler’s clothes.
    Of course, it would have been no defense to argue that
    Sigler engaged in offensive conduct.       Nevertheless, it is
    noteworthy that no heat of passion argument was made here.
    Indeed, excised statements and toxicology results would have
    also been consistent with a theory that the torturous brutality
    of the 30-minute assault was sparked by Sigler’s drunken
    insults.
    Based on Armstrong’s statements to investigators and his
    girlfriend, his adoptive admission of Pearson’s statements, and
    his own trial testimony, it is not “reasonably probable that a
    result more favorable to [Armstrong] would have been reached”
    at the guilt phase. (People v. Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal. 2d 818
    , 836.)
    While the excluded evidence would not have provided a
    defense against guilt for these offenses, the calculus of prejudice
    might well be different at the penalty phase. In determining
    whether to impose the ultimate punishment, the jury could
    consider evidence of Sigler’s conduct as “[a]ny other
    circumstance which extenuates the gravity of the crime even
    86
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    though it is not a legal excuse for the crime.” (§ 190.3, factor
    (k).) Because the death verdict is being set aside for error in jury
    selection, we need not discuss this question further.
    “Our public prosecutors are charged with an important
    and solemn duty to ensure that justice and fairness remain the
    touchstone of our criminal justice system. In the vast majority
    of cases, these men and women perform their difficult jobs with
    professionalism, adhering to the highest ethical standards of
    their calling. This case marks an unfortunate exception . . . .
    We are confident the prosecutors of this state need no reminder
    of the high standard to which they are held, and that the rule
    prohibiting reversals for prosecutorial misconduct absent a
    miscarriage of justice in no way authorizes or justifies the type
    of misconduct that occurred in this case.” (People v. Hill (1998)
    
    17 Cal. 4th 800
    , 847–848.)
    2. Judicial Bias
    Armstrong argues he was deprived of a fair trial, in
    violation of various constitutional guarantees, because the court
    was biased against him. The rulings and remarks Armstrong
    relies upon do not demonstrate bias.
    As with Armstrong’s prosecutorial misconduct claim, his
    allegation of judicial bias is largely derivative. Armstrong
    contends the court demonstrated bias by erroneously excusing
    jurors for cause. On the merits, some jurors were improperly
    excused, requiring reversal of the penalty verdict. However, a
    judge’s “rulings against a party — even when erroneous — do
    not establish a charge of judicial bias, especially when they are
    subject to review.” (People v. Guerra (2006) 
    37 Cal. 4th 1067
    ,
    1112.) The same is true of Armstrong’s argument that the court
    showed bias by failing to see through the prosecutor’s assertedly
    87
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    pretextual reasons for excusing African-American men and by
    excluding various items of evidence. We have evaluated and
    rejected the underlying claims on the merits. The court’s
    rulings, supported by substantial evidence and rules of
    evidence, do not demonstrate bias against Armstrong.
    To the extent Armstrong’s claim is not derivative, it is
    largely forfeited. Armstrong “never claimed during trial . . . that
    his constitutional rights were violated because of judicial bias.
    ‘It is too late to raise the issue for the first time on appeal.’ ”
    (People v. 
    Guerra, supra
    , 37 Cal.4th at p. 1111.) Only claims of
    “pervasive judicial bias” are preserved in the absence of an
    objection, on the ground that objection in that instance may be
    futile. (People v. Banks (2014) 
    59 Cal. 4th 1113
    , 1177.)
    No pervasive bias is evident here. Armstrong identifies
    three times when the court derided defense counsel’s questions
    as “unintelligent,” “unintelligible,” or “incomplete.” Armstrong
    also points to a handful of occasions when, in response to a
    prosecution objection, the court supplied a basis for the
    objection, then sustained it, or otherwise handled objections in
    ways with which Armstrong disagrees. Finally, Armstrong
    identifies as indicative of bias one sidebar conversation.
    Armstrong had been personally admonished before testifying to
    not discuss remorse. Both sides agreed the issue was irrelevant
    at the guilt phase. After he violated that admonition, the court
    remarked at sidebar that Armstrong “knows better” than to
    testify as he did.
    Without reciting every remark Armstrong identifies as
    signifying bias, we observe that the court’s statements were
    justified. For example, the court described as “unintelligible”
    this defense question: “Between you and Jeanette — when you
    88
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    talked to Jeanette, did the subject matter of how it was that you
    were in contact with this lady?” The court made its remark only
    in the context of asking counsel to rephrase after the prosecutor
    and witness both indicated they could not understand the
    question. The court’s sidebar remark that Armstrong knew
    better than to testify as he did was warranted in light of an
    express direction not to do so.24 Collectively, the statements
    Armstrong points to do not suggest “any judicial misconduct or
    bias, let alone misconduct or bias that was ‘so prejudicial that it
    deprived defendant of a “ ‘fair, as opposed to a perfect, trial.’ ” ’ ”
    (People v. Maciel (2013) 
    57 Cal. 4th 482
    , 540.)
    24
    Before Armstrong took the stand, the following exchange
    occurred:
    “The Court: On the remorse and sympathy issue, do you
    agree remorse and sympathy are not issues in the guilt phase?
    “[Defense Counsel]: That’s correct.
    “The Court: And your client is not going to testify how
    sorry he is . . . and he is asking for their forgiveness, is that
    correct?
    “[Defense Counsel]: That’s correct.
    “The Court: Mr. Armstrong is present in court. I make
    that [a] court order. He is not to do so. If he is to do so, I will
    interrupt immediately during the proceedings and advise the
    jury that we have had this instruction and your client has failed
    to obey the court’s instructions. All right, I want to make that
    crystal clear.”
    Despite this instruction, when asked why he confessed,
    Armstrong testified, “I wanted to tell [the police I knew nothing],
    but since it was on my heart, heavy, I just told them.” An
    objection ensued. At sidebar, the court accepted that counsel
    was not trying to elicit testimony in violation of its order, but
    observed that Armstrong knew better than to answer as he did.
    89
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    E. Cumulative Error
    Armstrong contends errors during the guilt phase of his
    trial were prejudicial when considered in combination. We have
    evaluated the two actual or assumed evidentiary errors and
    related prosecutorial misconduct together for purposes of
    assessing prejudice and have concluded Armstrong was not
    prejudiced at the guilt phase. (Ante, pt. II.D.1.)
    F. Penalty Phase Evidentiary Errors and Challenges to
    the Constitutionality of California’s Death Penalty
    Armstrong asserts various evidentiary errors occurred
    during his penalty phase trial. He also contends California’s
    death penalty is unconstitutional.         Because the penalty
    judgment is reversed based on erroneous exclusion of jurors for
    cause, we need not address these claims. The People retain the
    discretion to determine whether to retry the penalty phase on
    remand.
    III. DISPOSITION
    We reverse the judgment of death. We remand to the
    superior court with directions that it correct the abstract of
    judgment to reflect that (1) each of Armstrong’s convictions was
    pursuant to a jury verdict, not a guilty plea; (2) Armstrong was
    sentenced to 8 years for rape on count six; (3) the determinate
    portion of his sentence is 30 years; and (4) in addition to the
    determinate term for rape in concert, sexual penetration with a
    foreign object, and sexual penetration with a foreign object while
    acting in concert, on counts four, six and seven, Armstrong
    received a 25-year-to-life term under section 667.61,
    subdivisions (a) and (d), which was then stayed under section
    90
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    667.61, subdivision (g). We affirm the judgment in all other
    respects.
    CORRIGAN, J.
    We Concur:
    CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J.
    CHIN, J.
    KRUGER, J.
    91
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    S126560
    Dissenting Opinion by Justice Liu
    Defendant Jamelle Armstrong, a black man, was
    sentenced to death for raping, torturing, and murdering Penny
    Sigler, a white woman. Armstrong objected to the prosecutor’s
    peremptory strikes of four black men in the jury venire. (See
    Batson v. Kentucky (1986) 
    476 U.S. 79
    ; People v. Wheeler (1978)
    
    22 Cal. 3d 258
    .) The prosecutor gave reasons for each strike, and
    the trial court rejected Armstrong’s Batson claims. Today’s
    opinion upholds the trial court’s rulings.
    This is a case with “definite racial overtones” that
    “ ‘raise[ ] heightened concerns about whether the prosecutor’s
    challenge was racially motivated.’ ” (People v. Hardy (2018) 5
    Cal.5th 56, 78 (Hardy).) In the capital trial of Armstrong’s
    confederate, Warren Hardy, the same prosecutor struck every
    black juror she could have removed and gave six reasons for
    striking a black man, Frank G., from the main panel. Although
    this court rejected Hardy’s Batson claim, our opinion
    acknowledged that three of the reasons for striking Frank G. on
    their own appeared “weak” or “not . . . very convincing.” (Hardy,
    at pp. 82, 83.)
    In this case, the prosecutor struck four black male jurors,
    leaving no black man on the jury. As to the strike of Prospective
    Juror R.C., I agree the record supports the trial court’s finding
    that the prosecutor was credibly concerned that she and R.C.
    had a “personality conflict.” (Maj. opn., ante, at pp. 48–50.) But
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    as to the other three strikes, Armstrong raises more substantial
    objections. Especially troublesome, in my view, is the strike of
    Prospective Juror E.W. The prosecutor gave eight reasons for
    this strike, but in several respects, the reasons were not
    supported by the record. The discrepancies were numerous and
    significant; they were not “ ‘isolated’ ” misstatements or “slight”
    misrepresentations. (
    Hardy, supra
    , 5 Cal.5th at p. 80.) The
    trial court did not probe these discrepancies, nor did it probe the
    prosecutor’s disparate treatment of nonblack jurors who were
    more similar to E.W. than she suggested in explaining her
    strike. Had the trial court examined these anomalies, perhaps
    the prosecutor could have elaborated further on her concerns.
    But “the duty of [the trial court] and counsel to ensure the record
    is both accurate and adequately developed” was not fulfilled
    here (People v. Gutierrez (2017) 2 Cal.5th 1150, 1172
    (Gutierrez)), and we are left with a record that is not sufficient
    to sustain the trial court’s ruling. Because “[e]xcluding by
    peremptory challenge even ‘a single juror on the basis of race or
    ethnicity is an error of constitutional magnitude’ ” (ibid.) that
    requires reversal, I must dissent from today’s affirmance of
    Armstrong’s convictions.
    I.
    “We review a trial court’s determination regarding the
    sufficiency of tendered justifications with ‘ “great restraint,” ’ ”
    upholding the ruling if it is supported by substantial evidence.
    (
    Gutierrez, supra
    , 2 Cal.5th at p. 1159.) But “[a] trial court’s
    conclusions are entitled to deference only when the court made
    a ‘sincere and reasoned effort to evaluate the nondiscriminatory
    justifications offered.’ ” (Ibid.; accord, maj. opn., ante, at p. 37.)
    A “reasoned” effort involves, at a minimum, evaluating whether
    a proffered justification is supported by the record and, where a
    2
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    proffered reason is “not borne out by the record,” either
    “reject[ing] [the] reason or ask[ing] the prosecutor to explain
    further.” (Gutierrez, at p. 1172.) A trial court “should be
    suspicious” and should probe further when “ ‘the facts in the
    record are objectively contrary to the prosecutor’s
    statements . . . .’ ” (People v. Silva (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 345
    , 385.)
    To prevail on a Batson claim, the defendant must show “it was
    more likely than not that the challenge was improperly
    motivated.” (Johnson v. California (2005) 
    545 U.S. 162
    , 170.)
    Prospective Juror E.W., the third black man struck by the
    prosecutor, was a 28-year-old homeowner in Signal Hill who
    worked as a satellite engineer for Boeing and had been the
    student body vice-president at the University of California at
    Irvine. He planned on returning to school for postgraduate
    studies and considered focusing on astronautics, law, or
    business. At voir dire, E.W. said he could vote for either life
    imprisonment without the possibility of parole (LWOP) or death
    in the appropriate case, and that his decision would depend on
    the evidence.
    Today’s opinion concludes that the trial court properly
    focused its evaluation on those reasons the prosecutor said
    “really bother[ed]” her about E.W. — i.e., E.W.’s belief that
    LWOP is a more severe sentence than death, and his belief that
    the death penalty, when imposed, causes too much additional
    litigation. (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 51.) The court acknowledges
    that the prosecutor mentioned E.W.’s profession, engineering,
    as an additional area of concern. But the court says that because
    “[t]he prosecutor did not identify this as one of the ‘two things
    that really bother [her]’ about E.W., . . . [w]e may infer that in
    the prosecutor’s eyes the juror’s profession alone fell short of a
    sufficient reason to exercise a strike.” (Id. at p. 57.)
    3
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    At the outset, it must be noted that this characterization
    of the record is significantly incomplete. What the record
    actually shows is that the prosecutor gave eight different
    reasons for striking E.W. (numbered (1) to (8) below), and it is
    dubious to say the prosecutor did not regard E.W.’s engineering
    background as a main reason for the strike.
    When the prosecutor began her explanation for striking
    E.W., she said, (1) “[F]irst of all, the one thing that really bothers
    me” is that E.W. “believes that life without the possibility of
    parole is the most severe sentence.” But the prosecutor did not
    stop there. (2) “The next thing that concerns me,” she said, “is
    his training, as an engineer. He is trained to look at all possible
    doubt. There is no way I can prove this case to him beyond a
    reasonable doubt.” As discussed further below, the prosecutor
    devoted significant effort to exploring this issue with E.W.
    during voir dire.
    The prosecutor went on to give six additional reasons: (3)
    “He also in his questionnaire has indicated that he believes that
    the prosecutor tends to be over-zealous to convict. I find that to
    be a problem. I personally am a very assertive and aggressive
    prosecutor.” (4) “He also, in his questionnaire has indicated that
    he feels that the death penalty needs to be reformed just like
    affirmative action . . . .” (5) “[H]e indicates that he has had bad
    experience with police officers in his questionnaire. . . . [¶] . . .
    [H]e indicated during Hovey voir dire, . . . ‘Police officers have
    pulled me over more than once for questionable reasons.’ He
    also indicated today that more often than not it’s happened here
    in Long Beach. This case involves Long Beach police officers, in
    fact, the majority of my witnesses will be related to the Long
    Beach Police Department.” (6) “He also indicates that what he
    thinks are the three most important problems with the criminal
    4
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    justice system is bad police officers, and lawyers and that the
    system is biased against economically disadvantaged
    defendants.” (7) “He indicated on his questionnaire, as well as,
    during Hovey voir dire that he finds that the death penalty
    causes so much additional litigation that we should just let it
    go. [¶] I asked him during Hovey voir dire, ‘Would it be accurate
    to say that you are for the death penalty?’ He said, ‘I don’t have
    feelings one way or the other for it.’ And he kept indicating that
    he is neither for nor against. [¶] To me, if someone cannot say
    that they believe in the death penalty, I don’t believe they can
    impose it.” (8) “Then another thing that bothers me about this
    particular juror, he seems to have a lot of information about the
    law. . . . He already has additional information that other jurors
    don’t have. He is not in the same position that other jurors are
    currently.”
    The prosecutor concluded by saying: “The two things that
    really bother me [are] that he believes that life without the
    possibility of parole is the most severe sentence and he also
    believes that since if the death penalty is imposed it caused so
    much litigation, he doesn’t believe it should be, just let it go, is
    what he says. To me that is indicative of what his verdict is
    going to be. [¶] . . . Also the fact that he is an engineer, there
    are no other engineers in this panel and he is the only engineer
    and he is trained to look for all possible doubt. [¶] And I find
    that I can never reach that standard. I cannot possibly prove
    this case beyond all possible doubt nor is that the standard and
    that’s what he does in life look for all possible doubt.” After a
    reply from defense counsel, the prosecutor then said her
    “primary motivation” for striking E.W. was that he “indicated
    life without the possibility of parole is the most severe sentence.”
    At that point, the trial court credited the prosecutor’s first
    5
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    reason and, without examining any of the other reasons, upheld
    the strike.
    Four months later, in denying Armstrong’s motion for a
    new trial, the trial court returned to the Batson issue and said:
    “[E.W.] is an engineer and very articulate. This juror, however,
    indicated that he believes that life without parole is the most
    severe sentence. If this is the crime that deserves the most
    severe punishment, the People believe that he automatically
    would vote for life without parole. Therefore, it is unlikely
    under any circumstances that he would vote for death. More
    importantly, the People articulated that, as an engineer, this
    juror will likely require to make the People prove the case more
    than beyond a reasonable doubt. Both these reasons are race-
    neutral; this court found and now finds that [E.W.] was excused
    with the use of People’s peremptory for race-neutral
    reasons . . . .” (Italics added.)
    There is no question that E.W.’s belief that LWOP is a
    more severe sentence than death was, according to the
    prosecutor, an important reason for the strike. But so was the
    prosecutor’s concern about E.W.’s training as an engineer. The
    fact that the trial court originally upheld the strike of E.W. after
    examining and crediting only the LWOP concern does not mean
    “the trial court did not originally consider the prosecutor to have
    proffered [the engineering concern] as a justification.” (Maj.
    opn., ante, at p. 57.) As the record shows, the prosecutor
    thoroughly explored the engineering concern during voir dire,
    and she repeatedly identified it as a reason for the strike. The
    trial court, in later ruling on the new trial motion, described this
    concern not merely as an “additional genuine” reason for the
    strike (maj. opn., ante, at p. 60), but as more important to the
    prosecutor’s credibility than the LWOP concern. In today’s
    6
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    opinion, the court substitutes its own judgment and refuses to
    acknowledge what the record clearly indicates: that both the
    prosecutor and the trial court considered the engineering
    concern to be a significant reason for the strike.
    As I explain in a moment, a careful examination of the
    engineering concern reveals significant cause for suspicion, and
    the LWOP concern does not fare any better. But before
    undertaking that analysis, it bears mention that the trial court’s
    and this court’s narrow focus on those reasons implicates
    concerns we recently expressed in People v. Smith (2018) 4
    Cal.5th 1134 (Smith). Our unanimous opinion in Smith
    cautioned that a prosecutor’s “ ‘laundry list’ ” approach to
    justifying a peremptory strike “carries a significant
    danger: that the trial court will take a short-cut in its
    determination of the prosecutor’s credibility, picking one
    plausible item from the list and summarily accepting it without
    considering whether the prosecutor’s explanation as a whole,
    including offered reasons that are implausible or unsupported
    by the prospective juror’s questionnaire and voir dire, indicates
    a pretextual justification. A prosecutor’s positing of multiple
    reasons, some of which, upon examination, prove implausible or
    unsupported by the facts, can in some circumstances fatally
    impair the prosecutor’s credibility. [Citation.] In assessing
    credibility at the third stage of a Batson/Wheeler decision, trial
    courts should attempt to evaluate the attorney’s statement of
    reasons as a whole rather than focus exclusively on one or two
    of the reasons offered.” (Id. at pp. 1157–1158.)
    As Smith instructs, the trial court should have examined
    the prosecutor’s stated reasons for striking E.W. “as a whole.”
    (
    Smith, supra
    , 4 Cal.5th at p. 1157.) To be sure, the trial court
    could have assigned greater weight to the reasons that appeared
    7
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    more important to the prosecutor. And it follows that problems
    with such reasons should carry greater weight in the trial court
    and on appellate review. (See Foster v. Chatman (2016) 578 U.S.
    __, __ [
    136 S. Ct. 1737
    , 1752] (Foster) [“[W]e would expect at least
    one of the two purportedly principal justifications for the strike
    to withstand closer scrutiny. Neither does.”].) At the same time,
    if other reasons are implausible or unsupported by the record,
    that is a relevant consideration bearing on the prosecutor’s
    credibility. In Hardy, the same prosecutor gave six reasons for
    striking a black male juror, Frank G.; we upheld the strike, but
    not before examining all six reasons and finding them
    race-neutral when “[c]onsidered in combination.” (
    Hardy, supra
    , 5 Cal.5th at p. 79; see Foster, at p. __ [136 S.Ct. at
    pp. 1751–1754] [finding Batson violation upon considering all
    relevant circumstances, including analysis of “principal” and
    “secondary” justifications among the 10 reasons stated by the
    prosecutor for striking a black juror].) By minimizing the
    engineer issue and by conducting no meaningful examination of
    other proffered reasons that the trial court also left unexamined,
    today’s opinion fails to properly account for weaknesses in those
    reasons that provide cause for suspicion.
    II.
    Let us begin with the prosecutor’s stated concern that “as
    an engineer,” E.W. “is trained to look at all possible doubt.
    There is no way I can prove this case to him beyond a reasonable
    doubt.” In articulating this concern, the prosecutor said,
    “[T]here are no other engineers in this panel and he is the only
    engineer.” This was not true. Juror No. 11, whom the
    prosecutor had accepted, was a white woman who had worked
    as an engineer for Conoco Phillips for over 20 years. The trial
    court did not notice this discrepancy, and the record contains no
    8
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    explanation for the prosecutor’s misstatement. Today’s opinion
    says that Juror No. 11 had more favorable views on the death
    penalty than E.W. (maj. opn., ante, at pp. 57–58) and that the
    prosecutor “might be willing to trade some small risk of an
    unfavorable guilt phase verdict for better odds of a desired
    penalty phase verdict” (
    id. at p.
    58). But if the prosecutor’s
    concern was, as she put it, that engineers are “trained to look at
    all possible doubt” and that she “cannot possibly prove this case
    beyond all possible doubt,” it is not clear how an engineer’s views
    on the death penalty could outweigh that concern.
    Had the trial court noticed that Juror No. 11 was an
    engineer, the court might also have recalled that when Juror
    No. 11 came up for voir dire, the prosecutor asked no questions
    about Juror No. 11’s engineering training or how that training
    would affect her application of the beyond a reasonable doubt
    standard. In fact, there were 20 prospective jurors in the overall
    pool who had engineering training or who had worked in jobs
    involving engineering. Thirteen were dismissed by stipulation
    without the prosecutor questioning them about their
    engineering training. Among the remaining engineers, four
    came up for voir dire before E.W.: Juror No. 11, who was seated;
    then Prospective Juror No. 7420 and Prospective Juror
    No. 9961, both of whom the prosecutor excused for cause; and
    then Prospective Juror No. 8423, whom the defense excused
    with a peremptory strike.          The prosecutor extensively
    questioned all four of these jurors about a variety of topics, but
    she did not ask them any questions about their training or work
    as engineers.
    E.W. was the first engineer whom the prosecutor
    questioned about his engineering background, and it was only
    after questioning E.W. that the prosecutor questioned other
    9
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    engineers (the remaining two) about their engineering
    background. Moreover, it is evident that the prosecutor pursued
    a different line of questioning with E.W. than with the
    remaining two engineer jurors after E.W. Here is what the
    prosecutor asked E.W.:
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: Okay. Now, in your training does that
    cause you to look for all possible doubt?
    “[E.W.]: To look for all possible doubt?
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: Yes.
    “[E.W.]: I would say that it helps me to see many different
    angles.
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: Okay. Do you look for all the possible
    doubts there might be in your job?
    “[E.W.]: Yeah. I certainly consider them, sure.
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: And do you have this okay, what if this,
    what if this, then this? ‘What if this’ type bantering about
    in your job?
    “[E.W.]: We tend to try to, like I said, see things from
    many different angles. And yeah, what if this happened,
    then what will happen because of it? Cause and effect,
    sure.”
    The prosecutor also questioned E.W. about the role that
    speculation played in how he approached a specific area of his
    work, i.e., writing operations manuals for telemetry satellites:
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: Okay. So do you write into these
    chapters if this happens, do this?
    “[E.W.]: Correct.
    10
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: Okay. So you kind of speculate as to a
    problem that might occur, and then you write a solution
    for it?
    “[E.W.]: Sure.”
    After E.W., the next engineer up for voir dire was
    Prospective Juror No. 4629, a white male. The prosecutor also
    questioned this juror about his engineering background, first (as
    with E.W.) eliciting statements that he was “trained to
    speculate” in his work. But then, the prosecutor pursued a line
    of questioning that she had not pursued with E.W., focusing on
    whether Juror No. 4629’s engineering training would impair his
    ability to apply the beyond a reasonable doubt standard of proof:
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: Okay. As an engineer, do you always
    say, well, what if this and what if that? Is that how you
    approach things?
    “[Juror No. 4629]: What? Please rephrase.
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: Do you look at all of the possibilities?
    “[Juror No. 4629]: As many as possible.
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: Okay. In this case there is a standard
    of proof, and the standard of proof is beyond a reasonable
    doubt; you can’t look at all of the possibilities. Can you
    follow that law?
    “[Juror No. 4629]: Oh, certainly, of course.
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: Because if you start looking at all of
    the possibilities, you then become an advocate or a
    partisan for one side of the other, you become the lawyer
    for one person or the other. Does that make sense?
    “[Juror No. 4629]: This would be a violation of my civic
    duty to be impartial. If you are an advocate and defense
    11
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    counsel are advocates, I am not an advocate and I will
    never act as one.
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: Right. And that’s what I’m getting at.
    Because you’re an engineer, and engineers are trained to
    look at all of the various possibilities, and in human affairs
    we cannot — I cannot prove all of the possibilities.
    “[Juror No. 4629]: Oh, heavens. That’s wrong about
    engineering too, for that matter. There are significant
    factors and there are things that are insignificant. The
    insignificant digits, you do not concern yourself with.
    That’s putting it in language that you’re — a proper
    answer.”
    This juror was ultimately dismissed by stipulation because he
    had discussed his questionnaire answers with another juror.
    The prosecutor also questioned the final engineer in the
    panel, Prospective Juror No. 5128, a white male. As she did
    with Juror No. 4629, the prosecutor first asked Juror No. 5128
    about the role that speculation played in his work and then
    pivoted to whether he could refrain from speculating in his role
    as a juror:
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: Are you trained to say, what if this?
    What about that possibility?
    “[Juror No. 5128]: Yes, very much so.
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: You can’t do that in this case.
    “[Juror No. 5128]: That’s right, I don’t know — I’ll accept
    that I can’t do that.
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: You cannot come up with a hypothesis
    and then prove it.
    12
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    “[Juror No. 5128]: I understand. [¶] . . . [¶] . . .
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: And so for twenty years you have been
    on a daily basis going through this process, what if this?
    This could happen. What if that? This could happen,
    correct?
    “[Juror No. 5128]: That’s right, my profession involves the
    design of systems that go on [airplanes], so it’s a natural
    type of occurrence.
    “Ms. Locke-Noble:        You are taught to look at all
    possibilities?
    “[Juror No. 5128]: Yes, definitely. Well, I’ve learned to do
    that. [¶] . . . [¶] . . .
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: As you know you can’t go back and
    speculate. You can only base your verdict on the
    testimony that is presented in this courtroom?
    “[Juror No. 5128]: Yes ma’am. I understand that.
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: You can’t do what if this, or what if
    that, because if you do that, you have now become the
    lawyer for either one of the sides.
    “[Juror No. 5128]: I understand.
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: Would you agree with that?
    “[Juror No. 5128]: I agree, yes.”
    After voir dire, the prosecutor attempted to strike this juror for
    cause for two reasons unrelated to his engineering background.
    Juror No. 5128 was ultimately dismissed by stipulation.
    In sum, the record shows that before questioning E.W., the
    prosecutor did not question any of several engineers about their
    engineering training, even though she did question those jurors
    13
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    about other topics. Only after she questioned E.W. did she
    question the remaining two engineers about their engineering
    training. In doing so, the prosecutor elicited from E.W., Juror
    No. 4629, and Juror No. 5128 answers that acknowledged the
    role of speculation in their work and training. But the
    prosecutor elicited only from Juror No. 4629 and Juror
    No. 5128, and not from E.W., answers that confirmed their
    ability as jurors to avoid looking at “all possibilities” and instead
    to stick to the evidence presented and apply the proper standard
    of proof. These disparities “at least raise[ ] a question as to how
    interested [the prosecutor] was in meaningfully examining
    whether” E.W.’s training as an engineer would impair his ability
    to apply the beyond a reasonable doubt standard. (
    Gutierrez, supra
    , 2 Cal.5th at p. 1170.) Today’s opinion does not dispute
    the accuracy of the voir dire record quoted above; the court’s only
    response is a bald assertion, with no analysis of the prosecutor’s
    questioning, that the record does not “reveal[ ] any significant
    disparity.” (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 61, fn. 18.)
    I would add one more observation: In explaining this area
    of concern, the prosecutor said she was troubled not only by
    E.W.’s engineering training, but also by the fact that E.W. was
    “working on his master’s in pneumatics,” which she
    characterized as “also a study of looking for all possible doubts.”
    This assertion at best “left some lucidity to be desired.”
    (
    Gutierrez, supra
    , 2 Cal.5th at p. 1169.) Pneumatics, according
    to various dictionaries, is the study of the mechanical properties
    of air and other gases. It is hardly “an obvious or natural
    inference” (ibid.) to say that pneumatics is “a study of looking
    for all possible doubts.” The trial court did not probe this
    statement, and the prosecutor’s questioning of E.W. “failed to
    shed light on the nature of [her] apprehension or otherwise
    14
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    indicate [her] interest in meaningfully examining the topic, and
    the matter was far from self-evident.” (Id. at p. 1171.)
    III.
    Let us now consider the prosecutor’s concerns about E.W.’s
    views on LWOP and the death penalty. In its original ruling on
    the strike of E.W., the trial court determined that these concerns
    were genuine, race-neutral justifications, and today’s opinion
    concludes that “[t]he record substantiates that E.W. held the
    views the prosecutor ascribed to him.” (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 51.)
    But there are several problems here.
    In explaining her concern that E.W. believed LWOP is a
    more severe sentence than death, the prosecutor said, “All the
    other jurors currently sitting in the box have indicated that
    death is the most severe punishment that can be given, with the
    exception of [the juror then seated in the fourth position], who
    has indicated both are equal.” Later, the prosecutor said that
    “all peremptory challenges have been on that basis, if they said
    they believe in life without the possibility of parole is the most
    severe punishment then I have pre-empted them or challenged
    them for cause.” Later still, the prosecutor said that “none of
    the other jurors up on that panel right now have indicated life
    without the possibility of parole is the most severe sentence,
    with the exception of one who has indicated it is both.”
    The trial court, in its ruling, did not make a reasoned
    attempt to evaluate the prosecutor’s claim that she had sought
    to remove every juror who said LWOP is more severe than
    death. It merely said that “if Ms. Locke-Noble is consistently
    challenging by way of peremptory, folks who cannot impose the
    death penalty or feel that life without parole is the most severe
    sentence and that is not a race basis for excusing a juror.”
    15
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    (Italics added.) As it turns out, the prosecutor’s claim was
    materially incomplete and potentially misleading.
    The prosecutor was correct in her characterization of the
    seated jurors’ answers to an item on the juror questionnaire
    asking whether death or LWOP is a “more severe punishment.”
    But, as today’s opinion acknowledges (maj. opn., ante, at p. 56),
    the prosecutor accepted no fewer than three seated jurors (Juror
    No. 4, Juror No. 5, and Juror No. 9) and one alternate (Alternate
    Juror No. 5) who, like E.W., had selected LWOP as opposed to
    death in response to a separate item on the questionnaire asking
    which punishment is “worse for a defendant.” To be sure, the
    prosecutor did remove many jurors with views similar to E.W.’s.
    (Id. at pp. 54–55.) But not only did she accept four jurors who,
    like E.W., indicated that LWOP is a worse punishment than
    death; one of those jurors, Juror No. 5, had already been seated
    by the time the prosecutor made her assertion about the
    composition of the panel. The prosecutor’s repeated and
    emphatic assertion that none of the seated jurors had identified
    LWOP as the most severe sentence was potentially misleading
    and presented a significant concern that the trial court, in its
    initial ruling and especially when it revisited the Batson issue
    in its new trial ruling, should have noticed and addressed.
    The Attorney General contends that the seated jurors
    differed from E.W. insofar as they indicated that LWOP was
    worse than death on only one of two items on the questionnaire,
    whereas E.W. indicated that view on both items. The Attorney
    General also suggests it is significant that the seated jurors
    chose death as opposed to LWOP on the item asking “Which do
    you believe is a more severe punishment” because this question,
    he says, is designed to elicit a juror’s objective rather than
    subjective views.
    16
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    Today’s opinion does not endorse the Attorney General’s
    argument, and rightly so. The two items on the questionnaire
    are virtually indistinguishable (see maj. opn., ante, at p. 43,
    fn. 7), and the court does not suggest otherwise. The record
    shows that the prosecutor herself did not see a distinction
    between the two questions. In questioning Prospective Juror
    No. 9807, she engaged in the following exchange:
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: Question 198 says, ‘If a defendant
    convicted of first degree murder, and one or more of the
    special circumstances is found true, the law provides for
    one of only two possible punishments, death or life in
    prison without the possibility of parole. Overall in
    considering the general issue of punishment, which do you
    think worse[,] death or life in prison without the
    possibility of parole.’ Which do you believe?
    “[Juror No. 9807]: I think we have already answered that.
    For me, personally, I would have rather have death, but I
    don’t know what is best for everybody else.
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: Would you personally want death?
    “[Juror No. 9807]: I couldn’t stand to spend the rest of my
    life in jail.
    “Ms. Locke-Noble: So would you say that it is your belief
    that life without the possibility of parole is a more severe
    punishment because, personally, you believe that
    spending the rest of your life in jail would be worse?
    “[Juror No. 9807]: Yes, I think I would agree with that.”
    Moreover, on both items, E.W. made clear that his answer
    indicated his subjective view on the severity of LWOP compared
    to death; on one item, he wrote, “I would hate to be incarcerated
    17
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    that long — useless,” and on the other, he wrote, “To me, I’d
    rather die . . . .” His view is indistinguishable from the view of
    Juror No. 4, a white woman, who answered that she thought
    LWOP would be worse for a defendant because “I can only base
    this on my own personal choice. And I value freedom.”
    Similarly, Juror No. 5, a white man, answered that he thought
    LWOP would be worse because “I don’t know how [the]
    defendant feels, but myself.”
    Today’s opinion attempts to distinguish these jurors from
    E.W. on the ground that E.W. used the word “useless” to
    describe the death penalty, whereas Juror No. 4, Juror No. 5,
    Juror No. 9, and Alternate Juror No. 5 each hedged their
    responses with some support for the death penalty in some
    circumstances. (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 56.) But E.W.’s views also
    had nuance. As E.W. explained: “I guess it’s kind of like the
    question [i.e., whether he was ever for or against the death
    penalty] is asking like political views almost, because the
    answer that I gave was kind of like, ‘Okay, well, I’m okay with
    it, but realizing also the social ramifications of what it does to
    the court system and the criminal system and whatnot, maybe
    we should find another way.’ I’m thinking in the terms of the
    legislators. I’m not saying when I sit here that I can’t apply the
    law.”
    During voir dire, the prosecutor questioned E.W. about his
    views at length. When questioned about his objective views,
    E.W. left no doubt that he — like the seated jurors — understood
    death, not LWOP, to be the more severe sentence under the law.
    The prosecutor asked E.W., “So my question to you, if you
    personally believe that in this case and it’s a severe case, and
    you believe that it deserves the most severe punishment, would
    you be able to impose death instead of life without the possibility
    18
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    of parole?” E.W. answered, “Yes.” The prosecutor then gave
    E.W. a hypothetical scenario of a bank robbery involving three
    people: one who goes into the bank with a gun, one who waits
    outside the bank as a lookout, and one who waits in the car with
    the motor running. In the prosecutor’s hypothetical, the three
    people agree to rob the bank; all three know that the first person
    has a gun and that the gun is loaded; and during the robbery,
    the person with the gun shoots and kills someone. The
    prosecutor then asked, “So in your mind would all three be
    equally guilty of the murder?” E.W. responded, “Yes.” Next, the
    prosecutor asked, “Now . . . in your mind would you be able to
    impose the death penalty on the person waiting out in the car,
    if the aggravating circumstances substantially outweigh the
    mitigating circumstances?” E.W. responded, “I would say, based
    on the circumstances you gave me, I lean towards life on the
    person — the people outside.” When the prosecutor asked E.W.
    to explain his answer, E.W. said that the people outside “did not
    have the opportunity to make the decision at the moment of the
    crime of murder, whether or not it would take place. [¶] . . .
    [T]hey are guilty for aiding someone in participating in the
    crime, but they are not as guilty.” E.W. further explained, “Once
    again, because they created a situation where a murder could
    happen, they are all guilty of it, but as far as punishment, I don’t
    believe that all three are equal and should be punished in the
    same way.”
    This exchange, in which E.W. said he would give LWOP to
    the hypothetical bank robbers who were “not as guilty,” makes
    clear that E.W. was able to separate his subjective view about
    the severity of death from an objective understanding that
    death, not LWOP, is reserved for the most serious offenses.
    Today’s opinion suggests that the only “significance” of this
    19
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    exchange is that it shows E.W.’s views would not “substantially
    impair his ability to vote for execution.” (Maj. opn., ante, at
    p. 52; see 
    ibid. [“E.W. was not
    excused for cause.”].) But the
    court ignores the key point: E.W.’s voir dire responses show that
    his views on the relative severity of death and LWOP were no
    different than how the prosecutor purportedly understood the
    views of Juror No. 4, Juror No. 5, Juror No. 9, and Alternate
    Juror No. 5.      The LWOP concern, “while not explicitly
    contradicted by the record, [is] difficult to credit because the
    State willingly accepted white jurors with the same traits that
    supposedly rendered [E.W.] an unattractive juror.” 
    (Foster, supra
    , 578 U.S. at p. __ [136 S.Ct. at p. 1750].)
    The trial court did not examine whether the record of voir
    dire supported the prosecutor’s concern that E.W. believed
    LWOP is the more severe punishment. Although it is possible
    that the prosecutor was somehow left unconvinced by E.W.’s
    answers at voir dire, that is not apparent in the record. If the
    trial court had probed the discrepancy between the prosecutor’s
    statements and the voir dire responses of E.W. and the seated
    jurors above, the prosecutor could have elaborated further on
    her concern. But as the record stands, we are left with a stated
    reason that is unsupported by the record of voir dire. “The court
    may have made a sincere attempt to assess the [prosecutor’s]
    rationale,” but in light of its failure to probe further, “we cannot
    find under these circumstances that the court made a reasoned
    attempt to determine whether the justification was a credible
    one.” (
    Gutierrez, supra
    , 2 Cal.5th at p. 1172.)
    IV.
    As the discussion above shows, the main reasons credited
    by the trial court — the engineering concern and the LWOP
    20
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    concern — present significant questions about the prosecutor’s
    credibility. Let us now consider the rest of the prosecutor’s
    stated reasons, which today’s opinion dismisses with only
    cursory analysis. (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 61.) Those reasons have
    their own weaknesses and do not bolster the prosecutor’s
    credibility when considered in combination with the others.
    As to the prosecutor’s concern that E.W. believed
    prosecutors are too zealous to convict, E.W. wrote in his juror
    questionnaire that he based this opinion on “T.V. shows —
    obviously I don’t give this opinion much weight.” E.W. identified
    a similar concern regarding defense attorneys (they “[t]end to
    manipulate [the] system to win”) and said he based this opinion
    on “T.V. shows. Obviously I don’t give this opinion much
    weight.” The prosecutor did not question E.W. about this issue
    during voir dire, and the trial court briefly observed that “he is
    really talking about television shows” and does not “give this
    opinion much weight.”
    As to the prosecutor’s concern that E.W. believed “the
    death penalty needs to be reformed just like affirmative action,”
    E.W. made this statement during voir dire in response to the
    prosecutor asking him whether the death penalty should be
    abolished. E.W. answered, “No,” and then explained that the
    death penalty needed reform, “just like affirmative action. . . .
    [¶] I’m not against it.”
    As to the prosecutor’s concern that E.W. said he had been
    subject to questionable stops by Long Beach police officers, it
    gives me pause to credit a reason that is so widely applicable to
    African Americans and that may itself be the product of racial
    bias, whether conscious or unconscious. (See Floyd v. City of
    New York (S.D.N.Y. 2013) 
    959 F. Supp. 2d 540
    , 572–589
    21
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    [discussing expert analyses of 4.4 million police stops in New
    York City between 2004 and 2012, and finding that blacks and
    Hispanics are far more likely than whites to be stopped and
    frisked, and that police stops of blacks or Hispanics are
    substantially less likely than police stops of whites to uncover a
    weapon or contraband]; Pierson et al., A Large-scale Analysis of
    Racial Disparities in Police Stops Across the United States
    (2017)  [as of
    Feb. 4, 2019] [analyzing 60 million traffic stops in 20 states
    between 2011 and 2015, and finding that black drivers are
    stopped more often than white drivers after controlling for age,
    gender, location, and other variables, and that black and
    Hispanic drivers are searched on the basis of less evidence than
    white drivers]; all Internet citations in this opinion are archived
    by    year,    docket      number,      and     case    name     at
    .)
    As to the prosecutor’s assertion that E.W. was “neither for
    nor against” the death penalty, the record indicates that E.W.
    was “for” the death penalty according to how the prosecutor
    defined the term. During voir dire, the prosecutor explained to
    E.W. that “when I say ‘for it’ not that you are out there
    protesting for it, something like that, but you are not against it.”
    In response, E.W. clarified, “Right, I’m not against it.” The
    prosecutor then asked, “You don’t believe that California should
    abolish it?” E.W. answered, “No.”
    That leaves the prosecutor’s concern that E.W. identified
    “bad police officers, and lawyers and . . . bias[ ] against
    economically disadvantaged defendants” as “the three most
    important problems with the criminal justice system,” as well as
    her concern that E.W. seemed to know more about the law than
    other jurors. Although these concerns are not inherently
    22
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    implausible, they are somewhat underwhelming, and the
    prosecutor did not question E.W. about them. The trial court
    did not find, nor does this court suggest, that these reasons
    weigh significantly in favor of the prosecutor’s credibility.
    V.
    In light of the problematic record in this case, it is worth
    underscoring some guidance we recently provided: “Though we
    exercise great restraint in reviewing a prosecutor’s explanations
    and typically afford deference to a trial court’s Batson/Wheeler
    rulings, we can only perform a meaningful review when the
    record contains evidence of solid value. Providing an adequate
    record may prove onerous, particularly when jury selection
    extends over several days and involves a significant number of
    potential jurors. It can be difficult to keep all the panelists and
    their responses straight. Nevertheless, the obligation to avoid
    discrimination in jury selection is a pivotal one. It is the duty of
    courts and counsel to ensure the record is both accurate and
    adequately developed.” (
    Gutierrez, supra
    , 2 Cal.5th at p. 1172.)
    The record here contains a number of proffered
    explanations for the strike of a black juror that are implausible,
    misleading, contradicted by the record, or difficult to credit in
    light of the prosecutor’s disparate treatment of similarly
    situated jurors. The trial court should have pressed the
    prosecutor on these points, but it did not. As in Gutierrez, we
    are left with anomalies and inconsistencies that are simply too
    numerous and significant to permit a conclusion that the trial
    court’s ruling rests on a reasoned effort to evaluate the
    prosecutor’s reasons in light of all relevant circumstances.
    (
    Gutierrez, supra
    , 2 Cal.5th at p. 1175.) “Rarely does a record
    contain direct evidence of purposeful discrimination. More
    23
    PEOPLE v. ARMSTRONG
    Liu, J., dissenting
    often, . . . the inquiry calls on courts to assess the credibility of
    reasons given for a strike by drawing inferences from ‘ “such
    circumstantial . . . evidence of intent as may be available,” ’
    including comparative juror analysis.” (Id. at p. 1182 (conc. opn.
    of Liu, J.), quoting 
    Foster, supra
    , 578 U.S. at p. __ [136 S.Ct. at
    p. 1748].) On this record, I cannot say with certainty that the
    prosecutor’s strike of E.W. was improper; had the trial court
    probed further, the prosecutor might have clarified the
    discrepancies. But we must take the record as it comes to us,
    and certainty is not the standard. In this case, the record leads
    me to conclude that the trial court’s denial of Armstrong’s claim
    that “it was more likely than not that the challenge was
    improperly motivated” (Johnson v. 
    California, supra
    , 545 U.S.
    at p. 170) was unreasonable. I respectfully dissent.
    LIU, J.
    We Concur:
    CUÉLLAR, J.
    PERLUSS, J.*
    *
    Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeal, Second Appellate
    District, Division Seven, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant
    to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    24
    See next page for addresses and telephone numbers for counsel who argued in Supreme Court.
    Name of Opinion People v. Armstrong
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Unpublished Opinion
    Original Appeal XXX
    Original Proceeding
    Review Granted
    Rehearing Granted
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Opinion No. S126560
    Date Filed: February 4, 2019
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Court: Superior
    County: Los Angeles
    Judge: Tomson T. Ong
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Counsel:
    Glen Niemy, under appointment by the Supreme Court, for Defendant and Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris and Xavier Becerra, Attorneys General, Dane R. Gillette and Gerald A. Engler, Chief
    Assistant Attorneys General, Lance E. Winters, Assistant Attorney General, Keith H. Borjon, Joseph P. Lee
    and Yun K. Lee, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    Counsel who argued in Supreme Court (not intended for publication with opinion):
    Glen Niemy
    257 Washington Street, Unit 6
    Salem, MA 01970
    (207) 699-9713
    Yun K. Lee
    Deputy Attorney General
    300 South Spring Street, Suite 1702
    Los Angeles, CA 90013
    (213) 269-6078