Porter v. State ( 2016 )


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  •               REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    No. 1916
    September Term, 2013
    ______________________________________
    KARLA LOUISE PORTER
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    ______________________________________
    Graeff,
    Kehoe,
    Friedman,
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Kehoe, J.
    Dissenting Opinion by Friedman, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: October 25, 2016
    After a six day jury trial in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, Karla Louise
    Porter was convicted of first degree murder and related crimes. On appeal, she presents
    three issues, which we have reworded:
    1. Was the trial court’s jury instruction on imperfect self-defense erroneous as a
    matter of law?
    2. Did the court err when it declined to voir dire the jury after receiving a jury
    note suggesting that the jurors were speculating about matters not presented at
    trial?
    3. Did the court err in denying Ms. Porter’s motion to suppress the inculpatory
    statement she made to the police?
    The State concedes that the trial court’s instruction on imperfect self-defense was
    flawed. The State argues that the error was harmless because Ms. Porter was not entitled
    to the instruction in the first place. We believe that the State is correct. The trial court did
    not abuse its discretion when it declined to question the jurors individually about the
    contents of the note, nor did the court err when it denied Ms. Porter’s motion to suppress
    her statement. We will affirm the convictions.
    Background
    Because Ms. Porter does not challenge the legal sufficiency of the State’s case
    against her, our summary of the facts will focus on the evidence relevant to her
    contentions on appeal.
    The Principals
    During the early morning hours of March 1, 2010, William Raymond Porter was shot
    to death as he opened the Hess Gas Station that he owned and operated with his wife, Ms.
    Porter, in Baltimore County. Walter Bishop was the shooter. Bishop was a friend of
    1
    Seamus Coyle, Ms. Porter’s nephew. Coyle first introduced Bishop to Ms. Porter. Susan
    Datta, Ms. Porter’s sister, Calvin Mowers, her brother, and Matthew Brown were also
    involved in the conspiracy to kill Mr. Porter.1 Bishop, Mowers, Coyle, Datta, and Brown
    were all prosecuted for their involvement in Mr. Porter’s murder.
    Evidence of Abusive Relationships
    Ms. Porter testified at trial. She stated that her parents were separated when she was
    about six or seven years old and that, for several years thereafter, she lived with her
    mother and her mother’s boyfriend. The boyfriend regularly physically and verbally
    abused her mother in Ms. Porter’s presence and once pushed Ms. Porter into a hot stove,
    causing severe burns. Her mother did nothing about the incident and Ms. Porter went to
    live with her father when she was nine years old.
    Ms. Porter testified that she met Mr. Porter in 1982 and that they married in 1986.
    Ms. Porter described controlling behavior on Mr. Porter’s part from the outset of their
    relationship. She testified at length about numerous instances of physical, verbal, and
    psychological abuse, beginning early in their marriage and escalating, in severity and
    frequency, in the late 1990’s and thereafter. For example, and this list is not all-inclusive,
    Ms. Porter testified that, during their marriage, her husband had: beaten her on her back
    and legs with a belt; on various occasions hit her with a rake, a board, his fists, and a tool
    box; stabbed her in the abdomen with a drill; pushed her head into a grave marker;
    smeared dog excrement on her; and threatened to kill her on several occasions, at least
    1
    Brown’s precise role in the conspiracy is not altogether clear from the record.
    2
    once while pointing a gun at her. Additionally, she testified that he repeatedly had made
    demeaning and derogatory statements to her about her appearance and her worth as a
    human being, and that he had harassed her at work, and forced her to stand at their
    kitchen sink and drink water until she urinated on herself.
    Not all of this testimony was uncontested. Ms. Porter identified eyewitnesses to
    several incidents of abuse who were called by the State in rebuttal and testified that the
    incidents had never occurred in their presence. Moreover, her testimony as to Mr.
    Porter’s abuse differed in some significant ways from what she had told her mental health
    professionals prior to trial.2 However, some of Ms. Porter’s testimony was corroborated
    by the Porters’ youngest child, Megan Porter. Megan testified that the environment in the
    family home was tense, and that Mr. Porter was regularly angry. She testified that her
    mother was submissive to her father’s anger, and that Ms. Porter was frequently the target
    of Mr. Porter’s frustrations. It was Megan’s testimony that her father regularly yelled at
    her mother and called her demeaning and degrading names. Megan testified that,
    although she never saw her father strike her mother, she had seen her mother with bruises
    on her arms and legs, and at one point with a black eye.3
    2
    For example, Mary Ann Dutton, Ph.D., a psychologist testified on cross-examination
    that Ms. Porter had not told her about the dog excrement incident.
    3
    Additionally, Raymond Naimaster, a long-time friend of Ms. Porter’s, testified that the
    interaction between Mr. Porter and Ms. Porter led him to suspect that she was being
    abused but that, when he asked her about it, “she kind of dropped her head . . . and got
    small.” The Reverend Johnny Brewer, a pastor at Ms. Porter’s church, testified that she
    had hinted to him that she was being verbally abused in the mid-1990’s. Lorraine Briggs,
    who had worked at the Hess Station for fourteen years prior to Mr. Porter’s death,
    testified that Mr. Porter often criticized Ms. Porter for her appearance. The testimony of
    3
    Ms. Porter testified to two instances of abuse in the “week or so” before Mr. Porter’s
    death. The first arose out of Mr. Porter’s desire to move to Florida—a source of tension
    in the parties’ marriage, particularly in the year before Mr. Porter’s death. Mr. Porter
    held a gun to Ms. Porter’s head, and informed her that they would not be taking their
    children4 or his parents to Florida, when they moved. And then turned his attention to
    her, stating: “Maybe I am not even going to take you. I should just kill you now.” In the
    second instance, Mr. Porter struck Ms. Porter across her back with a crutch because he
    did not find her degree of sympathy towards the fact that he was “bored” to be
    satisfactory. Ms. Porter testified that from June 2009 through March 1, 2010, she was
    “terrified almost on a daily basis.” She testified that during the period of late 2009
    through March 2010:
    I was in fear for my life. I knew it was getting to the point where Ray was
    getting out of control. I knew it was a matter of time before he killed me.
    ...
    [T]hings were getting so bad, things were just out of control. I know
    it was crazy. It was just a day-to-day—it wasn’t even day-to-day. It was
    minute-to-minute. Always walking on eggshells. I never could do
    anything on my own. Something as simple as taking a shower.
    ...
    It was getting so bad that I knew that Ray was going to kill me and I
    just wanted to kill him first.
    Susan Datta was read into the record. Ms. Datta testified that her sister had spoken to her
    about abuse and being fearful of her husband.
    4
    The Porters’ youngest child was 18 years old at the time Mr. Porter was murdered.
    4
    Ms. Porter’s Earlier Attempts to Solicit Someone to Kill Mr. Porter
    In June 2009, that is, about nine months before Mr. Porter was murdered, Ms. Porter
    approached Daniel Blackwell, her daughter’s boyfriend at the time, about killing Mr.
    Porter. Although they differed as to some of the specifics, both Ms. Porter and Blackwell
    testified that she offered him money to kill Mr. Porter, that he, at least initially, expressed
    an interest in doing so, but that he never followed through.5
    Ms. Porter approached a second person—Tony Fails—in December 2009. Fails was
    a business associate of Mr. Porter’s. He testified that he had no intention of participating
    in the crime, but did not refuse Ms. Porter’s request. Instead, he told Ms. Porter that he
    would make some calls and get back to her. Ms. Porter called Mr. Fails throughout
    January 2010—by her own testimony, she called Mr. Fails frequently, sometimes several
    times a day—to see if he had found someone who was willing to kill Mr. Porter. Mr.
    Fails never made any phone calls on Ms. Porter’s behalf. Ms. Porter stopped calling Fails
    towards the end of January 2010.
    In the same month, Ms. Porter contacted Paige Huemann, who had lived with the
    Porters in 2007, about obtaining potassium cyanide so that she could poison Mr. Porter.
    Ms. Porter testified that Ms. Huemann did not provide her with any information as to
    5
    Ms. Porter testified that she gave Blackwell $1,000, and that he never returned the
    money. Blackwell testified that he was, at one point, presented with an envelope
    containing $3,000 and promised an additional $7,000, upon completion of the murder but
    that he refused to accept the money.
    5
    obtaining poison.6
    Ms. Porter Recruits Bishop
    Ms. Porter testified that one of her nephews, Seamus Coyle,7 introduced her to
    Bishop during a meeting between herself and Coyle in a Walmart parking lot, in late
    January or early February 2010. Coyle had arranged to meet Ms. Porter because she had
    agreed to give Coyle money to make his mortgage payment.         Bishop was seated in the
    passenger seat of the vehicle that Coyle was driving, and volunteered to kill Mr. Porter
    after listening to Ms. Porter describe Mr. Porter’s abuse of her. Coyle testified that at that
    point Bishop exited the vehicle, walked toward the rear, and had a conversation with Ms.
    Porter. Coyle remained in the vehicle, but overheard something about $500, and it was
    his belief that telephone numbers were exchanged.
    At a subsequent meeting in February 2010, Ms. Porter and Bishop finalized their
    agreement that Bishop would kill Mr. Porter and Ms. Porter gave Bishop the handgun
    that he would use to commit the murder. The handgun had been given to Ms. Porter by
    Susan Datta, her sister.
    The Murder and the Police Investigation
    On the evening of February 28, 2010, the night before Mr. Porter was murdered, Ms.
    Porter and Bishop spoke by telephone and agreed that Bishop would arrive at the gas
    6
    Baltimore County Police Detective Sekou Hinton testified that Ms. Porter also
    contacted a Travon Duncan about killing her husband but did not provide further details.
    Duncan did not testify and Ms. Porter did not mention Duncan in her own testimony.
    7
    Coyle did not testify at Ms. Porter’s trial. Rather, excerpts of the transcript of Coyle’s
    testimony from his own trial were read into the record.
    6
    station in the early morning hours of March 1, 2010, and that he would shoot Mr. Porter
    before anybody else would be around. At around 2:30 a.m. on March 1, Ms. Porter,
    using her cell phone, called her home telephone and told her husband that the alarm
    company had called and told her that the security alarm had gone off at the gas station.
    Mr. Porter then prepared himself for the day and proceeded to the gas station. (Mr.
    Porter usually arrived at the gas station between 4:00 and 4:15 in the morning.)
    After Mr. Porter left the house, Ms. Porter called her brother, Calvin Mowers, and
    arranged to have him drive Bishop to the gas station. Ms. Porter placed more than 50
    calls from her cell phone to Bishop and Mowers between 2:30 am and 7:00 am on March
    1, 2010. After leaving her home, Ms. Porter met Bishop, Mowers, and Matthew Brown at
    a McDonald’s, where she confirmed that Bishop would follow through with the murder.
    Ms. Porter then went to the Hess station. When she arrived, Mr. Porter was talking to
    a friend and she began taking inventory and performing other routine opening activities.
    At one point, Ms. Porter left the building, and when she re-entered Bishop followed her
    through the side door. Upon entering the station, Bishop ordered Ms. Porter and Mr.
    Porter to move toward the back room of the store. Bishop then removed the gun from his
    pocket and fired at Mr. Porter. The first shot hit Mr. Porter in the head and caused him to
    fall to the ground. Bishop proceeded to fire a second shot, hitting Mr. Porter in the face.
    Mr. Porter subsequently died as a result of his injuries. Bishop fled after the shooting and
    Ms. Porter called 9-1-1. When the police arrived, and in the days immediately following
    the shooting, Ms. Porter described the shooter as a black male, approximately 6 feet tall
    and about 25 years of age, wearing a black hooded sweatshirt. (Bishop is white; Fails, on
    7
    the other hand, is African-American.) Ms. Porter told the police that her husband had
    been shot in the course of an attempted robbery. However, Ms. Porter’s story quickly fell
    apart.
    During the afternoon of March 1, Fails heard the description Ms. Porter provided to
    the police and became concerned that he might come under police suspicion. He went to
    a Baltimore County police station and reported that Ms. Porter had approached him about
    killing her husband in December 2009. Thereafter, Fails assisted the police in
    investigating the murder. While wearing a recording device, Fails made multiple
    contacts with Ms. Porter, telling her that he was nervous that he would become a suspect
    and requesting money to flee. Ms. Porter ultimately offered Mr. Fails $700 not to tell the
    police of her involvement in her husband’s murder.
    Ms. Porter was arrested on March 6, 2010, and subsequently interviewed by two
    detectives. Initially, she maintained that her husband was shot in the course of an
    attempted robbery. After learning that the detectives knew that she had been
    communicating with Bishop and Mowers throughout the early morning hours of March 1,
    she altered her version of events and stated that she had hired Bishop to beat her husband
    up for $400.
    Ms. Porter’s Defense
    At trial, Ms. Porter’s defense was that, after sustaining years of abuse at the hands of
    her husband, she was suffering from battered spouse syndrome, and was acting in self-
    defense when she arranged for his murder. In addition to the testimony that we have
    previously summarized, the defense introduced two expert witnesses to support the
    8
    theory that Ms. Porter was suffering from battered spouse syndrome: Neal Blumberg,
    M.D., a forensic psychiatrist, and Mary Ann Dutton, Ph. D., a clinical psychologist.
    After being accepted by the court as an expert witness in the discipline of forensic
    psychiatry, Dr. Blumberg testified about his evaluation of Ms. Porter. Dr. Blumberg
    explained that, in evaluating a patient, he considers multiple sources of information in
    order to generate a reliable and accurate assessment. Dr. Blumberg testified that he: met
    with Ms. Porter five times, from 2011 to 2013; administered several psychological tests;
    reviewed information the police obtained, including Ms. Porter’s 9-1-1 call as well as the
    interviews the police conducted with other individuals as part of their investigation and
    Ms. Porter’s own statement to the police; conducted a forensic psychiatric examination,
    which involves a detailed family, medical, and legal history, as well as observations of
    the patient during the evaluation; and observed Ms. Porter’s in-court testimony, as well as
    that of her daughter, Megan Porter.
    As a result of his evaluation, Dr. Blumberg expressed the opinion that Ms. Porter was
    suffering from two different mental disorders, on or before March 1, 2010. The first was
    major depressive disorder, which Dr. Blumberg described as “severe.” Dr. Blumberg
    explained that “[a] major depressive disorder is a biological illness in which the
    individual experiences not only depressed mood, but also loss of interest in activities they
    may have previously enjoyed as well as having a variety of [vegetative] symptoms of
    depression.” Dr. Blumberg opined that Ms. Porter’s depressive disorder was “recurrent,”
    that is, she had experienced prior episodes of depression over time. The second mental
    disorder Dr. Blumberg identified was posttraumatic stress disorder, which Dr. Blumberg
    9
    explained, “is a disorder that develops in response to exposure to severe trauma,” and, as
    a result of which, “the person experiences significant distress, anxiety, [and] depression.”
    Dr. Blumberg also provided the jury with the bases for his conclusions. He explained
    that “there [we]re certain things in [Ms.] Porter’s background that made her . . . more
    vulnerable to developing both the problems with depression and PTSD.” Dr. Blumberg
    began with Ms. Porter’s childhood, noting that Ms. Porter was exposed to an abusive
    relationship between her mother and her mother’s boyfriend, and that, as the youngest
    child in her family, she seemed to have developed an “impairment in her self-esteem.”
    Dr. Blumberg’s testimony then shifted to Ms. Porter’s relationship with Mr. Porter. Dr.
    Blumberg explained that the relationship was initially positive, but that as time passed
    Mr. Porter became progressively more abusive. And, that Ms. Porter’s response was to
    “view herself as worthless, [and] to do whatever she could to avoid making him angrier
    or upset with her.” He noted that this further impaired Ms. Porter’s self-esteem. Dr.
    Blumberg acknowledged that there were “good times” in the Porters’ marriage but he
    explained that, during the periods in which Mr. Porter was particularly abusive, “[Ms.
    Porter] would experience periods of significant depression and anxiety.” He explained
    further:
    She became super sensitive to his moods. She described sort of walking on
    eggshells around him and her coping style was not to assert herself or go to the
    police and kind of -- or say I’m leaving, I’m getting out of here. Her response to
    that progressive abuse was to cover things over, to deny, to repress, to sort of
    avoid thinking about what was going on with the hopes that, you know, things
    would settle down and those good times that they had in the past would return.
    Finally, Dr. Blumberg addressed the escalation in violence in the year before Mr.
    10
    Porter’s death, and that it was his belief that, during that time, “she became increasingly
    anxious and fearful for her life and safety. She had become increasingly depressed. She
    had felt hopeless and helpless to extricate herself from the relationship.”
    After identifying Ms. Porter’s mental disorders, and explaining how he arrived at his
    diagnoses, Dr. Blumberg concluded that it was his “opinion to a reasonable degree of
    medical certainty that someone with [Ms.] Porter’s psychological profile would meet the
    criteria for the battered spouse syndrome,” as defined in the battered spouse syndrome
    statute, codified at Md. Code Ann., § 10-916 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings
    (“CJP”) Article.8 Dr. Blumberg proceeded to discuss battered spouse syndrome, in
    8
    The statute reads:
    § 10-916. Battered Spouse or Battered Woman’s Syndrome
    (a) Definitions — (1) In this section the following words have the meanings
    indicated.
    (2) “Battered Spouse Syndrome” means the psychological condition of a victim of
    repeated physical and psychological abuse by a spouse, former spouse, cohabitant, or
    former cohabitant which is also recognized in the medical and scientific community
    as the “Battered Woman's Syndrome”.
    (3) “Defendant” means an individual charged with:
    (i) First degree murder, second degree murder, manslaughter, or attempt to commit
    any of these crimes; or
    (ii) Assault in the first degree.
    (b) Evidence and expert testimony — Notwithstanding evidence that the defendant
    was the first aggressor, used excessive force, or failed to retreat at the time of the
    alleged offense, when the defendant raises the issue that the defendant was, at the
    time of the alleged offense, suffering from the Battered Spouse Syndrome as a result
    of the past course of conduct of the individual who is the victim of the crime for
    which the defendant has been charged, the court may admit for the purpose of
    11
    general, and the effects that it has on those who suffer from it. He stated:
    Battered spouse syndrome … [is] used to describe a reaction to recurrent spousal
    or partner abuse and the syndrome involves recurrent episodes in which there is
    an escalation of violence to the point where there is a particular violent episode
    followed by a cooling down period in which sometimes there are acts of
    contrition, but the situation calms down. . . . [B]attered spouse syndrome requires
    at least two of these cycles of an escalation of violence with an explosive
    outburst and then a cooling down period. As a result of the recurrent verbal and,
    in particular, physical abuse, the victim develops feelings of helplessness,
    hopelessness, which is referred to in the psychological literature as learned
    helplessness. Over time as a result of that abuse, the individual is feeling
    increasingly helpless or hopeless to rectify their situation. They often experience
    depression. They often experience severe anxiety. Those psychological
    conditions are in a sense paralyzing. They prevent them from being able to
    actively assert themselves, whereas a normal person might say hey, I’m not
    going to take that anymore and get out of it or call the police. As a result of the
    abuse, as a result of the depression and anxiety, women in particular or people
    with a battered spouse syndrome have difficulty and find it basically impossible
    to extricate themselves from the abusive relationship.
    ...
    [T]he cases that generally involve violence to the abuser occur in the context of
    an escalation of the abuse. A belief that something is going to be more imminent
    in terms of harm, bodily harm or, in fact, death. It’s often in that context that the
    abused spouse ultimately resorts to violence from her subjective point of view.
    And I'm using the “she” because [in] the vast majority of the cases the battered
    spouse is actually a woman. The wom[e]n ultimately believ[e] that the only way
    they can defend themselves, prevent themselves from further serious bodily harm
    or from death is to end the life of the abuser.
    ...
    Well, by subjective, and what I’m talking about is Mrs. Porter's point of view.
    Again, when somebody has experienced extensive verbal and or physical abuse,
    explaining the defendant's motive or state of mind, or both, at the time of the
    commission of the alleged offense:
    (1) Evidence of repeated physical and psychological abuse of the defendant
    perpetrated by an individual who is the victim of a crime for which the defendant has
    been charged; and
    (2) Expert testimony on the Battered Spouse Syndrome.
    12
    as a result of depression, as a result of the trauma that they have gone through,
    they may overreact to threats to their physical integrity. They may view the
    abusing spouse or others in their environment as being much more threatening
    than perhaps an objective viewer might see. So when we talk about the subjective
    point of view, we are talking about some of the distortions that are likely to have
    occurred with Mrs. Porter. It’s not saying that the abuse she experienced was not
    real. I believe that it was, but it certainly could make her super sensitive to
    threats to her physical integrity and to perhaps overreact or overperceive those
    threats, feeling that she has to act in self-defense when, in fact, there might not be
    an objective reason for that.
    The court accepted Dr. Dutton as an expert in the psychological condition of victims
    of repeated physical and psychological abuse by a spouse. She testified at length about
    domestic violence and the battered spouse syndrome, the psychological, emotional, and
    physical effects on the victim, myths associated with domestic violence and the battered
    spouse syndrome, strategies and coping mechanisms employed by victims, and the
    reasons—e. g., fear of the abuser, concern for children, economic worries—that can
    cause victims to stay in abusive relationships.
    Dr. Dutton identified factors in Ms. Porter’s history, e.g., that she was a neglected
    child, that she had had a child before entering into a relationship with Mr. Porter, that
    made her susceptible to the emotional dynamic that results in battered spouse syndrome.
    Dr. Dutton also expressed the opinion that, after interviewing Ms. Porter, reviewing her
    medical records and statements to the police, and observing her in-court testimony, Ms.
    Porter “experienced repeated abuse in the context of her marriage and that she was also
    experiencing and had experienced as a result of that, and other factors that contributed to
    it, consistent psychological effects related to it.”
    To support this conclusion, she pointed to a number of facts from Ms. Porter’s
    13
    history, as well as her description of Mr. Porter, e.g., a neglected childhood, Mr. Porter’s
    controlling behavior, his threats to kill her, his sometimes pointing a handgun at her when
    making those threats, his jealousy, and his prior physical violence towards her and the
    “incredible extent of humiliation and degradation” that she underwent during her
    marriage. As a result, in Dr. Dutton’s view, there was a “kind of building up [of] the level
    of the threat . . . more intense, more frequent towards the end compared to throughout the
    rest of the marriage.” Moreover, Dr. Dutton testified that “most women” who are the
    victims of domestic violence wish to “hide the level of abuse in their relationship.” The
    following colloquy summarizes Dr. Dutton’s conclusions:
    [Defense Counsel]: What about -- did you also review and take into
    consideration the mental health diagnosis, PTSD and the severe depression?
    A [Dr. Dutton]: Yes, I did.
    Q: And could those types of diagnoses affect an individual who is repeatedly
    abused, their perception of their options for getting out or stopping the abuse?
    A.: In two ways. Two ways in particular, maybe even more, but the two I’m
    thinking of are the experience of the fear is greater because of it. So someone
    who has symptoms of PTSD are likely to experience a subsequent event as even
    bigger because of that.
    The other thing is because of what trauma and PTSD do to our ability to think
    and reason and just process our range of options and being able to clearly think
    through, you know, what does it mean if I'm telling everybody I want him dead,
    what does that mean, why can’t I just, you know, try to strategize some other
    way, there is just a sense of desperation as opposed to clear, calm, rational,
    logical thinking through. That’s what trauma does. There is this sense of
    desperate action and also difficulty concentrating is one of the key symptoms of
    PTSD. It's not just about concentrating. It's about clearly -- thinking clearly.
    Q. And the hyperarousal or the hypervigilance that you mentioned earlier, how
    does that have any effect on one’s perception of the danger that they are in?
    A. It would augment that perception.
    14
    Q. Augment it? Can you explain?
    A. It would even make it bigger. I mean, there is a sense of is there some realistic
    danger, but then whatever that is, it would likely make their perception of that
    danger even bigger because of it.
    Q. Is it consistent with one who has been abused repeatedly that they would
    believe the threats that are being launched against them?
    A. Yes, especially if one has a gun to your head.
    Stephen Siebert, M.D., a psychiatrist, testified as an expert witness for the State. Dr.
    Siebert testified that he had interviewed Ms. Porter at the State’s request and concluded
    that she was suffering from a “mild depressive disorder” brought about by her lengthy
    pre-trial detention and stress related to the criminal charges pending against her. He
    opined that “there is no objective evidence for a posttraumatic stress disorder before the
    criminal offense.” Dr. Siebert did not address whether Ms. Porter suffered from battered
    spouse syndrome.
    Shortly before the close of evidence, the trial court and counsel engaged in an
    extensive discussion of the appropriate jury instructions, which we will summarize in
    Part I of this opinion. The jury returned a verdict of guilty for murder in the first degree,
    use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence, conspiracy to commit murder
    in the first degree, and three counts of solicitation to commit murder. The trial court
    sentenced Ms. Porter to life without the possibility of parole for murder, and merged the
    sentence for the related solicitation count with that sentence. The court also sentenced
    Ms. Porter to a term of life for conspiracy to commit first degree murder to run
    concurrently with her other sentences, imposed consecutive sentences of twenty years for
    the two additional solicitation counts, as well as a twenty year concurrent sentence for
    15
    use of a handgun in a crime of violence, for a total sentence of life plus forty years.
    This appeal followed.
    I. The Imperfect Self-Defense Instruction
    Pursuant to Md. Rule 4-325(c), “[a] court may, and at the request of any party shall,
    instruct the jury as to the applicable law and the extent to which the instructions are
    binding.” A trial court’s determination to give, or refuse to give, a requested jury
    instruction is reviewed for abuse of discretion. Arthur v. State, 
    420 Md. 512
    , 525 (2011).
    And, in reviewing a trial court’s decision to grant, or deny, a requested instruction, we
    consider “(1) whether the requested instruction was a correct statement of the law; (2)
    whether it was applicable under the facts of the case; and (3) whether it was fairly
    covered in the instructions actually given.” Stabb v. State, 
    423 Md. 454
    , 465 (2011).
    With regard to the second factor—whether the instruction was “factually
    generated”—the Court of Appeals has been clear that the defendant must point to “‘some
    evidence’ sufficient to raise the jury issue.” 
    Arthur, 420 Md. at 525
    . The Court has
    described the some evidence standard as “a fairly low hurdle for a defendant,” and has
    articulated the standard as follows:
    Some evidence is not strictured by the test of a specific standard. It calls for no
    more than what it says —“some,” as that word is understood in common,
    everyday usage. It need not rise to the level of “beyond reasonable doubt” or
    “clear and convincing” or preponderance. The source of the evidence is
    immaterial; it may emanate solely from the defendant.
    
    Id. at 526
    (citation omitted).
    Ms. Porter contends that the trial court’s instruction to the jury misstated the law of
    imperfect self-defense in several ways. Deciding whether she is correct and, if she is,
    16
    whether the trial court’s error is a basis for reversal, requires that we consider the
    relationship between the law of perfect and imperfect self-defense and the battered
    spouse syndrome and how, and indeed, if, these principles apply in a case involving
    murder for hire. We will explore these topics in order to provide context to the parties’
    appellate contentions.
    Self-Defense
    Maryland recognizes two forms of self-defense––perfect self-defense and imperfect
    self-defense. State v. Smullen, 
    380 Md. 233
    , 251 (2004). Perfect self-defense “operates
    as a complete defense to either murder or manslaughter[,]” and, where successful, results
    in acquittal of the defendant. State v. Faulkner, 
    301 Md. 482
    , 485 (1984). The Court of
    Appeals has articulated the elements “necessary to justify a homicide . . . on the basis of
    self defense” as follows:
    (1) The accused must have had reasonable grounds to believe himself in
    apparent imminent or immediate danger of death or serious bodily harm from his
    assailant or potential assailant;
    (2) The accused must have in fact believed himself in this danger;
    (3) The accused claiming the right of self defense must not have been the
    aggressor or provoked the conflict; and
    (4) The force used must have not been unreasonable and excessive, that is, the
    force must not have been more force than the exigency demanded.
    
    Id. at 485-86.
    Imperfect self-defense, on the other hand, arises where the defendant’s “actual
    subjective belief . . . that he/she is in apparent imminent danger of death or serious bodily
    harm from the assailant, requiring the use of deadly force, is not an objectively
    reasonable belief.” State v. Marr, 
    362 Md. 467
    , 473 (2001). Imperfect self-defense thus
    17
    differs from perfect self-defense in two significant respects—to claim imperfect self-
    defense the defendant’s belief that (1) he/she was in “apparent imminent or immediate
    danger of death or serious bodily harm” and/or (2) “that the force employed [wa]s
    necessary to meet the danger” need not be objectively reasonable. 
    Id. at 473-74.
    The
    Court of Appeals has expressly stated that “‘[i]n all other respects, the elements of the
    two doctrines are the same.’” 
    Id. at 474
    (quoting Burch v. State, 
    364 Md. 253
    , 283
    (1997)).
    Moreover, unlike perfect self-defense, imperfect self-defense does not operate as a
    complete defense to criminal homicide. 
    Faulkner, 301 Md. at 486
    . Rather, it negates the
    element of malice the State must prove to obtain a conviction for murder, and thus
    “mitigates murder to voluntary manslaughter.” 
    Id. The Court
    of Appeals has explained
    that “a defendant who commits a homicide while honestly, though unreasonably,
    believing that he/she is threatened with death or serious harm and that deadly force was
    necessary does not act with malice, and . . . cannot be convicted of murder.” 
    Marr, 362 Md. at 474
    . But, “because the killing was committed without justification or excuse, the
    defendant is not entitled to full exoneration and would be guilty of voluntary
    manslaughter.” 
    Id. The Battered
    Spouse Syndrome
    Maryland’s Battered Spouse Syndrome Statute,9 codified at Md. Code Ann. § 10-916
    of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings (“CJP”) Article, permits the introduction of
    9
    The full text of the statute is set out in 
    note 8 supra
    .
    18
    evidence that, at the time of the commission of certain crimes, the criminal defendant was
    suffering from battered spouse syndrome. State v. Peterson, 
    158 Md. App. 558
    , 586
    (2004). The statute limits evidence of battered spouse syndrome to cases in which the
    criminal defendant is charged with first degree murder, second degree murder,
    manslaughter, or attempt to commit any of those crimes, and assault in the first degree.
    CJP § 10-916(a)(3); 
    Peterson, 158 Md. App. at 587
    n.6.
    The statute defines “Battered Spouse Syndrome” as “the psychological condition of a
    victim of repeated physical and psychological abuse by a spouse, former spouse,
    cohabitant, or former cohabitant which is also recognized in the medical and scientific
    community as the ‘Battered Woman’s Syndrome’.” CJP § 10-916(a)(2). And, with
    regard to the admissibility of evidence of battered spouse syndrome, §10-916(b)
    provides:
    Notwithstanding evidence that the defendant was the first aggressor, used
    excessive force, or failed to retreat at the time of the alleged offense, when the
    defendant raises the issue that the defendant was, at the time of the alleged
    offence, suffering from the Battered Spouse Syndrome as a result of the past
    course of conduct of the individual who is the victim of the crime for which the
    defendant has been charged, the court may admit for the purpose of explaining
    the defendant’s motive or state of mind, or both, at the time of the commission of
    the alleged offense:
    (1) Evidence of repeated physical and psychological abuse of the defendant
    perpetrated by an individual who is the victim of a crime for which the defendant
    has been charged; and
    (2) Expert testimony on the Battered Spouse Syndrome.
    19
    This Court explained the significance of the enactment of Maryland’s Battered
    Spouse Syndrome Statute in Banks v. State, 
    92 Md. App. 422
    , 429-30 (1992) (citations
    omitted; emphasis added) as follows:
    Before § 10-916 was enacted, trial judges often excluded evidence of past abuse
    and the Battered Spouse Syndrome as irrelevant, since the common law of self-
    defense holds that in order to invoke the defense, the defendant must not have
    been the first aggressor, nor must she have used more force than was necessary
    to repel the attack. The new statute permits admission of this evidence,
    “[n]otwithstanding evidence that the defendant was the first aggressor, used
    excessive force, or failed to retreat at the time of the alleged offense.”
    The Court of Appeals addressed the battered spouse syndrome at length in Smullen v.
    State, 
    380 Md. 233
    , 253-56 (2004). The battered spouse syndrome describes the
    psychological response of a person subject to a cyclical pattern of abuse,10 physical
    and/or psychological, “that creates a hypervigilance on the part of the defendant and
    attunes the defendant to recognize a threat of imminent danger from conduct that would
    not appear imminently threatening to someone who had not been subjected to that
    repetitive cycle of violence.” 
    Id. at 270-71.
    In Smullen, the Court of Appeals explained
    10
    In State v. Peterson, this Court described the cyclical pattern of abuse as follows:
    [T]he “battering cycle” of a battered spouse happens in three phases, which
    may vary in time and intensity: the “‘tension-building’ phase, in which
    minor incidents of physical, sexual, or emotional abuse occur”; the “acute
    battering incident, in which the batterer ‘typically unleashes a barrage of
    verbal and physical aggression that can leave the woman severely shaken
    and injured’”; and the “contrition stage, in which the batterer apologizes,
    seeks forgiveness, and promises to 
    change. 158 Md. App. at 588
    (quoting 
    Smullen, 380 Md. at 253-54
    ).
    20
    the vigilance a victim of this pattern of abuse develops toward the behavior of the abuser
    as follows:
    The battered woman learns to recognize the small signs that precede periods of
    escalated violence. She learns to distinguish subtle changes in tone of voice,
    facial expressions, and levels of danger. She is in a position to know, perhaps
    with greater certainty than someone attacked by a stranger, that the batterer’s
    threat is real and will be acted upon.
    
    Id. at 255
    (quoting Bechtel v. State, 
    840 P.2d 1
    , 12 (Okla. Crim. 1992)). “[O]ver time,
    the cycle becomes more intense, more frequent, more violent, and often more lethal.” 
    Id. at 254.
    Evidence of battered spouse syndrome has been used to support claims of self-
    defense in cases where a victim of abuse kills his or her abuser. 
    Id. at 256-57.
    As the
    Court explained in Smullen, “[i]t is the psychological response to that cycle of violence
    that helps explain why the defendant perceived a threat from objectively non-threatening
    conduct on the part of the victim and why, though apparently the aggressor, the defendant
    was actually responding to perceived aggression by the victim.” 
    Id. at 271.
    Two hallmarks of the battered spouse syndrome, particularly relevant in the context
    of self-defense, are “[t]he abused victim’s ‘learned helplessness’ and heightened
    sensitivity to the abuser’s behavior.” State v. Peterson, 
    158 Md. App. 558
    , 589 (2004).
    “Learned helplessness” describes the aspect of the syndrome whereby, “after repeated
    abuse, women come to believe that they cannot control the situation and thus become
    passive and submissive.” 
    Smullen, 380 Md. at 254
    . Learned helplessness thus “explains
    why the battered spouse does not leave the situation, or take some action against the
    abuser.” 
    Peterson, 158 Md. App. at 589
    . “Heightened sensitivity” captures the battered
    21
    spouse’s sensitivity to the abuser’s behavior, that is, the victim’s ability to “sense the
    escalation in the frequency and intensity of the violence.” 
    Smullen, 380 Md. at 255
    .
    “‘Heightened sensitivity’ explains why the battered spouse may interpret as threatening
    conduct by the abuser that would appear non-threatening to others.” Peterson, 158 Md.
    App. at 589.
    The Relationship Between Self-Defense and the Battered Spouse Syndrome
    The appellate courts of this State have addressed the interaction of the law of self-
    defense and the battered spouse syndrome statute on three previous occasions: State v.
    Smullen, State v. Peterson, and Banks v. State, 
    92 Md. App. 422
    (1992). In all three
    cases, both the Court of Appeals and this Court have been clear that CJP § 10-916 does
    not create an independent defense to the enumerated homicide and assault crimes.
    
    Smullen, 380 Md. at 251
    ; 
    Peterson, 158 Md. App. at 587
    ; 
    Banks, 92 Md. App. at 429
    .
    Instead, evidence of battered spouse syndrome enables the fact finder to undertake a more
    nuanced and comprehensive analysis of the state of mind elements of perfect and
    imperfect self-defense. 
    Smullen, 380 Md. at 250-51
    ; 
    Peterson, 158 Md. App. at 587
    ;
    
    Banks, 92 Md. App. at 429
    .11
    11
    Our consideration of Banks ends at this point. In Banks, the defendant, at trial, asserted
    a defense that was “an amalgam of self-defense, hot-blooded response to provocation,
    and battered spouse 
    syndrome.” 92 Md. App. at 428
    (quotation marks omitted). We
    discussed the battered spouse syndrome in passing. 
    Id. at 428-30.
    The primary issue on
    appeal was evidentiary, 
    id. at 426,
    and the defendant’s conviction was reversed because
    this Court concluded that the trial court erred in permitting certain hearsay testimony. 
    Id. at 438-39.
    22
    In Smullen, the Court of Appeals explained the interaction between the state of mind
    element and evidence of battered spouse syndrome as follows (emphasis in original):
    [Battered spouse syndrome] . . . , where applicable, merely requires a more
    careful and sophisticated look at the notion of imminent threat and what
    constitutes ‘aggression,’ of understanding that certain conduct that might not be
    regarded as imminently dangerous by the public at large can cause someone who
    has been repeatedly subjected to and hurt by that conduct before to honestly,
    even if unreasonably, regard it as imminently threatening. If, with that subjective
    belief, the defendant acts aggressively in defense, the defendant may be able to
    show that, even though the first apparent aggressor, he/she was responding in
    self-defense to an honestly perceived imminent threat of death or serious bodily
    harm. The syndrome, when applied in a proper setting, can thus, depending on
    the circumstances, support both the subjective honesty of the defendant's
    perception of imminent harm and the objective reasonableness of such a
    
    perception. 380 Md. at 250
    –51.
    The Court, however, made it clear that, if applied in contexts outside of its “proper
    setting,” the Battered Spouse Syndrome:
    then does become detached from the recognized defense of self-defense and
    assumes the status of a separate, independent defense to murder, manslaughter,
    maiming, or assault that we do not believe was intended by the Legislature in
    enacting § 10-916 and that we are not prepared to accept as part of our common
    law.
    
    Id. at 251
    (emphasis in original).
    The Jury Instruction
    Throughout her trial, Ms. Porter sought to establish that she was suffering from
    battered spouse syndrome and was acting in self-defense when she arranged for her
    husband’s murder. Accordingly, Ms. Porter requested that the court instruct the jury on
    23
    the battered spouse syndrome and to give the jury the Maryland Criminal Pattern Jury
    Instruction on perfect and imperfect self-defense. 12
    12
    Maryland Criminal Pattern Jury Instruction 4:17.2(C) states:
    Voluntary manslaughter is an intentional killing, which is not murder
    because the defendant acted in partial self-defense. Partial self-defense
    does not result in a verdict of not guilty, but rather reduces the level of
    guilt from murder to manslaughter.
    You have heard evidence that the defendant killed (name) in self-defense.
    You must decide whether this is a complete defense, a partial defense, or
    no defense in this case.
    In order to convict the defendant of murder, the State must prove that the
    defendant did not act in either complete self-defense or partial self-
    defense. If the defendant did act in complete self-defense, your verdict
    must be not guilty. If the defendant did not act in complete self-defense,
    but did act in partial self-defense, your verdict must be guilty of voluntary
    manslaughter and not guilty of murder.
    Self-defense is a complete defense, and you are required to find the
    defendant not guilty, if all of the following four factors are present:
    (1) the defendant was not the aggressor [[or, although the defendant was the
    initial aggressor, [he] [she] did not raise the fight to the deadly force level]];
    (2) the defendant actually believed that [he] [she] was in immediate and
    imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm;
    (3) the defendant’s belief was reasonable; and
    (4) the defendant used no more force than was reasonably necessary to defend
    [himself] [herself] in light of the threatened or actual force. [[This limit on the
    defendant’s use of deadly force requires the defendant to make a reasonable
    effort to retreat. The defendant does not have to retreat if [the defendant was in
    his or her home] [retreat was unsafe] [the avenue of retreat was unknown to the
    defendant] [the defendant was being robbed] [the defendant was lawfully
    arresting the victim]].
    In order to convict the defendant of murder, the State must prove that self-
    defense does not apply in this case. This means that you are required to
    find the defendant not guilty, unless the State has persuaded you, beyond a
    reasonable doubt, that at least one of the four factors of complete self-
    defense was absent.
    24
    The State objected to the court instructing the jury on self-defense, arguing that “self-
    defense ha[d] not been adequately raised.” Nonetheless, on the assumption that the court
    was going to instruct on self-defense, the State presented the court with an instruction it
    had crafted to clarify the elements the jury must find in considering imperfect self-
    defense. The State took issue with the following sentence in Maryland Criminal Pattern
    Jury Instruction 4:17-2(C) Voluntary Manslaughter (Perfect/Imperfect Self-Defense):
    “[If the defendant actually believed that [he] [she] was in immediate and
    imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm, even though a
    reasonable person would not have so believed, the defendant’s actual,
    though unreasonable, belief is a partial self-defense and the verdict should
    be guilty of voluntary manslaughter rather than murder.]”
    The State’s concern was that the pattern instruction was misleading because the
    language suggests that the jury need only find that the defendant actually felt “they were
    Even if you find that the defendant did not act in complete self-defense,
    the defendant may still have acted in partial self-defense. [If the
    defendant actually believed that [he] [she] was in immediate and
    imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm, even though a
    reasonable person would not have so believed, the defendant’s actual,
    though unreasonable, belief is a partial self-defense and the verdict should
    be guilty of voluntary manslaughter rather than murder.] [If the defendant
    used greater force than a reasonable person would have used, but the
    defendant actually believed that the force used was necessary, the
    defendant’s actual, though unreasonable, belief is a partial self-defense
    and the verdict should be guilty of voluntary manslaughter rather than
    murder.]
    In order to convict the defendant of murder, the State must prove that the
    defendant did not act in complete self-defense or partial self-defense. If
    the defendant did act in complete self-defense, the verdict must be not
    guilty. If the defendant did not act in complete self-defense, but did act in
    partial self-defense, the verdict must be guilty of voluntary manslaughter
    and not guilty of murder.
    25
    in imminent and immediate danger of death or serious bodily harm,” but makes no
    mention of the other elements necessary for a finding of self-defense. The State thus
    offered a revised imperfect self-defense instruction to include all of the elements required
    for a finding of imperfect self-defense. Ms. Porter objected to this instruction. She
    argued that the Battered Spouse Syndrome Statute, CJP § 10-916, eliminated some of the
    elements of self-defense in cases involving battered spouse syndrome, and that the
    pattern jury instruction reflected that. Accordingly, she argued that to add elements of
    perfect self-defense to the imperfect self-defense provision of the voluntary manslaughter
    instruction would conflict with CJP § 10-916.
    In pertinent part, the court instructed the jury on self-defense as follows (the
    significant deviation from the pattern instruction is italicized):
    Self-defense is a complete defense to the crimes charged in this case and
    you are required to find the Defendant not guilty if all of the following
    four factors are present. First, that the Defendant was not the aggressor.
    Second, that the Defendant actually believed that she was in immediate
    and imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm. Third, that the
    Defendant’s belief was reasonable. And fourth, that the Defendant used
    no more force than was reasonably necessary to defend herself in light of
    the threatened or actual force.
    In order to convict the Defendant of murder, the State must prove that
    self-defense does not apply in this case. This means that you are required
    to find the Defendant not guilty unless the State has persuaded you
    beyond a reasonable doubt that at least one of the four factors of a
    complete self-defense was absent. Even if you find that the Defendant did
    not act in complete self-defense, the Defendant may still have acted in
    partial self-defense. If the Defendant actually believed that she was in
    immediate danger of death or serious bodily harm, even though a
    reasonable person would not have so believed, and the Defendant used no
    more force than was reasonably necessary to defend herself in light of the
    threatened or actual force, and that retreat from the threat was unsafe,
    and that she was not the aggressor, the Defendant’s actual, though
    26
    unreasonable belief, is a partial self-defense and the verdict should be
    guilty of voluntary manslaughter rather than murder.
    In order to convict the Defendant of murder, the State must prove that the
    Defendant did not act in complete self-defense or partial self-defense. If
    the Defendant did act in complete self-defense, the verdict must be not
    guilty. If the Defendant did not act in complete self-defense, but did act in
    partial self-defense, the verdict must be guilty of voluntary manslaughter,
    not guilty of murder.
    In assessing the Defendant’s claims of self-defense in this case, you may,
    but are not required to, consider why and how in light of any pattern of
    abuse that you find existed, the Defendant may have honestly and perhaps
    reasonably perceived an imminent threat of immediate danger.
    Appellate Contentions
    In her brief, Ms. Porter contends that the trial court erred in departing from the
    pattern jury instruction on imperfect self-defense and in providing an “overly-limited
    battered spouse syndrome instruction.” Ms. Porter raises three arguments in support of
    this contention. First, Ms. Porter asserts in her brief that, pursuant to CJP § 10-916(b),
    self-defense is available to a battered spouse, despite the fact that “some of the traditional
    hallmarks of self-defense are absent.” Ms. Porter contends that because the court
    departed from the pattern instruction, the jury was not able to consider the evidence of
    battered spouse syndrome and could not find that she was acting in imperfect self-
    defense. Second, Ms. Porter argues that the court’s instruction on battered spouse
    syndrome compounded the error because the instruction limited the jury’s consideration
    of the evidence of battered spouse syndrome to the imminence of the threat, and thus
    “precluded the jury from considering the effect of [the] abuse on Ms. Porter’s perception
    of who was the aggressor, the plausibility of retreat, and what constituted necessary
    27
    force.” Third, Ms. Porter contends that the instruction rendered the evidence she
    presented in her defense meaningless.
    The State concedes that the court erred in instructing the jury on imperfect self-
    defense. In its brief, the State identifies two incorrect statements of law in the court’s
    instruction: first, to claim imperfect self-defense the defendant’s use of force must have
    been reasonable, and second, that “the jury should apply an objective, rather than
    subjective, test to determine whether retreat from the threat was unsafe.” Nonetheless, the
    State contends that Ms. Porter was not entitled to an instruction on imperfect self-
    defense, and thus that her conviction should be affirmed.
    In its brief, the State makes several arguments in support of its position that the
    instruction, although incorrect, was not prejudicial to Ms. Porter. First, the State
    contends that Ms. Porter failed to identify “some evidence” as to each element required to
    make a claim of self-defense, and thus the instruction was not generated. Second, the
    State argues that the battered spouse syndrome statute does not create an independent
    defense to murder, but, rather, enables the jury to conduct a more sophisticated analysis
    of the elements of self-defense, particularly the defendant’s state of mind and status as
    the aggressor. In the State’s view, however, the statute does not “confer non-aggressor
    status upon a battered spouse who hires a third party to kill her partner.” Finally, the State
    contends that the doctrine of self-defense, even self-defense in battered spouse syndrome
    cases, should not be extended to cases involving murder for hire. Relatedly, the State
    asserts that even if we do extend imperfect self-defense to murder for hire, Ms. Porter
    was not entitled to an instruction on imperfect self-defense because she failed to point to
    28
    “some evidence” that “at the time and place of the crime, she actually believed that she
    was in immediate and imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm” and that
    “although she appeared to be the aggressor, she in fact was not.”13
    Analysis
    As we recounted above, the State has identified two errors of law in the imperfect
    self-defense instruction provided to the jury. According to the State, the instruction
    “required the jury to reject [appellant’s] self-defense claim if [appellant] used more force
    than was reasonably necessary to defend herself in light of the threatened or actual force,
    and if retreat from the threat was not unsafe.” We are not bound by the State’s
    concession. See, e.g., Greenstreet v. State, 
    392 Md. 652
    , 667 (2006) (“[A] party may not
    concede a point of law to the exclusion of appellate review, as necessary and proper to
    decide the case.”); Crown Oil & Wax v. Glen Construction, 
    320 Md. 546
    , 567 (1990).
    Nonetheless, we agree with the State.
    In order to successfully invoke the defense of imperfect self-defense, a defendant
    need not demonstrate that he used objectively reasonable force. See State v. Marr, 
    362 Md. 467
    , 473 (2001) (“The prospect of ‘imperfect’ self-defense arises when the actual,
    subjective belief on the part of the accused that he/she is in apparent imminent danger of
    13
    Analogizing the facts of the case before us to State v. Smullen, 
    380 Md. 233
    (2004), the
    State also argues in its brief that Ms. Porter failed to present a sufficient foundation for
    the introduction of the expert testimony on battered spouse syndrome, but that this was
    not prejudicial because “the erroneous instruction prevented the jury from exploiting that
    testimony to mitigate [Ms.] Porter’s conviction of murder.” We do not agree. Ms.
    Porter’s testimony constituted a basis for the conclusions of her expert witnesses, Dr.
    Blumberg and Dr. Dutton.
    29
    death or serious bodily harm from the assailant, requiring the use of deadly force, is not
    an objectively reasonable belief. What may be unreasonable is the perception of
    imminent danger or the belief that the force employed is necessary to meet the danger, or
    both.”). To the extent that the court’s instruction suggested that the jury should apply an
    objectively reasonable standard to decide whether Ms. Porter could safely retreat, the
    instruction was also erroneous. It is the defendant’s “actual, subjective belief . . . that
    he/she [wa]s in apparent imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm from the
    assailant,” that is relevant. 
    Id. That the
    instruction was erroneous is not, according to the
    State, the end of the matter. We now turn to the State’s harmless error argument.
    Except in cases of structural error, see, e.g., State v. Waine, 
    444 Md. 692
    , 705 (2015),
    an error in a jury instruction is not grounds for reversal if the error is “harmless.”
    Nottingham v. State, 
    227 Md. App. 592
    , 610 (2016). In Robinson v. State, the Court of
    Appeals explained:
    When an appellant, in a criminal case, establishes error, unless a reviewing
    court, upon its own independent review of the record, is able to declare a belief,
    beyond a reasonable doubt, that the error in no way influenced the verdict, such
    error cannot be deemed harmless and a reversal is mandated. Such reviewing
    court must thus be satisfied that there is no reasonable possibility that the
    evidence complained of—whether erroneously admitted or excluded—may have
    contributed to the rendition of the guilty verdict.
    In performing a harmless error analysis, we are not to find facts or weigh
    evidence. Instead, what evidence to believe, what weight to be given it, and what
    facts flow from that evidence are for the jury to determine. Once it has been
    determined that error was committed, reversal is required unless the error did not
    influence the verdict; the error is harmless only if it did not play any role in the
    jury’s verdict. The reviewing court must exclude that possibility beyond a
    reasonable doubt. To say that an error did not contribute to the verdict is, rather,
    to find that error unimportant in relation to everything else the jury considered on
    the issue in question, as revealed by the record. The harmless error rule has been
    30
    and should be carefully circumscribed. Harmless error review is the standard of
    review most favorable to the defendant short of an automatic reversal.
    
    436 Md. 560
    , 563 (2014) (quotation marks, citations and ellipses omitted).
    The State argues that the instructional errors were harmless because the concept of
    self-defense—whether perfect or imperfect and regardless of whether the defendant
    asserts that he or she suffered from battered spouse syndrome—should not have been
    presented to the jury through the court’s instructions because Mr. Porter was not killed by
    Ms. Porter but by a hired assassin who was present at the gas station on the fatal morning
    solely through a conspiracy orchestrated by her. Therefore, according to the State, any
    error in the self-defense instruction is harmless. The State relies on Evans v. State, 
    28 Md. App. 640
    , 669 (1975) (“Erroneous instructions on non-issues are self-evidently
    immaterial.”). As Judge Moylan explained for this Court in Evans,
    When a defendant has . . . no right even to take an issue before the jury, any
    instruction on such an issue (erroneous or not) is more than he is entitled to.
    When any consideration of an issue by the fact finder (court or jury) would
    properly be totally foreclosed, the defendant cannot complain that the issue was
    submitted under an unduly heavy burden upon him, since he has, even in that
    event, received more than he deserved.
    
    Id. at 668.14
    14
    As additional authority, the State cites, among other cases, Newborn v. State, 29 Md.
    App. 85, 87-92 (1975) (An erroneous jury instruction that purported to place burden on
    the defendant to prove mitigation, excuse, or justification was harmless where defendant
    denied agency and there was no evidence to generate issues of justification, excuse or
    mitigation.); and Burko v. State, 
    28 Md. App. 732
    (1975) (A jury instruction that
    erroneously placed burden of proving mitigation on defendant was harmless error where
    defendant offered no defense).
    31
    Whether an instruction on self-defense is generated in a case involving battered
    spouse syndrome, where the battered spouse contracts for the murder of the abusive
    spouse, is an issue of first impression in Maryland. The only two Maryland cases that
    address the interaction of self-defense and battered spouse syndrome are State v. Smullen
    and State v. Peterson. We will look to the reasoning of the Court of Appeals and this
    Court for guidance in resolving the one before us.
    In Smullen, the defendant, a teenager, “crept up behind [his father],” Warren, as he
    sat on the living room sofa, and repeatedly stabbed him with a butcher’s 
    knife. 380 Md. at 240
    . At trial, Smullen pursued perfect and imperfect self-defense. 
    Id. at 244.
    He sought
    to support his claim of self-defense with evidence that his father had been physically
    abusive and that he suffered from battered child syndrome. 
    Id. at 238,
    244-47. The trial
    court excluded the testimony concerning the alleged physical abuse, on the ground that
    “there was no factual predicate for a self-defense argument,” and the testimony regarding
    Smullen’s psychological profile, on the ground that CJP § 10-916’s provision for “co-
    habitants” did not include children. 
    Id. at 244-47.
    On appeal, the Court of Appeals first held “that the battered spouse syndrome, as
    recognized in § 10-916, applies as well to battered children.” 
    Id. at 268.15
    However, the
    Court concluded that “there was no evidentiary basis” to apply the battered child
    15
    In reaching this holding, the Court concluded “that the elements of the battered spouse
    syndrome that can help explain why a battered woman may perceive imminent serious
    harm from conduct that would not likely be regarded as imminently threatening by
    someone else and may regard her conduct as necessary to meet that threat apply equally
    with respect to battered 
    children.” 380 Md. at 271
    .
    32
    syndrome in Smullen’s case. 
    Id. at 274.16
    Id. at 271. 
    In reaching these conclusions, the
    Court undertook a comprehensive analysis of the law of self-defense and battered spouse
    syndrome, and how the two operate together.
    Among its observations, the Court noted that the cases in which evidence of battered
    spouse syndrome has been introduced to support a claim of self-defense are generally
    categorized as being “confrontational” or “non-confrontational.” 
    Id. at 257.
    As the
    names suggest, “confrontational” cases are those in which “the killing occurs when the
    defendant uses deadly force in response to a contemporaneous physical attack,” and
    “non-confrontational” cases are those in which “the defendant kills her partner while he
    is sleeping or is otherwise distracted or incapacitated.” 
    Id. The Court
    explained that, in
    general, introduction of battered spouse syndrome evidence “proved less difficult” in
    confrontational cases because the reasonableness of the defendant’s belief that she was
    “in imminent threat of death or serious bodily harm” was not at issue. 
    Id. at 257-58.
    In
    non-confrontational cases, however, courts have been more hesitant to admit syndrome
    evidence because the subjective reasonableness element of self-defense is directly at
    issue where, at the moment of the killing, “the [victim] was not . . . directly confronting
    [the defendant] and may . . . even have been sleeping or completely passive at the time.”
    
    Id. at 258.
    The Court also noted that there is, at least arguably, a “third category—that of
    16
    That the evidence presented was not sufficient to provide a basis for the introduction of
    evidence of the battered spouse syndrome is not an issue in the case before us. Through
    the testimony of Ms. Porter and Megan Porter, the defense presented evidence of a
    pattern of severe psychological, physical, and verbal abuse that extended over the course
    of many years.
    33
    contract killing.” In such cases, ‘“courts have unanimously refused to permit instructions
    to the jury on self-defense 
    claims[.]’” 380 Md. at 274
    n.5 (quoting John W. Roberts,
    Between the Heat of Passion and Cold Blood: Battered Woman’s Syndrome as an Excuse
    for Self-Defense in Non-Confrontational Homicides, 27 LAW & PSYCHOL. REV. 135, 144
    (2003)).
    This Court addressed battered spouse syndrome and self-defense in the non-
    confrontational setting in State v. Peterson, a post-conviction relief case.17 Peterson shot
    and killed her husband “as he was sitting in a chair in their living room, watching
    television.” 
    158 Md. App. 558
    , 565 (2004). There was evidence that Peterson had been
    the victim of severe psychological and physical abuse throughout her twenty-six and a-
    half-year marriage. 
    Id. at 567-68.
    The issue before us was whether the post-conviction court erred in granting the
    petition on the grounds of ineffective assistance of counsel, where counsel “either failed
    to investigate battered spouse syndrome or abandoned evidence of the syndrome in
    putting on a defense.” 
    Id. at 564.
    In affirming the judgment of the post-conviction court,
    we explained that it was apparent that trial counsel did not understand that, in light of the
    facts, the “defense of imperfect self-defense only could be presented to the jury upon the
    introduction of evidence of battered spouse syndrome. 
    Id. at 597.
    And, thus, “[w]hen
    trial counsel failed to introduce the evidence, the defense was kept from the jury, in a
    17
    Peterson’s convictions for first degree murder and use of a handgun in the commission
    of a felony were affirmed on direct appeal. Peterson v. State, 
    101 Md. App. 153
    , cert.
    denied, 
    336 Md. 559
    (1994).
    34
    ruling that was legally correct.” 
    Id. We concluded
    that imperfect self-defense may be
    generated in a non-confrontation case, stating:
    If trial counsel had introduced factual and expert opinion evidence of
    battered spouse syndrome, which was available and which he knew or
    should have known was available, the defense of imperfect self-defense
    would have been generated, and would have been presented to the jury to
    decide. It is reasonably probable that, if that defense had been decided by
    the jury, the result of the proceeding would have been different.
    
    Id. This brings
    us back to the current appeal. Read together, Smullen and Peterson
    instruct that, with a proper evidentiary basis, the battered spouse syndrome is relevant to
    the state of mind elements for self-defense and imperfect self-defense in certain types of
    confrontational and non-confrontational homicides. However, these cases, as well as
    Banks v. State, make it clear that the Battered Spouse Syndrome Statute does not
    establish a new defense but rather permits “a more careful and sophisticated look” at the
    state of mind elements of self-defense: “[t]he syndrome, when applied in a proper setting,
    can thus. . . support both the subjective honesty of the defendant’s perception of
    imminent harm and the objective reasonableness of such a perception.” 
    Smullen, 380 Md. at 250
    –51 (emphasis added). Neither Smullen nor Peterson addressed murder for hire.
    However, courts from other jurisdictions have done so.
    Murder for hire cases fall into two categories: cases in which courts permit evidence
    of the battered spouse syndrome, but refuse to give an instruction on self-defense; and
    second, cases in which courts refuse to admit evidence of the battered spouse syndrome.
    We shall address each in turn.
    35
    Where the courts have concluded that defendants, who contracted for the murder
    of their spouses, were not entitled to an instruction on self-defense, they have reasoned
    that the defendants failed to present evidence that, at the time of the killing, there were in
    immediate or imminent danger. People v. Yaklich, 
    833 P.2d 758
    , 763 (Colo. App. 1991);
    State v. Leaphart, 
    673 S.W.2d 870
    , 873 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1983).
    The facts in Yaklich are analogous to those in the case before us. Yaklich’s husband
    was shot and killed in the driveway to his home, while the defendant was asleep inside
    the house. 
    Id. at 759.
    “After her husband’s death, [the defendant] received payment
    under his three life insurance policies, and she admitted that she paid [his assailants]
    $4,200 . . . for murdering her husband.” 
    Id. At trial,
    her defense was that she suffered
    from “battered woman syndrome,” and thus “her actions were justifiable acts of self-
    defense.” 
    Id. The Colorado
    Court of Appeals concluded that the trial court erred in
    providing the jury with an instruction on self-defense because the evidence presented
    “was insufficient . . . to support her theory that she was in imminent danger at the time
    her husband was killed.” 
    Id. at 763.
    In reaching this conclusion, the court pointed to
    evidence that the defendant had (1) “approached several people about having her husband
    killed,” (2) met with the ultimate assailant “several times over an eight month period,” (3)
    “paid the [assailants] after they killed her husband,” and (4) slept, inside the house, while
    “the contract killing was performed.” 
    Id. The Court
    of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee arrived at the same conclusion in
    State v. Leaphart. There, the defendant paid her husband’s assailants $10,000 for his
    murder, was present when he was beaten to death, and assisted in disposing of his body.
    
    36 673 S.W.2d at 872
    . The evidence presented at trial established that the defendant
    “suffered repeated instances of physical abuse at the hands of [her husband],” but the
    court refused to give an instruction on self-defense. 
    Id. at 872-73.
    In affirming the
    defendant’s conviction, the Court of Criminal Appeals found no error on the part of the
    trial court because there was no evidence that the defendant was in imminent danger at
    the time of the murder. 
    Id. at 873.
    As to the second category of cases, Missouri has refused to permit the introduction of
    expert testimony on the battered spouse syndrome in cases involving murder for hire.
    State v. Anderson, 
    785 S.W.2d 596
    , 600 (Mo. Ct. App. 1990). In Anderson, the Missouri
    Court of Appeals explained that it was proper for the trial court to exclude expert
    testimony that the defendant was suffering from the battered spouse syndrome because its
    battered spouse syndrome statute requires a prima facie showing of self-defense before
    such evidence could be introduced. 
    Id. The court
    reasoned that the defendant could not
    make a prima facie showing of self-defense where the defendant had “hired and lured the
    killers into the crime[,] [t]here was no evidence of self-defense of assaults of the husband
    when he was shot[, the defendant] had been talking for over three months prior to the
    murder about how to have her husband killed,” and the defendant had paid the assailants
    out of the insurance proceeds she received after her husband’s death.18 
    Id. 18 The
    Missouri Court of Appeals reached a similar conclusion in State v. Martin, 
    666 S.W.2d 895
    , 899 (Mo. Ct. App. 1984), prior to the passage of Missouri’s battered spouse
    syndrome statute. The defendant sought to introduce expert testimony on the battered
    spouse syndrome to support her defense that she hired a third party to kill her husband as
    a means of self-defense, but it was excluded. 
    Id. The Missouri
    Court of Appeals
    concluded: “The [trial] court did not err in ruling that [defendant] had failed to make a
    37
    We turn back to the case before us. We recognize that, at trial, Ms. Porter presented
    evidence that she had endured years of severe physical and psychological abuse at the
    hands of Mr. Porter, and that she was suffering from the battered spouse syndrome.
    A “requested jury instruction is applicable if the evidence is sufficient to permit a
    jury to find its factual predicate.” Bazzle v. State, 
    426 Md. 541
    , 550 (2012). “The
    threshold determination of whether the evidence is sufficient to generate the desired
    instruction is a question of law for the judge.” 
    Id. at 550
    (citing Dishman v. State, 
    352 Md. 279
    , 292–93, 300 (1998)).
    In our view, the factual predicate at issue is whether, at the time Mr. Porter was
    killed, Ms. Porter honestly, albeit subjectively, believed that she was in imminent, that is
    to say, immediate, danger of death or serious bodily harm. 
    Faulkner, 301 Md. at 485
    .
    There was certainly evidence from which the jury could have found that Ms. Porter had
    felt herself in imminent danger of death on occasions in the weeks and months before Mr.
    Porter’s death, but there was no evidence that she had such a belief on the morning of the
    murder.
    Because there was no evidence that Ms. Porter was in fear of imminent danger of
    death or serious bodily harm at the time that Mr. Porter was shot, there was insufficient
    evidence to generate a jury instruction on self-defense. Ms. Porter thus never should have
    received an instruction on self-defense, and cannot now complain that the court’s
    prima facie showing of the elements of self-defense. It follows that the court did not err
    in refusing to admit the expert testimony offered for the purpose of corroborating such a
    defense.” 
    Id. 38 instruction
    was improper.19 As this Court explained in Evans, “[w]hen a defendant . . .
    has no right even to take an issue before the jury, any instruction on such issue (erroneous
    or not) is more than he is entitled to.” 
    Id. at 668.
    Accordingly, we conclude that the
    errors in the court’s imperfect self-defense instruction were harmless.20
    The Battered Spouse Syndrome Instruction
    In her brief, Ms. Porter contends that the battered spouse syndrome “requires that
    juries be permitted to find imperfect self-defense in cases where the defendant was the
    aggressor, failed to retreat, and used excessive force.” Certainly, our analysis in Peterson
    suggests that trial counsel in that case should have pursued those arguments in that case
    but the facts of Peterson are very different from those of the present case. Ms. Peterson,
    who like Ms. Porter, presented evidence of a long history of spousal abuse, shot and
    killed her husband while he was watching 
    television. 158 Md. App. at 565
    . The shooting
    19
    The Court asked the parties to submit supplemental briefing on harmless error, during
    oral argument. Both parties filed supplemental briefs.
    20
    See also, State v. Buggs, 
    806 P.2d 1381
    (Ariz. Ct. App. 1990) (Erroneous self-defense
    instructions were harmless error because there was no evidence that defendant’s action
    was immediately necessary to prevent the harm he feared); People v. Najera, 41 Cal.
    Rptr. 3d 244 (Cal. Ct. App. 2006) (the court declined to reach appellant’s contention that
    “sudden quarrel or heat of passion” language in voluntary manslaughter instruction was
    ambiguous because evidence that victim called defendant a “faggot” was insufficient to
    generate voluntary manslaughter instruction); State v. Bush, 
    297 S.E.2d 563
    (N.C. 1982)
    (Erroneous self-defense instructions were harmless error because there was no evidence
    that defendant in fact believed he had to kill to prevent death or great bodily harm, nor
    was there any evidence that such a belief would have been reasonable.), habeas corpus
    granted by Bush v. Stephenson, 
    669 F. Supp. 1322
    (E.D.N.C. 1986), aff’d, 
    826 F.2d 1059
    ; State v. Martin, 
    278 S.E.2d 315
    (N.C. Ct. App. 1981) (Any error in instruction on
    defense of habitation was harmless because evidence did not support a finding that
    defendant shot deceased while he was attempting to forcibly enter trailer).
    39
    was triggered by the fact that, a short time earlier, Peterson had seen her husband setting
    a fire in close proximity to some of their animals, 
    id. at 575,
    some of whom he had
    previously brutalized. 
    Id. at 572.
    In contrast, Ms. Porter began soliciting acquaintances to murder Mr. Porter nine
    months before the crime was committed. She and Bishop finalized their agreement that
    Bishop would kill Mr. Porter about two weeks before the murder. On the day of the
    murder, she falsely alerted Mr. Porter that the alarm had gone off at the gas station, thus
    causing him to go to the gas station earlier than an ordinary work day. In the time
    between her call to Mr. Porter, which occurred at approximately 2:30 a.m., and the time
    at which Mr. Porter was shot, Ms. Porter participated in more than 50 phone calls with
    Bishop and Mowers. And, before she herself went to the gas station, Ms. Porter met
    Bishop, Mowers, and Brown, at a nearby McDonald’s to ensure that Bishop still intended
    to shoot Mr. Porter. In our view, her active participation in an elaborate conspiracy to kill
    her husband places her outside of the class of persons for whose protection the Battered
    Spouse Statute was enacted.
    II. The Jury Note
    Ms. Porter’s second contention arises from the trial court’s refusal to voir dire the
    jury, after receiving a jury note suggesting that, during their deliberations, the jurors were
    “speculating” about information not presented during trial. The text of the jury note is as
    follows (underlining in original):
    There is speculation in the jury room about information not in evidence.
    For example, was Ms. Porter motivated by money, as in a large life
    insurance policy. Also discussion of sentences for others involved in crime
    40
    including Walter Bishop and Susan Datta. Are these appropriate subjects
    for the jury?
    Also, please clarify that all elements of a crime must be met to find
    guilty. Not just any or some elements.
    After the court read the note into the record, counsel for Ms. Porter moved for a
    mistrial. Counsel expressed concern that the jury was using information obtained from
    outside sources regarding the sentences of other defendants. In response, the State
    argued that the note did not necessarily mean that the jurors had discussed Bishop’s and
    Datta’s sentences. Rather, the State suggested that the note could be an inquiry as to
    whether “[the jurors should] know what the sentences were or if there were sentences.”
    The State asserted that the jurors should be instructed that “they shouldn’t speculate as to
    what happened with any other Defendant in this case and it is not a proper subject for
    their consideration in determining the guilt or innocence of this particular Defendant.”
    Defense counsel requested that, at the very least, the jurors be interviewed.
    The court denied the motion for mistrial and refused to interview the jurors. The
    court instructed the jurors as follows:
    The next question that you have posed indicates that, “There is
    speculation in the jury room about information not in evidence. For
    example, was [Ms.] Porter motivated by money as in a large life insurance
    policy? Also discussions of sentences for others involved in the crime
    including Walter Bishop and Susan Datta.” Then the ultimate sentence in
    this note is, “Are these appropriate subjects for the jury?” The answer to
    that question is no. You are not to speculate about things that you may
    have opinions on or beliefs about that are not in evidence in this case.
    I will repeat that during your deliberations, you must decide this case
    based only on the evidence that you and your fellow jurors heard together
    in the courtroom. That you are not to perform any outside research or
    investigation and you are certainly not to speculate about subject matters
    about which no evidence was introduced in this case.
    41
    On appeal, Ms. Porter asserts that the jury note suggested that there was misconduct
    on the part of the jury, and that the court abused its discretion in declining to voir dire the
    jurors, to determine whether there was impropriety and whether the jurors were capable
    of rendering an impartial verdict, before denying her motion for a mistrial. She identifies
    a number of improper actions, which she alleges one or more of the jurors could have
    undertaken, including: obtaining information about the convictions and sentences of
    Bishop and Datta, through news media or interactions with third parties; and failing to
    disclose during the initial voir dire that they had knowledge of such information. Ms.
    Porter contends that such knowledge by the jurors would have been prejudicial to her
    case because they might have been more concerned with ensuring that she received a
    harsher sentence than her co-conspirators, considering the defenses she presented.
    The State counters that the court did not abuse its discretion. The State asserts that
    the content of the note referred to speculation, rather than receipt of information. The
    State directs our attention to the fact that the note said neither that the jury had
    information about a life insurance policy nor that the jury had information about Bishop’s
    and Datta’s sentences. Moreover, with regard to the life insurance policy inquiry, the
    State notes that there is “nothing in the entire record . . . that there is such information.”
    And, with regard to Bishop’s and Datta’s sentences, the State suggests that “[i]n
    connection with the reading of Datta’s and Coyle’s testimony, the jury had been advised
    that there had been ‘cases against them brought in this court’ and so could infer that the
    same was true of Bishop.” And, as a result, the State contends “[i]t was not unreasonable
    to conclude that the jury merely speculated about these co-conspirators’ sentences,
    42
    without having any specific information as to what their sentences were.” The State thus
    contends that the court properly exercised its discretion in declining the invitation to
    interview the jurors and, instead, providing the jurors with a “cautionary instruction.”
    Neither party disputes that, as a general matter, communications between jurors and
    outside sources are presumptively prejudicial because they implicate a criminal
    defendant’s right to trial by an impartial jury, guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment to the
    United States Constitution and Article 21 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights. See
    Dillard v. State, 
    415 Md. 445
    , 454-55 (2010). Ordinarily, where there is such an
    allegation of misconduct, the trial court will voir dire the jurors to determine whether the
    contact was prejudicial. 
    Id. at 461
    (“An examination of the case law on issues of juror
    misconduct demonstrates that the court has a duty to fully investigate allegations of juror
    misconduct before ruling on a motion for mistrial, and that failure to conduct a voir dire
    examination of the jurors before resolving the issue of prejudice is an abuse of the trial
    judge’s discretion.). Where, however, “there was no allegation that the jurors actually
    received prejudicial information, only [the suggestion] that it was possible,” the Court of
    Appeals has upheld the trial court’s determination with regard to prejudice, despite the
    fact that the court did not voir dire the jury. 
    Id. at 463
    (distinguishing the case before it
    from Bruce v. State, 
    351 Md. 387
    (1998)).
    Neither at trial, nor on appeal, has Ms. Porter directed the court to any evidence that
    so much as suggests that any juror consulted with any third party or outside source to
    acquire information about Datta’s or Bishop’s sentence. Ms. Porter’s argument depends
    43
    entirely on the possibility of misconduct. We quote from Ms. Porter’s brief (emphasis
    added; footnote omitted):
    In this case, the jury’s note raised the possibility of several different kinds
    of misconduct. It is possible that one or more jurors had consulted news
    media during their deliberations and learned of the convictions and
    sentences of Bishop and Datta or that they had interacted with third parties
    who provided the information. The possibility exists that some jurors
    already knew of this information prior to trial, but failed to reveal it on voir
    dire. It is possible that the discussions of this extra-record evidence were
    protracted or they may have been brief. They may have involved one juror
    or all. “Because the content of the contact raised these potential serious
    issues, it was incumbent upon the trial judge to resolve the factual
    controversy that relates to the juror’s ability to render an impartial verdict.”
    
    Dillard, 415 Md. at 458
    [.]
    We cannot conclude that the court abused its discretion in refusing Ms. Porter’s
    invitation to interview the jurors on the basis of speculation. In light of the information
    before it, the court’s decision to do nothing beyond instructing the jurors not to speculate
    about matters not in evidence was reasonable.
    III. Ms. Porter’s Statement to the Police
    Ms. Porter’s final contention is that the court erred in denying her motion to suppress
    her custodial statement. Ms. Porter identifies two grounds on which she asserts her
    statement should have been suppressed – that she did not validly waive her Miranda
    rights and that she invoked her right to counsel in the course of the interrogation. We
    shall address each in turn. We begin with our standard of review.
    The Court of Appeals has articulated the standard pursuant to which we review an
    appeal from a denial of a motion to suppress as follows:
    In reviewing the Circuit Court’s ruling on the motion [to suppress], we consider
    only the facts and information contained in the record of the suppression hearing.
    44
    We view the evidence and inferences that may be reasonably drawn therefrom in
    a light most favorable to the prevailing party on the motion[.] We defer to the
    motions court’s factual findings and uphold them unless they are shown to be
    clearly erroneous. We, however, make our own independent constitutional
    appraisal, by reviewing the relevant case law and applying it to the facts and
    circumstances of this case.
    State v. Luckett, 
    413 Md. 360
    , 375 n.3 (2010) (internal citations and quotation marks
    omitted).
    The Waiver of Miranda Rights
    Ms. Porter’s March 6, 2010, interview with the Baltimore County Police was
    recorded, and subsequently transcribed. Both the recording and the transcription were
    made part of the record before the suppression court. We begin with the exchange
    between Detective Hinton and Ms. Porter, during which she waived her Miranda rights:
    DET. HINTON:         We’ve talked a couple of times. We’ve never gone over this
    but since you’re up here we got some people that are going to be coming up here.
    I need to read you your rights. All right. I don’t want you to freak out or
    anything.
    MS. PORTER: Why am I being arrested?
    DET. HINTON: You’re not being arrested, all right.
    You’re not under arrest right now. All right, but I have to read you your rights.
    MS. PORTER: Okay.
    DET. HINTON: All right. I want you to understand that we’re going to go over
    some things again.
    MS. PORTER: Okay.
    DET. HINTON: All right. And I just want you to be truthful with me and just talk
    to me.
    MS. PORTER: I’ve been truthful with you.
    DET. HINTON: And I know you have.
    MS. PORTER: I have been.
    DET. HINTON:         I know you have been and that’s all we’re going to do, just
    45
    talk over what we talked before.
    MS. PORTER: I know what this is about. It’s my tenant, that’s what it is. I
    know that’s what it is. Because he thinks, because he and Ray were arguing,
    playing arguing, he thinks that they think it’s him.
    DET. HINTON:        Okay.
    MS. PORTER: And he wanted to go away. Let’s do this and we’ll talk. We’ll
    talk.
    DET. HINTON:        I’m going to read it and then I’m going to have you read it
    and then I’m going to have you sign, just saying that you understand it.
    MS. PORTER: What? I can’t see it.
    DET. HINTON: You can’t, you need your glasses?
    MS. PORTER: They took everything. I can maybe make it out.
    DET. HINTON: Okay, the first line says you have the absolute right to remain
    silent.
    MS. PORTER: Okay.
    DET. HINTON: Do you understand that?
    MS. PORTER: Okay.
    DET. HINTON:        Do you understand it though?
    MS. PORTER: Uh-huh.
    DET. HINTON:         Okay, just initial here saying you understand. Anything you
    say can and will be used against you in a court of law.
    MS. PORTER: Okay.
    DET. HINTON:        You understand that?
    MS. PORTER: Uh-huh.
    DET. HINTON:         You have the right to talk with a lawyer at any time before
    or during any questioning. Do you understand that?
    MS. PORTER: Okay.
    DET. HINTON: If you want a lawyer and cannot afford one, you can request the
    court to appoint a lawyer prior to any questioning. Do you understand that?
    MS. PORTER: Okay. That means if I need a lawyer they’ll give me one.
    DET. HINTON:         Uh-huh. And if, if you agree to answer questions, you may
    stop at any time and no further questions will be asked of you.
    MS. PORTER: Okay.
    46
    DET. HINTON:         Do you understand that?
    MS. PORTER: Uh-huh.
    DET. HINTON:         Can you read this clear enough to read it out to me?
    MS. PORTER: All of it or -
    DET. HINTON:         Just that one line.
    MS. PORTER: Okay, um, I have read and understand this explanation of my
    rights. My decision is to waive these rights and to be interviewed is free and
    voluntary on my part. Okay, what does that mean? That I’m waiving all of this?
    DET. HINTON:         Right. What it’s saying is I have read you what your rights
    are.
    MS. PORTER: Okay.
    DET. HINTON:          And that at any time you want to go and you say I want to
    invoke this right, you can. You can stop at any time.
    MS. PORTER: I can sign this and say well I don’t want to talk to nobody or
    whatever?
    DET. HINTON:         But signing this says that I explained your rights to you,
    that’s what it says.
    MS. PORTER: Okay.
    DET. HINTON: And that you have read all of your rights and you understand
    exactly what we’re talking about.
    MS. PORTER: I’ve never had to do any of this. I don’t know.
    DET. HINTON: I know.
    MS. PORTER: I don’t know.
    DET. HINTON: Today’s date is the sixth.
    MS. PORTER: March.
    DET. HINTON: And it’s twelve minutes to twelve.
    MS. PORTER: Forty-eight?
    DET. HINTON: Yes. Sorry. All right. Okay. So.
    MS. PORTER: Tell me what’s going on.
    DET. HINTON: All right, what’s going on is we just need to talk about what
    happened again. All right? Just explain it to us and just be as clear as you
    possibly can.
    MS. PORTER: Okay.
    47
    The suppression court denied Ms. Porter’s motion to suppress the statements she
    made to law enforcement, finding Ms. Porter’s waiver of her Miranda rights to be
    “knowing and voluntary.”21
    On appeal, Ms. Porter argues that her waiver was invalid because it “was the product
    of deception and was made without a full understanding of her rights.” In support of the
    contention that the waiver was the product of deception, Ms. Porter points to the fact that
    Detective Hinton stated that she was not under arrest. With regard to her contention that
    she did not understand her rights, Ms. Porter asserts that her statement, “I can sign this
    and say well I don’t want to talk to nobody or whatever?” establishes a misunderstanding
    as to the implications of signing the waiver form. Ms. Porter asserts that Detective
    Hinton failed to resolve the misunderstanding when he told her that signing the form
    indicated that he had read her rights. And, further, that after he corrected himself and
    informed Ms. Porter that signing the form also indicated that she understood her rights,
    and she stated “I’ve never done any of this before. I don’t know,” he took no action to
    ensure that she understood her rights.
    The State counters that Ms. Porter’s waiver was both knowing and voluntary. In
    support the State directs us to the circuit court’s conclusion that “‘[t]here was no fatal
    trickery, deception or artifice employed by Detectives Hinton or Anderson, nor were
    there any fatal inducements, nor any coercion, during or before the Defendant’s oral and
    21
    Two suppression hearings were held regarding Ms. Porter’s statements to law
    enforcement, one on January 5, 2011, and the other on December 8, 2011. The circuit
    court did not find grounds to suppress Ms. Porter’s statements after either hearing.
    48
    written waivers of her right to remain silent and her right to counsel.’” Moreover, with
    regard to Ms. Porter’s contention that Detective Hinton failed to properly advise her of
    her Miranda rights, the State contends that she mischaracterizes her exchange with
    Detective Hinton. And, as to Ms. Porter’s contention that her waiver was the product of
    deception because Detective Hinton stated that she was not under arrest, the State directs
    us to the court’s finding that “Detective Hinton’s statement was a benign mistake….” The
    State also argues that, regardless when Detective Hinton told Ms. Porter that she was
    under arrest, a person in her circumstances “would reasonably have apprehended the
    gravity of her situation.”
    It is well established that a suspect in a criminal case must be advised of their Fifth
    and Fourteenth Amendment rights before he or she can be subject to a custodial
    interrogation. State v. Luckett, 
    413 Md. 360
    , 376-77 (2010). Accordingly, law
    enforcement personnel must advise a suspect of the following, before proceeding with an
    interrogation:
    [1] that he has the right to remain silent, [2] that anything he says can be used
    against him in a court of law, [3] that he has the right to the presence of an
    attorney, and [4] that if he cannot afford an attorney one will be appointed for
    him prior to any questioning if he so desires.
    
    Id. at 377-78
    (quoting Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 479 (1966)).
    Where a suspect chooses to waive those rights, the burden is on the State to
    demonstrate that the waiver was “knowing, intelligent, and voluntary.” 
    Id. at 379
    (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). In Luckett, the Court of Appeals
    explained this standard as follows:
    49
    First, the relinquishment of the right must have been voluntary in the sense that it
    was the product of a free and deliberate choice rather than intimidation, coercion,
    or deception. Second, the waiver must have been made with a full awareness
    both of the nature of the right being abandoned and the consequences of the
    decision to abandon it.
    
    Id. (quoting Moran
    v. Burbine, 
    475 U.S. 412
    , 421 (1986)).
    “In determining the constitutional adequacy of a suspect’s waiver of the Miranda
    rights,” we consider “the totality of the warnings.” 
    Id. “[I]f the
    warnings, viewed in the
    totality, in any way misstate the suspect’s rights to silence and counsel, or mislead or
    confuse the suspect with respect to those rights, then the warnings are constitutionally
    infirm, rendering the purported waiver of those rights constitutionally defective and
    requiring suppression of any subsequent statement.” 
    Id. at 380.
    The transcript, set forth in pertinent part above, illustrates that Detective Hinton
    informed Ms. Porter of each of her rights and that she orally confirmed her understanding
    after he read her each right. Additionally, Ms. Porter initialed next to each right to
    indicate that she understood the right and ultimately signed the form stating that she had
    been informed of her rights, that she understood them, and was waiving them. The
    suppression court found that Ms. Porter’s waiver of her Miranda rights was knowing and
    voluntary. On appeal, Ms. Porter identifies individual phrases that, standing alone, might
    suggest that she did not understand her rights.   After our independent review of the
    statements in context, we agree with the suppression court.
    Invocation of the Right to Counsel
    Before the suppression court, Ms. Porter identified four occasions on which she
    requested counsel during her interview with Detective Hinton and Detective Anderson.
    50
    On appeal, she takes issue with the inquiry she made regarding counsel just before she
    told the detectives that she had arranged to have Bishop beat her husband up. The
    following passage from Ms. Porter’s March 6, 2010, interview illustrates the inquiry
    (emphasis added):
    DET. HINTON: At 1:49 a.m. you contact your brother. Okay? At 1:59 you talk to
    him again. At two o’clock in the morning you have a conversation with this guy
    who you don’t know. This guy right here.
    MS. PORTER: Unless he was with my brother. I know the phone went dead and
    he -
    DET. ANDERSON: You’re grasping.
    MS. PORTER: He said his phone went dead.
    DET. HINTON:        You are completely grasping here. Are you understanding
    what we’re saying to you?
    MS. PORTER: I think so.
    DET. HINTON:         We know. We know. We’re not stupid. We’re really good.
    There are people running around this building, you can hear the stomping on the
    floors, running up and down the hallways.
    DET. ANDERSON: And it’s a Saturday. It’s usually empty.
    DET. HINTON: That doesn’t happen. You know why? Because everything is
    coming to an end, Karla.
    MS. PORTER: I know.
    DET. HINTON: This is it. And I don’t know how many times I’ve got to say it.
    I’ve been nothing but good to you.
    MS. PORTER: I know. I guess I need to speak to an attorney then, right? I just,
    I don’t know what else to say or do.
    DET. HINTON: I just came in to hear what you had to say. I just wanted you to
    tell me exactly what was going on. That’s why I came in here. To give you the
    benefit of the doubt. To listen to your version of the events that happened. And
    not to listen to what other people are going to -
    MS. PORTER: (inaudible) that Ray was hollering and screaming.
    DET. HINTON: But I need to know.
    MS. PORTER: And sometimes he would push me and a lot of people knew, you
    know, how he is. But he is such a good, good man. I just, I just wanted someone
    51
    to hit him for me. I didn’t want any of this to happen. I didn’t.
    DET. HINTON: What happened, Karla?
    Ms. Porter asserts that she made an unambiguous request for counsel and that
    Detective Hinton should have ceased the interview as soon as she made the request. In
    support of her contention, Ms. Porter analogizes her request to that of the defendant in
    Ballard v. State—“You mind if I not say no more and just talk to an attorney about
    this?”—which the Court of Appeals concluded was an unambiguous request for an
    attorney. 
    420 Md. 480
    , 494 (2011). And, with regard to her use of the word “right” at
    the end of her request, Ms. Porter asserts that it “indicated only that she, a battered
    woman, in [a] terrifying situation, was attempting to protect herself while still remaining
    deferential to an authority figure.”
    The State counters that “[Ms. Porter’s] reference to needing a lawyer was not only
    qualified by the equivocal phrase ‘I guess,’ but was couched as a question.” The State
    also asserts that Ms. Porter’s statement is distinguishable from that of the defendant in
    Ballard. First, the State contends that rather than expressing a desire as the defendant in
    Ballard did through the phrase “you mind if,” Ms. Porter, through the use of the phrase “I
    guess,” was expressing uncertainty. Second, unlike the defendant in Ballard, who
    followed his request for counsel with the statement “I’d feel more comfortable with [a
    lawyer],” Ms. Porter’s subsequent statement, “‘I just, don’t know what else to say or do,’
    only reinforced her previous expression of indecision…” And, third, the State
    distinguishes the nature of the request. Ms. Porter asked for the detectives’ advice, and
    the detectives declined to respond. In contrast, in Ballard, the defendant decided he
    52
    needed a lawyer and asked the detective if he minded.
    In Ballard v. State, the Court of Appeals addressed invocation of the right to counsel
    after waiver of the Miranda 
    rights. 420 Md. at 488-91
    . The Court explained that where,
    in the course of the custodial interrogation, the accused invokes his right to counsel,
    further questioning is prohibited. 
    Id. at 489.
    Quoting Edwards v. Arizona, 
    451 U.S. 477
    ,
    484-85 (1981), the Court stated:
    when an accused has invoked his right to have counsel present during custodial
    interrogation, a valid waiver of that right cannot be established by showing only
    that he responded to further police-initiated custodial interrogation even if he has
    been advised of his rights . . . [He] is not subject to further interrogation by the
    authorities until counsel has been made available to him, unless the accused
    himself initiates further communication, exchanges, or conversations with the
    police.
    
    Id. at 489.
    Where the accused seeks to invoke this right, however, the request for counsel
    “cannot be equivocal or ambiguous.” 
    Id. at 490.
    Rather, the Court explained:
    [i]nvocation of the Miranda right to counsel “requires, at a minimum, some
    statement that can reasonably be construed to be an expression of a desire for the
    assistance of an attorney.” But if a suspect makes a reference to an attorney that
    is ambiguous or equivocal in that a reasonable officer in light of the
    circumstances would have understood only that the suspect might be invoking
    the right to counsel, our precedents do not require the cessation of questioning.
    Rather, the suspect must unambiguously request counsel. As we have
    observed, “a statement either is such an assertion of the right to counsel or it is
    not.” . . . [A suspect] must articulate his desire to have counsel present
    sufficiently clearly that a reasonable police officer in the circumstances would
    understand the statement to be a request for an attorney. If the statement fails to
    meet the requisite level of clarity, Edwards does not require that the officers stop
    questioning the suspect.
    
    Id. at 490
    (quoting Davis v. United States, 
    512 U.S. 452
    , 459 (1994)) (emphasis in
    original). Notably, officers are not required to stop questioning where the request for
    53
    counsel is ambiguous or equivocal, though the courts have recognized that to ask
    clarifying questions “would be ‘good police practice.’” 
    Id. at 490
    (quoting 
    Davis, 512 U.S. at 461
    ).
    In Ballard, as mentioned above, the Court of Appeals concluded that the statement
    “You mind if I not say no more and just talk to an attorney about this,” amounted to “an
    unambiguous and unequivocal assertion of the right to counsel.” 
    Id. at 491.
    In reaching
    its conclusion, the Court reasoned that “you mind if” is a phrase employed by a speaker
    “about to express a desire,” that is, it is a colloquialism pursuant to which “it is
    reasonably assumed that the speaker is not actually seeking permission to do the thing
    desired or to have the desired thing occur.” 
    Id. at 492-93.
    The Court also explained that,
    even if the statement were a question, “the only question he reasonably posed was
    whether [the detective] ‘mind[ed]’ if [he] stopped talking and got an attorney.” 
    Id. at 493.
    Alternatively, the Court noted that any ambiguity would have been resolved by
    defendant’s response to the detective’s inquiry about what benefit an attorney would be –
    “I’d feel more comfortable with one.” 
    Id. at 494.
    Moreover, the Court distinguished several cases in which the defendants’ requests for
    counsel were deemed to be equivocal. 
    Id. at 492.
    Two of those cases, Davis v. United
    States and Minehan v. State, 
    147 Md. App. 432
    (2002), are instructive. In Davis, the
    Supreme Court could find “no reason to disturb th[e] conclusion” of the lower courts that
    the statement “Maybe I should talk to a lawyer” did not amount to a request for 
    counsel. 512 U.S. at 462
    . And, in Minehan, this Court, despite finding that appellant was not
    subject to a custodial interrogation, noted in dicta that, “[appellant’s] question, ‘Should I
    54
    get a lawyer?,’ was no more effective in invoking a Fifth Amendment right to counsel
    than the question in 
    Davis.” 147 Md. App. at 444
    . In distinguishing Davis and Minehan,
    the Court, in Ballard, described the “requests” for counsel as “suggest[ing] that the
    suspect might want a lawyer.” 
    Ballard, 420 Md. at 492
    (emphasis in original). Neither
    statement “provide[d] any indication that the suspect, at the time the statement was
    uttered, actually desired to have a lawyer present for the remainder of the interrogation.”
    
    Id. Ms. Porter’s
    statement—“I guess I need to speak to an attorney then, right? I just, I
    don’t know what else to say or do”—is not substantively different than those addressed in
    Davis and Minehan. Ms. Porter’s statement was not an “assertion of the right to
    counsel;” rather, as the Ballard Court described the statements in Davis and Minehan, it
    merely “suggest[ed] that [she] might want a lawyer.” Accordingly, Detectives Hinton and
    Anderson were not required to cease the interrogation, and had no obligation to inquire as
    to whether Ms. Porter wished to exercise her right to counsel. We find no error in the
    court’s refusal to suppress Ms. Porter’s custodial statement.
    THE JUDGMENTS OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BALTIMORE
    COUNTY ARE AFFIRMED. APPELLANT TO PAY COSTS.
    55
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1916
    September Term, 2013
    _________________________
    KARLA LOUISE PORTER
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    _________________________
    Kehoe,
    Graeff,
    Friedman,
    JJ.
    _________________________
    Dissenting Opinion by Friedman, J.
    _________________________
    Filed: October 25, 2016
    The State concedes, and we all agree, that the charge to the jury on imperfect self-defense
    was defective. The question, therefore, was whether Ms. Porter produced “some evidence”
    to generate that charge. The majority finds that she did not and therefore affirms Ms.
    Porter’s conviction. I disagree and therefore dissent.1 I think that there are three aspects to
    our disagreement: (1) the “some evidence” standard; (2) the role of imminence; and (3) the
    availability of a self-defense instruction in a contract killing.
    I.
    My colleagues correctly note the “some evidence” standard, ante at 18, but it is worth
    emphasizing just how easy to satisfy that standard is intended to be. Because it can be
    satisfied on the uncorroborated testimony of the defendant, Arthur v. State, 
    420 Md. 512
    ,
    526 (2011) (citing Martin v. State, 
    329 Md. 351
    , 359 (1993)), and because the trial judge
    is not supposed to be making a credibility determination, 
    id., it really
    is that if a defendant
    says that she is relying on a defense, she gets the appropriate instruction. See also Wright
    v. State, 
    70 Md. App. 616
    , 620 (1987) (defendant entitled to instruction even if defense is
    “well nigh incredible as a matter of fact”). Thus, if she says she was under duress, she gets
    1
    To be explicit, I would reverse Ms. Porter’s convictions and remand for a new trial.
    As a result, I would not need to reach the issues of the jury note or her statements to the
    police (although I agree wholeheartedly with the majority’s analysis of those issues). I
    would also reject the State’s alternative argument (which the majority is not compelled to
    reach) that the erroneous jury instruction affected only Ms. Porter’s murder conviction
    but did not infect her convictions for conspiracy to commit murder and solicitation to
    commit murder. To my mind, the failure to properly instruct on the issue of imminence
    infected all of the convictions.
    -1-
    a duress instruction; if she says that she was acting in self-defense, she gets a self-defense
    instruction. There is no more to it than that.2
    II.
    I read Smullen as establishing a two-step procedure in battered spouse syndrome cases:
    When a defendant claiming self-defense offers foundational
    evidence which, if believed, would establish the requisite
    pattern of abuse sufficient to provide a base for an expert
    opinion as to the battered spouse/child syndrome, it should be
    admitted, so that it can be followed by the expert
    testimony. The syndrome evidence would then play its proper
    role in explaining why and how, in light of that pattern of
    abuse, the defendant could honestly, and perhaps reasonably,
    perceive an imminent threat of immediate danger.
    
    Id. at 273
    (emphasis added). As I read Smullen then, once the defendant produces sufficient
    evidence of a pattern of abuse, then expert testimony becomes admissible to explain how
    a person that is subject to such a pattern of abuse, might perceive herself to be in “imminent
    threat of immediate harm” despite that others who are not themselves the victims of this
    pattern of abuse might not find it so. At that point, the defendant is entitled to an appropriate
    instruction and the jury is entitled to consider self-defense.
    In Smullen, the defendant failed at Step One: he didn’t produce sufficient evidence of
    a pattern of abuse. 
    Id. at 273
    -74. Therefore, he never got to Step Two. Because the
    defendant in Smullen didn’t get there, the Smullen majority opinion only provides hints
    2
    And Smullen is not to the contrary. In Smullen, the majority and dissent sparred
    over the question of whether the defendant had generated “some evidence” of a pattern of
    abuse sufficient to require the admissibility of expert testimony regarding the battered
    child syndrome, but both sides agreed that “some evidence” was the correct evidentiary
    standard. 
    Smullen, 380 Md. at 274
    n.14 (majority), 277-279, 285 (dissent).
    -2-
    about Step Two. But I read the quote from Smullen, above, as saying that expert testimony
    alone, if believed, can explain why someone subject to a pattern of abuse, would perceive
    imminence differently than a person who has not been subject to such a pattern of abuse.
    Applying this procedure to the current case, the trial judge found, and I would affirm,
    that Ms. Porter produced evidence of a pattern of abuse (Step One). At that point, expert
    testimony became admissible to explain how she might have perceived herself in
    “imminent threat of immediate danger” despite that others, who are not themselves victims
    of this pattern of abuse, might not find it so (Step Two). While the expert testimony that
    Porter produced at Step Two might have been clearer, ante at 14-15, I think it was
    sufficient. Thus, I think that she is entitled to a correct jury instruction and the jury is
    entitled to consider whether it thinks she acted in self-defense, perfect or imperfect.
    The majority disagrees and finds that Ms. Porter’s evidence of imminence was
    insufficient, holding that while she might have established imminence “in the days and
    weeks before” the murder, she failed to establish imminence on “the morning of” the
    murder. Ante at 42. I think this is wrong in two, closely-related dimensions. First, on a
    procedural level, I think Smullen establishes that in this realm, imminence is a subject for
    expert testimony and then a jury question, not an appropriate determination for appellate
    judges. More importantly, however, the whole point of the battered spouse defense is that,
    because of a pattern of abuse, a defendant might perceive the imminence of danger
    differently from someone who has not experienced this pattern of abuse. 
    Id. at 270-71
    (“the
    battered spouse/child syndrome is founded upon a repetitive and increasingly frequent and
    severe cycle of violence that creates a hypervigilance on the part of the defendant and
    -3-
    attunes the defendant to recognize a threat of imminent danger from conduct that would
    not appear imminently threatening to someone who had not been subjected to that repetitive
    cycle of violence.”); see also State v. Janes, 
    121 Wash. 2d 220
    , 241-42 (Wash. 1993)
    (“That the triggering behavior and the abusive episode are divided by time does not
    necessarily negate the reasonableness of the defendant’s perception of imminent harm.
    Even an otherwise innocuous comment which occurred days before the homicide could be
    highly relevant when the evidence shows that such a comment inevitably signaled the
    beginning of an abusive episode.”). Thus, I think that the question of imminence is properly
    a subject for expert testimony, not appellate speculation, and then it becomes a jury
    question.3
    III.
    Finally, I do not read Smullen as foreclosing the possibility of a battered spouse defense
    when the mechanism of death is contract killing. As the majority opinion reports, Judge
    Wilner, writing for the majority in Smullen, noted that there are two categories of battered
    spouse cases:
    The “confrontational” category, where the killing occurs when
    the defendant uses deadly force in response to a
    contemporaneous physical attack; and the “non-
    confrontational” category, where the defendant kills her
    3
    The majority also seems concerned that it is required to reject Ms. Porter’s battered
    spouse defense lest it be criticized, as this Court was in Smullen, for allowing the
    syndrome to “become detached from the recognized defense of self-defense and assume
    the status of a separate, independent defense.” Ante at 26 (quoting Smullen at 251). Not
    only do I not share that concern, I believe that the application that I have proposed above
    follows precisely the traditional defense of self-defense, modified only with “a more
    careful and sophisticated look at the notion of imminent threat and what constitutes
    ‘aggression.’” 
    Smullen, 380 Md. at 250
    .
    -4-
    partner while he is sleeping or is otherwise distracted or
    incapacitated.
    
    Smullen, 380 Md. at 257
    . Judge Wilner then noted in a footnote that “[o]ne writer has
    argued that there is a third category—that of contract killing,” 
    id. at 257
    n.5, and that the
    same writer has found that “in … cases … of a hired killer ‘courts have unanimously
    refused to permit instructions to the jury on self-defense claims.’” 
    Id. (quoting John
    W.
    Roberts, Between the Heat of Passion and Cold Blood: Battered Woman’s Syndrome As
    An Excuse For Self-Defense in Non-Confrontational Homicides, 27 LAW & PSYCHOL. REV.
    135, 141 (2003)). Those comments were obviously dicta in Smullen, which didn’t involve
    a contract killing, and hardly constitute a ringing endorsement of Professor Roberts’s
    view.4 It is hard to miss Judge Wilner’s skepticism about non-confrontational applications
    of the battered spouse syndrome: “non-confrontational settings [that] suggest an ambush
    … severely strain[], and in many cases will rupture, the relationship between the syndrome
    and the defense of self-defense, perfect or imperfect.” 
    Id. at 264-65.
    But he does not
    foreclose the possibility.
    Nothing about the text of CJP §10-916 mentions different categories of cases (other
    than that it is available only in homicide crimes or assault in the first degree, CJP §10-
    916(a)(3)), and nothing in the text suggests that it is limited to only one category of battered
    spouse cases or that it is unavailable in another class. It would have been extraordinary for
    4
    It hardly needs remark that the “unanimous” view of three of our sister intermediate
    state courts of appeal are not binding on us. Ante at 40-41 (citing People v. Yaklich, 
    833 P.2d 758
    , 763 (Colo. App. 1991); State v. Leaphart, 
    673 S.W.2d 870
    , 873 (Tenn. Crim.
    App. 1983); Anderson v. State, 
    785 S.W.2d 596
    , 600 (Mo. Ct. App. 1990)).
    -5-
    the Smullen majority to read into the statute categorical limitations—prohibitions on the
    use of the battered spouse defense in non-confrontational cases or in contract killings—in
    the absence of textual authority. Thus, I think the better reading of Smullen is that Judge
    Wilner was observing not that the defense is unavailable as a matter of law in a category
    of cases, but rather that a jury might not believe the testimony that a defendant was acting
    in self-defense in non-confrontational cases.
    I also don’t think it is appropriate to draw such a categorical line, because I infer from
    the testimony of the experts here that victims of the battered spouse syndrome, conditioned
    by their abusers to feel weak, unempowered, and impotent, might, as a direct result of their
    victimology, select to murder by contract killer rather than do it themselves. Thus, I would
    view murder for hire as a particularly attenuated subspecies of the non-confrontational
    category of battered spouse cases. Ante at 37-38 (discussing non-confrontational-type
    cases). As with all of these non-confrontational type cases, including murders where the
    victim (and batterer) is sleeping or otherwise incapacitated, the question for the jury to
    decide is whether the attenuation was too far and the threat was no longer imminent.
    In summary, I think Ms. Porter elicited some evidence of a pattern of abuse, which
    made her expert testimony regarding imminence admissible. Together, these elements
    entitled her, in my view, to a correct jury instruction so that the jury might determine if it
    believed her self-defense theory of the case.
    -6-