State of Maine v. Mark D. Penley , 2023 ME 7 ( 2023 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                                      Reporter of Decisions
    Decision:  
    2023 ME 7
    Docket:    Oxf-21-400
    Argued:    October 5, 2022
    Decided:   January 19, 2023
    Panel:          STANFILL, C.J., and MEAD, JABAR, CONNORS, and LAWRENCE, JJ.
    STATE OF MAINE
    v.
    MARK D. PENLEY
    LAWRENCE, J.
    [¶1] Mark D. Penley appeals from a judgment of conviction of two counts
    of intentional or knowing murder, 17-A M.R.S. § 201(1)(A) (2018),1 entered by
    the trial court (Oxford County, Warren, J.) after a jury trial and from his two
    concurrent life sentences. He challenges the court’s admission of evidence that
    one of the victims was planning to seek a court order of protection from abuse
    against him in the days before the victims’ deaths; the court’s failure to respond
    to the prosecutor’s suggestion, during closing argument, that Penley had a
    1  Because of statutory amendments enacted since the relevant time, see, e.g., P.L. 2019, ch. 462,
    § 3 (effective Sept. 19, 2019) (codified at 17-A M.R.S. § 201(4) (2022)); P.L. 2019, ch. 113, §§ A-1, A-2
    (emergency, effective May 16, 2019) (repealing and replacing sentencing statutes), this opinion cites
    the substantive statutes, including the statutes governing the imposition of the sentences, that were
    in effect at the time of the victims’ deaths in January 2019. See State v. Hardy, 
    489 A.2d 508
    , 512
    (Me. 1985) (holding that “the wrongdoer must be punished pursuant to the law in effect at the time
    of the offense”).
    2
    burden of proof; and the court’s consideration of domestic violence in
    determining the basic term of imprisonment for the crimes. We affirm the
    judgment of conviction but vacate the sentences and remand for resentencing
    consistent with this opinion.
    I. BACKGROUND
    [¶2] Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, the
    jury rationally could have found the following facts beyond a reasonable doubt.
    See State v. Gatto, 
    2020 ME 61
    , ¶ 16, 
    232 A.3d 228
    . On the night of January 1,
    2019, Penley went to the apartment of Dana Hill, where he knew his
    ex-girlfriend, Heather Bickford, was staying, and in the presence of Bickford’s
    two young children,2 repeatedly shot Bickford and Hill, causing their deaths.
    [¶3] On January 4, 2019, Penley was charged by complaint with two
    counts of murder, 17-A M.R.S. § 201(1)(A), for the deaths of the two victims. A
    grand jury indicted him for those charges in February 2019. Penley pleaded
    not guilty to both charges.
    [¶4] Penley moved in limine to exclude testimony from witnesses who
    had heard from Bickford, shortly before her death, that she feared him and was
    2Although Penley had treated the oldest child as his own and wanted to be the father of both
    children, Hill was the children’s biological father.
    3
    planning to seek a court order of protection against him. The State moved in
    limine for the court to admit statements that Bickford had made to others about
    her fear of Penley and her intention to seek an order of protection from abuse.
    After a nontestimonial hearing, the court ruled preliminarily that Bickford’s
    statements to others would be admissible to the extent that they were evidence
    of her existing mental state, intent, or plan, see M.R. Evid. 803(3), but that her
    reasons for wanting to obtain an order of protection—i.e., her underlying
    reports of Penley’s conduct toward her—would not be admissible.
    [¶5] The court held a nine-day trial in October 2021. In addition to other
    testimony and evidence, the court admitted the following testimony, which
    Penley challenges on appeal:
    • The testimony of Bickford’s landlord, a deputy judicial marshal at the
    Rumford courthouse, that in December 2018 Bickford asked her when
    the court would be open so that she could obtain a protection order
    against Penley because she was scared;
    • The testimony of Bickford’s friend that in late December 2018, Bickford
    asked her to accompany her to get a protection order, though Bickford
    did not end up obtaining one because the courthouse was closed;
    • The testimony of another friend of Bickford’s that on December 28, 2018,
    he accompanied Bickford to the South Paris courthouse to speak with a
    law enforcement officer because she had told him she was scared of
    Penley; and
    • The testimony of a police officer that at the courthouse on December 28,
    Bickford met with him and told him that she feared Penley and was going
    4
    to obtain a protection from abuse order against him, and that Bickford
    provided the officer with a description of Penley’s vehicle so that the
    officer could keep a lookout for it while Bickford stayed at Hill’s
    apartment.
    [¶6] After the presentation of evidence, the jury heard closing arguments
    from the parties.        Penley’s counsel argued, in part, that the State had
    manipulated evidence:
    Now, the last thing . . . that I [will] go over with you, ladies
    and gentlemen, is what I call manipulation of evidence,
    manipulation of the facts, whether it’s to correct the mistakes that
    have been made, to supplement data. That’s happening here and it
    needs to be pointed out.
    Counsel addressed multiple instances of what he characterized as
    manipulation, including the State’s handling of Facebook phone location
    tracking data, which he described as “putting it in the order that [they] want,
    manipulation of the evidence, manipulation of what they get from Facebook,
    correcting the errors that they see.”3
    [¶7] The State responded with the now-challenged assertion that “it’s
    easy to make an accusation and not have to back it up with evidence.” The
    prosecutor elaborated and argued that Facebook has a financial motivation for
    ensuring the accuracy of its records and that other evidence, including a
    3The detective who examined the Facebook GPS phone location records testified at length to
    explain the records. He indicated that he had had to sort the data by date and time.
    5
    surveillance video and receipts found in his vehicle, showed that during the day
    of the killings Penley was present at locations that were consistent with the
    locations for his phone compiled by Facebook’s phone tracking system. Penley
    did not object at trial to the prosecutor’s arguments.
    [¶8] The jury found Penley guilty of both charged crimes. The court held
    a sentencing hearing on November 23, 2021. The court heard from family
    members of the victims and considered arguments from both parties before
    delivering its sentences. The court considered the purposes of sentencing and
    conducted the requisite two-step sentencing analysis.4                   See 17-A M.R.S.
    § 1252-C(1)-(2) (2018); State v. Bentley, 
    2021 ME 39
    , ¶ 10, 
    254 A.3d 1171
    .
    [¶9] The court first considered the objective nature and seriousness of
    the crimes to determine the “basic” term of imprisonment—the first step in the
    statutory sentencing process. See 17-A M.R.S. § 1252-C(1). The court set the
    basic term of imprisonment for the crimes at life imprisonment, with the
    sentences to run concurrently. The court based its determination on several
    factors indicating that the murders were among the most serious: Penley
    intended to kill multiple victims, the killings were premeditated, there were
    4  There is no third step in murder sentencing because no period of probation is authorized.
    See 17-A M.R.S. § 1201(1)(A) (2018).
    6
    signs of domestic violence in both the relationship with Bickford and the
    committed crimes, and children were present at the scene of the murder. The
    court then went on at some length about domestic violence:
    And on the domestic violence issue, I don’t have before me
    evidence of exactly what happened during the ten-year
    relationship. That seems to have been an on and off relationship in
    part, but there was a lot of evidence about the end of that
    relationship and although . . . it’s definitely fair to state that there
    appears to have been a complicated relationship there, because
    they remained together . . . at least to some degree, even after
    Mr. Penley learned that [the older child] was not his child, by the
    end . . . it had soured to the point where Mr. Penley, based on those
    Facebook messages, had descended into what I can only describe
    as viciousness . . . . And based on some of the testimony at trial he
    was doing at the end stalking.
    I have no reason to know what happened earlier in the
    relationship but it seems to have been triggered . . . at least in part
    by . . . the fact that not only was [Bickford] leaving but the fact she
    was going to someone else, particularly Mr. Hill, who [Penley]
    demonstrated, I think it’s safe to say, extreme hatred for.
    [¶10] In arriving at the basic term of imprisonment for the crimes, the
    court also compared the facts of this case to two other cases where sentencing
    courts imposed a basic term of imprisonment of life in prison when children
    were present at the scene of the crime. See State v. Waterman, 
    2010 ME 45
    ,
    ¶ 46, 
    995 A.2d 243
     (holding that placing children close to a scene of violence or
    murder can contribute to a determination that the murder is among the most
    serious); State v. Hayden, 
    2014 ME 31
    , ¶¶ 4-6, 19, 
    86 A.3d 1221
     (affirming the
    7
    court’s determination of a basic period of incarceration of life in prison when
    the murder occurred in front of children and involved multiple victims, extreme
    cruelty, and domestic violence).
    [¶11]   In the second step, the court examined the mitigating and
    aggravating factors to determine the maximum sentences. See 17-A M.R.S.
    § 1252-C(2). In mitigation, the court found that Penley was a productive
    member of society in that he held down a job and provided for Bickford and the
    oldest child when they were together and that he was a loving father to the
    oldest child even after he learned that he was not the child’s biological father.
    As aggravating factors, the court considered Penley’s prior misdemeanor
    convictions, the conscious pain and suffering of Bickford, and the impact on the
    families of the victims, including the victims’ two children. The court concluded
    that the aggravating factors outweighed the mitigating factors and imposed two
    concurrent life sentences. The court also ordered Penley to pay $11,423.63 in
    restitution to the Victims’ Compensation Fund and statutorily required fees of
    $70. See 5 M.R.S. § 3360-I (2018).
    [¶12] Penley timely appealed from the judgment of conviction and
    successfully applied to the Sentence Review Panel for appellate review of his
    sentences after the trial court enlarged the time for him to file the petition for
    8
    sentence review.      See 15 M.R.S. §§ 2115, 2151-2152 (2022); M.R.
    App. P. 2B(b)(1), 20(h). We review Penley’s sentences as a part of his appeal
    from the judgment of conviction. See M.R. App. P. 20(h).
    II. DISCUSSION
    [¶13] Penley argues that the court erred in (A) admitting evidence of
    Bickford’s fear of Penley and intention to obtain a protection order against him,
    (B) allowing prosecutorial arguments in closing that implied that Penley had a
    burden of proof, and (C) improperly taking domestic violence into account
    when setting the basic term of imprisonment for the crimes. We address each
    issue in turn.
    A.    Evidence of the Victim’s Intention to Seek a Protection Order
    [¶14] Penley and the State agree that the trial court properly excluded
    evidence of Bickford’s statements to others about Penley’s previous conduct.
    See M.R. Evid. 404(b) (“Evidence of a crime, wrong, or other act is not
    admissible to prove a person’s character in order to show that on a particular
    occasion the person acted in accordance with the character.”). Penley contends,
    however, that the court erred in admitting evidence that Bickford told others
    that she was afraid of Penley and wanted a protection from abuse order against
    him. Penley contends that the evidence was hearsay that is not probative of
    9
    Penley’s motive or his relationship with Bickford and that its admission—even
    to establish Bickford’s then-existing state of mind, see M.R. Evid. 803(3)—was
    unfairly prejudicial and resulted in the jury considering impermissible
    evidence suggesting prior bad acts to show that Penley acted in conformity with
    those acts in committing the charged crime, see M.R. Evid. 403, 404, 803(3).
    [¶15]   We review a ruling admitting or excluding alleged hearsay
    evidence for an abuse of discretion. State v. Tieman, 
    2019 ME 60
    , ¶ 12, 
    207 A.3d 618
    . Hearsay—a statement not made while testifying at the current trial or
    hearing that is offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted in
    the statement—is generally inadmissible. See M.R. Evid. 801(c), 802. Evidence
    is admissible notwithstanding the hearsay rule, however, if it is “[a] statement
    of the declarant’s then-existing state of mind (such as motive, intent, or plan).”
    M.R. Evid. 803(3). “[T]he state of mind hearsay exception [is] limited to
    evidence that is highly relevant and uttered in circumstances indicating its
    truthfulness above and beyond the reliability presumed of all statements of
    present mental state.”    State v. Mahaney, 
    437 A.2d 613
    , 617 (Me. 1981)
    (quotation marks omitted). In addition to the Rule 803(3) requirement that
    state-of-mind evidence be “highly relevant,” see 
    id.,
     Rule 403 of the Maine Rules
    of Evidence calls for the exclusion of evidence if “its probative value is
    10
    substantially outweighed by a danger of . . . unfair prejudice.”           That
    determination is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. See State v. Williams,
    
    2020 ME 128
    , ¶ 29, 
    241 A.3d 835
    .
    [¶16]   Considering the state-of-mind exception in conjunction with
    Rule 403, we agree with other jurisdictions holding that a murder victim’s state
    of mind is generally not probative of the defendant’s state of mind and should
    not be admitted unless it is relevant to rebut a defense or justification that
    brings the deceased person’s state of mind into question. See, e.g., Woods v.
    State, 
    733 So. 2d 980
    , 987-88 (Fla. 1999) (referencing as examples arguments
    that the death resulted from self-defense, suicide, or accident). The Minnesota
    Supreme Court held, for instance, that testimony about a victim’s emotional
    state three months before the murder, when she was seeking an order for
    protection based on the defendant’s previous conduct, did not bear on the
    defendant’s motive to commit the charged crime. State v. Bauer, 
    598 N.W.2d 352
    , 357, 366-67 (Minn. 1999), overruled in part on other grounds by State v.
    McCoy, 
    682 N.W.2d 153
    , 160 n.6 (Minn. 2004). The Colorado Supreme Court
    similarly held that testimony concerning the victim’s opinion that the
    defendant would kill her was not proper state-of-mind evidence because
    references to her state of fear were “significantly overshadowed by references
    11
    to other matters not encompassed by the state of mind exception.” People v.
    Madson, 
    638 P.2d 18
    , 24-25, 30 (Colo. 1981).
    [¶17] As the Supreme Court of Florida stated, “The victim’s hearsay
    statements in a homicide case that the victim was afraid of the defendant
    generally are not admissible under the state of mind exception because the
    victim’s state of mind is not a material issue in a murder case.” Stoll v. State,
    
    762 So. 2d 870
    , 874 (Fla. 2000); see also Anderson v. State, 
    15 S.W.3d 177
    ,
    184 (Tex. App. 2000).            If the state-of-mind evidence conveys information
    beyond that expressly contemplated by Maine Rule of Evidence 803(3), there
    is a significant danger of unfair prejudice. See Bauer, 598 N.W.2d at 367;
    Madson, 638 P.2d at 28-31; M.R. Evid. 403.
    [¶18] Here, the court abused its discretion in admitting evidence of
    Bickford’s statements that she was afraid of Penley and wanted a protection
    order against him. Bickford’s state of mind was not an element of the crime and
    was not probative of whether Penley had the “conscious object” to kill Bickford
    and Hill or was the person who did so. 17-A M.R.S. § 35(1)(A) (2018). In other
    contexts, evidence of a victim’s state of mind may have significant probative
    value and be admissible under Rule 803(3).5 Such evidence, however, is
    5 See, e.g., People v. 
    Thompson, 753
     P.2d 37, 45-47 (Cal. 1988) (holding that the victim’s statement
    that she feared the defendant might kill her—a statement made on the night of the murder in
    12
    generally not admissible when (a) the victim’s state of mind is not relevant to
    either an element of a crime or a defense or justification and (b) the danger of
    unfair prejudice is significant. See M.R. Evid. 403, 803(3); Mahaney, 437 A.2d at
    617.
    [¶19] Nonetheless, “[a]ny error, defect, irregularity, or variance that
    does not affect substantial rights shall be disregarded.” M.R.U. Crim. P. 52(a).
    Here, the court’s admission of the challenged evidence and failure to deliver a
    limiting instruction sua sponte was harmless under this standard given the
    evidence of Penley’s hostile words and conduct toward Bickford before the
    murders, and the substantial other evidence connecting him to the crime.
    See Tieman, 
    2019 ME 60
    , ¶ 18, 
    207 A.3d 618
     (stating that an error is harmless
    if it is “highly probable the error did not affect the jury’s verdict” (quotation
    marks omitted)). The evidence included Penley’s statement to Bickford in a
    recorded message: “You’re threatening to put a PFA on me? Good. I will be
    down tonight. I fucking will. You want to threaten a fuckin’ PFA on me? Fuck
    you, you bitch. Fuck you.” The evidence also included the following:
    circumstances suggesting no motive to fabricate—was admissible because it was probative of
    whether the victim consented to intercourse or was murdered in the commission of a rape as the
    State charged).
    13
    • At the time of the murders, Bickford and Hill were reuniting.
    • Penley was enraged that Bickford was spending time at Hill’s apartment,
    and he contacted Bickford incessantly, leaving voice messages
    demonstrating increasing anger at Bickford and Hill and making threats
    of violence.
    • In the days leading up to the killings, Penley behaved in an intimidating
    and aggressive manner toward Bickford in the presence of others.
    • Penley told a friend that he had previously surreptitiously entered Hill’s
    apartment with a gun while Bickford and the children were asleep there.
    He also told the friend that if he could not have Bickford, nobody could,
    and said that he wanted to shoot Bickford and Hill.
    • Penley dug at least one grave-sized hole near his home.
    • Facebook phone location tracking data indicated that Penley’s phone
    traveled to a lot near Hill’s apartment at 5:40 p.m. on the night of the
    murders and that the phone was turned off or disconnected from the
    network from that time until 7:27 p.m., when the phone was located in
    the town where Penley lived, near the home of a member of Penley’s
    family.
    • Security footage captured a dark figure entering the area where the
    killings took place at 5:51 p.m. and exiting at 6:19 p.m., with a person next
    approaching at 8:25 p.m. Penley called the police from Hill’s apartment
    at 8:26 p.m.
    • At the crime scene, police found a gun in Bickford’s hand that had a serial
    number matching a gun box found at Penley’s home.
    • Eight cartridge casings recovered from the scene bore tool markings that
    matched the tool markings produced by the gun found at the crime scene.
    The gun was not excluded as the source of the marks on the bullets
    recovered from the victims’ bodies and the crime scene.
    14
    • Penley had ammunition in his vehicle and home that matched the
    ammunition that was fired in Hill’s apartment. A gun magazine found in
    Penley’s home was stained with Bickford’s blood.
    • Penley’s boots, which police initially saw at Penley’s home but later
    recovered from the home of a member of Penley’s family, had treads that
    matched tread patterns in blood at the scene of the crime.
    • DNA testing revealed Bickford’s DNA in the red-brown stains at the
    bottom of Penley’s boots.
    [¶20] Given Penley’s own mention of Bickford’s intent to “put a PFA” on
    him—and the abundant admissible evidence that Penley was angry at both
    victims and was linked to the crime scene and the murder weapon—the court’s
    admission of evidence that Bickford feared Penley and wanted to obtain a court
    order to protect her from him was harmless error.6 See State v. Discher,
    
    597 A.2d 1336
    , 1338-39, 1342 (Me. 1991) (holding that improperly admitting
    evidence regarding a statement by the victim’s mother was harmless in light of
    the defendant’s own similar statement, together with the other evidence in the
    case).
    6Furthermore, the prosecutor’s closing arguments referencing Bickford’s fear, to which Penley
    raised no objection at trial, do not amount to obvious error given the admissible evidence,
    summarized in closing, of Penley’s intimidating words and conduct toward Bickford before the
    killings. See State v. Pratt, 
    2020 ME 141
    , ¶¶ 14, 19, 
    243 A.3d 469
    .
    15
    B.    Prosecutorial Error
    [¶21] Penley argues that the prosecutor undermined the fairness of the
    proceedings by improperly suggesting in closing argument that Penley had the
    burden of proving his theory that Facebook phone location tracking data were
    unreliable, inaccurately indicating that there was no evidence to demonstrate
    problems with the Facebook data, and improperly disparaging defense counsel
    for challenging the data “over and over and over and over again.”
    [¶22] Because Penley did not object to the State’s argument, we review
    for obvious error. See M.R.U. Crim. P. 52(b); State v. Sousa, 
    2019 ME 171
    , ¶ 15,
    
    222 A.3d 171
    . “To show obvious error, there must be (1) an error, (2) that is
    plain, and (3) that affects substantial rights.” Sousa, 
    2019 ME 171
    , ¶ 15,
    
    222 A.3d 171
     (quotation marks omitted). “[I]f these three conditions are met,
    we will set aside a jury’s verdict only if we conclude that (4) the error seriously
    affects the fairness and integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.”
    
    Id.
     (quotation marks omitted). “When a prosecutor’s statement is not sufficient
    to draw an objection, particularly when viewed in the overall context of the
    trial, that statement will rarely be found to have created a reasonable
    probability that it affected the outcome of the proceeding.” 
    Id.
     (quotation
    marks omitted).
    16
    [¶23] We review claims of error arising from prosecutorial conduct to
    determine, first, whether the conduct was in error. State v. Cheney, 
    2012 ME 119
    , ¶ 34, 
    55 A.3d 473
    ; State v. White, 
    2022 ME 54
    , ¶ 19 n.9, 
    285 A.3d 262
    . If it
    was in error, we review each of the State’s comments individually but also
    consider all comments as a whole in determining whether to vacate the
    conviction. Cheney, 
    2012 ME 119
    , ¶ 34, 
    55 A.3d 473
    ; White, 
    2022 ME 54
    , ¶ 19
    n.9, 
    285 A.3d 262
    . We will affirm the judgment if “it is highly probable that the
    jury’s determination of guilt was unaffected by the prosecutor’s comments.”
    Cheney, 
    2012 ME 119
    , ¶ 34, 
    55 A.3d 473
     (quotation marks omitted).
    [¶24] A closing argument is improper if it conveys a shift in the burden
    of proof to the defendant or suggests “that the defendant must present evidence
    in a criminal trial.” Id. ¶ 34. A prosecutor must “focus . . . on the evidence itself
    and what the evidence shows or does not show, rather than on the defendant
    and what he or she has shown or failed to show.” State v. Chan, 
    2020 ME 91
    ,
    ¶ 25, 
    236 A.3d 471
     (quotation marks omitted). Thus, a prosecutor may say that
    the record contains no evidence to support a proposed finding but may not say
    that the defendant failed to provide evidence to support a proposed finding.
    See id. ¶ 27; Sousa, 
    2019 ME 171
    , ¶¶ 10-13, 
    222 A.3d 171
    .
    17
    [¶25] For instance, we vacated a judgment based on obvious error when
    a prosecutor improperly shifted the burden of proof when cross-examining a
    defendant. State v. Robbins, 
    2019 ME 138
    , ¶¶ 7, 13-16, 43, 
    215 A.3d 788
    . The
    prosecutor questioned the defendant about other events occurring at the time
    the defendant was committing the crime. Id. ¶ 7. When the defendant corrected
    the prosecutor to say “allegedly” committing the crime, the prosecutor
    responded, “No, no there is no . . . allegedly here,” because of “testimony on the
    record” that the defendant committed the crime. Id. (emphasis and quotation
    marks omitted). We determined that the prosecutor’s comments improperly
    implied that the burden of the proof shifted to the defendant after the State
    offered evidence suggesting guilt. See id. ¶¶ 7, 13.
    [¶26] An isolated misstep by a prosecutor might not, however, require
    us to vacate a judgment of conviction. For instance, we held that the statement
    that the defendant “ha[d] no evidence” of someone else committing the crime
    was improper but did not vacate the judgment when the comment was mild
    and isolated, the court instructed the jury on the proper burdens soon
    afterward, and the voluminous evidence of the defendant’s guilt suggested that
    the comment would not have tipped the balance. Cheney, 
    2012 ME 119
    , ¶¶ 17,
    35-36, 
    55 A.3d 473
     (quotation marks omitted).
    18
    [¶27] Here, Penley asserts one instance of improper burden-shifting
    during the State’s rebuttal closing argument:
    You know, it’s easy to make an accusation and not have to
    back it up with evidence. And with regard to the Facebook records,
    that’s exactly what [defense counsel] tried to do over and over and
    over and over again.
    This statement is improper because it suggested that the defendant had a
    burden to produce evidence to prove his position and repeatedly failed to do
    so. The context for the comment, however, at least partially diminishes the
    deleterious effect of the prosecutor’s misstep. Defense counsel had structured
    his closing argument around several themes, including that the State
    manipulated evidence. He argued that the State had manipulated the Facebook
    data by “putting it in the order that [they] want, manipulation of the evidence,
    manipulation of what they get from Facebook, correcting the errors that they
    see.”
    [¶28] The State responded with the now-challenged assertion that “it’s
    easy to make an accusation and not have to back it up with evidence.” The
    prosecutor elaborated, however, and argued that Facebook has financial
    motivations for ensuring the accuracy of its records and that other evidence
    corroborated the Facebook phone location data.
    19
    [¶29] Although the prosecutor’s statement taken alone improperly
    implied that Penley had a burden of proof, the prosecutor’s subsequent
    arguments properly addressed the state of—and weight of—the evidence in the
    record. Moreover, the court explicitly instructed the jury after the closing
    arguments that “[t]he law never imposes upon a defendant in a criminal case
    the burden or duty of calling any witnesses or producing any evidence, and you
    can never rely on the failure of a defendant to offer evidence on any issue.”
    See id. ¶¶ 18, 36. The court also instructed that “the closing arguments of the
    attorneys in this case are not evidence.” The court thus did not commit obvious
    error by not, sua sponte, striking the prosecutor’s argument or delivering a
    limiting instruction.7
    C.       Sentencing
    [¶30] Lastly, Penley argues that his sentences were improper because,
    as a matter of law, a consideration of domestic violence belongs only in the
    second step of the sentencing process, where the court weighs the aggravating
    We also do not discern obvious error from the cumulative effect of the prosecutor’s improper
    7
    arguments about the Facebook data and about Bickford’s statements of her fear and her plan to
    obtain a protection order. See State v. Sholes, 
    2020 ME 35
    , ¶ 9, 
    227 A.3d 1129
    ; State v. Gould, 
    2012 ME 60
    , ¶¶ 16-17, 
    43 A.3d 952
    .
    20
    and mitigating factors. In his view, the court “multi-counted” the domestic
    violence factor by also considering it in step one.
    [¶31] “In a murder case, the sentencing court employs a two-step
    process.” State v. Athayde, 
    2022 ME 41
    , ¶ 51, 
    277 A.3d 387
     (quotation marks
    omitted); see 17-A M.R.S. § 1252-C(1)-(2). The court first “determines the basic
    term of imprisonment based on an objective consideration of the particular
    nature and seriousness of the crime.” Athayde, 
    2022 ME 41
    , ¶ 51, 
    277 A.3d 387
    (quotation marks omitted). Second, “the court determines the maximum
    period of incarceration based on all other relevant sentencing factors, both
    aggravating and mitigating, appropriate to that case, including the character of
    the offender and the offender’s criminal history, the effect of the offense on the
    victim, and the protection of the public interest.” 
    Id.
     (alteration and quotation
    marks omitted). On a discretionary appeal from a sentence, we review “a
    court’s determination of the basic sentence de novo for misapplication of legal
    principles” and its determination of the maximum period of incarceration for
    abuse of discretion. State v. Sweeney, 
    2019 ME 164
    , ¶¶ 11, 17, 
    221 A.3d 130
    (quotation marks omitted).
    [¶32] A basic term of imprisonment at or near the top of the statutory
    sentencing range for the crime is appropriate when a court “finds the
    21
    defendant’s conduct most serious as compared to other means of committing
    the crime within that same range.” Hayden, 
    2014 ME 31
    , ¶ 18, 
    86 A.3d 1221
    (quotation marks omitted). By statute, a court must “assign special weight” in
    sentencing for murder to the fact “[t]hat the victim is a family or household
    member as defined in Title 19-A, section 4002, subsection 4 who is a victim of
    domestic violence committed by the convicted person.”                17-A M.R.S.
    § 1251(2)(C) (2018); see 19-A M.R.S. § 4002(4) (2018) (defining “family or
    household members” to include “former domestic partners,” meaning
    “2 unmarried adults who [we]re domiciled together under long-term
    arrangements that evidence[d] a commitment to remain responsible
    indefinitely for each other’s welfare”).
    [¶33] If a murder is committed as an act of domestic violence, “that is an
    objective factor properly considered in the first step of the sentencing analysis.”
    Athayde, 
    2022 ME 41
    , ¶ 52, 
    277 A.3d 387
     (quotation marks omitted). There
    may, however, also be “evidence of previous domestic violence apart from the
    acts constituting the crime itself.” 
    Id.
     “In such circumstances, that history of
    domestic violence would be considered as an aggravating factor in step two of
    the sentencing analysis.” 
    Id. 22
    [¶34] The fact that Penley murdered his ex-girlfriend as an act of
    domestic violence “is an objective factor properly considered in the first step of
    the sentencing analysis.” State v. Nichols, 
    2013 ME 71
    , ¶ 29, 
    72 A.3d 503
    ;
    see State v. Reese, 
    2010 ME 30
    , ¶ 30, 
    991 A.2d 806
     (holding that in determining
    the basic sentence the sentencing court acted properly in considering that the
    crime “occurred within the context of a violent relationship”); State v. Cookson,
    
    2003 ME 136
    , ¶¶ 39, 41, 
    837 A.2d 101
     (finding no error in the sentencing
    court’s determination of the basic sentence when it considered the fact that the
    “murder was a crime of domestic violence”).          The court did not err by
    considering the objective nature of the murder of Bickford as an act of domestic
    violence in step one.
    [¶35] The court, however, went further and delved into Penley’s history
    with Bickford and Hill in step one by considering the “complicated relationship”
    between Penley and Bickford over the course of ten years, acts of stalking
    before the murder, and Penley’s burgeoning hatred of Hill. Any history of
    domestic violence, apart from the commission of the crime itself, is properly
    considered only in step two. See Athayde, 
    2022 ME 41
    , ¶ 52, 
    277 A.3d 387
    ;
    cf. Reese, 
    2010 ME 30
    , ¶ 30, 
    991 A.2d 806
     (affirming the consideration of
    previous threatening words and behavior in setting the basic sentence because
    23
    the defendant knew when he committed the charged elevated aggravated
    assault that his domestic partner would be aware of these prior acts as she tried
    to escape).
    [¶36] The court’s analysis here cannot be viewed as harmless error
    because it may have affected the court’s determination of the basic term of
    imprisonment at life in prison. See State v. Stanislaw, 
    2011 ME 67
    , ¶ 16, 
    21 A.3d 91
     (holding that when a court misapplies the law in setting the basic term of
    imprisonment, the court “is left without a foundation on which to build an
    appropriate sentence,” and the sentence must be vacated and the matter
    remanded for resentencing). Accordingly, we vacate the sentences and remand
    the matter for resentencing consistent with this opinion.
    The entry is:
    Sentences vacated.      Matter remanded for
    resentencing consistent with this opinion.
    Judgment affirmed in all other respects.
    Rory A. McNamara, Esq. (orally), Drake Law LLC, York, for appellant Mark D.
    Penley
    Aaron M. Frey, Attorney General, and Donald W. Macomber, Asst. Atty. Gen.
    (orally), Office of the Attorney General, Augusta, for appellee State of Maine
    24
    Oxford County Unified Criminal Docket docket number CR-2019-21
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY