STATE V. BOBBY LEE BROWN
Case Date: 12/21/1994
Docket No: SYLLABUS
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(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for
the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized).
Argued March 29, 1994 -- Decided December 21, 1994
STEIN, J., writing for the Court.
A jury convicted Bobby Lee Brown in January 1993 of two counts of purposeful or knowing murder
in the deaths of Alice Skov and her brother John Bell. It also convicted Brown on charges of felony-murder,
robbery, weapons possession and conspiracy. Because the jury found that Brown had committed the
homicides "by his own conduct," a penalty-phase hearing followed. At the penalty phase, the same jury
unanimously found in respect of the murder of Alice Skov that the aggravating factors outweighed the
mitigating factors beyond a reasonable doubt and that Brown should be sentenced to death. The jury could
not unanimously agree on the punishment for the murder of John Bell.
Co-defendant Coleen Alexander was the State's chief witness at trial. In July 1992, she pled guilty to
felony-murder, robbery, and conspiracy charges. In return for her cooperation with the State in prosecuting
Brown, the other charges against Alexander were dismissed. Alexander was sentenced to a life term with a
thirty-year parole disqualifier.
Alexander and Brown were romantically involved and living together at the home of Alexander's
adoptive parents at the time of the murders. The victims were Alexander's great aunt and great uncle.
Victim Alice Skov was eighty-two years old and had recently suffered a stroke. Victim John Bell was staying
at Skov's house to care for her after the stroke.
Brown and Alexander had visited with Skov and Bell prior to the murders, and on one occasion they
stole around $350 from Skov's purse. According to the State's evidence, Brown began making plans to rob
Skov and Bell when he overheard Alexander's conversation with a relative concerning a safe containing a
large amount of cash hidden in Skov's house. Alexander testified that she and Brown went to Skov's house
together on the morning of October 10, 1990. Her testimony changed three times during trial concerning
when she became aware of the criminal purpose of the trip and that Alexander had her father's rifle. A
short time after arriving at the Skov house, Brown used the rifle to shoot Bell and Skov. Brown also stabbed
Bell with scissors. Brown netted approximately $300 from the crime.
HELD: At the guilt phase of a capital case, the trial court must instruct the jury that it has the option of
returning a non-unanimous verdict on the question whether defendant committed the murder "by his
own conduct." Brown's death sentence is therefore vacated and the State may again seek the death
penalty for the murder of Alice Skov by retrying Brown on that charge.
1. The Death Penalty Act makes death-eligible only those defendants who are convicted of purposeful
or knowing murder and either "committed the homicidal act by [their] own conduct" or procured its
commission through payment. Inherent in the requirement that the State prove the own-conduct criterion
beyond a reasonable doubt is the reciprocal requirement that a jury unanimously agree that the State has
met that burden. (pp. 25-32) 2. The trial court's charge to the jury on the own-conduct determination was flawed. It failed to convey to the jury that its inability to reach a unanimous decision that defendant had committed the homicides "by his own conduct" was a permissible final verdict that would result in the imposition of at least a thiry-year mandatory prison term on each murder. In addition, the court's instruction effectively required the jury to choose between a unanimous verdict that defendant had committed the murder by his own conduct or a unanimous verdict that he had committed the murder as an accomplice or co-conspirator.
However, a negative answer (that is, non-unanimous) to the first question -- defendant's own conduct -- was
sufficient to render Brown non-death-eligible. (pp. 32-44)
3. The evidence was such that it could have left the jury with a reasonable doubt whether Brown or
Alexander had shot Bell and Skov. Because such a doubt, even in the mind of one juror, could have resulted
in a permissible nonunanimous verdict on the own-conduct question, the failure to inform the jury that it had
the option of returning such a verdict was clearly capable of prejudicing defendant. The erroneous
instruction does not affect the murder convictions because the jury could have convicted Brown of the
murders even if it had disagreed about whether he had committed the murders by his own conduct. To seek
a death-penalty verdict, however, the State will have to retry Brown on the charge of murdering Alice Skov
for the purpose of establishing beyond a reasonable doubt that he committed that murder by his own
conduct. (pp. 44-52)
4. Although some of the other errors complained of by Brown warrant attention and reconsideration
on retrial should the State seek to pursue the death penalty, none require reversal of Brown's convictions.
Other claims of error are rejected, such as the claim that a prior inconsistent statement of a witness cannot
be admitted when that witness testifies that he cannot recall making the statement. (pp. 52-96)
5. The trial court erred in merging Brown's convictions for the first-degree armed robbery of Skov and
the first-degree robbery of Bell, and unlawful possession of a weapon with his felony-murder convictions,
which, in turn, had been merged with the purposeful and knowing murder convictions. These were
conceptually distinct offenses, and their merger is contrary to the weight of judicial authority. On remand,
the trial court is instructed to resentence Brown on these convictions. (pp. 96-98)
6. The Court once again rejects the argument that the death-penalty statute violates both federal and
State constitutional protections against cruel and unusual punishment. (pp.98-99)
Brown's convictions for murder, felony-murder, robbery, weapons-possession, and conspiracy, as well
as the sentence of life with thirty-years parole ineligibility for the murder of John Bell are AFFIRMED. The
imposition of the death sentence for the murder of Alice Skov is REVERSED. The matter is REMANDED
to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
JUSTICE HANDLER, concurring in part and dissenting in part, joins in the majority's conclusion
that the trial court's instructions in respect of the issue whether Brown committed the murders by his own
conduct was reversible error. He dissents from other conclusions of the Court, however, because he is of the
view that questions raised by defendant concerning instructions on vicarious liability theories of murder, the
adequacy of the death-qualification process during voir dire, the validity of the jury finding on the aggravating
factors at the penalty trial, and the introduction of prejudicial and irrelevant bad-act evidence also require
reversal of defendant's death sentence.
JUSTICE O'HERN, dissenting in part, in which JUSTICE GARIBALDI joins, disagrees with the
majority's position that principles of constitutional law or statutory construction require that a jury be
instructed that it may return a non-unanimous verdict in the guilt phase of a capital case. He is satisfied that
the jury charge here did not have a clear capacity to produce an unjust result.
CHIEF JUSTICE WILENTZ and JUSTICES CLIFFORD AND POLLOCK join in JUSTICE
STEIN's opinion. JUSTICE HANDLER filed a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.
JUSTICE O'HERN filed a separate opinion dissenting in part in which JUSTICE GARIBALDI joins.
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent
v.
BOBBY LEE BROWN,
Defendant-Appellant
Argued March 29, 1994 -- Decided December 21, 1994
On appeal from the Superior Court, Law
Division, Warren County.
Stephen W. Kirsch, Assistant Deputy Public
Defender, and Matthew Astore, Deputy Public
Defender II, argued the cause for appellant
and cross-respondent (Susan L. Reisner,
Acting Public Defender, attorney).
Nancy A. Hulett, Deputy Attorney General,
argued the cause for respondent and cross-appellant (Deborah T. Poritz, Attorney
General of New Jersey, attorney).
The opinion of the Court was delivered by In January 1993, a Warren County jury convicted defendant, Bobby Lee Brown, of two counts of purposeful or knowing murder in the deaths of Alice Skov and her brother John Bell. It also convicted Brown on felony-murder, robbery, weapon-possession, and
conspiracy charges. Because the jury found that Brown had
committed the homicides "by his own conduct," N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3c,
a penalty-phase hearing followed the jury's verdict in the guilt
phase of the trial. At the penalty phase, the same jury
unanimously found in respect of the murder of Alice Skov that the
aggravating factors outweighed the mitigating factors beyond a
reasonable doubt and that defendant should be sentenced to death.
Concerning the murder of John Bell, the jury could not
unanimously agree on the punishment. The trial court sentenced
defendant to death for the murder of Alice Skov and imposed a
consecutive sentence of life imprisonment with a mandatory
thirty-year term for the murder of John Bell. All other counts
were merged into those murder convictions.
not to seek the death sentence on remand, defendant's conviction
for the murder of Alice Skov will stand undisturbed and the trial
court shall impose sentence in accordance with N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3b.
If the State elects again to seek the death penalty for that
offense, defendant's murder conviction will be vacated and
defendant will be retried on the murder charges.
We base our narrative of the facts primarily on the State's version as presented at the trial and reflected in the jury's guilt-phase verdict. We include references to conflicts in the testimony only to the extent that they are relevant to our resolution of the issues. A. Events Leading Up to the Murders Defendant, Bobby Lee Brown, met co-defendant, Coleen Alexander, at a picnic in Pennsylvania on July 4, 1990. At that time, Alexander had been married for several years and had two small children. Since September 1989, Alexander, her husband, and children had been living in an apartment in Bangor, Pennsylvania, although during their marriage Alexander and her husband lived primarily with Alexander's adoptive parents, Violet and Stephen Krouch, at the Krouch's home in Pen Argyl, Pennsylvania. Alexander and her husband had a turbulent and at times abusive relationship.
Defendant and Alexander became romantically involved.
Defendant moved into Alexander's apartment on the day of the
picnic and Alexander's husband moved out three days later.
Neither defendant nor Alexander appeared to be employed during
the first few months of their relationship. The couple
experienced continuous financial problems, described by Alexander
as "[b]ounced checks all over[, b]ills, [and] loan payments."
the winter of 1989, and had set up a makeshift bedroom on the
first floor in the front of the house. The visit was purportedly
urged by Alexander's parents because Skov had just injured
herself in a fall. Also at the house was John Bell, Skov's
sixty-four-year-old brother and Alexander's great uncle. Since
Skov's stroke, Bell had been sleeping at Skov's house to look
after her. The visit on September 24 lasted less than an hour,
during which defendant and Alexander chatted with Skov and
defendant played religious music on an organ in the house.
safe in Skov's house that contained a large amount of cash.
Alexander further testified that she subsequently had overheard
defendant having a conversation with three other friends in the
kitchen of Alexander's Bangor apartment regarding "getting money
in New Jersey." Alexander also related that defendant made
efforts at that time to acquire a gun. Specifically, she stated
that she and defendant had stopped at a gas station in East
Bangor that also operated as a bar and gun shop. Once inside,
defendant began pointing out guns on display and asked Alexander
to get a price on a particular model.
defendant traveled to a Pontiac automobile dealership in Wind
Gap, Pennsylvania. A salesperson from the dealership testified
that defendant had shown interest in a new car on the lot and had
taken the car for a test drive. Defendant had stated that his
Pontiac Fiero was available as a trade-in. The salesperson
informed defendant that the cost of the new vehicle would be
approximately $17,800. Defendant and the salesperson filled out
a loan application, which the salesperson then forwarded for
approval. Defendant returned to the dealership with Alexander
late in the afternoon and learned that the lender had rejected
defendant's loan application. After discussing other loan
alternatives with the salesperson, defendant stated that he
either would make alternative loan arrangements or simply come
back the next day and pay for the car in cash.
Later that evening, defendant and Alexander went to the
neighborhood in Bangor in which they previously had lived to
visit a former neighbor. Defendant encountered Jeffrey Lambert
in the street and stated that he wanted to visit David Bittner, a
mutual friend in the neighborhood. On reaching Bittner's
apartment, defendant told Bittner that he wanted to talk to him
privately, whereupon defendant and Bittner went into Bittner's
bedroom. Defendant asked Bittner where defendant could get a gun
because he wanted to commit a burglary "in the country" in New
Jersey involving "a lot" of money. According to his testimony,
Bittner told defendant that "he was crazy" and believed that he
had defendant "talked out of it."
case of an emergency, in case something happened." Enticed by
the offer, Runyon took defendant's phone number and called
defendant at approximately 7:30 the next morning, asking if the
offer was still good. Defendant told Runyon that he would call
him back. Runyon asked if defendant needed a ride or other
assistance, and defendant replied that he did not.
when Alexander resumed her direct testimony the following day,
she stated that she had learned that the couple was "going to
Oxford for money" after defendant took the early-morning phone
call from David Runyon. However, Alexander maintained that she
had learned about the rifle's presence in the car only after the
couple was on the way to Oxford, when she discovered it behind
the driver's seat of defendant's car wrapped in a gray and black
striped dress shirt that belonged to defendant. Finally, after
Alexander had finished her testimony, the State recalled her to
the stand because she had informed the prosecutor that she
remembered additional details. She then testified that defendant
told her of the true purpose of the trip on the morning of the
crime, after which he had directed her to get her father's rifle
from her bedroom closet, where Alexander found it wrapped in the
striped shirt. She handed defendant the rifle before they left
the house.
followed defendant out of the house through the kitchen entrance,
passing John Bell who was sitting in a chair in the dining room
reading a book. Once outside, the couple sat by defendant's car
and smoked cigarettes. Alexander again pleaded for defendant to
leave. He responded, "You ruined it for me," apparently
referring to her having followed him outside. Defendant
instructed Alexander to "shut up and get back in there before I
leave you lay alongside the road."
was intended to give Alexander an opportunity to search for cash
in the Skov house, which she knew well.
However, when Alexander later returned to the witness stand, she
testified that defendant had handed her the rifle as she headed
out the door and that she had taken the rifle out to the car.
a Radio Shack in Bangor because he was having trouble with the
installation.
The officers briefly questioned the group and were told by
defendant and Alexander that they had visited the Skov home
approximately two weeks before. The police asked if defendant
and Alexander would submit to fingerprinting so that police could
eliminate their prints if they were found at the scene.
Defendant and Alexander agreed and were fingerprinted at the
local police station. The police also requested that they go to
the Warren County Prosecutor's Office to make statements.
Defendant and Alexander asked to go in the following morning
because Violet Krouch had seemed too upset to put Alexander's
children to bed.
the contents of the interviews, although the jury was not
informed that the interviews had occurred during a polygraph
test. In the course of those interviews defendant revised his
claim that he had been at the Skov home only once before, and
admitted to a subsequent visit during which Alexander had stolen
money. The detective informed defendant that he had been seen at
the Skov home in the past week. He then suggested a scenario in
which defendant and Alexander had gone to the house and a
struggle had ensued with John Bell, perhaps even after Bell had
threatened defendant with a BB gun that Bell owned. Defendant
neither denied nor agreed with the detective's suggestions.
and her children. Defendant claimed that that threat had
compelled him to help Lohman. Defendant's version of the crime
was that he drove Lohman to the Skov house, but that Lohman did
the shooting and stealing. Although defendant's original account
placed him outside the house while Lohman committed the murders
inside, defendant eventually admitted to having witnessed the
shooting of John Bell. Indeed, the State used defendant's
detailed description of Lohman's purported shooting of Bell as
evidence that defendant was personally familiar with the
circumstances of that shooting, including the manner in which
Bell fell and the gunshot wound that he suffered.
Robert Lohman, the man implicated by defendant, was arrested
in the early morning hours of Sunday, October 14. Police
confiscated a holstered .22 caliber handgun, which defendant had
described as the murder weapon. The following day, however, when
officers visited defendant at the Warren County Jail to interview
him further, defendant told the officers that the statement he
had given was not true and that he wanted a lawyer before he
would speak to them.
In addition, the State introduced statements made to police
by two inmates, Michael Merlo and Peter Lesando, which recounted
conversations that each had had with defendant around the time of
Alexander's arrest. In those conversations, defendant allegedly
stated that he had shot John Bell because the situation in the
house had become "agitated" when defendant learned that the safe
had been plastered over. Defendant purportedly told Merlo and
Lesando that he had shot Alice Skov as she sat in her rocking
chair, missing with the first shot and hitting her in the head
with the second. Defendant allegedly stated that Coleen
Alexander had stabbed John Bell, and noted as well that she had
once stabbed her husband. Defendant also explained that because
he did not know the location of the bullets for Alexander's
father's rifle, she had obtained them from her parent's bedroom.
Merlo reported that defendant had a notebook with information
written in it, but the police found no such notebook in a search
of defendant's cell. At trial, both Lesando and Merlo claimed
that they could not recall having made such statements or having
had such conversations with defendant. Following evidentiary
hearings, the trial court determined that both were feigning
their lack of recall, and permitted the State to introduce the
statements as substantive evidence under the hearsay exception
for prior inconsistent statements.
alleging that both had purposely or knowingly killed Bell and
Skov by their own conduct. The indictment also charged the pair
with purposeful or knowing murder in the deaths of Bell and Skov,
based on allegations that defendant "and/or" Alexander had
purposely or knowingly killed or inflicted serious bodily injury
on Bell and Skov while acting in the capacity of an accomplice or
co-conspirator. Other counts charged defendant and Alexander
with felony murder, two types of first-degree armed robbery,
possession of the rifle for an unlawful purpose, possession of
the scissors for an unlawful purpose, third-degree unlawful
possession of the rifle, fourth-degree unlawful possession of the
scissors, and conspiracy to commit first-degree murder and first-degree robbery.
testify truthfully against defendant at trial. In return, the
State agree to recommend a sentence of thirty years without
parole and to dismiss the remaining charges. Alexander entered a
plea in accordance with the agreement on July 2, 1992, and the
court sentenced her to the recommended term on August 14, 1992.
N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3c(1), claiming that certain evidence presented at
the guilt phase would be inadmissible and prejudicial in the
penalty phase, including testimony that defendant had threatened
and assaulted Alexander, photographs of the victims' bodies,
testimony regarding the age and physical frailties of Skov, and
testimony that defendant and Alexander had referred to themselves
as "Bonnie and Clyde." The court denied defendant's motion,
determining that the evidence either was admissible to prove the
aggravating factors alleged or that its admission in the guilt
phase did not compel the empaneling of a new penalty-phase jury.
Finally, defendant made several arguments regarding the
aggravating factors. Generally, those arguments were based on
the failure of the notice of aggravating factors to specify the
murder to which each factor applied or the underlying felony on
which each factor was based. Defendant also claimed that the
factors constituted improper double-counting of the evidence.
The court determined that the notice was not misleading regarding
the murders and underlying offenses to which the factors applied,
and that basing both factors on the same events was permissible
provided the jury received an appropriate instruction regarding
the weighing of the evidence in accordance with State v. Bey,
112 N.J. 123, 174-77 (1988) (Bey II).
statement in allocution. Jury deliberations took place primarily
during the entire second day of the proceeding. On the morning
of January 14, the jury returned a verdict in which it
unanimously found beyond a reasonable doubt that in regard to the
murder of Alice Skov the State had proved the existence of both
aggravating factors, that each factor outweighed the mitigating
factors, and that both factors outweighed the mitigating factors.
Regarding the murder of John Bell, the jury unanimously found
beyond a reasonable doubt the existence of only the c(4)(g)
aggravating factor, that the murder had been committed while
defendant was committing another offense. The jury decided that
after due deliberation it could not agree on punishment, an
option offered on the verdict sheet.
numerous contentions on appeal, some of which relate solely to
his death sentence, others of which relate to his convictions as
well, and one focussing on his sentence of imprisonment. The
State cross-appeals, contending that merger of certain
convictions was improper. Defendant concedes the State's claim.
Defendant contends that the court's charge and verdict sheet incorrectly instructed the jury that if it convicted defendant of purposeful or knowing murder, it then had to reach a unanimous decision that defendant had committed the murders by his own conduct or a unanimous decision that defendant had committed the murders as an accomplice or co-conspirator. Defendant claims that the court should have instructed the jury instead to decide
only whether it unanimously found beyond a reasonable doubt that
defendant had committed the murders by his own conduct, informing
the jury that a non-unanimous verdict on that issue was
acceptable and would not affect the murder conviction. Defendant
asserts that an affirmative determination of that question would
result in a penalty-phase hearing, and a negative determination,
which encompasses a non-unanimous verdict, would result in the
imposition of a sentence of thirty years to life imprisonment
with a mandatory thirty-year term for each murder. In 1982, the Legislature enacted the New Jersey Death Penalty Act (Act), L. 1982, c. 111, and "resurrect[ed] the distinction between a principal and an accomplice" for the purpose of determining a defendant's eligibility for the death penalty. State v. Gerald, 113 N.J. 40, 93 (1988). More precisely, the Act makes death-eligible only those defendants who are convicted of purposeful or knowing murder and either "committed the homicidal act by [their] own conduct" or procured its commission through payment. N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3c. In Gerald, supra, we adopted the view that the "by his own conduct" (own-conduct) requirement "'is not an element of the offense of murder . . . [but] is merely a triggering device for the death penalty phase of the trial.'" 113 N.J. at 99 (quoting State v. Moore, 207 N.J. Super. 561, 576 (Law Div. 1985)). See also State v. Biegenwald, 126 N.J. 1, 18 (1991) (recognizing own-conduct as triggering device for death-eligibility rather than
element of crime); accord State v. Moore,
113 N.J. 239, 300
(1988) (Moore (Marie)); State v. Koedatich,
112 N.J. 225, 338-40
(1988) (distinguishing between own-conduct finding and elements
of purposeful or knowing murder in concluding that failure of
jury to make own-conduct finding was harmless error), cert.
denied,
488 U.S. 1017,
109 S. Ct. 813,
102 L. Ed. 803 (1989). We
described the requirements of the own-conduct finding as follows:
"The relevant inquiry is whether or not the defendant actively
and directly participated in the homicidal act, i.e., in the
infliction of the injuries from which the victim died. The
critical elements are that [the] defendant in fact acted, and the
immediacy of his conduct to the victim's demise." Gerald, supra,
113 N.J. at 97.
at 159. See also R. 1:8-9 ("The verdict shall be unanimous in
all criminal actions * * * .") Thus, we now conclude that
inherent in the requirement that the State prove the own-conduct
criterion beyond a reasonable doubt is the reciprocal requirement
that a jury unanimously agree that the State has met that burden. Although a jury verdict that a defendant committed a murder by his own conduct must be unanimous, unanimity is not required to support a verdict that a defendant guilty of murder did not commit the murder by his own conduct. Rather, the inability of the jury to reach a unanimous decision on the own-conduct determination constitutes a final verdict that results in the imposition of a sentence of imprisonment of at least a thirty-year mandatory term, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3b. In Bey II, supra, we expressed our "awareness of the qualitative difference between the death penalty and other penalties, a difference that makes it unthinkable for jurors to impose the death penalty when they harbor a 'reasonable doubt as to its justness.'" 112 N.J. at 156 (quoting State v. Biegenwald, 106 N.J. 13, 60 (1987)). See Assembly Judiciary, Law, Public Safety and Defense Committee, Statement to Senate Bill No. 112, at 2 (May 20, 1982) (noting that "[t]o aid a defendant facing the possibility of a death sentence" amendments to death-penalty bill increased State's burden of proof on aggravating factors to beyond reasonable doubt and lowered defendant's burden on mitigating factors to burden of production). That difference is
apparent throughout death-penalty legislation and jurisprudence,
and perhaps is most clearly reflected in the recognition that
non-unanimous findings should be given legal effect when those
findings weigh in favor of the imposition of a life sentence.
"The unanimity requirement extends only to verdicts adverse to
the defendant, and the Legislature may provide for the return of
a verdict favorable to the defendant on less than unanimity."
Bey II, supra, 112 N.J. at 159.
"[r]equiring the vote of twelve jurors to
convict a defendant does little to insure
that his right to a unanimous verdict is
protected unless this prerequisite of jury
consensus as to the defendant's course of
action is also required." [United States v.
Gipson,
553 F.2d 453, 458 (5th Cir. 1977)].
There is no analogous principle requiring
that jurors voting to acquit must agree upon
the basis for their reasonable doubt.
[Ibid. (second alteration in original).]
hung jury results in a mistrial, after which the State has the
option of instituting new proceedings against the defendant. See
N.J.S.A. 2A:80-3; McKoy, supra, 494 U.S. at 449 n.4, 110 S. Ct.
at 1237 n.4, 108 L. Ed.
2d at 385 n.4; State v. Hunt,
115 N.J. 330, 382-83 (1989).
Applying those principles to defendant's claim, we conclude that the court's charge to the jury on the own-conduct determination was flawed for two related reasons. First, the court failed to convey to the jury that its inability to reach a
unanimous decision that defendant had committed the homicides "by
his own conduct" was a permissible final verdict that would
result in the imposition of at least a thirty-year mandatory
prison term on each murder. Second, the court's instruction
suggested to the jury that if it could not unanimously agree
beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant had committed the murder
by his own conduct, it instead had to find unanimously and beyond
a reasonable doubt that defendant had committed the murder as an
accomplice or co-conspirator. With respect to the first question, before you may conclude that the defendant committed the murder by his own conduct, you must be convinced of this fact beyond a reasonable doubt. If you have a reasonable doubt as to whether the killing was by his own conduct but you're satisfied beyond a
reasonable doubt that he was an accomplice,
then you should indicate that he was an
accomplice.
The trial court made no additional references to death
eligibility in its original charge.
Now if you find Bobby Lee Brown guilty
of murder of Alice Skov you are going to have
to check a box, one box, you'll have to
determine whether or not he purposely or
knowingly caused her death or purposely or
knowingly caused serious bodily injury
resulting in her death. Same thing with John
Donald Bell, if you found -- if you find Mr.
Brown guilty of murder of John Donald Bell,
you'll have to answer the question did he
purposely or knowingly cause death, or
purposely or knowingly cause serious bodily
injury resulting in death. Now if you find Bobby Lee Brown gui |