State v. Dirickson

The slip opinion is the first version of an opinion released by the Chief Clerk of the Supreme Court. Once an opinion is selected for publication by the Court, it is assigned a vendor-neutral citation by the Chief Clerk for compliance with Rule 23-112 NMRA, authenticated and formally published. The slip opinion may contain deviations from the formal authenticated opinion. 1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO 2 Opinion Number: 3 Filing Date: April 28, 2023 4 No. A-1-CA-40149 5 STATE OF NEW MEXICO, 6 Plaintiff-Appellee, 7 v. 8 MICHAEL DIRICKSON a/k/a 9 MICHAEL S. DIRICKSON, 10 Defendant-Appellant. 11 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF OTERO COUNTY 12 Angie K. Schneider, District Court Judge 13 Raúl Torrez, Attorney General 14 Santa Fe, NM 15 Erica Schiff, Assistant Attorney General 16 Albuquerque, NM 17 for Appellee 18 Bennett J. Baur, Chief Public Defender 19 Mary Barket, Assistant Appellate Defender 20 Santa Fe, NM 21 for Appellant 1 OPINION 2 YOHALEM, Judge. 3 {1} Defendant Michael S. Dirickson appeals his conviction of one count of 4 possession of a controlled substance (methamphetamine), contrary to NMSA 1978, 5 Section 30-31-23(A) (2019, amended 2021). Defendant argues on appeal: (1) the 6 district court erred in refusing to suppress his un-Mirandized 1 response to a police 7 officer’s question about the contents of his motel room; (2) the district court abused 8 its discretion when it refused to grant a mistrial based on a witness’s comment on 9 Defendant’s post-Miranda silence; (3) the district court’s instruction to disregard 10 hearsay testimony was insufficient to cure the prejudice from testimony about a 11 motel clerk’s out-of-court statement; (4) prosecutorial misconduct in closing 12 argument amounted to fundamental error, requiring reversal; and (5) cumulative 13 error requires reversal. We affirm. 14 BACKGROUND 15 {2} The issues on appeal arise from the circumstances surrounding Defendant’s 16 arrest outside a motel in Alamogordo, New Mexico involving Defendant’s 17 questioning by police incident to his arrest, and the sweep of his motel room that 1 See Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966) (holding that a defendant’s statements made in response to custodial interrogation are admissible in evidence only if the defendant has been warned prior to questioning that they have a right to remain silent, they have a right to counsel, and that any statement made can be used against them at trial). 1 followed his arrest and questioning. We describe the circumstances briefly, in the 2 light most favorable to the district court’s rulings, leaving additional facts for our 3 discussion of each issue. 4 {3} Sheriff’s Deputy Juan Rodriguez, a drug enforcement agent, received a call 5 from an unknown person reporting that Defendant, a person with an outstanding 6 warrant for his arrest, was at Motel 6, Room 201 (an upstairs room) in Alamogordo. 7 After verifying that Defendant had an active arrest warrant, Deputy Rodriguez and 8 his partner, Deputy Brad Nordquist, headed to the motel. The record does not reveal 9 the grounds for the arrest warrant. 10 {4} The deputies positioned themselves across the street from Room 201 where 11 they were able to see into the room through an opening in the curtains. Although 12 they were able to identify Defendant, and although they did not see anyone except 13 Defendant enter or leave the room, they testified at trial that they were not able to 14 determine whether Defendant was alone in the room. Both officers testified that they 15 could see only a silhouette after the curtains were closed and could not determine if 16 there were one or two people in the room. 17 {5} After more than an hour of observation, Deputy Nordquist left the officers’ 18 vehicle and headed toward Defendant’s motel room. Deputy Nordquist was standing 19 at the top of the stairs, near the door to Room 201, when Defendant, who had left the 20 room, approached the bottom of the staircase. Deputy Nordquist pointed his gun at 2 1 Defendant and ordered Defendant to the ground. Defendant complied. Deputy 2 Nordquist continued to cover Defendant with his gun while Deputy Rodriguez drove 3 to where Defendant was lying on the ground. When Deputy Rodriguez arrived, he 4 handcuffed Defendant, patted him down, and emptied Defendant’s pockets. No 5 weapons or contraband were found in that search. Deputy Rodriguez then helped 6 Defendant stand up, and walked him to the front of the motel where the Deputy’s 7 vehicle was parked. 8 {6} Without reading Defendant Miranda warnings, Deputy Rodriguez asked 9 Defendant, “Hey, is there anything in that room up there, because my partner has to 10 go up in there, and I don’t want him to get hurt.” Defendant responded, “Just my 11 tablet. I’m charging it.” Deputy Rodriguez then asked, “Is that all?” Defendant 12 responded, “And I got a loaded syringe [up] there.” 13 {7} After relaying this information to Deputy Nordquist, who, with another 14 officer, was about to conduct a sweep of Defendant’s motel room, Deputy Rodriguez 15 read Defendant Miranda warnings. He again asked Defendant if there was anything 16 in Room 201. Defendant responded that his electronics and jacket were in the room. 17 Deputy Rodriguez asked Defendant about the syringe. Defendant replied, “What 18 syringe?” 19 {8} The sweep of Defendant’s motel room revealed a single loaded syringe in 20 plain view on top of the refrigerator in the room, a jacket, and a tablet, which was 3 1 charging. The room was otherwise empty. The bed was made and the room appeared 2 ready for a new guest. A laboratory test of the contents of the syringe identified 3 methamphetamine. 4 DISCUSSION 5 I. The Admission of Defendant’s Un-Mirandized Statement Was Error, but 6 This Error Was Not Fundamental 7 {9} Defendant argues on appeal that the district court erred in refusing to suppress 8 his response to Deputy Rodriguez’s question about the contents of his motel room. 9 Defendant contends that suppression was required because Deputy Rodriguez’s 10 question was a custodial interrogation and he had not been advised of his right to 11 remain silent, as required by Miranda. The State contends in response that Deputy 12 Rodriguez’s question was designed to protect the safety of the law enforcement 13 officers who were about to conduct a sweep of Defendant’s motel room, and was, 14 therefore, subject to the “public safety” exception to Miranda adopted by the United 15 States Supreme Court in New York v. Quarles, 467 U.S. 649, (655-56) (1984), and 16 by our Supreme Court in State v. Widmer, 2020-NMSC-007, ¶ 1, 461 P.3d 881. 17 A. Preservation 18 {10} Before addressing the merits of this issue, we first consider whether 19 Defendant preserved in the district court the argument he now raises on appeal. 20 Defendant acknowledges that he did not file a motion to suppress prior to trial, as 21 required, in the absence of good cause, by Rule 5-212(C) NMRA. The issue arose 4 1 for the first time at trial. Defense counsel objected to the admission of Defendant’s 2 answer to Deputy Rodriguez’s question about the contents of his motel room on the 3 basis that the State had failed to first establish that Defendant had been given 4 Miranda warnings. A bench conference followed. The State conceded in response 5 to the objection that Miranda warnings had not been given at the time the question 6 was asked, and argued that Defendant’s answer should be admitted into evidence 7 because the public safety exception to Miranda applied. 8 {11} The defense admitted ineffective assistance in failing to move prior to trial to 9 suppress the statement, offering as good cause misleading information in Deputy 10 Rodriguez’s probable cause statement—specifically, Deputy Rodriguez’s statement 11 that he learned about the syringe in the room “through general conversation.” The 12 State then argued that the public safety exception to Miranda recognized by our 13 Supreme Court in Widmer applied. See 2020-NMSC-007, ¶ 1. The prosecutor stated 14 that the deputies had prior contact with Defendant, and knew that Defendant had 15 previously had a firearm. Defendant did not respond to the State’s public safety 16 argument. Without making findings of fact, the district court overruled the objection. 17 The parties agree on appeal that the district court ruled on the merits of the motion 18 to suppress rather than on the untimeliness of the motion. We, therefore, assume that 19 the district court concluded that the public safety exception applied. See State v. 20 Rivas, 2017-NMSC-022, ¶ 37, 398 P.3d 299 (noting that “when the trial court rules 5 1 on the merits of an untimely suppression motion, the court has also implicitly found 2 cause to grant relief from forfeiture of the right to seek suppression”). 3 {12} On appeal, Defendant argues that the State failed to show that the officers had 4 an “objectively reasonable need to protect the police or the public from immediate 5 danger,” the standard set by both Quarles and Widmer for the application of the 6 public safety exception to Miranda. Defendant further contends that a sweep of 7 Defendant’s motel room was not required by an immediate danger to the police, and 8 that, in the absence of such immediate danger, the police could not rely on the 9 necessity of a protective sweep to justify a police safety exception to Miranda 10 warnings. Our review of the record in the district court shows that Defendant did not 11 make this argument to the district court or indeed present any argument rebutting the 12 State’s claim that the public safety exception applied. 13 {13} To preserve an issue for appeal, an objection must provide the district court 14 with a factual and legal basis on which to make an informed ruling. State v. 15 Quiñones, 2011-NMCA-018, ¶ 23, 149 N.M. 294, 248 P.3d 336. An issue is 16 preserved for appeal if the appellant “fairly invoked a ruling of the trial court on 17 same grounds argued on appeal.” In re Norwest Bank of N.M., N.A., 2003-NMCA- 18 128, ¶ 10, 134 N.M. 516, 80 P.3d 98 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). 19 “Preservation serves the purposes of (1) allowing the trial court an opportunity to 20 correct any errors, thereby avoiding the need for appeal; and (2) creating a record 6 1 from which this Court can make informed decisions.” Quiñones, 2011-NMCA-018, 2 ¶ 23. These purposes not having been served here, this issue is not preserved for our 3 review. 4 B. Fundamental Error 5 {14} We next consider Defendant’s argument that the district court’s failure to 6 suppress Defendant’s un-Mirandized admission should be reversed based on 7 fundamental error. 8 {15} Review for fundamental error is a two-step process; first, we determine 9 whether error occurred and then determine whether the error was fundamental. State 10 v. Ocon, 2021-NMCA-032, ¶¶ 7-8, 493 P.3d 448. In determining whether error 11 occurred, we review the denial of a motion to suppress as a mixed question of fact 12 and law. State v. Williams, 2011-NMSC-026, ¶ 8, 149 N.M. 729, 255 P.3d 307. In 13 the absence of findings by the district court, as is the case here, “we will indulge in 14 all reasonable presumptions in support of the district court’s ruling.” State v. 15 Gonzales, 1999-NMCA-027, ¶ 15, 126 N.M. 742, 975 P.2d 355. A presumption is 16 reasonable if it is supported by substantial evidence in the record. See State v. 17 Slayton, 2009-NMSC-054, ¶ 11, 147 N.M. 340, 223 P.3d 337 (providing that 18 substantial evidence must support the district court’s findings of fact). We will infer 19 that the district court accepted all uncontradicted testimony unless the court 7 1 specifically indicates that it found the testimony was not credible. State v. Murry, 2 2014-NMCA-021, ¶ 10, 318 P.3d 180. 3 {16} Defendant argues that a protective sweep of Defendant’s room was not 4 justified by any immediate danger to police officers and that, therefore, the need to 5 conduct a protective sweep cannot form the basis for the State’s claim that there was 6 an objectively reasonable, immediate threat to the officers’ safety justifying pre- 7 Miranda questioning of Defendant. We agree that the totality of the circumstances 8 here do not support the claimed exception to Miranda, but do not adopt Defendant’s 9 reasoning. We note that there is no claim on appeal that the sweep of Defendant’s 10 room violated his rights under the Fourth Amendment to the United States 11 Constitution or under Article II, Section 10 of the New Mexico Constitution. 12 Entering the room to secure it was likely justified by Deputy Nordquist’s testimony 13 that he conducted a sweep of the room for the purpose of preserving evidence. This 14 testimony does not establish, as the State contends, that the sweep was for the 15 purpose of addressing a danger to officers based on the possible presence of another 16 person inside the room. In any event, because there is no challenge to the legality of 17 the protective sweep, we do not need to resolve the question of whether a protective 18 sweep was justified in this case. We do agree, however, that precedent regarding the 19 level of danger to police required to justify a protective sweep can help inform our 8 1 decision about whether the circumstances here posed the kind of immediate danger 2 to police officers required for the public safety exception to Miranda. 3 {17} In its decision in Quarles, the United States Supreme Court adopted the 4 limited public safety exception to Miranda at issue in this case. Quarles holds that 5 when a question is asked by police officers for the purpose of protecting the public 6 or protecting the police from an objectively reasonable, immediate threat to their 7 safety, the defendant’s answer will not be suppressed, even though the defendant is 8 in custody and Miranda warnings were not given prior to questioning. See 467 U.S. 9 at 658-59. In Quarles, the police were pursuing a suspect who police had been told 10 had just committed an armed rape. Id. at 651-52. The suspect had entered a nearby 11 supermarket. Id. The police chased the suspect through the aisles of the store, and, 12 when they caught him, they handcuffed and frisked him. Id. at 652. Police discovered 13 during the frisk that the suspect was wearing a shoulder holster, which was empty. 14 Id. Prior to giving Miranda warnings, they asked the suspect where the gun was. He 15 stated that the gun was “over there,” pointing to some empty cartons nearby. Id. at 16 652. Considering the totality of the circumstances, the United States Supreme Court 17 held that Miranda warnings were not required because the police, “in the very act of 18 apprehending a suspect, were confronted with the immediate necessity of 19 ascertaining the whereabouts of a gun which they had every reason to believe the 20 suspect had just removed from his empty holster.” Id. at 657. The Supreme Court 9 1 found that the presence of a gun in a grocery store filled with shoppers endangered 2 members of the public and that the question was necessary to secure the safety of 3 both the officers and the public. Id. at 659. 4 {18} Our Supreme Court in Widmer adopted the Quarles public safety exception, 5 holding that the exception will apply so long as the police questioning prior to giving 6 Miranda warnings is not “solely to elicit incriminating testimony,” and the question 7 is “objectively reasonable based on a need to protect [either the police or the public] 8 from an immediate danger.” Widmer, 2020-NMSC-007, ¶¶ 35, 37 (internal quotation 9 marks and citation omitted). Widmer applied the exception to a question asked by 10 police about items on the suspect’s person just prior to conducting a pat-down search 11 incident to arrest. Id. ¶ 1. In Widmer, our Supreme Court found that the danger to 12 police from needles, weapons, or sharp items on the suspect’s person provided an 13 objectively reasonable basis justifying a pre-Miranda warnings question to protect 14 the officers from an immediate danger. Id. ¶¶ 1, 16 (noting the objectively reasonable 15 officer concern that a needle or sharp object might injure him and expose him to 16 bodily fluids). As in Quarles, the exigency arose “in the very act of apprehending a 17 suspect.” 467 U.S. at 657. 18 {19} In this case, in contrast to both Quarles and Widmer, there was no objectively 19 reasonable need to protect officers or the public from an immediate danger incident 20 to Defendant’s arrest. Uncontradicted evidence established that Defendant was 10 1 handcuffed and had already been searched, that Defendant was in the custody of 2 Deputy Rodriguez and had been taken to the front of the motel, near the motel office, 3 at the time the question was asked about the contents of his motel room. There was 4 no evidence presented that Defendant possessed a weapon or that he had any 5 dangerous objects on his person at the time he was arrested. Under the 6 circumstances, both the timing of the question and the circumstances known to the 7 officers at the time the question was asked weigh against the conclusion that the 8 question was prompted by an immediate necessity to protect the officers or the 9 public. 10 {20} We assume, consistent with our standard of review, that the officers believed 11 it was possible that someone remained in the room. This fact, however, does not 12 establish the objectively reasonable immediate danger to officers required by 13 Quarles and Widmer. Looking to the cases Defendant cites on the justification 14 required to conduct a protective sweep, these cases require affirmative evidence that 15 someone is in the space to be searched, not simply a suspicion that someone might 16 be there. See United States v. Colbert, 76 F.3d 773, 777-78 (6th Cir. 1996) (stating 17 that a protective sweep was not justified where officers had no information anyone 18 else was in the defendant’s apartment); see also Maryland v. Buie, 494 U.S. 325, 19 337 (1990) (recognizing an exception to the Fourth Amendment requirement of a 20 search warrant where officers have a reasonable belief based on facts that “the area 11 1 to be swept harbors an individual posing a danger to those on the arrest scene”), 2 superseded by rule as stated in State v. Laboo, 933 A.2d 4 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 3 2007). No evidence affirmatively establishing the presence of another person inside 4 the motel room was introduced in this case. And although the State argues that 5 Defendant was suspected of leaving a gun in the room, there is likewise no evidence 6 in the record to support that claim. Rather, the only discussion of whether Defendant 7 had a weapon came from the prosecutor. During the bench conference, the 8 prosecutor asserted that the officers had previous dealings with Defendant and knew 9 him to possess firearms. The prosecutor did not elicit testimony or introduce 10 evidence to support this assertion during trial. See State v. Garcia, 1978-NMCA- 11 109, ¶ 4, 92 N.M. 730, 594 P.2d 1186 (“[S]tatements of counsel are not evidence.”); 12 Slayton, 2009-NMSC-054, ¶ 11 (providing that the district court’s decision on 13 suppression must be supported by substantial evidence in the record). 14 {21} A similar evaluation was employed by this Court in State v. Trangucci, to 15 determine whether asking an un-Mirandized suspect arrested in his bedroom about 16 the location of his gun implicated the public safety exception. 1990-NMCA-009, 17 ¶ 10, 796 P.2d 606. The suspect was arrested in a bedroom for a violent felony 18 committed with a gun the previous night. Id. ¶¶ 3-5. When the police pulled the 19 defendant out from under a dresser where he was hiding, they asked, “Where is the 20 gun?” Id. ¶ 5. This Court applied the public safety exception. Id. ¶ 13. This Court 12 1 observed that “[t]he standard for application of the public safety exception to 2 Miranda warnings” under Quarles is “a reasonable determination of an objective, 3 immediate threat to the safety of the public [or the police].” Id. ¶ 10. Because 4 substantial evidence supported the district court’s finding that the police expected to 5 find a gun and “that the situation had not stabilized or been secured for everybody’s 6 safety” when the defendant was questioned, this Court held that the district court 7 properly denied the defendant’s motion to suppress under the police and/or public 8 safety exception to Miranda. Id. ¶ 13. 9 {22} In this case, where Defendant had been arrested, searched, handcuffed, and 10 moved to the front of the motel near the officers’ vehicle, distant from his motel 11 room, where the officers in over an hour of surveillance had seen no one but 12 Defendant enter or leave the motel room, where there was no evidence in the record 13 concerning the nature of the warrant for Defendant’s arrest, and no evidence about 14 Defendant’s prior possession of a weapon, the district court’s application of the 15 public safety exception based on the State’s argument that the officers believed 16 someone else might be in the room is not consistent with either Quarles, Widmer, or 17 Trangucci. Even when the evidence is construed favorably to support the district 18 court’s decision, substantial evidence in the record does not establish the kind of 19 exigent circumstances incident to an arrest, circumstances posing an immediate 20 danger to officers or the public, necessary to support un-Mirandized questioning. 13 1 Under the totality of the circumstances, questioning Defendant about the contents of 2 his motel room was not “objectively reasonable based on a need to protect [either 3 the police or the public] from an immediate danger.” Widmer, 2020-NMSC-007, 4 ¶¶ 35, 37 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). We conclude that the 5 district court erred in failing to suppress Defendant’s un-Mirandized admission. 6 {23} The conclusion that there was error in the district court’s admission of the 7 Defendant’s un-Mirandized statement does not conclude our analysis, however. We 8 must address whether the error in the admission of Defendant’s un-Mirandized 9 statement was fundamental error. “The doctrine of fundamental error applies only 10 under exceptional circumstances and only to prevent a miscarriage of justice.” State 11 v. Barber, 2004-NMSC-019, ¶ 8, 135 N.M. 621, 92 P.3d 633. The error must “shock 12 the conscience or implicate a fundamental unfairness within the system that would 13 undermine judicial integrity if left unchecked.” State v. Cunningham, 2000-NMSC- 14 009, ¶ 21, 128 N.M. 711, 998 P.2d 176 (internal quotation marks and citation 15 omitted). 16 {24} Having reviewed the other evidence in the record in this case, we conclude 17 that the admission of Defendant’s statement did not implicate a fundamental 18 unfairness in the system of justice. First, we note that before Defendant’s un- 19 Mirandized statement was admitted into evidence through Deputy Rodriguez’s 20 testimony, Deputy Nordquist had already testified to the jury that Defendant had told 14 1 his partner, Deputy Rodriguez, there was a syringe in the room. Second, Defendant 2 objected only to his un-Mirandized admission and did not move to suppress the 3 syringe or its contents, discovered in plain view in the sweep of the motel room. 4 Therefore, the jury would have heard, in any event, testimony that the officers found 5 a syringe loaded with methamphetamine in plain sight in Defendant’s motel room. 6 Finally, despite the admission of his answer to Deputy Rodriguez’s question, 7 Defendant was still able to argue to the jury that Defendant’s admission that the 8 syringe belonged to him was ambiguous or was reported incorrectly by Deputy 9 Rodriguez and that he had said only that there was “a syringe” in the room. 10 Defendant argued in closing argument that others had access to the motel room and 11 that the evidence did not establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the syringe had 12 not been left in the motel room by a prior renter, motel staff, or by someone who 13 wanted to incriminate him. We therefore conclude that the error by the district court 14 does not meet the high standard required for fundamental error. 15 II. The District Court’s Denial of Defendant’s Motion for a Mistrial Based 16 on a Witness’s Comment on His Post-Miranda Silence Was Not an Abuse 17 of Discretion 18 {25} Defendant argues that the district court erred in denying his motion for a 19 mistrial based on a comment on his post-Miranda silence made by Deputy 20 Rodriguez during cross-examination by the defense. We review the denial of a 15 1 mistrial for an abuse of discretion. State v. O’Neal, 2008-NMCA-022, ¶ 28, 143 2 N.M. 437, 176 P.3d 1169. 3 {26} The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution’s Due Process 4 Clause protects against prosecutorial comment on a defendant’s post-Miranda 5 exercise of their right to remain silent. See State v. DeGraff, 2006-NMSC-011, ¶ 12, 6 139 N.M. 211, 131 P.3d 61; see also State v. Foster, 1998-NMCA-163, ¶ 11, 126 7 N.M. 177, 967 P.2d 852 (providing that a prosecutor is not permitted to elicit 8 statements from a witness that the defendant invoked his right to remain silent and 9 is not permitted to use a defendant’s silence to impeach their credibility or create an 10 inference of guilt in the minds of the jury). 11 {27} Here, however, the prosecutor did not elicit the comment at issue. Rather, the 12 witness’s comment on Defendant’s silence was made during cross-examination by 13 defense counsel. Defendant did not object at the time the statement was made, only 14 later moving for a mistrial when the court brought the statement to his attention. 15 Although the district court correctly found the statement to be a comment on 16 Defendant’s silence and to be unresponsive to the question asked by defense counsel, 17 the district court denied the motion for a mistrial, instead giving a curative 18 instruction. 19 {28} We find no abuse of discretion in the district court’s decision that a curative 20 instruction was adequate to remedy any prejudice to Defendant. The comment 16 1 complained of was an isolated comment; Defendant did not timely object; the 2 prosecutor did not solicit the comment and did not later direct attention to the 3 comment by asking related questions or by referring to it in closing argument. We, 4 therefore, are not persuaded that any prejudice was not remedied by a curative 5 instruction. See State v. Molina, 1984-NMSC-038, ¶ 5, 101 N.M. 146, 679 P.2d 814 6 (“It is not true, however, that any comment on the defendant’s silence must result in 7 a mistrial, or a reversal of the defendant’s conviction.” (emphasis, internal quotation 8 marks, and citation omitted)); accord State v. Wildgrube, 2003-NMCA-108, ¶¶ 23- 9 24, 134 N.M. 262, 75 P.3d 862 (holding that when a police officer made an 10 inadvertent comment regarding the defendant’s post-Miranda silence and the 11 prosecutor did not exploit the reference by asking related questions or referring to 12 the comment in closing argument, and no timely objection was made by the 13 defendant, reversal was not required). Accordingly, Defendant has failed to 14 demonstrate error on this basis. 15 III. The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Giving a Corrective 16 Instruction to Disregard Hearsay Evidence 17 {29} Defendant contends that the district court’s curative instruction was 18 inadequate to prevent prejudice from Deputy Rodriguez’s hearsay testimony 19 reporting that he had been told by the motel’s desk clerk that Defendant had not 20 rented Room 201. Defendant claims that reversal is required. We note that 21 “[g]enerally, a prompt admonition from the court to the jury to disregard and not 17 1 consider inadmissible evidence sufficiently cures any prejudicial effect which might 2 otherwise result.” State v. Newman, 1989-NMCA-086, ¶ 19, 109 N.M. 263, 784 P.2d 3 1006. We are not persuaded that any exception to this rule applies here. 4 {30} Our review is for abuse of discretion. See State v. Arvizo, 2021-NMCA-055, 5 ¶ 29, 499 P.3d 1221 (“[A] motion for mistrial is addressed to the sound discretion of 6 the district court and will not be disturbed absent a showing of abuse of discretion.”). 7 We see no abuse of discretion in the district court’s determination that an instruction 8 to the jury to disregard the hearsay testimony described above would avoid prejudice 9 to Defendant. Defendant never objected to the protective sweep or subsequent search 10 of the motel room, so the jury was not required to determine whether Defendant had 11 a Fourth Amendment expectation of privacy in the room. The desk clerk’s statement 12 is only tangentially related, if related at all, to Defendant’s defense that the syringe 13 had been left in the room by a prior tenant, by cleaning staff, or by someone who 14 wanted to set him up. We therefore see no abuse of discretion in the district court’s 15 reliance on a corrective instruction, rather than a mistrial. 16 IV. Defendant’s Claims of Prosecutorial Misconduct in Closing Argument 17 Do Not Amount to Fundamental Error 18 {31} Defendant alleges that the prosecution committed misconduct in its closing 19 arguments by (1) referring to evidence outside the record, (2) referencing hearsay 20 that had been excluded from the record, and (3) misstating the law on possession. 21 Defendant did not object to any part of the State’s closing arguments. Our review, 18 1 therefore, is for fundamental error. See State v. Allen, 2000-NMSC-002, ¶ 95, 128 2 N.M. 482, 994 P.2d 728. 3 {32} To find fundamental error based on misconduct in closing argument, even if 4 the comments were erroneous, “we must be convinced that the prosecutor’s conduct 5 created a reasonable probability that the error was a significant factor in the jury’s 6 deliberations in relation to the rest of the evidence before them.” State v. Sosa, 2009- 7 NMSC-056, ¶ 35, 147 N.M. 351, 223 P.3d 348 (internal quotation marks and citation 8 omitted). “As with any fundamental error inquiry, we will upset a jury verdict only 9 (1) when guilt is so doubtful as to shock the conscience, or (2) when there has been 10 an error in the process implicating the fundamental integrity of the judicial process.” 11 Id. 12 {33} Even assuming, without deciding, that the prosecution made erroneous and 13 potentially misleading statements during closing about whether Defendant had paid 14 to use the motel room, we are not persuaded that the information was a significant 15 factor in the jury’s deliberations. As we have already discussed, there was other, 16 more direct evidence of Defendant’s possession of the loaded syringe apart from any 17 comment on Defendant’s alleged failure to have paid rent for his room. Deputy 18 Nordquist had testified that he had been told by Deputy Rodriguez that Defendant 19 admitted there was a syringe in the room. This testimony, together with the seizure 20 of the syringe itself, and the stipulated laboratory test identifying the contents as 19 1 methamphetamine, provided overwhelming evidence of Defendant’s possession of 2 methamphetamine. The prosecution’s comments dealt with secondary matters of 3 little relevance to the questions before the jury. 4 {34} We therefore are not persuaded that the circumstances here rise to the level 5 necessary to support the application of the doctrine of fundamental error. 6 V. Cumulative Error 7 {35} Finally, Defendant argues that the cumulative effect of the various alleged 8 errors outlined above denied him a fair trial. “The doctrine of cumulative error 9 requires reversal when a series of lesser improprieties throughout a trial are found, 10 in aggregate, to be so prejudicial that the defendant was deprived of the 11 constitutional right to a fair trial.” State v. Duffy, 1998-NMSC 014, ¶ 29, 126 N.M. 12 132, 967 P.2d 807, overruled on other grounds by State v. Tollardo, 2012-NMSC- 13 008, ¶ 37 n.6, 275 P.3d 110. “Cumulative error has no application if the district court 14 committed no errors and if the defendant received a fair trial.” State v. Guerra, 2012- 15 NMSC-014, ¶ 47, 278 P.3d 1031. Because we have concluded the district court 16 committed no reversible errors in this case, we conclude that there is no cumulative 17 error. See id. ¶¶ 47-48. 18 CONCLUSION 20 1 {36} We affirm Defendant’s conviction. 2 {37} IT IS SO ORDERED. 3 __________________________________ 4 JANE B. YOHALEM, Judge 5 WE CONCUR: 6 _________________________________ 7 MEGAN P. DUFFY, Judge 8 _________________________________ 9 KATHERINE A. WRAY, Judge 21