Ritchie v. State

Attorneys for Appellant                            Attorneys for Appellee
Mark Small                                   Steve Carter
Kevin McShane                                      Attorney General of
Indiana
Marion County Public Defender Agency
Indianapolis, Indiana                              Stephen R. Creason
                                             Deputy Attorney General
                                             Indianapolis, Indiana

____________________________________________________________________________
__

                                   In the
                            Indiana Supreme Court
                      _________________________________

                            No. 49S00-0011-DP-638

 Benjamin Ritchie,
                                             Appellant (Defendant below),

                                     v.

State of Indiana,
                                             Appellee (Plaintiff below).
                      _________________________________

       Appeal from the Marion Superior Court, No. 49G04-0010-CF-172900
                    The Honorable Patricia Gifford, Judge
                      _________________________________

                              On Direct Appeal
                      _________________________________

                                May 25, 2004

Boehm, Justice.


      Benjamin Ritchie was convicted of killing Beech Grove  police  officer
William Toney.  Because the  victim  was  a  law  enforcement  officer,  the
prosecutor sought the death penalty.  The jury  recommended  death  and  the
trial court imposed that sentence.  We affirm the conviction  and  sentence.







                      Factual and Procedural Background


      On September 29, 2000, around 7:00 p.m., Ritchie and two others  stole
a white Chevrolet Astro van from a gas station in Beech  Grove.   The  theft
was reported and police were dispatched  to  the  scene  where  Beech  Grove
police officer Matt Hickey filed a  stolen  vehicle  report.   Approximately
two hours later, Hickey was  en  route  to  a  traffic  accident  scene  and
recognized the stolen van as Ritchie and one of his  accomplices  drove  by.
After confirming by radio that the van bore the license plate of the  stolen
vehicle, Hickey pursued, joined  by  officers  Robert  Mercuri  and  William
Toney.  After a short chase, the van pulled into the  yard  of  a  residence
where Ritchie and his companion jumped out and ran in  opposite  directions.
Officer Toney pursued Ritchie on foot, and  ultimately  Ritchie  turned  and
fired four shots, one of which struck Toney in the  chest.   Toney  died  at
the scene.  Ritchie was convicted of murder and  the  jury  recommended  the
death penalty, which the trial court imposed.  This direct appeal  followed.



                I. Indiana Constitution Article I, Section 18


      Ritchie argues that Indiana’s Death Penalty Statute  violates  Article
I, Section 18 of the Indiana Constitution, which provides that “[t]he  penal
code shall  be  founded  on  the  principles  of  reformation,  and  not  of
vindictive justice.”  Ritchie concedes that this claim was rejected  shortly
after the 1851 Constitution was adopted.  In Driskill v. State, 7 Ind.  338,
343 (1855), and Rice v. State, 7 Ind. 332, 338 (1855), this Court held  that
Section 18 applies to the Penal Code as a whole, but does not  require  that
every provision of the Penal Code be oriented toward  reform.   Accordingly,
this Court early held that Section 18 is not violated by the death  penalty.
  Ritchie  points  out  that  these  seminal  cases  neither  discussed  the
legislative history of  Section  18  nor  considered  the  prevailing  legal
framework at the time Section 18 was adopted.  Essentially,  Ritchie  argues
that this Court should have found that the focus of Indiana’s Penal Code  is
reform, and that the death penalty is grounded in the inconsistent  goal  of
vindictive retribution and is therefore unconstitutional.  We  do  not  find
this contention persuasive.  Driskill  and  Rice  were  decided  immediately
following the adoption of the 1851 Constitution.   There  was  no  need  for
this Court, in deciding those cases, to review the mindset  of  the  framers
of our state constitution.  The Indiana Supreme Court of 1855  was  composed
of judges who were present at the creation.  To the  extent  Ritchie  relies
on the views of the framers, contemporaneous court  decisions  are  evidence
of the attitude of the times.


      In recent times, this Court has consistently adhered to the view  that
the death penalty does not violate Section 18.  See  Saylor  v.  State,  686
N.E.2d 80, 88 (Ind. 1997); Harrison v. State, 644 N.E.2d  1243,  1258  (Ind.
1995); Fleenor v. State, 514 N.E.2d 80, 90 (Ind. 1987).  Ritchie advances  a
number of criticisms of the wisdom, fairness, humanity, or efficacy  of  the
death penalty.  These arguments have been successful in the legislatures  of
several states and many foreign countries.  They are  properly  directed  to
the General Assembly, which is free to abolish  the  death  penalty  at  any
time.   Any  change  in  the  settled  doctrine  that  the  penalty  is  not
inherently unconstitutional should be by constitutional amendment.


        II. Death by Lethal Injection as Cruel and Unusual Punishment


      Indiana  now  administers  the  death  penalty  by  lethal  injection.
Ritchie contends that this method of  execution  inflicts  unnecessary  pain
and therefore constitutes cruel and unusual punishment for purposes  of  the
Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution.   We  recently  rejected
this claim in Moore v. State, 771 N.E.2d 46  (Ind.  2002).   In  Moore,  the
defendant contended that lethal injection was cruel and unusual  as  applied
to him because of his obesity  and  the  resulting  inability  to  locate  a
suitable vein.  Id.  at  55  n.3.   We  noted  that  Moore  raised  possible
difficulties with the lethal injection process  without  substantiating  the
probability that any would occur in Moore’s case. Id.  We  held  that  Moore
had not established that lethal  injection  constituted  cruel  and  unusual
punishment in that case. Id. at 56.  In holding that  injection  as  applied
in Moore did not violate the Eighth  Amendment,  we  necessarily  held  that
injection is not per se cruel and unusual.


      In Moore, we observed that  the  Eighth  Amendment  requires  that  an
execution “be performed in  a  manner  that  avoids  unnecessary  or  wanton
infliction  of  pain,”  but  concluded  that  lethal  injection   does   not
constitute wanton infliction of pain. Id. at 55.  Because Ritchie points  to
no circumstances creating an  unusual  risk  in  his  case,  his  contention
amounts to a request to reverse that holding.  Ritchie cites  two  instances
where lethal injection did inflict excessive pain.  In the first  of  these,
the defendant’s veins were abnormally small and a physician was required  to
perform a “cut down” to locate a proper vein.  The  execution  required  one
hour and seventeen minutes, and sixteen minutes were spent locating  a  vein
before a physician’s incision exposed one.  The defendant was conscious  the
entire time.  The second instance involved an execution that took  one  hour
to complete, again because of difficulty in inserting the  needle  into  the
vein.  In that case the problem was  attributed  to  the  defendant’s  size.
These two isolated cases do  not  establish  that  lethal  injection  is  an
inherently cruel  or  unusual  method.   To  be  sure,  these  two  examples
demonstrate that problems may  occur  in  unusual  circumstances,  but  that
possibility does not rise to a systematic or inherent  flaw  in  the  lethal
injection process. See Hill v. Lockhart, 791 F. Supp. 1388, 1394 (E.D.  Ark.
1992).


      Recent decisions of the United States Supreme Court confirm this view.
 The reach of the Eighth Amendment is an issue of federal law.  The  Supreme
Court recently held that a challenge to the  “cut  down”  procedure  may  be
brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.  Nelson v. Campbell, 2004  U.S.  LEXIS  3680
(May 24, 2004).  That case involves a  defendant  who  has  collapsed  veins
requiring a potentially painful surgical procedure to perform an  injection.
 Two recent applications for stays of execution, Zimmerman v.  Johnson,  124
S.Ct. 979 (2003), and Vickers v. Dretke,  124  S.Ct.  956  (2003),  involved
more general challenges to the  lethal  injection  process.   Zimmerman  was
originally granted a stay of execution by the United States  Supreme  Court,
but the stay was lifted on December 15, 2003, and Vickers’s application  for
stay was denied by the Court on December 9, 2003.  Both have been  executed.
 Ritchie’s claim, like those in  Vickers  and  Zimmerman,  involves  only  a
general  claim  that  the  lethal  injection  process  violates  the  Eighth
Amendment.  Thus, the Supreme Court  has  very  recently  denied  review  of
these general challenges to lethal injection in proceedings where  execution
was imminent.  We conclude that the Court sees no merit  in  the  contention
that lethal injection is a per se violation of the Eighth Amendment.


            III. The Death Penalty as Inherently Unconstitutional


      Ritchie argues that the death penalty violates  the  Eighth  Amendment
and Article I, Section 16 of the Indiana Constitution because it  is  not  a
deterrent to crime.  The constitutionality of the death  penalty  under  the
federal constitution was resolved by the Supreme Court of the United  States
in Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. 153  (1976).  Ritchie’s contention  under  the
State Constitution assumes that deterrence is the only legitimate goal of  a
penal law and also that the  death  penalty  serves  no  deterrent  purpose.
Even if the former is the case, in Gregg, the Supreme  Court  observed  that
the death penalty serves as a valid deterrent in some situations and not  in
others.  428  U.S.  at  186-87.   Ritchie’s  contention  under   the   state
constitution also seeks review of settled precedent.  We adhere to the  view
this Court expressed in Evans v. State, 563 N.E.2d 1251, 1264  (Ind.  1990):
The effectiveness  of  the  death  penalty  as  a  deterrent  is  debatable;
resolution of that issue is a matter for the legislature.


               IV. Indiana Constitution Article I, Section 12


      Ritchie contends  that  the  Indiana  Death  Penalty  Statute  offends
Article I, Section 12 of  the  Indiana  Constitution  and  the  Due  Process
Clause of the federal constitution.  Article I,  Section  12  requires  that
“[j]ustice shall be administered freely, and without  purchase;  completely,
and without denial; speedily, and without delay.”  Ritchie points  out  that
an executed criminal cannot benefit from later  found  exculpatory  evidence
and therefore  cannot  receive  “complete”  justice.   Ritchie  provides  no
authority to support his contention that the death penalty violates  Section
12 because a person cannot “completely” obtain justice after execution.   We
do not find it persuasive.  “Complete”, as used in Section 12 does not  mean
“perfect.”  Complete redress for an unjust or erroneous conviction is  often
unavailable,  whether  the  wrongly  convicted  person  is  alive  or  dead.
Despite our best efforts, neither the United States, nor any  other  society
has  achieved  perfection  in  its  criminal   justice   system,   and   the
constitution does not require it.


                              V. Ex Post Facto


      Ritchie killed Officer Toney on September 29, 2000.  He was  convicted
on August 10, 2002 and sentenced on October 15, 2002.  An amendment  to  the
Death Penalty Statute became effective on July 1, 2002.[1]   Ritchie  argues
that the 2002 amendment to the Death Penalty Statute constitutes an ex  post
facto law because  it  effected  a  substantive  change  from  the  previous
statute.  Under the old statute, the jury’s weighing of aggravating  factors
and mitigating factors and the ensuing recommendation  was  not  binding  on
the trial  judge.   Under  the  new  statute,  after  receiving  the  jury’s
recommendation  as  to  the  death  penalty,  the  judge  is   to   sentence
“accordingly.”  As of this writing, the  United  States  Supreme  Court  has
granted certiorari in Schriro v. Summerlin, 124 S.Ct. 833 (2003) to  address
the retroactive application of Ring v. Arizona, 536  U.S.  584  (2002).   In
Summerlin, the Ninth  Circuit  held  that  Arizona’s  change  in  its  death
penalty  statute  violated  the  ex  post  facto  clause  of   the   federal
constitution by substituting the jury for the judge as  the  agent  required
to “find” the statutory aggravators. Summerlin v. Stewart,  341  F.3d  1082,
1108  (9th  Cir.  2003)  (en  banc),  cert.  granted  sub  nom,  Schriro  v.
Summerlin, 124 S.Ct. 833.  Despite this  holding,  we  believe  the  Indiana
amendment neither changes  the  elements  of  the  crime  nor  enlarges  its
punishment.  It simply mandates that once the jury makes  a  recommendation,
pursuant to its findings, the judge is to sentence “accordingly.”  As  such,
in our view the  changes  effected  by  the  2002  Indiana  legislation  are
procedural in nature for purposes of the ex post facto doctrine, and may  be
applied to crimes committed before the effective date.


      As the Supreme Court held in Dobbert v. Florida,  432  U.S.  282,  293
(1977), a substantive change in a  penal  statute  constitutes  an  ex  post
facto law, but a procedural change is not ex post  facto.   The  statute  in
Dobbert “established a bifurcated system in the wake of Furman  v.  Georgia,
408 U.S. 238 (1972)  and  thus  ‘simply  altered  the  methods  employed  in
determining whether the death penalty  was  to  be  imposed;  there  was  no
change in the quantum of  punishment  attached  to  the  crime.’”  Brice  v.
State, 815 A.2d 314, 321 (Del.  2003)  (citations  omitted).   Similarly,  a
statute that enlarged the class of people who were competent to  testify  in
criminal cases was not ex  post  facto  because  it  did  not  increase  the
punishment nor change the ingredients of the offense or the  ultimate  facts
necessary to establish guilt.  Hopt v. Utah, 110 U.S.  574,  589-90  (1884).
See also Collins v. Youngblood, 497 U.S. 37, 51 (1990),  where  the  Supreme
Court held that a statute that allowed  an  appellate  court  to  reform  an
improper verdict that assessed a punishment unauthorized by law was  not  an
ex post facto law because  it  did  not  “(1)  punish  as  a  crime  an  act
previously committed which was innocent when done; (2) make more  burdensome
the punishment for a crime,  after  its  commission;  nor  (3)  deprive  one
charged with a crime of any defense available according to the  law  at  the
time the act was committed.”  In our view, the  amendments  to  the  Indiana
Death Penalty Statute did none of these and is not  invalid  ex  post  facto
legislation.


        VI. The Weighing of Aggravating and Mitigating Circumstances


      Under the current version of the Indiana Death Penalty Statute, before
the jury can recommend the death penalty, it must find that “(1)  the  state
has proved  beyond  a  reasonable  doubt  that  at  least  one  (1)  of  the
aggravating circumstances listed in  subsection  (b)  exists;  and  (2)  any
mitigating circumstances  that  exist  are  outweighed  by  the  aggravating
circumstance or circumstances.” Ind. Code § 35-50-2-9(l) (2003).  Thus,  the
Indiana statute requires the jury to find the existence of one  or  more  of
the statutory aggravating circumstances beyond a reasonable  doubt.   Unlike
its counterparts in  some  states,  it  provides  no  guidance  as  to  what
standard governs the weighing process.[2]


      Ritchie argues that the trial court improperly instructed the jury  on
the weighing process contemplated by the second  part  of  this  subsection.
Specifically, he contends that the trial court should  have  instructed  the
jury that it must apply a reasonable doubt  standard  in  finding  that  the
State proved that the  aggravating  circumstances  outweigh  the  mitigating
factors.  For the reasons explained below, we conclude that this process  is
not subject to a reasonable doubt standard.  The Supreme Court has now  made
clear that statutory aggravators in Indiana’s  Death  Penalty  law  are  the
functional equivalent of elements of a crime, and must be found  by  a  jury
beyond a reasonable doubt.  Ring v. Arizona, 536 U.S. 584, 605, 609  (2002).
 Ring applied to death penalty jurisprudence the  doctrine  first  developed
in Apprendi v. New  Jersey,  530  U.S.  466,  494  (2000),  that  the  Sixth
Amendment right to jury trial requires that the jury make any  finding  that
“exposes the defendant to a greater punishment.”   We  believe  the  pivotal
inquiry under Ring  and  Apprendi  is  whether  exposure  to  punishment  is
increased, not whether the punishment should or should not be imposed  in  a
given case.  As  Ring  explained:  “If  a  State  makes  an  increase  in  a
defendant’s authorized punishment contingent on the finding of a fact,  that
fact—no matter how the State labels it—must be found  by  a  jury  beyond  a
reasonable doubt.” Ring, 536 U.S. at 602 (citations omitted).


      Indiana law, Indiana Code  section  35-50-2-9,  authorizes  the  death
penalty if  one  or  more  of  the  “aggravating  circumstances”  listed  in
subsection 9(b) is found.  Although our statute refers to the  items  listed
in subsection 9(b) as “aggravating circumstances,”  that  term  is  borrowed
from sentencing statutes.  As used in the death penalty statute,  it  refers
to the facts that must be found before a defendant may  be  subject  to  the
death penalty.  We think  it  is  more  useful  to  describe  these  factual
determinations as eligibility factors.  They are the first step required  of
the trier of fact.  In this case  that  issue  is  rather  simply  resolved.
Officer Toney, the victim of the murder, was a law enforcement  officer  and
there is no doubt that the defendant knew that at  the  time  he  fired  the
fatal shot.  Pursuant to section 9(e),  it  is  this  fact,  and  this  fact
alone, that, if proven beyond  a  reasonable  doubt,  enabled  the  jury  to
proceed to the second step of weighing any mitigating circumstances  against
the aggravating factors.


      Neither federal constitutional doctrine under Apprendi  and  Ring  nor
Indiana state jurisprudence leads to the requirement that weighing  be  done
under a reasonable doubt standard.  In Bivins v.  State,  642  N.E.2d.  928,
946 (Ind. 1994), we concluded,  as  a  matter  of  state  law,  that  “[t]he
determination of the weight to be accorded the  aggravating  and  mitigating
circumstances is not a ‘fact’ which  must  be  proved  beyond  a  reasonable
doubt but is a balancing process.”  (citations  omitted).[3]   Apprendi  and
its  progeny  do  not  change  this  conclusion.   At  its  core,  Ritchie’s
contention is that the  outcome  of  the  weighing  process  constitutes  an
eligibility factor for imposition of the death penalty.  If that were  true,
the Sixth Amendment under  Apprendi  and  Ring  would  require  that  it  be
subject to a reasonable doubt standard.  But  we  do  not  agree  with  that
premise.  Rather, the federal constitution  requires  that  eligibility  for
the death penalty be determined by the jury beyond a reasonable  doubt,  but
it does not require that the decision whether to impose  death  be  made  by
the jury, and it does not require the weighing, whether by  judge  or  jury,
to be under a reasonable doubt standard.


      Other states with similar sentencing schemes  have  reached  the  same
conclusion.   Before  the  2002  amendment  to  the  Indiana  Death  Penalty
Statute, the jury made a recommendation  but  the  judge  was  the  ultimate
weigher, just as in non death  penalty  sentencing.   The  weighing  process
determined whether the death penalty was to be applied, but eligibility  for
the death penalty was complete upon the finding of  an  eligibility  factor.
If, as Ritchie claims, weighing is required to  be  performed  by  the  jury
under a reasonable doubt standard, the  pre-2000  Indiana  scheme,  and  the
current  statute  in  Delaware,  would  violate  the  Sixth  Amendment.   We
conclude that neither is the case.


      The Supreme Court of Delaware in Brice v. State, 815  A.2d  314  (Del.
2003),  addressed  the  post-Ring  constitutionality  of  Delaware’s   death
penalty statute.  That state’s statute assigns to the sentencing  judge  the
sole responsibility for determining whether  to  impose  the  death  penalty
after weighing aggravating and mitigating  factors.   In  the  view  of  the
Supreme Court of Delaware, this approach remains constitutional after  Ring.
 Ring does not apply  to  the  weighing  phase  because  weighing  does  not
increase the maximum punishment.  Rather it resolved the  punishment  to  be
administered within the range fixed by the fact finding.  It is designed  to
“ensure that the punishment imposed is appropriate  and  proportional.”  Id.
at 322.


      The analysis of the California Supreme Court is consistent  with  this
view.   Under  the  California  statute,  if  the  jury  finds  a   “special
circumstance” in the guilt phase, a  penalty  phase  determines  whether  to
impose death.  People v. Prieto, 66 P.3d 1123  (Cal.  2003),  addressed  the
claim that an instruction of presumption of innocence must be given  in  the
penalty phase.   The  California  Supreme  Court  rejected  this  claim  and
observed that Ring and Apprendi are satisfied by  the  California  statutory
scheme:

      Under the California death penalty scheme, once the defendant has been
      convicted of first degree murder and one or more special circumstances
      has been found true beyond a reasonable doubt, death is no  more  than
      the prescribed statutory maximum for the offense; the only alternative
      is life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.

Id. at 1147 (emphasis in original) (citations omitted).  In explaining  this
conclusion, the California Supreme Court  cited  the  U.S.  Supreme  Court’s
holding in Tuilaepa v. California, 512 U.S. 967, 972 (1994), that under  the
California framework, “the jury [in the penalty  phase]  merely  weight  the
factors enumerated in section 190.3  and  determines  ‘whether  a  defendant
eligible for the death penalty should in fact receive that  sentence.’”  Id.
We agree and think the same reasoning applies to the Indiana statute.


      Similarly, the Nebraska Supreme Court held that Ring affects “only the
narrow issue of whether there is a Sixth Amendment  right  to  have  a  jury
determine the  existence  of  any  aggravating  circumstance  upon  which  a
capital sentence is based.” Nebraska v. Gales, 658  N.W.2d  604,  623  (Neb.
2003).  Under Nebraska’s post-Ring death penalty statute, the  jury  is  not
to  determine  mitigating   circumstances   or   balance   aggravators   and
mitigators.  The Court contrasted the eligibility  determination  which  the
jury makes with the death selection process  which  Nebraska  vests  in  the
judge:

      It is the determination  of  “death  eligibility”  which  exposes  the
      defendant to greater punishment, and such exposure triggers the  Sixth
      Amendment right to jury determination as delineated  in  Apprendi  and
      Ring.  In contrast, the determination of mitigating circumstances, the
      balancing   of   aggravating    circumstances    against    mitigating
      circumstances, and proportionality review are part of  the  ‘selection
      decision’ in capital sentencing, which, under the  current  and  prior
      statutes, occurs only after eligibility has  been  determined.   These
      determinations cannot increase the potential  punishment  to  which  a
      defendant  is  exposed   as   a   consequence   of   the   eligibility
      determination.  Accordingly, we do not read either Apprendi or Ring to
      require  that  the  determination  of  mitigating  circumstances,  the
      balancing function, or proportionality review be undertaken by a jury.



Id. at 627-28 (citations omitted).

      The Maryland Supreme Court reached the  same  conclusion.   Maryland’s
death  penalty  statute  allows  imposition  of  a  death  sentence  if  the
sentencing authority determines that aggravating circumstances outweigh  any
mitigating circumstances by a preponderance of the evidence. Oken v.  State,
835 A.2d 1105, 1147  (Md.  2003).   In  holding  the  preponderance  of  the
evidence standard constitutional, the Court stated:


      As is readily apparent from  the  opinion  of  the  Court,  Ring  only
      addresses the eligibility phase  of  the  sentencing  process.   Those
      aggravating  factors  which  narrow  the   class   of   death-eligible
      defendants for Eighth Amendment purposes must be  found  by  a  proper
      sentencing authority beyond a reasonable doubt in order to comply with
      the requirements of the  Sixth  Amendment.  Contrary  to  the  present
      assertions of Oken, Ring holds no implications for the selection phase
      of Maryland’s sentencing process.


Id.


      We note the contrary view of the Nevada Supreme Court.  In Johnson  v.
State, 59 P.3d 450 (Nev. 2002),  that  Court  concluded  that  the  weighing
process is  in  part  a  factual  determination,  not  merely  discretionary
weighing.  Id. at 460.  Although the  Nevada  Supreme  Court  observed  that
Ring expressly did not address any “Sixth Amendment claim  with  respect  to
mitigating circumstances,” the court concluded that  Ring  required  a  jury
finding as to weighing. Id.  For the reasons already given  we  respectfully
disagree.


      In sum, we conclude that the Indiana Death Penalty  Statute  does  not
violate the Sixth Amendment as interpreted by Apprendi  and  Ring.   Once  a
statutory aggravator is found by a  jury  beyond  a  reasonable  doubt,  the
Sixth Amendment as interpreted in Ring and Apprendi is  satisfied.   Indiana
now places the weighing process in the hands of the jury, but this does  not
convert the weighing process into an eligibility  factor.   The  outcome  of
weighing does not increase eligibility.  Rather,  it  fixes  the  punishment
within the eligible range.  It is therefore not required to be  found  by  a
jury under a reasonable doubt standard.  And as a matter  of  Indiana  state
law, under the Indiana death penalty statute the  weighing  process  is  not
subject to a reasonable doubt standard.  That second step,  consistent  with
the view we expressed in Bivins, is  in  part  a  determination  whether  to
impose the maximum sentence allowed.  That is an exercise in  judgment  that
is not capable of evaluation beyond a  reasonable  doubt,  and  our  statute
properly omits any standard by which it is to be measured.


                          VII. Trial Rule 59(J)(7)


      Indiana Trial Rules apply to  criminal  proceedings  if  they  do  not
conflict with the Rules of Criminal Procedure. Moore v.  State,  403  N.E.2d
335, 336 (Ind. 1980).  Indiana Criminal Rule  16(B)  expressly  incorporates
Trial Rule 59 dealing with Motions to Correct Error  insofar  as  applicable
and when not in conflict with any  specific  rule  adopted  by  the  Indiana
Supreme Court for the conduct of criminal procedure.  Ritchie contends  that
the death penalty statute conflicts with Trial Rule 59.  Indiana Trial  Rule
59(J)(7) provides that a trial court is to grant a new  trial  if  the  jury
verdict is against the weight of the evidence.  Ritchie contends  that  this
Rule trumps Indiana Code section 35-50-2-9(e)(2)  (2002)  which  requires  a
trial judge, after receiving the jury’s “recommendation” in a death  penalty
case, to sentence the defendant “accordingly.”


      In general, if a statute conflicts with a validly adopted Trial  Rule,
the rule prevails. Harrison v. State,  644  N.E.2d  1243,  1251  n.14  (Ind.
1995) (overruled on other grounds).  But here we find no conflict.   By  its
terms, Rule 59(J)(7) applies to “verdicts, judgments,  and  findings.”   The
Rule does not apply to the weighing process  that  occurs  pursuant  to  the
Death Penalty  Statute,  because  that  process  is  neither  a  verdict,  a
judgment, nor a finding.  As explained in Part VI, the weighing  process  in
Indiana’s Death Penalty Statute differs from the traditional jury  functions
of finding facts and reaching a verdict.  The weighing  process  is  similar
to the exercise undertaken by the judge  in  all  contexts  other  than  the
death penalty.  Just as it does not lend itself to being  judged  “beyond  a
reasonable doubt,” it is  not  susceptible  to  evaluation  as  against  the
weight of the evidence.


                       VIII. Prosecutorial Misconduct


      Ritchie  contends  that  two  instances   of   alleged   prosecutorial
misconduct warrant a mistrial.   If  an  appellant  properly  preserves  the
issue of prosecutorial misconduct  for  appeal  the  reviewing  court  first
determines whether misconduct occurred, and if so whether it had a  probable
persuasive effect on the jury. Brown v. State, 799 N.E.2d 1064 (Ind.  2003);
Cox v. State, 696 N.E.2d 853, 859 (Ind. 1998).  “Although often  phrased  in
terms of ‘grave peril,’ a  claim  of  improper  argument  to  the  jury  “is
measured by the probable persuasive effect of any misconduct on  the  jury’s
decision and whether there  were  repeated  instances  of  misconduct  which
would evidence a deliberate attempt to improperly prejudice the  defendant.”
Brown, 799 N.E.2d 1064, 1066 n.1 (citations omitted); Lopez  v.  State,  527
N.E.2d 1119, 1125 (Ind. 1988).  See also, Rodriguez  v.  State,  795  N.E.2d
1054, 1059 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003) (trans. denied).   We  conclude  that  these
occurrences do not warrant a new trial.


      A. Michael Moody’s testimony


      Ritchie planned to call his accomplice, Michael Moody, as  a  witness.
 Subsequently,  Moody  invoked  his  Fifth  Amendment  rights  because   the
 prosecution notified Moody that it planned to charge  Moody  in  connection
 with the death  of  Officer  Toney.   Ritchie  contends  that  the  State’s
 charging Moody functionally prevented  Moody  from  testifying  and  giving
 exculpatory evidence at trial.[4]  Ritchie  offers  no  evidence  that  the
 State overstepped its authority  or  deliberately  charged  Moody  for  the
 purpose of preventing him from testifying.   Prosecutorial  misconduct  may
 occur when the prosecution chills potential defense testimony by threats of
 prosecution or vindictive behavior.  To prove misconduct of this type,  the
 defendant must show that the State acted with the deliberate “intention  of
 distorting the judicial fact-finding process.”  Moore v. State, 655  N.E.2d
 1251, 1253 (Ind. Ct. App. 1995) (citations omitted).  The  mere  fact  that
 the State charged Moody after Ritchie listed Moody as a  witness  does  not
 establish that the State purposely did  this  to  distort  fact-finding  in
 Ritchie’s case.  Ritchie provides no other evidence to support this  claim,
 and this showing is not enough.  Unlike United States v. Valenzuala-Bernal,
 458 U.S. 858 (1982), where the government  deported  the  witness,  Moody’s
 unavailability resulted from his unilateral election to exercise his  Fifth
 Amendment right.


      B. Ritchie’s Tattoo


      The prosecutor  referred  during  the  guilt  phase  to  a  tattoo  on
Ritchie’s neck displaying the numbers three  and  seven.   Ritchie  contends
that this was a reference to officer Toney’s  badge  number.   There  is  no
showing that the jury was aware that Officer Toney’s badge  number  was  37.
The potential  prejudice  is  therefore  solely  whatever  effect  Ritchie’s
having a tattoo might have on the jury. Ritchie argues that  this  reference
constituted prosecutorial misconduct because the  trial  judge  had  granted
Ritchie’s motion in limine to bar reference to the tattoo during  the  guilt
phase.  Sanctions for violation of the trial court’s pretrial order are  for
the trial court to assess.  Underwood v. State, 644 N.E.2d  108,  111  (Ind.
1994).  The issue before this Court is whether  the  misconduct  requires  a
retrial, not whether it violates a trial court order.


      As a freestanding ground for mistrial, the trial court’s rulings as to
misconduct are reviewed for abuse of discretion. Although the reference  may
have constituted misconduct, in order to grant a mistrial, the  trial  court
must determine that no lesser step could have rectified the  situation.  Id.
“The trial court has discretion in determining whether to grant a  mistrial,
and the decision is afforded great deference on  appeal  because  the  trial
court is in the best position to gauge the surrounding circumstances of  the
event and its impact on the jury.” Schlomer v. State, 580  N.E.2d  950,  955
(Ind.  1991).   The  trial  court  felt  that  the  reference  was  not   so
prejudicial to warrant a new trial.  We hold that the trial  court  did  not
abuse its discretion in ruling as it did  and  we  decline  to  disturb  the
trial judge’s ruling.


                       IX. Sufficiency of the Evidence


      Ritchie challenges the sufficiency of the evidence  that  he  had  the
requisite mens rea to support the murder conviction.  As a  general  matter,
when reviewing a claim of insufficient evidence, we decline to  reweigh  the
evidence and substitute our judgment for that of the trial court. Soward  v.
State, 716 N.E.2d 423, 425 (Ind. 1999).  A claim  of  insufficient  evidence
will prevail if no reasonable trier of fact could have found Ritchie  guilty
beyond a reasonable doubt. Torres  v.  State,  673  N.E.2d  472,  473  (Ind.
1996).  Ritchie argues that he shot at Officer  Toney  without  aiming,  and
there is therefore insufficient evidence to show intent  to  kill.   Ritchie
contends that certain evidence presented  at  trial  displays  his  lack  of
intent.  Ritchie  notes  that  the  expert  witnesses  could  not  establish
whether Ritchie was stationary or not, or which way he was  facing  when  he
fired the shots, or whether he was  moving  towards  or  away  from  Officer
Toney.  Either an intentional or a knowing killing is required  for  murder.
Ind. Code § 35-41-2-2 (1998).  Lehman v. State, 730 N.E.2d  701,  704  (Ind.
2000).  A person “knowingly” kills when aware of a high probability that  he
is engaged in a killing.  A person acts intentionally if  “when  he  engages
in the conduct, it is his conscious objective to do so.” I.C. § 35-41-2-2(a-
b); Heavrin v. State, 675 N.E.2d 1075, 1079 (Ind. 1996).   Both  intentional
and knowing actions may be inferred  from  the  circumstances.  Mitchell  v.
State, 557 N.E.2d 660, 664 (Ind. 1990); Johansen v. State, 499 N.E.2d  1128,
1132 (Ind. 1986); Cole v. State, 475 N.E.2d 306, 308 (Ind. 1985).   Shooting
a handgun, even if merely shooting backwards without  stopping  and  aiming,
in an effort to “slow down” a pursuing officer meets the test of  “knowing.”
 Francis v. State, 758 N.E.2d 528, 535 (Ind. 2001); Hawkins  v.  State,  748
N.E.2d 362, 363 (Ind. 2001).  Ritchie claims he did  not  physically  “trap”
officer Toney and methodically murder  him.   A  reasonable  trier  of  fact
could nevertheless readily find that his conduct satisfied the element of  a
knowing killing.


      Even if we accept Ritchie’s claim that the shooting  was  subjectively
intended to “slow down” officer Toney, one  who  fires  a  handgun  in  this
manner may be found to be “aware of a  high  probability”  that  death  will
result. Barker v. State, 695 N.E.2d 925, 931 (Ind. 1998).   Accord  Cook  v.
State, 675 N.E.2d 687, 692 (Ind. 1996) (“Firing three shots in  the  general
direction of a victim constitutes using a deadly weapon in a  manner  likely
to cause death.”)  Ritchie fired four shots, and at  least  two  were  fired
from a stationary  position.   Finally,  there  is  no  serious  doubt  that
Ritchie was aware his victim was a law  enforcement  officer.   These  facts
are enough for a reasonable trier of fact to conclude that Ritchie  knew  he
was being chased by a law enforcement officer and that he  knowingly  killed
Officer Toney.  The jury was  properly  instructed  on  this  point  and  so
found.


                                X. Juror Note


      After the verdict, but before the jury retired to  deliberate  on  the
death penalty, a juror sent a note to  the  trial  judge  stating  that  she
wanted to file a complaint against one of  Ritchie’s  attorneys  because  of
his reference to her during his closing argument.  Specifically,  the  juror
complained of two  statements.   First,  the  defense  attorney  said:  “The
foreman will write their name, or should I say  forewoman,  because  we  all
know who that is.”  The juror thought it was improper for Ritchie’s  counsel
to identify the  foreperson  in  that  manner.   Second,  Ritchie’s  counsel
mentioned a song in closing argument and noted “[t]his one goes so far  back
none of you remember it, but [the foreperson] . . . .”  The  foreperson  was
offended by what she saw as counsel’s singling her out and  identifying  her
by name in front of the entire courtroom.   She  equated  this  to  a  moral
wrong.  In response, the trial judge inquired as to whether  the  attorney’s
comments affected the juror’s deliberations.  She replied that  it  did  not
and added her view that it did not affect the other  jurors’  deliberations.
Ritchie provides no support for the view that the mere fact that  the  juror
was upset  with  Ritchie’s  attorney  warrants  a  new  trial.   Rather,  he
complains of a reference by his own counsel, but  he  asserts  no  claim  of
ineffective assistance. Joyner v. State, 736 N.E.2d  232,  237  (Ind.  1999)
(“A defendant may not invite error and then complain on review.”)


                                 Conclusion


      We affirm the judgment of the trial court.


Shepard, C.J., and Dickson, and Sullivan, JJ., concur.


Rucker, J., concurs in part and dissents in part with separate opinion.




Rucker, J., concurs in part and dissents in part.


      Because I believe the jury must find beyond a  reasonable  doubt  that
any mitigating circumstances that exist are outweighed  by  the  aggravating
circumstance or circumstances I respectfully dissent from  Part  VI  of  the
majority opinion.


       The  majority  cites  Bivins  for   the   proposition   that   “[t]he
determination of the weight to be accorded the  aggravating  and  mitigating
circumstances is not a ‘fact’ which  must  be  proved  beyond  a  reasonable
doubt but is a balancing process.”  Slip  op.  at  8  (quoting  Bivins,  642
N.E.2d  at  946).   Whatever  validity  this  proposition   may   have   had
previously, it can no longer pass constitutional muster under  the  doctrine
expressed in Apprendi and Ring.


      In the abstract it does appear sound to say that “[o]nce  a  statutory
aggravator is  found  by  a  jury  beyond  a  reasonable  doubt,  the  Sixth
Amendment as interpreted in Ring and Apprendi is  satisfied  .  .  .  .  The
outcome of weighing does not increase eligibility.   Rather,  it  fixes  the
punishment within the eligible range.”   Slip  op.  at  10-11.   Indeed  the
Apprendi/Ring doctrines do not dictate which factors  a  State  may  require
for imposition of capital punishment.  Rather, States are free to  determine
these factors for themselves.  However, once  the  factors  are  determined,
the Sixth Amendment as interpreted by Apprendi and Ring  require  that  they
be submitted to the jury and proved beyond a reasonable doubt.   Unlike  the
capital sentencing schemes  in  some  other  jurisdictions,[5]  our  statute
unequivocally requires the existence of two distinct  factors  before  death
can be imposed.  The statute reads in pertinent part:


           (e) For a defendant sentenced after June 30, 2002 . . . .  [t]he
           jury may recommend:


                 (1) the death penalty; or


                 (2) life imprisonment without parole;


           only if it makes the findings described in subsection (l).


Subsection (l) reads:


           Before a sentence [of  death  or  life  without  parole  may  be
           imposed] the jury . . . must find that:


                 (1) the state has proved beyond a reasonable doubt that  at
                 least one (1) of the aggravating  circumstances  listed  in
                 subsection (b) exists; and


                 (2) any mitigating circumstances that exist are  outweighed
                 by the aggravating circumstance or circumstances.


I.C. § 35-50-2-9(e), (l)  (emphasis  added).   Consistent  with  legislative
mandate  this  Court  also  has  recognized  that  both  factors   must   be
established before a capital sentence may be imposed.  See, e.g.,  Brown  v.
State, 698 N.E.2d 1132, 1144 (Ind. 1998) (Before a sentence of death may  be
imposed “[o]ur death penalty statute  requires  the  sentencer  to  find  at
least one aggravating circumstance beyond a reasonable  doubt,  to  consider
and evaluate any mitigating factor it may find to exist, and  to  weigh  the
aggravators and mitigators . . . .” (emphasis added)); Judy  v.  State,  275
Ind. 145, 416 N.E.2d 95, 106 (1981)  (“The  jury  may  recommend  the  death
penalty only if it unanimously finds  beyond  a  reasonable  doubt  that  at
least one of the aggravating circumstances exists, and that  the  mitigating
circumstances, if any,  do  not  outweigh  the  aggravating  circumstances.”
(emphasis added)).


      In essence our  Legislature  has  chosen  to  make  death  eligibility
contingent upon the finding of two separate and  independent  factors.   The
majority parses these factors  by  characterizing  one  as  an  “eligibility
factor” and the other an “exercise in judgment.”  See slip  op.  at  8,  11.
However, regardless of the labeling, the Supreme Court has made  clear  that
“the relevant inquiry is one not of form but  of  effect—does  the  required
finding expose the defendant to a greater punishment  than  that  authorized
by the jury’s guilty verdict?”  Apprendi, 530 U.S.  at  494.   “If  a  State
makes an increase in a defendant’s authorized punishment contingent  on  the
finding of a fact, that fact—no matter  how  the  State  labels  it—must  be
found by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.”  Ring,  536  U.S.  at  602.   In
this jurisdiction, the increase of a defendant’s punishment from a  term  of
years to a sentence of death is contingent not only upon  the  existence  of
one  or  more  aggravating  factors,  but  also  upon  a  finding  that  the
aggravating factor(s) outweigh(s) any mitigating factor(s).  See I.C. §  35-
50-2-9(e), (l).  This statutory “finding” is a necessary  predicate  to  the
imposition of a death sentence.  “[A]ll facts  essential  to  imposition  of
the level of punishment that  the  defendant  receives—whether  the  statute
calls them elements of the offense, sentencing factors,  or  Mary  Jane—must
be found by the jury beyond a reasonable doubt.”   Ring,  536  U.S.  at  610
(Scalia, J., concurring).  Simply put, it  is  the  structure  of  Indiana’s
capital sentencing statute that pulls it within the embrace of the  Apprendi
and Ring doctrine.  The  plain  language  of  Indiana’s  capital  sentencing
scheme makes death eligibility contingent upon certain  findings  that  must
be weighed by the jury.  I agree  with  the  majority  that  these  findings
require an “exercise in judgment.”  See slip op. at  11.   Nonetheless  they
are at a minimum the type of findings anticipated by Apprendi and  Ring  and
thus require proof beyond a reasonable doubt.


      This does not mean however that I would declare  unconstitutional  the
weighing portion of Indiana’s death penalty statute.  “Every statute  stands
before us clothed with the presumption of  constitutionality  until  clearly
overcome by a contrary showing.”  Eukers  v.  State,  728  N.E.2d  219,  221
(Ind. Ct. App. 2000).  “[I]f  an  otherwise  acceptable  construction  of  a
statute  would  raise  serious  constitutional  problems,   and   where   an
alternative interpretation of the  statute  is  ‘fairly  possible,’  we  are
obligated to construe the statute to avoid such problems.”   I.N.S.  v.  St.
Cyr, 533 U.S. 289, 299-300 (2001) (citation omitted); Price  v.  State,  622
N.E.2d 954, 963  (Ind.  1993).  “[C]onstitutionally  doubtful  constructions
should be avoided where fairly possible.”  Miller v. French, 530  U.S.  327,
336 (2000) (internal quotation omitted); Bennett v. State, 801  N.E.2d  170,
174 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003), trans. not sought.   I  would  therefore  construe
section 35-50-2-9(l) of the Indiana Code as implicitly  requiring  the  jury
to find beyond a reasonable doubt that  any  mitigating  circumstances  that
exist are outweighed by the aggravating circumstance or  circumstances.   As
thus interpreted the statute passes constitutional muster.


      The question then is what is the effect in  this  case  of  the  trial
court’s failure to instruct the jury that it must apply a  reasonable  doubt
standard in the weighing process?  The record shows  the  trial  court  gave
several preliminary as  well  as  final  jury  instructions  concerning  the
weighing of aggravating  and  mitigating  circumstances.   None  required  a
reasonable doubt standard. However, the record shows that  Ritchie  did  not
object at trial to the jury instructions given by the trial  court  nor  did
he submit instructions of his own.  Thus, this issue is  waived  for  review
unless fundamental error occurred.  Sanchez v. State, 675  N.E.2d  306,  308
(Ind.  1996).   Fundamental  error  is  error  that  represents  a   blatant
violation of basic principles rendering the trial unfair  to  the  defendant
and thereby depriving the defendant of fundamental due process.  Borders  v.
State, 688 N.E.2d 874, 882 (Ind. 1997).  The error must  be  so  prejudicial
to the rights of the defendant as to make a fair trial impossible.  Id.   In
determining whether a claimed error denies the defendant a  fair  trial,  we
consider whether the resulting harm or potential for  harm  is  substantial.
Townsend v. State, 632 N.E.2d 727, 730 (Ind. 1994).  The element of harm  is
not shown by the fact  that  a  defendant  was  ultimately  convicted.   Id.
Rather, it depends upon whether the defendant’s right to a  fair  trial  was
detrimentally affected by the denial of  procedural  opportunities  for  the
ascertainment of truth to which he would have been entitled.  Id.


      Here, Ritchie makes no claim of fundamental error nor does the  record
support such a claim.  As aggravating circumstances  the  State  alleged  in
the penalty phase of trial that the victim of Ritchie’s  murder  was  a  law
enforcement officer acting in the course of duty when murdered, see  I.C.  §
35-50-2-9(b)(6)(A);  and  that  Ritchie  committed  the  murder   while   on
probation.  See I.C. § 35-50-2-9(b)(9)(C).  The State incorporated  evidence
introduced in the guilt phase  of  trial  to  support  its  allegation.   In
mitigation Ritchie, who was twenty-two years of  age  at  the  time  of  the
murder, introduced evidence of his difficult  childhood  that  included  his
lack of bonding before the age of  two.   During  closing  argument  Ritchie
highlighted his mitigation evidence and argued passionately for  a  term  of
years or at least no more than a sentence of life without  parole.   Tr.  at
2839-54.  The jury rejected Ritchie’s argument, found  that  the  State  had
proved  beyond  a  reasonable  doubt  the  existence  of  both   aggravating
circumstances, found that the aggravating circumstances were not  outweighed
by the mitigating circumstances, and recommended the death  penalty.   Under
the circumstances Ritchie has failed to demonstrate that  he  was  denied  a
fair trial.  In sum no fundamental error occurred on this issue.


      For the reasons expressed, I dissent from  part  VI  of  the  majority
opinion.  In all other respects I concur.













-----------------------
[1] Subsection (e)  of  Indiana’s  Death  Penalty  Statute  was  amended  to
provide that for defendants “sentenced after June 30, 2002”,  “if  the  jury
reaches a sentencing recommendation, the court shall sentence the  defendant
accordingly.” Act of Mar. 26, 2002, Pub. L. No. 117-2002, 2002-2  Ind.  Acts
1734.  This replaced the following  language:  “The  court  shall  make  the
final  determination  of  the  sentence,  after   considering   the   jury’s
recommendation, and the sentence shall be based on the same  standards  that
the jury was required to consider.  The court is not  bound  by  the  jury’s
recommendation.” Id.
[2] Some states provide in their statutes that a reasonable  doubt  standard
be imposed, others impose a preponderance  of  the  evidence  standard,  and
some, like Indiana, are silent. Compare Ark. Code  Ann.  §  5-4-603  (Michie
1987); Conn. Gen. Stat. § 53a-46a  (2003)  (reasonable  doubt  standard  not
directly in statute, but interpreted as such in Connecticut  v.  Rizzo,  833
A.2d 363, 410-11 (Conn. 2003)); N.J.  Stat.  Ann.  §  2C:11-3(c)(3)  (2004);
N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 400.27(11)(a) (McKinney 2004); Ohio Rev. Code Ann.  §
2929.03(D)(1) (West 2004); Tenn.  Code  Ann.  §  39-13-204(g)(1)(B)  (2003);
Utah Code Ann. § 76-3-207(5)(b) (2004) (reasonable doubt),  with  Del.  Code
Ann. tit. 11 § 4209(d)(1) (2004); Md. Code Ann. Crim. § 3-203(i)(1)  (2003);
Mo. Code § 565.030.4 (West 2004) (preponderance of the evidence).
[3] The Alabama Supreme Court took a similar approach, stating “Contrary  to
[Defendant]’s  argument,   the   weighing   process   is   not   a   factual
determination.  In fact, the relative ‘weight’ of aggravating  circumstances
and mitigating circumstances is not susceptible to any quantum of  proof.  .
. .  Thus the weighing process is not a factual determination or an  element
of an offense; instead it is a moral  or  legal  judgment  that  takes  into
account a theoretically limitless set of facts and that  cannot  be  reduced
to a scientific formula or the discovery of a discrete,  observable  datum.”
Ex Parte Waldrop v. Alabama, 859 So.2d 1181,  1189  (Ala.  2002)  (citations
omitted).
[4] Moody allegedly was  to  testify  regarding  Ritchie’s  intent  in  that
Ritchie allegedly told Moody that he fired his gun without  turning  around.
Moody was also to testify that  Ritchie  said  he  did  not  know  that  the
officer had been hit.   Both  of  these  would  presumably  be  inadmissible
hearsay.  To establish Ritchie’s remorse,  Ritchie  says  Moore  would  also
testify that Ritchie cried on Moody’s shoulder when he heard that he  killed
Officer Toney.
[5] In support of  its  view  the  majority  cites  authority  from  foreign
jurisdictions whose death penalty statutes  are  materially  different  from
those of Indiana.  See, e.g., California  v.  Prieto,  66  P.3d  1123  (Cal.
2003) (discussing California Penal Code section 190.2, which  declares  that
the “penalty for a defendant who is found guilty  of  murder  in  the  first
degree is death or [life without parole] if one or  more  of  the  following
special circumstances has been found”).  The  weighing  factor  merely  sets
the penalty within the maximum allowed range).  See Pulley  v.  Harris,  465
U.S. 37, 51-52 (1984) (declaring  that  “[u]nder  [California’s]  scheme,  a
person convicted of first-degree murder is sentenced  to  life  imprisonment
unless one or more ‘special circumstances’ are  found,  in  which  case  the
punishment is either death or life imprisonment without parole . . .  .  The
trial judge then reviews  the  evidence  and,  in  light  of  the  statutory
factors, makes an ‘independent determination as to  whether  the  weight  of
the evidence supports the jury’s findings  and  verdicts.’”(quoting  section
190.4(e)); Brice v. Delaware 815 A.2d 314 (Del. 2003) (discussing title  11,
section 4209 of the Delaware Code, which declares: “[I]f  the  existence  of
at least 1 statutory aggravating circumstance . . . has been found beyond  a
reasonable doubt by the jury, the Court . . . shall  impose  a  sentence  of
death if the Court finds by a preponderance of the evidence . . .  that  the
aggravating circumstances . . . outweigh the mitigating circumstances  found
by the Court to exist.”  § 4209(d)(1)); Nebraska v. Gales,  658  N.W.2d  604
(Neb. 2003) (discussing sections  29-2520(4)(g)  and  (h)  of  the  Nebraska
Revised Statutes under which  the  jury  is  dismissed  once  it  finds  the
existence of aggravating factors beyond a reasonable doubt: “Upon  rendering
its verdict as to the determination of the  aggravating  circumstances,  the
jury shall be discharged.” § 29-2520(4)(g).  The weighing process and  final
sentence are left to the discretion of a panel of judges: “If  one  or  more
aggravating circumstances are found to exist,  the  court  shall  convene  a
panel of three judges to hold a hearing to receive evidence of mitigation  .
. . .” § 29-2520(4)(h).).