            IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
                        OF TEXAS
                                        NO. AP-76,379



                            BLAINE KEITH MILAM, Appellant

                                             v.

                                  THE STATE OF TEXAS

                  ON DIRECT APPEAL FROM CAUSE NO. CR09-066
                      IN THE 4TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
                                  RUSK COUNTY

       C OCHRAN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which K ELLER, P.J., and
M EYERS, P RICE, W OMACK, J OHNSON, K EASLER, and A LCALA, JJ., joined. H ERVEY,
J., concurred.

                                         OPINION

       Appellant was indicted in Rusk County for the capital murder of thirteen-month-old

Amora Bain Carson, the daughter of his girlfriend, Jesseca Carson.1 The case was tried in

Montgomery County after a change of venue. On May 17, 2010, a jury found him guilty, and,

after a separate punishment hearing, the jury answered the future-dangerousness special issue



       1
           TEX . PENAL CODE § 19.03(a)(8).
                                                                                 Milam     Page 2

“yes,” the anti-parties special issue “yes,” the mental-retardation special issue “no,” and the

mitigation special issue “no.”2 The trial judge set appellant’s punishment at death.3 Direct

appeal to this Court is automatic.4 After reviewing appellant’s twenty points of error, we find

them to be without merit and affirm the conviction and death sentence. We note at the outset

that appellant challenges neither the sufficiency of the evidence to support the guilty verdict

nor the determination that appellant is not mentally retarded. Because appellant does

challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the future-dangerousness special issue,

we set out, at some length, the facts of the crime and relevant punishment evidence.

                                                  I.

A.     The State’s Guilt-Stage Evidence.

       At 10:37 a.m. on December 2, 2008, appellant called 911, and the first thing he said

was, “My name is Blaine Milam, and my daughter, I just found her dead.” Rusk County

Patrol Sergeant Kevin Roy arrived at appellant’s trailer home outside Tatum twenty minutes

later. Two ambulances were already there. EMTs were standing in the doorway of the

master bedroom, where appellant and Jesseca Carson were kneeling on the floor. Sgt. Roy

saw “an infant laying on the floor not moving, not breathing, bruised. The baby was laying

on its back, and the face of the baby was just one large bruise.” He thought that the circular


       2
        TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 37.071, § 2(b)(1) & (b)(2) & (e)(1); see Gallo v. State, 239
S.W.3d 757, 770 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007).
       3
           TEX .CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 37.071, § 2(g).
       4
           Art. 37.071, § 2(h).
                                                                            Milam    Page 3

bruises he saw on the child’s body were caused by a Coke can. He did not recognize them

as human bite marks.

       After lead investigator Sergeant Amber Rogers arrived, Sgt. Roy took appellant aside

to talk while Sgt. Rogers talked to Jesseca. Appellant told Sgt. Roy that he and Jesseca had

left Amora alone in the trailer and walked up the road to meet a man named Clark who was

going to clear some land for him. They were gone about an hour, and, when they came back,

they found “the baby in that condition.” Appellant was calm, collected, and cooperative.

After the interviews, Sgt. Roy read the pair their Miranda rights. He told them that, when

the crime-scene investigation was done, they would be taken to the Sheriff’s office for more

questioning and collection of their clothes.

       Shortly thereafter, Kenny Ray, a Texas Ranger, arrived and noticed Jesseca and

appellant embracing. To Ranger Ray, the two looked like “grieving parents,” not suspects.

Ranger Ray conducted an hour-long interview with appellant in the front seat of his patrol

car. Appellant told the ranger that authorities were “more than welcome” to search his car

and home. Appellant denied involvement in Amora’s death. He also gave Ranger Ray

names of possible suspects and said that whoever did this should “be hung.” In that recorded

interview, appellant explained that Jesseca was his fiancee and that Amora was Jesseca’s

child, but that they both lived with him and he was “raising that baby.”

       Appellant then told Ranger Ray the same story that he had told Sgt. Roy. He added

that, when he and Jesseca got home, they found Amora, not in her crib, but in a hole in the
                                                                                   Milam     Page 4

floor in the bathroom that he was remodeling. Appellant said Amora had a blood ring around

her mouth, and “it looked like she had been biting the insulation.” She was still breathing,

so they called 911. Appellant later told Ranger Ray that Jesseca called 911 before they found

Amora, and that when they found her, she was dead.

       Ranger Ray’s tone eventually became accusatory. He told appellant that he knew he

was lying, that no one would believe his story, and that everyone would think he had beat the

baby because he was the only male in the house. Appellant again denied any involvement

in Amora’s death and offered to take a polygraph test. Finally, Ranger Ray told appellant

that he was free to go, meaning that he was free to get out of the patrol car, but not to leave

the scene. By then, Ranger Ray considered appellant a suspect.

       The ranger also interviewed Jesseca. At first she “was crying and acting very

distraught,” but then there was a “pretty drastic” change in her demeanor. She referred to

Amora as “that baby” and told Ranger Ray an “extremely bizarre story.” 5

       The medical examiner gave Amora’s cause of death as homicidal violence, due to

multiple blunt-force injuries and possible strangulation. He detailed her injuries: facial

abrasions and bruises; twenty-four human bite marks; bruises, scrapes, and abrasions from

head to toe; bleeding underneath the scalp; extensive fracturing to the back of the skull;

bleeding between the brain and the skull; a laceration to the brain tissue as well as swelling,

bleeding, and bruising; bleeding around the optic nerves; bleeding in the eyes and around the

       5
          Because Jesseca did not testify at appellant’s trial, none of her statements were admitted
into evidence.
                                                                                 Milam     Page 5

jugular vein; fractures to the right arm and leg; eighteen rib fractures; a tear to the liver; and

extensive injury to the genitals. There were no old injuries suggesting a pattern of abuse.

       The investigation quickly poked holes in appellant’s story. Shane and Dwight Clark,

of Clark Timber, denied any meeting with appellant on December 2nd. Crystal Dopson,

manager of the Insta-Cash Pawn Shop in Henderson, said that, shortly after she opened the

shop on December 2nd, Jesseca and appellant came in and pawned an electric chain saw and

an air impact tool. Surveillance video showed the two in the pawn shop for about fifteen

minutes. Surveillance video from the Exxon in Henderson picked them up shortly thereafter.

Also, appellant had called his sister, Teresa Shea, that morning before 9:30 a.m., crying and

saying that he had “found Amora dead.” Teresa told him to call 911, but appellant did not do

so until 10:37 a.m.

       On December 11th, investigators conducted a second search of appellant’s trailer and

determined that the south end of the trailer, rather than the master bedroom, was probably the

crime scene. They found blood-spatter stains, consistent with blunt force trauma, near the

south bedroom. Among the items collected from the south bedroom were: blood-stained

bedding and baby clothes; blood-stained baby diapers and wipes; a tube of Astroglide

lubricant; and a pair of jeans with blood stains on the lap. DNA testing later showed that

Amora’s blood was on these items.

       On December 13th, appellant’s sister, Teresa, went to see appellant in jail. That night,

she told her aunt that she “was needing to find a way to get back out to the trailer in Tatum”
                                                                                Milam    Page 6

because “Blaine had told her that she needed to go out there to the trailer to get some

evidence out from underneath of it.” The aunt called Sgt. Rogers and told her that “she

needed to get out to the trailer immediately, that Teresa was wanting to go out there to get

some evidence out from underneath the trailer.”

         Sgt. Rogers immediately obtained a search warrant, crawled under the trailer, and

discovered a pipe wrench inside a clear plastic bag. The pipe wrench had been shoved down

“a hole in the floor of the master bathroom.” Forensic analysis revealed components of

Astroglide on the pipe wrench, the diaper Amora had been wearing, and the diaper and wipes

collected from the south bedroom.

         Dr. Robert Williams, a forensic odontologist, compared the bite marks found on

Amora’s body with bite dentition models obtained from appellant, Jesseca, and appellant’s

brother Danny Milam. Dr. Williams testified that, to “a reasonable degree of dental

certainty,” appellant’s dentition matched eight bite marks on Amora. He could exclude

Jesseca from all but one of the bite marks, and he could exclude Danny from all of the bite

marks.

         Shirley Broyles, the nurse at the Rusk County Jail, testified that appellant called for

her one day in January. She found him crying in his cell. He handed her a written request to

talk to Sgt. Rogers, and told Ms. Broyles: “I’m going to confess. I did it. But Ms. Shirley,

the Blaine you know did not do this. My dad told me to be a man, and I’ve been reading my

Bible. Please tell Jesseca I love her.”
                                                                            Milam    Page 7

B.     The Defense Guilt-Stage Evidence.

       Appellant’s defense focused on Jesseca as the murderer. The defense called Heather

Carson, Jesseca’s mother, who said that Jesseca and appellant starting dating around January

2008 and got engaged a few months later. Jesseca moved in with appellant and his parents

that spring. When Jesseca turned eighteen, she received an insurance settlement from her

father’s 2001 death.    Heather noticed an immediate change in Jesseca; she became

withdrawn and stopped caring about her appearance. Jesseca started harassing Heather with

telephone calls. When Heather learned that Jesseca was making serious and unfounded

allegations against her, she stopped talking to her.

       Lisa Taylor testified that Jesseca was her daughter’s best friend while growing up in

Alabama. Ms. Taylor knew Jessica as “sweet, outgoing, outspoken, funny.” She said that

Jesseca, appellant, and Amora visited them in Alabama twice in the fall of 2008. First, they

came for one night in October. Jesseca was making “bizarre” accusations about her mother.

In November, the trio returned to Alabama for about four days and said that they were

planning to move there. Ms. Taylor said that there was a “drastic change” in Jesseca’s

demeanor. She was “[w]eird, hollow. . . [l]ike empty.” Looking into her eyes was “like

looking into a dark space.” Jesseca was not taking care of Amora and did not give her a bath

for the whole week. She had appellant change Amora’s diaper and feed her.           Jesseca

seemed in charge, and when she told appellant to do something, he did it. Ms. Taylor was

concerned that there was something profound going on in Jesseca’s life and was worried
                                                                              Milam    Page 8

about her and her baby.

       A psychiatrist, Dr. Frank Murphy, testified that he was asked to “offer an opinion in

this case of the mental state of Jesseca Carson for the time period beginning sometime around

August of 2008 through December 2nd of 2008.” Dr. Murphy read interviews with Jesseca

and other materials but did not talk to Jesseca. Dr. Murphy said Jesseca’s symptoms were

consistent with a “psychotic depression . . . . The depression occurs first, and then it gets

severe enough that psychosis or loss of touch with reality then occurs . . . . Psychosis means

someone has lost touch with reality. The vast majority of times, that means either they’re

hallucinating or they’re delusional.”

       The defense odontologist, Dr. Isaac, studied five of the bite marks, and could not

exclude either appellant or Jesseca.

C.     The State’s Punishment-Stage Evidence.

       The State offered evidence that appellant was–at the time of this crime–on probation

for solicitation of aggravated sexual assault of a child under the age of fourteen. Appellant

had entered the home of an eleven-year-old neighbor, Karah Hodges, and left a stack of

pages torn from pornographic magazines, marked with salacious notes, in Karah’s dresser

drawer. Appellant’s probation terms prohibited him from going within “200 feet of a

premise where children commonly gather, including school, daycare facility, playground,

public or private youth center, public swimming pool, or video facility.” Appellant’s “mere

presence” with Amora was, therefore, a continuing probation violation.
                                                                                 Milam     Page 9

       Ranger Ray was recalled to play the entire patrol-car conversation he had recorded

with appellant. Appellant had told Ranger Ray that a third party had forced him to solicit

Karah Hodges. He also discussed several assaults, all of which he described as being of the

“he had it coming” variety.

       Glenda Risinger, who rented an apartment to appellant and Jesseca in the fall of 2008,

testified that when the pair left, the apartment “was trashed. There was stuff left everywhere.

The refrigerator was left open with food still in it. . . . It was pretty much just like they just

went through and trashed it.” She also found a lightbulb containing methamphetamine and

a hunting knife in the toilet tank.

       Bryan Perkins, appellant’s former boss, testified that appellant had “control issues”

and a “very short” fuse. Appellant would bring Jesseca to work to keep an eye on her. Mr.

Perkins said, “I started talking to him about his controlling problems, you know, that if he

kept on controlling his woman, she was going to leave him. And, you know, he just said it

seemed like, you know, with that baby, him and Jesseca were not really going to have a life.”

Mr. Perkins also described a fight appellant had with a customer.

       Monty Clark, a Rusk County patrol deputy, testified that, in January 2008, he

responded to a fight on the side of the road between appellant and his brother, Danny. He

arrested appellant for assault and family violence.

        Kenneth McDade, a fellow inmate, testified that appellant told him about a plan to

escape from the jail and also threatened to stab him with a pencil.
                                                                                Milam     Page 10

       Jesseca’s friend, Crystal Zapata, described an incident that occurred after appellant’s

father died in September but before Amora was killed in December. Ms. Zapata was inside

the trailer with Amora, while appellant and Jesseca were arguing outside. Appellant had a

gun and threatened suicide; Jesseca was trying to calm him down. Ms. Zapata heard a

gunshot. After a few minutes Jesseca came in the door crying and told Ms. Zapata that he

had shot into the floorboard of her car when she tried to keep him from leaving. Ms. Zapata

characterized appellant as dominant in the relationship.

D.     The Defense Punishment-Stage Evidence.

       The defense sought to rebut the State’s future-dangerousness evidence with both lay

and expert witnesses.

       Appellant’s mother, Shirley Milam, attributed appellant’s solicitation of aggravated

sexual assault to his mental immaturity. She said he stopped maturing emotionally at age

twelve. She testified that appellant had an on-and-off methamphetamine problem and that

he had started using drugs again shortly after his father’s death. Shirley testified that, after

the second time appellant tried to commit suicide to “go be with [his] daddy,” she

unsuccessfully tried to have him civilly committed.          In early November, Jesseca and

appellant brought a Ouija board to Shirley’s work and told her that they could communicate

with their dead fathers.

       Appellant’s older sister testified that appellant was a polite, passive child and a polite,

passive adult. This crime was completely out of character for him. Appellant’s childhood
                                                                             Milam    Page 11

friend said that he did not think appellant was capable of Amora’s murder or aggravated

sexual assault. He echoed what appellant’s family members said about the effect of his

father’s death: “It affected him really bad, because like him and his dad was real close.”

       Dr. Patricia Rosen, a medical toxicologist, testified that toxicology reports indicated

that appellant had 0.17 milligrams of methamphetamine per liter of blood in his system on

December 2nd. Dr. Rosen said this was a “high” dose–ten times the therapeutic dose.

Another expert testified about the effects of methamphetamine on the brain and gave her

opinion that appellant was a chronic methamphetamine user, whose heavy use could have

caused severe psychosis.

       Dr. Mark Cunningham, a clinical and forensic psychologist, testified that he was asked

to evaluate two issues concerning appellant: 1) “how did we get here?” and 2) “where do we

go from here?” Dr. Cunningham interviewed appellant three times, for a total of nearly ten

hours. He also interviewed appellant’s mother and sisters, and reviewed “a huge volume of

records.” Dr. Cunningham summarized the answer to the “how did we get here” question:

       There’s mental deficiency, youthfulness, meth dependence, meth psychosis,
       Jesseca’s psychosis. Those are all interacting with each other. That’s all part
       of the matrix of his psyche. Now, it’s not just those things, of course. There’s
       also the trauma and deprivation, the social deprivation I’m describing, as well
       as the trauma of his dad’s illness, and those experiences. There is the social
       isolation that came about that robs him of social resources that he might have
       called upon for some reality testing. There’s premature responsibility. There’s
       the death of his father. All of these things are being loaded on and are
       interacting with each other, as we’re coming up to this offense, and the effect
       of that is this tragedy.

       Dr. Cunningham answered the “where do we go from here?” question by outlining the
                                                                                  Milam     Page 12

reasons why appellant was “likely to have a nonviolent adjustment, in terms of no serious

violence, to a life without parole sentence in TDCJ.”

       •       Appellant’s “nonviolent adjustment to 17 months jail pretrial”;6

       •       “Appraisal of the correctional staff was not that [appellant] was going to be a
               predatory inmate that they needed to lock down”;

       •       Appellant’s history of employment: starting work at 16, and gaining “a pretty
               significant employment history for a kid that’s arrested when he’s 18”;

       •       Appellant’s continuing contact and relationship with family;

       •       The relatively low rate of major assaults committed by capital inmates serving
               a life term;

       •       The fact of serving a sentence of life without parole (“inmates facing
               life-without-parole sentences and long sentences have more to lose. This is
               where they’re going to be for a very long time and potentially the rest of their
               lives, and because of that, they are particularly motivated not to make this
               experience any more horrible on themselves than it has to be.”);

       •       The fact that he would be an inmate in the Texas prison system (“99.9 percent
               of inmates in Texas prisons in 2009 did not commit an assault resulting in
               injuries with more than first aid treatment”);

       •       The option of appellant going to the Hodge Unit (“a unit for intellectually
               limited individuals” with a program designed to meet their needs “and help
               prevent them from being victimized by other inmates”);



       6
          Dr. Cunnningham said that he was aware of the Kenneth McDade incident but, “[i]t did
not represent an assault.” He said that, in custody, “individuals may puff up. They may say
things to try to build a persona. In other words, they may act bad, puff themselves up, talk trash,
that kind of thing, to try to reduce the likelihood that they would be victimized, so you have to be
careful about how to interpret that when you hear, you know, that there’s threat behavior. That’s
one part of it. The other part of it is that you want to consider what’s the source of this, because
here’s what happens. In jail, it’s not uncommon for one inmate to try to implicate another inmate
or raise an allegation against them to get some personal advantage for themselves.”
                                                                               Milam     Page 13

       •        The option of protective custody (“because of the nature of his offense . . . for
                his safety so that other inmates didn’t act out on him. Those conditions of
                confinement would look in many ways like administrative segregation.”)

On cross-examination, Dr. Cunningham testified that he is always a defense expert because

“the research is very clear that the overwhelming majority of capital offenders will never be

violent in prison, that the rates of serious violence in prison are very low, that prisons are

extraordinarily effective in minimizing the occurrence of serious violence.”

                                                II.

A.     Appellant’s Oral Statement to Ranger Ray.

       In his first two points of error, appellant argues that the admission of his oral

statement to Ranger Ray violated both Article 38.22 and his Fifth Amendment rights.

       Ranger Ray did not read appellant his statutory or Miranda rights, so the admissibility

of his oral statement depends upon whether appellant was in custody–“a term of art that

specifies circumstances that are thought generally to present a serious danger of

coercion”7 –when he gave it. We address these points together because “[o]ur construction

of ‘custody’ for purposes of Article 38.22 is consistent with the meaning of ‘custody’ for

purposes of Miranda.” 8

       The Supreme Court recently reiterated the test for determining whether a person is in

custody for purposes of Miranda: The first step “is to ascertain whether, in light of the



       7
           Howes v. Fields, 132 S.Ct. 1181, 1189, ___ U.S. ___ (2012).
       8
           Herrera v. State, 241 S.W.3d 520, 526 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007).
                                                                                   Milam     Page 14

objective circumstances of the interrogation, a reasonable person would have felt he or she

was not at liberty to terminate the interrogation and leave.”9 If the answer is “yes,” then we

ask the “additional question whether the relevant environment presents the same inherently

coercive pressures as the type of station house questioning at issue in Miranda.” 10

       In Dowthitt, we outlined four general situations which may constitute custody:

       (1) when the suspect is physically deprived of his freedom of action in any
       significant way; (2) when a law enforcement officer tells the suspect that he
       cannot leave; (3) when law enforcement officers create a situation that would
       lead a reasonable person to believe that his freedom of movement has been
       significantly restricted; and (4) when there is probable cause to arrest [and the
       officers’ knowledge of probable cause is communicated to the suspect] and
       law enforcement officers do not tell the suspect that he is free to leave.11

These situations will indicate custody if the circumstances would lead a reasonable person

to believe that he is under restraint to the degree associated with an arrest.12

       We afford almost total deference to a trial judge’s “custody” ruling when the questions

of historical fact turn on credibility or demeanor, and otherwise review the ruling de novo.13

       We first examine all of the circumstances surrounding the interrogation–“the location

of the questioning, its duration, statements made during the interview, the presence or

absence of physical restraints during the questioning, and the release of the interviewee at


       9
           Fields, 132 S.Ct. at 1189 (internal brackets, quotation marks, and citations omitted).
       10
            Id. at 1190.
       11
            Dowthitt v. State, 931 S.W.2d 244, 255 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996).
       12
            Id.; see also California v. Beheler, 463 U.S. 1121, 1125 (1983).
       13
            Herrera, 241 S.W.3d at 526-27.
                                                                                  Milam     Page 15

the end of the questioning”14 –to determine whether a reasonable person in appellant’s shoes

would have felt he was not at liberty to end the interrogation and leave.15

        Appellant agreed to talk to Ranger Ray, and the questioning took place in the ranger’s

patrol car parked in appellant’s driveway. The interview was relatively short, just under one

hour.    Statements made to and questions asked of appellant ranged from friendly to

accusatory. Appellant was not handcuffed or physically restrained, and he was released from

the patrol car at the end of the interview. But, as appellant points out, before talking to

Ranger Ray, he had been told that he would be taken to the county jail for further questions

and the collection of his clothes. He told Ranger Ray, as the interview was ending,

Appellant:         Yeah, and they’re taking me and Jess up to the police station.

Ray:               I don’t know anything about that. Okay. Well, I tell you what, let’s–let me–let
                   me put just a little old ending on this tape. It’s approximately 12:36 p.m., and,
                   again, I’m–this is Sergeant Kenny Ray with the Texas Rangers out of Tyler,
                   and I’ve been conducting a noncustodial interview with Blain Keith Milam at
                   his residence in the northern part of Rusk County on County Road 2125. And
                   you are free to go, my friend. Thank you for talking to me.

Appellant:         All right.

        Under these circumstances, the various law-enforcement officers created a situation

that could possibly lead a reasonable person to believe that his freedom of movement had

been significantly, if temporarily, restricted. We therefore look to the additional question of

“whether the relevant environment presents the same inherently coercive pressures as the


        14
             Fields, 132 S.Ct. at 1189.
        15
             Id.
                                                                               Milam    Page 16

type of station house questioning at issue in Miranda.”16 Or as stated in Dowthitt, we look

to see if the circumstances would lead a reasonable person to believe that he is under restraint

to the degree associated with an arrest.17

       The Supreme Court, in Howes v. Fields, singled out communicated non-custodial

status as the most important factor in determining that an inmate taken from his cell to a

prison conference room for questioning about events that occurred outside the prison was not

“in custody” for Miranda.18

       That critical factor was present here. Ranger Ray consistently told appellant he was

not in custody: “you’re not under arrest”; “you don’t have handcuffs on”; “we’re just sitting

and visiting”; “you know you’re not under arrest. You’re not in custody, okay”; “You can

do whatever you want. You’re not under arrest”; “We’re through talking. Like I told you,

you’re sitting in my car. You don’t have handcuffs on. You came over here voluntarily.

We’ve just–we’ve just been sitting here talking. You’re not–You’re fixing to just get out and

walk out. I mean, you’re not under arrest. I’m telling you that right now.”

       Appellant knew that he was not free to leave the crime scene, but that fact would not

strike any reasonable person, standing in appellant’s shoes, as unusual or indicative of his

“arrest” or that of anyone else. This was a major violent crime. Reasonable people are well



       16
            Id.
       17
            Dowthitt, 931 S.W.2d at 255; see also Beheler, 463 U.S. at 1125.
       18
            Fields, 132 S.Ct. at 1193.
                                                                               Milam     Page 17

aware that, as a matter of course, evidence is collected from crime scenes and from the

people present at crime scenes.19 Further, appellant was told that his mother and brother

would also be taken to the police station and then brought back.

Appellant:      Where’s my mama?

Roy:            Her and Danny went up to the office. . . Same thing they’re going to do with
                you and Jesseca. We’re going to carry you up there.

Appellant:      And bring us back?

Roy:            Yeah, we’ll bring you right back. We’re not going to leave you stranded.

       The State notes that the various officers can be heard on the dash-cam audio talking

to each other and to appellant’s brother, stating that no one was in custody.

       Given all of the circumstances, we cannot say that the trial judge abused his discretion

in finding that appellant was not in custody when he was interviewed by Ranger Ray.20

Admission of the resulting oral statement–which contained no confession—did not violate

Article 38.22 or the Fifth Amendment. Points of error 1 and 2 are overruled.

B.     Voir Dire Issues.

1.     Veniremember Trzeciak

       In his third point of error, appellant claims that the trial judge erred by granting the

State’s challenge for cause against veniremember Trzeciak in violation of Witherspoon v.



       19
          See Fields, 132 S.Ct. at 1190 (the “temporary and relatively nonthreatening detention
involved in a traffic stop or Terry stop does not constitute Miranda custody”).
       20
            See id., 132 S.Ct. at 1193-94; Dowthitt, 931 S.W.2d at 255.
                                                                                Milam     Page 18

Illinois21 and Wainwright v. Witt.22 In a capital prosecution, a prospective juror is not subject

to a challenge for cause merely because he is opposed to or has “conscientious scruples”

about the death penalty.23 Under Witherspoon and Witt, however, the trial judge may excuse

prospective jurors based upon their views of the death penalty if these views would “prevent

or substantially impair the performance of his duties as a juror in accordance with his

instructions and his oath.” 24

       In determining whether the trial judge abused his discretion in ruling on a challenge

for cause, we review the voir dire record in its entirety and ask whether the judge had a

rational basis for his ruling.25 We grant the trial judge considerable deference, because he

is in the best position to evaluate the prospective juror’s demeanor and responses.26

       In this case, the trial judge instructed the prospective jurors that they should not come



       21
            391 U.S. 510 (1968).
       22
            469 U.S. 412 (1985).
       23
            Witherspoon, 391 U.S. at 515.
       24
           Adams v. Texas, 448 U.S. 38, 45 (1980) (prospective jurors who can set aside their
beliefs against capital punishment and honestly answer the special issues are not properly subject
to challenge for cause); Witt, 469 U.S. at 424 (prospective jurors can be challenged for cause if
their views about the death penalty would prevent or substantially impair the performance of
their duties in accordance with their instructions and oath); see also Segundo v. State, 270
S.W.3d 79, 93 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (finding that, although the prospective juror never
explicitly said that his personal views would “substantially impair” his ability to follow the law
in answering special issues, it was nonetheless clear that he could not follow the law if it would
lead to a death sentence).
       25
            Granados v. State, 85 S.W.3d 217, 230–31 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002).
       26
            Davis v. State, 313 S.W.3d 317, 343–44 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
                                                                                Milam     Page 19

forward at the end of the judge’s voir dire to discuss their feelings about the death penalty,

but instead should wait until they were called individually. Despite that request, venireman

Trzeciak came forward and indicated that he did not think that there were any circumstances

in which he could vote for the death penalty.

Trzeciak:     My thought on that is–I wanted to share with the Court that I don’t believe
              there’s a circumstance where I could condone or vote for the death penalty,
              based on my personal religious beliefs.

Judge:        All right.

Prosecutor:   Mr. Trzeciak, basically, you just wanted to come tell the Court that no matter
              what circumstances may be out there, you’ve already decided you could not
              consider the death penalty?

Trzeciak:     I cannot do that, yes.

Prosecutor:   Irrelevant of whatever that may be?

Trzeciak:     Irrelevant of whatever that may be.

Prosecutor:   You felt compelled to come tell us that now, rather than waiting to
              questioning, because you feel that strongly about it?

Trzeciak:     Well, I feel that strongly about it, and I didn’t want to waste the Court’s time
              in the future. I didn’t know if that was going to be captured later on based
              upon the questionnaire that you put out, so I just wanted to let that be known
              now.

Defense:       . . . If the Court asks you or instructs you to render a true verdict, meaning will
              you answer those questions truthfully, the first one being in essence from
              listening to all the testimony, can you make a decision as to whether or not the
              defendant will be a danger to commit future acts of criminal violence, to be
              violent in the future? Could you answer that question truthfully, if so
              instructed?

Trzeciak:     Well, I’m going to try. I understand the question you’re asking. If you’re
                                                                              Milam     Page 20

               asking. I would then go back to–in today’s society, in my opinion and the
               opinion of my church, there’s no justification for the death penalty. If
               I–rendering some sort of verdict in phase two, the potential exists for the death
               penalty; I could not vote that way.

                                           ***
Prosecutor:    Okay. But that based upon your religious feelings, that you would be very,
               very compromised to be in this sort of a situation?

Trzeciak:      That’s correct.
                                              ***
Judge:         Sir, let me ask you this question. Can you return a verdict which assesses the
               death penalty in a case? You understand you’re never going to write “death
               penalty.”

Trzeciak:      Right.

Judge:         But can you, in good conscience–and I don’t care what your answer is. I just
               need to know. Can you return a verdict which assesses a death penalty?

Trzeciak:      I could not.

         The State challenged Mr. Trzeciak for cause. Appellant objected, arguing that Mr.

Trzeciak said that he would answer the questions truthfully, despite his views on the death

penalty. The judge overruled the objection.

         Appellant now argues that the State did not go far enough to disqualify Mr. Trzeciak

because he never explicitly said that he would consciously distort answers to the special

issues to prevent imposition of the death penalty. But Mr. Trzeciak was clear that he could

not follow the law in answering the special issues and would be unable to return a verdict

leading to the death penalty. Although he stated that he would “answer questions truthfully,”

he also said that there was no set of circumstances under which the death penalty would be
                                                                              Milam     Page 21

justified, based on his religious beliefs. Furthermore, Mr. Trzeciak explicitly stated that he

could not return a death-penalty verdict.

       On this record we cannot find that trial judge abused his discretion in granting the

State’s challenge for cause. Mr. Trzeciak’s answers concerning his inability to assess the

death penalty under any circumstances were sufficient to support the trial judge’s conclusion

that he would be substantially impaired in his abilities as a juror.27 Accordingly, we overrule

appellant’s third point of error.

2.     Veniremember Shaw

       In his fourth point of error, appellant contends that the trial judge erred in overruling

his Batson28 challenge to the State’s peremptory strike of black veniremember Shaw. A

defendant objecting under Batson must make a prima facie showing of racial discrimination

in the State’s exercise of its peremptory challenges.29 If the defendant makes a prima facie

showing of discriminatory motives, the State then has the burden to produce a race-neutral

explanation.30 If the State articulates a race-neutral explanation, the burden remains with the

defendant to show that the State’s proffered reasons are mere pretexts for discrimination.31



       27
            See Segundo, 270 S.W.3d at 93.
       28
            Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79 (1986).
       29
         Herron v. State, 86 S.W.3d 621, 630 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002); Mathis v. State, 67
S.W.3d 918, 924 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002).
       30
            Herron, 86 S.W.3d at 630.
       31
            Id.
                                                                               Milam     Page 22

The trial judge must then decide whether the defendant has proven purposeful

discrimination.32 Because the trial judge’s decision often turns largely on an evaluation of

credibility, we give the judge’s ruling great deference and will not disturb it unless it is

clearly erroneous.33

       After the defense objected under Batson to the State’s use of a peremptory challenge

against veniremember Shaw, the prosecutor offered a race-neutral explanation for her strike.

The prosecutor explained that she struck Ms. Shaw because she indicated, at least eight times

on her questionnaire, that she was personally against the death penalty.34

       Appellant argued in response that the State spent nearly two hours questioning Shaw

during voir dire, which was the longest amount of time spent with any prospective juror

besides veniremember Lucas, also a black juror. Appellant added that the prosecutor twice

referred to Ms. Shaw outside of the courtroom as an “angry black female.” The prosecutor

admitted to using the term after questioning Ms. Shaw, but stated that neither that remark nor

Shaw’s race had anything to do with the strike. Regarding the two hours of questioning, the



       32
            Id.
       33
            Id.
       34
            For example, in one question, which asked her to describe her personal feelings about
the death penalty, Ms. Shaw responded, “Following capital murder I feel that a person should get
life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. There have been too many false convictions
and people put to death that were innocent.” When asked to circle which of six statements best
represented her feelings regarding the death penalty, Ms. Shaw circled (E), “I believe we should
abolish the death penalty and I will have a difficult time voting to impose it, regardless of the
facts of the case.” On a scale of 0 to 10, 10 being always give the death penalty and 0 being
never, Ms. Shaw circled 0.
                                                                             Milam     Page 23

prosecutor explained that she had hoped to be able to challenge Ms. Shaw for cause because

of her views about the death penalty in her questionnaire answers.

       Because the State offered race-neutral reasons for its strike and appellant failed to

rebut those reasons, we hold that the trial judge did not clearly err in denying appellant’s

Batson challenge.35 Appellant’s fourth point of error is overruled.

C.     The Admission of Autopsy Photographs.

       In his fifth point of error, appellant argues that the trial judge erred by admitting

highly prejudicial and irrelevant autopsy photographs. He specifically complains that the

admission of State’s Exhibits 92-112 violated Texas Rule of Evidence 403, as well as the

due-course-of-law and due-process clauses of the Texas and U.S. Constitutions. Because his

only argument deals with Rule 403, that is the only basis for exclusion that we will address.

       Under Rule 403, if the use of a photograph is helpful and “relevant, legitimate, and

logical to the testimony that accompanies it,” the trial judge may exclude it only if its

emotional and prejudicial aspects substantially outweigh the helpful aspects.36 In a Rule 403

analysis of autopsy photos, factors such as the “number of exhibits offered, their

gruesomeness, their detail, their size, whether they are black and white or color, whether they

are close-up, whether the body is naked or clothed” are appropriate for consideration.37 We



       35
            See Herron, 86 S.W.3d at 630.
       36
            Erazo v. State, 144 S.W.3d 487, 491-92 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004).
       37
            Long v. State, 823 S.W.2d 259, 272 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991).
                                                                                Milam     Page 24

review the trial judge’s Rule 403 ruling for an abuse of discretion.38

        Appellant argues that these autopsy photographs had no probative value concerning

any disputed fact because he did not contest the manner and cause of Amora’s injuries or

death. Although he did not expressly contest the manner and cause of Amora’s death,

appellant did hold the State to its burden of proving its case beyond a reasonable doubt by

consistently challenging the rough-shod manner of the investigation and handling of physical

evidence. He also challenged the assertion that most of the injuries were inflicted before

Amora’s death. Moreover, the State had the burden of proving that appellant intentionally

or knowingly murdered the infant, “and the photographic representation of the injuries tends

to establish this element in a way which testimony by witnesses could not as accurately

portray.” 39

        The autopsy photographs admitted–only twenty of the some 300 autopsy photos–were

personally selected by the medical examiner, Dr. Keith Pinckard, to best illustrate his

testimony.40 The color photographs were displayed on a projector. Multiple photographs

were necessary because multiple injuries were inflicted. Dr. Pinckard testified that, even

after the autopsy, he could not tell exactly which injury caused death. Rather


        38
             State v. Mechler, 153 S.W.3d 435, 438–40 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005).
        39
         Lanham v. State, 474 S.W.2d 197, 199 (Tex. Crim. App. 1971) (admission of nine
color photographs of battered child, taken shortly after she was placed in police custody was not
an abuse of discretion).
        40
          Dr. Pinckard actually picked out twenty-one photos, but the trial judge sustained an
objection to State’s Exhibit 113 “because of the mutilation shown as a result of the autopsy.”
                                                                                Milam     Page 25

         there were many injuries present, and there was also, as I indicated, the pretty
         good possibility that strangulation was also involved. So we have the
         possibility for strangulation. We have a head injury that could easily cause
         death. We have a liver injury that might cause death, although there wasn’t a
         whole lot of bleeding, so maybe not here. And then, of course, we have a
         number of injuries to–just the bruising itself was so extensive on the body, you
         can actually experience effects just from the amount of bleeding that occurs
         into the tissue. So rather than anything specific, we certified the cause of death
         as homicidal violence, because it was obviously inflicted, including multiple
         blunt force injuries and possible strangulations.

The autopsy photographs were probative of the fact that this was a cruel and deliberate

killing–with multiple injuries inflicted ante-mortem, rather than post-mortem. These

photographs, which simply showed the number and type of injuries Amora suffered, could

add little to improperly inflame or prejudice the jury. The trial judge did not abuse his

discretion in admitting the autopsy photographs.41 We overrule appellant’s fifth point of

error.

D.       Crime Lab Accreditation–Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 38.35.

         In his sixth point of error, appellant argues that the trial judge abused his discretion

in admitting the testimony of Dr. Robert Williams, a forensic odontologist, in violation of

Article 38.35–which makes the admissibility of some forensic evidence contingent on

whether the analysis of the evidence was conducted at an accredited laboratory.

         Article 38.35(d) provides, in relevant part, that


         41
          See Sonnier v. State, 913 S.W.2d 511, 519 (Tex. Crim. App. 1995) (“[W]hen the
power of the visible evidence emanates from nothing more than what the defendant has himself
done we cannot hold that the trial court has abused its discretion merely because it admitted the
evidence. A trial court does not err merely because it admits into evidence photographs which are
gruesome”).
                                                                               Milam    Page 26

       a forensic analysis of physical evidence under this article and expert testimony
       relating to the evidence are not admissible in a criminal action if, at the time
       of the analysis, the crime laboratory conducting the analysis was not accredited
       by the director under Section 411.0205, Government Code.42

Subsection (d) was added to Article 38.35 in 2003, in response to problems with the DNA

evidence testing and examination operations in the Houston Police Department Crime Lab.43

       Before Dr. Williams testified, a hearing was held, outside the jury’s presence, on

appellant’s Article 38.35 challenge. Appellant did not dispute that Dr. Williams is the chief

forensic odontologist for SWIFS44 or that SWIFS is an accredited crime lab. His objection

was two-fold. First, appellant alleged that Dr. Williams’s work in this case was done as part

of his private dental practice, rather than for SWIFS. Second, SWIFS, although accredited

through ASCLD/LAB-L45 for various scientific disciplines, was not certified for odontology.

The trial judge overruled appellant’s objections, but gave him a running objection to all of

Dr. Williams’s testimony. We review that ruling for an abuse of discretion.46

       First, the record supports the trial judge’s implicit finding that Dr. Williams conducted



       42
            TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 38.35(d)(1).
       43
        House Research Organization, Bill Analysis for House Criminal Jurisprudence
Committee, HB 2703, 78th Leg., R.S. (2003).
       44
            SWIFS is the acronym for “Southwestern Institute of Forensic Sciences.”
       45
         ASCLD/LAB is the acronym for “American Society of Crime Laboratory
Directors-Laboratory Accreditation Board Legacy.”
http://www.txdps.state.tx.us/CrimeLaboratory/documents/List_Texas_LabsAccredited.pdf (last
visited May 10, 2012).
       46
            Guzman v. State, 955 S.W.2d 85, 89 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997).
                                                                                    Milam     Page 27

this analysis for SWIFS. The medical examiner testified that, because it was “incredibly

obvious” that the baby was covered in human bite marks, he called in Dr. Williams “so that

he would he able to take his own photographs.” Dr. Williams testified that he is an

independent contractor for SWIFS. He said that he was called to the autopsy suite at SWIFS

by Dr. Pinckard, the medical examiner. When he gets such a call, he winds up the work in

his own practice “immediately” and then heads for the Medical Examiner’s Office. Dr.

Williams explained that he works as an independent contractor for a number of labs because

most medical examiner offices “do not have the budget to be able to pay someone a full-time

salary[.]”

       Second, SWIFS, according to Defense Exhibit 9 (“Current List of DPS Accredited

Labs from Texas, 8/6/2009”), was one of eight accredited labs, and in fact the most

extensively “accredited” of the eight.47        Article 38.35 does not specify that the crime

laboratory must be certified in the exact discipline that is the subject of the testimony.48 And




       47
           SWIFS, as of that date, was the only one of the eight certified in at least five of the six
disciplines subject to DPS accreditation. No lab was then certified in “Questioned Documents.”
       48
          Article 38.35 does not purport to cover the admission of all forensic evidence–or even
most of it. Many disciplines and procedures are excluded from the definition of forensic analysis
or otherwise exempted from accreditation requirements “based on their nature” or based on the
determination of the Director “that no accreditation is appropriate or available.” TEX . CODE
CRIM . PROC. art. 38.35; TEX . GOV ’T CODE § 411.0205; 37 TEX . ADMIN . CODE § 28.145-147.
Among these are: latent print examination; breath alcohol analysis; digital evidence; forensic
pathology, not including toxicology or other laboratory associated with the office of a medical
examiner; forensic anthropology, entomology, or botany; forensic photography; polygraph
examination; voice analysis; non-criminal testing; viral DNA testing. For the full list see
http://www.txdps.state.tx.us/CrimeLaboratory/LabAccreditation.htm (last visited May 10, 2012).
                                                                                Milam    Page 28

odontology is not one of the disciplines for which accreditation is available.49 Nevertheless,

odontology is a species of impression evidence, and Chapter 37, Section 28.145(d) of the

Texas Administrative Code provides that

       the subdiscipline of impression evidence, including footwear, tiretrack, and
       similar impression evidence, may be administratively assigned by the
       laboratory to its trace evidence section, firearms section, or questioned
       document section. The director deems impression evidence to be a
       subdiscipline of several disciplines under this subchapter, including trace
       evidence, firearms/toolmark, or questioned documents.

SWIFS was, as the prosecutor pointed out to the trial judge, accredited in the trace-evidence

and firearms/toolmark disciplines. Given this record, we conclude that the trial judge did not

abuse his discretion in overruling appellant’s objection to Dr. Williams’s testimony.50 We

overrule point of error six.

E.     Future Dangerousness.

       In his seventh point of error, appellant argues that the evidence is legally insufficient

to support the jury’s affirmative answer to the “future-dangerousness” special issue.

       A jury may consider a variety of factors when determining whether a defendant will

pose a continuing threat to society.51 The facts of the offense alone may suffice to support

       49
          37 TEX . ADMIN . CODE § 28.145 describes the disciplines and subdisciplines that
involve forensic analysis for use in a criminal proceeding for which accreditation is available
from a recognized accrediting body. Among those disciplines are (1) controlled substances; (2)
toxicology; (3) biology; (4) firearms/toolmark; (5) questioned documents; (6) trace evidence; or
(7) other discipline if approved by a recognized accrediting body and the director.
       50
            See Ellison v. State, 201 S.W.3d 714, 723 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006).
       51
        Freeman v. State, 340 S.W.3d 717 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011); Wardrip v. State, 56
S.W.3d 588, 594 & n. 7 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001); Keeton v. State, 724 S.W.2d 58, 61 (Tex. Crim.
                                                                                 Milam     Page 29

the jury’s finding of future dangerousness.52 We view the evidence in the light most

favorable to the jury’s finding and determine whether any rational trier of fact could have

found, beyond a reasonable doubt, that there is a probability that appellant would commit

criminal acts of violence that would constitute a continuing threat to society.53

       The circumstances of Amora’s murder are, by themselves, sufficient to sustain the

jury’s finding of future dangerousness. Appellant savagely beat, bit, strangled, and sexually

mutilated the thirteen-month old daughter of his girlfriend–either alone or with her. Dr.

Pinckard testified that this was “not a quick event” because of the number of injuries that are

“clearly antemortem.” He agreed that “anyone who would inflict these injuries on Amora

would have had to have known that death was reasonably certain to be the result.” Dr.

Pinckard testified that he had never–in his decades of experience–seen a more severe case

of child abuse. Evidence that a murder was committed with deliberation and forethought

may be sufficient for a finding of future dangerousness.54


App. 1987) The Keeton factors are: (1) the circumstances of the capital offense, including the
defendant’s state of mind and whether he or she was working alone or with other parties; (2) the
calculated nature of the defendant’s acts; (3) the forethought and deliberateness exhibited by the
crime’s execution; (4) the existence of a prior criminal record; (5) the defendant’s age and
personal circumstances at the time of the offense; (6) whether the defendant was acting under
duress or the domination of another at the time of the commission of the crime; (7) psychiatric
evidence; and (8) character evidence.
       52
        Fuller v. State, 253 S.W.3d 220, 231–32 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008); Sonnier v. State, 913
S.W.2d 511, 517 (Tex. Crim. App. 1995); Kunkle v. State, 771 S.W.2d 435, 449 (Tex. Crim.
App. 1986).
       53
            Holberg v. State, 38 S.W.3d 137, 139 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000).
       54
            Id.; see also Sonnier, 913 S.W.2d at 517.
                                                                             Milam     Page 30

       Evidence of a defendant’s prior criminal record may also serve as the basis for a

finding of future dangerousness, and this jury was presented with evidence of appellant’s

prior solicitation of aggravated sexual assault of his eleven-year-old neighbor.55

       Appellant asserts that the future-dangerousness special issue requires the jury to

determine whether a capital defendant would be a continuing threat to prison society. And

under this “future danger test of Berry [v. State, 233 S.W.3d 847 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007],”

the “State has failed to prove that [appellant], unless executed, would ever pose the threat of

criminal violence he posed in this case–danger to a child.” That is, if appellant were allowed

to live, he would spend the rest of his life in prison and therefore never have the opportunity

to hurt a child again. Appellant acknowledges that in Estrada v. State and Coble v. State, we

interpreted the future-dangerousness special issue to ask whether a defendant would be a

continuing threat “whether in or out of prison.”56 Appellant asserts that the Coble-Estrada

construction of the future-danger test permits consideration of hypothetical predictions and

is inconsistent with the Supreme Court’s holding in Jurek v. Texas,57 which interpreted the

Texas statute as “requiring a literal prediction of future criminal conduct made to further the

goal of incapacitation.”58 He argues, “Keeping faith with Jurek, this Court should here apply



       55
            Wilson v. State, 7 S.W.3d 136, 142 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999).
       56
         Estrada v. State, 313 S.W.3d 274, 281 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010); Coble v. State, 330
S.W.3d 253, 268 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
       57
            428 U.S. 262 (1976).
       58
            Appellant’s Brief at 52.
                                                                               Milam     Page 31

the future danger test of Berry which considers the restraints inherent in the alternative

sentence to death.”59 We have rejected this argument.60

       Further, the State’s case for future dangerousness was not “child-specific.” The jury

heard about appellant’s escalating pattern of violence. He settled his scores with adults with

violence–he “caught a guy in his apartment, and he commenced to whupping his ass.” He

“took care of” a guy he found with his niece. He fought with his brother because he was

tired of arguing about cigarette smoke: “I was tired of arguing with him, and I wasn’t going

to argue with him, so I hit him in the mouth.” Deputy Clark–who investigated the

fight–testified that appellant’s mother asked him, “What can be done about Blaine?”

       She said that his temper had progressed from the years. She said that he had
       began with becoming upset and showing anger through his emotions, and she
       said he went from that to verbal abuse. She said over the years he went to
       physical abuse, and she said that it’s been ongoing and uncontrollable. She
       said this is just getting to the point where she couldn’t control it, and now [his]
       brother is getting to where he can’t control it. And she asked me what can be
       done about his—about his actions . . . .

       And this case is distinguishable from Berry for yet another reason: The jury heard that

appellant, while he was in Rusk County jail, told another inmate of his plan to escape. “He

said his brother was going to have a bomb threat put on the jail, so that everybody in K Tank

would get let out.” He was then going to escape to Mexico. Appellant ended up threatening



       59
            Id.
       60
          Freeman, 340 S.W.3d at 726-27 (rejecting a claim that the future-dangerousness special
issue requires the jury to determine whether a capital defendant sentenced to life imprisonment
would be a continuing threat to prison society).
                                                                             Milam    Page 32

this inmate after they got in to an argument, saying “if I kept messing with him, I would wake

up with a pencil in my side.” Because he feared retaliation, the inmate never reported the

threat until appellant was moved from K Tank. Appellant’s pattern of violence did not

diminish, even in jail.

       Having viewed all of the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s finding, we

conclude that a rational jury could have found, beyond a reasonable doubt, a probability that

appellant would pose a continuing threat to society.61 Point of error seven is overruled.

F.     Racial Prejudice.

       In his eighth point of error, appellant argues that the trial judge erred, in the

punishment phase, in admitting evidence of appellant’s father’s racial prejudice. Appellant’s

friend, Chris Lay, testified about the end of appellant’s schooling in the fourth grade.

A.     Educationally [he was slow], because, I mean, he got pulled out of school in the
       fourth grade because people picking on him, you know. His dad got tired of it and
       said he didn’t want him in school no more, if everybody was going to mess with him
       like that.

On cross-examination, the prosecutor revisited appellant’s exit from school:

Q.     And you’ve–you visited with Missy, our investigator, over the weekend, right? . . .
       And you told her that part of the reason why he got pulled out of school was because
       his dad was upset because his principal was black.

A.     Well, he was upset because–yeah, that, too.

The trial judge overruled appellant’s Rule 403 objection. Outside the presence of the jury,

the prosecutor explained that she presented the evidence to refute the false impression that

       61
            See Coble, 330 S.W.3d at 268-69; Estrada, 313 S.W.3d at 281.
                                                                               Milam     Page 33

Mr. Lay had given to the jury.62 Defense counsel pointed out that the jury already knew,

from previous testimony, that appellant was pulled from school after the paddling and that

this was

       nothing more than a direct appeal to that jury for unfair prejudice against him
       through his father. It’s not like this man had any belief like this. We’re talking
       about a child who was in the fourth grade. And they want to bring in the fact
       the father pulled him out because the principal was black? And I believe what
       the witness testified to is he was pulled out because he was paddled, which
       was not a false impression, because that’s exactly what the jury was told. It
       just–you noted it for the record. You’ve done–you’ve made your ruling, and
       I’ve had my say. Fine. Move again for a mistrial.

       The trial judge overruled the motion for mistrial, but gave the jury the following

limiting instruction.

       Ladies and gentlemen, the Court overlooked this prior to beginning the
       testimony of this witness. I want to instruct you concerning some prior
       testimony this morning. You’re not to hold any alleged racial statements
       allegedly made by this defendant’s father against this defendant, or infer that
       this statement or these statements are or is the belief or view of this defendant,
       and any racial content of any alleged statement is not to be inferred upon this
       defendant.

       Appellant now argues that “it was irrelevant that the principal who paddled Milam,

causing his father to take him out of school, was African-American.” 63 The State counters

that the evidence was relevant to impeach Mr. Lay and “to counter the assertion that the sole




       62
          The prosecutor explained that appellant’s father pulled appellant out of school because
“he had been spanked by the principal, and his dad was upset about the principal spanking him;
and he was black.”
       63
            Appellant’s Brief at 58.
                                                                                Milam     Page 34

reason Appellant was removed from school was because he was unfairly picked on.” 64

       A trial judge’s relevancy rulings will not be disturbed absent an abuse of discretion.65

Appellant relies on Bell v. State, in which the Beaumont Court of Appeals held that it was

reversible error for the State to elicit testimony, at the punishment stage, from the defendant’s

mother about racially charged comments she overheard after her son was found guilty.

       The fact that Ms. Bell may have heard the jury or the prosecutor referred to as
       “prejudiced” or “redneck,” or that she heard someone comment that the verdict
       was unfair because of the fact that the appellant was Black and the jury was
       entirely white, without having first connected the source of said comments to
       appellant’s family or friends, was simply irrelevant as to any issue regarding
       appellant.66

       One critical difference between Bell and this case is that in Bell, it was the jury itself

that was accused of being racist.67 Further, in this case, the trial judge instructed the jury not

to hold appellant’s father’s possible racism against appellant. There is no indication that the

jury disregarded the trial judge’s instruction, and we must presume that it followed those

instructions.68 Point of error eight is overruled.

G.     Examining Experts: Lagrone.

       Appellant’s ninth, tenth, and eleventh points of error address the trial judge’s ruling,


       64
            State’s Brief at 93.
       65
            Montgomery v. State, 810 S.W.2d 372, 391 (Tex. Crim. App. 1990) (op. on reh’g).
       66
            Bell v. State, 948 S.W.2d 535, 540 (Tex.App.–Beaumont 1997, no pet.).
       67
            Id. at 540-41.
       68
         Thrift v. State, 176 S.W.3d 221, 224 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005) (jury presumed to
following limiting instruction).
                                                                             Milam     Page 35

made at appellant’s request, that the experts interviewing appellant be prohibited from asking

him about the facts of Amora’s murder. Specifically, appellant argues that the State’s

questioning of both the defense and State’s experts about that prohibition violated appellant’s

right to remain silent (point nine), constituted prosecutorial misconduct (point ten), and

deliberately deceived the jury (point eleven).

1.     Soria / Lagrone / Chamberlain

       In Soria v. State,69 we recognized that a defendant may “waive” his Fifth Amendment

rights to a limited extent by presenting psychiatric testimony. We held that

       when the defendant initiates a psychiatric examination and based thereon
       presents psychiatric testimony on the issue of future dangerousness, the trial
       court may compel an examination of appellant by an expert of the State’s or
       court’s choosing and the State may present rebuttal testimony of that expert
       based upon his examination of the defendant; provided, however, that the
       rebuttal testimony is limited to the issues raised by the defense expert.70

       In Lagrone v. State, we expanded the scope of the rule to allow trial judges to order

criminal defendants to submit to a state-sponsored psychiatric exam on future dangerousness

when the defense introduces, or plans to introduce, its own future-dangerousness expert

testimony based upon a psychiatric examination.71 In Chamberlain v. State, we held the rule

applicable even if the appellant introduces the evidence only in rebuttal.72 We noted that


       69
            933 S.W.2d 46 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996).
       70
            Id. at 58–59 (footnotes omitted).
       71
            942 S.W.2d 602, 611 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997).
       72
            Chamberlain v. State, 998 S.W.2d 230 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999).
                                                                                 Milam     Page 36

       Soria and Lagrone are governed by the principle that if a defendant breaks his
       silence to speak to his own psychiatric expert and introduces that testimony
       which is based on such interview, he has constructively taken the stand and
       waived his fifth amendment right to refuse to submit to the State’s psychiatric
       experts. The focus is the defendant’s choice to break his silence.73

       With this background, we turn to the relevant facts.

2.     Relevant Facts

       Before trial, the State filed a motion for a psychological evaluation of appellant to

rebut appellant’s psychological testimony. The trial judge conducted a pretrial hearing on

the motion during which the defense asked that the State’s expert be prohibited from asking

appellant questions about the facts of the crime. The defense said that it had not let its own

experts talk to appellant about the crime, and that none of them “have used any information

that they gained through him concerning the offense in forming any opinions.” The defense

opposed inquiry into the facts on a number of grounds, including the Fifth Amendment right

to remain silent. The State objected, arguing that once a defendant waives his right to remain

silent by talking to experts, he cannot dictate the questions that he is asked.

       Relying on the language contained in Chamberlain, that “the essential principles at




       73
          Id. at 234. Since Chamberlain we have held, in unpublished opinions, that the
Soria/Lagrone line of cases may be extended to psychological examinations of the defendant to
develop mitigating evidence, or determine mental retardation. Ward v. State, No. AP 74695,
2007 WL 1492080 (Tex. Crim. App. May 23, 2007); Lizcano v. State, No. AP-75879, 2010 WL
1817772, *8 (Tex. Crim. App. May 5, 2010) (“The precise nature of the psychological testimony
to be presented is immaterial; that it is being presented by the defendant is enough to trigger the
rule.”).
                                                                               Milam     Page 37

work in Lagrone and Soria are waiver and parity,”74 the trial judge agreed to limit

examination to exclude any discussion of the facts of the crime by both parties.

       All right. The Court has reviewed the cases submitted to it, and the Court–and
       primarily based upon language contained in Chamberlain, I am going to limit
       the interview to exclude the offense, with the understanding that defendant’s
       experts will be precluded from offering any . . . findings, conclusions, or
       opinions based upon any interview or conversations of the defendant, by the
       expert of the defendant, concerning the offense itself. And, of course, this does
       not preclude any opinions, findings, or conclusions obtained from sources
       other than the defendant. Anything further?

       At trial, Dr. Cunningham, the defense expert, testified that appellant’s mental

deficiency is sufficiently severe for him to meet the diagnostic criteria for mental retardation.

He also testified that appellant had psychotic symptoms related to his methamphetamine

abuse, and that “given the extent of methamphetamine that he was using prior to the crime,

it’s very likely that he may have been delusional. It may have induced a psychotic state that

looked similar to schizophrenia. He may have actually had some hallucinations.”

       On cross-examination by the prosecutor, the following exchange took place:

Q.     . . . When you interviewed the defendant in those 9 hours that you spent with him, you
       did not ask him one thing about the capital murder for which this jury has convicted
       him, did you?

A.     That’s correct.

Q.     Why?

A.     Well, primarily because I was instructed by Counsel not to go into the circumstances,
       the events of the offense itself.



       74
            998 S.W.2d at 234.
                                                                               Milam     Page 38

Q.     Really?

A.     Yes, ma’am.

       Defense counsel then renewed the Fifth Amendment objection he had made at the

pretrial hearing. The State responded, “He didn’t remain silent. He waived his right to remain

silent, and in talking to the expert, he–there is no such thing as a partial waiver. . . . I have

every right to ask him about that, because it’s–once he waives, he waives.” The trial judge

overruled the objection, but granted appellant’s running objection.

       The prosecutor resumed cross-examination and later asked,

Q.     Okay. Well, I’ll come back to that. But you do talk to capital murderers about the facts
       of the capital murder they’ve been convicted of.

A.     Infrequently. Most of the time I do not. Most of the time defense counsels do not
       authorize a discussion about the capital offense. The defendant retains a Fifth
       Amendment right to not incriminate himself, even for an evaluation that’s being
       performed for sentencing purposes . . . .

In rebuttal, the State called Dr. Tim Proctor, and questioned him as follows:

Q.     Okay. Now, you’ve told us that you spent a significant amount of time interviewing
       the defendant?

A.     Yes.

Q.     Were you permitted to talk to this defendant, Blaine Milam, about the facts of the
       capital murder case for which he has been convicted?

The trial judge overruled appellant’s running objection.

Q.     Dr. Proctor, were you able to speak with the defendant about the facts of the capital
       murder case for which he was convicted by this jury?

A.     No.
                                                                               Milam     Page 39

Later, the prosecutor asked Dr. Proctor about Dr. Cunningham’s opinion that appellant might

have been delusional.

Q.     In your field as a psychologist, as a forensic psychologist, is it appropriate to diagnose
       someone or to opine that someone is psychotic or delusional without having talked to
       them?

A.     Well, I think the best way for me to answer that is to tell you what I would do and
       what I would teach my students. And I believe that to make an assertion about what
       someone’s mental state was like at the time of some offense, you have to have talked
       to them about that to have a meaningful opinion about that. And without doing that,
       I don’t know how you can know, especially in the absence of some other piece of
       evidence where the person at issue has given a recitation of what happened.

3.     Points of Error Nine, Ten, and Eleven

       Appellant argues in his ninth point of error that the trial judge erred in allowing the

above questioning in violation of “the spirit, if not the letter” of the trial judge’s previous

order and of appellant’s Fifth Amendment right to remain silent. In his tenth point of error,

appellant argues that the State’s conduct–in exposing the fact that the experts did not talk to

appellant about the facts of the crime–constituted prosecutorial misconduct. That misconduct

(1) violated his Fifth Amendment right to be free of harm for exercising his right to remain

silent about the facts of his case,75 and (2) unfairly left “the jury with the impression that

Appellant, on advice of counsel, was attempting to hide important information that bore on

the issue.”76       In his eleventh point of error, appellant asserts that leaving this

impression–when it was actually the trial judge’s ruling to prohibit the experts from inquiring


       75
            Appellant’s Brief at 63.
       76
            Appellant’s Brief at 63-64.
                                                                                  Milam     Page 40

about the facts of the case–amounted to Napue v. Illinois77 or “false testimony” error because

it discredited appellant and “undermined his case for mental retardation.” 78

       First, the trial judge did not err. This line of questioning did not violate his pretrial

order: That order limited only the questioning of appellant, not the questioning of testifying

experts. And the questioning did not violate appellant’s Fifth Amendment right to remain

silent. Appellant broke his silence to speak to his own psychiatric expert and introduced

testimony based on that interview, so he constructively took the stand, and waived the Fifth

Amendment “in the same manner as would his election to testify at trial.” 79 The State was

then entitled to offer rebuttal testimony limited to the issues raised by the defense expert. It

was permissible for the State to test Dr. Cunningham’s opinions by questioning him (and Dr.

Proctor) about how Dr. Cunningham arrived at those opinions.80 Appellant may not testify

through a defense expert and then use the Fifth Amendment as a shield against

cross-examination of that expert on disputed issues.

       Second, there was no misconduct. The State did not leave a false impression “that



       77
            360 U.S. 264 (1959).
       78
            Appellant’s Brief at 67.
       79
            Chamberlain, 998 S.W.2d at 234; Lagrone, 942 S.W.2d 602; Soria, 933 S.W.2d 46.
       80
           Lagrone, 942 S.W.2d at 611. See generally, Renteria v. State, No. AP-74829, 2011 WL
1734067, at *42 (Tex. Crim. App. May 4, 2011) (not designated for publication)
(cross-examination of Dr. Cunningham as to why he did not question Renteria about the offense
did not exceed the scope of proper cross-examination; defense counsel called Cunningham to
testify that Renteria would not be a future danger in prison, so it was permissible for the State to
test Cunningham’s credibility by questioning him as to how he arrived at that conclusion).
                                                                               Milam     Page 41

Milam refused to speak about the facts of the offense, rather than it being the trial court’s

decision that the experts not inquire about the facts of the offense.”81 The trial judge limited

inquiry by the experts into the facts of the crime solely at appellant’s behest. Appellant chose

not to discuss the crime facts with his expert, and the trial judge entered an order limiting

these expert examinations only because of appellant’s request.

       Third, there was no false testimony. Dr. Cunningham testified he was instructed by

counsel not to inquire into the facts of the case, and Dr. Proctor testified that he was not able

to speak with the defendant about the facts of the case.82 These were true assertions. They

do not conflict with appellant’s request to the trial judge and the trial judge’s order based on

that request.83 Appellant’s points of error nine through eleven are overruled.

H.     State’s Punishment-Stage Closing Argument.

       In his twelfth point of error, appellant argues that two portions of the State’s closing

argument violated his Eighth Amendment right to have the jury consider and give effect to

his mitigating evidence, and so denied him his right to a fair trial and reliable sentencing.

       There are four proper areas of jury argument: (1) summation of the evidence presented

at trial; (2) reasonable deduction drawn from that evidence; (3) answer to the opposing




       81
            Appellant’s Brief at 66.
       82
            State’s Brief at 104.
       83
            See Renteria, 2011 WL 1734067, at *42.
                                                                              Milam   Page 42

counsel’s argument; or (4) a plea for law enforcement.84         Any appellate claim that a

prosecution argument strayed outside the bounds of these categories is forfeited if there was

no contemporaneous trial objection.85 If there was a contemporaneous trial objection to

improper jury argument, such argument does not result in reversal “unless, in light of the

record as a whole, the argument is extreme or manifestly improper, violative of a mandatory

statute, or injects new facts harmful to the accused into the trial proceeding.” 86

       Appellant complains about two arguments. First, appellant asserts that the prosecutor

misstated the law on mitigation, misstated the special issue, and prevented the jury from

giving effect to appellant’s mitigating evidence, when she argued–over a running

objection–that only evidence of appellant’s being abused as a child could justify a life

sentence.

       Mitigating evidence is that which lessens a person’s moral blameworthiness
       for what he’s done. And yes, you have heard evidence from his background
       that is unfortunate. You have heard things that I can agree was not the perfect
       life growing up; however, the problem is, the fundamental problem is that the
       one type of mitigating evidence that could explain this, that I would suggest
       to you might be sufficient to explain this act and this conduct and this crime,
       is not here. If there was evidence before you that this defendant had been
       horribly abused as a child, horribly abused as a child, I could stand before you
                                             ***


       84
        Jackson v. State, 17 S.W.3d 664, 673 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000); Brown v. State, 692
S.W.2d 497, 502 (Tex. Crim. App. 1985).
       85
        Threadgill v. State, 146 S.W.3d 654 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004); Cockrell v. State, 933
S.W.2d 73, 89 (Tex. Crim App. 1996).
       86
        Wesbrook v. State, 29 S.W.3d 103, 115 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000); Todd v. State, 598
S.W.2d 286, 296–97 (Tex. Crim. App. 1980) (panel op.).
                                                                               Milam     Page 43

       [objection overruled]

       Thank you, Your Honor. If he had been somehow horribly abused as a child,
       bitten, beaten, violated, perhaps that would be mitigating evidence that would
       lessen his moral blameworthiness sufficiently to warrant life. Folks, that’s not
       here. As much–as much as the Milam family did not do right over the years,
       they did not abuse their kids, and nobody else did either. That’s not here.
       That’s the bottom line, and I would suggest to you that really is the only kind
       of mitigating evidence that truly can explain why we’re here and truly lessen
       moral blameworthiness for this. I would ask you, when you’re looking at the
       mitigating evidence, to go back to that life-altering moment when you first saw
       and you first realized what he did to Amora, everything he did to Amora, and
       ask yourself what could possibly mitigate that? That is the bottom line where
       the fourth question is concerned. The answer to the fourth question is “No.”

       The prosecutor did not misstate the law on mitigation or the mitigation special issue.

Article 37.071(f) provides that the jury “shall consider mitigating evidence to be evidence

that a juror might regard as reducing the defendant’s moral blameworthiness.”87 Nor did the

prosecutor prevent the jury from giving effect to appellant’s mitigating evidence. The

argument was a fair rebuttal to defense counsel’s argument that appellant

       is the reason for this system. He’s the reason why we don’t say, ‘Guilty, death
       penalty’. . . . How many mitigating factors are there? In fact, I think I have like
       three pages written down here of factors through this kid’s life that could be
       mitigating and need to be considered . . . . That’s why we don’t let the mob
       mentality decide these cases, because everything that you’ve heard mitigates
       against giving this boy death.

For these reasons, we find nothing in the prosecutor’s remarks to reflect that she was asking

the jury to forgo its duty and automatically answer the special issues in such a way that




       87
            TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 37.071(f).
                                                                              Milam     Page 44

appellant would receive the death penalty.88 The trial judge did not err in overruling

appellant’s objection.

       Second, appellant complains that the prosecutor violated his right to a reliable

sentencing determination by falsely arguing that the jury had no choice but to assess death:

“Sometimes the death penalty is society’s last line of self-defense. . . . He has earned it, and

you know it’s the only choice.” Appellant did not contemporaneously object to this closing

argument, and therefore he has forfeited any complaint on appeal about it.89 We overrule

appellant’s twelfth point of error.

I.     Constitutional Challenges to the Texas Death Penalty Statute.

       Appellant’s remaining points of error are constitutional challenges to the Texas death-

penalty statute. Appellant candidly acknowledges that all of these challenges have previously

been rejected by this Court. Appellant invites us to review our prior positions. We decline

to do so and briefly answer each claim by citing the controlling authority.

       In his thirteenth point, appellant challenges the “10–12” rule, arguing that it violates

his rights under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments because it leaves jurors in the dark

about the fact that their failure to unanimously agree on an answer to either special issue

results in a life sentence. This Court has rejected these challenges.90


       88
            Freeman v. State, 340 S.W.3d 717, 730 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011).
       89
            Cockrell v. State, 933 S.W.2d 73, 89 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996).
       90
        Estrada v. State, 313 S.W.3d 274, 306 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010); Williams v. State, 301
S.W.3d 675, 694 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009); Druery v. State, 225 S.W.3d 491 (Tex. Crim. App.
                                                                              Milam     Page 45

       In his fourteenth point, appellant claims that the trial judge committed reversible error

by charging the jurors that they had discretion to decide whether a particular circumstance

was mitigating. Consistent with Article 37.071, §(2)(f)(4), the trial judge charged the jury

that it “shall consider mitigating evidence to be evidence that a juror might regard as

reducing the

defendant’s moral blameworthiness.” Appellant argues that the statute violates the Eighth

Amendment, “which permits jurors no such discretion.” We have rejected this claim.91

       In his fifteenth point, appellant argues that the trial judge’s failure to define

“probability,” “criminal acts of violence,” or “continuing threat to society” violated the

constitutional requirement that each statutory aggravating circumstance genuinely narrows

the class of persons eligible for the death penalty. We have repeatedly held that the trial

judge need not define such terms because we presume that the jury understands them.92

       In his sixteenth point, appellant argues that the State’s unfettered, standardless, and

unreviewable discretion to seek the death penalty violates his rights under the Equal

Protection and Due Process Clauses and results in cruel and unusual punishment. We have




2007); Escamilla v. State, 143 S.W.3d 814, 828 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004).
       91
        Estrada, 313 S.W.3d at 306; Threadgill v. State, 146 S.W.3d 654, 671 (Tex. Crim.
App. 2004).
       92
        Russeau v. State, 291 S.W.3d 426, 434-35 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009); Druery v. State,
225 S.W.3d 491 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007); Saldano v. State, 232 S.W.3d 77, 91 (Tex. Crim. App.
2007).
                                                                              Milam     Page 46

repeatedly rejected these contentions.93

       In his seventeenth point, appellant argues that the Texas death-penalty scheme violates

due process because the mitigation special issue fails to require the State to prove the absence

of mitigating circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt, contrary to the Apprendi line of

cases. And in his eighteenth point, he argues that the scheme violates due course of law and

results in cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Texas Constitution because of the

“impossibility of simultaneously restricting the jury’s discretion to impose the death penalty

while also allowing the jury unlimited discretion to consider all evidence militating against

imposition of the death penalty.” We have rejected these claims.94

       In points nineteen and twenty, appellant contends that the cumulative effect of these

constitutional and statutory infringements violates the state and federal constitutions. Having

found no such violations, we hold that these claims are without merit.95

       Having overruled appellant’s points of error, we affirm his conviction and sentence.

Delivered: May 23, 2012
Do Not Publish




       93
        Roberts v. State, 220 S.W.3d 521, 535 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007); Hankins v. State, 132
S.W.3d 380, 387 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004); Threadgill v. State, 146 S.W.3d 654, 671 (Tex. Crim.
App. 2004); Matamoros v. State, 901 S.W.2d 470, 478 (Tex. Crim. App. 1995).
       94
        Smith v. State, 297 S.W.3d 260, 278 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009); Fuller v. State, 253
S.W.3d 220, 234 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008); Escamilla v. State, 143 S.W.3d 814, 828 (Tex. Crim.
App. 2004).
       95
         See Turner v. State, 87 S.W.3d 111, 118 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002); Chamberlain, 998
S.W.2d at 238 (non-errors cannot cumulatively cause error).
