Case Title: P. v. Coffman & Marlow

Citation: 

Docket Number: S011960

State: california

Court: California Supreme Court

Date: 2004-08-19T00:00:00Z

Document:
1
Filed 8/19/04 (this opn. should precede P. v. Marlow, S026614, also filed 8/19/04) 
 
 
 
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA 
 
 
 
THE PEOPLE, 
) 
 
 
) 
 
Plaintiff and Respondent, 
) 
 
 
) 
S011960 
 
v. 
) 
 
 
) 
 
JAMES GREGORY MARLOW and 
) 
CYNTHIA LYNN COFFMAN, 
) 
 
) 
San Bernardino County 
 
Defendants and Appellants. 
) 
Super. Ct. No. SCR-45400 
___________________________________ ) 
 
 
A San Bernardino County jury convicted James Gregory Marlow and 
Cynthia Lynn Coffman of one count of each of the following offenses:  murder 
(Pen. Code, § 187),1 kidnapping (§ 207, subd. (a)), kidnapping for robbery (§ 209, 
subd. (b)), robbery (§ 211), residential burglary (§ 459) and forcible sodomy 
(§ 286, subd. (c)).  The same jury found true as to both defendants special 
circumstance allegations that the murder was committed in the course of, or 
immediate flight from, robbery, kidnapping, sodomy and burglary within the 
meaning of section 190.2, subdivision (a)(17)(A), (B), (D) and (G).  The jury 
further found that Coffman and Marlow were personally armed with a firearm.  
(§ 12022, subd. (a).)  Following Marlow’s waiver of a jury trial on allegations that 
                                             
 
1  
Unless otherwise specified, all further statutory references are to the Penal 
Code. 
 
 
2
he had suffered two prior serious felony convictions within the meaning of section 
667, subdivision (a), the trial court found those allegations to be true.  The jury 
returned a verdict of death, and the trial court entered judgment accordingly.  This 
appeal is automatic.  (§ 1239, subd. (b).)  We affirm the judgment in its entirety. 
I.  FACTS 
A.  Guilt Phase 
1.  Prosecution’s case-in-chief 
 
On Friday, November 7, 1986, around 5:30 p.m., Corinna Novis cashed a 
check at a First Interstate Bank drive-through window near the Redlands Mall, 
after leaving her job at a State Farm Insurance office in Redlands.  Novis, who 
was alone, was driving her new white Honda CRX automobile.  Novis had been 
scheduled for a manicure at a nail salon owned by her friend Terry Davis; she 
never arrived for the appointment.  Novis also had planned to meet friends at a 
pizza parlor by 7:00 that evening, but she never appeared. 
 
That same day, Coffman and Marlow went to the Redlands Mall, where 
Marlow’s sister, Veronica Koppers, worked in a deli restaurant.  Between 5:00 and 
5:30 p.m., Veronica pointed the couple out to her supervisor as they sat in the mall 
outside the deli.  Coffman was wearing a dress; Marlow, a suit and tie.2  Later, at 
the time they had arranged to pick Veronica up from work, Coffman and Marlow 
entered the deli and handed Veronica her car keys, explaining they had a ride. 
                                             
 
2  
Since their arrival in San Bernardino County in late October 1986, Marlow 
and Coffman had been staying with Veronica at the home she shared with her 
husband, Paul Koppers, and his brother, Steve Koppers, in the City of San 
Bernardino.  The arrangement did not work out, and, on November 6, 1986, Paul 
told Veronica that Marlow and Coffman would have to leave.  Veronica, reacting 
with hostility, decided to go with them.  Taking a pair of handcuffs belonging to 
Paul, Coffman and Marlow, along with Veronica, went to stay at the Fontana 
home of Richard Drinkhouse, a boyhood friend of Marlow’s. 
 
 
3
 
Around 7:30 p.m., Coffman and Marlow brought Novis to the residence of 
Richard Drinkhouse.  Drinkhouse, who was recovering from injuries sustained in a 
motorcycle accident and had some difficulty walking, was home alone in the 
living room watching television when the three arrived.  Marlow was wearing 
dress trousers; Coffman was still wearing a dress; and Novis wore jeans, a black 
and green top, and had a suit jacket draped over her shoulders.  Marlow told 
Drinkhouse they needed to use the bedroom, and the three walked down the 
hallway.  The women entered the bedroom.  Marlow returned to the living room 
and told Drinkhouse they needed to talk to the girl so they could “get her ready 
teller number” in order to “rob” her bank account.  Drinkhouse complained about 
the intrusion into his house and asked Marlow if he were crazy.  Marlow replied in 
the negative and assured Drinkhouse “there won’t be any witnesses.  How is she 
going to talk to anybody if she’s under a pile of rocks?”  Drinkhouse asked 
Marlow to leave with the women.  Marlow declined, saying he was waiting for 
Veronica to bring some clothing.  He told Drinkhouse to stay on the couch and 
watch television. 
 
Knowing Marlow had a gun and having previously observed him fight and 
beat another man, and also being aware of his own physical disability, Drinkhouse 
was afraid to leave the house.  At one point, when Drinkhouse appeared to be 
preparing to leave, he saw Coffman, in the hallway, gesture to Marlow, who came 
out of the bedroom to ask where he was going.  Drinkhouse then returned to his 
seat on the couch in front of the television. 
 
Veronica arrived at the Drinkhouse residence 10 to 15 minutes after 
Coffman, Marlow and Novis.  Marlow came out of the bedroom, told Veronica he 
“had someone [t]here” and cautioned her not to “freak out” on him.  Marlow said 
he needed something from the car; Coffman and Veronica went outside and 
returned with a brown tote bag.  About 10 minutes later, Coffman drove Veronica 
 
 
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to a nearby 7-Eleven store in Novis’s car, leaving Marlow in the bedroom with 
Novis.  Drinkhouse heard Novis ask Marlow if they were going to take her home; 
Marlow answered, “As soon as they get back.”  Veronica testified that, during this 
period, Coffman did not appear frightened or ask her for help in escaping from 
Marlow.  Drinkhouse likewise testified Coffman appeared to be going along 
willingly with what Marlow was doing. 
 
Upon returning from the 7-Eleven store, Coffman entered the bedroom 
where Marlow was holding Novis prisoner and remained with them for 10 to 15 
minutes.  During this time, Drinkhouse heard the shower running.  After the 
shower was turned off, Marlow emerged from the bedroom wearing pants but no 
shoes or shirt; he had a towel over his shoulders and appeared to be wet.  He 
walked over to Veronica, said, “We’ve got the number,” and started going through 
a purse, removing a wallet and identification.  Marlow then returned to the 
bedroom with the purse.  Veronica left the house.  About five minutes later, 
Coffman, dressed in jeans, emerged from the bedroom, followed by Novis, 
handcuffed and with duct tape over her mouth, and Marlow.  Novis’s hair 
appeared to be wet.  The three then left the house.  Drinkhouse never saw Novis 
again. 
 
Marlow and Coffman returned the following afternoon to ask if Drinkhouse 
wanted to buy an answering machine or knew anyone who might.  When 
Drinkhouse responded negatively, the two left. 
 
Novis’s body was found eight days later, on November 15, in a shallow 
grave in a vineyard in Fontana.  She was missing a fingernail on her left hand, and 
her shoes and one earring were gone.  An earring belonging to Novis was later 
found in Coffman’s purse.  Forensic pathologist Dr. Gregory Reiber performed an 
autopsy on November 17.  Dr. Reiber concluded that Novis had been killed 
between five and 10 days previously.  Marks on the outside of her neck, injuries to 
 
 
5
her neck muscles and a fracture of her thyroid cartilage suggested ligature 
strangulation as the cause of death, but suffocation was another possible cause of 
death due to the presence of a large amount of soil in the back of her mouth.  
Marks on her wrists were consistent with handcuffs, and sperm were found in her 
rectum, although there was no sign of trauma to her anus. 
 
When Novis uncharacteristically failed to appear for work on Monday, 
November 10, without calling or having given notice of an intended absence, her 
supervisor, Jean Cramer, went to Novis’s apartment to check on her.  Cramer 
noticed Novis’s car was not parked there, the front door was ajar, and the bedroom 
was in some disarray.  Cramer reported these observations to police, who found no 
sign of a forced entry.  Terry Davis went to Novis’s apartment later that day and 
determined Novis’s answering machine and typewriter were missing.3 
 
Around 9:30 p.m. on Friday, November 7, the night Novis apparently was 
killed, Veronica Koppers visited her friend Irene Cardona and tried to sell her an 
answering machine, later identified as the one taken from Novis’s apartment.  
Cardona accompanied Veronica, Coffman and Marlow to the house of a friend, 
who agreed to trade the answering machine for a half-gram of methamphetamine.  
The next day, Debra Hawkins bought the answering machine that Cardona had 
traded.  The Redlands Police Department eventually recovered the machine.  
Harold Brigham, the proprietor of the Sierra Jewelry and Loan in Fontana, 
testified that on November 8, Coffman pawned a typewriter, using Novis’s 
identification. 
                                             
 
3  
Detective Carlos Pimentel of the Redlands Police Department processed 
Novis’s apartment for fingerprints, but was unable to find any matching those of 
defendants. 
 
 
6
 
Victoria Rotstein, the assistant manager of a Taco Bell on Pacific Coast 
Highway in Laguna Beach, testified that between 11:00 p.m. and 12:00 a.m. one 
night in early November 1986, after the restaurant had closed for the evening, a 
woman came to the locked door and began shaking it.  When told the restaurant 
was closed, the woman started cursing, only to run off when Rotstein said she was 
going to call the police.  Rotstein identified Coffman in a photo lineup and a 
physical lineup, but did not identify her at trial.  On November 11, 1986, the Taco 
Bell manager found a bag near a trash receptacle behind the restaurant; inside the 
bag were Coffman’s and Novis’s drivers’ licenses, Novis’s checks and bank card, 
and various identification papers belonging to Marlow. 
 
The day after Novis’s disappearance, Marlow, Coffman and Veronica 
Koppers returned to Paul Koppers’s home; Marlow asked him if he could get any 
“cold,” i.e., nontraceable, license plates for the car.  On the morning of November 
12, Marlow and Coffman returned to Paul Koppers’s residence, where they told 
him they had been down to “the beach,” “casing out the rich people, looking for 
somebody to rip off.”  Koppers asked Marlow if he knew where Veronica was; 
after placing two telephone calls, Coffman learned Veronica was in police 
custody.  On the Koppers’ coffee table, Marlow saw a newspaper containing an 
article about Novis’s disappearance with a photograph of her car.  Marlow told 
Coffman they had to get rid of the car.  Paul Koppers refused Marlow’s request to 
leave some property at his house. 
 
Coffman and Marlow left the Koppers residence and drove to Big Bear, 
where they checked into the Bavarian Lodge using a credit card belonging to one 
Lynell Murray (other evidence showed defendants had killed Murray on 
November 12).  Their subsequent purchases using Murray’s credit card alerted 
authorities to their whereabouts, and they were arrested on November 14 as they 
were walking on Big Bear Boulevard, wearing bathing suits despite the cold 
 
 
7
weather.  Coffman had a loaded .22-caliber gun in her purse.  Novis’s abandoned 
car was found on a dirt road south of Santa’s Village, about a quarter-mile off 
Highway 18.  Despite Coffman’s efforts to wipe their fingerprints from the car, 
her prints were found on the license plate, hood and ashtray; a print on the hood of 
the car was identified as Marlow’s.  A resident of the Big Bear area later found 
discarded on his property a pair of gray slacks with handcuffs in the pocket, as 
well as a receipt and clothing from the Alpine Sports Center, where Coffman and 
Marlow had made purchases. 
2.  Marlow’s case 
 
Dr. Robert Bucklin, a forensic pathologist, reviewed the autopsy report and 
related testimony by Dr. Reiber.  Based on the lack of anal tearing or other trauma, 
Dr. Bucklin opined there was insufficient evidence to establish that Novis had 
suffered anal penetration.  He also questioned Dr. Reiber’s conclusion that Novis 
might have been suffocated, as opposed to aspirating sandy material during the 
killing or coming into contact with it during the burial process. 
3.  Coffman’s case 
 
Coffman testified on her own behalf, describing her relationship with 
Marlow, his threats and violence toward her, and other murders in which, out of 
fear that he would harm her or her son, she had participated with him while 
nonetheless lacking any intent to kill.  Coffman also presented the testimony of 
Dr. Lenore Walker, a psychologist and expert on battered woman syndrome, in 
support of her defense that she lacked the intent to kill.  The trial court admitted 
much of this evidence over Marlow’s objections. 
 
Coffman testified she was born in St. Louis, Missouri, in 1962 and, 
following her graduation from high school, gave birth to a son, Joshua, in August 
1980.  Shortly thereafter she married Joshua’s father, Ron Coffman, from whom 
she separated in April 1982.  In April 1984, Coffman left St. Louis for Arizona, 
 
 
8
leaving Joshua in his father’s care, intending to come back for him when she was 
settled in Arizona. 
 
Coffman testified that when she met Marlow in April 1986, she was 
involved in a steady relationship with Doug Huntley.  She and Huntley had lived 
in Page, Arizona, before moving to Barstow, where Huntley took a job in 
construction.  Coffman, who previously had worked as a bartender and waitress, 
was briefly employed in Barstow and also sold methamphetamine.  In April 1986, 
both Coffman and Huntley were arrested after an altercation at a 7-Eleven store in 
which Coffman pulled a gun on several men who were “hassling” Huntley and 
“going to jump him.”  Charged with possession of a loaded weapon and 
methamphetamine, Coffman was released after five days.  The day after she was 
released, Marlow, whom she had never met, showed up at the apartment she 
shared with Huntley.  Marlow said he had been in jail with Huntley and had told 
him he would check on Coffman to make sure she was all right.  Coffman and 
Marlow spent about an hour together on that occasion and smoked some 
marijuana.  After Huntley’s release, he and Coffman visited Marlow at the 
Barstow motel where Marlow was staying. 
 
By June 1986, Huntley was again in custody and Coffman was preparing to 
leave him when Marlow reappeared at her apartment.  At Marlow’s request, 
Coffman drove him to the home of his cousin, Debbie Schwab, in Fontana; while 
there, he purchased methamphetamine.  Within a few days, Coffman moved with 
Marlow to Newberry Springs, where they stayed with Marlow’s friends Steve and 
Karen Schmitt.  During this period, Marlow told her he was a hit man, a martial 
arts expert and a White supremacist, and that he had killed Black people in prison.  
In Newberry Springs, Coffman testified, Marlow for the first time tied her up and 
beat her after accusing her of flirting with another man.  During this episode, his 
demeanor and voice changed; she referred to this persona as Folsom Wolf, after 
 
 
9
the prison where Marlow had been incarcerated, and over the course of her 
testimony identified several other occasions when Marlow had seemed to become 
Wolf and behaved violently toward her.  After this initial beating, he apologized, 
said it would never happen again, and treated her better for a couple of days.  She 
discovered he had taken her address book containing her son’s and parents’ 
addresses and phone numbers, and he refused to give it back.  He became critical 
of the way she did things and when angry with her would call her names.  He 
refused to let her go anywhere without him, saying that if she ever left him, he 
would kill her son and family. 
 
After some weeks in Newberry Springs, Marlow told Coffman his father 
had died and left him some property in Kentucky and that they would go there.  
Coffman would get her son back, he suggested, and they would live together in 
Kentucky or else sell everything and move somewhere else.  Marlow prevailed on 
her to steal a friend’s truck for the journey; after having it repainted black, they set 
off.  Not long before they left, Marlow bit her fingernails down to the quick.  They 
went by way of Colorado, where they stayed with a former supervisor of 
Marlow’s, Gene Kelly, who discussed the possibility of Marlow’s working for him 
again in Georgia.  They then passed through St. Louis.  Arriving in the evening 
and reaching her parents by telephone at midnight, Coffman was told it was too 
late for her to visit that night; the next morning, Marlow told her there was no time 
for her to see her son.  Accordingly, although Coffman had not seen her son since 
Christmas 1984, they drove straight to Kentucky. 
 
On arriving, they stayed with Marlow’s friend Greg (“Lardo”) Lyons and 
his wife Linda in the town of Pine Knot.  Marlow informed Coffman the real 
reason for the trip was to carry out a contract killing on a “snitch.”  Once they had 
located the intended victim’s house, Marlow told her she was to do the killing.  
She protested, but ultimately did as he directed, carrying a gun, fashioning her 
 
 
10
bandana into a halter top, and luring the victim out of his house on the pretext of 
needing help with her car.  When the victim, who had a gun tucked into his belt, 
had come to the spot where their truck was parked and was taking a look under the 
hood, Marlow appeared and demanded to know what the man was doing with his 
sister.  Marlow then grabbed the man’s gun.  Coffman testified she heard a shot go 
off, but did not see what happened.  Coffman and Marlow returned to Lyons’s 
home.  Sometime later, Marlow and Lyons left the house and returned with a wad 
of money.  Coffman counted it:  there was $5,000. 
 
Coffman testified that Marlow subjected her to several severe beatings in 
Kentucky.  In mid-August 1986, they drove to Atlanta, where Marlow told her he 
had a job.  While in a bar after his fourth day working for Gene Kelly, Marlow 
became angry at Coffman.  That night, in their hotel room, he began beating her, 
took a pair of scissors, threatened to cut her eye out, and then cut off all her hair.  
He forced her out of the motel room without her clothes, let her back in and 
forcibly sodomized her.  Marlow failed to show up for work the next day and was 
fired.  They then returned to Kentucky, where they unsuccessfully attempted a 
burglary and spent time going on “pot hunts,” i.e., searching rural areas for 
marijuana plants to steal.  Just before they left Kentucky to go to Arizona, they 
stole a station wagon. 
 
Back in Arizona, they burglarized Doug Huntley’s parents’ house and stole 
a safe.  After opening it to find only some papers and 10 silver dollars, they took 
the coins and buried the safe in the desert.  Returning to Newberry Springs and 
again briefly staying with the Schmitts, they sold the stolen car and stole two rings 
belonging to their hosts, pawning one and trading the other for methamphetamine. 
 
From Newberry Springs, in early October 1986, Marlow and Coffman took 
a bus to Fontana, where they again stayed with Marlow’s cousins, the Schwabs.  
During that visit, Marlow tattooed Coffman’s buttocks with the words “Property 
 
 
11
of Folsom Wolf” and her ring finger with the letters “W-O-L-F” and lightning 
bolts, telling her it was a wedding ring.  Leaving the Schwab residence in late 
October, they hitchhiked to the house of Rita Robbeloth and her son Curtis, who 
were friends of Marlow’s sister, Veronica.  From there, Veronica brought Coffman 
and Marlow to the home she shared with her husband, Paul, and his brother, Steve.  
At the Robbeloths’ one day, Coffman, Marlow and Veronica were sharing some 
methamphetamine, and Marlow became enraged over Coffman’s request for an 
equal share.  Although Coffman quickly backed down, Marlow began punching 
her and threatened to leave her by the side of the road.  Later, back at the Koppers’ 
residence, Marlow continued to beat, kick and threaten to kill her, forced her to 
consume four pills he told her were cyanide, extinguished a cigarette on her face 
and stabbed her in the leg, rendering her unconscious for a day and unable to walk 
for two days. 
 
Coffman recounted how she and Marlow, along with Veronica, left the 
Koppers’ and came to stay at the Drinkhouse residence the night before they 
abducted Novis.  On the morning of November 7, 1986, Marlow told her to put on 
a dress, saying they would not be able to rob anyone if they were not dressed 
nicely.  Marlow borrowed a suit from Curtis Robbeloth and told Coffman they had 
to “get a girl.”  She testified she did not understand he intended to kill the girl.  
After dropping Veronica off at her job, Coffman and Marlow drove around in 
Veronica’s car looking for someone to rob.  Eventually they parked in front of the 
Redlands Mall.  When they saw Novis’s white car pull up in front of them and 
Novis enter the mall, Marlow said, “That is the one we are going to get,” despite 
Coffman’s protests that the girl was too young to have money.  He directed 
Coffman to get out of the car and ask Novis for a ride when the latter returned to 
her car.  Coffman complied, asking Novis if she could give them a ride to the 
University of Redlands.  When Novis agreed, Marlow got in the two-seater car 
 
 
12
with Coffman on his lap.  As Novis drove, Marlow took the gun from Coffman, 
displayed it and told Novis to pull over.  Then Coffman drove while Novis, 
handcuffed, sat on Marlow’s lap.  He told Novis they were going to a friend’s 
house and directed Coffman to the Drinkhouse residence, where they arrived 
between 7:00 and 7:30 p.m.  When Novis told them she had something to do that 
evening, Marlow assured her, “Oh, you’ll make it where you are going.  Don’t 
worry.” 
 
As Marlow went in and out of the bedroom at the Drinkhouse residence, 
Coffman sat with Novis.  When Novis asked if she was going to be allowed to 
leave, Coffman told her to do what Marlow said and he would let her go.  Showing 
Novis the stab wound on her leg, Coffman told her Marlow was “just crazy.”  
Marlow dispatched Coffman to make coffee and proceeded to try to get Novis to 
disclose her personal identification number (PIN).  Finally Novis gave him a 
number.  Marlow then taped Novis’s mouth and said, “We are going to take a 
shower.”  He removed Novis’s clothes and put her, still handcuffed, into the 
shower.  Coffman testified he told her (Coffman) to get into the shower, but she 
refused.  Thinking Marlow was going to rape Novis, Coffman testified she “turned 
around” and “walked away” into the living room.  There she retrieved her jeans 
and returned to the bedroom to get dressed.  Coffman denied either arousing 
Marlow sexually or having anything to do with anything that happened in the 
shower.  When Marlow told her to dress Novis, Coffman responded that if he 
uncuffed her, she could do so herself.  He removed the handcuffs to permit Novis 
to dress, then handcuffed her again to a bedpost. 
 
Around this time, Veronica arrived at the Drinkhouse residence.  Marlow 
took Novis’s purse, directed Veronica to get his bag out of her car, and told 
Coffman and his sister to go to the store, where they bought sodas and cigarettes.  
Back at the Drinkhouse residence, Veronica departed and, soon thereafter, 
 
 
13
Marlow, Coffman and Novis left, with Coffman driving and Novis, duct tape on 
her mouth, handcuffed, and covered with blankets, in the back of the car.  Marlow 
told Coffman to drive to their drug connection in Fontana, but directed her into a 
vineyard.  There, Marlow and Novis got out of the car, and he removed her 
handcuffs and tape.  He explained they could not bring a stranger to the drug 
connection’s house, so he would wait there with Novis while Coffman scored the 
dope.  They walked off, with Marlow carrying a blanket and a bag containing a 
shovel. 
 
Coffman testified she felt confused at that point because she possessed only 
$15, insufficient funds for a drug purchase.  Believing Marlow intended to rape 
Novis, she backed the car out of the vineyard, parked down the street and smoked 
a cigarette.  When she returned, no one was there.  She could hear the sound of 
digging.  Some 10 to 15 minutes later Marlow reappeared, alone.  Without 
speaking, he threw some items into the back of the car and, after Coffman had 
driven for a while, began to hit her and berated her for driving away.   
 
They returned to the Robbeloths’ house, where Marlow changed clothes.  
Next they drove to a First Interstate Bank branch, but were unable to access 
Novis’s account because she had given them the wrong PIN.  From there, around 
9:30 p.m., they went to Novis’s apartment and, after a search, found a card on 
which Novis had written her PIN.  They also took a typewriter, a telephone 
answering machine and a small amount of cash.  They returned to the Robbeloths’, 
where Marlow spoke with Veronica, who then drove them around unsuccessfully 
looking for a friend to buy the machine.  Leaving Veronica around 3:00 or 4:00 
a.m., Coffman and Marlow tried again to access Novis’s account, only to learn 
there was not enough money in the account to enable them to withdraw funds 
using the automated teller.  They returned to the Drinkhouse residence. 
 
 
14
 
The next morning, Veronica joined them around 8:00 or 9:00.  After trying 
again to sell the answering machine, they pawned the typewriter for $50 and 
bought some methamphetamine.  That afternoon Coffman and Marlow went to 
Lytle Creek to dispose of Novis’s belongings.  Coffman had not asked Marlow 
what had happened to Novis; she testified she did not want to know and thought 
he had left her tied up in the vineyard.  They returned to the Drinkhouse residence 
around 5:00 p.m.  Later that evening, after trading the answering machine for 
some methamphetamine in the transaction described in Irene Cardona’s testimony, 
Coffman and Marlow went with Veronica to the Koppers residence, where they 
“did some speed” and developed a plan to go to the beach in Orange County on 
Marlow’s theory that “it would be easier to get money down there because all rich 
people live down at the beach.”  Veronica drove Coffman and Marlow back to 
Novis’s car, which they drove to Huntington Beach, arriving at sunrise.   
 
After lying on the beach for several hours, they looked unsuccessfully for 
people to rob.  Marlow berated Coffman for their inability to find a victim, held a 
gun to her head and ordered her to drive.  After threatening to shoot her, he began 
to punch the stab wound on her leg.  That night, they slept in the car in front of 
some houses near the beach.  The next day, Coffman cashed a check on Novis’s 
account, receiving $15.  They continued their search for a potential victim and 
eventually bought dinner at a Taco Bell, where Marlow discarded their 
identification, along with Novis’s.  They drove up into the hills and spent the 
night.  The next day, they resumed their search for someone to rob.  Seeing a 
woman walking out of Prime Cleaners, Marlow commented that she would be a 
good one to rob.  They continued to drive around, however, and spent the night in 
the car behind a motel on Pacific Coast Highway after removing the license plates 
from another car and putting them on Novis’s car. 
 
 
15
 
The following afternoon, Coffman and Marlow entered Prime Cleaners and 
committed the robbery, kidnapping, rape and murder of Lynell Murray detailed 
below (see post, at pp. 25-28). 
 
Coffman also presented the testimony of several witnesses suggesting her 
normally outgoing personality underwent a change and that she behaved 
submissively and fearfully after she became Marlow’s girlfriend.  Judy Scott, 
Coffman’s friend from Page, Arizona, testified that when Coffman and Marlow 
visited her in October 1986, Coffman, who previously had been talkative and 
concerned about the appearance of her hair, avoided eye contact with Scott, spoke 
tersely and had extremely short hair that she kept covered with a bandana.  Lucille 
Watters testified that during the couple’s July 1986 visit to her house, Coffman 
appeared nervous, rubbing her hands and shaking.  Linda Genoe, Lyons’s ex-wife, 
testified she met Coffman in June 1986 when she and Marlow visited her at her 
home in Kentucky.  Genoe observed that whenever Marlow wanted something, he 
would clap, call “Cynful” and tell her what to do.  Coffman would always sit at his 
feet.  On one occasion, Genoe saw Coffman lying on the floor of the bedroom in 
which she was staying, naked and crying; Coffman did not respond when Genoe 
asked what was wrong.  The next morning, Genoe saw scratches on Coffman’s 
face and bruises around her neck, and Coffman seemed afraid to talk about it.  
Once Genoe observed Coffman cleaning between the spokes on Marlow’s 
motorcycle with a toothbrush while Marlow watched.  While at Genoe’s house, 
Coffman and Marlow got “married” in a “biker’s wedding.” 
 
Coffman also presented the testimony of psychologist Lenore Walker, 
Ph.D., an expert in battered woman syndrome.  Dr. Walker opined that Coffman 
was generally credible and suffered from battered woman syndrome, which she 
described as a collection of symptoms that is a subcategory of posttraumatic stress 
disorder.  Certain features of defendants’ relationship fit the profile of a battering 
 
 
16
relationship:  a pattern of escalating violence, sexual abuse within the relationship, 
jealousy, psychological torture, threats to kill, Coffman’s awareness of Marlow’s 
acts of violence toward others, and Marlow’s alcohol and drug abuse.  Dr. Walker 
administered the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory to Coffman and 
diagnosed her as having posttraumatic stress disorder and depression with 
dysthymia, a depressed mood deriving from early childhood. 
 
Officer Lisa Baker of the Redlands Police Department testified that on 
November 15, 1986, she took Coffman to the San Bernardino County Medical 
Center and there observed various scratches and bruises on her arms and legs, a 
bite mark on her wrist, and a partly healed inch-long cut on her leg.  Coffman told 
Baker the bruises and scratches came from climbing rocks in Big Bear. 
 
Gene Kelly, formerly Marlow’s supervisor in his employment with a 
company that erected microwave towers, testified that one evening in June 1986 
he saw Marlow, who believed Coffman had been flirting with another man, yank 
her out of a restaurant door by her hair. 
4.  Prosecution’s rebuttal 
 
Jailhouse informant and convicted burglar Robin Long testified that in 
January 19874 she met Coffman in the San Bernardino County jail.  Coffman told 
Long that when Marlow took Novis into the shower, she got in with them, and 
Marlow fondled both of them.  Coffman also told Long that Novis was alive and at 
the Drinkhouse residence when Marlow and Coffman went to Novis’s apartment 
to look for her PIN.  Coffman said she told Novis they would have to kill her 
because they could not leave any victims alive.  After Marlow killed Novis, 
                                             
 
4  
Long actually stated she met Coffman while in custody in January 1986, 
but clearly she misspoke. 
 
 
17
Coffman told Long, he came back to the car and got the shovel, whereupon 
Coffman went with him into the vineyard and was present when Novis was buried.  
Coffman told Long that killing Novis made her feel “really good.”  Coffman also 
said they had taken a number of items from Novis, including a watch, earrings and 
makeup. 
 
With respect to Lynell Murray, Coffman told Long (contrary to Coffman’s 
trial testimony) that she had gotten into the shower with Marlow and Murray.  
Coffman never told Long that Marlow had beaten her or that the only reason she 
had participated in the killings was because she was afraid for her son’s safety. 
 
The prosecution presented the testimony of several police officers regarding 
Coffman’s prior inconsistent statements.  Odie Lockhart, an officer with the 
Huntington Beach Police Department, and other officers accompanied Coffman to 
the vineyard where Novis was buried.  Contrary to her testimony, Coffman did not 
tell Lockhart that when Marlow took Novis into the vineyard, she had backed her 
car out; rather, Coffman told him she stayed in the same location.  When Lockhart 
asked Coffman how Marlow had killed Novis, she said she “guessed” he strangled 
her, but indicated she was only supposing.  Contrary to Coffman’s testimony that 
she did not know Novis was dead when she and Marlow went to Novis’s 
apartment to search for her PIN, Coffman told Sergeant Thomas Fitzmaurice of 
the Redlands Police Department in a November 17, 1986, interview that the reason 
they did not ask Novis for the correct PIN after the number Novis initially gave 
them did not work was that “she was already gone by then.”  Despite Coffman’s 
trial testimony that Marlow had beaten her while they were holding Lynell Murray 
at the motel in Huntington Beach, Fitzmaurice testified that Coffman never 
mentioned such a beating during a formal interview at the Huntington Beach 
Police Department and, indeed, said Marlow “wasn’t mean” to her. 
 
 
18
 
Finally, to rebut Coffman’s claim that she continued to fear Marlow after 
her arrest, Deputy Blaine Proctor of the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s 
Department testified that he was working courthouse security during September 
and October of 1987, and while preparing Coffman and other inmates for 
transportation to court on one occasion he noticed Coffman had left her holding 
cell and gone to the area where Marlow was located.  When he next saw Coffman, 
she was in front of Marlow’s cell; Marlow was standing on his bunk with his hips 
pressed against the bars and Coffman was facing him with her head level with his 
hips.  When Coffman and Marlow observed Proctor, Coffman stepped back and 
Marlow turned, revealing his genitals hanging out of his jumpsuit.  Marlow 
appeared embarrassed and told Proctor that “nothing happened.” 
5.  Marlow’s rebuttal 
 
Clinical psychologist Michael Kania testified, based on Coffman’s 
psychological test results and Dr. Walker’s notes and testimony, that Coffman was 
exaggerating her symptoms, was possibly malingering, and did not suffer from 
posttraumatic stress disorder, although she met most of the criteria for a diagnosis 
of antisocial personality disorder. 
 
Various individuals acquainted with both defendants testified that Marlow 
and Coffman seemed to have a normal boyfriend-girlfriend relationship and, 
although Coffman wore a bikini on many occasions, the witnesses had never 
observed cuts or bruises on her. 
 
Veronica Koppers testified that when she was around Coffman, Coffman 
was under the influence of methamphetamine almost every day.  Coffman never 
expressed fear of Marlow for herself or her son; instead, she wanted Marlow to get 
her son back for her by taking the boy and “getting rid” of her ex-husband and 
former in-laws.  Coffman frequently nagged Marlow to acquire more money.  
With one exception, all of the arguments between defendants that Veronica 
 
 
19
witnessed were verbal and nonphysical.  The one exception was an argument that 
occurred while Veronica was driving defendants to a drug connection to purchase 
methamphetamine.  Coffman, in the front seat, kept telling Marlow they needed to 
get more money to score speed and to get Joshua; Marlow told her to shut up.  
Coffman kept it up and Marlow slapped her.  Veronica told both to get out of her 
car; they complied.  After defendants continued to argue for a few minutes, 
Marlow got back into the car and told Coffman that if she wanted to leave, she 
could.  She begged him not to leave her.  He said, “Okay, get in [the car] and get 
off my back.”  Coffman got back into the car and was silent.  Veronica 
acknowledged that one day, after she had returned home following work, Marlow 
told her he had accidentally stabbed Coffman; the wound was a small puncture-
type wound that did not bleed a lot and, contrary to Coffman’s testimony, 
Coffman did not seem to have any trouble walking the next day. 
 
Veronica testified that, at the Drinkhouse residence on the night Novis was 
abducted, she saw Coffman going through Novis’s purse.  She also saw Coffman 
coming out of the bedroom wearing jeans and with wet hair. 
 
Marlow testified he was not a member of or affiliated with any prison gang 
and had never told Coffman he had been a member of such a gang or had killed 
anyone while in prison.  He acknowledged to the jury that he had had several 
disciplinary write-ups while in prison but claimed they were for verbal disrespect 
toward the staff.  He denied telling Coffman she would be killed if she ever left 
him or threatening to have her son killed.  He admitted he and Coffman had had 
physical fights.  He had never forced her to have sex, and Coffman never told him 
she disliked oral sex.  Contrary to Coffman’s testimony, they had had sex on the 
occasion when they first met. 
 
Marlow acknowledged that during their stay in Newberry Springs, he and 
Coffman had had two real arguments, but he denied, contrary to Coffman’s 
 
 
20
testimony, that on the first occasion he kicked her, tore off her clothes, tied her up 
or threatened to kill her.  Instead, he had merely pushed her to the ground with an 
open hand.  On the second occasion, Coffman had rebuffed several of Marlow’s 
requests for assistance in painting a trailer, claiming she was busy gluing together 
a broken nail; finally, Marlow claimed, he had bitten off the broken nail and 
trimmed her other nails with a nail clipper.  Marlow testified that on their trip east 
in June 1986, Coffman had declined to visit her mother on the morning following 
their arrival in St. Louis.  A few days after they reached Kentucky, Lyons and 
another man approached Marlow about killing one Gregory Hill; Marlow testified 
that, although he had told Coffman he would rather wait for an expected job 
opening with his former supervisor, Gene Kelly, Coffman told him the hit would 
be faster money.  Finally, he agreed to do the killing, and Lyons gave him a .22-
caliber pistol to do the job.  Marlow testified he had never killed anyone before 
and, when he and Coffman had parked their truck on a hill overlooking Hill’s 
house, he expressed reservations centering on whether Hill might have a wife and 
children and whether in fact he might not have snitched as he was alleged to have 
done.  Coffman told him he was going to have to deal with that and, when he said 
he could not, she demanded the gun and told him she would deal with it.  After 
Coffman got Hill to come and take a look at the truck, Marlow, who had secreted 
himself in the woods, noticed that Hill had a gun in his back pocket.  Marlow 
emerged and demanded to know what Hill was doing with his sister.  When Hill 
pulled out his gun, Marlow grabbed his arm and the gun went off in the course of 
the struggle. 
 
Later, Coffman expressed interest in a second contract killing proposed to 
them, but Marlow balked at the idea.  During the ensuing argument, Coffman 
revealed that her ex-husband and former in-laws had legal custody of her son, and 
she wanted them to “pay” with their lives for taking him away from her.  When 
 
 
21
Marlow refused to kill them, she threatened to inform the police about the Hill 
killing; the argument became heated, and he pushed her down; she got up and 
slapped him, and he slapped her.  Contrary to Coffman’s testimony, he did not 
kick her or hit her in the face with a clutch plate. 
 
In Atlanta, after a few days of working for Gene Kelly, Marlow agreed to 
Kelly’s offer to take him and Coffman out for dinner and drinks; Marlow felt 
reluctant, however, because Coffman had been flirting with other men, and he was 
afraid of getting into another argument with her in which the subject of the killing 
might come up.  They first went to a pool hall where, after drinking a lot of 
tequila, Marlow got involved in an argument over Coffman with two other men.  
Marlow told Coffman he wanted to leave the pool hall.  Entering a restaurant as 
the argument continued, Marlow became angry when Coffman told him she was 
going to sleep with Kelly.  He pulled her out of the restaurant by the hair, and they 
went back to their motel room.  In the past, Marlow had threatened to cut her hair 
when she had flirted with other men; this time, he did it.  He denied Coffman’s 
accusations that he had threatened to put out her eye, beat her and sodomized her. 
 
Marlow testified he and Coffman returned to Kentucky, where he was 
offered $20,000 to kill a pregnant woman in Phoenix, Arizona; Marlow was not 
interested, but Coffman wanted him to take the job or to get her to Arizona so that 
she could do it.  They traveled as far as Page, Arizona, before running out of 
money and heading to Newberry Springs, where they stayed with the Schmitts for 
a week.  There, at Coffman’s request, Marlow tattooed her ring finger and 
buttocks. 
 
In early October, Marlow and Coffman arrived at Veronica’s house.  
Marlow described the incident in which Coffman was stabbed:  High on 
methamphetamine, they had been arguing about money and her son, Joshua; 
Coffman wanted him to take the contract to kill the woman in Phoenix, but 
 
 
22
Marlow was unwilling.  Coffman threatened to “tell on [him] for Kentucky” if he 
did not, and said she would do the job herself.  Coffman was in bed, under the 
covers.  Marlow stabbed the bed, wounding Coffman’s leg.  Marlow asked one of 
the Koppers if they had anything for pain, and they gave him Dilantin, which he in 
turn gave to Coffman.  Marlow denied Coffman’s claim that he told her the pills 
were cyanide and threatened to kill her. 
 
Marlow recounted his version of the offenses against Novis.  On 
November 7, 1986, after moving to the Drinkhouse residence, Marlow and 
Coffman discussed committing a robbery for money to get Coffman to Arizona.  
After donning borrowed clothes that afternoon, while they were waiting to pick up 
Veronica at the Redlands Mall, Coffman noticed Novis pull up alongside their car 
and commented that she wanted that car for the trip to Arizona.  When Novis came 
out of a store, Coffman asked her for a ride.  She and Marlow got into the car, and 
Novis started driving.  Coffman nudged him several times to pull out the gun.  He 
did so and told Novis to pull over.  Coffman took over the wheel and, without any 
prompting from Marlow, drove to the Drinkhouse residence.  Marlow testified his 
intention at that point was to take the car and get Novis to obtain money from her 
ATM. 
 
At the Drinkhouse residence, they went straight into the bedroom, where 
Coffman handcuffed Novis to the bed, took her purse to the living room and 
searched it, finding an ATM card.  Coffman took Novis into the shower and asked 
Marlow to join them, saying she wanted to see him have sex with Novis.  Marlow 
entered the shower but was not aroused by the prospect, and Coffman performed 
oral sex on him.  After getting out of the shower, Marlow took some money from 
Novis’s purse and asked Coffman to go to the store and get cigarettes.  She and 
Veronica did so.  While they were gone, Drinkhouse asked Marlow for $1,000 for 
bringing Novis to his house and told Marlow he could not simply let her go 
 
 
23
because she would bring the police to his house.  Upon her return, Coffman too 
told him he could not just let Novis go. 
 
Marlow, Coffman and Novis left the Drinkhouse residence.  Coffman was 
driving and, with no direction from Marlow, drove to the vineyard.  They argued 
and, Marlow testified, Coffman insisted he “do something.”  He told her, “You do 
something.”  Coffman said she wanted to get some speed.  Marlow took a sleeping 
bag out of the car and sat down with Novis while Coffman drove off.  She 
returned some 15 minutes later and commented, “You still haven’t done 
anything.”  Marlow told her to kill the lady if she wanted the lady killed.  After 
Coffman continued to insist, he put his arm around Novis from behind and began 
choking her.  Marlow testified he told Novis to lie down, remain still until they 
left, and then get up and run away.  He then let go of her; she was lying on her side 
and still breathing.  He spread a little dirt over her, avoiding her head.  Shown 
pictures of the grave site, Marlow testified it did not look like that when he left 
her.  When he returned to the car, Coffman asked if he was sure Novis was dead.  
He told her he was not sure and they left.  When they stopped by a field near the 
Drinkhouse residence, Marlow got out of the car and waited in the field while 
Coffman took off.  When she returned, she asked him if he was okay. 
 
Later, after an unsuccessful attempt to use Novis’s ATM card, Marlow and 
Coffman went to Novis’s house.  As they approached the apartment, Marlow told 
Coffman they should not go in because he did not think Novis was dead and the 
police might be watching; Coffman told him not to worry. 
 
Dr. Michael Kania testified about an interview he had had with Marlow in 
January 1987.  In that interview, Marlow expressed a desire to protect Coffman 
and said he would do anything to help her.  Marlow told him that killing Novis 
was a response to his wanting to “do good” and to hear Coffman tell him he “did 
 
 
24
good.”  Marlow had only killed Novis, he told Kania, because of pressure from 
Coffman and Drinkhouse. 
6.  Prosecution surrebuttal 
 
To impeach Marlow’s testimony, Sergeant Fitzmaurice recounted 
statements obtained from him without waiver of the rights described in Miranda v. 
Arizona (1966) 384 U.S. 436.  Marlow told Fitzmaurice, among other things, that 
the killing of Novis was “a 50-50” thing, and Coffman “got the ball rolling.”  
Marlow indicated both he and Coffman took Novis into the shower, but he was 
unable to perform sexually despite Coffman’s attempting to help him maintain an 
erection.  He also said that they had tried to use Novis’s ATM card after she was 
dead, that he did not tell Novis what was going to happen to her, and that he had 
dug a hole for Novis’s body with the shovel the police later found at the Bavarian 
Lodge. 
B.  Penalty Phase 
1.  Prosecution’s case in aggravation 
 
In addition to the guilt phase evidence of the offenses defendants 
committed against Corinna Novis, the prosecution’s case in aggravation included 
evidence that, on November 12, 1986, Marlow and Coffman committed murder, 
rape and other offenses against Lynell Murray, a young college student, in Orange 
County.5  The prosecution also presented evidence that Marlow committed, and 
                                             
 
5  
On March 10, 1992, Marlow pleaded guilty to the murder of Lynell Murray 
in Orange County and thereafter was sentenced to death.  (See People v. Marlow 
(Aug. 19, 2004, S026614) __ Cal.4th ___.)  In a separate trial, Coffman was 
convicted of Murray’s murder, with special circumstances, and received a 
sentence of life without possibility of parole.  On January 31, 1995, the Court of 
Appeal for the Fourth District, Division Three, affirmed that judgment, and this 
court denied a petition for review. 
 
 
25
was convicted on his plea of guilty to, three robberies in 1979 (§ 190.3, factors (b) 
& (c)) and that, while incarcerated pending trial in the present case, he committed 
an act of violence against a jail trustee (id., factor (b)).  Aggravating evidence 
against Coffman consisted of an incident of brandishing a deadly weapon and 
possessing a concealed weapon, and an act of violence against her former 
boyfriend, Doug Huntley. 
a.  Murder of Lynell Murray 
 
On November 12, 1986, Lynell Murray failed to return home from her job 
at Prime Cleaners in a Huntington Beach mall.  Around 6:00 p.m. that evening, a 
half-hour before Murray was to get off work, Lynda Schafer drove into the 
parking lot of the mall and noticed Coffman, dressed in tight jeans, walking in 
front of various businesses in the mall.  Schafer entered Prime Cleaners and left 
some clothing with Murray, who was alone at the time.  As Schafer left the 
parking lot, she noticed Coffman passionately embracing a man, later identified as 
Marlow, near an alley behind the cleaners. 
 
About 6:30 p.m. that evening, Linda Whitlake was leaving her health club, 
located near Prime Cleaners.  As Whitlake walked to her car, Coffman, cursing 
profanely, approached her, claiming her new car would not start.  When Whitlake 
agreed to give Coffman a ride to her motel, down Pacific Coast Highway, 
Coffman said she would go tell her boyfriend that Whitlake would drive them.  
Seeing a man in a small white car with its hood up, Whitlake had misgivings, 
locked her purse in her car and started over to tell them she had changed her mind.  
Coffman met her halfway and said her boyfriend had decided to telephone the auto 
club instead. 
 
Around 7:00 p.m., a half-hour after Murray was scheduled to get off work, 
her boyfriend Robert Whitecotton arrived at Prime Cleaners, which appeared to 
 
 
26
have been burglarized and ransacked.  Murray’s car was parked in the store’s back 
lot.  Whitecotton called the police. 
 
At 7:13 p.m., Coffman, wearing a black and white dress, checked into 
room 307 of the Huntington Beach Inn.  She registered under the name of Lynell 
Murray, using Murray’s credit card to pay for the room.  At 8:19 p.m., a balance 
inquiry regarding Murray’s Bank of America checking account and a withdrawal 
of $80 from that account were made at an ATM located at a Corona del Mar 
branch of the bank.  One minute later an additional $60 was withdrawn, leaving a 
balance of $4.41. 
 
Later that night, Coffman checked into the Compri Hotel in the City of 
Ontario, again using Murray’s credit card.  Around midnight on November 13, 
Coffman and Marlow dined on shrimp and steak at the Denny’s restaurant across 
the street from the hotel.  The two were seen embracing in the restaurant.  
Coffman, wearing a skirt and blouse, did all the ordering and paid for the meal 
using Murray’s credit card; Marlow, in a three-piece suit, neither smiled nor said 
anything to restaurant staff. 
 
Around 3:00 p.m. on November 13, an employee of the Huntington Beach 
Inn entered room 307 and found Murray’s body.  The cause of death was 
determined to be ligature strangulation.  Murray’s head was in six inches of water 
in the bathtub; her head and face were bound with towel strips, and two gags were 
in and over her mouth.  Her right arm was secured to a towel binding her waist.  
Her right leg lay across the toilet, and her left leg rested on the floor in front of the 
toilet.  Her ankles apparently had been bound with duct tape, although most of the 
tape had been removed.  Murray’s bra, pantyhose and one earring were missing; 
 
 
27
evidence suggested she had been raped and possibly urinated on.6  She had 
suffered premortem blunt force trauma to the head, midsection injuries, bruising of 
the legs and two black eyes consistent with having suffered blows before death.  A 
footprint on a bathmat near the body was consistent with prints made by boots 
belonging to Marlow. 
 
After visiting the Koppers’ residence on the morning of November 13, 
Marlow and Coffman drove to the City of Big Bear and checked into the Bavarian 
Lodge.  Coffman registered using Murray’s credit card.  Further attempts to 
purchase clothing at a sporting goods store using Murray’s credit card alerted 
authorities to defendants’ whereabouts and led to their arrest on November 14 
while they walked along a road near Big Bear.  When officers seized Coffman’s 
purse, they found it contained Murray’s identification cards and wallet, an earring 
matching the lone leaf-shaped earring Murray was wearing when her body was 
discovered at the Huntington Beach Inn, a loaded .22-caliber revolver and .22-
caliber ammunition, credit card receipts bearing Murray’s forged signature, and a 
brown paper bag, similar to those used at Prime Cleaners, containing coins.  A 
search of the room defendants had occupied at the Bavarian Lodge yielded 
clothing stolen from Prime Cleaners and a gray suit jacket matching the one 
Marlow earlier had been seen wearing, with a set of handcuffs (later determined to 
be the ones Marlow had taken from Paul Koppers) in the pocket, identification in 
the name of James Gregory Marlow, a ladies’ blue wallet and various single 
earrings.  Novis’s white Honda was found parked off a highway near Santa’s 
Village, an amusement park in San Bernardino County, bearing license plates 
                                             
 
6  
Serological testing of the semen on a vaginal swab taken from Murray 
could not conclusively demonstrate that either Marlow or Whitecotton was its 
source. 
 
 
28
stolen from a vehicle parked at the Huntington Beach Inn.  Inside a trash can in 
Santa’s Village, a maintenance worker found a pillowcase with, among other 
items, a maroon bra identified as belonging to Murray and laundry receipts from 
Prime Cleaners. 
b.  Marlow’s 1979 robberies and 1988 assault 
i.  Upland robbery 
 
On November 5, 1979, Jeffrey Johnson lived in an apartment upstairs from 
sisters Lori and Kathy Liesch on Silverwood Avenue in Upland.  At 6:45 that 
morning, Johnson answered a knock at his door.  Marlow and one Allen 
Smallwood, at the time both heroin addicts, asked Johnson if he worked in 
construction.  When Johnson answered affirmatively, Smallwood hit him in the 
face, causing him to fall to the floor.  Entering the apartment, the two men asked 
where the drugs were, and Marlow starting beating Johnson with a chain.  
Smallwood restrained Johnson while Marlow searched the apartment.  Johnson 
was then told to put his shoes on and was taken downstairs to the Liesches’ 
apartment. 
 
Smallwood, holding a knife to Johnson’s back, and Marlow entered the 
Liesches’ apartment, where Lori was still in bed.  Smallwood ordered her to get 
out of bed and, when she said she had no clothes on, Marlow attempted to pull the 
covers off her.  After Smallwood told Marlow to stop, Marlow started searching 
the apartment for drugs over Lori’s protests that she knew nothing about any 
drugs.  While searching, Marlow surprised Kathy, who was returning to the 
apartment after taking her boyfriend to work.  He brought Kathy to the bedroom, 
where she, Lori and Johnson were tied up with electrical cord.  Marlow and 
Smallwood warned them not to contact the police because they had taken all their 
identification and would come back for them.  At one point during the ordeal, 
when Lori would not stop crying after Smallwood demanded she stop, Marlow 
 
 
29
grabbed his crotch and told her he had “something to shut her up.”  The Liesch 
sisters each found that a small amount of cash was missing from their wallets, as 
well as Kathy’s keys, while Johnson found $180 was missing from his dresser. 
ii.  Robbery at leather goods store 
 
On November 6, 1979, Joanne Gilligan owned a leather goods store in 
Upland.  On that day, while she was helping a customer in the store, Marlow 
walked in and came to the counter.  When Gilligan asked if she could help him, 
Marlow told her he had a gun and she should lie down on the floor.  Marlow’s 
hand was in the pocket of his sweatshirt and it appeared to Gilligan that he could 
have had a gun, although she did not actually see one.  Gilligan and the customer 
she had been helping each got down on the floor, while Marlow removed money 
from the register, grabbed a couple of coats and fled.  Gilligan identified Marlow 
at the preliminary hearing and at the present trial. 
iii.  Robbery at methadone clinic 
 
On November 20, 1979, Gertrude Smith and Wilson Lee were working at a 
methadone clinic in the City of Ontario in San Bernardino County.  At 10:00 a.m. 
that day, Marlow, armed with a sawed-off shotgun, and Smallwood, carrying a 
pistol, entered the clinic.  Marlow ordered clinic employees not to move.  Marlow 
and Smallwood demanded methadone but were told the drug was locked in the 
safe.  As Marlow held the shotgun on Smith, Smallwood went down a hallway 
with Wilson and confronted an employee, demanding he open the safe where the 
methadone was kept.  When the employee had difficulty opening the safe, Marlow 
urged Smallwood to shoot him in the head.  After the safe was opened, Marlow 
and Smallwood fled with methadone having a street value of $10,000. 
 
At the time of his arrest, on November 26, 1979, Marlow had a bottle 
containing methadone in his jacket pocket and was carrying a loaded sawed-off 
shotgun wrapped in a shirt.  He claimed to have recently purchased the 
 
 
30
methadone, but refused to identify who sold it to him or to discuss the clinic 
robbery. 
iv.  Assault against jail trustee 
 
On February 17, 1988, Gary Hale, a jail trustee facing charges of driving 
under the influence, was bringing breakfast to other inmates at the San Bernardino 
County jail.  When Marlow complained, Hale assured him he had been given the 
same quantity of potatoes as everyone else.  Shortly afterward, Hale noticed 
Marlow was pointing a blow gun at him.  As Hale walked away, he was hit by a 
paper blow dart with a pin at the end.  Marlow later bragged to Deputy Carvey that 
“It was a lucky shot through the bars.” 
c.  Evidence against Coffman 
 
California Highway Patrol Officer Robert W. Specht testified that about 
4:00 a.m. on April 5, 1986, he detained Doug Huntley for driving erratically and at 
high speed.  The car, in which Coffman was a passenger, stopped at an apartment 
complex in Barstow.  While officers attended to the irate Huntley, Coffman, 
yelling obscenities at the officers, ran toward a house carrying her purse.  Specht, 
who had received a radio report of an earlier incident linked to Huntley and 
Coffman, in which Coffman had brandished a gun at several men who were 
engaged in an altercation with Huntley at a 7-Eleven store, ordered her to come 
out of the house with her purse.  When she complied, Sergeant James Lindley of 
the Barstow Police Department retrieved a bindle of cocaine or methamphetamine 
from her purse; a silver derringer was recovered from the house where Coffman 
had hidden it. 
 
Doug Huntley testified that at the 7-Eleven store, three men had followed 
him to the parking lot, and one had assaulted him.  After Huntley threw his 
assailant to the ground, Coffman pulled the derringer from her purse and held it on 
the other two men.  Huntley also testified about an incident that had occurred 
 
 
31
about a year before the 7-Eleven incident.  Huntley was walking down the street 
after arguing with Coffman, who drove up beside him and asked him to get in the 
car.  When he told her he would rather walk home, she drove down the street, 
turned around and drove in his direction, coming up on the sidewalk and forcing 
him to move out of the way. 
2.  Marlow’s case in mitigation 
 
Marlow’s sister, Veronica Koppers, testified she was born in 1959 and 
spent her early childhood in rural Stearns, Kentucky, with Marlow, who was some 
four years older; her mother, Doris Hill; her father (Marlow’s stepfather), Wendell 
Hill; and Doris’s mother, Lena Walls.  Her parents fought constantly; her father 
shot her mother, and she stabbed him seven times. 
 
In 1963, Doris, Lena, Marlow, Veronica, an aunt and uncle, and their five 
children all moved to California to get away from Wendell Hill.  They first lived 
in East Los Angeles and then moved to El Monte, Azusa and San Dimas.  Doris 
developed a pattern of not staying with her children on a regular basis, frequently 
leaving them for extended periods in Lena’s care.  Neither Doris nor Lena worked 
and, while Lena received Social Security and AFDC payments for the children, 
Veronica did not know how Doris supported herself at this time.  Doris 
customarily had parties, with drinking and marijuana smoking, going on in her 
house around the clock.  Doris neglected the children, never taking them to the 
doctor or dentist and often leaving no food for them.  One Thanksgiving, Veronica 
recalled, Doris took her and Marlow to dinner at their uncle’s house; Doris said 
she was going to the liquor store and did not return for several months.  From time 
to time, Marlow was sent to stay with his father, Arnold Marlow; he also spent 
time in foster homes.  Doris enjoyed many types of drugs, became addicted to 
heroin, and openly used drugs in front of her children.  She also brought home 
 
 
32
many different men.  Veronica recalled visiting her mother at the Sybil Brand 
Institute for Women and at the state prison in Frontera. 
 
When Doris got out of prison in 1972, she introduced Veronica to drugs, as 
she had Marlow and their cousins Pam and Clel.  When Marlow was 15, Veronica 
saw Doris administer heroin to him by tying his arm and injecting it.  Doris, who 
was then supporting herself with prostitution and stealing from her “tricks,” also 
taught Veronica how to burglarize houses. 
 
Ray Saldivar testified that he met Doris in 1964, when she bought drugs 
from him.  As of the time of trial, Saldivar had conquered his drug habit and was 
working as a tree trimmer.  In 1965, Saldivar moved in with Doris and, after living 
there for several days, first discovered that Doris had children, despite the fact he 
had visited her house numerous times before moving in.  She was not a loving 
mother, frequently having to be reminded to feed the children.  Marlow was 
constantly afraid his mother was going to leave him, to the point that he 
sometimes slept on the floor next to her bed.  In their household, people came and 
went all day long to buy drugs.  In Saldivar’s opinion, Marlow was an “innocent 
child” who “didn’t [ask] to grow up” in “that abnormal home” and “grew up 
around nothing but dope fiends all his life.” 
 
Lillian Zamorano testified that she met Doris in the mid-1960’s at a bar in 
Pico Rivera where the two women came to spend a good part of their time.  They 
became good friends, and Doris eventually moved into Zamorano’s house.  Doris 
did not mention to Zamorano that she had children until at least six months after 
they met.  Zamorano never saw Doris display any affection toward her children.  
Zamorano’s daughter, Rosemary Patino, met Marlow on Christmas 1966 and 
remembered him as a “good,” “normal,” “playful” child.  On that occasion, she 
testified, they expected a family holiday, but Doris and Lillian left to go to a bar 
despite Marlow’s crying and pleading with Doris to stay. 
 
 
33
 
Doris died in a fire in 1975. 
 
Sue Warman, formerly the wife of Arnold Marlow, testified she first met 
Marlow when he was six and a half years old and was sent to live with his father.  
Marlow’s “mouth had sores all around it and his teeth were rotten.”  Warman took 
Marlow to the dentist and the doctor, bought him new clothes and enrolled him in 
school.  Although initially positive about Marlow’s arrival, Arnold soon began 
giving Marlow frequent “whippings” “if everything wasn’t done . . . just right.”  In 
Warman’s view, Marlow was “a lonely, lost little boy wanting somebody to love 
him.”  Marlow stayed with his father and Warman for about three months, until 
Doris came to his school, unannounced, and took him away.  Because Doris had 
legal custody of Marlow, Warman was told nothing could be done.  Warman did 
not see Marlow again for another seven years.  In 1969, California welfare 
officials contacted Arnold, asking if he could take care of Marlow.  At 13, Marlow 
appeared in better condition than the first time Warman had seen him, but he “still 
looked like that little, lost, lonely boy.”  Marlow got along well with his half 
siblings, and Warman never had any problems with him.  Arnold, however, 
continued to beat his children, including Marlow.7  After about a year, Warman—
tired of Arnold’s drinking and abusive behavior—made plans to leave him.  
Knowing she would not get custody, she took Marlow to a foster home so that he 
would not have to stay with his father.  Warman asked the jury to spare his life, 
commenting that his death “won’t bring those people back.  And Greg never had a 
chance from the day he was born either.  And I love him.  I always loved him.” 
                                             
 
7  
Michael Marlow and Tina Marlow Allen likewise described their father as 
an abusive alcoholic who used to beat Marlow severely; Tina testified her father 
raped her when she was 10. 
 
 
34
 
Allen Smallwood, who at the time of trial was serving a sentence at Folsom 
State Prison for a series of robberies, testified that he met Marlow at a party when 
Marlow was 23 years old; Smallwood was 35 and had already been convicted of 
two robberies and two escapes.  Smallwood was then a heroin addict with a $700 
per day habit; Marlow had a somewhat lesser habit.  Smallwood testified he 
recruited Marlow, who was undergoing heroin withdrawal, to rob a man named 
Johnson, who Smallwood had heard was a police informant.  Smallwood and 
Marlow robbed Johnson of several thousand dollars in cash and about six ounces 
of cocaine.  Smallwood denied that Marlow had a chain during the robbery.  Later, 
Smallwood traded some of the cocaine for heroin and some for weapons he 
planned to use in robbing the methadone clinic, for which effort he again recruited 
Marlow, who was again going through withdrawal.  Smallwood testified he did 
not think Marlow would have committed those robberies without his 
importunings.  Smallwood had to “show him the ropes,” as Marlow, whose 
criminal experience was limited to “stuff like” “petty shoplifting,” was “kind of 
naïve.” 
 
Clinical psychologist George Askenasy testified that in 1975, when he 
conducted a psychological examination of Marlow for the California Youth 
Authority, he had found him “a pathetic young man with a chaotic life history,” 
whose father showed no interest in him and whose mother exhibited a 
“smothering” “possessiveness” toward him.  Marlow, the witness stated, was 
“caught in an approach-avoidance conflict with many guilt feelings about his 
relationship with his mother,” “anxious, feeling of inadequacy, sexual confusion, 
[and] unmet dependency needs . . . .” 
3.  Coffman’s case in mitigation 
 
Katherine Davis, Marlow’s former wife, testified regarding Marlow’s 
violence and jealousy and its emotional and physical effects on her.  Her testimony 
 
 
35
is summarized below in connection with a related claim of error (see post, at p. 
96).  Marlene Boggs, Davis’s mother, confirmed much of her daughter’s testimony 
and described observing her daughter’s scars and bruises, as well as a 75-pound 
weight loss and hair loss, during Davis’s relationship with Marlow. 
 
Coffman’s former employers testified she was a good worker when 
employed as a waitress and bartender in Arizona. 
 
Carol Maender, Coffman’s mother, testified about the marital, financial and 
other difficulties she encountered in raising Coffman and sons Robbie and Jeff, the 
latter of whom was given up for adoption.  As an infant, Coffman had suffered 
from a painful double inguinal hernia that required surgical repair while she was 
still in early infancy.8  Maender testified to a lack of closeness with Coffman, 
progressing to irritability and aggression on Coffman’s part toward her mother.  
Coffman bonded well, however, with her stepfather, Bill Maender.  Coffman went 
through Catholic grammar school and public junior high school without major 
difficulty, but once in high school she encountered problems with grades, truancy 
and drugs.  At one point, she ran away and stayed at the home of her boyfriend, 
Ron Coffman, for a couple of months; the Maenders did not know where she was.  
Coffman returned to her own home when she discovered she was pregnant.  Their 
son was born after Coffman graduated from high school; the couple married and, 
with the baby, moved into a bungalow on Ron’s parents’ property.  The marriage 
was not a happy one; Ron was mean, abused her physically and cheated on her 
with other women.  Eventually Coffman left him, moving into an apartment and 
working while Ron’s mother took care of the baby.  Then Coffman left Missouri 
                                             
 
8  
Clinical psychologist Craig Rath testified the hernia impaired bonding 
between Coffman and her mother. 
 
 
36
for California, planning ultimately to have her son with her, but Ron’s parents 
obtained custody of the child.  Bill Maender, Coffman’s stepfather, testified 
Coffman did not abandon her son when she moved west. 
 
Clinical psychologist Craig Rath, Ph.D., examined Coffman and opined 
that Coffman’s relationship with Marlow was precipitated by impaired bonding in 
her early life.  He felt she was not malingering and discounted the possibility that 
she suffered from antisocial personality disorder catalyzed by Marlow. 
4.  Prosecution’s rebuttal 
 
Sergeant Richard Hooper of the Huntington Beach Police Department 
testified that Chuck Coffman, Ron Coffman’s father, told him Cynthia Coffman’s 
personality was aggressive when he knew her in St. Louis. 
II.  PRETRIAL AND JURY SELECTION ISSUES 
A.  Denial of Severance Motion 
 
Before and at various points during trial, each defendant unsuccessfully 
moved for severance.  Defendants now contend the denial of their motions 
requires reversal of the judgment. 
 
Section 1098 expresses a legislative preference for joint trials.  The statute 
provides in pertinent part:  “When two or more defendants are jointly charged with 
any public offense, whether felony or misdemeanor, they must be tried jointly, 
unless the court order[s] separate trials.”  (See People v. Boyde (1988) 46 Cal.3d 
212, 231, affd. on other grounds sub nom. Boyde v. California (1990) 494 U.S. 
370 [acknowledging legislative preference].)  Joint trials are favored because they 
“promote economy and efficiency” and “ ‘serve the interests of justice by avoiding 
the scandal and inequity of inconsistent verdicts.’ ”  (Zafiro v. United States 
(1993) 506 U.S. 534, 537, 539.)  When defendants are charged with having 
committed “common crimes involving common events and victims,” as here, the 
 
 
37
court is presented with a “classic case” for a joint trial.  (People v. Keenan (1988) 
46 Cal.3d 478, 499-500.) 
 
The court’s discretion in ruling on a severance motion is guided by the 
nonexclusive factors enumerated in People v. Massie (1967) 66 Cal.2d 899, 917, 
such that severance may be appropriate “in the face of an incriminating 
confession, prejudicial association with codefendants, likely confusion resulting 
from evidence on multiple counts, conflicting defenses, or the possibility that at a 
separate trial a codefendant would give exonerating testimony.”  Another helpful 
mode of analysis of severance claims appears in Zafiro v. United States, supra, 
506 U.S. 534.  There, the high court, ruling on a claim of improper denial of 
severance under rule 14 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, observed that 
severance may be called for when “there is a serious risk that a joint trial would 
compromise a specific trial right of one of the defendants, or prevent the jury from 
making a reliable judgment about guilt or innocence.”  (Zafiro, supra, at p. 539; 
see Fed. Rules Crim.Proc., rule 14, 18 U.S.C.)  The high court noted that less 
drastic measures than severance, such as limiting instructions, often will suffice to 
cure any risk of prejudice.  (Zafiro, supra, at p. 539.) 
 
A court’s denial of a motion for severance is reviewed for abuse of 
discretion, judged on the facts as they appeared at the time of the ruling.  (People 
v. Hardy (1992) 2 Cal.4th 86, 167.)  Even if a trial court abuses its discretion in 
failing to grant severance, reversal is required only upon a showing that, to a 
reasonable probability, the defendant would have received a more favorable result 
in a separate trial.  (People v. Keenan, supra, 46 Cal.3d at p. 503.) 
 
Coffman argues that several factors dictated severance of her trial from 
Marlow’s:  the antagonistic nature of their defenses, the expected introduction of 
Marlow’s extrajudicial statements implicating her in the offenses (see People v. 
Aranda (1965) 63 Cal.2d 518, 526-527), and the risk of prejudicial association 
 
 
38
with the assertedly more culpable Marlow.  Citing, inter alia, Johnson v. 
Mississippi (1988) 486 U.S. 578, Coffman also relies on the need for heightened 
reliability of the determination of guilt and penalty in a capital case.  Marlow, in 
turn, relies on the antagonistic nature of Coffman’s defense and the resultant 
admission of much evidence inadmissible on any theory as to him but relevant to 
Coffman’s state of mind.  As will appear, we find no abuse of discretion in the 
denial of defendants’ severance motions. 
 
In People v. Hardy, supra, 2 Cal.4th at page 168, we said:  “Although there 
was some evidence before the trial court that defendants would present different 
and possibly conflicting defenses, a joint trial under such conditions is not 
necessarily unfair.  [Citation.]  ‘Although several California decisions have stated 
that the existence of conflicting defenses may compel severance of codefendants’ 
trials, none has found an abuse of discretion or reversed a conviction on this 
basis.’  [Citation.]  If the fact of conflicting or antagonistic defenses alone 
required separate trials, it would negate the legislative preference for joint trials 
and separate trials ‘would appear to be mandatory in almost every case.’ ”  We 
went on to observe that “although it appears no California case has discussed at 
length what constitutes an ‘antagonistic defense,’ the federal courts have almost 
uniformly construed that doctrine very narrowly.  Thus, ‘[a]ntagonistic defenses 
do not per se require severance, even if the defendants are hostile or attempt to 
cast the blame on each other.’  [Citation.]  ‘Rather, to obtain severance on the 
ground of conflicting defenses, it must be demonstrated that the conflict is so 
prejudicial that [the] defenses are irreconcilable, and the jury will unjustifiably 
infer that this conflict alone demonstrates that both are guilty.”  (Ibid., last italics 
added.)  When, however, there exists sufficient independent evidence against the 
moving defendant, it is not the conflict alone that demonstrates his or her guilt, 
 
 
39
and antagonistic defenses do not compel severance.  (Ex parte Hardy (Ala. 2000) 
804 So.2d 298, 305.) 
 
In this case, although Coffman’s defense centered on the effort to depict 
Marlow as a vicious and violent man, and some evidence that would have been 
inadmissible in a separate guilt trial for Marlow9 occupied a portion of their joint 
trial, the prosecution presented abundant independent evidence establishing both 
defendants’ guilt.  Such evidence showed that Coffman and Marlow, with Novis, 
came to the Drinkhouse residence around 7:30 on the evening of Novis’s 
disappearance; Marlow indicated to Drinkhouse that they needed to get Novis’s 
PIN in order to rob her.  When Drinkhouse asked Marlow if he were crazy and 
complained about their bringing Novis to his house, Marlow told him not to 
worry, saying, “How is she going to talk to anybody if she’s under a pile of 
rocks?”  When Veronica Koppers arrived at the Drinkhouse residence a while 
later, Marlow told her he had someone there and “not to freak out on him.”  
Coffman appeared to be going along willingly with Marlow’s actions and did not 
ask for Veronica’s help to escape Marlow.  Marlow took Novis into the shower, 
and both left the house with wet hair, along with Coffman.  Novis had duct tape 
over her mouth.  Novis’s apartment later was found to have been entered and her 
typewriter and answering machine stolen.  Marlow and Coffman traded the 
answering machine for drugs, and Coffman, using Novis’s identification, pawned 
the typewriter.  The day after Novis’s disappearance, Marlow, Coffman and 
Veronica Koppers returned to Paul Koppers’s home; Marlow asked him if he 
                                             
 
9  
Such evidence included Coffman’s recitation of the circumstances of the 
murder for hire of Gregory Hill in Kentucky, Marlow’s alleged affiliation with the 
Aryan Brotherhood, his prison history and alleged killings of Black people in 
prison, his alleged abuse of Coffman and his threat to kill her son and family if she 
left him. 
 
 
40
could get any “cold,” i.e., nontraceable, license plates for the car.  Three days 
later, near a trash receptacle located behind a Taco Bell restaurant in Laguna 
Beach, where Coffman previously had been seen, a bag was found containing 
identification and other items belonging to Coffman, Marlow and Novis.  Novis’s 
car was found on November 14, 1986, abandoned on a dirt road south of Santa’s 
Village near where Marlow and Coffman were seen walking on Big Bear 
Boulevard.  Coffman’s fingerprints were found on the license plate, hood and 
ashtray of the car; one print on the hood of the car was identified as Marlow’s.  An 
earring of Novis’s was later found among Coffman’s belongings.  After 
defendants were arrested, Novis’s body was found in a vineyard in Fontana where 
she had been strangled and buried.  An autopsy revealed sperm in Novis’s rectum.  
Based on the foregoing evidence, we conclude the nature of the defenses here did 
not compel severance. 
 
Even were we to conclude the trial court abused its discretion in denying 
severance, the same independent evidence of defendants’ guilt would lead us to 
conclude defendants have not demonstrated a reasonable probability of a more 
favorable outcome as to either guilt or penalty had severance been granted, as 
would be required for reversal.  That evidence, as recited above, virtually ensured 
the jury would reach the verdicts it did.  In severed trials, moreover, the prosecutor 
could have introduced evidence of the Orange County offenses to show 
defendants’ intent in committing the crimes against Corinna Novis, further 
bolstering the People’s case.  (See Evid. Code, § 1101, subd. (b).)  With respect to 
penalty, we note that in addition to the evidence of the Orange County and 
Kentucky killings, most if not all of Marlow’s violent conduct as described by 
Coffman and other witnesses potentially was admissible under section 190.3, 
factor (b), as was Coffman’s prior criminality involving violence.  In the face of 
 
 
41
this overwhelming evidence, we see no reasonable probability of a more favorable 
outcome for either defendant had severance been granted. 
 
We further conclude that introduction of defendants’ extrajudicial 
statements implicating each other in the offenses did not dictate severance.  Both 
defendants in this case took the stand and submitted to cross-examination, thus 
vindicating each codefendant’s Sixth Amendment confrontation rights.  This 
procedure satisfied the rule of Bruton v. United States (1968) 391 U.S. 123 and its 
progeny, which provides that if the extrajudicial statement of a nontestifying 
codefendant is to be introduced at a joint trial, either the statement must be 
redacted to avoid implicating the defendant or severance must be granted.  (Id. at 
pp. 135-136; see Richardson v. Marsh (1987) 481 U.S. 200, 208-210; Nelson v. 
O’Neil (1971) 402 U.S. 622, 629-630.)  Although California law predating Bruton 
had required severance whenever a codefendant’s extrajudicial statement 
implicating the defendant was to be introduced, barring effective redaction, 
regardless of whether the codefendant testified at trial (see People v. Aranda, 
supra, 63 Cal.2d at pp. 530-531), since the adoption by the voters in June 1982 of 
Proposition 8, with its preclusion of state constitutional exclusionary rules broader 
than those mandated by the federal Constitution (see Cal. Const., art. I, § 28, subd. 
(d)), the Aranda rule is coextensive with that of Bruton.  (People v. Boyd (1990) 
222 Cal.App.3d 541, 562.)  Consequently, the introduction of defendants’ 
extrajudicial statements did not compel the trial court to grant severance. 
 
We also reject Coffman’s contention that severance was compelled by the 
factor of prejudicial association.  The evidence here showed defendants both took 
an active role in the commission of the crimes; this is not a situation in which a 
marginally involved defendant might have suffered prejudice from joinder with a 
codefendant who participated much more actively.  Nor is this a situation in which 
 
 
42
a strong case against one defendant was joined with a weak case against a 
codefendant. 
 
In sum, given the prosecution’s independent evidence of defendants’ guilt 
and the trial court’s carefully tailored limiting instructions, which we presume the 
jury followed (People v. Boyette (2002) 29 Cal.4th 381, 436), even under the 
heightened scrutiny applicable in capital cases (Williams v. Superior Court (1984) 
36 Cal.3d 441, 454), we find no abuse of discretion in the denial of severance.  For 
the same reasons, defendants’ claims that the joint trial deprived them of their 
federal constitutional rights to due process, a fair trial and a reliable penalty 
determination likewise must fail. 
B.  Denial of Motion for Change of Venue 
 
Defendants contend the trial court erred in denying their motions for a 
change of venue and thereby violated various state and federal constitutional 
guarantees, including those of due process, a fair trial and a reliable penalty 
determination. 
 
The applicable principles are settled.  “A trial court should grant a change 
of venue when the defendant demonstrates a reasonable likelihood that in the 
absence of such relief, he or she cannot obtain a fair trial.”  (People v. Weaver 
(2001) 26 Cal.4th 876, 905.)  On appeal, “we make an independent determination 
of whether a fair trial was obtainable” (People v. Jennings (1991) 53 Cal.3d 334, 
360) and reverse when the record discloses a reasonable likelihood the defendant 
did not have a fair trial (People v. Bonin (1988) 46 Cal.3d 659, 672-673 
[reasonable likelihood in this context means something less than “more probable 
than not,” and something more than merely possible], overruled on other grounds 
in People v. Hill (1998) 17 Cal.4th 800, 823).  To make that decision, we examine 
five factors:  the nature and gravity of the offense, the nature and extent of the 
media coverage, the size of the community, the status of the defendant in the 
 
 
43
community, and the prominence of the victim.  (People v. Douglas (1990) 50 
Cal.3d 468, 495, disapproved on other grounds in People v. Marshall (1990) 50 
Cal.3d 907, 933, fn. 4.) 
 
At the evidentiary hearing on the venue change motion, the defense 
presented more than 150 articles from regional newspapers and various videos of 
television coverage of the case.  In addition to the Novis homicide, many of the 
articles referred to the Orange County and Kentucky cases and an alleged contract 
to kill a pregnant woman in Arizona, and characterized defendants as armed and 
dangerous transients implicated in serial killings.  Some articles recounted 
Marlow’s criminal history and alleged ties to the White supremacist Aryan 
Brotherhood, and some alluded to defendants’ use of methamphetamine.  A few 
articles mentioned Coffman’s Roman Catholic upbringing.  Many articles referred 
to defendants’ confessions and cooperation with authorities.  Others reported 
procedural developments in the Novis and Murray cases and the prosecutions of 
Veronica Koppers and Richard Drinkhouse on lesser charges in the Novis case.  
The amount of media coverage declined substantially shortly after the discovery of 
Novis’s body. 
 
The defense also presented testimony by two California State University, 
Chico, professors, Robert S. Ross, Ph.D., an expert in survey methodology, and 
Edward J. Bronson, Ph.D., who designed a telephone public opinion survey 
administered to 526 San Bernardino County residents in early 1988, some nine 
months before trial.  The survey was designed to have a margin of error of 4.5 
percent.  Participants were first asked whether they recalled a November 1986 
incident in which a young woman named Corinna Novis was reported missing in 
Redlands and her body was found a few days later in a shallow grave in a Fontana 
vineyard, having been sexually molested, strangled and then buried.  Of the 282 
participants who resided in the judicial district from which the jury in this case 
 
 
44
was drawn, 70.9 percent responded affirmatively.  When provided a few additional 
facts, the number of participants recognizing the case increased.  Over 80 percent 
of participants who recognized the case from the facts recited in the survey 
believed defendants were definitely or probably guilty. 
 
The trial court denied the motion to change venue, noting the case had 
received less publicity than other cases tried without difficulty in the county of 
original venue.  The court distinguished the prejudgments of guilt “glibly” 
espoused by the telephone survey participants from the “decision made by a jury 
sworn to abide by the law, carefully voir dired and instructed as to the law and 
having a tremendous sense of their responsibility for the lives of the defendants.”  
The court found no reason to believe that prospective jurors with “irreversible” 
opinions as to a defendant’s guilt would not disclose them on voir dire, or that 
jurors who had merely heard of the case could not put aside any knowledge and 
base their decision on the evidence and the law given to them during the trial. 
 
Independently reviewing the relevant factors, we conclude the trial court 
did not err in denying the motion.  The gravity of the offenses with which 
defendants were charged weighs in favor of a change of venue, but does not 
compel it.  (People v. Jenkins (2000) 22 Cal.4th 900, 943.)  As for the size of the 
community, while arguing San Bernardino County is like a collection of small 
towns, defendants acknowledge the county’s population is the fourth largest in the 
state.  Venue changes are seldom granted from counties of this size.  (See People 
v. Fauber (1992) 2 Cal.4th 792, 818 [Ventura County].)  With respect to the status 
of the victim and the accused, we observe that before her death Novis was not 
prominent, nor were defendants well known, in the community.  Although some of 
the media coverage of this case referred to defendants as transients, Marlow in fact 
had friends and relatives who lived in San Bernardino County and himself had 
lived in the county for a time.  These factors, therefore, do not militate in favor of 
 
 
45
a venue change.  The pretrial publicity, while extensive, substantially predated the 
trial.  (Jenkins, supra, at p. 944.)  And in the course of the actual voir dire, all of 
the jurors eventually seated who said they remembered hearing about the case 
indicated that pretrial publicity would not prevent them from acting as fair and 
impartial jurors.  That neither Coffman nor Marlow exhausted their peremptory 
challenges strongly suggests the jurors were fair and that the defense so 
concluded.  (People v. Cooper (1991) 53 Cal.3d 771, 807.) 
 
People v. Williams (1989) 48 Cal.3d 1112, on which Marlow relies, is 
distinguishable.  That case involved a county (Placer) of very small population 
where media coverage of the offense was continuous up to the time of trial and 
where the victim and her family had long and extensive ties to the community, 
such that a substantial proportion of prospective jurors acknowledged they knew 
the victim, her family and her boyfriends, and a smaller but still significant 
number knew the prosecutor, his investigators or deputy sheriffs who were to 
testify.  (Id. at pp. 1126-1131.)  Similar circumstances are not present here. 
 
We therefore find no reasonable likelihood the denial of a change of venue 
deprived defendants of a fair trial or due process of law. 
C.  Restriction on Voir Dire 
 
Coffman contends the trial court improperly restricted death-qualification 
voir dire in a way that prevented her from effectively exercising challenges for 
cause and deprived her of her state and federal constitutional rights to due process 
of law, a fair trial and an impartial jury, and a reliable determination of guilt and 
penalty.  Specifically, Coffman complains the trial court prevented her counsel 
from questioning the prospective jurors on their views regarding the circumstances 
of the case that were likely to be presented in evidence in order to determine how 
such circumstances might affect their ability to fairly determine the proper penalty 
in the event of a conviction. 
 
 
46
 
Prospective jurors may be excused for cause when their views on capital 
punishment would prevent or substantially impair the performance of their duties 
as jurors.  (Wainwright v. Witt (1985) 469 U.S. 412, 424; People v. Ochoa (2001) 
26 Cal.4th 398, 431.)  A challenge for cause may be based on the prospective 
juror’s response when informed of facts or circumstances likely to be present in 
the case being tried.  (People v. Kirkpatrick (1994) 7 Cal.4th 988, 1005.)  Thus, 
we have affirmed the principle that either party is entitled to ask prospective jurors 
questions that are specific enough to determine if those jurors harbor bias, as to 
some fact or circumstance shown by the trial evidence, that would cause them not 
to follow an instruction directing them to determine penalty after considering 
aggravating and mitigating evidence.  (People v. Cash (2002) 28 Cal.4th 703, 720-
721; see CALJIC No. 8.85 (7th ed. 2004).)  “Our decisions have explained that 
death-qualification voir dire must avoid two extremes.  On the one hand, it must 
not be so abstract that it fails to identify those jurors whose death penalty views 
would prevent or substantially impair the performance of their duties as jurors in 
the case being tried.  On the other hand, it must not be so specific that it requires 
the prospective jurors to prejudge the penalty issue based on a summary of the 
mitigating and aggravating evidence likely to be presented.  (See People v. 
Jenkins[, supra, 22 Cal.4th at pp.] 990-991 [95 Cal.Rptr.2d 377, 997 P.2d 1044] 
[not error to refuse to allow counsel to ask juror given ‘detailed account of the 
facts’ in the case if she ‘would impose’ death penalty].)  In deciding where to 
strike the balance in a particular case, trial courts have considerable discretion.”  
(Cash, supra, at pp. 721-722.)   
 
We conclude Coffman fails to establish an abuse of discretion, in that she 
cites no trial court ruling precluding her from asking questions necessary to 
identify jurors unable to discharge their sentencing responsibility consistently with 
the law.  Unlike in People v. Cash, supra, 28 Cal.4th at pages 720-722, the trial 
 
 
47
court did not categorically prohibit inquiry into the effect on prospective jurors of 
the other murders, evidence of which was presented in the course of the trial.  
Rather, the trial court merely cautioned Coffman’s counsel not to recite specific 
evidence expected to come before the jury in order to induce the juror to commit 
to voting in a particular way.  (See People v. Burgener (2003) 29 Cal.4th 833, 
865.)  Notably, the trial court invited counsel to draft a proposed question for 
prospective jurors eliciting their attitudes toward the death penalty and in fact 
itself questioned a prospective juror whether he could weigh all the evidence 
before reaching a penalty determination in a case involving multiple murder.  
Even if counsel believed they were precluded from inquiring into a juror’s ability 
to fairly determine penalty in such a case, Coffman failed to exhaust her 
peremptory challenges or to express dissatisfaction with the jury as sworn on this 
ground.  Any error, therefore, was nonprejudicial.  (Id. at p. 866.) 
D.  Alleged Juror Bias and Ineffective Assistance of Counsel in Failing 
to Exercise Challenges 
 
Coffman argues we must reverse her conviction and sentence because four 
of the jurors who decided her case were biased in favor of the death penalty.  She 
acknowledges her trial counsel failed to challenge any of the four, either for cause 
or by using available peremptory challenges, and thus forfeited any appellate 
claim of error in the seating of those jurors.  (See People v. Morris (1991) 53 
Cal.3d 152, 184, disapproved on other grounds in People v. Stansbury (1995) 9 
Cal.4th 824, 830.)  She asserts, however, that she should be relieved of the 
consequences of counsel’s inaction because they rendered ineffective assistance in 
this regard.  On this record, we conclude her claims lack merit. 
 
As noted above, a prospective juror may be challenged for cause based 
upon his or her views regarding capital punishment only if those views would 
“ ‘ “prevent or substantially impair the juror’s performance of the duties defined 
 
 
48
by the court’s instructions and his or her oath.” ’ ”  (People v. Cunningham (2001) 
25 Cal.4th 926, 975, quoting Wainwright v. Witt, supra, 469 U.S. at p. 424.)  A 
prospective juror who would be unable conscientiously to consider all of the 
sentencing alternatives, including, when appropriate, the death penalty, is properly 
subject to excusal for cause.  (People v. Jenkins, supra, 22 Cal.4th at p. 987.)  Our 
review of the record confirms that none of the four jurors who defendant asserts 
were biased would have been properly excused under this standard, as each 
expressed a willingness to consider all the evidence presented before reaching a 
decision as to penalty.  Counsel therefore did not perform deficiently in not 
challenging those jurors for cause.  (See Strickland v. Washington (1984) 466 U.S. 
668, 687 [claims of ineffective assistance of counsel entail deficient performance 
assessed under an objective standard of professional reasonableness and prejudice 
measured by a reasonable probability of a more favorable outcome in the absence 
of the deficient performance]; People v. Ledesma (1987) 43 Cal.3d 171, 216-218.)  
Nor can we say counsel rendered ineffective assistance in failing to exercise 
peremptory challenges with respect to these jurors:  “ ‘Because the use of 
peremptory challenges is inherently subjective and intuitive, an appellate record 
will rarely disclose reversible incompetence in this process.’ ”  (People v. 
Freeman (1994) 8 Cal.4th 450, 485, quoting People v. Montiel (1993) 5 Cal.4th 
877, 911.) 
E.  Allegedly Improper Excusal of Prospective Juror B. 
 
Coffman contends the trial court deprived her of her state and federal 
constitutional rights of due process, equal protection and an impartial jury in 
granting a challenge for cause, joined by the prosecutor and both defendant 
Marlow’s counsel and her own, to Prospective Juror B.  Coffman further contends 
her counsel rendered ineffective assistance in joining in the challenge.  Her 
contentions lack merit. 
 
 
49
 
Preliminarily, respondent argues Coffman invited any error by joining 
defendant Marlow’s challenge.  As articulated in People v. Wickersham (1982) 32 
Cal.3d 307, 330, disapproved on other grounds in People v. Barton (1995) 12 
Cal.4th 186, 201:  “The doctrine of invited error is designed to prevent an accused 
from gaining a reversal on appeal because of an error made by the trial court at his 
behest.  If defense counsel intentionally caused the trial court to err, the appellant 
cannot be heard to complain on appeal. . . .  [I]t also must be clear that counsel 
acted for tactical reasons and not out of ignorance or mistake.”  In cases involving 
an action affirmatively taken by defense counsel, we have found a clearly implied 
tactical purpose to be sufficient to invoke the invited error rule.  (See People v. 
Catlin (2001) 26 Cal.4th 81, 150; People v. Wader (1993) 5 Cal.4th 610, 657-658; 
People v. Hardy, supra, 2 Cal.4th at p. 152.)  Here, Coffman’s counsel did not 
merely acquiesce, but affirmatively joined in the challenge to Prospective Juror B., 
and thus cannot be heard to claim the court erred in excusing her. 
 
In any event, the trial court did not err.  “On appeal, we will uphold a trial 
court’s ruling on a challenge for cause by either party ‘if it is fairly supported by 
the record, accepting as binding the trial court’s determination as to the 
prospective juror’s true state of mind when the prospective juror has made 
statements that are conflicting or ambiguous.’ ”  (People v. Bolden (2002) 29 
Cal.4th 515, 537.)  Although Coffman urges that Prospective Juror B.’s remarks 
were, at most, ambiguous and reflected merely hesitancy or reluctance and not 
outright refusal to impose the death penalty, read in context the prospective juror’s 
comments indicated that, while she favored the death penalty as a sentence for first 
degree murder, she could not personally impose it owing to her religious 
background.  Because excusal therefore was appropriate, trial counsel did not 
perform deficiently in joining the challenge. 
 
 
50
F.  Motion to Disqualify Trial Judge 
 
Pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 170.1, Coffman moved to 
disqualify Judge Don Turner, the superior court judge assigned to preside over her 
case for all purposes.  That statute requires disqualification, inter alia, whenever “a 
person aware of the facts might reasonably entertain a doubt that the judge would 
be able to be impartial.”  (Code Civ. Proc., § 170.1, subd. (a)(6)(C).)  In support of 
the motion, Coffman’s counsel, Alan Spears, declared he was a candidate for the 
office of San Bernardino County Superior Court judge and, as such, was running 
in opposition to Judge Duane Lloyd.  Counsel further declared that Judge Turner 
was a member of the Committee for Judge Duane Lloyd, had allowed his name to 
be used on Judge Lloyd’s campaign letterhead, and had failed to disclose to 
counsel his involvement in Judge Lloyd’s reelection effort.  As a result of these 
facts, counsel alleged, Coffman reasonably might entertain a doubt that Judge 
Turner would be able to remain impartial in her case.  Counsel further alleged on 
information and belief that Judge Turner was biased against him.  Judge Turner 
filed a responsive declaration denying any such bias or grounds for 
disqualification, stating he “fores[aw] no difficulty in being completely impartial 
in the trial of this case or any other case in which Mr. Spears is involved,” and 
noting “Mr. Spears has tried many cases (including death penalty cases) in my 
courtroom.  I respect his ability and he is welcome in my department at any time.”  
Judge Turner observed he had “no objections to continuing as the trial judge in 
this case,” nor did he “object to having the case reassigned depending upon the 
needs of the court.” 
 
The motion was assigned to another judge of the San Bernardino County 
Superior Court, who denied the motion by minute order stating:  “Court finds 
Judge Turner does not have any bias or prejudice toward Mr. Spears, nor will have 
in the future.” 
 
 
51
 
Coffman assigns the ruling as error in this appeal, contending it invalidates 
all of Judge Turner’s subsequent rulings in the case and requires reversal of the 
judgment.  She acknowledges that in People v. Brown (1993) 6 Cal.4th 322, 334, 
we held that Code of Civil Procedure section 170.310 precludes appellate review 
of a ruling on a statutory motion for disqualification, but contends her 
nonstatutory claims arising under the due process clause of the Fourteenth 
Amendment to the federal Constitution and the Eighth Amendment’s guarantee of 
reliability in penalty determinations in capital cases are cognizable on appeal.  
Respondent contends Coffman failed to articulate a due process claim below and 
cannot do so for the first time here. 
 
Assuming Coffman’s motion alleging judicial bias sufficiently preserved 
the constitutional claims she advances on appeal, or at least the due process claim 
(People v. Brown, supra, 6 Cal.4th at p. 334; see People v. Yeoman (2003) 31 
Cal.4th 93, 133 [objection on grounds of due process and equal protection 
sufficiently preserved 8th Amend. claim based on same facts]), we conclude her 
contention lacks merit.  The allegations presented in support of her disqualification 
motion simply do not support a doubt regarding Judge Turner’s ability to remain 
impartial.11 
                                             
 
10  
Code of Civil Procedure section 170.3 provides, in pertinent part:  “(d) The 
determination of the question of the disqualification of a judge is not an appealable 
order and may be reviewed only by a writ of mandate from the appropriate court 
of appeal sought within 10 days of notice to the parties of the decision and only by 
the parties to the proceeding.” 
11  
Coffman cursorily argues that her trial counsel rendered ineffective 
assistance in failing to seek a pretrial writ of mandate to review the denial of her 
motion to disqualify Judge Turner.  Inasmuch as we conclude her motion was 
properly denied on the record before us, and Coffman fails to identify any 
additional or different basis on which counsel might have sought writ review, it 
follows that counsel did not render ineffective assistance in failing to do so. 
 
 
52
G.  State Action Allegedly Interfering with Coffman’s Presentation of a 
Defense 
 
Coffman contends that certain actions by the prosecution effectively 
dissuaded certain witnesses from testifying on her behalf, thus suppressing 
favorable evidence within the meaning of Brady v. Maryland (1963) 373 U.S. 83 
and depriving her of her federal constitutional rights of compulsory process and to 
a reliable determination of guilt and penalty.  She also contends that the San 
Bernardino County Superior Court denied her due process by failing to pay on 
time certain authorized investigative expenses, resulting in the unavailability, 
during the guilt phase, of witness Katherine Davis, the former wife of defendant 
Marlow, who would have testified about Marlow’s physical and emotional abuse 
during their marriage.12  Coffman raised these contentions in an unsuccessful 
pretrial motion to strike the special circumstance allegations against her and in a 
motion for new trial.  She now reasserts them as a basis for reversal of the 
judgment.  For the reasons that follow, we conclude the contention lacks merit. 
 
As relevant to the claim that the prosecution dissuaded potential witnesses, 
at an evidentiary hearing on the motion to strike the special circumstance 
allegations, Coffman’s counsel presented defense investigator Barbara Jordan’s 
testimony to the effect that her efforts to obtain witnesses in Page, Arizona, had 
been hampered by disinformation Redlands Police Sergeant Larry Scott Smith had 
spread there.  Jordan further testified that potential witness Judy Scott, who had 
roomed with Coffman, reported to Jordan that she felt the police had pressured her 
not to talk to Coffman’s defense team; they told her Coffman was a lesbian and 
asked her how close Scott and Coffman were and whether Coffman had brought 
                                             
 
12  
Davis ultimately testified regarding these matters on behalf of defendant 
Coffman during the penalty phase. 
 
 
53
prostitution customers to the house when the two were living together.  According 
to Jordan, other potential witnesses who had spoken with the police declined to 
speak with Coffman’s investigators and treated them with hostility.  Jordan stated 
that Scott and another witness, Debbie Pugh, denied using words or making 
statements attributed to them in the Redlands police reports, which omitted 
information exculpatory as to Coffman.  Sergeant Smith acknowledged visiting 
Page with Detective Dalzell of the Redlands Police Department and interviewing 
Judy Scott; Smith testified he asked Scott if Coffman was bisexual, but elicited no 
information in that regard; following up on information received in Page, he also 
asked Scott about Coffman’s possible involvement in prostitution. 
 
The trial court denied the motion, commenting:  “I have seen nothing, 
either in the offer of proof or in the questioning of this witness, which 
substantiates any [allegation of improper conduct by police in relation to 
prospective witnesses].  All I have heard so far is that witnesses are telling 
somewhat different stories to different people, and you’ve been in this business 
long enough to know that that’s not a novel concept.” 
 
“ ‘Governmental interference violative of a defendant's compulsory- 
process right includes, of course, the intimidation of defense witnesses by the 
prosecution.  [Citations.]  [¶] The forms that such prosecutorial misconduct may 
take are many and varied.  They include, for example, statements to defense 
witnesses to the effect that they would be prosecuted for any crimes they reveal or 
commit in the course of their testimony.  [Citations.]’  (In re Martin (1987) 44 
Cal.3d 1, 30 [241 Cal.Rptr. 263, 744 P.2d 374].)  Threatening a defense witness 
with a perjury prosecution also constitutes prosecutorial misconduct that violates a 
defendant’s constitutional rights.  (People v. Bryant (1984) 157 Cal.App.3d 582 
[203 Cal.Rptr. 733].)”  (People v. Hill, supra, 17 Cal.4th at p. 835.)  Due process 
also is violated when the prosecution makes a material witness unavailable by, for 
 
 
54
example, deportation.  (United States v. Valenzuela-Bernal (1982) 458 U.S. 858, 
873 [due process mandates dismissal of charges when defendant makes a plausible 
showing that the deported witness’s testimony would have been material and 
favorable to the defense, in ways not merely cumulative to the testimony of 
available witnesses].) 
 
The record before us contains no evidence that the prosecution engaged in 
witness intimidation or other conduct depriving Coffman’s defense of a material 
witness.  The circumstance that a witness is reluctant to assist one side or the other 
of a criminal prosecution, or tells different stories to different investigators, is, as 
the trial court observed, far from unusual and does not, in itself, support a claim 
that the prosecution interfered with a defendant’s right of compulsory process or 
suppressed material evidence within the meaning of Brady v. Maryland, supra, 
373 U.S. 83, even if we assume Brady applies in this situation, where the 
prosecution did not control the witnesses.  Consequently, the trial court committed 
no error in denying Coffman’s motion to strike the special circumstance 
allegations, and reversal of the judgment is unwarranted. 
 
Coffman also urges that the court’s delay in paying investigative expenses 
incurred in developing her defense of battered woman syndrome deprived her of a 
potential witness in the guilt phase of trial, namely, defendant Marlow’s former 
wife Katherine Davis, and thus violated Coffman’s right to due process as 
articulated in Ake v. Oklahoma (1985) 470 U.S. 68, 80-83.  Davis did testify in 
Coffman’s case in mitigation during the penalty phase concerning Marlow’s 
abusive conduct during their marriage some years before the present offenses.  
Because Coffman made no offer of proof sufficient to enable us to determine that 
Davis would have given relevant, admissible testimony during the guilt phase, and 
because Coffman’s argument before the trial court focused on the failure to pay 
the expenses of investigators for trips to such places as Missouri and Kentucky, 
 
 
55
rather than the delay in paying Davis’s expenses in coming to California to testify 
in this trial, we cannot conclude the trial court erred in denying Coffman’s motion 
to strike the special circumstance allegations. 
III.  GUILT AND SPECIAL CIRCUMSTANCE ISSUES 
A.  Introduction of Allegedly Coerced Statements 
 
Defendants contend their convictions must be reversed because the trial 
court improperly allowed the prosecutor to impeach them with postarrest 
statements that each allegedly made involuntarily as a result of police coercion.  
Although the issue is close, we reject defendants’ contentions and conclude the 
statements were voluntarily made. 
1.  Factual background 
 
In order to resolve this issue, we find it necessary to recite in some detail 
the circumstances under which the statements were given.  By the time of 
defendants’ arrest on November 14, 1986, seven days after Novis disappeared, 
Redlands Police Department investigators had become aware of possible 
connections between the Novis case and the murder of Lynell Murray in 
Huntington Beach.  After defendants’ arrest, investigators from both localities 
interviewed them at the Redlands Police Department. 
 
Officers believed that, in light of Marlow’s criminal experience, he 
probably would not be forthcoming during interrogation and that Coffman, by 
contrast, was more likely to cooperate with them.  Accordingly, they first 
questioned Coffman for some three and a half hours, from about 5:30 p.m. until 
about 9:00 p.m.  During the course of this interview, officers gave Coffman 
coffee, cigarettes, food and socks for her bare feet.  Coffman complained of a 
wound on her leg, but the record does not reflect that she was provided medical 
attention during this period.  Officers also falsely told Coffman that Marlow was 
providing police with information and “ratting on her.”  At the end of this first 
 
 
56
interview, officers drove Coffman to the area of Lytle Creek, where officers 
believed defendants had spent time, returning to Redlands in the early morning 
hours of November 15.  Coffman then was questioned further until she agreed to 
take investigators to Novis’s body, which was found, pursuant to her direction, 
around 4:00 a.m. in a vineyard in Fontana. 
 
Marlow, meanwhile, was questioned for over three hours, from 9:00 p.m. 
until after midnight.  During this interrogation Marlow was provided with food 
and allowed to smoke.  Marlow ultimately agreed to try to take officers to Novis’s 
burial site.  Marlow directed officers to the Sierra Street off-ramp in Fontana, but 
once there he asked that Coffman be brought to the scene so she could show the 
officers where the body was located.  As the officers could not at that time reach 
Sergeant Smith, who then had custody of Coffman, they returned Marlow to the 
Redlands Police Department.  At 8:30 the same morning, after the discovery of 
Novis’s body, officers resumed interrogating Marlow and informed him that 
Coffman had told them all about the Novis and Murray homicides.  During this 
portion of the interrogation, Marlow gave a detailed statement about both murders, 
as well as the Kentucky killing.  A further interrogation took place two days later, 
on November 17. 
 
At the outset of the interviews, defendants each were advised of and 
invoked their Miranda rights.  (Miranda v. Arizona, supra, 384 U.S. 436.)  
Investigators nevertheless continued to question each defendant despite their 
repeated requests for counsel.  Sergeant Fitzmaurice told Marlow, numerous 
times, that because he had invoked his Miranda rights, whatever he told officers in 
the course of the interrogation could not be used in court. 
 
Ruling on defendants’ motions to suppress their statements to investigators, 
the trial court concluded all statements had been made voluntarily and thus could 
properly be used for impeachment purposes under Harris v. New York (1971) 401 
 
 
57
U.S. 222, 225-226, despite the officers’ noncompliance with Miranda.  With 
respect to Coffman’s motion to suppress the fruits of her statement, namely the 
location of Novis’s body and testimony relating to its condition, after hearing 
evidence regarding the grave’s shallowness and its proximity, in a working 
vineyard, to roads and a residential area, the court ruled that testimony regarding 
the body and its location was admissible pursuant to the doctrine of inevitable 
discovery. 
2.  Legal principles 
 
Recently, in People v. Neal (2003) 31 Cal.4th 63, 79-80, we reviewed 
certain legal principles governing the admissibility of defendants’ custodial 
statements.  “It long has been settled under the due process clause of the 
Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution that an involuntary 
statement obtained by a law enforcement officer from a criminal suspect by 
coercion is inadmissible in a criminal proceeding.  (See, e.g., Brown v. Mississippi 
(1936) 297 U.S. 278, 285-286 [80 L.Ed. 682, 56 S.Ct. 461].)  In Miranda v. 
Arizona[, supra,] 384 U.S. 436 [16 L.Ed.2d 694, 86 S.Ct. 1602] (Miranda), 
recognizing that any statement obtained by an officer from a suspect during 
custodial interrogation may be potentially involuntary because such questioning 
may be coercive, the United States Supreme Court held that such a statement may 
be admitted in evidence only if the officer advises the suspect of both his or her 
right to remain silent and right to have counsel present at questioning, and the 
suspect waives those rights and agrees to speak to the officer.  The court further 
held in Miranda that if the suspect indicates that he or she does not wish to speak 
to the officer or wants to have counsel present at questioning, the officer must end 
the interrogation.  In Edwards v. Arizona (1981) 451 U.S. 477 [68 L.Ed.2d 378, 
101 S.Ct. 1880] . . . , the high court held that if the suspect invokes the right to 
counsel, the officer may not resume questioning on another occasion until counsel 
 
 
58
is present, unless the suspect voluntarily initiates further contact.  In Harris v. New 
York [, supra,] 401 U.S. 222 [28 L.Ed.2d 1, 91 S.Ct. 643] (Harris), the court held 
that although a statement obtained in violation of Miranda may not be introduced 
by the prosecution in its case-in-chief, Miranda was not intended to grant the 
suspect license to lie in his or her testimony at trial, and thus if an ensuing 
statement obtained in violation of Miranda is voluntary, the statement nonetheless 
may be admitted to impeach a defendant who testifies differently at trial. 
 
“In People v. Peevy (1998) 17 Cal.4th 1184 [73 Cal.Rptr.2d 865, 953 P.2d 
1212], we addressed the issue whether a law enforcement officer’s intentional 
continuation of interrogation of a defendant, in spite of the defendant’s invocation 
of his or her right to counsel—in deliberate violation of Miranda—renders the 
statement obtained by the officer inadmissible even for impeachment purposes.  
We concluded that in light of the emphasis in Harris that Miranda should not be 
interpreted to permit a defendant to testify falsely at trial with impunity, under 
Harris the officer’s misconduct in Peevy did not affect the admissibility of the 
statement as impeachment evidence.  (Id. at pp. 1193-1194, 1203-1205.)”  (People 
v. Neal, supra, 31 Cal.4th at p. 67.) 
 
“A statement is involuntary [citation] when, among other circumstances, it 
‘was “ ‘extracted by any sort of threats . . . , [or] obtained by any direct or implied 
promises, however slight . . . .’ ” ’  [Citations.]  Voluntariness does not turn on any 
one fact, no matter how apparently significant, but rather on the ‘totality of [the] 
circumstances.’ ”  (People v. Neal, supra, 31 Cal.4th at p. 79.) 
 
“In reviewing the trial court’s determinations of voluntariness, we apply an 
independent standard of review, doing so ‘in light of the record in its entirety, 
including “all the surrounding circumstances—both the characteristics of the 
accused and the details of the [encounter]” . . . .’ ”  (People v. Neal, supra, 31 
Cal.4th at p. 80.)  But “we accept the trial court’s factual findings, based on its 
 
 
59
resolution of factual disputes, its choices among conflicting inferences, and its 
evaluations of witness credibility, provided that these findings are supported by 
substantial evidence.”  (People v. Mayfield (1997) 14 Cal.4th 668, 733.) 
 
Relevant to this case, too, is the line of judicial decisions, beginning with 
the pre-Miranda decision in People v. Modesto (1965) 62 Cal.2d 436 and finding 
support in the high court’s decision in New York v. Quarles (1984) 467 U.S. 649, 
that recognized an exception to the usual constraints on custodial interrogation in 
the situation where an overriding need exists to rescue persons in danger or to 
protect human life.  In Modesto, the defendant was arrested on suspicion of 
murdering one young girl, whose body had been found, and harming another, who 
was missing.  This court concluded that the possibility of finding a missing child 
alive allowed interrogation without advising the suspect of his rights to remain 
silent and to the assistance of counsel.  (Modesto, supra, at p. 446.)  The Court of 
Appeal in People v. Dean (1974) 39 Cal.App.3d 875, involving custodial 
questioning of a kidnap suspect concerning a missing victim’s whereabouts, 
concluded that the Modesto rule remained viable after Miranda.  (Dean, supra, at 
p. 882.)  Similarly, the Court of Appeal in People v. Riddle (1978) 83 Cal.App.3d 
563, 574-575, relied on Modesto in holding that Miranda did not preclude 
recognition of a limited exception to the normal rules governing custodial 
interrogation under exigent circumstances involving a possible threat to human 
life.  Riddle held that “under circumstances of extreme emergency where the 
possibility of saving the life of a missing victim exists, noncoercive questions may 
be asked of a material witness in custody even though answers to the questions 
may incriminate the witness.  Any other policy would reflect indifference to 
human life.”  (Riddle, supra, at p. 578.)  Since in the Riddle case the court 
concluded the defendant’s statements were voluntarily made and lawfully 
obtained, it found no basis on which to exclude them.  (Id. at pp. 580-581.) 
 
 
60
 
In New York v. Quarles, the high court recognized an analogous exception 
to Miranda in situations involving a threat to public safety.  In that case, a woman 
approached police officers to say she had just been raped and that her assailant, 
who had carried a gun, had entered a nearby grocery store.  Officers entered the 
store and confronted Quarles, who fit the woman’s description of her assailant.  
Frisking him, an officer discovered an empty shoulder holster.  After handcuffing 
him, the officer asked where his gun was located.  Quarles nodded toward some 
empty cartons, saying, “The gun is over there.”  After retrieving a loaded .38-
caliber gun from an empty carton in the area Quarles had indicated, officers read 
Quarles his Miranda rights and questioned him further following his waiver of 
rights.  (New York v. Quarles, supra, 467 U.S. at pp. 651-652.)  The Supreme 
Court reversed the state court’s decision suppressing the gun and initial statement, 
concluding that “the need for answers to questions in a situation posing a threat to 
the public safety outweighs the need for the prophylactic rule protecting the Fifth 
Amendment’s privilege against self-incrimination.”  (Id. at p. 657.)  The court 
declined to make the availability of the public safety exception turn on the 
subjective motivation of the particular officers involved.  (Id. at p. 656.)  The court 
noted that Quarles was free, on remand, to argue his statement was coerced under 
traditional due process standards.  (Id. at p. 655, fn. 3.) 
 
Under New York v. Quarles and People v. Modesto, the circumstances in 
the present case, involving the rescue of a known individual, were sufficiently 
exigent to place the initial interrogations, that is, those taking place before the 
discovery of Novis’s body, outside the scope of Miranda.  Novis had been missing 
for a week at the time defendants were questioned, this passage of time lessening 
but by no means eliminating the possibility that she remained alive.  (Compare 
People v. Manning (Colo. 1983) 672 P.2d 499, 509 [police concern for rescuing 
child who had been missing for 14 weeks “had long since ceased to be realistic,” 
 
 
61
hence rescue doctrine inapplicable].)  Before the interrogation, Marlow’s sister, 
Veronica Koppers, had told the police that Marlow previously had been known to 
leave individuals bound and stranded alive in rural areas.  Officers did not know 
whether defendants had done the same with Novis, or whether she was being held 
in a residence or other structure somewhere.  The absence of any blood or other 
signs of physical trauma in Novis’s car supported a reasonable hope that she might 
be alive and justified questioning defendants despite their invocation of their 
Miranda rights.  That officers employed an interrogation technique of referring to 
Novis alternately as dead and as still alive by no means negated the exigency, as 
the officers apparently sought to avoid alienating defendants and instead attempted 
to gain their confidence, whichever circumstance might in fact exist.  Under these 
circumstances, the rescue doctrine applied, and statements defendants made before 
police discovered the victim’s body, if voluntarily made, were admissible despite 
the officers’ noncompliance with Miranda. 
3.  Voluntariness of Marlow’s statements 
 
As noted, whether the admission of Marlow’s statements violated due 
process depends upon whether they were voluntarily made in the totality of the 
circumstances.  (People v. Neal, supra, 31 Cal.4th at pp. 79-80.)  Marlow contends 
his November 14 statement was involuntary because (1) his interrogator, Sergeant 
Fitzmaurice, ignored his nine requests to speak with an attorney; (2) Fitzmaurice 
repeatedly assured Marlow that nothing he said could be used in court, a promise 
that both rendered Marlow’s statement involuntary and gave rise to estoppel or use 
immunity; (3) the statement was induced by a promise of better jail conditions if 
Marlow cooperated and a threat of worse conditions if he did not; and (4) the 
police exercised a coordinated strategy of extracting statements first from Coffman 
and then from Marlow.  We disagree:  Marlow’s interrogation, while prolonged, 
was not accompanied by a denial of all creature comforts or accomplished by 
 
 
62
means of physical or psychological mistreatment, threats of harsh consequences or 
official inducement amounting to coercion, nor were Marlow’s admissions the 
product of coerced statements by Coffman. 
 
The record reflects that what Marlow characterizes as a promise of better 
jail conditions if he cooperated or a threat of worse if he did not simply amounted 
to Fitzmaurice’s acknowledgment that the nature of the crimes of which Marlow 
stood accused tends to evoke negative feelings, that Marlow’s cooperation could 
be made known to jail authorities, and that the latter might look favorably on such 
cooperation—all of which Marlow evidently well knew.13  Any “coordinated 
strategy” of confronting Marlow with Coffman’s statements violated his due 
process rights only if doing so actually and proximately caused him to make his 
admissions against his will.  (See People v. Musselwhite (1998) 17 Cal.4th 1216, 
1240-1241.)  Marlow points to no evidence in the record supporting such a 
conclusion; his interrogators’ comments that Coffman was cooperating with them 
surely did not render Marlow’s statements involuntary.  That Sergeant Fitzmaurice 
repeatedly ignored Marlow’s requests for an attorney does give rise to concern, 
but—given Marlow’s maturity and criminal experience (he was over 30 years old 
and a convicted felon at the time of the interrogation)—it was unlikely Marlow’s 
will was thereby overborne. 
 
Fitzmaurice’s assurances that any statements Marlow might make could not 
be used in court similarly raise the specter of coercion, but after independently 
reviewing the transcripts of the interrogation and the hearing on Marlow’s 
suppression motion, we see no reason to disturb the trial court’s determination that 
                                             
 
13  
Marlow repeatedly responded “Yeah” when Fitzmaurice explained the 
reaction jail authorities likely would have to his offenses and the beneficial impact 
his cooperation might have. 
 
 
63
his statements were voluntarily made.  Significantly, for a considerable period 
after Fitzmaurice began to assure Marlow his statements would not be used, 
Marlow continued to resist disclosing Novis’s whereabouts or admitting he 
committed the offenses.  His resistance, far from reflecting a will overborne by 
official coercion, suggests instead a still operative ability to calculate his self-
interest in choosing whether to disclose or withhold information.  Marlow’s 
admissions followed and appeared to be precipitated by continued confrontation 
with the evidence authorities possessed.  (Cf. State v. Walton (1989) 159 Ariz. 571 
[769 P.2d 1017, 1025-1026] [when 45 minutes elapsed between officer’s 
assurance that “it’s nothing that can’t be worked out” and defendant’s admissions, 
during which time officer continued to confront defendant with known evidence, 
court concluded admissions were not made in reliance on the assurance].)  
Moreover, Marlow was not promised leniency in exchange for admissions; rather, 
his interrogators advised him they had sufficient evidence to convict him without 
them. 
 
Marlow contends that under People v. Quartermain (1997) 16 Cal.4th 600, 
the use of his statements in court violated due process.  In Quartermain, this court, 
relying on the rationales of Santobello v. New York (1971) 404 U.S. 257, 262 
(when a guilty plea rests in any significant degree on the prosecutor’s promise or 
agreement, the promise must be fulfilled), Doyle v. Ohio (1976) 426 U.S. 610, 618 
(fundamental fairness precludes use of a defendant’s post-Miranda-warning 
silence to impeach his trial testimony), and their progeny, concluded that when a 
prosecutor violated an agreement made with the defendant not to use his statement 
in any court proceedings against him, fundamental fairness required that the 
prosecutor honor the agreement, and under the circumstances the introduction of 
the statement to impeach the defendant resulted in prejudice requiring reversal of 
the judgment.  (Quartermain, supra, at pp. 618-622.)  We observed that the 
 
 
64
prosecutor’s improper use of the defendant’s statements for impeachment 
purposes and in closing argument, by “paint[ing] defendant as a fabulist,” “struck 
at the heart of his defense,” as to which the jury’s assessment of his credibility was 
crucial.  (Id. at pp. 620, 622.)  Assuming the use of Marlow’s statements after 
repeated assurances to the contrary was fundamentally unfair, here the prosecutor 
presented abundant other evidence of defendants’ guilt, enabling us confidently to 
conclude the verdict was unattributable to any error in admitting the statements.  
(Id. at p. 622, citing Sullivan v. Louisiana (1993) 508 U.S. 275, 279; cf. People v. 
Gutierrez (2002) 28 Cal.4th 1083, 1132-1133 [defendant’s statement not 
involuntary despite circumstance that investigating officer told him it would not be 
used in court for any purpose].) 
 
Marlow’s further contentions that the officers’ representations that any 
statements he might make would not be used in court estopped the prosecution to 
introduce them, or resulted in a kind of use immunity, are unpersuasive.  The 
Right to Truth-in-Evidence Law (Cal. Const., art. I, § 28, subd. (d)), added to our 
state Constitution in 1982 when the voters passed Proposition 8, provides in 
pertinent part that “relevant evidence shall not be excluded in any criminal 
proceeding.”  The provision was intended to abrogate judicially created rules 
requiring the exclusion of otherwise admissible evidence, such as voluntary 
admissions.  (See People v. Macias (1997) 16 Cal.4th 739, 749; People v. May 
(1988) 44 Cal.3d 309, 318.)  Marlow does not explain how a common law 
estoppel or immunity theory might avoid the stricture of this constitutional 
provision. 
 
Even were we to assume, for argument’s sake, the trial court erred in 
finding Marlow’s statements were voluntarily made and thus admissible for 
impeachment purposes, we would conclude the error was harmless beyond a 
reasonable doubt.  (Chapman v. California (1967) 386 U.S. 18, 24; People v. 
 
 
65
Cahill (1993) 5 Cal.4th 478, 487.)  As respondent observes, Marlow did not 
challenge the prosecution’s evidence that, in concert with Coffman, he kidnapped, 
robbed and killed Corinna Novis, and that he entered her apartment and stole 
several items of property; his only defense was that he lacked the intent to kill.  
Yet the evidence of Marlow’s intent to kill, apart from his statements, was 
overwhelming:  Marlow, with Coffman, abducted Novis and sodomized her in the 
shower at the Drinkhouse residence, inducing her to disclose the PIN for her bank 
card in order to steal her money.  Marlow sought to assuage Drinkhouse’s anxiety 
at Novis’s presence in his house by saying, “How is she going to talk to anybody 
if she’s under a pile of rocks?”  Defendants equipped themselves with a shovel 
when they drove to the vineyard where Novis was strangled.  Sufficient force was 
employed in the strangulation to permit the pathologist to opine a second person 
(such as Coffman) might have assisted Marlow in the killing, or the killer might 
have placed his foot on Novis’s back as her face was pressed into the ground, 
accounting for the soil inside her mouth.  On this record, it appears beyond a 
reasonable doubt the error, if any, did not contribute to the verdict.  (Neder v. 
United States (1999) 527 U.S. 1, 15; Chapman, supra, at p. 24.)14 
4.  Voluntariness of Coffman’s statements and admissibility of evidence 
derived therefrom 
 
A similar analysis leads to the conclusion that Coffman’s statements were 
voluntary and thus properly admitted.  Although Coffman’s interrogation was 
lengthy and officers ignored her requests for an attorney, they provided her with 
                                             
 
14  
As we have rejected Marlow’s contention that his statements were 
erroneously admitted, it follows that we reject the related claim that his trial 
counsel rendered ineffective assistance in failing to assert, as bases for their 
exclusion, the same arguments unsuccessfully advanced on this appeal in support 
of the same contention. 
 
 
66
food and coffee, allowed her a cigarette, and brought her socks and other clothing 
after she complained of feeling cold.  Although officers did not immediately 
provide medical attention for Coffman’s leg wound, the injury, approximately two 
weeks old at the time, clearly was not as serious as that in Mincey v. Arizona 
(1978) 437 U.S. 385, 399-402, in which the high court held that statements 
resulting from the repeated interrogation of a hospitalized suspect suffering from a 
gunshot wound were involuntary.  Coffman’s admissions occurred after repeated 
confrontation with the known evidence.  She contends that investigators 
improperly threatened to have her child removed from his home in Missouri, but 
since she rejected the factual possibility their suggestion clearly had no coercive 
effect on her.  Coffman also contends the officers induced her to involuntarily 
admit her guilt by falsely telling her Marlow had incriminated her and by making 
promises of assistance.15  What the officer meant in asserting he would “help” 
Coffman is unclear, but we are unpersuaded his comments constituted a promise 
of leniency that rendered her subsequent statements and conduct involuntary. 
 
The scenario here differs from Collazo v. Estelle (9th Cir. 1991) 940 F.2d 
411, on which Coffman relies.  There, the federal court of appeals found reversible 
error in the admission of a confession obtained after an interrogating officer 
attempted to discourage a suspect from talking with a lawyer by predicting a 
lawyer would direct him not to speak with the police and “it might be worse” for 
the suspect.  (Id. at pp. 414, 416, 420.)  Here, the officers—questioning Coffman 
                                             
 
15  
In particular, Coffman cites the following portion of the interrogation:  
“[Detective Smith]:  ‘Look at me, girl, come here, hey.  Are you gonna help me?  
That’s all I want and I’ll help you.’  [¶] [Coffman]:  (Softly sobbing and sniffing.)  
[¶] [Detective Smith]:  ‘Hey, I’ll help you okay?  Fair enough?  Is it fair enough 
I’m giving you a commitment on my part, okay?’ ” 
 
 
67
in the midst of authorities’ efforts to locate Novis—did not hint she would receive 
harsher treatment if she failed to cooperate. 
 
Moreover, Coffman continued for a considerable period to resist the 
officers’ requests that she tell them where Novis could be found.  Rather than 
threaten Coffman, interrogators attempted by various techniques to appeal to her 
sense of moral integrity and any possible sympathy or sensitivity she might have 
toward the victim’s family.  The record supports the conclusion that Coffman’s 
statements were the product of her own free will. 
 
Even were we to conclude otherwise, i.e., that the trial court erred in 
finding Coffman made her statements voluntarily, the record contains 
overwhelming evidence of her guilt.  Specifically, the testimony of Richard 
Drinkhouse and Veronica Koppers supported the conclusion that Coffman 
willingly participated in the offenses; Harold Brigham testified Coffman was the 
person who pawned the stolen typewriter using Novis’s identification; Victoria 
Rotstein placed Coffman near the location where identification belonging to 
Coffman, Marlow and Novis was found several days after the offenses; and 
Coffman’s (along with Marlow’s) fingerprints were found on Novis’s car.  Any 
error in the admission of Coffman’s statements therefore did not, beyond a 
reasonable doubt, contribute to the verdict.  (Neder v. United States, supra, 527 
U.S. at p. 15.)  
 
Coffman further contends the discovery of Novis’s body and the evidence 
derived from it were the product of her coerced statements and should have been 
excluded.  Having concluded Coffman’s statements were voluntarily made, we 
further conclude the fruits of those statements were properly admitted.  Moreover, 
even had the statements been involuntary, the trial court properly ruled the 
physical evidence was admissible under the doctrine of inevitable discovery, 
which recognizes that if the prosecution can establish by a preponderance of the 
 
 
68
evidence that the information inevitably would have been discovered by lawful 
means, then the exclusionary rule will not apply.  (Nix v. Williams (1984) 467 U.S. 
431, 443-444.)  This is so because the rule is intended to ensure that the 
prosecution is not placed in a better position than it would have been had no 
illegality occurred; the rule does not require it be put in a worse one.  (Ibid.)  
Novis’s body lay, partially exposed, in a shallow grave in a working vineyard near 
a residential area.  Investigators found evidence that bicycles and horses had been 
ridden nearby.  On these facts, the trial court reasonably could find that Novis’s 
body ultimately would have been found regardless of defendants’ statements. 
5.  Failure to instruct regarding impeachment use of defendants’ 
admissions 
 
When defendants’ extrajudicial statements were admitted into evidence, the 
trial court gave the jury no instruction limiting their use to impeachment of 
defendants’ credibility.  Among the instructions the trial court read at the close of 
the guilt phase was CALJIC No. 2.13, which informs the jury that a witness’s 
prior inconsistent statements may be considered not only as they bear on the 
witness’s credibility, but also as evidence of the truth of the facts as stated by the 
witness on the prior occasion.  Marlow, joined by Coffman, contends the trial 
court erred in failing to instruct the jury, sua sponte, that statements taken in 
violation of Miranda could be used only for impeachment purposes under the rule 
of Harris, supra, 401 U.S. 222.  They argue that the court’s giving of CALJIC No. 
2.13 resulted in the jury’s improper use of the statements as substantive evidence 
of guilt. 
 
In People v. Nudd (1974) 12 Cal.3d 204, 209, overruled on other grounds in 
People v. Disbrow (1976) 16 Cal.3d 101, 113, this court declined to impose on 
trial courts a sua sponte obligation to give a limiting instruction when admitting 
Miranda-violative statements for impeachment purposes.  Marlow, however, 
 
 
69
contends Nudd is, in this respect, no longer good law in light of Richardson v. 
Marsh, supra, 481 U.S. at pages 206-207, in which the high court in dictum 
observed that “in [Harris, supra, 401 U.S. 222], we held that statements elicited 
from a defendant in violation of [Miranda, supra, 384 U.S. 436], can be 
introduced to impeach that defendant’s credibility, even though they are 
inadmissible as evidence of his guilt, so long as the jury is instructed 
accordingly.”  (Italics added.)  The Courts of Appeal have been divided on the 
question whether such a sua sponte instructional obligation exists.  (Compare 
People v. Torrez (1995) 31 Cal.App.4th 1084, 1088-1091 [no sua sponte 
obligation] with People v. Duncan (1988) 204 Cal.App.3d 613, 620-622 [imposing 
sua sponte duty].)  Recently, however, in People v. Gutierrez, supra, 28 Cal.4th at 
page 1134, this court rejected a claim that the admission for impeachment of a 
defendant’s Miranda-violative statement, without a limiting instruction and 
notwithstanding the giving of CALJIC No. 2.13, constituted error.  The same 
conclusion obtains here.16 
                                             
 
16  
Marlow also contends his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance in 
failing to request that the jury be instructed to consider the Miranda-violative 
statements only for impeachment purposes.  To the extent the statements were 
properly admitted under the rescue doctrine, they could be considered as 
substantive evidence of guilt as well as for impeachment, although the prosecutor 
apparently did not seek to introduce them as substantive evidence.  (See Dickerson 
v. United States (2000) 530 U.S. 428, 441 [describing the Quarles rule (New York 
v. Quarles, supra, 467 U.S. 649) as an exception to the Miranda rule].)  In any 
event, because the record on appeal sheds no light on why counsel failed to 
request such an instruction, and this is not a case in which there could be no 
satisfactory explanation, the claim of ineffective assistance should be raised in the 
context of a habeas corpus petition.  (People v. Mendoza Tello (1997) 15 Cal.4th 
264, 266-267.) 
 
 
70
B.  Admission of Evidence that Marlow Requested an Attorney During 
Police Questioning 
 
Marlow contends his constitutional rights to counsel and to due process of 
law were infringed when he was cross-examined by the prosecutor and by 
Coffman’s counsel regarding his request for counsel before police questioning, 
and when the prosecutor, on rebuttal, examined Sergeant Fitzmaurice concerning 
the same subject.  The contention was forfeited for appellate purposes by the lack 
of a contemporaneous objection.  (People v. Crandell (1988) 46 Cal.3d 833, 879, 
fn. 14, abrogated on other grounds in People v. Crayton (2002) 28 Cal.4th 346, 
364.)  Were we nevertheless to consider the merits, we would conclude that 
although the question is close, any error was harmless.  (Chapman v. California, 
supra, 386 U.S. at p. 24.) 
 
The challenged questioning went as follows: 
 
“[Prosecutor:]  Q.  . . . It’s true that when the police first talked to you they 
read you your Miranda rights, correct? 
 
“[Marlow:]  A.  I believe so. 
 
“[Prosecutor:]  Q.  Well, you asked for a lawyer, didn’t you? 
 
“[Marlow:]  A.  It’s been a long time.  [¶] I—we went to court a lot of times 
talking about me asking for a lawyer. 
 
“[Prosecutor:]  Q.  Okay.  Do you remember whether you asked them for a 
lawyer when you were read your Miranda rights? 
 
“[Marlow:]  A.  I believe I did. 
 
“[Prosecutor:]  Q.  They ignored that, right? 
 
“[Marlow:]  A.  I think so.” 
 
On recross-examination, Coffman’s attorney, Spears, asked Marlow:  “But 
are you able to reconcile how on the one hand you were screwed up on drugs, and 
 
 
71
how on the other hand you had the sense to ask for a lawyer during the 
questioning?”  Marlow responded:  “I couldn’t explain it to you, Mr. Spears.” 
 
Spears went on to ask:  “One of the first things that happened was that you 
got what’s called the Miranda advisal; is that correct?”  Marlow answered:  “I 
believe so.”  Spears:  “And right after getting that advisal, you told the police that 
you needed to get hold of a lawyer.  You made a request for counsel, didn’t you?”  
Marlow:  “If it says I did, I did.”  After Spears pointed out where, in the transcript 
of the interrogation, Marlow had requested counsel, he continued:  “Do you 
remember making a subsequent or another request for a lawyer?”  When Marlow 
answered negatively, Spears cited another instance in the interrogation when 
Marlow said he needed to talk to a lawyer.17 
 
Finally, in rebuttal, the prosecutor asked Sergeant Fitzmaurice whether, at 
the start of Marlow’s interview, he had read Marlow his Miranda rights and 
elicited the fact that Marlow had expressed a wish to see an attorney before 
questioning. 
 
As we said in People v. Crandell, supra, 46 Cal.3d at page 878:  
“Wainwright v. Greenfield [(1986)] 474 U.S. 284, concerned a prosecutor’s 
argument to the jury that the defendant’s repeated refusals to answer questions 
without first consulting an attorney demonstrated a degree of comprehension 
inconsistent with the defendant’s claim of insanity.  This argument was held to be 
a denial of federal due process rights under the reasoning of Doyle v. 
Ohio[, supra, ] 426 U.S. 610 [49 L.Ed.2d 91, 96 S.Ct. 2240].  [¶] Wainwright and 
                                             
 
17  
During this portion of the cross-examination, Marlow’s counsel, Craig, 
objected several times on grounds of relevancy and as going beyond the scope of 
the direct examination, but did not assert the impropriety of references to 
Marlow’s request for counsel. 
 
 
72
Doyle are founded on the notion that it is fundamentally unfair to use post-
Miranda silence against the defendant at trial in view of the implicit assurance 
contained in the Miranda warnings that exercise of the right of silence will not be 
penalized.  (Wainwright v. Greenfield, supra, 474 U.S. at p. 295 [88 L.Ed.2d at 
p. 629, 106 S.Ct. at p. 638].)  A similar process of reasoning supports the 
conclusion that comment which penalizes exercise of the right to counsel is also 
prohibited.  (People v. Fabert (1982) 127 Cal.App.3d 604, 610-611 [179 Cal.Rptr. 
702]; People v. Schindler (1980) 114 Cal.App.3d 178, 188-189 [170 Cal.Rptr. 
461].)”   
 
Counsel for a codefendant, like the prosecutor, is bound by this principle 
and thus is precluded from commenting on the defendant’s assertion of the right to 
counsel.  (See People v. Hardy, supra, 2 Cal.4th at p. 157 [applying related rule of 
Griffin v. California (1965) 380 U.S. 609, 615, barring comment by codefendant’s 
counsel on defendant’s failure to testify].) 
 
Respondent argues that the questioning quoted above was aimed, at least in 
part, not at suggesting Marlow’s guilt but instead at showing that during his 
interrogation his faculties were unclouded, contrary to his testimony that he was 
mentally impaired due to drug usage.  Respondent further contends that a 
defendant who testifies waives the privilege against self-incrimination and is 
subject to cross-examination on all relevant matters, of which Marlow’s mental 
status during police questioning was one.  Respondent also asserts that Wainwright 
v. Greenfield does not preclude examination pertaining to the defendant’s 
demeanor and behavior, suggesting that the challenged questioning may be so 
characterized.  These arguments, which are unsupported by citation to any 
factually similar cases, are not persuasive.  Wainwright characterized as Doyle v. 
Ohio’s primary rationale the avoidance of the fundamental unfairness that flows 
from the state’s breach of the implied assurances contained in the Miranda 
 
 
73
warning, stating broadly:  “What is impermissible is the evidentiary use of an 
individual’s exercise of his constitutional rights after the State’s assurance that the 
invocation of those rights will not be penalized.”  (Wainwright v. Greenfield, 
supra, 474 U.S. at pp. 294-295.)  Coffman’s attorney directly probed the 
inconsistency between Marlow’s claim of drug-related impairment and his 
assertion of his right to counsel during questioning; the prosecutor’s cross-
examination was not so focused, but instead seemed to address Marlow’s refusal 
to help officers find Novis.  The questions by Coffman’s counsel and the 
prosecutor, although apparently aimed at different objects, each made evidentiary 
use of Marlow’s assertion of the right to counsel and thus violated Wainwright. 
 
Even were the prosecutor’s questions somehow indirectly aimed at 
addressing Marlow’s mental state at the time of the interrogation, here other 
evidence (such as officers’ personal observations) surely would have been directly 
probative of Marlow’s demeanor and behavior without the necessity of penalizing 
Marlow’s assertion of his right to counsel.  (Wainwright v. Greenfield, supra, 474 
U.S. at p. 295 [“the State’s legitimate interest in proving that the defendant’s 
behavior appeared to be rational at the time of his arrest could have been served by 
carefully framed questions that avoided any mention of the defendant’s exercise of 
his constitutional rights to remain silent and to consult counsel”]; cf. People v. 
Crandell, supra, 46 Cal.3d at pp. 878-879 [prosecutor referred to defendant’s 
invocation of right to counsel “primarily as a point of reference within the taped 
interview to assist the jury in locating an area where the prosecution believed that 
the tone of defendant’s statements . . . appeared to be inconsistent with defendant’s 
statements about the events of the preceding night and about his relationships with 
the two decedents”].) 
 
As in People v. Crandell, supra, 46 Cal.3d 833, however, “if the remarks 
had the objectionable effect of drawing the jury’s attention to the exercise of 
 
 
74
protected rights,” the verdicts were certainly not affected by this “brief and mild 
reference” and, in view of the overwhelming evidence, any error was harmless 
beyond a reasonable doubt.  (Id. at p. 879.)  Thus, even assuming Marlow had 
properly preserved this claim for appeal, any error flowing from questioning him 
about his invocation of his right to counsel was harmless.  Moreover, this lack of 
prejudice defeats Marlow’s claim that counsel rendered ineffective assistance in 
failing to object. 
C.  Alleged Massiah Error 
 
Coffman contends her statements to jailhouse informant Robin Long, 
including her admissions that she had gotten into the shower with Novis and 
Marlow, that Novis was still alive when Marlow and Coffman went to her 
apartment to find her PIN, and that Novis had to be killed because they could not 
leave any victims alive, were obtained in violation of her right to counsel and thus 
improperly admitted over her motion to suppress.18  She further contends Long’s 
testimony infected the sentencing process with unreliability, in violation of the 
Eighth Amendment to the federal Constitution.  As will appear, Coffman’s 
contention lacks merit because she fails to demonstrate that the government did 
anything more than accept information that Long elicited from Coffman on her 
own initiative. 
 
In Massiah v. United States (1964) 377 U.S. 201, the high court held that 
once a judicial proceeding has been initiated against an accused and the Sixth 
Amendment right to counsel has attached, any statement the government 
deliberately elicits from the accused in the absence of counsel is inadmissible at 
                                             
 
18  
Coffman also contends (pt. III.D, post, at pp. 76-77) that the presentation of 
Long’s testimony in rebuttal, rather than in the prosecution’s case-in-chief, was 
improper and resulted in a denial of due process. 
 
 
75
trial against the defendant.  (Id. at pp. 206-207; In re Neely (1993) 6 Cal.4th 901, 
915.)  To prevail on a Massiah claim, a defendant must show that the police and 
the informant took some action, beyond merely listening, that was designed 
deliberately to elicit incriminating remarks.  (Kuhlmann v. Wilson (1986) 477 U.S. 
436, 459; People v. Jenkins, supra, 22 Cal.4th at p. 1007.)  “Specifically, the 
evidence must establish that the informant (1) was acting as a government agent, 
i.e., under the direction of the government pursuant to a preexisting arrangement, 
with the expectation of some resulting benefit or advantage, and (2) deliberately 
elicited incriminating statements.”  (In re Neely, supra, at p. 915.)  The 
requirement of agency is not satisfied when law enforcement officials “merely 
accept information elicited by the informant-inmate on his or her own initiative, 
with no official promises, encouragement, or guidance.”  (Ibid.)  A preexisting 
arrangement, however, need not be explicit or formal, but may be inferred from 
evidence of the parties’ behavior indicative of such an agreement.  (Ibid.)  A trial 
court’s ruling on a motion to suppress informant testimony is essentially a factual 
determination, entitled to deferential review on appeal.  (People v. Fairbank 
(1997) 16 Cal.4th 1223, 1247-1248.) 
 
During the hearing on Coffman’s motion to suppress statements she made 
to Robin Long while Long was in jail on a parole violation, San Bernardino 
County Deputy Sheriff Bobbi New testified officials were aware of Long’s 
practice, while in custody, of engaging in mock fortunetelling with playing cards 
as a means of eliciting from incarcerated suspects statements that Long would then 
communicate to law enforcement officials.  New testified that Long was placed in 
protective custody, where she met and talked with Coffman, for reasons other than 
her alleged status as a police agent.  (According to Long’s later testimony, because 
of a prior child endangerment charge she was placed in protective custody 
whenever she was incarcerated.)  Long’s parole agent, Frank Mamone, testified at 
 
 
76
the same hearing that no official had contacted him to arrange any deal for Long’s 
testimony or to change her parole status, and that Long had been released around 
February 6, 1987, as a normal procedure due to the minor nature of her parole 
violation (absconding and failing to report to her parole agent).  Long herself 
testified she wanted to learn the details of Coffman’s case because two of Long’s 
friends had been murdered, and she wondered if there was a connection between 
those killings and Coffman’s case.  Long also testified she did not like being 
incarcerated and acknowledged she had given information to authorities in an 
unrelated case in order to get out of jail, but insisted she had been promised 
nothing in connection with the present case and her testimony would have no 
bearing on how long she would spend in custody on her current parole violation. 
 
Coffman essentially argues that because Long was a known informant, the 
circumstance that she was housed near Coffman compels the inference that she 
was a police agent.  The trial court reasonably concluded otherwise, given the 
testimony showing Long had acted on her own initiative and the absence of any 
evidence that authorities had encouraged her to supply information or insinuated 
that to do so would be to her benefit, or that her release from jail was other than in 
the normal course for a minor parole violation.  Consequently, the admission of 
Long’s testimony did not violate Coffman’s Sixth or Eighth Amendment rights. 
D.  Long’s Testimony as Assertedly Improper Rebuttal 
 
Coffman contends that Long’s testimony was improper rebuttal because it 
failed to contradict particular elements of the defense case.  Instead, she argues, it 
merely supported a conviction generally and thus should have been presented in 
the prosecution’s case-in-chief.  She contends the error violated her state and 
federal constitutional rights to effective assistance of counsel, against self-
incrimination, to a fair trial, to confrontation, to nonarbitrary and reliable 
determinations of guilt, death eligibility and penalty, and to present a defense.  She 
 
 
77
further contends the error constituted an arbitrary denial of a state-created liberty 
interest and thus violated her federal due process rights.  She acknowledges her 
trial counsel failed to object to the order of proof, thus forfeiting the issue for 
appellate review, but contends this omission represents ineffective assistance of 
counsel. 
 
On the merits, Coffman’s argument is unpersuasive.  The order of proof 
rests largely in the sound discretion of the trial court, and the fact that the evidence 
in question may have tended to support the prosecution’s case-in-chief does not 
make it improper rebuttal.  (People v. Mosher (1969) 1 Cal.3d 379, 399, 
disapproved on another ground in People v. Ray (1975) 14 Cal.3d 20, 29-30; 
People v. Warner (1969) 270 Cal.App.2d 900, 906; Evid. Code, § 320; Pen. Code, 
§§ 1093, subd. (d), 1094.)  It is improper for the prosecution to deliberately 
withhold evidence that is appropriately part of its case-in-chief, in order to offer it 
after the defense rests its case and thus perhaps surprise the defense or unduly 
magnify the importance of the evidence.  Nevertheless, when the evidence in 
question meets the requirements for impeachment it may be admitted on rebuttal 
to meet the evidence on a point the defense has put into dispute.  (People v. 
Harrison (1963) 59 Cal.2d 622, 629.)  Because Coffman testified she had nothing 
to do with what happened in the shower between Marlow and Novis and denied 
knowing that Marlow had killed Novis in the vineyard, the prosecutor was entitled 
to rebut her testimony with prior inconsistent statements and admissions to Long.  
Because an objection would not have been well taken, counsel did not render 
ineffective assistance by failing to make one. 
E.  Marlow’s Invocation of the Fifth Amendment 
 
Both defendants challenge the propriety of the process by which Marlow, 
on cross-examination after his direct testimony in rebuttal to Coffman’s testimony, 
as described below, invoked his privilege against self-incrimination some 44 times 
 
 
78
when questioned about the Orange County crimes.  Respondent acknowledges 
error occurred, but argues neither defendant suffered any prejudice thereby.  
Marlow also contends that comment by the prosecutor and Coffman’s counsel in 
their respective closing arguments concerning his failure to testify about the 
Orange County offenses violated his privilege against self-incrimination and the 
rule in Griffin v. California, supra, 380 U.S. 609. 
1.  Factual context 
 
We first place these contentions in context.  Before trial, the prosecutor 
informed the court and defendants that he would not seek to introduce evidence of 
the Orange County offenses against Lynell Murray.  Accordingly, neither in his 
opening statement nor in his case-in-chief did he refer to or present evidence of 
those crimes.  In Coffman’s counsel’s opening statement and Coffman’s testimony 
in her own defense following Marlow’s case-in-chief, however, she told the jury 
about the Orange County killing.  The trial court instructed the jury that Coffman’s 
testimony about the Orange County offenses was being admitted only to show 
Coffman’s state of mind and was not to be considered as evidence against Marlow, 
either as reflecting on his character or as demonstrating a probability that he 
committed the San Bernardino County offenses. 
 
After Coffman rested, Marlow testified in rebuttal.  Just before Marlow 
took the stand, his counsel sought a ruling precluding cross-examination on the 
Orange County crimes.  The trial court declined to make a ruling at that time.  
During the course of Marlow’s direct examination, his counsel asked him if he had 
intended to kill Novis.  Marlow denied so intending.  When his counsel asked him 
if Novis was still alive at the point when, after choking her, he laid her on the 
ground in the vineyard, Marlow replied:  “I know she was alive.  I didn’t want to 
kill her or anybody else.”  (Italics added.)  Just before the start of cross-
examination, the court held an in limine hearing on the scope of the proposed 
 
 
79
cross-examination.  The prosecutor argued that Marlow’s response as quoted 
above opened the door to cross-examination on the Orange County homicide.  
Marlow’s counsel contended his client’s answer was nonresponsive and 
ambiguous as to what incident he was referring to and that he retained a privilege 
to refuse to answer questions relating to the Orange County homicide. 
 
The trial court noted that although defendants were currently on trial only 
for the charged offenses against Novis, Coffman’s defense had raised the issue of 
her relationship with Marlow in an effort to show she acted only under duress and 
coercion; and Marlow, for his part, had testified to the contrary, namely, that he 
had not manipulated her, she had manipulated him.  The Orange County crimes, 
the court believed, were highly relevant to the nature of defendants’ relationship in 
connection with the murder of Novis.  And, said the court, because Marlow had 
denied having the intent to kill anybody at any time, the People had “the right to 
show the relationship in connection with this other murder in Orange County.” 
 
Thereafter, Coffman’s counsel cross-examined Marlow, asking him various 
questions about his actions in Orange County.  Rather than answer, Marlow stated 
he was “taking the Fifth” on those questions.  Finally, Coffman’s counsel asked 
the court to direct Marlow to answer, stating, “[W]e’ve had a ruling on that and 
this is an area I am seemingly entitled to probe.”  The court disagreed:  “The 
ruling is you could ask questions.  I didn’t rule on whether or not he could take the 
5th Amendment.  That issue was not raised.”  In further discussion outside the 
presence of the jury, Marlow’s counsel clarified that “[Marlow] is not testifying on 
my advice because he has not come to trial and will not come to trial in Orange 
County until these proceedings are concluded.”  The court stated:  “[I]n any event, 
the court has to honor his reliance upon his Fifth Amendment privilege not to 
testify concerning the Orange County thing.  [¶] That was not gone into at all on 
his direct.  [¶] It is true that there are a lot of overlapping things, such as intent to 
 
 
80
kill, which flow from one case to the next that give the District Attorney a great 
interest in inquiring into the details of that case.  [¶] But there is no way you can 
force him to answer as against his reliance on the Fifth Amendment.”  The 
prosecutor responded:  “I know we can’t force him to answer.  You could instruct 
him to.  I know it wouldn’t do any good.  We have no control over him, but you 
legally, as you know, can instruct him that he is required to answer.”  The court 
answered:  “Yes.  I think in view of the fact that he does have a trial pending in 
Orange County and he has avoided that testimony on the stand here, justice 
requires that we honor his Fifth Amendment privilege.”  The court continued:  
“[A]s a practical matter we all know that taking the Fifth Amendment in view of 
all the evidence that’s come out in this case is a tacit admission to the jury that the 
worst is true.  [¶] And since nobody is trying to convict him of the Orange County 
case, why, we don’t have the problems of the burden of proof.  [¶] So far as the 
information which the jury will—whether we like it or not, consider his refusal to 
answer is one of the things which is in their heads.  [¶] They will be instructed 
very carefully not to consider that, but it’s—”  The prosecutor responded:  “I’m 
not sure taking the Fifth this way isn’t something they shouldn’t be able to 
consider.  That’s part of what I’m trying to make my point.  [¶] Procedurally, will 
the court at least permit me to force him to take the Fifth on these issues?”  The 
court acknowledged the prosecutor was “entitled to get his answer.” 
 
Before the jury, the prosecutor asked a succession of questions to which 
Marlow responded with an assertion of his Fifth Amendment privilege.  After the 
27th such assertion, the court interjected:  “I’d better clarify the record on that, 
counsel.  Mr. Marlow, when you say I have to take the Fifth on that, are you 
intending to say that you refuse to answer the question on the ground that the 
answer may tend to incriminate you?”  Marlow responded in the affirmative.  The 
court then told the jury:  “The record may show that when the defendant refers to 
 
 
81
taking the Fifth, he is in effect stating that he refuses to answer the question on the 
ground that the answer may tend to incriminate him.  [¶] On that basis, he does not 
have to answer the question.”  The court also informed the jury that the questions 
as to which Marlow asserted a privilege were not themselves evidence and were 
not to be considered as such.  The court later instructed jurors with CALJIC No. 
2.25, directing them to draw no adverse inference from Marlow’s invocation of the 
privilege. 
2.  Marlow’s contentions 
 
Marlow contends the trial court erred in permitting any cross-examination 
concerning the Orange County offenses because no evidence had been admitted 
against him, and he had not testified, concerning that incident.  Marlow further 
contends that once the trial court ruled his invocation of the privilege against self-
incrimination regarding the Orange County crimes was proper, it erred in requiring 
him to assert the privilege in front of the jury and informing the jury that he did so 
each time because the answer would tend to incriminate him.  (See People v. 
Mincey (1992) 2 Cal.4th 408, 440-442.)  Finally, the instruction advising the jury 
to draw no adverse inference from Marlow’s invocation of the privilege did not, he 
contends, eliminate the prejudice stemming from these circumstances.  
Respondent contends Marlow waived his Fifth Amendment privilege as to the 
Orange County crimes by testifying, on direct examination, that he did not want to 
kill “anybody,” inferentially including Lynell Murray, and that he therefore 
actually no longer had a privilege to assert before the jury.  Consequently, 
respondent urges, Marlow received the benefit of an instruction (CALJIC No. 
2.25, telling the jury to draw no adverse inference from the assertion of the 
privilege) to which he was not entitled.  Moreover, respondent points out, the jury 
was instructed regarding the limited purpose of evidence of the Orange County 
murder, an offense for which he was not on trial in the present proceeding. 
 
 
82
 
We conclude that Marlow’s direct examination response denying he ever 
wanted to kill Novis “or anybody else” did “open the door” to questioning 
regarding the Orange County murder, and the trial court abused its discretion in 
implicitly ruling to the contrary.  “A defendant who takes the stand to testify in his 
own behalf waives the privilege against self-incrimination to the extent of the 
scope of relevant cross-examination.  [Citations.]  ‘It matters not that the 
defendant’s answer on cross-examination might tend to establish his guilt of a 
collateral offense for which he could still be prosecuted.’ ”  (People v. Thornton 
(1974) 11 Cal.3d 738, 760-761, disapproved on other grounds in People v. Flannel 
(1979) 25 Cal.3d 668, 684, fn. 12, and abrogated on other grounds in People v. 
Martinez (1999) 20 Cal.4th 225, 234; Jenkins v. Anderson (1980) 447 U.S. 231, 
236, fn. 3.)  “None of [the] fundamental principles [underlying the rule precluding 
the prosecution from cross-examining a testifying defendant beyond the scope of 
direct examination, upon the case generally] . . . imply that when a defendant 
voluntarily testifies in his own defense the People may not fully amplify his 
testimony by inquiring into the facts and circumstances surrounding his assertions, 
or by introducing evidence through cross-examination which explains or refutes 
his statements or the inferences which may necessarily be drawn from them.”  
(People v. Schader (1969) 71 Cal.2d 761, 770; see also United States v. Hearst 
(9th Cir. 1977) 563 F.2d 1331, 1340-1341.)  In the context of the trial, following 
Coffman’s testimony that Marlow killed Murray, Marlow’s testimony denying he 
wanted to kill “anybody” reasonably would have been understood as referring to 
Murray, and it would have been unfair not to permit Coffman and the prosecutor 
to amplify it.  Cross-examination of Marlow concerning the events in Orange 
 
 
83
County, we conclude, thus was relevant and proper, and his purported assertion of 
the privilege was ineffective.19  From this conclusion it follows that the trial court 
did not commit Griffin error (see Griffin v. California, supra, 380 U.S. 609) in 
explaining to the jury the meaning of Marlow’s purported assertions of the 
privilege.  The trial court should not then have instructed the jury with CALJIC 
No. 2.25, or perhaps, on request, should have stricken Marlow’s direct testimony 
regarding his lack of desire to kill anybody.  Nevertheless, we see no reasonable 
probability of a more favorable outcome in the absence of these irregularities, for 
Marlow was not charged in this proceeding with the Orange County offenses, and 
we presume the jury followed the instruction to draw no adverse inferences from 
his assertion of the privilege.  (People v. Boyette, supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 436.)20 
                                             
 
19  
Marlow contends the prosecutor’s questioning concerning the events in 
Orange County was undertaken in bad faith because, following his assertion of the 
privilege, the prosecutor failed to call witnesses to prove he did intend to kill 
Lynell Murray.  (People v. Chojnacky (1973) 8 Cal.3d 759, 766.)  But not only did 
Marlow fail to object on this basis at trial, he does not suggest such proof was 
lacking, and how he might have been prejudiced by the prosecutor’s 
nonpresentation of the proof at this stage of the trial is difficult to conceive. 
20  
Marlow contends his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance in failing 
to object to the trial court’s insistence that Marlow assert his Fifth Amendment 
privilege in front of the jury.  Although permitting the jury to learn that a witness 
has asserted his Fifth Amendment privilege generally serves no legitimate purpose 
(People v. Cudjo (1993) 6 Cal.4th 585, 619), we have concluded that Marlow in 
fact waived his privilege, insofar as the Orange County homicide was concerned, 
by denying any wish to kill anybody.  Marlow further contends counsel rendered 
ineffective assistance in failing to object to the trial court’s informing the jury that, 
each time Marlow asserted the privilege, it was because his answer would tend to 
incriminate him.  Of course, given our conclusion that Marlow waived his 
privilege, the jury properly could have drawn adverse inferences from his refusal 
to answer.  That counsel’s failure to object deprived Marlow of the chance to have 
the trial court make an error in his favor does not constitute prejudice within the 
meaning of Strickland v. Washington, supra, 466 U.S. 668.  (Lockhart v. Fretwell 
(1993) 506 U.S. 364, 369-371.) 
 
(footnote continues on next page) 
 
 
84
 
Marlow further contends that both the prosecutor and Coffman’s counsel 
violated his right against self-incrimination by commenting, in their respective 
summations, on his failure to testify about the Orange County homicide.  (Griffin 
v. California, supra, 380 U.S. 609; People v. Hardy, supra, 2 Cal.4th at p. 157 
[Griffin rule applies to comment by codefendant as well as prosecutor].)  
Specifically, the prosecutor commented:  “Now the abduction out of that 
cleaners—and we have only heard Miss Coffman’s version of it—is that they are 
starting to be a good team.”  Coffman’s counsel stated:  “When you compare what 
Miss Coffman did, and starting at the beginning and recounting and answering 
questions, to what Mr. Marlow did, including picking and choosing what he 
wanted to talk about, I think that the differences are very extreme.  [¶] And I offer 
that as a suggestion to you.  [¶] I do not want to suggest that by exercising his right 
under the Fifth Amendment, that for that reason, you should disregard Mr. 
Marlow’s testimony, because instruction 2.25 indicates that a person has a right to 
rely on that.”  Finally, in his penalty phase closing argument, Coffman’s counsel 
stated:  “Greg Marlow never told the police anything about Lynell Murray.  And 
he took the Fifth Amendment, as I remember, here in court when he was asked 
about what occurred in Orange County.” 
 
Marlow forfeited any appellate challenge to the foregoing comments by 
failing to make a contemporaneous objection at trial or to ask that the jury be 
                                                                                                                                      
 
(footnote continued from previous page) 
 
Marlow also contends that any beneficial result of the giving of CALJIC 
No. 2.25 with respect to his responses to cross-examination concerning the Orange 
County offenses was negated by the instruction on adoptive admissions, CALJIC 
No. 2.71.5.  The latter instruction, however, expressly applies only to offenses for 
which the accused is currently on trial and thus has no direct bearing on the issue 
under discussion. 
 
 
85
appropriately admonished.  (People v. Memro (1995) 11 Cal.4th 786, 873-874.)  
As he contends counsel’s failure to do so constitutes ineffective assistance, we 
turn to the merits of the claim.  Because Marlow’s direct testimony that he did not 
want to kill “anybody” opened the door to cross-examination concerning the 
Orange County offenses, as discussed above, the Fifth Amendment no longer 
shielded him from cross-examination thereon, and both the prosecutor and his 
codefendant’s counsel were free to comment on his silence or failure to explain 
the evidence.  (See Jenkins v. Anderson, supra, 447 U.S. at p. 236; People v. 
Schader, supra, 71 Cal.2d at pp. 770-771; Pen. Code, § 1127; Evid. Code, § 413.)  
Moreover, the remarks by Coffman’s counsel seem aimed not at implying that 
Marlow’s failure to testify concerning Orange County signaled his guilt, but rather 
at suggesting Coffman’s credibility was comparatively strong because she took the 
stand and submitted to cross-examination.  In any event, brief and mild references 
to a defendant’s failure to testify, unaccompanied by any suggestion that the jury 
should draw an inference of guilt from it, are, like the comments Marlow cites, 
generally held to be harmless.  (People v. Ghent (1987) 43 Cal.3d 739, 771.)  We 
see no reason to reach a different conclusion here. 
3.  Coffman’s contentions 
 
Coffman contends the prosecutor’s cross-examination causing Marlow to 
invoke, in front of the jury, his privilege against self-incrimination regarding the 
Orange County crimes, and the prosecutor’s closing argument urging the jury to 
find both defendants guilty on the basis of Marlow’s testimony, improperly invited 
the jury to infer her guilt and thus deprived her of state and federal constitutional 
rights, including those to confrontation, due process and a fair trial.  Coffman’s 
argument is curious, for absent her testimony about the events in Orange County, 
the Murray homicide would not have been mentioned in the guilt phase of this 
trial; Marlow then never would have had occasion to assert his privilege in this 
 
 
86
connection, as he did, moreover, 11 times in response to cross-examination by 
Coffman’s counsel, in addition to numerous instances during cross-examination by 
the prosecutor.  In any event, we conclude any error in Marlow’s cross-
examination was harmless as to Coffman; the jury was instructed, whether or not 
appropriately, with CALJIC No. 2.25 and instructed that questions themselves are 
not evidence.  Presumably, therefore, the jury did not infer that Marlow was 
effectively admitting every incriminatory fact about which her counsel and the 
prosecutor asked him.  We further conclude the portion of the prosecutor’s closing 
argument that Coffman contends was Griffin error21 (see Griffin v. California, 
supra, 380 U.S. 609; People v. Hardy, supra, 2 Cal.4th at p. 154) is reasonably 
understood not as a request to infer that Coffman was guilty because Marlow had 
asserted his Fifth Amendment privilege, but as fair comment on the evidence as it 
related to Coffman. 
F.  Admission of Jailhouse Correspondence 
 
Overruling Coffman’s objection on grounds of Evidence Code section 352, 
the trial court granted Marlow’s motion to admit into evidence seven letters 
Coffman wrote to him while both were incarcerated before trial.  Coffman 
contends the court abused its discretion and violated her state and federal 
constitutional rights in so ruling.  She argues the correspondence, in which she 
expressed love and erotic desire for Marlow and which she occasionally illustrated 
                                             
 
21  
The prosecutor argued:  “[I]nstead of taking the Fifth Amendment, she just 
can’t remember anything she doesn’t want to talk about.  [¶] I think I keep coming 
back to the two sociopath theories and their synergistic [e]ffect on each other, 
because that[’s] what it looks like was going on here.  [¶] These two had an 
[e]ffect on each other, and they appear to have brought out the worst in each other 
when you look at them.  [¶] That’s the dynamics of the relations here.  [¶] Two 
sociopaths put together bring out the worst in each other.” 
 
 
87
with swastikas, lightning bolts and drawings of a sexual nature, as well as a map 
showing the location of her son’s residence, was so prejudicial as to require 
reversal of her conviction.  We find no abuse of discretion and no denial of 
constitutional rights in the admission of the letters. 
 
Evidence Code section 352 permits a trial court, in its discretion, to exclude 
evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the probability that 
its admission will necessitate undue consumption of time or create the substantial 
danger of undue prejudice, of confusing the issues or of misleading the jury.  The 
court’s ruling is reviewed for abuse of discretion.  (People v. Arias (1996) 13 
Cal.4th 92, 155.)  As the trial court reasoned, the letters were probative of the 
nature of defendants’ relationship and relevant to rebut Coffman’s defense that she 
participated in the offenses only because of her fear that Marlow would otherwise 
harm her or her son.  That the letters might have been, as Coffman argues, 
cumulative of Dr. Walker’s testimony pertaining to the cyclic nature of a battering 
relationship does not mean their introduction into evidence necessarily would take 
up too much time or confuse the issues.  Consequently, the trial court did not 
abuse its discretion in admitting the letters.  Inasmuch as Coffman fails to identify 
a meritorious ground for their exclusion, she fails to establish that her trial counsel 
rendered ineffective assistance in this regard. 
G.  Marlow’s Testimony Regarding Coffman’s Participation 
 
Coffman contends that in response to the prosecutor’s cross-examination, 
Marlow gave inadmissible opinion testimony on the central question of her guilt 
and thereby violated her constitutional rights to a fair trial by an impartial jury on 
every element of the charges, to confrontation and cross-examination of adverse 
witnesses, and to a fair and reliable determination of the facts upon which the guilt 
and penalty verdicts were based.  (See Evid. Code, § 800.)  The claim is, in 
substance, one of erroneous admission of evidence, subject to the standard of 
 
 
88
review for claims of state law error.  (See People v. Watson (1956) 46 Cal.2d 818, 
836.)  Coffman forfeited this contention by failing to make a contemporaneous 
objection.  (People v. Brown (2003) 31 Cal.4th 518, 545 [routine application of 
state evidentiary law does not implicate defendant’s constitutional rights]; Evid. 
Code, § 353, subd. (a).)  For the reasons that follow, had Coffman preserved the 
claim, we would conclude the challenged testimony represented not Marlow’s 
opinion of Coffman’s guilt, but rather his own concessions and recollection of 
events. 
 
The prosecutor began his cross-examination of Marlow by reading from 
count 2 of the information, which charged Marlow and Coffman with kidnapping 
Corinna Novis, and asking if the charge were true.  Marlow acknowledged he 
intentionally kidnapped Novis.  The prosecutor continued:  “And your testimony is 
Miss Coffman went along with it all the way and helped you kidnap her, correct?”  
Marlow answered, “That was the reason, to get a car and money to go to Arizona.”  
The prosecutor then read count 3, charging defendants with kidnapping for 
robbery, and asked if the allegation were true.  Marlow’s counsel then objected on 
the basis the question asked for a legal conclusion.  The court overruled the 
objection, noting:  “It is not a legal proposition.  He didn’t ask him if he was 
guilty, he just asked if that statement was true.  [¶] That’s a question of fact.  
[¶] Now, if he asked was he guilty, that’s fine.  You have a good objection.  
[¶] But he is just asking a question of fact whether that . . . is a true statement.”  
Continuing his cross-examination of Marlow, the prosecutor asked:  “Your 
testimony is that when Corinna Novis was kidnapped for purpose of robbery, Miss 
Coffman went along freely and voluntarily; is that correct?”  Marlow answered, 
“She is the one who approached Miss Novis to start with.”  Without objection, the 
prosecutor asked:  “Okay.  In other words, she was an active, willing participant in 
that crime?”  Marlow answered in the affirmative.  The prosecutor then inquired 
 
 
89
about count 4, charging robbery.  “On or about November 7, 1986, in the above 
named judicial district, the crime of robbery in violation of Penal Code section 
211, a felony, was committed by James Gregory Marlow and Cynthia Lynn 
Coffman, who did willfully, unlawfully and by means of force and fear take 
personal property from the personal possession and immediate presence of 
Corinna D. Novis.  [¶] That’s true also, isn’t it?”  Marlow assented.  “You robbed 
Corinna Novis, correct?”  Marlow demurred:  “I didn’t rob her.  I didn’t take 
nothing from her.”  The prosecutor asked:  “A purse, a wallet, a car?”  “Well, a 
car.”  “And a purse?”  “I never took her purse.”  The prosecutor clarified:  “I 
mean, if you and Miss Coffman were operating as a team and she actually took the 
purse instead of you, well—”  “Well, then we both took it,” Marlow replied.  The 
court then sustained Marlow’s counsel’s objection on the basis that the question 
called for a legal conclusion.  The prosecutor resumed:  “During all these crimes, 
were you and Miss Coffman acting as a team?”  Marlow responded affirmatively. 
 
A witness may not express an opinion on a defendant’s guilt.  (People v. 
Torres (1995) 33 Cal.App.4th 37, 47; People v. Brown (1981) 116 Cal.App.3d 
820, 827-829.)  The reason for this rule is not because guilt is the ultimate issue of 
fact for the jury, as opinion testimony often goes to the ultimate issue.  (Torres, 
supra, at p. 47; Brown, supra, at pp. 827-828; see Evid. Code, § 805.)  “Rather, 
opinions on guilt or innocence are inadmissible because they are of no assistance 
to the trier of fact.  To put it another way, the trier of fact is as competent as the 
witness to weigh the evidence and draw a conclusion on the issue of guilt.”  
(Torres, supra, at p. 47.)  Coffman contends the admission of Marlow’s testimony 
regarding her culpability violated these longstanding principles.  She asserts there 
was no foundational showing that Marlow understood the legal definitions of the 
crimes about which he was questioned.  She also asserts Marlow had no basis 
upon which to make any admission or confession of her guilt, and for these 
 
 
90
reasons his testimony was irrelevant.  Coffman further contends that Marlow’s 
status as the only living witness to the crimes, besides herself, rendered his 
testimony highly prejudicial. 
 
We conclude Coffman’s argument lacks merit.  In context, the prosecutor 
was attempting, with some success, to get Marlow to concede the truth of the 
allegations against him and to describe, as a percipient witness, the degree of 
defendants’ coparticipation during the commission of the offenses against Novis.  
We see in Marlow’s testimony the expression of an opinion regarding neither 
Coffman’s guilt nor her credibility or state of mind. 
H.  Impeachment of Veronica Koppers 
1.  Admission of prior inconsistent statements 
 
Marlow’s sister, Veronica Koppers, testified for the prosecution concerning 
events leading up to and immediately following Novis’s murder.  Before 
defendants’ trial, Koppers was herself tried and convicted of being an accessory to 
the kidnapping and robbery of Novis.  While in custody during her own trial, 
Koppers took medications for depression and difficulty sleeping (Elavil and 
Sinequan, respectively); in the present trial, she testified she had problems 
recalling what happened during the period of her incarceration, including the 
substance of her testimony at her own trial.  Finding Koppers was being 
deliberately evasive in stating she did not recall what Marlow was wearing and 
what he had said at the Drinkhouse residence on the night of the offenses and in 
claiming that the transcript of her prior testimony did not refresh her recollection, 
the trial court permitted the prosecutor, over Marlow’s objection, to read 
Koppers’s former testimony to the jury. 
 
Marlow contends the trial court erred in permitting the prosecution to 
impeach Koppers with her former testimony, because the court’s finding of willful 
evasiveness was not supported by substantial evidence.  We find no error. 
 
 
91
 
Evidence Code sections 770 and 1235 except from the general rule against 
hearsay evidence a witness’s prior statement that is inconsistent with the witness’s 
testimony in the present hearing, provided the witness is given the opportunity to 
explain or deny the statement.  (Evid. Code, § 770, subd. (a).)22  “Normally, the 
testimony of a witness that he or she does not remember an event is not 
inconsistent with that witness’s prior statement describing the event.”  (People v. 
Johnson (1992) 3 Cal.4th 1183, 1219.)  When, however, “a witness’s claim of lack 
of memory amounts to deliberate evasion, inconsistency is implied.”  (Ibid.)  The 
trial court had the opportunity to view Koppers’s demeanor and therefore was in 
the best position to assess the credibility of her claimed nonrecollection.  Marlow 
asserts that short-term memory loss is a known side effect of Elavil, but no such 
medical evidence was presented to the trial court in this case.  We find no error in 
the trial court’s ruling in this regard.  Marlow’s derivative claims of constitutional 
error likewise fail. 
2.  Trial court’s refusal to admit Koppers’s prior testimony 
 
Coffman contends the trial court erred in refusing to permit her to impeach 
Koppers with prior inconsistent statements she had made in the course of her own 
criminal trial, and that the error deprived Coffman of her state and federal 
constitutional guarantees including the rights to a fair trial, to confront witnesses 
                                             
 
22  
Evidence Code section 1235 provides:  “Evidence of a statement made by a 
witness is not made inadmissible by the hearsay rule if the statement is 
inconsistent with his testimony at the hearing and is offered in compliance with 
section 770.”  Evidence Code section 770, in turn, provides:  “Unless the interests 
of justice otherwise require, extrinsic evidence of a statement made by a witness 
that is inconsistent with any part of his testimony at the hearing shall be excluded 
unless:  [¶] (a) The witness was so examined while testifying as to give him an 
opportunity to explain or to deny the statement; or [¶] (b) The witness has not been 
excused from giving further testimony in the action.” 
 
 
92
and to reliable determinations of guilt and penalty.  As framed, the contention 
distorts the trial court’s actual ruling.  The court found that Koppers was not 
unavailable as a witness.  It consequently refused to allow a wholesale reading of 
Koppers’s prior testimony, but pledged to continue allowing her impeachment as 
appropriate on further findings that she was feigning loss of memory.  
Additionally, although the court was not then addressing an instance where 
Koppers’s current testimony was directly inconsistent with her prior testimony, 
nothing in its comments suggests it meant to preclude appropriate impeachment in 
such a situation.23 
 
We see no error in the trial court’s ruling.  Coffman fails to establish that 
Koppers’s failures of recollection rendered her unavailable as a witness so as to 
except her former testimony from the operation of the rule against hearsay.  (See 
Evid. Code, § 1291.)  Subject to an exception not relevant here, Evidence Code 
                                             
 
23  
The court stated:  “Incidentally, while we are in session out of the sight and 
hearing of the jury, Mr. Craig had made an objection to the reading of the 
transcript of the testimony of . . .Veronica Koppers.  And I had overruled the 
objection.  [¶] On further thought, I’m going to sustain the objection.  [¶] I do not 
feel in the first place that Miss Veronica Koppers is unavailable as a witness.  She 
did testify to a great many things.  I did [find] previously that her declarations as 
to certain selected questions that she had forgotten or didn’t remember anymore 
was not—were not—those statements were not made in good faith; that she was 
feigning loss of memory; and that it was a very selective loss of memory.  [¶] And 
I did permit impeachment on those particular points and I would continue to 
permit impeachment on any particular point where she has feigned a loss of 
memory, and I find that she was feigning it.  [¶] But, the reading of the transcript 
from her own trial into evidence would not be admissible under any 
circumstances, either for impeachment or were she indeed to be declared an 
unavailable witness.  In neither [sic] case it would not be available, so the 
objection is sustained.”  Coffman’s counsel stated:  “We’ll be introducing 
substantial parts of that, I suppose, now in Miss Coffman’s case.”  The court 
responded:  “If it is offered for impeachment of some statement that her response 
to some question that was asked previously, why, I’ll consider that at the time.” 
 
 
93
section 240, subdivision (a) defines “unavailable as a witness” to mean “that the 
declarant is any of the following:  (1) [e]xempted or precluded on the ground of 
privilege from testifying concerning the matter to which his or her statement is 
relevant[;] [¶] (2) [d]isqualified from testifying to the matter[;] [¶] (3) [d]ead or 
unable to attend or to testify at the hearing because of then existing physical or 
mental illness or infirmity[;] [¶] (4) [a]bsent from the hearing and the court is 
unable to compel his or her attendance by its process[; and] [¶] (5) [a]bsent from 
the hearing and the proponent of his or her statement has exercised reasonable 
diligence but has been unable to procure his or her attendance by the court’s 
process.”  Plainly, Koppers fit none of these categories.  As Coffman observes, 
“California courts have not interpreted Evidence Code sections 240 and 1291 so 
strictly as to preclude unlisted variants of unavailability.  Rather, courts have given 
the statutes a realistic construction consistent with their purpose, i.e., to ensure that 
certain types of hearsay, including former testimony, are admitted only when no 
preferable version of the evidence, in the form of live testimony, is legally and 
physically available.”  (People v. Reed (1996) 13 Cal.4th 217, 226-228.)  From 
this principle, Coffman argues Koppers’s failure to qualify under the specific 
statutory requirements for unavailability does not necessarily compel the 
conclusion she was not unavailable.  Coffman, however, cites no decision 
approving wholesale admission of former testimony in a case like this, where the 
declarant was present on the stand, responded to questions, and was appropriately 
subject to impeachment with prior inconsistent statements from her former 
testimony when she feigned loss of memory.  Indeed, Coffman acknowledges the 
trial court permitted her to impeach Koppers with portions of her former 
testimony, but complains that “due to its brevity, its presentation out of context, 
and the lack of continuity, its meaning was obscured and its import to the jury was 
lost.”  Nothing in the trial court’s ruling, however, foreclosed Coffman from using 
 
 
94
appropriate questions to set context and impart continuity in impeaching 
Koppers’s testimony. 
 
Coffman also complains the trial court erred under Evidence Code sections 
770 and 1235, and the rule in People v. Green (1971) 3 Cal.3d 981, 985, by failing 
to admit Koppers’s prior testimony for the truth of the matters asserted therein.  
Since she cites no specific ruling to this effect, the contention is apparently 
derivative of her broader argument that she should have been allowed to read into 
the record the whole of Koppers’s prior testimony.  It lacks merit for the reasons 
previously discussed. 
I.  Testimony of Dr. Lenore Walker 
1.  Marlow:  Admissibility of opinions; adequacy of limiting instruction 
 
Marlow contends the trial court erred in permitting the jury to consider Dr. 
Walker’s opinion that Coffman was a battered woman in arriving at its verdict 
against him and in failing to instruct, sua sponte, that such opinion was 
inadmissible as to him.  Marlow notes the trial court had instructed the jury, during 
Coffman’s testimony, that all testimony about her relationship with Marlow that 
was not directly related to the offenses against Novis was admissible only with 
respect to Coffman’s state of mind.  When Dr. Walker took the stand, the trial 
court instructed the jury that the evidence Walker had taken into account in 
forming her opinion that Coffman was a battered woman was hearsay as to 
Marlow and therefore inadmissible against him.  Marlow complains, however, that 
the court did not similarly restrict the admissibility of Dr. Walker’s opinions, 
leaving the jury to use those opinions in deciding his guilt or innocence.  Walker’s 
opinions, he argues, as to him essentially constituted bad character evidence, 
which was inadmissible because he had proffered no favorable character evidence.  
(See Evid. Code, §§ 1101, 1102.) 
 
 
95
 
We disagree.  Marlow points to nothing in the court’s instructions expressly 
or impliedly permitting the use of Dr. Walker’s opinions against him.  Even in the 
absence of a contrary instruction, the court repeatedly instructed the jury that 
Coffman’s evidence pertaining to defendants’ relationship that was not directly 
related to the Novis offenses was admissible only as to Coffman’s state of mind.  
Therefore, that the jury employed Dr. Walker’s opinions as a form of bad 
character evidence against Marlow is not reasonably probable.  (People v. Watson, 
supra, 46 Cal.2d at p. 836.)  Any possible inadequacy in the court’s instructions in 
this regard, moreover, appears harmless in light of other instructions the jury 
received, cautioning it as to the limited purpose for which evidence of battered 
woman syndrome was admitted, that the facts underlying hypothetical questions 
asked expert witnesses were not necessarily true, and that the jury could disregard 
any expert opinion it found unreasonable.  (CALJIC Nos. 2.09, 2.80, 2.82 and 
3.32.) 
 
Marlow further contends the admission of Dr. Walker’s opinion that 
Coffman was credible in her accusations against him, and the trial court’s failure 
specifically to instruct the jury that expert testimony is inadmissible to establish 
credibility, violated his rights to due process of law and a reliable penalty 
determination as guaranteed by the federal Constitution.  Marlow enumerates 
some 10 instances in which he asserts Dr. Walker testified that, in her professional 
opinion, Coffman was truthful.24  Trial counsel failed to object to or move to 
strike all but one of these instances, however, and as to the remaining instance the 
                                             
 
24  
Marlow appears to contend that Dr. Walker also improperly rendered an 
opinion as to Coffman’s credibility while testifying about the results of 
standardized psychological testing she had administered to Coffman.  In that 
context, however, Dr. Walker clearly was commenting only on the validity of 
Coffman’s test results, not her general credibility. 
 
 
96
objection was on the ground of lack of foundation rather than that the witness was 
impermissibly rendering an opinion as to Coffman’s credibility.25  Thus, Marlow 
forfeited the claim he now seeks to raise on appeal.  (Evid. Code, § 353, subd. (a); 
People v. Holt (1997) 15 Cal.4th 619, 666.)  Because, however, he asserts counsel 
rendered ineffective assistance in failing to preserve the point, we address its 
substance. 
 
On the merits, the challenged opinion that Coffman was credible should 
have been excluded on a proper objection.  The general rule is that an expert may 
not give an opinion whether a witness is telling the truth, for the determination of 
credibility is not a subject sufficiently beyond common experience that the 
expert’s opinion would assist the trier of fact; in other words, the jury generally is 
as well equipped as the expert to discern whether a witness is being truthful.  
(Evid. Code, § 801, subd. (a); see People v. Cole (1956) 47 Cal.2d 99, 103.)  Thus, 
we have held that a psychological expert may not testify about rape trauma 
                                             
 
25  
On one additional occasion, Marlow’s counsel joined in an objection by 
Coffman’s counsel to the prosecutor’s asking Dr. Walker, concerning an incident 
at the Taco Bell restaurant described differently by Coffman and another witness, 
“In your expert opinion, who is telling the truth?”  Coffman’s counsel asked, 
“Your honor, isn’t that . . . something that this jury is here to perform, to 
determine the credibility and veracity of witnesses?”  The trial court overruled the 
objection, commenting:  “Most everything this witness has said is something the 
jury is here to determine.”  Whether Coffman’s objection was founded on the 
principle that an expert may not express an opinion on a witness’s veracity, or 
instead on the long-abrogated rule that an opinion may not be received on the 
ultimate issue before the jury, is unclear.  (See Evid. Code, § 805 [“Testimony in 
the form of an opinion that is otherwise admissible is not objectionable because it 
embraces the ultimate issue to be decided by the trier of fact”].)  Absent a better 
understanding of the basis for the court’s ruling, we find it difficult to accept 
Marlow’s contention that to have repeated the objection upon other instances of 
Dr. Walker’s expressing an opinion on Coffman’s credibility would have been 
futile. 
 
 
97
syndrome, a condition analogous to battered woman syndrome, in order to prove 
that a rape actually occurred, although such testimony is admissible to rehabilitate 
the credibility of the complaining witness against a suggestion that her behavior 
after the assault—such as a delay in reporting it—was inconsistent with her claim 
of having been raped.  (People v. Bledsoe (1984) 36 Cal.3d 236, 247-248, 251; see 
also People v. McAlpin (1991) 53 Cal.3d 1289, 1300 [expert testimony pertaining 
to failure of parent of child molestation victim to report abuse].)  On a number of 
occasions in the present case, rather than merely explaining, with reference to her 
expert knowledge, certain aspects of Coffman’s behavior that a layperson might 
find irreconcilable with her claim to have been battered, Dr. Walker testified she 
believed Coffman’s claims of abuse and domination by Marlow were true.26  To 
this extent, a timely and specific objection probably should have been sustained. 
 
Assuming error in the admission of Dr. Walker’s opinions concerning 
Coffman’s credibility, we nevertheless conclude Marlow did not suffer prejudice.  
                                             
 
26  
Examples include the following statements and exchanges: 
 
“Q. [Prosecutor:]  Do you believe Coffman was telling you the truth during 
your interviews?  [¶] A. Well, again, in the way I [sic] that I measure truth, I think 
she told them as she knew it.” 
 
“[I]n my professional opinion, Mr. Marlow was indeed in control of Cindy 
Coffman, and I think that’s what she told.  She told it consistently to the police, to 
me, to this jury, and I believe it.” 
 
“[P]sychologists are trained to look for whether people are lying or are 
telling you the truth . . . .  [¶] We’re looking for reliability, we’re looking for 
validity and of that kind of consistency in the patterns, and then compare that with 
what I know and studied about human behavior.  And that’s the way I make those 
kinds of judgments.  [¶] And in my judgment, she was not lying about what 
happened to her.” 
 
“Q. [Coffman’s counsel:]  [D]o you feel that Miss Coffman was, generally 
speaking, a credible reporter to you as to really what was going on about the things 
that you were asking her about Mr. Marlow?  [¶] . . .  [¶] A. Yes.  I do.”   
 
 
98
Marlow, of course, was not charged with any offense against Coffman, nor was 
Dr. Walker’s testimony offered to vouch for the credibility of Coffman’s 
testimony regarding Marlow’s role in the offenses against Corinna Novis; rather, 
her testimony was offered to support Coffman’s defense that, by virtue of the 
coercion exerted by Marlow’s physical and psychological abuse, as reflected in the 
diagnosis of battered woman syndrome, she lacked the intent to kill.  The trial 
court, moreover, instructed the jury during Dr. Walker’s direct testimony that it 
could consider the evidence concerning battered woman syndrome only in 
evaluating Coffman’s defense, not against Marlow.  We presume the jury followed 
this instruction.  (See People v. Sanchez (1995) 12 Cal.4th 1, 79 [jury presumed to 
follow instruction pertaining to sentencing factors].)  We see no reasonable 
likelihood the jury would have understood the instruction to preclude it from 
considering against Marlow only the facts underlying Dr. Walker’s opinion, not 
the opinion itself.  (People v. Cain (1995) 10 Cal.4th 1, 48.)  For these reasons, 
and because the jury was instructed with CALJIC No. 3.32, cautioning that 
evidence of battered woman syndrome could be considered only for the limited 
purpose of showing Coffman’s mental state, we reject Marlow’s additional 
contention that Dr. Walker’s opinion that Coffman was a battered woman and 
incapable of forming the intent to kill was improper bad character evidence against 
Marlow.  (See Evid. Code, § 1101, subd. (a).)  The jury, moreover, also received 
the standard instructions that it was not bound by an expert’s opinion and could 
disregard any opinion found to be unreasonable, and that they were the sole judges 
of the credibility of a witness and the weight to be accorded his or her testimony.  
(CALJIC Nos. 2.80, 2.20.)  Marlow acknowledges that a trial court generally has 
no sua sponte duty to give an instruction limiting the purpose for which evidence 
is received (see People v. Collie (1981) 30 Cal.3d 43, 64); he fails to persuade us 
 
 
99
to hold to the contrary with respect to an instruction that Dr. Walker’s opinion 
should not be used in assessing Coffman’s credibility. 
 
In sum, despite the admission into evidence of Dr. Walker’s opinion 
concerning Coffman’s credibility, reversal is not required.  Marlow’s related claim 
of ineffective assistance of counsel and his derivative claims of federal 
constitutional error likewise must fail. 
2.  Coffman:  Prosecutorial misconduct in cross-examination of Dr. 
Walker 
 
Coffman contends the prosecutor improperly cross-examined Dr. Walker, 
over objection and a motion for mistrial, by using hypothetical questions contrary 
to the evidence, by applying unreasonable, prejudicial assumptions regarding 
Robin Long’s statements, and by asking a prejudicial question regarding an 
excerpt of a draft report that implied Coffman was malingering.  Acknowledging 
these asserted errors implicate state evidentiary rules in the first instance, Coffman 
contends they also violated her federal and state constitutional rights to due 
process, equal protection and a fair trial before an impartial jury, as well as the 
rights to present a defense, to the effective assistance of counsel and to a reliable 
determination of guilt and penalty.  We conclude the challenged questions 
constituted proper cross-examination as to the bases of Dr. Walker’s opinions 
(Evid. Code, § 721, subd. (a)); hence, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in 
allowing the questioning, and Coffman’s derivative claims of constitutional error 
likewise fail.  (See People v. Hendricks (1988) 44 Cal.3d 635, 642.) 
 
Coffman first contends the prosecutor engaged in misconduct by asking Dr. 
Walker whether convincing physical evidence that it took more than one person to 
kill Novis would alter her opinion regarding Coffman’s mental state at the time of 
the offense.  After Coffman’s counsel unsuccessfully objected that the question 
assumed facts not in evidence, Dr. Walker denied that such evidence, without 
 
 
100
more, would change her opinion.  We see no impropriety in the hypothetical 
question, which was predicated on the forensic evidence showing dirt in the back 
of Novis’s mouth, which in turn suggested that two persons might have 
participated in the killing (one strangling the victim while the other held her prone 
on the ground).  Because the trial court instructed the jury on the definition of a 
hypothetical question and reminded it of its role as the arbiter of fact and its 
obligation to consider whether the facts supporting the question had been 
adequately proven, Coffman could not have been prejudiced by any lack of 
foundation for the question. 
 
Coffman asserts a further instance of misconduct in the prosecutor’s cross-
examining of Dr. Walker, to whom Coffman had denied being present while 
Marlow was killing Novis, regarding Coffman’s inconsistent statements to Robin 
Long, who had not yet testified at the time of Walker’s testimony.  The trial court 
overruled Coffman’s objection, admonishing the jury not to consider the evidence 
unless it ultimately found the foundational facts had been proven.  Dr. Walker 
again denied that such evidence, without more, would alter her opinion, 
specifically noting she viewed Long’s reliability as questionable.  For the same 
reasons why the hypothetical question discussed above was proper, we conclude 
the prosecutor engaged in no misconduct in asking Dr. Walker about statements 
Robin Long was expected to testify Coffman had made to her, statements that 
were inconsistent with those Coffman had made to Dr. Walker and on which 
Walker testified she had relied in forming her opinion. 
 
We see no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s rulings.  An expert witness 
may be cross-examined on, among other subjects, the matter upon which his or her 
opinion is based and the reasons for the opinion, including any statements by the 
defendant that formed the basis for the expert’s opinion.  (Evid. Code, § 721, subd. 
(a); People v. Coleman (1989) 48 Cal.3d 112, 151-152.)  Because Dr. Walker 
 
 
101
acknowledged that she had relied on Coffman’s own statements about the abuse 
Marlow allegedly inflicted on her and her involvement in the charged offenses in 
forming her opinion concerning Coffman’s mental state, the prosecutor was 
entitled on cross-examination to explore Coffman’s inconsistent statements to 
others, including Long.  And because forensic evidence, including the 
pathologist’s testimony that dirt was found in the back of Novis’s mouth, 
suggested that more than one person may have participated in the actual killing, 
contrary to Coffman’s testimony that she did not take part in or witness the killing, 
we reject Coffman’s argument that the prosecutor’s hypothetical questions were 
merely designed to inflame the jury without regard to the evidence.  Coffman’s 
purely derivative constitutional claims likewise must fail. 
 
Finally, Coffman complains of misconduct in the prosecutor’s cross-
examination of Dr. Walker concerning Coffman’s expressed desire, noted in 
Walker’s draft report to Coffman’s counsel, to marry Marlow so they could die 
together in the gas chamber holding hands.  No objection was made at the time; 
later, after the jury was dismissed for the day, Coffman’s counsel stated he had 
refrained from objecting at the time in order to avoid drawing attention to the 
comment and because he acknowledged the comment was part of Walker’s 
interview with Coffman and thus a proper subject of cross-examination.  Counsel 
suggested, however, that the jury be admonished not to consider penalty at that 
point.  The following morning, outside the presence of the jury, counsel for both 
defendants moved for a mistrial, contending the prosecutor had misused the 
excerpt from Dr. Walker’s report by inappropriately injecting the question of 
penalty into the guilt phase.  The trial court denied the motion, reasoning the 
circumstances surrounding the comment and the purpose of the question were 
clear to the jury:  “[T]o again probe the expert witness as to her reasons for her 
testimony as to Miss Coffman’s intentions and feelings in this case.  [¶] It was one 
 
 
102
of the things that was considered by the expert and I think was an appropriate 
thing to inquire about.  [¶] It was not emphasized in any way.  There was no undue 
importance given to it.  Just one of the things indicating her close relationship and 
feelings about Mr. Marlow at the time she was being questioned and also her sense 
of guilt or remorse or lack of either.”  Counsel for defendants apparently did not 
pursue their suggestion that the jury be instructed to give no consideration 
whatsoever to penalty at this phase of the trial, as such an instruction was not 
given despite the prosecutor’s and the court’s acquiescence therein. 
 
There was nothing improper about the challenged cross-examination.  As 
respondent points out, Dr. Walker acknowledged relying on Coffman’s statements 
in forming her opinion regarding Coffman’s mental state at the time of the offense, 
and the prosecutor therefore was entitled to question her regarding the bases of 
that opinion.  (Evid. Code, § 721, subd. (a).)  Nor were the prosecutor’s questions 
unduly prejudicial. 
J.  Other Asserted Instance of Ineffective Assistance of Counsel 
(Coffman) 
 
In addition to the instances of alleged ineffective assistance of counsel 
addressed above in connection with other substantive claims of error, Coffman 
contends her trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance in putting before the 
jury, during the guilt phase, otherwise inadmissible evidence of her involvement in 
the Kentucky and Orange County murders.  Although she acknowledges counsel 
had a purpose for introducing the evidence—to show that Marlow had compelled 
Coffman to participate in murders for which she lacked criminal intent or malice 
aforethought, and in which she participated only as a result of battered woman 
syndrome—Coffman now urges this court to hold that, under the circumstances of 
this case, “this totally misguided tactical decision” constituted ineffective 
assistance of counsel requiring reversal of the judgment. 
 
 
103
 
“ ‘ “Reviewing courts defer to counsel’s reasonable tactical decisions in 
examining a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel [citation], and there is a 
‘strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of 
reasonable professional assistance.’ ”  [Citations.]  “[W]e accord great deference 
to counsel’s tactical decisions” [citation], and we have explained that “courts 
should not second-guess reasonable, if difficult, tactical decisions in the harsh 
light of hindsight” [citation].  “Tactical errors are generally not deemed reversible, 
and counsel’s decisionmaking must be evaluated in the context of the available 
facts.” ’ ”  (People v. Jones (2003) 29 Cal.4th 1229, 1254.) 
 
Introducing, in Coffman’s defense case, the evidence of her involvement in 
the Kentucky and Orange County murders was a tactic that, while not risk-free, 
offered the hope of countering the prosecution’s strong proof that Coffman was 
guilty of intentionally murdering Corinna Novis.  To hold that counsel rendered 
ineffective assistance in doing so would merely be to second-guess this decision 
with the benefit of hindsight.  We will not do so. 
K.  Sufficiency of Evidence 
 
Defendants each challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the 
verdicts and findings as to various charges and special circumstances.  “In 
reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to support a judgment of conviction, we 
examine the entire record in the light most favorable to the prosecution, presuming 
in support of the judgment the existence of every fact the trier could reasonably 
deduce from the evidence, to determine whether a rational trier of fact could have 
found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.”  (People v. Hayes (1990) 
52 Cal.3d 577, 631.)  State and federal due process requirements are identical in 
this regard.  (People v. Rowland (1992) 4 Cal.4th 238, 269.)   
 
We examine defendants’ arguments individually. 
 
 
104
1.  Sufficiency of evidence that Marlow committed burglary special 
circumstance, sodomy, and sodomy special circumstance 
 
Marlow first contends that no evidence supported the prosecution’s theory 
of burglary, namely that Novis was alive when defendants entered her apartment 
or that they formed the intent to commit burglary before she died.  The prosecutor 
noted the absence of any signs of forced entry into Novis’s apartment, arguing 
based on this circumstance that defendants must have entered using a key while 
Novis was still alive.  Marlow argues the argument lacks any foundation in logic.  
Therefore, Marlow contends, the burglary special-circumstance finding must be 
reversed. 
 
The felony-murder special circumstance applies to a murder committed 
while the defendant was engaged in, or was an accomplice in the commission of, 
the attempted commission of, or the immediate flight after committing or 
attempting to commit, various enumerated felonies, including, as relevant here, 
burglary.  (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(17).)  A strict causal or temporal relationship 
between the felony and the murder is not required; what is required is proof 
beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant intended to commit the felony at the 
time he killed the victim and that the killing and the felony were part of one 
continuous transaction.  (People v. Gutierrez, supra, 28 Cal.4th at p. 1141; People 
v. Hayes, supra, 52 Cal.3d at pp. 631-632.)  Additionally, in this Carlos-era case, 
the prosecution was required to prove that defendants intended to kill the victim.  
(See Carlos v. Superior Court (1983) 35 Cal.3d 131, 135; People v. Anderson 
(1987) 43 Cal.3d 1104, 1139-1140 [overruling Carlos]; People v. Duncan (1991) 
53 Cal.3d 955, 973, fn. 4 [holding Anderson could not be applied retroactively].) 
 
The jury in this case easily could conclude that defendants had formed the 
intent to commit burglary before Novis was killed.  In particular, the evidence 
showed that Novis’s apartment was difficult to find, and the glove box of her car 
 
 
105
contained a map of the area where she lived, with the location of her apartment 
circled.  This suggested that Novis told defendants where she lived (and, likely, 
that she lived alone, enabling defendants to enter without fear of discovery by a 
roommate).  Evidence concerning the answering machine stolen by defendants 
also supports the jury’s verdict on the burglary charge:  Coffman and Marlow left 
the Drinkhouse residence with Novis around 9:00 p.m., and a friend of Novis’s 
who telephoned her around 10:00 p.m. testified the answering machine failed to 
pick up her call, suggesting that the machine had been disconnected and stolen by 
that time.  Defendants’ theory was that, in less than an hour after leaving the 
Drinkhouse residence, they left Novis in a Fontana vineyard, then drove to the 
Robbeloth residence in Colton where Marlow changed his clothes, then went to a 
First Interstate Bank branch and discovered they were unable to access Novis’s 
account because she had given them the wrong PIN, whereupon they for the first 
time decided to go to Novis’s apartment in Redlands to search for the correct PIN.  
The jury was not required to accept defendants’ version of these events.  Rather, 
from the objective evidence before it, the jury rationally could conclude 
defendants formed the intent to commit burglary before murdering Novis and 
committed both crimes as part of a continuous transaction. 
 
Marlow also contends the evidence was insufficient to establish the element 
of penetration necessary to sustain the sodomy conviction and related special 
circumstance.  (§ 286.)  The evidence bearing on sodomy came in part from the 
testimony of the pathologist, Dr. Gregory Reiber.  Dr. Reiber’s examination 
discovered sperm heads in the victim’s rectum.  The sperm could have been placed 
there from 24 hours to perhaps as long as 96 hours prior to the victim’s death.  
There was no evidence of injury or tearing of the outside of the anus, which 
although not dispositive was consistent with consensual as opposed to forcible 
sodomy.  No ABO typing or other testing was done to compare Marlow’s blood or 
 
 
106
genetic characteristics with those of the sperm found in the victim.  Marlow’s 
expert pathologist, Dr. Robert Bucklin, testified, based on his review of the 
medical records and other testimony, that the lack of trauma to the victim’s anus 
tended to indicate that no penetration had taken place and that the sperm had been 
deposited through some other means, such as withdrawal of the penis from the 
vagina after ejaculation. 
 
The pathologists’ testimony regarding the presence of sperm in the victim’s 
rectum was sufficient to establish the element of penetration.  Their testimony, 
moreover, cannot be read in isolation from the circumstances surrounding the 
offense.  Corinna Novis was abducted and forced to accompany defendants to the 
Drinkhouse residence.  When Drinkhouse protested and expressed concern about 
his own liability, Marlow told him not to worry, stating, “How is she going to talk 
to anybody if she’s under a pile of rocks?”  Drinkhouse heard the shower running 
and then stop, after which Marlow emerged from the bedroom dressed only in 
trousers.  Later, a wet-haired Novis was led, handcuffed and with duct tape across 
her mouth, from the Drinkhouse residence by Marlow and Coffman.  Thus, the 
evidence—reflecting that defendants maintained control over an unwilling Novis 
and that Marlow took her into the shower and later killed her, coupled with the 
pathologists’ testimony, clearly supported the jury’s conclusion that Marlow 
committed a forcible sodomy.  Moreover, the sodomy special circumstance is 
satisfied by an attempt to commit sodomy, which in turn consists of acts falling 
short of actual penetration so long as the perpetrator has done more than mere 
preparation.  (People v. Hart (1999) 20 Cal.4th 546, 610; see People v. Kipp 
(1998) 18 Cal.4th 349, 377 [attempted oral copulation].)  We have no doubt the 
evidence here supported the jury’s finding on the sodomy special circumstance. 
 
 
 
107
2.  Sufficiency of evidence of special circumstances as to Coffman at 
close of prosecution’s case-in-chief; trial court’s failure to dismiss 
felony-murder charge on Coffman’s motion pursuant to section 
1118.1 
 
Coffman moved for acquittal at the close of the prosecution’s case on the 
ground of insufficient evidence to support the sodomy and burglary special-
circumstance allegations.  (§ 1118.1.)  She now asserts error in the trial court’s 
adverse ruling and its failure to dismiss the felony-murder and all special 
circumstance allegations.  The test applied by the trial court in ruling on a motion 
for acquittal is the same test applied by the appellate court in reviewing a 
conviction for sufficiency of the evidence, namely, to determine whether from the 
evidence then in the record, including reasonable inferences to be drawn 
therefrom, there is substantial evidence of the existence of every element of the 
offense charged.  (People v. Cuevas (1995) 12 Cal.4th 252, 261; People v. Trevino 
(1985) 39 Cal.3d 667, 695, disapproved on another ground in People v. Johnson 
(1989) 47 Cal.3d 1194, 1220-1221.)  Coffman first contends there was no 
substantial evidence that she intended to kill Novis, as required in this Carlos-era 
case (see Carlos v. Superior Court, supra, 35 Cal.3d at p. 135; People v. 
Anderson, supra, 43 Cal.3d at pp. 1139-1140 [overruling Carlos]; People v. 
Duncan, supra, 53 Cal.3d at p. 973, fn. 4 [holding Anderson could not be applied 
retroactively]), and that the trial court therefore erred in failing to dismiss the 
special circumstance allegations pursuant to section 1118.1.27  We are 
                                             
 
27  
Section 1118.1 provides in pertinent part:  “In a case tried before a jury, the 
court on motion of the defendant or on its own motion, at the close of the evidence 
on either side and before the case is submitted to the jury for decision, shall order 
the entry of a judgment of acquittal of one or more of the offenses charged in the 
accusatory pleading if the evidence then before the court is insufficient to sustain a 
conviction of such offense or offenses on appeal.”  At the conclusion of the 
prosecution’s case, Coffman moved, under section 1118.1, to dismiss only the 
 
(footnote continues on next page) 
 
 
108
unpersuaded.  The prosecution’s evidence of Coffman’s participation in the crimes 
was sufficient to permit the trial court to reasonably find that Coffman knew of 
and shared Marlow’s intent to kill Novis in order to eliminate the witness to their 
crimes.  The evidence included, among other acts, Coffman’s leading Novis into a 
bedroom at the Drinkhouse residence; standing guard while Novis was handcuffed 
to a bedpost; alerting Marlow to Drinkhouse’s behavior suggesting he might be 
trying to leave the house while defendants were holding Novis and trying to obtain 
her PIN; emerging, in changed clothing, from the bedroom where Novis was being 
held, which was adjacent to the bathroom in which the shower had been heard to 
run during this period; leading the handcuffed Novis, whose hair was wet and 
whose mouth was taped shut, from the Drinkhouse residence; and driving Marlow 
and Novis in Novis’s car to the vineyard where the body was found.  Testimony 
that the date of Novis’s death could be estimated only within a five- or six-day 
span, and the evidence that sperm can be preserved in a living person for up to 96 
hours, neither undermined the prosecution’s case nor dictated a contrary verdict.  
                                                                                                                                      
 
(footnote continued from previous page) 
sodomy and burglary special circumstances.  On appeal, Coffman renews her 
challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence of the special circumstances and 
contends her trial counsel was ineffective in not also seeking dismissal of the 
robbery and kidnapping special circumstances.  Coffman further contends the trial 
court has a sua sponte obligation, whenever counsel makes a limited motion under 
section 1118.1, to review the prosecution’s case at its conclusion for evidentiary 
sufficiency and to dismiss any inadequately supported charge or special allegation, 
regardless of whether the defendant specifically moved for dismissal of that 
particular charge or allegation.  Because, as we shall conclude, the record at the 
close of the prosecution’s case adequately supported each of the special 
circumstance allegations, we need not address whether the trial court has such an 
obligation, and trial counsel was not ineffective in failing to move for dismissal of 
the robbery and kidnapping special circumstances.  (See People v. Smith (1998) 64 
Cal.App.4th 1458, 1464.) 
 
 
109
The record at the conclusion of the prosecution’s case thus contains substantial 
evidence of Coffman’s participation, with the required intent, in the murder and 
each of the felonies underlying the special circumstance findings.  Even were we 
to agree with Coffman that the trial court erred in denying her motion to dismiss 
the sodomy special circumstance for insufficient evidence at the close of the 
prosecution’s case, reversal of the remainder of the judgment would not be 
required, as the evidence more than sufficed to support the remaining special 
circumstance allegations at the time of the court’s ruling. 
 
Coffman further argues the evidence showed two kidnap offenses, one 
involving bringing Novis from the mall to the Drinkhouse residence and the other 
taking her from the residence to the vineyard.  She urges that the first kidnapping 
was not part of a continuous transaction with the killing because it was a 
kidnapping for robbery completed at the time of their arrival at the residence and 
that the second kidnapping was incidental to the killing and thus cannot support a 
felony-murder-kidnap special circumstance.  To the contrary:  Based on the 
evidence presented to it, the jury could reasonably conclude that defendants 
murdered Novis to advance the underlying felonious purposes of kidnapping, 
robbery, burglary and sexual assault, none of which was merely incidental to the 
murder.  Although Coffman relies on People v. Ford (1966) 65 Cal.2d 41, 
overruled on other grounds in People v. Satchell (1971) 6 Cal.3d 28, 35, that case 
is not on point.  In that case, the defendant shot a deputy sheriff who had stopped 
his car, which defendant had been driving aimlessly for several hours after a 
reported robbery.  This court concluded that insufficient evidence supported a 
conviction of felony murder because the robbery and escape from it did not 
motivate the defendant’s conduct in killing the officer.  (Id. at p. 57.)  Here, as 
respondent argues, the evidence clearly showed the murder was committed to 
facilitate and conceal the other offenses. 
 
 
110
 
Coffman additionally contends that the prosecution’s theory of the case, 
supported by the testimony of Robin Long, was that the robbery and burglary were 
complete before the commission of the murder, that after committing the robbery 
and burglary, but before the killing, defendants had reached a place of temporary 
safety, and that the robbery and burglary hence were not part of one continuous 
transaction with the killing for purposes of the felony-murder rule.  (See People v. 
Hayes, supra, 52 Cal.3d at pp. 631-632.)  As discussed above in connection with 
Marlow’s similar claim, we reject Coffman’s initial premise.  On the evidence 
presented to it, the jury could reasonably have believed defendants formulated the 
intent to commit burglary before killing Novis and carried out the burglary after 
doing so. 
L.  Asserted Prosecutorial Misconduct in Guilt Phase Argument 
 
Coffman contends the prosecutor engaged in a pattern of misconduct during 
his guilt phase summation by misstating the law, impugning the integrity of 
defense counsel, and arguing that evidence of other bad acts by Coffman, 
indicating her criminal disposition, proved her guilt of the present charges.  The 
misconduct, she asserts, denied her due process, a fair trial and a reliable 
determination of the facts in a capital trial in violation of her rights under the Fifth, 
Sixth, Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the federal Constitution and their 
state constitutional analogues.  The claim is, in substance, one of deprivation of 
due process under the Fourteenth Amendment. 
 
A prosecutor’s conduct violates the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal 
Constitution when it “infects the trial with such unfairness as to make the 
conviction a denial of due process.”  (People v. Morales (2001) 25 Cal.4th 34, 44; 
accord, Darden v. Wainwright (1986) 477 U.S. 168, 181; Donnelly v. 
DeChristoforo (1974) 416 U.S. 637, 643.)  In other words, the misconduct must be 
“of sufficient significance to result in the denial of the defendant’s right to a fair 
 
 
111
trial.”  (United States v. Agurs (1976) 427 U.S. 97, 108 [addressing prosecutorial 
duty of disclosure].)  A prosecutor’s conduct “ ‘that does not render a criminal 
trial fundamentally unfair’ ” violates California law “ ‘only if it involves “ ‘the use 
of deceptive or reprehensible methods to attempt to persuade either the court or 
the jury.’ ” ’ ”  (People v. Farnam (2002) 28 Cal.4th 107, 167.) 
 
Turning to the specific claims of misconduct, we note that, at trial, Coffman 
failed to object or seek an admonition with respect to four of the five instances of 
improper argument she cites in her brief.  As to those four instances, she therefore 
has forfeited her claims for purposes of this appeal.  (People v. Frye (1998) 18 
Cal.4th 894, 970.)  She asserts, however, that counsel’s failure to object 
constituted ineffective assistance.  In any event, we find no prejudicial 
misconduct. 
 
First, Coffman claims the prosecutor misstated the law of robbery in 
arguing he had proven defendants guilty of murder committed in the course of that 
crime.  Responding to defendants’ arguments that Novis was killed after the 
underlying felonies were completed, the prosecutor sought to convey that the 
evidence sufficed for a finding that defendants had formed the intent to commit 
those felonies, as required for the special circumstances alleged in this case, before 
the murder.  As the prosecutor argued:  “The essence of these special 
circumstances is that the murder itself must be to facilitate the underlying crimes 
of burglary, robbery, kidnapping, but it doesn’t have to happen simultaneously.  
[¶] If the decision was in the mind of the perpetrator of the crimes that it would 
help them get away with the crime by murdering this person, the special 
circumstances is [sic] satisfied.  It doesn’t matter when they are murdered.”  The 
prosecutor proceeded to give a hypothetical example of a murder committed 
during the course of a robbery and went on to argue:  “If you determine, as the 
evidence makes abundantly clear, that Corinna Novis was killed to eliminate her 
 
 
112
as a witness, to kidnap for robbery[,] for burglary and for sodomy, that is a murder 
during the course of those crimes.  [¶] Pure and simple.  You can’t have a purer 
example of killing somebody to facilitate the commission of the crime.  [¶] . . .  
[¶] We had kind of an example of that in this case and it related to Corinna 
Novis’s checks.  [¶] From the evidence, when Corinna is kidnapped they probably 
take her purse with the checks in them pretty quickly.  You can assume the checks 
were in her purse.  [¶] Corinna gets killed the night they take her.  But when is the 
robbery involving the checks actually completed?  Isn’t it actually completed days 
later when the checks are forged and they pass the checks to get the money?  That 
is what they really want.  [¶] You see, here is a case where they have killed 
Corinna a couple of days before they actually complete that part of the robbery 
they were intending.  But because the thought was we are going to take all of her 
money, it doesn’t matter they killed her a couple of days before the checks were 
cashed.  Same principle applies to the burglary.” 
 
The prosecutor’s remarks, taken in context, somewhat inartfully urged the 
jury to find that defendants formed the intent to rob Novis before killing her, even 
though they did not obtain all the fruits of the crime until after the killing.  The 
jury, moreover, was correctly instructed with the elements of robbery and with the 
proposition that any statement by an attorney inconsistent with the court’s 
instructions as to the law must be disregarded.  Consequently, there was no 
reasonable likelihood any juror would have applied the prosecutor’s comments 
erroneously.  (People v. Frye, supra, 18 Cal.4th at p. 970.) 
 
Next, Coffman complains the prosecutor improperly urged the jury to 
categorically refuse to consider defendants’ testimony and to summarily convict 
them because their respective testimony was mutually irreconcilable.  She further 
contends the prosecutor’s argument for conviction illogically relied on admissions 
contained in the very testimony he was urging the jury to disregard.  Contrary to 
 
 
113
Coffman’s argument, no misconduct appears, as the prosecutor was merely asking 
the jury to conclude that both defendants had been willfully false in a material part 
of their testimony and therefore the jury should reject their conflicting testimony 
and rely on the objective evidence supporting a determination of their guilt of the 
charged offenses.  We see no reasonable likelihood any juror would have 
misunderstood the argument in the manner Coffman suggests.  (People v. Frye, 
supra, 18 Cal.4th at p. 970; see CALJIC No. 2.21.2.) 
 
Coffman further argues that the prosecutor engaged in misconduct by 
urging conviction based on defendants’ other bad acts, as reflected in the 
uncharged Kentucky and Orange County killings.28  Both she and Marlow 
objected to the prosecutor’s reference to the other crimes on the basis the evidence 
of those crimes had been admitted, and the jury had been instructed to consider it, 
only as it related to Coffman’s defense of coercion.  Marlow moved for a mistrial; 
Coffman joined in the motion, which the court denied, reasoning:  “The only use 
of argument was for the purpose of showing the relationship between the two 
parties and how they worked together, rather than one under the influence of the 
other.  [¶] That was the purpose for which that evidence was introduced.  The 
argument was appropriate.”  As the trial court reasoned, the prosecutor’s remarks, 
in context, did not urge a finding of guilt based on defendants’ other bad acts or 
criminal disposition, but instead properly suggested that each defendant bore 
responsibility for the crimes because neither acted under the other’s coercion. 
 
Coffman additionally cites as misconduct the prosecutor’s reference to the 
testimony of the Taco Bell employee who testified Coffman had reacted violently 
                                             
 
28  
In essence, the prosecutor argued that neither defendant coerced the other; 
rather they were two sociopaths “whose synergetic effect on each other produced a 
violent crime spree.” 
 
 
114
when told the restaurant was closed; the prosecutor commented that Coffman on 
that occasion appeared “mad, angry, violent, pushy.”  Contrary to Coffman’s 
argument, the quoted characterization of her behavior hardly amounts to an 
implication that she was of a criminal disposition.  And the prosecutor’s reference 
to Coffman’s antisocial conduct before she met Marlow (carrying a gun and trying 
to run down Doug Huntley while living in Arizona) clearly comprised part of his 
argument that she was not the sort who is “dominated by any man as she’s 
suggesting.  [¶] She can take care of herself.”  Because there is no reasonable 
likelihood the jury would have misapplied the prosecutor’s argument in the 
manner Coffman contends, no misconduct appears. 
 
Coffman also asserts the prosecutor impugned the integrity of defense 
counsel by depicting the duress and battered woman syndrome defense as 
manufactured by defense counsel together with the defense expert, Dr. Walker.  
The prosecutor commented:  “If you look at statements to the police, all of Miss 
Coffman’s conduct before Mr. Jordan [her defense counsel] and Dr. Walker come 
on the case, you just don’t see the picture of this battered woman, desperately 
battered woman.  [¶] Once Dr. Walker and Mr. Jordan come on the case—. . . .  
That’s when Miss Coffman decides she is the battered woman.”  Respondent 
argues, to the contrary, the prosecutor’s point was that Coffman, “on her own, 
amplified her claims of abuse” when she learned in the course of preparing a 
defense that it would be advantageous to do so.  In our view, the prosecutor’s 
argument is susceptible of either interpretation.  Nevertheless, were we to address 
the merits of the contention despite the want of an objection below, we would 
conclude any misconduct was harmless, given the fleeting nature of the comment 
and the overwhelming weight of the evidence against Coffman. 
 
Coffman additionally argues the prosecutor misstated to the jury crucial 
items of evidence.  Specifically, she complains, the prosecutor attributed planning 
 
 
115
activity, including donning attractive clothing before going to the Redlands Mall 
to abduct Novis and securing a gun and handcuffs from the Koppers residence and 
Paul Koppers’s truck, to both Coffman and Marlow although, Coffman asserts, it 
was Marlow alone who engaged in or directed that activity.  The prosecutor also 
allegedly misstated the evidence when he asserted, in support of the burglary 
special circumstance, that defendants intended to burglarize Novis’s apartment 
before they killed her when, according to Coffman, no evidence supported the 
assertion.  The prosecutor further allegedly misstated the testimony of the 
pathologist, Dr. Reiber, in urging the jury to conclude that three hands were 
needed to strangle Novis and inaccurately stated “they” (inferentially, both 
defendants) participated in burying Novis, when the only evidence in the record 
bearing on the point was Marlow’s statement to detectives that he had done so. 
 
A prosecutor engages in misconduct by misstating facts or referring to facts 
not in evidence, but he or she enjoys wide latitude in commenting on the evidence, 
including urging the jury to make reasonable inferences and deductions therefrom.  
(People v. Hill, supra, 17 Cal.4th at pp. 819, 823, 827-828.)  In our view, the 
challenged comments generally fall within the permitted range of fair comment on 
the evidence.  The thrust of the prosecutor’s argument was that defendants jointly 
engaged in the offenses against Corinna Novis, regardless of whose idea it was to 
dress up or procure a gun and handcuffs.  Although Coffman characterizes the 
burglary of Novis’s apartment as an afterthought that arose when defendants’ 
efforts to obtain cash from her bank account initially proved unavailing, the jury 
was entitled to infer that defendants entertained a broader purpose in abducting 
and murdering her.  Dr. Reiber’s testimony supported the prosecutor’s argument 
that both defendants participated in the act of strangling Novis; the prosecutor’s 
suggestion that defendants acted together in covering Novis’s grave, even if 
unsupported by the testimony, could not have prejudiced Coffman in view of the 
 
 
116
relatively insignificant nature of the comment and the overwhelming weight of the 
evidence against her.  Consequently, Coffman is not entitled to reversal of her 
conviction on this basis.  Because any possible misconduct was harmless on this 
record, Coffman’s claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel lacks merit. 
M.  Asserted Instructional Error 
1.  Instruction on forcible sodomy as supporting first degree felony 
murder; failure to instruct on second degree murder 
 
Coffman contends, and respondent concedes, that the trial court erred in 
instructing the jury in this case that forcible sodomy could support a finding of 
first degree murder.  Under California law as it existed in 1986 when Novis was 
killed, and until the approval of Proposition 115 by the voters in the general 
election of June 1990, forcible sodomy was not included in section 189’s 
enumeration of felonies supporting a first degree felony-murder conviction.  The 
error, however, was harmless, because the jury’s verdicts on the robbery and 
burglary charges and related special circumstance allegations reflect that the first 
degree murder conviction was grounded upon other, valid legal theories of felony 
murder.  (People v. Hughes (2002) 27 Cal.4th 287, 368.)  Coffman, argues, to the 
contrary, that the submission to the jury of the natural and probable consequences 
theory of aider and abettor liability meant the jury did not necessarily find she had 
the requisite specific intent to commit robbery, burglary and sodomy.  Given, 
however, that the jury was instructed that aider and abettor liability required 
knowledge of the perpetrator’s criminal purpose and acting with the intent or 
purpose of committing, encouraging or facilitating the commission of the crime 
(see CALJIC No. 3.01), her argument lacks merit. 
 
Coffman further argues the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury on 
second degree felony murder based on sodomy.  Any error in this regard clearly 
was harmless in light of the jury’s findings on the robbery and burglary charges 
 
 
117
and related special circumstances, including its findings of intent to kill as to each 
special circumstance allegation.  (See People v. Sedeno (1974) 10 Cal.3d 703, 721, 
overruled in part on other grounds in People v. Breverman (1998) 19 Cal.4th 142, 
149, and disapproved on other grounds in People v. Flannel, supra, 25 Cal.3d at 
p. 684, fn. 12 [error in omitting instruction harmless when factual question posed 
by that instruction was necessarily resolved adversely to defendant under other, 
properly given instructions].) 
 
Coffman also contends the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury, 
sua sponte, on second degree murder as a lesser included offense of either 
premeditated and deliberate first degree murder or first degree felony murder.  She 
theorizes that defendants completed their robbery of Novis when they arrived at 
the Drinkhouse residence, at which point the kidnapping became one for extortion 
(of Novis’s PIN) rather than robbery.  Coffman further suggests that when she and 
Koppers took Novis’s purse and drove her car to a 7-Eleven store, while Marlow 
remained at the Drinkhouse residence with Novis, Coffman had reached a place of 
temporary safety definitively terminating the prior robbery as to her, even though 
Novis remained captive under Marlow’s control.  She contends that, had she been 
the actual perpetrator of the robbery, once away from the victim, she would at that 
point have reached a place of temporary safety and that, as an aider-abettor, her 
liability for robbery could not exceed what it would have been had she been the 
perpetrator.  She contends further that the sodomy, assuming it occurred, was 
solely for Marlow’s sexual gratification, not as part of a conditional threat to 
extract information.  She asserts that the prosecutor’s theory of the crimes—that, 
from the moment they accosted Novis, defendants must have had a plan to take all 
of her property—is “at variance with the way in which common criminals happen 
to commit crimes.” 
 
 
118
 
We disagree with Coffman’s premise that the robbery terminated at the 
point when defendants brought Novis to the Drinkhouse residence; far from being 
a place of safety, the residence was the home of another person whom the 
evidence showed defendants felt the necessity of monitoring and impliedly 
threatening, lest he reveal their criminal activity, during the period of their 
occupation while they maintained control over the captive Novis.  Nor did the 
robbery terminate as to Coffman during her temporary absence from the house.  
Rather, the evidence shows all of defendants’ offenses against Novis to have been 
part of a continuous transaction for purposes of felony-murder liability.  Because 
no evidence supported the theory that defendants murdered Novis in the course of 
some lesser included felony rather than robbery, the trial court had no obligation to 
instruct on second degree felony murder.  (People v. Waidla (2000) 22 Cal.4th 
690, 733.)  And any error in failing to instruct on second degree implied-malice 
murder as a lesser included offense of premeditated and deliberate first degree 
murder was harmless, because the factual question posed by the omitted 
instruction necessarily was resolved unfavorably to Coffman under the 
instructions on the special circumstance allegations, which required a finding of 
intent to kill.  (People v. Sedeno, supra, 10 Cal.3d at p. 721.)  Finally, to the extent 
Coffman argues that evidence of her use of drugs around the time of the offenses 
supported an instruction on second degree murder on the theory that intoxication 
precluded formation of the specific intent to kill as necessary for first degree 
murder, we observe the jury was instructed that if it found defendants were 
intoxicated at the time of the offenses, it should consider that fact in determining 
whether they had the intent or mental state required for the crimes of murder, 
kidnapping, kidnapping for robbery, robbery and residential burglary.  That the 
jury convicted Coffman of all of the charged offenses and found true the special 
circumstance allegations, which required it to find intent to kill, indicates it found 
 
 
119
she was not so intoxicated as to be unable to form the required mental states; 
consequently, a more favorable outcome had a second degree murder instruction 
been given was not reasonably probable.  (People v. Watson, supra, 46 Cal.2d at 
p. 836.)29 
2.  Asserted error in instructions concerning battered woman syndrome 
and related defenses 
 
Coffman contends the trial court erred in refusing her request for certain 
instructions pertaining to her defense based on battered woman syndrome.  She 
further contends the instructions the court actually gave on battered woman 
syndrome and its relation to the mental states required to prove the charged 
offenses were prejudicially deficient.  For the reasons that follow, we disagree. 
 
Consistent with her defense that she participated in the offenses against 
Novis because she feared Marlow would harm her or her son, Coffman asked the 
trial court to instruct the jury that battered woman syndrome evidence, if believed, 
might negate any intent to kill; that battered woman syndrome evidence might be 
sufficient, by itself, to raise a reasonable doubt whether Coffman had the intent to 
kill Novis; that battered woman syndrome evidence could support a reasonable 
doubt whether Coffman had the intent required to “encourage or facilitate” 
Marlow in killing Novis; that a defense of duress may be based on threats of harm 
to persons other than the accused; and that a defendant is not an accomplice if he 
acted under threats or menaces sufficient to give him cause to believe his life 
would be endangered if he refused to help. 
                                             
 
29  
The lack of any prejudice from these asserted instructional errors dooms 
Coffman’s related claim of ineffective assistance of counsel in failing to object to 
the inclusion of the reference to sodomy in the trial court’s first degree murder 
instruction and to request correct instructions on second degree felony murder. 
 
 
120
 
The trial court refused the requested instructions.  Instead, the court 
instructed the jury that it could consider evidence of battered woman syndrome 
solely for the purpose of determining whether Coffman had actually formed the 
mental state required for the charged offenses of murder, kidnapping, kidnapping 
for robbery, robbery, residential burglary and sodomy by the use of force, and for 
the special circumstance allegations.  The court further instructed that a person is 
not guilty of a crime when he or she engages in conduct that is otherwise criminal, 
when the person is acting under threats or menaces that would cause a reasonable 
person to fear that his or her life would be in immediate danger if he or she did not 
engage in the conduct charged, and the person then believed that his or her life 
would be so endangered.  The court instructed that this rule does not apply to 
threats, menaces and fear of future danger to the person’s life, or when the person 
commits a crime punishable with death.30  The court also instructed, however, that 
such evidence, if believed by the jury, might still be relevant in determining 
whether or not the defendant had formed the intent or mental state required for the 
crimes charged.  The court also instructed that an act committed by a person who 
is in a state of voluntary intoxication is no less criminal by virtue of the person’s 
having been in such a condition, that voluntary intoxication was no defense to the 
charge of sodomy by force, and that evidence of intoxication could be considered 
in determining whether defendants had the mental state or specific intent required 
                                             
 
30  
The trial court did not specifically identify which crime of those with which 
Coffman was charged was punishable with death.  Although Coffman asserts the 
instruction’s lack of specificity in this regard must have been confusing and 
misleading to the jury, nothing on the face of the record indicates the jury was 
confused, nor is it reasonably probable the jury inferred that any offense other than 
murder was punishable with death. 
 
 
121
for the crimes of murder, kidnapping, kidnapping for robbery, robbery and 
residential burglary. 
 
Coffman complains the instructions given were incomplete, inaccurate and 
erroneous with respect to (1) the relationship between battered woman syndrome 
and coercion; (2) the crimes to which the defense of coercion applies, and the 
applicability of coercion to aider-abettor liability; (3) the principle that coercion, 
as shown by battered woman syndrome, can negate intent to kill, which was an 
element of first degree murder and the special circumstances; (4) the defense of 
necessity; and (5) the relationship between battered woman syndrome and 
Coffman’s credibility.  More specifically, she complains the instructions failed to 
inform the jury that it could consider evidence of battered woman syndrome in 
evaluating the defense of coercion, in determining whether Coffman perceived 
herself or any of her family members to be in imminent peril from Marlow, and in 
assessing her credibility and conduct pertaining to her jailhouse exchange of 
letters with Marlow. 
 
Under appropriate circumstances, “a trial court may be required to give a 
requested jury instruction that pinpoints a defense theory of the case by, among 
other things, relating the reasonable doubt standard of proof to particular elements 
of the crime charged.  [Citations.]  But a trial court need not give a pinpoint 
instruction if it is argumentative [citation], merely duplicates other instructions 
[citation], or is not supported by substantial evidence [citation].”  (People v. 
Bolden, supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 558.)   
 
We conclude the instructions given here correctly and (with one 
exception)31 adequately informed the jury that it could consider the evidence of 
                                             
 
31  
After the trial in this matter, in People v. Anderson (2002) 28 Cal.4th 767, 
784, we held that duress can, in effect, provide a defense to murder on a felony-
 
(footnote continues on next page) 
 
 
122
battered woman syndrome in determining whether Coffman had formed the 
mental state or specific intent required for the charged offenses, and the trial court 
therefore did not err in refusing Coffman’s proposed instructions.  At least one of 
the requested instructions properly could have been refused as argumentative 
because it would have directed the jury to draw inferences favorable to Coffman 
from specific evidence on a disputed question of fact.32  (People v. Wright (1988) 
45 Cal.3d 1126, 1135.)  The instruction on threats of harm to a third person was 
also properly refused under the evidence presented.  Because the defense of duress 
requires a reasonable belief that threats to the defendant’s life (or that of another) 
are both imminent and immediate at the time the crime is committed (People v. Lo 
Cicero (1969) 71 Cal.2d 1186, 1191, disapproved on another point in Curl v. 
Superior Court (1990) 51 Cal.3d 1292, 1301, fn. 6; People v. Condley (1977) 69 
                                                                                                                                      
 
(footnote continued from previous page) 
murder theory by negating guilt of the underlying felony.  Thus, because the 
prosecution in this case tried the murder charge on the alternative theories of 
felony murder and premeditated and deliberate murder, the trial court should have 
instructed the jury to consider evidence of duress with respect to felony murder 
(and the underlying felonies) but not premeditated and deliberate murder.  
Nevertheless, we perceive no prejudice from this omission because the jury’s 
complete rejection of Coffman’s duress theory of defense is evident in their 
verdicts of guilty on all charges, including those on which they impliedly were 
instructed to consider duress. 
32  
“Evidence has been introduced by Defendant Coffman tending to show that 
said defendant was a battered woman suffering from the battered woman 
syndrome and that as a result thereof she did not intend that Victim Corinna Novis 
be killed, nor did she intend to encourage or facilitate Defendant Marlow in killing 
said victim.  This evidence is sufficient in [and] of itself to raise a reasonable 
doubt as to whether Defendant Coffman had such intent.  If you have a reasonable 
doubt as to whether Defendant Coffman possessed such intent, she is entitled to 
the benefit of the doubt and you must find that she did not have any such intent to 
kill.” 
 
 
123
Cal.App.3d 999, 1012), threats of future danger are inadequate to support the 
defense.  Because any danger to Coffman’s child (who was living in Missouri) 
was not shown to be immediate, the trial court correctly rejected Coffman’s 
proposed instruction on this point. 
 
Contrary to Coffman’s argument, the trial court did not err in failing to 
instruct on the defense of necessity, which Coffman never raised at trial and which 
finds no support in the evidence in this case.  The defense of necessity generally 
recognizes that “the harm or evil sought to be avoided by [the defendant’s] 
conduct is greater than that sought to be prevented by the law defining the offense 
charged.”  (People v. Richards (1969) 269 Cal.App.2d 768, 777.)  The defendant, 
who must have possessed a reasonable belief that his or her action was justified, 
bears the burden of proffering evidence of the existence of an emergency situation 
involving the imminence of greater harm that the illegal act seeks to prevent.  
(People v. Patrick (1981) 126 Cal.App.3d 952, 960; People v. Condley, supra, 69 
Cal.App.3d at pp. 1011-1013.)  As respondent rightly points out, “[i]t is not 
acceptable for a defendant to decide that it is necessary to kill an innocent person 
in order that he [or she] may live, particularly where, as here, Coffman’s alleged 
fear related to some future danger.”  Our observations in People v. Anderson, 
supra, 28 Cal.4th at pages 777-778, although referring specifically to the duress 
defense in the context of gang-related killings, are pertinent here.  “A person can 
always choose to resist rather than kill an innocent person.  The law must 
encourage, even require, everyone to seek an alternative to killing.  Crimes are 
often committed by more than one person; the criminal law must also, perhaps 
especially, deter those crimes.  California today is tormented by gang violence.  If 
duress is recognized as a defense to the killing of innocents, then a street or prison 
gang need only create an internal reign of terror and murder can be justified, at 
least by the actual killer.  Persons who know they can claim duress will be more 
 
 
124
likely to follow a gang order to kill instead of resisting than would those who 
know they must face the consequences of their acts.  Accepting the duress defense 
for any form of murder would thus encourage killing.”  (Ibid.) 
 
Finally, with respect to Coffman’s contention that the instructions given 
were deficient because they failed to inform the jury that it could consider the 
evidence of battered woman syndrome in assessing her credibility or her conduct 
in sending letters to Marlow while in jail or in determining whether she perceived 
imminent peril to herself from Marlow, we note her proffered instructions failed to 
convey these concepts, which are not shown to fall in the category of general 
principles of law so closely and openly connected with the facts before the court as 
to come within the court’s sua sponte instructional obligations.  (See People v. St. 
Martin (1970) 1 Cal.3d 524, 531.)  Accordingly, the contention must fail. 
3.  CALJIC No. 2.15 
 
Defendants contend the trial court erred in instructing the jury, according to 
CALJIC No. 2.15, that the jury could infer from defendants’ conscious possession 
of stolen property their guilt of the “crimes alleged,” without limitation to theft-
related offenses.  They are correct.  (People v. Prieto (2003) 30 Cal.4th 226, 248-
249.)  In view of the overwhelming evidence of defendants’ guilt, however, and 
the panoply of other instructions that guided the jury’s consideration of the 
evidence (e.g., CALJIC Nos. 2.90 [presumption of innocence and reasonable 
doubt standard of proof], 2.00 [defining direct and circumstantial evidence], 2.02 
[sufficiency of circumstantial evidence to prove specific intent], 3.31 [requirement 
of union of act and specific intent], 1.01 [duty to consider instructions as a 
whole]), we see no reasonable likelihood of a more favorable outcome for either 
 
 
125
Marlow or Coffman had the instruction not been given.33  (Prieto, supra, at 
p. 249.) 
4.  CALJIC Nos. 2.04, 2.06 
 
Coffman contends the trial court erred by instructing the jury that it could 
infer she harbored a consciousness of guilt if it found certain predicate facts.  
CALJIC No. 2.04, as given in this case, provides:  “If you find that a defendant 
attempted to or did persuade a witness to testify falsely or attempted to or did 
fabricate evidence to be produced at the trial, such conduct may be considered by 
you as a circumstance tending to show a consciousness of guilt.  However, such 
conduct is not sufficient in itself to prove guilt and its weight and significance, if 
any, are matters for your determination.”  And, as given here, CALJIC No. 2.06 
provides:  “If you find that a defendant attempted to suppress evidence against 
himself or herself in any manner, such as by the intimidation of a witness, by 
destroying evidence [or] by concealing evidence, such attempts may be considered 
by you as a circumstance tending to show a consciousness of guilt.  However, such 
evidence is not sufficient in itself to prove guilt and its weight and significance, if 
any, are matters for your consideration.”  She contends these instructions denied 
her a fair trial by irrationally permitting an inference of guilt of all of the charged 
offenses based on evidence of her consciousness of guilt of only some offense or 
offenses less than capital murder.  (Francis v. Franklin (1985) 471 U.S. 307, 314-
315.)  She also may be understood to contend that the evidence was insufficient to 
                                             
 
33  
In view of this conclusion, we need not address Coffman’s related claim of 
ineffective assistance of counsel in failing to object to the giving of this instruction 
and defendants’ other arguments why the giving of this instruction was error.  We, 
however, previously have rejected the contention that CALJIC No. 2.15 is an 
unconstitutional mandatory or permissive presumption.  (People v. Yeoman, supra, 
31 Cal.4th at pp. 131-132.) 
 
 
126
support a finding that she committed the requisite predicate acts (i.e., attempting to 
persuade a witness to testify falsely, to fabricate evidence, or to conceal or destroy 
evidence). 
 
We disagree.  First, unlike CALJIC No. 2.15, CALJIC Nos. 2.04 and 2.06 
do not direct the jury to infer guilt of the “crimes alleged” and thus do not give rise 
to an irrational presumption of guilt of all charges, without limitation, from 
evidence relevant only to a theft-related offense.  Coffman merely speculates that 
the evidence of her consciousness of guilt present in this case might relate only to 
the less serious charges against her.  Because CALJIC Nos. 2.04 and 2.06 
instructed the jury to infer a consciousness of guilt only if it first found from the 
evidence that defendants had engaged in the described conduct, and further 
informed the jury such evidence was not, in itself, sufficient to prove guilt, the 
instructions properly guided the jury’s consideration of the evidence and did not 
lessen the prosecution’s burden of proof.  (People v. Jackson (1996) 13 Cal.4th 
1164, 1223-1224.) 
 
Second, to the extent Coffman contends that facts giving rise to an 
inference of consciousness of guilt must be conclusively established before 
CALJIC Nos. 2.04 and 2.06 may be given, she is incorrect; there need only be 
some evidence in the record that, if believed by the jury, would sufficiently 
support the suggested inference.  (People v. Hannon (1977) 19 Cal.3d 588, 597-
598; see also People v. Pensinger (1991) 52 Cal.3d 1210, 1246.)  The evidence in 
this case clearly warranted the giving of these instructions.  Relevant to CALJIC 
No. 2.04, for example, defendants’ jailhouse correspondence included references 
to “Jack,” a fictitious actual perpetrator of the crimes, suggestive of an effort to 
persuade each other to testify falsely or to fabricate evidence.  As for CALJIC No. 
2.06, the evidence showed that defendants discarded their own identifying 
documents together with Novis’s near a Taco Bell restaurant in Laguna Beach, 
 
 
127
that Coffman switched license plates on Novis’s car, and that she wiped 
fingerprints from the car before abandoning it in Big Bear.  The trial court, 
therefore, did not err in giving CALJIC Nos. 2.04 and 2.06.  Additionally, as 
objections to these instructions would not have been well taken, Coffman’s trial 
counsel did not render ineffective assistance in failing to make them. 
5.  Accomplice instructions 
 
Defendants challenge several aspects of the accomplice instructions given 
in this case.  Coffman complains the trial court incorrectly defined the term 
“accomplice” for the jury.  She also contends witnesses Richard Drinkhouse and 
Veronica Koppers were accomplices as a matter of law, and the jury should have 
been instructed accordingly.  She further asserts that the modified version of 
CALJIC No. 3.18 given in this case forced the jury to perform the “impossible 
mental gymnastic” of simultaneously distrusting (when offered against Marlow) 
and not distrusting (when offered in her own behalf) her testimony.  Marlow 
(joined by Coffman) similarly urges error in the instruction directing the jury to 
apply the general rules of credibility when weighing his testimony in his own 
defense, but distrusting his testimony against Coffman if it found him to be her 
accomplice.34  We conclude defendants’ contentions lack merit. 
 
The relevant principles governing accomplice testimony are well settled.  
No conviction can be had upon the testimony of an accomplice unless such 
testimony is corroborated by other evidence tending to connect the defendant with 
the commission of the offense, an “accomplice” being one who is liable to 
                                             
 
34  
Respondent contends defendants are precluded from challenging these 
instructions on appeal due to their failure to object below.  Defendants, however, 
may assert on appeal instructional error affecting their substantial rights.  (§ 1259; 
People v. Brown, supra, 31 Cal.4th at p. 539, fn. 7; People v. Prieto, supra, 30 
Cal.4th at p. 247.)  We therefore address the merits of their claims. 
 
 
128
prosecution for the identical offense charged against the defendant on trial.  
(§ 1111.)  Accessories, therefore (defined as persons who, after a felony has been 
committed, harbor, conceal or aid a principal in the felony with the intent that the 
principal avoid criminal liability therefor and knowing that the principal has 
committed the felony or been charged with or convicted thereof), are not 
accomplices as to whose testimony corroboration is required.  (§§ 31, 32; People 
v. Fauber, supra, 2 Cal.4th at pp. 833-834.)  Whether a person is an accomplice is 
a question of fact for the jury unless the facts and the inferences to be drawn 
therefrom are undisputed.  (Fauber, supra, at p. 834.) 
 
Here, the jury was instructed that “[a]n accomplice is a person who was 
subject to prosecution for the identical offense charged in any count against the 
defendant on trial by reason of aiding and abetting.”35  Coffman contends the 
instruction was erroneous because only if the jury found Marlow was an aider and 
abettor of the crimes, not the perpetrator, could it apply the instruction to him.  
Because the evidence showed Marlow was the perpetrator, Coffman reasons, the 
jury would have concluded it could convict her on the strength of his testimony 
without the required corroboration.  Viewing the instructions as a whole, we do 
not think the jury would have misunderstood its charge along the lines Coffman 
suggests.  As respondent points out, Marlow was entitled to a presumption of 
innocence, and it was obvious to the jury that defendants stood accused of being 
accomplices to each other and that its task was to determine whether one acted as 
an aider and abettor to the other or whether the two acted in concert.  That any 
                                             
 
35  
The jury was also instructed on the sufficiency of the evidence needed to 
corroborate an accomplice (CALJIC No. 3.12); that one accomplice may not 
corroborate another (CALJIC No. 3.13); and on the criminal intent necessary to 
make one an accomplice (CALJIC No. 3.14).  The parties raise no challenge to the 
propriety of these instructions. 
 
 
129
deficiency in this instruction affected the verdict is not reasonably probable.  
(People v. Heishman (1988) 45 Cal.3d 147, 163-164.) 
 
The jury also was instructed as follows:  “You are to apply the general rules 
of credibility when weighing Cynthia Coffman’s testimony in her own defense.  
[¶] But if you find her to be an accomplice, then in weighing her testimony against 
James Gregory Marlow you ought to view it with distrust.  [¶] This does not mean 
that you may arbitrarily disregard such testimony.  [¶] But give to it the weight to 
which you find it to be entitled after examining it with care and caution and in the 
light of all the evidence in the case.  [¶] You are to apply the general rules of 
credibility when weighing James Gregory Marlow’s testimony in his own defense.  
[¶] But if you find him to be an accomplice then in weighing his testimony against 
Cynthia Coffman you ought to view it with distrust.  [¶] This does not mean that 
you may arbitrarily disregard such testimony.  [¶] But give to it the weight to 
which you find it to be entitled after examining it with care and caution and in the 
light of all the evidence in the case.”  Marlow essentially contends the artificiality 
of the distinction between defensive and offensive testimony in the context of this 
case rendered the instruction virtually impossible for the jury to follow and 
undermined the presumption of innocence.  We disagree.  Because the evidence 
abundantly supported an inference that each defendant acted as an accomplice to 
the other, and because each testified and, to some extent, sought to blame the other 
for the offenses, the court was required to instruct the jury that an accomplice-
defendant’s testimony should be viewed with distrust to the extent it tended to 
incriminate the codefendant.36  (People v. Alvarez (1996) 14 Cal.4th 155, 217-
                                             
 
36  
We have more recently prescribed a modification of the standard 
instruction, by which the testimony of an accomplice that is unfavorable to the 
 
(footnote continues on next page) 
 
 
130
218.)  Such, essentially, is what the foregoing instruction did.  The instruction 
correctly informed the jury that, insofar as it assigned one accomplice-defendant’s 
testimony any weight in determining the codefendant’s guilt, it must view such 
testimony with distrust and find sufficient corroboration, as elsewhere defined for 
the jury.  We see no reason to believe this relatively straightforward task was 
beyond the jury’s capabilities.  Contrary to Marlow’s argument, the instruction did 
not undermine the presumption of innocence or deprive defendants of due process.  
As we have observed:  “[T]he testimony of a defendant ought not to be viewed 
without distrust simply because it is given by a defendant.  Under the law, a 
defendant is surely equal to all other witnesses.  But, under that same law, he is 
superior to none.”  (Id. at p. 219; see ibid., fn. 23.)37 
 
We reject Coffman’s further contention that the trial court erred in failing to 
instruct the jury that Richard Drinkhouse and Veronica Koppers were accomplices 
as a matter of law.  As noted above, an accomplice is one who is subject to 
prosecution for the identical offense charged against the defendant.  (§ 1111.)  
Although both Drinkhouse and Koppers suffered convictions for their role in the 
offenses against Novis (Drinkhouse by a plea of guilty to false imprisonment and 
Koppers, following a jury trial, for being an accessory and for receiving stolen 
                                                                                                                                      
 
(footnote continued from previous page) 
defense is to be viewed with care and caution.  (People v. Guiuan (1998) 18 
Cal.4th 558, 569.) 
37  
Unlike in the cases on which Marlow primarily relies, this jury was not 
misinstructed to distrust everything a defendant-accomplice testified to (People v. 
Fowler (1987) 196 Cal.App.3d 79, 87) or given contradictory instructions both to 
distrust a defendant-accomplice’s testimony and to treat it like any other testimony 
(see People v. Dail (1943) 22 Cal.2d 642, 653; People v. Hartung (1950) 101 
Cal.App.2d 292, 295).  Instead, the court harmonized the principles by which the 
jury was to evaluate defendants’ testimony. 
 
 
131
property), the record lacks evidence from which the jury could have found that 
either Drinkhouse or Koppers aided or abetted, or otherwise facilitated, with the 
requisite intent, any of defendants’ criminal actions.  Consequently, neither was, at 
least as a matter of law, an accomplice whose testimony the jury should have been 
instructed to view with distrust.38 
 
Finally, we reject Coffman’s complaint that the trial court erred 
prejudicially in omitting, from the accomplice instruction pertaining to defendants’ 
testimony, the requirement that the burden is on a defendant to prove by a 
preponderance of the evidence that the codefendant is an accomplice, as was 
correctly stated in the general accomplice instructions pertaining to Drinkhouse 
and Koppers, to trigger the corroboration requirement.  First, to the extent the 
instruction failed to impose on Coffman the burden of proving Marlow was an 
accomplice as a prerequisite to applying the corroboration rule to his testimony 
and to being directed to view it with distrust, she was not prejudiced.  Second, 
because the court’s instruction directed the jury to view Marlow’s testimony with 
distrust if it found him to be an accomplice, the jury implicitly was told to make a 
finding in this regard, and in doing so most likely, and correctly, would have 
applied the preponderance standard as it was instructed to do with respect to 
Koppers and Drinkhouse.  Thus, it is not reasonably probable Coffman would 
have received a more favorable outcome had the instructions been modified to 
include the omitted language. 
                                             
 
38  
As we have found no deficiency in the accomplice instructions given in this 
case, Coffman does not persuade us that her trial counsel rendered ineffective 
assistance by failing to object to them. 
 
 
132
6.  Instruction on natural and probable consequences doctrine; refusal 
of Coffman’s requested limiting instruction 
 
The trial court instructed the jury with CALJIC No. 3.02, on the natural and 
probable consequences doctrine of aider and abettor liability.39  Using CALJIC 
No. 3.01, the court defined aiding and abetting and, pursuant to CALJIC No. 
8.81.17, informed the jury that, in order to return a true finding on any special 
circumstance allegation, the jury had to find that the defendant had the specific 
intent to kill or to aid another in the killing of a human being.  Coffman voiced no 
objection to these instructions as given.  On appeal, however, she contends the 
instruction on natural and probable consequences was prejudicially defective in 
failing to inform the jury that “natural and probable” means “reasonably 
foreseeable,” thereby permitting the jury to convict her of murder without 
sufficient evidence of the required mental state.  Coffman contends she suffered 
further prejudice by the court’s refusal to instruct the jury that it must not use 
evidence of the Kentucky and Orange County killings in arriving at any verdict 
and that such evidence was admitted solely on the question of whether she 
intended to kill or to encourage or facilitate Marlow’s killing the victim.  Finally, 
Coffman contends the natural and probable consequences doctrine is 
unconstitutional in capital cases because it predicates criminal liability on 
negligence, in violation of due process.  We find no merit in her contentions. 
                                             
 
39  
The instruction told the jury that “[o]ne who aids and abets is not only 
guilty of the particular crime that to his or her knowledge his or her confederates 
are contemplating committing, but he or she is also liable for the natural and 
probable consequences of any criminal act that he or she knowingly and 
intentionally aided and abetted.  You must determine whether the defendant is 
guilty of the crime originally contemplated, and, if so, whether the crimes charged 
were a natural and probable consequence of such originally contemplated crime.” 
 
 
133
 
Elaborating on the natural and probable consequences doctrine, in People v. 
Prettyman (1996) 14 Cal.4th 248, 261, and People v. Croy (1985) 41 Cal.3d 1, 12, 
footnote 5, we observed that an aider and abettor “is guilty not only of the offense 
he intended to facilitate or encourage, but also of any reasonably foreseeable 
offense committed by the person he aids and abets.”  As the Court of Appeal in 
People v. Brigham (1989) 216 Cal.App.3d 1039 noted, although variations in 
phrasing are found in decisions addressing the doctrine—“probable and natural,” 
“natural and reasonable,” and “reasonably foreseeable”—the ultimate factual 
question is one of foreseeability.  (Id. at pp. 1050, 1054; see People v. Roberts 
(1992) 2 Cal.4th 271, 316-322.)  “A natural and probable consequence is a 
foreseeable consequence” (People v. Fabris (1995) 31 Cal.App.4th 685, 698, 
disapproved on another ground in People v. Atkins (2001) 25 Cal.4th 76, 90, 
fn. 5); the concepts are equivalent in both legal and common usage.  Coffman cites 
no authority for the contention that the term “natural and probable consequences” 
is one having a meaning peculiar to the legal context and that, therefore, the term 
must be expressly defined for the jury.  (See People v. Cox (2003) 30 Cal.4th 916, 
967.)  Indeed, in People v. Nguyen (1993) 21 Cal.App.4th 518, 535, the Court of 
Appeal found sufficient, without inclusion of the phrase “reasonably foreseeable,” 
the instruction Coffman challenges here.  We agree with the Nguyen court that 
CALJIC No. 3.02 correctly instructs the jury on the natural and probable 
consequences doctrine.  To the extent Coffman contends that imposition of 
liability for murder on an aider and abettor under this doctrine violates due process 
by substituting a presumption for, or otherwise excusing, proof of the required 
mental state, she is mistaken.  Notably, the jury here was also instructed with 
CALJIC No. 3.01, advising that an aider and abettor must act with the intent of 
committing, encouraging or facilitating the commission of the target crime, as well 
as CALJIC No. 8.81.17, which required, for a true finding on the special 
 
 
134
circumstance allegations, that defendants had the specific intent to kill the victim.  
These concepts fully informed the jury of applicable principles of vicarious 
liability in this context. 
 
Nor did the trial court err in refusing Coffman’s requested instruction that it 
was not to use evidence of the Kentucky and Orange County killings, which had 
been admitted solely on the issue whether Coffman entertained the intent to kill or 
to encourage or facilitate Marlow in killing the victim, in reaching its verdict in 
this case.  The requested instruction was duplicative of CALJIC Nos. 2.09, 
instructing the jury about evidence admitted for a limited purpose, and 2.50, 
advising it to use such evidence not to find criminal propensity but rather to 
determine whether the necessary element of intent was proven.  (People v. Gurule 
(2002) 28 Cal.4th 557, 659.)  When Coffman introduced evidence of the Kentucky 
and Orange County killings, moreover, the jury was specifically instructed as to its 
limited purpose.  We presume it followed these instructions.  (People v. Boyette, 
supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 436.) 
 
Finally, we reject the premise of Coffman’s argument that the application 
of the natural and probable consequences doctrine in capital cases 
unconstitutionally predicates murder liability on mere negligence.  Liability as an 
aider and abettor requires knowledge that the perpetrator intends to commit a 
criminal act together with the intent to encourage or facilitate such act; in a case in 
which an offense the perpetrator actually commits is different from the originally 
intended crime, the natural and probable consequences doctrine limits liability to 
those offenses that are reasonably foreseeable consequences of the act originally 
aided and abetted.  (See People v. Nguyen, supra, 21 Cal.App.4th at p. 531.)  
Moreover, by finding true the special circumstance allegations against Coffman, 
the jury in this case necessarily found she possessed the intent to kill.  Having 
found no error in these instructions as given in this case, we perforce reject 
 
 
135
Coffman’s claim that her trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance in failing to 
object to them. 
IV. 
PENALTY PHASE 
A.  Adequacy of Notice of Aggravating Evidence and Asserted Boyd 
Error as to Coffman 
 
Coffman contends the trial court erred in admitting certain evidence that 
she had in the past engaged in nonviolent criminal and noncriminal conduct, in 
violation of the rule in People v. Boyd (1985) 38 Cal.3d 762 and her rights to due 
process, equal protection and a fair trial before an impartial jury, as well as her 
rights to present a defense and to have a reliable determination of guilt and penalty 
as guaranteed by the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the 
federal Constitution and analogous provisions of the state Constitution.  She 
further contends the prosecutor provided inadequate (or no) notice of such 
evidence, thereby violating section 190.3 and the same state and federal 
constitutional provisions.  We conclude the challenged evidence was properly 
admitted, some as properly noticed aggravating evidence and the remainder as 
rebuttal to Coffman’s evidence in mitigation. 
 
Governing principles may be summarized as follows.  Except for evidence 
in proof of the offense or special circumstances that subject a defendant to the 
death penalty, the prosecution may present no evidence in aggravation unless 
notice of the evidence to be introduced has been given to the defendant within a 
reasonable period of time as determined by the court, prior to trial.  (§ 190.3.)  
Any aggravating evidence not relating to the sentencing factors enumerated in 
section 190.3 is inadmissible in the penalty phase.  (People v. Boyd, supra, 38 
Cal.3d at pp. 773-776.)  Aggravating evidence must pertain to the circumstances 
of the capital offense (§ 190.3, factor (a)), other violent criminal conduct by the 
defendant (id., factor (b)) or prior felony convictions (id., factor (c)); only these 
 
 
136
three factors, and the experiential or moral implications of the defendant’s age (id., 
factor (i)), are properly considered in aggravation of penalty.  (See People v. 
Wader, supra, 5 Cal.4th at p. 657 [a majority of statutory sentencing factors can 
only be mitigating, citing cases so holding as to factors (d), (e), (f), (g), (h) and (k), 
and noting that whether factor (j) is exclusively mitigating is undecided]; People v. 
Stanley (1995) 10 Cal.4th 764, 831 [factor (i)].)  Evidence offered as rebuttal to 
defense evidence in mitigation, however, is not subject to the notice requirement 
of section 190.3 and need not relate to any specific aggravating factor.  (In re Ross 
(1995) 10 Cal.4th 184, 206-207; § 190.3.) 
 
First, Coffman complains that although the notice of aggravation specified, 
with respect to the brandishing incident, only that the prosecution intended to 
introduce evidence concerning her possession and brandishing of a loaded 
handgun and the surrounding facts and circumstances, in Barstow on April 5, 
1986, the prosecution improperly presented evidence that Coffman possessed, and 
was under the influence of, either cocaine or methamphetamine on that date; she 
evaded arrest; she was verbally abusive, rude and loud in speaking with the police; 
she was arrested for possession of a derringer, possession of a drug and being 
under the influence of the drug; and, about one year before the April 5, 1986, 
incident, she was angry at Huntley and drove a car close enough to him to force 
him to move out of the way.  Second, Coffman complains that the prosecution 
presented unnoticed, nonstatutory aggravating evidence that after the murder of 
Lynell Murray, Coffman behaved in a celebratory manner at a Denny’s restaurant, 
embracing Marlow, talking loudly, ordering and consuming food and wine, and 
using Murray’s credit card to pay for the meal; and that Coffman subsequently 
used Murray’s credit card again at a sporting goods store in Big Bear. 
 
We conclude the prosecution gave sufficient notice to Coffman of the 
April 5, 1986, brandishing incident and its surrounding circumstances.  Contrary 
 
 
137
to Coffman’s implicit argument, she was not entitled to notice of all the testimony 
the prosecution intended to present.  (People v. Scott (1997) 15 Cal.4th 1188, 
1219.)  We note that although Coffman objected to the introduction of evidence 
relating to the incident and sought a mistrial on that basis, she did not claim she 
was denied discovery and did not seek a continuance to defend against the 
evidence. 
 
We further conclude that the testimony regarding Coffman’s behavior at the 
time of the April 5, 1986, brandishing incident, the incident about a year earlier 
involving driving at Huntley in her car, and her conduct after the killing of Lynell 
Murray did not constitute improper nonstatutory aggravation.  Regarding the 
brandishing and driving incidents, the prosecutor expressly offered the 
circumstances of these incidents as rebuttal to Coffman’s defense—which she 
introduced with the aim of negating or mitigating her guilt in the initial phase of 
trial and later continued to assert in her case in mitigation in the penalty phase—
that she had at all times pertinent to the current offenses acted under Marlow’s 
domination.  That is, the prosecutor properly sought to rebut Coffman’s evidence 
by showing that before she ever met Marlow, she had behaved violently and 
aggressively and had demonstrated a willingness to possess and use a firearm.  In 
addition, the evidence of Coffman’s behavior following the Murray offenses was 
both properly noticed as part of the “facts and circumstances surrounding” the 
kidnapping, robbery, rape and murder of Murray and admissible as pertinent to 
section 190.3, factor (b).  Thus, we reject Coffman’s claims of error. 
 
 
138
B.  Testimony of Dr. Craig Rath 
1.  Asserted prosecutorial misconduct in suggesting through 
inadmissible evidence that Marlow fit the definition of a sexual 
sadist serial killer 
 
In his direct testimony in Coffman’s case in mitigation, clinical 
psychologist Craig Rath, Ph.D., opined that Coffman could not be classified as a 
serial killer, primarily because serial killers are “almost exclusively male.”  On 
cross-examination, the prosecutor reviewed with Dr. Rath the various 
characteristics of serial killers and whether they applied to Coffman, observing, 
“I’m not talking about Mr. Marlow at all.”  Dr. Rath stated he knew of no cases of 
female sexually sadistic serial killers and repeatedly insisted that certain identified 
traits were characteristic only of male serial killers.  The trial court instructed the 
jury that Dr. Rath’s testimony was offered only as to Coffman and was 
inadmissible as to Marlow.  Marlow now contends the prosecutor engaged in 
misconduct by eliciting Dr. Rath’s opinion that sexual sadist serial killers are 
exclusively male in an impermissible effort to induce the jury to use Rath’s 
testimony against Marlow.40 
 
We first observe that Marlow forfeited this claim of misconduct by failing 
to make contemporaneous objection at trial, although he objected on other grounds 
                                             
 
40  
Marlow also suggests the prosecutor engaged in misconduct in cross-
examining Dr. Rath with a published article written by Dr. Richard Rappaport 
regarding sexual sadist serial killers and their profiles.  The trial court had ruled 
that Rath could be questioned concerning the article, but directed the parties not to 
reveal that the article in fact analyzed Coffman’s and Marlow’s case.  (Rappaport 
earlier had been retained to evaluate Marlow, but was not called as a witness.  
According to Marlow’s defense counsel, the publication of the article violated the 
“patient-client” [sic] and attorney-client privileges.)  We see no error in the court’s 
limitation on the use of the article and, in the absence of any instance in which the 
prosecutor transgressed it, no misconduct. 
 
 
139
not renewed here.  As previously noted, a prosecutor’s conduct violates the 
Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution when it “infects the trial with 
such unfairness as to make the conviction a denial of due process.”  (People v. 
Morales, supra, 25 Cal.4th at p. 44.)  A prosecutor’s conduct “ ‘that does not 
render a criminal trial fundamentally unfair’ ” violates California law “ ‘only if it 
involves “ ‘the use of deceptive or reprehensible methods to attempt to persuade 
either the court or the jury.’ ” ’ ”  (People v. Farnam, supra, 28 Cal.4th at p. 167.)  
The prosecutor’s cross-examination of Dr. Rath properly sought to impeach Rath’s 
opinion that Coffman did not meet the criteria for a diagnosis of antisocial 
personality disorder and could not properly be classified as a serial killer.  (Evid. 
Code, §§ 773, subd. (a) [scope of cross-examination], 801, subd. (b) [permissible 
bases for expert opinion]).  He did not examine Rath concerning whether Marlow 
could be so classified.  We find no misconduct. 
2.  Asserted prosecutorial misconduct and trial court error in failing to 
limit cross-examination of Dr. Rath 
 
Coffman contends the prosecutor engaged in misconduct by, in effect, 
presenting, during his cross-examination of Dr. Rath, his own unsupported theory 
that Coffman was a sociopath and a serial killer.  The trial court’s failure to 
confine the prosecutor to the proper scope of cross-examination, she argues, 
constituted prejudicial error.  Noting that the prosecutor, during his guilt phase 
cross-examination of Dr. Lenore Walker, had sought to demonstrate that Coffman 
fit the diagnostic criteria for antisocial personality disorder by eliciting examples 
of criminal conduct in which Coffman had engaged before she met Marlow, 
Coffman further maintains the prosecutor, during the penalty phase, continued this 
tactic of introducing evidence of her bad acts to prove a criminal disposition, 
contrary to Evidence Code section 1101, subdivision (a).  Coffman acknowledges 
that her counsel attempted, in his case in mitigation, to counter the prosecutor’s 
 
 
140
suggestion that she was a sociopath by eliciting from Dr. Rath the opinion that 
serial killers are almost exclusively male and that Coffman did not fit the profile of 
a serial killer.  She then complains that the ensuing cross-examination “was not 
rebuttal but a continuation of the themes which the prosecution itself had 
originally raised in the trial.”  In particular, Coffman argues, the prosecutor 
improperly examined Dr. Rath concerning the Rappaport article (see fn. 42, ante) 
in order to reinforce the suggestion that she was of a criminal disposition.  
Coffman also contends the prosecutor improperly questioned Dr. Rath concerning 
whether a sexual sadist serial killer could be female and whether Coffman’s 
bragging about the offenses, as testified to by jailhouse informant Robin Long, 
was consistent with the behavior of a serial killer.  In this connection, she also 
complains that the prosecutor wrongly put before the jury, during the penalty 
phase, nonstatutory aggravating evidence including that she had carried a gun in 
Barstow before ever meeting Marlow and that, shortly after the murder of Lynell 
Murray, she behaved exuberantly in a Denny’s restaurant in the City of Ontario.  
Coffman argues the above evidence was improper rebuttal, as her defense did not 
attempt to portray her as “having a character incompatible with antisocial 
conduct.”   
 
Although Coffman at one point objected to the cross-examination of Dr. 
Rath as going beyond the scope of the direct examination, she did not object to the 
evidence of her behavior before or after the Murray killing or other evidence of 
violent criminal conduct the prosecutor had introduced in aggravation.  She thus 
failed to preserve these claims for appeal.  In any event, we find the challenged 
cross-examination entirely proper as an exploration of the basis of Dr. Rath’s 
opinion, and the evidence of Coffman’s conduct was proper rebuttal to her penalty 
phase defense.  The trial court, therefore, did not err in failing to “confine” the 
prosecutor’s cross-examination of Rath, and the prosecutor did not engage in 
 
 
141
misconduct by probing into the basis of Dr. Rath’s opinions.  As no ground 
appears on which additional objections would have succeeded in limiting the 
scope of the cross-examination, Coffman’s trial counsel cannot be faulted for 
failing to make them. 
C.  Testimony of Katherine Davis and Marlene Boggs 
1.  As nonnoticed aggravation and improper propensity evidence 
 
Marlow complains that the testimony by his former wife, Katherine Davis, 
and her mother, Marlene Boggs, presented during Coffman’s case in mitigation 
(discussed in detail, post) constituted, in essence, nonnoticed evidence in 
aggravation and improper evidence of his propensity for violence.  He further 
asserts that Coffman’s counsel actively concealed from his defense team their 
intention to call Davis and Boggs.  The admission of their testimony, he contends, 
thus violated Evidence Code section 1101, subdivision (a) and deprived him of his 
rights to due process and a reliable penalty determination as guaranteed by the 
federal Constitution. 
 
Marlow did not object to the evidence on the ground that it had not been 
included in the notice of aggravating evidence, but rather questioned its relevance 
to Coffman’s case in mitigation and asserted it constituted nonstatutory 
aggravating evidence.  He therefore has forfeited this contention for appellate 
purposes.  (People v. Boyette, supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 453, fn. 15.) 
 
In any event, we disagree with the substance of the contention.  As 
pertinent to the introduction of aggravating evidence, section 190.3 provides:  
“Except for the evidence in proof of the offense or special circumstances which 
subject a defendant to the death penalty, no evidence may be presented by the 
prosecution in aggravation unless notice of the evidence to be introduced has been 
given to the defendant within a reasonable period of time as determined by the 
court, prior to the trial.”  The statute thus contemplates that the prosecution will 
 
 
142
give notice of the aggravating evidence it will present, but omits any mention of a 
codefendant’s obligation to provide notice of penalty phase evidence.  Moreover, 
the testimony of Davis and Boggs was not introduced by the prosecution in 
aggravation of Marlow’s penalty, but by Coffman in mitigation of her own, and 
the trial court specifically admonished the jury not to consider the evidence as 
aggravation against Marlow.  We presume the jury followed the admonition.  
(People v. Boyette, supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 435.)  Defendant Marlow thus was not 
forced to defend against aggravating evidence without proper notice.  Marlow’s 
assertion that Coffman’s counsel “actively concealed” their intention to call the 
witnesses, unsupported by any evidence in the record apart from counsel’s failure 
to mention them in his opening statement, adds nothing to his argument. 
 
Marlow further contends the testimony of Davis and Boggs should have 
been excluded under Evidence Code section 1101 as improper evidence of a 
propensity for violence.  Again, we observe he failed to object on this specific 
ground at trial and thus has forfeited the contention for purposes of this appeal.  
(See People v. Boyette, supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 453, fn. 15.)  In any event, the 
contention lacks merit.  Marlow relies on People v. Farmer (1989) 47 Cal.3d 888, 
921, overruled on another ground in People v. Waidla, supra, 22 Cal.4th at page 
724, footnote 6, where we rejected a claim of error in the exclusion of evidence of 
violent criminal activity on the part of a third person, offered to show that person 
was more likely the killer than was the defendant.  Farmer, however, is 
distinguishable, in that here the trial court admitted the testimony of Davis and 
Boggs to rebut Marlow’s insistence that Coffman was the instigator of Novis’s 
murder:  In overruling Marlow’s objection to the evidence as irrelevant and unduly 
prejudicial, the trial court stated:  “I think this is legitimate evidence to impeach 
the position which he has taken in opposition to her defense.”  We conclude the 
trial court did not abuse its discretion in so ruling.  Moreover, before the jury 
 
 
143
retired to deliberate on penalty, the trial court specifically instructed it regarding 
the criminal acts it could consider as aggravating circumstances in the case and 
cautioned that it could not consider any evidence other than those enumerated 
aggravating circumstances.  We again presume the jury followed these 
instructions.  (Boyette, supra, at p. 436.) 
2.  Restriction on examination of Davis 
 
Although Davis described in detail the course of her relationship with 
Marlow and his behavior toward her, Coffman challenges several rulings by the 
trial court that restricted certain aspects of the examination, claiming they violated 
her federal constitutional rights, under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to 
the federal Constitution, to present mitigating evidence (Lockett v. Ohio (1978) 
438 U.S. 586, 604-605; Eddings v. Oklahoma (1982) 455 U.S. 104, 113-114) and 
to due process of law (Hicks v. Oklahoma (1980) 447 U.S. 343, 346).  In order to 
assess the propriety and effect of the challenged rulings, we find it necessary to set 
forth Davis’s testimony in some detail. 
 
Davis testified she met Marlow in 1977, when she was 18 or 19 years old 
and he was two years older.  At their first meeting, they were somewhat hostile 
toward each other, but a few weeks later she and several of her friends took 
Marlow to her parents’ house, where Davis and Marlow “partied” and had sex 
together for the first time.  Later, when they were among a group of other 
teenagers and she was not immediately friendly to him, Marlow made a comment 
that greatly embarrassed her41 and caused her to be very angry toward him.  Not 
long after that incident, Marlow appeared at the door of her apartment and 
demanded admission, beating on the door and threatening to destroy her car. 
                                             
 
41  
The trial court sustained Marlow’s and the prosecution’s objections to 
counsel’s asking for the substance of the comment. 
 
 
144
 
The next time she saw Marlow, he behaved like a gentleman and was 
attentive, romantic and considerate; on that occasion, she took him to a party she 
was attending.  On the way, Marlow asked her to keep a handgun in her purse.  
Later that evening, Marlow pointed the gun at a man who was demanding drugs 
from him and who had broken the driver’s window of the car Davis was driving, 
and gave him a “whipping.”  Still later that night as Davis and Marlow were 
visiting at the trailer of some friends, that man, one Jeff Tailor, and another man, 
both carrying shotguns, forced their way in.  Tailor pointed his shotgun at Marlow.  
Davis, interposing herself between Marlow and Tailor, created a sufficient 
diversion to enable Marlow to grab both shotguns.  After a scuffle, Marlow ran the 
two intruders off the property.  The following morning, police arrested Marlow.  
Davis eventually bailed him out of custody and married him the same day.   
 
Their marriage was initially happy, but their drug use and other behavior 
soon displeased Davis’s parents, with whom they were living, and resulted in 
Davis and Marlow moving to Indianapolis to live with friends there.  After the 
move, Marlow began accusing Davis of flirting with other men.  He started 
manifesting fits of rage and would slap or hit her with his fist for no reason; on 
one occasion, he cut her on the shoulder and forearm with his pocketknife as she 
sat in the bathroom.  Because of the tension and violence between Davis and 
Marlow, they soon were no longer welcome in their friends’ house.  At that point, 
they returned to Kentucky and stayed with her paternal grandparents.  There, 
Marlow kept Davis isolated in their bedroom or elsewhere in the house most of the 
time, preventing her from talking with her relatives.  After two weeks, they moved 
into a vacant house owned by Davis’s maternal grandparents.  There, on one 
occasion, Marlow became enraged and choked Davis into unconsciousness.  When 
Davis became pregnant, Marlow was happy; they decided to name their child 
Joshua Luke.  Marlow then wanted the couple to move back to McCreary County, 
 
 
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Kentucky, where Davis had previously lived and where she had many relatives 
and friends.  Davis feared such a move because of Marlow’s intense jealousy.  She 
was so distraught over the prospect of the move that she stabbed herself in the leg 
with a pair of scissors.  Immediately after that incident, Marlow left the house, 
whereupon Davis’s father chased him with a pistol and shot at him. 
 
Over the course of her relationship with Marlow, Davis testified, she 
“wasn’t a person any more”; she “didn’t have any spirit,” “didn’t talk to other 
people,” and “hardly even [made] eye contact with other people.”  She lost 73 
pounds during their marriage, and her hair “fell out by the wads.”  Davis had tried 
to encourage Marlow to join her in attending church services, but on one occasion 
he responded by throwing her on the bed, getting on top of her and saying, in a 
menacing voice, “I am the devil and I own you.” 
 
Despite the extensive scope of the foregoing testimony, Coffman contends 
the trial court committed error of constitutional magnitude in precluding her from 
examining Davis concerning (1) her subjective reaction to Marlow’s sexual 
performance; (2) the precise nature of Marlow’s embarrassing remark; (3) the 
specific grounds for Marlow’s arrest following the altercation in the trailer with 
two men armed with shotguns; (4) the identity of a person with respect to whom 
Marlow was particularly jealous in his relationship with Davis; (5) the size of the 
links on a chain Marlow often carried; (6) the reasons why Davis often cried and 
whether she lay awake at night during their stay in Indianapolis; and (7) whether 
Davis feared she would be killed if she returned with Marlow to McCreary 
County.  The excluded evidence, Coffman contends, would have corroborated Dr. 
Walker’s guilt phase testimony concerning battered woman syndrome and 
supported a lingering doubt of Coffman’s guilt of the Novis and Murray 
homicides; thus, she urges, it constituted potentially mitigating evidence she was 
constitutionally entitled to have the jury consider.  (See Lockett v. Ohio, supra, 
 
 
146
438 U.S. 586; Eddings v. Oklahoma, supra, 455 U.S. 104; Hitchcock v. Dugger 
(1987) 481 U.S. 393, 395-399.) 
 
As Coffman correctly observes, the cited authorities hold that the Eighth 
and Fourteenth Amendments to the federal Constitution require that the sentencer 
not be precluded from considering any relevant mitigating evidence.  
Nevertheless, the trial court determines relevancy in the first instance and retains 
discretion to exclude evidence whose probative value is substantially outweighed 
by the probability that its admission will create substantial danger of confusing the 
issues or misleading the jury.  (People v. Cain, supra, 10 Cal.4th at p. 64.)  We 
conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in excluding the evidence 
described above.  Davis’s testimony presented to the jury a picture of a woman 
who endured abuse from Marlow similar to that described by Coffman, and thus 
tended to support Coffman’s claim that she had acted under duress in committing 
the offenses.  The additional details of Davis’s abuse were either irrelevant to 
Coffman’s circumstances, or their probative value was so slight as to be 
substantially outweighed by the danger of misleading the jury.  The trial court 
properly excluded them. 
D.  Admission of Marlow’s 1980 Statement Concerning Three 
Robberies 
 
During the penalty phase, Supervising Probation Officer Evelyn Frantz read 
into the record a statement that defendant Marlow had made to a probation officer 
in connection with his 1980 guilty plea to three counts of robbery.  In the 
statement, Marlow described the robberies he had committed in an apartment 
complex in Upland, a leather goods store in Upland, and a methadone clinic in 
Ontario, all in November 1979.  Marlow now contends admission of his statement 
was error under the rules of Ramona R. v. Superior Court (1985) 37 Cal.3d 802, In 
 
 
147
re Wayne H. (1979) 24 Cal.3d 595, People v. Hicks (1971) 4 Cal.3d 757 and 
People v. Harrington (1970) 2 Cal.3d 991. 
 
Marlow failed to preserve this issue for appellate review by making 
contemporaneous objection at trial, but he contends his trial counsel rendered 
ineffective assistance in this regard.  In any event, the claim lacks merit. 
 
A line of California authorities, beginning with People v. Quinn (1964) 61 
Cal.2d 551, held that statements made under certain circumstances by criminal 
defendants to probation officers in the course of the preparation of a probation 
report were inadmissible in any subsequent proceedings.  In Quinn, for example, 
the probation officer told the defendant he would not recommend probation if 
defendant failed to tell the truth; this court held that the “[d]efendant’s admissions 
following this threat or implied promise of leniency were . . . involuntary,” and 
their introduction into evidence required reversal.  (Id. at p. 554; see also People v. 
Harrington, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 999 [statements made to probation officer in the 
hope that candor would persuade the officer to make a favorable report to the court 
were held inadmissible either as substantive evidence or for impeachment]; but see 
People v. Alesi (1967) 67 Cal.2d 856, 861 [statements made by defendant on 
advice of counsel, with no assertion of privilege at the time the statements were 
made, were admissible at a later trial].)  In People v. Hicks, supra, 4 Cal.3d at 
pages 761-763, emphasizing the “paramount” nature of the policy of encouraging 
free and unfettered communication between a defendant and his or her probation 
officer, this court held it was error to admit a defendant’s statement made, on the 
advice of a probation officer, to a judge in a related case.  Similar rules were 
adopted in the context of juvenile proceedings.  (E.g., Ramona R. v. Superior 
Court, supra, 37 Cal.3d at pp. 807-810 [Cal. Const. precludes use of minor’s 
testimony at fitness hearing in juvenile court in later adult criminal trial]; In re 
Wayne H., supra, 24 Cal.3d at pp. 598-601 [statements made by juvenile to 
 
 
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probation officer held inadmissible in any subsequent proceeding as substantive 
evidence or for impeachment].) 
 
In Minnesota v. Murphy (1984) 465 U.S. 420, however, the high court held 
that the federal Constitution does not compel exclusion from criminal proceedings 
of a defendant’s statement to a probation officer.  The court reasoned that the Fifth 
Amendment privilege against self-incrimination is not self-executing, but must be 
affirmatively asserted, except in limited situations involving inherently compelling 
pressure to speak (e.g., when the declarant is undergoing custodial interrogation), 
the threat of a penalty for exercising the privilege, or, related to the latter, a 
gambler’s failure to file a gambling tax return.  (Id. at pp. 429-430, 434, 439.)  
Although the defendant in Minnesota v. Murphy was required to speak—and speak 
truthfully—with his probation officer, he was not precluded from asserting the 
privilege and was not shown to have been subject to any penalty for doing so.  
Consequently, the high court held, his statements were voluntary and thus 
admissible.  (Id. at pp. 436-439.)  Following Minnesota v. Murphy, and in light of 
article I, section 28, subdivision (d) of the California Constitution,42 the Court of 
Appeal in People v. Goodner (1992) 7 Cal.App.4th 1324, 1330-1332, held that 
statements made by a defendant to a probation officer during a presentence 
investigation interview could be used against him, at least in the absence of any 
evidence that the probation officer had threatened defendant with an unfavorable 
                                             
 
42 
This provision, added to the state Constitution by the passage of 
Proposition 8 by the voters in June 1982, provides that all relevant evidence must 
be admitted unless excludable under existing statutory rules of evidence pertaining 
to privilege or hearsay, or Evidence Code sections 352, 782 and 1103.  Evidence 
Code section 940 enshrines the state and federal constitutional privilege against 
self-incrimination, which thus remains a valid exclusionary principle following 
Proposition 8. 
 
 
149
recommendation if he or she refused to give a statement.  (Accord, People v. 
Pacchioli (1992) 9 Cal.App.4th 1331, 1340.)  Thus, the Goodner court recognized, 
our decision in People v. Hicks, supra, 4 Cal.3d 757, did not survive 
Proposition 8.43  Marlow’s claims, therefore, must fail. 
E.  Admission of Marlow’s Refusal to Discuss Involvement in 
Methadone Robbery 
 
Marlow contends the prosecutor violated the rule of Doyle v. Ohio, supra, 
426 U.S. at pages 617-618 (Doyle), in eliciting testimony from Detective Scharf of 
the Ontario Police Department that in 1979, after being advised of and waiving his 
Miranda rights and answering several questions relating to methadone found in his 
possession, Marlow refused to answer questions about the clinic robbery.  Marlow 
failed to object at trial on the ground he now advances and therefore has forfeited 
the contention for purposes of this appeal (People v. Hughes, supra, 27 Cal.4th at 
p. 332), but he contends his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance in this 
respect.  We conclude Marlow is not entitled to relief. 
 
Doyle holds that the prosecution may not, consistent with due process and 
fundamental fairness, use postarrest silence following Miranda warnings to 
impeach a defendant’s testimony at trial.  (Doyle, supra, 426 U.S. at pp. 617-618.)  
Respondent asserts Doyle has no application here because Scharf testified, not in 
impeachment, but before Marlow took the stand.  We find this contention 
inconsistent with the rationale of Doyle, that the impeachment by postwarning 
silence there condemned was “fundamentally unfair because Miranda warnings 
                                             
 
43  
The rule of Ramona R. v. Superior Court, supra, 37 Cal.3d 802, precluding 
substantive use of a minor’s statements made in the course of a fitness hearing, in 
contrast, is of constitutional dimension and remains viable after Proposition 8.  
(See People v. Macias, supra, 16 Cal.4th at pp. 756-757.) 
 
 
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inform a person of his right to remain silent and assure him, at least implicitly, that 
his silence will not be used against him.”  (Anderson v. Charles (1980) 447 U.S. 
404, 407-408.)  No less unfair is using that silence against a defendant by means 
of the prosecutor’s examination of an interrogating detective even before the 
defendant has had the opportunity to take the stand. 
 
Respondent further asserts, citing People v. Hurd (1998) 62 Cal.App.4th 
1084, that Doyle does not protect against prosecutorial use of a defendant’s refusal 
to answer selected questions after waiving Miranda rights and electing to speak to 
law enforcement authorities.  The Hurd court stated:  “A defendant has no right to 
remain silent selectively.  Once a defendant elects to speak after receiving a 
Miranda warning, his or her refusal to answer questions may be used for 
impeachment purposes absent any indication that such refusal is an invocation of 
Miranda rights. . . .  [Defendant] was not induced by the Miranda warning to 
remain silent. . . .  [¶] . . . We do not think Doyle was meant to preclude the 
prosecutor from commenting on highly relevant evidence bearing on [defendant’s] 
credibility, including [defendant’s] refusal to provide critical details, when he had 
voluntarily waived his right to remain silent.”  (Id. at pp. 1093-1094.) 
Other courts have taken a different view.  The Ninth Circuit, for example, 
has held that a suspect may selectively waive his Miranda rights by agreeing to 
answer some questions but not others.  (United States v. Soliz (9th Cir. 1997) 129 
F.3d 499, 503-504, overruled on another ground in United States v. Johnson (9th 
Cir. 2001) 256 F.3d 895; United States v. Garcia-Cruz (9th Cir. 1992) 978 F.2d 
537, 541-542.)  Several other federal circuits have specifically held that Doyle 
precludes the use of partial silence to the extent that the defendant relied on a 
Miranda warning in refusing to answer specific questions.  (Hockenbury v. 
Sowders (6th Cir. 1983) 718 F.2d 155, 159; United States v. Scott (7th Cir. 1995) 
47 F.3d 904, 906-907; United States v. May (10th Cir. 1995) 52 F.3d 885, 890; 
 
 
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United States v. Canterbury (10th Cir. 1993) 985 F.2d 483, 486.)  In United States 
v. Harrold (10th Cir. 1986) 796 F.2d 1275, the federal Court of Appeals for the 
Tenth Circuit reasoned, “To the extent that a defendant clearly relies on a Miranda 
warning to refuse to answer specific questions, he had been induced by the 
government to do it and his silence may not be used against him.”  (Id. at p. 1279, 
fn. 3.)  We need not, in this case, determine whether comment on Marlow’s refusal 
to answer questions pertaining to the robbery violated Doyle, because any such 
error would be harmless beyond a reasonable doubt in view of other witnesses’ 
testimony regarding Marlow’s involvement in the robbery and the incident’s 
relatively minor significance in the prosecution’s case in aggravation.  The lack of 
prejudice stemming from the assumed error is fatal to Marlow’s related claim that 
his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance in failing to object to the 
challenged comments. 
F.  Other Asserted Prosecutorial Misconduct 
 
Coffman contends the prosecutor engaged in prejudicial misconduct during 
his penalty phase argument, violating her rights under state and federal law.  As 
noted above, a prosecutor’s conduct violates the Fourteenth Amendment to the 
federal Constitution when it “infects the trial with such unfairness as to make the 
conviction a denial of due process.”  (People v. Morales, supra, 25 Cal.4th at 
p. 44; accord, Darden v. Wainwright, supra, 477 U.S. at p. 181; Donnelly v. 
DeChristoforo, supra, 416 U.S. at p. 643.)  In other words, the misconduct must 
be “of sufficient significance to result in the denial of the defendant’s right to a 
fair trial.”  (United States v. Agurs, supra, 427 U.S. at p. 108.)  A prosecutor’s 
conduct “ ‘that does not render a criminal trial fundamentally unfair’ ” violates 
California law “ ‘only if it involves “ ‘the use of deceptive or reprehensible 
methods to attempt to persuade either the court or the jury.’ ” ’ ”  (People v. 
Farnam, supra, 28 Cal.4th at p. 167.)  By failing to make contemporaneous 
 
 
152
objection in this situation, where the record supports no contention that to do so 
would have been futile, Coffman failed to preserve any of her claims of 
prosecutorial misconduct during the penalty phase argument.  (People v. Frye, 
supra, 18 Cal.4th at p. 970.)  She contends, however, that her trial counsel’s 
failure to make appropriate objection constituted ineffective assistance.  In any 
event, as will appear, Coffman’s contention that the prosecutor engaged in 
prejudicial misconduct lacks merit, and her claim of ineffective assistance of 
counsel must fail. 
 
Coffman first contends the prosecutor improperly asserted that the very fact 
she was defending against the charges in this case with a defense of domination or 
duress, and in a posture conflicting with Marlow’s defense, was itself evidence of 
sociopathy.  She quotes the following portion of the prosecutor’s argument:  “And 
I think this theory, the alternative theory, that the defendants’ classic sociopaths 
synergistic result affect each other results in this violent crime spree, really is the 
best theory to explain all the evidence you’ve got, for one thing.  [¶] I mean, how 
can you get a fact pattern where each defendant can claim at least plausibly that 
they were dominated and controlled by the other defendant?  [¶] Well, we have 
heard about sociopaths and what they are.  [¶] They are people that abuse and 
exploit everyone they meet their whole life, right?  [¶] So if you have two 
sociopaths, of course, they probably abused and exploited each other.”  In the 
same vein, Coffman contends the prosecutor engaged in misconduct by suggesting 
that, to the extent her defense drew upon her fear of harm to her son as motivating 
her to participate with Marlow in the charged crimes (in the face of evidence that 
she failed to mention any such fear to investigating officers after her arrest and 
that she wished to take Josh from his grandparents and have him come to live with 
herself and Marlow), Coffman was exploiting and “abusing” her son.  With these 
arguments, the prosecutor appears to have been urging the jury to adopt a 
 
 
153
particular interpretation of the evidence, not—as Coffman asserts—misstating the 
law by asserting that the mere proffer of a defense is itself evidence of guilt.  
Likewise, the prosecutor’s characterizations of Coffman’s personality (“an 
uncontrollable temper,” “utterly arrogant,” “total disrespect for authority”) did not 
purport to express a professional expertise, but constituted instead permissible 
comment on the evidence.  There was no misconduct and no basis on which to 
object. 
 
Coffman complains the prosecutor misstated evidence in arguing that the 
jury should draw no inferences favorable to Coffman from the testimony of 
Marlow’s former wife, Katherine Davis, regarding the abuse she suffered at 
Marlow’s hands.  The prosecutor said:  “I think in the—the thing I talked about in 
our guilt phase argument that I found repulsive that—is that battered woman 
syndrome we see one of Mr. Marlow’s former wives.  [¶] She clearly fits into that 
category.  [¶] Of course, you’ll remember she got out as quickly as she could.  
[¶] She had injuries.  Corroboration.  [¶] Miss Coffman’s defense team is hoping 
that the genuine repulsion that we all feel towards that kind of a crime will 
somehow wash over Mr. Marlow and make her seem better.  [¶] And I think they 
are trying to exploit that in this battered woman syndrome stuff.”  Coffman points 
out that Davis testified Marlow left her after a particularly violent episode, not that 
she (Davis) left Marlow.  Coming as it did in the context of the prosecutor’s 
argument emphasizing the evidence of Coffman’s responsibility for the offenses, 
however, this minor misstatement would not, to a reasonable probability, have 
unfairly influenced the jury.  Coffman further argues the prosecutor 
misrepresented the evidence in attributing ownership of the shovel with which 
Novis was buried, and the handcuffs with which Novis and possibly Murray were 
restrained, to both Coffman and Marlow, rather than Marlow alone.  But the 
 
 
154
record contains sufficient evidence of defendants’ joint participation in the 
offenses to support the prosecutor’s use of the third person plural pronoun. 
 
Coffman complains the prosecutor improperly referred to nonstatutory 
aggravating evidence in referring in his penalty phase closing argument to her 
celebratory behavior at the Denny’s restaurant following the murder of Lynell 
Murray.  (People v. Boyd, supra, 38 Cal.3d at p. 773.)  We see no misconduct in 
the prosecutor’s discussion of this evidence, which arguably tended to suggest 
Coffman’s voluntary, active role in the crimes, contrary to her defense of 
domination and duress, and thus bore on section 190.3, factor (a), the 
circumstances of the offense. 
 
Coffman further contends the prosecutor committed Davenport error (see 
People v. Davenport (1985) 41 Cal.3d 247, 289-290) in suggesting that 
deficiencies in her defense of duress constituted aggravating evidence.  Clearly, 
however, in context the prosecutor was merely commenting on the state of the 
evidence, as he was entitled to do.  No misconduct appears. 
G.  Asserted Instructional Errors  
1.  Marlow:  Instruction that jury could consider all evidence received 
during both phases of trial 
 
Marlow (joined by Coffman) complains the trial court exacerbated the 
erroneous admission of evidence in the guilt phase by instructing the jury, in the 
penalty phase, that it could consider all evidence received during both phases of 
the trial.  (CALJIC No. 8.85.)  The giving of this instruction, he contends, 
deprived him of a reliable penalty adjudication because it invited the jury to 
consider as evidence such matters as the Kentucky homicide, his alleged 
membership in the Aryan Brotherhood, his swastika tattoo, and Dr. Walker’s 
opinion that he was a batterer, all of which evidence was admitted only for 
purposes of Coffman’s defense.  The instruction, Marlow urges, also permitted the 
 
 
155
jury to consider his assertedly coerced confession.  Coffman also argues the 
instruction improperly allowed the jury to consider all the evidence she contends 
was erroneously admitted against her during the guilt phase of trial. 
 
To the extent defendants argue the trial court erred in failing to clarify the 
instruction, they forfeited their appellate challenge by failing to request such 
clarification.  (People v. Quartermain, supra, 16 Cal.4th at p. 630; see People v. 
McLain (1988) 46 Cal.3d 97, 113.)  In any event, the totality of the instructions as 
given properly guided the jury’s consideration of penalty.  In particular, before the 
commencement of penalty phase deliberations, the court instructed the jury as to 
the statutory aggravating and mitigating factors against which to evaluate the 
evidence (CALJIC No. 8.85), that evidence had been admitted against one 
defendant and not the other (CALJIC No. 2.07), that evidence had been admitted 
for a limited purpose (CALJIC No. 2.09), how to assess an expert’s testimony 
(CALJIC No. 2.80), and the use of prior consistent or inconsistent statements as 
evidence (CALJIC No. 2.13).  The jury was also properly instructed on the use of 
statements, taken in violation of Miranda, for impeachment purposes, and 
regarding Marlow’s assertion of the privilege against self-incrimination.  
Defendants therefore were not denied a reliable penalty determination as 
guaranteed by the Fifth, Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the federal 
Constitution. 
2.  Coffman:  Failure to define implied malice 
 
Coffman contends that the trial court’s failure to instruct the sentencing 
jury on the definition of implied malice, given the lack of such an instruction in 
the guilt phase as well, resulted in “grave uncertainty” whether the jury rendered 
an individualized penalty based on Coffman’s own personal conduct and 
responsibility, in violation of the Eighth Amendment’s requirement of reliability 
in capital sentencing.  She argues that the jury might have been so confused by the 
 
 
156
instructions actually given, including the definition of murder under section 187, a 
definition of first degree felony murder, and an instruction on murder liability 
predicated on an aiding and abetting theory, that it may have imposed the death 
sentence based on a belief that Coffman was guilty of murdering Lynell Murray 
even if it also concluded she lacked the intent to kill. 
 
The contention lacks merit.  The evidence relating to Lynell Murray’s 
killing was properly admitted as other violent criminal conduct under section 
190.3, factor (b).  When the prosecution has introduced evidence, during the 
penalty phase, of a defendant’s other violent criminal conduct, the trial court is not 
required, absent a request, to instruct on the elements of specific crimes that such 
evidence tends to prove.  (People v. Weaver, supra, 26 Cal.4th at p. 987; People v. 
Cain, supra, 10 Cal.4th at p. 72.)  Here, Coffman never requested an instruction 
defining implied malice, and the trial court thus had no duty so to instruct.  Given 
the abundant evidence, including Coffman’s own guilt phase testimony, showing 
her active participation in the murder and other offenses against Lynell Murray, 
we see no reasonable likelihood the jury was confused by the lack of an instruction 
defining implied malice.  (People v. Benson (1990) 52 Cal.3d 754, 801-802.) 
3.  Coffman: Asserted defects in principal penalty phase instructions 
 
Coffman contends the trial court’s failure to instruct the jury that certain 
sentencing factors could only be considered in mitigation might have confused the 
jury as to the scope of its sentencing discretion and constituted error under the 
Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the federal Constitution.  She argues the 
introduction of the various sentencing factors by the phrase “whether or not” could 
have led the jury to conclude that the absence of such factors constituted 
aggravation.  She also asserts the failure to explicitly designate aggravating and 
mitigating factors violated state and federal guarantees of equal protection 
 
 
157
inasmuch as, in noncapital sentencing, the factors are separately designated.  (See 
Cal. Rules of Court, rules 421, 423.) 
 
We have repeatedly held that sentencing factors need not be labeled as 
mitigating or aggravating, and we see no reasonable likelihood the jury would 
have misunderstood any mitigating factor as aggravating (see, e.g., People v. 
Maury (2003) 30 Cal.4th 342, 443-444; People v. Benson, supra, 52 Cal.3d at pp. 
801-803), or that the absence of a mitigating factor was itself an aggravating one 
(People v. Sapp (2003) 31 Cal.4th 240, 315).  Further, we see no merit in 
Coffman’s equal protection argument, for capital and noncapital defendants are 
not similarly situated for purposes of the choice among sentencing options. 
 
Coffman challenges a number of other aspects of the standard sentencing 
instruction.  She contends CALJIC No. 8.88, in its use of the terms “so 
substantial” and “warrants,” was vague and misleading as to the jury’s duty to 
return a death verdict only if aggravating circumstances outweighed those in 
mitigation, and only if it found death to be the appropriate sentence.  We have held 
to the contrary.  (People v. Breaux (1991) 1 Cal.4th 281, 315-316.)  She also faults 
the instruction for failing to inform the jury that if the aggravating circumstances 
did not outweigh those in mitigation, a sentence of life without the possibility of 
parole was mandatory.  As she acknowledges, we have rejected this argument.  
(People v. Tuilaepa (1992) 4 Cal.4th 569, 593-594; People v. Duncan, supra, 53 
Cal.3d at p. 978.)  Nor, contrary to Coffman’s argument, was the instruction 
constitutionally defective for not informing the jury that even if it found the 
aggravating circumstances outweighed the mitigating ones, it still could return a 
verdict of life without the possibility of parole.  (People v. Beeler (1995) 9 Cal.4th 
953, 997.)  Coffman further contends the instruction unconstitutionally failed to 
inform the jury that in order to reach a death verdict, it had to find that aggravating 
circumstances outweighed mitigating ones beyond a reasonable doubt and that 
 
 
158
death was the appropriate penalty beyond a reasonable doubt.  We have rejected 
these contentions.  (People v. Medina (1995) 11 Cal.4th 694, 782.)  Contrary to 
Coffman’s further contention, the instruction was not defective for failing to 
inform the jury as to which side bore the burden of persuading it of the 
appropriateness or inappropriateness of a death verdict in this case.  (People v. 
Hayes, supra, 52 Cal.3d at p. 643.)  Nor was the instruction defective for failing to 
require the jury to make unanimous separate findings on each of the aggravating 
circumstances or to render a statement of reasons for its death verdict.  (People v. 
Martinez (2003) 31 Cal.4th 673, 701; Medina, supra, at p. 782.)  We decline to 
reconsider these holdings. 
 
Finally, Coffman contends the instructions improperly suggested to the jury 
that it must unanimously agree on the presence of mitigating factors—in 
particular, the alleged duress or domination by Marlow—before it could consider 
them in determining her sentence.  As we explain, there is no reasonable 
likelihood the jury so interpreted the court’s instructions.  (People v. Benson, 
supra, 52 Cal.3d at p. 801.) 
 
The issue arose in the following context.  During a conference among the 
court and counsel to select jury instructions to govern the penalty phase 
deliberations, Marlow asked that the jury be instructed that in order to consider 
any aggravating factor, all 12 jurors were required to agree that the factor had been 
proven.  Although the court initially denied the request, it later reversed itself and 
instructed the jury that “[a]ll twelve jurors must agree as to the existence of any 
aggravating factor before it may be considered by you.  [¶] If the jury does not 
unanimously agree that the existence of an aggravating factor has been proved, no 
juror may consider it in reaching their personal penalty decision.”  After reading 
the jury the list of sentencing factors found in section 190.3, factors (a) through 
(k), the court said:  “I have previously read to you the list of aggravating 
 
 
159
circumstances which the law permits you to consider if you—if you found that any 
of them is established beyond a reasonable doubt by the evidence.”44 
 
Coffman contends the jury would have understood the court’s reference to 
“the list of aggravating circumstances” to encompass mitigating circumstances, 
noting the instructions did not specifically advise the jury that no unanimity was 
needed as to the latter.  She contends further that the prosecutor, in his summation, 
essentially characterized “the manipulative and exploitive way Marlow used” 
Coffman as an aggravating circumstance within the meaning of section 190.3, 
factor (a).  Because the jury could not believe Coffman had acted under duress or 
substantial domination without also believing Marlow had engaged in such duress 
or domination, she reasons the instructions would have led the jury to believe it 
must unanimously find the factual underpinning to the mitigating factor of section 
190.3, factor (g), contrary to the rule of McKoy v. North Carolina (1990) 494 U.S. 
433, 439-444. 
 
We disagree.  Nothing in the instructions told jurors to consider any 
mitigating factor only if they unanimously found it to be supported by the 
evidence; the unanimity requirement was explicitly directed to aggravating factors.  
Nor did anything in the prosecutor’s comments on Coffman’s duress defense 
suggest that Marlow’s exploitation of Coffman should be weighed against her as a 
factor in aggravation.45  To the extent the prosecutor suggested that Coffman 
                                             
 
44  
Of course, contrary to the instruction, the law does not require that the jury 
agree unanimously regarding the existence of aggravating factors.  (People v. 
Mayfield, supra, 14 Cal.4th at pp. 806-807.)  
45  
Coffman relies on selections from the following portion of the prosecutor’s 
summation, placed in context for ease of understanding:  “Other than the ‘k’ 
factor, there are really two defenses in my mind that have been raised all [the] way 
through this case.  [¶] One is the domination and control argument, the other one is 
the drug usage.  [¶] So let’s deal with those first and then go to these ‘k’ sorts of 
 
(footnote continues on next page) 
 
 
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exploited Marlow, we presume the jury, as instructed, weighed in aggravation only 
the factors specifically defined as aggravating, namely (as relevant to Coffman) 
the circumstances of the offense (factor (a)) and other violent criminal conduct 
(factor (b)). 
 
Finally, contrary to Coffman’s argument, California’s sentencing process 
remains constitutionally valid after Apprendi v. New Jersey (2000) 530 U.S. 466 
and Ring v. Arizona (2002) 536 U.S. 584.  (People v. Valdez (2004) 32 Cal.4th 73, 
139.) 
H.  Other Asserted Instance of Ineffective Assistance of Counsel 
(Marlow) 
 
Marlow contends his counsel rendered ineffective assistance in connection 
with the admission of evidence concerning the serological testing of urine stains 
on Lynell Murray’s clothing.  Marlow notes that in a hearing prior to the 
                                                                                                                                      
 
(footnote continued from previous page) 
factors.  [¶] Okay.  [¶] Domination and control.  [¶] I have one more chart.  [¶] By 
now you all could probably tell me my alternative theory to the defense theories 
better than I could.  [¶] I do think the evidence shows quite clearly that Mr. 
Marlow was not dominated by Miss Coffman.  [¶] Miss Coffman was not 
dominated and controlled by Mr. Marlow.  [¶] They were both full partners in a 
team of serial killers.  [¶] And I think this theory, the alternative theory, that the 
defendants’ classic sociopaths synergistic result affect each other results in this 
violent crime spree, really is the best theory to explain all the evidence you’ve got, 
for one thing.  [¶] I mean, how can you get a fact pattern where each defendant can 
claim at least plausibly that they were dominated and controlled by the other 
defendant?  [¶] Well, we have heard about sociopaths and what they are.  [¶] They 
are people that abuse and exploit everyone they meet their whole life, right?  
[¶] So if you have two sociopaths, of course, they probably abused and exploited 
each other.  [¶] After all, look at the history of Marlow and Coffman.  [¶] Didn’t 
they basically exploit and abuse every person they ever lived with?  Their family, 
husbands, kids, their work friends.  [¶] Everybody was exploited and abused by 
them.  [¶] So there’s no reason to expect that they didn’t exploit and abuse each 
other at times.  [¶] That would be the nature of their relationship.” 
 
 
161
testimony of criminalist Dan Gregonis, who performed the testing, the prosecutor 
stated he would not seek to introduce evidence of any testing beyond the base tests 
(identifying the urine as bodily fluid) and ABO typing, and that such testing 
would, “in my opinion [make] Mr. Marlow look less culpable than the base 
evidence did in my opinion. . . .  [¶] But the record should be clear in case later on 
someone accuses me of trying to make Mr. Marlow more guilty than he was . . . .”  
The prosecutor continued:  “I don’t try the defense case in this case.  I think it’s 
going to look worse for Mr. Marlow the way they are asking me to do it than the 
way it is.”  The court observed, “There are all sorts of tactical reasons for doing 
things in the presentation of the case,” and asked Marlow’s counsel to comment.  
After noting the necessity of a Kelly-Frye hearing (see People v. Kelly (1976) 17 
Cal.3d 24; Frye v. United States (D.C. Cir. 1923) 293 F. 1013; see also People v. 
Leahy (1994) 8 Cal.4th 587, 591) on serological evidence going beyond ABO 
typing, counsel said:  “[The prosecutor], as he indicated, does not wish to proceed 
there[;] that is fine.  I’m not asking him for advice on our tactics, and it is our 
belief that it is in Mr. Marlow’s interest.”  Later in the hearing Marlow’s counsel 
observed further:  “Our tactic has been dictated through the events of this trial that 
we are not putting up an affirmative defense to the Huntington Beach incident.”  
Before the jury, Gregonis testified that test results were inconclusive as to the 
identity of the source of the urine.  In response to examination by Marlow’s 
counsel, Gregonis acknowledged the stains on Murray’s clothing were consistent 
with the clothing’s coming into contact with, and absorbing, a preexisting urine 
deposit. 
 
In declining to present additional serological evidence, Marlow’s counsel 
clearly considered his client’s interests and entertained a tactical purpose to which 
he alluded on the record.  Perhaps he sought to minimize the significance of the 
stains rather than focus the jury’s attention on them, as surely would occur if 
 
 
162
additional evidence of forensic testing of the urine stains was presented.  In any 
event, because this is not a case in which there simply could be no satisfactory 
explanation for counsel’s action, Marlow’s claim of ineffective assistance of 
counsel fails for purposes of this appeal.  (People v. Mendoza Tello, supra, 15 
Cal.4th at pp. 266-267.) 
I.  Denial of Coffman’s Motion for New Trial 
 
Coffman’s motion for a new trial relied on many of the contentions 
advanced in this appeal, including the trial court’s denial of defendants’ severance 
motions, the denial of the motions to change venue, the denial of her motion to 
suppress her postarrest statements taken in violation of Miranda and the testimony 
of Robin Long, insufficiency of the evidence to support the burglary and sodomy 
special-circumstance findings, in addition to others not renewed here.  The trial 
court denied the motion, commenting it was convinced that “any jury anywhere” 
would have convicted Coffman and returned a death verdict.  Coffman contends 
the trial court should have granted the motion or otherwise stricken the special 
circumstance findings or exercised its power to reduce her sentence to life 
imprisonment. 
 
“We review a trial court’s ruling on a motion for a new trial under a 
deferential abuse-of-discretion standard.”  (People v. Navarette (2003) 30 Cal.4th 
458, 526.)  As to the grounds that Coffman has renewed in the course of this 
appeal, we have concluded none merits reversal of the judgment.  Coffman thus 
fails to establish a “manifest and unmistakable abuse of discretion” in the trial 
court’s denial of the motion for a new trial on those grounds.  (See People v. 
Delgado (1993) 5 Cal.4th 312, 328.)  As to the grounds she chose not to renew 
before this court, she fails to show that the trial court made any error of law 
rendering the denial of the motion for a new trial an abuse of discretion.  Nor does 
 
 
163
Coffman articulate a basis on which the trial court should have stricken the special 
circumstance findings or reduced her sentence to life imprisonment. 
J.  Cumulative Error 
 
Defendants contend the cumulative effect of the errors in both phases of 
their trial denied them a fundamentally fair trial and a reliable penalty 
determination.  We have found merit in three claims of error in the proceedings 
(error in the process whereby Marlow repeatedly asserted his privilege against 
self-incrimination before the jury, and instructional errors as to both defendants in 
instructing on first degree sodomy murder and in the giving of CALJIC No. 2.15 
without limitation to theft offenses) and have noted two claims of error by Marlow 
that, if not forfeited by lack of contemporaneous objection, would have had merit 
(the admission of Dr. Walker’s opinions as to Coffman’s credibility and the 
admission of evidence that Marlow requested an attorney during police 
questioning).  Additionally, we have assumed error in the admission of evidence 
that Marlow, after receiving Miranda warnings, refused to discuss the 1980 
methadone clinic robbery, for the purpose of resolving his related claim of 
ineffective assistance of trial counsel in failing to object thereto.  With respect to 
each claim individually, we have concluded that any error was harmless under the 
applicable standard.  Reviewing these errors cumulatively, we reach the same 
conclusion.  “[N]one of the errors, individually or cumulatively, ‘significantly 
influence[d] the fairness of [defendants’] trial or detrimentally affect[ed] the jury’s 
determination of the appropriate penalty.’ ”  (People v. Valdez, supra, 32 Cal.4th 
at p. 139.) 
K.  Constitutionality of the Death Penalty 
 
Defendants raise the following challenges to the constitutionality of the 
death penalty law, all of which have previously been rejected: 
 
 
164
 
Coffman argues that the statute under which she was convicted and 
sentenced to death fails to adequately narrow the class of persons eligible for the 
death penalty, as required by the Eighth Amendment to the federal Constitution 
(Zant v. Stephens (1983) 462 U.S. 862, 877), and creates a substantial and 
constitutionally unacceptable likelihood that the death penalty will be imposed in a 
capricious and arbitrary fashion.  We have held to the contrary.  (E.g., People v. 
Sakarias (2000) 22 Cal.4th 596, 632.) 
 
Marlow argues that the 1978 death penalty law is unconstitutional because 
it lacks procedural safeguards necessary to ensure consistent, rational application 
of the death penalty.  In particular, he notes, it fails to require written findings as 
to the aggravating factors selected by the jury, proof beyond a reasonable doubt 
and jury unanimity concerning aggravating factors, and a finding that death is the 
appropriate punishment beyond a reasonable doubt; it also lacks “a procedure to 
enable a reviewing court to evaluate meaningfully the sentencer’s decision” and a 
presumption that life without parole is the appropriate sentence.  Marlow also 
contends the statute invites arbitrariness and capriciousness by failing to designate 
which sentencing factors are aggravating and which are mitigating, by failing to 
require that the jury not consider inapplicable mitigating circumstances, and by 
permitting allegations of unadjudicated criminal activity to be used as a basis for 
imposing a sentence of death.  We disagree.  (E.g., People v. Kraft (2000) 23 
Cal.4th 978, 1078; People v. Hines (1997) 15 Cal.4th 997, 1078; People v. Arias, 
supra, 13 Cal.4th at p. 190; People v. Johnson, supra, 3 Cal.4th at p. 1256.) 
L.  Disproportionality of the Death Penalty as to Coffman 
 
Invoking her right to intracase proportionality review (People v. Mincey, 
supra, 2 Cal.4th at p. 476; see People v. Dillon (1983) 34 Cal.3d 441, 450), 
Coffman contends the death sentence is disproportionate to her personal 
culpability and thus violates the Eighth Amendment to the federal Constitution 
 
 
165
and its state analogue, California Constitution, article I, section 17.46  We 
disagree.  Unlike the psychologically immature 17-year-old defendant in Dillon, 
who fatally shot the victim in a panic during an attempted raid on the victim’s 
illicit marijuana field, Coffman, 24 years old at the time of the offenses, was found 
by the jury to have committed murder and to have engaged in the charged felonies 
with the intent to kill or to aid or abet Marlow in killing the victim.  The jury also 
heard evidence that Coffman, together with Marlow, had committed another 
similar murder and other felony offenses in Orange County.  Evidently the jury 
was not persuaded that Coffman suffered from such physical abuse or emotional 
or psychological oppression as to warrant a sentence less than death.  Contrary to 
Coffman’s argument, the offenses here were of the most serious nature, and her 
sentence clearly befits her personal culpability. 
                                             
 
46 
Respondent argues that such review is unavailable in capital cases by virtue 
of article I, section 27 of the state Constitution, which provides that the death 
penalty “shall not be deemed to be, or to constitute, the infliction of cruel or 
unusual punishments” within the meaning of article I, section 17 of the state 
Constitution.  We rejected this contention in People v. Bean (1988) 46 Cal.3d 919, 
957-958. 
 
 
166
DISPOSITION 
 
The judgment is affirmed. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
WERDEGAR, J. 
WE CONCUR: 
GEORGE, C. J. 
KENNARD, J. 
BAXTER, J. 
CHIN, J. 
BROWN, J. 
MORENO, J. 
 
 
 
167
See next page for addresses and telephone numbers for counsel who argued in Supreme Court. 
 
Name of Opinion People v. Coffman and Marlow 
__________________________________________________________________________________ 
 
Unpublished Opinion 
Original Appeal XXX 
Original Proceeding 
Review Granted 
Rehearing Granted 
 
__________________________________________________________________________________ 
 
Opinion No. S011960 
Date Filed: August 19, 2004 
__________________________________________________________________________________ 
 
Court: Superior 
County: San Bernardino 
Judge: Don A. Turner* 
 
__________________________________________________________________________________ 
 
Attorneys for Appellant: 
 
William J. Kopeny, under appointment by the Supreme Court; Law Office of John D. Barnett and Albert A. 
Newton for Defendant and Appellant Cynthia Lynn Coffman. 
 
Barry L. Morris, under appointment by the Supreme Court, for Defendant and Appellant James Gregory 
Marlow. 
 
 
 
__________________________________________________________________________________ 
 
Attorneys for Respondent: 
 
Bill Lockyer, Attorney General, David P. Druliner, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Gary W. Schons, 
Assistant Attorney General, William M. Wood, Holly D. Wilkens and Pamela Ratner, Deputy Attorneys 
General, for Plaintiff and Respondent. 
 
 
 
*Retired judge of the San Bernardino Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, 
section 6 of the California Constitution. 
 
 
 
168
 
 
 
 
Counsel who argued in Supreme Court (not intended for publication with opinion): 
 
William J. Kopeny 
William J. Kopeny & Associates 
16485 Laguna Canyon Road, Suite 230 
Irvine, CA  92618 
(949) 453-2243 
 
Barry L. Morris 
1260 B Street, Suite 220 
Hayward, CA  94541 
(510) 247-1100 
 
Pamela Ratner 
Deputy Attorney General 
110 West A Street, Suite 1100 
San Diego, CA  92101 
(619) 645-2273