Angela Henderson was charged in the Circuit Court of Buchanan County with second-degree murder, armed criminal action, and tampering with physical evidence. The charges arose from a murder in St. Joseph in December 2013. Henderson was convicted of all three counts following a jury trial in July 2016. This Court reversed Hendersons convictions due to instructional error, State v. Henderson, 551 S.W.3d 593 (Mo. App. W.D. 2018), and a second jury trial was held in January 2020. The second trial again resulted in Hendersons conviction on all three counts, and the circuit court sentenced her to consecutive terms of life imprisonment for murder, twenty-five years’ imprisonment for armed criminal action, and three years for evidence tampering.
Henderson appeals. She argues that the circuit court erroneously admitted the out-of-court statements of her adult son as a “vulnerable person” under § 491.075, RSMo, when the court had found him incompetent to testify at trial due to mental incapacity under § 491.060(1), RSMo. Henderson also contends that the court erred by failing to dismiss a juror, after Henderson presented evidence that the juror had purportedly engaged in non-verbal communication with members of the murder victims family in the gallery. We affirm.
Factual Background
Clinton (“Sam”) Justice (the “Victim”) lived in an apartment in St. Joseph. The Victim was murdered in his apartment in early December 2012.
Henderson dated the Victim “on-again, off-again” for seventeen years prior to his death. Hendersons son, Joshua Mollett, was in his early 20s at the time of the Victims murder, and spent a lot of time with him.
Kim Keith testified against Henderson at both her first and second trials. The evidence indicated that Henderson had begun a romantic relationship with Keith approximately three months before the Victims murder. Keith was a drug dealer, who sold methamphetamine and other drugs. He was also addicted to methamphetamine. Keith pleaded guilty to second-degree murder for the Victims murder and was serving a fifteen-year sentence. As a condition of his plea agreement, he was required to testify truthfully against Henderson.
Keith testified that late on the night of Friday, December 7, 2012, or in the early morning hours of Saturday, December 8, he received a call from Henderson, indicating that she wanted to buy an eighth of an ounce of methamphetamine from Keith for $300. When Keith met with Henderson, she was accompanied by Mollett, whom Keith had known since Mollett was a child. Henderson and Mollett did not have the money to buy the drugs, so Keith accompanied them in their car to the Victims apartment building, so that Henderson could get the necessary money from him.
Keith testified that Henderson initially went in to the Victims apartment alone, while Keith and Mollett waited in the car. After waiting for several minutes, Keith and Mollett went to the Victims apartment.
Keith testified that the Victim refused to give Henderson money for her to purchase methamphetamine from Keith. Keith testified that, on a signal from Henderson, Mollett walked behind the Victim and pulled his head back. Henderson then cut the Victim across the throat with a knife.
Because she had not heard from the Victim, one of his daughters and her husband went to his apartment on the evening of December 8 to check on him. They found the Victim lying face down in a pool of blood in front of the recliner in the living room. After not finding a pulse, the daughters husband called 911.
When police arrived, they found that the Victim had wounds to his neck, chest, and right thumb. He had one sock on and one off. A bloody sock was stuck to the wounds on his neck. The Victim had blood on the bottom of his bare foot and on the bottom of the sock on the other foot. Police found blood and bloody footprints on the carpet from the recliner to the front door and smears of blood on the front door. The recliners right armrest was also saturated with blood. Blood splatter patterns indicated that the Victims injuries had occurred in front of the recliner.
The Victim had been stabbed in the upper chest, striking a rib and cutting his carotid artery. A knife wound to the Victims neck sliced the jugular vein and created a small hole in the trachea. In addition to the neck and chest wounds, the Victim had a defensive wound to his right thumb. He died from massive blood loss.
According to his daughters, the Victim was meticulous about his apartment and kept it very clean at all times. Although he no longer smoked, the Victim allowed others to smoke in his apartment. His daughters testified, however, that the Victim would always empty and wash the ashtrays immediately after his guests were done smoking. Police found three cigarette butts in an ashtray in the living room of the Victims apartment. Hendersons DNA was found on one of the butts. Molletts DNA was found on the other two cigarette butts, and on a cup found in the apartment. Given the Victims housekeeping habits, the presence of these cigarette butts suggested that Henderson and Mollett had been in the Victims apartment shortly before his murder.
Henderson spoke with police twice shortly after the Victims body was found, and gave them inconsistent stories about when she had last seen him. Henderson denied that she was present when the Victim was murdered.
Becky Osborn was a close friend of the Victims family, and also knew Henderson and Mollett well. In March 2013, almost four months after the murder, Osborn saw Mollett and Henderson in her old neighborhood. When Henderson went into a building, Osborn spoke to Mollett about what he had witnessed on the day of the murder. Mollett “just kind of emotionally broke down.” He told Osborn that he and Henderson were present when Keith killed the Victim. Osborn then contacted the investigating detective and told him what she had just heard.
On April 2, 2013, police arrested Henderson and Mollett and interviewed them separately. Mollett told detectives that he and Henderson were at the Victims apartment one afternoon when Keith called Henderson and showed up shortly thereafter. About twenty to thirty minutes later, Keith and the Victim began arguing because the Victim said he did not have money that he owed Keith for drugs. Mollett said that he saw Keith stab the Victim in the neck. He said that after being stabbed in the neck, the Victim attempted to use a sock to staunch the blood flow and save himself, but it was too late. (The police had closely guarded the fact that the Victim had used one of his socks in this manner.) Mollett said that Keith gave him the murder weapon, a distinctive “scorpion” knife belonging to the Victim. Mollett and Henderson left walking in one direction and Keith in another. After walking approximately twenty minutes, Henderson told Mollett to dispose of the knife, so he threw it in some bushes. The knife was later located by two men in their side yard and retrieved by police. The Victims DNA was found on the blade of the knife.
In her interview that day, Henderson told detectives that she did not know Keith at the time of the murder but started dating him in January 2013. She said that after she broke up with Keith in February, Mollett told her that Keith had admitted to killing the Victim.
In July 2013, a psychologist and certified forensic examiner conducted a competency examination of Mollett in connection with his own criminal prosecution. The psychologist diagnosed him with mild mental retardation, with deficits in reasoning, problem solving, abstraction, and judgment. A general adult psychiatrist at Family Guidance Center testified that Mollett had been a patient there for various mental illnesses between 2001 and 2012. During his time at the Center, Mollett had been diagnosed with bipolar mood disorder Type 1, attention-deficit/ hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and either borderline intellectual functioning (IQ between 71 and 84) or mild mental retardation (IQ between 55 and 70). Mollett was found incompetent to stand trial in his own prosecution in July 2014. The charges against him were ultimately dismissed without prejudice, and he was committed to a mental-health facility.
While in the Buchanan County jail, Henderson was recorded on October 23, 2013, saying during a phone call, “They have charged [Mollett] with robbery. Why did they charge him with robbery?” A female on the other end of the line said, “They say he took [the Victims] pills.” Henderson responded, “No. I know who took – who got [the Victims] pills.” The unknown female said, “You need to shut the f*** up.” Henderson was recorded during a later call asking a female on the other end, “You got the paperwork that I sent you in the yellow envelope?” The female asked “What paperwork is that?” Henderson replied in a low voice, “Testimony. Yours.” The female responded, “Well, yeah, I got everything you sent me.”
On January 28, 2015, the State moved for the circuit court to enter an order allowing Mollett to testify at Hendersons first trial. In the alternative, the State requested that, if the circuit court found Mollett to be incompetent, that the court allow his out-of-court statements to be admitted under § 491.075, RSMo. The circuit court denied the States motion to allow testimony from Mollett, finding that Mollett was incompetent to testify due to mental incapacity under § 491.060(1), RSMo. The circuit court scheduled a hearing on March 9, 2015, to determine if Molletts out-of-court statements to Rebecca Osborn and Detectives Gregg Lewis and Scott Coates were admissible. During the hearing, the court heard testimony from Osborn, and from Detectives Lewis and Oates, regarding the statements made by Mollett and the circumstances in which those statements occurred. The court also received a number of exhibits into evidence, including a video recording of Molletts police interrogation, a transcript of Molletts January 15, 2015 deposition, and reports of two forensic evaluations conducted in Molletts own criminal prosecution.
On March 18, 2015, the circuit court ruled that Molletts out-of-court statements made to Osborn and Detectives Lewis and Coates were admissible under § 491.075.
The jury in Hendersons first trial found her guilty of second-degree felony murder, armed criminal action, and tampering with physical evidence. The trial court sentenced her as a prior and persistent offender to consecutive terms of life, twenty-five years, and three years’ imprisonment, respectively.
Henderson appealed. We reversed her convictions based on instructional error, and remanded the case for retrial. State v. Henderson, 551 S.W.3d 593 (Mo. App. W.D. 2018).
In a pretrial hearing on January 23, 2020, the circuit court ruled that it would adhere to its previous rulings that Mollett was “a vulnerable person and also ․ unavailable[le] because of his mental capacity, incapacity, and all. So the Court is going to stand by the rulings that were made previously.”
On the third day of Hendersons retrial, the circuit court interviewed Jurors 18 and 33 regarding an incident in which Juror 18 witnessed a person in the gallery who was associated with Henderson pointing to the jury and saying words to the effect of “shes stupid.” Juror 18 told Juror 33 what she had seen, and Juror 33 suggested that Juror 18 speak with the bailiff about it. When the circuit court asked if hearing about the incident from Juror 18 would affect Juror 33s ability to be unbiased, Juror 33 responded that “[e]verybody handles difficult situations differently. Some people try to cover it up with humor, or you know what Im saying? They find a coping mechanism to deal with a very difficult situation.” The circuit court found that there was no risk of bias from the interaction.
On the next day (the last day of trial) Megan Cogdill, a friend of Hendersons daughter, reported that she had seen Juror 33 making eye contact, winking, and smirking at a member of the Victims family in the gallery. The circuit court did not question Juror 33 about Cogdills accusations. The court refused to remove Juror 33 from the jury. The court stated that Juror 33 had “made a very good record on about she knows [how] emotions run, and so shes pretty much trying to keep an even keel through all of this.”
The jury in Hendersons second trial once again found her guilty on all three counts. The circuit court again sentenced her to consecutive terms of life imprisonment, twenty-five years, and three years.
Henderson appeals.
Discussion
Henderson asserts two Points Relied On. In the first, she argues that the circuit court erred in admitting Molletts out-of-court statements under § 491.075, RSMo, because those statements did not bear “sufficient indicia of reliability” under § 491.075.1(1), given the courts finding that Mollett was incompetent to testify due to mental incapacity under § 491.060(1), RSMo. In her second Point, Henderson challenges the circuit courts refusal to dismiss Juror 33 after Hendersons accusation that Juror 33 had committed misconduct by engaging in nonverbal communication with members of the Victims family.
I.
Hendersons first Point contends that Molletts out-of-court statements could not bear “sufficient indicia of reliability” under § 491.075.1(1), RSMo, because the court had found Mollett to be incompetent as a witness under § 491.060(1), RSMo. Henderson essentially argues that out-of-court statements cannot be admitted from any person declared to be incompetent under § 491.060(1), RSMo, because – as a matter of law – such statements cannot be found sufficiently reliable under § 491.075.1(1), RSMo.
At the outset, the State argues that we should not consider Hendersons challenge to the admissibility of Molletts out-of-court statements, because those statements were admitted in Hendersons first trial, and she did not challenge the admissibility of Molletts statement in her first appeal. According to the State, the admissibility of those statements is the “law of the case,” which Henderson cannot now challenge.
The law of the case doctrine provides that the previous holding in a case constitutes the law of that case and precludes re-litigation of the same issue in a subsequent appeal. The doctrine not only precludes re-litigation of claims that were actually raised in a prior appeal, but also any claims that arose prior to the first adjudication and might have been raised but were not. Pursuant to this doctrine, the failure to raise a claim in a prior appeal means that the court hearing a subsequent appeal need not consider the claim. But appellate courts do have discretion to consider an issue where there is a mistake, a manifest injustice or an intervening change in the law.
State v. Kelly, 43 S.W.3d 343, 347 (Mo. App. W.D. 2001) (citations omitted); see also State v. Deck, 303 S.W.3d 527, 545 n.2 (Mo. 2010).
We are not aware of any Missouri decision applying the “law of the case” doctrine to an evidentiary ruling made in a prior trial, in circumstances similar to this case – where Henderson won a reversal of her conviction in her first trial, and therefore it would not have been necessary for this Court to address the evidentiary issue, even if she had raised it. Evidentiary rulings are generally understood to be dependent on the specific context in which the evidentiary issues arise during trial. Thus, it is well-established in Missouri law that a trial courts pretrial limine rulings are only interlocutory, and that “[a]dditional information produced at trial may prompt the trial court to alter its pretrial ruling.” Elliott v. State, 215 S.W.3d 88, 92 (Mo. 2007) (citation omitted); see also, e.g., State v. Evans, 517 S.W.3d 528, 543 n.9 (Mo. App. S.D. 2015) (despite a pretrial limine ruling concerning the admissibility of evidence, trial judges must “be given an opportunity to reconsider their prior rulings against the backdrop of the evidence actually adduced [during the trial itself,] and in light of the circumstances that exist when the questioned evidence is actually proffered”). We therefore question whether evidentiary rulings made in the context of an earlier trial would generally constitute the “law of the case” binding the court and the litigants in a subsequent retrial, where the relevant evidentiary context may be materially different.
We recognize that, in Deck, the Missouri Supreme Court applied the “law of the case” doctrine to an evidentiary ruling from a prior trial. 303 S.W.3d at 545. But in Deck, in an earlier appeal the Supreme Court affirmed a jury verdict finding the defendant guilty of capital murder in his first trial; in the course of affirming, the Court specifically rejected the evidentiary argument which the defendant sought to renew in a later appeal (the later appeal was taken after a jury reimposed the death penalty in a penalty-phase retrial). See State v. Deck, 994 S.W.2d 527, 535-36 (Mo. 1999). This case is distinguishable – in Hendersons prior appeal this Court vacated the result of her first trial, without addressing the admissibility of Molletts statements. Moreover, we also note that Hendersons objections to the admission of Molletts out-of-court statements in her second trial depended, at least in part, on the circuit courts refusal to permit Henderson to re-depose Mollett, or subpoena him to testify at trial. Those circumstances did not exist at the time of Hendersons earlier appeal.
We need not definitively decide whether Hendersons first Point is precluded by the “law of the case” doctrine, however, because her Point lacks merit in any event. We emphasize at the outset what Hendersons first Point does not argue. Henderson does not challenge the circuit courts determination that Mollett was incompetent as a witness due to mental incapacity within the meaning of § 491.060(1), RSMo. Nor does Henderson challenge the circuit courts determination that, because Mollett was incompetent to testify, he was therefore “unavailable as a witness” within the meaning of § 491.075.1(2)(b), and thus his out-of-court statements could be admitted under § 491.075 despite Molletts failure to testify at Hendersons trial. Further, Henderson does not argue that the admission of Molletts statements independently violated Hendersons rights under the Confrontation Clause found in the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Although Hendersons Brief cites the Confrontation Clause and caselaw applying it, her only argument concerning the Confrontation Clause asserts that her confrontation rights were violated because Molletts statements were inadmissible under § 491.075.1(1), RSMo. Thus, her Confrontation Clause argument is derivative of her argument that Molletts statements were inadmissible because they lacked “sufficient indicia of reliability” under § 491.075.1(1).
Even with respect to the “reliability” question, Hendersons argument is limited. Generally, the “reliability” inquiry requires a court to consider all of the facts and circumstances surrounding a childs or a vulnerable persons out-of-court statement.
For purposes of § 491.075, courts determine the reliability of a childs out-of-court statements by evaluating the totality of the circumstances. In evaluating the totality of the circumstances, the court considers a non-exclusive list of factors, including: (1) spontaneity and consistent repetition; (2) the mental state of the declarant; (3) the lack of motive to fabricate; and (4) knowledge of subject matter unexpected of a child of similar age. Interviewing techniques are also an important factor to be considered as part of the courts totality of the circumstances analysis.
State v. Barker, 410 S.W.3d 225, 232-33 (Mo. App. W.D. 2013) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
In this case, to assess reliability under the totality-of-the-circumstances standard, this Court would be required to consider the testimony offered by Osborn, and by Detectives Lewis and Coates, at the § 491.075 hearing conducted before Hendersons first trial, as well as the exhibits admitted at that hearing (which included a video recording of Molletts police interrogation, the transcript of his January 2015 deposition, as well as reports of two competency examinations). Hendersons briefing does not describe the circumstances surrounding Molletts out-of-court statements in any detail, nor has she provided this Court with the exhibits admitted at the § 491.075 hearing. Although Hendersons Brief states that “the evidence adduced at the 491 hearing [failed to] demonstrate[ ] that Joshs statements demonstrated sufficient indicia of reliability necessary under Section 491.075,” Henderson fails to discuss any of the evidence from the § 491.075 hearing in her argument, or otherwise support her conclusory assertion that the evidence was somehow insufficient to establish reliability. Rather than challenging the circuit courts conclusion that Molletts statements were reliable in light of the totality of the circumstances, Henderson makes a more categorical argument: that Molletts out-of-court statements lack “sufficient indicia of reliability” – as a matter of law – because Mollett was declared to be “incompetent to testify” under § 491.060(1), RSMo.
Henderson offers minimal argument that a finding of incompetency because a witness is “mentally incapacitated at the time of his or her production for examination” under § 491.060(1), RSMo, necessarily equates to a finding that the witness’ out-of-court statements lack “sufficient indicia of reliability” under § 491.075.1(1), RSMo. Although Henderson essentially asks this Court to find the two standards to be equivalent, her briefing does not even cite caselaw interpreting the standards applied under the two statutes.
We do not find any necessary link between the two statutory standards. The definition of “vulnerable person” in § 491.075.5, RSMo, includes a “person who, as a result of an inadequately developed or impaired intelligence or a psychiatric disorder that materially affects ability to function, lacks the mental capacity to consent.” Plainly, the General Assembly understood that the “vulnerable persons” whose extrajudicial statements would be admissible might include persons with seriously impaired intellectual or cognitive functioning – yet it authorized the admission of statements from such “vulnerable persons” nonetheless. Further, we note that in State v. Chandler, 429 S.W.3d 503, 507 (Mo. App. E.D. 2014), the Eastern District held that a finding that an individual was a “vulnerable person” under § 491.075.5, RSMo, did not mandate a finding that the individual was incompetent to testify under § 491.060(1) – thus suggesting that the two standards are not identical.
Moreover, caselaw interpreting the competency standard found in § 491.060(1), RSMo suggests several features of the competency inquiry which may not be relevant to the reliability of an extrajudicial statement under § 491.075.1(1). For example, § 491.060(1) refers to an individuals mental capacity “at the time of his or her production for examination.” (Emphasis added.) Thus, the competency question focuses on a putative witness’ mental state at the time their testimony is sought. For this reason, “[a] prior adjudication of mental incompetence or a record of confinement in a mental hospital is not conclusive.” State v. Robinson, 835 S.W.2d 303, 307 (Mo. 1992) (quoting State v. Beine, 730 S.W.2d 304, 307-08 (Mo. App. E.D. 1987)); accord State v. Newton, 963 S.W.2d 295, 297 (Mo. App. E.D. 1997). In this case, Molletts extrajudicial statements were made in March and April 2013, while the circuit court first ruled him incompetent to testify in February 2015 – almost two years later. Notably, in arguing that the circuit court should revisit its determinations about Molletts competency prior to the retrial, defense counsel himself emphasized that the passage of time could be relevant to the competency determination:
[A]s we stand here today, we – three years have passed, almost four years have passed, Your Honor, since the last trial. And as we stand here today, we dont know how vulnerable Joshua is. We dont know what the impact of his testimony might have on him psychologically or otherwise.
A witness’ competence to testify, years after making extrajudicial statements, does not necessarily govern the reliability of the earlier statements themselves.
Besides the time lapse between Molletts extrajudicial statements and the courts ruling finding him incompetent as a witness, the competency standard also involves consideration of factors which do not easily translate to the “reliability” inquiry required by § 491.075.1(1), RSMo.
A witness is competent to testify if the witness shows “(1) a present understanding of, or the ability to understand upon instruction, the obligation to speak the truth; (2) the capacity to observe the occurrence about which testimony is sought; (3) the capacity to remember the occurrence about which testimony is sought; and (4) the capacity to translate the occurrence into words.”
Robinson, 835 S.W.2d at 307 (quoting State v. Feltrop, 803 S.W.2d 1, 10 (Mo. 1991)); see also Newton, 963 S.W.2d at 297. The one forensic evaluation report contained in the record on appeal reflects that Mollett was able to converse with the examiner concerning his possible upcoming trial, but that he had limited understanding of the manner in which the criminal proceeding would be conducted, or concerning the roles of various trial participants. The circuit court may well have found Mollett incompetent to testify as a witness based on his inability to understand the obligation of a witness to comply with their oath and testify truthfully – not based on any inability to observe, remember, or relate events.
Finally, the caselaw involving competency provides that, if an individual is confined to a mental-health facility at the time of a competency determination (as Mollett was), then that individual will be presumed to be incompetent, and the burden falls on the proponent of their testimony to prove otherwise. Robinson, 835 S.W.2d at 307. The circuit courts competency determination may reflect only that Henderson failed to carry her burden to prove him to be competent.
For the foregoing reasons, we reject Hendersons argument that the circuit courts finding that Mollett was incompetent to testify under § 491.060(1), RSMo, necessarily meant that his extrajudicial statements were unreliable, and therefore inadmissible under § 491.075, RSMo. Point I is denied.
II.
Hendersons second Point argues that the circuit court abused its discretion in failing to dismiss Juror 33 from the jury panel, when Henderson presented testimony from a family friend who was attending the trial that Juror 33 had been making eye contact, winking, and smirking at members of the Victims family in the courtroom gallery.
“[T]rial court decisions regarding alleged juror misconduct will not be disturbed on appeal absent a finding of abuse of discretion.” State v. Hicks, 959 S.W.2d 119, 122 (Mo. App. S.D. 1997) (citing State v. Brown, 939 S.W.2d 882, 883 (Mo. 1997)). If jury misconduct is found, the State must “ ‘affirmatively sho[w] that the jurors were not subject to improper influences.’ ” State v. Chambers, 891 S.W.2d 93, 102 (Mo. 1994) (quoting State v. Babb, 680 S.W.2d 150, 151 (Mo. 1984)). However, “juror misconduct must first be established by the defendant.” Hicks, 959 S.W.2d at 122 (citation omitted).
The circuit court has the responsibility to “determin[e] the existence of bias or prejudice with regard to a juror.” Id. at 123. Missouri law “does not always require juror testimony once misconduct is alleged.” Chambers, 891 S.W.2d at 101. In Chambers, the Missouri Supreme Court held that a circuit court had not abused its discretion in rejecting a new-trial motion when the defendant presented testimony that jurors had been overheard speaking about the defendants previous conviction for murder. Id. Similar to this case, the trial judge in Chambers did not receive testimony from any of the affected jurors before denying the defendants motion for new trial. Id.
The circuit court did not err in rejecting Hendersons motion to remove Juror 33. The circuit court was entitled to reject the testimony of Cogdill, a family friend of Hendersons, without calling Juror 33 to testify again. As the prosecutor argued in response to Hendersons motion, no one else in the courtroom had apparently seen the non-verbal communication which Cogdill claimed to have witnessed. Moreover, the circuit court had examined Juror 33 on the prior day concerning a separate issue, and found her to have been perceptive concerning the stakes at issue in the trial, and as someone who was “trying to keep an even keel” during the emotionally charged proceeding. In light of the courts own observation of Juror 33, it was entitled to disbelieve Cogdills testimony that Juror 33 had engaged in improper behavior.
Further, even if the court had believed Cogdills testimony, there is no evidence that any eye contact between Juror 33 and a member of the audience was a comment on the merits of the trial. This Court has held that a circuit court does not abuse its discretion when it allows a juror to remain after that juror had a conversation with a prosecution witness that, “while improper, was casual, brief and totally unrelated to anything associated with the trial.” State v. Lasley, 731 S.W.2d 357, 360 (Mo. App. E.D. 1987) (citing State v. Martin, 624 S.W.2d 879, 882 (Mo. App. E.D. 1981)). Cogdill testified that she witnessed Juror 33 in her peripheral vision, “making ․ eye contact ․ winked, kind of smirked” in the direction of the side of the courtroom where the Victims family was sitting. Cogdill could not say who, specifically, Juror 33 may have been looking at, and she admitted that she did not know the exact positioning of the Victims family in the courtroom: “I try not to look at them. I try out of respect not to look at them or associate with them.” Cogdills testimony was not specific enough to determine if Juror 33s purported facial expressions constituted improper communication concerning the merits of the case. The evidence produced by Henderson did not require the circuit court to exercise its discretion to dismiss Juror 33, even if the court believed that evidence.
Point II is denied.
Conclusion
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Alok Ahuja, Judge
All concur.