Peo v. Foster
Peo v. Foster
Peo v. Foster
Opinion
21CA1498 Peo v Foster 08-22-2024
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
Court of Appeals No. 21CA1498
Mesa County District Court No. 20CR477
Honorable Valerie J. Robison, Judge
The People of the State of Colorado,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Mark Anthony Foster,
Defendant-Appellant.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED
Division VI
Opinion by JUDGE LIPINSKY
Freyre and Schutz, JJ., concur
NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e)
Announced August 22, 2024
Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General, Carmen Moraleda, Senior Assistant
Attorney General, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee
Megan A. Ring, Colorado State Public Defender, River B. Sedaka, Deputy State
Public Defender, Denver, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellant
1
¶ 1 Mark Anthony Foster appeals his judgment of conviction
entered on a jury verdict finding him guilty of first degree murder
(after deliberation) and two counts of attempt to influence a public
servant. We affirm.
I. Background
¶ 2 A jury could have reasonably found the following facts.
¶ 3 Foster and his wife, Roxine Foster, were married for thirty-
nine years. (We refer to Roxine by her first name to differentiate her
from Foster. In so doing, we mean no disrespect).
¶ 4 On October 23, 2019, the Fosters were working at the ranch
they leased in Grand Junction. Roxine was operating a tractor near
Foster, whose SUV was approximately ten to twenty yards behind
the tractor. While Roxine was seated on the tractor, a bullet struck
and killed her.
¶ 5 Foster later told officers that he heard a gunshot and saw
Roxine slump forward and fall off the tractor. He said she was
bleeding from her mouth and not breathing when he reached her.
Roxine was pronounced dead shortly after the officers arrived. The
county coroner later concluded that she died from the gunshot.
The coroner recovered a .22 caliber bullet from Roxine’s body.
2
¶ 6 While speaking with the investigating officers, including Lissah
Norcross, Taylor Conrad, and Brandon Worley, Foster mentioned
various individuals who he said had grudges against him and
suggested that one of them may have shot Roxine. (The verdict
form for the attempt to influence a public servant charges named
Norcross, Conrad, and Worley as the public servants whom Foster
attempted to influence.) Foster also told the officers that a stray
bullet may have struck Roxine.
¶ 7 Foster named, among other possible suspects, brothers Brad
and Leland “John” Smith, who were the Fosters’ former neighbors
in Wyoming. Foster said he had been a witness against the Smiths
in a federal investigation regarding illegal dumping on Bureau of
Land Management (BLM) land, and that he and Roxine moved to
Wellington because they feared “retribution.”
¶ 8 Foster also said that, during the federal investigation, someone
entered the Fosters’ property in Wellington and Foster “exchanged
gunfire with that guy.” According to Foster, no one was injured in
the incident and the individual “got away.” Foster said that,
although officers investigated the incident, the individual was never
found. When one of the officers investigating Roxine’s death asked
3
Foster whether anyone was ever prosecuted in connection with the
Wellington incident, Foster responded that he was not aware of all
the details regarding the federal investigation into the Smiths, but
that “they were given probation.”
¶ 9 Officers recovered a .22 caliber Colt M4 rifle from Foster’s
SUV. They also seized from the property various types of
ammunition, including Remington Yellowjacket .22 caliber bullets.
¶ 10 In addition, an officer interviewed Norma Evans, Roxine’s
mother, who lived in a trailer on the ranch. The officer concluded
that Evans had not witnessed the shooting. Officers also
investigated the leads they obtained from Foster but determined
that the suspects Foster suggested were not responsible for
Roxine’s death.
¶ 11 Foster was charged with one count of first degree murder
(after deliberation) and two counts of attempt to influence a public
servant.
¶ 12 At trial, the prosecution’s theory was that Foster murdered
Roxine because he had reached a breaking point in his marriage,
and that he made false statements about Roxine’s death to the
officers to deflect blame from himself. The defense’s theory was
4
that Roxine was killed by a stray or ricocheted bullet that an
unknown person fired from a distance, and that Foster never
attempted to influence the investigation of Roxine’s death by
deceiving the officers.
¶ 13 The jury found Foster guilty as charged.
II. Analysis
¶ 14 Foster presents four arguments on appeal. He contends that
(1) the trial court abused its discretion by denying his
motion to depose Evans (the deposition motion), his
motion to admit Evans’s video recorded statements into
evidence under CRE 807 (the Rule 807 motion), and his
request to admit the statements under the “opening the
door” doctrine;
(2) the trial court abused its discretion by allowing the
prosecutor to introduce evidence of the Fosters’ financial
and marital troubles, Foster’s character for dishonesty,
and photographs of Foster posing with firearms;
(3) the trial court plainly erred by allowing the prosecutor to
engage in misconduct; and
5
(4) the cumulative effect of the alleged errors violated
Foster’s right to a fair trial.
We disagree with Foster’s first and fourth arguments and agree, in
part, with his second and third arguments. However, because we
determine that the errors were harmless, whether considered
individually or cumulatively, we affirm the judgment of conviction.
A. Foster’s Motions Regarding Evans
1. Additional Facts
¶ 15 Defense counsel video-recorded an interview with Evans.
During the interview, Evans stated that she was “right there” at the
time of the shooting, the shot “came from far off,” and Foster had
not killed Roxine.
¶ 16 About ten months after Roxine’s death, defense counsel filed
the deposition motion without a supporting affidavit. Defense
counsel asserted, “It is believed that [Evans] is in possession of
observations and memories that are material and relevant” to the
shooting and “are equally relevant to rebut any inference the
Government seeks to make concerning a negative relationship”
between Foster and Roxine.
6
¶ 17 The deposition motion did not disclose the specific facts about
which Evans was allegedly prepared to testify. Rather, defense
counsel focused on Evans’s age — eighty-nine years old — and “frail
health,” arguing “it is unknown if an appearance at trial would be
appropriate for [Evans] or if such an appearance in light of [her]
various medical conditions and age would be contraindicated”
because those medical conditions “further placed her in an at-risk
population during the [COVID-19] pandemic.”
¶ 18 Following a hearing, the court denied the deposition motion
because it lacked a supporting affidavit, as Crim. P. 15(a) requires.
The court said that, without an affidavit, it was “unable to make a
finding as to whether the deposition [was] necessary to protect the
health of the witness.” The court did not make findings as to
whether Evans may be unable to attend the trial or whether her
deposition was necessary to prevent injustice.
¶ 19 Defense counsel filed the Rule 807 motion six months after the
court denied the deposition motion, following Evans’s death. The
motion revealed the existence and substance of Evans’s recorded
statement, in which she claimed to have witnessed Roxine’s
shooting. Defense counsel did not contest that Evans’s statements
7
on the video recording were hearsay but argued they were
nonetheless admissible under CRE 807 — the residual hearsay
exception.
¶ 20 In the Rule 807 motion, defense counsel asserted that Evans
was “the only witness in the vicinity of the shooting” and that she
had “provided evidence that the defense cannot reasonably be
expected to procure elsewhere.” Defense counsel argued that Evans
had “no motive to be untruthful with regards to the death of her
daughter. Therefore, her statements bear particularized guarantees
of trustworthiness.”
¶ 21 The court denied the Rule 807 motion because, although
certain portions of Evans’s statements on the video recording
concerned material facts, they were not “supported by
circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness,” as CRE 807
requires.
¶ 22 The court found that Evans appeared confused on the video
recording, she “had a hard time hearing the questions” asked, and
Amy Marrs, the Fosters’ daughter, prompted her when she was
nonresponsive. Further, the court said that, “while a few of the
statements contained in [the] interview are more probative than any
8
other evidence which could be reasonably procured, much of the
interview is not probative, with large and repeated statements of
speculation,” and that “the general purposes of the rules of evidence
and interests of justice would not be served by admission of the
interview.”
¶ 23 At trial, defense counsel presented an alternative argument for
admission of the video recording into evidence: it was also
admissible under the “opening the door” doctrine. The prosecutors
“opened the door” to admission of the recording, according to
defense counsel, by offering the officer’s testimony that, after
interviewing Evans, he did not believe she possessed information
regarding the shooting. The court disagreed and concluded that the
video recording was inadmissible.
¶ 24 On appeal, Foster contends that the court erred by denying
the deposition motion, the Rule 807 motion, and the defense’s
subsequent request to admit Evans’s video recorded statements
under the “opening the door” doctrine.
2. Standards of Review
¶ 25 “We review a trial court’s evidentiary rulings for an abuse of
discretion.” People v. Owens, 2024 CO 10, ¶ 105, 544 P.3d 1202,
9
1226. “[A] trial court abuses its discretion when its ruling is
manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, unfair, or based on an incorrect
understanding of the law.” Id. Questions regarding the
interpretation of the Rules of Criminal Procedure or the Rules of
Evidence are questions of law subject to de novo review. See People
v. Dye, 2024 CO 2, ¶ 34, 541 P.3d 1167, 1175; Gonzales v. People,
2020 CO 71, ¶ 26, 471 P.3d 1059, 1063.
3. The Deposition Motion
¶ 26 Crim. P. 15(a) states that “[t]he prosecutor or the defendant
may file a motion supported by an affidavit any time after [an
information or complaint] . . . is filed requesting that the deposition
of a prospective witness be taken before the court.” The rule
provides that “[t]he court may order that a deposition be taken
before the court if a prospective witness may be unable to attend a
trial or hearing and it is necessary to take that person’s deposition
to prevent injustice.” Crim. P. 15(a).
¶ 27 We affirm the court’s denial of the deposition motion because
defense counsel failed to establish that taking Evans’s deposition
was necessary to prevent injustice. See Moody v. People, 159 P.3d
611, 615 (Colo. 2007) (“[A]ppellate courts have the discretion to
10
affirm decisions . . . on any basis for which there is a record
sufficient to permit conclusions of law, even though they may be on
grounds other than those relied upon by the trial court.”).
¶ 28 Defense counsel vaguely said in the deposition motion, “It is
believed that [Evans] is in possession of observations and memories
that are material and relevant” to the shooting. But defense
counsel did not reveal what those “observations and memories”
were or explain why they were “material and relevant.” Moreover, in
the deposition motion, defense counsel did not contest the veracity
of the officer’s testimony that, after interviewing Evans, he believed
she was not aware that a shooting had occurred.
¶ 29 Defense counsel’s argument at the hearing on the deposition
motion did not shed light on why preservation of Evans’s testimony
was necessary to prevent injustice. When the court asked defense
counsel whether Evans “witness[ed] something,” defense counsel
responded, “She has stated to officers that she didn’t, we have
reason to believe that she may have more to testify to [than] . . .
what she told the officers.” Defense counsel, however, did not
disclose what Evans would say during a deposition and did not
assert that Evans would dispute the officer’s testimony that she
11
lacked information regarding the shooting. Thus, the deposition
motion and defense counsel’s statements at the hearing on the
motion fell far short of showing that Evans’s testimony was
necessary to prevent injustice.
¶ 30 Foster cites People v. Hernandez, 899 P.2d 297, 300 (Colo.
App. 1995), to address the court’s conclusion that the deposition
motion failed for lack of a supporting affidavit. In that case, the
division held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by
waiving the affidavit requirement in Crim. P. 15(a) because the
party seeking to take the deposition had “thoroughly informed [the
court] of the facts and circumstances supporting the request to take
the deposition” and the opposing party did not dispute those
assertions. Id. Thus, Hernandez stands for the proposition that a
court, in its discretion, may grant a Crim. P. 15(a) motion without
an affidavit if the missing affidavit would be superfluous. See id.
¶ 31 In Hernandez, both the prosecutor and the witness’s counsel
filed Crim. P. 15(a) motions. See id. at 298-99. Those motions,
coupled with the prosecutor’s argument at the hearing on the
motions, provided the court with detailed information
demonstrating that the witness was also a suspect for the murder
12
of which Hernandez was accused, had recently been released from
custody, was facing imminent deportation from the United States,
and was being held at the El Paso County jail solely to secure his
testimony. The court noted that the prosecutor’s submission of a
supporting affidavit containing the same information would
therefore be unnecessary. See id. at 298-300.
¶ 32 Hernandez does not support reversal of the court’s denial of
the deposition motion. To the contrary, the level of detail that the
prosecutor and counsel for the witness provided to the court in
Hernandez only underscores the inadequacy of the information
contained in the deposition motion. Because defense counsel
conceded that Evans told officers she did not “witness anything”
and failed to elaborate what more she might testify to, he did not
demonstrate that Evans’s deposition was necessary to prevent
injustice. Accordingly, the court did not abuse its discretion by
determining that the deposition motion was insufficient without a
supporting affidavit.
¶ 33 For these reasons, we affirm the court’s denial of the
deposition motion.
13
4. The Rule 807 Motion
¶ 34 Hearsay is “a statement other than one made by the declarant
while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove
the truth of the matter asserted.” CRE 801(c). It is inadmissible
unless an exception to the rule applies. CRE 802. One such
exception allows the admission of hearsay so long as the statement
is backed by “circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness”
equivalent to the more specific hearsay exceptions in other rules of
evidence. CRE 807.
¶ 35 When determining the trustworthiness of a statement, “courts
should examine the nature and character of the statement, the
relationship of the parties, the probable motivation of the declarant
in making the statement, and the circumstances under which the
statement was made.” People v. Draper, 2021 COA 120, ¶ 82, 501
P.3d 262, 279 (quoting People v. Jensen, 55 P.3d 135, 139 (Colo.
App. 2001)), overruled on other grounds by Garcia v. People, 2023
CO 30, 531 P.3d 1031.
¶ 36 We affirm the court’s denial of the Rule 807 motion because
defense counsel failed to establish that Evans’s recorded
14
statements, which are undisputedly hearsay, were supported by
“circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness.” CRE 807.
¶ 37 The record supports the court’s stated concerns regarding “the
circumstances under which the statement was made.” Draper,
court observed that Evans did not make the statements under oath
and the prosecutor had no opportunity to question her about them.
Second, as noted above, the court found that Evans appeared
confused on the recording. At one point, Evans seemed to be
unaware of the reason for the interview. When defense counsel
stated, “We are here today to talk about . . . the current charges
against [Foster],” Evans responded, “What are the charges against
him?” Further, when asked if a police officer spoke to her that day,
Evans responded, “No, I don’t think so.” This statement directly
contradicted the officer’s testimony that he spent “around five
hours, on and off” with Evans on the day of the shooting. Defense
counsel likewise never contested that the officer had interviewed
Evans. Evans’s poor recall of events on the day of the shooting
supports the court’s doubts regarding the trustworthiness of
Evans’s recorded statements.
15
¶ 38 More significantly, as the court noted, the video recording
captured Marrs, from off camera, prompting Evans when she was
nonresponsive to defense counsel’s questions. When defense
counsel asked Evans where she was at the time of the shooting,
Marrs said, “You came out of the house,” after which Evans
parroted, “I came out of the house.” When asked if Evans
witnessed Roxine’s death, Evans responded, “I don’t remember.”
Marrs then interjected, “We just talked about this a little bit ago
Grandma.”
¶ 39 The video recording shows Evans repeating identical phrases,
suggesting that she may have been coached. For example, Evans
said, “I was there” and “the shot came from far off,” using nearly
identical words, more than four times. As the court correctly found,
Marrs’s prompting and Evans’s recitation of rote phrases
demonstrates that Evans’s statements “are not supported by
circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness.” Accordingly, we
need not reach Foster’s arguments regarding the other
requirements of CRE 807.
¶ 40 Therefore, we hold that the court did not abuse its discretion
by denying the Rule 807 motion.
16
5. The “Opening the Door” Doctrine
¶ 41 The “opening the door” doctrine “represents an effort by courts
to prevent one party in a criminal trial from gaining and
maintaining an unfair advantage by the selective presentation of
facts that, without being elaborated or placed in context, create an
incorrect or misleading impression.” Golob v. People, 180 P.3d
1006, 1012 (Colo. 2008). “When a party opens the door to
otherwise inadmissible evidence, his opponent may then inquire
into the previously barred matter.” Id.
¶ 42 However, the concept of “opening the door” does not grant a
party “unbridled license to introduce otherwise inadmissible
evidence into the trial.” People v. Cohen, 2019 COA 38, ¶ 23, 440
P.3d 1256, 1263 (quoting United States v. Martinez, 988 F.2d 685,
702 (7th Cir. 1993)). The doctrine does not allow the admission of
rebuttal evidence that “does not directly contradict the evidence
previously received” or “goes beyond the necessity of removing
prejudice in the interest of fairness.” Id. (quoting Martinez, 988
F.2d at 702). In short, the doctrine “can be used only to prevent
prejudice; it can’t be used as an excuse to inject prejudice into the
case.” Id. at ¶ 23, 440 P.3d at 1262-63.
17
¶ 43 Foster argues that the court should have admitted the video
recording into evidence to rebut the officer’s testimony that Evans
was not a witness to the shooting and was unaware of how Roxine
died.
¶ 44 But the officer never testified regarding any controverted
substantive statements that Evans made to him or to defense
counsel — only that he believed Evans possessed no knowledge of
the shooting in the hours following Roxine’s death and that his
interview with her did not lead to any other avenues of
investigation. Because the officer’s testimony was limited to how
his interview with Evans influenced his investigation, and the
parties do not contend that the officer became aware of Evans’s
recorded statements, the video recording would not have directly
contradicted the officer’s testimony.
¶ 45 Relatedly, Foster does not establish that the admission of the
video recording was necessary to “remov[e] prejudice in the interest
of fairness.” Id. at ¶ 23, 440 P.3d at 1263 (quoting Martinez, 988
F.2d at 702). There was nothing prejudicial in the officer’s
assertion that he concluded Evans did not possess any information
relevant to the investigation — particularly if he was not aware of
18
Evans’s subsequent statements to defense counsel. In contrast,
allowing the jury to hear Evans’s hearsay would have injected
otherwise inadmissible evidence and prejudice into the case, if only
because, as noted in Part II.A.4 above, her statements lacked
“circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness.” CRE 807.
¶ 46 Accordingly, the court did not abuse its discretion by
concluding that Evans’s recorded statements were inadmissible
under the “opening the door” doctrine. Because the court did not
abuse its discretion by denying the deposition motion, the Rule 807
motion, and the request to admit the video recording under the
“opening the door doctrine,” we reject Foster’s argument that the
court violated his right to a meaningful opportunity to present a
complete defense.
B. Evidentiary Issues
¶ 47 Foster argues that the court erred by allowing the prosecution
to introduce (1) evidence of Foster’s financial troubles; (2) evidence
showing a character for dishonesty; (3) photos depicting him with
firearms and law enforcement paraphernalia; and (4) evidence
regarding the Fosters’ marital strife.
19
1. Law and Standard of Review
¶ 48 The U.S. and Colorado Constitutions guarantee criminal
defendants the right to a fair trial by an impartial jury. U.S. Const.
amends. VI, XIV; Colo. Const. art. II, §§ 16, 23, 25. “A jury that has
been misled by inadmissible evidence . . . cannot be considered
impartial.” Harris v. People, 888 P.2d 259, 264 (Colo. 1995).
¶ 49 “Evidence which is not relevant is not admissible.” CRE 402.
Evidence is relevant if it has “any tendency to make the existence of
any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action
more probable or less probable than it would be without the
evidence.” CRE 401. Although relevant evidence is generally
admissible, it may be inadmissible under other rules of evidence.
See CRE 402.
¶ 50 One such rule is CRE 403, which allows a court to exclude
relevant evidence “if its probative value is substantially outweighed
by the danger of unfair prejudice.” The rule nonetheless strongly
favors the admissibility of relevant evidence. See People v.
Vanderpauye, 2023 CO 42, ¶ 59, 530 P.3d 1214, 1229. “For that
reason, when considering the balancing required by CRE 403, we
give the evidence the maximum probative value attributable to it by
20
a reasonable factfinder and the minimum unfair prejudice that may
be reasonably expected from it.” Id. at ¶ 59, 530 P.3d at 1228–29.
Against this backdrop, “evidence is unfairly prejudicial only if it has
an ‘undue tendency to suggest a decision on an improper basis,
commonly but not necessarily an emotional one, such as sympathy,
hatred, contempt, retribution, or horror.’” People v. Allgier, 2018
COA 122, ¶ 31, 428 P.3d 713, 721 (quoting People v. Dist. Ct., 785
P.2d 141, 147 (Colo. 1990)).
¶ 51 In addition, CRE 404(a) allows courts to exclude relevant
evidence of a person’s character or character trait “for the purpose
of proving that he acted in conformity therewith on a particular
occasion,” absent exceptions not applicable here.
¶ 52 Similarly, CRE 404(b) bars the admission of evidence of “any
other crime, wrong, or act” to prove “a person’s character in order to
show that on a particular occasion the person acted in conformity
with the character.” CRE 404(b)(1). However, other act evidence
“may be admissible for another purpose, such as proving motive,
opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, absence
of mistake, or lack of accident.” CRE 404(b)(2). This list is not
exclusive; “courts can admit uncharged misconduct evidence for
21
almost any non-propensity purpose,” subject to the limitations
discussed below. Rojas v. People, 2022 CO 8, ¶ 28, 504 P.3d 296,
305.
¶ 53 For other act evidence to be admissible under CRE 404(b), the
court must find that the evidence satisfies the four-part test set
forth in People v. Spoto: (1) the evidence relates to a material fact;
(2) it is logically relevant; (3) its logical relevance is independent of
an impermissible propensity inference; and (4) its probative value is
not substantially outweighed by the risk of unfair prejudice. 795
P.2d 1314, 1318 (Colo. 1990). This framework is premised upon
the requirements of CRE 401 through 404. See Rojas, ¶ 27, 504
P.3d at 304-05.
¶ 54 “We review a trial court’s evidentiary rulings for an abuse of
discretion,” which occurs when the court “misapplies the law or
when its ruling is manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, or unfair.”
Vanderpauye, ¶ 23, 530 P.3d at 1221. If an erroneous ruling was
preserved by objection, to avoid reversal, the People must prove that
the error was harmless — that it “did not substantially influence
the verdict or affect the fairness of the trial proceedings.” James v.
People, 2018 CO 72, ¶ 19, 426 P.3d 336, 341.
22
¶ 55 However, we review unpreserved errors for plain error — those
that are obvious and substantial. Hagos v. People, 2012 CO 63,
¶ 14, 288 P.3d 116, 120. An error is obvious if a trial court should
be able to avoid it without benefit of objection because the error
contravenes a clear statutory command, a well-settled legal
principle, or established Colorado case law. People v. Crabtree,
2024 CO 40M, ¶ 42, 550 P.3d 656, 667. “Conversely, when
Colorado statutory law or case law would not have alerted the trial
judge to an unobjected-to error, the error cannot be deemed plain.”
Id. An obvious error affects the substantial rights of the accused
and requires reversal only if “an appellate court, after reviewing the
trial record in its entirety, can say with fair assurance that the error
‘so undermined the fundamental fairness of the trial itself as to cast
serious doubt on the reliability of the judgment of conviction.’” Id.
at ¶ 43, 550 P.3d at 667 (quoting Wilson v. People, 743 P.2d 415,
420 (Colo. 1987)).
2. Evidence of Financial Troubles
a. Additional Facts
¶ 56 Defense counsel filed a pretrial motion to exclude evidence of
Foster’s “general indebtedness” and opposed the prosecution’s
23
notice of intent to admit evidence of Foster’s “financial situation.”
The prosecution argued that the financial evidence would show that
the couple had a “significant dispute” because of their years of
financial problems, establish that Foster did not kill Roxine “by
mistake or accident,” and “refute the anticipated defenses of general
denial or alternate suspect.”
¶ 57 The court said that the financial evidence is “relevant to show
that [Foster] acted after deliberation and with intent, and further
that his conduct was not a mistake or accident” because it showed
how the Fosters’ relationship had deteriorated; “the probative value
of the evidence is not substantially outweighed by the danger of
unfair prejudice”; and it does not “implicate ‘other crimes, wrongs,
or acts’ as contemplated by CRE 404(b).” The court concluded that
the evidence is relevant under CRE 402” and, thus, is admissible
under the res gestae doctrine. (As we explain further below, the
Colorado Supreme Court subsequently discarded the res gestae
doctrine in criminal cases. Rojas, ¶¶ 1-2, 504 P.3d at 300.)
¶ 58 At trial, the prosecution presented substantial evidence of the
Fosters’ financial difficulties, including testimony regarding Foster’s
evasiveness in making a settlement payment in a civil case; his
24
efforts to obtain loans and an advance from his employer; his
struggle to pay bills; and the Fosters’ bankruptcy filing in 2015,
their loss of property through foreclosure in 2018, and their
overdrawn bank balance in 2019. The evidence also included
financial documents such as invoices, a promissory note, bank
records, and a record of Foster’s earnings from the Department of
Labor.
¶ 59 On appeal, Foster contends that the court misconstrued the
law and abused its discretion to the extent it admitted the financial
difficulties evidence under the res gestae doctrine. He also argues
that the court should have excluded the financial evidence because
it was irrelevant, inadmissible character evidence, and unfairly
prejudicial.
b. We Apply Spoto in Light of Rojas
¶ 60 In Rojas, the supreme court explained what type of evidence is
subject to CRE 404(b) and admissible under that rule — how courts
can determine “when the charged crime ends and ‘other’ acts begin”
— in the absence of the res gestae doctrine. Id. at ¶ 42, 504 P.3d at
308. Courts must analyze whether challenged other act evidence is
intrinsic or extrinsic to the charged offense. See id. at ¶ 52, 504
25
P.3d at 309. If the evidence is intrinsic, meaning that it “directly
prove[s] the charged offense” or “occurred contemporaneously with
the charged offense and facilitated the commission of it,” courts
should evaluate admissibility under CRE 401, 402, and 403. Id. If
not, the evidence is extrinsic, and its admission is governed by CRE
404(b) and Spoto. Id.
¶ 61 The financial difficulties evidence was not intrinsic to the
charged offenses because it did not directly prove that Foster
committed any of the charged offenses. And although Foster may
have experienced some of the financial difficulties at the time of the
charged offenses, the difficulties did not facilitate the commission of
the offenses. Thus, the evidence was extrinsic, and we must
consider whether the financial difficulties evidence was admissible
under Spoto.
c. The Financial Difficulties Evidence Was
Admissible Under Spoto
¶ 62 The first two prongs of Spoto are satisfied. As the court
correctly determined, the financial difficulties evidence was
admissible under CRE 401 and 402 because it was logically
relevant to the mens rea element of first degree murder — that
26
Foster killed Roxine after deliberation and with intent. See
§ 18-3-102(1)(a), C.R.S. 2023. The evidence made Foster’s intent to
kill Roxine more probable because it supported the prosecution’s
theory of Foster’s motive — that the Fosters’ marriage was at a
“crisis point” and a “crossroads.”
¶ 63 For example, during closing argument, the prosecutor
described evidence showing how Roxine was “insisting on a way of
life [the Fosters] couldn’t afford” and how it was “costing an
enormous amount of money to try to keep [Roxine] in this
[agricultural] lifestyle.” The prosecutor argued that Foster must
have felt “desperation” as he was “dealing with this, as this ceiling
is crashing down,” and she pointed out that Foster called it a
“blessing” when he was able to sell several of the animals days after
Roxine’s death. The evidence showing the cause of this
“crossroads” in the Fosters’ marriage refuted the defense’s
argument that Foster “did not have a motive to kill his wife.” See
People v. Villanueva, 2016 COA 70, ¶ 55, 374 P.3d 535, 547 (noting
how evidence of motive renders inferences regarding a defendant’s
intent more reasonable).
27
¶ 64 Although the court did not analyze it, the third Spoto prong is
also satisfied. We acknowledge that the financial difficulties
evidence would be inadmissible to prove Foster’s character of
wrongdoing and that he acted in conformity with that character
when he killed Roxine. See CRE 404(b)(1). But nothing in the
record indicates that the prosecution sought to introduce the
financial difficulties evidence for that purpose. Rather, as noted
above, the prosecution used the financial difficulties evidence for
the independent purpose of showing a source of tension in the
Fosters’ marriage and, thus, a possible motive for Roxine’s murder.
This is a permissible use under CRE 404(b)(2).
¶ 65 The fourth Spoto prong is satisfied as well. Consistent with
this prong and CRE 403, the court evaluated the probative value of
the financial difficulties evidence and concluded that it was not
substantially outweighed by the risk of unfair prejudice to Foster.
Giving the financial difficulties evidence its maximum probative
value, we reject Foster’s contention that it “added nothing” to the
other evidence showing the Fosters’ marital strife. On the contrary,
the financial difficulties evidence illustrated one of the reasons why
28
Foster reached “a breaking point” and a “crossroads” in his
marriage.
¶ 66 Even if the financial evidence created the risk of unfair
prejudice by evoking “society’s general stigma against the poor” and
painting Foster as “rude, uncooperative, evasive, and dishonest,” as
Foster argues, we are not persuaded that the minimum unfair
prejudice attributable to the evidence had an undue tendency to
suggest a decision on an improper basis. See Vanderpauye, ¶ 59,
although we might have reached a different conclusion than the
court if we were deciding in the first instance how much of the
financial difficulties evidence to admit, the court “had substantial
discretion to decide this issue,” and we cannot say that the court’s
conclusions were “manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, or unfair.”
Owens, ¶ 117, 544 P.3d at 1228.
¶ 67 In sum, because the financial difficulties evidence satisfies the
Spoto test, the court did not err by admitting it.
3. Character for Dishonesty
¶ 68 Foster contends that the prosecution’s “extensive evidence
that [Foster] told false or exaggerated ‘tall tales’ about his past” was
29
irrelevant, unfairly prejudicial, inadmissible character evidence, and
improper impeachment. Specifically, he cites the prosecution
witnesses’ testimony that Foster told them he had worked in law
enforcement, volunteered for a fire department, or served in the
military; he had prior run-ins with drug cartels and members of
organized crime; and he was in a witness protection program
because he was a witness in the federal case. He points to twenty-
seven photos that the prosecution introduced depicting Foster’s
military and law enforcement paraphernalia. The prosecution also
introduced evidence that Foster did not have any military or law
enforcement experience; he exaggerated the seriousness of, and the
scope of his involvement in, the federal case; and he was not in a
witness protection program.
¶ 69 In challenging the alleged character evidence, Foster also
points to testimony regarding two other legal matters in which he
was involved. One was the Wellington incident, for which the
officers dropped their investigation because of the lack of
corroborating evidence. In the other matter, arising from a
motorist’s collision with Foster’s cows, Foster allegedly testified
falsely during a deposition.
30
¶ 70 The People respond that the evidence about Foster’s “fixation
with law enforcement . . . and blame-deflection was relevant and
highly probative of Foster’s intent (and ability to carry out the
murder)” and also tended to disprove Foster’s theory that a “stray
bullet” struck Roxine. They also argue that the prosecution was
“entitled to introduce evidence (including of ‘tall tales’) that tended
to prove [Foster] used deceit to influence police on how they were
investigating the case.”
a. Additional Facts
¶ 71 To determine whether the character for dishonesty evidence is
relevant and whether it was used for an impermissible purpose, we
must examine the arguments and theories that the prosecution
presented at trial.
¶ 72 In the prosecution’s opening statement, the prosecutor told
the jury that, although Foster attempted to blame others for
Roxine’s death, the evidence would show “the people that [Foster]
wants to blame either don’t exist, they weren’t in the area or they
have some other alibi on the date of the incident.” The prosecutor
argued that Foster wanted the officers investigating Roxine’s death
to believe “somebody else was to blame for murdering his wife” for
31
the purpose of “influenc[ing] their decisions on how they were
investigating this case.”
¶ 73 During closing argument, the prosecutor emphasized the
inconsistencies among Fosters’ various accounts of Roxine’s death,
asserting that he threw out “more names” of possible suspects as
he became “desperate” when the investigating officers cleared the
individuals whom Foster had previously identified. The prosecutor
further asserted that Foster told the officers “stories . . . in an effort
to avoid responsibility . . . and to cause them to make decisions
that would not lead to the arrest of the person who killed [Roxine],
but to other people, to waste time in these side investigations that
lead nowhere.”
¶ 74 We next describe the specific character for dishonesty evidence
that Foster challenges on appeal.
i. Testimony from Officers and Photos of
Law Enforcement Paraphernalia
¶ 75 Foster takes issue with certain of the officers’ testimony about
their investigation of Roxine’s death. Norcross testified that military
paraphernalia was found in the Fosters’ house and that an FBI
agent informed her that neither of the Fosters had served in the
32
military. In addition, Foster points to twenty-seven photos that the
prosecution introduced depicting Foster’s law enforcement
paraphernalia and officers’ testimony describing the photos.
¶ 76 Additionally, Worley testified that, when he was walking Foster
to the patrol car, Foster made an unprompted “statement about
being a witness in a federal trial.” Conrad testified that, when she
questioned Foster in the patrol car, Foster started talking about
“the Smiths.”
ii. Kristopher Hammond
¶ 77 Kristopher Hammond, the lawyer who represented the
motorist whose car struck Foster’s cows, testified to the following:
• During a deposition in the case arising from the cow
incident, Foster testified that he and Roxine were
separated. (According to the parties, this testimony
suggested that Foster lied under oath because he and
Roxine were not separated.)
• During that deposition, Foster said he was trained and
volunteered as an emergency medical technician (EMT),
and that he had been in the federal witness protection
program.
33
• After Roxine died, Foster accused Hammond of giving her
murderer the address where Roxine could be found.
• After Foster and the motorist entered into a settlement
agreement, Foster repeatedly put off making his
settlement payment to the motorist, at one point telling
Hammond, “I am under constraints and grief along with
fear of my own life and other family members until we
have more answers. I am being very careful about
releasing any info at this moment.”
• On a previous occasion, Foster accused Hammond of
working for “Smith Rancho,” which Hammond repeatedly
denied.
• In all of Hammond’s dealings with Foster, he never met
Roxine, never conversed with her over the telephone,
never exchanged any messages with her, and had no
reason to believe she knew about the lawsuit.
iii. Jaydin Connell
¶ 78 The prosecution called Jaydin Connell, who had purchased
livestock from the Fosters. Connell testified that, following Roxine’s
death, he thought he should provide the “tip line” with “some
34
information that [the Fosters] had shared” with him. According to
Connell, the Fosters had told him they were “neighbors of the drug
cartel,” and that they had “problems with the drug cartel killing
cows, and poisoning water.” The Fosters told Connell that they
“testified against this . . . drug cartel at some point.”
iv. Robert Bonino
¶ 79 The prosecution called Robert Bonino, who sold Foster hay
and who obtained a civil judgment against Foster when he failed to
pay. Foster had suggested Bonino as a potential suspect to the
officers. During his testimony regarding his interactions with
Foster, Bonino said that Foster claimed to have served in the
military. Bonino also testified that he was not connected with
Roxine’s shooting.
v. Jeffery Patton
¶ 80 Foster’s coworker Jeffery Patton also testified for the
prosecution. Patton described Foster’s stories: Foster was an ex-
deputy marshal; he had killed a Chinese courier who was carrying
fentanyl; “there was a contract put on his life after that,” and a
Chinese hit man was after him; he was in a “WITSEC” program; an
Italian hit man was also after him; when Roxine died, Foster told
35
Patton that “they killed her”; Foster shared an article with him
regarding a person suspected of killing Roxine; and Foster
mentioned that his supervisor’s father may have been involved with
Roxine’s death. Patton also testified that Foster “discussed on
multiple occasions” that he was an “eight-time champ” at U.S.
Marshals Service marksmanship competitions.
vi. Amanda Wright
¶ 81 The prosecution called Amanda Wright, who worked at the
hospital where Foster was a security guard. Wright testified that
Foster told her he worked for the U.S. Marshals Service with
Wright’s great-grandfather and great uncle, he was a Marine Corps
veteran, and he had won national shooting competitions. According
to Wright, Foster gave a presentation to patients about his alleged
experience in the Marine Corps. Wright also testified that Foster
told her Roxine was shot by people who worked with the drug cartel
“that he put away during his service” as a U.S. marshal and who
were after him. Wright further testified that Foster shared an
article with her about a person who (according to Foster) the officers
thought shot Roxine. Foster also told Wright that the officers
started to think Roxine’s death was an accident and that the
36
sheriff’s office didn’t want to hear about other suspects because
they “are scared a guy that is a big part of this deal has a daughter
who works for the U.S. Attorney’s office.”
vii. Scott Swanson
¶ 82 The prosecution called Special Agent Scott Swanson from the
BLM, who became acquainted with Foster when Foster was a
witness in the federal case. Swanson testified to the following:
• Foster was a witness to a trespass by the Smiths onto
BLM land.
• The case had nothing to do with drug cartels, fentanyl, or
Foster’s alleged role as a U.S. marshal.
• The U.S. attorney who prosecuted the federal case
decided not to continue using Foster as a witness
because of Foster’s “lack of candor,” and Foster never
testified against the Smiths at any hearing or trial.
• Swanson investigated the alleged attempted murder of
Foster in Wellington. Foster told Swanson that a man
tried to shoot him, Foster shot him twice in the chest,
and the man ran off.
37
• Because of a lack of corroborating physical evidence and
because Foster was not cooperating, Swanson decided
not to pursue the Wellington case.
• Foster was not in a federal witness protection program,
although the Fosters were given an escort when they
moved from Wellington to Fruita and were provided with
live-feed cameras on their property.
• Several times, Foster called Swanson to report people on
his property whom he felt threatened by, but “nothing
significant . . . ever happened.”
• During his investigation of the Wellington incident,
Swanson never came across any evidence that Foster had
ever worked for the U.S. Marshals Service.
b. The Court Did Not Plainly Err
by Admitting the Character for Dishonesty Evidence
¶ 83 Foster does not provide any citations in the record showing
that defense counsel objected to the admission of any of the
character for dishonesty evidence, other than ten of the photos. We
review the court’s admission of the ten photos (together with two
additional photos) in Part II.B.4 below. We review the court’s
38
admission of the other character for dishonesty evidence for plain
error.
i. While Certain of the Character for Dishonesty Evidence Was
Inadmissible, It Was Not Obvious
¶ 84 We agree with Foster that the photos and certain of the
testimony were inadmissible.
¶ 85 First, we agree with Foster that the photos of Foster’s law
enforcement paraphernalia were irrelevant. The parties cite no
record evidence indicating that Foster ever showed the
paraphernalia to anyone. Nor is there evidence that Foster told the
officers he was a U.S. marshal or served in the military.
Nevertheless, the court did not plainly err by admitting these photos
into evidence because their irrelevance was not obvious,
particularly as the officers obtained the photos during their
investigation, and the prosecution moved to admit them in a group
of other photos, the relevance of which Foster does not challenge on
appeal.
¶ 86 Second, we agree with Foster that the relevance of the
following testimony depended on an impermissible conformity
39
inference, and that its probative value was substantially outweighed
by the risk of unfair prejudice:
• Hammond’s testimony suggesting that Foster lied under
oath when he said during his deposition that he and
Roxine were separated and that he worked as an EMT;
• Bonino’s testimony suggesting that Foster lied to him
about serving in the military; and
• Wright’s testimony suggesting that Foster lied about
serving in the Marine Corps and about winning shooting
competitions.
¶ 87 Unlike the other challenged character for dishonesty evidence,
the above testimony was irrelevant because Foster told these
alleged lies outside the context of Roxine’s death, the alleged lies did
not provide a context for Foster’s later statements to these
witnesses about his theories regarding Roxine’s death, and the
alleged lies did not show that Foster used deceit to influence the
officers. Thus, the above testimony was inadmissible under CRE
403 and CRE 404(b).
¶ 88 Nevertheless, we conclude that the propensity inference and
unfair prejudice attributable to such testimony was not obvious
40
because the challenged statements involved comparatively minor
details integrated into the witnesses’ larger narratives (which the
prosecutor introduced for non-propensity purposes). Moreover,
neither Hammond nor Bonino commented on the veracity of
Foster’s statements — their falsity would have only been apparent
when considered in conjunction with other evidence. We also reject
Foster’s argument that the court abused its discretion by failing to
give a limiting instruction pursuant to Rojas, ¶¶ 52, 56, 504 P.3d at
309-10. Rojas does not suggest that a court plainly errs by failing
to give a limiting instruction on its own accord regarding evidence
that the court admitted without objection and where the
impermissible use of the evidence was not obvious.
¶ 89 In sum, the court did not plainly err by admitting the
irrelevant photographs and unfairly prejudicial testimony.
ii. The Remaining Character for Dishonesty Evidence
Was Admissible
¶ 90 Apart from the two categories of evidence noted above, the
remaining character for dishonesty evidence was relevant, the
relevance did not depend on a propensity inference, and its
probative value was not outweighed by the risk of unfair prejudice.
41
¶ 91 First, we reject Foster’s argument that the remaining character
for dishonesty evidence was irrelevant. Such evidence falls into
four general categories: (1) statements that Foster and others told
officers during the investigation into Roxine’s death; (2) Foster’s
statements to friends and acquaintances about Roxine’s death,
including his theories of who shot her; (3) testimony that provided
context or laid a foundation for Foster’s statements about Roxine’s
death; and (4) evidence that tended to discredit or disprove Foster’s
statements about Roxine’s death.
¶ 92 Such evidence is relevant for multiple purposes. Of primary
importance, evidence indicating that Foster knowingly provided
false theories and false suspects to the officers tends to establish
elements of attempt to influence a public servant: that Foster
(1) attempted to influence Norcross, Conrad, and Worley; (2) by
means of deceit; (3) with the intent to alter or affect the officers’
decisions and actions when they were investigating Roxine’s death.
See § 18-8-306, C.R.S. 2023; People v. Norman, 703 P.2d 1261,
1269 (Colo. 1985).
¶ 93 Further, by discrediting Foster’s claims (whether made to
officers or to friends and acquaintances) that various individuals
42
had motives for killing Roxine, the prosecution sought to eliminate
any reasonable doubts the jury may have had regarding whether
Foster was the shooter. Similarly, evidence that Foster suggested
false theories and false suspects — based on knowingly exaggerated
“tall tales” about people he knew were not likely to be “after him” or
who did not exist at all — demonstrated his consciousness of guilt
and made it more probable that he shot Roxine. See People v.
Summitt, 132 P.3d 320, 324 (Colo. 2006) (noting that a defendant’s
conduct that is apparently calculated to avoid detection, arrest,
prosecution, or conviction is often relevant in suggesting a guilty
mind).
¶ 94 Because the character for dishonesty evidence was probative
of material facts — whether Foster shot Roxine and whether he
attempted to influence the investigation by means of deceit — the
evidence was “relevant and presumptively admissible.” Rojas, ¶ 3,
¶ 95 Second, we reject Foster’s argument that the remaining
character for dishonesty evidence was impermissible under CRE
404(a) or (b). The relevance of such evidence did not depend on a
propensity inference that these rules prohibit — that Foster must
43
have a character for dishonesty because he told “tall tales” in the
past and, therefore, he must have acted in conformity with that
character when he spoke with the officers. Rather, the evidence
was relevant for non-propensity purposes: Foster told “tall tales”
about the possible suspects and their motives for killing Roxine to
deflect his liability for Roxine’s death because of his guilty mind.
Moreover, the prosecution offered the evidence of Foster’s
statements to the officers — combined with the evidence
establishing that such statements were deceitful — as direct
evidence that Foster had attempted to influence public servants.
Thus, such evidence constitutes “intrinsic acts” falling outside the
¶ 96 Third, although it is a closer call whether the risk of unfair
prejudice substantially outweighed the probative value of the
remaining character for dishonesty evidence, we determine that
admission of the evidence was not error — let alone plain error —
under CRE 403. Having determined that such evidence was
relevant for non-propensity purposes, we are not convinced that the
prejudicial effect of the evidence was unfair to Foster. The evidence
of the alleged falsehoods that Foster told — although perhaps
44
excessive — does not have an undue tendency to suggest a decision
on an emotional basis such as hatred, contempt, retribution, or
characterizes the alleged falsehoods as “tall tales” and “self-
aggrandizing” stories.
¶ 97 Thus, giving the evidence “the maximum probative value
attributable to it by a reasonable factfinder and the minimum
unfair prejudice that may be reasonably expected from it,”
Vanderpauye, ¶ 59, 530 P.3d at 1228–29, the risk of unfair
prejudice does not substantially outweigh the probative value.
¶ 98 Fourth, we reject Foster’s argument that the character for
dishonesty evidence was improper impeachment under CRE 608,
CRE 806, and People v. McLaughlin, 2023 CO 38, 530 P.3d 1206.
The prosecution did not introduce the character for dishonesty
evidence to impeach Foster. Rather, as explained above, such
evidence demonstrated Foster’s consciousness of guilt by showing
that he attempted to shift the blame for Roxine’s death onto
individuals who he knew had nothing to do with her death or who,
like the alleged hit men, did not even exist. It was also direct
evidence of Foster’s attempt to influence the officers by deceit.
45
¶ 99 The authorities on which Foster relies are inapposite. CRE
608 only governs evidence of a witness’s conduct and character,
and Foster did not testify at trial. CRE 806 is similarly unavailing.
Under this rule, when a hearsay statement or certain nonhearsay
statements have been admitted in evidence, “the credibility of the
declarant may be attacked . . . by any evidence which would be
admissible for those purposes if declarant had testified as a
witness.” CRE 806. The supreme court held in McLaughlin that,
“when a defendant-declarant’s statements are admitted under the
rule of completeness, the prosecution may not impeach the
defendant-declarant under CRE 806.” McLaughlin, ¶ 4, 530 P.3d at
1207 (emphasis added). But the court did not admit any of the
character for dishonesty evidence under the rule of completeness.
Rather, the prosecution sought admission of the evidence to prove
that Foster committed the charged offenses.
¶ 100 In sum, except as noted, the character for dishonesty evidence
was admissible, and the court did not plainly err by admitting such
evidence that we hold was irrelevant.
46
4. Photos
¶ 101 In addition to the fifteen photos analyzed above, Foster
contends that the court erred by admitting twelve other photos.
Those photos fall into four categories:
• five photos, to which defense counsel objected, depicting
Foster with what appears to be U.S. marshal badges and
gear (the U.S. marshal uniform photos);
• two photos, to which defense counsel objected, depicting
Foster in what appears to be his uniform as a security
guard (the security uniform photos);
• three photos, to which defense counsel objected, showing
Foster holding a firearm — two in which he is dressed in
U.S. marshal regalia with the firearm pointed to the
ground, and one in which he is wearing a security officer
uniform with the firearm over his shoulder (the uniform-
firearm photos); and
• two photos, to which defense counsel did not
contemporaneously object, showing Foster dressed in
what appear to be civilian clothes and holding a handgun
47
level with his chin pointed at the camera (the aimed
firearm photos).
¶ 102 Defense counsel objected to the photos in the first three
categories on the ground that they were irrelevant and implicated
Foster’s Fifth Amendment right to remain silent. Specifically,
defense counsel argued that the prosecution was trying to establish
that Foster was representing himself as a U.S. marshal and then to
impeach that representation, which would “infringe upon [Foster’s]
ability to remain silent” because Foster did not take the photos to
show others. Defense counsel further asserted that the prosecution
was “opening the door . . . to [Foster’s] credibility and that’s a
violation of his self-incrimination rights.”
¶ 103 The court concluded that the photos were relevant and that
their admission would not violate Foster’s Fifth Amendment rights
because they were not testimonial.
¶ 104 Defense counsel did not object to the admission of the aimed
firearm photos. However, he asked the court to “reconsider” their
admission after the court excluded a similar photo a few minutes
later. The court said, however, it would not reconsider the
48
admissibility of the aimed firearm photos “[i]f they’re already
admitted.”
¶ 105 On appeal, Foster contends that the uniform and uniform-
firearm photos were admitted for improper impeachment, and that
all twelve photos were irrelevant, unfairly prejudicial, and
inadmissible character evidence.
¶ 106 First, for the reasons explained in Part II.B.3.b.ii above, we
reject Foster’s argument that the photos were used for improper
impeachment.
¶ 107 Second, we agree with the People that the uniform-firearm
photos and the aimed firearm photos had at least some tendency to
show that Foster was “comfortable with guns and was able to use
guns,” which “made it more likely that [Foster] was capable and
able to use a firearm to kill his wife, rather than the . . . stray-bullet
theory.” Accordingly, these photos were relevant — if only
marginally so.
¶ 108 However, we agree with Foster that the uniform photos were
irrelevant. The U.S. marshal uniform photos were irrelevant for the
same reasons as the photos depicting the law enforcement
paraphernalia discussed in Part II.B.3.b.i above. The security
49
uniform photos were irrelevant because Foster’s employment as a
security guard had no connection to the charged offenses and thus
did not tend to make any material fact more or less probable.
Nevertheless, although the court should have excluded these photos
under CRE 402, their admission was harmless because the jury
heard admissible testimony about how Foster held himself out as a
former U.S. marshal, was employed as a security guard, and owned
guns. We do not see how photos showing Foster posing in such
uniforms would have evoked the jury’s emotions against Foster any
more than did the testimony establishing these same facts.
¶ 109 Third, we disagree that the relevance of the photos depended
upon an impermissible inference regarding Foster’s character for
dishonesty. As explained in Part II.B.3 above, the fact that Foster
held himself out as a former U.S. marshal — which tied into his
efforts to suggest that other suspects may have killed Roxine — was
relevant for the independent, permissible purpose of suggesting
Foster’s consciousness of guilt. And the security uniform photos do
not suggest a character of dishonesty because Foster was actually
employed as a security guard.
50
¶ 110 Fourth, to the extent the uniform-firearm photos and the
aimed firearm photos could have suggested that Foster had a
“character for violence and aggression,” Foster did not raise that
argument before the court, and we conclude that the court did not
plainly err by admitting them into evidence. See Martinez v. People,
2015 CO 16, ¶ 14, 344 P.3d 862, 868 (“Plain error review is equally
applicable when a party alters the grounds for his objection on
appeal.”).
¶ 111 We are not persuaded that a depiction of an individual holding
a firearm, without more, implies that the individual has a character
for violence or aggression, particularly when, like Foster in the
uniform-firearm photos, the individual is not aiming the gun at an
animate target. Even if some viewers might interpret the two aimed
firearm photos as showing Foster in “a menacing fashion,” as Foster
argues, the propensity inference and risk of unfair prejudice was
not obvious because defense counsel affirmatively said he had “no
objection” to the admission of the photos, which were admitted in a
group with other photos that depicted Roxine smiling. And the
court did not abuse its discretion by refusing to reconsider
admission of the aimed firearm photos when defense counsel
51
objected to their admission after the fact. Accordingly, any error in
admitting the uniform-firearm photos and aimed firearm photos
was not plain.
¶ 112 In sum, except as noted, the photos were admissible, and the
court did not plainly err by admitting the alleged character evidence
that we hold was irrelevant.
5. Evidence of Marital Strife
¶ 113 Over Foster’s objection to the admission of any evidence of
“discord in [the Fosters’] marriage,” the court allowed the
prosecution to introduce communications between the couple in
which Roxine expressed anger and frustration toward Foster. The
communications, which dated as far back as two years before
Roxine’s death, included discussions of divorce, swearing and
name-calling, and arguments over housework. On appeal, Foster
contends (1) the evidence was improper character evidence that he
was a “deadbeat husband” or a cheating spouse who was “likelier to
commit crimes”; and (2) the court abused its discretion by failing to
limit the evidence “to the most probative time period, such as the
three to six months preceding [Roxine’s] death” because the older
52
the communications, the more the “probative value decreased, and
the risk of unfair prejudice increased.” We disagree.
¶ 114 First, the relevance of the evidence did not depend upon an
impermissible character inference. Rather, the prosecution
presented the evidence for the independent purpose of showing that
the Fosters’ “marriage was coming to an end,” which, the
prosecution argued, was why Foster “decided to take actions into
his own hands by murdering his wife.” During closing argument,
the prosecutor argued that the voicemails and text messages show
the “mounting anger, frustration and fear, the breakdown of [the
Fosters’] marriage.” The prosecution’s theory of Foster’s motive for
killing Roxine was that Roxine treated Foster “like dirt. He [was]
demeaned, he [was] called names” until he reached “a breaking
point.”
¶ 115 Second, we discern no abuse of discretion in the court’s
admission of communications dating as far back as two years
before Roxine’s death. As the prosecutor argued in closing, the
breakdown of a thirty-nine-year marriage does not “happen
overnight or within a couple of days.” It was not manifestly
arbitrary, unreasonable, or unfair for the court to admit a two-year
53
period of communications to show the mounting problems in the
Fosters’ marriage.
C. Prosecutorial Misconduct
¶ 116 Foster argues that the prosecutor committed misconduct
during closing argument by (1) misstating the evidence;
(2) denigrating the defense; (3) appealing to the jury’s emotions;
(4) improperly attacking Foster’s credibility; and (5) expressing a
personal opinion that Foster was guilty.
1. Standard of Review
¶ 117 We engage in a two-step analysis when reviewing a claim of
prosecutorial misconduct. Wend v. People, 235 P.3d 1089, 1096
(Colo. 2010). We determine, first, whether “the prosecutor’s
questionable conduct was improper based on the totality of the
circumstances and, second, whether such actions warrant reversal
according to the proper standard of review.” Id.
¶ 118 Because Foster did not object to any of the statements he
challenges on appeal, we review for plain error. See id. at 1097. To
warrant reversal under this standard, the prosecutorial misconduct
must be “flagrantly, glaringly, or tremendously improper” and cast
serious doubt on the reliability of the jury’s verdict. Domingo-
54
Gomez v. People, 125 P.3d 1043, 1053 (Colo. 2005) (quoting People
v. Avila, 944 P.2d 673, 676 (Colo. App. 1997)).
2. Applicable Law
¶ 119 Because “[a]dvocates must be able to present their best case to
achieve just results,” prosecutors have “wide latitude in the
language and presentation style used to obtain justice.” Id. at
1048. During closing argument, a prosecutor “may refer to the
strength and significance of the evidence, conflicting evidence, and
reasonable inferences that may be drawn from the evidence.”
People v. Walters, 148 P.3d 331, 334 (Colo. App. 2006). Prosecutors
“can use every legitimate means to bring about a just conviction,”
but they have a “duty to avoid using improper methods designed to
obtain an unjust result.” Domingo-Gomez, 125 P.3d at 1048.
¶ 120 For example, a prosecutor may not intentionally misstate the
evidence or the law, id. at 1048-49; make remarks for the “obvious
purpose of denigrating defense counsel,” People v. Jones, 832 P.2d
1036, 1038 (Colo. App. 1991); use tactics calculated to inflame the
passions of the jury, People v. Manyik, 2016 COA 42, ¶ 29, 383 P.3d
77, 83; accuse a defendant of having lied, People v. McBride, 228
55
P.3d 216, 221 (Colo. App. 2009); or express a personal belief as to
the guilt of the defendant, Domingo-Gomez, 125 P.3d at 1049.
¶ 121 “Claims of improper argument must be evaluated in the
context of the argument as a whole and in light of the evidence
before the jury.” People v. Geisendorfer, 991 P.2d 308, 312 (Colo.
App. 1999). We accord prosecutors the benefit of the doubt when
their remarks are ambiguous or inartful. McBride, 228 P.3d at 221.
3. The Prosecutor Did Not Flagrantly Misstate the Evidence
¶ 122 Foster contends that the prosecutor asserted facts not in
evidence or misstated evidence when discussing during closing
argument (1) the distance from which the bullet was fired; (2) the
evidence suggesting how long Roxine had been dead by the time
officers arrived; and (3) expert testimony on whether the bullet
ricocheted. Although we agree that the prosecutor misstated the
evidence in the first two instances, those misstatements were not
“flagrantly, glaringly, or tremendously improper.” Domingo-Gomez,
the prosecutor misstated the evidence in the third instance.
Therefore, none of the challenged statements casts serious doubt on
the reliability of the jury’s verdict.
56
¶ 123 First, Foster challenges the prosecutor’s assertion that the
bullet had “a lot of energy behind it” and was “fired from much
closer than a mile or a mile and a half or a mile and a quarter.” The
prosecutor did not refer to any evidence supporting this statement,
but rather asked the jurors to use their “common sense” about “the
energy, the force behind [the] bullet as it tore through [Roxine’s]
body.” As Foster notes on appeal, evidence introduced at trial
indicated that the bullet could have been fired a mile and a half
away from Roxine.
¶ 124 Although we are not persuaded it was proper for the
prosecutor to urge the jurors to rely on their “common sense” to
determine how far the bullet traveled, the misconduct was not
obvious because other evidence allowed the jury to draw a
reasonable inference that the bullet was shot from less than a mile
away. For example, the jury heard testimony regarding the layout
of the land, the trajectory of the bullet, and physical barriers that
made it unlikely that the bullet traveled that far. And during
closing argument, defense counsel directed the jury’s attention to
expert testimony that the bullet could have traveled up to one and a
half miles but “[n]ot with any accuracy.” Therefore, the error was
57
not plain. (Foster does not develop his related argument that the
prosecutor’s statements regarding the distance the bullet traveled
improperly suggested that the prosecutor possessed expertise on
the topic. The evidence regarding this topic underscores that the
prosecutor presented an argument properly grounded in the
evidence and was not offering an opinion of her own.)
¶ 125 Second, Foster takes issue with the prosecutor’s statement
that, by the time officers arrived at the crime scene, Roxine’s body
temperature had already cooled to lukewarm, which, according to
the forensic pathologist who conducted Roxine’s autopsy and
testified at trial, “takes an hour or more.” The forensic pathologist
testified, however, that Roxine’s body would have cooled “probably
within an hour or so,” and that blood pooling in a person’s back, as
was observed on Roxine’s body, would “give a hint” that the person
had “been dead at least for several minutes, an hour or two.”
(Emphasis added.)
¶ 126 Allowing the prosecutor to make this misstatement was not an
obvious error because the forensic pathologist’s testimony was an
approximation of the time it takes a body to cool, and there were
signs, apart from the temperature of Roxine’s body, suggesting that
58
she may have been dead for more than an hour by the time the first
responders arrived. We are not convinced that the misstatement
was material because even if, as Foster argues, it “falsely suggested
there was evidence [Foster] delayed calling the police after his wife’s
death,” the record does not show that the prosecution emphasized
this point or asked the jury to infer Foster’s guilt from it. To the
extent the prosecutor insinuated that Foster delayed calling the
police, she focused on Foster’s statement to the officers that he had
gone to the SUV to pick up his phone to call 911, even though the
officers later discovered that Foster had in his vest pocket another
phone that apparently was not a “work phone,” as he had told the
officers. Foster does not challenge such evidence or statements on
appeal.
¶ 127 Third, the prosecutor did not misstate the evidence when she
asserted during closing argument that the jury heard from “[t]he
experts who examined this bullet and told you there is no evidence
of ricochet on this bullet.” As the parties point out on appeal, the
experts who testified at the trial disagreed whether there was
evidence of ricochet. We reject Foster’s argument that the
prosecutor was claiming evidence of ricochet “didn’t exist.” Rather,
59
the context shows that the prosecutor highlighted the testimony of
those “experts who examined [the] bullet and told [the jurors] there
is no evidence of ricochet.” This is permissible because “closing
argument allows advocates to point to different pieces of evidence
and explain their significance within the case.” Domingo-Gomez,
125 P.3d at 1048. Similarly, defense counsel highlighted the
opinions of those experts who testified there was evidence of
ricochet.
¶ 128 Accordingly, to the extent the prosecutor misstated the
evidence or injected her own purported expertise and personal
opinion into her closing, the error was not plain.
4. The Prosecutor Did Not Denigrate the Defense
¶ 129 Foster contends that the prosecutor denigrated the defense
when she argued that “the Defense wants to change the evidence in
this case, so they can make that argument” about a ricocheted
bullet. According to Foster, this statement attacked the integrity of
defense counsel and implied that the defense was being presented
in bad faith. We reject Foster’s strained interpretation of the
prosecutor’s words. The prosecutor immediately followed this
statement with an exhortation to the jury to “think thoughtfully and
60
carefully through that evidence to judge the credibility of that
evidence as you evaluate the facts in this case.”
¶ 130 Reading the prosecutor’s statements in the context of her
argument as a whole, and giving her the benefit of the doubt, see
McBride, 228 P.3d at 221, the statement can be interpreted as a
perhaps inartful rhetorical flourish commenting on the weakness of
the evidence supporting the defense’s theory compared to the
evidence supporting the prosecution’s case.
5. The Prosecutor Did Not Improperly Appeal to
the Jury’s Emotions
¶ 131 Foster contends that the prosecution improperly appealed to
the jury’s emotions when the prosecutors
• described Roxine during opening statement as a
“hardworking ranch woman who was murdered by her
coldblooded husband”;
• stated during closing argument that Roxine was a
“[m]other, grandmother, [and] wife” who was
“[u]nsuspecting” when she was “[s]hot in the back
defenseless”; and
61
• calculated Roxine’s exact age at the time of her death and
asserted that “she could still be alive talking to her
children regularly, celebrating [her] grandson’s first
birthday, celebrating every joy and milestone her family
reaches.”
¶ 132 We agree with the People that these statements fall under the
category of “rhetorical devices” and “oratorical embellishment,”
People v. Samson, 2012 COA 167, ¶ 31, 302 P.3d 311, 317, which
prosecutors may use to humanize a potentially unsympathetic
victim. Indeed, the prosecutor devoted more of her closing
argument to discussing Roxine’s flaws and how Foster was at a
“breaking point” because of the way Roxine spoke to and treated
him. Defense counsel similarly argued that the evidence showed
that Roxine had “a bit of a temper.”
¶ 133 Read in context of the argument as a whole and in light of the
evidence, the statements were not intended to induce the jury to
determine Foster’s guilt on the basis of passion or prejudice.
Rather, they evoked, in the prosecutor’s words, the “one thing [that]
unite[d] almost every person in [the] courtroom” — the “belief that
[Roxine] should not have lost her life.”
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¶ 134 Accordingly, we discern no error in the court’s allowance of
such statements.
6. Although Some of the Prosecutor’s Statements Improperly
Attacked Foster’s Credibility, There Was No Plain Error
¶ 135 Foster points to three instances during the prosecutor’s
closing argument where he alleges the prosecutor improperly
attacked his credibility.
¶ 136 As an initial matter, we note that there is no general
prohibition against attacking a defendant’s credibility during
closing argument. Such a prohibition would essentially prevent the
prosecution from obtaining a conviction for any offense that
includes an element of “deceit,” such as attempt to influence a
public servant. § 18-8-306. Rather, the prohibition addresses
inflammatory expressions such as “lie,” which risk communicating
the lawyer’s personal opinion about the defendant’s credibility or
improperly swaying the jury by evoking emotional reactions against
the defendant. See Wend, 235 P.3d at 1096. Prosecutors also may
not say in closing argument that evidence proves the defendant’s
bad character — even if such evidence was properly admitted
63
during trial for a permissible use. See McBride, 228 P.3d at 223;
CRE 404.
¶ 137 Foster first points to the prosecutor’s characterization of
Foster as an “actor.” In response to defense counsel’s assertion
that Foster consistently repeated the same story of Roxine’s death
across twenty months, the prosecutor stated, “I suppose like most
actors [Foster] was well capable of delivering performance, reciting
lines as if he had memorized them for a play.” We reject Foster’s
assertion that the statements were “synonymous” with, or “equally
inflammatory” to, terms like “lie,” “deceit,” and “BS,” which courts
have found to be improper. See People v. Serra, 2015 COA 130,
¶ 87, 361 P.3d 1122, 1138. However, characterizing Foster as an
“actor” was an impermissible comment on his character. The
prosecutor did not simply argue that Foster was “acting” or
“performing” when Foster recounted Roxine’s death to the officers.
Rather, the statements suggested that the jury could infer Foster
was engaged in a performance in conformity to his character as an
“actor” who “performs.”
¶ 138 Nevertheless, because the statements were not inflammatory
and did not draw a contemporaneous objection, we are not
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persuaded that this improper character attack was obvious or
substantial, and it therefore did not constitute plain error. Cf.
Domingo-Gomez, 125 P.3d at 1050-52 (disapproving of the
prosecutor’s argument that the defendant “did not tell you the
truth,” but explaining that such language did “not have the same
degree of rhetorical power” as saying the defendant “lied,” and
concluding that it did not fall “to the level of improper expressions
of the prosecutor’s personal opinion”); People v. Mason, 643 P.2d
745, 752-53 (Colo. 1982) (expressing “strong disapproval” of the
prosecutor’s references to the defendant as a “con man,” but
concluding there was no plain error).
¶ 139 Second, Foster takes issue with the prosecutor’s discussion of
the alleged attempt on Foster’s life. Although Foster contends that
the prosecutor argued that Foster fabricated the alleged Wellington
incident, the argument, read as a whole, suggests a different
purpose. The prosecutor argued that the investigation into the “oft-
mentioned and never corroborated shootout in Wellington” led
“[e]xactly nowhere”; Foster declined to “take some additional steps
to possibly further this investigation”; and, as a result, the U.S.
attorney in the federal case decided not to use Foster as a witness
65
against the Smiths. Even without Foster’s testimony in that case,
the prosecutor argued, “it result[ed] in a successful prosecution, a
plea deal of the Smiths. So, how key was [Foster] really to any of
those events?” Thus, the prosecutor was not discussing the alleged
Wellington events merely to attack Foster’s character, but rather to
discredit Foster’s suggestion to officers that the Smiths may have
been involved in Roxine’s death.
¶ 140 Finally, Foster argues the prosecutor improperly attacked his
character when she highlighted Foster’s testimony in the civil case,
“under penalty of perjury,” that he and Roxine were separated, and
then asserted that “that’s some pretty compelling evidence of
credibility as it reflects on [Foster].”
We agree.
¶ 141 As discussed in Part II.B.3.b.i above, the evidence that Foster
lied during the civil suit was relevant only by way of an
impermissible propensity inference. The prosecutor’s statements
during closing argument reaffirm that the prosecution intended that
the evidence established that Foster had a bad character and acted
in conformity with that character when he employed deceit to
influence the investigation into Roxine’s death. However, we are not
66
convinced that the prosecutor’s reliance on the conformity inference
was so obvious that the court should have interrupted the
prosecutor’s argument and struck it from the record. Therefore, the
error was not plain.
7. The Prosecutor’s Statement that Foster “Is Guilty” Was Not an
Expression of Personal Opinion
¶ 142 In closing argument, the prosecutor stated, “Mr. Foster is
guilty of the 1st degree murder of his wife, Roxine Foster. He’s
guilty of attempting to influence [the officers].” According to Foster,
the prosecutor “exceeded the bounds of permissible advocacy” by
asserting that Foster “is guilty” because that “was a decision for the
jury to make, unswayed by the prosecutor’s personal knowledge or
opinion.”
¶ 143 We agree that a jury could infer a prosecutor’s express
statement that a defendant “is guilty” as the prosecutor’s personal
opinion. However, the context of the statement in the argument as
a whole does not indicate that the prosecutor was attempting to
“convey the impression that evidence not present to the jury, but
known to the prosecutor, supports the charges against the
defendant,” or to “induce the jury to trust the Government’s
67
judgment rather than its own view of the evidence,” as Foster
argues, citing Wilson, 743 P.2d at 418-19 (quoting United States v.
Young, 470 U.S. 1, 18-19 (1985)). The statement came at the
conclusion of the prosecutor’s summation of the evidence, and
immediately after the prosecutor exhorted the jury to “[e]xamine the
evidence. Look at the credibility of the witnesses and the evidence
that the People have put in front of you.”
¶ 144 Thus, we conclude that the statement was not “flagrantly,
glaringly, or tremendously improper,” it does not cast serious doubt
on the reliability of the jury’s verdict, and the court did not plainly
err by allowing it. Domingo-Gomez, 125 P.3d at 1053 (quoting Avila,
D. Cumulative Error
¶ 145 Foster contends that, if we determine the trial court erred and
that none of the errors requires reversal of his conviction, we should
nevertheless reverse because of their cumulative prejudicial impact.
“For reversal to occur based on cumulative error, a reviewing court
must identify multiple errors that collectively prejudice the
substantial rights of the defendant, even if any single error does
not. Stated simply, cumulative error involves cumulative
68
prejudice.” Howard-Walker v. People, 2019 CO 69, ¶ 25, 443 P.3d
1007, 1011 (citation omitted). The relevant inquiry is “whether,
viewed in the aggregate, the errors deprived the defendant of a fair
trial.” Id. at ¶ 40, 443 P.3d at 1014.
¶ 146 We have identified one error that was harmless (admission of
the uniform photos) and seven errors that were not plain because
the errors were not obvious (admission of fifteen photos of Foster’s
law enforcement paraphernalia; admission of testimony from
Hammond, Bonino, and Wright suggesting that Foster lied to them;
the prosecutor’s misstatements of evidence during closing
argument; and the prosecutor’s characterization of Foster as an
“actor” and specific assertion that he lied under oath during his
deposition in the civil case). Additionally, we assume that the court
erred (albeit not plainly) when it admitted the uniform-firearm and
aimed firearm photos because the jury could have viewed those
photos as establishing that Foster had a character for violence or
aggression.
¶ 147 Although we do not condone these numerous errors, we hold
that, even when considered in the aggregate, they did not deprive
Foster of a fair trial. As explained below, the reliability of the
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verdict is a product of the overwhelming evidence supporting the
murder charge, independent from the errors and the logical
connection between the murder charge and the charges for attempt
to influence a public servant — if Foster is guilty of homicide, on
the facts of this case, it follows that he also is guilty of the attempt
to influence a public servant charges. This opinion should not be
read to suggest that these errors would not cumulatively warrant
reversal in the context of another case.
¶ 148 We initially note that most of these errors impermissibly
highlighted Foster’s character for dishonesty. Because dishonesty
is not an element of first degree murder, we are not convinced that
the errors swayed the jury to convict Foster on that charge based on
an impermissible propensity inference. Even if the jurors believed
Foster had a propensity for lying, it is doubtful they would convict
him of murder based on an inference that he was acting in
conformity with his character for dishonesty. Thus, the only errors
that had any bearing on whether Foster shot Roxine were the
admission of the uniform-firearm and aimed firearm photos (which
created the risk of portraying Foster as aggressive or violent) and
70
the prosecutor’s misstatements of the evidence during closing
argument.
¶ 149 We are not convinced that the jury premised a guilty verdict
on the five photos or the prosecutor’s misstatements of evidence
because the admissible evidence strongly suggested that Foster
shot Roxine:
• A Colorado Bureau of Investigation firearm and toolmark
expert testified at trial that the .22 bullet recovered from
Roxine’s body was consistent with the Remington
Yellowjacket style bullets that the officers found at the
Fosters’ ranch.
• The officers recovered a Colt M4 .22 caliber rifle from the
back of Foster’s SUV.
• Foster did not tell Norcross about the Colt M4 .22 caliber
rifle when he listed his firearms.
• Roxine was shot from the back.
• The firearm and toolmark expert testified that she
excluded as murder weapons the guns that officers
collected from neighbors.
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• Although some evidence suggested that the bullet
recovered from Roxine’s body could not be conclusively
linked to Foster’s Colt M4 .22 caliber rifle because it was
significantly damaged, Foster does not point to any
evidence suggesting that this rifle could be eliminated as
the murder weapon.
• Apart from the conflicts in the evidence regarding
whether the bullet could have ricocheted before hitting
Roxine and the evidence suggesting that the bullet had
the potential to travel a mile and a half, no evidence
admitted at Foster’s trial indicated that anyone other
than Foster shot Roxine.
• Following the shooting, investigating officers and
volunteers conducted a fruitless search of the
surrounding fields for evidence.
• One officer testified that the tractor was not visible from
the road adjacent to the property (where, according to
defense counsel, someone could have fired the fatal shot).
• All the alternate suspects had alibis.
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¶ 150 The convictions for attempt to influence a public servant
necessarily flow from Foster’s murder conviction because it is
undisputed that Foster told officers he did not shoot Roxine and
suggested alternate suspects. Because the jury found that Foster
shot Roxine (a decision that, as explained above, was unlikely
influenced by any of the trial errors), it would be logical for the jury
to find that Foster also deceived the officers when he told them he
did not shoot her and suggested alternate suspects. Accordingly,
the jury would not have relied on an impermissible character
inference to convict Foster of these charges, even if numerous trial
errors had the tendency to suggest such an inference.
¶ 151 In sum, although we have identified multiple errors, we
conclude that their cumulative impact did not undermine the
reliability of the verdict and did not prejudice Foster’s substantial
rights by depriving him of a fair trial.
III. Disposition
¶ 152 The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
JUDGE FREYRE and JUDGE SCHUTZ concur.
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