Full opinion text
Opinion EAGLESON, J. Defendant Fernando Belmontes was convicted of the first degree murder of Steacy McConnell (Pen. Code, § 187) and burglary in the second degree. (§§ 459-460.) The jury returned special findings that he personally committed the killing, and that the murder was intentional, wilful, deliberate, premeditated, and the result of the commission or attempted commission of the burglary. A special circumstance allegation under the 1978 death penalty law was found true: that the murder was committed while defendant was engaged in the commission or attempted commission of a burglary. (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(17)(vii).) The jury made additional special findings that defendant was the actual killer and had acted with specific intent to kill. The jury fixed the penalty at death; this appeal is automatic. (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 11; § 1239, subd. (b).) For the reasons set forth hereafter, we affirm the judgment in its entirety. I. Guilt Phase A. Facts Prosecution Case On Sunday, March 15, 1981, the parents of 19-year-old Steacy McConnell found her beaten unconscious on the floor of her residence in Victor, several feet from the unlocked front door. She had telephoned them that same morning to advise that several people, including Domingo Vasquez, had been threatening her. McConnell died a short while later from cerebral hemorrhaging due to 15 to 20 gaping wounds to her head which cracked her skull. The pathologist testified there would have been sounds “like a cracked pot” associated with the blows which fractured the skull, and blood would have splattered in a manner consistent with the blood patterns found on the door jambs next to where she was found. A single contusion on McConnell’s right temple was caused by blunt trauma of lesser force and did not lacerate the skin. It alone would not have caused death and—if it had been the first blow—would not likely have caused unconsciousness. Numerous defensive bruises and contusions on her arms, hands, legs and feet evidenced a struggle. All wounds were consistent with having been made by the metal dumbbell bar in evidence at trial. McConnell’s stereo components were missing. The lock on the rear bedroom door was broken in. The master bedroom was ransacked; traces of blood were found splattered on the walls, door jambs and a chest of drawers in that room. Defendant was spending the weekend with Bobby Solanos in Lodi. Both knew Domingo Vasquez, who was acquainted with McConnell. During the week preceding the murder, Vasquez, Solanos and others had “partied” at McConnell’s house. Vasquez “ripped off” a quantity of amphetamine pills from her; the party ended with McConnell throwing Vasquez and his friends out of her house two days prior to the murder. The group subsequently discussed their general dislike of McConnell. Solanos, who pled guilty to burglary and received immunity from prosecution for the murder, testified for the People. On Sunday morning, he and defendant drove to Vasquez’s residence in Bolanos’s vintage black Chevy. Vasquez, who was talking on the telephone with McConnell when they arrived, shortly hung up and informed them that McConnell’s parents were picking her up and she would not be home that day. Defendant was short of funds, having unsuccessfully tried to pawn a ring the previous week. Solanos, a seasonal farmworker, was out of work. Vasquez was unemployed. The three men agreed to burglarize McConnell’s residence, steal her stereo and “clean house.” Defendant was wearing a baseball cap with its bill flipped up, Vasquez wore a stocking cap or beanie, Solanos wore a checkered Pendleton shirt-jacket. Vasquez’s girlfriend, Carrie Lynn Rogers, was present; she testified that as the men departed defendant picked up a steel dumbbell bar which he carried out with him. Solanos was the “wheel man” and never entered McConnell’s residence; a role confirmed by defendant. En route to Victor, defendant suggested that he alone would approach the house on foot, using the metal bar if needed to force entry. Solanos pulled over a short distance from the house; defendant left his wristwatch behind, concealed the bar under his jacket and walked to the residence. In accord with the plan, Solanos and Vasquez waited several minutes, then drove up and backed into McConnell’s driveway. Vasquez could not find the key to the trunk. As Solanos got out of the vehicle to assist Vasquez, he heard repeated knocking or banging noises coming from within the house. They thought defendant was having trouble with the stereo. Vasquez entered to assist him. Bolanos remained in the car, still hearing the rhythmic thumping sounds as Vasquez walked up to the front door. Shortly, defendant and Vasquez emerged from the house carrying stereo components. Defendant alone was covered with blood sprinkled on his face, pants and shoes. Vasquez “looked like he had seen a ghost.” Defendant informed Bolanos he had to “take out a witness” because she was home. He explained that McConnell heard Vasquez and Bolanos drive up, and that he hit her with the bar when she looked away from him, and continued to hit her approximately 15 more times. Lucy Flores, McConnell’s neighbor, observed a black Chevy with distinctive, wide taillights back into McConnell’s driveway on the morning of her murder. A dark-complected man wearing a stocking cap got out of the passenger side and tried to unlock the trunk. He appeared to have difficulty with the lock, whereupon the driver, a male of Mexican or Italian ancestry, wearing a brown checkered shirt-jacket, got out of the car and unlocked the trunk. The driver got back in; the passenger walked towards the front of McConnell’s house and met a third man. Flores did not see where the third man had come from. A short while later, she observed the two men hurriedly exiting from the back door of McConnell’s house. The man in the stocking cap was carrying stereo speakers, the third man followed close behind carrying a stereo amplifier. They put the items in the trunk, got in the car and drove off. Bolanos testified that en route to the nearby city of Galt to fence the stereo, defendant, who was wearing gloves, wiped blood off of the metal bar and his shoes. Defendant threw the bar out of the car window as they crossed a bridge over the Mokelumne river (Bolanos later led police to the location on the river bank from which the bar was recovered). The group went to the home of Manuel Vasquez, Domingo’s brother, where defendant changed into a pair of clean pants. One Raul Barron was contacted; he met the three men at the home of Irma Vasquez, Domingo’s sister, and purchased McConnell’s stereo components for $100. The stereo components were recovered and introduced into evidence; Barron testified he paid $100 for them to the man wearing the baseball cap who did most of the talking. Later that afternoon Bolanos gave his-girlfriend, Teresa Cobarrubio, $15 from his share of the proceeds from the sale of the stereo. Acting scared, he informed her that he, defendant and Vasquez had burglarized McConnell’s residence. The following day Bolanos and Cobarrubio read a newspaper account of McConnell’s murder. Cobarrubio testified that at that point Bolanos related further details of the crime, informing her that he had remained in his car outside of McConnell’s house, and that defendant had exited from the house with blood all over his clothes, stating he had to “take a witness out.” On Monday, March 16, Vasquez called Bolanos in a panic to advise he had been questioned by police and did not want to “take the rap” for defendant. Bolanos and defendant went to Vasquez’s house where the three sat in the living room discussing the murder. Carrie Lynn Rogers, Vasquez’s girlfriend (who subsequently married him in jail—and who was a distant cousin to Bolanos) testified that from the kitchen she overheard the men discussing their sortie to McConnell’s house, and heard defendant describe how he had first entered alone and hit McConnell several times with the bar, after which Vasquez had joined him in the house. After the meeting, defendant telephoned his girlfriend, Barbara Murillo. Murillo testified that during the conversation defendant informed her he was “in trouble,” relating that he had gotten into an argument with McConnell at her house, become angered and hit her, and that she fell and “went to sleep,” although he “didn’t mean for her to go to sleep.” Belmontes fled to Southern California where he was arrested by Ontario police six days after the murder. Blood found on the tongue of one of his shoes was tested and found to be “type O”—McConnell’s blood type. Defendant furnished three tape-recorded statements to investigators shortly after his arrest. In the first statement he denied any complicity in the crime, but inquired whether Bolanos or Vasquez had been taken into custody. In his second statement he admitted involvement; claiming the incident was planned as a “stupid little burglary.” He had approached McConnell’s house alone on foot; when she answered the door he entered and they just talked. He was not carrying the metal bar. When Bolanos drove up, defendant thought they would all talk a bit and leave. Instead, Vasquez came to the door and hit McConnell “two or three” times. They grabbed the stereo and ran. In his third statement, defendant admitted he was armed with the dumbbell bar when he entered McConnell’s house. After speaking with her for a few minutes, Vasquez arrived and pushed the front door open. McConnell immediately recognized Vasquez, who ordered defendant to “hit her.” Defendant complied, hitting McConnell once in the head with the bar, knocking her to the floor. He proceeded to break down the rear bedroom door, search the closet, and remove the stereo components from the front of the house to Bolanos’s car. He was not paying attention to Vasquez’s actions during this period, and did not observe how the victim came to have suffered 15 to 20 fatal blows to her head. Defense Case The prosecution proceeded on actual malice-deliberation, vicarious liability (conspiracy) and felony-murder theories. Belmontes’s defense was that he abandoned all intent to go through with the burglary once he knocked on the door and discovered McConnell at home. He only entered the house to “play it out.” Although he struck McConnell the one blow with the bar, it was only at Vasquez’s direction; he did not intend to kill her. Vasquez must have dealt the additional fatal blows to McConnell while defendant was breaking into and searching the back rooms of the house. Defendant testified in his own behalf. On Sunday morning, March 15, he and Bolanos went to Vasquez’s house. Defendant had $7 remaining from his last paycheck and would not be paid again until April. Vasquez suggested they steal McConnell’s stereo because she was a “snitch.” Defendant had been to McConnell’s house twice in the previous month. She was not a friend, however, and it meant nothing to him to “rip her off.” He testified: “It was just something that came up. Everybody agreed on it, it happened. You can’t tell what’s going to happen from one day to the next.” They drove to Victor and parked a half block away from McConnell’s house. The plan was for defendant to go to the door first, since McConnell would not let Vasquez or Bolanos inside but was unaware defendant knew them. Defendant, however, did not anticipate that McConnell would be home. Vasquez gave him the dumbbell bar to use to break a window. Defendant concealed it up his sleeve. Vasquez and Bolanos stayed in the car; defendant walked to McConnell’s front door, knocked, and she answered. He told her he was hitchhiking and was stopping by because it was raining. McConnell invited him in. She noticed a bulge in his sleeve and asked what it was. Defendant showed her the bar, explaining he had it because he was hitchhiking; thereafter displaying it openly. He used McConnell’s bathroom and then stood by the table and talked while she ironed clothes. She related that she was having problems with some people and asked him if he knew Domingo Vasquez. Defendant said he had met Domingo before. Five minutes after defendant entered the house, Bolanos and Vasquez pulled into the driveway. McConnell started walking toward the front door. Defendant followed behind her and was placing the bar back up his sleeve when Vasquez rapped loudly on the door. According to defendant, the sequence of events was such that after pulling up Vasquez must have come directly to the front door; he would not have had time to go to the trunk of Bolanos’s car. Vasquez pushed the door open, saw McConnell and ordered defendant to “hit her.” Defendant followed Vasquez’s directive and hit McConnell in the side of the head with the bar, using as much force as he could with a backhanded sweeping motion. She fell to the floor. Defendant dropped the bar, ran to the back bedroom, broke down the door, searched that room and the kitchen, and returned to the living room, all within a matter of several seconds. He did not enter or ransack the master bedroom, testifying it must have been Vasquez. Upon returning to the front of the house, defendant observed Vasquez standing in the same spot holding the metal bar. He had not seen Vasquez hit McConnell nor heard any blows landing, because he was not paying attention. He could not explain the presence of defensive bruises and contusions on McConnell’s hands and feet. Defendant testified he was “mad” and “disgusted” because Vasquez was just “standing there like a fool” not doing anything while he was running around the house “looking for something to take.” Defendant told Vasquez to grab something; Vasquez picked up a speaker. Defendant ripped out the stereo wires and antenna, put the second speaker on top of the stereo unit, and told Vasquez to run. Vasquez ran out the back door; defendant followed close behind. They loaded the stereo components into the trunk. Vasquez got in the back seat, defendant rode “shotgun side,” and Bolanos drove. En route to Galt, Vasquez handed defendant the steel bar which had flesh and hair residue on it, stating he had to take out a witness. Defendant, still wearing his gloves, wiped blood off the bar and set it down on the floorboard. He was uncertain whether there was blood on his pants when he left McConnell’s house; some might have come off the bar when he placed it on the floorboard. He denied having wiped any blood off of his shoes. Bolanos and Vasquez told him to throw the bar out his window into the river; he complied. The three drove to Vasquez’s brother Manuel’s house. Defendant changed into a pair of Manuel’s pants. Manuel contacted Raul Barron, whom they met at Vasquez’s sister Irma’s house. Defendant backed the car into her garage and plugged in the stereo; Barron bought it for $100. Bolanos, Vasquez and defendant drove to Lodi, divided the money, bought some beer, then drove to the home of an acquaintance to purchase narcotics. Defendant’s girlfriend, Barbara Murillo, was questioned as a hostile witness by the defense. She and defendant were living together in Lodi shortly before the murder; at that time she had a two-year-old daughter by him and was pregnant with his second child. Six months after the murder she ran into Cobarrubio at the Grape Festival. Murillo believed defendant was the murderer. But when she asked Cobarrubio for further details about the crime, the latter claimed defendant had been “set up” because he had no backup in the area, while Vasquez had a network of local friends, Cobarrubio was questioned on the matter. She recalled running into Murillo at the Grape Festival and being asked if defendant had committed the murder. She responded affirmatively. Murillo then asked Cobarrubio if she thought defendant “might have been set up.” She replied: “Well, he might have.” Cobarrubio testified further that in fact she had no information from any source that defendant had been set up. She had answered Murillo’s inquiry to that effect because she knew defendant was protesting his innocence and felt sorry for Murillo, who seemed to still care about defendant. B. Guilt Phase Issues Defendant raises a number of contentions relating to the issue of guilt. None, as we shall show, warrants reversal. 1. Validity of the Arrest Warrant Defendant asserts the invalidity of his arrest warrant on two grounds: (1) that it was facially invalid because it was based solely on the uncorroborated accusation of accomplice Robert Solanos (see People v. Campa (1984) 36 Cal.3d 870 [206 Cal.Rptr. 114, 686 P.2d 634]); and (2) that material facts tending to negate the reliability of Bolanos’s information were omitted from the affidavit in support of the warrant. (See People v. Kurland (1980) 28 Cal.3d 376 [168 Cal.Rptr. 667, 618 P.2d 213].) He argues that his bloodstained shoes and extrajudicial statements should have been suppressed as the fruits of his illegal arrest. The arrest warrant was not challenged on these grounds in the trial court. “[(Questions relating to the admissibility of evidence will not be reviewed on appeal in the absence of a specific and timely objection in the trial court on the ground sought to be urged on appeal [citations].” (People v. Rogers (1978) 21 Cal.3d 542, 548 [146 Cal.Rptr. 732, 579 P.2d 1048]; People v. Easley (1983) 34 Cal.3d 858, 869 [196 Cal.Rptr. 309, 671 P.2d 813]; see Evid. Code, § 353.) The contrary rule would deprive the People of the opportunity to make their record on the matter and cure the defect at trial. (People v. Rogers, supra, 21 Cal.3d at p. 548, and cases cited.) “Because of [his] failure to make a timely and specific objection on this ground . . . the point must be deemed waived.” (People v. Green (1980) 27 Cal.3d 1, 22 [164 Cal.Rptr. 1, 609 P.2d 468].) While acknowledging trial counsel’s failure to challenge the arrest warrant, defendant urges us to reach the merits of his claim on the ground that failure to do so constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. In order to establish such inadequacy, he must demonstrate that counsel failed to perform with reasonable competence, and that it is reasonably probable a determination more favorable to the defendant would have resulted in the absence of counsel’s failings. (People v. Fosselman (1983) 33 Cal.3d 572, 583-584 [189 Cal.Rptr. 855, 659 P.2d 1144]; People v. Pope (1979) 23 Cal.3d 412, 425 [152 Cal.Rptr. 732, 590 P.2d 859, 2 A.L.R.4th 1].) Defendant has failed to meet his burden. Our review is limited to consideration of the facts established by the appellate record. a. Reliability of Accomplice-informant Bolanos’s Hearsay Statements In People v. Campa, supra, 36 Cal.3d 870, we affirmed the trial court’s determination that defendant’s arrest was illegal because the affidavit in support of his arrest warrant failed to establish probable cause. There, a van had pulled alongside a car and, after a brief exchange of words between a passenger in the van and the driver of the car, the van passenger fired several shots into the car, wounding the driver and killing the passenger. Subsequent investigation led to one Richard Martinez, whose parents owned the van. Placed under arrest for murder and interrogated, Martinez admitted his participation in the incident, but stated Campa had done the actual shooting. A warrant was procured for Campa’s arrest based upon Martinez’s statement. Since Campa’s crime occurred prior to the adoption of Proposition 8, we applied principles of California constitutional law theretofore unimpacted by that initiative measure. (People v. Smith (1983) 34 Cal.3d 251, 262 [193 Cal.Rptr. 692, 667 P.2d 149].) We relied on People v. Hamilton (1969) 71 Cal.2d 176 [77 Cal.Rptr. 785, 454 P.2d 681], wherein we stated that “for an affidavit based on an informant’s hearsay statement to be legally sufficient to support the issuance of a . . . warrant, two requirements must be met: (1) the affidavit must allege the informant’s statement in language that is factual rather than conclusionary and must establish that the informant spoke with personal knowledge of the matters contained in such statement; and (2) the affidavit must contain some underlying factual information from which the magistrate issuing the warrant can reasonably conclude that the informant was credible or his information reliable.” (Id., at pp. 179-180.) In Campa we concluded that accomplice Martinez’s affidavit contained no factual information relative to his credibility—the second Aguilar prong, supra, 378 U.S. 108—other than that he was himself in custody on a murder charge and had admitted his participation in the crime. We explained further: “This is not to say that in all such cases the statement of a coparticipant implicating a suspect in criminal activity should be disregarded in finding probable cause for issuance of a warrant. Admissions may be made under circumstances in which their credibility is enhanced. Other ‘indicia of reliability,’ such as . . . corroborative evidence obtained independently may buttress the credibility of an arrestee’s statement.” (Campa, supra, 36 Cal.3d at pp. 883-884; see People v. Scoma (1969) 71 Cal.2d 332, 337-338 [78 Cal.Rptr. 491, 455 P.2d 419], and cases cited.) Although the magistrate and parties below did not have the benefit of a reading of Campa, reasonably competent counsel at that time would have been familiar with the principles reiterated in this court’s earlier cases which applied the Aguilar-Spinelli test. Here, the circumstances of the crime and evidence found at the crime scene—as summarized in the affidavit—corroborated Bolanos’s statement. Bolanos asserted the murder was committed in the course of a burglary during which McConnell’s stereo was stolen and later fenced—the affiant, Detective Holman, declared that the victim’s house had been found ransacked. Bolanos stated defendant had beaten the victim with an iron bar causing defendant to become splattered with blood—such was consistent with the nature of the victim’s injury (“blunt trauma to the head”) noted in the autopsy results incorporated into the affidavit. Moreover, although defendant stresses that Bolanos had a self-serving interest in “pegging” him as the actual killer, all three participants in the burglary (defendant, Vasquez and Bolanos) shared felony-murder liability for McConnell’s murder. In his statement, Solanos confessed to his own role in the planning, participation and aftermath of the burglary; nothing therein suggested he had withdrawn from the criminal conspiracy at any time. Nor does defendant attempt to challenge the sufficiency of the affidavit to support his arrest under the warrant for burglary. Mindful of the preference to be accorded warrants in doubtful or marginal cases (see Campa, supra, 36 Cal.3d at p. 884, and cases cited), trial counsel could reasonably have concluded that the affidavit contained sufficient corroboration of Bolanos’s hearsay statement; that the arrest warrant thus issued on probable cause; and that a de novo motion to quash the warrant would have proved futile. Defendant has not met his burden of showing that failure to challenge the warrant on this ground amounted to ineffective assistance of counsel. b. Omission of Material Facts From the Affidavit Defendant argues there were four material omissions from the affidavit in support of the arrest warrant: (1) Deputy Holman had never heard the name Fernando Belmontes prior to Bolanos’s statement, although Vasquez was on the police list of people recently in contact with the victim; (2) the black Chevy described by Lucy Flores, McConnell’s neighbor, was traced to Bolanos and impounded before he furnished his statement; (3) Solanos had initially reacted to police questioning by lying and denying any knowledge of the crime; and (4) his eventual inculpatory statement was prompted not by good citizenship, remorse or a guilty conscience, but rather by the police confronting him with his girlfriend’s incriminating statements. Recognizing that the record is incomplete because this claim was not litigated in the trial court to determine whether the omissions were intentional, reckless or negligent, defendant nevertheless urges us to reach the merits of his claim because the omissions were negligent “as a matter of law.” For reasons already noted, the point has been waived on appeal. (People v. Green, supra, 27 Cal.3d at p. 22.) Nor was trial counsel incompetent in failing to attack the arrest warrant on this ground. Prior to the effective date of Proposition 8, Kurland applied. (People v. Kurland, supra, 28 Cal.3d 376; see In re Lance W. (1985) 37 Cal.3d 873, 896 [210 Cal.Rptr. 631, 694 P.2d 744]; compare Franks v. Delaware (1978) 438 U.S. 154, 155-156 [57 L.Ed.2d 667, 672, 98 S.Ct. 674].) Although Kurland speaks to search warrants, the test is equally applicable to omissions from arrest warrants. (People v. Anderson (1983) 149 Cal.App.3d 1161, 1164 [197 Cal.Rptr. 413]; see People v. Sesslin (1968) 68 Cal.2d 418, 424 [67 Cal.Rptr. 409, 439 P.2d 321].) Counsel could competently have concluded that the omitted facts were either immaterial, or their omission reasonable. In either situation no sanction is imposed and, assuming the affidavit otherwise supports probable cause, the warrant usually stands. (Kurland, supra, 28 Cal.3d at pp. 387-388.) Omissions are “material” only if they rendered the affidavit substantially misleading, i.e., if there was “a substantial possibility [the omitted facts] would have altered a reasonable magistrate’s probable cause determination.” (Id., at p. 385.) It is difficult to see how the officer-declarant’s unfamiliarity with defendant would have borne upon Bolanos’s reliability—the precise matter at hand. Nor did omission of the fact that Bolanos’s Chevy was impounded shortly before he furnished his statement diminish its reliability. If anything, inclusion of the fact that his vehicle had been identified would have corroborated his claim that he drove the participants to the crime scene. Nor would Bolanos’s truthful statement—furnished after he learned his girlfriend had incriminated him—necessarily have been more reliable had it been shown to be motivated by “good citizenship” or “remorse.” Inclusion in the affidavit of the circumstance that Bolanos’s statement conformed to his girlfriend’s report to police of what he had told her about the crimes would also have further enhanced its reliability. Lastly, although Bolanos may have initially denied knowledge of or involvement in the crime, it was his own incriminating admissions in his statement, together with other corroborative facts in the affidavit, upon which the magistrate could justifiably rely in assessing the reliability of Bolanos’s statement. Defendant has failed to show a “substantial possibility” that inclusion of these facts in the affidavit would have altered the magistrate’s determination of probable cause. He has thus not met his burden of demonstrating that failure to attack the warrant on this ground constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. 2. Admission of Defendant’s Extrajudicial Statements Defendant contends that his pretrial statements, in which he made inculpatory admissions of involvement in McConnell’s murder, should have been suppressed as the involuntary products of threats and/or promises of leniency by the homicide investigators. Specifically, he condemns the officers’ use of the “technique of invoking the threat of the death penalty and then offering the hope of leniency through the means of confession.” Six days after the murder, San Joaquin Detectives Elbert Holman and Lyle Cooper, armed with the arrest warrant, traveled to San Bernardino County and took defendant into custody at his mother’s home in Ontario. He was taken to the Ontario Police Department for questioning and advised of his Miranda rights (Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 384 U.S. 436 [16 L.Ed.2d 649,86 S.Ct. 1602, 10 A.L.R.3d 974]). Defendant acknowledged he understood his rights, waived them, and indicated his desire to speak with the officers. The waiver of rights and ensuing statement were tape-recorded. In his first statement, defendant admitted knowing Bolanos, Vasquez and McConnell. He admitted having been to McConnell’s house twice in January and February of that year. He had spent the previous weekend with Bolanos in Lodi. At first he claimed he had not been to Vasquez’s house on the Sunday of the murder; thereafter he admitted having gone there. He claimed he had come to Ontario to be with his girlfriend. He denied having discussed burglarizing McConnell’s residence while at Vasquez’s house; being with Bolanos or Vasquez in Galt on Sunday morning; parking around the comer and walking to McConnell’s house to break in; hitting her with the dumbbell bar as Bolanos and Vasquez were heard driving up; taking the stereo; attempting to throw the bar into the Mokelumne river; or selling the stereo in Lodi. When given an opportunity to ask questions, defendant wanted to know if Bolanos and Vasquez were already in custody, and was told they were in jail in Stockton charged with the murder. The interview was concluded and the tape recorder turned off. Deputy Holman testified that after turning off the machine defendant was told they would be going back to Stockton. Holman stated to defendant: “Thanks for lying to me.” When defendant expressed surprise, Holman added: “Why do you think we came down here and got you by name if we didn’t know the story prior to coming down here?” Defendant asked for a minute to think about it, then indicated he wanted to “tell [Holman] what had happened.” Holman advised defendant he would not continue taking the statement unless the tape recorder was turned back on, and this was done. Less than three minutes had elapsed since the conclusion of the first statement. Holman testified he did not recall either he or Deputy Cooper ever mentioning to defendant, in the two or three minutes that the tape recorder was turned off, that “this was a death penalty case.” He recalled Deputy Cooper telling defendant that “the whole case was lying on him”; which Holman felt accurately characterized the status of the investigation up to that point. Holman never told defendant they had him “dead to rights”; it was defendant who had first used that expression. Deputy Cooper testified that during the break between statements, Holman told defendant he would be going back to Stockton to stand trial, that it was “a homicide case,” that “he would have a long time to think about it,” “and he may have even been told it was a—in our estimation a death penalty case. I don’t recall if we told him that, ffl] I believe he was told there was no bail, again. That’s about the extent of it. It was a very short conversation.” Cooper testified that if the term “death penalty” was mentioned, it was not intended to scare defendant. Finally, his comment to defendant that “you want to clear it up so that its not all laying [sic] on you” was merely a reference in context to defendant’s own earlier exclamation to that effect. The transcript of the second tape-recorded statement supports the officers’ testimony. Defendant indicates therein that Holman had not coerced him into making a second statement by use of the term “dead to rights”; that he had not been threatened or promised anything to make a second statement; that less than three minutes had elapsed since the tape recorder had been turned off; and that he had volunteered during the break that he had not been truthful in the first statement and now desired to level with the officers. In his second statement—which defendant testified he furnished “because only three people knew what had happened, yet the deputies seemed to know everything”—defendant claimed the incident was planned as a “stupid little burglary.” He approached McConnell’s house alone on foot; when he knocked and found her home he entered and they talked. He was not carrying the metal bar. When Bolanos drove up, he thought they would all talk some more and leave. Instead, Vasquez came to the door and hit McConnell “two or three” times. They grabbed the stereo and ran. The rear bedroom was never ransacked. Bolanos and Vasquez told him to throw the bar out the car window. He got some blood on his pants but thought Vasquez did too. Defendant’s third tape-recorded statement was taken on the following day in the San Joaquin County jail. He was again Mirandized, waived his rights, and does not here challenge the voluntariness of that statement on separate grounds. He admitted therein to being armed with the dumbbell bar upon entering McConnell’s house. After speaking with her for a few minutes, Vasquez arrived and pushed the front door open, McConnell immediately recognized him, Vasquez ordered defendant to “hit her,” and defendant complied. He claimed he hit McConnell only once in the head with the bar, knocking her to the floor. He proceeded to break down the bedroom door, search the closet, then remove the stereo components from the front of the house to Bolanos’s waiting Chevy. Defendant stated he did not pay attention to Vasquez’s actions during this period, nor did he directly observe how McConnell came to have suffered the 15 to 20 fatal blows to her head. The burden is on the prosecution to prove the voluntariness of a confession beyond a reasonable doubt. (People v. Murtishaw (1981) 29 Cal.3d 733, 753 [175 Cal.Rptr. 738, 631 P.2d 446]; People v. Jimenez (1978) 21 Cal.3d 595, 608 [147 Cal Rptr. 172, 580 P.2d 672].) That requirement applies equally to a defendant’s incriminating admissions. (Murtishaw, supra, 29 Cal.3d at p.753.) It is well settled that “mere advice or exhortation by the police that it would be better for the accused to tell the truth when unaccompanied by either a threat or a promise does not render a subsequent confession involuntary.” (Jimenez, supra, 21 Cal.3d at p. 611.) As we stated in People v. Hill (1967) 66 Cal.2d 536 [58 Cal.Rptr. 340, 426 P.2d 908], the distinction between permissible and impermissible police conduct “does not depend upon the bare language of inducement but rather upon the nature of the benefit to be derived by the defendant if he speaks the truth as represented by the police.” (Id., at p. 549.) In terms of assessing inducements assertedly offered to a suspect, “ ‘[w]hen the benefit pointed out by the police ... is merely that which flows naturally from a truthful and honcit course of conduct,’ the subsequent statement will not be considered involuntarily made [citation].” (Jimenez, supra, 21 Cal.3d at pp. 611-612.) Our role as a reviewing court is “ ‘ “to examine the uncontradicted facts to determine independently whether the trial court’s conclusion of voluntariness was properly found . . . .” [Citations.]’ ” (People v. McClary (1977) 20 Cal.3d 218, 227 [142 Cal.Rptr. 163, 571 P.2d 620].) If there is “conflicting testimony, the court must ‘accept that version of events which is most favorable to the People, to the extent that it is supported by the record.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Hogan (1982) 31 Cal.3d 815, 835 [183 Cal.Rptr. 817, 647 P.2d 93].) Our independent review convinces us that no improper threats or promise of leniency were made to defendant. Deputy Holman testified that he did not, as defendant contends, “threaten him with the death penalty.” Deputy Cooper’s best recollection was that the term “death penalty” may have been mentioned at some point, but that if it was, it was not done so with intent to scare or coerce defendant into confessing. To the extent their testimony conflicted on whether the “death penalty” was ever mentioned, we must accept that version most favorable to the People. (People v. Hogan, supra, 31 Cal.3d at p.835.) Moreover, defendant’s own responses at the beginning of his second tape-recorded statement support the officers’ testimony that he was not “threatened” with the death penalty, nor were any promises of benefit or leniency offered as inducement for his statements. Belmontes acknowledged he lied in all three of his statements to police. He testified his intent during the first statement was to deny everything: “I was holding my mug.” His intention in his second statement was to tell enough of the truth so that he would be believed, but no more than necessary. Defendant’s own behavior and testimony virtually precludes a conclusion that his free will was overborne by the substance or manner of the interrogation. (See People v. Johns (1983) 145 Cal.App.3d 281, 292-293 [193 Cal.Rptr. 182].) Nor does the record support defendant’s further assertion that the officers unduly coerced his statements by falsely suggesting that Vasquez and Bola-nos were claiming he was the lone murderer because he was not a “home boy.” At the time of defendant’s questioning, Bolanos and Vasquez were in custody for the murder, and Bolanos had related that defendant went into the house first and thereafter came out with blood on him. Based upon the information they had at that point, it was reasonable for the officers to suspect defendant as the actual killer. Defendant acknowledged that it was the factual detail revealed in the officers’ questions which led him to conclude that Vasquez and Bolanos had “snitched him off.” Applying the applicable standards to the facts, we conclude that the trial court properly ruled the statements admissible. 3. Defense Counsel’s Potential Conflict of Interest One week after the filing of the information and prior to severance, the public defender, representing codefendant Vasquez, filed a motion to recuse defendant’s trial counsel, John Schick, on grounds of an alleged conflict of interest stemming from Schick’s “prior representation” of Vasquez. Schick was a named partner in the law firm which prior to 1980 had been under contract as the conflict public defender for San Joaquin County. Two years earlier, another attorney in Schick’s law firm had represented Vasquez on another murder charge. That case never went to trial; the charge against Vasquez was ultimately dismissed. In opposing his recusal, Schick filed a declaration in which he stated (1) that he was not in possession of any information relating to this case obtained through any confidential communication with Vasquez; (2) that he had made no personal appearances on behalf of Vasquez; and (3) that the office file on Vasquez’s 1979 case had been destroyed over eight months earlier. At the hearing on the motion, Schick further represented that the attorney who had represented Vasquez in 1979 was no longer employed in his firm and was in private practice in Manteca. Vasquez’s counsel conceded that “[c]ertainly if there were to be a severance granted, then that would go a long way towards clearing up those [potential conflict of interest] kinds of problems. But at this point as the District Attorney indicated, that is not necessarily the case. So I feel the problems are still there.” The court denied the motion to recuse Schick, concluding that under the circumstances there was no conflict of interest nor the potential for one to arise. Defendant was present and heard counsel’s representations and arguments at the hearing. At its conclusion, defendant was asked: “Do you wish and is that still your desire to have [Schick] represent you?” Defendant responded, “Yes.” Defendant argues that reversal is required due to a conflict or potential conflict of interest arising from Schick’s law firm’s prior representation of Vasquez. “It has long been established that ‘the “assistance of counsel” guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment contemplates that such assistance be untrammeled and unimpaired by a court order requiring that one lawyer shall simultaneously represent conflicting interests.’ (Glasser v. United States (1942) 315 U.S. 60, 70 [86 L.Ed. 680, 699, 62 S.Ct. 457]; accord People v. Chacon (1968) 69 Cal.2d 765, 774 [73 Cal.Rptr. 10, 447 P.2d 106, 34 A.L.R.3d 454].)” (Leversen v. Superior Court (1983) 34 Cal.3d 530, 536-537 [194 Cal.Rptr. 448, 668 P.2d 755].) Although the classic conflict situation involves joint representation of codefendants in the same action, “[t]he same principles apply when counsel represents clients whose interests may be adverse even when they are not codefendants in the same trial. [Citations.]” (People v. Mroczko (1983) 35 Cal.3d 86, 105 [197 Cal.Rptr. 52, 672 P.2d 835].) “When a trial court undertakes to appoint counsel for indigent codefendants (see People v. Chacon [1968] 69 Cal.2d 765 [73 Cal.Rptr. 10, 447 P.2d 106, 34 A.L.R.3d 454]), it must assume the burden of assuring that its appointment does not result in a denial of effective counsel because of some possible conflict. [Citations.]” (People v. Cook (1975) 13 Cal.3d 663, 671 [119 Cal.Rptr. 500, 532 P.2d 148], cert. den. (1975) 423 U.S. 870 [46 L.Ed.2d 100, 96 S.Ct. 135]; Maxwell v. Superior Court (1982) 30 Cal.3d 606, 612 [180 Cal.Rptr. 177, 639 P.2d 248, 18 A.L.R.4th 333].) Where the evidence conflicts “concerning the nature and extent of the past and present attorney-client relationship, the trial court’s findings based upon such conflicting evidence are conclusive on appeal. [Citations.]” (People v. Yorn (1979) 90 Cal.App.3d 669, 674 [153 Cal.Rptr. 295].) We have held that “even a potential conflict may require reversal if the record supports ‘an informed speculation’ that appellant’s right to effective representation was prejudicially affected.” (People v. Mroczko, supra, 35 Cal.3d at p. 105.) But “[permissible speculation giving rise to a conflict of interest may be deemed an informed speculation . . . only when such is grounded on a factual basis which can be found in the record.” (People v. Cook, supra, 13 Cal.3d at pp. 670-671.) Here the record does not establish an actual or potential conflict of interest. Attorney Schick, an officer of the court, “ ‘ “[was] in the best position professionally and ethically to determine when a conflict of interest exists or will probably develop in the course of a trial.” [Citation.]’ ” (People v. Mroczko, supra, 35 Cal.3d at p. 112.) He represented to the court that he personally had no prior contact with Vasquez. The attorney from Schick’s firm who had handled Vasquez’s earlier case was now in private practice in another locale; the file in that case had long since been destroyed. Alternatively, defendant urges that Schick’s ethical obligations to his firm’s former client precluded him—perhaps subliminally—from fully exploiting Vasquez’s prior criminal record in the presentation of Belmontes’s defense. At oral argument appellate counsel suggested that Schick might have “self-censored himself’ as a result of the conflict; at another point counsel took an opposite tack, suggesting Schick, “didn’t see the potential for conflict.” Trial counsel’s performance, however, lends little support to the argument. Throughout the guilt and penalty phases Schick characterized Vasquez as the “ringleader” of the planned crime, emphasizing that Vasquez was older than defendant, and urging the jury to consider Vasquez’s reputation in the local community; his infidelity and mistreatment of Carrie Rogers who was supporting him; his former relationship with the victim; his threats to her right up through the morning of the murder; and his motive—consistent with defendant’s claims—to do harm to McConnell, who had thrown him out of her house after he “ripped her off” several days prior to the murder. Further evidence of Vasquez’s prior “specific instances of violent conduct,” especially an earlier charge (the 1979 murder charge) which had been dismissed, would have been inadmissible to prove his conduct in the instant criminal episode. (Evid. Code, § 1101, subd. (a); Witkin, Cal. Evidence (2d ed. 1966) § 324, p. 287.) Moreover, given that the prosecution was proceeding on felony murder and conspiracy theories of vicarious liability, trial counsel had to weigh the tactical disadvantages of having the defense strengthen the case against Vasquez, thereby enhancing defendant’s vicarious liability for Vasquez’s criminal acts in the jurors’ eyes. The record affords no informed basis for concluding that a conflict of interest existed or affected trial counsel’s performance to defendant’s detriment. 4. Admissibility of Bolano’s and Cobarrubio’s Prior Consistent Statements Defendant contends that evidence of prior consistent statements of Bolanos and his girlfriend, Teresa Cobarrubio, were erroneously admitted without meeting the foundational requirements of Evidence Code sections 791 and 1236. Bolanos testified that he told Cobarrubio on the day after the murder defendant was the one who had killed McConnell during the burglary. No timely objection having been made to this testimony; the point has been waived on appeal. (People v. Cannady (1972) 8 Cal.3d 379, 388 [105 Cal.Rptr. 129, 503 P.2d 585]; People v. Green, supra, 27 Cal.3d at p. 22.) Defendant’s purported citation to an objection on this point is unavailing. The “objection” he notes in the record went to Bolanos’s testimony on a different matter (his initial false statement regarding the disposal of McConnell’s stereo); was made on a nonhearsay ground; and was raised well beyond the point at which Bolanos gave the testimony here challenged. Cobarrubio’s testimony confirmed that Bolanos told her defendant had killed McConnell. This time there was an objection; to which the prosecutor responded: “We’re offering it as a prior statement of Mr. Bolanos, given at a time when the motive imputed to him for why he should want to lie didn’t exist.” One motive for fabrication or bias in Bolanos’s testimony, explored at length during his cross-examination, was his favorable immunity agreement obtained in exchange for his testimony at defendant’s trial. Defendant himself recognizes: “Of course Bolanos also had a strong motive to shift as much legal and moral culpability away from himself and on to the others [Belmontes and Vasquez] as well.” Bolanos had not yet been granted immunity from prosecution for the murder at the time he related the prior statement—consistent with his trial testimony—to Cobarrubio. An immunity agreement has been recognized as a motive for bias within the meaning of Evidence Code section 791. (People v. Pic’l (1981) 114 Cal.App.3d 824, 862-863 [171 Cal.Rptr. 106].) “That there may always have existed another motive for fabricating did not deprive the prosecution of its right to show that a motive shown by the evidence did not affect the witness’ testimony [citation].” (People v. Cannady, supra, 8 Cal.3d at p. 388.) Bolanos’s prior consistent statement to Cobarrubio was thus admissible under Evidence Code section 791, subdivision (b). Lastly, Deputy Gary Coffey testified about the statement he took from Cobarrubio prior to Bolanos’s questioning and arrest. There was a hearsay objection; the prosecutor responded that evidence of Cobarrubio’s prior statement was “being offered to rehabilitate her, after counsel suggested she was lying on the stand. . . .” Counsel impeached Cobarrubio on cross-examination with her statement to defendant’s girlfriend, Barbara Murillo, made several months after the crime, to the effect that she might have agreed with Murillo that defendant could have been “set up.” This statement was inconsistent with Cobarrubio’s trial testimony. Evidence of her earlier statement to Deputy Coffey was inconsistent with her statement to Murillo—consistent with her trial testimony—and thus admissible as a prior consistent statement. (Evid. Code, §§ 791, subd. (a) & 1236.) 5. Curtailment of Impeachment of Prosecution Witness Carrie Lynn Rogers Defendant argues that the court improperly restricted his cross-examination of prosecution witness Carrie Lynn Rogers regarding her motive for bias and fabrication. On the date of the offense, Domingo Vasquez was living with Rogers, their daughter, and a friend, Laura Hernandez. Rogers subsequently married Vasquez in jail three months after his arrest for McConnell’s murder. Vasquez’s motion to dismiss the felony-murder-burglary special circumstance as to him was granted. He ultimately pled guilty to second degree murder and second degree burglary and was sentenced to an indeterminate term of 15 years to life. Rogers did not come forward to implicate defendant as the actual killer until shortly before the start of his trial. On direct examination, she testified that after the crime Vasquez refused to tell her why he had been picked up for questioning by the police. On the night following the murder, while in her kitchen, she overheard defendant discussing the murder with Vasquez and Bolanos in the living room, and heard defendant review how he had first entered McConnell’s house alone and hit her several times with the bar, after which Vasquez had joined him in the house. Prior to Rogers’s cross-examination, defense counsel moved for permission to question her about the disposition of Vasquez’s case. The theory of relevance was that Rogers’s belated claim that defendant was the killer was motivated by her desire to promote her husband’s chances for early release on parole. Defendant asserts that “[t]he indeterminate sentence disposition of Domingo Vasquez’s case and the wide range of potential prison confinement provided Carrie Rogers Vasquez with a powerful motive to portray [defendant] as the ringleader and killer. An early release—or indeed any release—of Vasquez depends in large measure upon his involvement in the offense and his level of culpability. Mrs. Vasquez could well be expected to so understand, believe or hope. The jury was deprived of powerful impeachment evidence.” The prosecutor countered that there was undue potential for prejudice and misuse of the information, and that counsel’s theory of relevance for impeachment was highly speculative. The court prohibited cross-examination in this vein. We recognize that “ ‘[w]hile the trial judge has broad discretion to control the ultimate scope of cross-examination designed to test the credibility or recollection of a witness (People v. Burton (1961) 55 Cal.2d 328, 343 [11 Cal.Rptr. 65, 359 P.2d 433]) . . (Jennings v. Superior Court (1967) 66 Cal.2d 867, 877 [59 Cal.Rptr. 440, 428 P.2d 304]), “wide latitude” should be given to cross-examination designed to test the credibility of a prosecution witness in a criminal case. (Curry v. Superior Court (1970) 2 Cal.3d 707, 715 [87 Cal.Rptr. 361, 470 P.2d 345].) Nevertheless, we are unpersuaded by defendant’s argument that the ruling was so unduly restrictive as to violate his Sixth Amendment right of confrontation. In Delaware v. Van Arsdall (1986) 475 U.S. 673, 680 [89 L.Ed.2d 674, 684, 106 S.Ct. 1431], the United States Supreme Court reaffirmed that “a criminal defendant states a violation of the Confrontation Clause by showing that he was prohibited from engaging in otherwise appropriate cross-examination designed to show a prototypical form of bias on the part of the witness, and thereby ‘to expose to the jury the facts from which jurors . . . could appropriately draw inferences relating to the reliability of the witness.’ Davis v. Alaska [(1974) 415 U.S. 308, 94 S.Ct. 1105], at 318.” “But Van Arsdall emphasized that a trial judge has broad latitude in restricting cross-examination which is repetitive or only marginally relevant. (Id. [475 U.S. 673, 679-680].) There is no Sixth Amendment violation at all unless the prohibited cross-examination might reasonably have produced ‘a significantly different impression of [the witness’s] credibility. . . .’ (Id. [475 U.S. 673, 680].) If cross-examination was improperly restricted, the prejudicial effect of the error on the trial as a whole depends on a multitude of factors, including the cumulative nature of the lost information, the extent of cross-examination otherwise permitted, the degree of evidence corroborating the witness, and the overall strength of the prosecution case. (Id. [475 U.S. 673, 684].)” (People v. Rodriguez (1986) 42 Cal.3d 730, 751, fn. 2 [230 Cal.Rptr. 667, 726 P.2d 113].) Here the jury learned Rogers had been with Vasquez for eight years and had married him shortly after his arrest for McConnell’s murder; that they had a daughter together; that she was seeing Vasquez on a weekly basis at the time of trial; that she had been living with Vasquez and supporting him on the date of the murder; that she knew Vasquez was keeping company with other women at that time and nonetheless “didn’t do anything about it”; and that she did not come forward to report her information inculpating defendant as the killer until the eve of his trial. Nor did the prosecutor in his closing argument make any attempt to clothe Rogers with a false aura of veracity. We conclude the trial judge was within his discretion in ruling that the proffered line of cross-examination was potentially prejudicial and would not reasonably have produced “a significantly different impression of [Rogers’s] credibility. . . .” (Van Arsdall, supra, 475 U.S. at p. 680 [89 L.Ed.2d at p. 684].) Even were we to assume error of constitutional magnitude, given the totality of circumstances under which Rogers’s testimony was presented—particularly defendant’s own testimony that he struck McConnell at least the one blow with the bar—no prejudice warranting reversal would be shown. 6. Conflicting Instructions on Evaluation of Accomplice Testimony Defendant acknowledges that the court gave the full panoply of standardized instructions advising the jury that Solanos was an accomplice as a matter of law (CALJIC No. 3.16); defining “accomplice” (CALJIC No. 3.10); and advising that his testimony had to be viewed with distrust (CALJIC No. 3.18) and needed corroboration (CALJIC Nos. 3.11 and 3.12). Defendant claims, however, that the purpose of these instructions was undermined to his prejudice by the giving of CALJIC No. 2.27, which allows the jury to find any fact on the testimony of one witness, and CALJIC No. 2.11.5, which cautions the jury against speculation as to the prosecution or nonprosecution of accomplices. a. CALJIC No. 2.27 CALJIC No. 2.27 was requested by defendant. Trial counsel never proposed that it conflicted with the accomplice testimony corroboration requirement. Nevertheless, since the corroboration requirement of section 1111 is a “substantial right” we shall address the claim. (§ 1259; People v. Chavez (1985) 39 Cal.3d 823, 830 [218 Cal.Rptr. 49, 705 P.2d 372].) In Chavez, supra, we held that the giving of CALJIC 2.27 in conjunction with accomplice instructions was not error per se, but we agreed with the suggestion of the Court of Appeal in People v. Stewart (1983) 145 Cal.App.3d 967, 975 [193 Cal.Rptr. 799], that it should contain an explicit reference to testimony requiring corroboration. (Chavez, supra, 39 Cal.3d at p. 831.) As in Chavez, here, looking to the instructions as a whole we find no error. (Id., at pp. 830-831.) Both the prosecution and the defense proceeded on the premise that corroboration was needed. (Id., at p. 831.) The prosecutor reiterated in his closing argument that Bolanos’s testimony needed to be corroborated, cautioned that it must be viewed with distrust, and summarized the evidence which he believed would support defendant’s guilty verdicts independent of Bolanos’s testimony. Bolanos himself conceded that he was testifying because: “I’m ordered here or else that murder case would be up on me again if I’m not here,” and acknowledged that he was more concerned about his own fate than that of defendant or Vasquez. Moreover, the record belies defendant’s assertion that Bolanos’s testimony “went almost completely uncorroborated.” It was corroborated by the testimony of Lucy Flores, Carrie Rogers, defendant’s girlfriend Barbara Murillo, and crucially, by defendant himself. He admitted, both in his extrajudicial statements and trial testimony, that he first entered McConnell’s house alone; dealt her the first blow with the iron bar; implored Vasquez to grab the stereo components and run; exited with blood on his clothes; wiped blood off the bar; and threw it in the river. He confirmed Bolanos was the “wheel man” and never entered the house. The murder weapon, recovered with Bolanos’s assistance; defendant’s bloodstained shoe; the number and severity of McConnell’s head wounds; and the autopsy physician’s testimony (that infliction of the blows would have made sounds like “a cracked pot”); all further corroborated Bolanos’s account of the crimes. We conclude there was no prejudicial error from the giving of unadorned CALJIC No. 2.27. b. CALJIC No. 2.11.5 CALJIC No. 2.11.5 instructs: “There has been evidence in this case indicating that a person other than defendant was or may have been involved in the crime for which defendant is on trial, [fl] You must not discuss or give any consideration as to why the other person is not being prosecuted in this trial or whether he has been or will be prosecuted.” There is no merit to defendant’s claim that, so charged, the jury might have believed it was prohibited from considering the “nonprosecution” of Bolanos. The instruction was patently directed at Vasquez. The jury knew Bolanos had pled guilty to burglary, was awaiting imposition of sentence therefor, and had been granted immunity from prosecution for McConnell’s murder. Defendant’s suggestion that the jury might have understood CALJIC No. 2.11.5 as applying to Bolanos, thereby precluding them from weighing the existence or nonexistence of bias, interest or other motive in assessing his credibility (see CALJIC No. 2.20), is implausible. It would require us to find that the jury rejected nearly all of the accomplice testimony instructions and disregarded as irrelevant counsel’s considerable efforts to impeach Bolanos in his cross-examination and closing argument. Defendant further argues that the instruction “might have misled the jury into believing that Vasquez was not being prosecuted, although they could not consider why.” He hinges this contention on the predicate in the instruction: “You must not discuss or give any consideration as to why [a possible accomplice] is not being prosecuted in this trial. . . .” In doing so he ignores the concluding clause of the instruction, which states: “or whether he has been or will be prosecuted.” The instruction in its entirety itself defeats his claim. 7. Instruction on Defendant's Failure to Deny or Explain Certain Evidence (CALJIC No. 2.62) The jury was instructed with CALJIC No. 2.62 (1980 rev.), which pertains to the inferences that might be drawn from defendant’s failure to explain or deny prosecution evidence of facts within his personal knowledge. “It correctly explained that defendant has a constitutional right to decline to testify, but that his failure to deny or explain facts within his personal knowledge may be considered as supporting the prosecution evidence at issue. It also correctly advised that such failure to deny or explain does not create any presumption or warrant any inference of guilt, or relieve the prosecution of its proof burden.” (People v. Ghent (1987) 43 Cal.3d 739, 763 [239 Cal.Rptr. 82, 739 P.2d 1250].) There was no objection to the instruction. Defendant contends that “[t]he instruction in conjunction with the prosecutor’s argument constituted prejudicial error because (1) the record discloses that [defendant] did not fail to explain or deny any prosecution evidence; and (2) the purported failures to explain or deny argued by the prosecution were tangential, collateral and of little importance.” We disagree on both counts. Defendant testified he heard Bolanos and Vasquez drive up, and that Vasquez came right to the front door and would not have had time to open Bolanos’s trunk. But as the prosecutor argued, defendant failed to explain Bolanos’s conflicting testimony, corroborated by the testimony of a disinterested neighbor (Lucy Flores