Full opinion text
Opinion MOSK, J. This cause involves an appeal, which is automatic, from a judgment including a sentence of death against Tauno Waidla. A separate cause involves a similar appeal from a similar judgment against Peter Sakarias. (People v. Sakarias (2000) 22 Cal.4th 596 [94 Cal.Rptr.2d 17, 995 P.2d 152].) I. Procedural History On November 28, 1988, on behalf of the People of the State of California, the District Attorney of the County of Los Angeles presented an information to the superior court thereof against Waidla and Sakarias, accusing them of various felonies committed during the preceding summer. As subsequently illuminated by the evidence, the information—which was pleaded, according to custom, in the conjunctive (In re Bushman (1970) 1 Cal.3d 767, 775 [83 Cal.Rptr. 375, 463 P.2d 727])—is to the following effect. In count 1, the district attorney charged that Waidla and Sakarias murdered Viivi Piirisild in the home that she shared with her husband Avo Piirisild in North Hollywood. To make them subject to the penalty of death, he alleged that they committed the murder under the special circumstances of felony-murder robbery and felony-murder burglary. To enhance any noncapital sentence that they might receive, he alleged that, in committing the murder, they personally used a deadly and dangerous weapon in the form of a knife. For the same purpose, he similarly alleged that, in committing the murder, they personally used a deadly and dangerous weapon in the form of a hatchet. In count 2, he charged that, in the same incident, they robbed her at home. Among his allegations were separate ones for sentence enhancement against both men, one for personal use of a deadly and dangerous weapon in the form of a knife, the other for personal use of a deadly and dangerous weapon in the form of a hatchet. In count 3, he charged that, also in the same incident, they burglarized the home. Here, as above, his allegations included separate ones for sentence enhancement against both men, one for personal use of a deadly and dangerous weapon in the form of a knife, the other for personal use of a deadly and dangerous weapon in the form of a hatchet. In count 4, he charged that, in an earlier incident, they burglarized a cabin that the Piirisilds owned in Crestline in San Bernardino County. In count 5, he charged that they fraudulently obtained telephone services. In count 6, he charged that they concealed, sold, and withheld stolen property that they took from the cabin. In count 7, he charged that Sakarias alone committed grand theft by taking an automotive vehicle. Waidla and Sakarias (see People v. Sakarias, supra, 22 Cal.4th at p. 609) each pleaded not guilty to the charges, and denied the allegations. Subsequently, the superior court found that Sakarias was not mentally competent to stand trial, and suspended criminal proceedings against him alone. (See People v. Sakarias, supra, 22 Cal.4th at p. 616.) It severed Waidla’s and Sakarias’s cases, and allowed Waidla’s to go forward. Trial of Waidla was by jury. After the guilt phase, by its verdicts and findings, the jury found him guilty of the following felonies under the following special and other circumstances: murder in the first degree against Viivi, under the felony-murder-robbery and felony-murder-burglary special circumstances, with the personal use of a deadly and dangerous weapon in the form of a hatchet but not a knife; robbery in the first degree against her, again with the personal use of a deadly and dangerous weapon in the form of a hatchet but not a knife; burglary in the first degree as to the Piirisilds’ home, yet again with the personal use of a deadly and dangerous weapon in the form of a hatchet but not a knife; burglary in the first degree as to their cabin; fraudulently obtaining telephone services; and sale of stolen property. After the penalty phase, by its verdict, it fixed the punishment for Viivi’s murder at death instead of a term of imprisonment for life without possibility of parole. The superior court rendered judgment against Waidla accordingly, sentencing him to death for Viivi’s murder and also to a term of imprisonment for each of the other felonies, whose execution it stayed, totaling 18 years. Later, having found that Sakarias had recovered mental competence, the superior court reinstated criminal proceedings. (People v. Sakarias, supra, 22 Cal.4th at p. 617.) Trial was by jury. (See id. at p. 615.) After the guilt phase, the superior court apparently dismissed the charge of grand theft. (See id. at p. 608.) Thereupon, the jury found him guilty of the same felonies, under the same special and apparently other circumstances, as had Waidla’s jury with respect to Waidla. (See ibid.) After the penalty phase, it fixed the punishment for Viivi’s murder at death. (See id. at pp. 608-609.) The superior court rendered judgment accordingly, sentencing him to death for her murder and also to a term of imprisonment for each of the other felonies, whose execution it stayed, totaling 18 years. (Ibid.) II. The Facts At the guilt phase, the People introduced evidence, including a confession that Waidla made to the police, to prove to the jury that he was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of all of the felonies charged under all of the special and other circumstances alleged, including first degree murder both on a theory of willful, premeditated, and deliberate murder and also on theories of felony-murder burglary and felony-murder robbery. Avo and Viivi Piirisild were bom in the Baltic state of Estonia. In 1951, they came to the United States. They subsequently married, and had a single child, their daughter Rita. They were active in the Baltic American Freedom League, a volunteer organization whose purposes included securing the independence of the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, which were then occupied by the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. They owned a home in North Hollywood and a cabin in Crestline. By the time pertinent here, Rita had grown to adulthood, left home, and married, taking her husband’s surname Hughes, and living with him in the general area. Around April of 1987, Avo and Viivi met Waidla and Sakarias. It appears that Viivi was then vice-president and secretary of the Baltic American Freedom League, and that Avo had formerly been its president. According to evidence including testimony that he himself would give bearing on his background and character, Waidla was born in Estonia apparently in 1967, and was reared there; he was conscripted into the Soviet Army, an altogether brutal environment, in 1986; he was sent to what was then East Germany for basic training; he ended up in a military hospital; once there, he met Sakarias, himself an Estonian conscript, who was assigned to drive a paramedic vehicle; they decided to desert; they left one night under the cover of darkness; after completing a journey of about three days, they crossed the border into what was then West Germany; apparently together with Sakarias, Waidla asked for, and received, political asylum, and sought, and obtained, permission to go to the United States; also apparently together with Sakarias, Waidla arrived in New York City in January of 1987, to the welcome of the Estonian-American community there, and arrived in due course in Los Angeles in April of 1987, to the welcome of the Estonian-American community there. Both Waidla and Sakarias spoke and understood English. Of the two, Sakarias was more outgoing and outspoken, Waidla less so. After meeting Avo and Viivi around April of 1987, Waidla and Sakarias moved into an apartment close to their home. Viivi invited them to dinner, and they accepted. Soon thereafter, she arranged for Waidla to interview for a position as a translator with the Voice of America in Washington, D.C.; he went there, something unfortunate apparently happened, and he returned about a week later. Later in the spring of 1987, at Viivi’s suggestion, Avo invited Waidla to move into their home—Viivi had told Avo, “He has no where [sic] to go, so we have to help him.” Waidla accepted. He moved in immediately. In the time that followed, Avo and Viivi would take him with them to their cabin. They provided him with room and board; they also saw to his other needs, including clothing, medical care, cigarettes, etc. He got a little bit of money from other sources—for example, he sold to a Canadian newspaper an article that he wrote, and Viivi helped translate, relating to his flight with Sakarias from the Soviet Army to the West; he took some photographs for the Baltic American Freedom League; and he did various odd jobs. He expressed no interest in finding work or in furthering his education; indeed, he expressed an interest in not doing so: Not only did he make no effort on his own behalf, he even frustrated efforts made by others, including Avo and Viivi, as by remaining only a week at a job that they had gotten for him and by refusing to cooperate in obtaining a scholarship that they had attempted to arrange. He indicated a desire to get money—but without working. So too did Sakarias, with whom he continued to associate when he was able, Sakarias moving from place to place around the country. As Waidla and Sakarias themselves told Rita, they “wanted to get rich quickly,” and discussed “living on the beach in Hawaii and traveling all around the world making money and living the high life”; but they “didn’t want to be working stiffs”; they “frowned upon” the “American work ethic”; and they “felt that they were treated better financially in Estonia,” where, Sakarias said, a person could obtain “government money because the government was so corrupt.” In the summer or fall of 1987, Avo asked Waidla to do certain construction and related work in and around the Piirisilds’ home in order to cover his room and board, and not for pay; Waidla agreed. Without Avo’s knowledge, Viivi promised to give Waidla, who did not have a driver’s license, a nonrunning Triumph Spitfire sports car belonging to Avo for his transportation needs if he should get a job or enroll in school. On learning of the promise, which he thought was conditioned on Waidla’s completion of the work in question, Avo expressed displeasure, apparently to both Viivi and Waidla, but agreed’to abide by its terms. By the fall of 1987, Viivi began to express an interest in paying for all of Waidla’s and Sakarias’s educational and perhaps other expenses if they wished to attend college. She expressed this interest to Waidla and, apparently, Sakarias, and to others as well. Evidently, neither Waidla nor Sakarias had such a wish. On one occasion, when she spoke of the matter, Waidla simply rolled his eyes. On the same occasion, she indicated a concern that he was being influenced—negatively, it appears—by Sakarias. By mid-May of 1988, Waidla had become angry with Avo and especially Viivi, and also, apparently, with the Estonian-American community generally; he had become desperate for money; and he had begun to scheme to resolve matters in his favor. So too had Sakarias. In a letter dated May 14, 1988, and written to Sakarias, who was then evidently in or around New York, Waidla related (in Estonian, as subsequently translated) that he had “sent an application to the Munich Radio”— referring, apparently, to Radio Free Europe in Munich. “If you want, send one also. There they are looking for workers . . . (announcers).” He cautioned: “Look, don’t breath[e] about this to anybody, otherwise the same may happen what happened to me at V.O.A. When one jerk knows, then all know. This is the way of the expatriot [sic: for “expatriate”] Estonians. You know yourself just as well.” He added: “Generally my situation is shitty . . . (more than shitty).” “I do not believe that I can stand to stay here until end of June. I believe that if we cannot get to Germany for some reason, then we could do something together. Of course, ... we must get rid of those dammed [sic: for “damned”] Estonians for once finally. This is like the Mafia, only the likes of us are the normal Estonians. I believe that to [sic: for “we”?] know the language and we can get along without those jerks.” He continued: “I believe that maybe we should go to Hawaii. Of course, if we can get to Munich, then definitely to there. I have nothing against it if we could go skiing in the Alps or chase women in Monte Carlo. Next week I will sell this wheelbarrow”—an evident reference in slang to Avo’s Triumph. “I cannot do anything with it. I cannot obtain driver’s licenses [sic], since Viivi’s insurance apparently does not cover it. This is all, of course, bullshit, but that’s the way it goes, and in Germany or in Hawaii, one does not need an automobile.” He asked: “Listen, how can one purchase such license in New York? Can it be done this way, that I will send you money, a photo and a signature. I have not found such a place here, and I do not care to come to New York. Such a forged license can be easily exchanged in Hawaii or in Germany” “for a correct license.” He closed: “Write. What do you think of such plans?” In late May of 1988, in the presence of Rita, Viivi and Waidla had an angry encounter about construction work around the Piirisilds’ home. For the work that he had in fact completed, which was substantial, Waidla demanded Avo’s Triumph, put into running condition, or $4,000, which he apparently believed was its value, a demand that he had made some days earlier. Viivi refused: She stated, “No, you show no incentive to work or go to school, and therefore you can’t have the car or the money”; she added, “You’ve brought this topic up before, and I don’t want to hear about it anymore.” He threatened that, if he did not get what he demanded, he would report her to the building authorities for nonpermitted construction, a threat that he made some days earlier as well. She stated that he had brought up this topic too previously, and did not wish to hear about it again. She made out a list of the cost of his room and board and other needs, which amounted to between $10,000 and $15,000. He became angry, and said, “Everyone knows what kind of person you are all around town.” She responded, “Get packed and get out of here.” She made a telephone call to Avo. Waidla threatened that, if he did not get what he demanded, he would kill Avo or break his arm. Rita calmed Waidla down, gave him a sandwich and some soda, and told him to go peacefully and not to do anything to provoke Avo. With her help, he packed, and then left. Sakarias picked him up, and together they departed. After, if not before, Viivi and Waidla’s angry encounter, Viivi began to express fear of Waidla and Sakarias. She expressed such fear to a number of persons, including Avo and Rita and also George Charon, a Special Agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation with whom she was acquainted. In addition, after, if not before, Viivi and Waidla’s angry encounter, Waidla and Sakarias found themselves cut off, at least in part, from the Estonian-American community and that community’s resources, and also from Estonians outside of the United States and their resources. According to testimony that Waidla himself would give, after the encounter he and Sakarias set out from the Los Angeles area in an automobile that Sakarias was driving; they went to Phoenix—from whose environs, apparently, they sent Viivi a postcard picturing a rattlesnake—then to Key West, Miami, New York City, Jersey City, and finally Boston; from Boston, they headed back to the Los Angeles area in a pickup truck that Sakarias contracted to deliver to San Francisco by a specified date for its owner; driving by turns, they arrived in the Los Angeles area. During the journey, again according to his own ensuing testimony, Waidla telephoned the Piirisilds several times in an effort to get Avo’s Triumph or the proceeds from its sale. On July 4, 1988, Waidla and Sakarias drove in the pickup truck to the Piirisilds’ home. They appeared at the front door unannounced. Avo and Viivi were within. Afraid, Viivi stayed out of sight inside the house. Avo went to talk to the pair outside. In the conversation that followed, Waidla and Sakarias told Avo that they had made a coast-to-coast-to-coast journey; they also told him that they had caused damage to the pickup truck in an accident, and that they had to deliver it soon to San Francisco. In the course of the conversation, Waidla announced to Avo that he had come to get Avo’s Triumph. Avo responded that he could not give him the automobile that day: The vehicle’s title documents, which were in a bank safety deposit box, were not accessible because the bank was closed for Independence Day, and the vehicle itself was not in running condition. Waidla apparently asked whether he could give him the automobile the next day. Avo answered that he could not: He had to leave on a business trip the following morning—as he actually did—and would not return for about two weeks—as he actually did not. Waidla commented that he did not know whether he would be back from the trip to San Francisco at that time. Displaying a bank book with a balance of $18, he added that he had no money and needed some for the trip. Avo stated that he did not have any cash on hand. Waidla said that he would pay him back. Avo stated, again, that he had no cash. Instead, he offered to purchase gasoline for the pickup truck by means of a credit card. Waidla and Sakarias drove Avo to a service station. Avo made the purchase. Waidla and Sakarias drove him back home. They then departed themselves. Between July 4 and 11, 1988, Waidla and Sakarias broke into and entered the Piirisilds’ cabin, which was unoccupied. As Waidla himself would testify in admitting the deed, they did not have much money. They stayed for some time, consuming food and drink and making telephone calls. Before they went off, with things in disarray, they took various items of the Piirisilds’ personal property, including a combination telephone/clock radio and a hatchet. On July 11, 1988, Waidla and Sakarias sold to a pawnbroker the combination telephone/clock radio that they had taken from the Piirisilds’ cabin, obtaining only $15 for the item. On July 12, 1988, while Avo was away on his business trip, and after Viivi left for a dental appointment, Waidla and Sakarias broke into and entered the Piirisilds’ home. Before doing so, they had been seen in the area by one of the Piirisilds’ neighbors walking towards the house, wearing jackets and not carrying bags, and displaying hard looks. On Viivi’s return, as she passed through the front door toward the living room, before she could even attempt to resist, Waidla and Sakarias set upon her, dispatched her toward death, and then dragged her to a bedroom where her body would subsequently be found. They throttled her, fracturing her larynx and hyoid bone; bludgeoned her several times about her head and face and neck with perhaps the butt of the head of a hatchet, delivering some blows with such force as to crush her skull, fracture her jaw and various facial bones with her teeth knocked back, and generally deform her features; chopped her three times around the top of her head perhaps with the edge of the head of a hatchet, delivering one blow with similar crushing, fracturing, and deforming force to penetrate her skull completely, delivering the other two blows with less force and, evidently, peri- or post-mortem; and stabbed her four times in the left chest area perhaps with a knife, inflicting two wounds that were six inches deep in the environs of vital organs, one that was three inches deep, and one that was only one-half inch deep and, evidently, peri- or post-mortem. They caused her death through the combination of the throttling, bludgeoning, chopping, and stabbing, and may have done so through any one of such means, because each was potentially fatal in and of itself. Before they went off, with things in disarray but apparently with their hands washed, they took various items of the Piirisilds’ personal property, including a purse, wallet, green jade earrings, black star sapphire pendant, and credit and telephone charge cards, all belonging to Viivi. After doing so, they were seen in the area by the same neighbor walking away from the house, now carrying bags and not wearing jackets, acting suspiciously. Within the house, near the place at which they had broken and entered, Waidla left behind his right thumbprint for later discovery. He could not have made the impression while he was living there up to about a month and a half earlier, because such an impression has a “life span” of only 10 days to three weeks. Apparently, he also left behind two cigarette butts. Tobacco smoking was not permitted in the house because Viivi was allergic to the fumes. Saliva on the butts matched Waidla’s, but not Sakarias’s. Later on July 12, 1988, Waidla and Sakarias sold to another pawnbroker the green jade earrings and the black star sapphire pendant that they had taken from Viivi at the Piirisilds’ home, obtaining only $20 for the items. With one of Viivi’s credit cards, they purchased two airline tickets for one-way travel from Los Angeles to New York City. They abandoned the pickup truck. On July 13, 1988, Waidla and Sakarias flew from Los Angeles to New York City. In the days that followed, they used Viivi’s credit and telephone charge cards to make various telephone calls and to purchase various items, including a substantial amount of fine jewelry and an airplane ticket that they unsuccessfully attempted to exchange for a cash refund. They traveled, together and separately, within the Estonian-American community and without. When asked by an Estonian-American acquaintance whether they had heard that Viivi had been murdered, they made no response, and turned to talk about the weather. On August 28, 1988, near the United States-Canada border in New York, a border patrol agent employed by the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service detained Waidla on suspicion of illegal entry into the country. Later that day, another border patrol agent detained Sakarias on the same basis at another location nearby. Seized from Sakarias was a very small amount of money, only 2 cents in American currency and 68 cents in Canadian. Seized from Waidla was a similarly small amount of money, only a few dollars in American currency and hardly anything at all in Canadian. Also seized from Waidla was a letter, dated August 26, 1988, that he had written to Sakarias, but had not sent, stating (in Estonian, as subsequently translated): “I am not sure, however, I hope that you will receive this letter sometime. At the last moment”—evidently turning back from suicide—“I did put the safety back on . . .the parabellum”—a kind of nine-millimeter semiautomatic pistol—“and I put” it “into the bag. What will come the future is unknown. Right now I am drinking Bavarian beer with the proper strength in one of the better class bars in Montreal. When you hear that I am dead, then you should know that I’ve coracked [sic: for “croaked”] with a weapon in hand. If you hear that I have been taken alive . . . (almost impossible) . . . then you should know that I did my best. However, generally you may look for me in Key West. This is a small place. You will find me. Of course, when my death notice will appear, probably there is no reason to look for me. However, . . . well. Generally you are my best friend . . . (possibly the only friend ever), so that it would be nice if we should meet again sometime. I wish you a firm hand and a cool nerve . . . .” In his own testimony, Waidla would admit that he had the “parabellum” in his possession when he was detained, and had it loaded. On August 29, 1988, Waidla made statements to the police, in the person of detectives employed by the Los Angeles Police Department. The next day, August 30, he made further statements to them and, ultimately, his confession. In his confession, he admitted participation in Viivi’s murder and the related burglary and robbery, but attempted to limit his involvement in the attack to a single bludgeoning blow delivered at its inception, and to expand Sakarias’s involvement to encompass all of the rest. For his part, Waidla introduced evidence to raise a reasonable doubt in the mind of the jury as to his guilt of each of the felonies charged under each of the special and other circumstances alleged. In summation, however, his counsel would argue that, if the jury did not entertain such a doubt, it should find him guilty of first degree murder on a theory of willful, premeditated, and deliberate murder only, and not on a theory of either felony-murder burglary or felony-murder robbery. Taking the stand in his own behalf, Waidla, among other things, denied any participation in Viivi’s murder and the related burglary and robbery, asserting as an alibi that he had left the Los Angeles area three days earlier to hitchhike to New York alone without Sakarias. He recanted his confession. He stated that he merely parroted back a story that the police schooled him in. He stated further that he did so because they threatened to hang him if he did not, and had persuaded him that they would follow through, since they behaved like interrogators of the Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti or KGB, the erstwhile Soviet “Committee for State Security,” into whose hands he said he had fallen in Estonia. He presented evidence, including the testimony referred to above spanning his birth in Estonia to his arrival in Los Angeles, bearing on his background and character. He also relied on evidence that the People presented, including his article on his flight with Sakarias from the Soviet Army to the West, bearing on the same matter. At the penalty phase, the People declined to introduce any further evidence. Relying on guilt phase evidence for aggravation, they urged the jury to fix the punishment for Viivi’s murder at death. Having introduced, or not opposed, evidence of his background and character at the guilt phase in anticipation of the penalty phase, Waidla likewise declined to introduce any further evidence. Relying on such guilt phase evidence for mitigation, which included no prior felony convictions and no other crimina] activity involving the use or threat of force or violence, he urged the jury to fix the punishment for Viivi’s murder at a term of imprisonment for life without possibility of parole. III. Discussion A. Issues Relating to Guilt and Eligibility for the Penalty of Death Waidla raises a number of claims against the determination of guilt and eligibility for the penalty of death. As will appear, none is meritorious. 1. Conduct of Voir Dire of Prospective Jurors Section 223 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides, among other things, that, “[i]n a criminal case,” the trial court has “discretion in the manner in which” it conducts the voir dire of prospective jurors. (Code Civ. Proc., § 223.) But it also provides that, in all such cases, including those involving the death penalty, the trial court must conduct the voir dire of “any prospective jurors . . . , where practicable, ... in the presence of the other” prospective “jurors . . . .” (Ibid.) In doing so, it “abrogates” (Covarrubias v. Superior Court (1998) 60 Cal.App.4th 1168, 1171 [71 Cal.Rptr.2d 91]) the holding of Hovey v. Superior Court (1980) 28 Cal.3d 1 [168 Cal.Rptr. 128, 616 P.2d 1301], wherein we “declare[d], pursuant to [our] supervisory authority over California criminal procedure, that in future capital cases that portion of the voir dire of each prospective juror which deals with” his views on the death penalty “should be done individually and in sequestration” (id. at p. 80, fn. omitted). Waidla moved the superior court to conduct the voir dire of the prospective jurors concerning their views on the death penalty individually and in sequestration, in accordance with Hovey. The superior court denied the motion. In setting out its reasons, it stated that section 223 of the Code of Civil Procedure “abrogated” Hovey, under the provision’s terms, it had the authority to conduct individual and sequestered voir dire in the “exercise” of its “discretion”; except in areas that were “sensitive in nature,” it chose not to do so; it believed that individual and sequestered voir dire was simply not “necessary in this case”; it also believed that it had “fulfill[ed]” any “policy” underlying individual and sequestered voir dire by obtaining from each prospective juror, on its order, a completed 25-page questionnaire answered in writing under penalty of perjury, wherein he expressed, inter alia, his “opinion on the death penalty,” “individually” and “in private.” Waidla contends that the superior court erred under California statutory law by denying his motion to conduct the voir dire of the prospective jurors concerning their views on the death penalty individually and in sequestration, in accordance with Hovey. An appellate court applies the abuse of discretion standard of review to a trial court’s granting or denial of a motion on the conduct of the voir dire of prospective jurors. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 223.) A trial court abuses its discretion when its ruling “fall[s] ‘outside the bounds of reason.’ ” (People v. Ochoa (1998) 19 Cal.4th 353, 408 [79 Cal.Rptr.2d 408, 966 P.2d 442], quoting People v. DeSantis (1992) 2 Cal.4th 1198, 1226 [9 Cal.Rptr.2d 628, 831 P.2d 1210].) Employing that test, we find no error. The superior court’s denial of Waidla’s motion to conduct the voir dire of the prospective jurors concerning their views on the death penalty individually and in sequestration, in accordance with Hovey, was not unreasonable. We shall assume that the superior court might have conducted the voir dire as requested. But we cannot conclude that it had to do so. The reasons that it set out for its ruling were altogether reasonable. Devoting but a handful of words to the issue, Waidla makes essentially no argument to the contrary. We shall not endeavor to make one on his behalf. 2. Overruling of Challenges for Cause Against Prospective Jurors Waidla challenged five prospective jurors for cause: Dorothy Gelles, Beatrice Martinek, Fred English, Brent Weston, and Darrow Bruck. The superior court overruled each challenge. The jury that was eventually sworn and impaneled included Bruck, but not Gelles, Martinek, English, or Weston. When it was sworn and impaneled, Waidla had peremptory challenges remaining against its members and made no objection to its composition. Waidla contends that, by overruling his challenges for cause against Prospective Jurors Gelles, Martinek, English, and Weston, and then Prospective Juror Bruck, the superior court erred under the impartial jury trial clause of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, as applied to the states through the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Under the Sixth Amendment’s impartial jury trial clause, the “crucial question is ‘whether the [prospective] juror’s views [on the death penalty] would “prevent or substantially impair the performance of his duties as a juror in accordance with his instructions and his oath.” ’ ” (People v. Clair (1992) 2 Cal.4th 629, 653, fn. 2 [7 Cal.Rptr.2d 564, 828 P.2d 705], quoting Wainwright v. Witt (1985) 469 U.S. 412, 424 [105 S.Ct. 844, 852, 83 L.Ed.2d 841], quoting in turn Adams v. Texas (1980) 448 U.S. 38, 45 [100 S.Ct. 2521, 2526, 65 L.Ed.2d 581].) We reject the claim at the threshold. To preserve a point based on the overruling of a challenge for cause against a prospective juror, a defendant “must either exhaust” his “peremptory challenges and object to the jury as finally constituted” at trial, or else “justify” his “failure to do so” on appeal. (People v. Kirkpatrick (1994) 7 Cal.4th 988, 1005 [30 Cal.Rptr.2d 818, 874 P.2d 248]; accord, People v. Lucas (1995) 12 Cal.4th 415, 480 [48 Cal.Rptr.2d 525, 907 P.2d 373].) Waidla did not exhaust and object below, nor does he justify here. We also reject the claim on the merits. An appellate court applies the abuse of discretion standard of review to a trial court’s sustaining or overruling of a challenge for cause against a prospective juror. (Cf. 2 Childress & Davis, Federal Standards of Review (2d ed. 1992) Trial Judge: Supervision and Discretion, § 11.19, pp. 11-83 to 11-84 [stating abuse of discretion as the federal standard of review].) As for each of the subordinate determinations, it employs the test appropriate thereto. Thus, it examines for substantial evidence any finding as to “whether and how the prospective juror’s views on” the death penalty “would affect his performance as a juror.” (People v. Ashmus (1991) 54 Cal.3d 932, 962 [2 Cal.Rptr.2d 112, 820 P.2d 214].) It also examines for substantial evidence any “finding on what those views actually are.” (Ibid.) Having scrutinized the record on appeal, we find no error. The superior court’s overruling of Waidla’s challenges for cause against Prospective Jurors Gelles, Martinek, English, and Weston, and then Prospective Juror Brack was not unreasonable. Certainly, there was more than substantial evidence for any finding, whether express in fact or implied at law, that none held views on the death penalty, whatever their precise contours, that “would ‘prevent or substantially impair the performance of his duties as a juror in accordance with his instructions and his oath.’ ” (Wainwright v. Witt, supra, 469 U.S. at p. 424 [105 S.Ct. at p. 852], quoting Adams v. Texas, supra, 448 U.S. at p. 45 [100 S.Ct. at p. 2526] .) 3. Admission of Evidence of Waidla’s Views on Money and Work During their direct examination of Rita Hughes, Avo and Viivi Piirisild’s daughter, the People attempted to ask questions including, in the prosecutor’s words, whether Waidla had “mention[ed]” any “feelings” that he may have had “about his economic situation in the United States.” Through counsel, Waidla objected, evidently under California statutory law, on the grounds that the question was vague and ambiguous and that any answer would be irrelevant. Outside of the presence of the jury, the superior court requested an offer of proof from the People. The prosecutor represented that the People would elicit testimony from Rita to the effect that, in the course of a conversation that she had had with Waidla and Sakarias, Waidla made statements expressing, among other things, a desire to get money without working. Through counsel, Waidla objected to the admission of such testimony, again evidently under California statutory law, as irrelevant. The superior court overruled the objection. It determined that the testimony in question was indeed relevant. It did so because it effectively concluded that the testimony had at least some tendency in reason to prove the disputed material fact whether Waidla had a motive for the murder of Viivi and the related burglary and robbery and for the other offenses and, therefore, whether he was the perpetrator thereof. It thereupon ruled the testimony admissible. Under the People’s direct examination, now resumed before the jury, Rita testified, in pertinent part, as follows: In the course of a conversation that she had had with Waidla and Sakarias, in which Sakarias “did most of the talking” and Waidla “basically nodded or smoked a cigarette, and . . . nodded occasionally,” the two men stated that they “wanted to get rich quickly,” and discussed “living on the beach in Hawaii and traveling all around the world making money and living the high life”; but they “didn’t want to be working stiffs”; they “brought up the example of’ a man who was apparently an acquaintance who had “acquired” a “Jaguar” or “Peugeot” “at the age of 60,” and they “thought what a waste, that he is too old to appreciate such a fine car, and that it would be nice to have a fancy Cadillac or a Mercedes or whatever at an early age”; they “frowned upon” the “American work ethic,” “us[ing] the example of [a] man back east on the east coast who had two Buicks and [a] house in the suburbs and [a] country home, and . . . that was all he amounted to after 50 years of hard work, and what a waste of a life”; they “felt that they were treated better financially in Estonia,” where, Sakarias said, a person could obtain “government money because the government was so corrupt.” At one point, Rita was asked by the prosecutor to identify the speaker of certain statements to which she testified, but she failed to do so. Waidla now contends that the superior court erred under California statutory law in its ruling on the admissibility of Rita’s testimony about his desire to get money without working, on the ground that such testimony was inadmissible hearsay outside of any exception, including that for admissions and adoptive admissions. Hearsay is evidence of a statement made by a declarant outside of court and offered in court for its truth. (Evid. Code, § 1200, subd. (a).) As a rule, it is inadmissible. (Id., § 1200, subd. (b).) Exceptions, however, exist. (See generally id., § 1220 et seq.) One covers admissions, which involve a statement by a declarant introduced against the declarant himself in an action to which he is a party. (Id., § 1220.) Another covers adoptive admissions, which involve a statement by a declarant introduced against a party who, with knowledge thereof, manifested his adoption of it or his belief in its truth. (Id., § 1221.) Waidla has not preserved the claim for review. “It is, of course, ‘the general rule’ ”—which we find applicable here—“ ‘that 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.’ ” (People v. Benson (1990) 52 Cal.3d 754, 786, fn. 7 [276 Cal.Rptr. 827, 802 P.2d 330], quoting People v. Rogers (1978) 21 Cal.3d 542, 548 [146 Cal.Rptr. 732, 579 P.2d 1048]; accord, e.g., People v. Alvarez (1996) 14 Cal.4th 155, 186 [58 Cal.Rptr.2d 385, 926 P.2d 365].) Here, Waidla rests his point on an assertion of inadmissible hearsay. Below, however, he never made any objection whatsoever on that basis. Because of his omission, we are without evidence to identify precisely what parts of Rita’s testimony about his desire to get money without working might have amounted to otherwise inadmissible hearsay. Likewise, because of his omission, we are without evidence to judge confidently what parts of the testimony in question that might have amounted to otherwise inadmissible hearsay might have come within one or more exceptions, including the apparently available ones covering admissions and adoptive admissions. He alone must bear the consequences of the evidentiary void for which he alone is responsible. To the extent that Waidla has indeed preserved a claim for review—albeit not the one that he attempts to raise—he fails on the merits. Broadly speaking, an appellate court applies the abuse of discretion standard of review to any ruling by a trial court on the admissibility of evidence. (People v. Alvarez, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 201; accord, People v. Rowland (1992) 4 Cal.4th 238, 264 [14 Cal.Rptr.2d 377, 841 P.2d 897].) Speaking more particularly, it examines for abuse of discretion a decision on admissibility that turns on the relevance of the evidence in question. (E.g., People v. Alvarez, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 201; People v. Clair, supra, 2 Cal.4th at pp. 670-671.) That is because it so examines the underlying determination as to relevance itself. (E.g., People v. Alvarez, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 201; People v. Rowland, supra, 4 Cal.4th at p. 264.) Evidence is relevant if it has any tendency in reason to prove a disputed material fact. (Evid. Code, § 210.) Any claim by Waidla that the superior court erred under California statutory law in its ruling on the admissibility of Rita’s testimony about his desire to get money without working, on the ground that such testimony was irrelevant, would not succeed. The superior court did not err on that basis. For it did not abuse its discretion in determining that the testimony in question was indeed relevant. Plainly, it would not have been unreasonable for the superior court to have concluded, as it effectively did, that the testimony had at least some tendency in reason to prove the disputed material fact whether Waidla had a motive for the murder of Viivi and the related burglary and robbery and for the other offenses and, therefore, whether he was the perpetrator thereof. Waidla complains that his counsel provided ineffective assistance under the counsel clause of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, as applied to the states through the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and also under the counsel clause of section 15 of article I of the California Constitution, by failing to object to the admissibility of Rita’s testimony about his desire to get money without working on grounds in addition to irrelevance, including inadmissible hearsay. To establish ineffective assistance under the Sixth Amendment’s counsel clause, Waidla must demonstrate both deficient performance under an objective standard of professional reasonableness and prejudice under a similarly objective standard of reasonable probability of an-adverse effect on the outcome. (E.g., Strickland v. Washington (1984) 466 U.S. 668, 687-696 [104 S.Ct. 2052, 2064-2069, 80 L.Ed.2d 674].) To establish ineffective assistance under the counsel clause of article I, section 15 of the California Constitution, he must do the same. (E.g., People v. Ledesma (1987) 43 Cal.3d 171, 215-218 [233 Cal.Rptr. 404, 729 P.2d 839].) Even if Waidla can demonstrate deficient performance, a point on which we do not pass, he cannot demonstrate prejudice. It is not reasonably probable that his counsel’s failure to object on grounds including inadmissible hearsay, even if professionally unreasonable, adversely affected the outcome. That is because it is not reasonably probable that any such objection, even if sustained by the superior court in the face of the apparently available exceptions covering admissions and adoptive admissions, would have resulted in the returning of any more favorable verdict or finding by the jury. Although unflattering, the testimony in question was hardly determinative of the balance between inculpation and exculpation or aggravation and mitigation. Waidla may be right to state that the testimony presented him as “feeling entitlement to an elevated standard of living” and as “disrespecting the American work ethic itself.” But he is simply wrong to state that it was “inflammatory.” 4. Admission of Evidence of Viivi Piirisild’s Fear of Waidla During their direct examination of Rita Hughes, the People asked, in the prosecutor’s words, “[Pjrior to” the date of Viivi Piirisild’s murder and the related burglary and robbery, “did you discuss with [Viivi] possibly visiting her at . . . home?” and Rita answered, “Yes. . . .1 called her early” one morning, “and I wanted to go home to her, and she said for me not to come home.” “Did you discuss why you should not go home?” “She said it would not be safe.” “And what was the reason for her not wanting you to come home?” “She was afraid of’ Waidla and Sakarias “coming by, and that I might be hurt.” “Did she tell you what the basis of her fears were, why she thought they might come by?” At this point, the superior court called the prosecutor and Waidla’s counsel to the bench. Outside of the presence of the jury, it requested an offer of proof. The prosecutor represented that Rita would testify that Viivi told her that she feared Waidla and Sakarias because “she was alone” while Avo was away on his business trip, and “believed” or “thought” that “she had seen them driving by . . . the house.” As for Rita’s testimony about Viivi’s statement declaring her fear of Waidla and Sakarias, he argued that, under California statutory law, it was admissible hearsay within the state-of-mind exception because the statement was offered to prove that, in the burglary and robbery related to her murder, she did not engage in certain conduct, that is, she did not consent to the entry in the burglary or the taking by means of force or fear in the robbery. By doing so, he effectively argued that, under California statutory law, it was relevant because it had at least some tendency in reason to prove the disputed material fact of consent for the burglary and robbery. Waidla’s counsel objected, evidently under California statutory law, on the ground that Rita’s expected testimony about Viivi’s statement declaring the basis of her fear would be inadmissible hearsay, adding that it would be “totally beyond” his “ability to cross-examine” Viivi on the matter. He also objected, again evidently under California statutory law, that Rita’s expected testimony about Viivi’s statement of the basis of her fear would be substantially more prejudicial than probative. He apparently extended his hearsay and undue-prejudice objections to reach Rita’s testimony about Viivi’s statement of her fear itself, suggesting that it was irrelevant because lack of consent was not a disputed material fact under the defense to be presented. The superior court overruled the hearsay and undue-prejudice objections to Rita’s testimony about Viivi’s statement of her fear, indicating its view to the effect that the statement was relevant and was not, in itself, substantially more prejudicial than probative, and “ruling” that consent was a “definite, genuine issue in the lawsuit.” But it sustained the undue-prejudice objection to Rita’s expected testimony about Viivi’s statement of the basis of her fear as “repetitive and cumulative.” In response, the prosecutor indicated that he had nothing further to ask Rita. Later, during their direct examination of Avo Piirisild, the People attempted to ask about statements that Viivi made on July 4, 1988, as Waidla and Sakarias arrived at the front door of the Piirisilds’ North Hollywood home. Waidla’s counsel interposed an objection that any answer would be inadmissible hearsay. The superior court sustained the objection. At the prosecutor’s request, the superior court called the prosecutor and Waidla’s counsel to the bench. Outside of the presence of the jury, the prosecutor volunteered an offer of proof, representing that Avo would testify to various statements by Viivi declaring her fear of Waidla and Sakarias and/or indicating such fear circumstantially, as through the tone in which they were spoken. He argued that the expected testimony would be admissible hearsay within the state-of-mind exception, apparently to the extent that it was hearsay at all, because any such statements would be offered to prove lack of consent in the burglary and robbery related to her murder. Waidla’s counsel argued to the contrary. He added that any such statements would be irrelevant because lack of consent was not a disputed material fact under the defense to be presented. The superior court asked Waidla’s counsel and the prosecutor whether Waidla and the People would each enter into a stipulation relating to lack of consent. For Waidla, his counsel answered in the affirmative. For the People, the prosecutor passed the question, expressing concern that a stipulation “may not bring the full flavor” of the evidence. The superior court stated that it had been considering whether or not to “force” the People to stipulate by “rul[ing] the evidence doesn’t come in.” It decided, instead, to hold the “issue ... in abeyance.” Under the People’s direct examination, now resumed before the jury, Avo continued to testify on other matters. Soon, the superior court called the prosecutor and Waidla’s counsel to the bench. Outside of the presence of the jury, it expressed its belief that “the issue of consent to take the property, the issue of consent to enter the home, is an issue in litigation,” and obtained the agreement of both the prosecutor and Waidla’s counsel on the point. “The issue,” it went on, “is whether or not” to “allow that in by stipulation or by evidence” in the form of Avo’s expected testimony about Viivi’s statements declaring and/or circumstantially indicating her fear of Waidla and Sakarias. Because it determined that a stipulation would not be equivalent to evidence, it choose not to “force” the People to enter into one. It expressed its belief that “it really boils down to a[n] . . . issue” whether Avo’s expected testimony about the statements in question would be substantially more prejudicial than probative, and obtained the agreement of both the prosecutor and Waidla’s counsel on this point as well. After stating that it had “weighted]” probativeness and prejudice, it determined that Avo’s expected testimony would not, in fact, be substantially more prejudicial than probative. As a result, it allowed its introduction. It informed Waidla’s counsel that, “[i]f the evidence comes in” and he “ask[ed] for a limiting instruction,” it would “gladly give . . . one.” Waidla’s counsel responded that he “would” indeed “ask,” “since” he “obviously” could not “cross-examine” Viivi herself. Under the People’s direct examination, again resumed before the jury, Avo undertook to testify. Before he did so, the superior court gave the jury a limiting instruction that the “statements of [Viivi] Piirisild that you are about to hear are not being introduced for the truth asserted. They’re not being introduced for their truth. They’re being introduced to show [her] state of mind to explain her conduct”; “[n]ot for the truth asserted whatsoever, but only to [her] state of mind . . . , to explain her conduct then and later.” In response to the superior court’s query whether the admonition was “agreeable,” Waidla’s counsel stated, “Yes.” Avo proceeded to testify to statements by Viivi, in some of which she arguably declared her fear of Waidla and Sakarias, and in others of which she unarguably indicated such fear circumstantially. Later still, at the prosecutor’s request, the superior court called the prosecutor and Waidla’s counsel to the bench. Outside of the presence of the jury, the prosecutor volunteered an offer of proof prior to the direct examination of George Charon, the Federal Bureau of Investigation Special Agent with whom Viivi was acquainted. He represented that, in pertinent part, Charon would testify to various statements by Viivi, a few days after July 4, 1988, in some of which she declared her fear of Waidla and Sakarias, and in others of which she indicated such fear circumstantially. He argued that Charon’s expected testimony would be relevant and not substantially more prejudicial than probative. He also argued that it would be admissible hearsay within the state-of-mind exception, apparently to the extent that it was hearsay at all, because any such statements would be offered to prove lack of consent in the burglary and robbery related to her murder. Waidla’s counsel effectively made irrelevance, undue prejudice, and hearsay objections to Charon’s expected testimony. As for the undue prejudice objection, he argued that “there is no way” that he could “cross-examine” Viivi herself. The superior court overruled the objections to Charon’s expected testimony. Against the undue-prejudice objection, it determined that the testimony would not be substantially more prejudicial than probative, stating that it had “weigh[edj” probativeness and prejudice. As a result, it allowed the introduction of Charon’s expected testimony. It offered to give a limiting instruction for purposes of hearsay, and Waidla’s counsel accepted. Under the People’s direct examination, Special Agent Charon commenced his testimony. In its course, the superior court gave the jury a limiting instruction that the “statements of [Viivi] Piirisild are not being introduced for the truth asserted. They’re only being introduced to show her state of mind to explain subsequent conduct. They’re not being introduced for the truth asserted.” In response to the superior court’s query whether the admonition was “sufficient,” Waidla’s counsel stated, “Yes.” Charon proceeded to testify to statements by Viivi, in some of which she declared her fear of Waidla and Sakarias, and in others of which she indicated such fear circumstantially. Subsequently, in its charge to the jury, the superior court instructed: “Certain evidence was admitted for a limited purpose. [¶] At the time this evidence was admitted you were admonished that it could not be considered by you for any purpose other than the limited purpose for which it was admitted. [¶] Do not consider such evidence for any purpose except the limited purpose for which it was admitted.” Waidla now contends, in effect, that the superior court erred under California statutory law in its rulings on the admissibility of the testimony of Rita, Avo, and Special Agent Charon about statements by Viivi declaring and/or circumstantially indicating her fear of him and Sakarias, on the ground that the underlying statements were irrelevant. At the outset, we believe that Waidla has preserved the claim for review. He adequately satisfied the specific-and-timely-objection rule. On the merits, however, we conclude that the claim fails. As stated, an appellate court applies the abuse of discretion standard of review to any ruling by a trial court on the admissibility of evidence, including, as noted, one that turns on the relevance of the evidence in question. We find not unreasonable the superior court’s determinations of the relevance of the testimony in question by Rita, Avo, and Special Agent Charon, some express, others implied. Viivi’s underlying statements declaring and/or circumstantially indicating her fear of Waidla and Sakarias had at least some tendency in reason to prove the fact of lack of consent in the burglary and robbery related to her murder. Lack of consent was material to burglary because it was material to the element of entry (see, e.g., 2 Witkin & Epstein, Cal. Criminal Law (2d ed. 1988) Crimes Against Property, § 662, p. 743), and was also material to robbery because it was material to the element of taking by means of force or fear (see, e.g., id., § 648(b), p. 729). Lack of consent was also disputed with regard thereto. As a fact going to an element of burglary and an element of robbery, it was put into dispute by Waidla’s plea of not guilty, and remained in dispute until it was resolved (People v. Rowland, supra, 4 Cal.4th at p. 260), as it was only by the jury’s adverse verdicts. That Waidla, by presenting the defense that he did, chose not to dispute it actually is without effect. As a fact going to an element of burglary and an element of robbery, it had to be proved by the People, and proved beyond a reasonable doubt. (See Pen. Code, § 1096.) That it might have been proved other than by the statements in question is also without effect. A fact’s relevance does not depend on the means of its proof. Waidla also contends that the superior court erred under California statutory law in its rulings on the admissibility of the testimony of Rita, Avo, and Special Agent Charon about statements by Viivi declaring and/or circumstantially indicating her fear of him and Sakarias, on the ground that the underlying statements were substantially more prejudicial than probative. We again believe that Waidla has preserved the claim for review. He satisfied the specific-and-timely-objection rule not only adequately, but fully. But again we conclude that the claim fails. As stated, an appellate court applies the abuse of discretion standard of review to any ruling by a trial court on the admissibility of evidence, including one that turns on the relative probativeness and prejudice of the evidence in question (e.g., People v. Alvarez, supra, 14 Cal.4th at pp. 214-215; People v. Rowland, supra, 4 Cal.4th at p. 264). Evidence is substantially more prejudicial than probative (see Evid. Code, § 352) if, broadly stated, it poses an intolerable “risk to the fairness of the proceedings or the reliability of the outcome” (People v. Alvarez, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 204, fn. 14). We find not unreasonable the superior court’s determinations that the testimony in question by Rita, Avo, and Special Agent Charon was not substantially more prejudicial than probative. Viivi’s underlying statements declaring and/or circumstantially indicating her fear of Waidla and Sakarias, as explained, were relevant, having at least some tendency in reason to prove the fact of lack of consent in the burglary and robbery related to her murder. The superior court discerned no intolerable risk to the proceedings’ fairness or the outcome’s reliability. We cannot say that it exceeded the limits of reason in this regard. We are surely unable to agree with Waidla that the statements in question were inflammatory. We are even less able to agree that they were not worthy of belief. Waidla himself does not seem seriously to doubt that Viivi was actually afraid. Waidla contends, in addition, that the superior court erred under California statutory law in its rulings on the admissibility of the testimony of Rita, Avo, and Special Agent Charon about statements by Viivi declaring and/or circumstantially indicating her fear of him and Sakarias, on the ground that the underlying statements constituted inadmissible hearsay outside of any exception, including that for state of mind. Here too, we believe that Waidla has preserved the claim for review. He satisfied the specific-and-timely-objection rule not only adequately, but fully. But here, too, we conclude that the claim fails. As stated, an appellate court applies the abuse of discretion standard of review to any ruling by a trial court on the admissibility of evidence, including one that turns on the hearsay nature of the evidence in question (e.g., People v. Alvarez, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 203; People v. Rowland, supra, 4 Cal.4th at p. 264). We find not unreasonable the superior court’s determinations that the testimony in question by Rita, Avo, and Special Agent Charon was admissible hearsay within the state-of-mind exception. This exception embraces evidence of a statement of a declarant’s state of mind offered to prove the declarant’s conduct, unless such statement was made under circumstances indicating its lack of trustworthiness. (Evid. Code, § 1250, subd. (a)(2).) Viivi’s underlying statements declaring her fear of Waidla and Sakarias were within this exception. They were offered to prove lack of consent on her part in the burglary and robbery related to her murder. Furthermore, they were apparently not untrustworthy. Waidla asserts that other statements by Viivi were unreliable. Even if true, her statements declaring her fear were not. As noted, Waidla himself does not seem seriously to doubt that she was actually afraid. In addition, statements by Viivi indicating her fear of Waidla and Sakarias circumstantially were not even hearsay at all, because they were not offered for their truth. Notwithstanding his counsel’s contemporaneous acceptance, Waidla complains of the limiting instructions that the superior court gave the jury as to the testimony in question by Avo and Special Agent Charon. Contrary to his implication, there is no basis to judge them ineffectual. The presumption is that limiting instructions are followed by the jury. (See, e.g., People v. Anderson (1987) 43 Cal.3d 1104, 1120 [240 Cal.Rptr. 585, 742 P.2d 1306].) That presumption is not rebutted here. Had Waidla believed then, as he apparently believes now, that the limiting instructions should have expressly admonished the jury against using Viivi’s statements declaring and/or circumstantially indicating her fear of him and Sakarias in order to infer that they had planned