HORSEY, Justice:
Defendant, William P. Baynard, seeks reversal of his conviction in a jury trial of Murder in the First Degree (11
Del.C.
§ 636(a)(1)), Burglary in the Second Degree (11
Del. C.
§ 825(1)), Theft of a Firearm (11
Del. C.
§ 1451), and Possession of a Deadly Weapon during the Commission of a Felony (11
Del.C.
§ 1447(a)) in the death of Joy Luzier. Defendant received a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment on the murder one conviction and an additional fifty-five years for the remaining charges. On appeal, defendant asserts multiple grounds for reversal. The issues raised involve: (1) the State’s exercise of its peremptory challenges; (2) the voluntariness of the defendant’s statements; (3) the admission of a certain portion of the defendant’s tape-recorded statement into the record; (4) the Court’s jury instruction on 11
Del.C.
§ 469;
and (5) the Court’s refusal to hold an evi-dentiary hearing to receive new matter. We find no reversible error and, therefore, affirm.
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The evidence at trial may at the outset be summarized as follows: On May 14, 1984, defendant Baynard broke into the unoccupied residence of Robert and Joy Luzier. Once inside the house, Baynard discovered a water jug containing some coins, and in a kitchen drawer he found a revolver. As Baynard was collecting his spoils, Joy Luzier returned home for lunch to discover that her house had been burglarized. Luzier immediately called her father-in-law and asked him to come over. She then proceeded to walk down the hallway, where she confronted Baynard. With Luzier’s back to the wall, Baynard took the revolver and shot Luzier twice, killing her. Baynard then fled the scene and threw the revolver into the woods behind the house.
Later that afternoon, after a motorist informed the state police that he had given Baynard a ride to an area near the Luzier house, the police went to Baynard’s residence. As Baynard saw the police cars approach, he fled into the nearby woods. He was later captured and turned over to Detectives Hudson and Truitt.
At this time, Baynard told the detectives that while he had been outside the Luzier house, another man named “Baldy” had gone into the home, but he (defendant) had fled when he saw Luzier drive up. After alerting'the other police units to begin looking for Baldy, the detectives proceeded to take Baynard to the Millsboro Police Station to tape-record his statement.
Later at the police station, Baynard admitted being in the victim’s house with Baldy. Baynard stated that while Baldy was struggling with Luzier, he jumped out of a window and while in the woods he heard several shots. That evening, after a private conversation with his girlfriend, Baynard told the police that he had been in the house alone and had shot Luzier after she pulled a gun on him and struggled with him.
At trial, Baynard admitted both the burglary and the shooting of Luzier. In defense he argued (1) that the killing was justified as an act of self-defense, and (2) that he lacked the culpable state of mind sufficient for first degree murder. The jury rejected both of these defenses and found Baynard guilty on all charges-.
Because the jury was unable to unanimously recommend the death penalty, the Superior Court sentenced Baynard to mandatory life imprisonment for murder one, plus an additional fifty-five years for the other charges.
I
The first issue presented is whether defendant was deprived of his State constitutional right under Del.Const., art. I, § 7, to trial by an impartial jury by the Trial Court’s handling of the State’s exercise of its peremptory challenges. Invoking
Riley v. State,
Del.Supr., 496 A.2d 997 (1985),
cert. denied,
— U.S. -, 106 S.Ct. 3339, 92 L.Ed.2d 743 (1986), defendant contends that the Court committed procedural error in failing to: (1) determine if defendant established a prima facie case of racial bias; (2) require the State to come forward with an explanation for its peremptory challenges of blacks; and (3) evaluate and determine whether the State’s explanations were bona fide.
A.
Defendant raises the issue on the following record: Baynard, a black, was accused of murdering Joy Luzier, who was white. From a jury panel of two hundred fifty persons, twelve jurors and four alternates were drawn. Of the two hundred fifty potential jurors, thirty-six were black,
one was oriental and the remainder were Caucasian. The State exercised six of its twelve peremptory challenges,
including its first four, against black candidates.
The defendant objected each time the State exercised a peremptory challenge against a prospective black juror. The Court, however, ruled in favor of the State and struck each potential juror.
Specifically, the State exercised its first peremptory challenge against Joseph Watson, a black. The defendant immediately stated for the record that Watson was black and that the jury panel consisted of a very limited number of black prospective jurors.
The State exercised its second peremptory challenge against black venirewoman Daisey Stevenson. The defendant again stated for the record that the prospective juror was black and that he felt the State was engaging in a pattern of racial discrimination in the exercise of its peremptory challenges. The defendant then asked the Court not to allow the last challenge based upon the apparent racial discrimination since the only two peremptory challenges exercised by the State were against blacks. When the Court asked the State if it wished to respond, the prosecutor offered to explain the reasoning behind its challenges at the end of the jury selection. The State did not want to indicate what its reasons were at the present time because it did not want to disclose its theory of the case. The Court stated:
Yes, you [the defendant] have made a record. I am not going to make a ruling as to whether or not the State is simply striking blacks. I agree with the defense that the two challenges they have used have both been against blacks. That is a fact that the Court cannot dispute, but I have seen no pattern as of yet that the State is simply striking all blacks. If it develops, I will then call upon the State to state its reasons if they have any, but at this point we have only been through eleven jurors and three of them have been black, two have been challenged by the State and one was excused by the Court because he was a correctional officer at Sussex Correctional Institute and that was Ronald Hall. I have seen no pattern as yet, but if one starts to develop I will certainly call upon the State to give its reasons.
The next prospective juror was William Hyland, also a black. The State exercised its third peremptory challenge against Hy-land; and defendant renewed his prior objection. Although the Court did not explicitly determine if the defendant had established a prima facie case of racial discrimination, the State volunteered to explain its reasons for challenging the three prospective black jurors.
The State indicated that it struck Hyland because he had equivocated on imposing the death penalty. Similarly, Stevenson was challenged because her responses, particularly her reference to the killing as an “accident,” made her appear unreceptive to the State’s theory of murder and the imposition of the death penalty. With respect to Watson, the State explained that he was hard of hearing and appeared to be “stupid,” which suggested he might have diffi
culty understanding the evidence. After considering these explanations, the Court found that the first juror challenged, Watson, indeed had a hearing problem and that he had extreme difficulty understanding the Court’s questions. As to the State’s other two peremptory challenges, of Stevenson and Hyland, the Trial Judge ruled that the reasons given for the strikes were “reasons I cannot quarrel with at this point.”
Twenty-one more prospective jurors were called and questioned without either side invoking a peremptory challenge. The State then lodged a challenge for cause against Chester West, a black. Cause was stated to be established because he had twice indicated that he would “automatically” vote for life imprisonment at a penalty hearing. The Court acknowledged that West displayed some confusion concerning his position on the death penalty, but refused to excuse him for cause. The State then proceeded to exercise its fourth peremptory challenge against West. When the defendant again renewed his racial discrimination claim, the Court held that the State’s reason “would be acceptable, whether he was white or black.”
Thereafter, the State exercised its fifth peremptory challenge against Jill Koyana-gi, the only oriental on the panel, and its sixth peremptory challenge against Michael Steele, a white.
The State then exercised its seventh peremptory challenge against Cynthia Brinkley, a black. After Brinkley indicated that her brother had been convicted by one of the State prosecutors and then fired from his position as a state police officer, the State asked that she be excused for cause. When the Court refused, the State exercised its seventh peremptory challenge.
The State exercised its next four peremptory challenges against whites and its twelfth peremptory challenge against Eplu-ribus Mills, a black. Mills, however, revealed that she had a son who had been convicted of murder but who had successfully avoided the death penalty. The Court refused to remove Mills for cause and the State then used its final peremptory challenge. The defendant again established for the record that Mills was a black. The Court noted, however, that, “I think it is clear as to why she was struck.”
When jury selection had been completed, the jury consisted of one black, eleven whites, and four white alternates. Defendant then moved the Court to quash the jury panel on the ground that the State had engaged in a systematic use of its peremptory challenges in a racially discriminatory manner. The Court, in a bench ruling, denied the request, stating, “As to the question of the State’s striking of the jurors, they gave a reason for each juror that was stricken, and this Court cannot say, because of these reasons, that there was a systematic striking of blacks to prejudice the defendant.”
B.
In
Riley,
496 A.2d at 1012, this Court concluded that the use of peremptory challenges to exclude prospective jurors solely upon the basis of race violates a criminal defendant's rights under Del.Const. art. I, § 7 to a trial by an impartial jury.
Borrowing heavily from
People v. Wheeler,
Cal.Supr., 22 Cal.3d 258, 148 Cal.Rptr. 890, 583 P.2d 748 (1978), and
Commonwealth v. Soares,
Mass.Supr., 377 Mass. 461, 387 N.E.2d 499 (1979),
cert. denied,
444 U.S. 881, 100 S.Ct. 170, 62 L.Ed.2d 110 (1979), we set out in general terms a procedure for trial courts to follow in the future when they are presented with a claim that per
emptory challenges have been exercised on discriminatory grounds. 496 A.2d at 1012-13.
Therefore, the procedures established in
Riley
have only prospective, and not retroactive, application.
In the instant case, defendant’s trial occurred nine months before we announced our decision in
Riley.
Thus, the
Riley
procedures were neither applicable to the Trial Court at the time of the defendant’s trial nor applicable upon this appeal, since we have explicitly declined to give the
Riley
procedures retroactive application.
Id.
However, even if
Riley
were applied to this case, we conclude that the Court’s procedures were in substantial compliance with the underlying principles of
Riley’s
three-tier test.
Id.
at 1013,
viz.,
(1) the presumption that the State is exercising its peremptory challenges for constitutionally permissible purposes, subject to a prima facie showing to the contrary; (2) a finding of substantial likelihood whether the State is exercising its challenges on the basis of race; and (3) if so found, whether the State has then met its burden of proving that the exercised challenges were not racially motivated.
C.
It is undisputed that defendant sustained his threshold burden under
Riley
of making a prima facie showing of racial discrimination by objecting to the State’s exercise of its peremptory challenges.
Cf. Saunders v. State,
Del.Supr., 401 A.2d 629, 632 (1979),
cert. denied,
449 U.S. 845, 101 S.Ct. 128, 66 L.Ed.2d 54 (1980);
Johnson v. State,
Del.Supr., 312 A.2d 630, 631 (1973). Defendant noted the race of each black against whom the State exercised a peremptory challenge and put in evidence the juror’s questionnaire form which indicates the race of each prospective juror. Similarly, defendant moved the Court to refuse the peremptory challenges against two of the drawn black jurors and moved to quash the entire panel at the end of the jury selection process.
Thus, if the Trial Court had prescience of
Riley
and been bound by it, defendant would have met the first tier of the
Riley
rule, but not the second and third. Defendant established a prima facie case that the State was exercising its peremptory challenges solely on the basis of race.
Strict procedural compliance, however, is not required where, as here, the Court was acting before the
Riley
procedures were announced.
Additionally, the
Riley
procedures are but “general terms” that we set out to fashion a “practical approach” for courts to determine whether peremptory challenges have been exercised on a racial
ly discriminatory basis.
Riley,
496 A.2d at 1012-13. Thus, even in
'post-Riley
trials, strict adherence with the
Riley
procedures is not mandated.
Therefore, the failure of a
pre-Riley
trial court to find that the defendant had sustained his burden of establishing a prima facie case of racial discrimination does not constitute reversible error.
D.
The defendant’s second contention — that the Court erred in not requiring the State to come forward with an explanation for the peremptory challenges of the prospective black jurors — is also not a ground for reversal. In the instant case it was unnecessary for the Court to require the State to come forth with a reasoned non-racial explanation because the State volunteered non-racial reasons for striking each of the first three potential black jurors. With regard to the State’s remaining peremptory challenges to strike the three other prospective black jurors, the record clearly reflects the reason why each juror was challenged. Thus, even though the Court did not explicitly call upon the State to explain the reasons for its challenges, the State, in fact, met its burden of providing a non-racial explanation for challenging the prospective black jurors.
E.
The defendant’s final ground of error under the
Riley
procedures is that the Court failed to evaluate the State’s explanations for challenging the prospective black jurors to determine that they were “bona fide” and not pretext. However, jurisdictions that have adopted the
Riley-Wheeler
approach uniformly defer to the trial judge by applying the clearly erroneous standard in reviewing findings involving motivations underlying peremptory challenges.
Wheeler,
148 Cal.Rptr. at 905-06, 583 P.2d at 764-65;
Soares,
387 N.E.2d at 517. Because the trial court’s findings will largely rest on the judge’s personal observation of the
voir dire
proceedings and on the credibility of the parties, a reviewing court should give those findings great deference.
Batson,
— U.S. at -, n. 21, 106 S.Ct. at 1724 n. 21;
Anderson v. Bessemer City,
470 U.S. 564, 105 S.Ct. 1504, 84 L.Ed.2d 518 (1985). “Sorting out whether a permissible or impermissible reason underlies a peremptory challenge is the function of the trial judge, and [an appellate court should] not substitute [its] judgment for his if there is support for it in the record.”
Commonwealth v. Thomas,
Mass.App., 19 Mass.App. 1, 471 N.E.2d 376, 379 (1984). We will “rely on the good judgment of the trial courts to distinguish bona fide reasons for such peremptories from sham excuses belatedly contrived to avoid admitting acts of group discrimination.”
People v. Hall,
Cal.Supr., 35 Cal.3d 161, 197 Cal.Rptr. 71, 75, 672 P.2d 854, 858 (1983).
Here, the Court appraised the demeanor and credibility of both the potential jurors and the prosecutor and determined that the State’s exercise of its peremptory challenges was nondiscriminatory. Furthermore, the Court had before it the prosecutor’s reasons for challenging the prospective black jurors. On this record, we cannot say that the Trial Court’s findings are clearly erroneous.
II
Defendant’s second ground for reversible error is the Trial Court’s failure to suppress his confession that he shot the victim. Defendant argues that his confession was induced by police promises of leniency and by deception so coercive as to overcome his will to make a rational choice. Hence, defendant argues that his confession must be found to have been involuntary and thus inadmissible. We conclude under the totality of the circumstances that the police
conduct was neither so coercive nor so deceptive as to render the defendant’s statement inadmissible.
See State v. Rooks,
Del.Supr., 401 A.2d 943 (1979).
The facts relevant to the issue of volun-tariness are not in dispute. State troopers arrested defendant, a thirty-year-old male with an eleventh grade education, at gun point in a woods at 5:45 p.m. on May 14, 1984. The troopers immediately turned defendant over to Detectives Hudson and Truitt.
The detectives placed defendant in their car and advised him of his
Miranda
rights.
Defendant, who had prior experience with the legal system, acknowledged that he understood the warnings.
As the detectives pulled off onto a dirt road to question defendant, they reassured him that no one was going to harm him and that they just wanted to know what happened. Defendant told the detectives that while he had been outside the victim’s house, Baldy had gone inside the home, but defendant had fled when he saw the victim drive up. The detectives then proceeded to take defendant to the local police station in order to tape record his statement. It was then 6:20 p.m.
At the station, defendant signed a written form allowing the police to search the home that he shared with his girlfriend. After the detectives gave defendant his
Miranda
warnings for a second time, defendant gave a tape-recorded statement, in which he reiterated the factual scenario that he had told the detectives in the car.
After the tape recorder was turned off, Detective Hudson falsely told defendant that his fingerprints had been discovered on the water jug inside the victim’s home. Hudson then reactivated the tape player and defendant admitted being inside the victim’s home. Defendant then claimed he had run from the house after watching Baldy struggle with the victim.
At 7:30 p.m., the detectives and defendant left for the defendant’s house in order to retrieve the shirt and shoes defendant had been wearing earlier that day. As they were en route to defendant’s house, Detective Hudson, hypothesizing about defendant’s second factual scenario which placed defendant inside the house, told defendant that if he had not carried the gun into the house but had killed Luzier after she had confronted him with the gun, the crime would be a lesser degree of murder or manslaughter with the possibility of parole. Detective Hudson, however, emphasized that he could not promise defendant (1) that he would be paroled; or (2) when he would be paroled. Defendant responded by telling the detectives, “I understand where you are coming from”; but he again repeated that Baldy had shot the victim.
At the defendant’s home, the detectives and defendant’s girlfriend were unable to locate the defendant’s shirt. The defendant, who had remained seated in the police car, asked to speak to her. After telling her that “it would be easier on all of us if he tells the truth,” the detectives allowed her to speak to defendant. Although she told defendant that it would be easier if “he would just tell the truth about what he did know,” defendant repeated that he had not killed Luzier.
After defendant and his friend had talked alone for fifteen minutes, the defendant called Detective Hudson over to the car and told him to turn on the tape recorder. At approximately 8:30 p.m., some fifty minutes after Hudson had mentioned the alternatives to murder one, defendant stated that he had shot the victim after taking the gun from her during a struggle.
Thereafter, defendant took the detectives to the location where he had thrown the gun. After finding the gun and stopping for food, the detectives took defendant to State Police Troop 4. There, after being read his
Miranda
rights for a third time, defendant gave a detailed statement of how he shot the victim.
In this statement, the following exchange occurred:
HUDSON: Just for the record, I want you to explain in your own words how you have been treated since we picked you up.
BAYNARD: Like a gentleman. Nobody has threatened me or give me anything or nothing. I have been treated fair. You give me something to eat cause I was hungry — cigarettes cause I wanted to smoke.
HUDSON: Nobody has threatened you? BAYNARD: Nobody has threatened me. HUDSON: Did you give this statement of your own free will?
BAYNARD: Yes sir.
HUDSON: Is everything contained in this statement true?
BAYNARD: Yes.
At trial, defendant moved to suppress his statement that he had shot the victim. The Court, however, found the defendant’s statement to be voluntary and, thus, admissible.
The question of voluntariness is a question of fact to be determined from the effect that the totality of the circumstances had upon the will of the defendant.
Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
412 U.S. 218, 226-27, 93 S.Ct. 2041, 2047-48, 36 L.Ed.2d 854 (1973);
Rooks,
401 A.2d at 948. Thus, the question in each case is whether the defendant’s will was overborne when he confessed.
Schneckloth,
412 U.S. at 225-26, 93 S.Ct. at 2046-47;
Lynumn v. Illinois,
372 U.S. 528, 534, 83 S.Ct. 917, 920, 9 L.Ed.2d 922 (1963);
Rooks,
401 A.2d at 947. A totality of the circumstances approach, however, requires the reviewing court to consider the specific tactics utilized by the police in eliciting the admissions, the details of the interrogation, and the characteristics of the defendant.
Rachlin v. United States,
8th Cir., 723 F.2d 1373, 1377 (1983). Factors which bear on these circumstances include the following:
the youth of the accused; his lack of education or his low intelligence; the lack of any advice to.the accused of his constitutional rights; the length of detention; the repeated and prolonged nature of the questioning; and the use of physical punishment such as the deprivation of food or sleep.
Schneckloth,
412 U.S. at 226, 93 S.Ct. at 2047 (citations omitted).
See also Rooks,
401 A.2d at 948.
Thus, the attention of the trial judge must be focused on the “totality of circumstances” overview of the behavior of the interrogators and the mental and physical make-up of the defendant.
Rooks,
401 A.2d at 948. This must be done on a case-by-case basis,
to reach an ultimate determination on the
voir dire
record, as to whether the behavior of the interrogators was such as to overbear the will of the defendant to resist and bring about a statement not “the product of a rational intellect and a free will.”
Id.
at 948-49.
In the instant case we conclude that there is sufficient evidence of record to support the Trial Court’s finding of volun-tariness.
Defendant was a thirty-year-old male at the time of arrest with an eleventh grade education and considerable experience with the legal system.
(See supra
note 12.) Thus, he was well aware of the consequences of confessing.
Miller v. Fenton,
3d Cir., 796 F.2d 598, 606 (1986). Further, defendant was neither suffering from any physical ailment that would have impelled him to confess nor under the influence of any drugs.
Cf. Reck v. Pate, 367 U.S. 433, 81 S.Ct. 1541, 6 L.Ed.2d 948 (1961); Leyra v. Denno,
347 U.S. 556, 74 S.Ct. 716, 98 L.Ed. 948 (1954). It is also clear that Detective Hudson made no threats and engaged in no physical coercion of the defendant.
In addition, defendant received
Miranda
warnings on three separate occasions during the six hours of intermittent interrogation and each time, he acknowledged that he understood his rights.
Moreover, the defendant never requested the presence of a lawyer to advise him. When defendant did ask to speak to his girlfriend, the detectives promptly granted his request.
Cf. Haynes v. Washington, supra; Ziang Sung Wan v. United States,
266 U.S. 1, 45 S.Ct. 1, 69 L.Ed. 131 (1924). Therefore, this case is distinguishable from cases of lengthy interrogation during incommunicado detention.
We do not find Detective Hudson’s untruth — that defendant’s fingerprints had been discovered on the water jug — to constitute sufficient trickery to overcome the defendant’s will.
Miller,
796 F.2d at 607. Although the lie could have caused the defendant to reflect on the believability of his earlier statement, it did not exert such pressure that defendant could not make a rational choice. Similarly, Detective Hudson’s statement, that if Luzier had confronted defendant with the gun the crime may be less than first degree murder, was not sufficient to prevent defendant from making a rational choice of his own free will. The fact is that Hudson did not make any express promise either that defendant would be charged with the lesser crime or that he would be paroled.
Furthermore,
this statement had no effect upon the defendant because in response he repeated his earlier story that Baldy had shot the victim.
The defendant’s actions at his house confirm the voluntariness of his statement. Defendant called Detective Hudson over to the police car and, on his own initiative, requested that his statement be tape recorded. Without any questioning from Hudson, defendant then admitted that he had shot Luzier. Thereafter, defendant physically helped the police search in the underbrush of the woods for the gun. Finally, in the last tape-recorded statement, defendant acknowledged that he had been treated like a gentleman and that his statement was given of his own free will.
Thus, viewing the totality of the circumstances, we must affirm the Trial Court’s finding that defendant’s statement was voluntary and, therefore, admissible.
Ill
The defendant also raises three other grounds for reversal. Although we find no basis for reversible error in any of these issues, we will address each in turn.
Defendant contends that the Court abused its discretion in rejecting his request to delete the reference that he “smoked pot” from his last tape-recorded statement. At the end of the interrogation at the police barracks, Detective Hudson asked, “We asked you on the other tape, but we want to get it on this tape too. Have you been drinking today?” Defendant responded, “No sir. I don’t drink. Very seldom do I drink. I smoked pot Saturday. That’s the last time I smoked pot.”
The Court denied the defendant’s request to excise this response from the statement and after the tape was played for the jury, defendant moved for a mistrial. Similarly, the Court denied the motion for mistrial holding that the reference was “so insignificant that it is not worthy of a mistrial.”
Defendant argues that the reference to his smoking pot was prejudicial evidence of irrelevant bad conduct that the Court admitted in violation of D.R.E. 402.
The State counters that the evidence was not offered to prove the defendant’s character or criminal disposition, but was relevant to show (1) the voluntary nature of the statement; and (2) that defendant was not under the influence of drugs when he made the statement.
A decision whether to admit testimony as relevant is within the sound discretion of the trial court and will not be reversed absent a clear abuse of discretion.
Lampkins v. State,
Del.Supr., 465 A.2d 785, 790 (1983);
Thompson v. State,
Del.Supr., 399 A.2d 194, 198-99 (1979). D.R.E. 404(b) prohibits the admission of evidence of other crimes or wrongful acts to show a person’s character, unless such evidence is admissible for another purpose.
Thus, D.R.E. 404, like its federal counterpart,
admits evidence of other crimes or acts relevant to a trial issue, except where the evidence tends to prove only criminal disposition.
See United States v. Shaw,
5th Cir., 701 F.2d 367, 386 (1983);
United States v. Bradshaw,
9th Cir., 690 F.2d 704, 708 (1982).
We agree with the State that the defendant’s reference to having earlier smoked pot was admissible as tending to establish the voluntariness of the defendant’s statement, an issue disputed at trial.
See supra
II. It also tended to show the cordial atmosphere of the interrogation and that defendant was not afraid to volunteer information about a prior criminal act. The response also established that defendant was not under the influence of drugs when he gave the statement. Furthermore, the Court’s cautionary instruction,
supra
note 20, negated any claim of unfair prejudice to the defendant.
See
D.R.E. 403.
Therefore, we cannot conclude that the Court abused its discretion in refusing to excise the statement; and, on the contrary, the Court properly admitted the evidence in accordance with D.R.E. 402, 403, and 404.
Defendant next contends that the Trial Court erred as a matter of law when it instructed the jury to consider the provisions of 11
Del.C.
§ 469 in determining whether defendant acted in self-defense.
At trial, defendant argued that Luzier confronted him with a gun and that he shot her in self-defense during a struggle. Accepting the defendant’s argument that the justification of self-defense was applicable to a killing by a burglar, the Court charged the jury on the elements of 11
Del.C.
§ 464(a), (c) and (e).
Section 464(a), however, only justifies the use of force upon another person when “the defendant believes such force is immediately necessary for the purpose of protecting himself against the use of
unlawful
force.... ” 11
Del.C.
§ 464(a) (emphasis added).
The Court proceeded to define unlawful force according to 11
Del.C.
471(c)
and then, over defendant’s objection, instructed the jury that it must consider 11
Del.C.
§ 469,
supra
note 24, in determining whether or not Luzier used unlawful force against the defendant. However,
section 469 is applicable only “[i]n the prosecution of an occupant of a dwelling charged with killing or injuring an intruder who was unlawfully in said dwelling... 11
Del.C.
§ 469. Thus, the Trial Court erred as a matter of law when it instructed the jury to consider section 469 because defendant was not an occupant of a dwelling charged with killing or injuring an unlawful intruder. Section 469 would be applicable if the defendant were in his own home when the victim entered unlawfully, but not in this case since the defendant was the intruder.
However, the Court’s instruction on 11
Del. C.
§ 469, though erroneously given, was harmless error at best because it was not prejudicial to defendant. The physical evidence at trial negated that any struggle had taken place. The police found Luzier with her door keys clutched in her hand. Also a fiber analysis test of the defendant’s and Luzier’s clothing established that their clothing never touched. Similarly, all the shots were fired at a downward angle, which indicated that defendant was standing over Luzier and not stuggling with her. The State also refuted the defendant’s testimony that Luzier had originally been carrying the gun. The State’s evidence showed that Luzier never carried the gun on her person and that the police found her purse closed after the murder.
Thus, in light of the evidence, the Court’s erroneous instruction on 11
Del. C.
§ 469 was harmless error.
We address defendant’s final contention — that the Trial Court abused its discretion in refusing to hold an evidentiary hearing to receive “new” matter subsequent to
State v. Blount,
Del.Super., 472 A.2d 1340 (1984),
aff'd,
Del.Supr., 511 A.2d 1030 (1986), on the
Witherspoon
issue.
Based on the Federal District Court’s decision in
Grigsby v. Mabry,
E.D.Ark., 569 F.Supp. 1273 (1983),
aff'd,
8th Cir., 758 F.2d 226 (1985)
(en banc), rev’d sub nom., Lockhart v. McCree,
— U.S. -, 106 S.Ct. 1758, 90 L.Ed.2d 137 (1986), defendant filed a pretrial motion requesting separate issues at the guilt and penalty phases of his trial. The Court, however, relying upon
Blount,
supra,
denied the defendant’s request. One day prior to the trial proceedings, defendant renewed his motion and asked for an evidentiary hearing to present “new” evidence on the conviction proneness of death qualified juries.
In support of his new motion, the defendant submitted the affidavit of Dr. Valerie Hans, a professor at the University of Delaware, who testified on behalf of the defendant in
Blount.
Dr. Hans’ affidavit indicated that subsequent to the hearing in
Blount,
a publication of
Law and Human Behavior
was released which dealt exclusively with the issue of death qualified
juries. Defendant, however, was unable to explain what new evidence Dr. Hans could present that was not before the Court in
Blount
Therefore, the Court ruled that the defendant had failed to carry his burden of establishing that the proffered evidence was new or different and that his late presentation precluded adequate consideration of the issue.
We hold that the Court correctly denied the defendant’s request for an evidentiary hearing because all the studies in the issue of
Law and Human Behavior
were before the Court in
Blount.
The studies were either (1) presented by Dr. Hans in her directed testimony; or (2) discussed in the cases that the
Blount
Court carefully analyzed.
See Blount,
472 A.2d at 1343-46;
Grigsby v. Mabry, supra; Keeten v. Garrison,
W.D.N.C., 578 F.Supp. 1164 (1984);
Hovey v. Superior Court,
Cal.Supr., 28 Cal.3d 1, 168 Cal.Rptr. 128, 616 P.2d 1301 (1980). Absent any new or different evidence, it was unnecessary for the Court to hold an evidentiary hearing. Thus, the Trial Court did not abuse its discretion.
♦ * *
Affirmed.