I've seen the video now of the "missed jury instruction." It is an instruction normally given during the AGGRAVATION phase, not the mitigation phase, and I don't know if it was really "missed" during the aggravation phase or not. It would be pretty strange to miss it, since it's the first one in the book of form instructions for that phase, and introduces the whole nature of both the aggravation and mitigation phases. If anyone has time to find the video of instructions for the aggravation phase, here's the one we're looking for (and it should be the first one!):
Members of the jury, I will now instruct you on the law governing these sentencing proceedings after a finding of guilt of first-degree murder.
The defendant in this case has been convicted of the crime of first-degree murder. Under Arizona law every person guilty of first-degree murder shall be punished by death, or imprisonment for life without the possibility of release from prison, or imprisonment for life with the possibility of release after 25 years.
This hearing may include as many as two phases. During this current phase, the jury decides whether any aggravating circumstances exist. If the jury unanimously decides beyond a reasonable doubt that at least one aggravating circumstance exists, then the second phase of the hearing begins.
If the State does not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that an aggravating circumstance exists, the judge will sentence the defendant to either life imprisonment without the possibility of release, or life imprisonment with the possibility of release after 25 years. If the jury unanimously decides beyond a reasonable doubt that an aggravating circumstance does exist, each juror will decide if mitigating circumstances exist and then, as a jury, you will decide whether to sentence the defendant to life imprisonment or death. If the sentence is life imprisonment then the judge will sentence the defendant to either life imprisonment without the possibility of release from prison, or life imprisonment with the possibility of release from prison after 25 years.
“Life without the possibility of release from prison” means exactly what it says. The sentence of “life without possibility of release from prison” means the defendant will never be eligible to be released from prison for any reason for the rest of the defendant’s life.
Now, you might have noticed that the instruction given yesterday added one sentence about there being no procedure in place currently to arrange for parole after 25 years. I frankly have no idea what this means, but it must be true since JM did not challenge that assertion. Nevertheless, IMO JM was also correct when he said that, if she gets to that 25-year point, she would have a legal right to MAKE the state get some procedure in place to consider her for parole.
The judge did not include this in the aggravating phase. In her instructions, she stated that the jury should not consider the penalty during this phase of the penalty phase. See video below
[video=youtube;L2Pk5ysQVp0]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L2Pk5ysQVp0[/video]
During the mitigation phase, the judge started by stating these were "preliminary instructions". The judge did not include anything about life vs life after 25 years.
Jodi Arias Penalty Phase - Day 1 - Part 1 - YouTube
Wonder if there was some disagreement about the instructions between the attorneys and the court and that is why she said it was preliminary. At the end of these instructions, the judge states something about giving them "final instructions" at some point.