Arthur Paul Baird, II appeals from a denial of his petition for posteonviction relief. In 1987, Baird was convicted of the 1985 murders of his wife and parents and of feticide. Baird’s petition for posteonviction relief unsuccessfully raised nine issues. In this appeal Baird alleges that the posteonviction court erred as to four of those issues. He contends that: 1) the sentence of death was excessive, dispropоrtionate, or inappropriate; 2) the Indiana Insanity Defense Statute violates the federal and Indiana constitutions; 3) his trial counsel committed fundamental error by failing to strike for cause, or interrogate, jurors that had been exposed to information concerning plea negotiations, and in failing to move for a mistrial because of an -impartial jury; and 4) the trial court’s decision to excuse a prоspective juror pursuant to the Indiana Householder Statute was fundamental error. We affirm the judgment of the posteonviction court.
Factual and Procedural Background
The facts of this case are reported in
Baird v. State,
The jury found him guilty of three counts of murder and one count of feticide. Following the jury’s recommendation the trial court imposed the death sentence as to the murders of Baird’s parents, and also imposed a sixty year sentence on the remaining murder charge, and an eight year sentence for the feticide. In 1992, we affirmed the convictions and the sentence on direct appeal.
Baird,
I. Death Sentence
Baird contends in this appeal that the posteonvietion court erred in not concluding that the death sentence was excessive, disproportionate, or inappropriate under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution. He also requests that we remand for new sentencing in light of newly discovered evidence that bears on this conclusion. The source of the new evidence was testimony at the posteonvietion hearing by Dr. Howard E. Wooden, a clinical psychologist. Dr. Wooden testifiеd that at the time of the murders Baird suffered from a “delusional disorder” accompanied by a “psychotic reaction.” According to Wooden’s diagnosis, Baird acted and functioned in accordance with fanciful beliefs or delusions. The wisdom of Baird’s illusory belief system was threatened by a different tangible reality— the failure of the federal government to supply funds to purchase the new farm. He refused to confront this reality and snapped, murdering his family — the accompanying psychotic reaction. Dr. Wooden said that at the time of the trial, such delusional disorders were not available for firm independent diagnosis but were considered mainly in conjunction with substance abuse. Baird does not assert that this evidence required a finding of not guilty by reason of insanity. Rather, his contention is that if this diagnosis had been available to present tо the jury in the sentencing phase or to this Court on direct appeal, it would have established Baird’s inability to control his behavior. and thus changed the balancing of mitigating and aggravating factors to weigh against a death sentence.
After hearing Dr. Wooden’s testimony, the posteonvietion court found that there was “no evidence” that the death sentence was excessive, disproportionate, or inapрro
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priate. The posteonviction court also concluded that because Baird raised this claim on .direct appeal, it was barred by res judica-ta. The court correctly concluded that we previously. decided the issue adversely to Baird on direct appeal.
Baird,
In order to obtain relief because of newly discovered evidence, the defendant must show that (1) the evidence has been discovered since the trial; (2) it is material and relevant; (3) it is not cumulative; (4) it is not merely impeaching; (5) it is not privileged or incompetent; (6) due diligence was used to discover it in time for trial; (7) the evidence is worthy of credit; (8) it can be produced on a retrial of the case; and (9) it will probably produce a different result.
James v. State,
After Baird filed notice of the defense’ of mental disease or defect, three psychiatrists were appointed to examine Baird as court’s witnesses. In trial testimony or by deposition admitted into evidence, the psychiatrists variously described him as “obsessive сompulsive,” as acting “on an impulse” in the murder of his wife, and even as psychotic and legally insane. In addition, an expert for the defense, who testified by video deposition during sentencing, concluded that although Baird knew what he was doing at the time of the murders, he could not control his conduct. None of the above diagnoses is termed a “delusional disorder” but in substance, as Baird notes in his brief, each of the experts who examined Baird described him as voli-tionally impaired, and one psychiatrist even shared Wooden’s later view that Baird was “obsessive compulsive.” Baird argues that his behavior was inexplicable without knowledge of the disassociative phenomena resulting from the psychotic break with his fictional world. He describes the earlier experts’ attempts to evaluate his behavior , as relevant mainly just to show Bаird’s above average frustration and stress, weak self-image, and primitive thinking.
' Baird’s description understates each expert’s claim. Indeed,’ one of these experts declared at trial that Baird was insane and psychotic. Further, Dr. Wooden’s testimony is not based on any new facts previously unknown to the experts or the jury. As already noted, Baird’s expectation that the federal government was going to pay him one million dollars and his plan to buy a farm with that money were discovered shortly after the murders and introduced into evidence at trial. Thus, even if the jury, and this *915 Court on direct appeal, did not know that “delusional disorders” as such existed, each was equipped with the facts of Baird’s bizarre conduct and with the psychiatrists’ conclusions that Baird was volitionally impaired. Dr. Wooden’s testimony simply does not mandate a new interpretаtion of the facts. He offers another, perhaps more medically advanced opinion, but an opinion that significantly overlaps with those already proffered. We do not exclude the possibility that a scientific breakthrough may generate post-trial evidence that justifies revisiting the findings of an earlier jury or an earlier sentence. But any such scientific evidence must meet not only the standard of Indianа Evidence Rule 702, but also that of Trial Rule 60, including that it was not available at the time of trial, was not cumulative, and also rises to the level of creating a “probability” of a different result. We assume that cases turning on evidence that meets the standard of both rules will be rare. This is not one of them. The testimony to which Baird points is cumulative not pathbreaking and provides no assurance that a different result would probably hаve been reached. Accordingly, Baird’s claim that the death sentence was excessive, disproportionate, or inappropriate is barred by res judicata, and the standard for revisiting the issue based on new evidence is not met.
II. Constitutionality of Insanity Statute
Baird’s conduct, as set forth in detail in his direct appeal, evidenced a clear understanding of the nature of his actions and efforts to deceive others to implemеnt them.
Baird,
The postconviction court concluded that Baird’s uneonstitutionality argument was barred by res judicata because Baird had raised the issue and lost on direct appeal. On direct appeal, we dealt with a different constitutional argument and held that the insanity statute did not unconstitutionally shift the burden of proof of mens rea to the defendant.
Baird,
III. Juror Exposure to Plea Negotiations
Next, Baird requests a new trial because, he contends, the postconviction court erred in concluding that Baird received a fair trial under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution and Article 1, §§ 12 and 13 of the Indiana Constitution. He claims that four members of the jury were not impartial because they had been exposed to information derived from.media accounts of plea negotiаtions that Baird had participated in before jury selection.
During voir dire, prospective jurors were interviewed in panels of three. The subject of Baird’s plea negotiations was mentioned to three different panels when future seated jurors were present. For example, while two jurors were present, a prospective juror stated that he had read or heard that Baird had pleaded guilty and that hе would find it hard to put out of his mind. That prospective juror was excused. The court responded by asking the other two whether, despite this knowledge, they could give Baird the benefit of a presumption of innocence. Each responded in turn that they thought they could. In order to be sure, the court stressed the importance of paying attention only to the evidence presented in court and elicited affirmative responses from both jurors, indicating that they understood. The other examples of alleged juror contamination are similar.
As the postconviction court noted, we considered a similar, if not the same question on direct appeal.
Baird,
the trial court thoroughly questioned each prospective juror as to the details of news reports that they may have recalled and admonished them that their verdicts must be based on the evidence produced at trial. Each juror impaneled expressed that they could try this case on the evidence, put aside any prior opinions they might have formed, and give the defendant the presumption of innocence.
Id.
at 1186. If Baird’s current claim was not raised on direct appeal—and addressed by the quoted paragraph—-the issue was certainly available and therefore presumably waived. To deal with that problem, Baird now characterizes his impartial jury claim as fundamental error. “Fundamental error” has been permitted to preserve certain egregious claims of error even if they were not objected to or were available but not raised on appeal.
Perkins v. State,
IV. Excused Juror Under Householder Statute
Finally, Baird contends that the trial court erred in excusing a juror pursuant to
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the requirement, since repealed, that a juror be a “householder.” Ind.Code § 33-4-5-7 (1993) (repealed by 1989 Ind.Acts, P.L. 282, § 2). This, he claims, resulted in violation of both his federal Sixth Amendment and Indiana constitutional right to be tried by a jury composed of a representative cross section of the community.
5
Specifically, Baird arguеs that the trial court’s application of the householder statute to the venire was unconstitutional. The statute provided that a qualified juror must be “a freeholder or householder, or the spouse of a householder,” meaning that jurors should “be actual members of the community [with] the experience of making important and binding practical decisions ... independently of family or relatives or others.”
Stevens v. State,
Although Baird neither objected to the trial court’s action at trial, nor raised this claim on direct appeal, Baird argues that the error was “fundamеntal” and therefore not waived.
James,
Conclusion
We affirm the judgment of the postconvietion court.
Notes
. This rule provides that the posteonviction remedy is available to: "(a) Any person who has been convicted of, or sentenced for, a crime by a court of this state, and who claims ... (4) that there exists evidence of material facts, not previously presented and heard, that requires vacation of the conviction or sentence in the interest of justice.” Ind. Post-Conviction Rule 1(1)(a)(4).
. This standard was originally formulated under former Indiana Trial Rule 59(A)(6) which set out newly discovered material evidence as a ground for a motion to correct errors.
Wiles v. State,
. In the wake of John Hinckley’s assassination attempt on President Reagan, Congress passed legislation defining insanity, and several states modified their definitions of insanity, to exclude the volitional prong.
See generally
. Although we do not reach the merits of Baird’s constitutional argument, we note that the Eleventh Circuit found the federal insanity statute constitutional in
United States v. Freeman,
. The cross sectional requirement of the Sixth Amendment is binding on the states under the Fourteenth Amendment.
Taylor v. Louisiana,
In asserting his Indiana constitutional right, Baird cites §§ 12, 13, 16, 18, and 23 of the Indiana Constitution. However, Baird provides no authority or argument for a separate and independent Indiana constitutional standard. Thus, the state constitutional claim is waived.
St. John v. State,
. In
Wooten
v.
State,
