STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Thrеe prisoners escaped from the Switzerland County jail, and Appellant, Mildred Bevis ("Mildred"), was charged for her part in that event. After a jury trial, Mildred was convicted of Aiding, Inducing or Causing Escape, 1 a Class C felony. As her grounds for appeal, Mildred alleges error at trial in the admission of testimony, exclusion of testimony, violation of her сonstitutional rights during cross-examination and prosecutorial misconduct. We reverse and remand.
ISSUE
Mildred presents four issues on appeal. Because we conclude that one issue warrants reversal, we address only the following question: Whether the State's cross-examination of Mildred concerning her post-arrest silenсe violated her right to fundamental fairness guaranteed by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
FACTS
The facts disclose that sometime between 12:80 and 1:00 a.m. on May 28, 1990, Mildred's husband, Troy Bevis ("Troy"), and two other prisoners escaped from the Switzerland County jail. They escaped through a window in their cell by using hacksaw blades, tin snips and a pocket knife in Troy's possession. Outside the jail the escapees were met by a station wagon driven by Troy's mother, Wanda Bevis ("Wanda").
Troy drove Wanda and the other escapees to Troy's mobile home where Mildred was waiting. During the ride, Troy told Wanda that he had expected Mildred to meet him. «Wanda told Troy that she had come instead of Mildred because she did not want to involve Mildred, who had young children.
At Troy and Mildred's mobile home, Troy, Mildred and another escapee, Mark Leach ("Leach"), allegedly had a conversation in which Troy told Leach that Mildred had supplied Troy with the hacksaw blades used in the escape. When Leach аsked how Troy had obtained the tools while in jail, Mildred purportedly replied that she *601 had given Troy the tools during a contact visit.
Wanda subsequently drove Leach and the third escapee, Phillip Tracy III ("Tra ey"), to her residence in her pickup truck where Leach and Tracy attempted to repair Troy's disabled truck. Troy and Mildred arrived at Wanda's residence shortly thеreafter, and Troy helped Leach and Tracy repair the truck.
In the meantime, Indiana State Police Trooper Stan Tressler, responding to a call regarding the escape, arrived at Troy and Mildred's trailer at 2:15 a.m. Trooper Tres-sler knocked on the door and walked around the trailer for about ten minutes, but rеceived no response. A light was on in the living room and there were no vehicles in front of the trailer.
At 2:52 a.m., Trooper Tressler arrived at Wanda's residence. As Trooper Tressler's vehicle crested the hill leading to Wanda's home, he was blinded momentarily by the high beam headlights of Wanda's approaching truck. Trooper Tressler noticed two people running from the scene. When Trooper Tressler asked Wanda and Mildred if the escapees were there, Wanda responded that she had not seen Troy since a visit earlier that day, and Mildred replied "I'm not saying nothing." Record at 212. The police later captured all three escаpees.
Mildred and Wanda were charged by information for their part in the escape. At Mildred's and Wanda's joint trial, Leach recounted the alleged conversation between him, Troy and Mildred in which Troy and Mildred had discussed Mildred's role in the escape.
Wanda did not testify at trial, but Mildred took the stand and denied helping Troy and the others escape from jail. Mildred testified that on the night of the escape, she and Wanda were asleep at Mildred's mobile home when they received a telephone call from Troy at approximately 1:00 a.m., in which Troy informed Mildred that he had escaped and requested that she come to Wanda's home. Mildred testified that she thought Troy was joking but that she and Wanda then drove in separate vehicles to Wanda's home where they found Troy and the other men. Mildred explained that she argued with Troy regarding his escape and refused to transport him elsewhere. Mildred admitted visiting Troy the day before the escape, but she denied having given Troy the hacksaw blades during that visit.
Mildred and Wanda were both convicted of Aiding, Inducing or Causing Escape, and Mildred appeals. We will state additional facts in our discussion as needed.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
Mildred asserts that the prosecutor made improper references to her post-arrest silence which placed her in grave peril and violated her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Twice during its cross-examination, the State questioned Mildred about her post-arrest silence. On the first occasion, the prosecutor asked:
"Q. Let me see, you have never talked to me before have you?
A. No I have not.
Q. So I'm hearing this for the first time, right?
A. Right.
Q. So bear with me if I have to ask you to repeat a few things. Now it is a fact, isn't it, that you've never given a statement to the authorities, isn't it?"
Record at 447-48. Before Mildred could answer the last question, her counsel objected on the grounds that the prosecutor's question violated Mildred's presumption of innocence and her Fifth Amendment right to remain silent. Record at 448. The court sustained the objection. Record at 448. However, later in cross-examination, the prosecutor returned to the same inquiry:
"Q. Did you tell anybody what you told me?
A. No.
Q. Why didn't you do that?"
Record at 469. Mildred's counsel again objected on the grounds that these questions violated Mildred's Fifth Amendment rights. Record at 469. The court again sustained the objection.
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Mildred asserts a Doyle violation. See Doyle v. Ohio (1976),
We agree that the State's questions were impermissible under Doyle - The State sought to impeach Mildred's exculрatory testimony by making direct reference to her post-arrest silence, even though Mildred had been advised when charged that she had a right to remain silent. These questions violated Mildred's Due Process right to fundamental fairness.
At oral argument,
2
the State maintained that these questions were permissible because they were intended to impeаch Mildred's testimony with her pre-arrest silence and were not directed to her post-arrest, post-Miranda silence. See Beach v. State (1987), Ind.App.,
Our inquiry does not еnd there, however. Our supreme court has ruled that under some circumstances, a Doyle violation may be only harmless error. To determine whether a Doyle error is harmless, a reviewing court must ask if, absent the prosecutor's allusion to the defendant's post-arrest failure to deny the charged conduct, it is clear beyond а reasonable doubt that the jury would have returned a guilty verdict. Yurina v. State (1985), Ind.,
Our supreme court has also adopted a five-factor test to guide this harmless error analysis. These factors include:
"1. The use to which the prosecution puts the post-arrest silence.
Who elected to pursue the line of questioning.
The quantum of other evidence indicative of guilt.
The intensity and frequency of the reference. [and]
The availability to the trial judge of an opportunity to grant a motion for mistrial or to givе curative instructions."
Bieghler v. State (1985), Ind.,
First, the prosecution used cross-examination to impeach Mildred's post-arrest silence. The only permissible inference that the jury could draw from these questions is that Mildrеd fabricated the entire story she told on the witness stand. This was not an inadvertent reference to the defendant's post-arrest silence made by another witness, see McCollum v. State (1991), Ind.,
Second, the quantum of evidence in the record is not so overwhelming as to outweigh the harmful effect of the State's repeated inquiry into Mildred's silence. See, e.g., Henson,
Furthermore, the prosecution рursued this line of questioning with considerable frequency and intensity. The record shows that the State directed four questions to Mildred's post-arrest silence. She was first asked to admit that she had never spoken previously with the prosecutor about her exculpatory story and then asked to admit that she had never given a statement to the authorities. She was next asked whether she had told anyone her exculpatory story, and finally she was asked why she had not told anyone her story. These were not inadvertent references to Mildred's post-arrest silence. These were direct questions designed to emphasize that Mildred had given her exculpatory testimony for the first time at trial.
Finally, although Mildred twice objected to the questions concerning her failure to tell anyone her exculpatory story at any time before trial, the court did not admonish the jury to disregard the questions nor explain that Mildred had a constitutional right to remain silent after her arrest. Following Mildred's timely objection, the trial cоurt had an opportunity to take curative measures to reduce the prejudicial effect of
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this error, but did not. Even where the trial court has admonished the jury after repeated Doyle violations, our supreme court has ruled that such curative measures were insufficient to remedy the harm. Jones v. State (1976),
We likewise reject the State's argument that Mildred's failure to request an admonishment or mistrial following her objection to those questions constitutes a waiver of any right to reversal on this ground. The State's position is inconsistent with the concept of fundamental error; fundamental error may be raised for the first time on appeal. See Wilson v. State (1987), Ind.,
The five Bieghler factors are not intended, however, to be an exhaustive or exclusive list of indicators which may аssist in the determination whether a Doyle violation is harmless error. - Henson,
The evidentiary significance of these questions is apparent from the prosecutor's closing argument in which he focused on the credibility of Mildred's explanation of events. In closing argument the prosecutor did not comment directly on Mildred's post-arrest silence, but he repeatedly asserted that her testimony was not credible, referring to her exculpatory story as a "little cock and bull story" аnd a "joke." Record at 564 and 574. Thus, his questions during trial directing the jury's attention to her post-arrest silence buttressed his contention in closing argument that Mildred's courtroom testimony was untruthful.
"Because the nature of a Doyle error is so egregious and so inherently prejudicial, reversal is the norm rather than the exception." Willioms,
Reversed and remanded.
