A jury convicted Mark Wesley Edmond (petitioner) of first degree burglary and grand larceny. He was sentenced to life in prison for burglary and four years, consecutive, for larceny. We dismissed his direct appeal following an Anders 1 review.
*343 State v. Edmond, Op. No. 96-MO-086 (S.C.Sup.Ct. filed April 10,1996).
The circuit court denied petitioner’s application for post-conviction relief (PCR). Counsel for petitioner filed a John son 2 petition for a writ of certiorari. We ordered the parties to fully brief the issue raised in the Johnson petition.
FACTS
The State accused petitioner of breaking into the home of Elizabeth S. Goldsmith and stealing a television, a videocassette recorder, jewelry, and other household items on August 31, 1994. The State presented no direct or physical evidence of petitioner’s guilt, but relied solely on circumstantial evidence.
A detective testified he told petitioner in response to petitioner’s questions following his arrest several days after the burglary that someone had told police where to find him. Petitioner, who had been drinking shortly before his arrest, replied, “She called in. I know she did. She’s out there free. My wife was with me. I didn’t do this alone.” The detective acknowledged that petitioner, in a more sober condition, later denied making such a statement. The detective testified, “I did pull him out [of jail] the next day to interview him. However, he invoked his right to counsel.” On cross-examination, the officer testified that petitioner invoked his right to remain silent and he “honored that right.”
In her closing argument while describing the detective’s testimony, the prosecutor stated, “And then the very next day *344 [after his arrest] [petitioner] invoked his right to counsel, smartly enough.”
Petitioner’s trial counsel did not object to the detective’s testimony or the prosecutor’s argument. Throughout the trial and in his closing argument, counsel emphasized the circumstantial nature of the evidence. Counsel also suggested the real culprit was the former husband of petitioner’s wife — a man who allegedly had access to the car used in the burglary and matched the description of the person seen walking in front of the victim’s home the evening the burglary occurred. Petitioner did not testify at trial.
At the PCR hearing, petitioner testified that he and his wife left the hospital to visit her son at her former husband’s home. The former husband borrowed the car while they were there. The former husband knew the location of the victim’s home because petitioner previously had taken the former husband there to meet an ex-girlfriend. Petitioner claimed he went to a video arcade, where he remained for a couple of hours after unexpectedly meeting a female acquaintance. Petitioner’s •wife offered testimony corroborating petitioner’s version of events.
Petitioner asserted his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to object to improper references to the invocation of his constitutional rights to remain silent and be represented by counsel during the detective’s testimony and the prosecutor’s closing arguments. Petitioner’s trial counsel testified he did not know why he failed to object to the testimony or comments. The PCR judge denied petitioner’s PCR application.
ISSUE
Does any probative evidence support the PCR judge’s denial of petitioner’s claim that the detective’s testimony and the prosecutor’s closing argument violated his constitutional rights to remain silent and be represented by counsel?
DISCUSSION
Petitioner contends the PCR judge erred in denying his claim that the detective’s testimony and prosecutor’s closing argument violated his rights under the state and federal *345 constitutions. See U.S. Const. amends. V & XIV; S.C. Const. art. I, §§ 3 and 12. He further argues the error was prejudicial. We agree.
It is improper for the State to refer to or comment upon a defendant’s exercise of a constitutional right.
State v. Johnson,
In particular, the State may neither comment upon nor present evidence at trial of a defendant’s decision to exercise his right to remain silent or be represented by an attorney.
See Doyle v. Ohio,
These principles are rooted in due process and the belief that justice is best served when a trial is fundamentally fair.
See Brecht v. Abrahamson,
In a direct appeal, the admission of comments or evidence of the defendant’s exercise of a constitutional right is a “trial error” subject to harmless error analysis.
State v. Pickens,
In this PCR proceeding, petitioner must meet the standard established in
Strickland v. Washington,
The burden is on the applicant in a PCR proceeding to prove the allegations in his application.
Butler v. State,
We conclude the PCR judge erred in denying petitioner’s claim because no probative evidence supports his decision. Petitioner has shown error in counsel’s failure to object to the detective’s testimony and the prosecutor’s comments, as explained by the above cases.
We further conclude petitioner has shown that the error prejudiced him. In
Johnson, supra,
we held that counsel was not ineffective in failing to object to the solicitor’s closing comment that “You have seen that
the defendant has not put up a defense, he’s not testified,
and you will hear shortly, after I argue and after Mr. Pough argues and his honor, Judge Whetstone,
you cannot even consider the fact that this man has not testified in this
trial____”
Id.
at 186,
We found that the PCR judge’s conclusion that the jury could have drawn an adverse inference from the solicitor’s comment was not supported by the evidence. “In context, the comment was simply a statement of the evidence which was before the jury, rather than a comment on Johnson’s failure to testify. As such, it is distinguishable from the typical ‘comment’ in which the clear implication is that the defendant has failed to explain the circumstances of the crime or has shown no remorse.”
Id.
at 187,
*348 Johnson is easily distinguished from the present case. The detective’s testimony and the prosecutor’s closing argument at petitioner’s trial were direct and improper references to the exercise of his constitutional rights. Jurors may have used the improper testimony and comments to infer petitioner was guilty simply because he exercised his rights. In addition, petitioner’s counsel did not request and the trial judge did not give a curative instruction.
In deciding the prejudice prong in this PCR action, we examine the following factors, which are the same ones analyzed in deciding on direct appeal whether a similar error is harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Such an error will not be deemed prejudicial when the record shows the reference to the defendant’s right to silence or to an attorney was a single reference, which was not repeated or alluded to; the prosecutor did not tie the defendant’s exercise of his right directly to his exculpatory story; the exculpatory story was totally implausible; and the evidence of guilt was overwhelming.
See Pickens,
Petitioner has shown prejudice because the record contains three direct references to the exercise of his right to remain silent or be represented by counsel. Immediately after stat *349 ing that petitioner had invoked his right to counsel, the prosecutor told jurors that the man at whom petitioner had pointed the finger testified he did not commit the crimes. The prosecutor tied the exercise of the right to petitioner’s exculpatory story, which was not totally implausible. Finally, evidence of petitioner’s guilt was not overwhelming as the State’s entire case was built on circumstantial evidence.
CONCLUSION
We reverse the denial of PCR and remand petitioner’s case for a new trial.
Notes
.
Anders v. California,
.
Johnson v. State,
. In limited exceptions to the general rule, the State may point out a defendant’s silence prior to arrest, or his silence after arrest but prior to
*348
the giving of the
Miranda
warnings, in order to impeach the defendant’s testimony at trial. "Such silence is probative and does not rest on any implied assurance by law enforcement authorities that it will carry no penalty.”
Brecht v. Abrahamson,
