Following a jury trial, Ronald L. Mason was convicted of dealing in a narcotic drug 1 and possessing a narcotic drug. 2 As ex *1235 plained below, this is Mason’s second direct appeal. We reverse the dealing conviction because prejudicial hearsay was admitted against Mason, and we grant a new trial.
Background
After receiving a tip from a confidential informant that Mason was distributing heroin from an Indianapolis apartment, Detective Tommie Terrell began surveillance. For two days in May, 1985, Detective Terrell and another officer observed people entering Mason’s apartment building, staying a short time, and leaving. Then Detective Terrell saw Mason load his van with clothing, indicating a trip out of town. Some three weeks later, the confidential informant called Detective Terrell and said that Mason had returned to Indianapolis and was again dealing drugs.
These first-hand observations and the informant’s tips led Detective Terrell to obtain a warrant to search Mason’s van. The police found Mason driving his van and stopped him. Although a search of the van produced nothing incriminating, a search of Mason’s left sock produced $825 in cash and six aluminum foil packets containing 3.0705 grams of heroin. Mason was charged with possessing a narcotic and with dealing in a narcotic. The dealing charge was elevated to a class A felony because Mason possessed more than three grams of heroin. Ind.Code § 35-48-4-1 (1982). He was also charged as a habitual offender.
The informant did not testify at trial and his identity remained confidential. Detective Terrell twice told the jury that the informant reported Mason was selling heroin. The trial court overruled Mason’s timely hearsay objections, refused to strike the informant’s statements from the record and gave no limiting instruction. In addition, the prosecutor repeated the content of the informant’s tips during closing argument. The jury found Mason guilty as charged.
Mason, represented by the same attorney who defended him at trial, began his direct appeal, but did not raise the hearsay issue. As to the issues he did raise, we found no error in thе trial court’s refusal to suppress certain evidence or in its denial of Mason’s request for the informant’s identity. We found sufficient evidence to support the conviction, and we affirmed.
Mason v. State,
With new counsel, Mason petitioned for post-conviction relief. He sought relief, in part, on grounds that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of appellate counsel by counsel’s failure to raise the hearsay issue on direct appeal. The post-conviction court denied relief. This denial was affirmed in Mason’s
pro se
appeal by an unpublished memorandum decision.
Mason v. State,
No. 49A04-9311-PC-417,
Mason then petitioned the federal distriсt court for a writ of habeas corpus. He raised essentially the same grounds for relief as he had in the post-conviction court, including, as relevant here, the claim that he was deprived of his right to effective assistance of appellate counsel. The district court denied the petition.
However, on appeal, the Seventh Circuit disagreed and granted relief.
Mason v. Hanks,
Thereafter, the State asked us to authorize a second direct appeal for Mason, which we did. We directed the trial cоurt to appoint counsel for Mason, and we ordered briefs on the issue of whether the admission of the confidential informant’s statements was reversible error.
Discussion
I
When Mason was tried in 1986, hearsay was defined as an out-of-court statement, offered in court, to prove the truth of the matter аsserted in the statement.
See, e.g., Torres v. State,
We long ago instructed that the content of an informant’s tip should not be communicated to the jury as evidence that the fact asserted therein is true.
Glover v. State,
Moreover, the trial court gave the jury no guidance on the limited purpose for which the State ostensibly proffered the tips.
Williams v. State,
Having concluded that the testimony was hearsay, we must still decide whether the error requires reversal. We reverse only if the erroneous admission of hearsay affects Mason’s “substantial rights.” ' Ind.Trial Rulе 61. We will reverse if the hearsay “was sufficiently specific and detailed to provide the jury with a basis for making inferences that the informant had knowledge that appellant committed the offense and that appellant was therefore guilty as charged.”
Williams,
In assessing the probable impact of the hearsay on Mason’s conviction for dealing in a narcotic drug, we conclude there was an
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unacceptable risk that the jury might have treated the informant’s statements as evidence that Mason was dealing heroin. Several considerations bear on this conclusiоn. First, the hearsay directly implicated Mason in the more serious crime with which he was charged.
Cf. Richter v. State,
Third, while we have previously determined that the evidence was sufficient to support the conviction for dealing heroin,
Mason,
Finally, while we cannot know whether the jury considered the hearsay for the truth, we do know that the State thought it important enough to repeat the informant’s statements in closing argument. Thus, any cautionary value in the deputy prosecutor’s earlier remark that the statements were not offered for their truth evaporated when he more than once referred to the informant’s statements.
Considering all of the above, we conclude that admission of the informant’s tips prejudiced Mason’s substantial rights, and we reverse his conviction for dealing in heroin.
This result would be the same under the Indiana Rules of Evidence. In
Craig v. State,
The informant’s out-of-court statement that Mason was dealing drugs is a fact susceptible of being true or false. Nothing suggests any recognized hearsay exceptiоn applies, and the statement is not from a witness or a party. The State contends it proffered the statement not for its truth, but to show the course of the police investigation. To the extent that this was relevant at all, it was not a contested matter at trial, and the bare fact that thе State had received a tip from a confidential informant would have adequately accomplished any legitimate purpose in the State’s presentation. The evidence’s relatively low probative value on this tangential issue, weighed against the risk that the jury considered the informant’s statements as proof of Mason’s heroin dealing, compels us to conclude that, regardless of whether the appeal is analyzed under Evid.R. 801 or the common law which existed prior to adoption of the rules, reversible error occurred.
II
Having reversed Mason’s conviction for dealing in heroin, we consider whether the State may prosecute Mason a second time for the same offense.
The Double Jeopardy Clause provides that no person will “be subject for the
*1238
same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.” U.S. Const, amend. V. This prohibition applies to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment.
Benton v. Maryland,
Here, we reverse Mason’s conviction for the improper admission of the confidential infоrmant’s tips. Accordingly, retrying him does not violate the bar against double jeopardy.
Conclusion
Mason’s conviction for dealing in a narcotic is reversed. Neither side raised any issue with regard to the earlier-vacated conviction on the lesser included offense of narcotic possеssion. We remand this cause to the trial court with instructions to vacate Mason’s conviction and sentence for dealing in heroin and for all other appropriate proceedings.
Notes
. Ind.Code § 35-48-4-1 (1982). The offense was elevated to a class A felony because Mason possessed more than three grams of heroin. Our opinion in Mason's first direct appeal inadvertently reported that Mason was convicted under Ind.Code § 35-48-4-2, but the record clearly shows that he was convicted under section 1.
Mason v. State,
. Ind.Code § 35-48-4-6 (Suрp.1985). The trial court also imposed an enhanced sentence of eight years for possession of heroin, a class C felony. As a lesser included offense of the dealing conviction, however, we instructed the trial
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court to vacate the possession conviction.
Ma
son,
. Mason was tried and his first direct appeal decided before the Indiana Rules of Evidence became effective January 1, 1994, so they do not apply, although as explained infra, the result would be the same.
. Another of Mason’s defense strategies was to argue that the police lied when applying for the search warrant, and Mason's attorney questioned Detectivе Terrell about the informant’s tips. The State does not contend that Mason waived his hearsay argument by this cross-examination. In any event, our view is the same expressed by the Seventh Circuit: "The defense pursued these inquiries only after its repeated objections to Terrell’s testimony about the substance of the tip were overruled. At that juncture, the informant’s statements were already before the jury, and the defense arguably was doing no more than making the best out of a bad situation.”
Mason
v.
Hanks,
.We have held that the fact that police received a tip is not hearsay when neither the informant’s name nor the tip’s content is revealed to the jury.
Head v. State,
