We granted certiorari to the Court of Appeals in
Reynolds v. State,
Paul Edward Reynolds was tried before a jury and convicted of aggravated battery stemming from a domestic dispute. Both the trial court and the Court of Appeals rejected his claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel. Regarding the sole issue on certiorari, during closing argument the prosecutor stated, “I want you to consider that Mr. Reynolds had the opportunity to stay . . . that night and call the police or wait for police to respond to give his version of the facts.” The Court of Appeals determined that trial counsel did not provide ineffective assistance by failing to object to such comment. The Court of Appeals acknowledged that this Court in Mallory v. State held that “it is improper for the State ‘to comment upon a defendant’s silence or failure to come forward’ even if the defendant testified at trial or had not received Miranda warnings”; nevertheless, the Court of Appeals relied upon its holding in Morrison v. State 2 that “the rule prohibiting comments regarding prearrest silence is properly limited to a defendant’s silence in the face of questions by an *71 agent of the State or his failure to come forward when he knew that he was the target of a criminal investigation.'” (Emphasis in original.) Reynolds v. State, supra at 48 (3). But, such limitations to the prohibition against commenting on a defendant’s silence are ill-founded.
In
Mallory,
this Court expressly acknowledged that the United States Supreme Court has held that where no government action has induced a defendant’s pre-arrest silence, and where the defendant has testified at trial, thereby waiving the privilege against self-incrimination, the State may comment at trial upon the fact that the defendant did not voluntarily come forward. Id. at 629 (5);
Fletcher v. Weir,
Yet, despite the clarity of the bright-line evidentiary rule enunciated in
Mallory,
the Court of Appeals in
Morrison
determined that the prohibition extended only to the two circumstances previously noted: when questioning by a State agent is met with the defendant’s silence or when the defendant fails to come forward in the face of the defendant’s knowledge of being the focus of a criminal investigation.
Morrison
at 164 (3). The only justification for these restrictions of
Mallory
was an attempt to distinguish and limit
Mallory
on its facts. But, such factual differences fail to provide support for the eroding of this Court’s determination of the potential for prejudice stemming
*72
from the State’s comment on a defendant’s pre-arrest silence. Indeed, this Court has continued to recognize and adhere to the rule of
Mallory,
unencumbered by the limitations engrafted by
Morrison. See Lampley v. State,
Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case is remanded to the Court of Appeals for consideration consistent with this opinion.
Judgment reversed and case remanded.
Notes
Mallory
was overruled on other grounds by
Chapel v. State,
The Court of Appeals additionally cited
Glidewell v. State,
