The State appeals from a grant of postcon-viction relief to defendant Gregory Van Cleave. The postconviction court vacated Van Cleave’s 1983 guilty plea for felony murder and the accompanying death sentence on the ground that Van Cleave had been denied his constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel. The State appeals only the reversal of the conviction. As explained below, we hold today that a defendant must demonstrate a reasonable probability of acquittal at trial to establish the “prejudice” from counsel’s performance necessary to vacate a conviction resulting from a guilty plea. Because Van Cleave has failed to make this showing, we reinstate his felony murder conviction and remand for a new sentencing hearing.
I. Factual & Procedural Background
On the night of October 19, 1982 Van Cleave, James Brazelton, Robert Coleman, and Andrew Sims set out to commit a robbery. The four men were driving through a neighborhood in Indianapolis in Coleman’s car when they spotted Robert Falkner caulking a window outside his home. Falkner had his television, which was visible to the four men, set up in his yard to watch the World Series as he worked. Van Cleave and Sims “hollered” for Coleman to stop the car so that the four could steal the television. While their two confederates waited in the bushes nearby, Van Cleave and Sims approached Falkner to demand the television. Van Cleave was carrying a sawed-off shotgun and Sims was carrying a handgun. Both guns were loaded. After a brief exchange of words between Falkner and the two men, Van Cleave shot Falkner at close range. Falkner later died of a single gunshot wound to the chest. Van Cleave, Sims, Brazelton, and Coleman fled the scene in Coleman’s ear without taking the television. All four were arrested in connection with the killing four days later. Each defendant gave a statement to the police.
On October 25,1982 the State charged Van Cleave with felony murder and conspiracy to commit robbery. In accordance with a plea agreement, Van Cleave pleaded guilty on
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April 18,1983 to felony murder and the State dismissed the conspiracy charge. Under the plea agreement, the sentencing judge could choose between 60 years in prison or the death penalty. After a lengthy sentencing hearing in which both sides presented evidence and cross-examined witnesses, the trial court issued findings of fact and a judgment dated May 27,1983 entering a conviction and sentencing Van Cleave to death. We affirmed Van Cleave’s conviction and death sentence on direct appeal. The facts and circumstances that led to Van Cleave’s guilty plea are presented at some length in
Van Cleave v. State,
Van Cleave filed a petition for postconvietion relief on August 24, 1989, asserting that he had been denied his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel. Van Cleave contended — and the postconviction court agreed — that his trial lawyer failed to uncover relevant evidence that, if discovered, would have caused Van Cleave to go to trial instead of entering a plea. The uninvestigat-ed evidence related to difficulties in Van Cleave’s childhood, including his parents’ divorce and racial issues in his upbringing, and a nonverbal learning disorder that impaired Van Cleave’s ability to understand visual, spatial, mathematical, and mechanical tasks. Additionally, counsel failed to view Van Cleave’s videotaped statement to the police (in which Van Cleave confessed to shooting Falkner) before the plea hearing. The post-conviction court further found that counsel had failed to scrutinize the strength and consistency of the State’s evidence, particularly the credibility of some of the State’s witnesses. Finally, Van Cleave’s attorney did not investigate the viability of an intoxication defense.
In addition to failing to pursue these lines of inquiry, counsel misapprehended the mens rea necessary for Van Cleave to be eligible for the death penalty. Counsel wrongly believed that an aggravating factor in the death penalty statute 1 was triggered only by specific intent. Thus, counsel concluded that if Van Cleave pleaded guilty and demonstrated lack of premeditation, he would be spared execution. On posteonviction review, counsel testified that the intent issue was a “key factor” in his decision to advise Van Cleave to plead guilty. Counsel further testified that had he been aware of all the evidence presented on postconviction review, he would have recommended that Van Cleave reject the plea offer and go to trial.
The postconviction court concluded that to prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance Van Cleave must show that his lawyer’s performance was deficient and, but for counsel’s errors, Van Cleave would not have pleaded guilty. After finding that counsel’s mistakes constituted deficient performance, and that Van Cleave would have gone to trial had his lawyer not erred, the postconviction court ruled that Van Cleave had established a violation of his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel. The court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law on November 22, 1994 vacating the guilty plea, conviction and death sentence. The State appeals.
II. Standard of Review
As we recently explained in
Spranger v. State,
III. Issue Presented
To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a criminal defendant must show two things: (1) the lawyer’s performance fell below an “objective standard of reasonableness,”
Strickland v. Washington,
We conclude that the showing of prejudice necessary to establish a constitutional claim requires that Van Cleave have shown a reasonable probability that he would not have been convicted at trial. In light of the lack of any evidence negating Van Cleave’s culpability for felony murder and overwhelming evidence confirming it, we conclude Van Cleave has not shown a reasonable probability he would have been acquitted at trial, and therefore he has not shown any prejudice due to his lawyer’s performance leading to his guilty plea. For this reason, the posteon-viction court erred as a matter of law in setting Van Cleave’s conviction aside.
IV. U.S. Supreme Court Decisions in Strickland & Hill
It is clear that the necessary showing of prejudice in Sixth Amendment cases is not definitively settled.
4
In
Strickland,
the Supreme Court established the two-part test for relief based on a violation of the right to
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effective assistance of counsel held applicable to the states under the Fourteenth Amendment.
5
Under
Strickland,
the defendant must show deficient attorney performance and resulting prejudice.
Strickland
dealt with ineffectiveness claims that related only to sentencing but discussed the issue as it related to the trial as a whole. The Court reasoned that the purpose of the Counsel Clause is to ensure a fair trial and to protect the adversary process.
Id.
at 686-86,
One year after
Strickland,
the Court in
Hill v. Lockhart,
Hill
itself is not entirely clear on this point, however. In addition to the language already quoted, the Court also observed that “the resolution of the ‘prejudice’ inquiry will depend largely on whether the affirmative defense likely would have succeeded at trial.”
Id.
The Court quoted with approval the following language from
Evans v. Meyer,
V. Lockhart v. Fretwell: Clarifying the Prejudice Prong
In
Lockhart v. Fretwell,
Fretwell
enabled the Supreme Court to elaborate on the prejudice that must be shown to prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel: “[A]n analysis focuss-ing solely on mere outcome determination, without attention to whether the result of the proceeding was fundamentally unfair or unreliable, is defective.”
Id.
at 369,
Fretwell involved a challenge to a sentence and did not address the guilt or innocence of the accused. However, for three reasons we conclude that the “unfairness” or “unreliability” requirement discussed in Fretwell applies to the conviction stage as well. First, the Court squarely held in Hill that Strickland’s two-part test for ineffective assistance also governs convictions based on a plea. It follows that any clarification of Strickland applies equally to the guilty plea setting. Second, Fretwell stated that the “conviction or sentence” is not unconstitutional unless the result was unfair or unreliable. Id. (emphasis added). Finally, federal courts of appeals have applied Fretwell in evaluating convictions based on trials. 7
VI. Post-Fretwell Authority
The Supreme Court has not elaborated on the implications of
Fretwell
for a conviction based on a guilty plea, and only a few federal courts of appeals and state supreme courts have addressed this question. The handful of courts who have faced the matter, however, have ultimately arrived at a “reasonable probability of acquittal” standard, or its functional equivalent. Most recently, in
Jones v. Page,
Other federal courts appear to read
Hill
and
Fretwell
as turning on whether the defendant would have pleaded guilty, but hinging that determination on an assessment of the outcome of a trial. These courts reasoned that because the defendant could expect a harsher sentence after trial than was available through a plea bargain, a guilty plea even with effective counsel could be inferred from strong evidence of guilt.
Armstead v. Scott,
Yet a third analytical framework is provided by
Copas v. Commissioner of Correction,
Although we are ultimately guided by federal law on the prejudice question, our holding is consistent with prior Indiana cases (both before and after Fretwell) on ineffective assistance of counsel. For example, in
King v. State,
VII. Rationale for Showing of a Reasonable Probability of Success at Trial
We believe there .are sound reasons to require that a defendant show a reasonable probability of acquittal in order to prevail in a postconviction attack based on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. All criminal defendants, if they so choose, of course have the right to force the prosecution to prove every element of its case to the satisfaction of a jury. And the failure to prove any element, whether by lawyerly ineptitude or sheer disbelief on the part of the jury, results in an acquittal that is final. However, the constitutional calculus shifts when a person who has already been convicted challenges that conviction. On collateral attack, the privilege the Bill of Rights accords to go before a jury and seek an unreviewable acquittal, even in the face of overwhelming incriminating evidence, no longer exists.
Strickland,
As the Supreme Court emphasized in
Hill,
the prejudice requirement derives from the significant State interest in finality of judgments.
Hill,
The government also has its omi interest in affording criminal defendants their constitutional right to a speedy trial. A guilty plea, by definition, eliminates the trial. Proof years after the event (in this case, 14 years and counting) can be difficult, in some cases impossible to establish. The passage of time takes its toll on evidence: witnesses die or move elsewhere, evidence becomes stale, and memories fade. 11 We do not believe the Sixth Amendment requires the State to cobble together the same evidence years after the fact if the defendant has not shown a reasonable probability that a conviction would not have resulted the first time around. 12
Demonstrating prejudice seems particularly appropriate in the context of a claim of ineffective assistance by a defendant who has pleaded guilty. The guilty plea, virtually uniquely among all procedural steps, involves the judgment of the defendant as well as his attorney. We recognize, as the postconviction court found here, that the decision to plead is often strongly if not overwhelmingly influenced by the attorney’s advice. But it is equally true that the defendant appreciates the significance of the plea and is uniquely able to evaluate its factual accuracy. The requirement that the court satisfy itself as to the factual basis for the plea is designed to ensure that only guilty defendants plead guilty, and also that the defendant’s decision to waive a jury trial is an informed and reflective one. Many decisions at trial — calling a given witness, asserting a defense, or the extent of cross-examination — are difficult if not impossible for the defendant to make, and reliance on counsel is unavoidable. In contrast, the decision whether to plead guilty is ultimately the prerogative of the defendant, and the defendant alone. More than conjecture or hope for a lucky break at trial should be required to upset that action years later. The Supreme Court has often reminded us that “in judging prejudice and the likelihood of a different outcome, [a] defendant has no entitlement to the luck of a lawless decisionmaker.”
Nix v. Whiteside,
The assessment whether a defendant has shown a reasonable probability of acquittal will necessarily vary based on the facts of the particular ease. As the Supreme Court has stated, “these predictions of the outcome of a possible trial, where necessary, should be made objectively, without regard for the idiosyncrasies of the particular decisionmaker.”
Hill,
VIII. Van Cleave Has Not Shown Fretwell Prejudice
We next must resolve whether Van Cleave’s conviction was a fundamentally unfair or unreliable result. It is clear that no unfairness occurs when a defendant is deprived of the “luck of a lawless decisionmaker.”
Fretwell,
A. Intoxication was not a defense available to Van Cleave.
The only factor identified by the post-conviction court as a result of counsel’s shortcomings that points remotely towards acquittal — as opposed to mitigating the sentence— was the possibility of an intoxication defense. However, any claim that Van Cleave’s lawyer erred by not investigating this aspect of the case must fail because voluntary intoxication was not a defense to either murder or robbery between 1980-84. Consequently, that defense would have been unavailable to Van Cleave at the time he pleaded guilty. Intoxication as a defense has endured an unsteady evolution in Indiana law. 14 Before September 1, 1980 intoxication was a defense to any crime only to the extent it negated specific intent. Ind.Code § 35-41-3-5(b) (Supp. 1979). Courts accordingly struggled to determine which offenses required a “specific intent.” In 1980 the Indiana Legislature attempted to take this issue out of the hands of the courts by revising the statute that permits voluntary intoxication to be asserted as a defense. That amendment limited the intoxication defense to those offenses specifically defined by use of the phrases “with intent to” or “with the intention to” and no others. See 1980 Ind. Acts, P.L. 205, § 1 (effective September 1,1980), codified at Ind. Code § 35-41-3-5(b) (1993).
We concluded in
Poe v. State,
The intoxication defense enjoyed a revival on July 9, 1984 when
Terry v. State,
B. Even if available, an intoxication defense would have failed.
The posteonviction court, without considering whether Van Cleave could have asserted an intoxication defense, concluded that “[o]n the night of the offense, [Van Cleave’s] intoxication would have precluded his ability to form the conscious intent to rob or kill.” Even assuming an intoxication defense would have been available, this finding is clear error. Had he gone to trial, Van Cleave would not have obtained a jury instruction on voluntary intoxication, much less an acquittal on these grounds. Under Indiana law, an intoxication instruction should be given only where “the evidence relevant to the defense, if believed, was such that it could have created a reasonable doubt in the jury’s mind that the accused had acted with the requisite mental state or specific intent.”
Morrison v. State,
Van Cleave’s intoxication clearly did not preclude him from forming the intent required for felony murder in this case. Felony murder occurs when the defendant kills another human being while committing, or attempting to commit, one of several felonies enumerated by statute, including attempted robbery, the underlying crime here. Ind. Code § 35-42-1-1(2) (1982). 18 Thus, to con *1304 vict Van Cleave of felony murder, the State would have had to prove: (1) an attempt to rob; and (2) a death in the course of the attempted robbery. No doubt exists as to the latter element. As Van Cleave himself testified, Robert Falkner was killed as Van Cleave and Sims approached Falkner to demand the television set. In contrast to the intent discussed above as a death penalty aggravating factor, Van Cleave’s only relevant state of mind here is that necessary for attempted robbery. One of the most disputed factual issues in this ease is whether Van Cleave intended to kill or shoot Falkner. However, this question is unrelated to Van Cleave’s culpability for felony murder. The evidence needs to show only that Van Cleave intended to commit the underlying felony. Intent to kill is relevant at the penalty phase as a potential aggravating circumstance. Ind.Code § 35-50-2-9(b)(l) (1982).
The crime of attempt occurs when the defendant, acting with the mens rea required for commission of a particular crime, takes a “substantial step” towards carrying out that crime. Ind.Code § 35-41-5-1 (1982). Robbery occurs when the defendant knowingly or intentionally takes property from another by using or threatening to use force, or by putting the victim in fear. Ind.Code § 35-42-5-1 (1982). The evidence in this case unequivocally shows that on the night of October 19, 1982 Van Cleave knowingly, if not intentionally, attempted to take property from Falkner by using or threatening to use force, or by putting Falkner in fear. What constitutes a “substantial step” depends on the facts of the particular case, but this requirement is a minimal one, often defined as any “overt act” in furtherance of the crime.
Jones v. State,
The only remaining issue is Van Cleave’s mens rea at the time of the offense. Attempted robbery requires proof that the defendant “knowingly” or “intentionally” engaged in the criminal act. 19 Conduct is “intentional” if the defendant had a conscious objective to do the act in question. Ind. Code § 35-41-2-2(a) (1982). Conduct is “knowing” if the defendant was aware of a high probability that he or she was engaging in the conduct. Ind.Code § 35-41-2-2(b) (1982). Because any defendant who “intentionally” robs by definition also “knowingly” does so, here the evidence needs to show only that Van Cleave knowingly attempted to rob Falkner. Despite Van Cleave’s intoxication, there is no reasonable doubt that he was aware that he was attempting to commit robbery. Van Cleave testified in detail at the sentencing hearing about the events surrounding the robbery and disclaimed intent to kill but, most importantly, conceded his intent to rob. In looking over his shoulder to see if anyone was watching him approach Falk-ner, Van Cleave demonstrated knowledge of the criminality of his actions. Van Cleave had no trouble explaining how the plan was hatched to steal the television and the specific acts that were taken to carry out the robbery attempt. Van Cleave also stated that he did not get sick from alcohol that evening and never fell or tripped due to intoxication. Regardless of his blood-alcohol content, Van Cleave was able to carry out acts requiring physical skill and was also able to direct the behavior of others.
*1305
Because Van Cleave’s testimony showed an acute awareness of his actions related to the robbery attempt, no reasonable doubt exists that Van Cleave was capable of forming the general intent required for robbery, and in fact had formed that intent the night Falkner was killed. The posteonvietion court clearly erred in concluding otherwise. Our result here is consistent with prior Indiana eases in which voluntary intoxication was asserted as a defense. Indeed, defendants who would seem far better candidates for an intoxication defense have seen that effort fail. For example, in
Vickers v. State,
C. Guilt was reliably established.
The other evidence Van Cleave presented on posteonvietion review was of a mitigating but not exculpating character. The posteonvietion court therefore properly set aside the sentence. However, assuming Van Cleave’s lawyer would have presented at trial the mitigating evidence found to cast a reasonable probability of success at the penalty phase, there is no showing of a reasonable probability that Van Cleave would have been acquitted. 23 The State’s case against Van Cleave was overwhelming: Van Cleave on several occasions confessed to shooting Falkner; two of Van Cleave’s cohorts in the robbery testified to his participation; and all the physical evidence corroborated Van Cleave’s culpability for felony murder. Although the mitigating factors found by the posteonvietion court are relevant to Van Cleave’s argument for a lighter sentence, these factors do not negate the State’s proof of his guilt. In fact, Van Cleave’s trial lawyer testified on posteonvietion review that the newly-uncovered matters would have caused him to advise Van Cleave to go to trial not because acquittal was likely or even remotely possible, but because a jury might not have recommended the death sentence. Indeed, the defense strategy was aimed chiefly towards securing the most favorable outcome at the penalty phase. Van Cleave can finally achieve in 1997 what was due to him in 1983: the assistance of competent counsel at sentencing.
Since Van Cleave has not shown a reasonable probability that he would have been acquitted had a trial for felony murder taken place, Van Cleave has incurred no prejudice within the meaning of Strickland, Hill, and *1306 Fretwell. For this reason, the postconviction court erred in setting Van Cleave’s conviction aside.
D. The death penalty statute does not change the analysis.
If this were anything other than a death penalty case, the foregoing analysis would dispose of this appeal. One issue remains, however, because in a death penalty case Indiana, with only three other states, provides for the jury to make a non-binding recommendation as to the sentence if it finds the defendant guilty.
24
Ind.Code § 35-50-2-9(d) & (e) (1993 & Supp.1996). This is a matter of state legislative policy. There is no federal constitutional right to a jury role in capital sentencing.
Spaziano v. Florida,
The purpose of the requirement of effective assistance is “to ensure that criminal defendants receive a fair trial.”
Strickland,
In summary, we return to the fundamental point that prejudice in a guilty plea requires a showing of a reasonable probability that the outcome would be different, not merely the possibility of “some conceivable effect on the outcome of the proceeding.” Id. Van Cleave’s trial counsel’s evaluation may be unreliable in concluding that a jury recommendation would be detrimental and not beneficial to Van Cleave. But elimination of the jury recommendation at most falls into the category of having “some conceivable effect” at sentencing. For the reasons explained in Part VII of this opinion, that is not enough to put the victim’s family and the State through a retrial of a reliably guilty defendant.
Conclusion
The State presented powerful evidence of Van Cleave’s culpability for felony murder at his sentencing hearing. The mitigating evidence Van Cleave’s lawyer failed to uncover, although relevant to Van Cleave’s intent to kill, does not establish a reasonable probability of a different result had Van Cleave gone to trial. Van Cleave’s intent to commit the underlying felony was never in doubt, and *1307 the State would not have been required to prove intent to kill to convict Van Cleave of felony murder. There is no showing of any other factor casting serious doubt on the reliability of the guilty plea. Accordingly, Van Cleave was not prejudiced at the conviction stage by his attorney’s errors and cannot establish a violation of his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel sufficient to set aside his conviction. The post-conviction court’s order vacating Van Cleave’s conviction for felony murder is reversed. The case is remanded for a new sentencing hearing.
Notes
. Ind.Code § 35 — 50—2—9(b)(1) (1982) listed as a death penalty aggravating factor "intentionally killing the victim while committing or attempting to commit” any of several listed crimes, including robbery. As the postconviction court concluded, the requisite mens rea to satisfy this factor is only general intent to kill. The language of this factor is substantively unchanged from its text 13 years ago when Van Cleave was sentenced in this case. See now Ind.Code § 35-50 — 2—9(b)(1) (1993 & Supp.1994).
. This standard of review for ineffective assistance mirrors the federal standard employed on habeas corpus review.
See, e.g., United States v. Quintero-Barraza,
. Van Cleave asserts, and the postconviction court found, that Van Cleave’s trial and appellate counsel did not perform at an objectively reasonable level. For purposes of our analysis we assume without deciding that Van Cleave's attorneys did perform deficiently. We need not reach that issue, however, because we dispose of Van Cleave's ineffectiveness claim under the prejudice prong of
Strickland.
The U.S. Supreme Court indicated in
Strickland
that this is the preferred approach because it avoids the often nettlesome question of whether the attorney's performance was objectively unreasonable.
See Strickland,
.See In Re Avena,
.
See Gideon v. Wainwright,
. Further support for this view is found in another case cited with approval in
Hill. Mitchell v. Scully,
. Most of these cases found that prejudice had not been proved because: (1) evidence of guilt was overwhelming; and (2) no jury would have acquitted even if counsel had been more adept.
See, e.g., Flamer v. State of Delaware,
. Shortly after Fretwell was decided, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit concluded that Fretwell, in elaborating on Strickland's requirement of a showing of unfairness or unreliability, "rejected the equation between causation and prejudice.” Durrive v. United States, 4 F.3d 548, 550-51 (7th Cir.1993). Durrive dealt with a collateral attack on the sentence and found that prejudice demanded a showing that a "significant" reduction in the sentence would have resulted from correction of counsel’s errors.
. Last year in
Butler v. State.
. The supreme courts of South Dakota and Utah have dealt with in habeas proceedings the prejudice issue following convictions based on guilty pleas. In
Hopfinger v. Leapley,
. In this case James Brazelton, an important witness for the State at the sentencing hearing 13 years ago, could not he located to testify in Van Cleave’s postconviction proceedings.
.
Cf. People v. Pickens,
.
Cf. Scarpa,
.
See generally
Susan D. Burke,
The Defense of Voluntary Intoxication: Now You See It, Now You Don't,
19 Ind. L.Rev. 147 (1986) (hereafter
"Voluntary Intoxication ").
For a detailed discussion of Indiana case law on the availability of the intoxication defense before the 1980 amendment, see
Carter v. State,
.Recently the U.S. Supreme Court held that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not require states to allow voluntary intoxication as a defense.
See Montana v. Egelhoff,
518 U.S. —,
. See Ind.Code § 35-42-1-1(2) (1982) (felony murder); Ind.Code § 35 — 42—5—1 (1982) (robbery); Ind.Code § 35-41-5-1 (1982) (attempt).
. Intoxication would have been relevant at the penalty phase in this case because intoxication was, and continues to be, a statutory mitigating circumstance in death penalty cases. Ind.Code § 35-50-2-9(c)(6) (1993). However, ineffective assistance at the penalty phase is not an issue here because the State has not challenged the reversal of Van Cleave's death sentence.
.In our discussion here of a likely trial outcome, we cite the relevant criminal statutes as they existed at the time Van Cleave was charged with murder in this case (October 1982). Both the statutory and common law applicable to Van Cleave’s case are largely unchanged since 1982.
. See Ind.Code § 35-41-5-1 (1982) (attempt requires proof of mens rea required for underlying offense); Ind.Code § 35-42-5-1 (1982) (robbery requires proof of knowing or intentional conduct as to each element of offense).
. Ind.Code§ 35-44-3-3 (1993).
. On posteonvietion review a toxicologist testified on the question of Van Cleave's intoxication. The toxicologist concluded, based on the amount of alcohol the four men claimed to have consumed on the night of the robbery attempt, that Van Cleave’s blood-alcohol content could have been 0.25% at the time Falkner was shot. We do not, and need not, reweigh this evidence here because even taking it as true Van Cleave would have failed to qualify for the intoxication defense for the reasons we have discussed.
. In another case with facts similar to those present here, the Court of Appeals ruled that the trial court properly denied an intoxication instruction in a prosecution for attempted robbery.
Cf. Douglas v. State,
.We are mindful of
Strickland's
instruction to disregard any evidence tainted by counsel's errors.
Strickland,
. The three other states providing a non-binding jury role in sentencing are Alabama, Delaware and Florida. See Ala.Code § 13A-5-46 (1994) (if trial was by jury, recommendation waivable with consent of both parties and court); DelCode Ann. tit. 11, § 4209 (1995) (for convictions tried to jury same procedure as Indiana); Fla. Stat. Ann. § 921.141 (West Supp.1997) (providing for jury recommendation where defendant convicted by jury, as well as right to waivable recommendation for bench tried and guilty plea convictions).
