¶ 1. This аppeal arises from the first-degree murder conviction of appellant Herman Yoh for the 1997 killing of his wife, Mary Yoh. We have consolidated our review of appellant’s direct appeal and his petition for post-conviction relief (PCR). In his direct appeal, appellant argues that the district court erred by: (1) failing to suppress his confession; (2) admitting evidence of his prior bad acts; and (3) refusing to instruct the jury on the lesser-included offense of voluntary manslaughter. In his appeal from the denial of his PCR petition, appellant contends that the superior court erred by granting summary judgment despite the existence of genuine issues of material fact regarding appellant’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. We affirm appellant’s conviction, but we reverse in part the superior court’s grant of summary judgment with respect to appellant’s PCR petition, and we remand the petition to the superior court for further proceedings. We also consider appellant’s challenge to his sentence, raised after oral argument in light of our recent decision in
State v. Provost,
¶ 2. Appellant was convicted by a jury of first-degree murder in October 1999 and sentenсed to life without the possibility of parole in April 2000. The body of Mary Yoh was found, wrapped in a blanket, beside a rural road in Williston, Vermont, on March 7, 1998. She had been strangled to death, and there were bruises on her face. Police located appellant in Reading, Pennsylvania, and Pennsylvania state troopers arrested him on March 18, 1998. The Pennsylvania troopers, prior to interviewing appellant, read him a form listing his Miranda rights, and appellant signed a form waiving these rights. During the interview, the troopers, acting on instructions from law enforcement personnel in Vermont, did not inform appellant that Mary’s body had been found, instead asking if he could provide any information regarding her disappearance. Appellant told the Pennsylvania troopers that he had last seen Mary on December 20, 1997, the day after he and *322 Mary had attended a Christmas party for the staff of the Residence Inn in Burlington, where Mary had worked. The party took place at the Radisson Hotel in Burlington, and the Yohs had reserved a room at the hotel. Appellant told the troopers he had taken Mary home from the party because she was feeling ill from drinking too much. He said that he left her in their home the next day, called her workplace and told them she would not be coming in that day, and left to run some errands. When he returned, Mary was gone. According to his story, he remained for another day, then left for Reading, Pennsylvania, where his former wife and children lived. When asked for an explanation of why Mary had disappeared, appellant mentioned that she had been involved in a legal dispute with a Vermont bail bondsman named Shelley Palmer, who once employed appellant. After this interview, appellant was charged with Mary’s murder.
¶ 3. On March 20,1998, two days after appellant’s interview with the Pennsylvania troopers, Vermont State Police detectives Dane Shortsleeve and Thomas Nelson interviewed appellant at the Pennsylvania State Police barracks. After again reading appellant his Miranda rights, the detectives conducted a tape-recorded interview, in which they continued to act as if Mary were only missing, not dead. Appellant referred them to the Pennsylvania troopers’ interview notes and continued to assert that he had last seen Mary the morning after the party. After approximately two hours of questioning, the detectives informed appellant that Mary’s body hаd been found and that she had been murdered. Appellant reacted as if he was surprised, and he did not change his story. The detectives then began to accuse appellant of committing the murder. They pointed out inconsistencies between appellant’s story and the physical evidence, including Mary’s autopsy results, blood spatters on the walls of the Yohs’ hotel room, and the accounts of witnesses who had heard an argument in the room. Appellant denied that there had been an argument or a fight between Mary and him, and he continued to deny any role in Mary’s disappearance. Finally, he accused the detectives of “trying to trip me up” and said “it all stops here.” When Detective Shortsleeve continued to talk to him, appellant said, ‘You’re trying to trip me up, you get an attorney in here or something.” Detective Shortsleeve insisted that he was not trying to trip appellant up. Detective Nelson then asked appellant if he wished to stop talking to the detectives, and appellant responded, ‘Yeah.” When Detective Shortsleeve asked him why he wanted to stop talking, appellant responded, “Because.” Detective Shortsleevе then continued questioning appellant for several more minutes, attempting *323 to convince appellant to help his own cause by portraying the murder as an accident, stating that appellant would not be able to talk to the detectives again, and at one point, saying:
You expect to get out of jail before you’re ninety years old, you need to tell us. Goes right here on the tape, you’re not going to get another opportunity. You know we’re talking to your family, you want to leave them with any good feelings, let us be able to tell them that this was an accidental thing. Tell us what happened in the room that night.
Appellant responded that he had already told them what happened, and after a few more statements about the strength of the case against appellant, the detectives ended the interview.
¶ 4. Later the same day, while being transported from the barracks by one of the Pennsylvania state troopers who had conducted the original interview, appellant asked the trooper whom the Vermont detectives would talk to next. The trooper responded that he did not know. Appellant repeated his question, and the trooрer said that he did not know, but that if it were his investigation, he would find out whether appellant’s family in Pennsylvania had any information. A short time later, appellant told the trooper, “If you can keep those guys off my family, I will tell them everything they want to know.” He was then brought back to the barracks, and the Vermont detectives were informed that appellant wanted to talk to them again.
¶ 5. When appellant arrived at the barracks, Detectives Shortsleeve and Nelson, after reading appellant his Miranda rights again and having him sign another waiver, conducted appellant’s third interview, which was videotaped. During this interview, appellant admitted that he and Mary had an argument in the hotel room, and that Mary threatened to call the police. Appellant stated that when Mary reached for the telephone, he “blacked out.” When he awoke, Mary was dead. Appellant claimed that he “snapped” and could not remember what happened after Mary reached for the telephone. He then described wrapping Mary’s body in a blanket, carrying the body to his car, and driving to the place where the body was found. When the detectives asked whether appellant had аny doubt that he had killed Mary, he responded that he could not remember doing so, but that there was no one else in the room.
¶ 6. Prior to trial, appellant’s counsel, Jerry Schwarz, informed the trial court that he would not seek suppression of appellant’s confession *324 because his investigation revealed no basis for suppression. The videotape of appellant’s confession and Detective Shortsleeve’s description of his two interviews with appellant were admitted into evidence without objection. Also before trial, Schwarz moved to suppress evidence of appellant’s prior physical abuse of Mary, including a May 1996 domestic assault that resulted in a conviction, a November 1996 assault that was reported to police, and a January 1997 complaint to the police about appellant’s apparent theft of Mary’s money and her car. The trial court admitted evidence of the May 1996 and January 1997 incidents but excluded evidence of the November 1996 incident on hearsay grounds.
¶ 7. At trial, in addition to evidence of appellant’s statements and his prior misconduct, the jury heard testimony from a forensic expert as to the cause and time of Mary’s death, and from guests at the hotel who heard an argument between appellant and Mary on the night of the party. Appellant’s defense consisted primarily of evidence, including his own testimony, that Shelley Palmer, the bail bondsman appellant had mentioned in his interview with the Pennsylvania troopers, had hired two hit men, who entered appellant’s hotel room, knocked him unconscious, and killed Mary. At the conclusion of the trial, the jury received instructions with respect to both the voluntariness of appellant’s confession and the purpose of the evidence of appellant’s prior conduct. Schwarz requested an instruction on the lesser-included offense of voluntary manslaughter, but the trial court denied this request and instructed the jury regarding first-degree and second-degree murder. The jury convicted appellant of first-degree murder, and the trial court, after a sentencing hearing, sentenced appellant to a term of life without parole.
¶ 8. Appellant appealed his conviction. While the appeal was pending, appellant moved for a stay of the proceedings so that he could file a PCR petition. We granted the stay, and аppellant filed his petition for PCR in the superior court, alleging ineffective assistance of counsel. The State moved for summary judgment, and the superior court granted the motion, finding that, regardless of Schwarz’s effectiveness, any errors by counsel did not prejudice the outcome of the trial. Appellant appealed from the superior court’s grant of summary judgment, and we consolidated appellant’s direct appeal and his PCR appeal for review.
*325 I. The Direct Appeal
¶ 9. In his direct appeal, appellant asserts that the district court erred by: (1) failing to suppress his confession; (2) admitting evidence of his prior bad acts; and (3) refusing to instruct the jury on the lesser-included offense of voluntary manslaughter. 1 We reject these claims of error and affirm appellant’s conviction.
A.
¶ 10. Appellant first contends that it was error for the district court not to suppress his confession because the statement was rendered involuntary by the Vermont detectives’ failure to end appellant’s second interview when he invoked his rights to remain silent and to have counsel present during questioning. “When considering a motion to suppress, we review the .trial court’s factual findings for clear error; we review its legal conclusion de novo.”
State v. Beer,
¶ 11. Under
Miranda v. Arizona,
¶ 12. There is no question that during appellant’s second interview, in his first conversation with Detectives Shortsleeve and Nelson, the detectives violated appellant’s
Miranda
rights. When Detective Nelson asked appellant whether he wanted to stop talking to the detectives, and appellant responded, ‘Yeah,” the detectives were required to end the interview immediately.
Miranda,
*327
¶ 13. Whether or not appellant asserted his right to counsel is also immaterial to the question of whether intеrrogation could resume later, as appellant was entitled to initiate further conversation on his own in either instance.
Edwards,
¶ 14. Appellant relies on
Missouri v. Seibert,
The threshold issue... is thus whether it would be reasonable to find that in these circumstances the warnings could function “effectively” as Miranda requires. Could the warnings effectively advise the suspect that he had a real choice about giving an admissible statement at that juncture? ... For unless the warnings could place a suspect who has just been interrogated in a position to make such an informed choice, there is no practical justification for accepting the formal *328 warnings as compliance with Miranda, or for treating the second stage of interrogation as distinct from the first____
Id.
at 611-12. The Ninth Circuit used a similar approach in
Collazo v. Estelle,
excluding a confession where, as here, police refused to end questioning after the defendant had invoked his
Miranda
rights, but reissued the
Miranda
warnings prior to the defendant’s confession after the defendant had initiated a second interview.
(1) there was a break in the stream of events sufficient to insulate the statement from the effect of the prior coercion, (2) it can be inferred that the coercive practices had a continuing effect that touched the subsequent statement, (3) the passage of time, a change in the location of the interrogation, or a change in the identity of the interrogators interrupted the effect of the coercion, and (4) the conditions that would have precluded the use of a first statement had been removed.
Id.
at 421 (citing
United States v. Patterson,
¶ 15. We conclude that appellant’s initiation of the third interview was voluntary despite the
Miranda
violation in his second interview. While, as in
Collazo,
little time passed between the interviews, and both interviews were conducted by the same officers in the same location, there was a significant “break in the stream of events sufficient to insulate [appellant’s] statement from the effect of the prior coercion.”
Collazo,
¶ 16. This reasoning also applies to appellant’s related argument that the totality of the circumstances of the second interview, aside from the aforementioned
Miranda
violation, rendered his confession in the third interview involuntary. See
State v. Bacon,
¶ 17. We need not decide whether any of the particular tactics employed by the Vermont detectives were unduly coercive; we have already determined that the detectives violated appellant’s rights in the second interview. But see
id.
at 293-94,
B.
¶ 18. Appellant next contends the district court erred by admitting evidence of his prior acts of domestic violence against Mary. ‘We reverse trial court evidentiary rulings only when we find an abuse of that discretion resulting in prejudice.”
State v. Ovitt,
C.
¶ 19. Appellant’s final contention in his direct appeal is that the district court erred by refusing to instruct the jury on the lesser-included offense of voluntary manslaughter. “As a general rule, a criminal defendant is entitled to have the jury instructed on all lesser-included offenses.”
State v. Delisle,
¶ 20. We agree with appellant that the evidence was sufficient to support a voluntary manslaughter instruction, and it was error for the
*332
court to deny the instruction. “‘[V]oluntary manslaughter is an intentional killing committed under extenuating circumstances that would mitigate, but not justify, the killing, such as provocation that would cause a reasonable person to lose self control.’”
Delisle,
[t]he evidence showed that the victim and defendant were in a deteriorating love affair and the victim had threatened defendant that she had “a dark tale” to tell. In addition, the manner of death was manual strangulation. These facts could conceivably have led the jury to conclude that this was an unlawful killing committed in the heat of passion.
Id.
at 301-02,
¶ 21. Although it was error for the court to refuse to instruct the jury on voluntary manslaughter, this error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt in this case. See
State v. Trombley,
¶ 22. Without more, though, we would still reverse appellant’s conviction if the jury had chosen to convict him of second-degree murder instead of first-degree murder. A jury charged on a lesser-included offense may view the evidence differently than it would without that charge. “[A] lesser-included offense instruction allows the jury to convict the defendant for criminal behavior for which there is proof beyond a reasonable doubt, without convicting on a greater offense for which proof beyond a reasonable doubt may be lacking.”
State v. Alexander,
¶ 23. This reasoning is somewhat less applicable where the jury is instructed on a lesser-included offense, but chooses to convict the defendant of the greater offense. In
Alexander,
the jury was not instructed on a lesser-included offense, and thus, faced a “binary choice of guilty or not guilty.”
¶24. By including both first-degree murder and second-degree murder in the jury charge, the court accomplished, to some extent, the goal of “sharpening] the definitions of the crimes for which the defendant can be convicted.”
Delisle,
¶ 25. It is important to emphasize that this conclusion is possible оnly with the benefit of hindsight. In determining how many lesser-included offenses to charge, a trial court cannot foresee whether a jury will convict the defendant of the greatest offense charged, making it less important to instruct the jury on an additional lesser-included offense. Thus, regardless of the likely effectiveness of the defendant’s strategy, the court must always grant a defendant’s request for a lesser-included offense that is supported by the evidence. The court’s error was serious, and it could have resulted in a reversal under slightly different circumstances, but here, it was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. We therefore affirm appellant’s conviction of first-degree murder.
II. The PCR Petition
¶ 26. Having affirmed appellant’s conviction, we now turn to his PCR petition. Appellant contends that the superior court erred by granting summary judgment to the State despite the existence of genuine issues of material fact regarding appellant’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. See
In re Carter,
¶ 27. In making a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel in the context of a petition for post-conviction relief, the petitioner bears the burden of proof. Appellant was required to demonstrate that: (1) his counsel performed below an objective standard of reasonableness
*336
according to professional norms; and (2) this substandard performance resulted in prejudice.
In re LaBounty,
A.
¶28. Appellant first claims that Schwarz was ineffective in failing to move to suppress appellant’s confession. While we question the wisdom of failing to challenge a confession that was obtained following a Miranda violation, we cannot question the superior court’s determination that this decision did not affect the outcome of appellant’s trial. A motion to suppress would have been futile because the Miranda violation did not result in a confession in appellant’s second interview, and the confession during appellant’s third interview was voluntary. Supra, ¶ 15.
B.
¶ 29. Appellant next contends Schwarz’s failure to request the correct jury instruction regarding the voluntariness of the confession caused him prejudice. Appellant was entitled to have the jury charged not to consider the confession unless it found the confession voluntary beyond a reasonable doubt.
State v. Caron,
you should consider whether these statements were freely and voluntarily made without fear of threats or physical or psychological coercion or promises of reward. You may consider the situation of the conversation between the defendant and the police, including the duration of questioning, who was present, whether the defendant was warned about and understood his right to remain silent, his right to a lawyer, and that his statement could be used against him, and whether the defendant knowingly and voluntarily waived those rights. You should consider the defendant’s motivation in making any statement. In short, you should give the defendant’s statements just such weight as you feel they deserve under all the circumstances as you find them.
The superior court determined that “there may be a reasonable probability that the jury would not have found [appellant’s] statements voluntary beyond a reasonable doubt” and “a proper charge may have triggered a different finding on voluntariness.” The court nevertheless ruled that there was no prejudice from this error because the remaining evidence was sufficient to convict appellant.
¶ 30. We do not share the superior court’s confidence that the jury would have found appellant guilty of first-degree murder even if it had disregarded the confession, but we agree that appellant was not prejudiced by Schwarz’s error in failing to request the correct instruction. See
Caledonian-Record Publ’g Co. v. Vt. State Coll.,
C.
¶ 31. Appellant’s third argument is that Schwarz failed to pursue an effective trial strategy. It is almost self-evident that appellant’s defense strategy was doomed to fail, relying as it did on outlandish claims that conflicted with appellant’s videotaped confession. The superior court ruled, however, that Schwarz had no choice but to pursue an “all-or-nothing” defense because appellant insisted on it. The court stated, correctly, that a defense attorney must abide by certain of a defendant’s decisions, even if doing so is not in the defendant’s best interest. See
In re Trombly,
¶ 32. Appellant submitted an affidavit with his opposition to summary judgment claiming that Schwarz did not discuss the likelihood of success of the various strategies available, and in particular, did not explain “what a diminished capacity defense was or whether it might be a possible defense,” or “what second degree murder is or the differénces between first and second degree murder, in terms of being found guilty and in terms of possible sentences.” Appellant also claimed that Schwarz did not discuss the likelihood of success of an all-or-nothing defense. Meanwhile, Schwarz’s deposition testimony indicated that he did not remember explaining diminished capacity or second-degree
*339
murder to appellant, but that he “typically” would have had such a conversation with a defendant. Schwarz also indicated that he repeatedly attempted to convince appellant to plead guilty to a lesser charge and explained that the strategy of blaming the killing on Palmer was unlikely to succeed. Schwarz testified that he believed the “Palmer defense” was akin to a “slow guilty plea,” but that further attempts to convince appellant to use а different strategy would harm the attorney-client relationship. This conflicting evidence from appellant and Schwarz was sufficient to create a disputed issue of material fact and remove the question of appellant’s choice of strategies from consideration in a motion for summary judgment. While appellant was entitled to choose whether to pursue an all-or-nothing strategy at trial, he was also entitled to make this decision ‘“after full consultation with counsel.’”
In re Trombly,
¶ 33. The State argues, as it did in its motion for summary judgment, that the superior court could have nevertheless concluded that there was no prejudice from Schwarz’s choice of strategies. Such a ruling wоuld have strained belief. The record in this ease contains sufficient evidence to support an argument for second-degree murder or voluntary manslaughter, and there is no telling how a jury would have weighed that evidence if it was presented in place of the Shelley Palmer story. We therefore reverse the superior court’s grant of summary judgment with respect to this claim of ineffective assistance of counsel and remand appellant’s PCR petition to the superior court for an evidentiary hearing on the issue of whether Schwarz’s advice to appellant prior to trial was sufficient to allow him to make an informed choice of trial strategies.
*340 D.
¶ 34. Appellant next contends that Schwarz was ineffective in failing to preserve appellant’s objection to the district court’s refusal to charge the jury on voluntary manslaughter. Because we have already held that this error was harmless in light of appellant’s defense strategy and the jury’s guilty verdict on the top charge of first-degree murder, supra, ¶¶ 19-21, we affirm the superior court’s ruling that the failure to preserve the objection did not prejudice appellant’s defense.
E.
¶ 35. Appellant’s final contention is that Schwarz fаiled to present “humanizing evidence” to the district court in his sentencing hearing. We do not reach this argument because appellant also raises, for the first time in a motion following oral argument, the question of whether his sentence was unconstitutional in light of our holding in
State v. Provost,
¶ 36. Appellant is entitled to the benefit of developments in the law while his case is pending on direct appeal.
State v. Gibney,
¶ 37. While most of our cases regarding plain error arise from situations where appellate counsel briefs an issue not preserved below, plain error is also applicable when appellate counsel fails to raise an issue, or raises it in an untimely fashion. See V.R.Cr.P. 52(b) (“Plain errors or defects affecting substantial rights may be noticed although they were not brought to the attention of the court.”);
State v. Savo,
¶ 38. Since the United States Supreme Court held, in
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
¶ 39. Plain-error analysis requires us to consider whether these are “exceptional circumstances where a failure to recognize error would result in a miscarriage of justice, or where there is glaring error so grave and serious that it strikes at the very heart of the defendant’s constitutional rights.”
Oscarson,
¶ 40. Using the
Olano
test as a guide for applying our own plain-error standard, we hold that the district court’s sentencing decision was plain error. After the jury convicted appellant of first-degree murder, the district court conducted a weighing of aggravating and mitigating factors pursuant to 13 V.S.A. § 2303. The court found multiple aggravating factors, including the “particularly brutal and cruel” nature of the murder, 13 V.S.A. § 2303(d)(5), and no significant mitigating factors. The court found that the aggravating factors outweighed the mitigating factors and sentenced appellant to a term of life in prison without the possibility of parole. This was the same procedure we held unconstitutional in
Provost,
*343
¶ 41. The error was also one that affected appellant’s substantial rights and resulted in prejudice.
Olano,
¶ 42. We must now consider whether the error implicates “the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.”
Id.
at 736 (quotations omitted). We conclude that it would be both unfair to apрellant and harmful to the public reputation of Vermont’s justice system to allow appellant’s sentence to stand under these circumstances. It is certainly true that appellant forfeited his objection to the district court’s sentencing procedure several times in the course of this
*344
appeal, but this is always the case in plain-error appeals. Appellant’s failure to raise his objection is more excusable than usual here, where the law at the time of his sentencing proceeding provided no basis for an objection. At the time of the filing of his first appellate brief, in November 2000,
Apprendi
had recently signaled a shift in Sixth Amendment law, but it was still not obvious that there was a reasonable argument for vacating appellant’s sentence, since th.e statutory maximum in § 2303 could have been interpreted as either life imprisonment without parole or life with a minimum term of thirty-five years.
Blakely
contained a clearer definition of the statutory maximum for
Apprendi
purposes, and this definition led directly to our decision in
Provost.
See
Provost,
¶ 43. The State argues that disregarding the district court’s error would not be unfair to appellant because his direct appeal is still pending only because of his own efforts to consolidate his direct appeal and his PCR petition. The procedural matters that have delayed our consideration of appellant’s direct appeal are not relevant. It is a fact of appellate review that certain appeals take longer than others to resolve. Our retroactivity rule strikes a balance between finality and fairness by applying decisions retroactively only to cases on direct appeal.
Gibney,
*345 ¶ 44. Since our decision in Provost, the Legislature has amended the sentencing procedures of § 2303. 2005, No. 119 (Adj. Sess.), § 2. The new statute contains procedures that, apply under these specific circumstances. Id. (amending § 2303 such that new subsections (b)-(f) apply “if the murder was committed before the effective date of this act, and ... the defendant’s sentence was stricken and remanded for resentencing pursuant to [Provost]”). We thus remand to the district court for further sentencing proceedings, although we express no opinion as to the constitutionality of the newly enacted procedures. As we also remand appellant’s PCR petition to the superior court, supra, ¶ 31, appellant’s new sentence will remain subject to the superior court’s decision on remand as to whether apрellant is entitled to post-conviction relief.
Appellant’s conviction is affirmed,. Appellant’s sentence is vacated and the case is remanded to the district court for further proceedings consistent with the views expressed herein. Summary judgment regarding appellant’s petition for post-conviction relief is affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded to the superior court for further proceedings consistent with the views expressed herein.
Notes
The State argues that Schwarz failed to preserve appellant’s first and third arguments for appeal. This would ordinarily result in plain-error review. See
State v. Oscarson,
2004 W 4, ¶ 27,
In its grant of summary judgment on appellant’s PCR petition, the superior court asserted that this request was not unequivocal, citing
Vail v. State,
We note that this error was not one the district court could have avoided, considering that the sentencing hearing occurred in April 2000, several months prior to the
*343
United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Apprendi,
which first signaled the possibility that judicial fact-finding in sentencing was unconstitutional. The timing of the court’s decision, however, is not relevant to our plain-error analysis. “[W]here the law at the time of trial was settled and clearly contrary to the law at the time of appeal — it is enough that an error be ‘plain’ at the time of appellate consideration.”
Johnson v. United States,
