OPINION ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
Appellant was convicted of the offense of murder and his punishment assessed by the jury at 99 years confinement in the Texas Department of Corrections. On his appeal to the San Antonio Court of Appeals appellant complained of an allusion to his postar-rest,
postMiranda
silence made by a police investigator during the State’s case in chief. The court of appeals ruled that the trial court’s instruction to the jury to disregard the investigator’s remark “cured any possible error.”
Waldo v. State,
I.
A hearing was held on appellant’s motion to suppress during presentation of the State’s case in chief in which appellant attempted successfully to exclude certain items of evidence confiscated from the motel room where appellant and a companion, Bonny Ford, had been arrested. At the conclusion of the hearing, upon defense counsel’s express invocation of
Doyle v. Ohio,
“Q. At which point what did you do?
A. By this time, Bonny had come out of the restroom, we sat her down on the bed next to [appellant], Detective Thomas removes the rights card, reads them their rights, asks them if they have any statements to make, which there was no response.” 1
Counsel for appellant instantly objected, pointing out this answer was in “[d]irect violation of the Court’s order.” The objection was sustained and, upon appellant's request, the trial court instructed the jury “to disregard the last comment of the witness.” Motion for mistrial was denied.
Noting that the “unresponsive portion” of Tart’s answer above was “admittedly prejudicial[,]” the court of appeals nevertheless followed “the general rule” that “[w]here prejudicial information is inadvertently placed before a jury, ... an instruction by the trial court to the jury to disregard such answer will be sufficient to cure any unresponsive answer.
Williams v. State,
II.
It has long been the general rule and “well settled since the early case of
Miller v. State,
“In the vast majority of cases in which argument is made or testimony comes in, deliberately or inadvertently, which has no relevance to any material issue in the case and carries with it some definite potential for prejudice to the accused, this Court has relied upon what amounts to an appellate presumption that an instruction to disregard the evidence will be obeyed by the jury. See 1 R. Ray, Texas Practice, Law of Evidence, § 29 (3rd ed. 1980). Thompson v. State,612 S.W.2d 925 (Tex.Cr.App.1981). In essence this court puts its faith in the jury’s ability, upon instruction, consciously to disregard the potential for prejudice, and then consciously to discount the prejudice, if any, in its deliberations.”
We also noted that “[wjhether a given case fits the exception or the rule will depend, of course, upon its particular facts.” Id.
Appellant likens the error in this cause to a direct comment on failure of the accused to testify, a variety of error for which this Court has essentially reversed the presumption and generally found instructions to disregard inefficacious. See
Dickinson v. State,
*754
Nor, secondly, do we find the potential for prejudice from a comment on postMi-randa silence to be as great as that which necessarily derives from a prosecutor’s deliberate comment on a defendant’s failure to testify. The latter comment will seriously taint any case in which the accused invoked his constitutional right to refuse to testify, since invariably it endorses the devastating and practically indelible inference that he had no exculpatory testimony to present in contradiction of the State’s evidence. By comparison, at least where, as shall be seen in the instant case, comment on postMiranda silence was not utilized in any overt fashion to impeach appellant’s testimony or rebut his defense, we cannot say that the prejudicial impact is so irrevocable that jurors could not obey an instruction to ignore it in their deliberations. In
United States v. Hale,
We therefore refuse to embrace a rule that in general
Doyle
error will not be cured by an instruction to disregard. Instead we will honor the presumption that the instruction was efficacious unless consideration of the facts of the particular case “suggest[s] the impossibility of withdrawing the impression produced on the minds of the jury[.]”
Hatcher v. State,
III.
Appellant invites us to consider the following factors in determining the efficacy of curative instructions:
1. The nature of the error.
2. The persistence of the prosecution in committing it.
3. The flagrancy of the violation.
4. The particular instruction given.
5. The weight of incriminating evidence.
6. The harm to accused as measured by severity of the sentence.
Without expressly adopting appellant’s factors as exhaustive or definitive, we observe that consideration of same does not militate in his favor here. Having already decided that the nature of a Doyle violation is not such that an instruction can never cure it, 5 we now examine the remaining factors as they apply to this case.
*755 Persistence of the Prosecution — Flagrancy
Appellant points to the fact that Detective Tart’s comment followed almost directly on the heels of the trial court’s express admonishment not to go into appellant’s postarrest silence. He contends, additionally, that the prosecutor compounded the error at a later point in the trial when in crossexamination of appellant she asked, “You did not tell those police officers what happened, did you?” Such reiteration of the error, appellant asserts, cancels the effectiveness of the earlier instruction to disregard. He cites Boyde v. State, 513 5.W.2d 588 (Tex.Cr.App.1974).
In the context in which the prosecutor’s question was asked, it is clear even on the face of the cold record that it pertained to the time at which appellant and Ford were standing at the door of their motel room. The detectives had not yet stepped into the room and spotted the bloody pair of jeans, and had no reason to suspect as yet that appellant was implicated in the offense. They knew only that appellant and Ford were among others who had been seen earlier that night in the motel office, where the deceased had been killed. Prearrest silence is a constitutionally permissible area of inquiry.
Jenkins v. Anderson,
As for Tart’s violation of the trial court’s admonishment, the court of appeals impliedly found it to have been inadvertent. That appears unlikely to us, but even assuming the remark was intentional, it should not here be attributed to the prosecutors, who made no attempt to capitalize on it by inviting inferences harmful to appellant’s credibility or defensive posture during final argument. It cannot be said under the circumstances that any action of the State was sufficiently egregious to defeat the presumed efficacy of the trial court’s instruction.
The Particular Instruction
Upon request of defense counsel following the objection to Tart’s comment, the trial court simply stated: “Jury is instructed to disregard the last comment of the witness.” Appellant now argues that “[assuming the prosecutor’s errors here were susceptible to cure by some instruction, the boiler place [sic] instructions actually given were inadequate.” “A sharp rebuke in the presence of the jury was certainly called for,” he contends.
Appellant quotes this Court’s observation in
Dee v. State,
*756 “Impressions made on the mind can no more be erased by such instructions than the memory of a curse or a blessing can be torn out and thrust away by the effort of the will.”
That language originally appeared in
McIntosh v. State,
“When prejudicial and persisted in so that same appear not occasional or accidental, and when it further appears from the verdict that the same may have affected the result, the case will be reversed for such misconduct.”
“If the defendant was not intoxicated, why did he not bring in character witnesses who would testify to his reputation as to sobriety?”
Weight of the Evidence
The killing took place at approximately midnight on September 2, 1980, in the office area of the Casa Linda Motel. Earlier in the evening appellant had arrived in San Antonio on the bus and was met at the station by Bonny Ford. They checked into room 217 of the motel and began to inject Preludin in order to enhance sexual relations. Several hours later, just before midnight, Ford was seen at the front door of the office with a coke can in her hand, speaking with the deceased, Choi. Two people bearing descriptions consistent with appellant and Ford were seen to leave the “[l]inen room adjoining the office” sometime after midnight and proceed toward room 217. At the scene of the murder police found a coke can, and a bottle of beer containing appellant’s fingerprints. Two bloody implements, a hammer and a pipewrench, were lying beside the head of deceased. Several items stained with blood of a type consistent with that of the deceased were recovered from room 217, including a small amount of paper money found in appellant’s pocket, and the jeans observed by Detective Tart, which belonged to appellant. Appellant had scratches on his hands and back.
Against advice of her own counsel, Ford testified on behalf of appellant. She stated she was a former employee of Choi at the Casa Linda, and had had disagreements over money she allegedly owed her. Choi had confiscated a backgammon set belonging to Ford as collateral on the supposed debt. At about 11:30 p.m. on September 1st, she went down to the office to talk to Choi about returning the backgammon set. Ford testified that she was “pretty wired” and “had done all the speed [she] could tolerate.” She was also taking Talwin, a pain killer, and had drunk some beer. In anger Ford kicked a hole in a door within the office. A heated argument ensued, during which Ford knocked Choi to the floor, pinned her there and began to choke her. At this time appellant came into the office and Choi grabbed at him. Ford then hit Choi’s head against the floor, and when Choi stopped struggling, thought she had already killed her. Ford continued screaming, and maintained at trial that, “I really was not aware of anything but hurting [Choi] the most I could.” When Choi began to stir again, Ford picked up a hammer lying nearby and struck her in the head “[a] bunch of times.” Appellant and Ford then dragged the body to another, more concealed part of the office. Ford turned off the lights in the office, and they returned to room 217.
Appellant’s version of events differed somewhat. He testified he entered the office looking for Ford, only, to be attacked inexplicably by Choi. As they struggled, *757 Ford struck Choi from behind appellant with the hammer five or six times. Appellant and Ford then moved the body. Appellant found some linens and began wiping blood and fingerprints off of the hammer and the wrench as Ford turned out the lights. The two then exited through the laundry room.
It is uncontested that appellant was at the scene of the killing and that he participated in attempts to conceal it. During final argument the State maintained his participation was greater, judging from the unexplained existence of the wrench, the amount of blood on appellant’s clothes, the scratches on his body and the inconsistencies between his story and Ford’s. In an attempt to impugn appellant’s credibility the prosecutor made one allusion to the fact appellant “lied to the cops, he lied to everybody and he’s lying to you. He was involved.” This can easily be construed as a reference to appellant’s prearrest contact with police, which was admitted in evidence without objection. Appellant did not object to the argument. The prosecutor urged the jury to find appellant guilty either as a primary actor or as a party to the offense committed by Ford. During its deliberations the jury sent out a note requesting clarification on the law of parties, asking, “Do you aid the crime by not preventing the crime[?]” 7 The trial court simply referred the jury back to its original instruction. Subsequently the jury requested to see appellant’s complete testimony, which was denied.
That appellant refused to make a statement at the time of the arrest does not appear to us to have been so detrimental to his defensive posture as to suggest the impossibility of removing it from the jurors’ minds. Under the circumstances as appellant adduced them in his evidence, it is not implausible he would have chosen to exercise his right to silence rather than incriminate Ford, his sometime girlfriend, as the sole perpetrator of a heinous crime. Silence in this context is not particularly compelling evidence of appellant’s involvement in “aiding” commission of the offense. Thus, though certainly the State failed to present an overwhelming case, the
Doyle
error in issue here was not of such “a material character, ... calculated to influence or affect the jury adversely to defendant [that] the withdrawal of same will not cure the error.”
Edmondson v. State,
Severity of Punishment
Appellant received the maximum sentence of 99 years imprisonment from the jury. He now claims this demonstrates “that the jury was unable to put aside [his] post-arrest silence.” All of the cases appellant relies upon involve the efficacy of curative instructions to remedy admission of extraneous instances of misconduct bearing no relevance to any material issue in the prosecution. 8 Here, three police officers testified appellant’s reputation for being peaceable and lawabiding was bad. Considering also the nature of the offense committed, we are unable to attribute the punishment assessed by the jury in any measure to detective Tart’s brief and un-embellished remark.
We therefore conclude the trial court did not err in failing to grant appellant’s motion for mistrial following the Doyle error that occurred in this case.
Accordingly, the judgment of the court of appeals is affirmed.
Notes
. All emphasis supplied unless otherwise indicated.
. In his brief on petition for discretionary review appellant also relies on decisions of this Court regarding any use of postarrest silence as a violation of his right under Article I, § 10 of the Texas Constitution and Article 1.05, V.A.C. C.P., not to ‘be compelled to give evidence against himself." See, e.g.,
Sanchez v. State,
. The language of the exception, attributed to
Miller
v.
State,
supra,
viz:
that error in admitting improper evidence over objection is incurable when "of such a character as to suggest the impossibility of withdrawing the impression produced on [jurors’] minds,” actually had its genesis in the even earlier case of
Hatcher v. State,
. In both
Montoya,
supra, and
Williams
v.
State,
. Indeed, the State argues that in view of the trial court’s instruction to disregard, there was not even error to be cured, relying on the recent Supreme Court opinion in
Greer v. Miller,
483 U.S. -,
"The fact of Miller’s postarrest silence was not submitted to the jury as evidence from which it was allowed to draw any permissible inference, and thus no Doyle violation occurred in this case."
*755 483 U.S. at -,107 S.Ct. at 3108 ,97 L.Ed.2d at 630 . Here the fact of appellant’s failure to make a statement was explicitly brought home to the jury by Tart’s answer, albeit not in direct response to the prosecutor’s question. Although the distinction may appear metaphysical, we are unprepared to hold that no Doyle violation took place in this case, and proceed rather to the inquiry whether the error was obviated by the instruction to disregard.
. Appellant filed an "Amended Brief’ in the court of appeals almost a full year after his original brief was filed. There he raised this second alleged Doyle violation for the first time as an additional ground of error. The court of appeals did not so much as mention this last ground of error in its opinion even though it appears the court had granted leave to file the amended brief. In his second ground for review in his petition to this Court appellant asserts error in the court of appeals' refusal to address the new ground of error brought forward in this way. While we believe that having granted leave to file the amended brief, the better course for the court of appeals would have been to address it on the merits, in view of our observations in the text we now consider appellant’s second ground for review to have been improvidently granted. Tex.R.App.Pro., Rule 202(k).
. Emphasis in original.
. E.g.,
Walker v. State,
