dissenting.
A majority of this panel affirms this case, holding, among other things, that the prosecutor’s jury argument did not constitute reversible error. I disagree, and will now tell the reader why.
I first object to the majority, in rather disingenuous fashion, by treating appellant’s grounds of error seriatim, and by selectively quoting from the record, making it appear that only the most minor of damage may have been done to appellant by the prosecutor’s unsupported and unfounded in fact arguments. That this appearance is a mirage is readily apparent from the record of the contested argument, presented whole. See, for example, infra, the continuation of the colloquy between the trial court and counsel as compared to what the majority says occurred.
Appellant was convicted of the misdemeanor offense of driving while intoxicated and a jury assessed his punishment at two years and a $500 fine, the maximum allowed by law.1
The facts of the case are relatively simple. The evidence at trial showed that a James L. Steel, while driving his automobile west on Lovers Lane in Dallas behind a white Opel stationwagon, later shown to be driven by appellant, observed appellant’s automobile “weaving back and forth across the road and occasionally the driver would stop.” “I think he stopped twice to yell something to people [pedestrians] on the other side of the road.” While attempting to pass another automobile, appellant’s sta-tionwagon struck the rear bumper of the other automobile. After the vehicles stopped and all parties got out of their respective vehicles, appellant informed Steel and the driver of the other vehicle that: “I’m going to whip your ass either one at a time or both at the same time.” At the scene, appellant also raised his hands in the air as though Steel and the other person, a Mr. Lord, who did not testify, had guns pointed toward him, but Steel testified: “And we were not even close to him.” In Steel’s opinion, appellant was intoxicated at the time. After his counsel finished examining Steel, appellant himself cross-examined and recross-examined the witness.
Police Officer Randall Ray Cobb of the University Park Police Department testified he received a dispatch call to go to Douglas and Lovers Lane in Dallas and after arriving at that location he talked with all three of the parties involved. In Cobb’s opinion, the accident was classified as a “minor” due to the small amount of damage. “There was some scratches on the chrome bumper and some scuff marks on the rubber on the bumpers.” In Cobb’s opinion, appellant was intoxicated at the time in question. Appellant was also allowed to cross-examine and later to recross-examine Cobb after his counsel completed her cross-examination.
Appellant did not offer any testimony nor did he testify at the guilt-innocence stage of the trial. The jury, however, found him guilty of the charged offense.
Up to that point we have in my view an errorless trial. But then came the punishment hearing. The State, when asked if it had any evidence to offer, replied: “The State rests” [on the punishment hearing]. Appellant, however, chose to testify at the *826punishment hearing and in my view the beginning of an error laden trial then developed from an error free trial.
Appellant, on cross-examination, was asked by the prosecutor about a prior murder by automobile conviction he received on April 28,1972. He first declined to answer the question and attempted to take his “Fifth Amendment exemption.” He was then ordered by the trial court, subject to contempt of court for failure to do so, to answer the question, and he did answer the question in the affirmative. The State, however, then had admitted into evidence, over objection, State’s Exhibit No. 1, which consists of an indictment, judgment and an order suspending imposition of sentence and placing the defendant on probation for the murder by automobile conviction.2 Because of the error that was later committed during jury argument, this indictment, in pertinent part, is here now set out:
[defendant] ... while intoxicated and while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, [did] drive and operate a motor vehicle, to wit, an automobile upon a public highway there situate, and did then and there in the execution of said unlawful act, through mistake and accident, kill John M. Johnson, the driver and occupant of a bicycle then and there in and upon said highway by then and there driving and causing the automobile so driven and operated by him the said John Gilbert Carter, Jr., to be driven into and against said bicycle so driven and occupied by the said John M. Johnson.2A
On re-direct examination, appellant also testified in reference to defendant’s Exhibit No. 1, which is an instrument entitled “Order Setting Aside Judgment of Conviction Dismissing the Indictment and Discharging Defendant from Probation,” which reflects appellant successfully completed his probation for the murder by automobile conviction. Apparently, appellant had no other admissible “prior criminal record” as none was offered by the State. After counsel completed their examination and cross-examination of appellant, the trial court then allowed appellant to personally “state whatever else you want to in that regard.” Appellant then personally made a few innocuous comments not pertinent here, regarding the prior conviction.
During argument, counsel for appellant made reference to the prior conviction but said nothing more than: “He did not have a trial, he pled guilty to a very unfortunate incident in which a car bike collision resulted in the death of the rider of the bicycle.”
The prosecutor then, almost immediately, in his jury summation, in my view, destroyed all of the work the police, his office, the trial court, counsel for appellant, and everyone else connected with the case had done in seeing that appellant not only had his day in court but received the fair trial the law requires he have.
The prosecutor argued and the record reflects the following:
******
Well, if you’ll remember back when he ran over this little child out there on that bicycle—
MS. HIGHT: Your Honor, we’ll object. There is no evidence at all that it was a small child, in fact, it was not.3
THE COURT: I sustain the objection about the word small child.
MS. HIGHT: We’ll request of the Judge to ask the jury to disregard?
THE COURT: The jury will disregard the words, small child.
MS. HIGHT: We will also request a mistrial.
THE COURT: Denied.
MS. HIGHT: Note our exception.
MR. CROSS: Well whether he was small or not, killing that man didn’t shock him any.
*827Later, during argument, counsel for the State further argued:
* # * * * *
Now Johnny Johnson didn’t have his Christmas with his mother this past Christmas because of this man sitting right there that got on the witness stand and told you his story — 4
MS. HIGHT: Your Honor, we object again to his comments that are outside the record and offered as testimony on punishment.
THE COURT: What is outside the record?
MS. HIGHT: Johnny Johnson and his mother. This is no evidence that he had a mother who is—
THE COURT: Ms. Hight, except for one situation, I don’t know how anybody got here except without having a mother. So I’ll overrule your objection.
MS. HIGHT: Your Honor, he is speaking of Christmas this past year, which is outside the record and there is no evidence, and we will—
THE COURT: That we had a Christmas? Overruled.
MS. HIGHT: No, Your Honor, that Johnny Johnson’s mother had one.
Note our exception.
MR. CROSS: Well, there is one person that we all know didn’t have a Christmas because this man run over him and killed him....
The jury accepted, by its verdict, the prosecutor’s plea for the maximum possible punishment provided by law.
Appellant, in his appeal, contends reversible error resulted when the prosecutor argued as set out above. The State responds, in part: “Only one arguable fact was presented, whether the deceased was a small child,” and admits there is absolutely nothing in this record to support the assertion that the deceased in the prior cause was a “small child,” other than: “As the indictment stated that the deceased was the occupant of a bicycle, it was not unreasonable to assume that the deceased was a minor.” The indictment of the prior conviction does not refer or make reference to the victim’s age. The fact that a person rides a bicycle, even in 1972, and certainly now, does not, standing alone, justify the inference that person must be a small child. Older youths — and even older adults — are known to ride bicycles throughout our state; then and now.
As to the prior conviction, it reflects appellant received the minimum punishment of two years’ probation, then provided by law, on April 28,1972, which he successfully completed on April 29, 1974, almost six years prior to the trial of this cause.
If the prosecutor had contented himself with making a showing of the facts of the case, together with the evidence of the prior conviction, as they existed, the jury might very well have assessed the punishment it in fact inflicted, but in the view of this writer there exists too great a danger that such penalty was influenced by the erroneous “striped kitty” argument of the State.
Proper jury argument must fall into one of four areas to be upheld: (1) summation of the evidence; (2) reasonable deduction from the evidence; (3) answer to argument of opposing counsel and, (4) a plea for law enforcement. See Todd v. State, 598 S.W.2d 286 (Tex.Cr.App.1980) and cases cited therein. It is clear that the unsupported argument of the prosecutor that the victim of the prior offense was a small child does not fit into any of the approved categories. But even argument outside the approved areas does not constitute reversible error unless, in light of the record as a whole, the argument is extreme or manifestly improper or injects new facts harmful to thé accused into the trial proceeding which may affect guilt-innocence or punishment.
Many years ago, this Court, speaking through Judge Lattimore, in Vargas v. State, 128 Tex.Cr.R. 139, 79 S.W.2d 860 (1935) said:
... The closing argument of the state is a powerful weapon in its hands. Men on the jury unused to court procedure, not *828quite sure what should be remembered as the case proceeds, hear their county attorney, most frequently, as in this case, a highly esteemed officer, in the closing moments of the argument, tell them what has been said, what the accused had admitted, and his statements are properly accorded weight. That the argument in this case was beyond the testimony seems plain, and the court approved the bill of exceptions without qualification. If the jury were led to believe from this argument that, in the opinion of their county attorney, appellant was one of the worst thugs in Lubbock when no testimony had been offered to show this, and if they were thus led to believe that appellant was about to kill some good man, or use this slungshot to accomplish a theft, because their prosecuting attorney assured them of this fact, this could easily account for the increased penalty above the minimum, which they might have otherwise inflicted.
As to the trial court's sustaining of the objection made and instructing the jury to disregard the words “small child,” I would hold that the withdrawal of those words from the jury’s consideration did not cure the error inherent in this direct reference, without any factual basis to support it, to the alleged age of the previous victim. The argument of the prosecutor was absolutely improper and the trial court’s instruction to disregard was not sufficient to have removed the prejudice it created. However, I do not reach the ground of error concerning this part of the objectionable jury argument. In light of this first attempt to throw the proverbial skunk in the jury box, see Dunn v. United States, 307 F.2d 883, 886 (5th Cir. 1962), I am constrained to examine more closely the “striped kitty” which the jury was permitted to take with it to the jury room when the trial court overruled appellant’s objection to the reference of “Johnny” not spending Christmas with his mother. I find this aggravated the original error to the point of making the jury argument reversible error.
I subscribe to and admonish counsel for both the State and the accused to follow what then Comm. Krueger of this Court said years ago in Pena v. State, 129 S.W.2d 667 (Tex.Cr.App.1939).
... The object and principal purpose of an argument to the jury, as we understand it, is to aid and assist them in properly analyzing the evidence and arrive at a just and reasonable conclusion based on the evidence alone, and not on any fact not admitted in evidence. Nor should resort be had in argument to arouse the passion or prejudice of the jury by matters not properly before them.5
Recently, in Walker v. State, No. 63,019, State’s Motion for Leave to File Motion for Rehearing denied without written opinion on 2/4/81, a conviction was reversed because the State revealed to the jury, in cross examining the accused, a prior conviction for incest, which was properly before the jury, but which involved his daughter. The opinion stressed the fact the jury knew that the daughter, who had testified in that cause where the accused was on trial for the murder of his daughter’s husband, was a child at the time of the incestuous conduct. There, we held the effect of letting the jury know that the victim of the prior conviction had been a child was so prejudicial that it was incurable by an instruction to disregard by the trial court.
I find here, as the Court did in Walker, that argument of counsel for the State was “so clearly calculated to inflame the minds of the jurors and was of such character as to suggest the impossibility of withdrawing the impression produced on their minds,” and that same constitutes reversible error.6
*829A majority of this Court, unfortunately, puts its seal of approval on the above actions of the prosecutor. However, if one reads “the skunk” and then the “striped kitty,” as set out above, there should be absolutely no room for doubt what the prosecutor was attempting to do. And yet, a majority of this panel upholds this conviction, admitting all of the while that “The record fails to disclose that there was evidence of these matters produced at trial.”
Assuming arguendo, that the first effort of the prosecutor to “inform” the jury that the victim of Carter’s previous misconduct had been a “child” was cured by the instruction to disregard, even if there was no basis in fact for this statement, it is clear beyond peradventure that, by arguing that “Johnny” had not spent Christmas with his mother the prosecutor was attempting to place before the jury, indirectly, speculation that what he had been forbidden to draw the jury’s attention to directly.
The majority relies in part for its result upon defense counsel’s failure to press for a ruling upon the specific issue, i. e., whether evidence existed that “Johnny’s” mother was alive at Christmas. While we cannot evaluate from a cold record in what tone and with what expression the court made the remarks quoted, supra, it is clear from this record they were made in a facetious and sarcastic vein. This, in itself, may have been prejudicial to appellant, and this Court should never countenance or condone such pettiness no matter how exasperated a trial judge may get. In this case, the trial court, having correctly refused to allow the prosecutor to introduce a “skunk” into the jury box, and having de-scented that “skunk” by an instruction to disregard, promptly allowed the prosecutor, over objection, to introduce a “striped kitty” to the jury. This constitutes reversible error.
The majority has admitted the argument was wrong, but implies that as the jury did not see fit to grant appellant another probation, then he should not complain and the error is harmless. Is two years in the Dallas County jail less than two years probation? See Lechuga v. State, 532 S.W.2d 581 (Tex.Cr.App., 1976).
It is not for this Court to speculate whether a jury might have given Carter the maximum sentence had they not been told that the victim in the previous case was a child; it is our duty to recognize that the “information” may have had an effect upon the jury, and we should remand this cause so that appellant may obtain a fair trial to which he is entitled.
The obvious questions raise their heads. Why did the prosecutor inject into this case the age of the victim of the prior conviction in the first place? Why did he persist in his argument, giving the name of the victim a new first name that, in the context used, applies to small children?
A close reading of the majority opinion makes no effort to require prosecutors to adhere to what proper jury argument should be, but in fact solicits prosecutors to see how far they can go in making erroneous jury arguments.
I am sorry to say but I find the actions of the prosecutor, in his juiy argument, constitute deliberate prosecutorial misconduct by injecting into the trial harmful and prejudicial facts which were unsworn and not admitted into evidence. I base this upon the fact that nowhere in this record or in the trial court’s records is the age of the victim reflected. The prosecutor was free and at liberty, in our adversary system, to strike hard blows, but he was not at liberty to strike foul ones. He crossed the line from permissible jury argument to impermissible jury argument in my view. He struck foul blows in this cause.
*830Again and in conclusion, as the majority correctly points out, here, unlike Walker v. State, supra, there was no evidence in the hands of the prosecutor, let alone before the court or jury, that the victim had been a child.
I would and do hold that, given the probable impact of the “information” on the minds of an average jury, there is a reasonable probability that the jury’s assessment of punishment would have been different had the argument not been made, see Harrington v. California, 395 U.S. 250, 89 S.Ct. 1726, 23 L.Ed.2d 284 (1969), and I would, therefore, reverse and remand this cause for a new trial.
I respectfully dissent.
. The record reflects that prior to trial the prosecution offered appellant “a $250 fine and probation,” apparently in exchange for a plea, but appellant apparently rejected the offer. See Art. 6701/-1, V.A.T.C.S.
. This conviction was, of course, admissible at the punishment hearing in this cause. See Art. 37.07, V.A.C.C.P.
. All emphasis is supplied throughout hereafter by the writer of this opinion unless otherwise indicated.
. This is the “skunk” mentioned hereafter.
. This is the “striped kitty” mentioned hereafter.
. Attention is also directed to the famous Supreme Court decision of Berger v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 55 S.Ct. 629, 79 L.Ed. 1314 (1935) where Mr. Justice Sutherland discussed the role of the United States Attorney during the trial of a criminal case and his statements are certainly applicable to a prosecutor in our state.
. Not only this Court, but other courts, see United States v. Morris, 568 F.2d 396 (5th Cir. 1978), are continuously plagued with counsel *829for the Sovereign making improper statements in their summations in criminal jury trials. It is the wise prosecutor and defense attorney who subscribe to the admonition that the purpose of summation in jury argument is for the attorney to assist the jury in analyzing, evaluating, and applying the evidence to the law. Likewise, prior to prosecuting a cause, or defending one, counsel for both the State and the defense should read and re-read Volume I, Chapters 3 and 4, of the American Bar Association’s Standards for Criminal Justice, Second Edition, as I, for one, feel it may eliminate such errors as occurred here and may serve as a condition precedent to the accused receiving a fair trial from both advocates.