Legal Research AI

Pennycuff v. State

Court: Indiana Supreme Court
Date filed: 2001-04-18
Citations: 745 N.E.2d 804
Copy Citations
33 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT            ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE

Jodi Kathryn Stein                      Karen M. Freeman-Wilson
Marion County Public Defender     Attorney General of Indiana
Agency
Indianapolis, Indiana
                                        Timothy W. Beam
                                        Deputy Attorney General
                                        Indianapolis, Indiana






                                   IN THE


                          SUPREME COURT OF INDIANA



TERRY PENNYCUFF,                  )
                                        )
      Appellant (Defendant Below),      )  49S02-0104-CR-213
                                        )  in the Supreme Court
                                    v. )
                                       )  49A02-9902-CR-117
STATE OF INDIANA,                       )  in the Court of Appeals
                                        )
      Appellee (Plaintiff Below). )








                    APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT
                   The Honorable Tanya Walton Pratt, Judge
                       Cause No. 49G01-9606-CF-088754



                               April 18, 2001

SHEPARD, Chief Justice.



      A jury found  appellant  Terry  Pennycuff  guilty  on  two  counts  of
incest, three counts of child molesting, and one count of sexual  misconduct
with a minor  for  carrying  on  a  sexual  relationship  with  his  teenage
daughter over a three-year period.  The  Court  of  Appeals  ordered  a  new
trial, holding that  Pennycuff’s  lawyer  was  ineffective  for  failing  to
object to evidence that violated Pennycuff’s rights under Doyle v.  Ohio.[1]
 Pennycuff v. State, 727 N.E.2d 723 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000).

      We conclude that the caselaw points to a different outcome.







                       How Pennycuff’s Trial Unfolded


      The State’s first witness at  trial  was  Pennycuff’s  daughter,  T.P.
(R. at 225.)  T.P. described in detail  numerous  sexual  advances  by,  and
contacts with, her father.  (R. at 227-38,  244-54,  257-58.)   Among  other
things, T.P. accused her father of videotaping and photographing her in  the
nude on two separate occasions.  (R. at 233-34, 246.)   She  testified  that
her father gave her money after some of their  sexual  encounters.   (R.  at
228, 234, 244.)  She also said that some  of  these  incidents  occurred  at
home while her brother was in another room, (R. at  245),  although  no  one
besides herself actually witnessed any of the occurrences.

      T.P. testified that  Pennycuff  had  written  words  and  initials  on
certain pages of a calendar to memorialize some of these incidents.  (R.  at
250-51, 253-54.)   For  example,  she  testified  that  early  on  Christmas
morning in 1995, she had intercourse with her father before  they  woke  her
brother and sister, and that Pennycuff entered an “I”  in  the  calendar  to
document the occurrence.  (R. at 252-53.)

      T.P. explained that she kept  silent  about  her  father’s  misconduct
because he told her she could be jailed for prostitution, and that he  would
kill them both if she spoke.  (R.  at  248-49.)   She  eventually  disclosed
what had been going on because her father,  by  then  divorced  from  T.P.’s
mother, described his new girlfriend’s daughter as  “cute.”   (R.  at  260.)
T.P. became concerned for the safety of that child and  of  her  own  eight-
year-old sister.  (Id.)  T.P. testified that she got along  well  with  this
new girlfriend.   (R.  at  256.)     Regarding  her  relationship  with  her
father, T.P testified:
      Q.    [T.P.], how do you feel about your dad right now?
      A.    I love him.
      Q.    You still love him?
      A.    (No audible answer.)
            THE COURT:  You have to answer yes or no.
        A. Yes.
        Q. Is there any anger?
        A. Yes.
        Q. Why?
        A. Because I want him to pay for what he did to me.  I want him  to
           stop lying.  I wish he’d tell the truth.

(R. at 263.)

      On cross-examination, the defense  methodically  sought  to  undermine
T.P.’s credibility by delving into  T.P’s  relationship  with  each  of  her
parents.  T.P.’s father first had inappropriate sexual contact with  her  in
May 1993.  (R. at  226.)   When  her  parents  separated  in  October  1994,
however, T.P. elected to stay with her  father  (although  her  brother  and
sister lived with their mother) because she  and  her  mother  did  not  get
along and even physically fought at times.  (R.  at  270,  280.)   Appellant
Pennycuff got custody of T.P. and her brother in April 1995, but T.P.  moved
back in with  her  mother  during  the  summer  of  1995  to  avoid  further
molestation by her father.  (R. at 283.)  However,  T.P.,  who  admitted  to
being “rebellious,” (R. at 270), again quarreled with  her  mother,  (R.  at
284-85), and moved back in with her father in  the  fall  of  1995,  (R.  at
286).  Subsequently, T.P.’s relationship with her mother improved,  although
T.P. still did not confide in her mother about the molestation  for  another
month or two.  (R. at 296-97.)

      After establishing this sequence  of  events,  defense  counsel  asked
T.P.,  “During  this  period  of  time—you—you  have  always  kind  of  just
vacillated  between  your  mother  and  father,   whichever—depending   upon
whichever person kind of treated you the best; is that right?”  (R. at  299-
300.)  T.P. replied, “Yes.”  (R. at  300.)    Defense  counsel  went  on  to
establish that four months after T.P.’s accusations, T.P. paged  her  father
because she and her mother were fighting.  (Id.)  T.P. asked her  father  to
come over to her mother’s house where T.P. was staying, which he  did.   She
asked her father to take her home with him, but he declined because  he  was
under a no contact order.   (R. at 301-02.)

      The defense also attacked T.P.’s claim that her father  paid  her  for
sex by eliciting admissions that T.P. helped with housework,  (R.  at  308),
and that he had given her money at times before the molestation  began,  (R.
at 307).

      The State’s next witness was T.P.’s brother, who is a year and a  half
younger than she.  (R. at 225, 323.)  He testified that Pennycuff  sometimes
went into another room with T.P., and ordered the boy to stay in the  living
room.  (R.  at  326-27.)   He  also  testified  that,  although  he  had  no
knowledge of any sexual relationship between Pennycuff and  T.P.,  Pennycuff
had sometimes given T.P. money.  (R. at 327.)

      On cross-examination, the defense sought to elicit testimony from  the
brother that T.P.  disliked  their  father’s  new  fiancée,  Jane,  and  had
threatened  to  ruin  the  planned  wedding.   (R.  at    331.)    The   boy
acknowledged that T.P. had expressed dislike for Jane, but he denied  having
heard T.P. make any such threat.  (Id.)

      The State next called Marion  County  Sheriff’s  Department  Detective
Sergeant Carmie Godan.   (R.  at  333.)   Detective  Godan  testified  about
T.P.’s  demeanor  when  she  gave  her  initial  statement.   (R.  at  336.)
Detective Godan described T.P. as confused and embarrassed,  and  said  that
T.P. blamed herself for  the  relationship.   (Id.)   Godan  also  testified
that, during a search of Pennycuff’s apartment, police  found  the  calendar
that T.P. described.  (R. at 340.)

      On cross-examination, Godan conceded  that  during  their  search  the
police found no videotape or photographs showing T.P.  nude.   (R.  at  355-
56.)  Defense  counsel  also  established  that  Pennycuff  had  no  advance
warning of the search.  (R. at 358.)

      The State then called T.P.’s mother,  who  testified  that  the  night
T.P. disclosed what Pennycuff had done, T.P. was upset and afraid  of  going
to jail.  (R. at 390.)  She said Pennycuff had given  T.P.  money  at  times
and that, when asked, he said he had paid  T.P.  for  helping  with  various
household chores.  (R. at 391-92.)

      On cross-examination, T.P.’s mother admitted that before T.P.  accused
Pennycuff of sexual misconduct, the mother herself had  twice  broached  the
subject of molestation.  (R. at 397-98.)  The first time was during  custody
negotiations, when the mother asked T.P. if her father had ever touched  her
and T.P. responded that the mother was crazy for  asking  such  a  question.
(Id.)  Then, about a year before her divorce, the mother asked T.P.  in  the
presence of a therapist whether there had been  any  molestation,  and  T.P.
said no.  (R. at 398.)

      The State’s final witness was a  psychiatric  social  worker,  (R.  at
405), who testified about T.P.’s demeanor  during  their  meetings,  (R.  at
407), and said that children who are sexually  abused  by  a  family  member
rarely come forward immediately, (R. at 408).

      When the State rested, then,  the  testimony  of  T.P.  stood  as  the
centerpiece of its case.  Pennycuff’s counsel managed  to  plant  the  seeds
for a defense focused on T.P.’s credibility.

      To do this, the defense presented two witnesses:   Pennycuff  and  his
second wife Jane (whom he married the same day  that  he  was  later  served
with the search warrant based upon T.P.’s  accusations).   (R.  at  417-18.)
Jane testified that she and Pennycuff had accelerated  their  wedding  date,
and married in Louisville rather than locally, because of T.P.’s threats  to
ruin the wedding.  (R. at 418-19.)  She also testified about  the  lock  box
in which the calendar was found:
      Q.    And the lock box.  Did [Detective  Godan]  ask  [Pennycuff]  for
           the keys to this box?
      A.    I don’t know if it was her, but one of the  detectives  ask  him
           for the key.
      Q.    Did he cooperate?
      A.    Yes, he did.
      Q.    Give her the keys and everything?
      A.    Yes.
      Q.    All right.
      A.    He told them he had nothing to hide.   That  they  could  search
           his apartment all they wanted to, that he had nothing to hide.

(R. at 421-22.)

      On cross-examination, Jane admitted that she got along well with  T.P.
and that T.P. had never  directly  told  Jane  that  she  disliked  Jane  or
opposed her marriage to Pennycuff.  (R. at 427.)

      Pennycuff then testified, to refute his daughter’s  allegations.   (R.
at 438.)  He began by saying he had  never  been  arrested  prior  to  these
events, and had always maintained employment and supported his family.   (R.
at 440.)  He testified he had paid  his  daughter  for  helping  around  the
house, but never had a sexual relationship with her or  paid  her  for  sex.
(R. at 444.)  Credibility and cooperation were part of Pennycuff’s theme  on
direct examination:
      Q.    The night that the detectives came into your home  and  executed
           a search warrant, that same  day  did  Detective  Godan  take  a
           statement from you?[2]
      A.    Yes, she did.
      Q.    Did she ask you about  any  of  these  allegations  that  you’ve
           heard about at the trial here?
      A.    Yes, she did.  She sat at the table and did a—a little  cassette
           tape.
      Q.    And what did—
      A.    And see if I was going to do one.  And  I  was  having  a  sugar
           attack.[3]  I—I was in and out, kind of,  you  know,  shaky  and
           dizzy.  I had some stuff.  I don’t remember it happening.
      Q.    All right.  But you did cooperate and you did give a  statement;
           is that correct?
      A.    Yes, I did.
      Q.    You had nothing to hide?  You said—
      A.    No, I told her I had nothing to hide in my apartment.
      Q.    And you—and you told her—and you  answered  every  question  she
           asked you; is that correct?
      A.    Yes, I did.
       Q.     What  did—what  did  you   tell   her   that   day   regarding
           whether—whether or not you had any sexual relationship?
      A.    Well she asked me if I’d had sexual relations with my  daughter.
            I told her, no, I didn’t.
      Q.    Did she ask you why she thought—why you  thought  your  daughter
           would—would make these allegations?
      A.    Yes, she did.   Why  would  your  daughter  have  these  charges
           against you if you hadn’t of been doin’ it to her.
      Q.    What did you say?
      A.    And I told her that  the  reason  was  that  she  wanted  to  be
           emancipated and she’d asked me two or three times if  she  could
           be emancipated so she could live with her mother.   And  I  told
           her she can go live with her mother all she wanted,  but  I  had
           custody of her.  If she wanted to be emancipated then I was  the
           one that had to do it if she, you know, wanted out on  her  own.
           And I told her, no, she wasn’t gonna run the streets on her own.
            She wasn’t old enough and she wasn’t workin’.

(R. at 445-46.)  He later testified about an exchange  that  occurred  three
days before T.P. made her accusations:
      [T.P.] said, yes, me and my mother are goin’  to  ruin  your  wedding.
      She said, why should you be happy if you won’t let me go  out  and  be
      happy on my own.  I said, [T.P.], I told you you can go live with your
      mom I said.  And she said, well, she said, you know, more or less that
      she wanted to go live with her mom.  And I told her  she  could.   And
      she said that she just want—wanted to be happy on her own.  She didn’t
      wanna live with her mom.  She said her mom would take her  back  as  a
      roommate and not a daughter.

(R. at 446, 448.)

      Pennycuff’s counsel questioned him about  the  calendar  entries  that
supposedly recorded sexual contacts with  his  daughter.   (R.  at  449-56.)
Pennycuff provided alternative  explanations  for  various  entries.   (Id.)
For example, he explained that the “I”  noted  on  December  25  recorded  a
missed insulin shot.  (R. at 453.)


      The prosecutor took up this topic while cross-examining Pennycuff:
        Q. Detective Godan talked to you and asked you about those initials
           on the calendar; didn’t she?
        A. Ah—I don’t think she did.
        Q. You don’t remember her mention a  calendar  and  ask  you  about
           those initials?
        A. No, they took that stuff and walked out the door with it.
        Q. My question is:  You do not remember Detective Godan . . .
        A. No, I don’t.
        Q. . . . asking you about the initials?
      A.    No, I don’t.
        Q. And you don’t remember her giving you a chance to explain  those
           initials?
        A. No, I don’t.
        Q. And you don’t remember not responding to her at that time?
        A. No.


(R. at 493.)

      After the defense rested, the prosecutor called Detective  Godan  back
to the stand for the following exchange:
        Q. Did you ask the Defendant, Terry Pennycuff, about the calendar?
        A. Yes, I did.
        Q. Did you ask him about the initials?
        A. Yes, I did.
        Q. And how did he respond?
        A. He didn’t give me any response.
        Q. In fact, did you ask him whether or not—told him that  this  was
           his chance to respond?
        A. Yes.
        Q. To that?
        A. Yes, I did.
        Q. And he did not.  No further questions.


(R. at 498-99.)

      The prosecutor spoke about the calendar during  the  rebuttal  portion
of her closing argument:
      Let’s  talk  about  the  calendar  because  that’s  something   that’s
      just—it’s—you’ve  gotta  believe  [the  daughter]  or  the  Defendant.
      You’ve got to choose which one you’re going to believe.  Okay.  Who is
      the more credible witness.  I already talked  about  [the  daughter’s]
      credibility.  Untouchable.  Unbelievable.   You  can’t  get  a  better
      witness than that.  Now let’s talk about the  Defendant.   Let’s  talk
      about what he had time to figure out what those  initials  stood  for.
      He didn’t tell  the  detective  anything  about  it  when  he  had  an
      opportunity to explain it.  He gets up there and he had  overnight  to
      think about it because we introduced some of these things.

(R. at 729.)


      Pennycuff’s attorney did not  object  to  any  of  the  references  to
Pennycuff’s non-responsiveness.

      The actual transcript of the interview  conducted  during  the  search
reveals that Pennycuff gave no verbal response to  five  questions.   (Supp.
R. at 205-08.)   The  first  two  times,  Godan  reacted  “No?   Okay.”  and
continued the questioning.[4]   The  third  time,  when  Godan  asked  “No?”
Pennycuff confirmed “No.”[5]  The last two  times,  Pennycuff  responded  to
Godan’s “No?” with an inaudible response.[6]   The  last  instance  involved
the following exchange:
        Q. Well, also, in there, she says that that book, it has the 49’ers
           on it, that you  would  write  in  there  different  times  with
           different initials when you’d had sex with her.
        A. (No verbal response).[7]
        Q. No?
        A. (Inaudible).
        Q. Okay.  Well, do you have any, anything to say on your behalf  on
           this?
        A. Yeah.  She’s lying just to get out of here.

(Supp. R. at 208.)



                           Post-Trial Proceedings


      After his conviction, Pennycuff filed  a  Belated  Motion  to  Correct
Errors.  (Supp. R. at 61.)  Among other things, he claimed that the  State’s
references to his post-Miranda silence  for  impeachment  purposes  entitled
him to reversal under Doyle.  (Appellant’s Br. at 9, 22.)  The  trial  court
heard evidence and  argument,  then  denied  the  motion  in  all  respects.
(Supp. R. at 146-47, 154.)

      On appeal, the Court of Appeals found  no  fundamental  error,[8]  but
held that Pennycuff’s counsel was ineffective in failing to  object  to  the
references to Pennycuff’s silence.  Pennycuff, 727 N.E.2d at 729.  It  found
a dispositive Doyle violation and ordered a new trial.  Id. at 733-34.   The
State seeks transfer to this Court.


               Standard for Ineffective Assistance of Counsel

      Our  standard  in  evaluating  claims  of  ineffective  assistance  of
counsel is straightforward:
      Reversal for ineffective assistance of counsel is appropriate in cases
      where a defendant shows both that counsel’s performance fell below  an
      objective  standard  of  reasonableness  and   that   said   deficient
      performance so prejudiced defendant as to deprive him of a fair trial.
       Strickland v. Washington (1984), 466 U.S. 668,  104  S.Ct.  2052,  80
      L.Ed.2d 674. . . It shall be strongly presumed that  counsel  rendered
      adequate assistance and made all significant decisions in the exercise
      of reasonable professional judgment.  Judicial scrutiny  of  counsel’s
      performance is highly deferential and should not be exercised  through
      the distortions of hindsight.  Isolated poor  strategy,  inexperience,
      or bad  tactics  do  not  necessarily  amount  to  ineffectiveness  of
      counsel.  If deficient performance of counsel can be proven, defendant
      must further show a reasonable probability that it altered the outcome
      of the case.  Id.


Bellmore v. State, 602 N.E.2d 111, 123 (Ind. 1992) (citations omitted).
      When evaluating ineffectiveness claims, courts must  be  cognizant  of
      the fact  that  “[t]here  are  countless  ways  to  provide  effective
      assistance  in  any  given  case.   Even  the  best  criminal  defense
      attorneys would not defend a  particular  client  in  the  same  way.”
      Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689, 104 S.Ct. at 2065,  80  L.Ed.2d  at  695.
      Accordingly, when appellate courts are considering the claim of actual
      ineffectiveness of counsel, they “must  judge  the  reasonableness  of
      counsel’s challenged conduct on the  facts  of  the  particular  case,
      viewed as of the time of counsel’s conduct.”  Id. at 690, 104 S.Ct. at
      2066, 80 L.Ed.2d at 695.


Thompson v. State, 671 N.E.2d 1165, 1168 (Ind. 1996).

      When the claim is that defense counsel failed  to  object  to  certain
evidence or testimony:
      This Court will not speculate  about  what  may  have  been  the  most
      advantageous strategy in particular cases.  A deliberate  choice  made
      by counsel for some tactical or strategic reason  does  not  establish
      ineffective assistance of counsel.  Owens v. State (1984),  Ind.,  464
      N.E.2d 1277.  Moreover, the decision to forego perfunctory  objections
      having  little  chance  of  success  or  no  direct   or   substantial
      relationship to the main thrust of the defense is within the realm  of
      reasonable trial strategy.  Bevill v. State (1985), Ind.,  472  N.E.2d
      1247.  The appellant must show that counsel’s alleged failure  to  act
      or his choice of strategy harmed the cause.  Kelly  v.  State  (1983),
      Ind., 452  N.E.2d  907.   When  an  ineffective  assistance  claim  is
      predicated on counsel’s failure to interpose an  objection,  appellant
      has the burden to  show  that  a  proper  objection  would  have  been
      sustained by the trial court.   Kimble  v.  State  (1983),  Ind.,  451
      N.E.2d 302.


Hudson v. State, 496 N.E.2d 1286, 1295 (Ind. 1986).


                          The Claim of Cooperation

      The Court of Appeals opinion does not address the  significant  events
at trial that preceded the  prosecutor’s  comments  about  Pennycuff’s  non-
responsiveness.  In response to  his  own  attorney’s  questions  at  trial,
Pennycuff claimed that he had fully cooperated when  he  was  questioned  by
the police during the search.  (R. at 445.)  Only after this  assertion  did
the prosecutor  raise  the  issue  of  Pennycuff’s  failure  to  respond  to
questions about the calendar entries.  (R. at 493.)

      It was perfectly reasonable for Pennycuff’s lawyer to put him  on  the
stand.  Indeed, in light of the victim’s  testimony,  calling  Pennycuff  to
rebut her on the facts and to claim she was  lying  out  of  vengeance,  and
trying to portray Pennycuff as a wronged man who  had  voluntarily  provided
information to the police was about  the  only  sensible  defense.   Because
there were  no  other  witnesses  to  the  alleged  misconduct,  Pennycuff’s
credibility in rebutting his daughter’s accusations was  critical.   Counsel
that performs in  a  reasonably  effective  manner,  evaluated  without  the
distortion of hindsight, passes constitutional muster.  Burr v.  State,  492
N.E.2d 306, 307-08 (Ind. 1986).   Although  the  claim  of  cooperation  did
allow the State to point out that Pennycuff did not respond to the  question
about  the  calendar,  defense  counsel  acted  reasonably   in   portraying
Pennycuff  as  cooperative  and  forthcoming,  and  in  portraying  T.P.  as
manipulative and deceitful.

      Having concluded that this basic trial strategy was  reasonable  under
the circumstances, we  are  led  to  the  question  of  whether  Pennycuff’s
counsel was ineffective in failing to object  to  the  State  references  to
Pennycuff’s  non-responsiveness.   The  basic  message  of  Doyle  is   that
impeachment on the basis of a defendant’s silence  is  fundamentally  unfair
and violates Due Process.  Anderson v. Charles, 447 U.S.  404,  407  (1980).
Miranda warnings inform the accused of  his  right  to  remain  silent,  and
implicitly assure him that his silence will not be used  against  him.   Id.
at 407-08.

      In Doyle, however, the U.S. Supreme Court explicitly  recognized  that
post-arrest silence may be used “to contradict a defendant who testifies  to
an exculpatory version of events and claims to  have  told  the  police  the
same version upon arrest.”  Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S.  610,  619  n.11  (1976)
(citing United States v. Fairchild, 505 F.2d 1378, 1383  (5th  Cir.  1975)).
In Fairchild, the  defendant’s  counsel  elicited  testimony  from  a  state
witness that the defendant had fully cooperated.   Fairchild,  505  F.2d  at
1383.  The court then allowed testimony by another state  witness  that  the
defendant had refused to make  a  statement  following  a  Miranda  warning.
Id. at 1382.  The court held that a criminal defendant’s  silence  following
arrest and warning “is not excluded so that the  defendant  may  freely  and
falsely create the impression that he has cooperated with the  police  when,
in fact, he has not.”  Id. at 1383.   Applying  this  principle,  the  court
determined that “Fairchild opened  the  door  to  a  full  and  not  just  a
selective development of the subject. .  .  .  [O]nce  [the  defendant]  did
broach [the subject of cooperation] the bar was  lowered  and  he  discarded
the shield which the law  had  created  to  protect  him.”   Id.  (citations
omitted).

      Subsequent federal authority continues to recognize  an  exception  to
Doyle for claims of cooperation by a defendant.  See,  e.g.,  United  States
v. Conlin, 551 F.2d 534, 537 (2nd Cir. 1977) (where defendant maintained  he
had spoken throughout the incident  at  issue,  government  was  allowed  to
rebut this assertion with evidence of silence), cert. denied, 434  U.S.  831
(1977); United States v. Allston, 613  F.2d  609,  611-12  (5th  Cir.  1980)
(defendant “opened the door” to cross-examination regarding his  post-arrest
silence, and closing argument questioning why the  defendant  had  not  come
forward with information for a year  carried  the  “lingering  fragrance  of
rebuttal”).

      The Fairchild court explicitly  limited  this  exception,  so  that  a
claim of cooperation does  not  give  a  prosecutor  carte  blanche  to  use
silence as direct evidence of the defendant’s guilt.   Fairchild,  505  F.2d
at 1383.   The  silence  may  be  used  only  to  rebut  the  impression  of
cooperation.   Id.

      The Seventh Circuit discussed this same distinction in  United  States
v. Shue, 766 F.2d 1122 (7th Cir. 1985).  Defendant Shue testified on  direct
examination that he had cooperated by providing fingerprints  and  hair  and
handwriting samples, and by participating in lineups.  Id.  at  1128.   This
created an impression of general cooperation  which,  the  court  held,  the
prosecution was entitled  to  rebut.   On  cross-examination,  however,  the
prosecutor asked Shue four times about his refusal to give  a  statement  to
the authorities.  Shue replied each time that he  had  been  exercising  his
right  to  remain  silent.   Id.   In  closing  argument,   the   prosecutor
emphasized that “[Shue] refused to talk to the FBI,  refused.   And  no  one
ever heard of this preposterous, incredible story of a frame  until  he  hit
the witness stand.”  Id. at  1128-29.   The  court  held  that  given  these
facts, the prosecutor’s use of Shue’s silence was “an obvious  reach  beyond
fair limits to impeach his explanatory story as a recent fabrication.”   Id.
at 1132.

      Here, no such overreaching occurred.  Pennycuff  specifically  claimed
credit not just for general cooperation, but for  having  answered  each  of
Detective Godan’s questions.  (R. at 445.)  The  prosecutor’s  questions  to
Pennycuff and Detective Godan were relevant to  counter  the  defense  claim
that Pennycuff openly  answered  all  queries,  including  those  about  the
calendar  entries.   After  eliciting  testimony  refuting  this  claim  the
prosecutor moved  on  without  belaboring  the  point.   (Id.)   In  closing
argument, the prosecutor referred only briefly  to  Pennycuff’s  failure  to
explain the calendar entries at his  first  opportunity.   These  references
were sufficiently related to Pennycuff’s claim of cooperation to qualify  as
a rebuttal.

      Because  the  State  was  entitled  to  point  out  and  comment  upon
Pennycuff’s non-responsiveness regarding the calendar,  Pennycuff’s  counsel
was not ineffective for failing  to  object.   Applying  the  principles  of
Strickland v. Washington,  466  U.S.  668  (1984),  we  have  held  that  “a
decision to forego perfunctory objections having little  chance  of  success
or no direct or substantial relationship to the main thrust of  the  defense
is within the realm of reasonable trial strategy.”   Hudson  v.  State,  496
N.E.2d 1286, 1294-95 (Ind. 1986).

      The risk that such might occur was simply a modest price  to  pay  for
the benefit of counsel’s larger strategy  of  portraying  his  client  as  a
cooperative fellow who’d been done wrong.


                      What If Pennycuff Wasn’t Silent?

      We have examined  Pennycuff’s  ineffective  assistance  claim  on  the
grounds that he has presented it to us:  his lawyer  failed  to  afford  him
appropriate protection  for  his  having  not  answered  some  of  Detective
Godan’s questions.  As  the  dissent  points  out,  Pennycuff’s  silence  in
response to Detective Godan’s calendar query may be viewed another way.   It
is possible that Pennycuff silently shook his head after the first  question
and then, when prompted  for  an  oral  response,  muttered  unintelligibly.
This reaction is still insolubly ambiguous, because a headshake  might  have
signaled chagrin over learning the  extent  of  the  police’s  knowledge  as
easily as denial.  If the former is true, our  analysis  that  assumes  non-
responsiveness is correct.

      Assuming that  Pennycuff  shook  his  head  in  denial,  however,  the
prosecutor’s reference to the fact that  Pennycuff  had  time  to  think  up
explanations for the suspicious calendar entries would not be  objectionable
under Doyle, because Pennycuff did  not  stand  silent.   If  Pennycuff  did
respond, one thing we know for sure is that his lawyer was  not  ineffective
in failing to protect Pennycuff’s Doyle rights.

       The  question  then   becomes   whether   Pennycuff’s   counsel   was
constitutionally ineffective in failing to correct Detective Godan when  the
detective stated at the trial that Pennycuff gave no response  when  queried
about the calendar.

      Under Strickland, the answer can be  yes  only  if  this  heat-of-the-
battle oversight  was  objectively  unreasonable  when  viewed  without  the
benefit of hindsight, and if there is  a  reasonable  probability  that  the
jury would have changed its verdict had this  clarification  occurred.   The
second prong is dispositive.  We deem it highly  unlikely  that  the  jurors
would  have  changed  their  verdict  had  they  believed   that   Pennycuff
dissembled by shaking his head and then muttering  a  response  rather  than
that Pennycuff failed to answer the question.


              Other Claims of Ineffective Assistance of Counsel

      On appeal, Pennycuff raised three  additional  claims  of  ineffective
assistance of counsel.  The Court of Appeals did not  address  these  issues
because it ordered a retrial  based  on  the  lawyer’s  failure  to  protect
Pennycuff’s Doyle rights.  Because we conclude differently  on  that  issue,
we proceed to address these additional claims.

       The  Therapist’s  Hearsay  Testimony.   Pennycuff  claims  that   his
attorney was ineffective in failing to object  when  T.P.’s  therapist  gave
hearsay testimony, as follows:
        Q. Are you still seeing [T.P.]?
        A. Yes, I am.
        Q. Did she identify who the culpitraitor [sic] was?
        A. Yes, she did.
        Q. What was that?
        A. She stated that it was her father.


(Appellant’s Br. at 19-20, R. at 407.)

      Even assuming that an objection would have been sustained,  a  failure
to object does not constitute  ineffective  assistance  of  counsel  if  the
decision to remain silent “could well have  been  a  strategic  decision  by
counsel.”  Charlton v. State, 702 N.E.2d  1045,  1051  (Ind.  1998)(citation
omitted).    Before   the   therapist   testified,   T.P.   personally   and
unequivocally  testified  that  Pennycuff  repeatedly  molested   her.    In
Bannowsky v. State, 677 N.E.2d 1032, 1035 (Ind. 1997) we recognized  that  a
defense attorney might pass up an opportunity for  an  objection  out  of  a
desire to avoid focusing the jury’s attention on a particular statement.

      Here, Pennycuff correctly asserts that the therapist’s  statement  may
have bolstered T.P.’s credibility to some degree.  The defense attorney  may
well have decided, however, to  let  the  brief  statement  pass  unremarked
rather than to highlight it with even a sustainable objection.  This  course
of action did not exceed the bounds of reasonable performance by  a  lawyer,
so Pennycuff’s claim fails under the first prong of Strickland.

      The X-Rated Stuff.  When the State called Detective Godan  to  testify
about executing the search warrant at Pennycuff’s apartment,  she  explained
that it authorized seizing the calendar, any kind of child pornography,  and
other pertinent items the victim had told police would be in  the  apartment
(like Polaroid pictures of her in the nude).  (R.  at  337,  355.)   Defense
counsel objected to introduction of the whole calendar, and thus only  parts
were admitted.  (R. at 341, 344.)

       On  cross-examination,  counsel  extracted  from  the  detective  her
acknowledgements that much of what the victim had claimed the  police  would
find in the apartment was not there at all.[9]

      Over the prosecutor’s objection, the defense  managed  to  elicit  the
detective’s confirmation that a background  check  revealed  that  Pennycuff
had never been arrested or recorded as involved in any  prior  incidents  of
the  sort  for  which  he  was  on  trial.   (R.  at  356-57.)    Presumably
anticipating the State’s re-direct, counsel asked whether  the  officer  had
found other items, like X-rated videos, magazines, and a  collage  of  movie
stars in various stages of dress.  (R. at 357, 360.)  These were all in  the
apartment on the day of  Pennycuff’s  wedding,  counsel  observed.   (R.  at
357.)  Yes, said the officer.  (Id.)

       On  re-direct,  the  State  offered  up  the  collage,  a  reasonably
inoffensive item, and the defense had  no  objection.   (R.  at  359.)   The
prosecutor  asked  whether  the  detective  drew  any  inferences  from  the
materials about Pennycuff and  pedophilia  based  on  her  experience  as  a
detective in the field.  (R. at 361.)  Defense counsel objected,  more  than
once, to this effort, such that  the  prosecutor  eventually  abandoned  it.
(R. at 361-66.)  The prosecutor moved instead  to  admit  a  magazine  named
Hawk, cover story “Mickey’s such a naughty young girl.”  (R. at  367,  371.)
It bore descriptions such as “Purely 18 – The  Innocent  Babes  You  Crave!”
and “The youngest babes allowed by law!”   (R.  at  371.)   Defense  counsel
forcefully objected.  (R. at 367-68.)  The prosecutor said she was  entitled
to use these to rebut the defense’s suggestion that Pennycuff  was  a  “good
guy” with “no, you  know,  criminal  history.”   (R.  at  368.)   The  court
overruled the objection.  (R. at 369.)

       Pennycuff  contends  his  lawyer  was  ineffective  for  asking   the
detective about the tapes and magazines, (Appellant’s Br. at 14-15), but  it
seems that counsel’s objective was  to  emphasize  that  much  of  what  the
victim had said to the police turned out to be  unverifiable  and  to  blunt
the effect of the videos and collage by noting that Pennycuff did  not  take
any effort to hide them, even from his new wife.  As for Hawk, the  magazine
featuring pubescent girls, counsel worked hard at keeping it  out,  but  the
court saw it as relevant to the charge and  the  general  defense  that  the
victim was lying about Pennycuff’s sexual interest in his young daughter.

      All in all, we are not  persuaded  that  Pennycuff  has  overcome  the
presumption that his lawyer performed reasonably well on this score.

       The  Sexual  Device.   During  direct  examination,  the   prosecutor
questioned T.P. as follows:
      Q.    Now, [T.P.], did your father ever ask  you  to  use  any  sexual
           toys?
      A.    Yes, he did.
      Q.    Do you—tell—tell the jury what he did.
      A.    It was right before the divorce.  He was going through a box  of
           personal items that him and my mother had had.  He pulled out  a
           dildo and asked me if I would be interested in using it.  And  I
           told him no.  I never used it. . . .
      Q.    I’m going to show you  what’s  been  marked  for  identification
           purposes as State’s Exhibit One and ask you to identify this for
           the jury.
      A.    That is the dildo he asked me if I would like to use.

(R. at 236.)    Pennycuff claims ineffective assistance because his  defense
counsel did not object to admission of  the  sexual  device  into  evidence.
(Appellant’s Br. at 17.)

      Pennycuff has not shown that he suffered prejudice over  this  failure
to object.  T.P.’s mother testified that  she  purchased  the  device  while
married to Pennycuff, because Pennycuff experienced  difficulty  getting  an
erection.  (R. at 399.)

       The  introduction  of  the  device  served  to  bolster   Pennycuff’s
arguments,  i.e.  that  he  suffered  from  impotence  and   was   therefore
physically incapable  of  having  done  some  of  the  things  his  daughter
described.   (R.  at  715,  719.)   Nonetheless,  T.P.’s   testimony   about
Pennycuff’s  inappropriate  offer  certainly   painted   Pennycuff   in   an
unflattering light.  We accept Pennycuff’s claim  that  most  lawyers  would
have objected, and that it was error  not  to  do  so.   Pennycuff  has  not
shown, however, that any  damage  outweighed  the  benefit  he  received  in
increased  credibility  regarding  his  claim  of  impotence.   This   claim
therefore fails under the second prong of Strickland.

      A Cumulative Recap.  Errors  by  counsel  that  are  not  individually
sufficient to prove ineffective representation may  add  up  to  ineffective
assistance when viewed cumulatively.  Williams v. State,  508  N.E.2d  1264,
1268 (Ind. 1987) (citation omitted).  Here, however, that is not  the  case.
Defense counsel’s  handling  of  the  issues  related  to  Pennycuff’s  non-
responsiveness  to  the  calendar  question,  to  the  therapist’s   hearsay
testimony, and to the pornography collection all fell within  the  range  of
reasonable trial performance.   Counsel’s  only  error  was  in  failing  to
object to introduction of the sexual device, so our conclusion stands.


                   Differing Reasonable Doubt Instructions

      Pennycuff asks for a  new  trial  because  the  court  gave  different
preliminary and final reasonable doubt instructions,  although  he  concedes
that both were correct statements of law.[10]  (Appellant’s Br. at  6,  25.)
Defense counsel objected to the final  instruction  on  the  basis  that  an
inconsistency might confuse the jury.  (R. at 500-01.)

      We recently dealt with a very similar claim in Albrecht v. State,  737
N.E.2d  719  (Ind.  2000).   In  Albrecht,  the  court  gave  the  same  two
instructions that were given here, but gave both at the same time.   Id.  at
730.


      Albrecht  claimed,  as  Pennycuff  claims,  that  the  combination  of
instructions confused the jury.  Id., (Appellant’s  Br.  at  25.)   We  held
otherwise, noting that “[s]imply because the language  of  the  instructions
differs,  it  does  not  necessarily  follow  that   the   definitions   are
inconsistent  or  conflicting.”   Id.  at  731.   We  found  no   reasonable
likelihood that  the  different  instructions  led  the  jurors  to  convict
Albrecht based upon constitutionally insufficient proof of guilt.  Id.



      The gap in time between the two instructions here does not change  our
conclusion.  Pennycuff  argues  that,  because  different  jurors  may  have
looked to different instructions for guidance, their verdict was  not  truly
unanimous.  (Appellant’s Br.  at  25-26.)   We  disagree.   Each  juror  was
guided solely by correct statements of the law  on  reasonable  doubt.   Due
process does not demand that each  juror’s  subjective  view  of  reasonable
doubt  be  identical.   It  demands  only  that   each   juror   require   a
constitutionally sufficient  quantum  of  evidence  to  convict.   Both  the
instructions at issue meet this test.  Pennycuff’s argument fails.


                                 Conclusion

      We grant the State’s petition to transfer and affirm the  judgment  of
the trial court.

Sullivan and Rucker, JJ., concur.
Dickson, J., dissents with separate opinion.
Boehm, J., dissents with separate opinion, in which          Dickson, J.,
      concurs in Part I.















                                   In The
                            INDIANA SUPREME COURT

                                        )
TERRY PENNYCUFF,                  )
      Defendant-Appellant,              )
                                       )
           v.                           )    49S02-0104-CR-213
                                       )
STATE OF INDIANA,                       )
      Plaintiff-Appellee.                     )
                                        )
              ________________________________________________

                    APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT
                   The Honorable Tanya Walton Pratt, Judge
                       Cause No. 49G01-9906-CF-088754
              ________________________________________________

                           On Petition To Transfer


                               April 18, 2001

DICKSON, Justice, dissenting.

      I agree with the analysis of Justice Boehm in Part I of his
dissenting opinion.  Because these considerations lead me to conclude that
the judgment of the trial court should be reversed, I express no opinion on
the remaining issues.

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT

Jodi Kathryn Stein
Indianapolis, Indiana




ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE

Karen M. Freeman-Wilson
Attorney General of Indiana

Timothy W. Beam
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
__________________________________________________________________


                                   IN THE



                          SUPREME COURT OF INDIANA

__________________________________________________________________

TERRY PENNYCUFF,             )
                                  )     Indiana Supreme Court
      Appellant (Defendant Below), )    Cause No. 49S02-0104-CR-21
                                  )
            v.                    )     Indiana Court of Appeals
                                  )     Cause No. 49A02-9902-CR-117
STATE OF INDIANA,                 )
                                  )
      Appellee (Plaintiff Below).       )
__________________________________________________________________

                    APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT
                   The Honorable Tanya Walton Pratt, Judge
                       Cause No. 49G01-9906-CF-088754
__________________________________________________________________


                           ON PETITION TO TRANSFER

__________________________________________________________________

                                April 18 2001

BOEHM, Justice, dissenting.

      I respectfully dissent and would deny transfer.  I believe  the  Court
of Appeals reached the correct result, although not for the same  reasons  I
would give. I also believe that to the extent the  majority  opinion  offers
guidance in future cases, it sets very dangerous precedents.
                                     I.
      It seems to me that this record  supports  the  claim  of  ineffective
assistance of counsel. The “transcript”  of  Pennycuff’s  kitchen  interview
after Miranda warnings reveals  several  exchanges  with  the  investigating
officer, Detective Godan, along the following lines:
      Q [Godan]: Do you have any idea what [T.P.] is talking about?
      A [Pennycuff]:  (No verbal response)
      Q [Godan]: No? Okay. She’s saying she, started when she was thirteen.
The  prosecution  contended  that  these  “refusals  to   answer”   rebutted
Pennycuff’s claim of cooperation with the  investigation  triggered  by  his
daughter’s allegations.  The defense  made  no  coherent  response  to  this
portrayal of Pennycuff as a liar in his claim at trial  to  have  cooperated
with the investigation.  The Court of Appeals also  viewed  these  exchanges
as refusals to answer, but found them protected by Doyle v. Ohio,  426  U.S.
610 (1976).  The majority  of  this  Court  addresses  the  Doyle  issue  at
length, concluding that Pennycuff’s post-Mirandized silence in  response  to
Detective Godan’s question was admissible  to  rebut  his  claim  of  having
cooperated with the investigation of his daughter’s allegations.
      Assuming Pennycuff did refuse  to  respond  to  Detective  Godan,  the
prosecutor’s use of that refusal is at best dubious under United  States  v.
Shue, 766 F.2d 1122 (7th Cir. 1985), cited by the majority.  That case  held
silence admissible to rebut a claim of cooperation, but  not  admissible  as
evidence of guilt in the charged crime.  See id. at  1132  (“The  government
violated appellant’s right to due process by using his  post-arrest  silence
in an obvious reach beyond fair limits to impeach his explanatory  story  as
a recent fabrication.”).  The latter is what  happened  here.   The  State’s
closing argument included:
      Now let’s talk about the Defendant.  Let’s talk about what he had time
      to figure out what those initials  stood  for.   He  didn’t  tell  the
      detective anything about it when he had an opportunity to explain  it.
      He gets up there and he had overnight to think  about  it  because  we
      introduced some of these things.


The Court of Appeals concluded that failure to raise  the  Doyle  issue  was
ineffective assistance.  Perhaps the majority is  correct  that  this  alone
did not rise to that level, but it gets worse.
      The majority also  acknowledges  that  this  “transcript”  may  simply
reflect nonverbal  negative responses.  It seems to me  the  normal  reading
of this interview is that Pennycuff did answer each of these questions,  and
did so by a negative shake of the head or  other  clear  nonverbal  response
that communicated a negative answer to the questioner.  In  each  case,  the
claimed nonresponse is followed by the questioner’s  apparently  taking  the
nonverbal response as a negative answer, and proceeding  as  if  a  negative
response had been given.  If this had been a  deposition,  the  interrogator
or the reporter would have said something like,  “You  need  to  give  us  a
verbal reply, so the tape can pick this up.”  But this “transcript”  is  not
a reporter’s account of a court proceeding.  It is simply  a  typed  version
of an audio tape recording of an officer interview of the defendant  in  his
home, with  no  one  else  present.   No  one  made  a  demand  for  audible
responses, but it seems fairly clear that Pennycuff was  communicating  with
his questioner.  This is not only my reading of this typewritten account  of
the  tape-recorded  interview.   It  is  precisely  what   the   questioner,
Detective Godan, said under  oath  in  an  affidavit  filed  in  support  of
Pennycuff’s belated motion  to  correct  errors.   Pennycuff  v.  State,  __
N.E.2d __, __ n.7 (Ind. 2001).
      The majority acknowledges that defense  counsel  did  not  raise  this
fairly obvious response to the  charge  that  Pennycuff  was  a  liar.   The
majority concludes that there was no prejudice from  this  exchange  because
the jury could conclude either that Pennycuff had “dissembled”  or  that  he
had refused to answer, both of which place him in a  poor  light.   But  the
majority’s characterization of  “dissembling”  responses  is  not  the  only
alternative  reading  of  this  transcript.   The   point   of   Pennycuff’s
contention is that he did neither.  He claims  he  was  forthright  and  did
respond to the questions.  And he points to the fact  that  Detective  Godan
took his answers as denials.  If so, he was  cooperating,  not  dissembling.
Similarly, his  failure  to  recall  not  responding  to  the  inquiries  is
consistent with his claim that he did in fact respond.  Thus, the  jury  was
presented with a defense that accepted the State’s characterization of  this
exchange as Pennycuff’s refusal to answer.  Pennycuff’s  claim  of  truthful
answers was for the jury to resolve, but it was presented  or  discussed  by
no one.
      If counsel had read this “transcript” as I do,  the  contention  would
not be that there is a Doyle problem.  Rather, the contention would be  that
the State  was  fabricating  a  refusal  to  answer  when  there  was  none.
Accordingly,  the  contention  would  be  that  Pennycuff  was  truthful  in
claiming cooperation with the investigation. And his failure to recall  “not
responding” is explained by the fact that it did not occur.   None  of  this
was pointed out to the jury.  In itself, that may be explained as  a  viable
strategy based on factors not evident from the record.  But I do  not  agree
with the majority when it attributes counsel’s performance  to  a  “heat  of
battle” decision. Long before the trial began  it  must  have  been  obvious
that the transcript was clearly in play and a subject of  dispute.   In  any
event, the direct examination of Detective Godan  plainly  foreshadowed  the
prosecution’s claim in closing argument that Pennycuff was not  forthcoming.

      Minimal preparation by trial counsel  would  have  considered  how  to
handle this issue.  If viewed as nonverbal negative responses,  the  defense
could have presented Pennycuff’s claim  of  cooperation  as  supported,  not
rebutted, by the “transcript,” if not a Doyle violation.  Perhaps  rejection
of that alternative was a tactical call based on counsel’s  assessment  that
the claim to have given nonverbal responses would  not  be  accepted.   But,
for the reasons given by the Court of Appeals, counsel had to choose  either
that route or a Doyle objection, and did neither.

                                     II.

       Regardless of the resolution of the issues raised by the  transcript,
in the context of the other actions of trial counsel,  I  think  ineffective
assistance was demonstrable.  It was defense counsel, not  the  prosecution,
who introduced the “X-Rated Stuff.”  This was after  direct  examination  of
the detective had concluded without mention of the nature of the  literature
seized in Pennycuff’s house.  I think it obvious that possession of some  of
these materials may have prejudiced  some  jurors  against  Pennycuff.   The
majority suggests that  this  subject  was  brought  out  “anticipating  the
State’s redirect.”  I would think that  its  introduction  would  be  highly
improper unless it were itself illegal  material,  which  no  one  seems  to
contend is the case.  There was no need  to  anticipate  an  action  by  the
prosecution that did not occur  on  direct,  should  not  have  occurred  on
redirect, and should not have been allowed by the trial court if it did.
      After defense counsel had opened this subject, the prosecution offered
the September 1996 issue of  “Hawk,”  claiming  to  display,  “The  youngest
babes allowed by law!” to rebut Pennycuff’s claim that he was a law  abiding
citizen.  This publication was not shown to T.P. or involved in any  of  the
alleged incidents.  Taking this magazine’s claim at face value,  it  is  not
illegal.  Even if it contained photos of underage  subjects,  its  relevance
would be at best a marginal call under Evidence Rule 403.   But  it  appears
to contain nothing but photos of adult women.  Whatever one thinks  of  this
publication, it is of the genre openly  displayed  in  many  newsstands  and
other retail outlets.  We claim to  base  our  criminal  justice  system  on
proof of what the defendant  has  done,  not  who  the  defendant  is.   Yet
introduction  of  the  defendant’s  lawful  materials,  however   tasteless,
without tying them to any issue in the case runs the risk of violating  that
basic principle.  The prosecutor’s closing argument played  to  this  theme.
It included the contention that, “What’s strange is that the  Defendant  had
sex with his daughter.  It’s strange that he committed  oral  sex  with  his
daughter.  It’s strange that he’s had barley [sic] legal magazines  that  he
reads.”  (Emphasis added.)  In short, introducing these materials was in  my
view not a defensible  defense  strategy,  and  it  produced  the  erroneous
admission of prejudicial materials.
      The  claim  raised  in  this  appeal  is  ineffective  assistance  for
introducing  this  material  into  the  trial,  not  trial  court  error  in
admitting the one item to which Pennycuff objected.  The State defended  its
admission on the  ground  that  defense  counsel  had  opened  the  door  by
pointing out on cross-examination of  Detective  Godan  that  no  photos  or
videos of T.P. were found in the search and that Pennycuff had  no  criminal
record.  The trial court, in ruling on Pennycuff’s motion to correct  error,
found that it had ruled the materials  admissible  on  that  basis.   In  my
view, if the door was not opened, overruling the objection  was  error,  see
Rafferty v. State, 610 N.E.2d 880, 883 (Ind.  Ct.  App.  1993).    It  seems
debatable that the door was opened  wide  enough  to  permit  salacious  but
irrelevant  material, but the issue is not raised in this  appeal  as  trial
court error.  Rather, it is presented as ineffective assistance for  opening
the door.  I believe Pennycuff has  established  his  claim  of  ineffective
assistance by showing that the defense opened the  door  to  materials  that
would otherwise have been ruled inadmissible.
      Because this case turned substantially on the conflicting testimony of
Pennycuff and T.P., the introduction of  these  materials  was  prejudicial.
As the majority  puts  it,  this  “X-Rated  Stuff”  was  used  to  show  the
defendant’s interest in his own young daughter.  Pennycuff, __ N.E.2d __  at
__.  I think this use violates both prongs of the  balancing  test  required
by Evidence Rule 403.  It is highly prejudicial,  because  many  would  find
this magazine offensive or even, in the prosecutor’s  term,  “strange.”   It
is also irrelevant.  The defendant’s interest  in  photographs  of  somebody
else’s adult daughters is qualitatively different from the  charge  that  he
was having  sex  with  his  own  fourteen  year  old.   In  any  event,  its
appearance  in  this  case  was  instigated  by  defense  counsel  and   was
prejudicial.  I would deny transfer and accept the result of  the  Court  of
Appeals’ decision.


      DICKSON, J., concurs in Part I.

-----------------------
[1] In Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S. 610, 619 (1976), the U.S. Supreme Court  held
that use for impeachment purposes of a defendant’s silence after arrest  and
a Miranda  warning  violates  the  Due  Process  Clause  of  the  Fourteenth
Amendment.
[2] Pennycuff received a Miranda warning and acknowledged it in writing
before this questioning.  (Supp. R. at 51.)
[3] Jane Pennycuff had earlier testified that Pennycuff is diabetic.  (R.
at 415.)
[4] Q.      Okay.  Um, I’m here  because,  like  I  was  saying  that,  your
      daughter, [T.P.] has come in and given me a statement on  things  that
      happened between you and her.  Okay?  Um, she seems very upset.  She’s
      saying a lot of things that happened for the last three years.  Do you
      have any idea what she’s talking about?
      A.    (No verbal response).
      Q.    No?  Okay.  She’s saying she, started  when  she  was  thirteen.
      That, you remember taking any kind of videos of her in a black slip?
      A.    I had a video camera, yeah.  But, no.
      Q.    When  you  lived  over  on  the  other  street  on  Midvail,  or
      something.  You had a basement.
      A.    I had a basement.
      Q.    Um-huh (indicating yes).  She said that you took her down  there
      with the video camera and, in this black slip that her mom got her.
      A.    (No verbal response).
      Q.    No?  Okay.  Um, have you noticed in the last three years or  so,
      that your daughter’s been going to the hospital a lot?  You know why?
      A.    (Inaudible).
      Q.    Why’s she been going?
      A.    Cause she’s having sex.
      Q.    With whom?
      A.    Well, I, I don’t know . . . .
(Supp. R. at 205.)

[5] Q.      Okay.  Have you ever had sex with her?
      A.    No, I haven’t.
      Q.    Okay.  She’s saying that you have for many years.
      A.    (No verbal response)
      Q.    No?
      A.    No.
(Supp. R. at 206.)

[6] The fourth exchange went as follows:
      Q.    Okay.  She’s saying that you did things, you did things  to  her
      in the bunkbeds.  You taught her oral sex and all that stuff.
      A.    (No verbal response).
      Q.    No?
      A.    (Inaudible).
      Q.    And I asked her why that she hadn’t told a long time  ago.   She
      said because you threatened to kill her.
      A.    No.  She tried to kill herself.
(Supp. R. at 206.)

[7] During a hearing on a belated motion to correct error,  Detective  Godan
stated, based upon her follow-up question “No?”,  that  Pennycuff’s  initial
“no response” was almost certainly a negative headshake.  (Supp. R. at  211,
219.)
[8] We summarily affirm the Court of Appeals on this point.  Ind. Appellate
Rule 58(A)(2).
[9]   Q.    Did you find a video tape of him filming her dancing in her
slip?
      A.  No.
(R. at 355.)
[10] The preliminary instruction stated, in pertinent part:

      A reasonable doubt is a fair, actual and logical doubt that arises  in
      your mind after an impartial consideration of  all  the  evidence  and
      circumstances in the case.  It should be a doubt based upon reason and
      common sense and not a doubt based upon imagination or speculation.


      To prove the defendant’s guilt of the elements of  the  crime  charged
      beyond a reasonable doubt, the evidence must be  such  that  it  would
      convince you of the truth of it, to such a degree  of  certainty  that
      you would feel safe to act upon such conviction without hesitation, in
      a matter of the highest concern and importance to you.

(R. at 92.)  The final instruction stated:

      The State has the burden of proving  the  Defendant  guilty  beyond  a
      reasonable doubt.  Some of you may have  served  as  jurors  in  civil
      cases, where you were told that it is only necessary to prove  that  a
      fact is more likely true  than  not  true.   In  criminal  cases,  the
      State’s proof must be more powerful than that.  It must  be  beyond  a
      reasonable doubt.


      Proof beyond a reasonable  doubt  is  proof  that  leaves  you  firmly
      convinced of the defendant’s guilt.  There are very few things in this
      world that we know with absolute certainty, and in criminal cases, the
      law does not require proof that overcomes every possible  doubt.   If,
      based  upon  your  consideration  of  the  evidence,  you  are  firmly
      convinced that the Defendant is guilty  of  the  crimes  charged,  you
      should find him guilty.  If, on the other hand, you think there  is  a
      real possibility that he is  not  guilty,  you  should  give  him  the
      benefit of the doubt and find him not guilty.

(R. at 131.)  In Winegeart v. State, 665 N.E.2d 893, 902 (Ind. 1996), a
majority of this Court expressed a preference for the latter instruction.
However, acknowledging the differences of opinion within the Court, we
specifically declined to require the latter.  Id.