STATE OF MISSOURI,                            )
                                              )
       Plaintiff-Respondent,                  )
                                              )
vs.                                           )               No. SD33339
                                              )
ROMMEL R. NEWTON,                             )               Filed: August 4, 2015
                                              )
       Defendant-Appellant.                   )

          APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF DUNKLIN COUNTY

                        Honorable Joe Z. Satterfield, Special Judge

AFFIRMED

       A jury found Rommel R. Newton (“Defendant”) guilty of two counts of

distributing marijuana, and the trial court sentenced Defendant as a persistent drug

offender to fifteen years in the Department of Corrections. Defendant appeals and, in two

points, claims that the trial court abused its discretion (1) in denying Defendant’s request

to cross-examine a confidential informant as to the informant’s bias in favor of the State

arising from a municipal domestic assault charge that had been dismissed as a result of

the informant working as an informant before the offenses charged in this case occurred;

and (2) in prohibiting Defendant from asking any questions during voir dire about

Defendant not testifying. Although we agree that the trial court may have abused its



                                             1
discretion in both instances, we deny Defendant’s points and affirm because the State

convinces us the trial court’s error raised in Defendant’s first point was harmless beyond

a reasonable doubt, and Defendant fails to convince us there is a real probability he was

prejudiced by the trial court’s error raised in Defendant’s second point.

                                    Standard of Review

                                            Point I

       We review a trial court’s decision to exclude evidence for abuse of discretion and

resulting prejudice. See State v. Wolfe, 344 S.W.3d 822, 837 (Mo.App. S.D. 2011); State

v. Mason, 95 S.W.3d 206, 211 (Mo.App. S.D. 2003); State v. Barriner, 111 S.W.3d 396,

401 n.4 (Mo. banc 2003). “A trial court abuses its discretion in excluding evidence if its

decision shocks the sense of justice or indicates an absence of careful consideration.”

Wolfe, 344 S.W.3d at 837; see also State v. Robinson, 90 S.W.3d 547, 550 (Mo.App.

S.D. 2002) (“Such abuse of discretion occurs when the trial court’s evidentiary ruling is

clearly against the logic of the circumstances before the court, and is so unreasonable and

arbitrary that it shocks the sense of justice and indicates a lack of careful deliberate

consideration.”). A trial court does not abuse its discretion when it excludes evidence

that is merely cumulative to other admitted evidence. Wolfe, 344 S.W.3d at 837; Mason,

95 S.W.3d at 211.

       Trial court error in excluding admissible evidence in a criminal case creates a

rebuttable presumption of prejudice. See State v. Hopper, 315 S.W.3d 361, 367

(Mo.App. S.D. 2010); Barriner, 111 S.W.3d at 401. When the error was preserved, the

State must show the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt to rebut the




                                               2
presumption of prejudice. See Hopper, 315 S.W.3d at 367; State v. Sanders, 126 S.W.3d

5, 23 (Mo.App. W.D. 2003).

                                                Point II

        As our high court has observed:

                “A defendant is entitled to a fair and impartial jury.” State v.
        Oates, 12 S.W.3d 307, 310 (Mo. banc 2000). While a “necessary
        component of a guarantee for an impartial jury is an adequate voir dire
        that identifies unqualified jurors[,] . . . the trial judge is vested with the
        discretion to judge the appropriateness of specific questions, and is
        generally vested with wide discretion in the conduct of voir dire.” Id.
        “The judge is in the best position to determine whether a disclosure of
        facts on voir dire sufficiently assures the defendant of an impartial jury
        without at the same time amounting to a prejudicial presentation of the
        evidence.” Id. at 310–11 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
        Because rulings by the trial court are reviewed only for an abuse of
        discretion and “[a]n appellate court will find reversible error only where
        an abuse of discretion is found and the defendant can demonstrate
        prejudice,” [the defendant] “has the burden of showing a ‘real probability’
        that he was prejudiced by the [alleged] abuse.” Id. at 311.

State v. Baumruk, 280 S.W.3d 600, 614 (Mo. banc 2009).

                                  Facts and Procedural History

        Defendant was charged by amended information with (1) distribution of more

than five grams of marijuana on October 27, 2011, in Count I, and (2) sale of more than

five grams of marijuana on December 6, 2011, in Count II.1 The amended information

also alleged that Defendant was a persistent drug offender. Defendant initially was

arrested on the offense charged in Count I in August 2012.

        In a pretrial conference on July 22, 2013, prosecutors represented that a

confidential informant had no record of any arrests other than arrests that led to disclosed


1
 The amended information was filed on the morning of trial, and charged Defendant with “distribution” of
more than five grams of marijuana in Count I and “sale” of more than five grams of marijuana in Count II;
however, the verdict directors given to the jury and the jury’s verdicts phrased both counts as charging
distribution.


                                                    3
convictions. A prosecutor subsequently acknowledged that the confidential informant

was arrested for an alleged violation of a municipal ordinance – a “traffic offense” for

which the statute of limitations had run.

       At the pretrial conference, the trial court also reviewed its voir dire practice with

counsel and stated:

       I go back through this, again, about if Defendant would not testify, then --
       I believe they’re asked the question -- or the State -- or the State can ask it
       or [defense counsel] can ask it, but phrased in a way that I don’t get 60
       hands up in the air, which, basically, my understanding is that -- basically,
       what I do is, certain everybody understands, they’re advised he has a right
       not to testify and that that can’t be used against him, it’s his constitutional
       right. And that if he requests it, I would provide an instruction to that
       effect and read that instruction to them and ask if there’s anybody that
       cannot or would not follow that instruction, and that’s the end of the
       inquiry.

               ....

       I certainly have no problem if [defense counsel] ask[s] that question and
       ask[s] if they can follow that instruction, but I’ve got into things before
       where the attorney will say, well, would anybody hold it against him if he
       didn’t testify. And that’s not the test.

               ....

       I think it’s detrimental to the Defendant, myself, to start in on those
       explorations, because this is going to get down to, no matter what -- where
       you go, I’m going to read an instruction at the end and I’m going to say,
       “Is there anyone here who can’t follow that instruction?” And if nobody
       raises their hands, they’re in. So I try to avoid that, because I really think
       it’s to the benefit of the Defendant not to start opening that gate if that’s
       where it’s going to end. And that’s where it’s going to end because I think
       that’s what the law is.

               ....

              If they say they can follow the instruction, that’s the end of
       everything. They are -- They are qualified at that point.

               ....




                                             4
       I think [defense counsel] can inquire. And I want [defense counsel] to
       inquire if you want to.

               ....

              But I will approve -- I will have to approve the question, because
       I’m not going to get into questions such as . . . how many in here think the
       defendant should testify? That’s not the -- That’s not the standard.

               ....

               That’s the end of the inquiry if they say they can follow it.

               ....

               If they say they can’t follow it, then I’m going -- I’m not going to
       allow them to be on the jury, they’ll be stricken for cause, I mean, if they
       raise their hand at all.

Defense counsel and the trial court then had the following exchange:

               [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Okay. Well, I guess my only concern
       would be -- in a situation such as that one would be whether a potential
       jury could possibly – you know, with some inquiry -- some further
       inquiry, we might get to the bottom of where they realize that they can’t
       follow that instruction. Do you understand what I’m trying to say?
               THE COURT: I understand what you’re trying to say. But you
       open a whole boatload of stuff when you do that; and, no, you won’t do
       that in my court.

       On the morning of trial on March 31, 2014, before the commencement of voir

dire, the following occurred. The trial court found Defendant to be a prior and persistent

drug offender based on Defendant’s two prior felony convictions for drug violations (the

guilty pleas were in 2007). Defense counsel further stipulated that Defendant was the

“sole resident” of the residence at 643 Goldsmith in Malden. The stipulation

subsequently was reduced to writing at the pretrial conference.

       In response to a prosecutor’s request that defense counsel “be restrained from

asking in voir dire about any opinions as far as the Defendant not being allowed to




                                             5
testify” and defense counsel’s statement that “in every trial I’ve ever done there’s

invariably somebody that has said that they will hold that against them no matter what the

instructions given by the Court,” the trial court stated:

               Somewhat to my surprise in recently looking at this issue, I have
       found the statute and the Court rule that [the prosecutor is] referring to and
       several recent cases that says it is absolutely not allowed, even in voir dire,
       for years me thinking just the opposite. But I do not believe it is allowed
       and there’s some of the cases talk about it’s reversible error to allow it.
               So I am not going to allow any questions from the State or the
       Defendant -- defense concerning whether the Defendant will or will not
       testify. And certainly if he doesn’t testify, I will submit the appropriate
       instruction if the Defendant requests that.

At the trial court’s suggestion, defense counsel stated for the record that he would like to

ask “the jurors their views on the issue of the Defendant not testifying and whether or not

any of those jurors would hold that against him.” The trial court granted defense

counsel’s request for a continuing objection to the trial court’s ruling denying him the

right “to examine the panel on this issue of Defendants right not to testify.”

       At the beginning of voir dire, the trial court instructed the venirepersons that

“there are issues of fact that must be decided by a jury, subject to instructions concerning

the law which the Court will give to the jury. The jury is obligated to follow those

instructions.” The trial court further instructed the venirepersons that:

               It is your duty to follow the law as the Court gives it to you in the
       instructions even though you may disagree with it.
               Are there any of you who would not be willing to follow all
       instructions which the Court will give to the jury? If so, would you please
       raise your right hand at this time? The record will reflect that no hands
       were raised.

       In discussing the use of confidential informants with the venirepersons, a

prosecuting attorney told the venirepersons “[m]any times those informants have

previously been arrested or convicted of crimes and sometimes serious ones.”



                                              6
        Immediately after opening statements, the trial court told the jury:

               The parties have stipulated that the residence located at 643
        Goldsmith, Malden, Missouri, was the residence of the Defendant, Mr.
        Newton, and that he was the sole occupant of that location and that he had
        exclusive control of those premises on the dates of October 27, 2011 and
        December the 6th of 2011.

        At issue is the limitation of cross examination of Ben Handy. Handy, a

confidential informant for the Southeast Missouri Drug Task Force, testified as follows.

Handy (1) was paid to work as a confidential informant, (2) had no charges pending

against him “at the end of 2011,” and (3) was found guilty of statutory rape in the first

degree in 2000 and of involuntary manslaughter in 2007 and served “time” on both

offenses. Handy had known Defendant for “over ten years,” and knew him before he

started working as a confidential informant.

        A little after noon on October 27, 2011, Handy purchased three ounces of

marijuana from Defendant at Defendant’s home at 643 Goldsmith in Malden with money

Handy had received from law enforcement.2 Handy paid Defendant $200 for the

marijuana. The sale was recorded by an audio-video recorder. The recording is very

unclear, but at most shows a black male talking with Handy, with many of the views of

the black male being reflections in a mirror.

        Shortly after 5:30 p.m. on December 6, 2011, when it already was dark outside,

Handy purchased one ounce of marijuana from Defendant outside Defendant’s home at

643 Goldsmith, again with money Handy had received from law enforcement.3 Handy



2
 The State Highway Patrol crime laboratory determined the marijuana weighed 75.86 grams, which is
approximately 2 and ½ ounces.
3
  The State Highway Patrol crime laboratory determined the marijuana weighed 26.55 grams, which is a
little less than one ounce.



                                                   7
paid Defendant $75 for the marijuana. Handy’s purchase and the events leading up to the

purchase were again recorded by an audio-video recorder. The recording does not show

an identifiable image of the person who sold the marijuana to Handy,4 but Handy does

indicate he is on “Goldsmith” street at least twice, states “643” on multiple occasions and

states “643 Goldsmith” on another occasion. When Handy knocks on the door, an

individual inside the home asks Handy to “hit [or take] a block, come back.” Handy

understood this request to mean that Handy should leave and return a short time later.

Handy did so and, when he returned, purchased the marijuana outside Defendant’s home.

Because it was dark, very little of the actual sale was visible on the recording.

        Handy identified Defendant in court as the person from whom he purchased the

marijuana on October 27 and December 6, 2011.

        In a bench conference immediately following Handy’s direct examination,

defense counsel requested permission to cross-examine Handy on a Malden municipal

charge of domestic assault against Handy that had been dismissed prior to Handy’s

purchases of marijuana from Defendant. Defense counsel argued that Handy:

        has like a guillotine, if you will, hanging over head that because of these
        assault charges that the Prosecutor can file if he doesn’t make something
        happen doing these drug buys, and it is a motive for him to buy or
        exaggerate or to fabricate or to do anything, I think that’s absolutely fair
        cross-examination.

The trial court ultimately denied defense counsel’s request because Handy “testified he

was not placed on any charges at the time of these alleged buys, it is a municipal

violation, he’s also testified that he was being paid to make these buys.”

        In an offer of proof, defense counsel stated:

4
 The State incorrectly asserts in its brief that the recording shows Defendant’s face. The recording does
not show Defendant’s face, but may show the face of a person who was completely unrelated to Defendant
based on the recording and the transcript of the trial.


                                                    8
                Were Mr. Handy allowed to testify before the jury, during my
        cross-examination I would elicit from him . . . that at the time that the
        police -- prior to ever doing anything in the case of State versus Rommel
        Newton, he had pending charges of domestic assault. And that those
        charges could have resulted in more serious charges. That they could have
        been picked up by the State in this matter and charged as felonies, he
        could have gone to prison for those charges.

In addition, portions of Handy’s pretrial deposition were read into the record. In the

deposition, Handy acknowledged that charges against him were dropped, but noted “[i]t

wasn’t this case. I got my case dropped. I got paid on this case,” and stated that he did

not have any pending charges “at the time of [Defendant].” Handy further stated in the

deposition “I thought [the domestic assault charges] were cleared up on the previous one.

Okay. That’s what I thought. I’m not saying they was. That’s what I thought.” The trial

court refused to permit defense counsel to ask Handy additional questions related to the

offer of proof. Later in the trial after the State rested, the parties, as part of an offer of

proof, entered a stipulation similar to Handy’s pretrial deposition. The trial court also

permitted Southeast Missouri Drug Task Force officer Ron Meredith to be questioned at

that time as part of the offer of proof. Officer Ron Meredith added the following

information. Officer Meredith began working with Handy “in the middle of 2011,” and

Officer Meredith “did not believe there would be any charges pending or worked off, that

those were covered by another agent of the Task Force at that time.” Officer Meredith

also stated that a confidential informant either “work[s] off charges” or is “paid” but not

both. Additional facts will be discussed in the context of the points relied on.

        In closing argument, defense counsel stated “we’re not arguing with the fact that

drugs were sold. . . . Drugs were sold. The only question is who. Who sold drugs that

day.”




                                                9
       The jury found Defendant guilty of distributing more than 5 grams of marijuana

on October 27, 2011, and on December 6, 2011.

       As a persistent drug offender, Defendant’s range of punishment for each offense

was “not less than 10 years and not to exceed 30 years, or life imprisonment” “without

probation or parole.” At the time of sentencing and of the offenses in this case,

Defendant was on parole from a thirteen-year sentence imposed in 2007 for “drug

trafficking.” The trial court sentenced Defendant to fifteen years in the Department of

Corrections for each offense with the sentences to run concurrently with each other and

with his 2007 sentence.

                                          Analysis

                                           Point I

       In his first point, Defendant asserts that the trial court abused its discretion in

denying Defendant’s request to cross-examine Ben Handy, a confidential informant,

“about a [municipal] domestic assault charge that had been dismissed as a result of

[Handy] working as a[n] . . . informant” before the offenses charged in this case occurred

in that Defendant should have been permitted “to inquire about [Handy’s] bias” in favor

of the State and the trial court’s denial of the inquiry prejudiced Defendant.

       A “commonly recognized method[] of impeaching a witness” is “admission of

evidence of the witness’s bias, interest or prejudice[.]” Mitchell v. Kardesch, 313

S.W.3d 667, 675 (Mo. banc 2010). Subject to the trial court’s discretion to “limit[] or, in

rare instances, preclud[e] such evidence entirely so as to avoid undue prejudice,” a

witness can be cross-examined about any matter that shows the witness’ bias, interest or




                                              10
prejudice in the proceeding, and extrinsic evidence can be introduced to show the bias,

interest or prejudice even when the witness admits the matter. Id. at 676, 679, 680-82.

        These principles form the foundation for the rule that evidence of a witness’

“arrests and pending charges not previously resulting in conviction” is admissible “where

the inquiry shows a specific interest of the witness, a possible motivation of the witness

to testify favorably for the government, or where testimony was given in the expectation

of leniency.” State v. Joiner, 823 S.W.2d 50, 52-53 (Mo.App. E.D. 1991) (emphasis in

original). Although Joiner involved pending charges against a witness being prosecuted

by the same office that was prosecuting the defendant, Id. at 52,5 the Eastern District of

this Court’s discussion of the Supreme Court of the United States’ decision in Delaware

v. Van Arsdall, 475 U.S. 673 (1986), and the general principles set forth above indicate

that the same analysis should apply to a previously dismissed charge where the jury

reasonably could find that the dismissal gave the witness a motive to favor the

prosecution. Id. at 54, 53-54.

        In this case, on the basis of defense counsel’s offer of proof, the municipal

prosecuting authority dismissed the charge in exchange for Handy’s agreement to “work

off” the charge by acting as a confidential informant. Handy “thought,” but was not sure,

the charge had been “cleared up” before he first bought marijuana from Defendant.

Handy was paid for his work as a confidential informant in Defendant’s case. Handy

worked off the dismissed charge no more than a few months before he first bought

marijuana from Defendant, and the prosecuting authority who was prosecuting Defendant

could have refiled the dismissed municipal charge as a felony for which Handy “could

5
  See also State v. Thomas, 118 S.W.3d 686, 690 (Mo.App. W.D. 2003) (“The court may not ‘wholly
exclude’ evidence of pending charges against a witness brought in the name of the same prosecutor.”
(internal citation omitted)).


                                                   11
have gone to prison” if he were found guilty. Although the jury was informed that law

enforcement paid Handy for his work as a confidential informant in Defendant’s case, the

trial court prohibited all inquiry before the jury about the dismissal of a municipal charge

in exchange for Handy’s agreement to work as a confidential informant a short time

before Handy’s work in Defendant’s case. The jury reasonably could have viewed

Handy’s potential loss of liberty as a more significant incentive to testify favorably to the

State than mere money. In these circumstances, the trial court abused its discretion in

precluding any inquiry about the dismissal of the municipal charge in exchange for

Handy’s work as a confidential informant.

       The State refers us to State v. Watts, 813 S.W.2d 940 (Mo.App. E.D. 1991) and

our opinion in State v. Moore, 252 S.W.3d 272 (Mo.App. S.D. 2008) as support for the

trial court’s prohibition. In Watts, the trial court prohibited defense counsel from cross-

examining the arresting officer-witness about the dismissal of a criminal charge against

the officer because “[t]here was no nexus between” the dismissal and the officer’s trial

testimony sufficient to permit the introduction of the dismissal as evidence of bias.

Watts, 813 S.W.2d at 943. In addition the speculative possibility of future prosecution

was insufficient to establish the required nexus. Id. In this case, Handy was “working

off” the dismissed charge no more than a few months before he first bought marijuana

from Defendant, and, though Handy thought he had “cleared up” the dismissed charge

when he first bought marijuana from Defendant, Handy was not sure. In these

circumstances, the possibility of future prosecution was not too speculative and the jury

reasonably could have found these facts gave Handy a motive or incentive to favor the

prosecution.




                                             12
       In Moore, the trial court permitted the jury to be informed of an accomplice-

witness’ plea agreement for crimes arising out of the incident at issue in the defendant’s

trial, but prohibited defense counsel from inquiring about unrelated charges pending

against the accomplice-witness in the same county. Moore, 252 S.W.3d at 275, 276 n.5.

We declined plain error review because Moore failed to demonstrate “any error, plain or

otherwise.” Id. at 276. In so holding, we noted that Moore neglected to establish that the

accomplice-witness perceived a benefit or detriment from his testimony with respect to

the unrelated pending charges. Id. at 276-77. We also noted that the trial court permitted

a full inquiry into the accomplice-witness’ bias based on his plea agreement in the

underlying criminal proceeding with the result that the trial court permissibly limited

rather than impermissibly foreclosed evidence of the accomplice-witness’ bias. Id. at

277-78. Although it would be a best practice to allow cross examination in close calls on

questions of bias and, assuming without deciding, that the court erred in excluding the

proposed testimony, we are convinced that any such error was harmless beyond a

reasonable doubt because, in this case, the offer of proof suggested a direct connection

between the dismissal of Handy’s municipal charge and his work as a confidential

informant and that, though Handy thought the dismissed charge had been “cleared up”

before he first bought marijuana from Defendant, he was not sure. It further appeared

that the dismissed charge had been “worked off” not more than a few months before

Handy first bought marijuana from Defendant. The jury reasonably could have found

that Handy perceived a risk of future prosecution based on his testimony at trial. And,

the exclusion of the most significant evidence of bias (i.e., Handy’s potential loss of

liberty) is an impermissible limitation on evidence of bias and an abuse of discretion that




                                             13
is not cured by permitting much less significant evidence of bias in the form of payment

of money.

       Although we conclude that the trial court erred, we reject Defendant’s first point

because the State convinces us the trial court’s error was harmless beyond a reasonable

doubt. Aside from Handy’s testimony, Defendant stipulated that 643 Goldsmith was his

residence, and he was the sole occupant and had exclusive control of his residence on the

dates of the marijuana sales at issue. A Malden police officer testified that he visited

Defendant at 643 Goldsmith, and that the residence depicted on the recording of the

October 27, 2011 marijuana sale was 643 Goldsmith. A task force officer testified that

he saw Handy pull into a driveway on Goldsmith during the October 27, 2011 marijuana

sale. The Malden police officer also testified that he recognized the voice of the person

“doing the majority of the speaking” on the recording of that sale as Defendant’s voice.

       On the recording of the December 6, 2011 sale of marijuana, Handy states he is

on “Goldsmith” at least twice, states “643” on multiple occasions and states “643

Goldsmith” on another occasion. In addition, two task force officers followed Handy to

the “600-block of Goldsmith.”

       Finally, although insufficient to cure the trial court’s error, there was some

evidence of Handy’s bias in favor of the prosecution (i.e., he was paid for his work as a

confidential informant with Defendant), and the jury was informed of Handy’s two prior

convictions for statutory rape and involuntary manslaughter.

       In these circumstances, the trial court’s error was harmless beyond a reasonable

doubt. Defendant’s first point is denied.




                                             14
                                           Point II

         In his second point, Defendant claims the trial court abused its discretion “in

prohibiting [Defendant] from asking any questions during voir dire about [Defendant] not

testifying” in that Defendant “was entitled to ask the venire panel questions in order to

ensure that they would follow the law regarding the critical issue of him not testifying

and to draw no negative inferences from his failure to do so.” We agree the trial court

abused its discretion, but deny this point because Defendant fails to convince us there is a

real probability he was prejudiced by the trial court’s error.

         As we observed in State v. Hohensee, 353 S.W.3d 445, 447-48 (Mo.App. S.D.

2011):

                 Defendant argues that the foregoing general rule should not be
         applied because § 546.270 and Rule 27.05 prohibit “any attorney in the
         case” from commenting on the defendant’s failure to testify. As applied to
         the facts before us, that argument has no merit. Based upon our review of
         the record, it is evident that defense counsel made this neutral, prefatory
         remark as part of his voir dire examination to determine whether members
         of the venire could follow MAI–CR 3d 308.14, if that instruction were
         given. In that regard, the following quotation from State v. Cokes, 682
         S.W.2d 59 (Mo.App.1984), is instructive:

                It seems clear that appellant was entitled to have selected a
                fair and impartial jury, and therefore would be entitled to
                inquire at that point, on voir dire, whether any panel
                member would be prejudiced by appellant’s failure to
                testify, or whether they would follow an instruction of the
                court on the subject. To have empanelled a fair and
                impartial jury was appellant’s first right, or conjunctively to
                that was his right to have no adverse presumption or
                inference drawn by the jury by his failure to testify. He
                was entitled to both rights so as to reduce a possible jury
                reaction to lessen the state’s burden to prove his guilt
                beyond a reasonable doubt because of his failure to testify.

         Id. at 61–62. Several reported decisions record instances in which similar
         voir dire questions resulted in venirepersons being stricken for cause after
         stating that they would not be able to follow such an instruction. See, e.g.,



                                              15
       State v. Garrison, 292 S.W.3d 555, 557–58 (Mo.App.2009); State v.
       Chaddock, 280 S.W.3d 164, 166–67 (Mo.App.2009). Permitting defense
       counsel to ask panel members in voir dire whether they will draw an
       adverse inference if the defendant fails to testify is essential in order for a
       defendant to effectively exercise his or her right not to be compelled to
       testify. See State v. Clement, 2 S.W.3d 156, 159–60 (Mo.App.1999).
       Whether to engage in such voir dire and how it should be done are matters
       of trial strategy for defense counsel to decide. See, e.g., State v. Wright,
       978 S.W.2d 495, 500 (Mo.App.1998); State v. Hamilton, 871 S.W.2d 31,
       33–34 (Mo.App.1993).

By prohibiting defense counsel from conducting any examination of the venirepersons to

determine whether any of them would draw an adverse inference if Defendant failed to

testify and if they would follow an instruction on the subject, the trial abused its

discretion. However, Defendant fails to convince us that there is a real probability he

was prejudiced by the trial court’s error.

       The trial court did tell the venirepersons generally that:

               It is your duty to follow the law as the Court gives it to you in the
       instructions even though you may disagree with it.
               Are there any of you who would not be willing to follow all
       instructions which the Court will give to the jury? If so, would you please
       raise your right hand at this time? The record will reflect that no hands
       were raised.

And, there is nothing in the record that suggests any juror declined to follow the trial

court’s specific instruction on the subject of Defendant’s right not to testify that was

included in the trial court’s written instructions to the jury. Finally, as explained in our

discussion of Defendant’s first point, the evidence in this case was strong. In light of

these facts, Defendant fails to convince us there is a real probability he was prejudiced by

the trial court’s error. Defendant’s second point is denied.

       The trial court’s judgment is affirmed.




                                              16
Nancy Steffen Rahmeyer, J. - Opinion Author

Don E. Burrell, P.J. - Concurs

William W. Francis, Jr., J. - Concurs




                                        17
