BARNES, Judge.
Stacey Huddleston, Jr., appeals the denial of his petition for post-conviction relief ("PCR petition"), which challenged his conviction for murder. We reverse and remand.
Huddleston raises two issues, one of which we find dispositive: whether Huddleston's guilty plea to murder was invalid because he simultaneously protested his innocence.
The evidence, as elicited at Huddleston's guilty plea hearing, was recounted as follows by this court in Huddleston's direct appeal:
Huddleston v. State, No. 20A04-0603-CR-107, slip op. pp. 2-3 (Ind. Ct.App. June 23, 2006).
At the conclusion of the factual basis questioning, the following transpired:
Id. at 62-63.
Before accepting Huddleston's guilty plea, the trial court questioned him further:
Id. at 68-69. The trial court then accepted Huddleston's plea, and subsequently sentenced him to fifty years. This court affirmed the sentence on direct appeal.
On March 5, 2010, Huddleston filed a PCR petition and indicated that he wished to proceed pro se. The petition alleged that Huddleston's plea was not entered knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily, and that his trial counsel had been ineffective. After conducting a hearing, the PCR court denied Huddleston's petition on December 6, 2010. Huddleston now appeals.
Post-conviction proceedings provide defendants the opportunity to raise issues not known or available at the time of the original trial or direct appeal. Stephenson v. State, 864 N.E.2d 1022, 1028 (Ind.2007), cert. denied. "In post-conviction proceedings, the defendant bears the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence." Id. We review factual findings of a post-conviction court under a "clearly erroneous" standard but do not defer to any legal conclusions. Id. We will not reweigh the evidence or judge the credibility of the witnesses and will examine only the probative evidence and reasonable inferences therefrom that support the decision of the post-conviction court. Id. Additionally, the PCR court here entered findings of fact and conclusions thereon, as required by Indiana Post-Conviction Rule 1(6). We cannot affirm the judgment on any legal basis, but rather, must determine if the court's findings are sufficient to support the judgment. Lile v. State, 671 N.E.2d 1190, 1192 (Ind.Ct.App.1996).
Huddleston contends that his plea was not knowingly, intelligently, or voluntarily entered. Specifically, he contends that by insisting during the guilty plea factual basis hearing that he did not know or intend that S.G. would be killed, the trial court should not have accepted his guilty plea, pursuant to the holdings in Harshman v. State, 232 Ind. 618, 115 N.E.2d 501 (1953), and Ross v. State, 456 N.E.2d 420 (Ind.1983). In Harshman, our supreme court held, "a plea of guilty tendered by one who in the same breath protests his innocence, or declares he actually does not know whether or not he is guilty, is no plea at all. Certainly it is not a sufficient plea upon which to base a judgment of conviction." Harshman, 232 Ind. at 621, 115 N.E.2d at 502. In Ross, the court reaffirmed "that a judge may not accept a plea of guilty when the defendant both pleads guilty and maintains his innocence at the same time. To accept such a plea constitutes reversible error." Ross, 456 N.E.2d at 423.
Indiana continues to follow the Ross/Harshman rule. See Norris v. State, 896 N.E.2d 1149, 1152 (Ind.2008). "This rule was designed to both increase the reliability of guilty pleas and prevent the diminishment of respect for the court system as jailing people who committed no crime." Id. The rule represents a policy decision by our supreme court that is not grounded in the federal constitution or federal jurisprudence. Trueblood v. State, 587 N.E.2d 105, 107 (Ind.1992), cert. denied.
The State has not directly responded to Huddleston's argument that the trial court's acceptance of his guilty plea violated the Ross/Harshman rule.
Here, despite professing that he wanted to plead guilty to murder, Huddleston quite clearly and unequivocally stated during the factual basis colloquy that he did not intend for S.G. to be killed, nor did he know or anticipate that White would kill S.G. These statements constitute an outright denial by Huddleston that he possessed the requisite mens rea to be convicted of murder as White's accomplice. Perhaps recognizing the difficulty presented by Huddleston's statements, the trial court attempted to question him further as to whether he truly wanted to plead guilty; as the record reflects, it took three attempts by the trial court to extricate a simple "yes" from Huddleston as to whether he was guilty of murder.
We cannot conclude that Huddleston's ultimate "yes" to the question of whether he was guilty of murder was sufficient to override his earlier statements expressly denying the requisite culpability for murder. In Wingham v. State, 780 N.E.2d 1164, 1165 (Ind.Ct.App.2002), this court held that a trial court erred in accepting a guilty plea to operating a vehicle while intoxicated ("OWI"), where the defendant had expressly denied being intoxicated. This was so, even after the trial court subsequently advised, and the defendant said that he understood, that entering a plea of guilty to OWI would constitute an admission that he had been intoxicated. Here, likewise, despite the trial court's efforts to extract an unequivocal admission from Huddleston that he was guilty of murder, we cannot square any such admission with his statements, made during the same proceeding, that he lacked the requisite culpability for that offense. The trial court erred in accepting the guilty plea; consequently, the post-conviction court erred in denying Huddleston's PCR petition.
We reverse the denial of Huddleston's PCR petition, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
RILEY and DARDEN, JJ., concur.