Court Opinion

ID: 4256191
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-03-20 14:28:32.661013+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:45:16.174329
License: Public Domain

03/19/2018
        IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                         AT KNOXVILLE
                          Assigned on Briefs January 24, 2018

     MALCOLM ORLANDO WITHEROW v. STATE OF TENNESSEE

                Appeal from the Criminal Court for Hamilton County
                        No. 289761 Tom Greenholtz, Judge

                              No. E2017-00512-CCA-R3-PC

The Petitioner, Malcolm Orlando Witherow, appeals the Hamilton County Criminal Court’s
denial of his petition for post-conviction relief from his 2011 conviction for first degree
premeditated murder and his life sentence. The Petitioner contends that he received the
ineffective assistance of counsel. We affirm the judgment of the post-conviction court.

 Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed

ROBERT H. MONTGOMERY, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JAMES
CURWOOD WITT, JR., and D. KELLY THOMAS, JR., JJ., joined.

Donna Miller, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellant, Malcolm Orlando Witherow.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Brent C. Cherry, Senior Counsel;
Neal Pinkston, District Attorney General; and Kristen Spires, Assistant District Attorney
General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

                                             OPINION

       This case arises from the Petitioner’s fatally shooting Melissa Hoover, the Petitioner’s
former girlfriend. The Petitioner appealed his first degree murder conviction, and this court
affirmed the conviction and summarized the facts of the case as follows:

              At trial, [Connie] Harrold testified that she had known Witherow for
       twenty years. She said the victim and Witherow stayed with her from time to
       time. On the morning of October 10, 2008, the victim, Witherow, and Tyler
       Baker, a friend of Harrold’s son, were drinking coffee at Harrold’s house. The
       victim went outside to roll up the windows of her car because it began to rain.
       Witherow followed her. As Witherow exited the house, he told Harrold, “I’m
       sorry I’ve got to break my promise, I love you, I’m sorry, Connie.” When
asked what promise he was referring to, Harrold said, “[Witherow] promised
me he would never hurt [the victim] in my house.” She could not recall
exactly when he had made that promise.

       When Witherow and the victim were outside, Ms. Harrold heard loud
noises, looked outside her window, and saw Witherow and the victim arguing.
She said they were “slapping at each other but nothing really fist to fist or
anything.” She sat back down and heard another loud noise “like a gun.” She
then heard the victim “holler, ‘Connie, Connie, help me. Help me, Mamma
Connie, help me.’” She observed Witherow chasing the victim down the
driveway, which she estimated was two or three hundred feet long. She told
Baker, who was in the shower, to come outside because Witherow was
shooting the victim. Harrold went outside and observed Witherow “walking
on the other side of the road. . . . He was going past me, going back towards
my house, and I’m going towards the other way.” She said initially she could
not see the victim but found her “on the side of the road. And I’m holding her
in my arms and [Baker] comes out and I tell him to call 911.” Harrold said the
victim was “limp” and barely breathing. The victim had been shot several
times and could not talk, because there was “a bullet penetrating out of her
throat.” Although Harrold attempted CPR on the victim, she died in Harrold’s
arms.

       A recording of the 911 call was admitted into evidence and played for
the jury. During the call, Harrold said that “Malcolm” shot the victim with a
“small pistol” and “took off.” When asked why Witherow would be angry
with the victim, Harrold said that the victim “wore a wire on him several years
back” as an informant for the police in a drug case.

        On cross-examination, Harrold explained that Witherow made his
promise “over a conversation about [the victim] wearing a wire,” and that “he
was going to retaliate against [the victim] or something. But he promised he
wouldn’t do it at my house.” On the day of the offense, Witherow had been
living at Harrold’s house for several months, and the victim had been living
there for a couple of weeks. Witherow and the victim slept in different areas
of her three bedroom house and “were always friendly with each other for the
most part.” She had never observed Witherow or the victim with a gun. The
night before the offense, the victim spent the night at Harrold’s house, and
Witherow spent the night elsewhere, which was not unusual.

       According to Ms. Harrold, on the morning of the offense, Witherow
returned to her house at around 7 a.m. She explained that she could not

                                  -2-
remember every detail concerning that day because it had occurred over three
years ago. Although she did not recall whether Witherow had a forty-ounce
can of beer in his hand that morning, she agreed that it was not uncommon for
Witherow to drink alcohol in the morning. She also did not recall smoking
marijuana with the victim that morning but agreed that they had done so prior
to the offense. She had observed Witherow and the victim argue prior to the
offense, but she had never observed Witherow strike the victim. She testified
that Witherow told her that he was going to hurt the victim “probably a few
months” before the offense, but she never thought Witherow would hurt the
victim. Finally, Harrold agreed that she did not see Witherow with a gun on
the day of the offense.

        Mr. Tyler Baker, a friend of Ms. Harrold’s son, testified that he was
living with Harrold on the day of the offense, and had known the victim and
Witherow for “just a couple of months.” On the morning of the offense, Baker
said the victim had agreed to drive him to a job interview. He was sleeping on
a chair by the front door when he saw Witherow enter Harrold’s house. He
fell back asleep, and nothing unusual happened until he was in the shower and
heard gunshots. He initially thought it was a car, but then he heard screams.
He walked outside and saw Witherow walking up the driveway “just real
calm” with a small silver gun in his right hand. Baker testified that Witherow
“looked at me and I asked him what happened and he just didn’t say nothing.
He just got in the car and left.” Baker called 911, handed Harrold the phone,
and ran to help the victim.

        Baker testified that Witherow told him several times a week that the
victim had “wor[n] a wire on him.” Baker said that Witherow told him the
investigation “made him lose everything . . . . he wanted revenge.” Witherow
also told Baker he was going to kill the victim and that he would “get away
with it . . . . [and] do a year and a half . . . . at a crazy house.”

       On cross-examination, defense counsel asked Baker, “isn’t it in fact the
case you lived at Ms. Harrold’s house for about a month and a half prior to
October 10th?” He answered “yes” but later clarified that by October 10,
2008, he had been staying at Harrold’s house “on and off” for “five to six
months.” Baker met Witherow and the victim when they came to stay with
Harrold about three months before the offense. He agreed that Witherow
came to live at Harrold’s house before the victim. He thought that the victim
lived at Harrold’s house for “maybe a month” prior to the offense. He said
Witherow did not get drunk every night. Prior to the offense, Baker observed
Witherow and the victim argue, but had never observed them in a physical

                                  -3-
confrontation. He thought their arguments occurred because the victim did not
want to have a relationship with Witherow.

       When asked whether the victim showed him a gun, Baker said, “I want
to say she had one. This was weeks before it happened. But I can’t
remember.” Baker testified that the victim had a gun in a brief case in the
trunk of her car and sold it “probably a week” before the offense. He said the
gun was “probably a .22” and described it as small and silver. Baker said
Witherow also showed him two guns, a black revolver and a silver gun, a
week before the offense. He did not observe Witherow hunt animals or shoot
the guns around Harrold’s property. Asked whether Witherow threatened the
victim in her presence, Baker said[,] “Maybe sometimes. Sometimes she
didn’t worry about it; sometimes she thought he was just talking.”

        Sergeant Dean Beverly of the Cleveland Police Department testified
that he investigated Witherow in 2005 for drug trafficking in Bradley County.
He utilized the victim as a confidential informant in two controlled drug
purchases from Witherow. He confirmed that the victim wore a wire during
the investigation. Witherow was subsequently arrested and charged with the
sale and delivery of Schedule II narcotics. The charges were eventually
dismissed because the State was unable to locate the victim to testify at trial.
On cross-examination, Sgt. Beverly said he did not know whether Witherow
knew the victim had served as a confidential informant in his case. He
explained, under normal circumstances, that information was provided to a
defendant by the District Attorney General’s Office upon request through
discovery.

        The director of admissions at Moccasin Bend Mental Health Institute
testified that on the day of the offense, she was summoned to the admissions
area of the hospital to meet Witherow. She asked how she could help him, and
Witherow replied, “that he wanted to be evaluated. Said he had shot his
girlfriend.” Witherow told her he had thrown the gun in the river. The
director called an admitting physician, the hospital attorney, and the police
department. The director described Witherow as “tearful” and “unkept.” She
did not detect an odor of alcohol about his person, and he appeared to
understand her questions. Witherow was evaluated by a physician, but he was
not admitted to the mental hospital.
        Detective Mark Miller of the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office
identified photographs he took of Witherow’s car parked outside of the mental
hospital, which were admitted as exhibits. Witherow’s car was towed to the
Sheriff’s Office and preserved in a secure area. On cross-examination, he

                                  -4-
stated that he followed the car to the Sheriff’s Office and was present when it
was unloaded, but he did not search it because he did not have a search
warrant.

        Detective Robin Langford of the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office
identified photographs and a diagram of the crime scene which were admitted
as exhibits. He described what he believed to be droplets of blood at the scene
and the location of the victim’s body. He also identified swabs of suspected
blood, a set of keys found in the street, and two Winchester .25 caliber spent
shell casings retrieved from the scene, which were also admitted into evidence.
Photographs of Witherow’s car, which was processed for evidence after a
search warrant was obtained, were also identified and admitted into evidence.
Finally, Detective Langford identified a gunshot residue kit and the samples he
obtained from Witherow’s car. These items were forwarded to the Tennessee
Bureau of Investigation for analysis and admitted as exhibits at trial.

       Detective Rick Whaley of the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Department
was the case agent assigned to investigate the victim’s death. He said a
handgun was never recovered in the case despite the search efforts of a dive
team. Detective Whaley identified Witherow’s clothing, admitted as an
exhibit, that was collected at the police annex. He observed other [detectives]
take a buccal swab of Witherow’s mouth pursuant to a search warrant.
Detective Whaley identified these swabs, which were entered into evidence.
He also observed Dr. Frank King’s autopsy of the victim. He identified
fingernail clippings, a blood sample, and a bullet he obtained from the victim’s
autopsy, all of which was sent to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigations for
analysis. Detective Whaley said the victim’s body was found “a little over a
hundred yards” from the bottom of the driveway.

       On cross-examination, Det. Whaley said Witherow’s hands were tested
for gun[]shot residue at the police annex on the day of the offense. He was
unable to determine the position of the shooter or the victim at the time she
was shot.

        Dr. Frank King, the Hamilton County medical examiner, performed the
autopsy of the victim and testified as an expert in forensic pathology. He
identified the autopsy report and his report of investigation, which were
admitted as exhibits. He said the victim’s cause of death was multiple gunshot
wounds, and the manner of death was homicide. He said the “gunshot wounds
passed through the chest, abdomen, and right arm, . . . causing damage to

                                  -5-
internal organs, bleeding, and subsequent death.” He found fresh and old
bruises on the victim’s legs. Dr. King explained that a bullet wound consists
of “entrances, exits, and graze wounds.” He determined that six or seven
bullets struck the victim, creating fourteen different gunshot wounds. He said
the victim was alive when each bullet entered her, and “[a]ll of these gunshot
wounds occurred close together in time.” He opined that the victim was
“going through different positions . . . [and] could be partly on the ground or
all the way on the ground when some of these shots occurred.”

       Based on the similar appearance of the gunshot wounds, Dr. King
opined that “the same gun or type of gun, same ammo[,] could cause all these
similar looking wounds.” He testified that the victim’s wounds “all looked
very similar, all caused by low velocity gunshot wounds.” Finally, he stated
that one bullet remained in the victim’s body.

        Special Agent Shelley Betts, a forensic scientist and firearms examiner
with the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, testified as an expert in the field
of firearms identification. She found no gunshot residue on the victim’s
clothes and was unable to determine a muzzle-to-garment distance. She
testified that the two fired cartridge cases she examined “had the same unique
identifying marks[,] . . . so [she] was able to conclude that they had both been
fired in the same .25 auto caliber pistol.” Based on her testing, she further
concluded that the bullet which came from the victim’s body was a .25 caliber
bullet.

       On cross-examination, Agent Betts testified “there could have been any
number of factors that would preclude [her] from determining a muzzle to
garment distance.” She said the gun could have been fired beyond “the
maximum distance at which that gun and that type of ammunition would
deposit gunshot residues on an item of clothing.” Or, she said, the residue
could have been lost and “environmental factors like a lot of mud or rain or a
lot of blood could have destroyed [gunshot residue] evidence.” She was
unable to determine whether the bullet and shell cases were fired from the
same gun because a gun was not recovered. She said “[t]here could have been
one or two guns used in this case.”

       Special Agent James Russell Davis, III, of the Tennessee Bureau of
Investigation[] testified as an expert in the field of microanalysis in trace
evidence. He identified his report on the gunshot residue kit performed on
Witherow’s hands. Although the test was inconclusive for gunshot residue, it
did not eliminate the possibility that Witherow could have fired, handled, or

                                  -6-
was near a gun when it fired. Agent Davis also identified his report analyzing
the evidence retrieved from Witherow’s car. His test revealed the presence of
particles unique to gunshot primer residue on a sample from Witherow’s
driver’s seat belt or pull strap. Agent Davis said this indicated that a weapon
was fired in close proximity of that particular item or that it was transferred
from someone’s hands. Both of Agent Davis’s reports were admitted as
exhibits at trial.

       On cross-examination, Agent Davis agreed that the elements lead,
barium, and antimony can be naturally occurring. He reiterated, however, that
the gunshot residue found on Witherow’s driver’s seat belt came from a
weapon that was fired. He also agreed that this residue could have come from
Witherow being near a gun when it was fired or handling a gun after it was
fired.

       Detective Brian Ashburn, called as a witness by Witherow, testified that
he conducted an interview with Baker which was recorded. Detective
Ashburn testified that during the course of the interview Baker said that he had
lived at Harrold’s house “for about one to one and a half months” prior to the
offense. The corresponding portion of the recording was played for the jury
and largely inaudible. Baker was heard to say “about a month and a half.”
Detective Ashburn also testified that during the same interview Baker told him
that Witherow had been living with Harrold for “a few weeks” prior to the
offense. The corresponding portion of the recording was played for the jury
and, again, was largely inaudible. Baker was heard to say “could be . . . about
a month. Because I know it was about a week or two weeks before that I
moved in there. Because I’d just met him. I’d never met him before.”

        Detective Ashburn agreed that Baker told him during the course of the
interview that Witherow would get drunk and talk about killing the victim.
The corresponding portion of the recording was largely inaudible; however,
Baker is heard to say “I mean, [Witherow is] always like saying I’m going to
kill that b----, . . . . But I mean you know (inaudible) . . . . almost a week and a
half but I won’t go to jail because I (inaudible) about it.” Another portion of
the recording was played for the jury in which Baker said that Witherow and
O’Donald left Harrold’s house the night before the offense, and went to
Meigs. Baker said Witherow and O’Donald arrived at Harrold’s around 7 a.m.
on the day of the offense and Harrold’s son left around 8 a.m. Detective
Ashburn agreed that Baker said Witherow had been out that night with
O’Donald, rode in O’Donald’s new car, and that Baker told him Witherow had
been in Georgia with a girl two nights before the offense. The corresponding

                                    -7-
portion of the recording was played for the jury in which Baker said “Like two
nights before . . . [Witherow] went down to Georgia and had sex with some
girl, and that’s what was killing him in his mind. . . . I don’t know what girl, I
don’t know anything. He was just using his cell phone so.” Detective Ashburn
agreed that Baker said Witherow threatened to kill the victim only when he
was drinking or intoxicated but not when Witherow was sober. The
corresponding portion of the recording was played for the jury in which Baker
said “[Witherow] was never mad at [the victim] when he was sober. He just
really didn’t talk to nobody that much.”

        Detective Ashburn agreed that Baker did not say that he lived with
Harrold longer than one and a half months during the course of the interview.
Detective Ashburn testified that Harrold told him that when Witherow arrived
at her home on the day of the offense he was intoxicated and had a forty-ounce
can of beer in his hand.

        Dr. Laura Boos of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigations testified as
an expert in serology and DNA. She analyzed various items of evidence in
this case and said that blood was found on Witherow’s jeans and shoes but not
on a belt, shirt, cell phone case, watch, rings, swabs from the roadway, or the
two cartridge cases. Upon further testing, she found blood and DNA on three
swabs from the roadway, and two of these matched the victim’s DNA while
the third had insufficient or degraded DNA and could not be matched. Dr.
Boos tests also showed that the DNA on Witherow’s shoes matched the
victim’s DNA. She explained that it is not uncommon for DNA to be
undetected on shell casings, because the heat produced by the firearm
degrades DNA. On cross-examination, she said that the blood on Witherow’s
jeans was his blood.

       Witherow testified that he had known the victim for seven or eight
years and Harrold for fifteen or twenty years. He said he had a romantic
relationship with the victim, during which she lived with him. Their
relationship ended two years before the victim’s death. Witherow said the
victim invited him to visit with her, but he declined. He said he allowed the
victim to stay with him when she had nowhere else to stay. He said he
brought the victim to Harrold’s house to live, because he “didn’t want to see
her with nowhere to stay.” He could not recall how long the victim lived with
Harrold, but he knew it was more than a week.

                                   -8-
       Witherow said he stayed with Harrold only a few days in October 2008.
At that time, Witherow lived with his new girlfriend in Bradley County. He
spent the night away from her only when they argued. When Witherow and
the victim were together at Harrold’s house, they would sometimes argue.
Witherow said it was because the victim was jealous of his attention to other
women. He said he argued with the victim a couple of days before her death
because she did not go to the liquor store for him.

        While living with Harrold, Witherow was employed as a cement
worker and had periods without work. The morning before the offense, he and
a friend hunted squirrels with a .22 rifle in the Ooltewah area and shared a pint
of vodka that afternoon. James O’Donald, whose nickname was “Possum”,
drove to Harrold’s house, and Witherow left with O’Donald to go to a house in
Birchwood. Upon their arrival, O’Donald and Witherow drank a case of beer.
Witherow slept a couple of hours that night, and the next morning, he drove
O’Donald’s car back to Harrold’s house. Witherow could not remember
exactly when they arrived at Harrold’s house but thought it was around 8:00
a.m. When asked if he was “doing any drinking when [he] came back,”
Witherow replied, “I had a quart of beer.” He also had consumed a cup of
coffee at Harrold’s that morning.

       Later that morning, Witherow went outside of Harrold’s house to
receive better cell phone reception and to determine if he had received a
telephone call concerning a job. The victim was getting something out of the
trunk of her car when Witherow exited the house, and they spoke. Witherow
said the victim told him earlier in the week that she would take him to meet
someone about a job. However, the victim told him she was taking Baker to a
job interview at that time and that Witherow would have to wait until they
returned.

       Witherow could only remember driving in his car after his conversation
with the victim. He explained that his “memory ain’t too good.” Witherow
said he drove to the mental hospital “because everything seemed like it was a
dream . . . . I tried to run in and talk to them and see about getting some
medicine or something because I was feeling like I was in a dream that whole
morning.” He did not remember having a gun or shooting anyone on the day
of the offense. When asked, “Did you shoot anybody that morning?”
Witherow responded, “I don’t know.” He said the previous evening he took a
hydrocodone pill because he had a headache. He said he did not know why he
drank a lot and said “I guess to calm me down sometime.” Witherow agreed
that he had a .22 caliber rifle for squirrel hunting and a .410 caliber shotgun

                                   -9-
       for rabbit hunting on the day of the offense, both of which were borrowed.
       While he had owned a handgun in the past, he said he did not own a handgun
       on the day of the offense.

              On cross-examination, Witherow said he and O’Donald drank
       Budweiser the night before the offense. He recalled only the nickname of the
       friend, “Rook”, who drank one or two beers with them. He said he hunted
       squirrels with a .22 rifle alone the night before the offense. He admitted that
       he was angry with the victim because she wore a wire and acted as an
       informant for the police, but said he “got over it.” He remembered
       apologizing to Harrold and explained the following:

              [I]t wasn’t about - - what I was apologizing to her for, she told
              me . . . . don’t hit no woman up there on the hill at her house.
              And you know I said . . . . I wouldn’t hit nobody. Just said
              don’t hit . . . . because I have a few girlfriends that we just
              friends, but other people might think something else but. . . . I
              wasn’t going to hit [the victim]. I was just jiving her.

              Witherow denied telling others that he was going to retaliate against the
       victim for snitching on him. Witherow also said “even if . . . I . . . was going
       to do something like that, I wouldn’t [do] it around people no way.” He said
       he “vaguely” remembered the victim’s bleeding body lying in the road. He
       said on his way to the mental hospital, he stopped to get a sandwich and gas.
       He said he told the director at the mental hospital that he only “thought” he
       shot his girlfriend. He said he could remember drinking Budweiser the night
       before the offense because it was his usual type of beer.

State v. Malcolm Witherow, No. E2012-00131-CCA-R3-CD, 2013 WL 3353338, at *1-7
(Tenn. Crim. App. June 28, 2013), no perm. app. filed.

       The Petitioner filed the instant petition for post-conviction relief, alleging he received
the ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel on multiple grounds, that his
conviction was based upon evidence obtained in violation of his protection against
unreasonable searches and seizures, and that his rights to a fair trial and due process were
violated as a result of perjury from the State’s witnesses.

        At the post-conviction hearing, appellate counsel testified that he prepared the
Petitioner’s brief for the appeal of the conviction and that although he recalled Tyler Baker’s
testifying at the trial, the appellate record did not contain Mr. Baker’s pretrial video-recorded
police statement. Counsel said that Mr. Baker’s statement was not a trial exhibit and that he

                                          -10-
did not have the authority to attach Mr. Baker’s statement to the trial or appellate court
records. Counsel said that he crafted his sufficiency of the evidence argument based upon all
of the evidence contained in the court record.

       On cross-examination, appellate counsel did not dispute that he supported his
insufficient evidence allegation with six sentences of argument. He said that his arguments
on appeal were limited by the issues trial counsel raised in the motion for a new trial.
Appellate counsel agreed that an offer of proof relative to the contents of Mr. Baker’s pretrial
statement was not contained in the trial court record, which prevented counsel from utilizing
Mr. Baker’s statement in the appeal.

        Herman Pickleshimer, Jr., testified that he did not attend the trial, although the
Petitioner and the victim were his friends. He said that the Petitioner’s trial and appellate
counsel did not question him, although he was at Connie Harrold’s home on the day of the
shooting. Mr. Pickleshimer recalled that he was at Ms. Harrold’s home working on a
transmission when the Petitioner and the victim began arguing and that Mr. Pickleshimer got
in his car and left. He said that he lived with his grandmother at the time of the shooting and
that the Petitioner began living with him and his grandmother a few days before the shooting.
 Mr. Pickleshimer recalled that the Petitioner moved into Mr. Pickleshimer’s grandmother’s
home because the Petitioner did not want to argue with the victim and because the victim
“push[ed] [the Petitioner] around and stuff.”

        Mr. Pickleshimer testified that the victim, the Petitioner, Ms. Harrold, and Mr. Baker
were at the home when Mr. Pickleshimer arrived. Mr. Pickleshimer recalled that Ms.
Harrold was in the basement doing laundry, that the victim was sitting on a living room
chair, and that Mr. Baker was asleep. Mr. Pickleshimer said that initially, the Petitioner was
also in the living room but that the Petitioner went outside and began pacing on the front
porch. Mr. Pickleshimer said that the Petitioner’s demeanor was “fine” when Mr.
Pickleshimer arrived at the home but that the victim was “angry about something.” Mr.
Pickleshimer said that the victim yelled at and pushed the Petitioner and that as a result, the
Petitioner walked onto the front porch. Mr. Pickleshimer said that the Petitioner’s demeanor
changed, that the victim continued yelling and pushing the Petitioner, and that Mr.
Pickleshimer left the home. Mr. Pickleshimer said he did not hear the Petitioner say that the
Petitioner had to “break [his] promise and hurt [the victim].” Mr. Pickleshimer said that he
also did not hear the Petitioner tell Mr. Baker that the Petitioner was going to kill the victim.

       Mr. Pickleshimer testified that before he entered his car to leave the home, the victim
walked into the kitchen and began “fiddling around through the sink drawer.” He said that
he did not know what was happening but that he wanted to leave because of the “fussing and
fighting.” He said that as he left in his car, the Petitioner paced on the front porch and that

                                          -11-
the victim walked toward the trunk of her car and inserted her key into the trunk’s lock. Mr.
Pickleshimer did not see the victim open the trunk. Mr. Pickleshimer said that the Petitioner
looked “messed up,” nervous, and disoriented, and Mr. Pickleshimer recalled that he had
never seen the Petitioner in this condition. Mr. Pickleshimer said that the Petitioner was
generally calm and was never angry or violent with anyone, including the victim, but that the
victim was violent and angry with the Petitioner. Mr. Pickleshimer thought the victim was
jealous of the Petitioner. Mr. Pickleshimer believed that the Petitioner “just snapped”
because the Petitioner was not himself that day. Mr. Pickleshimer said that the Petitioner’s
eyes looked “glazed over.”

       Mr. Pickleshimer testified that as he drove away from Ms. Harrold’s home, he heard a
“pop” when he reached the bottom of the hill of the driveway but that he never considered
the pop could have been gunfire. He said he learned days later from Ms. Harrold that the
victim had been shot and recalled Ms. Harrold was not upset with the Petitioner. Mr.
Pickleshimer had known the Petitioner twelve to fourteen years and said he did not think the
Petitioner was capable of committing premediated murder. Mr. Pickleshimer had known
Ms. Harrold all of his life and said that Ms. Harrold expressed concern about testifying in
this case again.

        On cross-examination, Mr. Pickleshimer testified that although Mr. Baker was inside
the home on the day of the shooting, Mr. Baker was asleep in a bedroom and that Mr.
Pickleshimer did not see Mr. Baker. Mr. Pickleshimer said that he was inside the home for a
short time, that when he entered the home, he said hello to the Petitioner, the victim, and Ms.
Harrold, that he used the bathroom and poured a glass of water, and that he went outside to
work on his truck’s transmission. Mr. Pickleshimer said that on the night before the
shooting, he, his grandmother, and the Petitioner were at his grandmother’s home.

        On redirect examination, Mr. Pickleshimer testified that the Petitioner had stayed at
Mr. Pickleshimer’s grandmother’s home for about three days and that Mr. Pickleshimer
never heard the Petitioner express anger toward the victim. Mr. Pickleshimer agreed that at
the time of the shooting, the Petitioner’s romantic relationship with the victim had ended and
that the Petitioner had a new girlfriend. Mr. Pickleshimer said, though, that the Petitioner
had expressed fear of the victim because the victim threw objects and became aggressive
when angry. Mr. Pickleshimer agreed that the victim was “particularly agitated” on the day
of the shooting.

        Trial counsel testified that he represented the Petitioner in this case, that he had tried
three or four cases before the Petitioner’s case, and that the Petitioner’s case was counsel’s
first murder trial. Counsel said that although he did not ask another attorney to assist with
the trial, his paralegal, who was a law student at the time, sat with him during the Petitioner’s
trial. Counsel did not know what medications the Petitioner took at the time of the trial but

                                           -12-
said he read the forensic mental health evaluation report, which would have detailed the
medications. Counsel recalled discussing the Petitioner’s mental health with a counselor,
later identified as Dr. Montgomery from Vanderbilt Medical Center, but said he did not
recall the details of their conversations. Counsel thought that Dr. Montgomery evaluated the
Petitioner based upon counsel’s request for an independent mental health evaluation.
Counsel noted that the trial court initially denied his request for an independent mental health
evaluation but that after counsel filed a motion for reconsideration, the court granted the
request. Counsel recalled that the court initially denied the request because the Petitioner’s
evaluation at “Johnson Mental Health” showed no concerns. Counsel did not recall what, if
anything, Dr. Montgomery concluded about the Petitioner’s having episodes of blackouts or
memory loss. Counsel said that Dr. Montgomery did not testify at the trial and that as a
result, counsel assumed Dr. Montgomery’s assessment did not provide value to the defense.

       Trial counsel testified that Mr. Botts was the defense investigator hired to locate any
witnesses and that Mr. Botts had difficulty locating the witnesses. Counsel said that he first
spoke to Mr. Baker and Ms. Harrold two days before the trial and that he would have liked
additional time to compare their previous statements with his interviews in order to “pull
out” their inconsistent statements. Counsel did not request a continuance for this purpose.

        Trial counsel testified that he did not recall the frequency with which he met with the
Petitioner at the jail but said that it would have been multiple times. Counsel said that
although he did not represent the Petitioner at the preliminary hearing, counsel had been
present, and he recalled that Ms. Harrold and a police officer testified. Counsel stated that
his defense strategy was to attack the sufficiency of the State’s evidence identifying the
Petitioner as the perpetrator and to argue the shooting was not premediated. Counsel said
that he also focused on the victim’s actions outside the home before the shooting, noting no
witnesses saw what occurred just before the shooting, and on whether the gun came from the
victim. Counsel conceded, though, that no evidence showed that the Petitioner acted in self-
defense. Counsel also agreed that identity of the shooter was not disputed but said that the
Petitioner’s chasing the victim down the driveway of Ms. Harrold’s home did not mean the
Petitioner shot the victim. Counsel said that although the Petitioner could not remember the
events and no other evidence supported counsel’s theory, counsel attempted to elicit from
witnesses that they did not see the Petitioner shoot the victim.

       Trial counsel testified that he and the Petitioner did not discuss the Petitioner’s
previously having been shot five times during a robbery. Counsel also did not recall
discussing this incident with Dr. Montgomery. Counsel believed he addressed the
Petitioner’s actions resulting from “self-defense, provocation, [and] heat of passion” by
cross-examining the State’s witnesses about not seeing what occurred outside Ms. Harrold’s
home just before the shooting. Counsel agreed that if the transcript did not reflect he
questioned the witnesses about the Petitioner’s demeanor and behavior, the transcript was

                                          -13-
accurate. Counsel did not recall any discrepancy between the testimony of the police
officers, Ms. Harrold, and Mr. Baker about the time the shooting occurred and the time the 9-
1-1 call was placed but noted that any discrepancy was “significant.” Counsel did not recall
whether he questioned Dr. King about the victim’s toxicology report. Counsel recalled the
toxicology report showed the presence of drugs.

       Trial counsel testified that he did not attempt to introduce evidence of the victim’s,
Ms. Harrold’s, or Mr. Baker’s criminal histories and that he did not request fingerprint
analysis of the cartridge casings recovered from the scene. Counsel did not recall
questioning Mr. Baker and Ms. Harrold about their statements in the 9-1-1 call or their initial
police statements in order to show neither witness referenced the Petitioner’s alleged
previous statement that he would “shoot the victim and then go to the crazy hospital
basically so he would get away with it.” Counsel recalled that he “fought” with the trial
court about introducing Ms. Harrold’s and Mr. Baker’s video-recorded police statements.

        Trial counsel testified that although he was permitted to cross-examine Detective
Ashburn about Mr. Baker’s police statement, counsel could not question Mr. Baker about the
statement because Mr. Baker had been released by the trial court. Counsel said that the
video-recorded interviews of Mr. Baker and Ms. Harrold were not transcribed and that
counsel believed any transcript of the recordings would have been inadmissible because
“they wouldn’t have been signed off or verified by the actual witness at the time.” Counsel
said that he requested permission to recall Ms. Harrold to question her about her police
statement but that the judge denied his request. Counsel said that the police located Mr.
Baker “maybe two days” after Mr. Baker’s initial testimony but that counsel did not request
a continuance to provide Mr. Baker time to return for further testimony.
        Trial counsel testified that he met the Petitioner’s girlfriend’s parents before the trial
but did not call them as character witnesses relative to the Petitioner’s interaction and
demeanor with their daughter. Counsel thought he argued at the trial that the Petitioner was
too intoxicated to engage in premeditation but agreed, after reviewing the transcript of his
closing argument, that he did not argue Ms. Harrold and Mr. Baker did not see the initial
confrontation between the victim and the Petitioner. He recalled that a voluntary
intoxication instruction was provided to the jury. He said it was difficult to argue
simultaneously that insufficient evidence existed, that the Petitioner was not the shooter, and
that the Petitioner was incapable of premeditation based upon his intoxication. Counsel said
that he tried “do to whatever [he] could” for the Petitioner when asked if his defense was that
someone other than the Petitioner shot the victim. Counsel agreed that Mr. Baker initially
told the police that the Petitioner was intoxicated when the Petitioner arrived at Ms.
Harrold’s home but testified inconsistently with this statement at the trial.

      Trial counsel testified that he learned the video-recorded police statements of Mr.
Baker and Ms. Harrold were not included in the appellate record, that the trial judge would

                                           -14-
not allow counsel to “do anything with Ms. Harrold’s statement,” that counsel did not recall
making an offer of proof relative to Ms. Harrold’s statement, and that counsel thought Mr.
Baker’s statement was introduced during Detective Ashburn’s testimony. Counsel said he
assumed Mr. Baker’s statement was included in the appellate record.

       Trial counsel testified that he had discussions about the Petitioner’s education level,
that counsel recalled the “particular circumstances” leading to the Petitioner’s lack of
education, and that the Petitioner owned a business before going to prison. Counsel said the
Petitioner appeared to have clear, coherent conversations. Counsel did not recall whether the
Petitioner could read and write. Counsel did not recall discussing that the Petitioner believed
Mr. Baker committed perjury during the trial. Counsel did not recall the dosage or the
medications the Petitioner took at the time of the trial. Counsel said, though, that the
Petitioner never appeared “drugged up” or sleepy as a result of any medication.

       Trial counsel testified that during the Petitioner’s testimony, counsel questioned the
Petitioner about not remembering the shooting. Counsel said, though, the defense did not
present an expert witness to discuss the impact of trauma on memory. Counsel agreed the
State argued that the Petitioner “faked” his memory loss and said he interviewed the mental
health facility staff who treated the Petitioner at the time of the shooting. He agreed the
Petitioner’s mental health was an issue at the trial and said he did not “know what else to do
necessarily under the circumstances other than what I’d already done to . . . develop evidence
that could be helpful.” He thought he spoke to another attorney, who provided counsel with
Dr. Montgomery’s contact information. Counsel agreed he did not present evidence
substantiating the legitimacy of the Petitioner’s memory loss. Counsel did not recall the
Petitioner’s telling counsel that the Petitioner’s prescribed amount of Thorazine caused
difficulty staying awake during the trial. Counsel agreed he did not “discover” or contact
Mr. Pickleshimer, whose nickname was “Ruke.” Counsel said that he thought Mr.
Pickleshimer was someone referred to as “Possum” during the trial but conceded that
Possum and Ruke were different people. Counsel said that he did not recall Possum’s legal
name mentioned during the trial, that counsel and the Petitioner discussed the necessity of
learning Possum’s legal name in order to present him as a trial witness, that counsel asked
Mr. Baker and Ms. Harrold for Possum’s legal name, and that counsel did not recall either of
them providing it.

       On cross-examination, trial counsel testified that he cross-examined Mr. Baker
extensively about the Petitioner’s drinking alcohol, the Petitioner’s and the victim’s previous
arguments, and the Petitioner’s ability to “control himself generally around the victim.”
Counsel said that he attempted to show that the shooting could not have been premeditated
and that the Petitioner would have had multiple opportunities to harm the victim but chose
not to hurt her. Counsel said that he questioned Mr. Baker about whether he had seen the
Petitioner with a firearm and that the Petitioner had been squirrel hunting with a .22-caliber

                                         -15-
rifle the day before the shooting. Counsel agreed Mr. Baker admitted that the Petitioner was
in a relationship with another woman at the time of the shooting and that the Petitioner’s
general mood had improved before the shooting. Counsel recalled that when the Petitioner
went to “prison” for the drug-related “conviction,” the Petitioner lost his personal belongings
and had difficulty adjusting to life outside of prison.

        Trial counsel testified that he requested permission to cross-examine Mr. Baker about
his video-recorded police statement for impeachment purposes and as substantive evidence.
Counsel said that the trial court denied his request to introduce Mr. Baker’s statement as
substantive evidence on three occasions. Counsel said that the trial court recessed and that
after a jury-out discussion, the court allowed counsel to question Mr. Baker further to
determine whether Mr. Baker’s trial testimony was inconsistent with his police statement and
that ultimately, the court allowed counsel to “use only a limited written statement” to
impeach Mr. Baker. Counsel admitted that he became frustrated with the trial judge and said
that after his cross-examination, he presented the court with case law supporting his
argument that he should be permitted to use Mr. Baker’s recorded statement during cross-
examination. Counsel said that the court revised its previous ruling and allowed him to
introduce portions of Mr. Baker’s recorded statement for impeachment purposes but that by
this time, Mr. Baker was no longer available. Counsel said that as a result, the court allowed
him to introduce portions of Mr. Baker’s recorded statement through Detective Ashburn for
impeachment purposes and that counsel provided the trial court with the portions of the
recording he wanted to introduce. Counsel agreed that the relevant portions of Mr. Baker’s
recorded statement related to how long the Petitioner had lived at Ms. Harrold’s home,
whether the Petitioner made threatening statements toward the victim, whether Mr. Baker
was surprised by the shooting, the Petitioner’s relationship with a woman who lived in
Georgia, whether the Petitioner was intoxicated or sober when he made any threats toward
the victim, and whether Mr. Baker reported to the police that the Petitioner and Possum had
been together the night before the shooting.

        Trial counsel testified that the Petitioner underwent his first mental health
examination in March 2009 and that an “insanity defense” was not supported by the
evaluation. Counsel said that the report led him to contact Dr. Montgomery, that counsel
requested Dr. Montgomery independently examine the Petitioner, and that the trial court
initially denied his request but later granted it after reconsideration in January 2011. Counsel
agreed that if the evaluation were not favorable to the defense, he would not have filed a
copy of it with the trial court.

       Trial counsel testified that the only people the Petitioner stated were at Ms. Harrold’s
home at the time of the shooting were Ms. Harrold, Mr. Baker, the victim, and Possum.
Counsel did not recall the Petitioner’s testifying that Ruke was with him and Possum the
night before the shooting. Counsel said that he and the Petitioner discussed Possum several

                                          -16-
times before the trial but that counsel did not recall any mention of Ruke. Counsel said that
during closing argument, he discussed the testimony relative to the Petitioner’s intoxication
and the amount of alcohol the Petitioner had consumed the night before and the morning of
the shooting. Counsel thought the main portion of his closing argument focused on the
Petitioner’s intoxication and that the other portion focused on Mr. Baker’s and Ms. Harrold’s
not witnessing the shooting. Relative to premeditation, counsel recalled arguing that the
Petitioner did not plan to shoot the victim, that the Petitioner had been drinking all of the
previous night, and that “things just happened.” Counsel did not recall whether he stated
during his closing argument that the Petitioner was too intoxicated to have been capable of
premeditation.

        On redirect examination, trial counsel testified that he attempted to question Mr.
Baker and Ms. Harold about whether they ever saw the victim with a firearm but that it was
difficult to argue the victim brandished a firearm first because Mr. Baker and Ms. Harrold
did not witness the shooting. Counsel agreed the Petitioner stated that the Petitioner and the
victim had resolved their differences related to the victim’s role in sending him to jail and
that the Petitioner allowed the victim to stay with him when the victim had nowhere else to
go. Counsel recalled discussing with Dr. Montgomery whether the Petitioner had suffered
some type of diminished capacity but did not recall Dr. Montgomery’s conclusions.

        The post-conviction court denied relief. Relative to the Petitioner’s allegations that
trial counsel failed to impeach Mr. Baker with Mr. Baker’s video-recorded police statement
and that counsel should have made an offer of proof showing the contents of Mr. Baker’s
recorded statement, the court determined that counsel did not provide deficient performance.
 The court found that the trial court initially denied counsel’s requests to use Mr. Baker’s
recorded statement as substantive evidence, to refresh Mr. Baker’s recollection, and for
impeachment purposes. The post-conviction court found that counsel persisted in his request
and that the trial court conceded it erred by denying counsel permission to use the recorded
statement for impeachment purposes. The post-conviction court found that by the time the
trial court reversed its previous ruling relative to impeachment, Mr. Baker’s testimony had
concluded and that Mr. Baker had been released by the trial court. As a result, the post-
conviction court determined that counsel’s inability to cross-examine Mr. Baker about his
recorded statement to the police was not the result of deficient performance, but rather the
result of the trial court’s initial ruling.

        The post-conviction court also determined that trial counsel did not provide deficient
performance because he failed to request a continuance to provide Mr. Baker time to return
for further testimony. The post-conviction court found that the trial court told the jury that it
made a mistake and that it would allow counsel to admit Mr. Baker’s recorded statement
through Detective Ashburn’s testimony because Mr. Baker spoke to the detective. The post-
conviction court found that the trial court provided counsel with the choice between recalling

                                          -17-
Mr. Baker and admitting the recorded statement through the detective’s testimony. The post-
conviction court determined that counsel chose to present the recorded statement through the
detective’s testimony and that the court would not question counsel’s strategic decision made
during the trial. The post-conviction court determined that counsel’s choice was reasonable
based upon the “unique circumstances.” The post-conviction court also determined that the
Petitioner failed to establish that the outcome of the trial would have been different had the
recorded statement been admitted during Mr. Baker’s testimony, rather than Detective
Ashburn’s testimony.

        The post-conviction court determined relative to counsel’s failure to make an offer of
proof of Mr. Baker’s video-recorded police statement in its entirety, portions of which were
played for the jury, that counsel did not provide deficient performance. The post-conviction
court determined that the trial transcript reflected that the relevant portions played for the
jury included Mr. Baker’s statements regarding how long Mr. Baker had lived at Ms.
Harrold’s home, how long the Petitioner had been staying at Ms. Harrold’s home, whether
the Petitioner “got drunk” and talked about killing the victim before the shooting, that the
Petitioner arrived at Ms. Harrold’s home at 7:00 a.m. on the morning of the shooting with
Possum, that the Petitioner went to Georgia to spend time with someone two nights before
the shooting, that the Petitioner did not threaten anyone when he was sober, and that the
Petitioner’s threats toward the victim occurred only when the Petitioner was intoxicated.
The post-conviction court determined that the jury heard the relevant portions of Mr. Baker’s
statement, that counsel questioned the detective about Mr. Baker’s responses, and that the
trial court instructed the jury that it could consider Mr. Baker’s responses in considering his
credibility. The post-conviction court found that the portions played for the jury were
detailed in the trial transcript and determined that counsel had made an offer of proof relative
to the portions of the recordings counsel believed showed Mr. Baker’s inconsistent
statements. The post-conviction court determined that the Petitioner did not present any
additional evidence from the recording in an effort to show counsel provided deficient
performance in his selections and that the Petitioner failed to establish prejudice in this
regard.

        The post-conviction court determined that trial counsel did not provide deficient
performance relative to the Petitioner’s mental health evaluation. The court found that an
independent mental health examination was performed and that the results of the evaluation
did not support a viable defense. The court found that counsel successfully obtained funds
for the evaluation performed by Dr. Montgomery and that the trial court record reflected that
counsel requested payment for Dr. Montgomery’s services. The post-conviction court found
that although counsel did not recall at the post-conviction hearing whether the evaluation
was performed and what the results would have been, the evidence established by a
preponderance of the evidence that an evaluation was conducted. The court credited
counsel’s testimony that he would have presented at the trial any favorable conclusions from

                                          -18-
the evaluation. The court determined that the Petitioner failed to establish prejudice because
he failed to present Dr. Montgomery at the post-conviction hearing to establish whether Dr.
Montgomery’s conclusions were favorable to the defense. The court noted the Petitioner did
not testify at the post-conviction hearing and found that the Petitioner failed to show that he
suffered from any mental health disorder.

        The post-conviction court determined that trial counsel did not provide deficient
performance by failing to present Mr. Pickleshimer as a trial witness to establish the
Petitioner did not engage in premeditation. The court found that it was “unclear” how
counsel could have reasonably known about Mr. Pickleshimer. The court found that counsel
asked witnesses for the names of the people present at Ms. Harrold’s home on the morning
of the shooting. The court credited counsel’s testimony that he spoke with Ms. Harrold and
Mr. Baker a couple of days before the trial and that counsel was not told Mr. Pickleshimer
was at the home. The court also credited counsel’s testimony that the Petitioner never
identified Mr. Pickleshimer as someone who was at the home before the shooting occurred.
The court found that although counsel said he could have learned of Mr. Pickleshimer if
counsel had additional time to speak with Ms. Harrold and Mr. Baker, counsel’s statement
was “pure speculation . . . [and] conjecture.” The court found that Ms. Harrold, Mr. Baker,
and the Petitioner did not mention Mr. Pickleshimer’s presence before the shooting during
the trial. The post-conviction court further determined that post-conviction counsel’s ability
to identify and locate Mr. Pickleshimer was not determinative. The court found that counsel
investigated the facts of the case and the possible witnesses by interviewing the Petitioner,
Ms. Harrold, and Mr. Baker before the trial. The court found that the Petitioner’s single trial
reference to Ruke relative to the events the night before the shooting was not “sufficient to
alert” counsel that Ruke could have been at the home on the morning of the shooting.

        The post-conviction court determined that trial and appellate counsel did not provide
ineffective assistance by failing to ensure Mr. Baker’s video-recorded police statement was
included in the record to facilitate appellate review. The court noted that the issues relevant
to the recording were whether it could have been used for impeachment purposes and
whether it could have been used for substantive evidence. The post-conviction court noted
that although the recording was not included in the appellate record, this court “had no
impediment to analyzing the effect of Mr. Baker’s recorded statement” on the sufficiency of
the convicting evidence. The post-conviction court also noted that this court determined on
appeal that “[a]ny error by the trial court in failing to admit Baker’s video statement as
substantive evidence had no bearing on the aforementioned proof.” Although the post-
conviction court did not determine whether trial or appellate counsel provided deficient
performance, the court determined that, based upon the appellate court’s conclusions in the
appeal of the Petitioner’s conviction, the Petitioner failed to established he was prejudiced
by the failure to the include the recording in the appellate record.

                                         -19-
        The post-conviction court determined that appellate counsel did not provide
ineffective assistance by failing to prepare an adequate legal argument with citations to the
record on appeal relative to the sufficiency of the evidence. The post-conviction court noted
that although appellate counsel argued that the jury would have reached a different
conclusion about premeditation if it could have considered Mr. Baker’s statement to the
police, appellate counsel failed to identify any of Mr. Baker’s relevant statements. The post-
conviction court determined that, based upon the appellate court’s opinion, the Petitioner
failed to establish that he was prejudiced by appellate counsel’s performance. The post-
conviction court noted that this court “was able to determine the substance of these
statements from citations provided elsewhere in the brief” and that this court reviewed the
sufficiency of the evidence, including the excerpts of the recording presented at the trial
during the detective’s testimony. This appeal followed.

       The Petitioner contends that he received the ineffective assistance of trial and
appellate counsel. He argues that trial counsel failed to present Mr. Pickleshimer at the trial
whose testimony was relevant to the Petitioner’s state of mind at the time of the shooting, the
Petitioner’s reputation for peacefulness, and whether the Petitioner acted pursuant to
adequate provocation. The Petitioner also argues that trial counsel failed to cross-examine
Mr. Baker properly and failed to make an offer of proof of Mr. Baker’s video-recorded
police statement. Likewise, the Petitioner alleges trial counsel failed to present the
psychological defenses of diminished capacity and “severe” intoxication and failed to ensure
the Petitioner stopped taking his psychological medication in order for the Petitioner to
participate meaningfully in the trial. The Petitioner argues that appellate counsel failed to
provide an adequate argument in the appellate brief supporting the sufficiency of the
evidence allegation. The State responds that “the Petitioner failed to show that he was
prejudiced by his attorney’s ineffective assistance at trial.”

        Post-conviction relief is available “when the conviction or sentence is void or
voidable because of the abridgement of any right guaranteed by the Constitution of
Tennessee or the Constitution of the United States.” T.C.A. § 40-30-103 (2012). A
petitioner has the burden of proving his factual allegations by clear and convincing evidence.
 Id. § 40-30-110(f) (2012). A post-conviction court’s findings of fact are binding on appeal,
and this court must defer to them “unless the evidence in the record preponderates against
those findings.” Henley v. State, 960 S.W.2d 572, 578 (Tenn. 1997); see Fields v. State, 40
S.W.3d 450, 456-57 (Tenn. 2001). A post-conviction court’s application of law to its factual
findings is subject to a de novo standard of review without a presumption of correctness.
Fields, 40 S.W.3d at 457-58.

       To establish a post-conviction claim of the ineffective assistance of counsel in
violation of the Sixth Amendment, a petitioner has the burden of proving that (1) counsel’s
performance was deficient and (2) the deficient performance prejudiced the defense.

                                         -20-
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984); see Lockhart v. Fretwell, 506 U.S. 364,
368-72 (1993). The Tennessee Supreme Court has applied the Strickland standard to an
accused’s right to counsel under article I, section 9 of the Tennessee Constitution. See State
v. Melson, 772 S.W.2d 417, 419 n.2 (Tenn. 1989).

        A petitioner must satisfy both prongs of the Strickland test in order to prevail in an
ineffective assistance of counsel claim. Henley, 960 S.W.2d at 580. “[F]ailure to prove
either deficiency or prejudice provides a sufficient basis to deny relief on the ineffective
assistance claim.” Goad v. State, 938 S.W.2d 363, 370 (Tenn. 1996). To establish the
performance prong, a petitioner must show that “the advice given, or the services rendered . .
. , are [not] within the range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases.”
Baxter v. Rose, 523 S.W.2d 930, 936 (Tenn. 1975); see Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690. The
post-conviction court must determine if these acts or omissions, viewed in light of all of the
circumstances, fell “outside the wide range of professionally competent assistance.”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690. A petitioner “is not entitled to the benefit of hindsight, may not
second-guess a reasonably based trial strategy by his counsel, and cannot criticize a sound,
but unsuccessful, tactical decision.” Adkins v. State, 911 S.W.2d 334, 347 (Tenn. Crim. App.
1994); see Pylant v. State, 263 S.W.3d 854, 874 (Tenn. 2008). This deference, however,
only applies “if the choices are informed . . . based upon adequate preparation.” Cooper v.
State, 847 S.W.2d 521, 528 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1992). To establish the prejudice prong, a
petitioner must show that “there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Strickland,
466 U.S. at 694. “A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine
confidence in the outcome.” Id.

                                    A.     Trial Counsel

1.     Mr. Pickleshimer

       The Petitioner argues that trial counsel failed to present Mr. Pickleshimer at the trial
whose testimony was relevant to the Petitioner’s state of mind at the time of the shooting, the
Petitioner’s reputation for peacefulness, and whether the Petitioner acted with adequate
provocation.

       The record reflects that Mr. Pickleshimer was present at Ms. Harrold’s home on the
morning of the shooting but that neither trial counsel nor the defense investigator identified
Mr. Pickleshimer as a potential trial witness or attempted to locate Mr. Pickleshimer. Mr.
Pickleshimer testified that he was at Ms. Harrold’s home working on his truck’s transmission
before the shooting occurred and that he “noticed” the Petitioner and the victim fighting
outside the home. Mr. Pickleshimer stated that initially, the Petitioner’s demeanor was
“fine” but that the victim was “angry about something” and pushed the Petitioner. Mr.

                                         -21-
Pickleshimer saw the Petitioner’s demeanor change after the victim pushed the Petitioner,
and Mr. Pickleshimer got in his car to leave after watching the victim’s continuing to push
and yell at the Petitioner. Mr. Pickleshimer said that the Petitioner looked “messed up,”
nervous, and disoriented and that Mr. Pickleshimer had never seen the Petitioner in this
condition. Although Mr. Pickleshimer did not witness the shooting, he did not believe the
Petitioner was capable of premeditation and believed that the Petitioner “snapped.” Mr.
Pickleshimer had never witnessed the Petitioner be violent.

        Mr. Pickleshimer’s testimony would have been relevant to the Petitioner’s state of
mind at the time of the shooting and his lack of violent conduct. However, trial counsel’s
credited testimony reflects that the Petitioner never told counsel that Mr. Pickleshimer was at
the home on the morning of the shooting. Counsel stated that the only people the Petitioner
identified at Ms. Harrold’s home were Ms. Harrold, Mr. Baker, the victim, and Possum. In
any event, counsel investigated the case by reviewing the discovery materials provided by
the prosecution, utilized the services of an investigator, and interviewed Ms. Harrold and Mr.
Baker before the trial. Neither the discovery materials nor the State’s witnesses mentioned
to counsel that Mr. Pickleshimer was present at Ms. Harrold’s home on the morning of the
shooting. Although the Petitioner mentioned “Ruke,” Mr. Pickleshimer’s nickname, during
his cross-examination at the trial in the context of squirrel hunting and drinking beer with the
Petitioner and Possum on the day before the shooting, the trial transcript does not reflect that
any witness, including the Petitioner, mentioned Mr. Pickleshimer in any context relative to
the day of the shooting. As a result, the record supports the post-conviction court’s
determination that counsel did not provide deficient performance in this regard.

       Furthermore, the Petitioner has failed to establish any prejudice. Although Mr.
Pickleshimer’s testimony could have been relevant to the Petitioner’s state of mind, Mr.
Pickleshimer did not witness the shooting. Rather, his testimony reflects that he left Ms.
Harrold’s home before the shooting began and did not know the victim had been shot until
days afterward. Although Mr. Pickleshimer saw the victim yell and push the Petitioner and
thought the Petitioner might have snapped, nothing in the record suggests that the victim’s
conduct resulted in the Petitioner’s acting under adequate provocation to shoot the victim
multiple times. Mr. Pickleshimer did not see the victim open the trunk of her car and did not
see the victim display a weapon of any type. The post-conviction court did not err by
denying relief.

        We note that portions of Mr. Pickleshimer’s post-conviction testimony conflicted with
the Petitioner’s trial testimony. Mr. Pickleshimer testified that the Petitioner began living
with him and his grandmother a few days before the shooting. However, the Petitioner
testified at the trial that he lived with his “new girlfriend in Bradley County.” Furthermore,
Mr. Pickleshimer’s testimony that the Petitioner was at Mr. Pickleshimer’s grandmother’s
house on the night before the shooting does not support the Petitioner’s trial testimony. The

                                          -22-
Petitioner testified that on the morning before the shooting, the Petitioner and Possum,
identified as James O’Donald, went squirrel hunting and drank vodka. The Petitioner stated
that on the night before the shooting, he and Possum “went up to some other people’s house
up in Birchwood and we [were] drinking beer.” The Petitioner stated that Possum picked
him up from Ms. Harrold’s home that evening, that Possum drove to the home in Birchwood,
and that they, along with another friend later identified as Ruke, drank one case of beer. The
Petitioner said that he returned to Ms. Harrold’s home the morning of the shooting. The
Petitioner did not testify that he spent the night before the shooting at Mr. Pickleshimer’s
grandmother’s home. The Petitioner is not entitled to relief on this basis.

2.     Cross-examination of Mr. Baker

        Relative to trial counsel’s cross-examination of Mr. Baker, the Petitioner recites
counsel’s post-conviction hearing testimony in the argument section of the brief but fails to
present any legal argument supporting his ineffective assistance allegation. The issue as
written in the Petitioner’s brief states, “[T]rial counsel failed, based on his lack of criminal
defense experience, . . . to properly cross-examine Tyler Baker, the State’s chief witness.” In
the argument section of the appellate brief, the Petitioner notes that counsel mistakenly
thought he had cross-examined Mr. Baker and Ms. Harrold about the Petitioner’s “demeanor
and him snapping or being provoked and impassioned by the victim’s behavior.” The
Petitioner likewise noted that counsel “admitted that the witnesses testified the shooting
occurred around 7:00 or 8:00 a.m., but the detectives testified they were not dispatched until
10:00 a.m.” and that counsel did not “pick[] up on this.” The Petitioner states in his brief
that counsel “did not bring out the fact that the victim had drugs in her system” or that the
State’s witnesses had criminal histories. Finally, the Petitioner notes that counsel agreed that
none of the prosecution’s witnesses stated in the 9-1-1 call or in their initial police statements
that the Petitioner said “he was going to a crazy hospital to help his case.” We presume that
these are the questions the Petitioner alleges trial counsel should have asked during the trial
and that because counsel did not ask these questions, he provided ineffective assistance.

       Because the Petitioner’s allegation is based upon trial counsel’s cross-examination of
Mr. Baker, our analysis is limited to whether counsel provided ineffective assistance during
his cross-examination of Mr. Baker. Mr. Baker testified that he did not witness the shooting
and that he did not observe anything unusual about the Petitioner before the shooting
occurred. Mr. Baker testified that after the shooting, the Petitioner was “[j]ust real calm
about it” and did not respond when Mr. Baker asked what occurred. Mr. Baker stated that he
had previously seen the victim and the Petitioner have verbal altercations but never physical
altercations before the shooting. As a result, Mr. Baker, based upon his trial testimony,
would not have been able to provide information relative to whether the Petitioner acted
within a state of adequate provocation or passion. Furthermore, the Petitioner did not present
Mr. Baker at the post-conviction hearing, and this court will not speculate about what Mr.

                                           -23-
Baker’s testimony would have been in this regard. See Black v. State, 794 S.W.2d 752, 757
(Tenn. Crim. App. 1990). The record supports the post-conviction court’s general
determinations that the Petitioner has failed to show that trial counsel provided deficient
performance or that the Petitioner was prejudiced by counsel’s performance. The post-
conviction court did not err by denying relief, and the Petitioner is not entitled to relief on
this basis.

        Relative to the timeline on the morning of the shooting, Mr. Baker testified that the
Petitioner arrived at Ms. Harrold’s home around 7:00 or 7:15 a.m., that Ms. Harrold’s son
left the home around 8:30 or 9:00 a.m., and that Mr. Baker asked the victim about her
driving him to a job interview around 10:00 a.m. We note that Ms. Harrold did not dispute
during cross-examination that the Petitioner arrived at her home around 7:00 a.m. and that
the 9-1-1 call was made around 10:00 a.m. Therefore, nothing in the record reflects that the
timeline of events was disputed, and no evidence presented at the post-conviction hearing
reflects otherwise. The post-conviction court did not err by denying relief, and the Petitioner
is not entitled to relief on this basis.

       Relative to the victim’s having drugs in her system at the time of the shooting, the
record does not indicate Mr. Baker was questioned at the trial about the victim’s alleged drug
use, but the record does reflect that Ms. Harrold admitted at the trial that she and the victim
smoked marijuana occasionally and that they “could have” smoked marijuana on the
morning of the shooting. Although counsel recalled that the victim’s toxicology report may
have showed the presence of drugs, the Petitioner did not present any evidence, including the
toxicology report or expert testimony, at the post-conviction hearing to establish whether the
victim had recently used any controlled substances and, if so, the effect of any relevant
controlled substance. This court will not speculate about the results of the victim’s
toxicology report. Furthermore, the Petitioner did not present Mr. Baker at the post-
conviction to establish whether Mr. Baker had any knowledge of the victim’s alleged drug
use, and this court will likewise not speculate about what Mr. Baker would have said in this
regard. See Black, 794 S.W.2d at 757. The record supports the post-conviction court’s
general determinations that the Petitioner has failed to show that trial counsel provided
deficient performance or that the Petitioner was prejudiced by counsel’s performance. The
post-conviction court did not err by denying relief, and the Petitioner is not entitled to relief
on this basis.

       Relative to the counsel’s failure to present evidence of Mr. Baker’s criminal history,
no evidence presented at the post-conviction hearing reflects Mr. Baker had any criminal
convictions. The Petitioner did not present certified copies reflecting Mr. Baker had any
criminal convictions or present Mr. Baker as a witness to testify about any conviction he may
have had at the time of the offense or the trial. See Black, 794 S.W.2d at 757. The record
supports the post-conviction court’s general determinations that the Petitioner has failed to

                                          -24-
show that trial counsel provided deficient performance or that the Petitioner was prejudiced
by counsel’s performance. The post-conviction court did not err by denying relief, and the
Petitioner is not entitled to relief on this basis.

        Relative to the 9-1-1 recording reflecting that nobody said the Petitioner stated that
“he was going to a crazy hospital to help his case” after the shooting, we note that the
recording is neither included in the appellate record nor transcribed in the trial transcript.
However, this court summarized in the appeal of the conviction that during the 9-1-1 call,
Ms. Harrold stated that the Petitioner shot the victim with a “small pistol” and left the scene
and that the victim “wore a wire on him several years back” when the 9-1-1 operator asked
why the Petitioner would have been angry with the victim. Malcolm Witherow, 2013 WL
3353338, at *1. The trial transcript reflects that Ms. Harrold told Mr. Baker to call 9-1-1,
that Ms. Harrold spoke to the operator, and that Ms. Harrold “believed” she was “out of [her]
mind” and “incoherent” when she spoke to the operator. Ms. Harrold did not testify at the
trial that the Petitioner said he was going to mental health facility. Rather, Ms. Harrold
testified that the Petitioner did not say anything to her after the shooting.
        Tyler Baker testified at the trial that Ms. Harrold told him to call 9-1-1 after the
shooting and that he gave the telephone to Ms. Harrold. Malcolm Witherow, 2013 WL
3353338, at *2. Therefore, the record does not reflect that Mr. Baker provided the 9-1-1
operator with any substantive information about the shooting. However, at the trial, Mr.
Baker testified that, at an unidentified time, the Petitioner previously stated that he was going
to kill the victim and that he would “get away with it” by going to the “crazy house.” Id.
Mr. Baker did not testify that the Petitioner referenced seeking treatment at a mental health
facility at the time of the shooting. Rather, Mr. Baker testified that the Petitioner was calm
and did not speak after the shooting. The record does not reflect that trial counsel questioned
Mr. Baker about his reference to the mental health facility during Mr. Baker’s direct
examination. Furthermore, Mr. Baker’s video-recorded police statement was not presented
at the post-conviction hearing and is not included in the appellate record. However, the trial
transcript reflects that the single relevant excerpt from the recording was largely inaudible
and that Mr. Baker told Detective Ashburn the following:

       [the Petitioner] (Inaudible), I mean he’s always like saying I’m going to kill
       that b----, this and that. But I mean you know (Inaudible) after that and then
       you know he’s say I (Inaudible) almost a week and half but I won’t go to jail
       because I (inaudible) about it. I mean –[.]

This excerpt was played in the context of counsel’s attempting to show that the Petitioner
became intoxicated about one and one-half weeks before the shooting and talked about
killing the victim while under the influence of alcohol. Detective Ashburn testified that Mr.
Baker stated that the Petitioner talked about killing the victim after becoming intoxicated one
and one-half weeks before the shooting. The record does not reflect that Mr. Baker

                                          -25-
referenced any clear comment about the Petitioner’s seeking mental health treatment in an
effort to avoid criminal punishment.

       Contrary to the Petitioner’s allegation that trial counsel failed to highlight that Mr.
Baker did not mention the Petitioner’s previous comment about avoiding criminal
responsibly during the 9-1-1 call, the record establishes that Mr. Baker mentioned the largely
inaudible comment during his initial police statement before testifying at the trial. We note
that Detective Ashburn also testified that Mr. Baker previously stated that the Petitioner only
threatened the victim when the Petitioner was intoxicated and that the Petitioner never
“messed with anyone” when the Petitioner was sober. The corresponding excerpt from the
video recording was played for the jury in which Mr. Baker stated, “[The Petitioner] was
never mad at [the victim] when he was sober. He just really didn’t talk to nobody that
much.” The Petitioner has failed to establish that counsel provided deficient performance in
this regard or that the Petitioner was prejudiced by counsel’s performance. Counsel’s
strategy was to show the Petitioner’s intoxication played some role in the killing, and Mr.
Baker’s recorded statement to the detective reflected that Mr. Baker said the Petitioner was
intoxicated when the Petitioner discussed killing the victim. The record supports the post-
conviction court’s general determinations that the Petitioner has failed to show that trial
counsel provided deficient performance or that the Petitioner was prejudiced by counsel’s
performance. The post-conviction court did not err by denying relief, and the Petitioner is
not entitled to relief on this basis.

3.     Offer of Proof of Mr. Baker’s Video-Recorded Police Statement

       The Petitioner argues that trial counsel failed to make an offer of proof relative to Mr.
Baker’s video-recorded police statement. The record reflects that trial counsel sought to
introduce Mr. Baker’s video-recorded statement as substantive evidence and for
impeachment purposes. The trial court denied counsel’s request for both purposes but later
reversed its ruling relative to impeachment. However, by the time the trial court corrected its
erroneous ruling, Mr. Baker had finished his testimony and had been released by the court.
Although the court permitted trial counsel to recall Mr. Baker, he was more than six hours
away and was not readily available to testify. As a result, trial counsel was permitted to
present selected portions of the recorded statement through Detective Ashburn’s testimony
because Mr. Baker provided the statement to the detective. No objections to this procedure
appear in the record. The trial court instructed the jury that it had erred by not permitting
counsel to cross-examine Mr. Baker with the previous statement to show Mr. Baker’s prior
inconsistent statements and that the only mechanism to admit excerpts from the recording
was through Detective Ashburn’s testimony. The court instructed the jury that the recording
was to be used for determining Mr. Baker’s credibility, and no objections to the court’s
instruction appear in the record. Trial counsel identified the portions of the video recording
he wished to present to the jury, and the excerpts were played for the jury during Detective

                                          -26-
Ashburn’s testimony. The record reflects that the recording was not admitted into evidence
and that counsel did not make an offer of proof of the entire recording.

        The allegation in the appellate brief is that the Petitioner received the ineffective
assistance of counsel because trial counsel “failed, based on his lack of criminal defense
experience, . . . to make an offer of proof, along with appellate counsel, with regard to
Baker’s prior recorded statement to law enforcement which was strongly inconsistent with
his trial testimony.” The argument section of the Petitioner’s brief relevant to an offer of
proof states the following:

       [Trial counsel] also agreed that he did not ask to halt the trial for a brief period
       in order to have Tyler Baker returned once [the trial judge] agreed that her
       prior ruling had been in error prohibiting [counsel] from cross-examining
       [Mr.] Baker by impeaching him with a copy of a prior recorded statement he
       made despite the fact that [counsel] felt such was crucial to effectively cross-
       examining the State’s main witness with a prior inconsistent statement.
       [Counsel] also agreed that he had not utilized [the Petitioner’s] new
       girlfriend’s family as character witnesses and that they would have stated he
       had a very gentle demeanor.

        The Petitioner has failed to present any legal argument and to identify relevant
portions of the record showing that trial counsel provided deficient performance relative to
his failure to make an offer of proof of Mr. Baker’s video-recorded police statement.
Although counsel was initially not permitted to cross-examine Mr. Baker about the previous
inconsistent statements, counsel was permitted to present Mr. Baker’s inconsistent
statements to the jury. The Petitioner has not alleged he received ineffective assistance
because counsel’s failure to make an offer of proof of the entire recorded statement
prevented appellate counsel from arguing on appeal that the trial court erred by not admitting
Mr. Baker’s statement as substantive evidence. Furthermore, the Petitioner has not identified
any inconsistent statement not presented by trial counsel during Detective Ashburn’s
testimony. The video-recorded statement was not presented at the post-conviction hearing,
and this court will not speculate whether any additional inconsistencies existed between the
recording and Mr. Baker’s trial testimony. See Black, 794 S.W.2d at 757. The record
supports the post-conviction court’s determinations that the Petitioner has failed to show that
trial counsel provided deficient performance or that the Petitioner was prejudiced by
counsel’s performance. The Petitioner is not entitled to relief on this basis.

       To the extent that the Petitioner argues appellate counsel should have made an offer of
proof of Mr. Baker’s video-recorded statement, no legal authority exists allowing appellate
counsel to create evidence for appellate review that was not admitted in the trial court
proceedings. Likewise, it was impossible for appellate counsel to supplement the appellate

                                           -27-
record with evidence not admitted in the trial court proceedings. The record supports the
post-conviction court’s general determinations that the Petitioner has failed to show that
appellate counsel provided deficient performance or that the Petitioner was prejudiced by
counsel’s performance. This allegation is without merit, and the Petitioner is not entitled to
relief.

        Although not relevant to trial counsel’s failure to make an offer of proof of Mr.
Baker’s police statement, we note the Petitioner’s single reference to counsel’s failure to
present the Petitioner’s girlfriend’s parents as character witnesses at the trial. The Petitioner
failed to present the potential witnesses as the post-conviction hearing, and we will not
speculate what their testimony would have entailed. See Black, 794 S.W.2d at 757. The
record supports the post-conviction court’s general determinations that the Petitioner has
failed to show that trial counsel provided deficient performance or that the Petitioner was
prejudiced by counsel’s performance. The post-conviction court did not err by denying
relief, and the Petitioner is not entitled to relief on this basis.

4.     Psychological Defenses

        The Petitioner alleges that trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by “failing to
present a psychological defense in terms of diminished capacity and severe intoxication” and
by failing “to have the Petitioner stop taking his Thorazine a few days before trial so that he
could meaningfully participate in his trial.” The argument portion of the brief relevant to the
Petitioner’s mental health states that trial counsel did not recall the Petitioner’s medication
but that counsel recalled the Petitioner underwent mental health evaluations and could have
been prescribed Thorazine. The Petitioner notes that counsel did not recall the Petitioner’s
telling counsel he could not stay awake at the trial because of his medication and that counsel
did not ask the Petitioner to stop taking his medication a few days before the trial. The
Petitioner states that although counsel recalled an independent psychological evaluation was
performed, counsel did not recall what the evaluation showed about the Petitioner’s
medication or memory loss or blackout periods from past trauma associated with the
Petitioner’s being shot five times during a robbery. The Petitioner noted that counsel could
not recall what discussions he had with Dr. Montgomery, who conducted the evaluation.

       The record reflects that the trial court approved payment for Dr. Montgomery to
evaluate the Petitioner’s mental health. However, Dr. Montgomery’s report was not filed
with the trial court, provided to the prosecution, or mentioned during the trial. Trial
counsel’s credited testimony reflects that if the report were not favorable to the defense, he
would not have presented it in the trial proceedings. The Petitioner did not present Dr.
Montgomery or his evaluation report at the post-conviction hearing, and this court will not
speculate about Dr. Montgomery’s conclusions relative to the Petitioner’s mental health or
prescribed medications. See Black, 794 S.W.2d at 757. No evidence was presented at the

                                          -28-
post-conviction hearing that the evaluation supported any form of diminished capacity, and
although counsel did not recall Dr. Montgomery’s conclusions, counsel said that he and Dr.
Montgomery discussed whether the Petitioner suffered some form of diminished capacity.
Relative to the Petitioner’s medication, no evidence was presented at the post-conviction
hearing about the Petitioner’s medications or any adverse effects of the prescribed
medications. This court will not speculate relative to the Petitioner’s prescribed medications
or any effects. Likewise, the trial transcript does not reflect any concern about the
Petitioner’s appearance or demeanor during the trial. The Petitioner did not testify at the
post-conviction hearing, and counsel’s uncontradicted testimony does not reflect that
Petitioner was impaired during the trial. The record supports the post-conviction court’s
general determinations that the Petitioner has failed to show that trial counsel provided
deficient performance or that the Petitioner was prejudiced by counsel’s performance. The
post-conviction court did not err by denying relief, and the Petitioner is not entitled to relief
on this basis.

       Relative to the Petitioner’s intoxication at the time of the shooting, ample evidence
was presented during the trial that the Petitioner had consumed alcohol the night before and
the morning of the shooting. During closing argument, trial counsel discussed the
Petitioner’s drinking beer and vodka and getting little sleep the night before the shooting,
which was presented through the Petitioner’s testimony and the recording of Mr. Baker’s
police statement. Counsel also discussed the Petitioner’s drinking beer on the morning of
the shooting, which was presented through the testimony of Ms. Harrold and the Petitioner.
Relative to whether the Petitioner acted with premeditation, counsel told the jury that the
Petitioner “did not have a plan to go up there that day and do this. Instead he’d been out
drinking all night. He got out there and things just happened.” Although counsel did not tell
the jury specifically that the Petitioner was too intoxicated to commit premeditated murder,
counsel’s argument reflects the Petitioner’s intoxication played a role in the shooting. We
note that no evidence presented at the trial or at the post-conviction hearing reflects the
Petitioner’s “severe intoxication.” Ms. Harrold and the Petitioner talked on the morning of
the shooting while drinking coffee, and Ms. Harrold never explicitly stated or implied that
the Petitioner was severely intoxicated. We note, too, that the trial court instructed the jury
relative to voluntary intoxication. The record supports the post-conviction court’s general
determinations that the Petitioner has failed to show that trial counsel provided deficient
performance or that the Petitioner was prejudiced by counsel’s performance. The post-
conviction court did not err by denying relief, and the Petitioner is not entitled to relief on
this basis.

                                  B.     Appellate Counsel

       The Petitioner alleges that appellate counsel provided ineffective assistance in his
presentation of the sufficiency of the evidence issue to this court in the previous appeal.

                                          -29-
However, the Petitioner presents no legal argument or citation to the record to support his
assertion that appellate counsel provided deficient performance. Appellate counsel agreed at
the post-conviction hearing that his argument for this issue consisted of six sentences.

        The record reflects that appellate counsel argued in the previous appeal that the State
would have been unable to establish the Petitioner acted with premeditation had the jury
been permitted to consider Mr. Baker’s recorded statement as substantive evidence. We note
that the Petitioner has not alleged that trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing
to make an offer of proof or to admit the entire recording into evidence, depriving appellate
counsel of the ability to argue fully why the recording should have been admitted as
substantive evidence. In a related issue, appellate counsel contended on appeal that the trial
court erred by not admitting Mr. Baker’s recorded statement as substantive evidence. This
court concluded that any error in not admitting the recording as substantive evidence was
harmless because the evidence of the Petitioner’s guilt was overwhelming and that the
recording “had no bearing” on the proof supporting the Petitioner’s first degree murder
conviction. Malcolm Witherow, 2013 WL 3353338, at *12. In determining that the evidence
was sufficient, this court stated that cartridge casings and the victim’s blood were found in
the driveway leading to the roadway where the victim was found, that gunshot residue was
found on the Petitioner’s seatbelt, and that the victim’s blood was found on the Petitioner’s
shoe. Id. at *9. The court also noted that after the shooting, the Petitioner drove to a mental
health facility, where he reported that he had shot the victim and had disposed of the gun. Id.
Although Appellate counsel’s argument was noticeably short, this court considered the
sufficiency of the evidence on the merits. Likewise, no evidence shows that the outcome of
the appeal would have been different had counsel elaborated in his argument. The record
supports the post-conviction court’s determinations that the Petitioner has failed to show that
appellate counsel provided deficient performance or that the Petitioner was prejudiced by
counsel’s performance. The Petitioner is not entitled to relief on this basis.

      Based upon the foregoing and the record as a whole, the judgment of the post-
conviction court is affirmed.

                                            ____________________________________
                                            ROBERT H. MONTGOMERY, JR., JUDGE

                                          -30-