IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT JACKSON
December 6, 2011 Session
STATE OF TENNESSEE v. AMEALE HUDSON
Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Madison County
No. 10-152 Roger A. Page, Judge
No. W2010-02625-CCA-R3-CD - Filed September 14, 2012
A Madison County Circuit Court Jury found the appellant, Ameale Hudson, guilty of first
degree felony murder and especially aggravated robbery. The trial court imposed an
effective sentence of life imprisonment in the Tennessee Department of Correction. On
appeal, the appellant contends that the trial court erred by (1) denying his motion for a
change of venue; (2) denying his motion to bar the State from referring to him by his
nickname,“Pistol”; and (3) denying his motion to prohibit the admission of postmortem
photographs of the victim. The appellant also contends that the evidence is insufficient to
support his convictions. Upon review, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Circuit Court are
Affirmed.
N ORMA M CG EE O GLE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which A LAN E. G LENN and
J EFFREY S. B IVINS, JJ., joined.
Joseph Taggart, Jackson, Tennessee, for the appellant, Ameale Hudson.
Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Rachel E. Willis, Senior Counsel;
James G. Woodall, District Attorney General; and James W. Thompson, Assistant District
Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
OPINION
I. Factual Background
The appellant’s charges stemmed from the death of the victim, Troy Mitchell. At trial,
Johnnie McKinnie, a maintenance man who worked at Guardian Courts Apartments, testified
that he was at the complex on the morning of October 28, 2009. McKinnie’s coworker,
Darryl Wayne Kizer, was having car trouble, and McKinnie attached a chain from his truck
to Kizer’s car to pull it up the hill of the apartment complex. At the top of the hill, the men
saw the victim, who was a locksmith and the owner of Mitchell’s Lock and Safe, working
on a yellow Chevrolet Cavalier that was parked outside apartment 220, the appellant’s
apartment, which was located on the bottom floor. The victim’s van was parked “catty
cornered” to the building. McKinnie asked the victim to move his van for a moment so
McKinnie could tow Kizer’s car beyond it. The victim complied then went back to work on
the yellow car.
While McKinnie and Kizer were removing the chain from Kizer’s car, the appellant,
whom McKinnie knew as “Pistol,” came outside and “started . . . cussing and rushing
people[] away.” McKinnie heard the appellant say, “Hurry up. Let’s get the H-E-L-L out
of here. These folks got to go to school.” McKinnie said that the appellant was six to ten
feet away from the victim and that he was “scoping” the victim, repeatedly glancing at him.
McKinnie saw the appellant make hand signals to communicate with two men, one of whom
was Justin Gray. The men were standing at the appellant’s open, bedroom window and
watching the appellant. McKinnie thought the appellant “was up to something,” but he and
Kizer left before anything happened. Later, McKinnie identified the appellant and Gray from
a photograph line-up.
Kizer testified consistently with McKinnie, noting that when the appellant tried to
make them leave, he pushed and shook Kizer’s car even though it was not blocking any
vehicle.
Montrez McAlister testified that around 9:45 or 10:00 a.m. the morning of the
shooting, he went to apartment 220 where he saw the appellant, whom he knew as “Pistol”;
Gray; and another man he referred to as “Dude.” “Dude” was later identified as Cornelius
Roberson. The appellant’s fourteen- or fifteen-year-old sister, Calvinette, was asleep on the
living room couch. McAlister assumed that the appellant’s mother was next door with her
boyfriend. McAlister recalled that the victim’s locksmith van and a yellow car were in front
of the appellant’s bedroom window. He identified the window from a photograph.
McAlister testified that when he walked into the apartment, Gray was putting a navy
blue bandana with designs on it around his face, covering his mouth and nose. McAlister
stated that the blue bandana depicted in Exhibit 19, which was a photograph, looked like the
one Gray wore at the time of the shooting. Gray was dressed in a black jacket turned inside-
out, a black hoodie with the hood pulled over his head, black pants, and black “Air Force 1
low top” tennis shoes. McAlister said that the appellant handed Gray a black .22 or .25
caliber “six shooter” revolver and told Gray that “[o]h, when he get through handling their
business, just put it [the gun] back and we’re going to take all this stuff off when you get
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done.” McAlister said that he did not know to what “business” the appellant was referring.
McAlister said Gray left the apartment with the gun in his pocket. McAlister went to
the back of the apartment and asked Roberson what was going on, and Roberson responded,
“I guess Justin [Gray is] fixing to do something stupid.” McAlister heard a loud noise and
looked out of the appellant’s bedroom window. He saw Gray “coming up out of the [yellow]
car like he – in a pulling motion, like he were pulling something out.” Afterward, Gray ran
around the building and returned to the appellant’s apartment. The appellant opened the
door, and Gray threw the revolver and bandana in the apartment. Then, Gray and the
appellant walked toward Hollywood Drive. McAlister said he left the appellant’s apartment
because he thought that Gray had stolen a CD player from the car.
McAlister conceded that his first statement to police on November 4, 2009, in which
he stated that he heard the shot while standing outside, was false. He explained that he was
not truthful because he was afraid that if he admitted being in the apartment, he would be
charged with a crime. Later that same day, McAlister gave a second statement to police in
which he acknowledged that he was in the appellant’s bedroom at the time of the shooting.
McAlister said that he had a clear view of events from the window. Additionally, McAlister
identified Gray from a photograph line-up. McAlister acknowledged that his nickname was
“Money.”
Darlene Echols testified that at the time of the shooting, she lived in apartment 130
of Guardian Courts Apartments. That morning, she saw a man, whom she later identified
from a photograph line-up as “Justin [Gray],” and the appellant, whom she knew as Pistol,
“running from Guardian Courts Apartments, running on Hollywood to the blue house.” She
said that as they ran, the men looked behind them toward the appellant’s apartment. She
noticed them because “[i]t’s unusual for people to run through the projects.” A few minutes
later, Echols heard an ambulance and the police arrive. She walked toward the commotion
and learned that a man had been shot. Shortly thereafter, she went back to her apartment. She
saw the appellant’s girlfriend pull into a driveway, the appellant quickly got into the car, and
the car “zoomed off.” Gray did not get into the car, and Echols did not see where he went.
Echols stated that she knew the appellant and his family “from the neighborhood.”
She said that young boys in the neighborhood “mostly hang around” and that when the
appellant “got out of jail he sort of someway claimed the younger boys to his house, you
know. He hang around with the older boys, he hung around with the younger boys.” She
stated that she stopped her sixteen-year-old son from associating with the appellant,
explaining, “They always hang around with him. Too tough, you know. . . . I just didn’t like
him.” She said that she did not want her son “hanging around that spot” because “there’s a
lot of drugs and stuff like that being – dealing around in that area.”
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Jasmine Carlson, the appellant’s girlfriend, testified that the appellant spent the night
of October 27 with her, and, on her way to college the next morning, she drove the appellant
to apartment 220 in her silver Pontiac Grand Am. She picked the appellant up later in the
day but could not recall the exact time or location. She did not believe that she picked the
appellant up from anyone’s driveway. Carlson stated that the appellant and Gray were
“buddies,” that they were frequently together, and that the appellant called Gray “his little
brother.” On cross-examination, Carlson said that she did not see the appellant with a gun
on the night of October 27. She stated that the next day, she picked the appellant up after she
attended chapel at Lane University, maintaining that “[c]hapel is over at about twelve,
twelve-thirty.”
Jackson Police Officer Ted Maxwell testified that on the morning of October 28,
2009, he was dispatched to 1170 Hollywood Drive, the location of the Guardian Courts
Apartments complex, following a report of a possible shooting. When Officer Maxwell
arrived, he saw some people gathered around a yellow Chevrolet Cavalier. The driver’s side
door of the car was open, and the victim was sitting on the ground with his back against the
car. The victim’s face was bleeding, he was awake, but he was not coherent. An ambulance
arrived, and some of the blood was removed from the victim’s face, revealing “a possible
bullet entry” at the bridge of the victim’s nose. The victim was taken from the scene, and
photographs of the scene were taken by a crime scene officer. Officer Maxwell testified that
the victim’s vehicle, which was a van and trailer for Mitchell’s Lock and Safe, was parked
at an angle to the driver’s side of the Cavalier. Inside the Cavalier, Officer Mitchell saw
blood on papers and tools that were in the passenger seat. On cross-examination, Officer
Maxwell stated that he was the first officer on the scene and that he did not see the appellant
there.
Lieutenant Mike Turner, a crime scene investigator and property custodian for the
Jackson Police Department, testified that when he arrived at the scene, the victim had been
transported to the hospital. Lieutenant Turner saw a yellow Chevrolet Cavalier with the door
open. The victim’s van and trailer were parked at an angle, adjacent to the Cavalier.
Lieutenant Turner took photographs of the scene. He stated that there was a considerable
amount of blood inside the vehicle, including on the running board beside the driver’s seat
and on the victim’s tools that were in the passenger seat. Lieutenant Turner said that he saw
blood on the parking lot outside the driver’s side of the vehicle.
Jackson Police Investigator Chris Chestnut testified that on October 28, 2009, he
responded to a report that a man had been shot at Guardian Courts Apartments. Upon his
arrival, Investigator Chestnut saw “several police officers already on the scene, an
ambulance, a vehicle belonging to a locksmith, and a yellow car that had some blood on the
ground beside it.” As the victim was loaded into the ambulance, Investigator Chestnut took
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photographs of him. After the ambulance left, Investigator Chestnut photographed the scene
then went to the hospital. While at the hospital, Investigator Chestnut saw that the victim had
a single gunshot wound that appeared to be from a small caliber bullet. The bullet had
entered the left side of the victim’s nose.
When the victim was taken for a CAT scan, Investigator Chestnut spoke with the
victim’s family. During the conversation, Investigator Chestnut learned that the victim’s
black leather wallet and Samsung cellular telephone were missing. Thereafter, he returned
to the scene to assist with the search of the area.
As Investigator Chestnut and Sergeant Mike Doran were searching the apartment
complex, a maintenance man, Mr. Patterson, asked the officers what they were doing. After
being informed of the reasons for the officers’ presence, Mr. Patterson told Investigator
Chestnut that earlier that day, he had locked some vacant apartments “that were standing
open,” one of which was apartment 210. Patterson unlocked the apartments for Investigator
Chestnut and Sergeant Doran to search. During the search, Sergeant Doran alerted
Investigator Chestnut that he had found a black Samsung telephone in a drawer under the
bathroom sink in apartment 210. In a cabinet underneath the drawer, Investigator Chestnut
found digital scales, small Ziploc bags, and rubber gloves, which he described as drug
paraphernalia. Later, the victim’s son, Larry Joe Mitchell, confirmed that the telephone
belonged to the victim.
Mike Doran, a sergeant with the Madison County Sheriff’s Department assigned to
the Metro Narcotics Unit, testified that on the afternoon of October 29, 2009, he was called
to the scene to assist in searching the apartment complex. He stated that “several other
investigators [from] the Narcotics Unit, the Gang Unit, and the Jackson Police Department
Violent Crimes Unit” were also involved in the search. Sergeant Doran said that he and
Investigator Chris Chestnut entered apartment 210, which was vacant. In a bathroom drawer,
Sergeant Doran found a black Samsung telephone. Sergeant Doran informed Investigator
Chestnut of his discovery.
Officers William Roane and Aimee Oxley testified that they retrieved fingerprints
from apartment 210 and that none of the prints retrieved matched Gray or the appellant.
Dr. Laura Boos testified that she worked in the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation’s
(TBI) crime laboratory and that she tested the victim’s cellular telephone and a blue coat for
skin cells. On the cellular telephone, Dr. Boos found a mix of genetic material from at least
two people, with the victim being the major contributor. The appellant, McAlister, and
Roberson were excluded as the minor contributor, but Gray could not be excluded. On the
blue coat, Dr. Boos also found a mix of genetic material from two people, with the victim
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again being the major contributor. McAlister and Roberson were excluded as the minor
contributor to the mixture found on the blue coat, but Gray and the appellant could not be
excluded.
Investigator Terry Buckley testified that on the day of the shooting, the appellant was
developed as a suspect and was brought to the police station for an interview. After being
informed of his Miranda rights, the appellant waived his rights and agreed to speak with
police. The appellant initially told Investigator Buckley that he had spent the previous
evening with his girlfriend, Jasmine Carlson, and that she had driven him to his mother’s
apartment the next morning. He spoke briefly with “a dude” and went inside. He played
music for five to ten minutes, walked to Brookfield, then returned home. Thereafter, the
appellant went back to Brookfield; on the way, he saw people “hovering” around a car, then
police and an ambulance arrived. The appellant left and “hung out” for a while before
returning to Guardian Courts Apartments where he was apprehended by police. The
appellant maintained, “I didn’t have anything to do with Dude getting robbed or shot and I
don’t know anything about it or who did it.”
On November 4, 2009, Investigator Tyreece Miller, the head of the Jackson Police
Department’s Violent Crimes Unit, brought the appellant in for a second interview. During
the first part of the interview, the appellant acknowledged that he had been in apartment 210
where the victim’s cellular telephone was found, maintaining that on October 9 or 10 a girl
gave him oral sex in that apartment. The appellant also said that his fingerprints would be
on scales and plastic bags that were in a bathroom cabinet in apartment 210 because he put
those items there. Investigator Miller said that the cabinet where the drug paraphernalia was
found was located directly under the drawer where the victim’s cellular telephone was
discovered.
The interview was suspended for a break, and, when it resumed, the appellant said that
he had spent the night of October 27 with Carlson. The next morning, Carlson drove to class
at Lane University, taking her cousin, Robin, with her. On the way to school, Carlson took
him to apartment 220 where his mother lived. The appellant said that Calvinette, Gray,
Roberson, and a man he knew as “Money” were in the apartment. The appellant, Gray, and
Roberson went in the appellant’s bedroom then went outside for a few minutes. The
appellant walked to Brookfield and returned to apartment 220 approximately ten to fifteen
minutes later. The appellant saw “Money,” which was McAlister’s nickname, outside; Gray
and Roberson were in the appellant’s bedroom. The appellant saw the victim driving around
“looking for the car” before he began working on a yellow car. The appellant and McAlister
went back to Brookfield. Gray and Roberson stayed in the appellant’s bedroom.
When the appellant and McAlister returned, the victim was working inside the car.
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The appellant and McAlister went in the apartment, and Gray and Roberson called the
appellant over to the window. The appellant said, “My bedroom window overlooks the
parking lot and you can look out my bedroom window and see the locksmith.” Gray said,
“‘Let’s rob him.’” The appellant replied, “‘No.’” Gray and Roberson asked “‘[w]hat we
going to do?’” The appellant responded, “‘I ain’t doing shit,’” and Roberson agreed with the
appellant. The appellant said that Gray “got up the nerve to go rob him” and went outside.
The appellant, McAlister, and Roberson followed Gray outside. After the appellant smoked
a cigarette, the four men went back to the appellant’s bedroom. Gray said, “I’m fixing to go
– I’m fixing to do it,” and the four men went back outside. Gray “ran up on” the victim,
pointed the gun at him, and took the victim’s wallet. The appellant stated that “the gun went
off. Everybody went their separate ways,” with the appellant going back to Brookfield alone.
Investigator Miller testified that around 5:30 p.m., they took a break and got food from
Burger King for the appellant and resumed at 7:45 p.m. Investigator Miller said that “during
the time that we started back,” the appellant gave information about McAlister’s
whereabouts. Investigator Miller had other officers locate McAlister and bring him in for
an interview. During the interview, McAlister implicated the appellant in the crime.
Investigator Miller explained, “[T]hat was the reason for the last interview that we did.”
In his final version of events, the appellant said:
“When I first got home that morning, [Gray, Roberson, and
McAlister] were inside my apartment. There was a gun laying
on my bed. The gun was a black revolver. I handed [Gray] the
gun and told him to get this away from me because I’m on ten
years paper[, meaning on probation].
“I left and went to Brookfield and came back. [Gray,
Roberson, and McAlister] stayed there. When I came back
[Gray and Roberson] called me to the window. [McAlister] was
just in the room. He really didn’t say anything.
“[Gray and Roberson were] talking about robbing the
locksmith that was working on the yellow car. I went out – I
went inside the house. I told [Gray], ‘If you going to rob him,
then rob him. You got the gun. I ain’t got shit to do with this.’
“Everybody went outside. [Gray] shot and robbed him.
We went back inside my apartment. [Gray] had on his solid
black hoody coat. He had something covering his face. [Gray]
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had the locksmith’s wallet and phone. That’s when we all left
and went our separate ways.
“I got out of jail back on October the 8th . I got a revolver
on October 9th because I was being threatened. I kept the gun
sometimes and [Gray] kept the gun sometimes. This was the
same gun that was used in this robbery.”
Lieutenant Christopher Wiser, the supervisor of the Gang Enforcement Team, testified
that he was involved in the homicide investigation and that he was one of a team of officers
who executed a search warrant at Gray’s residence at 1221 Hollywood Drive. After they
entered the residence, found it unoccupied, and secured the scene, they broke “into two-man
search teams per room.” Lieutenant Wiser and Sergeant Charles Wayne Mathis searched
Gray’s bedroom. On a shelf, Lieutenant Wiser found a school progress report bearing Gray’s
name and some trophies. Also in the bedroom, the officers found two blue bandanas; one
was a darker blue and the other was a lighter blue. A photograph of the darker blue bandana
was entered into evidence as Exhibit 19. Sergeant Mathis stated that the dark bandana was
found lying on top of a pair of black jeans. Sergeant Mathis found a letter addressed to Gray
from the State Department of Safety and, in Gray’s nightstand, he found a “live .22 bullet.”
Lieutenant Wiser said that he was present when Gray was arrested at Jackson-Central Merry
High School. Lieutenant Wiser acknowledged that he was not aware of any evidence found
at Gray’s home that could be linked to the appellant.
Danielle Jones, a violent crimes investigator with the Jackson Police Department,
testified that she went to the Juvenile Detention Center and picked up shoes belonging to
Gray. She identified a photograph of the shoes, which depicted a pair of black, Nike “Air
Force” low-top tennis shoes.
Investigator Buckley was recalled to the stand and testified that while the appellant
was in jail, he had a telephone conversation with his father. Investigator Buckley said that
the recording of the conversation reflected that the appellant’s father asked, “‘Did they find
a gun yet?’” The appellant responded, “‘They got a gun but it ain’t [the] gun that was
committed in this robbery and this murder.’” The appellant’s father inquired, “‘Well, then,
you ain’t – Where the gun at that you supposed to have gave the boy?’” The appellant
replied, “‘I don’t know.’”
Dr. Feng Li, the medical examiner who performed an autopsy on the victim’s body,
stated that the manner of the victim’s death was homicide and that the cause of death was a
gunshot wound to the bridge of the victim’s nose. Dr. Li stated that the victim’s eyes were
blackened and that the bullet penetrated the cranial cavity, causing several injuries to the
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brain tissues. From powder tattooing to the victim’s skin, Dr. Li deduced that the shot was
fired from two-and-a-half to three feet from the victim. Dr. Li retrieved two small bullet
fragments from the victim’s head. Because of the size of the fragments, Dr. Li believed that
the bullet was a small caliber. However, the murder weapon was never recovered.
In the appellant’s defense, his mother, Dorothy Hudson, testified that her father
nicknamed the appellant “Pistol” when she was pregnant and that the appellant had always
been called “Pistol.” She said that she lived in apartment 220 but that on the morning of
October 28, 2009, she was next door in her boyfriend’s apartment. Around 8:00 a.m., she
took her dog outside and saw the appellant walking toward the apartments from Brookfield.
When she finished walking her dogs, the appellant was sitting on the porch of apartment 220.
Ms. Hudson testified that she did not hear a gunshot but that she later learned someone had
been shot.
The jury found the appellant guilty of felony murder and especially aggravated
robbery. The trial court sentenced the appellant to life imprisonment for his felony murder
conviction and imposed a concurrent sentence of twenty-five years for the especially
aggravated robbery conviction.
II. Analysis
A. Denial of Motions
In his first three issues, the appellant challenges the trial court’s denial of his motion
for change of venue, the denial of his motion to bar the State from referring to the appellant
as “Pistol,” and the denial of his motion to prohibit the admission of postmortem photographs
of the victim. The State contends that the appellant waived these issues by failing to raise
them in his motion for new trial. We agree with the State.
Rule 3 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure expressly cautions that
no issue presented for review shall be predicated upon error in
the admission or exclusion of evidence, jury instructions granted
or refused, misconduct of jurors, parties or counsel, or other
action committed or occurring during the trial of the case, or
other ground upon which a new trial is sought, unless the same
was specifically stated in a motion for a new trial; otherwise
such issues will be treated as waived.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3(e). In other words, the failure to raise an issue of error, other than
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sufficiency of the evidence or sentencing, in a motion for a new trial waives that issue for
purposes of appellate review. See id. Therefore, the appellant has waived his first three
appellate issues.
B. Sufficiency of the Evidence
The appellant argues that the evidence was insufficient to sustain his convictions,
arguing that the testimonies of McKinnie and Kiser were “conflicting [and] speculative” and
therefore should not have been believed by the jury. The appellant also contends that
although he gave Gray the gun, his statement to Gray that he “ain’t got shit to do with this”
showed that the appellant did not intend to promote or assist in the commission of the
offenses.
On appeal, a jury conviction removes the presumption of the appellant’s innocence
and replaces it with one of guilt, so that the appellant carries the burden of demonstrating to
this court why the evidence will not support the jury’s findings. See State v. Tuggle, 639
S.W.2d 913, 914 (Tenn. 1982). The appellant must establish that no reasonable trier of fact
could have found the essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. See
Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979); Tenn. R. App. P. 13(e).
Accordingly, on appeal, the State is entitled to the strongest legitimate view of the
evidence and all reasonable inferences which may be drawn therefrom. See State v.
Williams, 657 S.W.2d 405, 410 (Tenn. 1983). In other words, questions concerning the
credibility of witnesses and the weight and value to be given the evidence, as well as all
factual issues raised by the evidence, are resolved by the trier of fact, and not the appellate
courts. See State v. Pruett, 788 S.W.2d 559, 561 (Tenn. 1990).
Felony murder is defined as “[a] killing of another committed in the perpetration of
or attempt to perpetrate any . . . robbery.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-202(a)(2). Especially
aggravated robbery is robbery accomplished with a deadly weapon where the victim suffers
serious bodily injury. Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-403(a)(1) and (2). Robbery is defined as
“the intentional or knowing theft of property from the person of another by violence or
putting the person in fear.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-401(a). A theft of property occurs
when someone, with the intent to deprive the owner of property, knowingly obtains or
exercises control over the property without the owner’s effective consent. Tenn. Code Ann.
§ 39-14-103.
The proof at trial revealed that Gray took property from the victim and shot him in the
head, causing his death. The appellant was indicted based upon his criminal responsibility
for Gray’s actions. In Tennessee, “criminal responsibility is not a separate, distinct crime.
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It is solely a theory by which the State may prove the defendant’s guilt of the alleged offense
. . . based upon the conduct of another person.” State v. Lemacks, 996 S.W.2d 166, 170
(Tenn. 1999). A defendant convicted under a criminal responsibility theory “is guilty in the
same degree as the principal who committed the crime” and “is considered to be a principal
offender.” Id. at 171. The appellant must “‘in some way associate himself with the venture,
act with knowledge that an offense is to be committed, and share in the criminal intent of the
principal in the first degree.’” State v. Maxey, 898 S.W.2d 756, 757 (Tenn. Crim. App.
1994) (quoting Hembree v. State, 546 S.W.2d 235, 239 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1976)).
“A person is criminally responsible as a party to an offense if the offense is committed
by the person’s own conduct, by the conduct of another for which the person is criminally
responsible, or by both.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-401(a). Tennessee Code Annotated
section 39-11-402(2) provides that an appellant is criminally responsible for the actions of
another when, “[a]cting with intent to promote or assist the commission of the offense, or to
benefit in the proceeds or results of the offense, [the appellant] solicits, directs, aids, or
attempts to aid another person to commit the offense.” Specifically, when the appellant is
aware of the intentions of his co-defendant and proceeds to aid or attempt to aid in the
endeavor, the appellant is responsible for all natural and probable consequences of his co-
defendant’s actions during the commission of the crime. State v. Richmond, 90 S.W.3d 648,
654 (Tenn. 2002); State v. Carson, 950 S.W.2d 951, 956 (Tenn. 1997).
Reviewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, the proof revealed that
shortly before the victim’s robbery and murder, Gray and the appellant were in the
appellant’s bedroom, and Gray began planning the robbery of the victim. Gray covered the
lower half of his face with a navy blue bandana. The appellant handed Gray a revolver and
told Gray that “when he get through handling their business, just put it [the gun] back and
we’re going to take all this stuff off when you get done.” Immediately prior to the offenses,
the appellant went outside to try to clear the area of witnesses, watched the victim, and
communicated with Gray via hand signals. Gray shot the victim and removed something
from the yellow car. The victim’s family later told police that the victim’s wallet and cellular
telephone were missing. After taking items from the car, Gray returned to the appellant’s
apartment, the appellant opened the door, and Gray tossed the bandana and gun inside. Gray
and the appellant ran from the apartment, looking back toward the scene of the shooting as
they ran. Shortly thereafter, the appellant’s girlfriend arrived in a gray car; the appellant
jumped in the car, and the car quickly sped away. Police later found the victim’s cellular
telephone in a vacant apartment located not far from the appellant’s apartment. The appellant
acknowledged that he had been in the apartment and had left drug paraphernalia there. Police
found the appellant’s drug paraphernalia in a cabinet under the bathroom sink. In a drawer
located immediately above the cabinet, police found the victim’s cellular telephone. The
appellant also acknowledged that he knew Gray was going to rob the victim and that the gun
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Gray used in the robbery belonged to the appellant. The jury heard the evidence and, as was
their prerogative, chose to accredit the evidence presented by the State; we will not now
reconsider their assessment. See State v. Carruthers, 35 S.W.3d 516, 558 (Tenn. 2000).
Moreover, although the appellant argues that his informing Gray that he “ain’t got shit to do
with this” indicates that he did not intend to promote or assist the commission of the
offenses, the jury obviously discredited this argument. A jury may believe part of a
defendant’s statement to be truth while rejecting other parts as falsehood. See State v.
Gilbert, 612 S.W.2d 188, 190 (Tenn. Crim. App.1980); Batey v. State, 527 S.W.2d 148, 150
(Tenn. Crim. App. 1975); State v. Crystal Miranda Kirby, No. E2008-01862-CCA-R3-CD,
2010 WL 1854137, at *11 (Tenn. Crim. App. at Knoxville, May 7, 2010), perm. to appeal
denied, (Tenn. 2010). We conclude that the proof presented at trial amply supports the
appellant’s convictions of felony murder and especially aggravated robbery.
III. Conclusion
In sum, we conclude that the appellant waived his first three appellate issues and that
the State adduced sufficient proof to sustain the appellant’s convictions. Therefore, the
judgments of the trial court are affirmed.
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NORMA McGEE OGLE, JUDGE
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