IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT NASHVILLE
Assigned on Briefs October 18, 2011
BARRY WAYNE DUNHAM v. STATE OF TENNESSEE
Appeal from the Criminal Court for Macon County
No. 97-71 David E. Durham, Judge
No. M2010-02586-CCA-R3-PC - Filed February 9, 2012
The Petitioner, Barry Wayne Dunham, appeals the Macon County Criminal Court’s denial
of post-conviction relief from his conviction for first degree murder, for which he is serving
a life sentence. The Petitioner contends that he received the ineffective assistance of counsel.
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed
J OSEPH M. T IPTON, P.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN E VERETT
W ILLIAMS and JEFFREY S. B IVINS, JJ., joined.
A. Russell Brown, Lafayette, Tennessee, for the appellant, Barry Wayne Dunham.
Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Clarence E. Lutz, Assistant Attorney
General; Tom P. Thompson, District Attorney General; and Robert Hibbett, Assistant District
Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
OPINION
The facts resulting in the Petitioner’s conviction were stated by this court in the direct
appeal:
On June 2, 1997, the Macon County Grand Jury charged
the defendant with premeditated first degree murder for the
April 23, 1997, shooting death of his father, Clinton Dunham.
On October 5, 1998, the defendant pled guilty to second degree
murder in exchange for a twenty-five-year sentence. However,
he was later granted post-conviction relief on the basis that his
sentence, which was ordered to be served at 85% parole release
eligibility rather than the 100% required by the violent offender
statute, was illegal and his guilty plea therefore unknowing and
in v o lu n ta ry . S e e B a rry D unham v. S tate, N o.
M2000-02557-CCA-R3-PC, 2002 WL 242356, at *1 (Tenn.
Crim. App. Feb.11, 2002). The defendant was subsequently
tried before a jury, found guilty of first degree murder, and
sentenced to life imprisonment.
...
According to the State’s proof, the defendant killed the victim
with a single rifle shot to the head at close range as the victim
lay either asleep or passed out on his couch in his home in Red
Boiling Springs.1 The defendant wore gloves to avoid leaving
fingerprints and obtained the murder weapon, a 30-30 rifle, from
the victim’s home. After the shooting, the defendant leaned the
rifle against an inside wall near the back door and immediately
drove to Gamaliel, Kentucky, where he spent the night with his
girlfriend before returning early the next morning to “discover”
the victim’s body and call 9-1-1. Although he initially denied
any involvement in the crime, he eventually made a full
confession. Accordingly, his trial defense strategy included an
attempt to show that the killing occurred in self-defense and that
the lingering effects of his earlier stroke, combined with his
intoxicated state, prevented him from forming premeditation.
To that end, he presented proof, among other things, that the
victim was an alcoholic and a violent and abusive man. He also
presented evidence that the victim was under indictment for the
murder of Joe Frank Newberry at the time of his death and had
stated his intention of killing two of the witnesses who planned
to testify against him at his upcoming trial.
1
Evidence supporting the State’s theory that the victim was asleep or
unconscious at the time of his death included the defendant’s statement as
well as the position in which the victim’s body was found, with his head on
a pillow, arms crossed over his stomach or chest, blanket covering his body
from feet to mid-torso, and partial denture removed from his mouth and
lying on top of the blanket on his stomach. In addition, the pathologist who
performed the autopsy of the victim’s body testified his blood-alcohol level
was .12% and his urine drug screen was positive for benzodiazepines at the
time of his death.
-2-
Special Agent Roy Copeland of the Tennessee Bureau of
Investigation (“TBI”) conducted the initial interview of the
defendant at the crime scene on April 24, 1997. At that time,
the defendant claimed the victim was asleep when he last saw
him the previous evening at 9:00 or 9:15 p.m. before leaving to
spend the night with his girlfriend in Kentucky. Agent
Copeland acknowledged he learned during the course of his
investigation that the victim was a heavy drinker and that he had
a reputation as a violent man.
On May 5, 1997, TBI Special Agent Jason Locke
interviewed the defendant at the Macon County Sheriff’s Office.
During that interview, the defendant stated that he had spent the
morning of Wednesday, April 23, 1997, at the victim’s house
with the victim and Cynthia Denham, where they discussed the
victim’s plans for burning his house to collect insurance money
to pay his attorney’s fees. The defendant also stated that the
victim admitted to him in February 1997 that he had killed
Newberry and shot at Newberry’s wife, Francis, because
Newberry had stolen some chainsaws from him.
On May 6, 1997, Agent Locke conducted a second
interview in which the defendant ultimately confessed he shot
and killed the victim after the victim told him of his plans to kill
Francis Newberry and James Lyons, a friend of the defendant’s,
in order to prevent them from testifying at the victim’s murder
trial. The defendant’s May 6 statement, which Agent Locke
read aloud to the jury, states as follows:
On Wednesday, April 23, 1997, we had a
bunch of friends over at the pool room behind my
dad’s house. Before everyone got there, [D]ad
and I had been talking in the pool room. We
talked about me having a cocaine problem and I
told him I didn’t have one. We also talked about
him burning the house down the following Friday
night for insurance money to pay his attorney. I
had been helping him, and Cynthia Denham,
move furniture and other things out of the house
over the past week.
-3-
Dad told me he was going to kill Francis
Newberry before he was going to leave town
early Saturday morning. He also said he was
going to kill James Lyons because they were both
going to testify against him. When he started
telling me about James, he could tell I was getting
upset and he said, “[L]et’s just drop it.”
I helped him move a couple of chairs & a
loveseat out after that and everybody came over a
little while later.
Dad went inside at about 8:00 p.m. to go to
sleep and everyone else left at about 8:15 p.m. I
left the pool room at about 8:30 p.m. and went to
my trailer next door. I called my wife in Myrtle
Beach, S.C. & talked to her for 15-25 minutes.
I then walked over to [D]ad’s & got a pack
of cigarettes and hung up the cordless phone. I
walked back to the trailer. I thought about James
who used to be a good friend of mine and what
[D]ad had said about killing him. I had been
drinking and still was. I called Sabrena Green
and she asked me to come over and I told her I
would be over in 30 minutes to an hour. I
changed clothes & put on my new blue jeans &
cologne. I was headed out the door. I took a big
drink of Canadian Mist and the thought hit me
about killing [D]ad. I put my cup and liquor in
the car and sat down inside the car and lit a
cigarette. I put it in the ashtray and got out.
I walked to the back door and went inside.
I knew there was no way to wake [D]ad up. I got
the 30-30 rifle from behind the kitchen door and
cocked the rifle twice & put two shells in the floor
to make it look like a woman had done it.
I walked up to the couch where [D]ad was
and put the gun about a 1/2 inch to an inch away
-4-
from his head and shot him. I turned around and
walked out, shut the back door after putting the
rifle against the wall and left. Before I had gone
inside the house, I put on a pair of gloves that was
on the back deck under a duck [sic] on top of the
well house so I wouldn’t leave any fingerprints.
I don’t know what happened to the gloves.
I left and went to Sabrena’s. I came home
the next morning and got there at 6:10 a.m. I
changed clothes and walked over to [D]ad’s. I
made the phone call to Sandy [defendant’s sister]
and then to 911 and then walked down to the
trailer and got Timmy [defendant’s half-brother]
up.
Macon County Sheriff Joe Ferguson, who participated in
the May 6 interview, testified that after being interviewed for
some time, the defendant looked him in the eye and said, “Joe,
you have got me.” When he asked the defendant what he meant,
the defendant replied that he had killed his father and went on to
give the statement about the killing. Sheriff Ferguson testified
he was also present later that night at the jail when one of the
defendant’s sisters asked the defendant if he had killed their
father and the defendant replied, “[Y]es, I did.” Sheriff
Ferguson acknowledged that the victim was under indictment
for the murder of Joe Frank Newberry at the time of his death
and that the defendant replied to his sister, when she asked him
why he had committed the crime, “because it was never going
to stop,” or words to that effect.
Timothy Gravens, the defendant’s half-brother by the
same mother, was sharing a house trailer on the victim’s
property with the defendant at the time of the shooting. He
described the defendant and the victim’s relationship as “pretty
rough,” testifying that the victim had threatened to shoot the
defendant and burn his car and that both men had made
comments to him at various times about killing the other. He
acknowledged the victim, in addition, had commented to him
about killing Newberry and the witnesses to Newberry’s murder,
Francis Newberry and James Lyons. He further acknowledged
-5-
the victim often mistreated the defendant, calling him
“worthless” and telling him he “wasn’t no good,” and the victim
was violent to other people and abusive to animals. Gravens
was aware of the victim’s plans to burn his house and was
present at the jail when the defendant said the reason he killed
the victim was “because it was never going to stop.”
Roger Dale Denham, the victim’s brother, testified the
defendant told him in a conversation the week before the
shooting that the victim was getting on his nerves and he wanted
him back on the boat. Denham later explained that the victim
worked on a river barge and was regularly absent from home for
weeks at a time. Denham testified the victim left Macon County
when the defendant was a small child and remained away for
years because he “got in so much trouble” with the law over
“break ins and everything.” He conceded the victim “was a
little mean” and had a reputation as a violent man when he was
“on the liquor.” According to Denham, the victim once shot a
jukebox in a bar, at another time fired his pistol in a bar, causing
a bullet to ricochet off the wall, and at yet another time
threatened to shoot Denham’s girlfriend.
Donna Trisdale, the defendant’s sister, testified the victim
and the defendant did not have a good relationship and got into
arguments whenever they were together. She said when she and
her siblings asked the defendant at the jail why he had killed
their father, he replied that “it had to be stopped.” Trisdale
testified on cross-examination that the victim was sober only
about half the time and that she avoided him when he was
drinking. She acknowledged the victim told her he killed
Newberry because Newberry stole two chainsaws from him and
that the victim also told her of his plans to burn his house.
The first witness the defendant presented in his defense
was his younger sister, Sandy Dugan. Dugan testified the victim
left home when she was six weeks old and the defendant was
one or two years old. During the years that followed, she
remembered meeting the victim when he returned for a visit
when she was eleven and seeing him again during visits when
she was approximately thirteen and sixteen. In 1991, the victim
bought the property he owned at the time of his death and, in
-6-
1992, moved into the house located on the property. Dugan
characterized the victim’s relationship with the defendant as
“good” except when the victim was drinking, which she
acknowledged occurred frequently. She said the victim was
often “ill and hateful” when on one of his drinking binges, and
she related an incident in the kitchen of his home when he
suddenly pulled out a gun and fired a shot that narrowly missed
her. According to Dugan, the victim told her before Newberry’s
murder that he planned to kill Newberry and bury his body in
Hippie Hollow. After the murder, the victim told her he was
going to have to kill the witnesses, specifically, Francis
Newberry and James Lyons.
Dugan testified the defendant suffered a severe stroke in
September 1996 that initially paralyzed the right side of his
body and rendered him unable to speak, walk, or care for
himself. Despite his eventual partial recovery, the defendant
was not “the same person” after his stroke. The defendant was
at her home the evening of Wednesday, April 23, 1997, when
the victim telephoned and said, “[Y]’all get y’all’s a-s-s out
here.” Recognizing from the victim’s voice that he was drunk,
she made an excuse about attending church but dropped the
defendant off at the victim’s house as the victim instructed.
Dugan explained that she knew what the defendant meant
when he told her that he had killed the victim because it was
“never going to stop”:
[A]nd I said, Barry, why did you do it? And he
said because it wasn’t [sic] never going to stop.
I said, regardless, you killed Daddy, and he
started crying and he said, I had to do it. I had to
do it so it would stop, and I knew what he was
going through and what he felt, because I knew
all of this stuff that was going on and it shouldn’t
have been going on, wasn’t supposed to be that
way. It’s not supposed to be that way.
Q. By that, you mean the killing of
witnesses?
-7-
A. Yeah, just the way it went in general,
just the way it all went, just wasn’t supposed to be
that way. There was [sic] positions and situations
that we should never have been put in, things we
never should have seen and experienced. He was
doing things our kids going to school was [sic]
having to hear about. People was [sic] calling me
at the factory and would say, do you know what
I heard your daddy done [sic] last night? Me and
Donna [sic] would leave and go find Daddy, find
out what in the world he’d done. It was just
something all the time.
The defendant testified he currently lived in the victim’s
house and that he received social security disability benefits as
a result of his stroke. He said he did not have any kind of
regular relationship with the victim until March 1996 when he
came back to Tennessee and moved in with Gravens, who was
living in the trailer beside the victim’s home. He characterized
his relationship with the victim as good when the victim was
sober but bad whenever the victim was drinking, which was
often. He said that on one occasion when he refused to do
something the victim had asked, the victim pulled a .38 from a
cabinet and fired six shots at him, three between his legs as he
was sitting at the table and three more after he had run outside
onto the deck. He also described another occasion in which the
victim threatened him when he was reluctant to let the victim
use his car. Further, he corroborated Dugan’s testimony that he
was present at the time the victim fired his gun at Dugan.
The defendant testified his severe stroke, which occurred
on September 6, 1996, left him unable to speak with any clarity
for three or four months and unable to walk without the
assistance of a walker or cane. During his recuperation, the
victim, when drinking, “always put [him] down,” telling him
that he would “never be worth a shit again and things like that.”
The defendant testified the victim described to him how he had
killed Newberry. He said the victim told him he shot Newberry
as he and Mrs. Newberry were going out the door, tried for Mrs.
Newberry but missed, followed Newberry to his truck, shot him
again, instructed Lyons to come pick him up at Hippie Hollow,
-8-
and then drove Newberry in his truck to Hippie Hollow, where
he shot him six more times. The defendant said the victim also
spoke several times with him about his plans to burn his house
and, on the evening of April 23, 1997, told him he was “going
to get rid of” James Lyons and Mrs. Newberry before renting a
car on Friday or Saturday and leaving town. That same night,
the victim told him to retrieve the dynamite that he and Lyons,
per the victim’s instructions, had earlier buried.2
The defendant testified he had taken a morphine pill that
afternoon and had also consumed about a half-gallon of
whiskey. He said he donned the gloves with the intention of
retrieving the dynamite but went directly inside the victim’s
house, picked up the murder weapon, and shot the victim. He
testified he “was scared because [the victim] made the statement
that he wasn’t going to leave any witnesses, and he was a
dangerous man.” In addition to the victim’s other violent acts,
the defendant was aware of the victim’s having shot a man in
the buttocks and kneecap in a bar and having fired shots in a bar
on another occasion in order to clear people from the pool table.
On cross-examination, the defendant conceded that the
victim did not like cocaine usage but denied that the victim
would have forced him to move out of the trailer if the victim
had found out he was using cocaine. He further denied the
“thought hit him” about killing the victim or that he sat in his car
for a while before entering the house. He testified he did not
eject the shells on the floor to make it appear as if a woman had
committed the crime, as he reported in his May 6 statement, but
the rifle had failed to fire when he first pulled the trigger and he
had returned to the kitchen to check if a bullet was in the
chamber:
2
James Lyons later testified that he remembered the victim’s having
instructed him and the defendant to hide the dynamite, which, he said, they
buried in Hippie Hollow. During his cross-examination testimony, Sheriff
Ferguson acknowledged a dynamite cap and possibly one stick of dynamite
had been uncovered on the victim’s property.
-9-
The reason the two shells were in the floor
is because I went in to-at first when I was going to
kill him, I guess I didn’t have a bullet in the
chamber so it didn’t go off or misfired or
something. I don’t think there was a bullet in the
chamber, so I walked back in the kitchen, ejected
two shells out and walked back in there.
The defendant claimed he was not aiming at the victim’s
head when the fatal shot was fired but, instead, was holding the
weapon down at his side when the back door slammed shut and
the gun discharged.3 He said he was not himself because of the
severe brain damage he had suffered and insisted he made no
decision to kill the victim. Asked whether “it [was] self-defense
or ... an accident or [he] just didn’t know what [he was] doing,”
the defendant replied that he “really didn’t know what [he] was
doing.”
Francis Newberry related the events of January 16, 1997,
when her husband was murdered, describing how she heard
popping sounds as she and her husband were leaving the
victim’s house, looked back to see her husband fall, and then ran
when he told her the victim had shot him and instructed her to
flee. She said the victim was an “ill-like person” and a violent
man and she was afraid of him. She had never heard the victim
threaten the defendant but had heard him say mean and hateful
things to him. James Lyons, who was present at the victim’s
house on January 16, 1997, described the victim’s killing of
Newberry4 and said the victim was violent when he was drunk.
Kenny Frazier described a number of violent episodes
involving the victim. He testified the victim twice threatened
3
During the State’s case in chief, TBI Special Agent Steve Scott, a firearms
expert, testified that at the time he examined it, the murder weapon,
including its safety mechanism, was in proper working condition.
4
Lyons’ account essentially corroborated the details the defendant testified
the victim had provided to him about the murder.
-10-
him, on one occasion shooting a gun around his feet and on
another occasion pulling a gun and threatening to shoot him. He
said he also witnessed the victim empty his gun into a car radio
because he did not like the music, shoot a jukebox because a
rock and roll song came on instead of the country music he
requested, shoot stray animals that came onto his property, and
pour alcohol on an African-American man in a bar and attempt
to set him on fire with a lighter. Frazier additionally testified he
was at the Valley View Tavern one night when a Mr. Tuck was
shot. Although he did not witness the actual shooting, the
victim was the only one present who had a gun.
Vesper Newberry, the owner of the Valley View Tavern,
confirmed that a man had been shot one night after closing time
outside his tavern and that the victim had been present in the
tavern before closing. He said the victim did not have a good
reputation in the community.
Dr. Pam Auble, a neuropsychologist, testified the
defendant had a full-scale I.Q. of 75. She said she diagnosed
him with dementia resulting from his stroke and from
alcoholism, and she opined that these factors prevented him
from being able “to exercise reflection and judgment at the time
of [the] offense.” Dr. Keith Caruso, a forensic psychiatrist,
testified he interviewed the defendant and reviewed Dr. Auble’s
report and concurred in Dr. Auble’s findings and results.
Specifically, he diagnosed the defendant with an anxiety
disorder not otherwise specified (“anxiety disorder NOS”),
dementia due to stroke, chronic alcohol abuse, polysubstance
abuse, and alcohol dependence, as well as alcohol intoxication
at the time of the offense. Dr. Caruso testified the defendant’s
anxiety disorder NOS caused him to have “a tendency to
misperceive or inaccurately judge the degree of threat that was
posed at a particular time,” and his dementia created problems
for him with “reasoning and planning.” In sum, he thought there
was “a lot to suggest” that at the time of the offense the
defendant “was not free of passion and excitement.” He
acknowledged, however, that it was “certainly” possible the
defendant had acted with premeditation.
-11-
State v. Barry Wayne Dunham, No. M2003-02802-CCA-R3-CD, Macon County (Tenn.
Crim. App. Mar. 1, 2005) (Tipton, P.J., dissenting), perm. app. denied (Tenn. Oct. 24, 2005).
The Petitioner filed a petition for post-conviction relief claiming that he received the
ineffective assistance of counsel because counsel failed to pursue a motion to suppress and
used one expert witness but failed to use another expert witness or witnesses.
At the post-conviction hearing, the forty-two-year-old Petitioner testified that he was
thirty-four years old at the time of his trial. He said that at the time of his father’s death on
April 23, 1997, he lived beside his father. The Petitioner suffered a stroke on September 6,
1996, from which he was disabled. He said that he had “severe brain damage,” that he was
paralyzed on the right side of his body, and that he had difficulty walking, talking, and
eating. He explained that the stroke also affected him mentally and said, “I just wasn’t
myself.” He received Social Security Disability payments due to his condition.
The Petitioner acknowledged that he drank alcohol “pretty much daily” at the time he
gave statements to law enforcement. He did not recall drinking on the morning he took a
polygraph examination but said he took Xanax, which was not prescribed for him. He said
he also smoked marijuana and took morphine around the time he gave the statements. He
said he wrote better than he read and thought he quit school in the sixth grade. He did not
recall whether law enforcement officers read him his rights in April before he signed the
waiver of his rights. He said he was just beginning to be able to sign his name with his right
hand.
The Petitioner testified that in his first statement following the polygraph examination,
he was at the Macon County Ambulance Service with TBI Agent Jason Locke, Roy
Copeland, and Sheriff Joe Ferguson. He said Agent Locke informed him that he “failed it
ninety nine point nine percent” and that it would help him in the long run to admit what
happened. He said he was not able to think clearly at the time, nor was he able to do so two
days or two months later.
The Petitioner testified that after he was arrested, jailed, and appointed counsel, he
pled guilty to second degree murder, although he was later granted post-conviction relief
from that conviction due to a sentencing error. He and his trial counsel began preparing for
trial. He said that counsel never discussed filing a motion to suppress his statements or
explained why a motion to suppress would not be filed. He said there was no discussion of
the effect of his pretrial statements being admitted at the trial. The Petitioner did not recall
any objection to his statements being read at his trial. He acknowledged that he and counsel
discussed whether he would testify at the trial. He said he left to counsel the decisions about
which witnesses to call. He said that he did not want to testify but that counsel called him
the night before and told him he needed to testify. He said he used alcohol and drugs while
he was released on bond before the trial.
-12-
The Petitioner testified that the defense was based upon his examinations with Dr.
Ann Goetting, Dr. Pamela Auble, and Dr. Keith Caruso. He said he met with Dr. Caruso
once for thirty to forty-five minutes, which he said was not enough time to discuss the
relevant facts. He said he was not asked to provide any other information to trial counsel for
Dr. Caruso, nor did he meet with trial counsel about Dr. Caruso’s anticipated testimony. He
said that he met with Dr. Goetting four or five times and that they spent several hours
together. He thought he met with Dr. Auble three times. She gave him several tests and
determined that his IQ was 75, which he acknowledged was in the “borderline retarded”
category.5
The Petitioner testified that he met with Tom Bilbrey, an assistant public defender
who represented him, about once every three months from early 2001 until February 2003.
He said that he and Mr. Bilbrey had a good relationship and that he did what Mr. Bilbrey told
him. He said that in addition to his stroke, his alcohol and drug use and the events that were
occurring at the time affected his cognitive ability. He thought that since 1996, he had
improved greatly from the effects of his stroke.
On cross-examination, the Petitioner testified that his trial was in 2003, about six
years after his stroke. He agreed that he originally pled guilty and said the conviction was
set aside because he was not advised that he would have to serve 100% of his sentence. He
said he discussed his involvement in his father’s death with his attorneys and did not recall
ever denying that he killed his father. He later said, “We never talked much about what my
testimony was going to be.” He also claimed he could not recall whether they discussed his
prospective testimony. He did not recall telling his attorneys that he was present when his
father died. He did not recall giving his statement that he retrieved a rifle from behind the
kitchen door, cocked it, and placed two shells on the floor to make it look like a woman
killed the victim. He did not recall but did not deny testifying that there were two shells on
the floor because there were no bullets in the chamber when he was going to kill the victim,
that the gun did not fire or misfired, and that he walked to the kitchen and ejected two shells.
He neither recalled nor denied other trial testimony related to the crime. He said he was not
denying at the hearing that he was present when his father died or that he had a weapon in
his hand. He did not know how many motions his counsel filed. He denied knowing that the
defense filed a motion to suppress the 9-1-1 recording.
5
We note that on April 9, 2010, the General Assembly ordered all
references to “mental retardation” in Tennessee Code Annotated to be
changed to “intellectual disability.” See 2010 Tenn. Pub. Acts 734. The
testimony of the witnesses is provided as given.
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The Petitioner did not recall telling Dr. Caruso that he intended to kill his father, but
he did not deny that he made the statement. He did not recall Dr. Caruso testifying that
although the Petitioner said he did not intend to kill the victim, the Petitioner could not have
premeditated the killing. When asked whether he was present at his trial, he said, “My body
was, my mind wasn’t.” He did not recall if he told counsel to take his case to trial.
On redirect examination, the Petitioner testified that there were settlement
negotiations for him to plead guilty and receive a sentence of twenty-five years to be served
at 100%, but claimed he was told the sentence would be served at eighty-five percent. He
did not recall attending any motions hearings, including a hearing on a motion to suppress
the 9-1-1 recording. Likewise, he did not recall whether the recording was played for the
jury. He acknowledged that he still had memory problems.
One of the Petitioner’s two attorneys, Tom Bilbrey, testified that he was appointed to
represent the Petitioner following the grant of post-conviction relief. He said he had
practiced law for thirty-one years and had tried other first degree murder cases. At the time,
he was an assistant public defender, and the Petitioner’s other attorney, Comer Donnell, was
the district public defender. He said he might have worked on the Petitioner’s case more
because he was local, but he did not know if he was the lead attorney. He said that he met
with the Petitioner to prepare for trial and that the public defender’s investigator probably
met with the Petitioner more than he did.
Mr. Bilbrey testified that he had known the Petitioner since the Petitioner was four or
five years old, when the Petitioner was enrolled in a Head Start program where counsel had
been employed. He described the Petitioner as a cooperative client and active in the defense.
Mr. Bilbrey said that to his knowledge, the defense did not file a motion to suppress
the Petitioner’s statements. He said no oral motion was made to suppress the statements at
the trial. He could not recall whether there was any discussion of trying to have the
statements suppressed. He said that at the trial, the statements were displayed with an
overhead projector and that the Petitioner was asked line-by-line whether a statement was
true. Mr. Bilbrey said the Petitioner admitted in the statements that he killed his father. He
said that although the statements were damaging, the defense was based upon showing self-
defense and defense of others. He said there was also proof about the Petitioner’s stroke and
diminished mental capacity. He said that he knew from the beginning that the Petitioner
wanted to testify but that the Petitioner testified differently than the facts the Petitioner gave
in the statements. He said this was particularly the case about the gun not firing and the
Petitioner going into the kitchen, ejecting shells, and returning to the victim.
Mr. Bilbrey testified that the Petitioner had been “victimized” by the victim. He
described the victim as a vicious, violent man. He said it was reasonable to believe that the
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Petitioner lived in fear of the victim. He said that the victim had been charged with murder
and that there was proof the victim planned to kill two witnesses in the murder case.
Mr. Bilbrey testified that he did not recall whether the Petitioner made inculpatory
statements in addition to the statements to law enforcement. He thought the change in the
Petitioner’s version of events was the reason the Petitioner was convicted. He said that it
was theoretically possible that no trial would have occurred if the statements had been
suppressed but that he did not know.
Mr. Bilbrey testified that although the Petitioner’s education was limited, the
Petitioner seemed to understand their conversations. He said he knew about the Petitioner’s
background and IQ. He did not recall any concerns that the Petitioner’s IQ and history of a
stroke affected the Petitioner’s ability to waive his rights and give a statement. He said there
were several pretrial motions, although he could not remember whether he or co-counsel
argued the motion to suppress the 9-1-1 recording. He said that he did not always file a
motion to suppress pretrial statements in murder cases and that sometimes it was
advantageous for a defendant’s statement to be admitted.
Mr. Bilbrey testified that he counseled his clients to ask themselves what they could
add to their defense by testifying. He said he reviewed the “pros and cons” with them and
pointed out anything that would not be proven other than through the defendant’s testimony.
He said he would never tell a client whether the client could or could not testify.
Mr. Bilbrey testified that he argued for admission of Dr. Goetting’s testimony. He
said he did not know at the time that the trial judge had any propensity to rule against
admission of a sociologist’s testimony. He said he disagreed with the trial judge’s ruling and
noted that one of the appellate judges agreed with him in the Petitioner’s direct appeal. He
said that Dr. Goetting was a prominent expert in spousal abuse and the battered spouse
defense but that she had never testified about abuse involving a parent and a child.
Mr. Bilbrey testified that Dr. Auble’s testimony was favorable to the defense. He said
that Dr. Caruso’s testimony changed from direct examination to cross-examination. He said
that Dr. Caruso testified about the lack of premeditation but then changed his opinion after
the prosecutor had him listen to the 9-1-1 recording and asked the doctor whether the
Petitioner told him facts to which the Petitioner testified. He said that Dr. Caruso “didn’t
completely change his testimony but . . . conceded that maybe [the Petitioner] did
premeditate.” He was extremely disappointed in Dr. Caruso’s testimony. He said that he and
co-counsel met with Dr. Caruso before the trial to review Dr. Caruso’s testimony, which he
said “was basically consistent with what he testified to on direct.” He thought that two
investigators might have attended the meeting but did not think the Petitioner was present.
He noted, however, that the Petitioner met with Dr. Caruso before the trial and that he
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presumed the Petitioner gave Dr. Caruso the same factual information as was in the
Petitioner’s statements. He said he was not present for this meeting. He said his normal
practice was to make most discovery materials available to an expert witness, but he could
not recall whether Dr. Caruso had the 9-1-1 recording before the trial. He said he and Mr.
Donnell had no way of knowing that Dr. Caruso would change his opinion.
Mr. Bilbrey testified that he had no way of knowing that the Petitioner would testify
to different facts than those reflected in the statements. He thought he asked the Petitioner
what happened on the night of the crime. He said he had not previously heard about the gun
failing to fire, the Petitioner going to the kitchen to eject shells, the Petitioner returning to the
victim’s location, the door slamming, and the gun “just go[ing] off.”
Mr. Bilbrey testified that he did not recall the trial judge ever limiting him in offering
expert proof other than in the case of Dr. Goetting at the Petitioner’s trial. He could not
recall whether he and co-counsel considered or investigated other expert witnesses for the
Petitioner’s trial.
Mr. Bilbrey testified that he did not have any documentation in his file of a motion
to suppress. He said that in hindsight, he thought a motion to suppress would have been
unsuccessful but conceded, “Anything is possible.”
On cross-examination, Mr. Bilbrey agreed that the number sixteen sounded correct
as the number of motions filed by the defense. He said he met with all three experts before
the trial. He said Dr. Caruso gave no indication that he was wavering in his opinion about
diminished capacity and the lack of premeditation. He said, “It was right the opposite.”
The State did not present any proof. After considering the evidence, the trial court
found that the defense strategy from the beginning of the case was self-defense and that the
failure to pursue suppression of the Petitioner’s pretrial statements was “a purposeful
strategic move, not an ineffective omission.” The court found that the Petitioner failed to
show that there was a reasonable probability that even if the Petitioner had filed and
prevailed upon such a motion, the outcome of the trial would have been different. The court
also found that counsel could not have foreseen that the trial court would exclude Dr.
Goetting’s testimony or that Dr. Caruso would testify favorably for the State during cross-
examination. The court found that both the exclusion of Dr. Goetting’s testimony and the
turn of events with Dr. Caruso’s testimony were matters that could happen in any proceeding
and did not reflect on the competence or effectiveness of the Petitioner’s attorneys. The trial
court noted that Mr. Bilbrey testified that he had known the Petitioner for a long time and
was familiar with the Petitioner’s traits and intellect and that the Petitioner was cooperative
and active in his defense. The court found that the Petitioner failed to present any evidence
of experts who would have testified favorably in his defense. The trial court denied relief.
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On appeal, the Petitioner contends that the trial court erred in denying his claims that
trial counsel were ineffective (1) in failing to file and pursue a motion to suppress his pretrial
statements, (2) in their use of expert witnesses, and (3) in failing to present expert proof that
he lacked the mens rea for first degree murder. The State contends that the trial court did not
err in finding that the Petitioner failed to prove his claims. We agree with the State.
The burden in a post-conviction proceeding is on the petitioner to prove his grounds
for relief by clear and convincing evidence. T.C.A. § 40-30-110(f) (2006). On appeal, we
are bound by the trial court’s findings of fact unless we conclude that the evidence in the
record preponderates against those findings. Fields v. State, 40 S.W.3d 450, 456-57 (Tenn.
2001). Because they relate to mixed questions of law and fact, we review the trial court’s
conclusions as to whether counsel’s performance was deficient and whether that deficiency
was prejudicial under a de novo standard with no presumption of correctness. Id. at 457.
Post-conviction relief may only be given if a conviction or sentence is void or voidable
because of a violation of a constitutional right. T.C.A. § 40-30-103 (2006).
Under the Sixth Amendment, when a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel is
made, the burden is on the Petitioner to show (1) that counsel’s performance was deficient
and (2) that the deficiency was prejudicial. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687
(1984); see Lockhart v. Fretwell, 506 U.S. 364, 368-72 (1993). In other words, a showing
that counsel’s performance fell below a reasonable standard is not enough because a
petitioner must also show that but for the substandard performance, “the result of the
proceeding would have been different.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694. The Strickland
standard has been applied to the right to counsel under article I, section 9 of the Tennessee
Constitution. State v. Melson, 772 S.W.2d 417, 419 n.2 (Tenn. 1989).
A petitioner will only prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel after
satisfying both prongs of the Strickland test. Henley v. State, 960 S.W.2d 572, 580 (Tenn.
1997). The performance prong requires a petitioner raising a claim of ineffectiveness to
show that the counsel’s representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness or
“outside the wide range of professionally competent assistance.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690.
The prejudice prong requires a petitioner to demonstrate that “there is a reasonable
probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would
have been different.” Id. at 694. A reasonable probability means a “probability sufficient
to undermine confidence in the outcome.” Id.
In Baxter v. Rose, 523 S.W.2d 930, 936 (Tenn. 1975), our supreme court decided that
attorneys should be held to the general standard of whether the services rendered were
“within the range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases.” Further, the court
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stated that the range of competence was to be measured by the duties and criteria set forth
in Beasley v. United States, 491 F.2d 687, 696 (6th Cir. 1974), and United States v.
DeCoster, 487 F.2d 1197, 1202-04 (D.C. Cir. 1973). Baxter, 523 S.W.2d at 936. Also, in
reviewing counsel’s conduct, a “fair assessment of attorney performance requires that every
effort be made to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the
circumstances of counsel’s challenged conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from counsel’s
perspective at the time.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689; see Hellard v. State, 629 S.W.2d 4, 9
(Tenn. 1982). Thus, the fact that a particular strategy or tactic failed or even hurt the defense
does not, alone, support a claim of ineffective assistance. Cooper v. State, 847 S.W.2d 521,
528 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1992). Deference is made to trial strategy or tactical choices if they
are informed ones based upon adequate preparation. See DeCoster, 487 F.2d at 1201;
Hellard, 629 S.W.2d at 9.
The Petitioner claims that counsel were ineffective in failing to file and pursue a
motion to suppress his pretrial statements. Trial counsel testified that the defense strategy
was to show self-defense and defense of others. The Petitioner’s defense also involved
evidence that the victim was a violent man and that he had tormented the Petitioner. The
defense never sought to show that the Petitioner did not kill the victim. The Petitioner’s
pretrial statements included evidence that the victim killed a man who stole chainsaws and
shot at the man’s wife, that the victim planned to burn a house to collect the insurance
proceeds to pay his attorney’s fees, and that the Petitioner killed the victim after the victim
advised him of plans to kill two people to prevent them from testifying against the victim.
The Petitioner also described the circumstances and manner in which he killed the victim.
The Petitioner’s statements, including his admitting he shot the victim, demonstrate that the
circumstances in which he did so were consistent with theories of self-defense and defense
of others. Although there was proof that the Petitioner suffered cognitive effects from a
stroke, used alcohol and drugs regularly, and had a borderline intellectual disability, there
was also proof that the Petitioner did not exhibit impairment. Mr. Bilbrey testified that in
retrospect, he saw no basis for a meritorious motion to suppress the statements. The evidence
does not preponderate against the trial court’s conclusions that trial counsel’s performance
was not deficient and that the Petitioner failed to prove prejudice. The Petitioner is not
entitled to relief.
The Petitioner also claims that counsel provided ineffective assistance by their use of
Dr. Goetting, whose testimony the trial court excluded, and Dr. Caruso, who testified
unfavorably to the defense on cross-examination, as expert witnesses. Regarding Dr.
Goetting’s testimony, we note that the majority of the court in the Petitioner’s direct appeal
held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in excluding her testimony as an expert,
on the basis that her testimony was neither reliable nor relevant, but the dissent concluded
that the trial court should have allowed the testimony. See Barry Wayne Dunham, slip op.
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(Tipton, P.J., dissenting). In any event, Mr. Bilbrey testified that he did not know the trial
court would exclude Dr. Goetting’s testimony because she was a sociologist. There was no
proof at the post-conviction hearing that the trial court had such a policy of which trial
counsel should have been aware. We conclude that the Petitioner has not shown that
counsel’s performance was deficient.
We also conclude that the Petitioner did not demonstrate that he was prejudiced by
counsel’s performance. He did not offer testimony of an expert witness other than a
sociologist relative to homicide related to parent/child abuse. Without proof of a different
expert whose testimony the trial court would have admitted, he has not demonstrated that he
was prejudiced by counsel’s reliance on Dr. Goetting, to the exclusion of a different expert
witness who would have been allowed to testify. The Petitioner is not entitled to relief on
this basis.
As for the Petitioner’s claims relative to Dr. Caruso, Mr. Bilbrey testified that he met
with Dr. Caruso, as did the Petitioner on a separate occasion. Counsel did not know whether
Dr. Caruso reviewed the 9-1-1 recording before the trial, but he testified that Dr. Caruso’s
concession on cross-examination that it was possible the Petitioner premeditated the killing
was after Dr. Caruso both heard the 9-1-1 recording and learned of the Petitioner’s testimony
that was at odds with the pretrial statements. Counsel testified that his usual practice was to
provide expert witnesses with the relevant discovery. A review of Dr. Caruso’s report, which
was an exhibit at the post-conviction hearing, does not support a conclusion that Dr. Caruso
was provided with the 9-1-1 recording before the trial. The report lists over 100 items
provided to the expert, none of which is designated as a 9-1-1 recording. We have reviewed
the record from the Petitioner’s direct appeal and note that Dr. Caruso testified on cross-
examination that he had not heard the 9-1-1 recording.
Even if counsel’s failure to provide the 9-1-1 recording to Dr. Caruso was deficient,
the Petitioner cannot overcome the effect his own trial testimony had on Dr. Caruso’s
testimony on cross-examination. The Petitioner testified at the trial that he fired the rifle at
his father, that it failed to fire or misfired, that he walked into the kitchen and ejected two
shells, and that he returned to the room where the victim was. This testimony provided proof
from which a jury could conclude that the Petitioner premeditated the killing. We conclude
that the evidence does not preponderate against the trial court’s findings relative to trial
counsel’s use of expert witnesses. The Petitioner is not entitled to relief.
The Petitioner’s final claim is that counsel were ineffective by failing to present expert
proof that the Petitioner lacked the mens rea for first degree murder. We note that counsel
offered the testimony of two experts, Dr. Auble and Dr. Caruso, and attempted to offer Dr.
Goetting’s testimony on this point. As noted by the trial court, the Petitioner failed to offer
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any expert proof to this effect at the hearing. Without evidence that favorable defense expert
testimony would have been available to trial counsel, the Petitioner cannot establish that
counsel’s performance was deficient or that he was prejudiced by counsel’s failure to avail
the defense of such a witness. The Petitioner is not entitled to relief.
In consideration of the foregoing and the record as a whole, the judgment of the trial
court is affirmed.
____________________________________
JOSEPH M. TIPTON, PRESIDING JUDGE
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