State v. Allen

       IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE



STATE OF DELAWARE                   )
                                    )
            v.                      )           ID No. 1510018545A
                                    )
ANDREW ALLEN,                       )
                                    )
            Defendant.              )


                         Submitted: December 29, 2023
                            Decided: April 15, 2024


        Upon Defendant Andrew Allen’s Motion for Postconviction Relief
                 GRANTED in Part and DENIED in Part.



                         MEMORANDUM OPINION




Amanda D. Buckworth, Esquire, Deputy Attorney General, DEPARTMENT OF
JUSTICE, 820 North French Street, 7th Floor, Wilmington, DE 19801, Attorney for
the State of Delaware.

Herbert W. Mondros, Esquire, RIGRODSKY LAW, P.A., 300 Delaware Avenue,
Suite 210, Wilmington, DE 19801, Attorney for Defendant Andrew Allen.


WHARTON, J.
                            I.     INTRODUCTION

      Defendant Andrew Allen (“Allen”) was convicted by a jury of Home

Invasion, Robbery First Degree, Assault Second Degree, Burglary Second Degree,

four counts of Possession of a Firearm During the Commission of a Felony, and

Conspiracy Second Degree.1 This Court previously denied Allen’s motion for

judgment of acquittal.2 Allen’s convictions were affirmed on direct appeal to the

Delaware Supreme Court.3 In doing so, that Court found that this Court did not

commit plain error: (1) when it instructed the jury that it could use a witness’s

conviction of a crime “for the sole purpose of judging that witness’s credibility or

believability;”4 and (2) when it did not sua sponte instruct the jury that the

complaining witness’s testimony should be viewed with caution.5 That court also

rejected Allen’s request to remand the matter to this Court for a hearing on whether

the State committed a Brady violation, agreeing with the State that Allen’s Brady

argument was “mere speculation.”6


1
  Allen was also charged with Possession of a Firearm by a Person Prohibited.
However, that charge was severed to be tried later, and, on September 25, 2019, the
State entered a nolle prosequi on it. Allen v. State, 2021 WL 3012892 n.4 (Del.
Supr.).
2
  State v. Allen, 2019 WL 4740842, at *1 (Del. Super. July 16, 2021); Allen also
unsuccessfully moved for judgment of acquittal during trial after the close of the
evidence. Id. at *3.
3
  Allen v. State, 2021 WL 3012892 (Del. Supr.).
4
  Id. at *6.
5
  Id. at *7.
6
  Id.
                                         1
       Allen moves for postconviction relief under Superior Court Criminal Rule

61.7   In his motion, he raises five claims, three of which allege ineffective

assistance of counsel (“IAC”), a fourth reprises his Brady claim, and the fifth

alleges cumulative error.8 Of the IAC claims, one faults trial counsel for failing to

call certain witnesses and the other two repackage his unsuccessful direct appeal

jury instruction arguments as IAC claims.9 He asks the Court to grant him an

evidentiary hearing on all contested issues of fact and to vacate his convictions and

sentences. After carefully considering the Motion, for the reasons set forth below,

the Court GRANTS Allen’s request for an evidentiary hearing, but only on two

issues: (1) Trial Counsel’s failure to call certain witnesses; and (2) Allen’s Brady

claim. In all other respects, the Motion is DENIED.

           II.   FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

       The facts, as summarized by this Court’s opinion on Allen’s Motion for

Judgment of Acquittal, are as follows:

             Allen and his co-defendant, Jeremy Clark, were indicted
             on January 4, 2016 on charges of Home Invasion,
             Robbery First Degree, Assault Second Degree, Burglary
             Second Degree, four counts of Possession of a Firearm
             During the Commission of a Felony, and Conspiracy
             Second Degree. The charges stemmed from an incident

7
   Mot. for Postconviction Relief, D.I. 87; This case was originally assigned to
another judge on the Court. On May 15, 2023, this case was reassigned to this
judge.
8
  Id.
9
  Id.
                                         2
that took place on July 15, 2015 at a home in
Wilmington, Delaware. Clark and Allen were not tried at
the same time because Allen was not arrested until after
Clark's trial. In September 2016, a jury found Clark not
guilty of all the indicted charges. On November 20, 2018,
after a five-day trial, a jury convicted Allen of all the
charges against him. Allen filed a timely motion for
judgement of acquittal.

At trial, the State presented evidence that Clark and Allen
forced their way into a residence on July 15, 2015 and
committed various crimes in the residence before fleeing.
Troy Williams testified for the State that he was at home
alone on July 15, 2015 at approximately 1:00 p.m. when
he heard a knock on his front door. From the window,
Williams saw a man at the front door holding a pizza box
and wearing a Yankees baseball cap. Williams also saw a
white Chevrolet sedan with a New York license plate
parked in his driveway. Believing the person at the door
was a delivery man who came to the wrong address,
Williams opened the door. The individual outside then
displayed a firearm and attempted to force his way into
the home. Williams resisted, but had trouble maintaining
his footing because pizza had spilled onto the floor
during the struggle. The individual outside ultimately
gained entry with the assistance of a second man.

Williams testified the two assailants forced him to the
floor at gunpoint and duct taped his legs together and his
hands behind his back. One of the assailants then guarded
Williams at gunpoint while the other searched the home.
When Williams attempted to move, the guard struck
Williams in his head and ear with the firearm. The two
assailants searched the home and repeatedly demanded
Williams tell them where his drugs and money were
hidden. During the search, Williams overheard portions
of a phone conversation between the assailants and a
third individual, who Williams perceived was giving the
two assailants instructions. The two assailants also
threatened to wait until Williams' wife returned home
                            3
from work, insinuating that Williams would reveal the
location of his drugs and money once his wife's safety
was in jeopardy.

The threats about his wife prompted Williams to attempt
to fight back. After persuading his guard to move him
from the floor to a chair, Williams broke free of the duct
tape that was binding him and grabbed a gun that one of
the men had left lying on the desk. The gun, however,
would not fire, and Williams continued to struggle with
the two assailants before breaking free and running
upstairs. Williams then retrieved a revolver hidden in his
bedroom, started running back downstairs, and began
firing at the two assailants, who were running out of the
house. One of Williams' shots embedded in the floor of
the entryway.

Williams believed it was possible another of the shots hit
one of the assailants. He observed the two assailants flee
to the white Chevrolet that he previously saw in his
driveway, at which point the car quickly drove away.
After the men fled, Williams first called his wife at work
and told her to come home immediately. Williams then
called his close friend. Approximately 10-15 minutes
after the two assailants left, Williams called the police.
After police and an ambulance arrived, Williams received
medical attention for the injuries caused when he was
struck with the gun and during his struggle to get away
from the two assailants.

The defense cross-examined Williams to cast doubt on
his credibility. Williams acknowledged he previously was
convicted of a felony drug-related offense and lost his job
as a Chester City firefighter as a result. Williams again
admitted during cross-examination that he was not
forthcoming with police about the fact that he fired a gun
at the fleeing assailants, explaining he was hesitant to be
truthful because he knew he was not supposed to possess
a firearm as a result of his past felony conviction.
Williams testified it was not until approximately six
                            4
weeks after the incident that he told police he fired at,
and likely hit, one of the assailants. The defense also
questioned Williams regarding his finances, specifically
his wherewithal to maintain his lifestyle exclusively on
income from his rental properties and his wife's job.
Williams' testimony revealed that he paid off the
mortgage on his home in five years and he owned various
other rental properties that he managed. Williams and his
wife also owned four vehicles and had a pool installed at
their home. The defense suggested to the jury that the
only possible explanation was that Williams was dealing
drugs to supplement his legal sources of income.

Although Allen's pending motion focuses exclusively on
Williams' credibility, Williams' testimony was not the
State's only evidence. The jury also heard evidence
during the State's case regarding the Delaware State
Police investigation. Detective Timothy Harach of the
Delaware State Police processed the crime scene,
including taking pictures and collecting evidence.
Detective Harach found duct tape pieces on Williams'
legs and wrist, in the office, and in Williams' upstairs
bedroom. The detective also found several pizza slices on
the hall floor along with a [torn] pizza box. Police located
a roll of duct tape and two firearm magazines in the
office and a bullet in the entryway floor near the front
door. In the laundry room, police also found a cell phone
belonging to Jeremy Clark. Detective Harach processed
the duct tape roll and the pizza box for fingerprints and
found possible useable prints on both items. The
detective then sent those items to the State Bureau of
Identification for further processing and investigation.

Anthony DiNardo, a fingerprint examiner, testified that
he matched Clark's fingerprint to the fingerprint
recovered from a piece of duct tape and matched Allen's
fingerprint to the fingerprint on the pizza box. DiNardo
testified he was 100 percent certain about both matches.



                             5
The jury also heard evidence regarding cell tower records
for Allen's phone and a forensic examination of the
cellphone found at the scene. The cell tower records
showed that Allen's phone hit off a tower in Philadelphia
in the morning of July 15, 2015, and between 10:46 a.m.
and 2:49 p.m. Allen's phone repeatedly hit off a cell
tower near Williams' residence. At 2:57 p.m., the phone
hit off a tower north of the tower near Williams'
residence, indicating the phone was moving in a
northerly direction. At 3:33 p.m. and 3:58 p.m., Allen's
phone hit off cell towers in the Philadelphia area.

Police also analyzed the phone left in Williams' home
and discovered it belonged to Clark. After forensically
examining the phone, investigators found text messages
and phone calls between Clark and Allen, along with
communications between Clark and two other
individuals, “Sadiqq” and “Gees 2.” There were
numerous communications between Clark and those
three individuals on the day of incident, including a
message Clark sent to Gees 2 that stated, “Tape and
rope.”

At the close of the State's evidence, Allen made an oral
motion for judgment of acquittal, arguing the State failed
to present a prima facie case that Allen committed any of
the charged crimes as opposed to merely being present at
the scene. The Court denied that motion, finding the State
presented sufficient evidence for a rational jury to
conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that Allen
committed the charged crimes either as a principal or as
an accomplice.

The defense's theory of the case, offered largely through
Jeremy Clark's testimony, was that the July 15, 2015
incident at Williams' home was a drug deal gone awry.
Clark testified that Williams was Clark's cocaine supplier
and that on July 15, 2015, Clark purchased a large
quantity of cocaine from Williams for approximately
$10,000. Clark explained that he brought Allen along
                            6
with him for the purchase in order to introduce Allen to
Williams. Clark testified that he and Allen went to
Williams' home that morning, purchased the cocaine,
waited for Williams to count the money, and then Clark
and Allen drove back to Pennsylvania to give the cocaine
to Clark's uncle, Sadiqq, who “cooked” the cocaine to
make crack cocaine for street sales.

Clark further testified that while he was at Sadiqq's
house, Williams called Clark and demanded he return to
Williams' home immediately because there was a
“discrepancy.” Clark stated he returned to Delaware with
Allen and a second friend nicknamed “Gees.” While
Gees and Allen waited in the car, Clark entered Williams'
home, where Williams accused Clark of using counterfeit
money to purchase the cocaine that morning. Williams
demanded that Clark pay $5,000 cash immediately. Clark
testified Williams became enraged and threatened Clark
with a gun, at which point Clark called his uncle and
allowed Williams to speak with him. Williams
purportedly did not return Clark's phone and instead
began restraining Clark with duct tape. The two men
struggled during this encounter, and Clark testified he
struck Williams' head with the scale that Williams
previously used to weigh the cocaine. Clark ultimately
freed himself from the duct tape and ran out of Williams'
residence as Williams was firing a gun at him.

Clark was shot one time in his shoulder but fled to the car
where Allen and Gees were waiting. Allen and Gees
drove Clark to Temple University Hospital in
Philadelphia, where he was treated and released. While at
the hospital, Clark was questioned by Philadelphia police
regarding the origins of the gunshot wound. Clark lied
and said he was shot by an unknown assailant while
walking through Philadelphia.

To explain the State's fingerprint evidence, Clark testified
there was a pizza box on Williams' desk that Allen picked
up and moved to give Williams room to count the money
                             7
during the initial drug purchase. As to the “tape and rope”
text message Clark sent on the morning of July 15, 2015,
Clark explained that Williams called Clark that morning
and asked him to bring duct tape and rope with him to the
house. Clark said he tried to make a shopping list on his
phone, but accidently created a text message to Gees
instead.

The State cross-examined Clark about his past felony
convictions. Clark also admitted on cross-examination
that after the July 15, 2015 incident, he sent his then-
girlfriend to pay Williams money. Clark denied he was
trying to bribe Williams and testified he simply was
trying to repay Williams the money that Williams
believed he was owed. Clark also acknowledged that he
saw all the police reports and evidence in the case before
testifying.

In its rebuttal case, the State offered a videotaped
statement that Allen gave the State police on July 25,
2017. Through that statement, the State pointed out
several inconsistencies between Clark's and Allen's
versions of the events of July 15, 2015. The
inconsistencies included that: (1) Allen stated he met
Clark through an individual named Mike, while Clark
denied knowing anyone named Mike; (2) Allen told
police he and Clark stopped for pizza and cheesesteaks
before going to Williams' house on the morning of July
15, 2015, but Clark denied ever doing so; (3) Allen
denied ever entering Williams' home, but Clark insisted
Allen was in the home that morning and picked up a
pizza box from the desk; (4) Allen said only he and Clark
drove to Williams' home, but Clark testified Gees was
with them; (5) Allen said he and Clark only went to
Williams' home once, but Clark said they visited on two
separate occasions that day; (6) Allen denied knowing
Clark was involved with any drugs other than marijuana,
but Clark testified Allen was present when Clark



                            8
             purchased cocaine from Williams and when Clark later
             gave the cocaine to Sadiqq to “cook.”10

      At the close of the State's evidence, Allen moved orally for judgment of

acquittal, arguing the State failed to present a prima facie case that Allen

committed any of the charged crimes as opposed to merely being present at the

scene.11 The Court denied that motion, finding the State presented sufficient

evidence for a rational jury to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that Allen

committed the charged crimes either as a principal or as an accomplice. 12 Allen

was convicted by the jury on all charges.13

      In his motion for judgment of acquittal filed after conviction, Allen asked the

Court to conclude that there were “irreconcilable inconsistencies” in the State's

case.14 Allen argued that Williams: (1) had financial resources beyond his reported

income; (2) did not immediately call the police after the assailants fled the scene;

and (3) did not tell police for several weeks that he fired a gun at the assailants.15

The Court denied this motion for judgment of acquittal as well, writing:

             Assuming the jury concluded the victim was credible, the
             State's evidence was not irreconcilably inconsistent and
             was more than sufficient to sustain Allen's conviction
             beyond a reasonable doubt. Determining witness

10
   State v. Allen, 2019 WL 4740842, at *1-4 (Del. Super. July 16, 2021).
11
   Id. at *3.
12
   Id.
13
   Allen’s Trial Tr. (November 20, 2018) at 178-79, D.I. 69.
14
   State v. Allen, 2019 WL 4740842, at *1 (Del. Super. July 16, 2021).
15
   Id.
                                          9
             credibility solely is the province of the jury, and - except
             in rare circumstances not present here - the Court may
             not disturb those determinations through a judgment of
             acquittal.16

      Next, Allen appealed to the Delaware Supreme Court.17 Allen argued that:

(1) the Superior Court committed plain error by instructing the jury that evidence

of Williams’ prior felony conviction “could be used ‘solely’ for general credibility,

as set forth in Del. Rule of Evidence 609, precluding its use as a predicate for proof

of the complainant's bias, motive and incentive to lie, thus abridging appellant's

rights to due process, confrontation and trial by jury[;]”18 (2) the Superior Court

committed plain error by not sua sponte “giving an instruction that, because the

complainant had a penal interest in testifying favorably for the State, his testimony

should be considered with great care and caution, abridging appellant's rights to

due process, confrontation and trial by jury[;]”19 and (3) alternatively, the case

“should be remanded for an evidentiary hearing on whether the State violated

Brady by failing to disclose any consideration, tacit or express, given to [the




16
   Id.
17
   Allen v. State, 2021 WL 3012892 (Del. Supr.); Trial Counsel represented Allen
through his motion for judgment of acquittal and sentencing. Allen’s current
counsel represented Allen during his direct appeal to the Supreme Court.
18
   Id. at *1.
19
   Id.
                                         10
complainant] in exchange for his testimony.”20 The Delaware Supreme Court

found no merit to Allen’s claims and affirmed this Court’s judgment.21

      Now, Allen moves for postconviction relief under Rule 61.22 On September

1, 2022, Allen filed his motion for postconviction relief (“Motion”)23 and an

appendix (“Appendix”).24     On October 11, 2022, Allen’s trial counsel (“Trial

Counsel”) submitted an affidavit (“Affidavit”) in response to the Motion.25 On

December 12, 2022, the State responded to the Motion (“State’s Response”),

relying in part on Trial Counsel’s Affidavit.26 On January 18, 2023, Allen replied

to the State’s Response (“Reply to State’s Response”).27 On July 28, 2023, the

State submitted an amended response (“State’s Amended Response”).28 On August

29, 2023, Allen submitted his reply to the State’s Amended Response (“Reply to

State’s Amended Response”).29 Oral argument was held on September 6, 2023.30




20
   Id.
21
   Id.
22
   Mot. for Postconviction Relief, D.I. 87.
23
   The motion is comprised of two documents, both marked as D.I. 87.
24
   D.I. 88.
25
   D.I. 91.
26
   D.I. 92.
27
   D.I. 93.
28
   D.I. 99.
29
   D.I. 100.
30
   D.I. 101.
                                        11
On December 29, 2023, Allen supplemented the record with Jeremy Clark’s

(“Clark”) trial transcript.31

                       III. THE PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS

A.     Allen’s Motion for Postconviction Relief (Form and Memorandum).

       The Motion is comprised of both the standard Rule 61 form motion

(“Form”) and a memorandum (“Memorandum”).32 The Form includes identical

arguments as to Claims 1-3 of the Memorandum. As space was limited, the Form

only references Claims 4-5 of the Memorandum.                 The Memorandum is

comprehensive of the Form.        For practical purposes, the Court addresses the

Motion as to the Memorandum.

       The Form, as completed by Allen’s current counsel, is not a pro se form.33

Allen’s current counsel created and signed the Form on behalf of Allen with his

authorization.34 Allen’s current counsel filed the Form in an abundance of caution

because he did not find any authority indicating that a counseled movant was

excused from filing a form.35




31
   D.I. 106.
32
   See Motion for Postconviction Relief, D.I. 87.
33
   Allen’s Letter to the Court dated June 14, 2023, at 1, D.I. 105
34
   Id.
35
   Id.
                                          12
      On August 1, 2022, both documents comprising the Motion were properly

served to the Attorney General’s Office.36 The Deputy Attorney General assigned

to this case only had the Form in her possession because of a staffing transition.37

Upon realizing this mistake, the State requested that the Court allow the

submission of an amended response to fully respond to the Motion.38 Allen’s

current counsel did not object.39 The Court approved the submission of the State’s

Amended Response and Allen’s Reply to the State’s Amended Response.40

      Allen moves for postconviction relief under Rule 61.41 He asks the Court to

grant him an evidentiary hearing on all contested factual issues, vacate his

convictions and sentences, and grant him a new trial.42 Allen’s Motion lists five

claims: Claims 1, 3 and 4 are IAC claims; Claim 2 is an alleged Brady violation;

and Claim 5 is based on the cumulative impact of both the IAC claims and the

alleged Brady error. In Claim 1, Allen contends that “Trial Counsel was ineffective

under the Sixth Amendment and Article I, Section 7 of the Delaware Constitution

for failing to introduce evidence, provided in discovery (and at Clark’s earlier

trial), that powerfully corroborated the defense theory that Clark was the only


36
   Id. at 2.
37
   State’s Email to the Court dated June 13, 2023, D.I. 104.
38
   Id.
39
   Allen’s Letter to the Court dated June 14, 2023, at 1, D.I. 105
40
   Oral argument was rescheduled as well.
41
   Mot. for Postconviction Relief, at 1, D.I. 87.
42
   Id. at 3.
                                          13
person inside Williams’ home on the afternoon of July 15, 2015.”43 Allen contends

that Trial Counsel was ineffective in failing to introduce evidence from two

witnesses who called 911, arguing that: (1) Trial Counsel’s performance was

deficient because it was inexplicable and indefensible for him to have relied

exclusively on Clark’s testimony, when the witnesses would have effectively

corroborated Allen’s account of the events;44 and (2) Allen has been prejudiced

because the witnesses’ testimony “would have revealed the defense theory as the

most plausible account; and ultimately as the truthful account.”45 Next, he claims

Trial Counsel was ineffective in failing to introduce evidence that Williams’ made

an unprompted admission that only Clark entered Williams’ house.46 He argues

that: (1) Trial Counsel performed deficiently by not reviewing the record to find

and/or present evidence of Williams’ interview statement; and (2) Allen was

prejudiced because there is a reasonable probability that the evidence would have

acquitted Allen.47

      In Claim 2, Allen contends that the State violated Allen’s due process rights

under the Fourteenth Amendment by failing to disclose that police told Williams




43
   Id. at 20.
44
   Id. at 30-31.
45
   Id. at 32. (emphasis in original.)
46
   Id. at 35-37.
47
   Id. at 38-39.
                                        14
that he would never be charged.48 Allen argues that this non-disclosure was

material.49

       In Claim 3, Allen contends that “Trial Counsel was ineffective under the

Sixth Amendment and Article I, Section 7 of the Delaware Constitution, for failing

to object to the trial court’s instruction that [Williams’] 2007 felony conviction

could be used ‘solely’ for general credibility, as set forth in Del. Rule of Evidence

609, precluding its use as a predicate for proof of Williams’ bias, motive and

incentive to lie, thus abridging Allen’s rights to due process, confrontation and trial

by jury.”50 Allen argues that: (1) “Trial Counsel performed deficiently by failing to

object to the instruction, and request that the jury be told that it can consider

Williams’ prior felony conviction in assessing whether Williams’ may have a

secondary motive to testify consistent with the trial theory of the prosecuting

authority that is authorized to prosecute him;51 and (2) Allen was prejudiced

because the instruction was an incorrect statement of law that harmed Allen’s

credibility battle in his defense against Williams’ account of the incident. 52

       In Claim 4, Allen contends that “Trial Counsel was ineffective under the

Sixth Amendment and Article I, Section 7 of the Delaware Constitution for failing


48
   Id. at 40.
49
   Id. at 46.
50
   Id. at 50.
51
   Id. at 51.
52
   Id. at 58.
                                          15
to request an instruction that, because [Williams] had a penal interest in testifying

favorably for the State, his testimony should be received with great care and

caution[,]” and “[Trial] Counsel’s failure to do so had abridged Allen’s rights to

due process, confrontation, and trial by jury.”53 Allen then argues that: (1) Trial

Counsel performed deficiently by not requesting an “interested witness” instruction

which the Court would have been obliged to give under the Sixth Amendment;54

and (2) this performance deficiency prejudiced Allen because Williams’ testimony

“was the primary evidence relied upon by the State, trial counsel was ineffective

for failing to request that the trial court caution the jury that it should have received

that biased, incentivized testimony ‘with caution.’”55

       In Claim 5, Allen contends that the cumulative impact of Trial Counsel’s

ineffectiveness and the Brady violation, establishes that, but for those errors, there

would have been a reasonable probability of a different outcome at trial.56

B.     Trial Counsel’s Affidavit.

       Trial Counsel writes in his Affidavit:

              Trial counsel carefully reviewed the police reports, 911
              calls, expert fingerprint report, and all other evidence that
              linked Mr. Allen and Mr. Clark to being inside [Williams’
              home]. The possible fact that the witnesses saw one
              person wearing a bloody shirt get in a car does not

53
   Id. at 60.
54
   Id. at 62-63.
55
   Id. at 65.
56
   Id. at 66.
                                           16
              necessarily corroborate that there was only one person
              inside [Williams’ home] while a confrontation occurred
              therein. Co-defendant Clark testified that Allen entered
              [Williams’ home] and moved a pizza box on the desk in
              Williams’ office. That accounted for Allen’s fingerprints
              being found at the scene, inside the house.57
                                           …
              At Mr. Allen’s trial, the State presented evidence that Mr.
              Allen was in [Williams’ home] at some point after or
              during the delivery of a pizza. Specifically, his
              fingerprint was found on a pizza box inside the house. In
              trial counsel’s view, presenting evidence that
              corroborated some of the physical evidence presented by
              the State, while showing that Mr. Allen was not involved
              in any criminal activity, would have been more
              believable to the factfinder. Presenting a case tending to
              suggest that Mr. Allen was never inside [Williams’ home]
              would not have been as effective, in counsel’s view, than
              the course that trial counsel elected to take in calling
              Clark as a witness and eliciting testimony that Allen
              moved a pizza box, thereby harmlessly explaining the
              presence of his fingerprint on the box.58

       Trial Counsel then confirms that the State never disclosed any promise to not

prosecute Williams for the crime of possession of a firearm by a person prohibited

(“PFBPP”) or any other crime arising out of the incident that formed the basis of

this case.59 Additionally, Trial Counsel confirms that “he was never advised by the

State that Williams’ would never be charged because he was a victim.”60 Trial

Counsel states that if this Brady material been disclosed to him prior to trial, he


57
   Trial Counsel’s Aff., at 9, D.I. 91.
58
   Id. at 9-10.
59
   Id. at 10.
60
   Id.
                                          17
“would have brought these promises to the attention of the jury and questioned

Williams, Detective Rizzo, and any other related individuals about it.”61 Trial

Counsel also points out that: “the jurors were given a general credibility instruction

permitting them to consider witness’s motivation, bias, prejudice, and interest[.]”62

Trial Counsel then writes:

             During cross-examination of witness Williams, trial
             counsel elicited an admission from Williams that he lost
             his job as a paid firefighter around the time he was
             convicted of the felony drug offense in 2007. Trial
             counsel sought to convey to the jury the seriousness of
             the conviction, and that Williams’ lost his job because of
             it. The State objected to questioning pertaining to the
             issue. The trial court sustained the State’s objection and
             trial counsel abided by the Court’s ruling. Thus, trial
             counsel did seek to explore the seriousness of the
             conviction and highlight to the jury that the conviction
             was serious and must be considered in evaluating the
             weight to which it would give Williams’ testimony. In
             this regard, trial counsel’s performance was not deficient.
             Whether Mr. Allen received a specific bias instruction or
             not, trial counsel highlighted that the jury ought to give
             less weight to Williams’ testimony in light of the 2007
             conviction.63

      Trial Counsel asserts that the substance of Claim 4 is similar to the argument

in Claim 3, although that claim dealt with a different jury instruction.64 However,

Trial Counsel still addresses this claim, writing:


61
   Id.
62
   Id. at 11 (quoting Mot. for Postconviction Relief, at 56).
63
   Id. at 11-12 (internal citations omitted).
64
   Id. at 12-13.
                                          18
              [A]s       witness      Williams    was     not    a     co-
              defendant/accomplice who was testifying against another
              co-defendant, if trial counsel had requested a Bland
              instruction, the trial court would have applied the
              governing law and most likely would have concluded
              that a Bland instruction was not appropriate. Mr. Allen
              further cites the Model Jury instruction for a witness who
              has pleaded guilty to the same or related offense,
              accomplices, immunized witness, or cooperating
              witnesses. Respectfully, based on the evidence adduced
              at trial, the trial court would have determined that witness
              Williams did not meet the criteria to classify as any of
              those types of witnesses. Accordingly, any request for a
              jury instruction for such a witness more likely than not
              would have been denied.65

C.     The State’s Response.

       The State responds that Allen’s Motion is procedurally barred under Rule

61(i)(1) because it was not filed within one year of the final judgment of

conviction.66 Additionally, the State argues that Claim 2 – the Brady claim - is

procedurally barred pursuant to Rule 61(i)(4) because it was adjudicated

previously on direct appeal to the Delaware Supreme Court.67                 The State

substantively addresses only Claims 1 and 3. Here, the State reiterates Trial

Counsel’s argument:

              Trial counsel explained that he carefully reviewed all
              evidence in this case, including 911 calls, and
              strategically decided to refrain from presenting the 911
              calls as evidence a[t] trial. Trial counsel went on to

65
   Id. at 13.
66
   State’s Resp., at 3, D.I. 92.
67
   Id.
                                          19
             explain that, in his opinion, presenting a defense that
             [Allen] was not inside the victim’s home at the time of
             the offense would not have been effective as there was
             other physical evidence, including a fingerprint, that
             showed [Allen] was inside the victim’s home at some
             point.68

      The State also reiterates Trial Counsel’s argument that regardless of whether

Allen “received a specific bias instruction or not, trial counsel highlighted that the

jury ought to give less weight to Williams’ testimony in light of the 2007

conviction.”69 Lastly, the State points out that the Delaware Supreme Court also

addressed this same argument on direct appeal and found that the trial judge did

not commit plain error.70

D.    Allen’s Reply to the State’s Response.

      Allen’s Reply to the State’s Response argues that the State is incorrect in

asserting a procedural bar due to Allen not filing the Motion within one year of the

final judgment of conviction.71     Allen reasons that a judgment of conviction

becomes final on the date after the direct appeal process is complete – the date the

mandate is issued.72


68
   Id. at 4 (citing Trial Counsel’s Aff., at 9).
69
   Id. at 5 (quoting Trial Counsel Aff., at 12).
70
   Id. at 5; The State does not argue that Claim 3 should be procedurally barred
under Rule 61(i)(4).
71
   Reply to State’s Resp., at 1, D.I. 93; Allen also points out that some of his claims
have not been addressed. The State’s Amended Response addresses those
unaddressed claims in the Motion. See infra, at 22-25.
72
   Reply to State’s Resp., at 2, D.I. 93
                                          20
       Allen contends that the State mischaracterizes his argument that Trial

Counsel was ineffective in not calling certain witnesses because the “‘defense that

the defendant was not inside the victim’s home at the time of the offense’ was the

very defense that trial counsel presented.”73         Allen also rejects the State’s

suggestion that the evidence proffered in the Motion is “vague.” 74 Allen does not

take issue with Trial Counsel’s strategy, endorsed by the State, of “harmlessly

explaining the fingerprint on the pizza box” by Allen’s presence in Williams’ home

that morning.75 Instead, Allen points out that the disinterested witnesses’ testimony

would have advanced and profoundly strengthened Trial Counsel’s theory,

meanwhile, the explanation of the fingerprints would have been unaffected.76

Allen asserts that his Brady claim should not be barred because the State cannot be

permitted to profit from its suppression of evidence, and the nature of this Brady

claim has not been previously litigated due to its different factual and legal basis. 77

Additionally, Allen contends that the Delaware Supreme Court’s ruling on direct

appeal, which did not find plain error, does not operate as an impediment to

Strickland review because Strickland review and plain error are different standards




73
   Id. at 2-3 (quoting State’s Resp., at 4).
74
   Id. at 4.
75
   Id. at 4 (quoting State’s Resp., at 5).
76
   Id. at 4.
77
   Id. at 6.
                                               21
in both degree of error and degree of impact.78 Lastly, Allen reiterates that even

though Trial Counsel highlighted Williams’ 2007 conviction, it was not a substitute

for an instruction that comes from the Court.79

E.    The State’s Amended Response.

      First, the State’s Amended Response addresses Rule 61’s procedural bars and

Allen’s state constitutional claims. As to the Rule 61 procedural bars, the State

argues:

             Because Allen’s postconviction motion is his first and is
             timely, this Court can consider the ineffective assistance
             of counsel claims because the first time such claims can
             be raised is on postconviction. Even so, Allen’s claims
             should be dismissed without further proceedings because
             … his claims of ineffective assistance of counsel are
             without merit. As to Allen’s other claims, they are
             procedurally barred under Rule 61. In any event … all of
             Allen’s claims are meritless.80

On Allen’s claims based in part on the Delaware Constitution, the State argues that

these specific claims have been waived and should be summarily denied because

they are conclusory.81

      The State argues that Allen has failed to demonstrate Trial Counsel was

deficient because: (1) “Trial counsel’s decision to refrain from introducing the 911

calls and Williams’ statement during his August 2015 interview falls within the

78
   Id. at 6-7.
79
   Id. at 7.
80
   State’s Am. Resp., at 15, D.I. 99.
81
   Id. at 16-17.
                                         22
wide range of professional assistance[;]”82 and (2) “Trial counsel’s decision is

entitled to a strong degree of deference and the decision to do so was not

unreasonable.”83 Additionally, the State argues that even if Trial Counsel had

presented testimony from the two 911 callers, as well as Williams’ statement to

Det. Rizzo, Allen cannot show that the trial outcome would have been different.84

      The State then contends that Allen’s Brady claim is procedurally barred

under Rules 61(i)(3) and (4) because Allen did not raise it in the proceedings

leading to the judgment of conviction, and this issue has been previously

adjudicated by the Supreme Court.85 Further, the State contends that Allen has not

met the standard for various Rule 61 exceptions.86 The State asserts that Allen has

not alleged that the trial court lacked jurisdiction over his convictions and sentence,

nor has he identified the existence of a new, retroactively applicable rule of

constitutional law.87 Additionally, the State asserts that Williams’ statements to

Allen’s private investigator do not constitute newly discovered evidence and the

proffered evidence does not create a strong inference that Allen is actually

innocent.88 The State maintains that Allen has failed to establish a Brady violation


82
   See id. at 24.
83
   Id.
84
   Id. at 26.
85
   Id. at 33.
86
   Id. at n.66; Id at n.68 and associated text.
87
   Id. at 35.
88
   Id. at 36, 42.
                                           23
because Allen has not established that the State suppressed evidence.89

Additionally, the State argues that Allen has not established that an agreement

existed between Williams and the State, tacit or otherwise, at the time of trial.90

       The State addresses Allen’s jury instruction claims on the merits. The State

first asserts that Trial Counsel’s representation was not deficient in failing to object

to the Court’s instruction pertaining to the victim’s 2007 felony conviction because

he had no basis to object and this claim is “meritless.”91 The State then argues that

Allen cannot show prejudice because there is not a reasonable probability that the

trial’s outcome would have been different had the instruction been requested.92

       Next, the State argues that Trial Counsel was not deficient in not requesting

an instruction that Williams’ testimony should be received with great care and

caution because there were no grounds for such a request.93 Again, the State

claims that Allen cannot establish prejudice because he cannot show a reasonable

probability that the outcome of the trial would have been different had the

instruction been requested.94     Finally, the State argues that there can be no

cumulative error because all of Allen’s claims fail individually.95


89
   See id. at 45.
90
   Id. at 45-46
91
   Id. at 51-52.
92
   Id. at 60.
93
   Id. at 62-63.
94
   Id. at 70.
95
   Id. at 72-73.
                                          24
F.    Allen’s Reply to the State’s Amended Response.

      Allen argues in his Reply to the State’s Amended Response that the State

makes an identical meritless argument regarding the proposed introduction of the

witness evidence.96 Again, Allen reasons that the flaw in the State’s rationale is

that the defense that Allen was not inside the victim’s home at the time of the

offense, was the very defense that trial counsel presented.97 Again, Allen clarifies

that his claim is not “that trial counsel should have argued that Allen never entered

[Williams’ home]. Rather, the claim is that Trial Counsel failed to utilize readily

available evidence supporting his own theory that Allen never entered the house

that afternoon when the alleged crime occurs.”98          Allen disputes the State’s

contention that the “fact that witnesses saw one person wearing a bloody shirt get

in a car does not necessarily corroborate that there was only one person inside

[Williams’ home],” arguing that either Williams or the witnesses necessarily must

have lied.99 Allen believes that the jury would have had little difficulty resolving

the credibility battle between Williams and the witnesses in favor of the

witnesses.100   Additionally, Allen states that Strickland requires a reasonable




96
   Allen’s Reply to State’s Am. Resp., at 2, D.I. 100.
97
   Id.
98
   Id. at 3.
99
   Id. at 3 (quoting State’s Am. Resp., at 23) (citation omitted).
100
    Id. at 3.
                                          25
probability of a different result, not that there would have “necessarily” been a

different result.101

       Regarding Williams comment that he shot “the one that came in the house,”

Allen writes:

                Certainly, if trial counsel had listened to and/or
                appreciated the significance of Williams’ comment, and
                presented it to the jury, the State would have been free to
                present all these implausible explanations to the jury.
                That fact, however, does not mean that the State’s spin on
                what is a straightforward comment, overcomes
                Strickland’s reasonable probability standard. Perhaps the
                jury might have accepted the State’s tortured
                explanations; however, [Allen] need not overcome that
                standard to merit relief.102

       Allen also replies that the Court should reject the State’s attempt to hold

Allen responsible for its suppression of Brady evidence.103 Allen supports this

argument by contending that: (1) “the State does not contest the veracity of

Williams’ statement to investigator Jansen that a detective promised him that he

would never be arrested for his admitted guilt to a serious felony[;]” (2) “the State

does not contest that due process is violated[,] whether or not the detective

promised him that he would not be arrested[] mentioned this to trial prosecutors[;]”

and (3) “the State does not suggest (as complainant Williams does in the interview)



101
    Id.
102
    Id. at 8.
103
    Id.
                                            26
that because no one said anything about a ‘deal,’ the detective’s promise that he

would never be arrested was a nonevent.”104

       Turning to jury instructions, Allen asserts that the State cannot refute the

likelihood that the jury interpreted the crimen falsi instruction to mean what it

said.105 Allen writes:

              If the highest courts of Delaware and the United States
              distinguish between cross-examination directed to
              general credibility and cross-examination directed to
              motive and bias, there [is] no reason to believe that the
              jurors did not. Thus, an instruction arguably precluding
              consideration of a prior conviction for anything other
              than general credibility presents a reasonable probability
              that at least one juror would not consider the exposure
              presented by Williams’ conviction had on his
              motivation.106

      Allen replies that the State provides no rationale for Trial Counsel’s failure to

request an interested witness instruction, writing:

              The question of whether trial counsel should have
              realized the language of Bland v. State regarding an
              accomplice was applicable to an unindicted, self-
              admitted participant in the criminal activity, is a different
              question than whether the trial court, on its own should
              have fashioned such instruction and whether not doing so
              constituted error (let alone plain error).107




104
    Id. at 12.
105
    Id. at 17.
106
    Id. at 19-20.
107
    Id. at 22 (internal citation omitted).
                                             27
Lastly, Allen then contends that “there is simply no basis to find that an instruction

urging caution due to the witness’s secondary motive to avoid arrest, conviction

and incarceration, would not have created a reasonable likelihood of a different

result.”108

                         IV.   STANDARD OF REVIEW

       Rule 61 is the exclusive remedy for those “in custody under a sentence of

this court seeking to set aside the judgment of conviction…”109 This Rule balances

finality “against … the important role of the courts in preventing injustice.”110

       Before addressing the merits of a defendant’s motion for postconviction

relief, the Court must first apply the procedural bars of Superior Court Criminal

Rule 61(i).111 If a procedural bar exists, then the Court will not consider the merits

of the postconviction claim.112 Under Delaware Superior Court Rules of Criminal

Procedure, a motion for postconviction relief can be barred for time limitations,

repetitive motions, procedural defaults, and former adjudications.          A motion

exceeds time limitations if it is filed more than one year after the conviction

becomes final or if it asserts a newly recognized, retroactively applied right more




108
    Id. at 23-24.
109
    Super. Ct. Crim. R. 61(a)(1).
110
    Zebroski v. State, 12 A.3d 1115, 1120 (Del. 2010) (citation omitted).
111
    Younger v. State, 580 A.2d 552, 554 (Del. 1990).
112
    Id.
                                          28
than one year after it was first recognized.113 A second or subsequent motion is

repetitive and therefore barred.114 The Court considers a repetitive motion only if

the movant was convicted at trial and the motion pleads with particularity either:

(1) actual innocence;115 or (2) the application of a newly recognized, retroactively

applied rule of constitutional law rendering the conviction invalid.116 Grounds for

relief “not asserted in the proceedings leading to the judgment of conviction” are

barred as procedurally defaulted unless the movant can show “cause for relief” and

“prejudice from [the] violation.”117 Grounds for relief formerly adjudicated in the

case, including “proceedings leading to the judgment of conviction, in an appeal, in

a post-conviction proceeding, or in a federal habeas corpus hearing” are barred.118

Additionally, “[t]his Court will not address claims for post-conviction relief that

are conclusory and unsubstantiated.”119

      To successfully bring an IAC claim, a claimant must demonstrate: (1) that

counsel’s performance was deficient; and (2) that the deficiencies prejudiced the



113
    Super. Ct. Crim. R. 61(i)(1).
114
    Super. Ct. Crim. R. 61(i)(2).
115
    Super. Ct. Crim. R. 61(d)(2)(i).
116
    Super. Ct. Crim. R. 61(d)(2)(ii).
117
    Super. Ct. Crim. R. 61(i)(3).
118
    Super. Ct. Crim. R. 61(i)(4).
119
    State v. Guinn, 2006 WL 2441945, at *4 (Del. Super. Aug 16, 2021). See also
Gattis v. State, 697 A.2d 1174, 1178-79 (Del. 1997); Younger, 580 A.2d at 556;
State v. McNally, 2011 WL 7144815, at *5 (Del. Super. Nov. 16, 2011); State v.
Wright, 2007 WL 1982834, at *1 n.2 (Del. Super. July 5, 2007).
                                          29
claimant by depriving him or her of a fair trial with reliable results. 120 To prove

counsel’s deficiency, a defendant must show that counsel’s representation fell

below an objective standard of reasonableness.121 Moreover, a defendant must

make concrete allegations of actual prejudice and substantiate them or risk

summary dismissal.122     “[A] court must indulge in a strong presumption that

counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of reasonable professional

assistance.”123 A successful Sixth Amendment claim of IAC requires a showing

“that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors,

the result of the proceeding would have been different.”124 An inmate must satisfy

the proof requirements of both prongs to succeed on an IAC claim. Failure to do

so on either prong will doom the claim and the Court need not address the other.125

                               V.     DISCUSSION

      A.    Bars to Relief.

            1. The Time Bar of Rule 61(i)(1).

      Although the State asserted in their Response that the Motion is time-barred

under Rule 61(i)(1), the State appears to have conceded that it is not in their

120
    Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. at 688.
121
    Id. at 667-68.
122
    Wright v. State, 671 A.2d 1353, 1356 (Del. 1996).
123
    Strickland, 446 U.S. at 689.
124
    Id. at 694.
125
     Strickland, 466 U.S. at 697; Ploof v. State, 75 A.3d 811, 825 (Del. 2013)
(“Strickland is a two-pronged test, and there is no need to examine whether an
attorney performed deficiently if the deficiency did not prejudice the defendant.”).
                                         30
Amended Response.126 The Court agrees that the Motion is not time-barred under

Rule 61(i)(1). “The limitations period begins to run on the date when the direct

appeal process is complete; that is, on the date the mandate is issued.” 127 The

Delaware Supreme Court issued the mandate on the direct appeal on August 3,

2021.128 Allen filed the Motion on August 1, 2022.129 Thus, the Motion is timely.

               2. The Former Adjudication Bar of Rule 61(i)(4).

       The State contends that Rule 61(i)(4) bars Allen’s Brady violation claim.

Rule 61(i)(4) states: “any ground for relief that was formerly adjudicated, whether

in the proceedings leading to the judgment of conviction, in an appeal, in a

postconviction proceeding, or in a federal habeas corpus proceeding, is thereafter

barred, unless reconsideration of the claim is warranted in the interest of

justice.”130

       Allen did not assert a Brady claim in his motion for acquittal before this

Court. Instead, in his third argument on direct appeal to the Delaware Supreme

Court, Allen asked that Court to remand the matter to the Superior Court to

conduct an evidentiary hearing on whether the State violated Brady by failing to




126
    State’s Am. Resp., at 13-15, D.I. 99.
127
    Felton v. State, 945 A.2d 594 (Del. 2008).
128
    Reply to State’s Resp., at Ex. A, D.I. 93.
129
    Mot. for Postconviction Relief, D.I. 87.
130
    Super. Ct. Crim. R. 61(i)(4).
                                         31
disclose any consideration given to Williams in exchange for his testimony.131 He

argued that ‘“it is utterly improbable that no one made the decision not to

prosecute’” and the facts demonstrate ‘“the overwhelming likelihood that Williams

received an undisclosed deal in this case, and thus support granting a hearing on

this claim.’”132 The Supreme Court declined the remand request, concluding that

Allen's Brady claim was “mere speculation and … the record is devoid of any

evidence to substantiate [Allen’s] Brady allegation.”133 When making his Brady

claim on direct appeal, Allen did not have any actual evidence that the State

suppressed an agreement between the State and Williams, but, rather, he argued the

circumstances compelled that conclusion.

      In is unclear to this Court why Allen chose to raise his Brady claim on direct

appeal in the manner he did. Because he lacked evidence to support his argument,

he sought a remand to attempt to develop that evidence. By figuratively dipping

his toe into the Brady issue in this fashion, he ran the risk of an adverse

adjudication procedurally barring him from ever having the opportunity to litigate

the claim on its merits.




131
    Allen v. State, 2021 WL 3012892, at *7 (Del. 2021).
132
    Id.
133
     Id.
                                        32
      In postconviction litigation, the State argues that the issue was resolved on

direct appeal and, thus, it is procedurally barred as previously adjudicated.134 To

the extent Allen argues it was not previously adjudicated, the State maintains it

barred under Rule 61(i)(3) as procedurally defaulted since the claim was not raised

in the proceedings leading to Allen’s conviction or on direct appeal. 135 Further,

Allen cannot avoid the bars to relief because the Brady claim neither alleged a lack

of jurisdiction by the trial court or the existence of a new, retroactively applicable

rule of constitutional law, nor did it allege newly discovered facts supporting a

claim of actual innocence.136

      In his Reply to the State’s Amended Response, Allen argues that the State’s

argument under Rule 61(i)(3) that Allen could have learned of the purported facts

supporting his Brady claim sooner and raised the claim earlier has been rejected by

the United States Supreme Court and the Third Circuit because the State has a due

process obligation of disclosure even where defense diligence could have

uncovered the material.137      Moreover, Allen maintains that suppression of an

explicit assurance by Det. Rizzo that Williams would not be charged is sufficient



134
    State’s Am. Resp., at 30-44, D.I. 99.
135
    Id. at n. 66.
136
    Id. at 33-44.
137
    Reply to State’s Resp., at 9-10 (citing Banks v. Dretke, 540 U.S. 668 (2004);
Dennis v. Sec’y Dep’t of Corr., 834 F.3d 263 (3d Cir. 2016); Bracey v. Sup’t
Rockview, SCI, 986 F.3d 274 (3d Cir. 2021)), D.I. 100.
                                         33
cause to excuse the procedural default and, further, the materiality of that assurance

is unchallenged.138

      Accepting all of the foregoing as correct, Allen still must contend with the

State’s argument under Rule 61(i)(4). He does so by first arguing that the State has

not contested that there was an express agreement with Williams not to prosecute

him for illegally possessing a firearm,139 and, second, by asserting that the

underlying issues raised on direct appeal and here are not the same.140

      Both arguments miss the mark. As to the first, the State simply does not

accept the premise that Allen has established any agreement at all - “Williams’

remarks to Allen’s investigator over the phone – approximately seven years after

the incident and after Williams was interviewed by the police – do not establish the

existence of any deal, promise, or quid pro quo or establish that Williams was

given any consideration for his testimony.”141 As to the second, the underlying

claim was exactly the same on direct appeal as it is here – that the State violated its

Brady obligations by failing to disclose an agreement between it and Williams not

to prosecute Williams for illegally possessing a firearm in exchange for his

testimony.



138
    Id. at 11.
139
    Id. at 12.
140
    Id. at 13-17.
141
    State’s Am. Resp., at 47, D.I. 99.
                                          34
      As the Court previously observed, it is unclear why Allen raised the Brady

issue on direct appeal without any evidentiary support in the record. Certainly, as

he persuasively argues here, Rule 61(i)(3) would not bar him from raising it on

postconviction relief if he were able to develop such a record. Nevertheless, raise

it he did, and so the Court must consider whether Rule 61(i)(4) bars him from

raising it again here. The Court finds the bar of Rule 61(i)(4) inapplicable. The

Supreme Court did not address the underlying merits of Allen’s substantive Brady

claim – in fact, there were none - but concluded under the plain error standard that

the claim was speculative.142 By raising the Brady issue prematurely on direct

appeal, appellate counsel, who also is postconviction counsel, risked precluding

Allen from raising it now. Because the Court finds Rule 61(i)(4) inapplicable and

in an effort to forestall any future IAC claim against appellate counsel in the event

it ultimately is determined that Rule 61(i)(4) is applicable, Allen’s request for a

hearing is GRANTED. In that way, the Court intends to develop a better record

upon which to consider the claim and ultimately decide it.

      B.     Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claims.

      All three IAC claims reference both the Sixth Amendment of the United

States Constitution and Article I, Section 7 of the Delaware Constitution.143 The


142
    See, State v. Jones, 2022 WL 2827004, at *7 (Del. Super. Ct. Jul. 20, 2022)
(citing Green v. State, 238 A.3d 160, 176 (Del. 2020)).
143
    Allen’s Brady claim is grounded only in the United States Constitution.
                                         35
Motion’s references to the Delaware Constitution, however, are limited to

conclusory headings.144     Finding no substantive IAC argument based on the

Delaware Constitution, the Court addresses Allen’s Strickland-based IAC claims

only as to the Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution.

             1.     Failure to Introduce Exculpatory Evidence.

      Allen’s first IAC claim concerns Trial Counsel’s failure to introduce

allegedly exculpatory evidence that Clark was the only person inside Williams’

home on the afternoon of July 15, 2015.145 The allegedly exculpatory evidence

included: (1) two 911-callers who witnessed Clark alone on Foulk Road on the day

of the home invasion, July 15, 2015; and (2) a statement Williams made to Det.

Rizzo during an interview on August 28, 2015.146

                    a.    911-Callers.

      During Clark’s trial, Williams testified as to his account of Allen and Clark

fleeing his home:

             WILLIAMS: I hear my front door open and I think - -
             when the front door open [sic] I think that they're about
             to let the third - - they're yelling for the third guy to come
             help us because this guy got out of control and he's
             fighting us, we need more help.147



144
    Mot. for Postconviction Relief at 20, 50, 60, D.I. 87.
145
    Id. at 20-21.
146
    Id.
147
    Clark’s Trial Tr. (September 21, 2016) at 81, D.I. 106.
                                          36
                          So when I hear my front door open, I immediately
                   turn - - I come up, I turn my - - come around the corner
                   and I'm looking down my stairwell. And when I look
                   down my stairwell, I see somebody pop out of my office
                   and I just left [sic] off, boom, boom, boom. I shoot three
                   times and they run out the door.

                         I run down the steps behind them and I run out the
                   door behind them. And when I run out the door, they’re
                   running across my front lawn which leads to Foulk Road.
                   And they cross Foulk Road. And by this time, there's the
                   same white car that was parked in my driveway when
                   they dropped them off is across the street in a medical
                   complex. He’s backing out of the parking spot and he's
                   coming down the hill to Foulk Road.

                         They run across Foulk Road, they get in that car
                   and they turn and make a left - - well, they make a right
                   on their right and they go down toward Silverside
                   Road.148
                                             …

                   MS. GATTO: And from the time that you started firing to
                   the time that - - did they - - were they - - did they wait in
                   the house, did they leave immediately, did they leave a
                   little later? Do you know how long it was after you fired
                   that they left the house?

                   WILLIAMS: Oh, they were running out of the house
                   after I started - - after I was firing.

                   MS. GATTO: So the vehicle - - you said that you saw
                   both of them run to a vehicle?

                   WILLIAMS: Yes.149
                                                …


148
      Id. at 82.
149
      Id. at 94.
                                                37
                   MS. GATTO: Were you able to tell while you were
                   watching them which - - where the two ended up entering
                   the car? Did you see them actually enter the car?

                   WILLIAMS: I did but, no, I didn't make note of which
                   one got in which space.

                   MS. GATTO: But you saw them both enter?

                   WILLIAMS: They both got in that car and drove off,
                   yes.150

                   MS. GATTO: And I know you testified, but where did
                   you see them drive off to?

                   WILLIAMS: They came - - they came out of the medical
                   center, which is - - which basically is - - it's not directly
                   across the street from my house, but it's - - he's next door
                   to the guy across the street from my house, so it's over
                   this side.

                          They came down there, down out of the driveway
                   of [sic] there and they made - - which would have been
                   their right to my left - - and they went toward Silverside
                   Road. I didn't see where they went after, I just know they
                   went toward Silverside Road.151

         During Allen’s trial, Williams again testified as to his account of Allen and

Clark fleeing his home:

                   MS. DILIBERTO: … So you went up to the bedroom,
                   you grabbed that gun, it was still there and you said you
                   were standing at the top of your stairwell?

                   WILLIAMS: I was standing in the doorway of my
                   bedroom, which - - standing in the doorway of my

150
      Id. at 95.
151
      Id. at 96.
                                                38
bedroom, it’s a wall there but on the other side of that
wall is a stairwell that comes down the steps back
downstairs. So I’m standing there with the gun holding it,
waiting for somebody to come upstairs.

       Instead, I hear my front door open and I don’t
know if they are either leaving, coming, I don’t know if
they went and got the other guy who brought the phone
to the door, his backup to come get me, so I immediately
spinned around - - and I’m standing at the top of the steps
now. And when I’m standing at the top of the steps, I see
the guy with the white Jordans come out of my office and
he’s standing at the front door. And the guy with the
Yankee’s cap is standing outside on the steps saying:
Come on. Come on. Come on.

       As I come down the steps, I come down the steps
and I shoot three times: Boom, boom, boom. I don’t
know if I hit him at the time or not, but I shot three times
going down the steps. They both - - he ran out of the door
and both of them ran across my lawn towards the - - it’s
an office complex, doctors office across the street with a
parking lot. And they were running across my yard and
then across Foulk Road up the hill to the doctor’s office
where I assumed there was a car parked.

        So now I come down from the steps behind them
and come out the front door. And I’m standing on the
steps yelling, just yelling obscenities or whatever
emotion that I was yelling at the time about them: Come
back. Come back. Come back. I got you now. Whatever
anger I was yelling when they were running across the
street.

       And then I see the same white Chevrolet with the
New York plates on it, it’s pulling out of the doctor’s
office and then they both jump in that car and they pull
off and they go south on Foulk Road.



                            39
               MS. DILIBERTO: So the car you saw - - after you fired
               your gun and they ran outside, do you go outside and
               follow them out to see where they are going?152

               WILLIAMS: Yeah, I’m out on the step. I don’t think I
               went any further than my step., [sic] my stoop outside of
               my door, but - -

               MS. DILIBERTO: Okay?

               WILLIAMS: But I was [sic] definitely ran out after them.

               MS. DILIBERTO: Okay. And you said you see them kind
               of run across Foulk Road?

               WILLIAMS: Yeah, I saw them run diagonally across
               Foulk Road. Directly across me on Foulk Road is
               another house, but to the left of that house is a - - you go
               up a hill, it’s on a raised hill and it’s a little office
               complex right there.

               MS. DILIBERTO: Did it appear to you that someone else
               was driving - -

               WILLIAMS: Oh somebody was definitely driving. The
               car was moving.

               MS. DILIBERTO: So this car you saw, was this, did this
               appear to be the same car you saw initially in your
               driveway?

               WILLIAMS: I believe that it was the same car that I saw
               initially in my driveway.

               MS. DILIBERTO: Okay. Was the car moving?

               WILLIAMS: The car was moving.153

152
      Allen’s Trial Tr. (November 15, 2018) at 43-44, D.I. 69.
153
      Id. at 45.
                                           40
            MS. DILIBERTO: Okay. And where was it moving
            toward?

            WILLIAMS: It pulled out of that doctors office and it
            made - - that would have been making a right on Foulk
            Road and it went south on Foulk Road.154

      Alexander Manoogian (“Manoogian”) was one of the two witnesses who

called 911. In his call, Manoogian stated that he saw a man who “had blood all

over his white T-shirt and what looked like a hole in his back.”155 Manoogian

added that the man ran across Foulk Road.156 In a later interview, Manoogian

indicated that he was driving north on Foulk Road and that the man was jogging

south on the sidewalk to his left.157 Manoogian emphasized that the man was

alone.158

      Lyndee Baldwin (“Baldwin”) was the other witness who called 911.

Baldwin’s 911 call conveyed that while driving on Foulk Road she saw a man enter

the backseat of a vehicle.159 Baldwin also said that the man entered the vehicle in

the middle of the road and that he had blood on his shirt.160 During Clark’s trial,


154
    Id. at 46.
155
    Appendix at A46, D.I. 88.
156
    See id.
157
    Id. at A48. Manoogian also stated that he appeared at Court and was excused
upon his request. Manoogian was not sure which defendant was on trial during his
appearance.
158
    Id.
159
    Id. at A45.
160
    Id.
                                        41
Baldwin testified as a witness for the State.161 Baldwin’s testimony included that

she viewed the man as she had driven down a “little hill” on Foulk Road next to an

office complex.162 Baldwin stated that there were two other men in the vehicle;

one man was in the driver’s seat and one man was in the passenger seat.163

Baldwin affirmed that the passenger seat was “leaned all the way back.” 164 In a

later interview with Allen’s private investigator, Baldwin specified that the man

with the bloody T-shirt entered the backseat of the vehicle on the driver’s side.165

      Trial Counsel’s affidavit appears to understand Allen’s argument to be that

“trial counsel should have argued that Allen never entered Williams’ house.” 166

But, that is not Allen’s argument. Allen’s argument is “that trial counsel failed to

utilize readily available evidence supporting his own theory, that Allen never

entered the house that afternoon when the alleged crime occurred.”167 In other

words, Allen’s claim acknowledges that he entered the house on an earlier visit, but

not at a second, later time when the alleged crime occurred. He contends that the

missing testimony of both Manoogian and Baldwin that they only saw one

individual fleeing and getting into a car would have corroborated his version and


161
    Clark’s Trial Tr. (September 21, 2016) at 3, D.I. 106.
162
    See id. at 4-5, 8-9.
163
    Id. at 9.
164
    Id. at 20-21
165
    Appendix at A47, D.I. 88.
166
    Allen’s Reply to State’s Am. Resp., at 3, D.I. 100.
167
    Id.
                                          42
contradicted Williams’ testimony. The Court believes that an expanded and more

on point explanation from Trial Counsel of his decision not to call these two

witnesses would be helpful to the Court. Accordingly, Allen’s request for a hearing

is GRANTED on this claim.

                   b.    Williams’ Statement to Det. Rizzo.

      Allen argues that the jury would not have convicted Allen had the evidence

of the August 28, 2015 interview between Det. Rizzo and Williams been proffered.

Specifically, Allen argues that this evidence, combined with Williams’ lies

regarding his possession of a gun, would have led to the jury believing that the

other person did not come in the house on the afternoon of the incident.168 The

interview between Det. Rizzo and Williams included the following dialogue:

            DET. RIZZO: Was this the guy, do you know, was he
            wearing a Yankee’s hat --

            WILLIAMS: This wasn’t the Yankee’s hat one. This was
            the one that came in the house. That’s the one that - -

            DET. RIZZO: Do you know why they call him
            “Jerm”?169

      A review of the video of the statement makes it plain that “This was the one

that came in the house” is not the “gotcha” case dispositive comment Allen thinks


168
   Mot. for Postconviction Relief at 39, D.I. 87.
169
   Aug. 28, 2015 video interview between Williams and Det. Rizzo, at 30:30-
31:00. The transcript of the interview at A49 of the Appendix to the Motion seems
to be incorrect.
                                        43
it is. It is not some sort of Freudian slip. It is also not an isolated statement.

Williams instantly attempted to clarify what he had just said, but was unable to

when Det. Rizzo asked another question on a different topic. Both Det. Rizzo’s

conduct, and more importantly Williams’ conduct, do not give the appearance that

Williams accidently revealed the “truth.” The full context of the statement and

Williams testimony at two trials makes it plain that Williams consistently described

two men coming into his house. The Court is confident that, had Trial Counsel

questioned Williams about this comment, Williams would have placed it in its

proper context.   Further, it is entirely possible that aggressively questioning

Williams on this point would have been harmful to Allen as the jury may have seen

it as Allen grasping at straws. Thus, not doing so was not performance deficiency.

The Court is also confident that had Trial Counsel raised the comment with

Williams, it would have had no bearing on the outcome of the trial.

            2.     Failure to Object to Jury Instructions Regarding Evidence
                   of Williams’ Prior Felony and Credibility of Witnesses.

      The following two instructions were given to the jury at Allen’s trial:

                   Credibility of witnesses. You are the sole judges of
            the credibility of each witness. You decide the weight to
            be given to each witness’s testimony. You should
            consider each witness’s means of knowledge, strength of
            memory and opportunity for observation; the
            reasonableness or unreasonableness of the testimony; the
            consistency or inconsistency of the testimony; the
            motivations of the witness; whether the testimony has
            been contradicted; the bias, prejudice or interest of the
                                         44
             witness, if any; the manner or demeanor of the witness …
             upon the witness stand; and all other facts and
             circumstances shown by evidence that affect the
             credibility of the testimony.

                    Witness’ Conviction of a Crime. You may consider
             evidence that a witness was previously convicted of a
             felony or a crime involving dishonesty for the sole
             purpose of judging that witness’s credibility or
             believability. Evidence of a prior conviction does not
             necessarily destroy or damage the witness’s credibility
             and it does not mean the witness has testified falsely. It is
             simply one of the circumstances you may consider in
             weighing the testimony of a witness.170

      Allen asserts that Williams’ prior drug conviction played a critical role in

this case, and that it incentivized Williams to testify consistently with the State’s

wishes.171 Allen emphasizes that the jury was permitted to consider evidence of

Williams’ convictions “for the sole purpose of judging that witness’s credibility

or believability.”172 He asserts that the prior conviction has relevance beyond

Williams’ general credibility. Specifically, he argues that the prior conviction

exposed him to prosecution for illegally possessing a firearm giving him a motive

to testify falsely in order to curry favor with the prosecuting authority having the

power to charge him.173 Allen argues the Trial Counsel was ineffective in failing to

object to the instruction limiting consideration of his felony conviction to


170
    Allen’s Trial Tr. (November 20, 2018) at 160-161, D.I. 69.
171
    Mot. for Postconviction Relief at 51, D.I. 87.
172
    Id. (quoting Allen’s Trial Tr. (November 20, 2018) at 161).
173
    Id. at 50-59.
                                          45
Williams’ general credibility. Instead, Trial Counsel should have proposed an

instruction that allowed the jury to consider Williams’ conviction for the specific

purpose of judging his credibility, bias, motive, or incentive to lie in this case.174

       Allen made this identical jury instruction argument on direct appeal, but

because it was not raised in this Court, Allen was limited to arguing it under a plain

error standard.175 That standard requires the error to be “so clearly prejudicial to

substantial rights as to jeopardize the fairness and integrity of the trial process.”176

“Plain error is limited to material defects which are apparent on the face of the

record; which are basic, serious, and fundamental in their character, and which

clearly deprive an accused of a substantial right, or which clearly show manifest

injustice.”177 Applying that standard, the Delaware Supreme Court rejected Allen’s

argument.178 Here, he couches the argument as an IAC claim, which requires the

Court to apply Strickland’s reasonable probability of a different result standard.

      The two standards are not the same, and as Allen correctly points out, plain

error prejudice can be a “‘more exacting”’ standard the Strickland prejudice

standard.179 Even so, “prior appellate review of the error underlying an ineffective


174
    Id.
175
    Allen, 2021 WL 3012892, at *4-6.
176
    Id. at *4.
177
    Id.
178
    Id.
179
    Reply to State’s Resp., at 6-7, (quoting State v. Jones, 2022 WL 2827004, at *10
(Del. Super. Ct. Jul. 20, 2022), D.I. 93.
                                           46
assistance of counsel claim may render the ineffective assistance of counsel claim

‘futile.’”180   “Prior review of a claim – may ‘implicitly reject [ ]’ the merits of a

‘follow-on’ ineffective assistance allegation that is based on the same claim or a

variant of it.”181 “[T]he follow-on claim still may ‘fare no better’ than its ‘direct

appeal precursor.”182

       On direct appeal, Allen relied on three cases – Davis v. Alaska,183 Weber v.

State,184 and Reid v. State.185 The Delaware Supreme Court discussed each one.186

It found that all three were “distinguishable and inapplicable” and “[n]one of the

cases have anything to do with jury instructions.”187 It found that not only did

Allen’s Trial Counsel present evidence that allowed the jury to “assess Williams’

general credibility and any bias, motive, and incentive to be untruthful in this

specific case,” but the witness’s conviction of a crime instruction, together with the

instruction on witness credibility “plainly gave the jury full range to consider

whether Williams’ prior felony conviction gave him a motive or incentive to make




180
    Jones, 2022 WL 2827005 at *7 (quoting Green v. State, 238 A.3d 160, 176 (Del.
2020).
181
    Id. (quoting Green, 238 A. 3d at 177-78).
182
    Id. (quoting Green 238 A.3d at 177).
183
    415 U.S. 308 (1974).
184
    457 A.2d 674 (Del. 1987).
185
    888 A.2d 232 (Del. 2005).
186
    Allen, 2021 WL 3012892, at *5-6.
187
    Id. at 6.
                                          47
up a story which portrayed him as the victim in an attempt to shift law

enforcement’s attention away from prosecuting him for possessing a firearm.”188

      On postconviction relief, Allen relies substantially on the same three cases

the Supreme Court found to be “distinguishable and inapplicable.” – Davis, Weber,

and Reid.189 To the extent he cites other cases, those cases are also distinguishable

or inapplicable because they deal with counsel’s failure to object to incorrect

statements of the law.190 Here the jury instructions given by the Court correctly

state the law.    The Court finds that the prior appellate review of this claim

implicitly, if not explicitly, rejected the merits of Allen’s follow-on IAC allegation.

Allen has failed to show that Trial Counsel’s performance was deficient or that he

suffered prejudice such that there was a reasonable probability of a different result.

             3.    Failure to Request a Jury Instruction that Williams’
                   Testimony Should be Received with Great Care and
                   Caution.

      Allen asserts Trial Counsel was ineffective in failing to request an interested

witness instruction to the effect that Williams’ testimony should be viewed with

caution.191 He references Bland v. State192 and Brooks v. State,193 cases involving

accomplice testimony where failure to give an accomplice testimony instruction is

188
    Id.
189
    Mot. for Postconviction Relief, at 50-59, D.I. 87.
190
    See, Id. at 57.
191
    Mot. for Postconviction Relief at 60-65, D.I. 87
192
    263 A.2d 286 (Del. 1970).
193
    40 A.3d 346 (Del. 2012).
                                          48
plain error, a New Jersey pattern jury instruction for “Testimony of a Cooperating

Co-Defendant or Witness,” and a model charge from the Third Circuit.194

       Again, Allen raised the identical issue on direct appeal under a plain error

standard.195 He cited both Bland and Brooks and the same New Jersey and Third

Circuit instructions.196 The Delaware Supreme Court noted in rejecting this claim

that in Delaware, “the giving of a cautionary instruction for specific witness

testimony has not been extended beyond the witness who claims to have been an

accomplice of the defendant.”197 Given the state of the law in Delaware, there is

no reason to believe that a request for an interested witness instruction, if made by

Trial Counsel, would have been successful. Under those circumstances, Trial

Counsel’s performance was not deficient and Allen suffered no Strickland

prejudice.

      C.     Alleged Brady Violation.

      After his direct appeal, Allen retained a private investigator who interviewed

Williams on July 17, 2022 over the telephone.198 In that interview, Williams




194
    Mot. for Postconviction Relief, at 62-64, D.I. 67.
195
    Allen, 2021 WL 3012892, at *7.
196
    Id.
197
    Id.
198
    See July 17, 2022 audio interview between Williams and Allen’s private
investigator.
                                         49
mentioned that he read one of Allen’s appeals.199 Then, regarding any type of

immunity or cooperation agreement to testify for the State at trial, Williams stated:

             Andrew Allen was one-hundred percent wrong. He has
             this belief … that I was under some type of cooperation
             agreement with the State Police of Delaware and I was
             not … They never charged me. They never said they
             were going to charge me. They never threatened to
             charge me. They never acted like they were going to
             charge me. The only reason that I believe that he thinks
             that I was cooperating and went on the stand [is] because
             [he believes] they were giving me - - they were making
             me do it or they were going to arrest me.200

      In an August 28, 2015 interview between Williams and Det. Rizzo, Det.

Rizzo pointed out that police recovered a bullet from Williams’ home that appeared

to be fired from a revolver.201 Det. Rizzo then asserted that there must have been at

least three guns involved during the home invasion because the two guns collected

at the crime scene were not revolvers.202 The following dialogue ensued:

             DET. RIZZO: Were any of them yours?

             WILLIAMS: No.

             DET. RIZZO: Ok, I’m just going to ask you flat out. Did
             you happen - - This doesn’t change the investigation in
             any way. Did you shoot either one of these guys?

             WILLIAMS: Yes I did.

199
    Id at. 4:30-5:00.
200
    Id. at 4:30-5:30.
201
    Aug. 28, 2015 video interview between Williams and Det. Rizzo, at 25:00-
25:30.
202
    Id.
                                         50
              DET. RIZZO: You shot him?

              WILLIAMS: Yes I did.203
                                          …

              DET. RIZZO: It’s not like you’re on the street … and
              some guy gives you a dirty look and you pull [the
              trigger]. These guys come into your house … I get where
              your concern is because you’re a felon. You’re a
              convicted felon. You’re not supposed to have a gun. I get
              that. But it’s kind of a different set of circumstances
              here[.]204

This interview was not suppressed by the State.

      Nearly seven years later, after that interview with Det. Rizzo, Williams

responded to a telephone interview with Allen’s private investigator. Importantly,

Williams told the investigator near the outset of this interview, that he “has seen the

police report and everything that they asked me is in that police report[,]” and that

he “can’t even remember what went on in that interview [with Det. Rizzo] … what

the interview was about, what [Det. Rizzo] asked me or how it went. I don’t even

know without … reading Det. Rizzo’s personal notes.”205

      Allen relies on a later portion of that interview to support his Brady

allegation:

              When I said that [I had a gun] to [Det. Rizzo], when I
              said that to him, he said, “there’s not a judge in the world

203
    Id. at 25:00-26:00.
204
    Id. at 29:00-29:30
205
    Id. at 3:30-4:30.
                                          51
             that would convict you or prosecute you for standing up
             when some people come into your house to do bodily
             harm to you.” There is such a thing as the Castle
             Doctrine, where this is my castle, and I have every right
             to defend my castle in any means necessary and any
             other extenuation circumstances get thrown out the
             window because it was my house and if they had not
             come into my house to try to bodily, inflict bodily harm
             upon me I wouldn’t have had to shoot them with a gun
             that I wasn’t supposed to have. They could have kept
             their asses on the other side of my door and we wouldn’t
             have had any problem. But they chose not to do that, so I
             was well within my rights to defend my rights to defend
             my castle, my safety in my humble abode, in any manner
             that I please, that I deem necessary. And for that, he was
             like “you will never be charged for that because you are
             the victim in this, and we are not going to charge the
             victim.206

      Based on this portion of Williams’ interview with his investigator seven

years after Williams spoke to Det. Rizzo, and despite Williams’ disclaimer that he

lacked specific recollection of his interview with Det. Rizzo, Allen argues that the

State suppressed a promise it made to Williams that he would not be prosecuted for

illegally possessing a firearm.207 Further, Allen contends that the State wrongly

“doubled down” on its insistence that it was unaware of any discussion with

Williams by law enforcement not to prosecute him in its briefing in the Supreme

Court.208



206
    Mot. for Postconviction Relief, at 42-43 (citing Appendix at A47), D.I. 87.
207
    Id.
208
    Id. at 41.
                                         52
      As noted above, the Court finds that it would be helpful to have a more

complete record before it in deciding this issue. Accordingly, Allen’s request for

an evidentiary hearing on his Brady claim is GRANTED. Because any factual

support for Allen’s Brady claim is limited to his contention that the State

suppressed assurances made by Det. Rizzo to Williams that Williams would not be

prosecuted for illegally possessing a firearm, so too the evidentiary hearing will be

limited to that contention.

      D.     Cumulative Effect.

      Allen has not succeeded on his jury instruction claims or his claim that Trial

Counsel was ineffective in ignoring a comment he made in his interview with Det.

Rizzo. Thus, his argument the cumulative effect of the multiple errors he alleges

warrant reversal of his convictions loses its force. Further, if Allen succeeds on

either of his remaining claims, his convictions will be reversed on that basis alone.

Accordingly Allen’s request to reverse his convictions due to the cumulative effect

of his claimed errors is DENIED.

                              VI.    CONCLUSION

      For the foregoing reasons, Allen’s Motion for Postconviction Relief is

GRANTED in part, but only as to his request for an evidentiary hearing on his

claims that: (1) Trial Counsel was ineffective in failing to call as witnesses

Alexander Manoogian and Lyndee Baldwin; and (2) the State violated its Brady


                                         53
obligations.   Further, the hearing on Allen’s Brady claim is limited to his

contention that the State suppressed assurances made by Det. Rizzo to Troy

Williams that Williams would not be prosecuted for illegally possessing a firearm..

In all other respects, the Motion is DENIED.

IT IS SO ORDERED.


                                                   /s/ Ferris W. Wharton
                                                    Ferris W. Wharton, J.




                                        54