11/23/2021
IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT JACKSON
Assigned on Briefs November 10, 2020
LEVIE ROBERTS v. STATE OF TENNESSEE
Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County
No. 13-05763 Paula L. Skahan, Judge
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No. W2019-02165-CCA-R3-PC
___________________________________
The Petitioner, Levie Roberts, appeals the Shelby County Criminal Court’s denial of his
post-conviction petition, seeking relief from his conviction of second degree murder and
resulting twenty-year sentence. On appeal, the Petitioner contends that he received the
ineffective assistance of counsel because trial counsel did not notice before trial that the
State’s “key” witness gave inconsistent statements to the police and because trial counsel
failed to recall the witness to the stand in order to question her about the inconsistencies.
Based upon the record and the parties’ briefs, we affirm the judgment of the post-conviction
court.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed
NORMA MCGEE OGLE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN EVERETT
WILLIAMS, P.J., and TIMOTHY L. EASTER, J., joined.
Shae Atkinson, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Levie Roberts.
Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Samantha L. Simpson, Assistant
Attorney General; Amy P. Weirich, District Attorney General; and Leslie Byrd, Assistant
District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
OPINION
I. Factual Background
In November 2013, the Shelby County Grand Jury indicted the Petitioner for the
second degree murder of thirty-four-year-old David Williams. A jury trial was held from
August 8 to August 12, 2016, and the jury convicted the Petitioner as charged in the
indictment. The trial court held a sentencing hearing and ordered that the Petitioner serve
twenty years in confinement at one hundred percent.
After the trial court denied the Petitioner’s motion for new trial, the Petitioner filed
a timely notice of appeal and the direct appeal record with this court. However, on July
14, 2017, he filed a motion to dismiss his appeal. This court granted the motion to dismiss
on July 26, 2017. On November 1, 2017, the Petitioner filed a pro se petition for post-
conviction relief, claiming that trial counsel were ineffective because they did not review
discovery before trial, failed to interview witness Dr. Anna Slagle, and failed to re-
subpoena her for further questioning at trial.1
The trial transcript reflects that in April 2013, the victim was living in a home on
Philwood Avenue in Memphis with his father and stepmother. About 10:00 p.m. on April
14, the victim drove to a gas station on Summer Avenue to buy a newspaper. When he
arrived at the gas station, he got into a verbal altercation with three men in a white Mercury
Grand Marquis. The three men were the Petitioner, who was driving the Mercury;
Demarcus Allen; and Steven Weathersby. The argument was brief, and all four men went
into the store. The victim purchased a newspaper and left. Shortly thereafter, the
Petitioner, Allen, and Weathersby returned to the Petitioner’s car. They saw damage on
the Mercury and thought the victim had hit the Mercury intentionally with his car as he left
the gas station. The Petitioner, Allen, and Weathersby went back into the store. They
asked the manager if he knew where the victim lived and if they could see the store’s
surveillance video. The manager knew the victim because the victim was a regular
customer but told the Petitioner, Allen, and Weathersby to call the police.
Instead of calling the police, the three men got back into the Mercury and began
driving around the neighborhood, looking for the victim’s red Ford Focus. Shortly
thereafter, they found the Focus parked in front of the victim’s father’s house on Philwood
Avenue. All three of the men got out of the Mercury, and Allen and Weathersby began
vandalizing the victim’s car. The victim’s father heard glass breaking outside and went to
the door of his home. He saw someone “messing” with the victim’s car and alerted the
victim. The victim ran outside while his father, a retired detective from the Memphis Police
Department (MPD), went to a bedroom to get a pistol. After the victim’s father obtained
the pistol, he put the gun into the pocket of his bathrobe and went outside. He saw the
white Mercury accelerate and speed away, but he did not see the victim. The victim’s
father went to the street and saw the victim lying on the pavement. A pool of blood was
around the victim, and the victim’s legs appeared to have been broken. A woman was
tending to the victim.
1
During the post-conviction evidentiary hearing, post-conviction counsel referred to specific parts
of the trial transcript when questioning trial counsel. Therefore, we have taken judicial notice of the trial
record in State v. Levie Roberts, W2017-00685-CCA-R3-CD. See Harris v. State, 301 S.W.3d 141, 147
n.4 (Tenn. 2010) (noting that an appellate court may take judicial notice of its own records).
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Dr. Anna Winter Slagle testified that in April 2013, she was a medical resident and
lived across the street from the victim on Philwood Avenue. On the night of April 14, Dr.
Slagle heard “some loud banging noises.” She looked out her living room window and
saw a white car “sitting in the middle of the street.” The victim, who was wearing a white
t-shirt and dark pants, ran out of his house and was waving his hands. Dr. Slagle said that
the white car was “still stationary at that time” and that the victim “planted himself in front
of the car with his hands up in the air.” The victim was standing several feet in front of the
white car, and he did not touch the car. Dr. Slagle said that people appeared to get into the
back of the white car and that the white car “went from pretty much 0 to 60.” Dr. Slagle
did not notice “any hesitation” from the car before it accelerated. The car ran over the
victim and sped away.
Dr. Slagle testified that she ran outside to the victim. He was lying in the middle of
the street, and blood was coming out of his right ear. She said that her “doctor instinct kind
of kicked in” and that she checked him for a pulse. The victim had a pulse and was
breathing but was unresponsive. Dr. Slagle looked around for a weapon but did not see
one. She used her cellular telephone to call 911.
After Dr. Slagle completed her testimony, a police officer testified about
photographs he took at the scene, and the trial court took a brief recess. When the trial
court and the parties returned to the courtroom, trial counsel requested to recall Dr. Slagle
to ask her an “omitted question,” and the following colloquy occurred:
[Lead trial counsel]: . . . In her primary statement that she gave to a
different officer, I don’t remember which officer it was, different officer, [Dr.
Slagle’s] testimony was substantially similar or her statement was
substantially similar to the testimony she gave today.
There is another statement though that was taken right after the time.
It’s not a formal typed statement. It’s only one of the officer’s Sergeant Kent
noted and had some notes about it, which that’s the part we didn’t really see
until right after she testified.
And his notes say that she looked out her window, saw a white four-
door vehicle speeding down the street with a male white running next to it
on the passenger’s side. The male white ran out in the street in front of the
car and raised his hands but the car kept going, which is a little bit different.
It indicates the car was speeding and then he moved in front of the car when
it was speeding.
-3-
It’s different than the typed statement. And the reason we didn’t
notice it, it’s part of his multipage, one of these multipage narratives we see
that have a lot of information and it just slipped our attention at the time. I
mean, it’s essentially an omitted question that we’re trying to ask.
I think Rule 607 would allow us to call a witness and impeach that
witness. We don’t want to call any undue attention to it and make that issue
seem any larger than it needs to, so whatever Your Honor wants to do with
that, we’ll deal with it the way Your Honor wants to do.
THE COURT: Okay. You haven’t asked her about this at any other
occasion?
[Lead trial counsel]: No, Your Honor. Because again, that small little
statement there had slipped my attention. I just noticed it for the first time
today. That’s on me.
THE COURT: Okay. But, I mean, you haven’t had an investigator
or anybody ask her about this on any other time?
[Lead trial counsel]: Every time we have spoken with her or anyone’s
spoken with her, all of the information is always similar to the statement she
gave to the separate officer, the actual typed written statement which was
given to Officer Craig and that’s all different than this one from Sergeant
Kent.
....
[The Petitioner] brought that to our attention that there was a separate
statement to Mr. Kent -- Sergeant Kent, rather, and we want to just ask her
about that if she made a statement to Sergeant Kent and if that’s what she
told Sergeant Kent.
[Co-counsel]: We need to hear that, Your Honor, for a fair trial.
[Lead trial counsel]: If she told Sergeant Kent that the car was
speeding up and then he moved in front or if Sergeant Kent misunderstood.
THE COURT: Your client just pointed out to you in a supplement
that the witness supposedly said something different?
-4-
[Lead trial counsel]: Right, correct.
The State opposed the Petitioner’s recalling Dr. Slagle to the stand, arguing that trial
counsel should have impeached her on cross-examination. The trial court ruled that the
Petitioner could call Dr. Slagle as a defense witness.
When the State resumed its presentation of proof, Demarcus Allen testified that after
he, Weathersby, and the Petitioner found the victim’s car on Philwood Avenue, they got
out of the Petitioner’s white Mercury. Weathersby broke out the rear window on the
driver’s side of the victim’s car. Someone came to the door of the victim’s house, so the
three men got back into the Mercury. The Petitioner “crunk the car up” and pushed the gas
pedal, but the car moved forward slowly. The victim ran outside and began hitting the
passenger-side window of the Mercury. The victim ran around the front of the Mercury
and began hitting the car on the driver’s side. The victim then “jumped in front of the car.”
Someone said the victim had a gun, and Allen saw the victim reaching for something black
on the victim’s hip. Allen said that everyone in the Mercury “started ducking” down, that
the car’s motor finally caught up with the accelerator, and that the Mercury sped up and
ran over the victim. On cross-examination, Allen testified that he felt a bump, that he
opened the car door, and that he looked back at the victim. The victim was “moving,
getting up.”
Steven Weathersby testified that as he and Allen were vandalizing the victim’s car
in front of the victim’s home, the victim ran outside. Weathersby saw “[a] white lady” at
the bus stop and heard her yell that the victim had a gun, so the Petitioner, Allen, and
Weathersby got back into the Petitioner’s Mercury. Weathersby said that “everybody just
put their head down” and that the Petitioner “threw the car in drive and we just pulled off.”
Weathersby saw a black pistol in the victim’s hand. The Mercury began “picking up
speed,” and Weathersby “heard a bump.” Weathersby acknowledged telling the police that
the victim ran in front of the Mercury, that the victim put his hands on the hood like he was
trying to stop the car, and that the Petitioner “put the car in drive and sped off and ran over
the white guy.” Weatherby explained to the jury that he “got it mixed up” because the
Petitioner “was already pulling off” when the victim ran to the Mercury. On cross-
examination, Weathersby said that the Petitioner’s “old” Mercury was slow to accelerate
and that “[y]ou got to be pushing it, pushing it for it to pick up speed.” He acknowledged
that the Mercury “lunge[d] forward” and hit the victim.
The State played Weathersby’s audio-recorded statement to a defense investigator
for the jury. In the statement, Weathersby said as follows:
We found his car. We vandalized his car. We wasn’t going to do
nothing but vandalize his car.
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Once we got back into Levie car, I screamed out that he had a gun
because he was running out the door with a gun in his hand, which I seen was
a gun. So I’m telling Levie that he had a gun. So once I said that, everybody
in the car had, you know, ducked down where they couldn’t see or get shot
so in case he started shooting. So Levie put the car in drive with his head
ducked down and just hit the gas trying to get away in case he shot one of us.
And as he did that, we felt something go under the car. But like we was
saying, that wasn’t nothing but a speed bump.
Sergeant Robert Wilkie of the MPD testified that on April 17, 2013, the Petitioner
waived his rights and gave a statement. In the statement, the Petitioner said that the victim
came outside, approached the Mercury, and had a gun in his hand. The Petitioner thought
the victim was going to shoot him, so the Petitioner “ducked down” and “pulled off as soon
as possible.” The Petitioner said he ran over the victim as the Petitioner was “trying to get
away” from the victim. The Petitioner described the victim’s gun as “[a] brown wooded
rifle” and said the victim was holding the rifle “[w]ith two hands and pointing it out in front
of him.” Sergeant Wilkie asked the Petitioner if the Mercury had any mechanical
problems, and the Petitioner said no.
Dr. Karen Chancellor testified as an expert in forensic pathology that she performed
the victim’s autopsy. The victim survived a couple of hours in the hospital but died of
multiple blunt force injuries due to being run over by a vehicle. The victim sustained
several skull fractures and had bleeding and swelling of the brain. The victim had
numerous contusions, lacerations, and abrasions on his body, several broken ribs, a broken
breast bone, and a broken left tibia. On cross-examination, Dr. Chancellor testified that
most of the victim’s injuries occurred on the front and right side of his body and that the
victim’s head injury was fatal. Toxicology testing revealed that marijuana was in the
victim’s system.
After the State rested its case-in-chief, Sergeant Steve Kent of the MPD’s Felony
Response Unit testified for the Petitioner that on the night of April 14, 2013, he responded
to a call on Philwood Avenue. He spoke with Dr. Slagle about 11:40 p.m. and was “jotting
stuff” into his notepad as she was speaking. He wrote a “supplement” to his notes later in
his office. Co-counsel showed Sergeant Kent his written supplement to refresh his
recollection and asked him, “And what did she tell you?” Sergeant Kent answered,
That she had heard something outside, some loud noises outside and when
she looked out she saw a car speeding down the road and at some point she
saw a man out there I guess with his hands up in front of the car and this car
ran over this man in the street.
-6-
Sergeant Kent acknowledged that Dr. Slagle said that the victim was running alongside the
moving car and that the victim ran out in front of the car.
On cross-examination, Sergeant Kent testified that according to his supplement, the
victim “tried to stop a light colored sedan who was speeding down the street.” Dr. Slagle
did not say the victim had a gun. At some point, Dr. Slagle came to the police department
and gave a formal statement to another officer.
At the conclusion of Sergeant Kent’s testimony, the trial court held a Momon
hearing. During the hearing, the trial court asked the Petitioner if there were any other
witnesses he wanted to call, and the Petitioner stated, “I mean, I thought Ms. Anna [Slagle]
was coming back. That’s what I was aware of. But I don’t know why she didn’t come.”
The trial court responded, “I believe we got the statement in through the officer. We got it
before the jury.” The Petitioner chose not to testify.
Officer David Wagner of the MPD testified on rebuttal for the State that he
responded to the scene and spoke with Dr. Slagle before Sergeant Kent spoke with her.
Officer Wagner typed Dr. Slagle’s statement into a “PDA,” which he described as “a small
cell phone . . . that allows us to write what our witness statements are,” as she gave the
statement to him. He wrote his report from the PDA within one hour. The State showed
Officer Wagner his report to refresh his recollection. Officer Wagner then stated as
follows:
She saw the victim David Williams running alongside the passenger side of
a white vehicle. The complainant Anna [Slagle] states she then saw the
victim David Williams step in front of the white car with his arms
outstretched and what appeared to her to be an attempt to stop the white car.
The complainant Anna [Slagle] states that the white car then accelerated
forward and struck the victim David Williams who was knocked back several
feet and fell to the ground. The complainant Anna [Slagle] advised that the
white car continued accelerating and the victim David Williams was [run]
over.
The State asked Officer Wagner, “And when does she say that she first saw the car move?”
Officer Wagner answered, “She said once the victim had stopped and put his hands
outstretched and what appeared to her to be an attempt to stop the car.”
Sergeant Kevin Craig of the MPD also testified on rebuttal for the State. He said he
took Dr. Slagle’s formal statement at the police department and typed her answers. She
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reviewed her three-page statement, initialed every page, and signed the last page. Sergeant
Craig said that according to Dr. Slagle’s formal statement:
[S]he was sitting on the couch when she heard what sounded like a loud boom
noise. She got up and looked out her window through her blinds to see what
was happening. She saw a white car with a Caucasian male in a white T-
shirt running besides the passenger side of the vehicle. The white male ran
out in front of the white vehicle waving his hands to stop. He then planted
himself in front of the car with his hands in the air. The driver of the vehicle
then slammed on the accelerator and hit the male directly, I guess head on.
He then flew back a few feet and landed on his back after it happened and
the vehicle then ran over him and fled the scene.
Sergeant Craig said Dr. Slagle never said anything about the car moving prior to the
victim’s planting himself in front of the car. On cross-examination, Sergeant Craig testified
that Sergeant Kent was a very good officer and acknowledged that notes taken in the field
were important.
During closing arguments, trial counsel asserted that Dr. Slagle’s statement to
Sergeant Kent, in which she said the victim was running beside the moving car and ran in
front of the moving car, was inconsistent with her statement at the police department and
her trial testimony. Trial counsel argued that Dr. Slagle’s statement to Sergeant Kent,
which she gave in her home soon after the event, was an accurate account of what she
witnessed and was consistent with Allen’s and Weathersby’s testimony. Trial counsel
asserted that the Petitioner was guilty of voluntary manslaughter, reckless homicide, or
criminally negligent homicide, not second degree murder. However, the jury convicted
him of second degree murder.
After the Petitioner filed his pro se petition for post-conviction relief, the post-
conviction court appointed counsel, and post-conviction counsel filed an amended petition.
Relevant to this appeal, the Petitioner claimed in the amended petition that trial counsel
were ineffective because they “failed to properly prepare for trial as evidenced by the
Petitioner having to point out the inconsistencies in [Dr. Slagle’s] testimony” and because
they did not call Dr. Slagle as a defense witness.
At the evidentiary hearing, lead trial counsel testified that two attorneys in his office
initially handled the Petitioner’s case. However, one of the attorneys had a medical issue,
so lead trial counsel took over and prepared the case for trial. The second attorney
remained on the case and served as co-counsel. Lead trial counsel said that the defense
had “quite a bit” of discovery to review and that he either hand-delivered or mailed a copy
of the discovery materials to the Petitioner. The Petitioner was in jail while awaiting trial,
-8-
and lead trial counsel met with him several times. Lead trial counsel and the Petitioner had
“several conversations” about the case, and lead trial counsel was sure he went over the
discovery materials with the Petitioner. Lead trial counsel also reviewed the discovery
materials himself at least one time before trial and prepared a trial notebook so that he had
“everything right there at [his] fingertips.”
Lead trial counsel testified that he did not remember if the State made a plea offer
but that he would have communicated any offer to the Petitioner. The victim was the son
of a former police officer, and the victim’s father was “pretty upset.” Lead trial counsel
said he did not think the victim’s father would have been “okay” with any kind of plea.
The Petitioner claimed that the victim “jumped out in front of the moving vehicle.”
Therefore, the defense’s theory of the case was that the Petitioner was attempting to leave
when the victim came out of the house and that the Petitioner could not see the victim in
front of his vehicle because the Petitioner had ducked down. Lead trial counsel described
the incident as “heated.” He said that provocation existed because the victim was coming
toward the car and because the victim’s father had a gun. Therefore, lead trial counsel
“definitely” would have discussed voluntary manslaughter with the Petitioner.
Lead trial counsel testified that the defense hired a private investigator but that the
victim’s father refused to speak with the investigator. Lead trial counsel did not think the
defense spoke with any police officers before trial. However, the defense would have
reviewed their reports. Lead trial counsel said that he thought he spoke with Dr. Slagle
before trial and that “details” of her statements were in discovery. Lead trial counsel saw
Sergeant Kent’s supplement in the discovery materials but did not notice that the
supplement claimed Dr. Slagle saw the victim run in front of a speeding car. Lead trial
counsel did not ask Dr. Slagle about the statement on cross-examination, but the defense
“ended up putting the officer on, instead of recalling her, due to some scheduling.” Lead
trial counsel explained, “[O]nce we put the officer on to get that information [in], we didn’t
think it was really necessary to bring her back. . . . But we got the information we wanted
from the officer.” Post-conviction counsel asked how trial counsel could have overlooked
Dr. Slagle’s inconsistent statement in Sergeant Kent’s supplement, and lead trial counsel
answered, “Sometimes when you’ve got hundreds of pages, . . . a sentence might just slip
past you.” Trial counsel were able to correct their mistake, though, by getting the
information to the jury though Sergeant Kent’s testimony. Lead trial counsel said he
thought Dr. Slagle’s written statement at the police department was “pretty similar” to her
trial testimony.
Lead trial counsel testified that he advised the Petitioner to pursue a direct appeal of
his convictions but that the Petitioner “wanted to go straight for post-conviction.” The
Petitioner “was not happy with the trial” and “made it clear” that he no longer wanted trial
counsel’s law firm working on his case.
-9-
On cross-examination, lead trial counsel testified that he had been practicing law
for eight years at the time of the Petitioner’s trial. He practiced mostly criminal defense,
and he had handled first and second degree murder cases. The defense had some
indications that the State might re-indict the Petitioner for first degree murder, and the State
would not negotiate on a charge less than second degree murder.
Lead trial counsel acknowledged that no weapon was recovered from the victim.
He said that Dr. Slagle was a “very good” witness for the State to have because she
probably did not need any “coaching” and because she was “used to dealing in high stress
situations.” Lead trial counsel said the defense got “the best of both worlds” by not calling
Dr. Slagle back to the stand. He explained, “And she couldn’t get up and say, ‘No, I deny
it. I didn’t make that statement. He wrote it down wrong.’” Lead trial counsel
acknowledged that by not calling Dr. Slagle back to the stand, Dr. Slagle was not able to
explain the inconsistent statement she gave to Sergeant Kent. Trial counsel also addressed
the inconsistent statement during the defense’s closing argument.
Dr. Slagle testified for the Petitioner that after the Petitioner’s car hit the victim, she
spoke with several police officers. She said she would have told them as follows:
I saw -- as I was looking out my window, an individual running out from the
home across the street and there was a white car that was stationary in the
middle of the street and this individual ran in front of that car with his hands
in the air, and then that car proceeded to go from what I perceived as
stationary, to full speed and ran over the individual, and fled the scene.
Post-conviction counsel then showed Sergeant Kent’s written supplement to Dr. Slagle and
asked her to review it. The supplement, which post-conviction counsel introduced into
evidence as an exhibit, provided as follows:
[Dr. Slagle] looked out her window, and saw a white, 4 door vehicle speeding
down the street westbound, with a male white running next to it on the
passenger side. The male white ran out into the street in front of the car, and
raised his hands for the car to stop, but the car kept going, and ran over Mr.
Williams.
Post-conviction counsel asked Dr. Slagle, “Is that a true statement in regards to what you
actually saw that day?” Dr. Slagle responded, “It is not. No, the car was always -- that I
saw was stationary. It was never, never moving.”
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On cross-examination, Dr. Slagle acknowledged that her statement to Officer
Wagner was “more consistent” with what she saw and told the officers. She said that if
she had been asked about Sergeant Kent’s supplement at the Petitioner’s trial, her
testimony would have been the same as her testimony at the evidentiary hearing.
Sergeant Kent testified for the Petitioner, and post-conviction counsel showed the
supplement to him to refresh his memory. Sergeant Kent said that he wrote the supplement
from his notes and that the supplement was not a formal statement from the witness. He
said he would not have written something in his supplement that the witness did not tell
him.
On cross-examination, Sergeant Kent acknowledged that he did not write down
“verbatim” what Dr. Slagle said. He stated that a supplement did not contain all of the
details about an incident and that he could learn additional details from a witness’s formal
statement or testimony. On redirect examination, Sergeant Kent testified that his
supplement in this case did not specify whether the Petitioner’s car was moving or
stationary when the victim moved in front the car. He acknowledged that he had no reason
to dispute his supplement and that he thought it accurately reflected what Dr. Slagle told
him.
The Petitioner testified that his family hired trial counsel’s law firm to represent
him. The Petitioner was in jail about three and one-half years, and trial counsel met with
him in jail “maybe five times.” Trial counsel provided discovery to the Petitioner, the
Petitioner reviewed the discovery materials, and the Petitioner “pointed out” to trial counsel
what his defense would be at trial. Specifically, the Petitioner pointed out “[t]he
inconsistent statements of the eyewitnesses.”
The Petitioner testified that Dr. Slagle gave two statements on the scene to two
different officers. Two or three hours later, she gave a statement to an officer at the police
department. Her statement at the police department was inconsistent with her two
statements at the scene. In her two statements at the scene, Dr. Slagle said the victim ran
in front of the Petitioner’s car while the car was moving.
The Petitioner testified that he and trial counsel talked about his defense and the
State’s plea offers. The State’s first offer was for a sentence of twenty years, and the State’s
second offer was for a sentence of thirteen and one-half years. Co-counsel told the
Petitioner about the offers and said he would “fight for . . . a lesser-included offense” at
trial. He also told the Petitioner that he would show the jury that the victim’s father had a
gun. The Petitioner decided to go to trial. When he got to trial, though, trial counsel did
not know that Dr. Slagle’s inconsistent statements were in the discovery materials. The
Petitioner “had to point it out” to trial counsel in the middle of trial. Trial counsel did not
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cross-examine Dr. Slagle about her two inconsistent statements or call her back to testify
despite the trial court’s giving trial counsel the opportunity to do so.
On cross-examination, the Petitioner acknowledged that trial counsel met with him
when he came to court and that an investigator worked on his case. However, the Petitioner
met with the investigator “[m]aybe twice.” He said that he did not graduate from high
school, that he had never been in trouble prior to this case, and that he did not know
anything about a trial. He said trial counsel should have called Dr. Slagle back to the stand
and questioned her about her inconsistent statements.
On redirect-examination, the Petitioner testified that trial counsel claimed they did
not recall Dr. Slagle because they were “trying to save time.” However, the Petitioner’s
jury was selected on Monday, Dr. Slagle testified on Tuesday, and the jury announced its
guilty verdict on Friday; therefore, trial counsel “had more than enough time” to call Dr.
Slagle back to court.2 On recross-examination, the Petitioner testified that if he had known
trial counsel “wasn’t going to cross-examine eyewitnesses, [he] may would have pled
guilty.” The Petitioner acknowledged that he turned down a twenty-year offer from the
State. At that point, the assistant district attorney general, who also represented the State
at trial, advised the post-conviction court that her trial notes reflected she made one,
twenty-year offer to the Petitioner.
The post-conviction court filed a written order denying the petition for post-
conviction relief. In the order, the post-conviction court found that even if trial counsel
failed to notice in the discovery materials that Dr. Slagle gave two statements on the scene
that were inconsistent with her trial testimony, the Petitioner was not prejudiced by the
deficiency because lead trial counsel testified that Dr. Slagle’s inconsistent statements were
revealed to the jury through Sergeant Kent’s testimony. The post-conviction court further
found that the Petitioner was not prejudiced because lead trial counsel testified that not
calling Dr. Slagle back to the stand “worked to Petitioner’s benefit” in that it allowed the
jury to assess the witness’s credibility “without giving her the opportunity to explain why
she may have made the inconsistent statements.” Accordingly, the trial court ruled that the
Petitioner was not entitled to post-conviction relief.
II. Analysis
On appeal, the Petitioner maintains that trial counsel were ineffective for not
noticing that Dr. Slagle, who was the State’s “key” witness, gave two statements right after
2
The trial transcript confirms that the jury was selected on Monday, August 8, 2016; that lead trial
counsel requested to question Dr. Slagle about the “omitted question” on Tuesday, August, 9, 2016; and
that the jury found the Petitioner guilty on Friday, August 12, 2016.
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the incident that were inconsistent with her statement at the police department and that he
was prejudiced by trial counsel’s “mistake” because “the driving force for the jury to
determine intent was whether the victim ran in front of a moving car or whether the victim
was standing in front of a nonmoving car prior to the car speeding up and running over the
victim.” The Petitioner also contends that trial counsel were ineffective because they failed
to call Dr. Slagle back to testify after the trial court gave them an opportunity to correct
their mistake. The Petitioner asserts that at the evidentiary hearing, Dr. Slagle’s “story
continued to flip back and forth”; therefore, recalling her to the stand at trial would have
discredited her testimony. The State argues that the Petitioner failed to demonstrate that
he received the ineffective assistance of counsel. We agree with the State.
To be successful in a claim for post-conviction relief, a petitioner must prove the
factual allegations contained in the post-conviction petition by clear and convincing
evidence. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-110(f). “‘Clear and convincing evidence means
evidence in which there is no serious or substantial doubt about the correctness of the
conclusions drawn from the evidence.’” State v. Holder, 15 S.W.3d 905, 911 (Tenn. Crim.
App. 1999) (quoting Hodges v. S.C. Toof & Co., 833 S.W.2d 896, 901 n.3 (Tenn. 1992)).
Issues regarding the credibility of witnesses, the weight and value to be accorded their
testimony, and the factual questions raised by the evidence adduced at trial are to be
resolved by the post-conviction court as the trier of fact. See Henley v. State, 960 S.W.2d
572, 579 (Tenn. 1997). Therefore, the post-conviction court’s findings of fact are entitled
to substantial deference on appeal unless the evidence preponderates against those findings.
See Fields v. State, 40 S.W.3d 450, 458 (Tenn. 2001).
A claim of ineffective assistance of counsel is a mixed question of law and fact. See
State v. Burns, 6 S.W.3d 453, 461 (Tenn. 1999). We will review the post-conviction
court’s findings of fact de novo with a presumption that those findings are correct. See
Fields, 40 S.W.3d at 458. However, we will review the post-conviction court’s conclusions
of law purely de novo. Id.
When a petitioner seeks post-conviction relief on the basis of ineffective assistance
of counsel, “the petitioner bears the burden of proving both that counsel’s performance was
deficient and that the deficiency prejudiced the defense.” Goad v. State, 938 S.W.2d 363,
369 (Tenn. 1996) (citing Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984)). To
establish deficient performance, the petitioner must show that counsel’s performance was
below “the range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases.” Baxter v. Rose,
523 S.W.2d 930, 936 (Tenn. 1975). To establish prejudice, the petitioner must show that
“there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of
the proceeding would have been different. A reasonable probability is a probability
sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694. Further,
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[b]ecause a petitioner must establish both prongs of the test, a failure to prove
either deficiency or prejudice provides a sufficient basis to deny relief on the
ineffective assistance claim. Indeed, a court need not address the
components in any particular order or even address both if the [petitioner]
makes an insufficient showing of one component.
Goad, 938 S.W.2d at 370 (citing Strickland, 466 U.S. at 697).
Turning to the instant case, Dr. Slagle testified at trial that the Petitioner’s car did
not move until the victim “planted” himself in front of the car. After her testimony
concluded, trial counsel discovered that her testimony was inconsistent with the statement
she gave to Sergeant Kent on the scene. Trial counsel requested to call Dr. Slagle back to
the stand to ask her about the inconsistency, and the trial court ruled that trial counsel could
call Dr. Slagle as its own defense witness. However, instead of calling her as a witness,
trial counsel chose to call Sergeant Kent to testify. Sergeant Kent testified that Dr. Slagle
told him that the Petitioner’s car was moving and that the victim ran in front of the moving
car.
At the evidentiary hearing, lead trial counsel testified that he was able to get Dr.
Slagle’s statement that the car was moving when the victim ran in front of the car into
evidence through Sergeant Kent’s testimony. He also testified that calling Sergeant Kent
to testify instead of Dr. Slagle was beneficial to the defense because it prevented Dr. Slagle
from being able to explain the statements she gave at the scene. During closing arguments,
trial counsel addressed the statements and asserted that Dr. Slagle’s statement to Sergeant
Kent, which she gave closer in time to the incident, was accurate. As this court has stated,
“When reviewing trial counsel’s actions, this court should not use the benefit of hindsight
to second-guess trial strategy and criticize counsel’s tactics.” Irick v. State, 973 S.W.2d
643, 652 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1998). On appeal, this court may not second-guess the tactical
or strategic choices of counsel unless those choices are based upon inadequate preparation,
nor may we measure counsel’s behavior by “20-20 hindsight.” See State v. Hellard, 629
S.W.2d 4, 9 (Tenn. 1982). We note that during the evidentiary hearing, post-conviction
counsel confronted Dr. Slagle with Sergeant Kent’s statement as the Petitioner had wanted
trial counsel to do at trial. Dr. Slagle reiterated that the Petitioner’s car did not move until
the victim stood in front of the car, that Sergeant Kent’s supplement was incorrect, and that
she would have said so if asked about the supplement at trial. Therefore, even if trial
counsel were deficient for not noticing Dr. Slagle’s inconsistent statements in the discovery
materials, we agree with the post-conviction court that the Petitioner has failed to
demonstrate prejudice.
III. Conclusion
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Based upon the record and the parties’ briefs, we affirm the judgment of the post-
conviction court.
_________________________________
NORMA MCGEE OGLE, JUDGE
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