William B. Thurlby v. State of Tennessee ( 2006 )


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  •          IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    March 28, 2006 Session
    WILLIAM B. THURLBY v. STATE OF TENNESSEE
    Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Sevier County
    No. 2000-940   Rex Henry Ogle, Judge
    No. E2005-00648-CCA-R3-PC - Filed July 10, 2006
    The petitioner, William B. Thurlby, appeals the dismissal of his petition for post-conviction relief,
    arguing ineffective assistance of both pre-arrest and trial counsel, the State withheld evidence and
    failed to make an election of offenses, his due process rights were violated, and the cumulative effect
    of the various errors resulted in the denial of his right to a fair trial. Following our review, we affirm
    the dismissal of the petition for post-conviction relief.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed
    ALAN E. GLENN , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JERRY L. SMITH and J.C. MCLIN ,
    JJ., joined.
    Paul G. Whetstone, Mosheim, Tennessee, for the appellant, William B. Thurlby.
    Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; David E. Coenen, Assistant Attorney General;
    Al C. Schmutzer, Jr., District Attorney General; and Steven R. Hawkins, Assistant District Attorney
    General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
    OPINION
    FACTS
    The facts in this matter were set out in the direct appeal:
    Jeff McCarter testified that he is a detective with the Sevier County Sheriff's
    Department. He said he was dispatched to the victim's apartment on the evening of
    Sunday, January 21, 1996. He said he found the victim's body lying on its back in
    the floor of the living room. He said he made a videotape of the scene, and the
    videotape was played for the jury while Detective McCarter explained what he saw.
    He said the victim had silver duct tape around his ankles and was wearing sweat
    pants. He said that from the waist up, the victim was covered by a large, white linen
    bag. He said the bag was later removed, revealing that the victim's hands were bound
    by duct tape across the chest, with one arm lying over the other. He said there was
    a jagged tear or cut in the bag on the opposite side from the victim's face.
    Detective McCarter said that each of the victim's legs was individually taped
    and then taped together. He said the victim's clothes were pulled around his waist,
    indicating that the victim had been dragged backwards with his feet toward the door.
    He said the victim's button-up shirt and T-shirt were bundled underneath him. He
    said the victim's hands were tightly bound, and each arm was bound individually and
    then together. He said the victim had relatively fresh wounds on his knuckles and
    hands, abrasions on his nose and face, and a wound or scratch on the left side of his
    abdomen. He said there was a clump of hair near the victim, and blood was on a
    shirt.
    Detective McCarter testified that his first contact with the defendant was on
    the Tuesday following the victim's death. He said he drove into the defendant's
    driveway, but a vicious dog was outside, and he did not get out of the car. He said
    that instead, he blew his horn for three to five minutes, but nobody came outside. He
    said he drove across the street and pulled into a gravel parking lot from which he
    could observe the defendant's driveway. He said he called Agent Davenport and
    Captain Larry McMahan and told them what happened. He said they met him in the
    parking lot, and Agent Davenport called the defendant. He said Agent Davenport
    spoke with the defendant and told him they were coming to his home. Detective
    McCarter testified that when they drove across the street to the defendant's home, the
    defendant was standing in the driveway next to his car and had keys in his hand. He
    said they explained to the defendant that they were investigating a homicide, and the
    defendant invited them into his home.
    He said that he, Agent Davenport, Captain McMahan, and TBI Agent Steve
    Richardson accompanied the defendant into his home. He said the defendant mainly
    talked to Agent Davenport. He said he observed the defendant and noticed that the
    defendant kept his right hand either underneath him or in his pocket during the
    conversation. He said that when the telephone rang, the defendant reached out with
    his right hand, and he noticed that the defendant had fresh scratches on the back of
    his hand. He said the officers began to leave because the defendant said he had no
    information about the victim's death, but he and Captain McMahan went back to ask
    the defendant about the scratches on his hand. He said he examined the back of the
    defendant's hand and saw two long scratches. He said the defendant explained that
    briars caused the scratches while he was chopping wood. He said that ten days later,
    he obtained a search warrant and took photographs of the scratches. He said that by
    then, the injuries had substantially healed.
    On cross-examination, Detective McCarter said that the defendant's friends
    -2-
    confirmed that the defendant frequently chopped wood, and he admitted that the
    defendant's home was in a wooded area. Detective McCarter stated that the
    defendant came to the detective's office on January 30 and gave a statement. He said
    the defendant admitted that he was at the victim's apartment on Friday, January 19.
    He testified that the defendant said the victim started a fight by punching him in the
    face, knocking off his glasses. The defendant said they engaged in mutual combat,
    and he eventually found some duct tape in a pile of junk in a corner. The defendant
    told Detective McCarter that he threw the laundry bag over the victim's head to
    disorient the victim so he could escape. He told Detective McCarter that he slit the
    bag to allow the victim to breathe.
    Detective McCarter testified that the defendant told him he never punched the
    victim in the face because he knew the victim was a restaurant worker. He said the
    defendant told him that his primary goal was to detain and disorient the victim in
    order to get out of the apartment. Detective McCarter said the victim's hands were
    taped differently than how the defendant explained it in his statement. He said the
    defendant stated that he thought the victim was alive and breathing when he left the
    apartment. He also said the defendant stated that he left the duct tape at the
    apartment and placed a table upright that had been knocked over during the struggle.
    On redirect examination, Detective McCarter testified that the defendant is
    six feet, three inches tall and weighs two hundred pounds. He said that when he and
    the other officers first spoke with the defendant at the defendant's home, the
    defendant refused permission to take photographs of his hands. He said that when
    the defendant came to the station and made a statement, the defendant said that he
    walked from his house to the victim's apartment at about 11:30 p.m. on Friday night.
    He testified that the defendant said that he smoked marijuana with the victim that
    night, then told the victim he was not going to buy any more marijuana from him.
    He stated that the defendant said this made the victim angry, and the victim cursed
    and yelled. He said the defendant told him that the victim went to the kitchen, came
    back out and threw a rock at him.
    Detective McCarter testified that the defendant told him that the victim then
    got a knife. He stated that the defendant said he knocked the knife away and as they
    struggled, he saw the duct tape. Detective McCarter said the defendant stated that
    he got on top of the victim and taped his hands and legs together. He said the
    defendant told him that the victim's hands were ten inches apart, outstretched and
    straight over the victim's genital area. Detective McCarter testified that at the scene,
    the victim's hands were not ten inches apart; rather they were tightly taped together.
    He said the defendant told him that he screamed for Ms. Capiello about twenty times.
    He said the defendant told him that once he bound the victim, he turned on the
    television, turned off the lights and left. He said the defendant stated that the victim
    was moaning and breathing shallowly when he left and that he left the apartment door
    -3-
    cracked. Detective McCarter testified that at the scene, the table the victim claimed
    was knocked over during the struggle was standing upright with a coffee cup
    containing coffee and a cigarette tray containing ashes on top of it.
    On recross-examination, Detective McCarter stated that he found several
    clumps of hair at the scene, and one clump was in the victim's hand. He said that the
    defendant told him that when he was on top of the victim, the victim grabbed his
    hair, pulling him back.
    Karen Lanning, a forensic examiner with the FBI Trace Evidence Unit,
    testified that she examined the hair found at the scene, and the hair was consistent
    with the defendant's hair and inconsistent with all other samples provided to her. She
    said the defendant's hair was also found underneath the victim. She said that all of
    the hair found on the victim's clothing came from either the victim or the defendant.
    She said it looked like the hair from the defendant had been forcibly removed and
    would be consistent with the victim having pulled the defendant's hair in a struggle.
    Dr. Cleland Blake, the Assistant Chief Medical Examiner for Tennessee,
    testified that he was called to the victim's apartment on January 21, 1996. He said
    the victim's body was lying on the floor in the same position as when it was
    discovered. He said he saw a table and a rock collection partially overturned on the
    floor. He said the victim had a laundry bag over his head and was wearing blue
    sweatpants. He said that after removing the laundry bag, he saw that the victim's
    hands and feet were tightly bound with duct tape. He said the hands were crossed,
    and each hand was taped individually and then bound together tightly. He said that
    the victim had injuries to his face and knuckles and that the surface skin on his nose,
    chin and cheeks was rubbed off like an abrasion. He said the victim had free blood
    around his lips. He said the victim's knuckles and the backs of his hands were
    bruised, which indicated that his hands had hit a surface.
    Dr. Blake testified that the victim had compression abrasions on his neck,
    which were associated with mild bleeding around the vessels inside the neck. He
    said the victim had compression fractures on seven of his ribs, and the fractures were
    consistent with someone jumping or sitting down hard on the victim's chest. He said
    he found bleeding around the carotid arteries, which was typical of squeezing and
    compressing the neck. He said the neck showed only abrasions and not significant
    outside bruises because one generally does not see bruises if a cloth or padding is
    used to squeeze the neck. He said the victim's injuries were consistent with choking
    or squeezing the neck. He determined that the cause of death was compression of the
    neck which cut off the oxygen supply and caused the victim to asphyxiate. He said
    the choking would have had to last at least five minutes, and the victim could not
    have died just from the bag being placed over his head. He said there had to be some
    compression.
    -4-
    On cross-examination, Dr. Blake testified that he did not examine the duct
    tape for the presence of teeth marks or saliva. He said he saw hair on the scene,
    including at least one clump of hair. He said the victim was smothered through the
    cotton bag, but he did not examine the inside of the victim's nose or his neck area for
    fibers from the bag. He admitted that in his report, he stated that the neck was
    symmetrical and unremarkable with no evidence of grasp marks or encircling lines,
    but he said he meant no marks consistent with strangulation, such as noose marks.
    He said the victim had external injury in the form of abrasions. He said he found no
    grasp marks on the neck, but the skin was rubbed off. He said the victim had internal
    bleeding around the neck vessels which showed that the neck was definitely
    squeezed. He said the bleeding around the neck was not from a kick or a chop but
    from progressive choking. He said he believed the choking was done through the
    cotton bag. He said that because the bag protected the skin, the only visible external
    injuries were abrasions. He said he could not estimate the time of death, but he could
    determine that the victim ate no more than one hour before he died. He stated that
    in his report, he put a question mark next to "compression marks from asphyxiation
    effort." He said his initial impression was that there was compression through the
    fabric, and he believes that the compression was the cause of death.
    State v. William B. Thurbley, No. 03C01-9709-CC-00414, 1999 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 457, at
    **10-20 (Tenn. Crim. App. May 11, 1999), aff’d and remanded for correction of record, 1999 Tenn.
    LEXIS 663 (Tenn. Dec. 13, 1999).
    The petitioner filed a pro se petition for post-conviction relief on December 11, 2000,
    followed by an amended petition on January 23, 2004, after the appointment of counsel, and a
    supplement to the amended petition on November 30, 2004. Generally, the complaints are against
    both pre-arrest counsel and trial counsel, alleging as to trial counsel that he was ineffective in his
    pretrial preparation, his opening statement, in the theory of defense, his introduction during cross-
    examination of the defendant’s statement to law enforcement officers, his attempting to establish the
    defendant’s character, and his preventing the defendant from testifying in his own behalf.
    Additionally, he argues that the State intentionally withheld evidence at the trial; the State failed to
    elect which offenses were being submitted to the jury; the trial court erred in requiring that pretrial
    motions be argued on the day of trial; and he was denied his rights.
    At the petitioner’s March 7, 2005, evidentiary hearing, pre-arrest counsel testified that he had
    been practicing law since 1982, with “[a]bout half” of his practice devoted to criminal defense. He
    said that the petitioner retained him because of “his concern about protecting him as it related to a
    death where he might be a suspect or might be questioned.” He said that the petitioner “didn’t hire
    [him] for the murder” and paid “about $2,000.00 pre arrest to protect him, make sure they didn’t
    pressure him, that kind of thing.” Counsel was retained “just to make sure that he didn’t give a
    statement, do a little investigation. I did investigation. I hired an investigator.” Counsel explained
    his efforts on behalf of the petitioner: He said he did not file a motion to withdraw from representing
    -5-
    the petitioner because “there was no one to file it with. [The petitioner] was not under charges when
    he came to me and I wouldn’t have had a docket number or even a style of the case.” He said that
    he did not believe it was necessary to send a letter to the petitioner saying their attorney-client
    relationship had ended because “it pretty well figured since he was doing what I had told him not to
    do he had pretty well rejected my help.”
    Pre-arrest counsel described the circumstances of the petitioner’s admissions to law
    enforcement officers about the homicide: “[The petitioner] came with this preacher fellow and went
    to the sheriff’s department, asked for Detective McCarter and said I’ve got something I want to tell
    you and he did so without telling me he was doing it.” Counsel said he had advised the petitioner
    “not to give any statements of any kind.” He said while he was on vacation, he received a telephone
    call from the petitioner and told him, and perhaps Detective McCarter as well, “[D]on’t talk [to] him,
    he’s represented.” He gave this advice because he “felt like if [the petitioner] didn’t give a statement
    he probably couldn’t get convicted.” Regarding his work on the case, counsel testified:
    [The investigator] and I and [the petitioner] met many times and discussed
    what it is [the petitioner] told us about the incident. We went to and met with Mr.
    McCarter and two or three other law enforcement to make it known that we didn’t
    intend to give a statement. I think [the petitioner] was, as I recall, rather nervous
    about all this and scared. He sort of wanted them to either leave him alone or arrest
    him.
    The petitioner testified that pre-arrest counsel never told him that his representation was
    limited to pre-charge matters. Although he had paid counsel $2000, signed “a letter of
    representation,” and agreed to pay counsel an additional $2300, the petitioner requested a court-
    appointed attorney at his arraignment because counsel had “f[allen] off the radar screen.
    Untouchable, you couldn’t get a hold of him. I showed up at his office, made phone calls, no
    answers. They put me on hold, half an hour later they’d hang up.” The petitioner said he called
    counsel “[c]lose to twenty times over the months.” The petitioner acknowledged that he was
    “itching to talk” to the police and that he told pre-arrest counsel he wanted to give a statement.
    Counsel told him, “I don’t care what you do.” He said that he had taken Paxil, Xanax, and Ambien
    and smoked three marijuana cigarettes prior to giving his statement on January 30 and that his pastor,
    Gary Gray, was present when he gave his statement.
    The petitioner said that the public defender’s office was subsequently appointed to represent
    him, but the public defender had a conflict of interest and “tr[ied] to get out of representing [him].”
    When the petitioner talked to the public defender on May 22, 1996, approximately one month after
    he was arrested, trial counsel was “very heated” and told him “he didn’t want any part of [the
    petitioner], didn’t want anything to do with [the petitioner].” He eventually met with trial counsel
    one to two months later. The petitioner said he did not receive a copy of counsel’s motion to
    withdraw until after he was in prison and did not see counsel again until the day of the conflict of
    interest hearing. He met with counsel again about two months later and then on January 6, 1997,
    which was about five months before trial. He described the meetings as “very, very quick, informal
    -6-
    . . . . [Counsel] might ask me one or two questions, that was the end of the meeting.” At the January
    6 meeting, counsel informed the petitioner that he was not going to testify, saying, “[Y]ou never put
    your defendant on the stand.” The petitioner said he had no impeaching convictions at the time of
    his trial. The petitioner then received letters from counsel in March and April and called counsel’s
    office and left messages with his secretary.
    The petitioner identified Indictment No. 6791 for first degree felony murder including
    kidnapping and said that the first time he had seen it was “[a] couple of months ago” and that he was
    never arrested for that charge. He denied that counsel told him he was going to be tried for felony
    murder in the perpetration of a kidnapping. He said no investigator worked on his case, nor did
    counsel do any mitigation work. The petitioner said he remembered a videotape depicting the
    victim’s body “with a laundry bag over his head and with duct tape around his ankles and duct tape
    around his wrist” being shown to the jury at trial.
    Asked what he thought when trial counsel told the jury that he had not committed a crime
    although he had given a statement admitting he tied up the victim, the petitioner said, “I couldn’t
    believe [trial counsel] said it.” The petitioner acknowledged that trial counsel introduced character
    evidence as to his peacefulness. The petitioner said he was dissatisfied with the way counsel
    represented him, the number of times counsel met with him, and the quality of those meetings.
    On cross-examination, the petitioner said he never received McCarter’s “supplemental
    summary” regarding the evidence he collected. According to the petitioner, “none of the evidence
    that was picked up at the crime scene was ever fingerprinted or the reports thereof given to [him].”
    However, he acknowledged he had admitted in his statement that he had touched the duct tape. The
    petitioner said he knew that he did not have to give a statement without pre-arrest counsel being
    present, but he could not get in contact with pre-arrest counsel. He acknowledged that he talked to
    the public defender’s office who told him to discuss the matter with pre-arrest counsel and not to “go
    near law enforcement.”
    The petitioner said he had wanted trial counsel to call Jimmy Sizelow as a witness at trial and
    acknowledged that counsel asked for a continuance in that regard which the trial court denied. He
    said that although Sizelow was not present at the time of the murder, his testimony “would have
    changed this whole thing quite a bit,” explaining that Sizelow was present during drug transactions.
    He said that Sizelow was not present at the post-conviction hearing because he could not be located.
    The petitioner said that he was also dissatisfied with trial counsel’s cross-examination of Dr.
    Blake and that trial counsel had introduced his statement wherein he admitted he restrained the
    victim and cut a slit in the bag over his head. He acknowledged that trial counsel’s theory of defense
    was self-defense and maintained that “the whole truth” did not come out at trial.
    Gary Gray testified that he had been the petitioner’s pastor and had accompanied him to the
    police station on January 30, 1996, when he gave his statement. He also met with the petitioner and
    pre-arrest counsel “at a restaurant one night,” at which time pre-arrest counsel acted as if he were
    -7-
    going to represent the petitioner throughout the case. Gray said he did not agree with the way pre-
    arrest counsel “was handling things.” He said that he did not notice any signs of intoxication from
    the petitioner the day he gave his statement and that the petitioner told the officers the same thing
    he had told him. It was Gray’s opinion that pre-arrest counsel was going to represent the petitioner
    if he was charged with a crime.
    Detective Jeff McCarter testified that the first time he met the petitioner was at the
    petitioner’s house, “days after the homicide had occurred.” The petitioner told McCarter that he did
    not want to give a statement at that time and had retained an attorney. The petitioner then telephoned
    pre-arrest counsel who informed one of the officers present that he did not want the petitioner to give
    a statement. McCarter said he spoke to pre-arrest counsel several times before the petitioner gave
    his statement. He did not notice any signs of intoxication on the petitioner the day he gave his
    statement.
    Trial counsel testified that he had been employed by the public defender’s office since 1989
    and had handled many first degree murder cases. He was appointed to represent the petitioner in
    April 1996 and discussed potential witnesses and possible defenses, “[p]articularly self defense,”
    with the petitioner. Counsel said, after “discussing the dangers” with the petitioner, he called
    character witnesses who testified as to the petitioner’s peacefulness. Counsel said his advice to the
    petitioner about testifying at trial
    would have probably been not to take the witness stand because the defense was that
    he went to his preacher, they discussed what happened and they wanted to go tell the
    truth and that’s what he did and his story was going to be told through that statement.
    And basically there wasn’t anything in that statement that he’d have any problem
    with. He said that’s what happened. And that would have been my advice, that you
    can’t do anything but hurt yourself by testifying. But ultimately, [it] always come[s]
    down to the last witness, I tell my client, you have the opportunity to testify and it’s
    your decision.
    Asked if he had done all that he could with the petitioner’s case, trial counsel replied, “In
    hindsight, the only thing I would have done differently is not call the character witnesses but I don’t
    know of anything else that I could have done.” Counsel said he met with Dr. Blake and studied some
    of his books which he used in cross-examination. Counsel said he received all of the petitioner’s
    indictments and recalled that the State had a superceding indictment alleging kidnapping which he
    discussed with the petitioner before trial.
    On cross-examination, trial counsel acknowledged that his office had between 1500 and 1750
    active cases when he was appointed to represent the petitioner and that he had four assistants on
    staff. He also acknowledged that he did not have any co-counsel or an investigator to help with the
    petitioner’s case. Counsel said that if he had had his current funding and resources at the time of the
    petitioner’s trial, “[i]t would certainly be an easier job than it was at that time.”
    -8-
    Trial counsel said he did not recall the victim having duct tape in his nose or mouth although
    Dr. Roach’s report said there was duct tape obstructing the victim’s nose, mouth, and sac enclosure.
    Counsel said he had not seen the “tip” from Mr. and Mrs. Parton that was provided to Detective
    McCarter, but if he had known about the tip, he would have issued a subpoena to the Partons at their
    last known address and would have called Detective McCarter. He acknowledged that he received
    letters from pre-arrest counsel and that pre-arrest counsel had evidence in his possession.
    Trial counsel identified three letters, dated August 6, 1996, December 11, 1996, and March
    12, 1997, that he sent to the petitioner. He read a portion of the March 12, 1997, letter wherein he
    informed the petitioner that his case had been set for trial for May 21, 1997, and that because he had
    two other murder cases set for trial in April, his time between then and the first of May would be
    devoted to the other cases. He acknowledged that, according to his letter, he would have had from
    the first of May to May 22 to “do the final preparation” for the petitioner’s trial.
    In response to questioning from the post-conviction court, trial counsel said he knew that the
    petitioner was being tried for first degree premeditated murder and felony murder.
    Asked why he had questioned Detective McCarter about the petitioner’s statement on cross-
    examination when the State had not asked about it on direct examination, trial counsel replied:
    I think I had some good reason to do it. But, yeah, I would have thought the State
    would have asked certain . . . at least questions about certain portions of that
    statement, on direct, and I’m surprised that they didn’t.
    ....
    Again, thinking back seven or eight years and not recently reviewing the
    record, I don’t know what other evidence they had to offer of that statement. You
    know whether it needed an answer in the way of that . . me introducing that statement
    or what. I would assume I introduced it for a purpose, to answer some evidence.
    Trial counsel said it was “possible” that he had allowed the petitioner’s statement to come in on
    cross-examination in order to advance a claim of self-defense.
    At the conclusion of the hearing, the post-conviction court made oral findings of fact and
    conclusions of law, denying the petitioner post-conviction relief and, subsequently, entered a written
    order dismissing the petition.
    ANALYSIS
    I. Standard of Review
    -9-
    The post-conviction petitioner bears the burden of proving his allegations by clear and
    convincing evidence. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-110(f) (2003). When an evidentiary hearing
    is held in the post-conviction setting, the findings of fact made by the court are conclusive on appeal
    unless the evidence preponderates against them. See Tidwell v. State, 
    922 S.W.2d 497
    , 500 (Tenn.
    1996). Where appellate review involves purely factual issues, the appellate court should not reweigh
    or reevaluate the evidence. See Henley v. State, 
    960 S.W.2d 572
    , 578 (Tenn. 1997). However,
    review of a trial court’s application of the law to the facts of the case is de novo, with no presumption
    of correctness. See Ruff v. State, 
    978 S.W.2d 95
    , 96 (Tenn. 1998). The issues of deficient
    performance of counsel and possible prejudice to the defense are mixed questions of law and fact
    and, thus, subject to de novo review by the appellate court. See State v. Burns, 
    6 S.W.3d 453
    , 461
    (Tenn. 1999).
    II. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    In order to determine the competence of counsel, Tennessee courts have applied standards
    developed in federal case law. See State v. Taylor, 
    968 S.W.2d 900
    , 905 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997)
    (noting that the same standard for determining ineffective assistance of counsel that is applied in
    federal cases also applies in Tennessee). The United States Supreme Court articulated the standard
    in Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    (1984), which is
    widely accepted as the appropriate standard for all claims of a convicted petitioner that counsel’s
    assistance was defective. The standard is firmly grounded in the belief that counsel plays a role that
    is “critical to the ability of the adversarial system to produce just results.” 
    Id. at 685,
    104 S. Ct. at
    2063. The Strickland standard is a two-prong test:
    First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was deficient. This
    requires showing that counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not
    functioning as the “counsel” guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment.
    Second, the defendant must show that the deficient performance prejudiced the
    defense. This requires showing that counsel’s errors were so serious as to deprive the
    defendant of a fair trial, a trial whose result is reliable.
    
    Id. at 687,
    104 S. Ct. at 2064. The Strickland Court further explained the meaning of “deficient
    performance” in the first prong of the test in the following way:
    In any case presenting an ineffectiveness claim, the performance inquiry must be
    whether counsel’s assistance was reasonable considering all the circumstances. . . .
    No particular set of detailed rules for counsel’s conduct can satisfactorily take
    account of the variety of circumstances faced by defense counsel or the range of
    legitimate decisions regarding how best to represent a criminal defendant.
    
    Id. at 688-89,
    104 S. Ct. at 2065. The petitioner must establish “that counsel’s representation fell
    below an objective standard of reasonableness under prevailing professional norms.” House v. State,
    
    44 S.W.3d 508
    , 515 (Tenn. 2001) (citing Goad v. State, 
    938 S.W.2d 363
    , 369 (Tenn. 1996)).
    -10-
    As for the prejudice prong of the test, the Strickland Court stated: “The defendant 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.” 466 U.S. at 694
    , 104 S. Ct. at 2068; see also Overton v.
    State, 
    874 S.W.2d 6
    , 11 (Tenn. 1994) (concluding that petitioner failed to establish that “there is a
    reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s errors, the outcome of the proceedings would have been
    different”).
    Courts need not approach the Strickland test in a specific order or even “address both
    components of the inquiry if the defendant makes an insufficient showing on 
    one.” 466 U.S. at 697
    ,
    104 S. Ct. at 2069; see also 
    Goad, 938 S.W.2d at 370
    (stating that “failure to prove either deficiency
    or prejudice provides a sufficient basis to deny relief on the ineffective assistance claim”).
    We note that when post-conviction proceedings have included a full evidentiary hearing, as
    was true in this case, the trial judge’s findings of fact and conclusions of law are given the effect and
    weight of a jury verdict, and this court is “bound by the trial judge’s findings of fact unless we
    conclude that the evidence contained in the record preponderates against the judgment entered in the
    cause.” Black v. State, 
    794 S.W.2d 752
    , 755 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1990). The reviewing court must
    indulge a strong presumption that the conduct of counsel falls within the range of reasonable
    professional assistance, see 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690
    , 104 S. Ct. at 2066, and may not second-
    guess the tactical and strategic choices made by trial counsel unless those choices were uninformed
    because of inadequate preparation. See Hellard v. State, 
    629 S.W.2d 4
    , 9 (Tenn. 1982). The fact
    that a strategy or tactic failed or hurt the defense does not alone support the claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel. See Thompson v. State, 
    958 S.W.2d 156
    , 165 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997).
    Finally, a person charged with a criminal offense is not entitled to perfect representation. See
    Denton v. State, 
    945 S.W.2d 793
    , 796 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996). As explained in 
    Burns, 6 S.W.3d at 462
    , “[c]onduct that is unreasonable under the facts of one case may be perfectly reasonable under
    the facts of another.”
    A. Pre-arrest Counsel
    The petitioner describes only in broad terms the alleged ineffective assistance provided by
    pre-arrest counsel:
    It is without question that [the petitioner] disregarded his attorney’s advice
    by volunteering to be interviewed by Detective Jeff McCarter. Under textbook
    representation, [pre-arrest counsel] would have developed a rapport with his client
    that created an atmosphere of trust. That, in turn, would have negated the scenario
    created below, where a confused client goes from door to door in search of guidance.
    Here, [pre-arrest counsel’s] efforts were aloof, to put it mildly. Yet, in all candor, the
    [petitioner] confesses that this issue may not be well received, especially in view of
    the Supreme Court of Tennessee’s decision, entitled Sepulveda v. State, 
    90 S.W.3d 633
    (Tenn. 2002).
    -11-
    As we understand, the petitioner, saying that he was a “confused client,” claims that pre-
    arrest counsel was ineffective because he was “aloof.” By his view, counsel should “have developed
    a rapport with his client that created an atmosphere of trust.” The petitioner acknowledges that he
    gave his statement to law enforcement officers against the advice of pre-arrest counsel.
    As to the petitioner’s complaints against pre-arrest counsel, the post-conviction court noted
    that “there is nothing unusual, unethical or illegal about” an attorney being retained to represent a
    client only to a certain point in the criminal process. The court found that it should have been
    “obvious” to the petitioner that he had not retained pre-arrest counsel for continued representation.
    As the court succinctly stated: “ [O]n the one hand [the petitioner] doesn’t pay [pre-arrest counsel]
    for the balance of his representation and on the other hand he wants him to represent him in a trial
    of first degree murder case for $2,000.00. So you can’t have it both ways.” The post-conviction
    court determined the petitioner failed to establish that pre-arrest counsel had been ineffective, and
    the record supports this determination.
    B. Trial Counsel
    As to the alleged ineffective assistance provided by trial counsel, the petitioner makes the
    general arguments that, had the public defender’s office been better funded, trial counsel “could have
    done a better job for [the petitioner] had [h]e been better financed and furnished with an
    investigator.” This is pure speculation. In fact, as to the claim that with more funding he could have
    done a better job for the petitioner, trial counsel instead said it would have been “an easier job than
    it was at that time.” This claim is without merit.
    Initially, we note that the petitioner consistently fails to recognize in his various complaints
    that, against the advice of counsel, he gave a statement to law enforcement officers, creating a
    problem for his trial counsel, as the post-conviction court explained:
    [Y]ou do what you can with what you’ve got. Every defense lawyer, including yours
    truly, has been in cases where not only were the facts against you but the law was
    against you. That was what happened to [trial counsel] in this case. This defendant
    had basically admitted to every fact necessary to constitute the crime charged except
    for the actual killing. That happened long before [trial counsel] got in the case and
    it happened, not on [pre-arrest counsel’s] advice but on the advice of this defendant’s
    pastor. Neither of these attorneys caused that to happen.
    The petitioner, in his numerous and diverse claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, also
    fails to recognize that much of the strength of the State’s case against him resulted from his ignoring
    the instructions of pre-arrest counsel and giving a statement to law enforcement officers, admitting
    that he taped the victim’s hands and feet and placed a bag over his head but did so in self-defense.
    The careful taping of the victim’s hands and feet, immobilizing him, and the fact that he had been
    strangled belie the petitioner’s claims that he was attempting only to subdue the victim so that he
    -12-
    could escape. The petitioner does not suggest a trial strategy or theory which would have bridged
    his self-defense claim with the incompatible manner of the victim’s death.
    1. Pretrial Preparations
    The petitioner makes the conclusory allegations, in asserting trial counsel was ineffective as
    to his pretrial efforts, that “relatively nothing was done to prepare for trial; thus, the services
    rendered were not within the range of competence of attorneys in criminal cases.” As we
    understand, the specific claims as to trial counsel’s allegedly deficient pretrial preparation are that
    had the pretrial motions been argued before the morning of trial, counsel might have “realize[d] that
    he was defending not one, but two counts of murder,” those being first degree premeditated murder
    and felony murder; counsel failed to notify the petitioner that he had been charged with felony
    murder or provide him with a copy of the presentment charging him with the offense; and counsel
    failed to obtain a copy of the victim’s death certificate, which, according to the petitioner, “contained
    very useful errors in connection to the victim’s cause of death.” The petitioner has failed to allege,
    much less show, that any of these claimed shortcomings affected the outcome of the trial and, thus,
    prejudiced him. Accordingly, the record supports the post-conviction court’s finding that this claim
    is without merit.
    2. Opening Statement
    The petitioner complains that trial counsel was ineffective by saying, in his opening
    statement, that the petitioner was not “violent” and “had committed no crime”:
    He’s been a productive citizen, been a hard worker, and you’ll have highly respected
    members of this community c[o]me in and tell you that they have known [the
    petitioner]. . . .
    He is a man of impeccable character; he is not a violent man. He is . . . one
    of the most respectable persons that these people have ever met, one of the nicest
    individuals, with children, with society, very polite and mannerly – not a killer.
    We’re satisfied . . . that he had committed no crime.
    Out of the lengthy opening statement of trial counsel, the petitioner has focused on these two
    short phrases to argue that trial counsel was ineffective. The problem with this criticism is that the
    petitioner neglected to question him as to why he had made these statements. As we have set out,
    the petitioner has the burden of proof to establish that trial counsel was ineffective and that he was
    prejudiced thereby. In view of his failure to present any evidence, such as questioning trial counsel
    about these claims, the petitioner can prevail only if, as a matter of law, the statements constitute
    ineffective assistance of counsel and the petitioner was prejudiced thereby. We conclude that, given
    the tenor and theme of the opening statement of the petitioner’s trial counsel, the statements were
    consistent with the claim of self-defense. In any event, the petitioner failed to show that he was
    -13-
    prejudiced by the statements, especially given the strong proof against him. Accordingly, the
    petitioner has failed to establish that trial counsel was ineffective in this regard.
    3. Theory of Defense
    This complaint is based upon trial counsel’s response to the court at the beginning of the trial
    when questioned as to the intended defense:
    Well, it’s not a – it would be mainly part and parcel of it self defense, but
    there’s more to it than that.
    ....
    Because of the situation that developed with my client down there at the
    victim’s house that night, they were discussing marijuana, and my client not going
    to purchase any more marijuana from him because of a financial situation, and it sort
    of sent the victim into a tirade, calling and threatening my client, thinking he’s going
    to be a narc . . ., and so forth. I think it’s common knowledge that people who not
    only smoke marijuana, but deal in selling marijuana, may be paranoid more than
    others, and this paranoia caused by the presence of marijuana in his system could
    help explain the tirade that he did go into, and helps support our position that he was
    the initial aggressor in this.
    The petitioner explains his ineffective assistance of counsel claim based on this statement
    by saying that “the sad truth that these services rendered in his behalf by trial counsel were not within
    the range of competence of attorneys in criminal cases. . . . And, but for [trial counsel’s] deficient,
    perhaps absent[,] theory of defense, the results of the trial would have been different.”
    As the petitioner notes, trial counsel agreed in his testimony at the evidentiary hearing that,
    according to the question, the petitioner’s statement to law enforcement officers became his theory
    of defense at the trial. We note, in considering this claim, that trial counsel was saddled with a
    statement made by the petitioner to law enforcement officers in which he admitted binding and
    immobilizing the victim but claimed he did so in self-defense. Even on appeal, the petitioner does
    not argue that the statement was not admissible.
    As we previously have set out, the post-conviction court explained that the petitioner “had
    basically admitted to every fact necessary to constitute the crime charged except for the actual
    killing.” The petitioner has not identified a theory which, if utilized by trial counsel, could have
    avoided the fact of his statement to officers.
    The record supports the finding of the post-conviction court that the petitioner failed to
    establish that trial counsel was deficient in the defense theory he pursued at the trial.
    -14-
    4. Introduction of Petitioner’s Confession
    The petitioner argues that trial counsel was ineffective because, after the State had completed
    its direct examination of Detective Jeff McCarter, counsel questioned him about the petitioner’s
    statement of January 30, 1996.
    Although the matter had not been discussed on direct examination, during the cross-
    examination of Detective McCarter, defense counsel questioned him about the petitioner’s statement
    to law enforcement officers. Through his questioning, counsel established that the petitioner,
    accompanied by his pastor, voluntarily went to the police station and gave a statement as to the death
    of the victim. In his statement, the petitioner said that he had taped the victim’s hands and feet and
    placed a laundry bag over the victim’s head to disorient him so he could escape from the victim, but
    he cut a slit in the bag so the victim could breathe. Detective McCarter said that the bag did have
    such a slit. The petitioner further told McCarter that the victim, armed with a knife, had initiated a
    fight, and the petitioner disarmed him after a three-to-four-minute struggle. The petitioner said that
    the victim had struck him and knocked off his glasses. Detective McCarter acknowledged that the
    wounds on the victim’s hands could have been offensive wounds. As the petitioner had described
    in his statement, officers found a small box containing marijuana residue at the victim’s residence.
    Detective McCarter agreed with counsel’s statement that the petitioner had said he tried to avoid
    hitting the victim in the face and was trying to get out of the victim’s house.
    At the evidentiary hearing, trial counsel in his testimony suggested a reason he may have put
    this statement before the jury by asking Detective McCarter about it during cross-examination:
    Q.      It was helpful, and assuming what I’m telling you is true, and we’ve got a
    record, okay, you would have to second guess yourself in raising that statement on
    cross examination?
    A.      Again, thinking back seven or eight years and not recently reviewing the
    record, I don’t know what other evidence they had to offer of that statement. You
    know whether it needed an answer in the way of that . . . me introducing that
    statement or what. I would assume I introduced it for a purpose, to answer some
    evidence.
    Q.     Could it be possible that you have allowed the statement to come in on cross,
    when it wasn’t brought in on direct, in order to somehow advance a self defense
    claim?
    A.      Yes, that’s . . . That’s possible.
    We note that when defense counsel questioned Detective McCarter about this statement
    during cross-examination at the trial, the State had not yet rested its case-in-chief. Further, the
    petitioner had talked with his girlfriend, Debra Loveday, who was on the State’s witness list, and
    -15-
    given the same explanation as to how the victim died.1 The record does not reflect whether she was
    present during the trial; and, at the evidentiary hearing, the petitioner presented no proof as to what,
    if any, use the State intended to make of the statement or whether the State would have called
    Loveday as a witness if Detective McCarter had not testified about the petitioner’s statement. Trial
    counsel surmised that he might have cross-examined McCarter about the statement because it was
    the only method to put the petitioner’s self-defense claim before the jury without subjecting him to
    what could well have been a devastating cross-examination.
    The record supports the determination of the post-conviction court that the petitioner failed
    to establish trial counsel was ineffective in questioning McCarter about this statement.
    5. Character Evidence
    The petitioner argues that trial counsel was ineffective for calling as character witnesses
    Michael Cecil Howard, Gary Gray, Albert Cissero, and Joan McGill. According to the petitioner,
    these witnesses were called to testify as to his reputation for peacefulness and faced “damming
    inquiry.”
    Since the cross-examinations of these witnesses were very similar, we will review only the
    testimony of the first witness in this regard, Michael Cecil Howard. He testified on direct
    examination that he had known the petitioner for six years, both as a co-worker and on a social level,
    and that the petitioner had a reputation as being “[v]ery peaceful.” On cross-examination, Howard
    was asked the following:
    Q.       You’ve testified regarding his reputation for peacefulness, is that right, sir?
    Is it also a part of that reputation – have you heard that [the petitioner], on or about
    May 17, 1995, did assault his wife at that time, Debbie Lunsford, by grabbing her
    throat, kicking her feet out from under her, landing on top of her, and choking her.
    Had you heard that?
    A.       I heard something about that, yes, sir.
    Q.     Did you consider that report when you testified regarding his reputation for
    peacefulness?
    A.      Yes, sir, because I went up there shortly thereafter, and I saw the one you’re
    talking about, and she was not scratched, no – looked like she hadn’t been touched
    at all.
    1
    The appellate record contains a transcript of a statement given by Loveday on January 24, 1996, to an attorney
    apparently representing her. She stated the petitioner told her that, while he was at the victim’s residence, the victim
    pulled a knife on him, they struggled, and the petitioner “wrestled [the victim] down” and “tied him up loose enough till
    he could get through.”
    -16-
    Q.      So you just discounted that report?
    A.      Yes, sir.
    Q.      Had you heard that two days after that [the petitioner], long about May 19th,
    1995, that he again assaulted Debbie Lunsford, his wife at that [time], sat down on
    her, and choked her. Did you hear about that report also?
    A.      No, sir.
    Q.      You didn’t hear that report?
    A.      No, sir.
    Q.      Now hearing that report and considering that, would that change your opinion
    as to his reputation for peacefulness?
    A.      No, sir, because I know [the petitioner].
    Q.      You know from your own personal knowledge, is that what you’re saying?
    A.      Yes, sir.
    At the evidentiary hearing, trial counsel testified that he and the petitioner had jointly
    determined to present character proof:
    A.        [T]he best I recollect we discussed how damaging that could be and I think
    we made the decision together and . . . we had very good character witnesses, in my
    opinion. And he said the allegations that you cross examined him about weren’t true
    and . . .
    Q.      When you say “we decided this” and “he”, you’re talking about [the
    petitioner]?
    A.      That’s correct.
    The other character witnesses were cross-examined in a similar fashion. Trial counsel
    testified that he discussed with the petitioner the dangers of calling the character witnesses and the
    potential for the State to introduce damaging testimony about violent behavior. He said they “made
    the decision together” to call these witnesses. Counsel said, as to the trial, “the only thing I would
    have done differently is not call the character witnesses.” Even if the petitioner were correct that
    counsel erred in presenting character proof, he has failed to show, given the strength of the State’s
    proof, that this testimony affected the outcome of the trial.
    -17-
    F. Petitioner’s Denial of Right to Testify
    As we understand the petitioner’s claims in this regard, they are that trial counsel “just told
    [him], you are not going to testify, that’s that.” However, trial counsel testified that the petitioner
    made the decision not to testify:
    Q.      Did you talk to him about him testifying in this case?
    A.       I know we did. The specific times that we did, I can’t tell you. Did I tell him
    you will not testify, no, I didn’t. My advice, under the circumstances of the case,
    would have probably been not to take the witness stand because the defense was that
    he went to his preacher, they discussed what happened and they wanted to go tell the
    truth and that’s what he did and his story was going to be told through that statement.
    An basically there wasn’t anything in that statement that he’d have any problem with.
    He said that’s what happened. And that would have been my advice, that you can’t
    do anything but hurt yourself by testifying. But ultimately, [it] always come[s] down
    to the last witness, I tell my client, you have the opportunity to testify and it’s your
    decision.
    As to this claim, the post-conviction court found the petitioner had failed to establish that
    he did not know he had a right to testify: “[T]here is no real evidence in this case to suggest that this
    defendant did know about his right to testify but I’m not imputing that to him. I’m just saying
    there’s no evidence about that issue here.”
    The petitioner acknowledges Momon v. State, 
    18 S.W.3d 152
    , 168 (Tenn. 1999), is not given
    retroactive application because it did not establish a new constitutional right. However, he argues
    that this court should apply the criteria set out in State v. Zimmerman, 
    823 S.W.2d 220
    (Tenn. Crim.
    App. 1991), and conclude that counsel was ineffective in advising that the petitioner not testify at
    his trial. This argument overlooks the fact that trial counsel testified it was the decision of the
    petitioner that he not testify. Further, we note that while the petitioner hinted that he could provide
    an apparently more benign explanation of what transpired between him and the victim, he did not
    suggest what this might have been.
    We conclude that the record supports the determination of the post-conviction court that this
    claim is without merit.
    III. Withholding of Evidence by the State
    In his brief, the petitioner explains his claim that the State withheld certain evidence from
    him:
    Initially, a Discovery Request was filed. Secondly, the State did, in fact
    suppress evidence: the “tip” regarding the suspects, named “Parton”; the misplaced
    -18-
    duct tape and fingerprint evidence; the Supplement from Detective McCarter, which
    provided a wealth of information, were all suppressed by the State. Likewise, the
    Victims’ Compensation denial, based upon the fact that the victim “may have been
    involved in illegal activity” was suppressed; and tangible evidence gathered at the
    scene of the homicide. And with reference to a suspect, named Dean Oakie, his
    polygraph examination, which indicated that he stole from the victim’s residence,
    was suppressed. Finally, a letter written by “Irene and Dean” surfaced after trial,
    which provided that one of these individuals was “grateful for the time I spent with
    [the victim] the day of his death.”
    More significantly, [the prosecutor’s] own, holographic trial notes provided
    that “If Dean Oakie stole, he wouldn’t be the one to call and find the body. Let Irene
    do it. Let someone else do it. Never admit to being in apartment alone [and] finding
    body.”
    The post-conviction court found that this claim was without merit:
    There is no evidence in this record of any Brady [v]iolations and specifically
    as it relates to any tip that Mr. and Mrs. Parton apparently gave to Detective Jeff
    McCarter. They’re not here. They have not – The substance of their testimony has
    not been offered and the mere giving of a tip, while it might be subject to disclosure,
    since the disclosure in these proceedings, they’re not here to testify.
    In Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    , 87, 
    83 S. Ct. 1194
    , 1196-97 (1963), the United States
    Supreme Court held that the prosecution has a duty to furnish to the defendant exculpatory evidence
    pertaining either to the accused's guilt or innocence or to the potential punishment that may be
    imposed. The Court explained that “suppression by the prosecution of evidence favorable to an
    accused upon request violates due process where the evidence is material either to guilt or to
    punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution.” 
    Id. The duty
    to disclose
    extends to all information favorable to the accused whether the evidence is admissible or
    inadmissible, State v. Spurlock, 
    874 S.W.2d 6
    02, 609 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1993), and to information
    “which might be useful to the defense[.]” Branch v. State, 
    4 Tenn. Crim. App. 164
    , 173, 
    469 S.W.2d 533
    , 536 (1969). However, the State’s duty under Brady to turn over evidence does not extend to
    information that the defense either already possesses or is able to obtain or to information not in the
    possession or control of the prosecution. Wooden v. State, 
    898 S.W.2d 752
    , 755 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    1994) (citing Banks v. State, 
    556 S.W.2d 88
    , 90 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1977)). Further, Brady does not
    require the State to investigate on behalf of the defendant. State v. Reynolds, 
    671 S.W.2d 854
    , 856
    (Tenn. Crim. App. 1984).
    In order to establish a due process violation under Brady, a defendant must show the
    following:
    -19-
    1. The defendant must have requested the information (unless the evidence is
    obviously exculpatory, in which case the State is bound to release the information
    whether requested or not);
    2. The State must have suppressed the information;
    3. The information must have been favorable to the accused; and
    4. The information must have been material.
    State v. Edgin, 
    902 S.W.2d 387
    , 389 (Tenn. 1995) (citations omitted).
    We will apply these principles to the petitioner’s claims. When shown the note referring to
    a “tip” and listing the names Ricky Parton and wife, Joy Parton, with the cryptic phrase, “429-0313
    does not work,” trial counsel said he “never saw it.” Post-conviction counsel then questioned trial
    counsel about this note by saying, “And Mr. and Mrs. Parton could have said maybe that Steve
    Hawkins did or that he did it, you know, somebody else besides [the petitioner].” However, since
    neither Mr. nor Mrs. Parton testified at the hearing, the record contains no evidence as to what
    relevant information, if any, they might have had. We note that the petitioner, in speculating that
    they might have testified that someone other than the petitioner killed the victim, fails to take into
    account his statement to Detective McCarter that he, himself, had bound the victim’s hands and feet
    and placed a laundry bag over his head.
    The so-called “duct tape and fingerprint evidence” refers simply to an eight-years-after-the-
    fact statement that, apparently, a fingerprint analysis had not been performed on the tape used to bind
    the victim. Thus, as we understand this argument, the petitioner is claiming that the State suppressed
    evidence by not revealing that certain items had not been processed for fingerprints. No authorities
    are provided in support of the argument that the State specifically must identify which items were
    not examined for the presence of latent fingerprints. In view of the fact the petitioner admitted that
    he had bound the victim with the duct tape he found at the victim’s house, it is unclear why the State
    would have checked the tape for the petitioner’s fingerprints or how the presence of another person’s
    prints on the tape would have benefitted him. This claim is without merit.
    The petitioner complains that the State suppressed “the [s]upplement from Detective
    McCarter, which provided a wealth of information.” Although what purports to be a copy of this
    supplement is contained in the appendix to the petitioner’s brief, it was not entered into evidence
    during the hearing. Accordingly, it is not properly before this court and cannot be considered.
    Further, in his questioning of trial counsel, the petitioner did not explore the “wealth of information”
    to establish how it would have benefitted the defense. This claim is without merit.
    The petitioner argues that the State illegally suppressed “the Victim’s Compensation denial,
    based upon the fact that the victim ‘may have been involved in illegal activity.’” What purports to
    be a copy of this denial is found only in the appendix to the petitioner’s brief. Accordingly, it is not
    in evidence and may not be considered by this court. The purported results of the polygraph
    -20-
    examinations administered to “a suspect, named Dean Oakie, . . . which indicated that he stole from
    the victim’s residence” are located in the appendix to the petitioner’s brief, but not in evidence.
    Accordingly, we cannot consider the suppression claim as to this alleged document. Further, even
    assuming, arguendo, that this would have been admissible, the petitioner has not shown how it
    would have been material to the defense.
    The petitioner argues that the State suppressed “a letter written by ‘Irene and Dean’ [which]
    surfaced after [the] trial, [and] which provided that one of these individuals was ‘grateful for the time
    I spent with [the victim] the day of his death.” Although a copy of what purports to be this letter is
    contained in the appendix to the petitioner’s brief, it was not entered into evidence and, therefore,
    is not properly before this court. Accordingly, we cannot consider this claim. Further, the petitioner
    has not shown how this letter would have been material to the defense or suggested why it was
    admissible.
    Although it is not entirely clear from the petitioner’s brief, it appears he argues that the State
    should have provided a copy of “[the prosecutor’s] own, holographic trial notes provided that ‘If
    Dean Oakie stole, he wouldn’t be the one to call and find the body. Let Irene do it. Let someone
    else do it. Never admit to being in apartment alone [and] finding body.’” The petitioner’s brief does
    not reveal that at the evidentiary hearing he questioned any witnesses about this document, and he
    has provided no authorities or argument to support his apparent position that he is entitled to
    discover the written mental impression of the prosecutors. The post-conviction court concluded the
    petitioner had failed to establish that any Brady violations occurred, and the record supports this
    determination.
    IV. Election of Offenses and Patchwork Verdict
    The petitioner argues that the State did not elect between the offenses for which he was
    indicted, resulting in his being convicted of both first degree premeditated murder and felony murder.
    Additionally, in this regard, he argues that even though the trial court subsequently entered an order
    merging the two convictions, as directed by our supreme court, “that [order] had no effect on the
    piecemeal deliberation that surely resonated among jurors as they considered both charges.”
    As the petitioner recognizes, he stands convicted of only one offense. His argument, as we
    understand it, that the jury’s verdicts were affected by the fact it was considering two homicide
    indictments, is based upon nothing other than speculation. The problem with this argument is that,
    on direct appeal, our supreme court merged the petitioner’s convictions for first degree premeditated
    murder and first degree felony murder. Accordingly, as we understand this issue, it was resolved on
    direct appeal.
    V. Arguments of Motions on Day of Trial
    The petitioner argues that the trial court violated his right to due process by not hearing
    arguments on his motions until the day of trial. He supplies no authorities to support his claim that
    such a procedure may violate the due process rights of a defendant. Further, he has not attempted to
    -21-
    explain why this claim was not raised on direct appeal or, if properly raised as a post-conviction
    claim, how he suffered prejudice. Accordingly, this issue is waived. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-
    106(g).
    VI. Cumulative Errors
    As his final claim, the petitioner asserts that this court “will soon realize that a negative
    synergy fell upon the [petitioner’s] trial as the result of the combination of constitutional deficiencies
    born from the Trial Court, the District Attorney, and Trial Counsel.” We interpret this claim to be
    that an accumulation of errors prevented his receiving a fair trial. However, as we have set out, we
    conclude that his post-conviction claims are without merit. Further, even if there were trial errors,
    this claim is waived because it was not presented on direct appeal. See 
    id. CONCLUSION As
    we have set out, the record fully supports the findings and conclusions of the post-
    conviction court. Accordingly, we affirm the dismissal of the petition.
    ___________________________________
    ALAN E. GLENN, JUDGE
    -22-