Reginald Rome v. State of Tennessee ( 2011 )


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  •         IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT JACKSON
    Assigned on Briefs May 4, 2010
    REGINALD ROME v. STATE OF TENNESSEE
    Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County
    No. 03-01497    W. Mark Ward, Judge
    No. W2009-02027-CCA-R3-PC - Filed January 12, 2011
    A Shelby County jury convicted the petitioner of one count of first degree murder and five
    counts of attempted first degree murder, Class A felonies. He received an effective sentence
    of life without parole plus 100 years in the Tennessee Department of Correction. A panel
    of this court affirmed the trial court’s judgments. The petitioner filed a petition for post-
    conviction relief, which the post-conviction court heard and denied. On appeal, the petitioner
    alleges that he received ineffective assistance of counsel when counsel’s failure to include
    an issue in the motion for new trial resulted in waiver of that issue for purposes of appellate
    review. Following our review, we affirm the denial of post-conviction relief.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed
    J.C. M CL IN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which A LAN E. G LENN and D. K ELLY
    T HOMAS, J R., JJ., joined.
    Neil Umsted, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Reginald Rome.
    Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Cameron L. Hyder, Assistant Attorney
    General; and William L. Gibbons, District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of
    Tennessee.
    OPINION
    Background
    Trial
    On direct appeal, a panel of this court summarized the underlying facts of this case
    as follows:
    Jessica Selby testified that she was married to Greg Selby, the deceased
    victim, who was a Shelby County Deputy Sheriff. She said the victim worked
    the shift from 3:00 p.m. until 11:00 p.m. in December 2002. She recalled that
    on the day of his death, the victim babysat one of their two children while she
    was at work and prepared dinner for the family before he left for work.
    Detective William Speight testified that he was employed by the Shelby
    County Sheriff’s Office and was assigned to the narcotics division on
    December 4, 2002. He was part of the team of officers that went to the
    [petitioner]’s home that evening to execute a search warrant. He said that he
    had obtained the warrant on December 3 and that a team of twelve officers met
    on December 4 to plan their execution of it. He said that they went to the
    [petitioner]’s house about 5:30 or 6:00 p.m. and that it was dark outside. He
    and the other officers were wearing “raid gear,” which included a ballistics
    vest, a helmet with goggles, and a holster for their guns. He said the gear and
    their clothing contained markings identifying them as law enforcement
    officers. The victim was on the entry team meaning he would be the first
    officer inside the residence.
    Detective Speight testified that he did not hear evidence of people
    inside the house when he first approached it but that there was a porch light on
    and a light in the living room. He said after the officers had positioned
    themselves at the [petitioner]’s house, he banged on an iron door at the front
    entry twice with a heavy metal pick and announced, “Sheriff’s office, search
    warrant.” He repeated this procedure a second time. He said he allowed more
    than enough time for someone to answer the door and that when no one did,
    he checked the door and found it locked. He and Detective Jones used a pick
    and ram to pry open the iron door, and Detective Jones forcefully rammed the
    wooden door and cracked it open four to six inches after one blow. He said he
    heard a gunshot come from the house, which struck the victim, who was on his
    way up the porch. He said the victim fell off the porch. He said he ran down
    the porch and positioned himself behind a window unit air conditioner beside
    the door and returned fire into the house through a window. He said that he
    shot into the house in the direction where he thought the shooter was. He said
    that he knocked the glass out of the window in order to see inside the house
    and that he could see a person lying on the living room floor. He said that this
    person was Calvin Williams, who was unarmed. He said that the shots from
    inside the house stopped but that he heard a detective who was not at the front
    door firing a shotgun. He said Detective Chambers sent a police dog inside to
    -2-
    get Williams out. He said that they learned from Williams that someone else
    was inside the house and that the police dog went back inside the house and
    retrieved the [petitioner]. He said that after the [petitioner] told them no one
    else was inside the house, he and his partner, Detective Feathers, entered and
    found a silver revolver in the hallway.
    On cross-examination, Detective Speight admitted that he had not
    received any formal training about executing search warrants when he joined
    the narcotics division in October 1998. He said he had learned on the job that
    the law required a “knock and announce” procedure before entering a home.
    He said he had never been given any formal instruction regarding a specific
    length of time after knocking and announcing before forcibly entering a home.
    He said the narcotics team did not attempt to surprise people, but he admitted
    they used a large number of people to protect the evidence they were
    attempting to seize and to ensure the safety of the officers. He denied having
    seen the doorknob missing on the wooden door, any damage to the door, or
    that the door frame was missing. He acknowledged a “barrage of bullets” and
    having heard the shotguns being fired but said he did not know how many
    shots the officers fired at the [petitioner]’s house.
    Detective Speight testified that there was not a specific period of time
    to wait before entering a house after the knock and announce procedure. He
    said the time varied according to how long it would take an occupant to get to
    the door based upon the size of the house and any information known about
    specific dangers that existed at that residence. He said that he had information
    about the [petitioner] having been in possession of a sawed-off shotgun in the
    past and that this information played into the decision of how long to wait
    before attempting to enter the [petitioner]’s house. He said they waited long
    enough for a person to get from the back of the [petitioner]’s house to the
    door.
    Lieutenant Alvin Moore of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department
    testified that he was involved in the investigation of the [petitioner]. He said
    he requested a trace through the federal Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms
    database of a Colt King Cobra .357. He learned through the database
    information that the weapon had been purchased by Willie Collins. He spoke
    with Mr. Collins, who was registered in the database as being a California
    resident, but who had moved to Shelby County.
    -3-
    Calvin Williams testified that he was living temporarily with his
    brother-in-law, the [petitioner], in December 2002. He said that on December
    4 at about 5:30 or 6:00 p.m., he was lying on the living room couch drinking
    a beer about to go to sleep, having just eaten dinner. He said it was not dark
    yet. He said that a couple of minutes before the police came, a person named
    Roderick had come by. He said that the [petitioner] had answered the door for
    Roderick and that he had been cooking dinner at the time. He described the
    home as a four-bedroom house. He said the [petitioner] used the master
    bedroom, which was in the back corner. He said that after dinner while he was
    on the couch, the [petitioner] was in his bedroom. He said that the living room
    television was turned on and that he thought the [petitioner]’s bedroom
    television was turned on, as well.
    Mr. Williams testified that he heard some noise and thought that
    Roderick had returned and was “playing on the door.” He said he heard the
    door coming open, a “boom,” and hollering “Police, sheriff, put your hands up,
    don’t move.” He also heard them say, “Search warrant.” He said, “I didn’t
    know what he was talking about because the house had just been previously
    burglarized.” He said he was scared because he did not know whether the
    person who committed a burglary the day before had returned. He also said he
    was not paying attention to what they were saying because he was trying to see
    what they were pointing at him. He said that he lay on the floor and saw the
    [petitioner] come down the hall with his gun. He said he could see that the
    people outside were police officers and could see a gun pointed at him. He
    yelled at the [petitioner] that the police were there and not to shoot because
    they were aiming a gun at him. He said the [petitioner] reached around a
    corner and shot. He said the first shots were fired from the hallway inside the
    house and then shots came from outside, “[a]ll over the house.”
    Mr. Williams testified that he did not open the door before the shooting
    started because it was already opening. He could not say whether there was
    banging on the metal door before that because he was not paying attention and
    was “nodding out.” He later said he heard a loud noise that he could not
    identify but that it was not a knock. He said that it was chaotic and that he
    could see the police entering the house.
    Mr. Williams testified that he and the [petitioner] had been away from
    home the previous day and that when they returned, the front door had been
    kicked in, the house ransacked, and household items stolen. He said there was
    an iron door with a glass insert and a wooden door at the front entrance. He
    -4-
    described the iron and wood doors as “cracked open” and the wood door as
    “kicked off the hinges almost.” He said the items taken included televisions,
    vacuum cleaners, and VCRs. He said they called the police that morning to
    report the burglary. He admitted that he had told the police that there was also
    some marijuana stolen from the house and that the [petitioner] had been selling
    marijuana after being laid off from a welding job. He said that after the
    December 3 break-in, they locked the storm door and put a latch on the wood
    until the doorknob could be fixed.
    Mr. Williams testified that he did not know whether there was
    marijuana or cocaine in the house on December 4. He said he knew there was
    a glass cooking tube that was used for cocaine in a storage area.
    Willie Collins testified that he had lived in Bartlett for about twelve
    years and had lived in California before that. He said he owned a .357
    Magnum Colt King Cobra which he discovered missing in December 2002
    when he searched for it after receiving a call from the police. He said he later
    learned that his son, Brandon Collins, had taken the gun.
    Brandon Collins testified that he had taken a gun from his father’s
    house in the summer of 2002. He said he took it to his mother’s house, which
    was three streets away from the [petitioner]’s street. He said that he did not tell
    either of his parents that he had taken the gun and that he gave it to Jonathan
    Upchurch.
    Jonathan Upchurch testified that he lived one street from the
    [petitioner]’s street in 2002. He said his friend Brandon Collins gave him a
    gun, which he sold to “a guy named Rome.” He identified the gun as one of
    the courtroom exhibits and the purchaser as the [petitioner]. He said he did not
    know the [petitioner] before selling him the gun and had heard through his
    uncle that the [petitioner] was looking for a gun. He said that he and his uncle
    went to the [petitioner]’s house and that he sold the [petitioner] the gun for
    eighty dollars. He said the sale was about five months before the crime on trial
    took place.
    Phil Drewery testified that he was a retired Shelby County Sheriff’s
    Department lieutenant. He said that he was a detective in December 2002 and
    that he investigated the crime scene. He said he made drawings and
    photographs of the scene and collected evidence. He said that two separate
    investigations were made of the scene relative to the homicide and narcotics
    -5-
    and that his involvement was with the homicide investigation. He said that
    there were numerous bullet holes throughout the house and that he determined
    that the holes corresponded with fifteen forty-caliber bullets and three rounds
    of double aught buckshot having been fired. He said a revolver was on the
    hallway floor. He said that ammunition was in the closet of the master
    bedroom, including a box of CCI .357 Magnum live rounds with seven rounds
    missing and a box of Blazer CCI .357 Magnum live rounds with twenty-four
    rounds missing. He said that in one of the bedrooms, there was a trail of blood
    droplets leading into the bedroom, to the window, and back to the hallway. He
    said there were holes and blood stains on the curtains in this bedroom. He said
    the window in that room faced the front yard. He said there was evidence of
    a shotgun round having been fired in through this window. He said that bullet
    holes in the front door indicated that a projectile had gone through the door
    and into and out of a wall onto the porch area while the door was “wide open”
    and that another one had been fired while the door was closed. He said that at
    least three rounds were fired from inside the home through the front door. He
    described the scene as a video of it was played for the jury. He said that from
    the outside of the house, he recovered eleven Winchester forty caliber spent
    shell casings and three spent and one live Winchester twelve gauge double
    aught shotgun shells. He said this ammunition was consistent with that used
    by the Sheriff’s Department. He said that due to the height of the grass, the
    condition of the ground, and the traffic of officers and emergency personnel
    in the yard, it was possible that not all the ammunition was recovered from the
    yard. He said he was able to account for about twenty-one rounds fired on the
    scene. He said there were some shell casings on the front porch but that most
    of them were down the driveway from the porch to the street. He was not able
    to determine whether shots had been fired out the front window, but he did
    determine that shots were fired in through the window. He used a diagram to
    describe specific locations where the ammunition and other evidence was
    recovered outside the house. He said that the photographs of the iron door
    showed damage to a deadbolt lock and a missing doorknob on the outside with
    the doorknob intact on the inside. He said the locking mechanism was missing
    from the wood door. He said that based upon the position of the doors when
    he was at the scene, the doors must have been open at some point during the
    shooting based upon the positioning of bullet holes in the wood door and the
    fact that the glass was intact in the iron door. He said the door had been forced
    open at some point before his inspection of the scene because there was
    damage to the door frame and wall. He said he did not see any marks on the
    wood door that were consistent with having been struck with a ram.
    -6-
    Officer Samuel Jones of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department
    testified that he was assigned to the narcotics division in December 2002. He
    said he was the “ram man” on the search warrant team that went to the
    [petitioner]’s house. He was wearing apparel with Sheriff’s Department
    markings as well as body armor, under armor, raid vest, helmet, and goggles.
    He said that he went to the front of the house with Detectives Speight and
    Selby and that Speight “knocked and announced” by hitting the iron door with
    the pick and that he “announced,” as well. He said Speight was “beating on the
    door” loudly and that other officers were yelling, “Sheriff’s office-sheriff’s
    office.” He said that after a “reasonable amount of time,” Speight stuck a pick
    into the seam of the iron door and that he hit the pick twice with the ram. He
    said they were able to open that door. He said that he hit the wood door with
    the ram and that it opened about half way. He did not see a chain on the door.
    He identified a place on the doorknob where he had struck the wooden door
    with the ram. He said he stepped aside for Detective Selby, who was holding
    a shotgun, to go inside. He heard a gunshot and saw Selby start to fall back. He
    said the door opened and the gunshot was “[m]aybe a second” or “a couple of
    seconds” later. He said that he shot inside the house and that he could see a
    chrome pistol but not the person holding it inside the house. He heard someone
    say, “Get George-Get George,” referring to Selby. He said he fell off the porch
    as he tried to drag Selby to safety.
    Officer Jones testified that it was dark when they arrived at the
    [petitioner]’s house. He said there was a car in the driveway. He did not recall
    whether lights were illuminated. He said the narcotics division’s policy was
    that once forced entry was begun, they would continue even if they heard
    someone coming to the door.
    Brad Taylor testified that he was a nurse on duty at Regional Medical
    Center of Memphis when the victim arrived on December 4, 2002. He said that
    in the course of treatment, which included removing clothing, he found a bullet
    in between the victim’s skin and his vest, which was placed in a cup and
    labeled with the victim’s identifying information and given to the liaison
    officer, Norman Benjamin.
    Officer Norman Benjamin of the Memphis Police Department testified
    that he was assigned to Regional Medical Center on December 4, 2002. He
    said that he went to the emergency room when he heard an injured officer was
    being transported and that he stood outside the treatment room door to prevent
    other officers from going inside. He said Nurse Taylor gave him a bullet in a
    -7-
    clear container that had been collected as evidence. He gave the evidence to
    Detectives Roberts and Galloway, who were arriving as he received it from
    Nurse Taylor.
    Detective B.G. Roberts of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department
    testified that he and Detective Denford Galloway went to the hospital on
    December 4, 2002, to investigate the homicide of Detective Selby. He said that
    they received the bullet and Selby’s clothing and that Detective Galloway
    initialed the cup which held the bullet. He identified the cup and bullet in
    evidence as the same ones he received that night. He said he brought the
    evidence to his office and turned it over to Sergeant White.
    Roger Carpenter testified that he was a former reserve officer of the
    Shelby County Sheriff’s Department and was on the narcotics team on
    December 4, 2002, when they went to the [petitioner]’s house to execute a
    search warrant. He was assigned to watch the carport door to make sure no one
    used it to escape from the house. He said he was making his way to the carport
    when he encountered a dog. He heard deputies yelling “Sheriff’s Department
    Narcotics-Sheriff’s Department Narcotics,” and he heard banging on a door.
    He heard three gunshots and someone saying, “Purple down,” which referred
    to an officer being shot. He heard people shouting to get Detective Selby to
    safety and saw officers shooting into the front door. He heard someone say,
    “Shoot the window out,” but could not see a target inside the window. He said
    a loud gunshot went off behind him and the window broke. He returned to the
    carport to stay out of the line of fire. After the gunfire stopped, he went inside
    and “cleared” the house.
    Mr. Carpenter testified that he received instruction at the training
    academy on “how to clear and search a house.” He said this information was
    not specific to search warrant execution. He said the operations plan in the
    present case included getting all the officers into place secretively before
    alerting any occupants of the house to their presence. He said they parked
    down the street and attempted to get into position, although he was not sure
    they had been successful in executing the plan. He said the only officer he
    specifically recalled having seen shooting was Detective Feathers, whom he
    said was shooting a shotgun at the window while standing in front of the door.
    Officer Chauncy Walton of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department
    testified that he was presently employed by the department and had been a
    reserve officer with the narcotics unit in December 2002. He participated in
    -8-
    the search warrant briefing and execution at the [petitioner]’s house. He was
    assigned to cover the carport door and back of the house along with Roger
    Carpenter and George Stauffer. He wore his raid vest with departmental
    insignia on it. He said there were twelve officers, a police dog, and four police
    vehicles on the scene to execute the warrant. He was making his way to his
    assigned position when a Rottweiler dog who was not restrained and was
    barking at the officers came out of the carport. He said that he focused on the
    dog and that as he got closer to Officers Carpenter and Stauffer, the dog turned
    and ran to the back of the house. He said he was still in the driveway and heard
    the “knocking and announcing” and “a loud boom.” He said that he first heard
    knocking and announcing as he was closing the doors to the van and that he
    heard the boom around the time the dog was running away. He said the amount
    of time that elapsed was adequate for someone to answer the door given the
    size of the house. He said he heard someone say, “He’s got a gun. Get some
    cover,” and he heard officers returning fire. He said that he checked the back
    of the house and determined that there was no way for someone to escape and
    then took cover in the carport. He said that he heard more gunfire but that he
    did not shoot his weapon. He said they sent the police dog inside the house to
    retrieve the occupants. He attempted to call for help for Detective Selby but
    had poor radio reception.
    Officer Walton testified that he had received academy training
    regarding building searches. He said he had received on-the-job training that
    was specific to execution of search warrants.
    Officer George Stauffer of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department
    testified that he participated in executing the search warrant at the
    [petitioner]’s house on December 4, 2002. He had been assigned to open and
    close the side doors of the police van and to watch the carport door in the
    operations briefing, and he had been told the [petitioner] had a gun conviction.
    He said that it was dark outside when they arrived but that the street lights
    were illuminated. He said lights were also on inside the house. He said he
    could hear officers banging on the iron door and announcing, “Sheriff’s
    Narcotics,” repeatedly as he closed the van doors. He started toward the
    carport but stopped when a barking and growling Rottweiler came toward him.
    He said that he may have yelled at the dog and that the dog ran away. He went
    to the far corner of the porch by the carport and heard one of the officers say,
    “Let’s do this.” He said the other officers on the porch used the ram and pick
    to open the iron door. He heard a boom, which he identified as the ram hitting
    the wood door. He heard another boom “seconds later” and saw Officer Selby
    -9-
    fall backwards. He said, “[a] lot of shots started.” He ran around the house to
    make sure no one was coming out the back windows and then returned to the
    front.
    Officer Stauffer testified that he had known the victim since high school
    and that he brought him blankets from the [petitioner]’s house after it was
    cleared. He said the victim said that he could not feel his legs, that he was
    cold, and that he was going to die. He said the victim asked what he was going
    to do about his girls. He rode to the hospital in an ambulance with the victim.
    He said the emergency personnel opened the victim’s vest in order to cut off
    his shirt to attach medical equipment.
    Officer Stauffer testified that he could not say exactly how much time
    elapsed from the time he first heard the other officers knocking and
    announcing and when they used the pick and ram, but he said, “[I]t seemed
    like forever.” He said he had time to leave the van door, go across the yard,
    deal with the dog, warn the others about the dog, check the carport, and come
    out of the carport and get into position.
    Officer Stauffer testified that he received hands-on training when first
    assigned to the narcotics division in 1997 by being paired with an experienced
    officer. He said they sometimes practiced by staging mock search warrant
    executions at abandoned houses. He said it was not atypical for the knock and
    announce to begin before all officers were in position.
    Captain Phillip Barnett of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department
    testified that he was on the narcotics team on December 4, 2002, and
    participated in executing the search warrant at the [petitioner]’s house. He was
    in charge of the evening shift that night. He said Detective Speight, as the case
    officer, prepared an operations plan which was approved by Sergeant Nelson.
    Captain Barnett was on the scene to supervise the officers. He wore marked
    clothing and a bullet-proof vest under his clothing but not the outer vest worn
    by the other officers. He said they parked out of view, which was important for
    officer safety. He said that according to the operations plan, the victim was
    designated as the first person who would go inside the house. He saw the
    officers go straight to the house from the van and get into position. From his
    position on the street, he heard Speight knocking and saying, “Sheriff’s Office
    Narcotics.” He said the officers waited long enough for someone inside the
    house to answer the door. He heard the sounds of the officers forcing the door
    open and a shot. He turned and saw Detective Selby fall back from where he
    -10-
    was standing on the front porch. He ran to assist Selby as other officers
    returned fire. He said that as he was trying to pull Selby to safety, he fell in
    front of the front window. He said that when he first reached to grab Selby, he
    heard gunfire and thought he “felt the pressure of the bullet, and heard the
    sound coming right past my head” from the window area. He heard someone
    say the shooter was in the window. Officer Hubbard came and helped him
    move Selby to the west side of the yard. Sergeant Nelson came to help with
    Selby. Captain Barnett said that he told Nelson to remove Selby’s vest to see
    the location of the entry wound and that he went back to the corner of the
    house. He could see a person lying on the living room floor inside the house.
    They decided to send the police dog inside. The dog brought the person out
    and then returned to the house and brought out the [petitioner]. He said that
    after the police dog was taken from the scene by an officer, he approached the
    [petitioner], who said he had been shot.
    Captain Barnett testified that when the dog brought the [petitioner] out
    of the house, Officer Chambers got the dog promptly. He denied that the
    [petitioner] and Calvin Williams were taken out of the police cars later in order
    for the dog to attack them. He said that if this had been attempted, he would
    have stopped it.
    Captain Barnett testified that the amount of time before beginning
    forced entry varied in search warrant execution and that the officers waited a
    reasonable time based upon the circumstances of the case. He said that ideally,
    someone would answer the door and allow them to come inside. He said,
    however, that factors which might affect the amount of wait time included the
    size of the house and whether they have information that weapons are
    involved. He said that the situation is safer for the officers and citizens if
    forced entry were not used. He said there would be a danger in waiting too
    long to force entry because someone inside the home may destroy evidence or
    get a weapon.
    Robert Rivera testified that he was a reserve officer with the Shelby
    County Sheriff’s Department on December 4, 2002, and that he was part of the
    entry team executing the search warrant at the [petitioner]’s house. He said that
    when the entry team reached the front porch, Detective Speight knocked loudly
    on the door with the pick. He said Detectives Speight and Jones announced
    “Sheriff’s Department” repeatedly. He said there were several knocks and
    numerous announcements. When they received no response, the pick was used
    to open the iron door, followed by the ram being used to open the wood door.
    -11-
    He said that right after Detective Jones opened the wood door with the ram,
    shots were fired from inside the house. He said Detective Selby was hit by the
    first bullet and “went backwards.” He said he saw someone with a gun behind
    a wall and returned fire. He did not recall whether the person had a shotgun or
    a handgun. He identified the [petitioner] as the person with the gun. He said
    that as other officers removed Selby from the porch, he covered for them to try
    to keep them from being shot.
    Mr. Rivera testified that he did not recall how many times the door was
    rammed before it opened. He said that typically, the officer with the ram tried
    to hit the doorknob with the ram. He said the door was wide open after the ram
    was used but he did not see anyone lying on the floor. He denied any
    knowledge of the police dog being allowed to attack the [petitioner] and
    Calvin Williams while they were handcuffed.
    Lieutenant Richard Nelson of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department
    narcotics division testified that on December 4, 2002, he was the sergeant
    assigned to review the operations plan for the execution of the search warrant
    at the [petitioner]’s house. He went to the scene and stood to the side with
    Lieutenant Barnett. He was assigned to secure the rear of the house. He said
    he did not recall hearing the knock at the door, which he said he would not
    have been able to hear from where he was, but he said he did hear “Sheriff’s
    Department Narcotics-Sheriff’s Department Narcotics.” He said there was a
    shot and “a short body of gunfire.” He said he was familiar with the sound of
    the officers’ weapons and recognized the sound of the first shot as being
    different from that made by weapons issued by the Sheriff’s Department. He
    ran to the back corner of the house to make sure no one was escaping from
    inside then went to attend the victim. He said the victim was complaining of
    difficulty breathing. He had another officer retrieve a first aid kit. He said he
    cut the victim’s shirt open and found a bullet hole under the victim’s right
    nipple. He plugged the hole with a bandage and monitored the victim’s pulse.
    He said the victim asked to see his children and asked Lieutenant Nelson to
    keep him alive.
    Detective Dirk Beasley of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department
    testified that on December 4, 2002, he was on the first shift search warrant
    team of the narcotics division and was called to work during the evening shift.
    He responded to the [petitioner]’s house and was assigned to do the narcotics
    investigation after the homicide investigation was completed. He was sent
    home until the homicide investigation was completed and returned the
    -12-
    following day to conduct the narcotics investigation. At that point, he executed
    the search warrant inside the house. He said that in the living area of the house,
    the search team found identification and paperwork belonging to the
    [petitioner], four sets of hand scales of the type commonly used by marijuana
    dealers, a gallon bag with residue inside that smelled like marijuana, a bowl
    containing marijuana “roaches,” a razor blade with residue which field tested
    positive to be cocaine, a pack of 1.5 rolling papers, and a prescription bottle
    bearing the [petitioner]’s name and containing a plastic bag with what
    appeared to be a drug cutting agent inside. He said they recovered from a car
    in the driveway that was registered to the [petitioner]’s wife a small set of
    scales, a razor blade, a set of digital scales, and white powder that field tested
    positive to be cocaine. He said that from a storage area, they recovered two
    glass crack cooking tubes containing residue that field tested positive to be
    cocaine, two bottles of substances commonly used to “cut” cocaine, paper that
    was cut and folded in a manner commonly used to hold drugs in powder form,
    and a box for digital scales which was of the same brand of scales as those
    found in the car. In the attic of the house, they found an empty, operating
    refrigerator. He said it was not unusual for drugs to be kept inside a
    refrigerator to keep out rodents. He said it was unusual that this refrigerator
    was plugged in and running because the attic was not a walk-up type attic and
    required a person to push aside a board and stand on a chair to get into the
    attic.
    Diana Parmenter of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation testified as
    an expert witness in forensic chemistry. She tested the items submitted from
    the search warrant. She said that the powder inside the prescription bottle did
    not contain any controlled substances but that one of the glass tubes contained
    cocaine and the substance from the plastic bag was marijuana. She did not test
    the residue in the second glass tube.
    Sergeant Brock Owens of the Memphis Police Department testified that
    he was assigned to uniform patrol on December 3, 2002, and that he responded
    to a call at the [petitioner]’s house around 8:00 or 8:30 a.m. He said that the
    [petitioner] and a friend were present and that the [petitioner] filed a burglary
    complaint and reported two RCA Zenith televisions and a Sony camcorder as
    missing. He said he saw no sign of forced entry into the house. He said that he
    went to the front door when he arrived and that he did not see any damage,
    although he later conceded he could not be sure the wood door’s lock was
    intact. He said the molding around the door was intact. He said that when he
    knocked on the door he waited an “average amount of time” and that someone
    -13-
    answered the door. He said the house had not been ransacked, although it was
    typical that a house would be ransacked in a burglary. He said he walked
    through the house and went into the bedroom from which the items had been
    taken. He said he thought he saw a television in the living room but was not
    positive. He said he did not see any evidence which warranted having the
    crime scene unit process the scene. He said that he saw some items in the
    house that he would not have expected to see after a burglary and that he was
    suspicious whether a burglary had occurred based upon those items and the
    condition of the house.
    Officer Darren Feathers of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department
    testified that he was on the narcotics division search warrant team on
    December 4, 2002, and was involved in executing the search warrant at the
    [petitioner]’s house. He attended the briefing conducted by Detective Speight
    and was assigned to be a “shotgun man,” as was Detective Selby. He said
    Selby was to be the first officer in the house and he was to be the second. He
    said he was wearing his raid gear that night. He said that the goal in beginning
    the execution process was to enter the scene without alerting anyone of the
    police presence and then letting them know the police were there when the
    police were ready. He said that Detective Speight knocked on the door and
    announced, “Sheriff’s Office, Narcotics,” and that Speight repeated this
    process a second time. He said they waited a “reasonable” amount of time, that
    being enough time for someone within the house to come to the door, and then
    Speight placed the pick in the door and Detective Jones hit it. He said that
    while Speight and Jones were opening the door, the announcing continued. He
    said that Jones hit the doorknob of the wood door with the ram and that as the
    door opened, a gunshot came from inside the house and Selby fell to the
    ground. He said he shot into the house to give the other officers cover to move
    the victim. He felt his arm go back but looked and did not see blood or his shirt
    torn and reloaded his shotgun. He said he was later treated for a grazing
    wound. He said Lieutenant Barnett and Detective Hubbard moved the victim
    to the side of the house. He said that as Barnett, Hubbard, and the victim
    reached a front window, Hubbard looked at him and at the window and that
    Feathers shot through the window because he thought there was a threat inside.
    He said there was another window beyond that window at which he did not
    shoot because he did not believe there was a threat. He said the police dog
    removed the [petitioner] and another person from the house.
    Detective Feathers testified that he did not see any damage to the wood
    door before Jones struck it with the ram. He said he did not know whether the
    -14-
    door’s lock was in place before it was forced open. He said that just before
    Selby was shot, Selby was standing at the door with a shotgun on his shoulder
    pointed at the door.
    Sergeant Reginald Hubbard of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department
    testified that he was a detective in the narcotics division in December 2002 and
    participated in the search warrant execution at the [petitioner]’s house. He said
    he was the van driver and was on the entry team. He said he was supposed to
    get in line with other officers on the entry team after securing the van. He was
    going across the yard when he heard the knock and announce process. He said
    he heard knocking three or four times. He said when he came across the yard,
    he saw one of the officers holding the iron door and saw Jones ramming the
    wood door. He said that as Jones hit the door, a shot hit Selby, who fell back.
    He went to aid the victim and drew his weapon and fired into the house in the
    direction of gunshots he heard inside. He said that the door was open wide and
    that he did not see anyone lying on the living room floor. He helped pull the
    victim to the side of the house. He said that as he reached a window, he could
    see the curtains moving. He fired at the window and yelled, “Cover the
    window.”
    Sergeant Hubbard testified that the victim asked him for help and
    indicated his chest was hurting. He retrieved a first aid kit from Sergeant
    Nelson’s car and called for help on his radio.
    Officer Scott Chambers of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department
    testified that he was assigned to the dog squad and had a dog named Rex who
    did both apprehension and narcotics duties. He said the dog scratched and
    barked when he detected drugs and did “bite work,” such as apprehending a
    subject from a house. He said Rex responded to his verbal commands but not
    the commands of others. He and Rex were at the [petitioner]’s house the night
    the search warrant was executed. He stood in the yard and watched the entry
    team. He saw them line up. He said they began saying, “Search Warrant,
    Sheriff’s Office” before they reached the house and then approached the door,
    knocked, and announced. He heard someone say, “Pick.” He saw light coming
    from between the wood door and the house, shots come out the front door, and
    Detective Selby fall. He said he squatted down and told Selby to stay down. He
    said Selby asked him to come help but that he could not. He said that another
    officer reached Selby and attempted to move away and that he moved toward
    the door to try to help suppress the gunfire coming at the officers. He said
    someone shot out a window, sending glass in his direction. He said someone
    -15-
    was shooting from inside the house because the glass and curtains or blinds
    flew outside. He yelled for someone to shoot at the window. He said that he
    saw Sergeant Barnett making unsuccessful attempts to call for help on two
    radios and that he went to his truck, called for help on his radio, and returned
    to the front door with Rex.
    Officer Chambers testified that before he had gone to his truck, the
    officers were yelling for the occupants of the house to come outside and were
    identifying themselves as the Sheriff’s office. He said that when he returned
    with Rex, the officers were still trying to get the occupants to come outside and
    that he gave Rex a command, “Stella,” which meant to go inside and find the
    threat. He said Rex could physically drag a person across a room. He heard
    someone screaming and called for Rex to come out. Rex returned with a
    person. He said he “[i]mmediately took the dog off” and sent him back inside.
    He heard a commotion, screaming, and bumping from inside the house. He
    yelled for the person to come outside, and the person said for him to get the
    dog off him. He said that the person would not come out on his own and that
    he called for Rex to come out. He said that Rex brought the [petitioner] out
    and that he separated the dog from the [petitioner] immediately. He sent Rex
    inside the house a third time, but Rex did not find anyone else. He said that he
    put Rex into his truck and that the officers checked the house to make sure
    there was no one else inside. He said he did not get Rex out of the truck again.
    Officer Chambers testified that Rex would bite a person to get hold of
    him and would drag the person out of the house. He said Rex was trained to
    hold on to the person until he gave the dog the command to release the person.
    He said, however, that Rex would not continuously bite and attack a person
    while removing him from a house. He denied having ordered Rex to attack the
    [petitioner] after the [petitioner] was outside.
    Rachel Copeland testified that she was a nurse practitioner and that she
    obtained a blood sample from the [petitioner]. She took the sample to the
    Tennessee Bureau of Investigation.
    Sergeant Scott Wright of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department
    testified that he was assigned to the detective division in December 2002. He
    received a call around 6:30 p.m. about an officer having been shot at the
    [petitioner]’s house. He went to the scene and learned that Selby and the two
    occupants of the house had been taken to the hospital for treatment. While still
    on the scene, he learned that Selby had died. He was the case officer for the
    -16-
    homicide investigation, meaning he directed other officers in performing the
    various investigative tasks. He said that they recovered a gun containing six
    empty shell casings in the hallway of the [petitioner]’s house and that there
    were blood droplets on the floor of a bedroom. He learned that one of the
    officers had gone into the home and taken some blankets and sheets for Selby
    before the investigation took place. He learned that the [petitioner] had
    received medical treatment for a gunshot wound to the left hand and dog bites.
    He said that he received information that the bullet was still in the
    [petitioner]’s hand and sent word to the jail that if the [petitioner] had the
    bullet removed, he would like to receive it, and that he did not ever receive it.
    Sergeant Wright testified that Calvin Williams was interviewed but was
    not charged in connection with the events of December 4. He said that he took
    two statements from Williams on December 6 and that Williams did not have
    any serious injuries, although he had some marks from dog bites.
    Colonious Davis testified that he was the medical records manager with
    Regional Medical Center. He identified the medical records for the
    [petitioner]’s December 4 treatment.
    Chad Johnson of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation testified as an
    expert witness in DNA. He examined curtains that were submitted for testing
    and determined that some of them had human blood on them. He later
    compared a blood standard identified as coming from the [petitioner] with the
    substance on curtains that were submitted and obtained a “100 percent match.”
    He said that statistically, the odds that the blood on the curtains came from
    someone other than the [petitioner] exceeded the earth’s population.
    Don Carmen of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation testified as an
    expert witness in forensic firearms identification. He examined the Colt King
    Cobra .357 magnum revolver that was recovered from the [petitioner]’s house
    and the bullet that was recovered at the hospital from the victim’s clothing and
    determined that the bullet had been fired from the gun. He also determined that
    the shell casings recovered from the gun were of the same type, manufacturer,
    and caliber as unfired cartridges recovered from the master bedroom closet at
    the [petitioner]’s house. He examined the curtains submitted and determined
    that there was gunshot residue on them. He said that a particular grouping of
    holes was indicative of a shotgun blast. He said he was not able to determine
    in which direction ammunition had traveled through the curtains.
    -17-
    Cerdinia Braswell of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation and
    formerly of the Shelby County Medical Examiner’s office testified as an expert
    witness in blood spatter analysis. In her previous employment with the medical
    examiner, she examined evidence at the [petitioner]’s house. She examined
    blood spatters in a bedroom, blood drips in the hallway, and blood drops on the
    curtains in a second bedroom. She said the blood on the bottom of the curtains
    indicated that blood had fallen from above onto the curtains. She said that it
    appeared someone had stood in contact with the curtains for some time with
    the blood dripping down and that the pattern was consistent with someone
    being shot in the left hand, coming into contact with the curtain, and dripping
    blood from the wound onto the curtain. She said the blood spatter evidence
    was consistent with impact from a gunshot wound. She said there was
    evidence in the hall of a castoff pattern, which was consistent with someone
    bleeding and moving down the hall. She said there was also evidence of a
    transfer pattern on a doorknob, indicating that something covered with blood
    had touched the doorknob, and consistent with the pattern a bloody hand
    would make. She said there was a blood trail down the hallway, to the
    bedroom window, and back out of the room.
    Doctor O’Brian Cleary Smith testified as an expert witness in forensic
    pathology. As part of his duties as medical examiner, he examined the scene
    with two additional members of his staff. He also performed the autopsy of the
    victim and examined the victim’s clothing. He said the victim died of a
    gunshot wound to the chest. He said the fatal bullet struck the front of the
    victim’s armpit area, grazed his upper arm, went between the third and fourth
    ribs, severed the artery and the vein underneath the third rib, entered the right
    lung, caused extensive bruising of the heart, entered the spine at the sixth
    vertebra fragmenting bone and crushing the spinal cord, and exited the body.
    He said the victim had external abrasions where the bullet had bounced off the
    body armor and hit the skin. He said the findings relative to the victim’s
    clothing, including the body armor, correlated with the autopsy findings. He
    said that based upon the appearance of the entrance wound, it was his opinion
    that the bullet may have passed through an intermediate target before striking
    the victim.
    Linda Simmons testified for the [petitioner] that she lived next door to
    the [petitioner] in December 2002. She recalled that on the date in question,
    she was standing at her front door and saw two or three unmarked trucks come
    to the area at around 6:00 p.m. and that three men in dark clothes got out of the
    trucks and went around the house. She said she did not know whether the men
    -18-
    were police officers. She said she walked to a bedroom after closing her front
    door and that she heard a screech that sounded like someone was trying to
    open the [petitioner]’s metal door. She said she heard a shot and then more
    shooting. She denied having heard the men say anything before the screech
    and the shooting began. She said that she thought it was a driveby shooting,
    that she took cover with her family, and that she told her daughter to call 9-1-1.
    She said that about three or four minutes after the gunfire, she looked out a
    window and saw an officer bringing “Calvin” out of the [petitioner]’s house.
    She said that she saw someone taking photographs or filming outside that night
    and that a day or two later, a police officer came to her house and asked if she
    knew who had been taking photographs or video. She said the police went
    around the neighborhood asking what anyone had seen.
    Ms. Simmons testified that she suspected Calvin had stolen her dog.
    She also said she was suspicious that Calvin had arranged the burglary of the
    [petitioner]’s house on December 3, 2002.
    Robert Johnson testified that he was a friend of the [petitioner] and had
    been a co-worker of his at Diamond Steel. He said the [petitioner] was a
    welder and had been laid off shortly before the crime. He said they were
    frequently laid off by their employer. He visited the [petitioner]’s home the
    evening before the crime and had seen that the front door had been “broken
    into.” He said both the iron door and the wood door had been damaged and
    that the locks would not engage. He said they were not secure. He said a
    portion of the door knob of the wood door had been ripped off the handle and
    was no longer present. He said the [petitioner] was going to work on getting
    the iron door fixed or replaced the next day.
    Jonathan Bozart testified that he lived on the [petitioner]’s street and
    that he had been at home on December 4, 2002. He said he saw a white SUV
    pull up and four or six men dressed in black get out and go to the [petitioner]’s
    house. He denied seeing any writing on the back of their vests. He said he was
    in the carport. He said that the men had “semi weapons,” which he said were
    long guns rather than handguns. He saw them go to the [petitioner]’s door and
    thought they were going to break into the house. He said that he saw them get
    past the iron door and that he could see light through a crack in the wood door
    but that shots were fired before they got in through the wood door. He said
    there was a shot fired from inside the house and then more shots, with a total
    of fifteen to thirty shots. He saw one of the men on the front porch fall and
    some of the other men drag the fallen person away. He said he heard
    -19-
    screaming and someone yelling, “I give up,” and saw the dog bring people out
    of the house individually. He said that the officer who handled the dog was
    standing by the front door when the dog brought the [petitioner] out and that
    the officer stomped the [petitioner] on the head a couple of times and told the
    dog to “get him.” He said that the [petitioner] was later handcuffed and placed
    face down in the yard and that the officers allowed the dog to attack him for
    about five minutes. He said an officer came to his house and told him to go
    inside. He said that the [petitioner] was put in a car and that he later saw a
    Memphis Police car pull up and an officer get out, pull the [petitioner] out of
    the car, and hit the [petitioner] a couple of times as other officers watched.
    Mr. Bozart testified that when he saw the officer stomping the
    [petitioner] as the dog brought the [petitioner] out of the house, he retrieved
    a camera and took pictures, which he said did not develop properly. He said
    officers came to talk to him two days later and inquired what had happened
    and whether he had a camera. He said he told the officers that “the lawyer
    already had the camera.” He identified “the lawyer” as one of the [petitioner]’s
    attorneys.
    Mr. Bozart testified that he had been alone outside for about thirty
    minutes before the police arrived. He denied having seen anyone knock on the
    [petitioner]’s door shortly before the police arrived. He said the men did not
    start yelling that they were police officers until after the shooting started. He
    acknowledged that he did not call 9-1-1 despite the fact he first thought the
    men were robbers.
    Darnisha Simmons testified that she lived next door to the [petitioner]
    in December 2002. She said that on the night in question, she was in her room
    watching television and saw a van park outside. She said it was there about ten
    minutes and that she heard “creeping noises” of people walking. She looked
    outside and saw “[p]eople in black spread out in the yard with guns.” She said
    she assumed the people were police officers, although she could not see
    writing on their vests. She said that she moved away from the window and that
    she heard a shot followed by “a couple of more shots.” She went to the hallway
    when she heard the first shot. She said she went to the door after the shooting
    and was told by the police to get out of the doors and windows.
    Jim Russell testified that he was the owner of Diamond Steel
    Corporation. He said the [petitioner] had been employed full-time as a welder
    from 1999 until 2002, at which time he was laid off due to economic
    -20-
    conditions in the industry. He said the [petitioner]’s working environment
    would have been “fairly noisy.” He said the [petitioner] had participated in the
    company’s 401K program.
    The [petitioner] testified that he had lived in a home he owned on
    Chattering Lane for eight years before the events on trial occurred. He said that
    the residence had been home to himself, his wife, and his four children, but
    that he and his wife were separated on December 4 and that Calvin Williams
    was living at the home with him. He said that he had completed vocational
    training to be a welder and a tractor-trailer truck driver and that he had been
    employed for his adult life. He said that he was laid off his job as a welder at
    Diamond Steel in August or September 2002 and that he received
    unemployment benefits and withdrew money from his 401K account. He said
    that he had an active bankruptcy petition filed in December 2002 and that he
    had paid into the Chapter 13 plan. He acknowledged having used crack
    cocaine and marijuana but said he stopped in 1996 and was enrolled in a
    rehabilitation program for about seven months. He admitted he had used
    marijuana in 2000. He said he sold crack cocaine for a short period of time in
    1996 and had a drug conviction from this time period. He admitted having
    “some personal weed” while living on Chattering Lane and said he probably
    sold some of it to friends who were visiting, but he denied selling drugs from
    the house.
    The [petitioner] testified that his house had been burglarized twice, in
    2000 and in 2002. He said that on December 3, 2002, the date of the second
    burglary, he and Calvin Williams left the house at 5:20 or 5:30 a.m. He did not
    know whether the house was locked because Williams was the last person out
    of the house. He said Williams did not have a key but could have locked the
    wood door by turning the handle from the inside. He said the iron door did not
    have a knob on the outside but had a deadbolt for which he had the only key.
    He said the iron door could be pried open or opened with a screwdriver if the
    deadbolt were not engaged. He said that he and Williams returned home an
    hour and a half to two hours later and that the front window and wood door
    were wide open and the iron door was closed. He said the iron door looked like
    it had been pried and the wood door was cracked at the doorknob. He said the
    latch on the wood door was on the floor in the front room and the door frame
    was “busted.” He said the damage to the doorknob area of the wood door that
    was evident on the door, which was a trial exhibit, was the same as how it
    appeared after that morning. He said that a television was missing from the
    front room and that a television, cologne, a camcorder, watch, and a ring were
    -21-
    missing from the master bedroom. He said the master bedroom door had been
    pried open and the bed was “totally tore up.” After calling his mother and
    eliminating his brother-in-law as a suspect, he called 9-1-1. When an officer
    arrived, he showed the officer the damage to the door and showed him the lock
    in the living room floor. He said that they went into the kitchen and that the
    officer filled out a report of the missing items but that he did not think the
    officer recorded everything he told him. He said he offered to show the officer
    the area in the back of the house where most of the damage had been done but
    the officer declined. He said he did not repair the doors that day and locked the
    iron door that evening. He said there was no reason to lock the wood door
    because it would not hold.
    The [petitioner] testified that he owned a .357 weapon he purchased
    from a young man named John Upchurch for $100. He said he found out about
    the weapon when the young man’s uncle went around asking people if they
    wanted to buy a gun. He admitted knowing he was not allowed to have a gun
    because of his prior drug conviction. He said that on December 4, he had .22,
    .38, .380, and .357 caliber ammunition at his house.
    The [petitioner] testified that after dark on December 4, he was in the
    master bedroom after dinner and Williams told him that someone was at the
    door. He said “Rob” came in the house for two or three minutes and then left.
    He said that Rob was there because Rob owed him $50 and that he loaned
    money to other people despite the fact he was unemployed. He went back to
    his room for about thirty to forty minutes and watched television, and while he
    was in the bathroom, he heard a “huge” bang. He said he asked Williams what
    the noise was and that Williams told him someone was breaking into the
    house. He said Williams looked scared and was barely able to speak. He said
    that he was scared because he thought the burglars from the previous day had
    returned and that he ran to the dresser drawer and got a gun. He said he did not
    hear any other noises or commands after the bang. He said he went toward the
    end of the hallway and heard the iron door hit the air-conditioning unit, a
    sound with which he was familiar. He said he went to the end of the hallway,
    saw that the wood door had come open, and fired a shot at the door. He said
    he did not know who was behind the door and denied hearing the officers
    yelling they were with the Sheriff’s Department and had a search warrant. He
    said that he heard a shot from outside and that he continued shooting at the
    door until he had emptied his gun. He said that while he was shooting, he saw
    a curtain fly open and determined that someone was firing through the
    window. He denied ever seeing the wood door come open. He said that after
    -22-
    he ran out of bullets, he was shot in the hand as he tried to look around a wall
    to see whether the wood door had come open. He said he dropped the gun, fell
    to the floor, and crawled to another room. He said he was trying to get to a
    cellular telephone to call the police. He said that as soon as he opened the
    door, shots came through the window. He said that he crawled into the room
    and that he may have bled on the curtains but that he never looked out the
    window. He said he heard a police scanner and realized the people outside
    were police. He denied that he would have shot had he realized the people
    were police officers.
    The [petitioner] testified that he crawled to the end of the hallway and
    yelled, “I give up,” and that he heard an officer tell him to show his face. He
    said he stuck his head behind a wall and saw a shotgun and handgun at the
    door. He said that they told him to lie flat on the floor against the wall with his
    hands on his head and that he complied. He said that Williams was lying on the
    floor in the living room and that Williams yelled, “I give up.” He said that the
    police told Williams to come out first and that Williams was in the process of
    doing so when a dog came through the door and attacked Williams. He said
    that the dog and Williams wrestled until Williams was outside, that the officers
    took the dog off Williams immediately, and that a couple of the officers beat
    Williams. He said an officer told him to crawl to the door and that he was
    doing so when the dog came in and attacked him. He said he was too heavy for
    the dog to pull and that he pushed the dog out the door while the dog was
    “clamped on” him. He said he got halfway out of the house and was kicked by
    someone. He said that he kept yelling for them to get the dog off him but that
    the officers took their time in doing so. He said that he complied with the
    directive to lie flat on the ground and that an officer kicked him in the face and
    the bottom. He said that he was handcuffed and that an officer allowed the dog
    to attack him again. He said he was placed in a police car and had his head
    bumped in the process. He said that he was later removed from the police car
    and searched and that in the process, an officer hit him in his testicles with a
    fist and another officer hit him across his head with a pistol.
    The [petitioner] testified that he was taken by ambulance to the hospital.
    He said that on the way, he asked the officers whether the officer whom he
    shot was okay and told them he did not know who they were and thought a
    robber had returned. He said he was unaware of any drugs in his house other
    than possibly some “roaches” that belonged to him. He denied that the 1.2
    grams of marijuana other than the roaches was his but admitted that the scales
    in the closet were his. He said that he used the scales to “[w]eigh up some
    -23-
    weed” but that it had been two or three months since he had used them. He
    said the scales that were found in the car had been there for two or three
    months. He said the car belonged to his wife and had transmission problems.
    He said the cooking tubes had been in the storage area for two or three months.
    The [petitioner] identified the refrigerator that was found in the attic
    and said he had stored it in the attic. He denied that it was plugged into the
    electricity.
    A videotape of the scene was played during part of the [petitioner]’s
    direct examination. The [petitioner] identified various items and locations
    which were relevant to the events in question. He noted that the videotape
    depicted both the broken lock from the wood door and a glass of beer he was
    drinking when the incident began were sitting on his bedroom dresser.
    On cross-examination, the [petitioner] acknowledged that there had
    been marijuana in a gallon bag that was in his bedroom but claimed it had all
    been smoked before December 4. He admitted that the drug paraphernalia with
    cocaine residue was his, but he denied he had used it since 1996. He
    acknowledged that there was stereo equipment, two televisions, a handgun,
    and a VCR which were not taken during the burglary. The [petitioner]
    admitted that he had locks on his bedroom door and closet door and that he
    was the only person with keys. He said he had locks on the doors to keep
    visiting relatives from stealing from him. He said the televisions that were in
    the living room and his bedroom on December 4 had been in his children’s
    bedrooms before the burglary on December 3. He admitted that he was taking
    care of his wife’s Rottweiler and that the dog would bark if strangers came to
    the house but said the dog ran loose and may have been elsewhere during the
    burglary. He denied that Williams ever told him not to shoot because the police
    were at the door. The [petitioner] said the police dog left bite marks on his
    arms but did not attack other parts of his body. He said he cut the bullet out of
    his hand with a razor and flushed it in a toilet while he was in jail.
    The state recalled Detective Speight for rebuttal proof. Using the pick
    he had taken to the [petitioner]’s house on December 4, 2002, Detective
    Speight demonstrated the knock and announce procedure he followed that
    night.
    After receiving the evidence, the jury found the [petitioner] guilty of
    first degree murder of George Selby and guilty of attempted first degree
    -24-
    murder of William Speight, Samuel Jones, Reginald Hubbard, Darren
    Feathers, Scott Chambers, and Robert Rivera. The jury found the [petitioner]
    not guilty of any offense in the counts alleging attempted first degree murder
    of George Stauffer, Roger Carpenter, Chauncey Walton, Phillip Barnett, and
    Richard Nelson.
    The state and the [petitioner] entered into a sentencing agreement which
    called for the [petitioner] to serve a sentence of life without parole for the first
    degree murder conviction. After a sentencing hearing, he received twenty-year
    sentences for each of his five attempted first degree murder convictions.
    Consecutive sentencing was imposed, for an effective sentence of life without
    parole plus 100 years.
    State v. Reginald Rome, No. W2006-00838-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2008 WL 2331018
    , *1-17 (Tenn.
    Crim. App., at Jackson, June 5, 2008).
    In his appeal from his convictions and sentences, the petitioner argued
    (1) that the evidence is insufficient to convict him of first degree murder, (2)
    that the trial court erred in admitting the testimony of a nurse about a bullet
    recovered from the victim at the hospital, (3) that the trial court erred in
    allowing admission of insufficient evidence about the chain of custody of the
    bullet recovered at the hospital, (4) that the prosecution withheld information
    about a technical failure in videotaping the deposition of an unavailable
    witness, (5) that the trial court erred in ruling that the defendant could not
    introduce evidence from the deposition of a non-testifying state’s expert and
    then call its own expert to refute that proof, and (6) that the trial court erred in
    its jury instructions.
    Id. at *1. This court concluded that the petitioner waived his sixth assignment of error, that
    the trial court erred in its jury instructions, for failure to address the alleged error in his
    motion for new trial. Id. at *23. Finding no error in the sufficiency of the evidence or the
    trial court’s rulings, the panel affirmed the judgments of the trial court. Id. at *19-22, 24.
    On October 28, 2008, the petitioner filed a pro se petition for post-conviction relief.
    The post-conviction court appointed private counsel to represent the petitioner.
    Subsequently, the petitioner filed amended petitions on February 25, 2009, and May 13,
    2009. The post-conviction court held an evidentiary hearing on August 13 and 14, 2009.
    The parties presented the following evidence at the hearing.
    -25-
    Both of the petitioner’s trial counsel testified. Co-counsel testified that the petitioner
    retained lead counsel, and lead counsel brought him in to assist because the state was asking
    for the death penalty. Co-counsel said that the defense strategy was that the petitioner did
    not know that “it was [a] law enforcement agency that was kicking in his door[] when he
    fired those shots,” and the petitioner believed that burglars who had recently broken into his
    home were returning. Co-counsel testified that a possible violation of the “knock and
    announce” rule when the police were executing the search warrant was significant because
    the petitioner’s contention was that the police had already begun opening the door to his
    home when they announced that they were law enforcement. He said that the “knock and
    announce” issue was related to the petitioner’s mens rea and not a Fourth Amendment
    argument.
    Co-counsel further testified that the parties had a “contentious argument” over the jury
    instructions about the “knock and announce” rule. He characterized the state’s requested
    instruction as “dealing more or less with the [officers’] state of mind and not the state of
    mind of [the petitioner]” because it “said that if the officers thought it was reasonable and
    had a search warrant then . . . there [was] a presumption that their knocking and entering was
    reasonable.” Co-counsel said that the jury instructions outlined the extrinsic circumstances
    that would justify law enforcement’s dispensing with the “knock and announce” rule. He
    said that, “in hindsight,” the problem with the instructions was that “there [were] elements
    [there] that were never factually testified to at trial.” As an example, he said that there was
    no testimony that the officers heard anything that would lead them to believe that someone
    inside the house was destroying evidence.
    Co-counsel agreed that he did not argue in the motion for new trial that the jury
    instructions were erroneous. He testified, “I can say emphatically that there was no tactical
    decision not to argue it.” He further testified that he was aware that the issue would be
    waived on appeal if not included in the motion for new trial. Co-counsel also said, “I know
    I argued it for sure.” He said that he argued against the jury instructions, but that petitioner’s
    argument against the instructions as presented in the post-conviction proceeding “[was] more
    of a nuance[d] argument that [he] just apparently didn’t argue.” Co-counsel said that he
    believed that the circumstances required some instruction on the “knock and announce” rule
    but “in hindsight, looking at the way it was addressed here, [he thought it] could [have been]
    problematic.”
    Co-counsel testified that lead counsel handled the appeal by himself because it was
    no longer a death penalty case. He discussed potential issues with lead counsel, but he did
    not see the appellate brief nor did he know that lead counsel discussed the jury instructions
    at length in the appellate brief.
    -26-
    On cross-examination, co-counsel testified that both the defense and the state
    submitted language for the jury instructions, and they “had a long, long discussion about jury
    instructions.” He recalled that they presented witnesses who testified that they did not hear
    the officers announce that they were law enforcement before they began entering the house.
    He said that he did not know if he and lead counsel “made a tactical decision that the jury had
    to be advised regarding [the] search warrant issue” because “the [trial court], under the
    circumstances . . . and the argument that [the defense was] making[,] had to instruct the jury
    on the law as it related to that particular defense.”
    On re-direct examination, co-counsel agreed that, “in hindsight,” it might have been
    a “wise move to include any questionable jury instructions in a motion for new trial simply
    to preserve the record[] and to have the ability to raise it on appeal[.]” He said that the
    discussion at trial about the jury instructions centered on the language the court would use,
    and he said that, while the defense took issue with the given instructions, “[he did not] know
    that [anyone] wouldn’t look at [the defense’s] request and look at what was actually given
    and say there’s much of a [difference].” The post-conviction court entered a document titled
    “Defendant’s Request for Jury Instructions” as exhibit seven, noting that neither the trial
    judge, the state, nor the defense signed the document.
    The petitioner testified that co-counsel did not discuss the motion for new trial with
    him. He further testified that he and lead counsel discussed his appeal on one occasion, and
    lead counsel did not include any of the issues that he wanted in his appeal.
    Lead counsel testified that the petitioner initially retained him when his case was in
    general sessions, but the court appointed him to represent the petitioner in criminal court.
    He recalled that the significance of the testimony regarding whether the sheriff’s deputies
    knocked and announced their presence went to the credibility of witnesses and to the
    petitioner’s “understanding of the circumstances.” Lead counsel testified that he believed
    that he would have submitted a written proposal for jury instructions but could not recall
    specifically what he submitted. He recalled that the defense did not get the instructions that
    they wanted. Lead counsel testified that co-counsel prepared and argued the motion for new
    trial. He did not recall any specific discussions with co-counsel about including the jury
    instructions in the motion for new trial. Lead counsel said, “If [the jury instruction issue]
    was left out . . . then it was a mistake.” He testified that he hired a legal research firm to
    assist him in preparing the appellate brief. He said that he was “[s]hocked” that the appellate
    court did not consider the jury instruction issue.
    Following the close of proof, the post-conviction court took the matter under
    advisement. The post-conviction court filed a written order denying post-conviction relief
    on August 28, 2009. The court found that the petitioner failed to show that co-counsel
    -27-
    provided ineffective assistance by not including the jury instructions issue in the motion for
    new trial because he did not demonstrate that he suffered actual prejudice. The petitioner
    now appeals the denial of post-conviction relief.
    Analysis
    On appeal, the petitioner contends that the trial court erred by (1) not finding that co-
    counsel performed deficiently; (2) conducting an actual prejudice analysis rather than finding
    that co-counsel’s deficient performance was presumptively prejudicial; and (3) not granting
    a delayed appeal or delayed filing of a motion for new trial.
    In order for a petitioner to succeed on a post-conviction claim, the petitioner must
    prove the allegations set forth in his petition by clear and convincing evidence. Tenn. Code
    Ann. § 40-30-110(f). On appeal, this court is required to affirm the post-conviction court’s
    findings unless the petitioner proves that the evidence preponderates against those findings.
    State v. Burns, 
    6 S.W.3d 453
    , 461 (Tenn. 1999). Our review of the post-conviction court’s
    factual findings is de novo with a presumption that the findings are correct. Fields v. State,
    
    40 S.W.3d 450
    , 457-58 (Tenn. 2001). Our review of the post-conviction court’s legal
    conclusions and application of law to facts is de novo without a presumption of correctness.
    Id.
    To establish ineffective assistance of counsel, the petitioner must show that (1)
    counsel’s performance was deficient and (2) the deficient performance prejudiced the
    defense rendering the outcome unreliable or fundamentally unfair. Strickland v. Washington,
    
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687 (1984); see also Arnold v. State, 
    143 S.W.3d 784
    , 787 (Tenn. 2004).
    Deficient performance is shown if counsel’s conduct fell below an objective standard of
    reasonableness under prevailing professional standards. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688; see also
    Baxter v. Rose, 
    523 S.W.2d 930
    , 936 (Tenn. 1975) (establishing that representation should
    be within the range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases). Prejudice is
    shown if, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, there is a reasonable probability that the
    outcome of the proceeding would have been different. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694. If either
    element of ineffective assistance of counsel has not been established, a court need not
    address the other element. Id. at 697; see also Goad v. State, 
    938 S.W.2d 363
    , 370 (Tenn.
    1996). Also, a fair assessment of counsel’s performance “requires that every effort be made
    to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the circumstances of counsel’s
    challenged conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from counsel’s perspective at the time.”
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689; see also Nichols v. State, 
    90 S.W.3d 576
    , 587 (Tenn. 2002). The
    fact that a particular strategy or tactical decision failed does not by itself establish ineffective
    assistance of counsel. Goad, 938 S.W.2d at 369. However, deference is given to strategy
    -28-
    and tactical decisions only if the decisions are informed ones based upon adequate
    preparation. Id. (citations omitted).
    The Post-Conviction Procedure Act provides that, once a court has found that counsel
    was ineffective on direct appeal, the court “shall vacate and set aside the judgment or order
    a delayed appeal.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-111(a). Additionally, the act states:
    (a) When the trial judge conducting a hearing pursuant to this part finds that
    the petitioner was denied the right to an appeal from the original conviction in
    violation of the Constitution of the United States or the Constitution of
    Tennessee and that there is an adequate record of the original trial proceeding
    available for a review, the judge can:
    (1) If a transcript was filed, grant a delayed appeal;
    (2) If, in the original proceedings, a motion for a new trial was filed and
    overruled but no transcript was filed, authorize the filing of the
    transcript in the convicting court; or
    (3) If no motion for a new trial was filed in the original proceeding,
    authorize a motion to be made before the original trial court within
    thirty (30) days. The motion shall be disposed of by the original trial
    court as if the motion had been filed under authority of Rule 59 of the
    Rules of Civil Procedure.
    Id. § 40-30-113.
    Deficiency. The petitioner first argues that the post-conviction court erred by not
    finding that trial counsel’s performance was deficient. The post-conviction court stated that
    it could not make a determination whether trial counsel made a tactical decision to not
    include the jury instructions issue in the motion for new trial because of co-counsel’s “vague
    and confusing” testimony at the evidentiary hearing. Lead counsel testified that the omission
    of the issue was a mistake, but he said that co-counsel was in charge of the motion for new
    trial. Co-counsel testified that it was not a tactical decision, but then he spent considerable
    time explaining that the defense requested instructions about the “knock and announce” rule
    because they considered it central to their theory. Co-counsel said that he was not pleased
    with the language proposed by the trial court and argued against it. He repeatedly said that
    in hindsight he could have made a different argument or included it in the motion for new
    trial. However, a fair assessment of counsel’s performance “requires that every effort be
    -29-
    made to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the circumstances of
    counsel’s challenged conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from counsel’s perspective at the
    time.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689. Based on co-counsel’s testimony, we cannot say that the
    petitioner provided clear and convincing evidence that trial counsel’s performance was
    deficient. However, assuming arguendo that trial counsel’s representation fell below
    professional standards, the petitioner has also not shown that trial counsel’s allegedly
    unprofessional error was prejudicial.
    Prejudice. The petitioner relies on Wallace v. State, 
    121 S.W.3d 652
     (Tenn. 2003),
    to support his argument that (1) this court should deem trial counsel’s failure to include the
    jury instructions issue in the motion for new trial to be deficient performance; (2) such
    deficient performance was presumptively prejudicial because it led to waiver of the issue on
    appeal; and (3) trial counsel’s ineffective assistance entitled the petitioner to a delayed
    appeal. In Wallace, the Tennessee Supreme Court held that counsel’s failure to file a motion
    for new trial, which resulted in the petitioner’s waiving every issue other than sufficiency of
    the evidence for purposes of appellate review, was presumptively prejudicial deficient
    performance and entitled the petitioner to a delayed appeal. Wallace, 121 S.W.3d at 658.
    The court reasoned that the failure to file a motion for new trial was presumptively
    prejudicial and not subject to Strickland’s actual prejudice analysis because “[a]s a direct
    result of counsel’s ineffective assistance, the defendant was procedurally barred from
    pursuing issues on appeal, and the State’s case was not subjected to adversarial scrutiny upon
    appeal.” Id. at 660. However, the court also noted that the United States Supreme Court
    ruled that the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals correctly applied the Strickland actual
    prejudice analysis when trial counsel’s errors were “sporadic in nature, rather than complete.”
    Id. (citing Bell v. Cone, 
    535 U.S. 685
    , 697-98 (2002)).
    In this case, we cannot conclude that trial counsel’s failure to include the jury
    instructions issue in the motion for new trial was an abandonment of his client at a critical
    stage in the judicial process resulting in “complete failure to subject the State to the
    adversarial appellate process.” See id. at 658. Co-counsel prepared and argued a motion for
    new trial, and lead counsel pursued an appeal that included four issues, which this court
    considered on the merits, other than sufficiency of the evidence and the waived jury
    instructions issues. We conclude that the petitioner’s allegation that he received ineffective
    assistance of counsel is subject to Strickland’s actual prejudice analysis. Therefore, the post-
    conviction court did not apply an incorrect standard in its analysis below, and the petitioner’s
    argument to the contrary is without merit.
    The post-conviction court found that the petitioner did not suffer actual prejudice as
    a result of trial counsel’s failure to include the jury instructions issue in the motion for new
    trial because “the instructions in this case fairly informed the jury as to the mens rea required
    -30-
    to support the conviction and did not mislead the jury on this point,” and we agree. Under
    the United States and Tennessee Constitutions, a defendant has a right to a correct and
    complete charge of the law, so that each issue of fact raised by the evidence will be submitted
    to the jury on proper instructions. State v. Garrison, 
    40 S.W.3d 426
    , 432 (Tenn. 2000).
    When the trial court’s instructions to the jury correctly, fully, and fairly state the applicable
    law, it is not error to refuse to give a special requested instruction. State v. Inlow, 
    52 S.W.3d 101
    , 107 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2000); State v. Forbes, 
    918 S.W.2d 431
    , 447 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    1995). This court must review the entire jury charge; we can find error only if, when read
    as a whole, the charge fails to fairly submit the legal issues or misleads the jury as to the
    applicable law. State v. Phipps, 
    883 S.W.2d 138
    , 142 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1994). As a mixed
    question of law and fact, our standard of review for questions concerning the propriety of
    jury instructions is de novo with no presumption of correctness. State v. Smiley, 
    38 S.W.3d 521
    , 524 (Tenn. 2001).
    This court, on direct appeal, characterized the petitioner’s argument regarding the jury
    instructions as follows.
    The [petitioner] claims that the jury instructions were misleading. He
    argues that the instructions were flawed because they caused the jury to ignore
    the question of mens rea and to believe conviction was required even if it did
    not accept inconsistencies and ambiguities in the prosecution’s evidence. The
    instructions in question read:
    Members of the jury, if you find from the proof that the
    officers had a search warrant, you may infer that the officers
    were under a legal duty to conduct the search. If the defendant
    knows that the search is being made by law-enforcement
    officers, respect for the rule of law requires that the defendant
    submit to the apparent authority.
    The law requires that a serving officer wait a reasonable
    period of time after announcing before entering.
    The types of considerations that the law allows an officer
    to take into account for determining the existence of a
    reasonable period of time include considerations such as:
    Whether the officers have a justified belief someone
    within the dwelling is in immediate peril of bodily harm.
    -31-
    Whether the officers have a justified belief those inside
    of the dwelling are aware of their presence and are engaged in
    escape or the destruction of evidence.
    Whether a person inside the dwelling is armed and is
    either likely to use the weapon or become violent.
    Or whether the person inside the dwelling has threatened
    the officer’s safety, possesses a criminal record reflecting
    violent tendencies or has a verified reputation of a violent
    nature.
    Whether or not any of these factors exist in this case, and
    if so, what impact they may have had on determining what
    constituted a reasonable period of time in this case are factual
    matters for the jury to determine.
    Although the [petitioner] states that the first paragraph regarding the
    [petitioner]’s knowledge was proper, he contends that the remainder of the
    instructions were erroneously given because it misled the jury into believing
    that if the attempted search entry was properly executed, this fact was relevant
    in determining the [petitioner]’s guilt. He argues that his state of mind, not that
    of the officers, was relevant. He also argues that these instructions confused
    the jury, as evidenced by their verdicts convicting the [petitioner] of the first
    degree murder and some of the attempted first degree murder counts but
    acquitting him of other attempted first degree murder counts.
    Rome, 
    2008 WL 2331018
    , at *23.
    In Tennessee, “[u]nder [the ‘knock and announce’] rule, ‘a law enforcement officer
    who is charged with the execution of a search warrant must give: (1) notice of his authority;
    and (2) the purpose of his presence at the structure to be searched.’” State v. Majors, 
    318 S.W.3d 850
    , 858 (Tenn. 2010) (citing State v. Perry, 
    178 S.W.3d 739
    , 745 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    2005)). Regarding exceptions to the “knock and announce” rule, a panel of this court
    explained:
    As a general rule, it is sufficient for the state to show that (a) a person
    within the dwelling knows of the officer’s authority and purpose; (b) the
    officers have a justified belief someone within the dwelling is in immediate
    -32-
    peril of bodily harm; (c) the officers have a justified belief those inside the
    dwelling are aware of their presence and are engaged in escape or the
    destruction of evidence; (d) a person inside the dwelling is armed and is either
    likely to use the weapon or become violent; or (e) a person inside the dwelling
    has threatened an officer’s safety, possesses a criminal record reflecting
    violent tendencies, or has a verified reputation of a violent nature.
    State v. Curtis, 
    964 S.W.2d 604
    , 610 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997).
    Clearly, the trial court used the language from Curtis when creating the jury
    instructions. In our view, the jury charge fairly stated the “knock and announce” rule and
    appropriately addressed the petitioner’s mens rea without being misleading. In light of our
    conclusion and the entirety of the opinion on direct appeal, we cannot say that there is a
    reasonable probability that the petitioner would have been successful on appeal, but for co-
    counsel’s allegedly unprofessional error. We conclude that the petitioner has not shown that
    he received ineffective assistance of counsel. We further conclude that the petitioner is not
    entitled to a delayed motion for new trial or delayed appeal because he was not “denied the
    right to an appeal from the original conviction in violation of the Constitution of the United
    States or the Constitution of Tennessee.” See Tenn. Code Ann § 40-30-113(a). Therefore,
    the petitioner is without relief in this matter.
    Conclusion
    Based on the foregoing reasons, we affirm the denial of post-conviction relief.
    ___________________________________
    J.C. McLIN, JUDGE
    -33-