Donald Jones v. State of Tennessee ( 2021 )


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  •                                                                                         08/18/2021
    IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT JACKSON
    Assigned on Briefs April 6, 2021
    DONALD JONES v. STATE OF TENNESSEE
    Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County
    No. 09-01473       Lee V. Coffee, Judge
    ___________________________________
    No. W2020-00421-CCA-R3-PC
    ___________________________________
    The Petitioner, Donald Jones, was found guilty by a jury of first degree felony murder
    and especially aggravated burglary, and he received an effective sentence of life
    imprisonment plus thirty years. After this court affirmed the Petitioner’s convictions on
    direct appeal, he filed a petition for post-conviction relief contending that he received
    ineffective assistance of counsel when his counsel failed to locate and interview an alibi
    witness and failed to request an instruction on accomplice testimony. Following a
    hearing, the post-conviction court denied the petition. After review, we affirm the
    judgment of the post-conviction court.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed
    JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS, P.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ROBERT W.
    WEDEMEYER and ROBERT L. HOLLOWAY, JR., JJ., joined.
    Shae Atkinson, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Donald Jones.
    Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Garrett D. Ward, Assistant
    Attorney General; Amy P. Weirich, District Attorney General; and Leslie Byrd, Assistant
    District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
    OPINION
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Trial
    The Petitioner was convicted at trial of first degree felony murder and especially
    aggravated burglary for killing the victim, Mr. Tony Wood, during a burglary at the
    victim’s home. State v. Donald Jones, No. W2011-00973-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2012 WL 3590363
    , at *1 (Tenn. Crim. App. Aug. 21, 2012). The victim received multiple gunshot
    wounds to his chest and died as a result of his injuries. Id. at *4.
    As related to the issues raised on appeal, the evidence presented at trial showed
    that on October 23, 2008, Mr. Cortez Jones, the Petitioner’s cousin, stole a truck in
    Mississippi with Mr. William Mathis and then called the Petitioner, who had previously
    told Mr. Cortez Jones that he needed a stolen vehicle. Id. at *1. Mr. Cortez Jones
    testified that he took the stolen truck to his mother’s home in Memphis, Tennessee, and
    the Petitioner, Mr. Alvin Walker, and Mr. Derrick Anderson arrived at the home in the
    Petitioner’s Dodge Intrepid. The Petitioner offered drugs to Mr. Cortez Jones and Mr.
    Mathis in exchange for the stolen truck. Id. Mr. Cortez Jones then called the victim and
    told the victim that he had money he owed the victim. Id. After their conversation, the
    Petitioner asked Mr. Cortez Jones what the victim was doing, and Mr. Cortez Jones told
    him that the victim was at work. Id. Mr. Cortez Jones stated that he knew the Petitioner
    and Mr. Walker had wanted to steal from the victim for a long time because the victim
    had drugs and money in his home and that he had tried to warn the victim about the
    Petitioner on prior occasions. Id. The Petitioner, Mr. Walker, and Mr. Anderson decided
    to burglarize the victim’s home once they heard that the victim was at work. Id. Mr.
    Cortez Jones testified that he did not help with the burglary, but he did not warn the
    victim about the burglary. Id. He knew the Petitioner usually carried a Tech Nine, an
    automatic weapon, and he observed Mr. Walker carrying a .38 caliber revolver on the day
    of the offenses. Id.
    Mr. Walker and Mr. Anderson drove to the victim’s home in the stolen truck, and
    the Petitioner followed them in his Dodge Intrepid. Id. Shortly after 3:00 p.m., the
    Petitioner called Mr. Cortez Jones from an unfamiliar telephone number, and the
    Petitioner informed him that he had been shot and needed help. Id. The Petitioner told
    him, “‘Man, that n[****] was home—he was at home, Cuz. He shot Walker, and I had to
    reach around Walker and shoot on him.’” Id. Mr. Cortez Jones was unable to help the
    Petitioner and learned that night that the victim died as a result of the shooting. Id. Mr.
    Cortez Jones later identified the Petitioner, Mr. Walker, and Mr. Mathis in photographic
    lineups. Id. Mr. Cortez Jones confessed to stealing the truck at the time that he told the
    police about the Petitioner’s involvement in the victim’s death. Id. He testified that the
    State had not given him an agreement in exchange for his testimony. Id.
    On cross-examination, Mr. Cortez Jones conceded that he knew the Petitioner
    would want to know whether the victim was home the day of the offenses. Id. at *2. He
    testified that he was originally investigated for the charge of first degree felony murder,
    but the charges were dropped after he gave a statement to law enforcement. Id. He
    admitted that he owed the victim money at the time of the victim’s death, but he denied
    -2-
    that he was going to share in the proceeds of the burglary. Id. Mr. Cortez Jones pleaded
    guilty to theft of property regarding the truck he stole and conceded at trial that he could
    have received a more severe punishment than he did for the theft. Id.
    Mr. Anderson, a co-defendant also charged with first degree felony murder and
    especially aggravated burglary in the case, testified that on October 23, 2008, the
    Petitioner offered him fifty or sixty dollars to drive a truck for him. Id. at *4. The
    Petitioner, Mr. Walker, and Mr. Anderson then drove in the Petitioner’s Dodge Intrepid
    to a house in South Memphis where two men he did not know were trying to get a white
    truck out of the mud in the backyard. Id. Once they freed the truck, Mr. Anderson heard
    Mr. Walker ask one of the men if he had a crowbar, and the man retrieved one from the
    trunk of his car and gave it to Mr. Walker. Id. The Petitioner then told Mr. Anderson,
    “‘You just drive that truck over here, man; we’re fixin’ to run in the victim’s house and
    get whatever in there out of it and come on back.’” Id.
    Mr. Anderson testified that he and Mr. Walker entered the truck and followed the
    Petitioner, who was driving his Dodge Intrepid, to an area near the victim’s home. Id. at
    *5. The Petitioner parked his car and entered the truck with Mr. Anderson and Mr.
    Walker. Id. They parked the truck in front of the victim’s home and walked to the front
    door. Id. Mr. Anderson recalled that the Petitioner had his umbrella and cell phone in his
    hands as they approached the victim’s home. Id. Mr. Walker pried open the front door
    with the crowbar, and as they were about to enter the residence, the victim walked out
    with a gun raised. Id. Mr. Anderson immediately turned and ran in the opposite
    direction. Id. Just before Mr. Anderson was shot, he looked behind him and saw the
    Petitioner and Mr. Walker “‘tussling’” with the victim over the gun. Id. He tried to call
    the Petitioner after fleeing the scene but was not able to reach him. Id. He testified that
    he never saw the Petitioner with a gun on the day of the killing, but he saw Mr. Walker
    with an automatic pistol that day. Id.
    Ms. Erika Jones, Mr. Cortez Jones’s sister and the Petitioner’s cousin, testified that
    she saw Mr. Cortez Jones, Mr. Mathis, the Petitioner, Mr. Walker, and Mr. Anderson at
    her mother’s home on the day of the shooting. Id. at *2. She also observed the
    Petitioner’s burgundy Dodge Intrepid and a truck with identifying letters on the back
    parked at her mother’s home that day. Id. She saw Mr. Mathis give a crowbar to the
    Petitioner, who handled it with the sleeve of his coat so that he would not touch it with
    his hand. Id. The Petitioner then gave the crowbar to Mr. Walker, who placed it behind
    the passenger seat of the truck. Id. Sometime after 3:00 p.m., she saw the Petitioner
    leave in his car and then saw Mr. Walker and Mr. Anderson follow him in the truck. Id.
    Later that day, she saw a photograph of the truck on the 5:00 p.m. news during a story
    about the victim’s murder. Id.
    -3-
    Ms. Starkesha Craft, the victim’s niece, testified that she dropped the victim off at
    his home at approximately 3:00 p.m. that day, and she later learned he died that
    afternoon. Id. Ms. Celia Ruiz, the victim’s next-door neighbor, testified that she heard
    several gunshots from the direction of the victim’s home while she was doing laundry.
    Id. She walked outside and observed an African-American man with dark skin shooting
    a revolver at the victim. Id. The man entered the passenger side of a truck before it
    drove away. Id. She was unable to see the individual driving the truck. Id. She testified
    that she never saw the victim fire a gun and that the victim did not have a weapon in his
    hand at the time of the shooting. Id.
    Ms. Malinda Jordan, who lived a short distance away from the victim’s home,
    testified that between 3:15 p.m. and 3:30 p.m., she observed a truck with a bullet hole
    park in front of her house. Id. at *3. She saw an African-American man fall out of the
    truck and drag himself across the street to the driver’s side of a burgundy Dodge Intrepid
    that was parked across the street. Id. She observed the driver of the truck exit the truck,
    walk over to the Dodge Intrepid, change clothes, and get into the passenger side of the car
    before it drove away. Id. Law enforcement officers located the truck near the victim’s
    home and discovered that it had been left running and had a bullet hole on the right side.
    Id. at *2.
    Officers located the Petitioner’s cell phone on the ground near the victim’s front
    door. Id. at *4. The records from the cell phone used by the Petitioner showed that he
    and Mr. Anderson made several telephone calls to one another on the day of the victim’s
    murder. Id. A crowbar and spent .40 caliber shell casings were found inside the victim’s
    home, and what appeared to be pry marks were found on the victim’s door. Id. at *3.
    Officer Desmond Gibbs of the Memphis Police Department (“MPD”) responded
    to a “man down” call at a fast-food restaurant between 3:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. following
    the shooting. Id. at *3. Officer Gibbs discovered Mr. Walker, who had been shot. Id.
    Officer Gibbs testified that Mr. Walker matched the description of one of the suspects
    involved in the victim’s death. Id. Mr. Walker later died as a result of a gunshot wound
    to his torso. Id. at *4.
    Special Agent Cervinia Braswell of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (“TBI”)
    testified that all of the shell casings recovered from the crime scene had been fired from
    the .40 caliber semi-automatic pistol, which had also been found at the scene. Id.
    Although she could not conclusively state that the bullet recovered from Mr. Walker’s
    body was fired from the .40 caliber pistol recovered from the scene, she determined that
    the bullet bore the same class characteristics. Id. The bullets recovered from the victim’s
    body had different class characteristics than the bullets fired from the .40 caliber bullets
    -4-
    recovered from the scene and were .38/.357 caliber-class bullets. Id. She stated that all
    the bullets recovered from the victim were fired from the same unknown revolver. Id.
    MPD Sergeant David Parks testified that his investigation revealed that the victim
    believed the Petitioner and Mr. Cortez Jones “‘were trying to set him up.’” Id. at *3. He
    stated that law enforcement suspected that the Petitioner sustained an injury to one of his
    legs based on information they received that a witness observed the Petitioner crawling
    from a gray truck to a burgundy Dodge Intrepid. Id. As a result, Sergeant Parks
    instructed his officers to check with local hospitals for individuals with leg injuries or
    gunshot wounds. Id. He expanded the search to hospitals outside of Tennessee, and the
    Petitioner was found at a hospital in Grenada, Mississippi. Id. The Petitioner’s burgundy
    Dodge Intrepid was located at a Memphis apartment complex and blood recovered from
    the car matched the Petitioner’s DNA. Id. at *4.
    Mississippi Bureau of Investigation Special Agent Peter Clinton testified that on
    October 23, 2008, he was called to a hospital in Grenada, Mississippi, to investigate a
    case involving the Petitioner, who had reported being shot during a robbery on the
    interstate after he had car trouble. Id. Special Agent Clinton interviewed the Petitioner,
    who was unable to describe the two men who shot and robbed him or the suspects’ car
    and was unable to identify the person who drove him to the hospital. Id. Special Agent
    Clinton later discovered that the authorities in Southaven, Mississippi, were looking for
    an African-American male who might be seeking medical treatment in Mississippi. Id.
    He contacted the authorities in Southaven, Mississippi, who contacted the Memphis
    Police Department about the Petitioner. Id.
    The jury convicted the Petitioner of first degree felony murder and especially
    aggravated burglary, and he received an effective sentence of life imprisonment plus
    thirty years. Id. at *5. On direct appeal, this court affirmed the Petitioner’s convictions.
    Id. at *10.
    Post-Conviction Proceedings
    The Petitioner filed a pro se petition for post-conviction relief and amended
    petitions, contending that he received ineffective assistance of counsel. As related to the
    issues on appeal, the Petitioner claimed that his counsel were ineffective by failing to
    locate and interview a potential alibi witness and by failing to request an instruction on
    accomplice testimony at trial. The post-conviction court held a hearing during which trial
    counsel and the Petitioner testified.
    Trial counsel, an assistant district public defender, testified that the Petitioner’s
    case went to trial in 2010 and that he represented the Petitioner on the case over the
    -5-
    course of a couple years. He obtained discovery, provided it to the Petitioner, and then
    met with the Petitioner to discuss it. Trial counsel met with the Petitioner often in court
    and visited him in jail, but he did not recall how many times they met. He and co-
    counsel, another assistant district public defender, met with Petitioner together on a few
    occasions. Trial counsel testified that the Petitioner informed him that there was an alibi
    witness who could verify his presence in Mississippi at the time the offenses occurred,
    but the defense was never able to substantiate the alibi. According to trial counsel, the
    Petitioner’s information about the alibi was consistent with his statement given to
    Mississippi authorities that he broke down on the side of the interstate, was robbed of his
    car, and ended up at a Mississippi hospital. He recalled that the Petitioner could not
    provide details of the incident to a detective who interviewed him. Trial counsel
    instructed an investigator with the public defender’s office to interview witnesses for the
    defense, but the investigator was not able to locate the alibi witness. He was not sure at
    the time of the hearing if the investigator ever met with the Petitioner. Trial counsel
    noted that the investigator prepared written reports pertaining to the investigation, and
    trial counsel made copies of the reports available to the Petitioner. Trial counsel could
    not recall if the Petitioner asked him to investigate one or more than one witness, but he
    testified that he would have attempted to investigate them. Trial counsel stated that he
    would have asked the Petitioner for contact information, and if the Petitioner did not have
    the contact information, trial counsel would have asked the investigator to try to locate
    the witnesses.
    Trial counsel did not initially recall what involvement Mr. Anderson or Mr. Cortez
    Jones had in the Petitioner’s case. When asked why the defense did not argue that Mr.
    Cortez Jones was actually an accomplice so that his testimony would have required
    corroboration, trial counsel replied, “I simply erred.” He did not recall if anyone was
    charged with the offenses prior to the Petitioner being charged and did not recall
    investigating if another perpetrator was involved. On cross-examination, trial counsel
    testified that he vaguely recalled that the State charged Mr. Cortez Jones in the case and
    that the charges were dropped before trial. He testified that he was confident that the
    defense either obtained a statement from Mr. Cortez Jones or tried to do so. He agreed
    that he would have used the statement to cross-examine Mr. Cortez Jones and in closing
    argument.
    The Petitioner testified that trial counsel provided him “partial discovery,” which
    he explained meant that he did not receive parts of discovery from the full discovery file
    the State possessed and that he was provided additional discovery on two or three
    occasions after the trial was concluded. The Petitioner recalled that the additional
    discovery contained arrest reports showing that people were charged in his case before he
    was charged. According to the Petitioner, he first met trial counsel when he was indicted,
    and trial counsel provided the Petitioner with discovery. He testified that he saw trial
    -6-
    counsel during court dates and that trial counsel visited him once at jail during the week
    of trial. The Petitioner stated that he wrote letters to trial counsel while incarcerated, but
    he only received one response that read, “‘I will come see you, I’m sorry I didn’t come
    see you.” When trial counsel visited the Petitioner, he introduced the Petitioner to co-
    counsel. The Petitioner stated that his discussions with trial counsel about his case
    involved people who implicated him in the burglary and shooting. He testified that he
    asked trial counsel if he could speak to the investigator, but trial counsel told him that he
    could not do so. He stated that he wanted an investigator to investigate his alibi, but he
    never met an investigator while his case was pending. He explained that his alibi witness
    was Ms. Juanita Croff, who was from Mississippi. He informed trial counsel that Ms.
    Croff was from Clarksdale, Mississippi, and that they connected with each other in
    Grenada and Clarksdale. On cross-examination, he stated that he also informed trial
    counsel that Ms. Croff worked at the Gold Strike Hotel. He informed trial counsel he
    wanted to pursue at trial the alibi defense that he was dealing drugs in Mississippi at the
    time of the offenses and was shot in a drug-related robbery.
    The Petitioner testified that he never received a report from an investigator and
    that trial counsel led him to believe that the defense was not using an investigator.
    According to the Petitioner, trial counsel never discussed the alibi witness with him or
    told him that the witness was not found. He asked trial counsel about the alibi witness
    close to the time of trial, but trial counsel “had nothing for [him].” The Petitioner
    testified that six years after his trial, Ms. Croff met with his prior post-conviction
    attorney, who recorded a conversation with Ms. Croff. The attorney no longer practiced
    law.
    On cross-examination, the Petitioner acknowledged that Ms. Croff was not with
    him at the time he was shot on the side of an interstate in Mississippi. The Petitioner
    explained that he was with her until between noon and 2:00 p.m. on that day and that they
    “split up” before going to make the drug deal because she did not accompany him to
    make drug deals. He testified that he and Ms. Croff used to call each other and meet up,
    but he did not know what her number was at the time he was arrested for the offenses and
    was unable to provide it to counsel. He did not give trial counsel the number he had used
    to call her previously. He testified that he had been to her house before, but he did not
    know her address and did not provide it to counsel. When asked whether he provided the
    information to co-counsel when trial counsel included co-counsel on a meeting, the
    Petitioner stated that he did not know who co-counsel was and that it was a week before
    trial at that time.
    In response to the post-conviction court’s questioning, the Petitioner testified that
    he knew Ms. Croff for a couple of years before he was charged with the offenses, that he
    did not know where she was at the time of the hearing, and that he last communicated
    -7-
    with her before he was arrested. He clarified that he last saw Ms. Croff at approximately
    1:30 p.m. on the afternoon he was shot, that she was on her way to work at that time, and
    that he was shot about thirty minutes after last seeing her. The Petitioner testified that,
    although she was not with him when he was shot, she could have testified that he was in
    Mississippi rather than Memphis at that time. He denied that the cell phone found at the
    victim’s home belonged to him, and he stated that he told trial counsel the phone was not
    his.
    The Petitioner testified that he did not give counsel the names of the men who
    robbed him or their cell phone numbers. He stated that he told the Mississippi Bureau of
    Investigation agent who interviewed him about him being robbed. He recalled that one
    of the robbers’ names was Jimmy, but he did not know the other man who helped Jimmy
    rob him. The Petitioner testified that he and Jimmy would call each other to arrange drug
    deals and would meet in different places, including the laundromat, the interstate, and a
    house. He stated that he and Jimmy arranged to meet on I-55 Memphis-bound on the day
    he was robbed and that he waited for Jimmy to arrive on the side of the interstate with his
    hood up and headlights activated. Jimmy and the other man robbed the Petitioner once
    they arrived between 1:30 p.m. and 2:00 p.m., and Jimmy shot the Petitioner with a
    handgun in the foot and the leg during the robbery. A stranger picked the Petitioner up
    on the side of the interstate and dropped him off at a Grenada hospital. The Petitioner
    stated that the robbers drove a white Lumina and that he provided this information to the
    agent who interviewed him.
    The post-conviction court made a general credibility finding in favor of trial
    counsel and against the Petitioner. The post-conviction court found that counsel were not
    deficient in investigating the Petitioner’s alibi defense, finding that trial counsel met with
    the Petitioner and discussed the discovery with him, that he requested information about
    the Petitioner’s alibi witness, that he provided the limited information offered by the
    Petitioner to an investigator, and that trial counsel was unable to locate the witness with
    the investigator’s assistance. The court found that trial counsel, having been unable to
    locate the alibi witness, “made a well-founded strategic choice to challenge the . . .
    evidence and the credibility of the witnesses in this case.” The court additionally found
    that the Petitioner failed to establish prejudice in counsel’s investigation into the alibi
    because he did not call the alibi witness to testify at the hearing and because he failed to
    show a reasonable probability that any further investigation would have resulted in a
    different result at trial.
    The post-conviction court found that the issue regarding counsel’s failure to
    request an accomplice instruction was waived. The post-conviction court also found that
    counsel were not deficient and that the Petitioner failed to show prejudice because there
    was no basis for the trial court to charge the jury on such an instruction. Referring to its
    -8-
    notes from trial, the post-conviction court found that Mr. Cortez Jones testified he did not
    know about the burglary until the Petitioner called him after having been shot. The court
    found that “[t]he facts at trial clearly indicated that [Mr.] Cortez Jones was not involved
    in the planning, perpetration, or execution of the home invasion and killing.” The post-
    conviction court, which was also the trial court, stated that if there were any basis to
    charge Mr. Cortez Jones as an accomplice in fact or in law, the court would have done so
    regardless of whether trial counsel requested the instruction. The court denied the
    Petitioner post-conviction relief, and the Petitioner appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    The Petitioner claims on appeal that he received ineffective assistance of counsel
    because counsel failed to locate and interview a potential alibi witness and failed to
    request an accomplice instruction during trial. In support of his claim that counsel failed
    to locate and interview an alibi witness, the Petitioner argues that counsel’s failure to
    timely meet with him prior to trial and the inadequate use of investigative services
    contributed to the defense’s inability to locate the alibi witness. The State responds that
    the post-conviction court properly denied the Petitioner relief. We agree with the State.
    A petitioner may request post-conviction relief by asserting grounds alleging that
    his conviction or sentence is void or voidable because it abridged his constitutional rights
    provided by the Tennessee or the United States Constitutions. T.C.A. § 40-30-103. To
    obtain post-conviction relief, a petitioner must prove the allegations of fact made in the
    petition by clear and convincing evidence. T.C.A. § 40-30-110(f). On appeal, the post-
    conviction court’s findings of fact are conclusive unless the evidence preponderates
    against them. Ward v. State, 
    315 S.W.3d 461
    , 465 (Tenn. 2010). “[Q]uestions
    concerning the credibility of witnesses, the weight and value to be given their testimony,
    and the factual issues raised by the evidence are to be resolved by the trial judge.” Fields
    v. State, 
    40 S.W.3d 450
    , 456 (Tenn. 2001) (citing Henley v. State, 
    960 S.W.2d 572
    , 579
    (Tenn. 1997)). Additionally, appellate courts may not “substitute their own inferences
    for those drawn by the trial court.” 
    Id.
     (citing Henley, 
    960 S.W.2d at 579
    ). This court
    reviews “a post-conviction court’s conclusions of law, decisions involving mixed
    questions of law and fact, and its application of law to its factual findings de novo
    without a presumption of correctness.” Whitehead v. State, 
    402 S.W.3d 615
    , 621 (Tenn.
    2013) (citations omitted).
    A criminal defendant has a right to the assistance of counsel under the Sixth
    Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 9 of the Tennessee
    Constitution. State v. Burns, 
    6 S.W.3d 453
    , 461 (Tenn. 1999). The right to assistance of
    counsel inherently guarantees that counsel’s assistance is “effective.” Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 685-86 (1984); Dellinger v. State, 
    279 S.W.3d 282
    , 293-94
    -9-
    (Tenn. 2009). To prove that counsel was ineffective, a petitioner must show that (1)
    counsel performed deficiently and (2) such deficient performance prejudiced the defense.
    Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 687-88
    .
    To establish deficient performance, a petitioner must show that “counsel’s
    representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.” 
    Id. at 688
    . This
    standard requires a petitioner to demonstrate that the “services rendered or the advice
    given” were “‘below the range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases.’”
    Grindstaff v. State, 
    297 S.W.3d 208
    , 216 (Tenn. 2009) (quoting Baxter v. Rose, 
    523 S.W.2d 930
    , 936 (Tenn. 1975)). Counsel must have made errors so serious that counsel
    was not functioning as the “‘counsel’” guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment. Strickland,
    
    466 U.S. at 687
    . Measuring counsel’s performance requires giving deference to
    counsel’s decisions, and courts must apply a “strong presumption that counsel’s conduct
    falls within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance.” 
    Id. at 669
    .
    Accordingly, this court has held that a “petitioner is not entitled to the benefit of
    hindsight, may not second-guess a reasonably based trial strategy by his counsel, and
    cannot criticize a sound, but unsuccessful, tactical decision made during the course of the
    proceedings.” Adkins v. State, 
    911 S.W.2d 334
    , 347 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1994). The
    reviewing court “must make every effort to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight,
    to reconstruct the circumstances of counsel’s conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from
    the perspective of counsel at that time.” Howell v. State, 
    185 S.W.3d 319
    , 326 (Tenn.
    2006) (citing Strickland 
    466 U.S. at 689
    ).
    “[D]eference to tactical choices only applies if the choices are informed ones
    based upon adequate preparation.” Cooper v. State, 
    847 S.W.2d 521
    , 528 (Tenn. Crim.
    App. 1992). Adequate preparation includes counsel’s “duty to make reasonable
    investigation or to make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations
    unnecessary.” Burns, 
    6 S.W.3d at 462
     (quoting Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 691
    ). Counsel’s
    decision to not investigate must be assessed by courts “for reasonableness in all the
    circumstances, applying a heavy measure of deference to counsel’s judgments.” 
    Id.
    To demonstrate that a counsel’s deficient performance prejudiced the defense, a
    petitioner must prove “‘a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional
    errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.’” Dellinger, 
    279 S.W.3d at 294
     (quoting Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 694
    ). “A reasonable probability is a probability
    sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 694
    .
    Because a petitioner must establish both deficiency and prejudice to prove ineffective
    assistance of counsel, a court need not address both prongs where the petitioner has failed
    to establish one of them. Goad v. State, 
    938 S.W.2d 363
    , 370 (Tenn. 1996) (citing
    Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 697
    ).
    - 10 -
    The Petitioner claims that counsel were ineffective by failing to locate and
    interview a potential alibi witness. The trial court credited trial counsel’s testimony that
    he met with the Petitioner, discussed discovery with him, requested information from the
    Petitioner about the Petitioner’s alibi, provided the information about the alibi witness to
    an investigator, and could not locate the witness with the investigator’s assistance. See
    Fields, 
    40 S.W.3d at 456
    . Although the Petitioner asserts that he wanted to speak with an
    investigator personally, he conceded at the hearing that he provided trial counsel with all
    of the available information he had about the alibi witness. The Petitioner has failed to
    show that counsel’s representation was deficient. He has also failed to show prejudice
    because he did not call the alibi witness to testify at the hearing. Black v. State, 
    794 S.W.2d 752
    , 758 (Tenn. 1990) (“When a petitioner contends that trial counsel failed to
    discover, interview, or present witnesses in support of his defense, these witnesses should
    be presented by the petitioner at the evidentiary hearing.”). Therefore, the Petitioner is
    not entitled to relief on this claim.
    The Petitioner next claims that his counsel failed to request an accomplice
    instruction at trial and that the instruction would have required the State to corroborate
    Mr. Cortez Jones’s testimony. The State responds that there was no evidence to support
    the accomplice instruction and that the Petitioner did not suffer prejudice. We conclude
    that, in light of the evidence presented at trial, the Petitioner cannot establish prejudice.
    The post-conviction court noted that a panel of this court on direct appeal
    determined that this issue was waived, and the post-conviction court found this issue was
    waived. However, this court did not consider on direct appeal whether the Petitioner’s
    constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel was violated by the failure to
    request the accomplice instruction at trial; instead, we determined that a challenge to the
    trial court’s failure to issue the instruction was waived. See Donald Jones, 
    2012 WL 3590363
    , at *8-9. Accordingly, the issue of whether the Petitioner received ineffective
    assistance of counsel on this ground has not been waived.
    A criminal defendant in Tennessee cannot be convicted “solely upon the
    uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice.” State v. Shaw, 
    37 S.W.3d 900
    , 903 (Tenn.
    2001) (citing State v. Bigbee, 
    885 S.W.2d 797
    , 803 (Tenn. 1994), superseded by statute
    as stated in State v. Odom, 
    137 S.W.3d 572
    , 583 (Tenn. 2004); Monts v. State, 379
    S.W.34, 43 (Tenn. 1964), overruled on other grounds by State v. Collier, 
    411 S.W.3d 886
    , 899 (Tenn. 2013)). “An accomplice is defined as a person who knowingly,
    voluntarily[,] and with common intent unites with the principal offender in the
    commission of the crime.” State v. Anderson, 
    985 S.W.2d 9
    , 16 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997)
    (citing State v. Perkinson, 
    867 S.W.2d 1
    , 7 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1992)). Generally, a
    witness qualifies as an accomplice if “the alleged accomplice could be indicted for the
    same offense charged against the defendant.” State v. Allen, 
    976 S.W.2d 661
    , 666 (Tenn.
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    Crim. App. 1997). The Tennessee Supreme Court has stated that in order to properly
    corroborate accomplice testimony,
    [T]here must be some fact testified to, entirely independent of the
    accomplice’s testimony, which, taken by itself, leads to the inference, not
    only that a crime has been committed, but also that the defendant is
    implicated in it; and this independent corroborative testimony must also
    include some fact establishing the defendant’s identity. This corroborative
    evidence may be direct or entirely circumstantial, and it need not be
    adequate, in and of itself, to support a conviction; it is sufficient to meet the
    requirements of the rule if it fairly and legitimately tends to connect the
    defendant with the commission of the crime charged. It is not necessary
    that the corroboration extend to every part of the accomplice’s evidence.
    Shaw, 
    37 S.W.3d at 903
     (quoting Bigbee, 
    885 S.W.2d at 803
    ). The corroborating
    evidence need only be “slight.” State v. Griffs, 
    964 S.W.2d 577
    , 589 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    1997).
    Because there was overwhelming corroborating evidence, the Petitioner cannot
    show that a failure to request the instruction was prejudicial. To demonstrate prejudice,
    the Petitioner must have shown that had “the questioned accomplice instruction been
    given to the jury, there is a ‘reasonable probability’ that [he] would have been acquitted.”
    See Chico Lopez Chigano v. State, No. 03C01-9602-CR-00061, 
    1997 WL 105002
    , at *2
    (Tenn. Crim. App. Mar. 11, 1997) (citing Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 693
    ). Ms. Jones, who
    was not an accomplice, testified that at her mother’s home, she observed Mr. Mathis give
    a crowbar to the Petitioner, who grabbed it with his coat sleeve so as to not touch it with
    his bare hand. The Petitioner then handed the crowbar to Mr. Walker, who placed it in
    the stolen truck. Sometime after 3:00 p.m., the Petitioner left the home in his burgundy
    Dodge Intrepid, while Mr. Walker and Mr. Anderson left in the stolen truck. Ms. Ruiz,
    the victim’s neighbor, observed the shoot-out and saw the perpetrators enter a truck.
    Between 3:15 p.m. and 3:30 p.m., Ms. Jordan observed a truck with a bullet hole park in
    front of her house. A man fell out of the truck and dragged himself to a burgundy Dodge
    Intrepid, and the Petitioner’s blood was recovered from the Intrepid. Law enforcement
    discovered a truck with a bullet hole in it still running near the victim’s home, a crowbar
    inside the victim’s home, pry marks on the victim’s door, the Petitioner’s cell phone
    outside of the victim’s home, and the Petitioner’s Dodge Intrepid, with his blood inside,
    at a Memphis apartment complex. The Petitioner’s cell phone records reflected that he
    and Mr. Anderson made several telephone calls to one another on the day of the victim’s
    murder. Law enforcement suspected the Petitioner of sustaining an injury to his legs, and
    the Petitioner was discovered in Grenada, Mississippi, seeking medical attention for
    gunshots wounds. The Petitioner’s explanation of the origin of the wounds was
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    implausible. We note that this court on direct appeal found the evidence sufficiently
    corroborated Mr. Anderson’s testimony. Donald Jones, 
    2012 WL 3590363
    , at *8
    (relying on the evidence above and also on Mr. Cortez Jones’s testimony that the
    Petitioner “had wanted to steal from the victim for a long period of time and took the
    stolen truck on October 23, 2008, for the purpose of burglarizing the victim”). We
    conclude that the Petitioner has failed to establish prejudice because the evidence
    corroborated Mr. Cortez Jones’s testimony implicating the Petitioner in the victim’s
    murder. See Shaw, 
    37 S.W.3d at 903
     (quoting Bigbee, 
    885 S.W.2d at 803
    ). Accordingly,
    the Petitioner is not entitled to relief.
    CONCLUSION
    Based upon the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the post-conviction
    court.
    ___________________________________________
    JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS, PRESIDING JUDGE
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