         IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                          AT NASHVILLE
                                  January 15, 2003 Session

           STATE OF TENNESSEE v. CHARLES W ADE SM ITH, III

                  Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Perry County
                            No. 585 Donald P. Harris, Judge



                  No. M2001-01740-CCA-R3-CD - Filed September 11, 2003


The defendant, Charles Wade Smith, III, was convicted by a Perry County jury of second degree
murder for the shooting death of his father. The trial court sentenced the defendant as a violent
offender to seventeen years of incarceration. The defendant now appeals contending that: (1) he was
deprived of the opportunity to present exculpatory evidence; (2) the trial court erred in not giving
a jury instruction regarding the relevance of the Defendant’s intoxication to negate his culpable
mental state; and (3) the evidence presented is insufficient to support his conviction. Finding no
error, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

     Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed

ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAVID H. WELLES and
THOMAS T. WOODA LL, JJ., joined.

Lloyd R. Tatum, Henderson, Tennessee (on appeal); and Ricky L. Wood, Parsons, Tennessee (at
trial), for the appellant, Charles Wade Smith, III.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; Michael Moore, Solicitor General; Kim R.
Helper, Assistant Attorney General; Ronald L. Davis, District Attorney General; and Jeffrey L.
Long, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

                                           OPINION
                                I. Facts and Procedural History

       The Defendant, Charles Wade Smith, III, was indicted by a Perry County Grand Jury on
one count of violating Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-13-210, Second Degree Murder, a
class A felony. The defendant pled not guilty and, after a jury trial, was convicted of the crime
charged. The following proof was presented at the Defendant’s trial.

       Perry County Sheriff’s Department Dispatcher Patsy Lemay was on duty on May 19,
1998, when she received a call around 1:00 a.m. from someone who identified himself as Mr.
Charles Wade Smith. She testified that the caller told her, “I’ve just shot my father.” Lemay
asked the caller his name again and he said, “Charles Wade Smith, and I’m on Spring Creek and
I need an ambulance. I have just shot my dad. He was trying to kill me with a nine millimeter,
and I shot him with a shotgun.” Lemay asked the Defendant if the victim was dead and he said,
“He’s dying now.”

       The sheriff, Thomas Ward, who was in the office when the call came in, took the
telephone and talked to the Defendant. Thereafter, he and Deputy Sheriff Harold Mercer left for
the scene. Lemay stated that the sheriff contacted her to inform her that he and the deputy had
arrived at the scene, and he directed her to contact the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation.
According to the log books, Deputy Mercer first transported the Defendant to Baptist-Perry
Hospital for tests and then to the jail.

        Deputy Mercer testified that when he and the sheriff arrived at the crime scene, the
Defendant was inside the house, talking on the phone. Following the sheriff’s instructions, the
Defendant put down the phone and came out of the house. Deputy Mercer checked the
Defendant for weapons and put him in the patrol car. Deputy Mercer testified that when he and
the sheriff arrived at the scene, the Defendant told him the Defendant shot the victim after the
victim threatened to shoot him with a pistol.

        Deputy Mercer and the sheriff went into the house and found the victim laying on his
back on the livingroom floor, with what appeared to be a shotgun wound to the chest. The
victim had no pulse and did not appear to be breathing. The ambulance team arrived shortly
after the officers and confirmed that the victim lacked a pulse. Deputy Mercer testified that the
victim “had a pistol laying in his hand,” but that “the pistol was upside-down” and it looked
more like “the gun [was] laid back in [the victim’s] hand than [like] somebody . . . holding it like
they want[ed] to shoot it.” He also testified that there was a shotgun near the victim’s body.

        Deputy Mercer testified that when he and Agent Armour were working at the crime scene
Agent Armour picked up the gun found in the victim’s hand and determined that it was a nine
millimeter pistol. The pistol was loaded with eleven shells in the clip and one in the barrel,
leaving room for one more shell in the clip. Deputy Mercer testified that the hammer on this
model pistol must be cocked in order shoot the pistol, and the hammer on the pistol found in the
victim’s hand was “down,” indicating it was not ready to shoot. In addition to the pistol, Deputy
Mercer found a deer rifle inside the house and a .22 rifle, which appeared broken, on the ground
near a pickup truck parked at the rear of the house.

       Deputy Mercer testified that the sheriff stayed on the scene while Mercer took the
Defendant to the hospital and then to the jail. At the hospital, Deputy Mercer ordered that blood
and urine tests be performed on the Defendant, “because there had been a killing.” After taking
the Defendant to the hospital, Deputy Mercer took the Defendant to the jail. At the jail, Mercer
met Tennessee Bureau of Investigation Special Agent Dale Armour, and the two then returned to
the scene, where they arrived at about 3:00 a.m. and worked until 6:00 or 7:00 that morning.
Deputy Mercer testified that after “working” the scene they returned to the jail, and Agent
Armour interviewed the Defendant with Deputy Mercer present.



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        Deputy Mercer testified that the Defendant told him that he and the victim got into an
argument over lighting a grill to cook some food and that the victim had a pistol and was
threatening to shoot him. In response, the Defendant went into the living room, walked by the
victim, who was sitting in a chair, and got a .22 rifle out of a closet. The Defendant then walked
back by the victim, with the gun down to his side, went outside and around behind the house.
The Defendant told Deputy Mercer that the victim came out on the deck and fired around the
corner of the house at him while he was near the pickup truck. The Defendant then shot back at
the victim from near the truck. Deputy Mercer examined the area and opined that the events
were not likely to have taken place as the Defendant described.

        Deputy Mercer testified he checked the deck, around the edge of the deck, in the house,
and behind the pickup truck for spent shell hulls. The officers found two shotgun shell hulls on
the deck where the Defendant said that he was when he shot the victim. Deputy Mercer opined
that one was used when the Defendant shot into the air and that the other that was used when the
Defendant shot at and killed the victim. Other pistol hulls were found on the deck, but none
were from a nine millimeter gun. The only nine millimeter shells found were in a partially-used
box located in a night stand about ten to twelve feet from the body. Additionally, Deputy
Mercer testified that the officers had walked around the property looking for more pistol shell
hulls, but did not find any. The deputy admitted that the grass was “pretty long” and the officers
did not actually get out in the grass area looking for shell hulls. Neighbors told Deputy Mercer
that the Smith family, of which the victim and the Defendant were a part, often sat on the porch
and fired weapons toward the large field area in the front of the house.

        On cross-examination, Deputy Mercer testified that he knew the victim in this case and
knew that the victim had “quite a bit of a drinking problem.” He also stated that some of the
victim’s neighbors said, “they do a lot of shooting up there around his house . . . maybe a lot of
target practice or something . . . .” However, Deputy Mercer never “dealt with the victim on any
charges with a gun.” During the course of his investigation, Deputy Mercer interviewed the
victim’s ex-wife who said that, when they were married, the victim was very abusive to her
when he had been drinking.

       Special Agent Dale Armour of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation testified that at the
time of this shooting he was a field agent working criminal cases. He stated that he was assigned
to investigate this shooting and met Deputy Mercer at the sheriff’s department before going with
him to the crime scene. Agent Armour described the victim’s body as he first saw it, with a
gunshot wound to the right chest, the pistol’s position in the victim’s hand, and blood in the palm
of the victim’s hand holding the gun. He also testified that he examined the weapon in the
victim’s hand and identified it as a Browning semi-automatic, nine millimeter clone. Upon
examining the gun, the agent determined that it was loaded and could have held one more round.
Further, he testified that the hammer was down, which was not in firing position for that weapon.

       Agent Armour testified that he interviewed the Defendant about eight o’clock the next
morning at the sheriff’s department. He advised the Defendant of his right to counsel, and the
Defendant waived that right. Agent Armour testified that the Defendant first gave a verbal
statement and then a written statement. The written statement included the following:

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       On Monday, May 18th, 1998, [the victim] and me went riding around visiting
       people. We cashed my unemployment check and I bought beer to take back to his
       house. We arrived back at his house about 11:00 p.m. We had both been drinking.

       I wanted something to eat. I went out the side door and attempted to start the grill.
       I asked [the victim] for a light and he went crazy. He said he would not give me a
       light and it went downhill from there. We exchanged words, we called each other
       son of a bitch and other things. [The victim] said he was going to kill me. [The
       victim] has threatened me with a gun before. At this time I went to the closet
       under the steps of the bathroom and I got a .22 automatic rifle. I held the rifle
       down by my leg and ran out of the house.

       [The victim] was sitting in his chair between the bed and the stairs. He was not
       sitting in the recliner. I did not see the pistol when I ran out. [The victim] went
       onto the deck and fired two or three rounds towards the truck where I was. I fired
       back towards him with the rifle. He went into the house. I waited about fifteen
       minutes for him to cool off. The rifle I had, the .22, broke. The cylinder
       magazine tube came off the gun and then the stock came off.

       I waited about fifteen minutes and then I remembered there was a loaded .12
       gauge in the truck. I shot the gun in the air, then I pumped it. I knew it was
       loaded. I went to the side door and [The victim] was walking around. I told him,
       ‘I just wanted to started the grill. I wanted something to eat.’ And he said, ‘I’m
       going to kill you, you son of a bitch.’

       I went alongside the deck to the sliding glass door. [The victim] said, ‘Don’t stick
       your head around here.’ I saw him coming at me with the nine millimeter. I was
       still on the deck. I put the shotgun to my shoulder and leaned around the corner.
       I shot in, he was about ten feet away from me. I fired the shotgun only once. I
       racked a round into the gun. He was down. He fell straight back towards the blue
       recliner. He was lying on his back and I heard gurgling noises coming from him.

       I set the shotgun down either by the bed or on the porch. I called 911, then my
       mother, and then I called my ex-wife . . . . He never moved again. I’m not sure,
       but the gun, shotgun, had not been fired since I moved in two months ago. I was
       still talking to my ex-wife when the cops got there. I never touched him or the
       pistol after I shot him. I held the shotgun on [the victim] while I called 911. He
       never moved, turned over or wiggled. He just gurgled. The handgun, the nine
       millimeter, is in his hand, it never fell out.

       Agent Armour testified about multiple facts that he found implausible in the Defendant’s
statement. The agent opined that it was “strange” that the Defendant walked within inches of the
victim both to get the gun and to go back outside. Further, Agent Armour questioned why, when
the Defendant was waiting in the back of the house, did he not just leave the area. In response,

                                               -4-
the Defendant said that he “didn’t want to do that.” The agent was also skeptical about the
portion of the Defendant’s statement regarding the victim firing at the Defendant. Agent
Armour opined that for the events to have occurred as the Defendant said, the victim would have
had to lean over the outside deck railing to fire at the Defendant. Finally, the agent thought it
odd that a person could be shot with a shotgun and still have a pistol in his hand.

        Agent Armour testified that he searched the deck where the Defendant said the victim
was standing when the victim shot at the Defendant and found the two shotgun shell hulls from
the Defendant’s gun and several other pistol shell hull. The pistol shell hulls were from many
different caliber guns, but none were “fresh brass,” leading him to believe that none were from
the gun that the victim allegedly fired. Further, the agent noted that the multitude of shell hulls
was consistent with the neighbors’ descriptions that “the Smiths stood on the front deck and fired
a lot of different guns off.” Agent Armour also searched near the truck, where the Defendant
said he was when he shot at the victim, but did not find any “fresh brass” there either.

         Agent Armour testified that he interviewed the Defendant again, after the Defendant
signed the first statement. In this second interview, the Defendant said that the first time he fired
the shotgun into the air he was on the deck and not by the truck, as he said in his first statement.
The agent noted that this testimony explained the extra shell hull found on the deck. The agent
testified that the Defendant demonstrated his actions leading up to the shooting of the victim.
The Defendant showed him how he shot the first time from outside the doorway, and then how
he stood behind the wall, mounted the shotgun to his shoulder and rolled around the corner,
shooting from outside the door. Agent Armour opined that the only reason to shoot the first shot
into the air from right outside the door was to “draw [the Defendant’s] father out,” however the
Defendant never provided a motive for firing the first shot.

        Agent Armour read into evidence the following statement given by the Defendant during
the second interview:

       I was not telling you the truth about the nine millimeter not being moved. After I
       shot [the victim] the gun fell from his hand. I took a blue-colored washcloth and
       picked up the pistol and I put the nine millimeter pistol in his hand. I also shot
       the shotgun on the deck by the sliding door into the air, not at the truck. I then
       racked the gun and reloaded it.

       This was when [the victim] told me that he was going to kill me if I stuck my
       head around the corner. I put the shotgun to my shoulder, leaned around and
       leaned around the corner. I fired and he went down. I s[at] on the porch and
       collected my thoughts. [The victim] was gurgling. I then went inside and called
       911 and my mom and ex-wife.

       Agent Armour testified that there was blood covering the victim’s wrists and palm,
which indicated that the victim touched his wound. Agent Armour testified that there was little
blood on the pistol found in the victim’s hand, considering the amount of blood on the floor and


                                                -5-
on the victim. Armour stated that he had smelled the gun at the crime scene, and it did not smell
as though it was recently fired.

        Agent Armour testified that he examined victim’s body at the crime scene and found a
blood trail to the side of the victim in the carpet. The blood trail ran down the victim’s arm, as
though the victim had been lying on his side. Additionally, there were four bloody fingerprints
on the victim’s left leg. The agent thought this was unusual because the Defendant said the
victim fell and never moved. Agent Armour stated that while inspecting the area around the
victim, he found no ammunition other than the box Deputy Mercer brought to his attention. The
agent found no nine millimeter hulls inside the house. Further, Agent Armour testified that did
not find any bullet holes in the exterior of the house where the Defendant said the victim was
standing when the Defendant first shot at him from near the pickup truck. The agent testified
that, while part of the front of the pickup truck was visible from where the Defendant said the
victim was standing, a right-handed person would have to lean out from the house in order to
have the truck in his line of sight to shoot a weapon.

        On cross-examination, Agent Armour testified that tests of the nine millimeter pistol
found in the victim’s hand showed that it was in “good working condition with the safety feature
functioning.” The agent also testified that he did not take any blood samples or fingerprints from
the crime scene. The agent explained that since the Defendant admitted at the scene that he shot
the victim and since both the Defendant and the victim lived in the house, both their prints would
have been expected. However, he did take evidence from the victim’s hands for a gun residue
test, which is designed “to find out if someone had fired a weapon or not,” but is not “one
hundred percent reliable.” The agent confirmed that the TBI received a written request to
perform the gunshot reside test, but could not explain why it was never performed.


        Sheriff Thomas Ward testified that he was in the office at the jail around one o’clock in
the morning on May 19, 1998, when the call came in from the Defendant. He heard the
Defendant tell the dispatcher that he killed the victim. The sheriff then spoke with the
Defendant, who told him also that he killed the victim after the victim tried to kill him. When
speaking with the Defendant, the sheriff heard a gurgling noise in the background and upon
inquiring what the noise was the Defendant told him that it was the victim. The sheriff told the
Defendant that he would be coming to the crime scene and told the Defendant to meet him out in
the yard without a gun. The Defendant requested an ambulance, and the sheriff told the
Defendant that he would send one.

        Sheriff Ward testified that he and Deputy Mercer then left the jail and went to the crime
scene. When the sheriff arrived, the Defendant was not outside, and the only vehicle at the
house was the victim’s truck. Sheriff Ward testified that it was dark behind the house and that
he “sat down at the back wall, because there was a truck parked there and a rifle leaning up
against . . . it.” After a minute or so, the sheriff heard somebody in the back part of the house, so
he looked in the window and he saw the Defendant standing inside, drinking a bottle of beer and
looking at the victim. The sheriff testified that he “pecked on” the window and motioned for the
Defendant to come outside. The Defendant came outside, sat down on the steps and finished

                                                -6-
drinking the beer while he told the officers what happened. The sheriff said that the Defendant
cooperated with the officers, but that he later learned that the Defendant was not completely
truthful with them. It appeared to the sheriff that the Defendant had been drinking quite a bit,
but that he appeared calm.

        The sheriff testified that he proceeded into the house to check the victim and found him
dead. When he went inside the house, the sheriff saw other guns “sitting around” and noticed
bullet holes inside the house. The sheriff testified that he came back outside and testified that
“[the Defendant, the sheriff and the deputy] just stood there and talked for a few minutes.”
Sheriff Ward testified that, thereafter, he told the deputy to take the Defendant to the hospital
“get him checked and get a blood test and then take him on to the jail.” The sheriff then called
the dispatcher to have the TBI sent to the crime scene, and he waited there until the TBI agent
arrived. After the TBI agent arrived, the sheriff turned over the investigation to him.

       On cross-examination, Sheriff Ward stated that he had known the victim for ten to twelve
years because of the victim’s “association with drinking.” Further, he testified that, since he
became sheriff, his office had received several calls about the victim concerning drinking,
shooting guns and violence against the victim’s son and other people. The sheriff opined that the
victim had a reputation for “pulling guns” on people. He also believed it possible that the victim
would have “pulled a gun” on his son.

        Sheriff Ward testified that he had investigated and referred to the TBI another possible
homicide that was reported at the victim’s house six or seven years before the trial in the case
under submission. In that investigation (“1993 Investigation”), the victim’s stepson was killed
with a firearm. The 1993 Investigation revealed that the victim and his stepson got into an
argument after the victim had been drinking and that the stepson died of a bullet wound. The
sheriff never considered the victim as a suspect in his stepson’s killing. At the conclusion of the
1993 Investigation, both the sheriff and the TBI concluded that the stepson’s death was a suicide,
a conclusion with which the stepson’s mother disagreed. Sheriff Ward estimated he has made
calls to the victim’s residence once or twice a year for shooting and fighting incidents involving
people other than the Defendant. Sheriff Ward testified that he thought that he had also
responded to calls to the victim’s residence for “drunk driving.”

        The sheriff also testified about the terrain around the house. Sheriff Ward said that the
closest neighbor was about three to four hundred yards away and could be seen from the house.
Further, he stated that three or four other neighbors’ houses could be seen from the back of the
victim’s house. The front of the house was an open field. Consequently, the sheriff opined that
the Defendant “had a place to go that night, he could’ve left.” However the sheriff admitted that
he had previously said that the victim’s house is “scary looking” and that you are “sort of
trapped up there.”

       Emma Lavy testified that she lives near the victim’s house and had known the victim
since 1987. Lavy testified that on the night of the incident she was inside her home around nine
o’clock when she heard some shooting. The shooting did not draw her attention because it was a
usual sound. Later that evening, Lavy heard another shot around ten or ten thirty, which was

                                               -7-
louder than the first shots. Lavy testified that the later shot sound like a “boom,” which was
different from the first shots, which made a “cracking sound.” Lavy testified that it seemed like
an hour or more after the “boom” that she heard ambulance sirens. When asked about the
victim’s relationship with the Defendant, Lavy testified that the victim told her that he was
concerned for the Defendant and that she could tell that he cared for the Defendant.

         Benny Daniel Holloway, another of the victim’s neighbors, testified he had been around
the victim and the Defendant enough to know about their relationship. Holloway stated, “I guess
they hated each other . . . .” Holloway testified that he did not have any personal knowledge of
the victim shooting at the Defendant but that “[the victim] shot all the time. It was almost an
everyday occurrence . . . .” Holloway stated that, if the victim shot at something he “never did
miss, he was too good of a shot.” Holloway testified that he was home the night of this incident.
He said that at thirteen minutes after 10:00, he and his wife heard a “big boom.” Holloway also
testified that he never saw the victim “pull a gun” on anybody. He stated that when he and the
victim drank together, the victim “always had guns, but . . . never . . . pulled one on me.”
Holloway testified that the victim was overbearing and that if the victim “could run . . . over you,
he would.” He acknowledged that the victim used guns to intimidate people to the point that
they would back down.

         Dawn King, a toxicologist forensic scientist with the TBI for approximately five years,
testified that she received the Defendant’s blood sample from Agent Armour and the victim’s
blood sample from Dr. Harlan, who performed his autopsy. King testified that she performed
blood alcohol testing on these two samples and found that the victim’s blood alcohol level was
.24% and that the Defendant’s blood alcohol level was .19%. King testified that in Tennessee a
person is presumed intoxicated if they have a blood alcohol level of .10%. King testified that
alcohol levels like those found in the victim and Defendant could affect the body. She stated
that “[a]t that level you could have altered gait, blurred vision, decrease in critical judgment,
increase in reaction time, there could be a loss of inhibitions.” She summed up by agreeing that
“in common language . . . both of these people were intoxicated.”

        Robert Daniel Royse, a special agent forensic scientist with the TBI specializing in the
area of firearms identification, testified that he examined the shotgun and the nine millimeter
pistol connected with this case. He performed a function test on both guns and found that both
were operational and would fire properly. Royse also tested the two twelve gauge shotgun shells
to see if these shells were fired by the shotgun in this case. From these tests, Royse determined
that the shells were fired from the shotgun Agent Armour submitted for testing.

        Royse testified that he received a tee shirt and a pair of bib overalls from the victim upon
which he performed microscopic tests to determine if any gun powder residue or lead residue
was present on the clothing. Royse said he “found lead residues which are consistent with the
passage of lead shot pellets [from a shotgun].” He also examined the shot pellet holes in the
overalls and determined that their pattern was consistent with the victim being greater that nine
feet and less than seventeen feet from the shotgun at the time it was fired at him.



                                                -8-
       On cross-examination, Royse was asked about gunshot residue testing of the victim’s
hands. Royse explained that such a test would indicate whether a person has either fired a gun,
handled a gun, or was in close proximity to a firearm when it was discharged. Royse
acknowledged that a gunshot residue kit was taken on the victim. Further, he testified that while
another section of the laboratory was responsible for performing the test from the kit, it was his
understanding that “one of the swabs on the left back, that’s the back surface of the left hand,
was missing from the kit, therefore, the kit was not able to be examined.” Royse clarified that as
a matter of standard operating procedure, the TBI does not utilize gunshot residue test kits on
shooting victims because a shooting victim usually has either fired, handled or been in close
proximity to a discharged weapon and would, therefore, test positive for gunshot residue.

        The parties stipulated to the contents of the autopsy report prepared by Dr. Harlan. The
State summarized the report as stating that “this fifty-one year old white male received a shotgun
wound to the chest and abdomen producing injury to the heart, right lung, liver, bleeding and
death. The blood alcohol level is point two four grams percent ethyl alcohol.”

        The Defendant, Charles Wade Smith III, testified in his own defense. He testified that at
the time of trial he was thirty-two years old and currently resided with his mother, Pat
McCommon. The Defendant testified that his mother was married to the victim, Charles Wade
Smith, Jr., for about eight years, with the marriage ending in divorce. The Defendant testified
that after the divorce he continued to live with his mother in Jackson, Tennessee, until about two
months prior to the incident, when the victim gave him permission to move in with him.

        The Defendant testified that he had a “pretty good” relationship with the victim as long
as the victim was not drinking. The Defendant said the victim had a drinking problem and that,
when the victim drank, his personality changed. The Defendant said, “any little thing could set
him off, just really wasn’t any reason for it, it’s just – it’s like turning a light switch, it’s a
completely different person.”

        The Defendant testified about the victim’s use of firearms. The Defendant stated that the
victim liked guns and kept a lot of them around the house. The Defendant stated that “if [the
victim] was sitting in the house, he was no more than arm-lengths away from at least some kind
of a gun.” The Defendant testified that the victim kept a pistol “down beside his chair, right
there in the cushion.” The Defendant identified the pistol in evidence as the gun the victim kept
near him at all times. The Defendant said that when the victim was drinking and started “pulling
guns,” the Defendant was scared of him and tried to get away.

        Additionally, the Defendant said the victim “pulled a gun” on him several times. The
Defendant testified that he had seen the victim “pull a gun” on others. The Defendant testified
that the victim fired a gun at him on multiple occasions, and described in detail several such
occasions. The Defendant testified that usually, after firing at the Defendant, the victim would
cool down a little bit and then would be okay.

         The Defendant testified that prior to the night of the shooting the victim never threatened
to kill him, but had threatened to, and did, beat him. The Defendant testified that one night the

                                                -9-
victim, who was much larger than he, threw him around the room, braking three of the
Defendant’s ribs. The Defendant testified that the victim also held a knife to his throat several
times, but the Defendant would get away, and the victim would cool off. The Defendant
described numerous acts of physical violence by the victim that were directed toward the
Defendant and others, including the Defendant’s mother. The Defendant also testified about a
prior shooting that occurred at the victim’s house that resulted in the death of the Defendant’s
stepbrother. Although the death of the Defendant’s stepbrother was thought by the authorities to
be a suicide, the Defendant suspected that his father actually shot and killed the Defendant’s
stepbrother.

       Concerning the killing of the victim in this case, the Defendant testified about the events
which led up to the shooting death of the victim. The Defendant testified that he and the victim
went out in the afternoon and bought beer, which was paid for by the Defendant. Thereafter, the
two visited the victim’s friends and came home around 11:00 or 11:30 that night. The Defendant
admitted that both he and the victim had been drinking while they were out and that he knew the
victim was taking pain killers.

        The Defendant said that after they arrived home, the Defendant was hungry and took
some meat from the freezer to the grill outside, but he did not have a lighter to start the fire. The
Defendant said when he asked the victim for a lighter, the victim said, “Screw you. You’re not
getting my lighter.” The Defendant testified that he then went to use the bathroom and, as he
walked past the victim sitting in his chair, the victim threatened to kill him. The Defendant said
that he disregarded the threat because he knew the victim would make such threats when he was
drinking. The Defendant said the victim said a second time, “I’m going to kill you.” As the
Defendant walked past the victim, he saw him “moving in his chair like he was going for his
pistol.” The Defendant said “the .22 rifle was sitting there and I put it down beside my leg and
ran out of the house.”

        The Defendant stated that he went out the side door and went behind the house and then
behind a tree. The Defendant testified that from behind the tree he could see the porch. The
Defendant testified that by the time he got behind the tree, the victim was already firing shots at
him. The Defendant said he fired a couple of shots back, but he only shot in that direction and
did not aim to kill the victim. The Defendant testified that it was so dark that he could not see
the victim, but could see the fire from his gun. He said he returned fire with the .22 until “the
gun just fell apart.”

         The Defendant said that he then got into the truck to try to leave, but could not find the
keys. He said “ I didn’t know what [the victim] was going to do. So I stood by the truck for a
little bit and tried to regain my thoughts, and I remembered that there was a shotgun behind the
seat of the truck.” The Defendant said he waited out by the truck for at least five or ten minutes,
and that the victim quit shooting, and the Defendant assumed he had gone back into the house.
The Defendant testified that the shotgun in the truck was not his and he did not know if it was
loaded. He testified that he grabbed the shotgun out of the truck and shot it once into the air to
see if there was a shell in the chamber and, as it was the first time he used the gun, to determine
how the gun operated. The Defendant testified that he then walked back to the porch and did not

                                                -10-
see or hear the victim through the door. The Defendant said he proceeded to the front corner of
the deck and still heard nothing from inside.

        The Defendant testified that he was scared at this time, but wanted to find out what was
bothering the victim. Thinking that the victim would have cooled off, the Defendant testified he
came up to the sliding glass door, stuck his head around and asked the victim what his “damn
problem was.” The Defendant testified that the victim was standing in front of the blue recliner
in the middle of the room, facing the corner of the door, and said he was going to kill the
Defendant. The Defendant testified that the victim had the nine millimeter pistol in his hand.
The Defendant then demonstrated how the victim walked toward him and started raising the gun
toward the Defendant. The Defendant said the victim “looked pretty crazy,” and, although the
Defendant had seen the victim that mad before, the victim had never threatened the Defendant’s
life before. The Defendant testified that he honestly believed at that point that the victim was
going to shoot him, and he felt it reasonable to defend himself.

         The Defendant stated that right after he shot the victim he went inside, called 911 and
told the officer that he just shot the victim and needed an ambulance. He testified that he then
called his mother and told her what happened, and then called his ex-wife. The Defendant
testified that he was on the phone with his ex-wife when the sheriff arrived. The Defendant
admitted that prior to the police arriving, he picked up the pistol and put it in the victim’s hand.
He explained that when he shot the victim, he “kind of stumbled around and the gun flew out of
his hand across the other side of the room . . . .” The Defendant said he picked up the pistol
because he was scared and in shock. He admitted that the first time he talked to Agent Armour,
he did not tell him about what he did with the pistol because “Well, he didn’t really ask me
anything about it or anything, and I -- I was scared and nervous and upset and hadn’t had much
sleep that night.” The Defendant stated that when he gave Agent Armour his second statement,
he told the agent he was untruthful the first time, and that he had picked up the pistol with a
washrag and put the it in the victim’s hand.

         The Defendant admitted that when he came back to the house, he hid outside the house
behind the sliding glass door. The Defendant testified that he did not mean to shoot the victim in
the chest. He stated that he was not really aiming, he just pulled the trigger. The Defendant
testified that he did not shoot the victim in an extremity because “[t]here wasn’t too much time
to think because [the victim] was trying to shoot me.” The Defendant insisted he did not intend
to kill the victim. However, the Defendant said that he was ten to fifteen feet away from the
victim when he shot at him and that he knew that the destruction caused by a close range shotgun
wound is “pretty bad.”

        The Defendant admitted he did not render any first aid or CPR after he shot the victim,
but explained that he did not do so because he was unfamiliar with these emergency aid
techniques. According to the Defendant’s testimony, the victim fired the pistol at him multiple
times. When asked about why the police found only one bullet missing from the pistol’s
chamber, the Defendant speculated that the victim reloaded his pistol while the Defendant was
out at the truck. The Defendant testified that when he went back to the house to get his things


                                               -11-
after the shooting he saw two nine millimeter shells laying next to the bed upstairs. The
Defendant testified that the victim had time to reload the gun.

       Ellis White testified that he and the victim were around each other a lot because they
grew up on adjoining farms. White testified that the victim was a very abusive and violent
person. White testified that he saw the victim abuse his wife in front of the Defendant on two
occasions that he could recall.

        Bill White testified that he is the victim’s uncle and that the victim “could be pretty
abusive. . . . He was single-minded, he was a big, stout fellow and he -- he could push his way
around pretty much.” Bill White admitted that he never saw any specific acts of violence by the
victim in the Defendant’s presence, but offered that he “was not around [the victim] that much,
particularly after he and [the Defendant’s] mother divorced . . . .”

        Fran Peters testified that she is the sister of the Defendant’s mother. She stated that she
had lived with the Defendant and his mother for three years in Jackson, Tennessee, and was
familiar with the victim because she was around him a lot in her “earlier years.” Peters testified
that “[h]e was very unpredictable, to the point I was very nervous around him.” Asked if she had
seen any specific acts of violence by the victim in front of his son, she said she had seen the
victim verbally abuse the Defendant. Peters testified that on one occasion she observed the
victim emerge from his garage with a gun in his hand after threatening to kill her sister.

        Pat McCommon, the victim’s ex-wife and the Defendant’s mother, testified that she lives
in Jackson, Tennessee, and was married to the Defendant for ten years. Concerning the victim’s
character for violence, McCommon testified that the victim was a very cruel and violent man.
She said he was easily angered and that she often had to take her son and run out of the house.
She testified that she would stay with friends during these times because the victim would
threaten her to not go to her parents’ home.

         McCommon also testified that the victim “pulled a gun” on her many times. She stated
that, although she tried to keep these acts of violence away from her son, she was not able to do
so entirely. McCommon testified that when the Defendant was younger, the victim “would go
off and drink and come in in the “wee hours” of the morning. And he would just walk in and
just start something, run in there and pull a gun. I would take [the Defendant] and hide him.”
McCommon added that these kinds of acts of violence were continuous and, sometimes, if she
thought he was about to be in a violent mood, she would take the Defendant to her parents’
house or to a friend’s house and leave him there.

        McCommon testified that she received a telephone call from the Defendant around one
o’clock on the day of the incident. She stated that the Defendant told her he “just shot [the
victim]. . . . He pulled a gun on me, tried to kill me . . . and I shot him.” She said she thought she
remembered asking if the victim was still alive, then the Defendant started crying. McCommon
stated that she told the Defendant to calm down and said she would be right there.



                                                -12-
       McCommon stated that she signed a statement to TBI Agent Armour. McCommon was
asked to read the last paragraph into the record as follows: “This conversation lasted a brief
moment. I did ask if the gun was still in [the victim’s] hand. [The Defendant] said yes. I told
him not to touch anything.” When asked why she wanted to know if the gun was still in the
victim’s hand, McCommon stated that it was “for the simple fact that it would prove that [the
victim] did pull a gun on [the Defendant], and if the gun wasn’t there, it might be questionable . .
. .” McCommon admitted that she now knows that the Defendant planted the gun in the victim’s
hand, but did not know until after she had given her statement.

       The jury returned with a verdict of guilty to the charge of second degree murder and set a
fine at twenty-five thousand dollars. The trial court sentenced the Defendant as a violent
offender to serve one hundred percent of a seventeen-year sentence in the Tennessee Department
of Correction. The Defendant now appeals his conviction to this court, contending that: (1) he
was deprived of the opportunity to present exculpatory evidence; (2) the trial court erred in not
giving a jury instruction regarding the relevance of the Defendant’s intoxication to negate his
culpable mental state; and (3) that the evidence presented is insufficient to support his
conviction.

                                           II. Analysis

        As stated above, the Defendant asserts that he is entitled to a new trial based upon two
errors committed by the trial court. He also asserts that the evidence presented against him is
insufficient to support his conviction. We address the sufficiency issue first, as it is potentially
dispositive of this case.

                                 A. Sufficiency of the Evidence

       The Defendant contends that insufficient evidence was presented to support his
conviction. When an accused challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, “the standard for
review by an appellate court is whether, after considering the evidence in the light most
favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of
the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v. Smith, 24 S.W.3d 274, 278 (Tenn. 2000)
(quoting State v. Buggs, 995 S.W.2d 102, 105 (Tenn. 1999)); See Tenn. R. App. P. 13(e);
Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 324 (1979); State v. Duncan, 698 S.W.2d 63, 67 (Tenn.
1985). This rule applies to findings of guilt based upon direct evidence, circumstantial evidence,
or a combination of both direct and circumstantial evidence. State v. Pendergrass, 13 S.W.3d
389, 392-93 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1999).

        In determining the sufficiency of the evidence, this Court should not re-weigh or re-
evaluate the evidence. Smith, 24 S.W.3d at 279; State v. Matthews, 805 S.W.2d 776, 779 (Tenn.
Crim. App. 1990). Nor may this Court substitute its inferences for those drawn by the trier of
fact from the evidence. Buggs, 995 S.W.2d at 105; Liakas v. State, 286 S.W.2d 856, 859 (Tenn.
1956). Questions concerning the credibility of the witnesses, the weight and value of the
evidence, as well as all factual issues raised by the evidence are resolved by the trier of fact.
Liakas, 286 S.W.2d at 859. This Court must afford the State of Tennessee the strongest

                                               -13-
legitimate view of the evidence contained in the record, as well as all reasonable inferences
which may be drawn from the evidence. State v. Evans, 838 S.W.2d 185, 191 (Tenn. 1992).
Because a verdict of guilt against a defendant removes the presumption of innocence and raises a
presumption of guilt, the convicted criminal defendant bears the burden of showing that the
evidence was legally insufficient to sustain a guilty verdict. Id.

       In the case under submission, the Defendant was found guilty of an offense pursuant to
Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-13-210 (1997 & Supp. 2002). That code section states, in
pertinent part that “Second degree murder is: (1) A knowing killing of another.”

       “Knowing” refers to a person who acts knowingly with respect to the conduct or
       to circumstances surrounding the conduct when the person is aware of the nature
       of the conduct or that the circumstances exist. A person acts knowingly with
       respect to a result of the person’s conduct when the person is aware that the
       conduct is reasonably certain to cause the result . . . .

Tenn. Code Ann. 39-13-106 (a)(20) (1997). The killing must also be unlawful. Tenn. Code
Ann. § 39-13-201 (1997). This Court has determined that second degree murder is a “result of
conduct offense.” State v. Page, 81 S.W.3d 781, 788 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2002). Therefore, the
evidence presented at trial must have been sufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the
Defendant was aware that his conduct was reasonably certain to cause the death of the victim.
Id.

      The Defendant contends on appeal that the evidence required the jury to find that the
Defendant killed the victim in self-defense.

       A person is justified in threatening or using force against another person when
       and to the degree the person reasonably believes the force is immediately
       necessary to protect against the other’s use or attempted use of unlawful force.
       The person must have a reasonable belief that there is an imminent danger of
       death or serious bodily injury. The danger creating the belief of imminent death
       or serious bodily injury must be real, or honestly believed to be real at the time,
       and must be founded upon reasonable grounds. There is no duty to retreat before
       a person threatens or uses force.

Tenn. Code Ann. 39-11-611 (1997). Accordingly the three prerequisites that must be met before
one is justified in killing another human being under the rubric of “self-defense” are: (1) the
defendant must reasonably believe he is threatened with imminent loss of life or serious bodily
injury; (2) the danger creating the belief must be real or honestly believed to be real at the time
of the action; and (3) the belief must be founded on reasonable grounds. State v. Meade, 942
S.W.2d 561, 565 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996). The issues of self-defense and degree of homicide
are for the jury to decide in light of all of the circumstances of the killing. State v. Keels, 753
S.W.2d 140, 143 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1988) (quoting State v. Gilbert, 612 S.W.2d 188, 190 (Tenn.
Crim. App. 1980)). In deciding these issues, the jury was free to believe the testimony of some


                                               -14-
of the witnesses and not that of other witnesses, or they could believe a part of a witness’
testimony and reject part of a witness’ testimony. Id.

         In the case under submission, the evidence is clearly sufficient to support the Defendant’s
second degree murder conviction. According to the Defendant’s own testimony, the victim shot
from the deck of the house while the Defendant was outside behind a truck. The Defendant
testified that he then went back to the house, fired one shot in the air, and then inquired as to the
victim’s problem. The Defendant further testified that the victim raised his hand, with a pistol in
his hand, and the Defendant shot the victim. However, the Defendant also testified that the
pistol fell out of the victim’s hand and that he later planted it back in the victim’s hand prior to
the police arriving at the house. The pistol in the victim’s hand was found with the hammer
down, indicating it was not ready to shoot.

        From this evidence, and the other evidence presented at the trial, the jury could have
found that the Defendant was not in imminent danger when he fired the shotgun. First, the jury
could have concluded that, after the victim went back inside the house, the Defendant could have
left the premises to avoid the danger. Second, the jury could have concluded that the victim did
not actually have the pistol in his hand and was not raising it at the Defendant when the
Defendant shot him. The Defendant admits planting the gun in the victim’s hand, and the jury
could rightfully reject his testimony that the victim had a gun at all. By the jury’s verdict it
rejected the Defendant’s claim that he acted in self-defense. When considered in the light most
favorable to the State, we find that this record contains ample evidence from which the jury
could find the Defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of murder in the second degree.

                                           B. New Trial

        Having determined that the evidence was sufficient to support the Defendant’s
conviction, we now address the Defendant’s contention that he is entitled to a new trial because:
(1) the State lost exculpatory evidence thereby depriving him of his right to a fair trial; and (2)
the trial court erred in failing to give a jury instruction on voluntary intoxication indicating that
the Defendant’s intoxication may be relevant to negate the necessary culpable mental state.

                                     1. Exculpatory Evidence

        In response to the Defendant’s contention that the State lost exculpatory evidence, the
State asserts that the Defendant waived this issue by not properly preserving it for appeal. Both
parties agree that the Defendant did not seek relief from the trial court for the missing gunshot
residue test results. The Defendant recognizes that failure to so preserve issues for appeal
generally results in a waiver. See Tenn. R. App. P. 3(e), 36(a); State v. Adkisson, 899 S.W.2d
626, 636 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1994). Despite these concessions by the parties, we find that the
Defendant did, in fact, preserve this issue for appeal. In the Defendant’s Motion for Judgment of
Acquittal or New Trial the Defendant alleged that the State “failed to properly remove and
protect for testing ‘gun power residue’ taken from [the] hand and other portions of the victim’s
body.” This language in the Defendant’s motion preserved this issue and we will, therefore,
address the issue on its merits.

                                                -15-
         The Defendant contends that the State lost evidence that would be exculpatory. To
support this contention, the Defendant relies on the testimony of Robert Daniel Royse, a special
agent forensic scientist with the TBI, who testified that, while another section of the laboratory
was responsible for performing gun residue tests, it was his understanding that “one of the swabs
on . . . the back surface of the left hand, was missing from the kit, therefore, the kit was not able
to be examined.” The Defendant asserts that this testimony proves that the State lost part of the
gun residue testing kit and that the results of that kit would have been exculpatory and he was,
therefore, denied a fair trial.

        The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution
provides every defendant the right to a fair trial. To facilitate this right, a defendant has a
constitutionally protected privilege to request and obtain from the prosecution evidence that is
either material to guilt or relevant to punishment. Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 87 (1963).
Further, the prosecution has a duty to turn over exculpatory evidence that would raise a
reasonable doubt about a defendant’s guilt. United States v. Agurs, 427 U.S. 97, 110-11 (1976).
The evidence in both Brady and Agurs was “plainly exculpatory” evidence, which differs from
the evidence in the case under submission, which is “allegedly exculpatory.”

        The Tennessee Supreme Court adopted a balancing approach to determine the
consequences that flow from the State’s loss or destruction of allegedly exculpatory evidence in
State v. Ferguson, 2 S.W.3d 912 (Tenn. 1999). In Ferguson, the Court held that the first step in
the balancing analysis is to “determine whether the State had a duty to preserve the evidence.
Generally speaking, the State has a duty to preserve all evidence subject to discovery and
inspection under Tenn. R. Crim. P. 16, or other applicable law.” Id. at 917 (footnote omitted).
The Court clarified the boundaries of the State’s duty to preserve evidence by quoting California
v. Trombetta, 467 U.S. 479 (1984), which held:

    “Whatever duty the Constitution imposes on the States to preserve evidence, that duty
    must be limited to evidence that might be expected to play a significant role in the
    suspect’s defense. To meet this standard of constitutional materiality, evidence must
    both possess an exculpatory value that was apparent before the evidence was destroyed,
    and be of such a nature that the Defendant would be unable to obtain comparable
    evidence by other reasonably available means.”

Ferguson, 2 S.W.3d at 917 (quoting Trombetta, 467 U.S. at 488-89).

        The Court went on to state that if the proof demonstrates the existence of a duty to
preserve the evidence and demonstrates that the State failed in that duty, “the analysis moves to
considerations of several factors which guide the decision regarding the consequences of the
breach.” Id. Accordingly, those factors include: “(1) the degree of negligence or bad faith
involved; (2) the significance of the destroyed evidence, considered in light of the probative
value and reliability of secondary or substitute evidence that remains available; and (3) the
sufficiency of the other evidence used at trial to support the conviction.” Ferguson, 2 S.W.3d at
917 (footnote omitted). If, after considering all the factors, the trial judge concludes that a trial


                                                -16-
without the missing evidence would not be fundamentally fair, then the trial court may dismiss
the charges, this being but one of the trial judge’s options. Id.

       We now determine whether, in light of the considerations above, the State had a duty,
which it breached, to preserve the gun residue test kit in the case under submission. As noted
above, the State has a duty to preserve all evidence subject to discovery and inspection under
Tennessee Rule of Criminal Procedure 16. The issue before us, though, is whether the record
supports the Defendant’s contention that the State failed to preserve this evidence. The
Defendant relies upon a speculative statement by a TBI agent who was not responsible for the
gun residue test to support his contention that part of the gun residue test kit was lost. The agent,
however, made no definitive statement that any evidence was lost, and the Defendant did not call
any other witnesses to attest to the fact that the evidence was lost. Therefore, we find that there
is no conclusive proof in the record that the State breached its duty to preserve the evidence,
because there is no conclusive proof in the record that any evidence is missing.

        While this finding is dispositive of the issue before us, we find further support for our
holding in that, considering the three relevant factors articulated by the court in Ferguson, the
Defendant received a fundamentally fair trial. Unquestionably, the Defendant failed to prove
that the State acted in bad faith if the evidence was lost. Second, the evidence was not of great
significance because the Defendant testified that the victim shot at him and he, therefore,
presented his defense in as complete a manner as was possible without the test results. Finally,
as discussed previously, the evidence is sufficient as to the Defendant’s conviction. Thus, it is
clear that the Defendant was not hindered in the full and complete exposition of his theory to the
jury. We conclude, therefore, that he received a fundamentally fair trial and that he experienced
no measurable disadvantage because of the unavailability of the test results.

                                    2. Voluntary Intoxication

        The Defendant failed to raise his next issue, whether the trial court erred in not giving a
jury instruction regarding the relevance of the Defendant’s intoxication to negate his culpable
mental state, in his Motion for New Trial. The Defendant’s failure to raise the issue in his
Motion For a New Trial precludes our review of this issue, subject to our noticing “plain error.”
See Tenn. R. App. P. 3(e) (providing that “no issue presented for review shall be predicated upon
error in the admission or exclusion of evidence, jury instructions granted or refused, misconduct
of jurors, parties or counsel, or other action committed or occurring during the trial of the case,
or other ground upon which a new trial is sought, unless the same was specifically stated in the
motion for new trial. . . . ); Tenn. R. App. P. 36(a) (providing that relief is not required for a
party who failed to take reasonably available action to prevent or nullify an error).

        Pursuant to Rule 52(b) of the Tennessee Rules of Criminal Procedure, we have discretion
to notice an error that has affected the substantial rights of an accused when necessary to do
substantial justice. State v. Adkisson, 899 S.W.2d 626, 642 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1994). Before an
error may be recognized it must be “plain” and must affect a “substantial right of the accused.
The word “plain” is synonymous with “clear” or equivalently “obvious.” United States v.
Olano, 507 U.S. 725, 732 (1993). Plain error is not merely error that is conspicuous, but

                                                -17-
especially egregious error that strikes at the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial
proceedings. See State v. Wooden, 683 S.W.2d 553, 559 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1983). When
considering whether “plain error” exists we consider the following factors:

       (a) the record must clearly establish what occurred in the trial court;
       (b) a clear and unequivocal rule of law must have been breached;
       (c) a substantial right of the accused must have been adversely affected;
       (d) the accused did not waive the issue for tactical reasons; and
       (e) consideration of the error is “necessary to do substantial justice.”

State v. Smith, 24 S.W.3d 274, 282-83 (Tenn. 2000) (adopting the test articulated by the Court of
Criminal Appeals in Adkisson, 899 S.W.2d at 641-42 ). All five factors must be established by
the record before an appellate court will recognize the existence of “plain error,” and complete
consideration of all the factors is not necessary when it is clear from the record that at least one
of the factors cannot be established. Id. In addition, the “‘plain error’ must [have been] of such
a great magnitude that it probably changed the outcome of the trial.” Adkisson, 899 S.W.2d at
642.

        After a thorough review of the record in this case, we conclude that the “plain error”
doctrine cannot afford the Defendant relief. Although voluntary intoxication is not itself a
defense to second degree murder, it is relevant to negate a culpable mental state. See Tenn.
Code Ann. §39-11-503(a). The trial court did not instruct the jury that voluntary intoxication is
relevant to negate a culpable mental state, but its failure to do so does not constitute “plain error”
because, for the reasons hereinafter set out, such an instruction was not warranted under the facts
of this case. Therefore, the failure to give the jury an instruction on voluntary intoxication is not
a breach of a clear and unequivocal rule of law, and thus does not rise to the level of “plain
error.”

        The Defendant correctly notes that “it is the duty of the trial court, without request, to
instruct the jury on rules of law governing every issue raised by the evidence.” See Poe v. State,
370 S.W.2d 488, 489 (1963); State v. Locke, 771 S.W. 2d 132, 138-39 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1988).
However, as the State points out, “[p]roof of intoxication alone . . . does not entitle an accused to
jury instructions . . . there must be evidence that the intoxication deprived the accused of the
mental capacity to form specific intent . . . .” Harrell v. State, 593 S.W.2d 664, 672 (Tenn. Crim.
App. 1979). In our view, the record does not contain evidence proving that the Defendant’s
elevated blood alcohol level rendered him incapable of acting “knowingly.”

        While the proof was uncontradicted that the Defendant had a blood alcohol level of point
one nine percent when tested after the shooting, no expert testified as to how this may have
impaired the Defendant’s ability to act knowingly. TBI Agent King testified that alcohol levels
like those found the Defendant could affect the body and that a person in such a state “could
have altered gait, blurred vision, decrease in critical judgment, increase in reaction time, there
could be a loss of inhibitions.” However, neither she nor any other expert testified that alcohol
levels like those found in the Defendant would affect his ability to act knowingly. Further, the


                                                -18-
Defendant himself testified that he drove the victim home because the victim was “too drunk to
drive,” implying to the jury that the Defendant was not.

        We also reject the Defendant’s assertion that the reason he was tested for blood alcohol
level that night was due to his behavior. Deputy Mercer testified that the blood and urine tests
were performed “because there had been a killing.” We, therefore, find nothing in the testimony
that would compel the trial court to give a jury charge on the possible effects of intoxication on
the Defendant’s mental capacity. The Defendant’s theory of defense was self-defense, and,
notwithstanding the great deal of evidence presented relevant to that theory, the jury chose to
reject the Defendant’s claim of self-defense. The Defendant did not claim at trial that he was too
intoxicated to act knowingly, and the evidence, in our view, does not support such a claim.

        Because we find that the Defendant failed to establish that a “clear and unequivocal rule
of law has been breached,” which is one of the five factors necessary to prove “plain error,” we
hold that the trial court did not commit “plain error” when it failed to instruct the jury on the
relevance of voluntary intoxication to the formation of the Defendant’s culpable mental state.
This issue is without merit.

                                        III. Conclusion

        Based on the foregoing, we find no reversible error. Accordingly, the judgment of the
trial court is AFFIRMED.



                                                     ___________________________________
                                                     ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER, JUDGE




                                              -19-
