        IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                         AT NASHVILLE
                          Assigned on Briefs February 11, 2015

            CANDANCE CAROL BUSH v. STATE OF TENNESSEE

                 Appeal from the Circuit Court for Rutherford County
                      No. 68966    Mitchell Keith Siskin, Judge




                   No. M2014-00824-CCA-R3-PC - Filed May 5, 2015




The Petitioner, Candance Carol Bush, appeals as of right from the denial of her petition for
post-conviction relief. The Petitioner contends that she received ineffective assistance of
counsel based upon trial counsel’s advice that she not testify at trial and counsel’s failure to
file a motion to sever the Petitioner’s case from that of her co-defendant. The Petitioner
further contends that the cumulative effect of these errors undermines the confidence in the
outcome of her trial such that she is entitled to post-conviction relief. After a thorough
review, we affirm the judgment of the post-conviction court.

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

R OBERT L. H OLLOWAY, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which T HOMAS T.
W OODALL, P.J., and T IMOTHY L. E ASTER, J., joined.

John Drake, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellant, Candance Carol Bush.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Ahmed A. Safeeullah, Assistant
Attorney General; William Whitesell, District Attorney General; and J. Paul Newman,
Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

                                          OPINION

                           I. Facts and Procedural Background

       This appeal involves a “cold case” from Rutherford County that went to trial some 26
years after the crime was committed. In 2008, the Petitioner and her husband, Gary W. Bush
(“Defendant Bush”), were tried and convicted of first-degree murder in connection with the
death of the Petitioner’s first husband, Lynn Orrand, in 1982. Both the Petitioner and
Defendant Bush were sentenced to life imprisonment.

      On direct appeal, this court summarized the facts from trial, as follows:

                              I. The Murder of Lynn Orrand

              In 1981, [the Petitioner] was married to the victim, Lynn Orrand. The
      Orrands and their two children, Terry and Gary, lived in a house on Peachtree
      Street in Murfreesboro. Lynn worked at North American Car while [the
      Petitioner] worked for a company called Gemtop. During this time, [the
      Petitioner] and Defendant Bush were coworkers at Gemtop. At some point in
      1981, [the Petitioner’s] younger brother, Kevin Patterson, came to live with the
      Orrands. Kevin had been kicked out of his parents[’] house because his
      girlfriend was pregnant. Kevin lived with the Orrands until he married his
      girlfriend and moved in with her parents in December 1981.

              On November 18, 1981, Lynn was returning home from work some
      time around 2:00 a.m. when he entered an unlocked side door to his garage.
      As Lynn entered the garage, he was struck in the head with “a tire tool” by an
      unknown assailant who then fled the scene. Gary Orrand later testified that on
      the night of the attack he woke up to the sound of his father, Lynn, calling for
      [the Petitioner] “to get the gun.” According to Gary, [the Petitioner] went
      through the hallway crying, but “she wasn’t hysterical.” [The Petitioner] told
      Gary to “lay back down, it would be okay.” Officer Ricky Keyt responded to
      the Orrand residence on the night of the attack. Officer Keyt testified that he
      remembered Lynn was bleeding from a cut under his right eye before he was
      transported to the emergency room. Officer Keyt did not observe any signs
      that the intruder had broken into the garage. Officer Keyt testified that
      witnesses described the assailant as a white male wearing a blue jacket with
      fur trim. Officer Keyt spoke with [the Petitioner] about the assault, and she
      told him that she had received two phone calls “from an unidentified person.”
      [The Petitioner] told Officer Keyt that the caller had informed her “that her
      husband was selling drugs” and that “he had been seen going into a bar with
      two other women.” Lynn was subsequently hospitalized, underwent surgery for
      his injuries, and missed two months of work.

             Prior to the attack, Lynn had been hunting a large buck in the woods
      near the home of [the Petitioner’s] parents. According to [the Petitioner’s]

                                            -2-
mother, Norma Jean Patterson, although Lynn had set up a tree stand in the
woods, he would often hunt on a rock near a deer trail where “[h]e could sit ...
[and] watch the deer.” [The Petitioner] told her mother “not to tell anybody
where [Lynn] was hunting at.” On January 14, 1982, Lynn spoke with his
coworker and friend, A.J. Mullins, about hunting for the buck that weekend.
Later that night, Mr. Mullins remembered that deer season had ended and told
Lynn he would not go hunting with him. Before they left work, Lynn told Mr.
Mullins “that he changed his mind also” and would not go hunting that
weekend. In the early morning hours of January 15, 1982, Kevin’s girlfriend
gave birth to their daughter Kimberly. Kevin spent that night at the Orrand
house because there had been a significant winter storm and their house was
near the hospital. That night, [the Petitioner] called her mother to tell her that
Lynn was coming over to their property “early the next morning” to hunt for
the buck. [The Petitioner’s] mother overheard Kevin and Lynn talking in the
background. According to [the Petitioner’s] mother, the only people who
knew Lynn would be hunting the next morning were [the Petitioner], Kevin,
and herself.

        On the morning of January 16, 1982, Gary Orrand woke up to hear [the
Petitioner] and Lynn “[t]alking about going and killing a deer and them kind
of joking.” At approximately 6:00 a.m., [the Petitioner’s] mother awoke to the
sound of a truck pulling into her driveway. [The Petitioner’s] mother looked
out her window and saw Lynn’s white pickup truck. [The Petitioner’s] mother
then heard the truck door slam and went back to sleep. Approximately 10 to
15 minutes later, [the Petitioner’s] mother woke up again because her husband
was getting out of bed. He told her that he had heard two gunshots and figured
“Lynn has shot him a deer” so he would fix some coffee and wait for Lynn to
come down to the house. [The Petitioner’s] mother and father waited for Lynn
until approximately 10:00 a.m. At that time, [the Petitioner’s] mother became
worried about Lynn and sent her husband and her youngest son, John
Patterson, to the woods to check on Lynn. John saw one set of footprints in
the snow leading from Lynn’s truck and into the woods. John and his father
followed these footprints until they found Lynn’s body. John’s father “rolled
[Lynn’s body] over” and attempted to resuscitate him. John told his father to
stop because it was too late, Lynn was already dead. John then went back to
the house to tell his mother to call the police.

       [The Petitioner’s] mother went with several police officers to [the
Petitioner’s] house in order to tell her that Lynn had been killed. When told,
[the Petitioner] “just went, awwww” and grabbed her mother by the shoulder

                                       -3-
and shook her saying, “If you had called the ambulance he might not would
have died.” [The Petitioner’s] mother thought this was odd because [the
Petitioner] had no reason to know that Lynn “had been laying out there in the
snow . . . dead for several hours.” [The Petitioner’s] mother testified that [the
Petitioner] “was acting a little weird,” seemed “nervous,” and “was and
wasn’t” upset when told about Lynn’s death. [The Petitioner’s] neighbor and
friend, Lorraine Perry, testified that [the Petitioner] seemed “very calm” and
“[n]ervous more than upset” that day. Ms. Perry did not remember [the
Petitioner] crying that day and testified that she “cried more” than [the
Petitioner] did. The next day, [the Petitioner] went to view Lynn’s body at the
funeral home with Lynn’s twin brother, Glenn Orrand. According to Glenn,
[the Petitioner] began crying and said “I want him back now” repeatedly.
Shortly after the funeral, Kevin, his wife, and their child moved in with [the
Petitioner] and her children for approximately two or three months.

                                    ****

             II. The Police Investigation and Forensic Evidence

        Chief Deputy Virgil Gammon of the Rutherford County Sheriff’s
Department was the lead investigator on the case in 1982. He received a call
from the dispatcher about a shooting at approximately 10:30 a.m. on January
16, 1982. When he arrived, Chief Gammon saw Lynn’s body lying on the
ground next to a rock that “looked to have had some damage” to it. Lynn had
been shot in the back near “the upper left shoulder.” There were no footprints
around the body but a search of the area revealed two sets of footprints near
a tree approximately eight to ten yards from Lynn’s body. There were no
footprints between the body and the tree. Both sets of footprints appeared to
be from the same person and “appeared to be comings and goings.” Chief
Gammon “believed that someone had been standing or sitting or waiting” for
Lynn by the tree. Chief Gammon followed the footprints as they “circled
around up [a] hill and back down the hill.” The footprints continued on across
Richland Road and back into the woods behind “three or four houses and came
out” at an old, abandoned church down the street. Chief Gammon believed
that the footprints leaving the scene were “at a faster pace or running” because
of the stride and “distance between the steps.” At one point along the
footprints, the police discovered an area where the snow was disturbed. Chief
Gammon believed that the assailant had fallen and dropped his gun. There
were indentations in the snow that appeared to be where the assailant’s knee
touched the ground and where he placed his hand “trying to get up.” There

                                       -4-
was also an indentation Chief Gammon believed was of a “double barrel
shotgun.” At the abandoned church, police found “tire marks” in the snow
showing “where a vehicle had been at one point.” The police were able to
determine that the footprints came from “a hunting style boot.”

        Michael Cawthorn, then the deputy coroner for Rutherford County,
examined Lynn’s body on January 16, 1982. Mr. Cawthorn observed
“perforations” around the left elbow and a “one inch hole in the mid back.”
Mr. Cawthorn also observed “what appeared to be the outline of . . . something
metallic under the left pectoral muscle.” Mr. Cawthorn removed “a shotgun
slug” from Lynn’s body along with some “wadding” behind the slug. Mr.
Cawthorn opined that the murder weapon was either a 12 gauge or 16 gauge
shotgun and leaned “more toward a 12 gauge based on the amount of slug that
was there.” No autopsy was performed on the body in 1982. In 1982,
Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI) Assistant Director Lanny Wilder
examined the shotgun slug recovered from Lynn’s body. Assistant Director
Wilder concluded that the slug was fired from a 12 or 16 gauge shotgun, but
the slug’s weight “was closer to a 12.” Assistant Director Wilder concluded
that the slug was a “rifled slug,” which allowed the weapon to be fired with
more accuracy. Assistant Director Wilder also opined that it would not be
unusual for shotgun wadding to penetrate a body if the shot was fired from
eight to ten yards away, especially if the wadding followed behind the slug.

       Lynn’s body was exhumed in 2007 and an autopsy was performed by
Dr. Adele Lewis. The autopsy revealed a “large roundish shaped wound” and
“multiple smaller wounds surrounding that” on Lynn’s back. The slug traveled
“through the ribs” and injured the spleen, left lung, and heart. Dr. Lewis
opined that these injuries “would almost certainly be fatal within a matter of
30 seconds to a minute.” Dr. Lewis also found “several small shotgun wounds”
on the left arm, “right above [the] elbow.” Dr. Lewis recovered several
fragments from the body which she submitted to the TBI for testing. Dr.
Lewis opined that the victim’s wounds were consistent with having been “shot
once with a slug . . . in the back” and having been struck by fragments from a
second shot that struck a nearby rock. TBI Special Agent Robert Royse
examined the fragments recovered from Lynn’s body in 2007. Special Agent
Royse concluded that one of the fragments was a piece of rock but that the
other fragments were consistent with being from a deer slug.




                                     -5-
                       III. Kevin Patterson’s Confession

        In March 2007, police received information from Lonnie Butcher, an
inmate at the Rutherford County jail, which implicated Kevin Patterson in
Lynn’s death. On March 17, 2008, Kevin pled guilty to one count of second
degree murder for shooting Lynn and is currently serving a 25-year sentence.
At [the Petitioner’s] trial, Kevin testified that in the autumn of 1981, he moved
in with [the Petitioner] and Lynn because he “wasn’t getting along very good”
with his father. Kevin was 17 at the time and a senior in high school. After
moving in with the Orrands, Kevin learned that [the Petitioner] and Defendant
Bush were “lovers” and were having an affair together. Kevin never told Lynn
about the affair because he “didn’t want to get [his] sister in trouble.” [The
Petitioner] wanted Kevin to meet Defendant Bush and “see what [he] thought
about [Defendant Bush].” [The Petitioner] arranged for the two to meet at a
local store. Kevin rode to the store on his bicycle and found Defendant Bush
at a pay phone talking to [the Petitioner]. Defendant Bush introduced himself
to Kevin and shook his hand. Kevin and Defendant Bush talked for “[m]aybe
two minutes” before Kevin left. After Kevin learned about the affair and met
with Defendant Bush, [the Petitioner] began to ask Kevin to kill Lynn. Kevin
testified that [the Petitioner] asked him on “several occasions” to kill Lynn and
that she would often do it while she was on the phone with Defendant Bush.
However, Kevin testified that he could not remember the first time [the
Petitioner] asked him to kill Lynn because he “put a lot of this stuff out of [his]
mind because of what [he] did.” [The Petitioner] told Kevin that she wanted
Lynn killed because “she couldn’t divorce him because he wouldn’t leave her
alone.”

       After being asked to kill Lynn, Kevin approached his friend Jason Riley
and “asked him if he’d be interested in killing somebody for $5,000.” Kevin
had previously asked Jackie Young if he would kill someone for money, but
Mr. Young had refused. Kevin decided to ask Mr. Riley because he was “a
roughneck” and “was known to go out to . . . [construction sites] and steal[ ]
shingles and supplies.” Kevin told [the Petitioner], while she was on the phone
with Defendant Bush, that Mr. Riley had agreed. A meeting was setup
between Defendant Bush, Mr. Riley, and Kevin. Kevin testified that he could
not remember where the meeting took place but that he picked up Mr. Riley.
Defendant Bush was waiting for them in his black Ford pickup truck. All
three men got into the truck, and Defendant Bush showed Mr. Riley an
envelope that had money in it. Kevin testified that he got out of the truck
while Mr. Riley and Defendant Bush discussed the details of the plan to kill

                                        -6-
Lynn. On November 18, 1981, Kevin picked up Mr. Riley and drove him to
Lynn’s house. Kevin testified that Mr. Riley waited in the garage for Lynn and
that when Lynn came home, Mr. Riley struck him over the head with “a bat or
something another.” [The Petitioner] told Kevin that the plan was for Mr.
Riley to hit Lynn over the head and then drag his body to the road, but Mr.
Riley “didn’t knock [Lynn] out and [Mr. Riley] got scared and took off
running.” Kevin testified that he had been “riding around the neighborhood”
for about 30 minutes waiting on Mr. Riley to kill Lynn when he picked Mr.
Riley up “[d]own the road from the house.” Mr. Riley was “scared to death”
and told Kevin that he had hit Lynn but “it didn’t knock him out.” Lynn had
started to fight back so Mr. Riley “took off running.” Kevin dropped Mr.
Riley off back at his vehicle and never spoke to Mr. Riley about the attack
again.

        After the failed attempt to kill Lynn in the garage, Kevin agreed to kill
Lynn himself. [The Petitioner] and Defendant Bush devised a new plan. [The
Petitioner] offered to let Kevin, his then girlfriend, and their child move into
her house and to pay him $5,000 in exchange for killing Lynn. Kevin testified
that the plan was for him to shoot Lynn while he was hunting for the buck in
the woods near [the Petitioner’s] parents’ home. Kevin testified that
Defendant Bush was to provide him with a shotgun and leave a station wagon
with “a pair of coveralls, a pair of gloves, and a hat” inside at the “national
guard armory.” Kevin would then drive the station wagon to an abandoned
church near the woods. Kevin testified that prior to the murder, he met with
Defendant Bush at the Jackson Heights parking lot, where Defendant Bush
gave him a double barrel shotgun “wrapped up in a blanket.” Defendant Bush
also gave him two sets of shotgun shells, a set of “regular shotgun shells” to
use for target practice, and a set of deer slugs to use for the murder. Kevin put
the shotgun and the shells into the trunk of the car, a Grand Prix owned by his
girlfriend’s brother. Kevin testified that his pregnant girlfriend was hidden,
lying down in the seat, when Defendant Bush gave him the gun. Kevin also
testified that after he married his girlfriend in December 1981, he moved in
with her parents and practiced shooting at “some old junk cars out there” on
his father-in-law’s property, firing the gun twice.

       On January 15, 1982, Kevin’s daughter was born. According to Kevin,
he had a conversation with [the Petitioner] about the murder that day. [The
Petitioner] told Kevin that Lynn would be hunting on their parents’ property
the next morning and that after the murder, Kevin should go back to the
hospital “and get in the room with [his] wife and make like [he had] been there

                                       -7-
the whole time.” Kevin also testified that [the Petitioner] spoke with Defendant
Bush about the murder over the phone that day. Kevin spent that night at the
Orrand house and woke up around 4:30 a.m.on January 16, 1982. [The
Petitioner] and Lynn were drinking coffee and talking when Kevin woke up.
Kevin testified that Lynn “was about to talk himself out of going [hunting] that
morning” but that [the Petitioner] “was pushing him to do it.” Kevin also
testified that he remembered [the Petitioner] “at some point in time” having a
phone “conversation with [her] mother . . . letting her know that Lynn was
coming out there that morning to go hunting.” Kevin left the Orrand house
while it was still dark outside and before Lynn had left to go hunting. Kevin
drove his wife’s brother’s car “to the national guard armory.” As planned,
there was a station wagon parked at the “armory” with the keys “under the
floor mat.” Kevin testified that when he got to the “armory,” there were no
other cars in the parking lot and the lights were off in the building. Kevin also
testified that he had kept the shotgun in the trunk of his wife’s brother’s car
since he got it from Defendant Bush. Kevin took the shotgun out of the car
and put it in the station wagon. Kevin then put on the coveralls, gloves, and
ski mask he found in the station wagon and drove toward his parents’ house.

        Kevin parked the station wagon at the abandoned church on Richland
Road. It was cold and there was snow on the ground when he got to the
church. Kevin “walked through the woods down close to where [his] father’s
property was at and then crossed the road and went up in the woods.” Kevin
walked to a tree where he crouched down and waited “for about probably 30
minutes or so.” Kevin then heard Lynn’s truck pull up the driveway, Lynn get
out of the truck, and Lynn enter the woods. As Lynn approached Kevin, Kevin
came out from behind the tree and “was probably 30 feet from [Lynn]” when
he fired a shot. Kevin thought he missed Lynn so he fired a second shot. He
knew he “didn’t miss the second time” because he heard Lynn say, “You got
me.” Kevin testified that the two shells he fired at Lynn were both deer slugs.
At the preliminary hearing in this case, Kevin testified that Lynn was walking
toward him and facing him when he fired. After hearing Lynn say “You got
me,” Kevin “took off running.” Kevin testified that he ran away from Lynn
and the station wagon “up in the woods a little bit” before “running back
toward where the car was at,” going the same way back to the car as he had
come. As he was running, Kevin “tripped over a log or a rock or something”
and fell and dropped the gun in the snow. Kevin “reached down and picked
the gun up and took off running again.” When Kevin reached the station
wagon, he put the gun in the back seat and drove back to the “armory” still
wearing the coveralls, gloves, and ski mask. Kevin parked the station wagon

                                       -8-
at the “armory,” removed the coveralls, gloves, and ski mask and left them
along with the gun in the station wagon. Kevin testified that he never asked
and never learned what happened to the station wagon and the other items.

        After leaving the station wagon at the “armory,” Kevin drove to the
hospital. Kevin testified that he “waited around out in the hallway until ... [he]
didn’t see any nurses around the nurse station.” He then “snuck in [his] wife’s
room without anybody seeing [him]” and “made like [he had] been there a
while” and “acted like [he] was asleep in the chair.” Kevin’s wife was asleep
when he entered her hospital room. After she woke up, Kevin told her that he
had killed Lynn. Kevin testified that she was upset, but he could not remember
what she said. Kevin also testified that she had previously known about the
plan to kill Lynn and that she helped him with his alibi. Kevin left the hospital
and eventually went to [the Petitioner’s] house, where their mother and “a
bunch of detectives” were as well. Kevin was eventually questioned by the
police, and he told them that he was at the hospital with his wife at the time of
the murder. A few days after the murder and after having spoken with the
police, Kevin realized that he “still had the same shoes on that [he] had on
when [he] committed the crime.” Kevin went behind a K-Mart and threw the
shoes into a dumpster. Kevin testified that he could not remember what type
of shoes he had worn during the murder. Kevin admitted that at the
preliminary hearing, he had testified that he was wearing a normal pair of “lace
up shoes.” However, Kevin also testified that in the past he had owned a pair
of Herman boots, that he could have owned a pair at the time of the murder,
and that he considered Herman boots to be “lace up shoes.” Kevin, his wife,
and their child then moved in with [the Petitioner]. However, they did not live
there long because [the Petitioner] and his wife did not get along so [the
Petitioner] “kicked [them] out.” Kevin testified that he never received the
$5,000 but only got “$100 here, $100 there.” Kevin also testified that
sometime after the murder, he told Lonnie Butcher that he had killed Lynn for
[the Petitioner and Defendant Bush].

        After moving out of [the Petitioner’s] house, Kevin “kind of stayed
away” from [the Petitioner] because he “just couldn’t look at them boys [Terry
and Gary Orrand] in the face anymore.” However, in 2007 Kevin was
contacted by detectives who were reopening the investigation. Kevin testified
that after he was contacted by the police, he went to [the Petitioner’s] house
and spoke to [the Petitioner and Defendant Bush]. [The Petitioner and
Defendant Bush] told him to “stay calm and keep [his] mouth shut and just
stick with the story.” Kevin testified that over the course of the investigation,

                                       -9-
he went over to [the Petitioner and Defendant Bush’s] house “four or five”
times and they would meet in the garage. To avoid “listening devices and all
this,” [the Petitioner and Defendant Bush] and Kevin would “whisper in real
low voices while [they] [were] talking about it” and would sometimes “write
notes and pass them instead of even talking.” Kevin testified that they
destroyed the notes. During this time, [the Petitioner and Defendant Bush]
gave Kevin “about $1,000” to pay off his fines and fees related to his
probation. [The Petitioner and Defendant Bush] gave Kevin the money on two
occasions. The first time [the Petitioner] gave him money, and the second time
Defendant Bush gave him money after “[h]e wiped all the money off removing
any fingerprints on it.” Kevin repeatedly denied to the police having any
involvement in Lynn’s murder. However, after meeting with an attorney,
Kevin confessed to the police and agreed to testify and “tell the truth” against
[the Petitioner and Defendant Bush] in exchange for a 25-year sentence.
Kevin testified that he did not want to kill Lynn, but [the Petitioner]
“brainwashed [him] into killing [Lynn]” in exchange for $5,000 and allowing
Kevin and his family to move in with her. Kevin further testified that he felt
“terrible” about what he did and that he would not have pled guilty and
“volunteer[ed] to take 25 years if it wasn’t the truth.”

        At trial, Kevin admitted to having prior convictions for passing
worthless checks and theft of property valued less than $500. Kevin testified
that he had a good relationship with Lynn and denied that he and Lynn had any
conflicts or that Lynn did not want him to move into the Orrands’ home.
Kevin also denied that Lynn had kicked him out of the house prior to his
having moved in with his wife’s parents. On cross-examination, Kevin
admitted that at the preliminary hearing, he testified that when Defendant Bush
gave him the shotgun, it was not wrapped up and that he did not mention that
his girlfriend was at the meeting. Kevin also admitted that he told the police
he was given the gun one week before the murder. Kevin admitted on
cross-examination that at the preliminary hearing, he testified that the station
wagon had been left at the “armory” for a week prior to the murder. However,
Kevin testified at trial that he could not remember when he got the shotgun or
when the station wagon was left at the “armory.” On cross-examination,
Kevin testified that he finally decided to kill Lynn after his daughter was born,
then he testified that it was after his wedding, and finally testified that he could
not remember when he decided he would kill Lynn for [the Petitioner and
Defendant Bush]. Kevin testified that he had trouble remembering the details
because it happened so long ago and because he “blocked a lot of this stuff out
of [his] mind because it was a very, very bad thing to do.” At trial, [the

                                       -10-
Petitioner and Defendant Bush] established that the national guard armory
Kevin testified he picked up and dropped off the station wagon at was not built
until 1984. However, Kevin testified that [the Petitioner and Defendant Bush]
told him where to retrieve the station wagon and gave him directions on how
to get there. Kevin further testified that he followed those directions. The
State also established that there was another national guard armory located in
Murfreesboro prior to 1984.

                         IV. Corroborating Evidence

        [The Petitioner’s] mother, Gary Orrand, Kevin’s brother John, and
Terry all testified that Kevin had a good relationship with Lynn. However,
Terry Orrand testified that [the Petitioner] and Lynn had a “rocky” relationship
and that he could remember the two fighting “over finances.” [The Petitioner]
told her friend and coworker, Barbara Poague, that she was “not happy” with
Lynn and that Lynn “hit her.” [The Petitioner] also told Ms. Poague that she
would not divorce Lynn because “Lynn would not leave her alone and he
would take her boys away from her.” Prior to his death, Lynn spoke with his
brother Glenn about his life insurance policy. Lynn told Glenn that he was
thinking about dropping his life insurance. Glenn asked Lynn if he had
dropped his insurance a few weeks later, and Lynn said that he had not
dropped it but had actually increased the amount of coverage. When Glenn
asked Lynn about his life insurance, [the Petitioner] “grinned” and said, “Lynn,
if something was to happen to you, if I would have you killed, I’d be a rich
woman.” Lynn had also spoken to his friend and coworker, Mr. Mullins, about
his life insurance policy. Lynn told Mr. Mullins that his wife was the sole
beneficiary of the policy. Mr. Mullins urged Lynn to make his children
beneficiaries as well. Mr. Mullins testified that Lynn did not get the chance
to change his policy before he died.

       Several former Gemtop employees testified that it was common
knowledge at Gemtop that [the Petitioner] was having an affair with
Defendant Bush around the time of Lynn’s murder. Ms. Poague confronted
Defendant Bush about whether he had anything to do with the attack on Lynn
in November 1981. Defendant Bush’s ex-wife, Patricia Conner, testified that
she met [the Petitioner] in October of 1981 or 1982 and that she “sort of
suspected [Defendant Bush and the Petitioner] were going together.”
Defendant Bush and Ms. Conner divorced on August 29, 1983.                [The
Petitioner’s] friend and neighbor, Ms. Perry, testified that she saw Defendant
Bush’s black Ford pickup truck at the Orrands home a few months after

                                      -11-
Lynn’s murder. [The Petitioner’s] niece, Christy Rawls, testified that she
stayed at [the Petitioner’s] house during the summer of 1982 and that
Defendant Bush would come over to the house. Ms. Rawls testified that she
saw Defendant Bush kiss [the Petitioner] and that the two “appeared to be a
couple.” Gary testified that he recalled seeing Defendant Bush kiss [the
Petitioner] in 1983. However, when [the Petitioner and Defendant Bush]
spoke to Detective Jim Tramel of the Rutherford County Sheriff’s Department,
they denied having an affair and told Detective Tramel that they did not start
dating until around 1985 or 1986.

        Jackie Young testified that he was friends with Kevin in high school
and that in 1981 Kevin asked him if he would “kill somebody for $10,000.”
When Mr. Young said no, Kevin told him that he was just joking. Mr. Young
testified that he thought Kevin was serious before Kevin told him he was
joking. Jason Riley testified that one night in 1981, he was in the parking lot
of Jackson Heights when a black pickup truck with Kevin and another man
inside pulled up. Mr. Riley had “hung out pretty good” with Kevin in high
school and continued to “hang out” with him even after Mr. Riley had dropped
out of high school. After the pickup truck pulled up, Kevin “hollered” for Mr.
Riley to get in the truck. Mr. Riley testified that when he got into the truck,
Kevin introduced the driver as “his sister’s boyfriend.” The driver pulled an
envelope with $5,000 out of his jacket and handed it to Kevin. Mr. Riley
testified that at the time, Kevin did not work and would not have had access
to $5,000. Kevin placed the money on the dash and told Mr. Riley “this right
here could be yours” if Mr. Riley would kill Kevin’s brother-in-law. Kevin
explained that his sister wanted her husband dead because “[h]e was abusive”
and because [the Petitioner and Defendant Bush] wanted to marry. Mr. Riley
testified that he refused to kill Lynn, but he agreed to “knock [Lynn] out and
drag him to the street,” where Kevin and Defendant Bush would “take out the
trash.”

        On November 18, 1981, Mr. Riley met Kevin in the Hardee’s parking
lot. Kevin was in a black Ford pickup truck when he held up the envelope of
money and said, “This right here could be yours.” Mr. Riley testified that he
could not remember if there was anyone else with Kevin in the pickup truck.
Kevin had previously driven him by the Orrand house. However, that night,
Mr. Riley took his own car because he does not “like being stranded
nowheres.” Mr. Riley testified that he could not remember where he parked
his car, but he parked it “out of the way where nobody could see it.” Mr. Riley
walked about a block to Lynn’s house and entered the garage through an

                                     -12-
unlocked side door. Terry Orrand testified that the side door in the garage was
always unlocked and that Lynn would always come in through that door. Mr.
Riley brought a flashlight and a “tire tool” into the garage with him. Mr. Riley
testified that the flashlight was to signal “two people in the truck,” who were
waiting at the abandoned church. Mr. Riley hid behind the door he had
entered and waited until he heard Lynn park his car in the driveway, get out,
and walk toward the side door of the garage. After Lynn walked through the
door, Mr. Riley hit him in the head with the “tire tool.” The blow did not
knock Lynn out, and Mr. Riley ran out of the garage after Lynn either “pulled
a gun or said he had a gun.” Mr. Riley testified that he ran through the front
yard, back to his car, and drove away. Mr. Riley also testified that he wore a
green army jacket with a hood which had “fur around it.” However, Mr. Riley
later testified that he did not remember the hood of his jacket being lined with
fur. Mr. Riley testified that he attacked Lynn because he was “young” and
“dumb” and that after the attack Kevin “just seemed like he disappeared.”

        Kevin’s ex-wife, Joyce Hudson, testified that in 1981, Kevin told her
that [the Petitioner and Defendant Bush] were having an affair. Kevin also
told her that [the Petitioner] was “looking for somebody to kill her husband .”
Ms. Hudson testified that she told Kevin “to stay away from [the Petitioner].”
Kevin also told Ms. Hudson that [the Petitioner and Defendant Bush] had
“hired somebody to hit [Lynn] in the head and it didn’t kill him.” One day in
1981, Kevin asked Ms. Hudson to go with him to Jackson Heights to “get
some pot.” Kevin told her that “he wanted [her] to get down in the car because
he didn’t want this guy to see [her].” Ms. Hudson testified that even though
she was pregnant at the time, it was not a problem for her to lie down in the
seat because she “never showed” while she was pregnant. At one point, Ms.
Hudson “peeked” out the window and saw a black Ford pickup truck parked
next to the car. Ms. Hudson then saw Kevin put something in the trunk of the
car that “was covered with a piece of cloth” and “was long.” Ms. Hudson
testified that it “looked like a gun.” However, Ms. Hudson admitted on
cross-examination that she originally told the police she thought Kevin had
placed drugs in the trunk. After Kevin got back in the car, Ms. Hudson sat up.
Kevin told her to get back down when the black Ford pickup truck drove by
them. Ms. Hudson saw a man driving the truck and asked Kevin who it was.
Kevin told her that it was Defendant Bush and that he was [the Petitioner’s]
boyfriend. Ms. Hudson testified that to her knowledge, Kevin did not own a
gun at the time. Ms. Hudson also testified that she later saw Defendant Bush
again in the same black truck he drove the night of the meeting. Defendant
Bush’s ex-wife, Ms. Conner, testified that Defendant Bush owned coveralls
and “a long shotgun” at that time.


                                      -13-
       Ms. Hudson testified that after Kevin moved in with her parents, [the
Petitioner] would call to speak to Kevin “a lot.” The day after giving birth to
her daughter, Kevin came into Ms. Hudson’s hospital room and told her that
he had shot Lynn. Kevin told her that he had parked at the abandoned church
on Richland Road and “hiked up in the woods and waited on [Lynn].” Kevin
told her not to tell anyone about it because [the Petitioner] was “crazy enough
to have [Ms. Hudson] killed.” Ms. Hudson testified that she did not believe
that Kevin would kill Lynn because “[h]e didn’t tell me he was going to do it.”
Ms. Hudson denied having any role in Lynn’s murder and denied that she
agreed to help Kevin with his alibi. Ms. Hudson testified that after the murder,
she, Kevin, and their child moved in with [the Petitioner] for about two
months. When [the Petitioner] “kicked them out,” Kevin started calling her
names and said that [the Petitioner] “wanted [Lynn] dead” and that she
“wanted [Kevin] to kill him.” Sometime after that, Kevin came to Ms. Hudson
and told her they were going to have to leave town because he had told his
“friends” that he had killed Lynn. Ms. Hudson testified that she was afraid to
divorce Kevin and that he had threatened to kill her on “a couple of
occasions.” Ms. Hudson also testified that she was uncooperative with the
police at first because she was afraid [the Petitioner] would have her killed.

        John Patterson testified that when he found Lynn’s body, he saw a set
of foot prints that were similar to the footprints his boots left. John was
wearing Herman boots that day and was so worried about the footprints that
he “stomped them to cover them up.” However, John noticed that the
footprints were bigger than his. John testified that at the time of the murder,
Kevin also owned a pair of Herman boots. Chief Gammon testified that Kevin
became a suspect because he became uncooperative with the investigators and
because his alibi was called into question. According to Chief Gammon, the
community services coordinator with the Sheriff’s Department, Don
Castleman, had seen Kevin either reentering or leaving the hospital the
morning of the murder. [The Petitioner’s] neighbor, Ms. Perry, testified that
on the day of the murder, [the Petitioner] was adamant that Kevin not be
interviewed by the police because he “had been through enough already” that
day. Mr. Riley testified that after the murder, he saw either John or Kevin in
a store and asked how Lynn was. According to Mr. Riley, he was “all giggle”
and said, “He died. Hunting accident.” Ms. Perry testified that after Lynn’s
death, [the Petitioner] would blame Lynn anytime something bad happened to
her. Ms. Perry also testified that in 1982 or 1983, [the Petitioner] asked if she
could leave her car with Ms. Perry while [the Petitioner] and Defendant Bush

                                      -14-
went on a vacation to Florida with their children. Ms. Perry asked [the
Petitioner] if she was going to get married, and [the Petitioner] “laughed and
said, no, that she would lose her [S]ocial [S]ecurity.”

       When the investigation was reopened in 2007, the police asked Mr.
Riley to make a controlled phone call to Kevin. The phone call was recorded
and monitored by the police. Mr. Riley told Kevin that the police were asking
him questions about the murder. Kevin told Mr. Riley that he “didn’t have
nothing to do with the f–––––g s—t.” When Mr. Riley brought up the attack
on Lynn in the garage, Kevin said that he did not “even know what you’re
talking about now,” that he did not “know nothing about nothing,” and that
would “be the last word I’ll say when I die.” Kevin testified that he denied
everything to Mr. Riley because he assumed his phone was taped. A day after
making the controlled call to Kevin, Mr. Riley received a telephone call at
work. The caller did not identify himself, and Mr. Riley did not recognize the
voice. The caller said that he knew Mr. Riley had an upcoming interview with
the police and told him “the best thing to do is stay calm, stay cool” and
“[d]on’t tell them nothing.” Mr. Riley informed Detective Tramel about the
phone call and what the caller had said. Detective Tramel set up another
controlled call, provided Mr. Riley with two phone numbers, and told Mr.
Riley that they were for Defendant Bush’s home and cell phones. Mr. Riley
called the home number first and got no answer. Mr. Riley then called
Defendant Bush’s cell phone and spoke to a man. The phone call was
recorded, and Mr. Riley testified that the recording played at trial was the
phone call he made to the number Detective Tramel provided him.

       At the beginning of the phone conversation, Mr. Riley asked for
“Gary.” Defendant Bush responded “Yeah.” Mr. Riley told Defendant Bush
that he was in his truck and calling him because the police just left his
workplace after interviewing him. Defendant Bush told Mr. Riley that he did
not “need to talk on that phone” because the police “can pick them up on a
scanner.” After reassuring Defendant Bush that the police were not close
enough to monitor the call, Mr. Riley asked Defendant Bush “what do you
want to do.” Defendant Bush responded that he did not “want to do nothing”
and that Mr. Riley needed to “[j]ust stay cool like I told you.” Defendant Bush
told Mr. Riley that the police were “gonna aggravate you for a while” and that
Mr. Riley “better do” what he told him. Mr. Riley testified that he recognized
Defendant Bush’s voice as the voice of the earlier caller and that he “knowed
right off the bat who it was.” However, Mr. Riley testified that he “couldn’t
put a name to” the voice but that he could identify the voice as the same person

                                      -15-
       who called him at work. After listening to a portion of the recording,
       Detective Tramel, Terry Orrand, and Ms. Rawls were all able to identify
       Defendant Bush’s voice as the person speaking with Mr. Riley. Detective
       Tramel also testified that he was present during the recording of the phone
       conversation and that the voices belonged to Mr. Riley and Defendant Bush.
       A day after the controlled call, Mr. Riley got another phone call from
       Defendant Bush in which Defendant Bush asked how the police interview
       went and told Mr. Riley to “lose his phone number” and “don’t say nothing to
       nobody.”

               Kristi Dunnan testified that she was Kevin’s probation officer and that
       in the summer of 2007 Kevin was delinquent on his probation fees and fines.
       However, in August 2007 Kevin was able to pay off his fees in two separate
       payments totaling $1,052. Jeff Witas, [the Petitioner’s and Defendant Bush’s]
       neighbor, testified that in 2007, Defendant Bush asked him if he could get
       Kevin a job. Defendant Bush had the two meet in his garage because Mr.
       Witas wanted to meet Kevin to see what his qualifications were. Gary Orrand
       testified that [the Petitioner] does not like to hear his son’s middle name, Lynn.
       Gary also testified that [the Petitioner] told him she wanted to contest the
       exhumation of Lynn’s body. However, she ultimately decided not to contest
       the exhumation. Terry Orrand testified that he spoke with his mother after he
       found out that she had hired an attorney to contest the exhumation. According
       to Terry, when he spoke with [the Petitioner] about the exhumation she “turned
       pale” and “looked more frightened than she did upset.” Terry also testified
       that he had never seen [the Petitioner] cry over Lynn’s death until the trial
       started. Terry admitted on cross-examination that he has sued [the Petitioner]
       for $5 million in a wrongful death action. Based upon the foregoing evidence,
       the jury convicted [the Petitioner and Defendant Bush] of first-degree murder.

State v. Candance Orrand Bush and Gary W. Bush, No. M2010-00186-CCA-R3-CD, 2011
WL 2848266, at *1-12 (Tenn. Crim. App. July 18, 2011), perm. app. denied, (Tenn. Nov. 17,
2011) (footnotes omitted). This court affirmed the Petitioner’s judgment of conviction, and
the Tennessee Supreme Court denied the Petitioner’s application for permission to appeal
thereafter. Id.

       On November 13, 2012, the Petitioner filed a timely, pro se petition for post-
conviction relief. Following the appointment of counsel, no amended petition was filed on
behalf of the Petitioner. However, on December 4, 2012, the Petitioner filed a pro se
amendment to her petition. The State filed its response on July 12, 2013.



                                             -16-
       At an evidentiary hearing before the post-conviction court, the Petitioner testified that,
leading up to trial, trial counsel prepared her to testify in her own behalf and she understood
that she would be testifying. During trial, however, counsel told the Petitioner that he did
not want her to testify and he would not put her on the witness stand. Counsel offered no
rationale for not calling the Petitioner as a witness, except to say that the Petitioner was not
going to testify “[b]ecause it was a murder case.” Although trial counsel explained to the
Petitioner that it was her choice whether to testify, the Petitioner followed trial counsel’s
advice and did not testify because trial counsel previously stated that “[h]e was in charge.”

        If called as a witness at trial, the Petitioner would have denied that she was having an
affair with Defendant Bush at the time of the victim’s murder. She explained that she
worked at Gemtop on two different occasions and she did not begin dating Defendant Bush
until her second term of employment at Gemtop in 1988. The Petitioner acknowledged that,
as testified to by Gemtop employees, she talked to Defendant Bush before the victim’s
murder but maintained that their conversations had been work-related. The Petitioner stated
that the Gemtop employees that testified for the State about the nature of her and Defendant
Bush’s relationship prior to the murder were either mistaken or lying. The Petitioner
believed that the State’s witnesses possibly confused her first period of employment at
Gemtop with the second period of employment.

       The Petitioner stated that, had she testified at trial, she would have denied having
anything to do with the victim’s murder. She would have testified that she did not conspire
with anyone to kill the victim and she had nothing to do with Mr. Riley’s attacking the victim
months before the murder. The Petitioner explained that she had no prior criminal record at
the time of trial and thus could not have been impeached based upon prior convictions. The
Petitioner could think of no reason why her brother, Kevin Patterson, had confessed to killing
the victim and agreed to a 25-year prison sentence.

        The Petitioner recalled that, while she routinely followed trial counsel’s advice after
he informed her that he was “in charge,” she did not follow his advice when he recommended
that they file a motion to sever her case from Defendant Bush’s case. Trial counsel was
concerned about the recording of Defendant Bush’s phone conversation with Mr. Riley, and
counsel told the Petitioner that because of the tape he thought it best that her case be
separated from Defendant Bush’s. The Petitioner did not want a severance, and trial counsel
could not persuade her otherwise. The Petitioner explained that she did not want the cases
separated “[b]ecause I knew we didn’t have anything to do with the murder of my husband.
So, I didn’t feel that we should be separated.” Regarding the tape offered by the State that
allegedly contained Defendant Bush’s voice, the Petitioner testified that her voice was not
on the tape and it did not hurt her. The Petitioner explained that, if she had testified and been
asked to identify Defendant Bush’s voice on the tape, she would have said that the voice on
the tape was not that of Defendant Bush.

                                              -17-
        Trial counsel testified that the Petitioner had two attorneys, an investigator, and a
paralegal assigned to work on her case. Trial counsel recalled that, during his representation
of the Petitioner, he and the Petitioner interacted well. Counsel explained that the defense
theory at trial was that Mr. Patterson was not telling the truth and, if Mr. Patterson
committed the murder, the State offered him the plea deal in exchange for implicating
Defendant Bush and the Petitioner. Another strategy employed by the defense was to focus
the jury on the initial police investigation into the victim’s death. In 1982, the victim’s death
was ruled an accident, and trial counsel explored this issue while cross-examining the State’s
witnesses. Trial counsel also attacked Mr. Patterson’s story at trial, cross-examining him for
six hours. Counsel challenged Mr. Patterson’s claim about the National Guard Armory. He
subpoenaed the historian from the Armory, who testified that the Armory in question was not
built until after the victim’s murder. Trial counsel also challenged Mr. Patterson’s testimony
that he shot the victim from the front as this testimony differed from the pathologist’s
physical findings. Regarding his cross-examination of Mr. Patterson, trial counsel stated,
“And to tell you the truth, we did totally destroy him. But the jury believed him. I mean, it’s
just that simple. That’s where this case was.”

        Trial counsel recalled that he and the defense investigator took “great pains” to
prepare the Petitioner to testify. As the case unfolded during trial, counsel discussed with
the Petitioner each day’s proof and assessed the case with the Petitioner each day. During
their conversations, trial counsel discussed the questions the Petitioner would be subjected
to on cross-examination and how the risks of her testimony might outweigh whatever benefit
it could offer. Regarding his advice to the Petitioner that she not testify, trial counsel
explained:

       If [the Petitioner] had testified in this case, and that’s what we talked about,
       she would have had to have identified that voice on that tape. She would have
       had to have called about 20 people liars, including her own Mama. And that
       just doesn’t play well for a jury.

Trial counsel testified that he watched the jury during the trial, looking for signs as to
whether or not certain testimony hurt the defense, as this went to his assessment of whether
the Petitioner should testify. Trial counsel further explained that another factor he considered
was whether the Petitioner would have made a good, strong witness. Counsel believed that
the Petitioner would not have been a good witness and the prosecutor would have “eaten her
up” on cross-examination.

        Based upon their discussions, the Petitioner made the decision not to testify. The trial
court conducted a Momon hearing, questioning the Petitioner about her understanding of her
right to testify and ensuring that her decision not to testify was free and voluntary.

                                              -18-
       Trial counsel testified that, after the Petitioner’s trial, he wondered if he should have
pressed the issue of severance more forcefully with the Petitioner because he believed that
the tape purporting to include Defendant Bush’s statement was hurtful to the Petitioner.
However, the Petitioner was emphatic that her and Defendant Bush’s defenses were “tied
together” and “she wouldn’t hear of [a severance].” Ultimately, trial counsel concluded, “I
don’t believe [the trial court] would have been required to grant [a motion to sever]. And I
don’t believe [the trial court] would have been reversed on appeal, but it would have given
me something else to argue about.”

      Following this testimony, the Petitioner waived argument and submitted the case to
the post-conviction court. Thereafter, the post-conviction court entered a written order
denying the petition. This timely appeal followed.

                                         II. Analysis

        In order to prevail upon a petition for post-conviction relief, a petitioner must prove
all factual allegations by clear and convincing evidence. Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-110(f)
(2014); Jaco v. State, 120 S.W.3d 828, 830 (Tenn. 2003). “Evidence is clear and convincing
when there is no serious or substantial doubt about the correctness of the conclusions drawn
from the evidence.” Grindstaff v. State, 297 S.W.3d 208, 216 (Tenn. 2009) (quoting Hicks
v. State, 983 S.W.2d 240, 245 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1998)). Whether the petitioner has met his
burden of proof is a question of law that this court reviews de novo. Arroyo v. State, 434
S.W.3d 555, 559 (Tenn. 2014).

        Post-conviction relief cases often present mixed questions of law and fact. See Fields
v. State, 40 S.W.3d 450, 458 (Tenn. 2001) (citing State v. Burns, 6 S.W.3d 453, 461 (Tenn.
1999)). We review a trial court’s findings of fact under a de novo standard with a
presumption that those findings are correct unless otherwise proven by a preponderance of
the evidence. Id. (citing Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Henley v. State, 960 S.W.2d 572, 578
(Tenn. 1997)). The trial court’s conclusions of law are reviewed “under a purely de novo
standard, with no presumptions of correctness . . . .” Id. When reviewing the trial court’s
findings of fact, this court does not reweigh the evidence or “substitute [its] own inferences
for those drawn by the trial court.” Id. at 456. Additionally, “questions concerning the
credibility of the 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.” Id. (citing Henley, 960
S.W.2d at 579).

      The right to effective assistance of counsel is safeguarded by the Constitutions of both
the United States and the State of Tennessee. U.S. Const. amend. VI; Tenn. Const. art. I, §

                                              -19-
9. In order to receive post-conviction relief for ineffective assistance of counsel, a petitioner
must prove two factors: (1) that counsel’s performance was deficient; and (2) that the
deficiency prejudiced the defense. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984); see
State v. Taylor, 968 S.W.2d 900, 905 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997) (stating that the same
standard for ineffective assistance of counsel applies in both federal and Tennessee cases).
Both factors must be proven in order for the court to grant post-conviction relief. Strickland,
466 U.S. 687; Henley, 960 S.W.2d at 580; Goad v. State, 938 S.W.2d 363, 370 (Tenn. 1996).
Additionally, a review of counsel’s performance “requires that every effort be made to
eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the circumstances of counsel’s
challenged conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from counsel’s perspective at the time.”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689; see also Henley, 960 S.W.2d at 579. We will not second-guess
a reasonable trial strategy, and we will not grant relief based on a sound, yet ultimately
unsuccessful, tactical decision. Granderson v. State, 197 S.W.3d 782, 790 (Tenn. Crim. App.
2006).
        As to the first prong of the Strickland analysis, “counsel’s performance is effective
if the advice given or the services rendered are within the range of competence demanded
of attorneys in criminal cases.” Henley, 960 S.W.2d at 579 (citing Baxter v. Rose, 523
S.W.2d 930, 936 (Tenn. 1975)); see also Goad, 938 S.W.2d at 369. In order to prove that
counsel was deficient, the petitioner must demonstrate “that the counsel’s acts or omissions
were so serious as to fall below an objective standard of reasonableness under prevailing
professional norms.” Goad, 938 S.W.2d at 369 (citing Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688); see also
Baxter, 523 S.W.2d at 936.

        Even if counsel’s performance is deficient, the deficiency must have resulted in
prejudice to the defense. Goad, 938 S.W.2d at 370. Therefore, under the second prong of
the Strickland analysis, the petitioner “must show that there is a reasonable probability that,
but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
different. A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
outcome.” Id. (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694) (internal quotation marks omitted).

                              Advice That Petitioner Not Testify

      The Petitioner first argues that she received ineffective assistance of counsel based
upon trial counsel’s advice that she not testify at trial. The Petitioner cites State v.
Zimmerman, 823 S.W.2d 220 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1991) in support of her claim that trial
counsel was ineffective.

        The defendant in Zimmerman was charged with second-degree murder, and trial
counsel planned to employ a theory of self-defense based upon “battered wife syndrome.”
Id. at 221-22. In opening statements, trial counsel announced to the jury that they would hear

                                              -20-
testimony from the defendant, as well as testimony from a psychologist regarding battered
wife syndrome. Id. However, despite there being “no surprises in the presentation of the
state’s case,” defense counsel advised the defendant not to testify and did not present the
testimony of the psychologist. Id. at 224. The defense rested without presenting any proof,
and the defendant was convicted. Id. at 222.

        In concluding that trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance, this court reasoned
that “there appear[ed] to have been no basis for the sudden change in strategy.” Id. at 226.
The court went on to cite the following five factors that “would tend to indicate ineffective
assistance” in a case where trial counsel fails to call the defendant to testify:

       (1) only the victim and the defendant were present when the offense was
       committed;

       (2) only the defendant could present a “full version of her theory of the facts”;

       (3) the defendant’s testimony could not be impeached by prior criminal
       convictions;

       (4) the defendant could give an account of the relationship with the victim; and

       (5) the attorney had let in objectionable, prejudicial testimony with the
       intention of clarifying it with the testimony of the defendant.

Id. at 227 (quoting from State v. Dorothy Renate Gfeller, No. 87-59-III, 1987 WL 14328, at
*5 (Tenn. Crim. App. July 24, 1987)).

       Zimmerman is distinguishable from the Petitioner’s case for several reasons. The
instant case is not one in which only the victim and the defendant were present when the
offense was committed, and there is no evidence that trial counsel let in objectionable,
prejudicial testimony with the intention of clarifying it with the Petitioner’s testimony.
Moreover, the court in Zimmerman placed great weight on the fact that trial counsel
promised the jury in the opening statement that it would hear from the psychologist and the
defendant. This court held that “‘[t]he trial attorney should only inform the jury of the
evidence that he is sure he can prove . . . . His failure to keep [a] promise [to the jury]
impairs his personal credibility. The jury may view unsupported claims as an outright
attempt at misrepresentation.’” Id. at 225 (quoting McCloskey, Criminal Law Desk Book
§ 1506(3)(O)). There is no evidence in this case that trial counsel told the jury that the
Petitioner would testify.



                                             -21-
        The Zimmerman court was also concerned with trial counsel’s sudden and
unexplained change in strategy, which appeared arbitrary rather than logical and deliberate.
See id. at 226. In rejecting the Petitioner’s claim in this case, the post-conviction court found
that the Petitioner was “not credible” when she testified that, during trial, counsel abruptly
and without further elaboration told her that he would not put her on the stand “because it
was a murder case.” Rather, trial counsel testified about his careful assessment of the proof
and the jury’s reaction to it as the trial unfolded. He explained that, if the Petitioner had
testified, she would essentially have to call “about 20 people liars, including her own Mama.”
Trial counsel also considered that the Petitioner would not make a good witness and would
not have fared well under cross-examination.

        Finally, the Zimmerman court was particularly concerned that defense counsel failed
to present any witnesses or evidence on the defendant’s behalf despite the existence of
evidence that could have helped her case. See id. Unlike in Zimmerman, trial counsel for
the Petitioner presented two witnesses on the Petitioner’s behalf. The testimony from these
defense witnesses called into question key aspects of Mr. Patterson’s account of his shooting
the victim. Therefore, we agree with the post-conviction court that the Petitioner has not met
her burden of establishing by clear and convincing evidence that trial counsel was
constitutionally ineffective based upon counsel’s advice that the Petitioner not testify at trial.

                           Failure to File a Motion for Severance

        The Petitioner also argues that she was denied effective assistance of counsel based
upon trial counsel’s failure to file a motion to sever her case from that of Defendant Bush.
The post-conviction court did not address the issue of trial counsel’s failure to file a motion
for severance in its order denying relief. The post-conviction court noted, however, that the
initial and amended petitions contained many allegations that were not addressed by the
Petitioner at the hearing. The court also noted that the Petitioner raised at least one
additional issue at the hearing but had failed to include the issue in her petition. The court
determined that any allegations not presented at the hearing or not included in the petition
for post-conviction relief were waived.

          Upon a review of the record, it is clear that the Petitioner failed to raise this issue in
her initial petition for post-conviction relief or in any amended petition. Additionally,
although there was some testimony about trial counsel’s attempts to persuade the Petitioner
to file a motion to sever, the Petitioner did not argue the failure to file a motion to sever as
a basis for her ineffective assistance of counsel claim before the post-conviction court. Thus,
we determine that the Petitioner has waived our consideration of this issue, and it will not be
addressed on appeal. See, e.g., Butler v. State, 789 S.W.2d 898, 902 (Tenn. 1990) (finding
that an issue was waived because it was not litigated in the trial court); State v. Turner, 919

                                               -22-
S.W.2d 346, 356-57 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1995) (stating that an issue which was neither raised
nor litigated in the trial court is waived and that a party may not raise an issue for the first
time in appellate court).

                        Cumulative Effect of Trial Counsel’s Errors

       Finally, the Petitioner contends that the cumulative effect of trial counsel’s errors
undermines the confidence in the outcome of the trial such that she is entitled to post-
conviction relief. Cumulative error consists of “multiple errors committed in the trial
proceedings, each of which in isolation constitutes mere harmless error, but which when
aggregated have a cumulative effect on the proceedings so great as to require a reversal in
order to preserve a defendant’s right to a fair trial.” State v. Hester, 324 S.W.3d 1, 76-77
(Tenn. 2010) (internal citations omitted). “To warrant assessment under the cumulative error
doctrine, there must have been more than one actual error committed in the trial
proceedings.” Id. (internal citations omitted). In the post-conviction context, a petitioner
cannot successfully claim she was prejudiced by counsel’s cumulative error when the
petitioner failed to show counsel’s performance was deficient. Tracy F. Leonard v. State,
No. M2006-00654-CCA-R3-PC, 2007 WL 1946662, at *21 (Tenn. Crim. App. July 5, 2007),
appeal dismissed, (Tenn. Sept. 13, 2007) (citing Leon J. Robins v. State, No. M2005-01204-
CCA-R3-PC, 2006 WL 1816361, at *20 (Tenn. Crim. App. June 27, 2006), perm. app.
denied, (Tenn. Oct. 30, 2006)). Because we have considered the Petitioner’s issues on appeal
and concluded that she is not entitled to relief for any alleged error, we need not consider the
cumulative effect. The Petitioner is not entitled to relief.

                                       III. Conclusion

       In consideration of the foregoing and the record as a whole, the judgment of the
post-conviction court is affirmed.




                                                     _________________________________
                                                     ROBERT L. HOLLOWAY, JR., JUDGE




                                              -23-
