         IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                          AT KNOXVILLE
                                     June 28, 2005 Session

               LESTER P. PARKER, III v. STATE OF TENNESSEE

                       Appeal from the Circuit Court for Blount County
                         No. C-13460     D. Kelly Thomas, Jr., Judge



                     No. E2004-00584-CCA-R3-PC - Filed October 3, 2005


The petitioner, Lester P. Parker, III, appeals the Blount County Circuit Court’s denial of post-
conviction relief. His post-conviction relief petition attacked his 1997 conviction of attempt to
possess cocaine with intent to deliver, as a result of which he received a two-year suspended
sentence. His post-conviction claims of the state’s suppression of exculpatory evidence and of
ineffective assistance of trial counsel are spiced with allegations that the prosecution was the result
of conspiratorial retaliation for his championing a fight against corruption in the Alcoa Police
Department. The post-conviction court denied relief, and we affirm.

                Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Circuit Court is Affirmed.

JAMES CURWOOD WITT , JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which NORMA MCGEE OGLE
and ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER , JJ., joined.

Boyd Venable, III, Knoxville, Tennessee; and Michael Meares, Maryville, Tennessee, for the
Appellant, Lester P. Parker, III.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General & Reporter; John H. Bledsoe, Assistant Attorney General;
Michael L. Flynn, District Attorney General; and Tammy Harrington and Robert Headrick, Assistant
District Attorneys General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.

                                             OPINION

              We glean a summary of the facts underlying the petitioner’s conviction of attempt to
possess cocaine with intent to deliver from this court’s opinion in the petitioner’s direct appeal.

                       The [petitioner] was employed by the City of Alcoa as an
               animal control officer. During early 1997, he contacted Joy Hubbard
               and inquired if she had animals running at large. She replied that she
               did not. During the conversation, the [petitioner] asked for her phone
               number and later made several calls to her. Ms. Hubbard eventually
became suspicious that the [petitioner] was involved in illegal drug
activity and contacted the Alcoa Police Department. She was told to
contact them again if she obtained any additional information. On
June 20, 1997, the [petitioner] called Ms. Hubbard, and she contacted
the police department. She met with several police officers, and they
placed a wire on her. Pursuant to the [petitioner’s] instructions, Ms.
Hubbard met the [petitioner] at the Rock Gardens Park where she
gave him $40.00. The police officers observed and monitored this
meeting.

        After leaving the park, Ms. Hubbard returned home. Her
exhusband and one of the police officers went into her basement. The
[petitioner] then arrived at Ms. Hubbard’s house. According to Ms.
Hubbard and to the officer in the basement, the [petitioner] wanted an
aluminum can which she did not have. The [petitioner] then left Ms.
Hubbard’s home. After he left, a second officer went into the
basement. The [petitioner] returned to Ms. Hubbard’s house with an
aluminum can. He laid small rocks on the can, lit them and used the
can to smoke the rocks. A forensic scientist from the T.B.I. Crime
Laboratory later identified the residue on the can to be cocaine. The
officers in the basement testified that they heard the [petitioner]
talking to Ms. Hubbard about drugs. They also heard Ms. Hubbard
ask the [petitioner] to give her her part of the drugs. Eventually, the
[petitioner] left Ms. Hubbard’s home.

        The [petitioner] related a rather unusual story. In the way of
background, he had previously worked as an informant for the Drug
Task Force. He then obtained a job with the sanitation department of
the City of Alcoa. While working in that capacity, he filed a lawsuit
against the city. He testified that as a part of the settlement of the
case, he became the animal control officer.

         The [petitioner] testified that when he first met Ms. Hubbard
he was on an animal control call. According to the [petitioner], Ms.
Hubbard stopped him and told him she wanted to discuss a problem
with him. They went to Ms. Hubbard’s house, and she brought out
a box of records and several cases of micro cassettes. The [petitioner]
believed this was evidence of corruption in the Alcoa Police
Department. The [petitioner] explained that the reason Ms. Hubbard
made him aware of this information was because he had a reputation
of one who was not afraid to fight city hall. The [petitioner] testified
that he later talked to a city commissioner who told him that he would
have to have material evidence to proceed against the police


                                  -2-
                  department. The [petitioner] said that it was his duty to gather
                  evidence against corrupt policemen.

                          After the initial conversation, the [petitioner] said he saw Ms.
                  Hubbard on several occasions, and she continued to express an
                  interest in turning this information over to him. In mid-June, the
                  [petitioner] told Ms. Hubbard that she should come up with some
                  money so that he could take the information, make copies of it,
                  document it and put it in chronological order. A few days later, they
                  talked again by telephone, and Ms. Hubbard asked the [petitioner] to
                  “front her” some dope. They then agreed to meet in the park. When
                  they met, Ms. Hubbard gave him money and asked him when he was
                  going to get the dope.

                           After leaving the park, the [petitioner] went to a gas station
                  and bought gas and beer. He then went to Ms. Hubbard’s house
                  where she talked to him about drugs. The [petitioner] left and
                  returned. When he returned, Ms. Hubbard offered him a drink of
                  Kool-aid and vodka. The [petitioner] said that after drinking part of
                  it, he felt strange and his thought processes went astray. He believed
                  the drink contained cocaine. He then pretended to smoke cocaine to
                  persuade Ms. Hubbard to give the information about the corrupt cops
                  to him.

                           The [petitioner] left and was arrested later that night.

                       The next day, the [petitioner] went to the Blount County
                  Memorial Lab and underwent a drug test which he failed.

See State v. Lester Parker, No. E2000-00282-CCA-R3-CD, slip op. at 2-3 (Tenn. Crim. App.,
Knoxville, Dec. 20, 2000), perm. app. denied (Tenn. May 21, 2001). After analyzing the evidence
presented at the defendant’s trial, this court said, “We find the evidence is clearly sufficient to
support the jury’s verdict. Direct evidence of the [petitioner’s] guilt was presented through several
witnesses. The [petitioner] attempted to refute this testimony by a rather incredible story which the
jury did not believe.”1 Id., slip op. at 3.

                 In the post-conviction evidentiary hearing, the petitioner testified that his trial counsel
failed to call several witnesses who could have enabled him to establish that Joy Hubbard lied about
her relationship with Alcoa Police Chief Wayne Chodak. Apparently, the petitioner wanted to
establish at trial that the charge against him was trumped up because Chief Chodak wanted to protect


         1
           The petitioner had testified, that Joy Hubbard put cocaine in the vodka and Kool-aid cocktail she gave him
and that, rather than smoke cocaine, he had actually smoked bread crumbs.

                                                        -3-
his job by preventing the petitioner from revealing that, years earlier, he and Ms. Hubbard engaged
in sexual activity when she was under the age of consent. He testified at the evidentiary hearing that
he was relying upon his trial counsel to call the witnesses, but that on the day of trial, counsel told
him “that the witnesses didn’t call him the night before the trial, [so counsel] didn’t issue those
subpoenas.”

                The petitioner further opined that, at trial, his counsel underplayed the issue of the
police chief’s relationship with Ms. Hubbard. He testified that Ms. Hubbard had told him that “she
had an affair with Wayne when she was sixteen years old and there was a baby in question.” He
testified that Ms. Hubbard was alienated from the police chief because he had stopped giving her
money. The petitioner added, “At the time, I wasn’t aware that she was actually setting me up.” He
claimed that word had gotten around that he had talked to the Federeal Bureau of Investigation about
the police department. The petitioner testified that “there was a reason for Wayne Chodak to stage
a conspiracy.”

                 The petitioner testified that the police did not tell him that the aluminum can had been
found in the Hubbard home by Donald Hubbard, not the police officers. He opined that the police
did not want to reveal Donald Hubbard’s role in the case because “he could have blew [sic] their case
apart with the fact that he knew [Ms. Hubbard] was having sex with Wayne, as a minor.” The
petitioner also maintained that Ms. Hubbard was having sexual relations with a number of Alcoa
police officers.

                The petitioner testified that his trial counsel, who had formerly served as attorney for
the City of Alcoa, agreed to pursue the conspiracy theory as a defense to the criminal drug charge
against the petitioner, but the petitioner opined that, as a result of counsel’s personal and past
professional relationship with the city administration, his trial counsel’s zeal to pursue the conspiracy
defense flagged, and counsel failed to establish the lack of credibility of three prosecution witnesses
– Ms. Hubbard and two police officers.

                 Joy Hubbard next testified on behalf of the petitioner at the evidentiary hearing. She
denied that she had told her ex-husband, Donald Hubbard, that she had once had a sexual
relationship with Wayne Chodak. She denied having sexual relations with any Alcoa police officer.
She further denied that she had told Donald Hubbard that, several years earlier, she had taken “the
fall” for a driving under the influence charge when Wayne Chodak had been driving. She denied
that Chief Chodak was the father of her first child and that she had ever told Donald Hubbard that
the chief was the father. She maintained that the petitioner tried to get her to “write stuff down
[about Chief Chodak] that didn’t happen. . . . He was . . . trying to get me to write stuff down that
he was saying.”

              Ms. Hubbard testified that the police department paid her $200 to participate in the
drug undercover operation against the petitioner. She testified that a few hours after the petitioner
smoked cocaine from an aluminum can in her home, she and Donald Hubbard found the can under



                                                  -4-
a bed. She called the police department and gave the can to an Alcoa officer. She denied that she
had ever used drugs.

                Donald Hubbard testified for the petitioner by deposition.2 He testified that he was
married to Joy Hubbard for more than a year and that while they were married, she told him that
Wayne Chodak was the father of her oldest child. He admitted, however, that Joy Hubbard had also
told him that a different person was the child’s father. He testified that Joy Hubbard told him that
her relationship with Wayne Chodak began when she was arrested for shoplifting at the age of 16
and that she later had a sexual relationship with another Alcoa police officer. He testified that Joy
Hubbard continued to enjoy favoritism from the Alcoa Police Department. He testified that Joy
Hubbard showed him a “piece of paper signed by Wayne Chodak,” which she referred to as her “get-
out-of-jail-free pass.” He claimed that Joy Hubbard further told him that she had once accepted
blame for Wayne Chodak’s driving under the influence. He testified that when he and Joy Hubbard
were married, Wayne Chodak called her on the telephone “all the time.”

               Mr. Hubbard testified that Joy Hubbard had told him that she had had a sexual
relationship with the petitioner. Mr. Hubbard testified that he was in South Carolina when the
petitioner was tried and that neither the prosecutor nor defense counsel spoke with him about the
case.

                 Mr. Hubbard testified that he was in the basement of the Hubbard’s Alcoa home on
June 20, 1997, the afternoon the petitioner left the aluminum can. According to Mr. Hubbard,
earlier that day, Joy Hubbard, serving in an undercover capacity and equipped with recording devices
and money furnished by the police, met the petitioner at a park. She gave the petitioner money, and
“he was supposed to get the dope and bring it back to the house to her.” Joy Hubbard returned to
the home, and Mr. Hubbard then waited in the basement with police officers who were conducting
surveillance. Later, the petitioner arrived.

               Mr. Hubbard testified that, on the following day, as he was vacuuming under the bed,
an aluminum can “came rolling out. Well, I picked the can up, . . . and I showed it to Joy, and she
immediately called [Detective] Dale Boring . . . .” He testified that, despite a half-hour’s search,
the police had been unable to find the can the previous day after the petitioner left.

                Mr. Hubbard testified that back at the time of this incident, the petitioner was trying
to get Wayne Chodak in trouble over his relationship with Joy Hubbard. He stated, “[H]e wanted
this on Chodak to, I guess, revenge against him losing his job.” Mr. Hubbard testified that the
petitioner had been demoted at the police department, “and he was all the time . . . suing the City of
Alcoa. He was suing the Alcoa Police Department, and he was all the time suing somebody.”

              Terry Baker testified for the petitioner that he was married to Joy Hubbard in the
1980.s. He testified that Ms. Hubbard talked about having “a relationship” with Wayne Chodak


       2
           The witness was incarcerated in Columbia, South Carolina.

                                                        -5-
and that this relationship with Chief Chodak was one of the reasons they divorced. He testified that
Joy Hubbard’s driving under the influence conviction resulted from her hitting a fence when she was
coming to pick up Mr. Baker at his parents’ house. Mr. Baker believed that he was the father of Joy
Hubbard’s oldest child, but he acknowledged that she once told him that a man named Tom Knowles
was the father.

                Called by the petitioner, Wayne Chodak testified that, as Alcoa chief of police, the
petitioner worked under him as an animal control officer. Chief Chodak acknowledged that he had
heard that the petitioner was contacting Joy Hubbard in an effort to get derogatory information about
him. He denied that he had ever engaged in sexual activity with Ms. Hubbard and denied that he had
once arrested her on a shoplifting charge. He testified that the petitioner is the only person who had
ever accused him of having an illicit affair with Joy Hubbard or anyone else. He stated that Joy
Hubbard called him several times over the years, that many of the calls related to her complaint that
the petitioner was harassing her, and that the others were “law enforcement related.”

               On cross-examination, Chief Chodak testified that he did not initiate the criminal
investigation of the petitioner. He testified that he could not have sired Joy Hubbard’s 18-year-old
daughter because he had undergone a vasectomy 27 years earlier.

                The petitioner called former Alcoa police officer John Swicegood to testify in the
evidentiary hearing. He testified that, when he worked as an officer, he once saw Wayne Chodak
sitting in a parked car with Joy Hubbard and that she would frequently call Wayne Chodak during
the evening shift.

              Mr. Swicegood acknowledged that he had been a candidate for chief of police when
Wayne Chodak was selected. He testified that Chief Chodak once “rescinded” Mr. Swicegood’s
promotion from patrol officer to field training officer. He maintained, however, that he left the
department with no ill feelings.

                 Next, Detective Lieutenant Dale Boring of the Alcoa Police Department testified.
He denied that Joy Hubbard had engaged in sexual activity with him or that he knew of any such
activity between her and any other Alcoa officer. He testified that he had no basis for believing that
Joy Hubbard and Wayne Chodak had a relationship. He testified that when the Hubbards found the
aluminum can the day following the petitioner’s visit, he went to their home and retrieved it. He
testified that he was probably the one who took the can to the crime laboratory for analysis and was
probably the one who returned it to the police department following analysis.

                Former Alcoa police officer William Donnie Vance testified in the evidentiary
hearing and characterized Ms. Hubbard as a “uniform freak,” someone who “likes police officers.”
He testified that “roughly” in 1985, he saw Detective Boring in a sexually compromising situation
with Ms. Hubbard. He also testified that he saw Wayne Chodak visiting Ms. Hubbard when she
worked as a clerk at a convenience store in Powell, north of Knoxville.



                                                 -6-
              Mr. Vance admitted that he resigned from the Alcoa Police Department “prior to
being terminated over several small trumped-up charges.” He testified that the department’s
“trumping up” charges against officers was a well known fact. Bill Thomas was the chief at the time
he resigned. He testified that Chief Thomas advised him to resign because Wayne Chodak was
“after” Mr. Vance and that Mr. Vance could “eat a bullet if [he didn’t] resign.”

                Called by the state, the petitioner’s trial counsel testified that he was appointed to
defend the drug charge in circuit court. He testified that he received discovery materials from the
state, including toxicology reports. He recalled moving to suppress the results of the petitioner’s
drug test, but the trial court overruled the motion. He opined that the admission of the drug test
meant that the petitioner needed to testify and that, in any event, the petitioner “was pretty set on
testifying.”

               Trial counsel acknowledged that the defense theory was that the petitioner was “being
set up.” He recalled that the defense theory was based upon “hanky-panky going on between Chief
Chodak and Joy Hubbard, and that this prosecution was basically a retaliation for that.” He testified
that he had subpoenaed Chief Chodak and the Blount County Sheriff, but these subpoenas were
quashed. He did not recall the petitioner’s proposing any other witnesses.

                Trial counsel rejected the notion that he should have sought Donald Hubbard to be
a witness. He stated that Joy Hubbard was present when the aluminum can was found and that,
therefore, Donald Hubbard’s role as a link in the custody chain of the can was superfluous.
Moreover, counsel opined that showing the jury that Mr. Hubbard, a civilian, was in the Hubbard
basement with the secluded police officers would belie the defense theory that the police were
fabricating a case against the petitioner.

                Counsel opined that the tapes of the petitioner’s conversations with Ms. Hubbard
were not flattering to the petitioner. Counsel conjectured, however, that the “critical thing is when
[the petitioner] began explaining [on cross-examination] about the bread crumbs . . . . I think that
was a significant point in his testimony.”

                On cross-examination, trial counsel testified that between 1989 and 1997 he was
associated in law practice with a lawyer who was the Alcoa city attorney. He acknowledged that he
had acted as a prosecutor in the Alcoa municipal court but stated that he “didn’t deal very much with
the police side of it.” He testified that he had left the law firm before being appointed to represent
the petitioner. He stated that the petitioner knew that he had performed legal services for the City
of Alcoa and that counsel’s mother worked at city hall. Counsel opined that he felt no allegiance to
the City of Alcoa and “thought that perhaps [his former] affiliation might actually help [the
petitioner].” Counsel opined that at trial he cross-examined prosecution witnesses vigorously and
that his connection to the City of Alcoa did not bother him. Counsel acknowledged that he obtained
no written waiver from the petitioner.




                                                 -7-
                 Counsel believed that he had interviewed witnesses prior to trial but could not
specifically recall any interviews. Although approximately ten witnesses were subpoenaed by the
defense to testify at trial, counsel only utilized the petitioner and his brother as witnesses. He opined
that using “150 people” to show a relationship between Wayne Chodak and Joy Hubbard “wouldn’t
have made any difference.” He expressed his view that he did not have to prove that a relationship
existed between Wayne Chodak and Joy Hubbard to effectively defend the criminal charge against
the petitioner and that “up until the bread crumbs . . . we would have gotten an acquittal.”

              Counsel testified that the state made no pretrial disclosure that Donald Hubbard had
found the aluminum can in the Hubbard home.

                Counsel acknowledged that he “probably” did not challenge the state’s proof
establishing a chain of custody for the aluminum can. He believed that the state established a
sufficient chain of custody.

               After the petitioner’s trial, counsel moved for leave to withdraw from the case, in part,
because he had returned to the law firm that represented the City of Alcoa. Nevertheless, counsel
represented the petitioner through his direct appeal.

                Following this testimony, the petitioner returned to the witness stand to rebut the
testimony of Joy Hubbard via tape recordings he made of his discussions with her following his trial.
He testified that the conversations revealed that Joy Hubbard did hold documentary evidence of her
relationship with Wayne Chodak and that she was the one who initiated the discussions with the
petitioner about buying drugs.

                 In its written order adjudicating the issues raised in the post-conviction petition, the
post-conviction court found that the state had denied the petitioner due process by not revealing the
information possessed by Donald Hubbard and that the petitioner’s trial counsel rendered deficient
performance by failing to interview Donald Hubbard and by failing to challenge the chain of custody
of the aluminum can, “which, given the testimony at trial, very well might have been excluded.”
Nevertheless, the court denied post-conviction relief because the petitioner failed to demonstrate
prejudice in view of the petitioner’s testimony at trial, which “so completely convinced the jury of
his guilt that no amount of damage to the credibility of Joy Hubbard or Dale Boring would overcome
it.” In conclusion, the court held, “Due to the extremely unusual facts of this case, the constitutional
violations suffered by the petitioner would, if righted, not result in a different result.”

               On appeal, the petitioner posits that, but for the withholding of material evidence, the
outcome of the trial would have been different and that the record supports a finding of ineffective
assistance of counsel.

                In post-conviction proceedings, the petitioner has the burden of proving by clear and
convincing evidence the claims raised. Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-110(f) (2003). On appeal, the
lower court’s findings of fact are reviewed de novo with a presumption of correctness that may only


                                                  -8-
be overcome if the evidence preponderates against those findings. Fields v. State, 40 S.W.3d 450,
458 (Tenn. 2001). “Claims of ineffective assistance of counsel are considered mixed questions of
law and fact and are subject to de novo review.” Serrano v. State, 133 S.W.3d 599, 603 (Tenn.
2004); see State v. Burns, 6 S.W.3d 453, 461 (Tenn. 1999).

                                       I. Due Process Claims.

A. Unspecified Due Process Claim.

                In his brief, the petitioner asserts that his due process rights were abrogated at trial
because the petitioner did not know about and did not utilize the information possessed by Donald
Hubbard, Terry Baker, and former officers Swicegood and Vance. In this section of his brief,
however, the petitioner fails to cite to authority to support his claim that circumstances surrounding
the absence of these witnesses equate to a denial of due process of law. Although he offers legal
bases as to why the testimony of some of these witnesses might have been admissible, he affords us
no legal bases for adjudicating a denial of due process. In this situation, this general claim of a
denial of due process related to all of these witnesses is waived. See R. Tenn. Ct. Crim. App. 10(b).

B. Brady Due Process Claim.

                In a separate section of his brief, however, the petitioner argues that the state’s
withholding the information that Donald Hubbard could have impeached Joy Hubbard and that he
was the person who found the aluminum can violated principles of due process. For this proposition,
the petitioner relies upon the lodestar of Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 83 S. Ct. 1194 (1963).

                In Brady, the United States Supreme Court held that the prosecution has a
constitutional duty to furnish an accused with exculpatory evidence pertaining to either the accused’s
guilt or innocence and to the punishment that may be imposed. Failure to reveal exculpatory
evidence violates due process when the evidence is material either to guilt or punishment,
irrespective of good faith or bad faith of the prosecution. Id. at 87, 83 S. Ct. at 1196-97.
Suppression by the prosecution of exculpatory evidence violates not only the Fourteenth
Amendment’s due process guarantee to a fair trial, but also the Tennessee Constitution’s “Law of
the Land” Clause. See State v. Ferguson, 2 S.W.3d 912, 915 (Tenn. 1999).

               To obtain post-conviction relief on this basis, the petitioner bears the burden of
proving the following:

               (1) that the defendant requested the information (unless the evidence
               is obviously exculpatory, in which case the state is bound to release
               the information whether requested or not);

               (2) that the state suppressed the information;



                                                  -9-
               (3) that the information was favorable to the accused; and

               (4) that the information was material.

Johnson v. State, 38 S.W.3d 52, 56 (Tenn. 2001); see State v. Edgin, 902 S.W.2d 387, 390 (Tenn.
1995).

                The materiality aspect of a Brady claim is governed by the same prejudice standard
as an ineffective assistance of counsel claim; that is, a defendant must show that there is a reasonable
probability that the result of the proceedings would have been different. See United States v. Bagley,
473 U.S. 667, 682, 105 S. Ct. 3375, 3383 (1985). Materiality does not demand a showing by a
preponderance that the suppressed evidence would have resulted in the defendant’s acquittal. Kyles
v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 434, 115 S. Ct. 1555, 1566 (1995); Johnson v. State, 38 S.W.3d 52, 58
(Tenn. 2001). Moreover, materiality is not an evidence sufficiency test. Kyles, 514 U.S. at 434,
115 S. Ct. at 1566; Johnson, 38 S.W.3d at 58. Once constitutional error has been found, there is no
need for further harmless-error review. Kyles, 514 U.S. at 435, 115 S. Ct. at 1566; Johnson, 38
S.W.3d at 63. Finally, the “suppressed evidence [is to be] considered collectively, not item by item”
to gauge materiality. Kyles, 514 U.S. at 436, 115 S. Ct. at 1567. Plainly stated, establishing
materiality requires a “showing that the favorable evidence could reasonably be taken to put the
whole case in such a different light as to undermine confidence in the verdict.” Id. at 435, 115 S.
Ct. at 1566; see Johnson, 38 S.W.3d at 58.

               Impeachment evidence is treated no differently than other evidence in terms of
exculpatory significance. “Impeachment evidence, . . . as well as exculpatory evidence, falls within
the Brady rule.” Bagley, 473 U.S. at 676, 105 S. Ct. at 3380. Impeachment evidence is “‘evidence
favorable to an accused,’ . . . so that, if disclosed and used effectively, it may make the difference
between conviction and acquittal.” Id., 105 S. Ct. at 3380.

              The gist of the Brady argument is that the state withheld information that Donald
Hubbard was the sole person who found the aluminum can and that Mr. Hubbard held knowledge
that would impeach Joy Hubbard. We look at these claims separately.

               (1) Chain-of-custody claim.

                Regarding withholding information that Donald Hubbard acted alone in finding the
can, we are unable to conclude that the record supports a finding that the state suppressed the
information. Detective Boring was the person the Hubbards called about the discovery of the can,
and Detective Boring retrieved the can from the Hubbard residence. Although Donald Hubbard
testified through his deposition that he found the can, Joy Hubbard testified that she and Donald
Hubbard found the can together and that she gave it to Detective Boring. Detective Boring testified
at the evidentiary hearing that he did not recall which one of the Hubbards called him, and he was
not positive who gave him the can when he arrived, although he assumed it may have been Donald
Hubbard because he knew that Donald Hubbard’s fingerprints would appear on the can. The


                                                 -10-
detective recalled that the can was found under a bed but did not recall whether Donald Hubbard said
he had found it.

                 If indeed the post-conviction court found that the state had knowledge that Donald
Hubbard was the sole finder of the aluminum can, we conclude that the evidence preponderates
against such a finding. Detective Boring disavowed any such knowledge, and Donald Hubbard
himself testified that no one questioned him about the case. We hold that the petitioner did not show
by clear and convincing evidence that the state knew about Donald Hubbard’s claim to have been
the sole finder of the can. It follows that the state could not have suppressed that of which it had no
knowledge.

                We also fail to discern a basis for holding that Donald Hubbard’s claims about the
aluminum can were material. We comprehend that, had the defense been aware that Donald
Hubbard would have testified consistently with his post-conviction deposition, the information may
have been utilized on at least one of two levels. The defense may have challenged the admissibility
of the aluminum can based upon Donald Hubbard being a missing link in the state’s chain of
custody, and if that failed, the defense presumably could have argued against the authenticity of the
evidence on the basis of Donald Hubbard’s opportunity to fabricate evidence. Nonetheless, we are
unconvinced that Donald Hubbard’s information as revealed in the deposition was material.

                 In order for the defense to have mounted a challenge to the chain of custody based
upon Donald Hubbard’s claim of discovering the aluminum can, it would have had to have produced
Mr. Hubbard; Joy Hubbard apparently would have testified that she was present when the can was
found and that she delivered it to Detective Boring. The appearance of Donald Hubbard as a witness
in the context of a challenge to the chain of custody, however, would have no doubt resulted in the
state’s utilization of him as a provisional custody witness. Furthermore, we recognize that Donald
Hubbard’s account of finding the can, although differing from that of Joy Hubbard as to method of
discovery, does not differ from Joy Hubbard’s account as to the derivation of the can. Donald
Hubbard did not claim that the can was somewhere other than under the bed where Joy Hubbard saw
the petitioner throw it, and Donald Hubbard provided no information that suggested that the
relationship of the can to the petitioner was fabricated. Indeed, Joy Hubbard had an equal
opportunity to fabricate evidence by putting the can under the bed. From the standpoint of
admissibility, Donald Hubbard’s presence at trial would have added nothing except to cause the state
to cover the contingency that he was an indispensable link in the chain of custody.

                 From the standpoint of the weight of the evidence as considered by the jury, we again
stress that Donald Hubbard had no information that contradicted Joy Hubbard’s account of why the
can was found behind or under the bed. Certainly, had Donald Hubbard’s claimed role in finding
the can been known by the defense at the time of trial, the defense could have argued that Hubbard
could have fabricated the evidence. We point out, however, that, at least at trial, the defense was
aware of Donald Hubbard’s presence in the house during the petitioner’s visit because Blount
County Sheriff’s Deputy Scott Johnson, who operated the recording equipment in the basement,
testified at trial that Mr. Hubbard was there with him. Moreover, as pointed out above, the


                                                 -11-
aluminum can as evidence was as vulnerable to a claim that Joy Hubbard, as opposed to Donald
Hubbard, contrived the evidence. In these circumstances, Donald Hubbard’s information as revealed
in the deposition was not material in the Brady sense.

               Based upon a lack of state suppression and of materiality, we hold that no Brady due
process violation occurred with respect to the admissibility or weight of the aluminum can as
evidence.

                (2) Impeachment claim.

                Next, we examine the claim that Donald Hubbard’s deposition revealed information
that would have served to impeach Joy Hubbard as a trial witness. Certainly, Donald Hubbard
claimed that Joy Hubbard told him details about her relationship with Wayne Chodak that
contradicted both her trial and evidentiary hearing testimony. Also, assuming that the defense could
have satisfied the rigors of Tennessee Rule of Evidence 613(b) in impeaching a witness via extrinsic
evidence of a prior inconsistent statement, the prospective impeachment of prosecution witness Joy
Hubbard would qualify as exculpatory for purposes of a Brady claim. See State v. Leach,148 S.W.3d
42, 56 (Tenn. 2004) (“Under the collateral fact rule, the statement of a witness made during
cross-examination as to a collateral fact may not be impeached by extrinsic evidence of a prior
inconsistent statement as to that fact”); see Bagley, 473 U.S. at 675, 105 S. Ct. at 3380. We see no
basis, however, for concluding that the state suppressed this information because the petitioner has
failed to establish that the state was aware of Donald Hubbard’s claims about Joy Hubbard’s
relationship with Wayne Chodak.

               For this reason, we cannot conclude that the petitioner proved by clear and convincing
evidence that the state violated the principles of Brady because it did not reveal to him before trial
the knowledge claimed by Donald Hubbard.

              We note that had a Brady violation been established, the post-conviction court should
not have undertaken a harmless error analysis. See Kyles, 514 U.S. at 435, 115 S. Ct. at 1566.

               Ultimately, we affirm the post-conviction court in its denial of relief on the Brady
claim, but we do so on the ground that Brady violations are not established in the post-conviction
record and not because any Brady violation was harmless.

                                II. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel.

                  The petitioner espouses on appeal that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance
of counsel because (1) counsel had a conflict of interests in representing the petitioner at trial, (2)
he failed to call available witnesses to support the petitioner’s claim of corruption in the Alcoa Police
Department, and (3) he failed to require the state to establish a chain of custody of the aluminum can.
The trial court’s findings of deficient performance of counsel related to his failure to interview
Donald Hubbard and his failure to challenge the chain of custody of the aluminum can.


                                                  -12-
               When a petitioner challenges the effective assistance of counsel, he has the burden
of establishing (1) deficient representation and (2) prejudice resulting from that deficiency.
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 686, 104 S. Ct. 2052, 2064 (1984); Baxter v. Rose, 523
S.W.2d 930, 936 (Tenn. 1975). Deficient representation occurs when counsel’s services fall below
the range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases. Bankston v. State, 815 S.W.2d
213, 215 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1991). Prejudice is the reasonable likelihood that, but for deficient
representation, the outcome of the proceedings would have been different. Overton v. State, 874
S.W.2d 6, 11 (Tenn. 1994). Courts need not address both Strickland components in any particular
order or even address both if the petitioner fails to meet his burden with respect to one. Henley v.
State, 960 S.W.2d 572, 580 (Tenn. 1997). On review, there is a strong presumption of satisfactory
representation. Barr v. State, 910 S.W.2d 462, 464 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1995).

                In evaluating counsel’s performance, this court should not examine every allegedly
deficient act or omission in isolation, but rather we view the performance in the context of the case
as a whole. State v. Mitchell, 753 S.W.2d 148, 149 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1988). The primary concern
of the court should be the fundamental fairness of the proceeding being challenged. Id. Therefore,
this court should not second-guess tactical and strategic decisions of defense counsel. Henley, 960
S.W.2d at 579. Instead, this court must reconstruct the circumstances of counsel’s challenged
conduct and evaluate the conduct from counsel’s perspective at the time. Id.; see also Irick v. State,
973 S.W.2d 643, 652 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1998). A court must

                “consider the totality of the evidence before the judge or jury. Some
                of the factual findings will have been unaffected by the errors, and
                factual findings that were affected will have been affected in different
                ways. Some errors will have had a pervasive effect on the inferences
                to be drawn from the evidence, altering the entire evidentiary picture,
                and some will have had an isolated trivial effect. . . .”

Henley, 960 S.W.2d at 580 (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 696-97, 104 S. Ct. at 2069).

A. Conflict of Interests.

                 The petitioner argues that his trial counsel was conflicted in his representation of the
petitioner at trial because of his professional and personal affiliation with the City of Alcoa. The
petitioner cited counsel’s (1) former representation of municipal interests as an associate in a law
firm that represented the city and (2) counsel’s mother’s position as an administrative assistant to
the city manager.

                 Ineffective assistance of counsel may result if counsel’s performance is affected by
a conflict of interests. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 692, 104 S. Ct. at 2067. This conflict, however, must
be more than just a potential conflict of interest. See Cuyler v. Sullivan, 446 U.S. 335, 100 S. Ct.
1708 (1980). “An actual conflict of interest is usually defined in the context of one attorney
representing two or more parties with divergent interests.” State v. Tate, 925 S.W.2d 548, 552


                                                  -13-
(Tenn. Crim. App. 1995). Prejudice is presumed “if the defendant demonstrates that counsel
‘actively represented conflicting interests’ and that ‘an actual conflict of interest adversely affected
his lawyer’s performance.’” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 692, 104 S. Ct. at 2067; Netters v. State, 957
S.W.2d 844, 847 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997). To establish a claim based upon conflict of interests, the
conflict must be actual and significant, not irrelevant or “merely hypothetical.” Howard Clifton
Kirby v. State, No. 03C01-9303-CR-00074, slip op. at 4 (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville, Sept. 28,
1994), perm. app. denied (Tenn. 1995).

                We begin our analysis by noting that the post-conviction court did not find deficient
performance based upon a conflict of interests. The court made no finding at all relative to a conflict
of interests apparently because the issue was not raised in the pleadings and was not addressed by
post-conviction counsel in their arguments.3 In this situation, the claim on appeal is waived.
Generally, this court does not address issues in post-conviction cases “that were not raised in the
petition or addressed in the post-conviction court.” Rickman v. State, 972 S.W.2d 687, 691 (Tenn.
Crim. App. 1997); see Tenn. R. App. P. 36(a) (precluding appellate relief “in contravention of the
province of the trier of fact”).

                 In any event, the petitioner failed to establish that an actual and significant conflict
of interests occurred, and he has failed to cite to authority on appeal that would convince us
otherwise. When trial counsel undertook the petitioner’s defense by appointment, he had previously
terminated his association with the law firm that represented the City of Alcoa. His mother’s
employment in the city manager’s office may have signified a potential conflict, but the petitioner
failed to establish that the potential had ever ripened into an actual and significant conflict. Counsel
testified that the petitioner was aware of both connections to the City of Alcoa, and based upon
counsel’s testimony, he believed that counsel’s insights into municipal operations would benefit the
defense. He affirmatively denied that his associations with the municipality “bothered” him at all.

B. Failure to Call Witnesses.

             The petitioner claims that counsel performed deficiently in failing to call witnesses
who could have attested to the corruption in the Alcoa Police Department.

                Waiver aside, we note that the post-conviction court did not find that trial counsel
performed deficiently in failing to call witnesses who were available. The witnesses presented by
the petitioner at the evidentiary hearing evinced knowledge that, if admissible at trial, might have
impeached Joy Hubbard’s trial testimony that claims of her relationship with Wayne Chodak were
groundless. These witnesses could not have impeached Wayne Chodak because he did not testify
at trial. Nor could they have impeached Detective Boring, whose trial testimony did not touch upon
his personal relationship with Joy Hubbard; evidence of a sexual relationship between Detective
Boring and Joy Hubbard would apparently have been collateral and inadmissible. See Leach, 148


        3
            W e acknowledge that post-conviction counsel did elicit testimony from trial counsel which provides the
factual basis for the petitioner’s appellate claims that counsel had a conflict of interests.

                                                       -14-
S.W.3d at 56. Essentially, in the evidentiary hearing, the petitioner established no corruption in the
Alcoa Police Department, except to offer claims that Wayne Chodak and Dale Boring lied in their
post-conviction testimony – a fact not found by the post-conviction court – and that Wayne Chodak
committed a criminal offense of statutory rape some 20 years earlier and sought to cover it up – a
claim that was left unproven in the evidentiary hearing. We cannot see how the evidence offered at
the evidentiary hearing, if even admissible at trial, could have blossomed into poignant substantive
evidence for the defense. Trial counsel apparently concluded that the defense predicated upon claims
of a cover-up and a conspiracy against the petitioner were untenable. We tend to agree. At any rate,
counsel determined not to call available witnesses, the post-conviction court failed to find deficient
performance on this point, and the record lends support to an inference that counsel made a tactical
decision not to sponsor testimony in a vain, if not self-destructive, attempt to establish a conspiracy.

C. Failure to Challenge Chain of Custody.

                In his third appellate claim of ineffective assistance, the petitioner posits that counsel
failed to challenge the admissibility of the aluminum “crack” can. Apparently, he claims that the
evidence was inadmissible because a chain-of-custody witness, Donald Hubbard, was absent at trial.
We cannot be certain of the specifics of this claim because they are not elucidated in the petitioner’s
brief. As in the case of the failure to call witnesses, the failure to challenge the chain of custody of
evidence is mentioned only topically and is, accordingly, waived. See R. Tenn. Ct. Crim. App.
10(b).

                 We recognize, however, that the post-conviction court did find that counsel performed
deficiently on the issue of the chain of custody, and we pause to consider what merit lies in this issue
had it not been waived. The petitioner’s difficulty in pointing to Donald Hubbard’s absence as a
chain-of -custody witness is that the same witness whose testimony could create a problem about the
initiation of the chain of custody is also the witness whose presence and testimony would provide
the solution. As we noted above, we have no doubt that had Donald Hubbard’s claim to have solely
found the aluminum can come to light and had the defense contested the chain of custody, the state
would have supplemented its apparently ready-in-waiting evidence of the chain of custody by
including the provisional testimony of Donald Hubbard. Moreover, the petitioner has cited no other
potential flaws in the chain of custody, and we discern none. Although the post-conviction court
expressed concern that the chain of custody was intact based upon “trial” testimony, we recognize
that the issue was not joined at trial. Had it been, we surmise that the available evidence would have
warranted admission of the can.

                Even if it had been held inadmissible, we believe that the post-conviction court’s
rationale for denying post-conviction relief – that the petitioner experienced no prejudice – is sound.
In our view, the state presented enough evidence of the conviction offense without the “crack” can




                                                  -15-
to create a jury question of guilt.4 Based on counsel’s testimony, the petitioner was apparently eager
to testify, and the admission of drug test results – not the admission of the aluminum can – was the
event that caused counsel to favor the petitioner’s testifying. Once he testified, the case was lost, and
our conclusion in this respect is shared not only by trial counsel, but also by the post-conviction
judge (who was also the trial judge) and by a panel of this court on direct appeal. The post-
conviction court concluded that not even an effective challenge to the chain of custody of the “crack”
can would have yielded a different result at trial. We agree.

                                                 III. Conclusion.

                  We find no basis for reversing the post-conviction court and affirm its order.



                                                                ___________________________________
                                                                JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., JUDGE




         4
           The state admitted tape recordings in which the petitioner discussed money and drugs with Joy Hubbard.
Evidence showed that Ms. Hubbard met the petitioner surreptitiously at a park and gave him $40. Later, he came to Joy
Hubbard’s residence, and the discussion of drugs ensued. An officer who had waited in the basement testified that he
heard the petitioner ask for an aluminum can and that aluminum cans were commonly used as devices for smoking crack
cocaine. An officer heard a noise that sounded like someone inhaling. The next day, the petitioner’s blood test yielded
a positive result for the presence of cocaine.

                                                         -16-
