Donald Woods v. State of Indiana ( 2014 )


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  • Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), this
    Memorandum Decision shall not be
    regarded as precedent or cited before any
    court except for the purpose of establishing
    the defense of res judicata, collateral
    estoppel, or the law of the case.
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                             ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
    DAVID T. PAGE                                       GREGORY F. ZOELLER
    Pittman & Page                                      Attorney General of Indiana
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    MICHAEL GENE WORDEN
    Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    Aug 11 2014, 10:33 am
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    DONALD WOODS,                                       )
    )
    Appellant-Petitioner,                        )
    )
    vs.                                  )      No. 49A02-1310-PC-858
    )
    STATE OF INDIANA,                                   )
    )
    Appellee-Respondent.                         )
    APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT
    The Honorable Grant W. Hawkins, Judge
    The Honorable Christina Klineman, Commissioner
    Cause No. 49G05-0703-FA-45266
    August 11, 2014
    MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION
    CRONE, Judge
    Case Summary
    Donald Woods appeals the denial of his petition for postconviction relief. In his
    petition, he maintains that he was denied his constitutional right to effective assistance of
    counsel based on his attorney’s alleged in-court failure to develop defenses, call certain
    experts, and conduct thorough cross-examination as well as his alleged out-of-court failure to
    investigate crime scenes. Finding that he failed to establish that he was prejudiced by any of
    his alleged errors, we affirm.
    Facts and Procedural History
    The facts as summarized in an unpublished memorandum decision on Woods’s direct
    appeal and adopted in the postconviction court’s findings of fact are as follows:
    At approximately 3:00 a.m. on March 18, 2007, Jose Raines was home
    alone and asleep on his couch when a loud noise awakened him. He looked up
    to find Donald Woods standing over him. After the two men exchanged
    words, Woods pulled a gun out of his pocket, pointed it at Raines, and
    threatened to kill him. Woods asked Raines about money and property,
    including a Playstation and some DVDs. During this exchange, Raines
    grabbed for the gun. As the two men struggled, the gun discharged. The bullet
    went past Raines’ head and embedded in the wall behind him. Raines “felt the
    gunpowder and everything else.” As the struggle continued, the magazine fell
    out of the gun. Raines managed to push Woods out the back door of his
    apartment. Once outside, Woods continued to cock the gun back and forth as
    if it were jammed.
    Police officers arrived in response to a 911 call. When they were in
    front of Raines’ residence, they heard the distinct sound of a gun being cocked
    at the rear of the house. They saw Woods around the corner of the house. The
    officers told Woods to stop and drop his gun. Woods ran toward his residence,
    and the officers followed. Woods entered his house, placed a second magazine
    in the gun, opened the front glass storm door, and shot at one of the officers.
    The officer heard the bullet go by his head and returned fire. The officer’s
    shot hit Woods. The officers arrested Woods after he exited the house and
    doubled up on the front porch, injured from the officer’s shot.
    2
    The State charged Woods with two counts of attempted murder, a Class
    A felony; one count of attempted robbery, a Class B felony; one count of
    burglary, a Class B felony; one count of resisting law enforcement, a Class D
    felony; and one count of carrying a handgun without a license, a Class A
    misdemeanor. The jury found Woods guilty of all the charges.
    Woods v. State, No. 49A04-0904-CR-192 (Ind. Ct. App. Apr. 16, 2010) (footnotes and
    internal citations omitted).
    Woods appealed, challenging the sufficiency of evidence to support his conviction for
    the attempted murder of Raines. Another panel of this Court affirmed. Woods subsequently
    filed a petition for postconviction relief, claiming that his trial counsel (“Counsel”) provided
    ineffective assistance by (1) failing to develop his self-defense claim; (2) failing to impeach
    certain State witnesses; and (3) failing to investigate crime scenes and challenge certain
    physical evidence.1 The evidence presented at the hearing consisted of exhibits (trial
    transcripts and depositions) as well as testimony from Counsel and lengthy testimony from
    Woods’s expert, Professor Frances Watson, director of the wrongful conviction clinic at the
    Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law. The postconviction court denied his
    petition, and he now appeals. Additional facts will be provided as necessary.
    Discussion and Decision
    Woods contends that the postconviction court erred in denying his petition for
    postconviction relief. The petitioner in a postconviction proceeding “bears the burden of
    establishing grounds for relief by a preponderance of the evidence.” Ind. Postconviction
    1
    In his memorandum in support of his postconviction petition, Woods also alleged ineffective
    assistance of appellate counsel. The postconviction court concluded that he waived this claim by failing to
    raise it in his petition. Ind. Postconviction Rule 1(3)(b). This appeal concerns only Woods’s trial counsel.
    3
    Rule 1(5); Passwater v. State, 
    989 N.E.2d 766
    , 770 (Ind. 2013). When issuing its decision to
    grant or deny relief, the postconviction court must make findings of fact and conclusions of
    law.   Ind. Postconviction Rule 1(6).       A petitioner who appeals the denial of his
    postconviction petition faces a rigorous standard of review. Massey v. State, 
    955 N.E.2d 247
    ,
    253 (Ind. 2011). In conducting our review, we neither reweigh evidence nor judge witness
    credibility; rather, we consider only the evidence and reasonable inferences most favorable to
    the judgment. 
    Id.
     “A post-conviction court’s findings and judgment will be reversed only
    upon a showing of clear error—that which leaves us with a definite and firm conviction that a
    mistake has been made.” Passwater, 989 N.E.2d at 770 (citation and quotation marks
    omitted). In other words, if a postconviction petitioner was denied relief in the proceedings
    below, he must show that the evidence as a whole leads unerringly and unmistakably to a
    conclusion opposite the one reached by the postconviction court. Massey, 955 N.E.2d at 253.
    Section 1.0 – Ineffective Assistance of Counsel – Standard of Review
    Woods maintains that he was denied his constitutional right to effective assistance of
    counsel. To prevail on an ineffective assistance claim, he must satisfy two components; he
    must demonstrate both deficient performance and prejudice resulting from it. Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687 (1984). Deficient performance is “representation [that] fell
    below an objective standard of reasonableness, [where] counsel made errors so serious that
    counsel was not functioning as ‘counsel’ guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment.” Passwater,
    989 N.E.2d at 770. We assess counsel’s performance based on facts that are known at the
    time and not through hindsight. Shanabarger v. State, 
    846 N.E.2d 702
    , 709 (Ind. Ct. App.
    4
    2006), trans. denied. Evidence of isolated poor strategy, inexperience, or bad tactics will not
    support an ineffective assistance claim; instead, we evaluate counsel’s performance as a
    whole. Flanders v. State, 
    955 N.E.2d 732
    , 739 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), trans. denied (2012).
    “[C]ounsel’s performance is presumed effective, and a defendant must offer strong and
    convincing evidence to overcome this presumption.” Ritchie v. State, 
    875 N.E.2d 706
    , 714
    (Ind. 2007). “Strickland does not guarantee perfect representation, only a reasonably
    competent attorney.” Hinesley v. State, 
    999 N.E.2d 975
    , 983 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013) (citation
    omitted), trans. denied (2014).
    Prejudice occurs when a reasonable probability exists that, but for counsel’s errors, the
    result of the proceeding would have been different. Passwater, 989 N.E.2d at 770. “A
    reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.”
    Mitchell v. State, 
    946 N.E.2d 640
    , 643 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), trans. denied. “Although the
    performance prong and the prejudice prong are separate inquiries, failure to satisfy either
    prong will cause the claim to fail.” Baer v. State, 
    942 N.E.2d 80
    , 91 (Ind. 2011).
    The postconviction court issued extensive findings of fact, which read in pertinent
    part,2
    6.     Although Woods was initially represented by the Marion County Public
    Defender’s Office, Woods ultimately hired private counsel, [Counsel],
    who represented him for the last four months of the pre-trial period, as
    well as throughout the jury trial and sentencing. The Petitioner
    confines his ineffective assistance of counsel claim to the
    representation provided by Counsel before and during the trial. The
    court notes that much of the discovery conducted on behalf of
    Throughout the findings, the postconviction court referred to Woods’s counsel by name. We refer to
    2
    him as Counsel.
    5
    petitioner, including all the pre-trial depositions, was done by the public
    defender’s office. All such discovery was provided to Counsel.
    Counsel’s pre-trial representation included taking a second sworn
    statement of Officer Anderson and of Officer Vanek; filing defense
    witness lists on January 8, 2009, and February 23, 2009; arguing in
    opposition to the State’s 404(b) evidence (that Woods stole the gun,
    which he possessed during the alleged crimes, from Eric Dodson)
    during a hearing on the same.
    Throughout the jury trial, Counsel participated in voir dire
    including voicing appropriate challenges for cause; present[ed] an
    opening statement; cross-examined each of the State’s eleven witnesses
    in its case-in-chief and both of the State’s rebuttal witnesses; presented
    testimony from two witnesses for the defense who each claimed that
    they were eyewitnesses to portions of the altercation with Raines and
    the police, each maintaining that the [sic] Woods’ behavior was
    contrary to that testified to by State’s witnesses[;] presented evidence
    from Woods himself; voiced pertinent objections during trial; tendered
    a proposed jury instruction for D-felony criminal recklessness and made
    argument in support thereof regarding the attempted murder count
    involving Jose Raines; tendered a proposed jury instruction regarding
    impeachment and made argument in support thereof; successfully
    presented argument in support of the court giving a self-defense
    instruction as to the attempted murder count involving Jose Raines;
    asked the court to reconsider its refusal to instruct the jury as to
    criminal recklessness and made additional argument; presented a
    closing argument for the defense; [and] polled the jury as to their
    verdict.
    Following the trial Counsel did significant work in preparation
    for sentencing. His effectiveness in the sentencing hearing, and his
    preparation therefore, are not in question.
    7.   Counsel has been an attorney for sixteen years. He has practiced
    throughout Indiana and has represented clients in a variety of cases
    including a substantial amount of criminal defense work. He estimates
    having handled one hundred fifty to two hundred major felony criminal
    cases. Counsel believes that he had tried approximately ten major
    felony jury trials as lead counsel prior to representing Woods and had
    tried another ten or so as co-counsel.
    …. Counsel obtained Woods’ file from deputy public defender
    6
    Kathie Perry within a few days of being hired, and after reviewing said
    file Counsel spoke with Ms. Perry and with [another deputy public
    defender] about the case. In addition, Counsel went out in the
    neighborhood and spoke with potential witnesses. Counsel testified
    that his preparation also included examining all of the State’s
    discovery, evidence, and exhibits; having numerous converastions [sic]
    with his client; conducting legal research; preparing jury instructions;
    and preparing for trial. Counsel believes that he did examine Woods’
    body for scars from wounds as well as Woods’ medical records; he did
    not photograph Woods’ body or conduct additional interviews of his
    treating doctors.
    Counsel did not petition to view the crime scene in Raines’
    house himself, although he reviewed the State’s evidence thoroughly.
    The court recognizes that Counsel did not enter his appearance as
    counsel in this case until October 17, 2008, nearly 19 months after the
    case was filed. Counsel did not see a need to employ an expert
    regarding blood patterns and could not recall if he interviewed crime
    scene specialist Veronica Livers prior to trial.
    Counsel reviewed all of the State’s ballistics reports and did not
    see anything that could be accomplished by having an independent
    ballistics expert examine the evidence. Counsel no longer recalls if
    there were two different opinions from the State’s experts regarding a
    connection of the firearms evidence to his client’s gun, but he would
    have reviewed any firearms experts’ reports discovered by the State.
    Counsel did not believe that there was any chance that he could get that
    .45 caliber shell casing excluded from the evidence.
    Counsel identified the “keys to the case” as self-defense, witness
    credibility and physical evidence. Counsel testified that his theory of
    the case was guided by his client’s version of the events which was
    corroborated by testimony of the neighbor across the street as well as by
    Woods’ uncle. His theme regarding the charging involving the officer
    was that an unarmed and pointing Woods was shot by police who then
    tried to cover up that Woods was unarmed (i.e. witness credibility and
    lack of physical evidence). Counsel’s theme regarding the charges
    against Raines was a struggle that resulted when Raines grabbed the
    gun and also self-defense based again upon his client’s version of the
    events which also asserted that Raines was the one who then shot at and
    tried to kill Woods. Counsel felt that the best evidence regarding self-
    defense was to let his client tell his truthful testimony about what
    7
    occurred and also to cross-examine Raines and challenge his credibility.
    When asked about the prior incident in which Raines was
    alleged to have brandished a gun, followed by a police search of
    Raines’ house in response to a call from Woods, Counsel testified that
    he was aware of this incident before trial and did plan to elicit
    testimony about it to show his client’s fear of Raines and also to show a
    motive that Raines had to be angry with Woods. Counsel was not
    aware of the actual police report prior to trial though and did not plan to
    use it as documentary evidence. Counsel does not recall specifically
    but believes that if he did not object to the State’s motion in limine
    regarding prior bad acts, then he did not believe that said motion
    applied to this evidence regarding Raines’ possession of a firearm on
    previous date. When asked if he ultimately acquiesced to not
    presenting evidence about Raines’ prior brandishing of a gun, Counsel
    strongly disagreed. Counsel’s recollection is that he repeatedly pursued
    the issue and fought the point for his client.
    8.   Frances Watson is a clinical professor of law and co-director of clinical
    programs at Indiana University’s Robert H. McKinney School of Law
    in Indianapolis. She directs the wrongful conviction clinic in which
    law students represent clients on “wrongful conviction” postconviction
    relief cases and on any related appeals. In the past, Ms. Watson worked
    with the criminal defense clinic in which law students represent
    defendants at the trial level, and she coached the trial team for more
    than ten years. She been involved with teaching at the law school for
    over twenty years and has been licensed to practice law since 1980.
    Ms. Watson has also worked in a public defender-type capacity, has
    tried over thirty jury trials, and was the first Chief Public Defender in
    Marion County, serving from 1993 to 1995. Early on in that position
    she had direct supervisory responsibility over all major felony public
    defenders.
    Ms. Watson volunteered her time regarding her preparation and
    testimony for Woods’ postconviction relief action. She was asked by
    Woods’ PCR counsel to be a witness regarding the performance of the
    trial lawyer. In preparation, she read the four-volume trial transcript.
    In Ms. Watson’s opinion, Counsel was ineffective and would have been
    given an “F” in trial practice. Ms. Watson specifically asserts that
    Counsel failed to adequately argue self-defense, failed to obtain a
    ballistics expert and suppress ballistics evidence and failed to properly
    cross-examine witnesses. (Petitioner, by counsel, argued additional
    8
    alleged deficiencies.)
    9.     The Court was not provided a copy of the police report from January
    2007 discussed at great length in the trial. The Court was not provided
    records of an independent medical examination of petitioner nor was
    the court given evidence of any kind outside the original discovery,
    other than through testimony of Professor Watson. The Court was not
    provided copies of taped statements taken by Counsel. The Court was
    not provided with any independent expert testimony on any singular
    issue related to physical evidence (i.e. no ballistics expert, no blood
    spatter expert, etc.).
    10.    Three witnesses testified on behalf of the defense during the Jury Trial,
    each bolstering Woods’ claim of self defense and/or his claims that he
    did not fire a weapon at Officer Vanek. The jury’s verdict indicates the
    testimony was rejected.
    11.    The evidence is for the State and against the Petitioner.
    Appellant’s App. at 48-53 (footnotes and internal citations omitted).
    Section 1.1 – Self-Defense Claim
    Woods maintains that Counsel was ineffective in presenting his claim of self-defense
    with respect to the attempted murder of Raines. The postconviction court concluded that
    Counsel performed deficiently for failing to adequately develop the defense but that Woods
    was not prejudiced as a result. At the postconviction hearing, Counsel testified that he had
    intended to develop self-defense by using evidence that Raines had brandished a weapon in
    front of Woods in a previous incident. The problem stems from the source of this evidence, a
    police report which was the subject of the State’s pretrial motion in limine to which Counsel
    had agreed. The trial court had granted the motion in limine based on Indiana Evidence
    Rules 609, 403, and 404(b). Nonetheless, Counsel addressed the incident in opening
    statement, and when the trial court sustained an objection by the State, a bench conference
    9
    was held outside the jury’s presence and Counsel was prohibited from further addressing the
    contents of the report.
    At the postconviction hearing, Professor Watson testified that it was apparent that
    Counsel “did not understand that he had agreed to limine out the facts relative to character
    evidence, relative to his self-defense theory and it’s clear he didn’t understand what he’d
    done or how it would impact … his opening statement.” PCR Tr. at 103. Whether owing to
    ignorance or the confusion of the moment, from that point on, Counsel did not explicitly
    develop the defense. During direct examination of Woods, Counsel elicited some testimony
    indicating that Woods had acted in self-defense during his confrontation with Raines, but
    neither the questions nor the responses were stated in those terms.3 Likewise, during his
    summation, Counsel referenced Woods’s fear of Raines, stating that Woods “saw the look in
    Jose Raines’s eyes when he whipped that gun out and aimed it at his head,” “was so sure that
    Jose Raines was going to shoot him in the head,” and was “running out there and he’s
    thinking he’s going to get shot any minute in the back.” Tr. at 1096. Counsel also sought
    and was granted a detailed self-defense jury instruction that comprised two pages of the
    3
    The facts underlying Woods’s self-defense claim are unclear. The postconviction court concluded
    that Woods’s self-defense theory was that he had seen Raines carrying a gun months earlier, that he feared that
    Raines might retaliate against him for entering his house and demanding cash and property, and that he
    therefore brought a gun when he entered Raines’s house. Appellant’s App. at 55. We agree that this was
    likely Counsel’s strategy, but we also note Woods’s trial testimony that Raines also had a gun that night and
    that Raines had been sitting on the gun on the couch when he was confronted by Woods. Tr. at 986. Woods
    was unable to explain why Raines attempted to wrestle Woods’s gun away rather than simply using his own
    gun. Id. at 986-87. At the postconviction hearing, Professor Watson testified that she did not think that
    Counsel had a consistent theory regarding self-defense and that to the extent he had a theory, he had abandoned
    it by the conclusion of the trial. PCR Tr. at 108, 111.
    10
    record. Appellant’s Dir. Appeal App. at 186-87.4
    We agree with the postconviction court that Counsel performed deficiently concerning
    Woods’s self-defense claim, especially pertaining to his handling of the pretrial motion in
    limine. Likewise, we agree that the basic facts underlying Woods’s self-defense claim (that
    Raines had previously possessed a gun and/or had a gun on the couch with him when Woods
    entered and confronted him) were placed before the jury—albeit inartfully—through
    testimony, closing argument, and the jury instruction. The jury heard this evidence and could
    evaluate it alongside the overwhelming physical and testimonial evidence of his guilt. We
    therefore conclude that there is not a reasonable probability that the outcome of his trial
    would have been different absent Counsel’s deficient performance. As such, Woods failed to
    demonstrate prejudice under Strickland.
    Section 1.2 – Cross-Examination/Impeachment of Witnesses
    Woods also alleges as deficient Counsel’s cross-examination/impeachment of certain
    State witnesses. “The nature and extent of cross-examination is a matter of trial strategy,
    delegated to trial counsel.” Bivins v. State, 
    735 N.E.2d 1116
    , 1133 (Ind. 2000) (citation
    omitted). “We will not lightly speculate as to what may or may not have been an
    advantageous trial strategy, as counsel should be given deference in choosing a trial strategy
    that, at the time and under the circumstances, seems best.” Perry v. State, 
    904 N.E.2d 302
    ,
    4
    We note that Woods was fortunate that the trial court allowed the jury instruction to be given, since
    Woods was not in a place where he had the right to be (having broken into Raines’s house) and he instigated
    the violence by bringing a firearm and pointing it at Raines. See Bryant v. State, 
    984 N.E.2d 240
    , 250 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2013) (to prevail on self-defense claim, “defendant must present evidence that he … was in a place he
    had a right to be … did not provoke, instigate, or participate willingly in the violence … and … had a
    reasonable fear of death or great bodily harm”), trans. denied.
    11
    308 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009), trans. denied. “The method of impeaching witnesses is a tactical
    decision and a matter of trial strategy that does not amount to ineffective assistance.”
    Woodson v. State, 
    961 N.E.2d 1035
    , 1042 (Ind. Ct. App. 2012) (citation omitted), trans.
    denied.
    Here, Woods cites Counsel’s cross-examination and efforts to impeach two police
    officers with prior inconsistent statements, characterizing Counsel’s questions as “compound,
    convoluted and confusing.” Appellant’s Br. at 19. At the postconviction hearing, Professor
    Watson described Counsel’s cross examination as “just horrid,” stating that “he didn’t
    understand how to ask a simple question,” asked “rambling” questions, did not know the
    difference between impeaching and refreshing recollection, and “just doesn’t have th[e] skill
    set [to impeach using a deposition].” PCR Tr. at 114-15, 119-20.
    Counsel failed to impeach Officer Vanek concerning minor discrepancies between his
    pretrial and trial testimony about his vantage point when he first arrived outside Raines’s
    home and reported hearing the noise of a gun being cocked. Counsel cross-examined Officer
    Vanek regarding the exact number of shots fired by Woods at the second crime scene and
    attempted to impeach him concerning the difference between “at least two” and “more than
    two.” Tr. at 217, 220, 229. He also attempted to impeach Officer Vanek concerning his
    exact position at the second crime scene relative to Officer Anderson and to Woods’s house.
    Moreover, the inconsistency between the two officers’ testimony concerned whether Officer
    Anderson returned fire “immediately” or “within a few seconds” after Woods fired. Id. at
    216, 302-03.
    12
    While we agree with Professor Watson that Counsel’s questions were often inartful
    and compound, we conclude that the inconsistencies did not implicate whether Woods shot at
    the officers but rather the number of shots that he fired as well as Officer Anderson’s
    response. Additionally, we note that during his summation, Counsel discussed the various
    inconsistencies in the officers’ testimony. In short, Counsel’s failure to fully highlight the
    cited testimonial inconsistencies was accompanied by overwhelming physical and testimonial
    evidence of Woods’s guilt. Woods has failed to establish clear error by the postconviction
    court in determining that he was not prejudiced by Counsel’s deficiencies in cross-
    examining/impeaching the State’s witnesses.
    Section 1.3 – Physical Evidence
    Woods also alleges that Counsel made several mistakes or omissions vis-à-vis
    physical evidence. In this vein, he claims that Counsel failed to investigate the two crime
    scenes, failed to object to the ballistics evidence, and failed to call experts to testify
    concerning the ballistics and blood evidence.
    Section 1.31 – Pretrial Investigation
    Woods submits that Counsel was ineffective in failing to investigate or photograph the
    crime scenes and in failing to introduce evidence collected there. Indisputably, effective
    representation requires adequate pretrial investigation and preparation; however, it is also
    well settled that we may not use hindsight in judging counsel’s performance. Badelle v.
    State, 
    754 N.E.2d 510
    , 538 (Ind. Ct. App. 2001), trans. denied. This means that we must
    employ a great deal of deference to counsel’s judgments with respect to pretrial
    13
    investigations. Boesch v. State, 
    778 N.E.2d 1276
    , 1283 (Ind. 2002). “[E]stablishing failure
    to investigate as a ground for ineffective assistance of counsel requires going beyond the trial
    record to show what investigation, if undertaken, would have produced.” Woods v. State,
    
    701 N.E.2d 1208
    , 1214 (Ind. 1998), cert. denied (1999).
    The trial court found that Counsel did not perform deficiently in this respect. We
    agree. Although Woods cites evidence of bullet holes, a porch light, and a bloody kitchen
    floor that purportedly should have been investigated, we note that he initially was represented
    by a public defender and that Counsel was not hired until nineteen months later. Counsel
    testified that when he was hired, he met with both predecessor deputy public defenders and
    that they discussed the case “pretty extensively [and] covered all the bases.” PCR Tr. at 12.
    He further reported that he conducted depositions, went out into the neighborhood, spoke
    with lots of witnesses, conferred with Woods multiple times, examined the State’s evidence
    (including medical records), conducted legal research, formulated theories of the case, and
    prepared jury instructions. He explained that although he did not petition the trial court for
    permission to conduct a formal investigation of the crime scenes, he visited Raines’s home
    and looked around outside and looked around inside Woods’s home during several informal
    visits. Moreover, in terms of a formal forensic investigation, the remoteness between the
    offenses and any such investigation would impact the investigator’s ability to collect
    probative physical evidence.5 Simply put, Woods has failed to establish what relevant
    5
    For example, blood on the kitchen floor would be difficult if not impossible to detect nineteen
    months after the incident. Also, a bullet-pierced glass pane presumably would have been repaired and porch
    light bulbs changed in the interim.
    14
    exculpatory evidence so late an investigation would have produced. As a result, he has failed
    to establish that the court clearly erred in determining that Counsel did not perform
    deficiently with respect to crime scene investigation.
    Section 1.32 – Ballistics Report and Expert Witnesses
    Woods also claims that Counsel was ineffective based on his failure to object to the
    ballistics report (or file a motion to suppress it) or to object to the State’s expert testimony
    concerning ballistics. To prove ineffective assistance based on counsel’s failure to object, a
    petitioner must prove that an objection would have been sustained if made and that he was
    prejudiced by the failure. Kubsch v. State, 
    934 N.E.2d 1138
    , 1150 (Ind. 2010). See also
    Helton v. State, 
    907 N.E.2d 1020
    , 1024 (Ind. 2009) (petitioner failed to show reasonable
    probability that he would have prevailed at trial had counsel filed motion to suppress,
    meaning that trial court would have granted it and State’s other evidence would have been
    otherwise insufficient to support conviction). “[A] decision regarding what witnesses to call
    is a matter of trial strategy which an appellate court will not second-guess.” Curtis v. State,
    
    905 N.E.2d 410
    , 415 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009) (citation omitted), trans. denied.
    With respect to the ballistics evidence, Professor Watson testified that Counsel should
    have objected when the State’s ballistics expert characterized the shell casing as a “match”
    with Woods’s weapon, opining that the term is an overstatement and that the preferred
    phraseology is “consistent with.” PCR Tr. at 126-29, 132. Not only did Counsel not object
    to the term “match” during trial, but he also used the term at the postconviction hearing,
    testifying that “the .45 caliber cartridge shell that was found outside was problematic because
    15
    it matched the caliber of the handgun that belonged to – was in the possession of Donald
    Woods that night.” Id. at 30. With respect to his decision not to call an expert to refute the
    report and testimony, Counsel stated,
    I did not see anything there that I thought would help the defense in terms of –
    if what you’re getting at is, you know, did I hire an independent ballistics
    expert to examine anything, I did not and that was based on the fact that I …
    didn’t see anything that leapt out at me as being important to inform me that I
    should do so.
    Id.
    In reviewing Counsel’s postconviction hearing testimony concerning ballistics, we see
    a lengthy line of questioning concerning alleged inconsistencies between the State’s experts,
    apparently to show that Counsel should have objected or called his own witnesses.
    However, as a whole, Counsel’s responses concerning the ballistics evidence indicate that his
    approach was strategic, based on his not wanting to draw attention to the caliber match by
    raising an objection. The record is devoid of evidence that the State’s ballistics evidence was
    subject to fabrication or tampering. Instead, the evidence simply was unfavorable to
    Woods’s case, showing with respect to the second crime scene (1) that a .45 caliber shell
    casing was discovered in a place consistent with the officers’ testimony that Woods fired at
    them; (2) police found a .45 caliber Glock stashed partially under a bed in Woods’s home;
    and (3) that the officers were carrying .40 caliber firearms. Woods has failed to demonstrate
    that any objection would have been sustained or that any additional expert would have
    offered probative evidence to cast doubt on the ballistics evidence. Consequently, he has
    failed to establish clear error by the postconviction court in its concluding that Counsel did
    16
    not perform deficiently with respect to the ballistics evidence.
    Additionally, Woods complains that Counsel should have done more to call the jury’s
    attention to his injuries, that is, Counsel should have taken photographs or called an expert to
    testify concerning them. The fact that Woods was injured during his confrontation with
    police was placed before the jury multiple times during the three-day trial. He has failed to
    demonstrate that photographs or expert commentary on the physical appearance of those
    injuries would be anything other than cumulative. As such, Counsel did not perform
    deficiently in this respect. We find no clear error here.
    Woods makes a similar argument with respect to blood spatter evidence, claiming that
    Counsel was ineffective in not calling an expert witness to testify. Again, Woods did not
    offer any exhibits or testimony from ballistics or blood evidence experts during the
    postconviction hearing in an effort to establish the exculpatory effect of such expert
    testimony. We find no clear error by the postconviction court in concluding that Counsel did
    not perform deficiently with respect to blood spatter evidence or any other physical evidence.
    Section 1.4 – Cumulative Effect
    Finally, Woods maintains that the cumulative effect of Counsel’s alleged errors
    amounts to ineffective assistance. Errors by counsel that are not individually sufficient to
    establish ineffective representation may add up to ineffective assistance when viewed
    cumulatively. Pennycuff v. State, 
    745 N.E.2d 804
    , 816-17 (Ind. 2001). Cf. Lloyd v. State,
    
    669 N.E.2d 980
    , 985 (Ind. 1996) (court refused to find cumulative prejudice where defendant
    was not prejudiced by any of the individually assigned errors). Here, the postconviction
    17
    court concluded that Woods failed to prove deficient performance with respect to Counsel’s
    investigation of crime scenes and treatment of ballistics and blood evidence. As such, the
    only errors (deficiencies in performance) to be considered for cumulative effect are
    Counsel’s failure to develop Woods’s self-defense claim and Counsel’s inartful impeachment
    of State witnesses. As stated, the self-defense claim was placed before the jury, albeit
    weakly, and the inconsistencies in the officers’ testimony did not call into doubt Woods’s act
    of shooting at them. In the words of Woods’s own expert Professor Watson, the State’s case
    against him was “strong.” PCR Tr. at 135. Based on the foregoing, we conclude that the
    two instances of deficient performance, even considered cumulatively, do not amount to
    prejudice. Thus, Woods has failed to establish clear error in the postconviction court’s denial
    of his petition. Accordingly, we affirm.
    Affirmed.
    BAKER, J., and BARNES, J., concur.
    18