State of Tennessee v. Frederick Keith ( 2015 )


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  •         IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    March 24, 2015 Session
    STATE OF TENNESSEE v. FREDERICK KEITH
    Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Knox County
    No. 93721    Steven W. Sword, Judge
    No. E2014-00448-CCA-R3-CD – Filed July 16, 2015
    The appellant, Frederick Keith, was convicted in the Knox County Criminal Court of first
    degree felony murder, and the trial court sentenced him to life. On appeal, the appellant
    contends that the evidence is insufficient to support the conviction, that the trial court
    erred by failing to grant his motion to sever his case from that of his co-defendant, and
    that the State committed prosecutorial misconduct during closing arguments by vouching
    for the credibility of State witnesses. Based upon the oral arguments, the record, and the
    parties‟ briefs, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    Tenn. R. App. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the the Criminal Court is
    Affirmed.
    NORMA MCGEE OGLE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN EVERETT
    WILLIAMS and ROBERT L. HOLLOWAY, JR., JJ., joined.
    Robert R. Kurtz, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the Appellant, Frederick Keith.
    Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Benjamin A. Ball, Senior Counsel;
    Charme P. Allen, District Attorney General; and Leslie R. Nassios, Assistant District
    Attorney General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.
    OPINION
    I. Factual Background
    In February 2010, the Knox County Grand Jury indicted Michael Lambdin,
    Anthony White, and the appellant for first degree felony murder committed during their
    attempt to rob Vincent Presutto, who was shot and killed. On the morning of the first day
    of trial, the State orally moved to sever White‟s trial from that of his co-defendants. The
    trial court granted the motion, and the appellant and Lambdin proceeded to trial.
    Barbara Eaton testified that on December 17, 2009, she was living in the
    Woodgate apartment complex on Cedar Lane in Knoxville and that her apartment was
    “[r]ight behind” apartment 109. About 11:15 p.m., Eaton returned home from work and
    pulled into the parking lot. She saw a small, dark-colored pickup truck with “Mazda” on
    the tailgate. The truck was in Eaton‟s parking space, and she noticed that the truck‟s
    headlights were turned off but that its parking lights were turned on. She said that the
    truck “started creeping a little bit” so that it eventually moved out of her space and into a
    space across from where she usually parked. Eaton could not see how many people were
    inside the truck.
    Eaton testified that as she was backing into her parking space, she hit something.
    She said that she stopped and that a young, white male “come running around and
    stopped right at my window for a second.” Eaton looked at the male, he looked at her,
    and he ran to the truck and got in. Eaton described the male as short, blonde, blue-eyed,
    and wearing a camouflage jacket. She turned off her car engine and heard someone
    yelling for help. Eaton looked to her left and saw a second male “come running out
    through the breezeway.” The pickup truck pulled up to the sidewalk, and the second
    male “jumped” into the truck. The truck pulled onto Cedar Lane with its headlights still
    turned off.
    Eaton testified that as she was walking to her apartment, she received a telephone
    call from a friend who worked at 911. The friend told her, “„Go in the house. There was
    just a shooting.‟” Eaton walked to the victim‟s apartment to see if she could help and
    saw the victim lying on the ground. She said that his apartment door was open and that
    she saw “quite a bit of blood.” In the early morning hours of December 18, an
    investigator showed Eaton a photograph array, and she identified the first male‟s
    photograph. She said that about one and one-half minutes elapsed between her seeing the
    first male and the second male.
    On cross-examination by the appellant, Eaton acknowledged that she identified
    Lambdin as the first male. She said that the second male had dark hair and was wearing a
    camouflage jacket but that she could not identify him. On cross-examination by
    Lambdin, Eaton testified that the second male “[ran] as fast as he could to the truck” but
    that the first male “ran slower to the truck.” Eaton never heard a gunshot.
    Alan Bull of Knox County 911 testified that on December 17, 2009, the 911 center
    received calls about a shooting. The State played the audio-recorded calls for the jury.
    -2-
    During the first call, which was recorded at 11:19 p.m., a woman reported that someone
    in her apartment complex had been shot. She said she heard one gunshot, went outside,
    and heard a man screaming, “Help me, help me!” The caller, who was inside her
    apartment, said that the victim was outside and that “I don‟t hear him anymore.” During
    the second call, a woman reported that she heard a man calling for help and that he
    sounded like he was in pain. During the third call, which was recorded at 11:20 p.m., the
    victim telephoned 911 but hung up or was disconnected. The dispatcher called the
    victim‟s cellular telephone, and the victim answered. The victim yelled, “Help me!” and
    “701 Woodgate!” The victim said he had been shot and continued to yell for help. The
    victim said “help” one last time before the call ended. In the fourth call, which was
    recorded at 11:21 p.m., a man said that he heard a gunshot and that someone was outside
    his apartment, screaming for help. He said that he heard “a big bang” and that he did not
    know if the victim “fell or what.” During the fifth call, a man reported that a male had
    been shot, that the victim was lying on the sidewalk, and that the victim had “lost a ton of
    blood.”
    Shane Hunter Williams, who made the fourth call to 911, testified that on
    December 17, 2009, he was watching television in his living room when he heard “a loud
    bang” and “a man start yelling for help.” Williams went upstairs, looked out his bedroom
    window, and saw the victim lying on his back near a concrete retaining wall that was
    three to four feet tall. Williams said that prior to the shooting, he heard voices and “some
    yelling or something like that. I wasn‟t sure how many people or what was going on, but
    it got my attention.”
    On cross-examination by the appellant, Williams testified that he heard “[j]ust
    some vague voices” prior to the shooting and that he did not hear a struggle or anyone
    running. He said he had never seen the victim before December 17.
    Jack Dixon testified that on December 17, 2009, he lived in the Woodgate
    apartment complex and went to bed about 11:30 p.m. Dixon said that he heard a gunshot,
    that he heard “someone holler for help,” and that he immediately called 911. He said that
    he had worked for the sheriff‟s department for twenty-seven years, that he had been a
    hunter for fifty-five years, and that the gunshot was fired from “a large-caliber weapon,
    either a short barrel rifle or a large magnum type pistol.” Dixon looked out his kitchen
    window but did not see anyone. He got dressed, went outside, and saw the victim lying
    in a fetal position. The victim had lost a lot of blood and appeared to be deceased. The
    door to the victim‟s apartment was open, and Dixon saw “a large amount of blood in the
    front door into the kitchen area.” A light inside the victim‟s apartment was on, and
    Dixon saw a four-inch stainless steel or nickel-plated revolver in the doorway. He said
    several police officers arrived and protected the crime scene for detectives.
    -3-
    On cross-examination by the appellant, Dixon testified that he did not know the
    victim, that he did not hear any fighting before the shooting, and that he did not hear
    footsteps leave the scene. He said that more blood was outside where the victim was
    lying than inside the apartment but that “there was a trail of blood there and down the
    steps . . . on the porch.”
    Jason Huiting testified that he and the victim were friends for three or four years.
    In December 2009, the victim lived in the Woodgate apartment complex and was a
    bartender and server at Wild Wings Café. The victim had a young son and was married
    but was separated from his wife. Huiting said that the victim was addicted to opiates, that
    the victim had a prescription for pain pills, and that the victim sometimes sold the pills.
    On the night of December 17, Huiting went to the victim‟s apartment and stayed ten to
    fifteen minutes. The victim did not make any telephone calls during that time, and
    Huiting did not know if the victim was expecting anyone else at the apartment after he
    left. About 3:00 a.m. on December 18, Huiting learned about the shooting and contacted
    the Knoxville police.
    On cross-examination by the appellant, Huiting testified that the victim had been
    using pain pills for as long as he had known the victim and that the victim had filled a
    prescription on December 17. On cross-examination by Lambdin, Huiting acknowledged
    that the victim was a “small time” drug dealer and that the victim usually kept his
    apartment door locked.
    Gerald Smith testified that in 2009, he processed crimes scenes for the Knoxville
    Police Department (KPD) Forensic Unit and arrived at the scene at 11:32 p.m. on
    December 17. The victim was receiving medical treatment just outside apartment 109.
    After paramedics removed the victim, Smith photographed apartment 109 and the area
    outside the apartment. Smith noticed “an obvious bullet hole in the door near the opening
    side.” The hole went through the door.
    Smith testified that he collected the victim‟s cellular telephone, which had been on
    the ground near the victim; the victim‟s eyeglasses, which were at the base of a short set
    of steps coming down from the victim‟s apartment; a camouflage baseball cap that was
    just inside the doorway of the apartment; a red, white, and blue toboggan that was outside
    on a ledge near the victim; and a cigarette on the ground below the toboggan. The
    cigarette was still burning. Smith saw a Smith and Wesson forty-four-caliber, six-shot
    revolver inside the apartment. The gun was on the floor between a tiled foyer area and
    the living room carpet and contained five unfired cartridges and one spent cartridge. The
    gun was three feet inside the door. The camouflage cap also was in the tiled foyer area
    but was near the entrance to the kitchen. Blood was in the kitchen, demonstrating that the
    victim had walked into the kitchen after he was shot. Blood also was on the steps outside
    -4-
    the apartment door and led to “the main blood pool where the victim was found.” Smith
    opined that the victim had been shot inside the doorway of the apartment and that the
    victim then moved around, ending up outside the apartment.
    Smith testified that officers searched the apartment and found two empty
    prescription bottles and a drugstore receipt. One of the bottles showed that hydrocodone
    had been prescribed to the victim. The drugstore receipt showed that the victim had filled
    a prescription for 120 oxycodone pills that day. However, officers did not find any drugs
    in the apartment. The bullet hole in the apartment door was fifty-two inches from the
    base of the door. A trajectory rod inserted into the hole showed that the bullet was fired
    at an angle and slightly downward and that the door was open when the gun was fired.
    Smith estimated that the door was open twelve to sixteen inches at the time of the
    shooting. The victim was shot in the shoulder; therefore, his body had to be lower than
    fifty-two inches when he was shot.
    On cross-examination by the appellant, Smith testified that blood was underneath
    the camouflage cap in the foyer and that he believed the hat fell onto the blood. The cap
    was twenty-eight to thirty inches from the front door and two feet from the gun. Smith
    said that he thought the victim was in the center of the foyer at the time of the shooting
    and that the victim was closer to where the gun was found than where the cap was found.
    On cross-examination by Lambdin, Smith testified that he thought the victim was
    crouched down, trying to keep the shooter out of the apartment, when the victim was
    shot.
    Investigator Timothy Schade of the KPD Forensic Unit testified that he assisted
    Gerald Smith with processing the crime scene and that he photographed the gun. Blood
    was on the weapon. Investigator Schade, a certified latent fingerprint examiner, collected
    fingerprints from the front door, and the prints appeared to be from the three middle
    fingers of someone‟s hand. Investigator Schade compared the prints to known
    fingerprints from the victim, the appellant, Lambdin, and Jason Huiting, but the prints on
    the door did not match anyone. On cross-examination by the appellant, Investigator
    Schade testified that he was unable to obtain fingerprints from the gun or the cartridges
    inside the gun.
    Patricia M. Resig of the KPD testified as an expert in firearms identification that
    she examined the revolver found in the victim‟s apartment, one fired cartridge case from
    the gun, five “live” rounds from the gun, and a bullet recovered from the victim. She
    concluded that the fired cartridge case was fired in the gun and that the bullet from the
    victim passed through the barrel of the gun. Resig said that the gun was an older-model
    Smith and Wesson but that it was “in pretty good condition.” She described it as a
    “powerful weapon,” firing large-caliber bullets.
    -5-
    On cross-examination by the appellant, Resig testified that she tested the gun and
    that ten to eleven pounds of pressure were needed to fire it. If the hammer was already
    cocked, though, only four to five pounds of pressure were needed to fire the weapon.
    Natalie Freeman testified that in December 2009, she was dating Anthony White
    and lived on East Oldham Avenue in Knoxville. Freeman had known the appellant for a
    long time and thought of him as her brother. She also knew Lambdin but did not know
    him well. On the night of December 17, White and the appellant brought Lambdin to
    Freeman‟s house “because we were all going to be drinking.” The three men arrived
    about 9:30 or 10:00 p.m., and everyone consumed rum. At some point, Freeman was in
    the kitchen alone and heard the appellant and Lambdin talking on the back porch. The
    appellant and Lambdin were talking about Lambdin arranging to buy pills from the
    victim. Lambdin wanted the appellant and White to help him because Lambdin wanted
    to rob the victim. White was to drive the appellant and Lambdin to the victim‟s
    apartment, and the appellant was to be Lambdin‟s “muscle.”
    Freeman testified that prior to the three men leaving for the victim‟s apartment,
    Lambdin talked to the victim on the telephone, and Freeman saw Lambdin pull a gun out
    of his pocket. She described the weapon as “a handgun, big, silver, had a six-shooter
    type spin on it.” The men left Freeman‟s house about 11:00 p.m. in White‟s small Mazda
    pickup truck. Lambdin was wearing blue jeans, a t-shirt, a camouflage jacket, and a
    camouflage baseball cap, and the appellant was wearing blue jeans, a t-shirt, a colorful
    hoodie, and a red and blue toboggan.
    Freemen testified that the men were gone for twenty-five to thirty minutes. When
    they returned, the appellant and Lambdin were not wearing their hats, and Lambdin did
    not have his gun. Freeman said that the appellant was “out of sorts” and very pale and
    that Lambdin was crying and yelling. Lambdin was upset that his gun was gone because
    it had been “passed down to him.” Freeman said that she parked White‟s truck down the
    street from her home because she did not want the police to come to her house and that
    she wanted him to “get rid” of the truck. The next morning, White drove the truck
    somewhere. At some point, Freeman heard a description of White‟s truck on the news
    and that the police were looking for two white males. On December 27, 2009, Freeman
    talked with Investigator Charlie Lee and gave a statement but was “[n]ot completely”
    truthful with the officer. She said that she knew Lambdin, White, and the appellant were
    going to the victim‟s house to rob the victim of oxycodone on December 17 and that she
    did not alert the police or the victim.
    On cross-examination by Lambdin, Freeman acknowledged that she did not want
    to testify against the defendants. She said she overheard the appellant‟s and Lambdin‟s
    -6-
    conversation about planning the robbery while she was in the kitchen and they were on
    the porch. She said that the appellant‟s “idea was that they could just go in at the same
    time and just rob him flat out, just in and out.” However, Lambdin “was concerned that
    [the victim] would know he had been set up.” When the men returned to Freeman‟s
    home after the shooting, the appellant told Freeman what had happened. He told her that
    Lambdin went inside the victim‟s apartment, came outside, and was running. The gun
    was on the ground. The appellant picked up the gun, and he and the victim fought over
    it. During the struggle, the gun “went off,” and the appellant ran away.
    Freeman acknowledged that after the men returned to her house from the victim‟s
    apartment, Lambdin was crying and vomiting. She also acknowledged that she believed
    the gun fired accidentally. The appellant did not tell her that the victim was shot through
    the door or that he hit the victim with the weapon. She said she helped the appellant
    leave Tennessee after the shooting by giving him one hundred dollars. However, the
    appellant returned to Tennessee and was with Freeman when she talked with Investigator
    Lee on December 27. Freeman acknowledged that, according to her statement to the
    investigator, she and White were in her bedroom when she heard the appellant and
    Lambdin talking on the porch. She explained that she heard them talking from her
    bedroom, that she went into the kitchen alone, and that she heard them conversing on the
    back porch. Freeman acknowledged telling Investigator Lee that Lambdin said after the
    shooting, “„I didn‟t think that was going to happen. . . . I didn‟t mean for all that to
    happen.” She also acknowledged that she did not tell Investigator Lee that Lambdin was
    upset about losing his gun. She told the officer that the appellant and Lambdin did not
    take anything from the victim.
    On cross-examination by the appellant, Freeman acknowledged that Lambdin was
    proud of his gun. She denied insisting that White drive the appellant and Lambdin to the
    victim‟s apartment. She acknowledged that it was Lambdin‟s plan to telephone the
    victim, that Lambdin had “dealt” with the victim previously, and that Lambdin was mad
    at the victim because the victim kept increasing the price of the pills. She also
    acknowledged that Lambdin did not want to lose the victim as his “dealer” and, therefore,
    that Lambdin “set this up to look like he was . . . being robbed as well.” While the men
    were gone to rob the victim, Freeman continued to drink rum. When they returned to her
    home, she was intoxicated. Freeman said she was not completely honest with
    Investigator Lee because she was trying to protect White and the appellant but that she
    thought she “was pretty up front about everything” Investigator Lee asked her.
    Co-defendant Anthony White testified that he had known the appellant three or
    four years and Lambdin since middle school. On the night of December 17, 2009, White
    and the appellant were at Natalie Freeman‟s house. White‟s telephone rang, and the
    appellant answered it. The call was from Lambdin. After the appellant spoke with
    -7-
    Lambdin, the appellant told White that Lambdin wanted to come to Freeman‟s house to
    “hang out.” White and the appellant drove White‟s pickup truck to the IHOP on
    Merchants Road, picked up Lambdin, and drove back to Freeman‟s house. White said
    that during the drive, the appellant and Lambdin talked about robbing “this guy that had
    Roxies that just came back from Florida.” Lambdin said he had his “papaw‟s” gun, said
    he knew the victim, and referred to the victim as a “pushover.” White did not know the
    victim or where the victim lived.
    White testified that after being at Freeman‟s house for twenty or thirty minutes,
    he, the appellant, and Lambdin decided to go to the victim‟s apartment. He said that as
    they were getting ready to leave, the appellant “came up to me and showed me the gun
    and said we got to ride out here to do that, so we all loaded up in the truck and took off.”
    White knew they were going to rob the victim of pills, and Lambdin directed White to the
    victim‟s apartment. When they arrived in the Woodgate parking lot, they discussed that
    Lambdin was going to knock on the victim‟s door and that the appellant was going to run
    into the apartment, point the gun at the victim, and rob the victim. Lambdin was
    supposed to return to the truck during the robbery. White said that Lambdin and the
    appellant got out of the truck and went to the victim‟s apartment. Lambdin was wearing
    a Carhartt jacket, and the appellant was wearing a “Mario beanie.” White waited in the
    truck but had to back out of the parking space it was in because another vehicle wanted to
    park there. While the other vehicle was moving into the space, it almost hit Lambdin.
    White said Lambdin got into the truck and “seemed skittish, scared.” Two or three
    minutes later, the appellant ran to the truck and told White, “Go fat man. Go.” Neither
    man was wearing a hat when he returned to the truck.
    White testified that the appellant was angry and that the appellant started punching
    the dashboard. The appellant was “mainly” angry at Lambdin because Lambdin had said
    that the appellant was a “pushover” and that the robbery “would be easy.” The appellant
    said that the victim fought back and that the gun “went off.” When the three men
    returned to Freeman‟s house, Lambdin kept asking the appellant if the appellant was
    going to kill him. White learned that they had left the gun at the apartment complex, and
    Lambdin said that “his grandmother was going to kill him.” The appellant was upset that
    he had lost his beanie and did not know if he had shot the victim. The appellant and
    Lambdin told White that “they didn‟t get nothing” from the victim. Freeman decided that
    she and White would park White‟s truck at St. Mary‟s hospital.
    White testified that he talked with Investigator Lee twice after the shooting. The
    first time, he pretended not to know anything about the incident. He said he was not
    truthful with the officer because he was scared he was going to get into trouble. He
    acknowledged that he was charged as a principal offender in this case and that he and the
    State had an agreement regarding his testimony and cooperation.
    -8-
    On cross-examination by the appellant, White acknowledged that in order to keep
    his “deal” with the State, he had to testify truthfully. He said his agreement with the
    State was a guilty plea in exchange for a thirteen-year sentence to be served as one year
    in jail and twelve years “on paper.” However, he had not yet pled guilty and did not
    remember to what offense he was going to plead guilty. White spoke with Investigator
    Lee on December 29, 2009, and February 6, 2010, and lied to the officer both times. He
    was arrested and charged with first degree murder on February 6, 2010; had his bond
    originally set at $150,000; and spent almost one month in jail. He acknowledged that his
    attorney worked out a “deal” with the State so that he was released on a $1,000 bond,
    which was an unusual amount for a felony murder charge.
    White acknowledged that he was intoxicated on the night of December 17, 2009,
    and that Lambdin “came up with this plan.” At some point that night, Lambdin showed
    the gun to White. Lambdin told White that the gun had belonged to his grandfather and
    that it was a family heirloom. The appellant also showed the gun to White. White
    acknowledged that Freeman insisted that he drive to the victim‟s apartment and said that
    she wanted him to drive because they were using his truck to commit the robbery. He
    said that he did not think Freeman helped plan the robbery but that “[s]he could have.”
    White stated that he had had mental problems, which included hearing voices and having
    hallucinations, “[a]s far back as I remember” and that he used to meet with a mental
    health specialist. He acknowledged that he consumed alcohol and smoked marijuana on
    December 17, 2009, but said that he had been “clean” since he got out of jail.
    On cross-examination by Lambdin, White acknowledged that he was twenty-one
    years old when he spoke with Investigator Lee and that some of what he told the officer
    was true. For example, White told Investigator Lee that he and the appellant were close
    friends; that the appellant claimed he and the victim struggled over the gun; and that the
    appellant claimed the gun “went off.” He acknowledged that he did not want to testify
    against the appellant. He also acknowledged that the appellant was angry after the
    shooting because the victim had fought back and because the appellant had lost his
    toboggan. White said that he was two years older than Lambdin and that Lambdin began
    buying marijuana from him in 2008. Lambdin was addicted to pain pills and met the
    appellant and Freeman through White. White said that after he and the appellant picked
    up Lambdin at the IHOP on December 17, Lambdin explained the plan to rob the victim.
    The appellant decided that Lambdin should knock on the victim‟s door, and Lambdin
    said he would “get out of the way” so that the appellant could rob the victim. White did
    not tell Freeman about the plan. He said that before he, the appellant, and Lambdin left
    Freeman‟s house to rob the victim, the appellant had Lambdin‟s gun. White said that
    despite being intoxicated on the night of the shooting, he could not forget what happened
    because “[i]t haunts me.”
    -9-
    Kim Lusignan, a special agent forensic scientist with the Tennessee Bureau of
    Investigation (TBI), testified as an expert in DNA analysis that she analyzed DNA found
    on the toboggan, the cigarette, and fingernail scrapings from the victim and compared the
    results to known standards from the appellant, Lambdin, and the victim. Agent Lusignan
    found two small areas of blood on the toboggan, and the blood was that of the victim.
    She found skin cells inside the toboggan. The appellant was a major contributor of the
    cells, and an unknown male was a minor contributor. DNA on the cigarette was that of
    an unknown male, and DNA from the victim‟s fingernail scrapings was that of the victim.
    On cross-examination by the appellant, Agent Lusignan testified that she did not receive
    a camouflage cap for testing.
    Investigator Charles Lee of the KPD testified that he was in charge of
    investigating this case, that he went to the Woodgate apartments on the night of
    December 17, 2009, and that paramedics had already transported the victim to the
    hospital. He observed the crime scene inside and outside the victim‟s apartment. He saw
    empty prescription bottles in the apartment and suspected that the shooting could have
    been related to prescription drugs. He spoke with Barbara Eaton and determined that
    three suspects probably were involved. Eaton also gave a good description of the
    getaway vehicle. Investigator Lee learned that the victim had died upon arrival at the
    hospital or shortly thereafter and went to the home of the victim‟s next of kin, Jennifer
    Presutto, to tell her that the victim was deceased. Ms. Presutto was very distraught but
    gave Investigator Lee the names of the victim‟s friends and acquaintances. One of those
    names was “Michael Lambdin,” and Investigator Lee found a contact phone number for
    “„Lambdin‟” in the victim‟s cellular telephone. Investigator Lee also knew from the
    phone that the victim had contact with Lambdin within thirty minutes of the victim‟s
    death. He prepared a photograph array containing Lambdin‟s photograph and showed it
    to Eaton. Eaton identified Lambdin as the first male she saw on the night of December
    17.
    Investigator Lee testified that he also determined that he needed to speak with
    Anthony White and Natalie Freeman. Freeman corroborated some of the evidence found
    at the crime scene, such as the toboggan, and corroborated the getaway vehicle.
    Investigator Lee obtained the records for the victim‟s and Lambdin‟s cellular telephones,
    and the records revealed contact between the two phones throughout the afternoon and
    evening hours of December 17, 2009. The State introduced the records into evidence.
    On cross-examination by Lambdin, Investigator Lee testified that a prescription
    receipt found in the victim‟s apartment showed that an oxycodone prescription had been
    filled on December 17 at a local pharmacy. Investigator Lee searched the victim‟s
    apartment for the prescription bottle but never found it. On cross-examination by the
    - 10 -
    appellant, Investigator Lee testified that he did not perform gunshot residue tests on
    anyone or submit the camouflage cap found in the victim‟s apartment to the TBI for
    testing.
    Steven Cogswell, the Deputy Chief Medical Examiner for Knox and Anderson
    Counties, testified as an expert in anatomic and forensic pathology that he performed the
    victim‟s autopsy. The victim‟s primary injury was a gunshot wound of intermediate
    range, meaning that the muzzle of the gun was a couple of feet from the victim when it
    was fired. The bullet entered the victim‟s right collar bone area, broke his collar bone,
    and lacerated the blood vessels directly beneath his collar bone. The bullet moved into
    the victim‟s chest wall and stopped in the soft tissue of his back. It did not strike his
    heart or lungs. The victim bled to death from the injury to his subclavian artery and vein.
    Dr. Cogswell testified that the victim also had two scalp wounds that were
    consistent with his having been struck by the revolver. One of the wounds was a “Y-
    shaped abraded laceration,” seven-eighths of an inch long, and just to the left of the top of
    the victim‟s head. The second wound was “a very slightly depressed skull fracture”
    above the victim‟s hairline. The victim also had two abrasions between the thumb and
    forefinger of his right hand. During the autopsy, Dr. Cogswell examined the revolver
    recovered from the crime scene. He concluded that the ejector rod on the gun probably
    caused the Y-shaped laceration and that the frame of the gun caused the injury near the
    victim‟s hairline. He said the two abrasions on the victim‟s right hand matched the top of
    the revolver‟s frame and occurred when the victim grabbed the barrel of the gun “right
    around the frame.”
    Dr. Cogswell testified that he examined photographs of the crime scene and
    concluded that the muzzle of the gun was probably within one foot of the door when it
    was fired. No soot was on the victim, but gunpowder stippling was on his chin and neck.
    Dr. Cogswell said that an area under the victim‟s chin was free of stippling, meaning that
    something had blocked the gunpowder, and that the victim‟s injuries were consistent with
    the bullet‟s having passed through the door and striking the victim. He stated that he
    inserted a trajectory rod into the gunshot wound and that the rod showed the bullet
    traveled downward and slightly left to right. The victim was sixty-six inches tall and was
    probably “down a little bit” when he was shot. However, the bullet hole in the door was
    too high for the victim to have been “all the way in a ball on the floor.”
    Dr. Cogswell testified that the victim would have been able to walk, run, and
    speak after he was shot and that his head injuries could have occurred after the shooting.
    He said that because the victim‟s hand was around the gun at some point and because the
    gun was found inside the apartment, “it makes sense that he‟s actually taking the gun
    away from the person who shot and killed him.” The victim was still alive when he
    - 11 -
    arrived at the hospital but died during surgery. Toxicology tests showed that his blood
    contained a therapeutic level of methadone but a “relatively high,” even lethal, level of
    oxycodone. The victim‟s urine showed that he recently had used marijuana; cocaine;
    oxycodone; methadone; and ditiazem, a cardiac drug. Dr. Cogswell said that if the gun
    was in proper working order, the trigger had to be pulled in order for it to fire.
    On cross-examination by Lambdin, Dr. Cogswell testified that the stippling on the
    victim resulted from gunpowder that traveled around the door. He acknowledged that a
    likely sequence of events was that someone shot the victim, the victim received the head
    injuries, the victim grabbed the gun, and the gun ended up on the floor.
    On redirect examination, Dr. Cogswell testified that the camouflage cap found in
    the foyer was on top of blood. Therefore, the hat fell onto the already-bloodied floor, and
    then blood continued to fall on top of the hat. At the close of Dr. Cogswell‟s testimony,
    the State rested its case.
    Co-defendant Michael Lambdin testified that he was twenty-two years old at the
    time of trial and nineteen at the time of the victim‟s death. In 2008, Lambdin graduated
    from Sevier County High School and began attending Tennessee Technical Center. The
    victim was also a student at Tennessee Tech, and they became friends. At that time,
    Lambdin was consuming two to three pain pills per day. The victim also was consuming
    pills, and Lambdin bought pills from him. The victim obtained the pills locally from
    prescriptions, and he would use some and sell some. The victim was nice to Lambdin,
    and Lambdin would go to the victim‟s apartment. Lambdin said that he saw the victim
    with the victim‟s young son and that the victim was “a really good dad.”
    Lambdin testified that he knew of Anthony White in middle school but that White
    was two or three grades ahead of him. In December 2009, Lambdin and White, whom
    Lambdin knew as “Fat Man,” had been friends for about one year. Lambdin would buy
    marijuana from White and met Natalie Freeman and the appellant through White. White
    and the appellant were best friends. Lambdin said that on December 17, he spoke with
    the victim on the telephone. The victim told Lambdin that he had just filled a
    prescription and that he had plenty of pills. The victim asked if Lambdin wanted pills or
    knew of anyone who wanted them. Lambdin met the victim at a grocery store on
    Merchants Road and bought one pill from him.
    Lambdin testified that later that day, he spoke with the appellant on the telephone.
    Lambdin told the appellant about the victim‟s having pills, and the appellant wanted to
    know the price of the pills. Lambdin told the appellant that the pills were twenty dollars
    each and that the victim would not take any less than that amount. The appellant asked
    Lambdin if the appellant could “take” the victim, meaning rob him, but Lambdin told the
    - 12 -
    appellant that he did not want the appellant to rob the victim. The appellant told
    Lambdin that no one would get hurt and that he would make the robbery look like
    Lambdin was not involved. The appellant said he would “just scare” the victim and take
    the victim‟s pills. The appellant asked if Lambdin had a gun, and Lambdin said yes.
    Lambdin testified that later that night, he met the appellant and White at the Red
    Lobster on Merchants Road. The appellant and White were in White‟s “little brown
    Mazda truck,” and Lambdin could smell alcohol on their breath. However, the appellant
    and White did not act intoxicated. The appellant told Lambdin to give him the gun, and
    Lambdin did so. The appellant never returned the gun to Lambdin. Lambdin said that
    the gun had been “passed down” to him through his family and that he usually kept it in a
    drawer at his grandmother‟s house. The weapon was always loaded, and he had never
    fired it.
    Lambdin testified that the three of them went to Freeman‟s house. Lambdin saw a
    bottle of rum on a table in the living room, but he did not consume any alcohol. At some
    point, Lambdin told the appellant that the victim was going to know that Lambdin was
    involved in the robbery. The appellant explained the plan to rob the victim as follows:
    Lambdin was to knock on the victim‟s door while the appellant hid nearby. When the
    victim opened the door, the appellant was to run up to the door, pull Lambdin out of the
    way, scare the victim, and take the victim‟s pills. Lambdin was supposed to run away.
    Lambdin testified that Freeman and White were present while the appellant was
    describing the plan. The appellant, Lambdin, and White left in White‟s truck, and White
    was driving. When they arrived at the Woodgate apartments, Lambdin and the appellant
    got out. Lambdin was wearing his camouflage baseball cap, and the appellant was
    wearing his red, white, and blue toboggan. Lambdin knocked on the victim‟s door,
    which the victim always kept locked. Lambdin had told the victim that he was coming to
    buy pills, so the victim was expecting him. The victim opened the door, but the appellant
    did not come running up to the door like he was supposed to. Lambdin went into the
    victim‟s apartment, and the victim shut the door. Lambdin told the victim that he had left
    his wallet in the truck and needed to go back to the truck to get it. The victim offered to
    let Lambdin pay for the pills “next time,” which made Lambdin feel “[p]retty horrible,”
    but Lambdin insisted on returning to the truck for his wallet.
    Lambdin testified that he decided he “just couldn‟t do it,” that he walked out of the
    victim‟s apartment, and that the victim shut the door behind him. The appellant was
    hiding under the steps. As Lambdin passed the appellant, he waved for the appellant to
    “come on.” The appellant went to Lambdin and asked “what the [f***] was going on.”
    Lambdin told the appellant that he “couldn‟t do it anymore” and told him, “Let‟s just --
    let‟s just go.” Lambdin said the appellant “got pretty mad,” called him “a [f***ing]
    - 13 -
    [p***y],” and snatched the camouflage cap off his head. The appellant told Lambdin that
    “he‟d just do it his [f***ing] self, to get back to the truck.” Lambdin said he did not try
    to stop the appellant because the appellant was mad and had the gun.
    Lambdin testified that he started walking back to the truck. He heard a gunshot
    and began running to the truck. He said that he did not know what was going on and that
    he did not want anyone to get hurt. He acknowledged seeing Barbara Eaton and said he
    got into White‟s pickup. White “pulled up just a little bit, and then [the appellant] come
    running and jumped in the truck.” The appellant told White, “„Go, Fat Man, go. I shot
    him.‟” Lambdin said the appellant was “pretty mad” and was “punching stuff and telling
    me to shut up crying.” Lambdin said he asked the appellant not to kill him.
    Lambdin testified that they returned to Freeman‟s house, that Freeman and the
    appellant went into the kitchen, and that the appellant told her what had happened. White
    and Freeman hid White‟s truck, and Lambdin later saw on the news that the victim was
    dead. Lambdin said that while he was at Freeman‟s house after the shooting, he cried and
    vomited because he had not wanted anyone to get hurt. When Lambdin later spoke with
    Investigator Lee, he did not tell the officer the truth. He said he thought about December
    17, 2009, every night, that he “wished it wouldn‟t have happened,” and that he “[wished
    he] could go and take it back and change it.”
    On cross-examination by the State, Lambdin acknowledged that much of White‟s
    and Freeman‟s testimony was true. However, Lambdin never showed the gun to them.
    He acknowledged that he and the appellant discussed whether the victim would be easy
    to rob and that he led White and the appellant to the victim‟s apartment, knowing that a
    robbery was going to occur. He also acknowledged that his gun was used to beat and
    shoot the victim and that he lied to Investigator Lee when he spoke with the officer on
    December 19, 2009. At first, Lambdin told Investigator Lee that he, the appellant, and
    White went directly to the victim‟s apartment after they left the Red Lobster. However,
    he then told Investigator Lee that he remembered going to a house prior to the robbery.
    Lambdin told Investigator Lee that he was just trying to help some people buy some pills,
    that he knocked on the door to the victim‟s apartment, that someone knocked him down
    the steps, and that he saw two people fighting. Lambdin told the officer that he ran to
    White‟s truck and realized that the person who had knocked him down was one of the co-
    defendants. He acknowledged telling Investigator Lee that he did not know anything
    about the gun. Lambdin testified that the appellant had told him over the telephone to
    bring the gun and that he did so. He said that the appellant had led him to believe that no
    one would get hurt and that the appellant had “talked [him] into it.”
    On cross-examination by the appellant, Lambdin acknowledged that he never told
    Investigator Lee the truth about what happened on the night of the shooting and that he
    - 14 -
    also lied to his mother and grandmother. Lambdin spoke with the victim for the first time
    on December 17 at 1:50 p.m., and they continued to communicate throughout the day.
    He said that he, the appellant, and White first began talking about the plan to rob the
    victim while they were driving from the Red Lobster to Freeman‟s house but that they
    mostly talked about the plan when they got to Freeman‟s home. He said that White and
    Freeman were lying when they said they saw him with the gun and that he did not know
    he was going to lose the gun when he gave it to the appellant. Lambdin denied coming
    up with the plan to rob the victim or being angry with the victim. He acknowledged that
    although he changed his mind about the robbery, he did not warn the victim or call help
    for the victim. He stated, “I thought I‟d be able to call it off.” He denied that he was
    upset about losing his gun when he got back into the truck or at Freeman‟s house. He
    also denied saying, “„My grandmother‟s going to kill me.‟”
    At the close of the proof, the jury convicted the appellant and Lambdin as charged
    of first degree felony murder. The trial court released the jury and sentenced the
    defendants to life.
    II. Analysis
    A. Sufficiency of the Evidence
    The appellant claims that the evidence is insufficient to support the conviction. He
    contends that although there is no doubt that he accompanied Lambdin to the victim‟s
    apartment or that the victim was shot with Lambdin‟s gun, the State produced no direct
    evidence that he pulled the trigger or even touched the gun. He also argues that his
    conviction was based solely on the unreliable testimony of “co-conspirators” Lambdin,
    White, and Freeman and that the only evidence showing he knew he was going to the
    victim‟s apartment to rob him as opposed to just buy pills from him came from the
    testimony of those co-conspirators. The State argues that the evidence is sufficient. We
    agree with the State.
    When an appellant challenges the sufficiency of the convicting evidence, the
    standard for review by an appellate court is “whether, after viewing the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the
    essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979); Tenn. R. App. P. 13(e). The State is entitled to the strongest
    legitimate view of the evidence and all reasonable or legitimate inferences which may be
    drawn therefrom. State v. Cabbage, 
    571 S.W.2d 832
    , 835 (Tenn. 1978). Questions
    concerning the credibility of witnesses and the weight and value to be afforded the
    evidence, as well as all factual issues raised by the evidence, are resolved by the trier of
    fact. State v. Bland, 
    958 S.W.2d 651
    , 659 (Tenn. 1997). This court will not reweigh or
    - 15 -
    reevaluate the evidence, nor will this court substitute its inferences drawn from the
    circumstantial evidence for those inferences drawn by the jury. 
    Id. Because a
    jury
    conviction removes the presumption of innocence with which a defendant is initially
    cloaked at trial and replaces it on appeal with one of guilt, a convicted defendant has the
    burden of demonstrating to this court that the evidence is insufficient. State v. Tuggle,
    
    639 S.W.2d 913
    , 914 (Tenn. 1982).
    A guilty verdict can be based upon direct evidence, circumstantial evidence, or a
    combination of direct and circumstantial evidence. State v. Hall, 
    976 S.W.2d 121
    , 140
    (Tenn. 1998). “The jury decides the weight to be given to circumstantial evidence, and
    „[t]he inferences to be drawn from such evidence, and the extent to which the
    circumstances are consistent with guilt and inconsistent with innocence, are questions
    primarily for the jury.‟” State v. Rice, 
    184 S.W.3d 646
    , 662 (Tenn. 2006) (quoting State
    v. Marable, 
    203 Tenn. 440
    , 
    313 S.W.2d 451
    , 457 (Tenn. 1958)). “The standard of review
    „is the same whether the conviction is based upon direct or circumstantial evidence.‟”
    State v. Dorantes, 
    331 S.W.3d 370
    , 379 (Tenn. 2011) (quoting State v. Hanson, 
    279 S.W.3d 265
    , 275 (Tenn. 2009)).
    First degree felony murder is defined as a “killing of another committed in the
    perpetration of or attempt to perpetrate any . . . robbery[.] Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-
    202(a)(2). In order for a killing to occur “in the perpetration of” the felony, the killing
    must be “done in pursuance of the unlawful act, and not collateral to it.” Farmer v. State,
    
    296 S.W.2d 879
    , 883 (Tenn. 1956). No culpable mental state is required for a felony
    murder conviction except the intent to commit the underlying felony. Tenn. Code Ann. §
    39-13-202(b).
    Taken in the light most favorable to the State, the evidence shows that Lambdin,
    White, and the appellant concocted a plan to rob the victim of pills, that they drove to the
    victim‟s apartment complex, and that Lambdin and the appellant went to the victim‟s
    apartment while White waited in the truck. However, the plan went awry, and the
    appellant ended up shooting the victim. Regardless of whether the appellant was the
    actual shooter, the jury merely had to find that the victim was killed in pursuance of the
    attempted robbery in order to convict the appellant of first degree felony murder. Co-
    defendants White and Lambdin testified about the appellant‟s planning and participating
    in the attempted robbery, and their testimony was corroborated by other witnesses and
    evidence at the crime scene. See State v. Shaw, 
    37 S.W.3d 900
    , 903 (Tenn. 2001)
    (stating that “a conviction may not be based solely upon the uncorroborated testimony of
    an accomplice”). For example, White testified that Lambdin was to return to the truck
    while the appellant was robbing the victim, and Lambdin testified that that he changed
    his mind about robbing the victim and returned to the truck while the appellant continued
    with the robbery. Barbara Eaton said she saw Lambdin run to the truck and saw the
    - 16 -
    appellant run to the truck one and one-half minutes later. White testified that he observed
    the appellant with the gun before they left Freeman‟s house, and Freeman said the
    appellant claimed he and the victim struggled over the gun. The police found the
    appellant‟s hat outside the apartment and Lambdin‟s gun inside the apartment. The jury,
    as was its prerogative, obviously accredited the testimony of the State‟s witnesses. In
    sum, the proof of the appellant‟s guilt in this case is more than sufficient to support the
    conviction.
    B. Severance
    The appellant contends that the trial court erred by denying his motion to sever his
    trial from that of Lambdin. He argues that their cases should have been severed because
    both co-defendants testified against him at trial and because their testimony “was more
    than merely antagonistic, it caused [him] gross prejudice and resulted in [his] being
    unable to receive a fair trial.” The appellant argues that Lambdin‟s testimony was
    particularly prejudicial in that Lambdin used his testimony to appear the more
    sympathetic defendant. The State argues that the trial court properly refused to grant the
    motion to sever. We agree with the State.
    In February 2010, the grand jury jointly indicted the appellant, Lambdin, and
    White for killing the victim. White began cooperating with the State, and the State
    indicated that it planned to try jointly only the appellant and Lambdin. One week before
    trial, the appellant filed a motion to sever his trial from that of Lambdin on the grounds
    that both co-defendants were going to testify against him and that Lambdin‟s testimony
    would result in “gross prejudice.” Lambdin filed a motion opposing severance, arguing
    that the appellant had failed to show that a severance was necessary in order for him to
    receive a fair trial.
    At a hearing on the motion, counsel for the appellant argued that severance was
    necessary pursuant to Rule 14(c)(2), Tennessee Rules of Criminal Procedure, because
    Lambdin‟s testimony would prevent the appellant from receiving a fair trial and be
    “detrimental” to the appellant‟s case. The trial court denied the appellant‟s motion to
    sever. On the morning of the first day of trial, the State finally moved to sever White‟s
    case from that of the appellant and Lambdin, and the trial court granted the motion.
    Tennessee Rule of Criminal Procedure 14(c)(2) provides that a trial court shall
    grant a severance of defendants before trial if “the court finds a severance necessary to
    protect a defendant‟s right to a speedy trial or appropriate to promote a fair determination
    of the guilt or innocence of one or more defendants.” Whether to grant a severance lies
    within the sound discretion of the trial court. State v. Meeks, 
    867 S.W.2d 361
    , 369
    (Tenn. Crim. App. 1993) (citing State v. Coleman, 
    619 S.W.2d 112
    , 116 (Tenn. 1981)).
    - 17 -
    This court will not find an abuse of the trial court‟s discretion unless the record clearly
    shows that the defendant was so prejudiced by the joint trial that the granting of a
    severance became a judicial duty. State v. Burton, 
    751 S.W.2d 440
    , 447 (Tenn. Crim.
    App. 1988).
    We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying the
    appellant‟s severance motion. “[T]he mere fact that damaging proof against one
    defendant is presented will not, by itself, entitle another defendant to a severance.”
    
    Meeks, 867 S.W.2d at 369
    . As the trial court noted in denying the appellant‟s motion,
    “The defendant must go further and establish that a joint trial will result in „compelling
    prejudice,‟ against which the trial court cannot protect, so that a fair trial cannot be had.”
    State v. Ensley, 
    956 S.W.2d 502
    , 509 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996) (quoting United States v.
    Horton, 
    705 F.2d 1414
    , 1417 (5th Cir. 1983). The appellant has failed to cite any specific
    examples of prejudice in this case. While he contends that Lambdin‟s testimony was
    particularly prejudicial in that Lambdin used it to appear as the more sympathetic
    defendant, we note that the jury also convicted Lambdin of first degree felony murder.
    Therefore, we conclude that the appellant is not entitled to relief.
    C. Prosecutorial Misconduct
    Next, the appellant contends that the State committed prosecutorial misconduct by
    vouching for the credibility of White and Freeman. The State argues that the appellant is
    not entitled to relief. We agree with the State.
    It is well-established that closing argument is an important tool for both parties
    during a trial; thus, counsel is generally given wide latitude during closing argument, and
    the trial court is granted wide discretion in controlling closing arguments. See State v.
    Carruthers, 
    35 S.W.3d 516
    , 577-78 (Tenn. 2000) (appendix). “Notwithstanding such,
    arguments must be temperate, based upon the evidence introduced at trial, relevant to the
    issues being tried, and not otherwise improper under the facts or law.” State v. Goltz,
    
    111 S.W.3d 1
    , 5 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2003). “The prosecution is not permitted to reflect
    unfavorably upon defense counsel or the trial tactics employed during the course of the
    trial.” State v. Garner Dwight Padgett, No. M2003-00542-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2004 WL 2359849
    , at *12 (Tenn. Crim. App. at Nashville, Oct. 21, 2004).
    In 
    Goltz, 111 S.W.3d at 6
    , this court outlined “five general areas of prosecutorial
    misconduct” that can occur during closing argument: (1) intentionally misleading or
    misstating the evidence; (2) expressing a personal belief or opinion as to the truth or
    falsity of the evidence or defendant‟s guilt; (3) making statements calculated to inflame
    the passions or prejudices of the jury; (4) injecting broader issues than the guilt or
    innocence of the accused; and (5) intentionally referring to or arguing facts outside the
    - 18 -
    record that are not matters of common public knowledge. “In determining whether
    statements made in closing argument constitute reversible error, it is necessary to
    determine whether the statements were improper and, if so, whether the impropriety
    affected the verdict.” State v. Pulliam, 
    950 S.W.2d 360
    , 367 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996).
    In connection with this issue, we must examine the following factors:
    “(1) the conduct complained of viewed in context and in light
    of the facts and circumstances of the case[;]
    (2) the curative measures undertaken by the court and the
    prosecution[;]
    (3) the intent of the prosecutor in making the statement[;]
    (4) the cumulative effect of the improper conduct and any
    other errors in the record[; and]
    (5) the relative strength or weakness of the case.”
    
    Id. (quoting Judge
    v. State, 
    539 S.W.2d 340
    , 344 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1976)).
    The appellant complains that the State committed prosecutorial misconduct when
    the prosecutor stated as follows during her rebuttal closing argument:
    I want to touch just very briefly on another issue that
    [was] raised by [the appellant‟s counsel], and that is--and to
    some degree by [Lambdin‟s counsel], regarding Anthony
    White‟s testimony and the fact that he had an agreement with
    the state, and I think the Court would not object to me telling
    you that the state has an ethical duty here to only proffer
    evidence and testimony that is credible. Okay. It‟s an ethical
    duty that I take very seriously, and the state would not have
    proffered Anthony White or Natalie Freeman if the state
    wasn‟t sure and secure that the evidence supported and
    corroborated--
    At that point, counsel for the appellant objected, and the trial court overruled, stating, “I
    think it is appropriate argument.” The prosecutor then continued as follows:
    So when you consider what Anthony White said, I
    want you to consider it in the context of other evidence,
    - 19 -
    because, yeah, Anthony did have problems.             He was
    obviously using drugs. He had some mental health issues.
    There are, you know, a number of things that were wrong
    with that young man, but the fact is that everything that he
    told you is supported by other evidence and other proof in this
    case, and it strikes me as odd that both of these lawyers are
    telling you to disregard what Natalie Freeman and Anthony
    said that hurts their case, but, hey, when it helps them, you
    know, you‟re entitled to believe that.
    At the conclusion of the prosecutor‟s argument, the jury retired from the
    courtroom, and defense counsel clarified his objection, stating that when the prosecutor
    commented on her “ethical duty,” it vouched for the credibility of the State‟s witnesses
    and implicated that defense counsel had a different ethical duty “and that the testimony
    that we presented or otherwise elicited is somehow false.” The prosecutor responded that
    she referred to her ethical duty because “I have been accused of suborning perjury and by
    cutting deals . . . . [B]ut what I said was in the context of having the jury understand and
    consider the evidence, the testimony of those two witnesses as it related to the other proof
    and the evidence that corroborated what they said[.]” The trial court stated that “I do
    believe if you had brought that up without being in the context of rebuttal that there
    would have been concern with it, but I think it was appropriate rebuttal argument, and I,
    again, for the record, deny your objection.” The trial court stated that it was not going to
    give the jury a curative instruction.
    While the prosecutor made her comments in response to argument by defense
    counsel, we agree with the appellant that her referring to her “ethical duty here to only
    proffer evidence and testimony that is credible” was an attempt to vouch for White‟s and
    Freeman‟s credibility. However, the prosecutor‟s improper argument was brief and
    tempered somewhat by her immediately stating that the evidence corroborated White‟s
    and Freeman‟s testimony. Moreover, the State‟s proof against the appellant was strong.
    Therefore, we conclude that he is not entitled to relief. See Tenn. R. App. P. 36(b).
    III. Conclusion
    Based upon the oral arguments, the record, and the parties‟ briefs, we affirm the
    judgment of the trial court.
    _________________________________
    NORMA MCGEE OGLE, JUDGE
    - 20 -