Steven James Rollins v. State of Tennessee ( 2012 )


Menu:
  •         IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    October 25, 2011 Session
    STEVEN JAMES ROLLINS v. STATE OF TENNESSEE
    Criminal Court for Sullivan County
    No. C52875 R. Jerry Beck, Judge
    No. E2010-01150-CCA-R3-PD - Filed August 31, 2012
    The Petitioner, Steven James Rollins, filed a petition seeking post-conviction relief from his
    convictions of first degree premeditated murder, first degree felony murder, and especially
    aggravated robbery. The post-conviction court denied Petitioner relief on all grounds related
    to the guilt phase of the trial but granted a new sentencing hearing on the grounds of
    ineffective assistance of counsel. The State is not challenging the grant of a new sentencing
    hearing. The Petitioner appeals the post-conviction court’s ruling denying relief as to the
    guilt phase of the trial. On appeal, the Petitioner contends that a biased juror served on his
    jury, that he received the ineffective assistance of counsel because his trial attorneys failed
    to voir dire potential jurors properly, and that his mental retardation exempts him from the
    death penalty. Based upon the oral arguments, the record, and the parties’ briefs, we
    conclude that the Petitioner was denied his constitutional rights to a fair and impartial jury
    and that he received the ineffective assistance of counsel. Therefore, the Petitioner’s
    convictions are reversed, and the case is remanded to the trial court for a new trial.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court is Reversed.
    N ORMA M CG EE O GLE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which J ERRY L. S MITH and
    D. K ELLY T HOMAS, J R., JJ., joined.
    Bradley A. MacLean and Joanne L. Diamond, Assistant Post-Conviction Defenders, for the
    appellant, Steven James Rollins.
    Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter, Michael E. Moore, Solicitor General
    and Renee W. Turner, Assistant Attorney General; H. Greeley Wells, District Attorney
    General; and Barry P. Staubus, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State
    of Tennessee.
    OPINION
    I. Factual Background
    A. Trial
    The Petitioner was convicted in June 2003 of first degree premeditated murder, first
    degree felony murder, and especially aggravated robbery. The Petitioner and his friend,
    Gregory Fleenor, planned to rob the victim’s bait shop for money to buy drugs. The crimes
    were carried out overnight on August 21, 2001. Following the convictions of first degree
    murder, the jury sentenced the Petitioner to death based upon its finding of five aggravating
    circumstances: (1) the defendant was previously convicted of one or more felonies, other
    than the present charge, whose statutory elements involve the use of violence to the person;
    (2) the murder was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel in that it involved torture or serious
    physical abuse beyond that necessary to produce death; (3) the murder was committed for the
    purpose of avoiding, interfering with, or preventing a lawful arrest or prosecution of the
    defendant or another; (4) the murder was knowingly committed, solicited, directed, or aided
    by the defendant, while the defendant had a substantial role in committing or attempting to
    commit, or was fleeing after having a substantial role in committing or attempting to commit,
    any robbery, and (5) the victim of the murder was seventy (70) years of age or older. See
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-204(i)(2), (5), (6), (7), (14) (1999). The prior violent felony
    aggravator was found to be invalid by our supreme court on direct appeal. State v. Rollins,
    
    188 S.W.3d 553
    , 574 (Tenn. 2006). The court held, however, that the jury’s reliance on that
    factor was harmless. Id. The following facts of this case were summarized by the court in
    its opinion on direct appeal:
    The proof offered by the prosecution at trial established
    that the defendant, thirty-seven-year-old Steven James Rollins,
    killed the eighty-one-year-old victim, John Bussell, during a
    robbery. For thirty years prior to his murder, Bussell owned and
    operated the Fisherman’s Paradise bait shop and barbeque
    restaurant in the Colonial Heights area of Sullivan County near
    Kingsport, Tennessee. Bussell, a widower, lived alone in a
    camper next door to the bait shop. Although Bussell suffered
    from arthritis, bad eyesight, and breathing difficulties, he had
    remained active and independent for a person of his age. Local
    residents were aware that Bussell frequently accommodated
    customers by opening his business late at night to sell bait or
    fishing and camping supplies. Furthermore, local residents were
    aware that Bussell carried large amounts of cash on his person,
    -2-
    at least $1,000 to $1,500 at any given time, according to Walter
    Hoskins, Bussell’s friend of five years and maintenance man.
    Hoskins recalled that Bussell often displayed this “wad” of cash
    as he provided change to customers. Hoskins and other of
    Bussell’s friends and relatives cautioned Bussell against opening
    the bait shop late at night while he was alone and against
    making change from his “wad” of cash, but to Hoskins’
    knowledge, Bussell continued to operate his business as he had
    for the preceding thirty years. Bussell owned and carried a
    handgun for his protection, and in July 2001, approximately one-
    month before his murder, Bussell purchased a two-shot
    Derringer handgun and carried it with him at all times in his
    right front pants pocket. Hoskins was the last person to speak
    with Bussell before his murder. Bussell telephoned Hoskins at
    10:30 p.m. on August 21, 2001, to discuss Hoskins’ plans for the
    next day.
    Ottie McGuire, who had been Bussell’s friend for ten
    years, arrived at the bait shop around 8:30 a.m. on the morning
    of August 22, 2001, intending to have breakfast with Bussell, as
    was their custom. McGuire became worried when he noticed
    that the restaurant lights were off and the door still locked.
    McGuire walked next door and found the door to Bussell’s
    camper partly open and the morning newspaper still in the box.
    McGuire knocked on the camper’s window and called for
    Bussell, and when Bussell failed to respond, McGuire went to
    a nearby fire hall for help, fearing that Bussell had suffered a
    heart attack.
    Eventually Sullivan County Deputy Sheriff Jamie Free
    arrived at the bait shop. After looking through a window and
    seeing the victim’s head lying on the floor of the bait shop
    between two display racks, Officer Free removed the chained
    “closed” sign and kicked open the locked door. Officer Free
    then found Bussell’s body lying in a pool of blood on the floor
    behind the counter of the bait shop. Bussell was clothed in
    pajamas and house slippers; his clothing was blood-soaked; and
    he was not breathing. The cash register was open and empty;
    the change drawer, also empty, was lying on the floor beside the
    body. Several minnows and cups used to dip out the minnows
    -3-
    were on floor near the minnow tank. Bussell’s Derringer was
    missing. A trail of bloody footprints led from inside the bait
    shop to the victim’s camper, which had been ransacked. Blood
    smears were found inside the camper on a variety of the victim’s
    personal belongings. A wad of $1,150 in cash was found lying
    on the floor of the camper covered by other items.
    Forensic experts from the Tennessee Bureau of
    Investigation Crime Laboratory ultimately spent 112.5 man
    hours processing the bait shop, the camper, and the area outside
    but found no physical evidence tying anyone to the crime. The
    blood found at the scene belonged to the victim. Investigators
    neither discovered identifiable latent fingerprints nor shoes
    belonging to a suspect which could be compared to the bloody
    footprints found at the scene.
    An autopsy disclosed that the victim had sustained
    twenty-seven and possibly twenty-eight knife wounds and had
    bled to death from these wounds. While most of these injuries
    would not have been immediately fatal, a deep six-inch cutting
    wound that began near the victim’s left ear and extended across
    his neck had sliced through his left common carotid artery and
    jugular vein and would have rendered the victim immediately
    unconscious and led to his death within four minutes. Another
    incised wound to the victim’s neck had cut into his right jugular
    vein and would have been fatal without prompt medical care. A
    third stab wound to the victim’s shoulder had penetrated the
    victim’s lung and heart and would also have been fatal without
    immediate medical care. In addition, Dr. Gretel Harlan Stevens,
    the forensic pathologist who performed the autopsy, noticed
    multiple painful but non-life threatening stab wounds to the
    victim’s collarbone, chest, abdomen, back, and hands. Dr.
    Stevens testified that the [sic] all of these wounds would have
    been painful, some more than others, but none of these wounds
    was itself life threatening. Dr. Stevens further explained that the
    presence of blood on the victim’s feet and clothing as well as
    defensive wounds to his hands indicated that he had been
    injured but had remained alive and had struggled with and fled
    from his attacker. Dr. Stevens opined that the nature of the
    -4-
    wounds suggested that the victim initially did a “fairly good job”
    fending off his attacker, considering his age and health.
    Shortly after the victim’s murder, Richard Russell, chief
    investigative officer for the Scott County, Virginia Sheriff’s
    Department, reported to the Sullivan County Sheriff’s
    Department a conversation that he had with the defendant about
    one month before the murder. In particular, the defendant told
    Officer Russell that two of the defendant’s acquaintances had
    mentioned robbing “an old guy ... that owned some kind of a
    bait shop ... and taking his money.” At that time, Officer
    Russell believed that the defendant was referring to a crime that
    had already been committed. After determining that no such
    crime had occurred, Officer Russell forgot about the defendant’s
    statement. After learning of the victim’s murder, Officer
    Russell relayed the information to the Sullivan County Sheriff’s
    Department.
    On August 25, 2001, the defendant and his girlfriend,
    Angela Salyers, were interviewed by Sullivan County officers.
    The defendant agreed to accompany the officers to the Sheriff’s
    Department for questioning. Sullivan County Detective Bobby
    Russell interviewed the defendant, whom he described as
    cooperative and responsive. The defendant expounded upon the
    information he previously had given to the Virginia police,
    telling Detective Russell that about one month earlier Ricky
    Frasier, for whom the defendant worked as a roofer, and Larry
    Cowden, the defendant’s co-worker, mentioned going to the
    trailer of an old man who had a large sum of money and
    “knocking on the trailer and knocking him in the head. He said
    he had maybe $40,000.00 or something.” The defendant further
    admitted that, about three weeks earlier, he had accompanied
    Frasier and Cowden to a drive-in restaurant across the road from
    the victim’s trailer while they watched the victim’s trailer, but
    the defendant denied ever meeting the victim or participating in
    or knowing anything about the victim’s murder.
    The police continued to investigate the victim’s murder
    and received information which, on September 26, 2001,
    resulted in the underwater investigation team of the Sullivan
    -5-
    County Sheriff’s Department retrieving Bussell’s Derringer
    from the Holston River. In the meantime, the defendant and
    Angela Salyers left Tennessee and traveled to a rural area in
    Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, a two-day drive from Sullivan
    County. On October 9, 2001, Sullivan County officers arrested
    the defendant and Salyers in Michigan. After receiving Miranda
    warnings and signing a waiver of those rights, the defendant
    gave a statement in Michigan admitting that he had killed
    Bussell. The defendant then waived extradition, and he and
    Salyers returned to Tennessee with the Sullivan County officers.
    The group arrived late on October 11, and the defendant then
    asked to speak with officers “to clear up” some things. Due to
    the lateness of the hour, the officers delayed meeting with the
    defendant until October 12. At that time, the defendant gave a
    second statement recounting his involvement in the robbery and
    murder of the victim. This second statement was consistent with
    the first, but provided additional detail.
    The substance of the defendant’s two statements was that
    he and Gregory “Kojack” Fleenor were discussing ways to get
    money to buy cocaine when the defendant suggested robbing the
    victim. The defendant purchased four pairs of gloves at a
    convenience store. The defendant, Fleenor, Salyers, and
    Fleenor’s girlfriend, Ashley Cooper, then drove to the victim’s
    bait shop around midnight. The defendant rang the doorbell at
    the shop. When no one answered, the defendant knocked on the
    door of the camper. The victim answered, and the defendant
    told the victim that he needed to buy some bait. The defendant
    followed the victim into the bait shop, and, while the victim was
    bent over dipping minnows from the tank, the defendant
    grabbed the victim’s shoulder. When the victim reached for his
    gun, the defendant pulled a lock-blade knife from his pocket and
    began stabbing the victim. The defendant could not remember
    how many times he had stabbed the victim. After the stabbing,
    the defendant made sure the victim was dead by shaking him,
    and then the defendant washed his hands and his knife in the
    minnow tank before joining Fleenor in searching through the
    victim’s camper for money, drugs, and anything else of value.
    Fleenor found $1,000 to $1,200 in the victim’s wallet. The
    group then drove to Knoxville, where Fleenor purchased
    -6-
    cocaine, which the group consumed. The defendant threw away
    the victim’s wallet and the clothing that the defendant had been
    wearing when he killed the victim. The defendant also threw
    the victim’s gun into the Holston River. According to the
    defendant, Fleenor suggested that he kill the victim and that they
    “leave no witnesses.” The defendant insisted that he never
    intended to kill the victim and that he had been “strung out” on
    cocaine the entire evening. He concluded his last statement with
    the admission: “I know I should be punished.”
    Contradicting both of these statements, the defendant
    testified at trial that Fleenor had killed the victim. The
    defendant maintained that he had been afraid of Fleenor and was
    unaware that Fleenor had planned to rob or to kill the victim. At
    Fleenor’s instruction, the defendant went into the bait shop to
    buy some bait while Fleenor “checked things out.” The
    defendant left the bait shop after telling Fleenor to pay the
    victim for the minnows. Fleenor agreed but instructed the
    defendant to sneak into the camper and steal anything of value
    he could find. The defendant ransacked the camper for five or
    ten minutes until Fleenor joined him. When the defendant asked
    where the victim was, Fleenor responded, “I took care of it.”
    The defendant testified that he thought this meant that Fleenor
    had hit the victim in the head. Fleenor, however, eventually told
    the defendant that he had killed the victim by “cutting” him,
    warned the defendant to keep his mouth shut, and threatened to
    kill Salyers, Cooper, and members of the defendant’s family if
    the defendant did not keep quiet. The defendant testified that he
    only had “a little, bitty Old Timer” knife in his pocket while
    Fleenor had a lock-blade knife. The defendant said that he
    could not read or write, that he provided the October 9th
    statement because officers promised that he could ride from
    Michigan to Tennessee in the same car with his girlfriend,
    Salyers, and that he had accepted blame for the killing because
    he was afraid of Fleenor and of Fleenor’s father, both of whom
    were incarcerated with the defendant in the Kingsport jail. The
    defendant admitted on direct examination that he had fifteen
    prior felony convictions but pointed out that he had pleaded
    guilty in each case because he had been guilty. On cross-
    examination, the defendant intimated that the Sullivan County
    -7-
    investigators had supplied the details of the statements he had
    given. The defendant explained that he had initialed the
    erroneous and false written statements because he could neither
    read nor write with any proficiency. For purposes of
    impeachment the defendant acknowledged that he had thirteen
    prior convictions for aggravated burglary from August 1995 to
    November 1996 and one conviction of felony theft.
    Testifying in rebuttal for the State, Detective Bobby
    Russell, the officer who had taken the defendant’s statements,
    denied supplying the defendant with details concerning the
    victim’s murder. Another officer, Karen Watkins, testified to
    rebut the defendant’s testimony concerning events occurring
    during the ride from Michigan to Sullivan County. Rana
    Jandron of the Marquette County Sheriff’s Department in
    Michigan testified that the defendant told her that he could read
    and write a little bit, “enough to write a letter.” A videotape of
    the defendant’s booking in Michigan showing the defendant
    making this statement was played for the jury. Finally, Angela
    Salyers, the defendant’s girlfriend, testified that the defendant
    could read and write, that the defendant had owned a lock-blade
    knife with a four-inch blade at the time of the victim’s murder,
    and that the defendant had attacked and killed the victim.
    Salyers admitted that she had been tried for first degree murder
    in connection with the victim’s murder and had been convicted
    of facilitation of robbery.
    The jury found the defendant guilty of premeditated first
    degree murder, felony first degree murder, and especially
    aggravated robbery.
    At the sentencing hearing, the State introduced certified
    copies of the defendant’s two 1996 aggravated assault
    convictions in Hawkins County, Tennessee. The State also
    presented photographs of some of the wounds inflicted on the
    victim. Dr. Gretel Stevens testified at the sentencing phase that
    none of these injuries had been fatal, that some of these injuries
    were inflicted while the victim was alive and standing or
    walking about, and that these injuries would have been painful.
    The last witness for the State was Marie Carpenter, the victim’s
    -8-
    niece, through whom the State presented victim impact
    testimony. Carpenter testified that the eighty-one-year-old
    victim had no children and had been a father-figure to her.
    Carpenter explained that she talked with the victim by telephone
    every night, saw him weekly, and sometimes drove him to the
    doctor. The victim had operated his bait shop and barbecue
    restaurant for thirty years. Although the victim was not in the
    best of health, he was still able to come and go as he wished. In
    closing, the State specifically announced that it relied on the
    proof presented at the guilt phase.
    The only mitigation proof offered by the defense was a
    report by a school psychologist dating from 1978, when the
    defendant was in his early teens. The report reflected that the
    defendant’s parents were divorced and that the defendant lived
    with his grandmother. His mother, who had a third-grade
    education, was not well physically or mentally. No information
    was available regarding the defendant’s father. The defendant’s
    older brother was in the Army. According to the report, the
    defendant had received speech therapy, was enrolled in
    vocational training in auto body work, and was repeating the
    seventh grade. His school grades were mostly Ds and Fs.
    Teacher comments indicated that he was “basically a non-
    reader” and could not spell or write. When tested in March
    1978, the defendant’s I.Q. fell within the borderline defective
    range, slightly above mentally retarded. The report also noted
    that the defendant had the academic skills of a second grader.
    A re-evaluation, performed about six months later, confirmed
    that the defendant’s I.Q. was borderline defective.
    Rollins, 188 S.W.3d at 559-64 (footnote omitted). The court affirmed the Petitioner’s
    convictions and sentences. Id. at 577. As noted above, the Petitioner’s girlfriend was
    convicted of facilitation of robbery. Fleenor pled guilty to first degree felony murder and
    especially aggravated robbery and received concurrent life and fifteen year sentences. See
    Gregory Christopher Fleenor v. State, No. E2004-00943-CCA-R3-PC, 
    2005 WL 1412104
    (Tenn. Crim. App., June 16, 2005).
    -9-
    B. Post-Conviction
    The Petitioner timely filed his petition for post-conviction relief on December 1, 2006.
    The post-conviction court appointed the Office of the Post-Conviction Defender, which
    ultimately amended the pro se petition. The post-conviction court conducted an evidentiary
    hearing on October 12 through 16, and December 21, 2009, and issued its written order on
    April 26, 2010. The post-conviction court denied relief on all grounds related to the guilt
    phase of the trial, but granted the Petitioner a new sentencing hearing on the ground of
    ineffective assistance of counsel during the penalty phase. The Petitioner is appealing the
    denial of a new trial. The State, however, is not challenging the granting of a new sentencing
    hearing. The Petitioner’s primary issue on appeal relates to juror bias. This court’s summary
    of the records, therefore, will be limited to the facts surrounding voir dire and the post-
    conviction testimony concerning juror bias.
    Prior to trial, the prospective jurors in this case were given a written questionnaire to
    complete. The jurors were asked background questions about themselves as well as whether
    they had any personal or familial interactions with law enforcement or the legal system in
    general. One of the forty questions in the questionnaire asked if they had “been interested
    in a specific criminal case in this county.” Juror 9’s questionnaire was introduced as an
    exhibit during the post-conviction hearing. Juror 9 did not answer the overwhelming
    majority of the questions, including the one asking if he had any interest in any particular
    criminal case.
    Juror 9 was in the first panel of prospective jurors called to the jury box. The trial
    court, as part of its introduction to the prospective jurors, informed the panel that this case
    was a first degree murder case in which the State filed notice of intent to seek the death
    penalty. The court told the panel that those jurors who were actually selected to hear the trial
    would be sequestered for an extended period of time and that the court would impose certain
    communication restrictions upon them outside of open court. The trial court gave the
    following initial admonishments to the entire panel, which it said would be applicable
    throughout the trial of the case:
    You’re not to communicate with other jurors or anyone
    else regarding any subject connected with the trial. Nor should
    you form or express any opinion thereon until the case is finally
    submitted to the jury.
    You should report promptly to the Court any incident
    involving an attempt by any person to improperly influence you
    -10-
    or any member of the jury or a violation by any juror of any of
    the Court’s admonishments.
    You should not read, listen to or view any news reports
    concerning the case. The case must ultimately be decided solely
    and alone upon the evidence that comes in to trial.
    In addition, the trial court informed the panel that they would be asked if they had read or
    heard anything about the case. The court explained that any prospective juror who knew
    anything about the case would be questioned individually out of the presence of the rest of
    the panel. The court stated,
    So, be very careful to identify yourself if you have read or heard
    anything about the case from any source, but do not, at that
    moment, tell me what you’ve read or heard because that way
    you have the possibility of, of letting the other jurors know and
    we’ll be in [sic] a problem if you do that. So, don’t state at that
    moment what you’ve read or heard. We will talk with you
    individually.
    After the court excused a number of prospective jurors from the first panel due to
    hardships, medical or otherwise, the court swore in the remainder of the panel. Juror 9 was
    one of twenty-seven prospective jurors remaining on the first panel and was one of the initial
    eighteen prospective jurors called into the jury box for questioning. The trial court read the
    presentment of the three charges (first degree premeditated murder, first degree felony
    murder, and especially aggravated robbery), which stated that the defendant, Steven J.
    Rollins, along with co-defendants Gregory Christopher Fleenor and Angela Ann Salyers,
    allegedly killed the eighty-one year old victim, John T. Bussell, by stabbing him and slitting
    his throat during the coarse of a robbery. The trial court elaborated further as follows:
    And if the attorneys would allow me, the allegation is
    that Mr. John T. Bussell had a place of business in the Colonial
    Heights area down near what used to be called Crooked Road,
    now it’s called, I believe, Moreland Drive, a fish or a bait shop,
    and the allegation is that during the course of the robbery, he
    was killed. And I believe that’s, again, alleged to be back in
    August 21st through the 22nd.
    Immediately following those statements, the trial court asked the group of eighteen
    prospective jurors, including Juror 9, if any of them had read or heard anything about the
    -11-
    case. Of the eighteen jurors in the box, only three jurors, including Juror 9, responded that
    they had not read or heard anything about the case. The transcript reflects that the trial court
    questioned each one of the eighteen jurors. The transcript reveals the following when the
    court questioned Juror 9:
    THE COURT:            Juror number 9, have you read or heard
    anything about this?
    [JUROR 9]:            I’m sure I . . . .
    THE COURT:            You haven’t. Okay. Juror number 10,
    have you?
    The trial court thereafter examined individually, and outside the presence of the other
    jurors, each juror who indicated they had read or heard something about the case. Some were
    excused for cause, including one who knew the victim and believed the defendant should be
    sentenced to death for his actions. And although the trial court explained to the entire panel
    that it was going to further question those jurors individually about the extent of their
    knowledge about the case, Juror 9 did not say anything else and the trial court did not attempt
    to clarify Juror 9’s earlier response.
    After the trial court excused five of the eighteen prospective jurors for cause, the court
    filled the vacancies with five new prospective jurors. In the presence of those eighteen
    prospective jurors, which included Juror 9, the trial court again read the presentment of the
    charges to the group, again identifying the name of the victim and the place of the crime, and
    then asked all of the prospective jurors whether any of them had read or heard anything about
    the case. All five of the new prospective jurors raised their hand. The court then explained
    to all of the prospective jurors its practice of inquiring with each juror individually, and
    outside the presence of the others, about the extent of their knowledge about the case and
    stated, “The obvious reason we do that if they tell you what you’ve [sic] read, all of you all
    will know what they’ve read or heard and that could have an effect, potentially affect you.”
    Juror 9 exited the courtroom without saying anything. Of those five new prospective jurors,
    three were excused for cause. One of the two who was permitted to remain on the panel,
    Juror Brenda J. Depew, knew the victim from her and her husband’s patronage of the
    victim’s business, but Ms. Depew stated that she could render a fair and impartial verdict
    based upon the evidence presented at trial. Ms. Depew ultimately served on the jury in this
    case.
    The trial court filled the three vacancies and, again, read the presentment of the
    charges which identified the victim by name as well as the location of his business. The trial
    -12-
    court then asked all the jurors if they had read or heard anything about the case. None raised
    their hand. The court immediately thereafter stated to the prospective jurors, “If we --during
    the -- further questioning will be asked here shortly, if you should remember something about
    [the case], raise your hand and let us know and we’ll send the other jury matter -- people
    out.” The trial court then asked the eighteen prospective jurors if they knew the parties,
    attorneys, or some of the potential witnesses listed on the indictment. Two of the prospective
    jurors said they knew potential witnesses but further stated that they would not place any
    undue weight on the testimony of those witnesses.
    The trial court then proceeded to question the eighteen prospective jurors, including
    Juror 9, about their views on capital punishment. Prior to delving into specific questions
    about that topic, however, the trial court asked the jurors once more, “Does anyone presently
    seated on the jury know of any reason they couldn’t sit on the jury and render an absolutely,
    fair and impartial verdict? Just – if you can [sic] render a [sic] absolutely fair and impartial
    verdict, let me know right now. All right. Nobody’s raised their hand.” The trial court then
    asked the prospective jurors if anyone had a strong opinion one way or the other about the
    death penalty which would impair their ability to follow the court’s instructions on the law
    and render a fair and impartial verdict based upon the evidence presented. Several jurors
    raised their hands, and they were further questioned separately about their views. Juror 9,
    however, remained silent throughout the trial court’s questioning of the prospective jurors
    on this matter.
    Prior to the end of the first day of jury selection, the trial court stated the following
    before excusing the prospective jurors for the night:
    Now, when we come back tomorrow, we’ll, we’ll
    continue the voir dire process. Voir dire is a big magic word
    everybody uses. It just means to tell the truth and it’s probably
    French Renaissance Latin. Just basically means to tell the truth
    and that’s what we call jury selection. So, we’ll continue that
    tomorrow. The attorneys will be asking you questions
    tomorrow. I think I’ve carried the burden a little bit here going
    through some of the preliminaries trying to move things along,
    but the attorneys will be allowed to ask you questions tomorrow
    and also ask you questions about these admonitions I’ve given
    you.
    At the beginning of the second day, the trial court reminded the prospective jurors, including
    Juror 9, about their obligation to inform the court if they had read or heard anything or had
    already formed an opinion about the case or whether their views on the death penalty would
    -13-
    impair their ability to reach a fair and impartial decision during sentencing. None of the
    jurors raised their hand.
    After the trial court concluded its general questioning, the attorneys for each side were
    permitted to pose their own questions to the prospective jurors. The prosecutor summarized
    the trial process in a capital case and specifically asked each juror if they would be able to
    follow the law as instructed by the court. Juror 9 responded that he could. Although the
    prosecutor did not directly ask if any of the jurors knew the victim, he did ask the jurors if
    they knew the attorneys, the defendant, or either of the co-defendants. None of the jurors
    responded in the affirmative. After the prosecutor concluded his opening remarks, defense
    counsel then continued to explain to the jury their general responsibilities as jurors. Defense
    counsel reminded the prospective jurors, including Juror 9, as follows:
    So, it’s real important at this stage of the game that if
    there’s anything that comes to your mind, coming out of any of
    these questions that have been asked, that suddenly popped into
    your mind, raise your hand and let’s deal with it now because
    we’d like to try to get twelve (12) jurors with as clean a mindset
    coming in, that is, free of any preconceived notions or any other,
    or any other information to come into this, come into this
    decision-making process as we can.
    One of the prospective jurors then raised his hand and, outside the presence of the other
    jurors, the court questioned this juror about his concerns. While the jurors remained outside
    the courtroom during this time, two other prospective jurors notified the court officer that
    they also wanted to express some concerns to the court about their continued service. The
    court questioned them outside the presence of each other as well as the rest of the prospective
    jurors. When defense counsel resumed his general questioning of the panel, none of the
    jurors indicated that they would not be able to render a fair and impartial decision in the case.
    In the presence of the entire panel, including Juror 9, defense counsel questioned three
    prospective jurors about answers they entered on the written questionnaire. The answers
    related to the several jurors’ knowledge of either someone in law enforcement or one of the
    potential witnesses in the case. Juror 9 remained silent during these inquiries.
    Before and after each recess when the jury was excused from the courtroom during
    the selection process, the trial court reminded the jurors of the admonishments previously
    given about not reading or watching the news, not communicating with anyone about the
    case, not prematurely forming an opinion, and reporting any improper outside influences.
    Following the exercise by the attorneys of their peremptory challenges, the parties and court
    accepted a jury of twelve (plus two alternates), which included Juror 9. During the trial of
    -14-
    the case, each time before the jury was excused from the courtroom and after they were
    reseated in the jury box, the trial court read them the list of the admonishments noted above,
    including the prohibitions against discussing the case with anyone at all or forming an
    opinion prior to deliberations, and then inquired whether any of the jurors had anything to
    report. Each time, Juror 9 remained silent.
    In his post-conviction petition, the Petitioner claimed that Juror 9 did not give
    thoroughly honest responses to questions asked during the jury selection process and
    improperly discussed the case with at least one other person after he was sworn in as a
    member of the jury and prior to deliberations. Specifically, the Petitioner contends Juror 9
    failed to disclose to the court his friendship with the victim and his views on capital
    punishment and talked about the case with his juror roommate prior to deliberations. In
    support of his claim, the Petitioner introduced two affidavits signed by Juror 9 and called
    Juror 9 as a witness to testify at the evidentiary hearing.
    The following affidavit was signed by Juror 9 on August 6, 2008:
    I, [Juror 9’s name], having been duly sworn, state: I served on
    the Steve Rollins jury. The jury agreed on death in one vote. I
    had known the victim Mr. Bussell and bought bait from him
    about once a week. We could not talk about the case with other
    jurors except for my roommate and we talked about it and both
    agreed. I had my mind made up as soon as they seated the jury.
    I could tell by looking at him that he was a crook. I believe that
    death is the only appropriate punishment for someone convicted
    of murder, but no one asked me about my opinion.
    The affidavit appears to have been handwritten by someone other than Juror 9 because his
    last name is misspelled. The signature, however, reflects the correct spelling of his last
    name. The second affidavit was signed by Juror 9 on October 10, 2009, and states as
    follows:
    I, [Juror 9’s name], having been duly sworn, state: I knew Mr.
    Bussell for one year from buying fishing equipment. We were
    friends and I would visit his shop at least once a week. I heard
    that he had been murdered on the night he was killed. I said to
    myself, “If I catch him, I’ll kill him.[”] He cut his throat, he
    deserved to die. Everyone was upset about the murder and
    talking about it. It was on the news and in the newspaper. I
    read about the arrests the whole time. I knew as soon as I seen
    -15-
    him that he was guilty. I knew he was going to burn. Death is
    always appropriate when you kill someone – automatically it’s
    the only appropriate punishment. I talked to my roommate
    about the case. I told him I knew Bussell and asked him how he
    felt about it. He said, “We should burn him.” Everybody agreed
    he was guilty and deserved to die. We said he took a life and
    deserved to lose his life. Nobody ever asked me how I felt
    about the death penalty. I thought he deserved to die then, and
    I still feel that way now. After we found him guilty and gave
    him death, the judge let us leave. He thanked us for what we
    had done and we all felt good about it.
    It appears the second affidavit is in a handwriting style different than the first one. Juror 9’s
    signature appears to be the same, however.
    At the time of the hearing, Juror 9 was eighty years old. During his post-conviction
    testimony, Juror 9 affirmed that each statement contained in the two affidavits was true. Juror
    9 testified he would have informed the court during voir dire that he was a friend of the
    victim and saw him about once a week if he had been asked. He also testified that, if asked
    during voir dire, he would have informed the court at that time that he felt the Petitioner
    deserved to die for his actions. Juror 9 stated he was able to hear and understand everything
    that was said during the jury selection process.
    During cross-examination by the State, Juror 9 acknowledged he had difficulty
    hearing and had had the problem for “[q]uite a while.” When asked if he owned a hearing
    aid, Juror 9 did not respond clearly. At first, he stated that he did not possess a hearing aid,
    but when asked if he had access to a hearing aid when he was interviewed and asked to sign
    the affidavits prior to the hearing, he stated, “I don’t know. I’ll be honest with you, I don’t’
    know.” Juror 9 then later testified that he never owned a hearing aid.
    Juror 9 testified during cross-examination that he believed the Petitioner received a
    fair trial. He also testified that he would have voted “not guilty” if he had thought the State
    did not prove its case-in-chief. When asked if he would have voted for the death penalty if
    the evidence did not support it, Juror 9 initially responded, “No, I’d – I’d – I’d give him a
    debt [sic], and I still would.” The State then asked, “But if you didn’t think that the evidence
    justified giving him a death sentence, would you give him the death penalty?” Juror 9
    replied, “No.” Juror 9 also testified that if he was asked during voir dire if he had read or
    heard anything about the case he would have responded in the affirmative. Juror 9 further
    testified that he did not offer to the court any reason why he would not be able to render a fair
    and impartial verdict. The following exchange between the State and Juror 9 then took place:
    -16-
    Q.     Do you recall whether anyone asked you whether or not
    you knew [the victim]?
    A.     Yeah.
    Q.     Did they? Did somebody ask you that?
    A.     Yeah.
    Q.     Did you respond to it?
    A.     Yeah.
    Juror 9 testified that he heard about Mr. Bussell’s murder in the news. Although Juror
    9 stated in his second affidavit that he “heard that he [the victim] had been murdered on the
    night he was killed,” he acknowledged during the hearing that he could not have heard about
    it that same night because the victim’s body was not discovered until the next day. The
    State’s cross-examination of Juror 9 concluded with the following exchange:
    Q.     Who came out and asked you these questions on these
    affidavits?
    A.     I don’t know. That’s been a long time.
    Q.     Who did they tell you they were?
    A.     I – I don’t know. I’ll be honest with you.
    Q.     Who did they tell you they worked for?
    A.     The county.
    Q.     The county? Okay. Did you think they worked for me?
    A.     Huh?
    Q.     Did you think they worked for me?
    A.     I don’t know.
    Q.     Did you think they worked for the sheriff?
    A.     Possibly.
    Q.     You said it’s been a long time ago. The two-page one
    says that you were sworn to it on October the 10th of
    2009, which would have been last Friday.
    A.     Yeah.
    Q.     You don’t remember who came out to see you last
    Friday?
    A.     No.
    Q.     When whoever it was came out and asked you these
    things and wrote down these affidavits, did they show
    you the transcript of the questions that were asked of you
    at the trial?
    A.     I don’t know. I’ll be honest with you.
    -17-
    Q.     Well, you see this – these volumes of paper that I’m
    handing up?
    A.     Yeah.
    Q.     Looks --- what? --- about four or five inches thick. Did
    they show you anything like this when they came out and
    asked you the questions?
    A.     Well, they – they just asked me to sign the affidavit that
    the – of the questions they asked.
    Q.     Okay. But your answer is: They didn’t show you what
    questions were asked of you by the judge or by the
    lawyers at the trial, did they?
    A.     Yeah.
    Q.     They didn’t show you this stuff, did they?
    A.     No.
    On redirect examination, Juror 9 again testified that the affidavits he signed were
    completely truthful. He further stated that he would have never considered the possibility
    of any sentence other than death following the guilty verdict. After Juror 9 was excused from
    the witness stand, the post-conviction court and counsel briefly discussed the fact that no one
    specifically asked the prospective jurors during voir dire if any of them actually knew the
    victim of the crime in this case.
    The post-conviction court concluded that the Petitioner did not carry his burden of
    proof on the juror bias claim. In arriving at its conclusion, the court recounted the fact that
    the prospective jurors were asked during voir dire if they knew anyone involved in the case
    or had read or heard anything about the case. The court acknowledged the fact that Juror 9
    remained silent during this line of questioning and did not alert the court about his friendship
    with the victim or any pretrial exposure he may have had about the crimes. The post-
    conviction court pointed to the fact that the transcript of the jury selection process does not
    clearly reflect whether Juror 9 ever finished his response when the court asked him directly
    if he had read or heard anything about the case. The post-conviction court apparently did not
    have any independent recollection of that particular exchange.1 In addition to the numerous
    publicity-type questions, the post-conviction court recounted the fact that the prospective
    jurors were also repeatedly asked if any of them harbored any personal opinions about capital
    punishment which would prevent or substantially impair their ability to render a fair and
    1
    The record reflects that the same judge presided at trial and the post-conviction
    evidentiary hearing.
    -18-
    impartial decision based on the instructions given during the penalty phase of the trial. The
    court recognized that Juror 9 remained silent throughout this line of questioning as well.
    The post-conviction court observed that Juror 9 testified during the post-conviction
    hearing that each of the statements in the two affidavits he signed were true. The court also
    noted that Juror 9 testified that he was never asked if he knew the victim but that he would
    have informed the court of his friendship if he had been asked about it. In addition, the court
    noted that Juror 9 testified that if he had been asked his opinion about the death penalty he
    would have said he thought the Petitioner deserved to die. As to the truth of the affidavits
    and Juror 9’s testimony that he was never asked if he knew the victim or his views on capital
    punishment, the court concluded, “This portion of the testimony, which this Court deemed
    credible and which was solicited by the Petitioner, does not support willful concealment or
    failure to disclose the fact that the juror knew the victim or regarding his death penalty
    views.”
    The post-conviction court also quoted from the transcript of the evidentiary hearing
    the majority of the prosecution’s cross-examination of Juror 9. Based upon that line of
    questioning, the court concluded that “Juror [9]’s testimony established that he has a hearing
    problem and it also established that the witness may have been confused at the hearing about
    the subjects he was discussing to a substantial degree and that clearly calls his recollection
    and, thus, his credibility into question.” The court also commented that “issues such as age,
    hearing, and wording of questions may have contributed to this juror’s failure [during voir
    dire] to clearly and properly express his relationship with the victim, his views about the
    death penalty, and other matters.”
    The post-conviction court concluded as follows:
    When considering the record as a whole, this Court does
    not find that the Petitioner has carried his burden of proof on the
    issues related to Juror [9]. This Court finds that Juror [9]
    credibly stated that he would answer questions honestly if asked
    and that the Juror wanted to be forthright with the Court, but this
    Court further finds that this Juror’s ability to recall both the
    recent and distant past are at best questionable. When asked
    about it, he could not recall the events related to the taking of his
    affidavit only one week before the hearing. He clearly answered
    questions in a confused manner as is evidenced by the transcript
    and this Court’s observation of the Juror.
    -19-
    This Court does not find credible evidence in this record
    of any willful concealment or failure to disclose information by
    this juror. Accordingly, there is no presumption of prejudice.
    Without a presumption of prejudice, the Petitioner has failed to
    carry his burden of proof on the issue of prejudice. As stated
    previously, this Court finds credible the Juror’s statements that
    if the evidence had not been presented to him that he would not
    have reached the same verdict.
    II. Analysis
    The Petitioner’s post-conviction petition is governed by the Post-Conviction
    Procedure Act. See Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 40-30-101 to -122. To obtain post-conviction
    relief, a petitioner must show that his or her conviction or sentence is void or voidable
    because of the abridgment of a constitutional right. Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-103. The
    petitioner must establish the factual allegations contained in his petition by clear and
    convincing evidence. Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-110(2)(f). Evidence is clear and convincing
    when there is no serious or substantial doubt about the accuracy of the conclusions drawn
    from the evidence. Hicks v. State, 
    983 S.W.2d 240
    , 245 (Tenn. Crim. App.1998).
    Once the post-conviction court rules on the petition, its findings of fact are conclusive
    on appeal unless the evidence preponderates against them. State v. Nichols, 
    90 S.W.3d 576
    ,
    586 (Tenn. 2002) (citing State v. Burns, 
    6 S.W.3d 453
    , 461 (Tenn.1999)); Cooper v. State,
    
    849 S.W.2d 744
    , 746 (Tenn. 1993). The Petitioner has the burden of establishing that the
    evidence preponderates against the post-conviction court’s findings. Henley v. State, 
    960 S.W.2d 572
    , 579 (Tenn. 1997). This court may not re-weigh or reevaluate the evidence or
    substitute its inferences for those drawn by the post-conviction court. Nichols, 90 S.W.3d
    at 586. Furthermore, the credibility of the witnesses and the weight and value to be afforded
    their testimony are questions to be resolved by the post-conviction court. Bates v. State, 
    973 S.W.2d 615
    , 631 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997).
    A. Juror Bias
    The Petitioner argues that Juror 9’s participation on the jury violated his constitutional
    rights to a fair and impartial jury and that the post-conviction court’s analysis of the issue was
    erroneous. Specifically, the Petitioner argues that because Juror 9 failed to disclose his
    friendship with the murder victim in this case, a presumption of bias is established which has
    not been overcome.
    -20-
    Both the United States and the Tennessee Constitutions guarantee a criminal
    defendant the right to a trial by an impartial jury. U.S. Const. amend. VI; Tenn. Const. art.
    I, § 9. In Tennessee, challenges to juror qualifications generally fall into the following two
    categories: propter defectum, “on account of defect,” or propter affectum, “on account of
    prejudice.” See State v. Akins, 
    867 S.W.2d 350
    , 355 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1993). General
    disqualifications based on alienage, family relationship, or some other statutory mandate are
    classified as propter defectum and must be challenged before the return of a jury verdict. Id.
    An objection based upon bias, prejudice, or impartiality is classified as propter affectum and
    may be made after the jury verdict. Id. A claim of juror bias or impartiality may, therefore,
    be asserted in a petition seeking post-conviction relief. See Carruthers v. State, No.W2006-
    00376-CCA-R3-PD, 
    2007 WL 4355481
     (Tenn. Crim. App., Dec. 12, 2007), perm. to app.
    denied, (Tenn., May 27, 2008).
    In Akins, this court aptly summarized the law on juror bias in Tennessee, stating,
    The jury selection process must be carefully guarded to
    ensure that each defendant has a fair trial and that the verdict is
    determined by an impartial trier of fact. The Tennessee
    Constitution guarantees every accused “a trial by a jury free of
    . . . disqualification on account of some bias or partiality toward
    one side or the other of the litigation”. Toombs v. State, 
    197 Tenn. 229
    , 
    270 S.W.2d 649
    , 650 (1954).
    Bias in a juror is a “leaning of the mind; propensity or
    prepossession towards an object or view, not leaving the mind
    indifferent; [a] bent; [for] inclination.” Durham v. State, 
    182 Tenn. 577
    , 
    188 S.W.2d 555
    , 559 (1945). Jurors who have
    prejudged certain issues or who have had life experiences or
    associations which have swayed them “in response to those
    natural and human instincts common to mankind,” id. 188
    S.W.2d at 559, interfere with the underpinnings of our justice system.
    The essential function of voir dire is to allow for the
    impaneling of a fair and impartial jury through questions which
    permit the intelligent exercise of challenges by counsel. 47
    Am.Jur.2d, Jury § 195 (1969). Traditionally, our state had
    shown great respect and deference to the voir dire process. Our
    legislature had given parties in criminal and civil cases “an
    absolute right to examine prospective jurors.” Tenn. Code Ann.
    § 22-3-101 (1980 Repl.). Our courts, both civil and criminal,
    -21-
    have long recognized the importance of the voir dire process and
    have zealously guarded its integrity. See e.g., Hyatt v. State,
    
    221 Tenn. 644
    , 
    430 S.W.2d 129
     (1967); Toombs v. State, 
    270 S.W.2d 649
     (Tenn. 1954); Durham v. State, 
    188 S.W.2d 555
    (Tenn. 1945); Owen v. Arcata Graphics/Kingsport Press, 
    813 S.W.2d 442
     (Tenn. App. 1990), perm. to appeal denied,
    (Tenn.1991); State v. Furlough, 
    797 S.W.2d 631
     (Tenn. Crim.
    App.), perm. to appeal denied, (Tenn. 1990); State v. Pender,
    
    687 S.W.2d 714
     (Tenn. Crim. App. 1984), perm. to appeal
    denied, (Tenn. 1985); Tennessee Farmers Mut. Ins. Co., v.
    Greer, 
    682 S.W.2d 920
    , 924 (Tenn. App.), perm. to appeal
    denied, (Tenn. 1984); State v. Taylor, 
    669 S.W.2d 694
     (Tenn.
    Crim. App. 1983), perm. to appeal denied, (Tenn. 1984). Since
    full knowledge of the facts which might bear upon a juror’s
    qualifications is essential to the intelligent exercise of
    peremptory and cause challenges, jurors are obligated to make
    “full and truthful answers . . . neither falsely stating any fact nor
    concealing any material matter.” 47 Am.Jur.2d, Jury § 208
    (1969).
    ....
    [A] defendant bears the burden of providing a prima facie case
    of bias or partiality. See State v. Taylor, 
    669 S.W.2d 694
    , 700
    (Tenn. Crim. App. 1983), perm. to appeal denied, (Tenn. 1984).
    When a juror willfully conceals (or fails to disclose) information
    on voir dire which reflects on the juror’s lack of impartiality, a
    presumption of prejudice arises. Durham v. State, 
    188 S.W.2d 555
    , 559 (Tenn. 1945). Silence on the juror’s part when asked
    a question reasonably calculated to produce an answer is
    tantamount to a negative answer. 47 Am.Jur.2d § 208 (1969)
    (counsel has right to rely on silence as negative answer); see
    Hyatt v. State, 
    430 S.W.2d 129
    , 130 (Tenn. 1967) ( “[j]uror . .
    . by his silence . . . acknowledged”). Therefore, failure to
    disclose information in the face of a material question
    reasonably calculated to produce the answer or false disclosures
    give rise to a presumption of bias and partiality, Hyatt v. State,
    
    430 S.W.2d 129
     (Tenn. 1967); Toombs v. State, 
    270 S.W.2d 649
     (Tenn. 1954); Durham v. State, 
    188 S.W.2d 555
     (Tenn.
    1945), “the theory being that a prejudicial bias has been
    -22-
    implanted in the mind which will probably influence the
    judgment.” 188 S.W.2d at 558.
    
    867 S.W.2d 350
    , 354-56 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1993) (footnotes omitted). See also Smith v.
    State, 
    357 S.W.3d 322
    , 348 (Tenn. 2011) (citing Akins with approval). As this court
    observed, the question posed to the prospective juror “must be material and one to which
    counsel would reasonably be expected to give substantial weight.” Akins, 867 S.W.2d at 356
    n.12. “The test is whether a reasonable, impartial person would have believed the question,
    as asked, called for juror response under the circumstances.” Id. n.13. Moreover, the intent
    of the juror is not dispositive of the issue of bias. Id. n.15.
    [W]hen a juror’s response to relevant, direct voir dire
    questioning, whether put to that juror in particular or to the
    venire in general, does not fully and fairly inform counsel of the
    matters which reflect on a potential juror’s possible bias, a
    presumption of bias arises. While that presumption may be
    rebutted by an absence of actual prejudice, the court must view
    the totality of the circumstances, and not merely the juror’s self-
    serving claim of lack of partiality, to determine whether the
    presumption is overcome. Moreover, when the presumed bias
    is confirmed by the challenged juror’s conduct during jury
    deliberations which gives rise to the possibility that improper
    extraneous information was provided to the jury, actual
    prejudice has been demonstrated.
    Id. at 357.
    Our supreme court has recognized that “proper fields of inquiry [into a juror’s bias or
    partiality] include the juror’s occupation, habits, acquaintanceships, associations and other
    facts, including his [or her] experiences, which will indicate his [or her] freedom from bias.”
    Smith, 357 S.W.3d at 347 (first brackets added; emphasis added; internal quotations
    omitted). In Smith, a capital post-conviction case, the petitioner challenged his trial
    counsel’s failure to question prospective jurors about their past experiences either as a victim
    or with a victim of a criminal act. Id. at 335. The record in that case reflected that no one,
    neither the trial court nor the attorneys, asked the jurors whether they knew anyone who had
    been the victim of a crime. Id. at 346. One of the jurors revealed during the post-conviction
    hearing that his daughter’s boyfriend had been murdered shortly before the trial. Id. Our
    supreme court held that trial counsel’s failure to question the prospective jurors about any
    of their experiences with crime victims was deficient performance under the circumstances.
    Id. at 348. The court concluded, however, that Smith failed to prove any resulting prejudice
    -23-
    from the deficient performance because he did not show actual bias on the part of the juror.
    Id. The court noted that the juror informed the trial judge there was no reason he could not
    give the defendant a fair trial. Id. Nevertheless, Smith argued that the juror’s bias should
    have been presumed. Id. The court noted, however, that because the jurors were never
    directly asked questions about any experience with crime victims, the juror at issue did not
    willfully conceal his history. Id. The court cited cases addressing presumptions of bias
    where jurors concealed prior involvement as prosecuting witnesses in similar cases or close
    personal or familial relationships with a party to the case, but it stated that it has “never
    presumed bias absent either an affirmative statement of bias, willful concealment of bias, or
    failure to disclose information that would call into question the juror’s bias.” Id. (emphasis
    added).
    In Akins, the defendant was charged with vehicular homicide, driving under the
    influence of an intoxicant, and driving on a revoked license. 867 S.W.2d at 352. One of the
    trial jurors had previously worked as a probation officer, a DUI probation counselor, and at
    a hospital in an alcohol and drub rehabilitation program. Id. at 353. The juror, however, did
    not disclose any of that information during jury selection despite being asked straightforward
    questions about any experiences working with or counseling alcoholics, connections with
    DUI cases, or employment in law enforcement. Id. at 353-54. Moreover, the juror discussed
    her work history with other jurors during deliberations by telling them that she “knew what
    alcoholics were like.” Id. at 354. This court ruled that not only had a presumption of bias
    been raised but that the defendant had proven actual bias because the juror discussed her
    experiences involving alcoholics and law enforcement during deliberations. Id. at 357.
    In Bowman v. State, one of the jurors revealed during voir dire that she knew one of
    the two prosecuting attorneys in the case and was friends with his ex-wife. 
    598 S.W.2d 809
    ,
    812 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1980). This court recognized that a juror’s failure to disclose a close
    personal relationship with the victim of a crime could result in juror bias. Id. at 812 (citing
    Hyatt v. State, 
    430 S.W.2d 129
     (Tenn. 1976); Toombs v. State, 
    270 S.W.2d 649
     (Tenn.
    1954); Durham v. State, 
    188 S.W.2d 555
     (Ten. 1945)). The defendant in Bowman, however,
    did not challenge the juror at issue for cause or strike her peremptorily after she revealed her
    relationship with one of the parties. Id. This court held that there was full disclosure by the
    juror, that the juror was not legally disqualified, and that the defendant failed otherwise to
    establish any bias. Id.
    In Carruthers, another capital post-conviction case, the defendant’s mother and brother
    testified during the post-conviction hearing that they recognized one of the trial jurors as their
    neighbor. The juror in question also testified during the hearing. He stated that although
    someone mentioned that the defendant’s mother was present during trial, he further testified
    that he did not remember recognizing any of the courtroom spectators as being one of his
    -24-
    neighbors. At the conclusion of closing arguments during the guilt phase, the trial court
    informed the parties that the juror in question was possibly a neighbor of the defendant’s
    mother. Id. at 44-45. According to the information imparted to the trial court, however, the
    defendant’s mother did not know the juror personally and only recognized him as a neighbor
    on her street. Id. at 45. Neither of the parties requested to voir dire the juror and neither
    objected to his continued presence on the jury. Id. at 46. During the penalty phase of the
    trial, defense counsel moved for a mistrial because they had since learned that the juror in
    question lived only two doors down from the defendant’s mother. Id. The trial court denied
    the request based on the fact that no evidence had been introduced to suggest that the juror
    was prejudiced against the defendant or his family. Id.
    On appeal of the denial of post-conviction relief, Carruthers argued the fact that the
    juror lived on the same street as his mother raised a presumption of bias. Id. at 47. In
    denying relief, this court stated that there was no allegation that the juror failed to disclose
    any association with the defendant’s family during jury selection or that any question was
    asked that should have triggered such a response from him. Id. at 48. This court held that
    the proof did not establish that the juror recognized the defendant or that he was biased
    against the defendant or his family. Id. This court noted that “‘Tennessee courts have
    routinely refused relief in post-verdict propter affectum challenges in cases where there was
    a casual relationship not disclosed during voir dire or the record failed to reveal an inherently
    prejudicial relationship or a false answer.’” Id. (quoting State v. Joseph Angel Silva, III, No.
    M2003-03063-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2005 WL 1252621
     (Tenn. Crim. App., May 25, 2005), perm.
    to app. denied, (Tenn. Oct. 17, 2005)) (emphasis added).
    In Silva, one of the jurors was the aunt of the former girlfriend of the defendant’s
    brother. 
    2005 WL 1252621
     at *3. At the time of trial, the former girlfriend and the
    defendant’s brother had difficulty over visitation and child support issues. Id. During voir
    dire, the jurors were specifically asked if they knew the defendant’s brother because he was
    a potential witness at trial. Id. The defendant’s brother was not present during voir dire. Id.
    The juror in question did not recognize the name (her niece twice in passing introduced her
    to the defendant’s brother, not by name, but only as her “boyfriend”), and thus did not
    respond to the question during voir dire. Id. Later during a recess in trial, however, the juror
    recognized the defendant’s brother in the hallway. Id. She did not alert anyone to that fact,
    though, because she said it did not affect her verdict. Id. at *4. During the motion for new
    trial, the defendant argued juror bias based on the juror’s knowledge of his brother. Id. at *3.
    In affirming the denial of the motion on this ground for relief, this court noted on appeal that
    the evidence did not reveal “anything approaching a close familial relationship” between the
    juror and her niece. Id. at *7. This court also noted that the evidence demonstrated that the
    juror did not know the defendant’s brother by name and only had a “casual acquaintance”
    with him. Id.
    -25-
    This court in Silva discussed a similar issue that was raised on appeal in State v.
    Sammy D. Childers, No. W2002-00006-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2003 WL 214444
     (Tenn. Crim. App.,
    Jan. 30, 2003), perm. to app. denied, (Tenn., May 27, 2003). During voir dire in Childers,
    the prospective jurors were asked if they knew anyone involved in the case, including the
    names of the two victims. Id. at *1. The juror in question did not respond. Id. The
    defendant thereafter alleged juror bias in his motion for new trial. Id. The defendant
    apparently learned from one of the victims that the juror in question did in fact know the
    other victim. Id. During the hearing on the motion for new trial, the juror in question
    testified that she did not alert anyone to the fact that she knew one of the victims because she
    did not believe it would have affected her judgment. Id. The juror further testified that she
    was an acquaintance of one of the victims in that he was a best man in her friend’s wedding
    and that she was on the same boat with him during an outing one time. Id. She stated,
    however, that the victim was not a good friend of hers. Id. This court held that the
    “uncontroverted proof” revealed that the juror “did not have a close acquaintanceship with
    the victim.” Id. at *3. The court quoted the following comments made by the trial court on
    the issue: “[in small counties], we could not try a lawsuit where someone didn’t have a
    passing acquaintanceship with someone. Nothing wrong with knowing someone unless that
    might cause you to treat the lawsuit differently or to not be able to be completely fair to both
    sides.” Id. (emphasis added). Finally, this court stated that “[w]e are not at liberty to reverse
    the trial court’s finding unless the evidence clearly preponderates against the court’s
    conclusion that [the juror] was not biased or partial.” Id.
    In State v. George Arthur Lee Smith, No. E2006-00984-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2007 WL 4117603
     (Tenn. Crim. App., Nov. 19, 2007), perm. to app. denied, (Tenn., Feb. 25, 2008),
    the defendants were convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to life in prison. In their
    motions for new trial, the defendants alleged that one of the jurors failed to disclose that he
    knew one of the potential witnesses, failed to disclose that he worked as a plumber for one
    of the defendants, and failed to disclose that his daughter worked in law enforcement. Id. at
    **28-29. This juror did not answer the question in the written juror questionnaire asking
    whether he had family members who worked in law enforcement even though his daughter
    worked in that field. Id. at *26. During trial, based upon information imparted to it, the trial
    court questioned this particular juror about whether he knew one of the potential witnesses.
    Id. The juror responded in the negative. Id.
    Although the defendants in Smith, presented evidence in the motion for new trial that
    this juror’s niece had two children by someone with the same name as the potential witness
    and that the juror had been seen at family functions with the potential witness, the trial court
    accredited the juror’s testimony that he did not know the potential witness. Id. at *28. This
    court concluded on appeal that the defendants did not prove that the juror actually knew the
    potential witness. Id. This court also observed that the potential witness did not testify at
    -26-
    trial. Id. As to the juror’s alleged employment with one of the defendants, this court noted
    that the juror did not testify concerning the matter and that the defendants otherwise failed
    to show how the alleged employment affected the juror’s partiality. Id. Finally, this court
    stated that an alleged relationship between a juror and someone in law enforcement “does not
    give rise to an inherently prejudicial situation in and of itself” and that there was no evidence
    in the record proving that the juror’s daughter’s employment in the field resulted in actual
    partiality. Id. at *29. Under the totality of the circumstances, therefore, this court held that
    the defendants failed to show a presumption of bias on the part of the juror in question. Id.
    at **28-29.
    In State v. Randall S. Sparks, No. M2005-02436-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2006 WL 2242236
    (Tenn. Crim. App., Aug. 4, 2006), the defendant claimed in his motion for new trial that one
    of the trial jurors was biased because she failed to reveal during voir dire that she knew the
    defendant and members of his family. It is unclear from the opinion what questions were
    asked prospective jurors during voir dire, but the opinion reflects that the defendant was
    identified by name and asked to stand up in front of the jurors. Id. at *7. The juror in
    question managed an apartment complex where the defendant and members of his family had
    lived. Id. at **5-6. The juror revealed this fact during voir dire, however, and also stated
    that she was “close” with many of the residents. Id. at *7. The juror testified during the
    hearing on the motion for new trial that she only had a “passing acquaintance” with the
    defendant but that she did not realize this fact until the middle of trial when his wife’s name
    was mentioned. Id. The names of the defendant’s wife and mother were not mentioned
    during voir dire. Id. On appeal, this court concluded that, under the circumstances, any
    presumption of prejudice was rebutted. Id.
    In Hyatt, one of the jurors knew one of the defendants but did not realize this fact until
    deliberations when another juror referred to the defendant by her former name which was the
    name by which the juror in question knew her. 430 S.W.2d at 129. This juror had previously
    procured a search warrant against one of the defendants’ residences in hopes that the
    defendant would quit selling whiskey to the juror’s son-in-law. Id. Although there appears
    to have been no willful concealment of the juror’s knowledge of the defendant, our supreme
    court held that “the constitutional guaranty of trial by an impartial jury requires the jury be
    free of even a reasonable suspicion of bias and prejudice.” Id. The court stated that the
    record supported a finding that the juror “was at least hostile to the defendant.” Id.
    Finally, in Toombs, one of the trial jurors was a first cousin of the prosecutor’s wife
    but did not reveal this fact to the court or attorneys prior to trial. 270 S.W.2d at 650.
    Although the jurors were not asked during voir dire whether they were related to any of the
    attorneys or the defendants, they were asked if they knew any reason why they could not give
    both sides a fair trial. Id. Our supreme court concluded that the defendants had established
    -27-
    juror bias and granted them a new trial. Id. at 651. The following excerpts from the Toombs
    opinion, which were alluded to by this court in Akins, are germane to the very issue now
    before this court and bear repeating in full:
    Now [the juror in question] necessarily knew that his close
    kinship with the prosecutor’s wife was a fact that should be
    revealed to these defendants, particularly after there had been
    addressed to him the question as to whether he knew of any
    reason which might prevent him from giving both sides a fair
    trial. His failure under these circumstances to reveal this kinship
    almost forces the conclusion that he was animated by an ulterior
    motive in remaining silent, and that this ulterior motive stemmed
    from a partiality in favor of the prosecution and, by the same
    token, a bias against these defendants.
    ....
    When attorneys for [the defendants] inquired as to
    whether this juror knew of any reason why he could not give
    these defendants a fair trial, that inquiry clearly indicated to the
    mind of a fair and reasonable man that the question required
    revelation of the fact that the prospective juror was very close
    kin to the prosecutor’s wife. His failure in this respect justifies
    the conclusion that he had a purpose unfavorable to [the
    defendants] in withholding that information.
    ....
    And, while it is a fact that it would have been much better
    practice for the defendants to have specifically asked the juror
    as to any kinship with the parties, nevertheless, in view of the
    question which the defendants did put to the prospective juror,
    we are not able to conclude that the defendants were guilty of
    such negligence as to deprive them of their right to a new trial
    in a case in which there sat in judgment on them a juror who
    withhold [sic] from them the fact that he was a first cousin and
    close friend to the wife of the man who was seeking their
    conviction at the hands of this jury.
    Id. at 650-51.
    -28-
    These cases illustrate what Akins demands of prospective jurors as well as the courts
    reviewing claims of juror bias and impartiality: “[F]ailure to disclose information in the face
    of a material question reasonably calculated to produce the answer or false disclosures give
    rise to a presumption of bias and partiality,” and “[w]hile that presumption may be rebutted
    by an absence of actual prejudice, the court must view the totality of the circumstances, and
    not merely the juror’s self-serving claim of lack of partiality, to determine whether the
    presumption is overcome.” 867 S.W.2d at 356-57. In addition, this court is bound by certain
    maxims in its review of the post-conviction court’s ruling in the post-conviction context.
    Specifically, the post-conviction court’s findings of fact are conclusive on appeal unless the
    evidence preponderates against them, Nichols, 90 S.W.3d at 586, this court may not re-weigh
    or reevaluate the evidence or substitute its inferences for those drawn by the post-conviction
    court, id., and the credibility of the witnesses and the weight and value to be afforded their
    testimony are questions to be resolved by the post-conviction court, Bates, 973 S.W.2d at
    631. Moreover, a petitioner is required to satisfy the factual allegations in support of his
    ground for relief by clear and convincing evidence. Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-110(2)(f).
    With this backdrop in mind, we will review the issue at hand.
    The transcript of the voir dire demonstrates that the jurors in this case were repeatedly
    asked to state whether they had heard or read anything about this case or whether they knew
    the attorneys, the parties, or anyone on a list of potential witnesses. The trial court
    specifically asked the jurors if “anyone presently seated on the jury know[s] of any reason
    they couldn’t sit on the jury and render an absolutely, fair and impartial verdict.” Juror 9
    remained silent throughout this line of questioning. In its post-conviction order, the post-
    conviction court stated that “issues such as age, hearing, and wording of questions may have
    also contributed to this juror’s failure to clearly and properly express his relationship with
    the victim.” As the trial record reflects, however, Juror 9 did not express his relationship
    with the victim at all, much less “clearly and properly.” The post-conviction court
    specifically stated in its post-conviction order that it deemed credible Juror 9’s testimony that
    he would have revealed his friendship with the victim if he had been asked whether he knew
    the victim. The post-conviction court did not, however, discount the fact that Juror 9 was
    friends with the victim. Nor did the State introduce any evidence to rebut this fact. The
    record clearly demonstrates, therefore, that Juror 9 was friends with the victim. The question
    now becomes whether a presumption of bias arose when Juror 9 did not disclose this fact
    during voir dire or at any other time prior to the return of the jury’s verdict.
    The post-conviction court stated that Juror 9’s “age, hearing, and wording of questions
    may have” caused him not to disclose his friendship with the victim. Although the court
    found that Juror 9 had difficulty hearing and understanding questions asked during the post-
    conviction hearing, there is nothing in the record to establish that Juror 9 was unable to hear
    everything that was said during trial. To the contrary, Juror 9 testified during the evidentiary
    -29-
    hearing that he heard and understood everything that was said during the jury selection
    process. The post-conviction court’s suggestion that Juror 9 may not have disclosed his
    friendship with the victim due to his age, hearing loss, or the style of the questions is simply
    unfounded. Based upon our review of the totality of the circumstances, this court must
    conclude that a presumption of bias arose when Juror 9 failed to disclose his friendship with
    the victim in response to the nature of the questions that were repeatedly asked during voir
    dire. Juror 9’s friendship with the victim entailed weekly visits for about one year. The court
    does not consider this type of relationship a casual or passing acquaintance. Cf. supra
    Carruthers, Silva, Childers, and Sparks. Instead, a juror who was friends with the murder
    victim in the case in which he is a prospective juror is the very classic type of relationship
    which “give[s] rise to an inherently prejudicial situation in and of itself.” Smith, 
    2007 WL 4117603
    ; see Carruthers, 
    2007 WL 4355481
     at *48; Silva, 
    2005 WL 1252621
     at *6. See also
    Bowman, 598 S.W.2d at 812 (failure to disclose close personal relationship with the victim
    of a crime could result in juror bias). Juror 9, however, did not say anything about his
    friendship with the victim during voir dire. “When jurors fail to disclose relevant, potentially
    prejudicial information, counsel are hampered in the jury selection process.” Akins, 867
    S.W.2d at 357. One of the other prospective jurors in this case informed the trial court that
    she knew the victim and she was subsequently excused because of that fact.
    “The test is whether a reasonable, impartial person would have believed the question,
    as asked, called for juror response under the circumstances.” Id. at 356 n.13. There is no
    doubt that the jurors in this case were not specifically asked if they knew the victim. The
    post-conviction court even seemed surprised about this fact during the post-conviction
    proceeding. The trial court did, however, read the charges against the defendant to the
    prospective jurors, including Juror 9, more than once and specifically identified the victim
    by name. Furthermore, as noted above in the summary of the jury selection process, the trial
    court and counsel repeatedly asked the jurors if they had read or heard anything about the
    case. This court must conclude that any reasonable juror would interpret the phrase
    “anything about the case” to include knowledge of the victim. After reviewing the transcript
    of the entire jury selection process, this court further concludes that the questions asked were
    reasonably calculated to solicit any juror’s personal knowledge of the victim. In fact, at least
    three different jurors informed the court that they either knew the victim or his place of
    business where the crimes occurred. “[W]e must demand of all participants in the justice
    system appropriate candor and conduct if the system itself is to maintain a position of dignity
    and respect.” Id. at 357.
    In its post-conviction order, the post-conviction court did not comment on the nature
    of the relationship between Juror 9 and the victim. The court instead offered a passing
    explanation about why Juror 9 may not have disclosed the friendship. The court concluded,
    however, that Juror 9’s testimony, that he would have informed the court that he knew the
    -30-
    victim if asked, “which this Court deemed credible and which was solicited by the Petitioner,
    does not support willful concealment or failure to disclose the fact that the juror knew the
    victim.” This court disagrees. Again, the credibility of the witnesses and weight and value
    to be given their testimony are solely within the post-conviction court’s purview. The post-
    conviction court found some of Juror 9’s testimony credible and some not. As evidenced by
    the post-conviction court’s own affirmation, the testimony relating to the matter of Juror 9’s
    friendship with the victim, however, was not called into doubt. The fact that Juror 9 testified
    that he was never directly asked if he knew the victim, when indeed he was not, supports his
    testimony that he heard everything that was said during the jury selection process. According
    to the post-conviction court, “This Court finds that Juror [9] credibly stated that he would
    answer questions honestly if asked and that the Juror wanted to be forthright with the Court.”
    As part of the juror bias claim he presented in his written petition, the Petitioner
    alleged that Juror 9 was not truthful in responses to questions asked during voir dire about
    his views on the death penalty. During the evidentiary hearing, Juror 9 was questioned if he
    had any preconceived notions about the punishment in this case. In its order, the post-
    conviction court noted that Juror 9 seemed confused by some of those questions and, thus,
    questioned his credibility in that respect. The court also questioned Juror 9’s credibility in
    responses he gave to the questions about his hearing problem as well as other recent events
    that occurred in his life. The post-conviction court commented generally on Juror 9’s
    advanced age and trouble hearing at the time of the evidentiary hearing. However, outside
    of his claim of bias because of Juror 9’s friendship with the victim, the Petitioner does not
    raise as an issue on appeal anything related to Juror 9’s views on the death penalty. As such,
    the post-conviction court’s finding that some of Juror 9’s testimony was not credible does
    not affect this court’s analysis of the bias issue with respect to Juror 9’s failure to disclose
    his friendship with the victim, especially when the post-conviction court found that portion
    of Juror 9’s testimony to be credible.
    The totality of the circumstances surrounding the voir dire in this case demonstrates
    that Juror 9 failed to disclose his friendship with the victim, and there is nothing in the record
    to overcome the presumption of this bias. The circumstances of this case can readily be
    distinguished from those circumstances in each of the cases discussed above wherein the
    courts concluded there was no constitutional violation regarding juror bias or partiality.
    Furthermore, while Juror 9 may not have willfully concealed his friendship with the victim,
    he most definitely failed to disclose that fact to the court. Akins reminds us that the intent
    of the juror is not dispositive of the issue. 867 S.W.2d at 356 n.15. Juror 9’s failure to
    disclose his friendship with the victim of the murder trial on which he was about to sit as a
    member of the jury was inexcusable. It is difficult to imagine a situation in which a
    reasonable juror would not think his or her friendship with the murder victim of the case is
    not a material fact which should not be imparted to the court and parties. As our supreme
    -31-
    court recently recognized, “the failure to ask the prospective jurors about their past
    experiences as victims or associates of victims is objectively unreasonable.” Smith, 357
    S.W.3d at 347. The post-conviction court accredited Juror 9’s testimony “that if the evidence
    had not been presented to him that he would not have reached the same verdict.” Any
    subsequent self-serving statements by Juror 9 that his friendship with the victim did not
    affect his ability to be fair and impartial are, however, “of little consequence” to the issue.
    Akins, 867 S.W.2d at 356 n.16. Accordingly, the courts should not consider statements about
    the affect of the bias on the juror’s decision making process. Cf. Walsh v. State, 
    166 S.W.3d 641
    , 649 (Tenn. 2005) (holding that “Tennessee Rule of Evidence 606(b) permits juror
    testimony to establish the fact of extraneous information or improper influence on the juror;
    however, juror testimony concerning the effect of such information or influence on the
    juror’s deliberative processes is inadmissible”).
    To borrow the words of our supreme court: “His failure under these circumstances
    to reveal this [friend]ship almost forces the conclusion that he was animated by an ulterior
    motive in remaining silent, and that this ulterior motive stemmed from a partiality in favor
    of the prosecution and, by the same token, a bias against [the defendant].” Toombs, 270
    S.W.2d at 650. Moreover,
    [t]he integrity of the voir dire process depends upon the venire’s
    free and full response to questions posed by counsel. When
    jurors fail to disclose relevant, potentially prejudicial
    information, counsel are hampered in the jury selection process.
    As a result, the defendant’s right to a trial by a fair and impartial
    jury is significantly impaired.
    Akins, 867 S.W.2d at 357.
    Based upon the foregoing analysis, this court concludes that the Petitioner has
    established by clear and convincing evidence that Juror 9 was presumptively biased, which
    presumption was not overcome by the State, and that the Petitioner was, therefore, denied his
    constitutional rights to a trial by a fair and impartial jury.
    B. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    Similarly, the Petitioner argues that trial counsel were ineffective by failing to ask
    prospective jurors during voir dire whether they knew the victim. The Sixth Amendment
    provides, in pertinent part, that, “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the
    right . . . to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defense.” U.S. Const. amend. VI. This
    right to counsel is “‘so fundamental and essential to a fair trial, and so, to due process of law,
    -32-
    that it is made obligatory upon the States by the Fourteenth Amendment.’” Gideon v.
    Wainwright, 
    372 U.S. 335
    , 340 (1963) (quoting Betts v. Brady, 
    316 U.S. 455
    , 465 (1942)).
    Inherent in the right to counsel is the right to the effective assistance of counsel. Cuyler v.
    Sullivan, 
    446 U.S. 335
    , 344 (1980). “The benchmark for judging any claim of
    ineffectiveness must be whether counsel’s conduct so undermined the proper functioning of
    the adversarial process that the trial cannot be relied on as having produced a just result.”
    Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 686 (1984); see Combs v. Coyle, 
    205 F.3d 269
    , 277
    (6th Cir. 2000).
    When a petitioner seeks post-conviction relief on the basis of ineffective assistance
    of counsel, “the petitioner bears the burden of proving both that counsel’s performance was
    deficient and that the deficiency prejudiced the defense.” Goad v. State, 
    938 S.W.2d 363
    ,
    369 (Tenn. 1996) (citing Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
     (1984)). To establish
    deficient performance, the petitioner must show that counsel’s performance was below “the
    range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases.” Baxter v. Rose, 
    523 S.W.2d 930
    , 936 (Tenn. 1975). To establish prejudice, the petitioner must show that “there is a
    reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the
    proceeding would have been different. A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient
    to undermine confidence in the outcome.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694. Because a petitioner
    must establish both prongs of the test, a failure to prove either deficiency or prejudice
    provides a sufficient basis to deny relief on the ineffective assistance claim. Goad, 938
    S.W.2d at 370 (citing Strickland, 466 U.S. at 697).
    Claims of ineffective assistance of counsel are regarded as mixed questions of law and
    fact. Fields v. State, 
    40 S.W.3d 450
    , 458 (Tenn. 2001). As such, the post-conviction court’s
    findings of fact underlying a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel are reviewed under
    a de novo standard, accompanied by a presumption that the findings are correct unless the
    preponderance of the evidence is otherwise. Id. (citing Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d)). However,
    a post-conviction court’s conclusions of law are reviewed under a purely de novo standard,
    with no presumption of correctness. Id.
    In addressing counsel’s performance during voir dire, the post-conviction court
    recognized, as we have noted above, that no one specifically asked any of the jurors if they
    knew the victim. The court recounted the extent of the questions otherwise asked to the
    jurors about their pretrial exposure to publicity and their knowledge of the case. The court
    acknowledged that several jurors alerted the trial court to their knowledge of the victim
    and/or his place of business. The post-conviction court concluded, however, after its review
    of the record as a whole and based upon its findings regarding the claim of Juror 9’s bias,
    that counsel’s alleged failure to ask specific questions did not result in a fundamentally unfair
    -33-
    trial in this matter. The court held, therefore, that the Petitioner failed to establish any
    prejudice related to counsel’s voir dire of the prospective jurors.
    Our supreme court recently addressed a similar claim of ineffective assistance of
    counsel in Leonard Edward Smith, 357 S.W.3d at 346, a case we discussed in the previous
    issue. Smith claimed that his trial attorneys were ineffective by failing to adequately question
    the prospective jurors about their past experiences either as a victim or with a victim of a
    crime. Id. One of the jurors who heard the case had a daughter whose boyfriend had been
    murdered in the year prior to the trial. Id. Neither the trial court nor the attorneys asked the
    jurors whether they or someone close to them had ever been the victim of a crime. Id. at 347.
    Our supreme court held,
    “The ultimate goal of voir dire is to ensure that jurors are
    competent, unbiased and impartial.” State v. Hugueley, 
    185 S.W.3d 356
    , app. 390 (Tenn. 2006) (citing State v. Cazes, 
    875 S.W.2d 253
    , 262 (Tenn. 1994), and State v. Howell, 
    868 S.W.2d 238
    , 247 (Tenn. 1993)). The “proper fields of inquiry include
    the juror’s occupation, habits, acquaintanceships, associations
    and other factors, including his [or her] experiences, which will
    indicate his [or her] freedom from bias.” State v. Onidas, 
    635 S.W.2d 516
    , 517 (Tenn. 1982) (quoting Smith v. State, 
    205 Tenn. 502
    , 
    327 S.W.2d 308
    , 318 (Tenn. 1959)). While there is
    no requirement that counsel ask any specific questions of
    potential jurors during the voir dire process, this Court has
    previously recognized that potential bias arises if a juror has
    been involved in a crime or incident similar to the one on trial.
    See Ricketts v. Carter, 
    918 S.W.2d 419
    , 422 (Tenn. 1996);
    Durham v. State, 
    182 Tenn. 577
    , 
    188 S.W.2d 555
    , 558 (Tenn.
    1945). We believe that questions to cull the jury for persons
    who might be biased due to their past experiences with the
    criminal justice system are a critical part of a competent voir
    dire in criminal cases, and that, absent a showing that counsel
    had a strategic reason for not asking the question, the failure to
    ask the prospective jurors about their past experiences as victims
    or associates of victims is objectively unreasonable. See Hughes
    v. United States, 
    258 F.3d 453
    , 460 (6th Cir. 2001) (stating that
    “‘[a]bsent the showing of a strategic decision, failure to request
    the removal of a biased juror can constitute ineffective
    assistance of counsel’”) (quoting Johnson v. Armontrout, 
    961 F.2d 748
    , 755 (8th Cir. 1992)).
    -34-
    Id. The court concluded that Smith established deficient performance on the part of trial
    counsel, but further concluded that he failed to show any resulting prejudice. The court
    stated that it has “never presumed bias absent either an affirmative statement of bias, willful
    concealment of bias, or failure to disclose information that would call into question the
    juror’s bias.” Id. at 348. The fact that the jurors in the case were never asked “‘a material
    question reasonably calculated to produce the answer’” weighed heavily upon the court’s
    conclusion: “This case is distinguishable . . . because [the juror in question] was never asked
    the question and did not willfully conceal his history.” Id. (quoting Akins, 867 S.W.2d at
    356).
    There is nothing in the record before this court demonstrating that trial counsel had
    any strategic reason why they (or even the trial court for that matter) would not want to know
    if any of the jurors knew the murder victim in this case. We conclude, therefore, that trial
    counsel’s failure to ask the jurors if they knew the victim, especially after the trial court did
    not ask the specific question, was objectively unreasonable and resulted in deficient
    performance under the circumstances. See id. Moreover, because juror bias has already been
    established, as discussed above, we also conclude that the Petitioner is able to demonstrate
    the requisite prejudice. This court concludes, therefore, that the Petitioner has established
    by clear and convincing evidence that he was denied his constitutional right to the effective
    assistance of counsel during the jury selection process.
    C. Mental Retardation
    The Petitioner’s remaining issue on appeal concerns the post-conviction court’s
    conclusion that he is not exempted from the death penalty based upon his alleged mental
    retardation. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-203. Because, however, the post-conviction court
    granted the Petitioner a new sentencing hearing, the State correctly argues that this issue is
    moot on appeal. In Coleman v. State, 
    341 S.W.3d 221
     (Tenn. 2011), our supreme court
    examined the nature and type of evidence that the trial court shall consider in determining
    whether a defendant is mentally retarded under Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-13-
    203. The Petitioner will, therefore, have the opportunity at or before any new sentencing
    hearing to present evidence concerning his alleged mental retardation and exemption from
    capital punishment. See Smith, 357 S.W.3d at 355.
    III. Conclusion
    Based upon our review of the oral arguments, the record, and the parties’ briefs, we
    conclude that the Petitioner was denied his constitutional rights to a fair and impartial jury
    as well as the right to the effective assistance of counsel during voir dire. The judgment of
    -35-
    the post-conviction court with respect to those two grounds for post-conviction relief is
    hereby reversed. The Petitioner’s convictions are reversed, and the case is remanded to the
    trial court for a new trial.
    _________________________________
    NORMA McGEE OGLE, JUDGE
    -36-