State of Tennessee v. Christopher Duwan Robertson ( 2002 )


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  •          IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    Assigned on Briefs February 13, 2002
    STATE OF TENNESSEE v. CHRISTOPHER DUWAN ROBERTSON
    Appeal from the Criminal Court for Davidson County
    No. 99-C-1579    Cheryl Blackburn, Judge
    No. M2001-00976-CCA-R3-CD - Filed October 2, 2002
    The defendant, Christopher Duwan Robertson, appeals as of right from his conviction by a jury in
    the Davidson County Criminal Court of first degree, premeditated murder. The defendant received
    a sentence of life imprisonment with the possibility of parole. He contends that (1) the evidence is
    insufficient to support his conviction, (2) the trial court erroneously failed to instruct the jury to
    determine whether witnesses Karen Mullins and Michael Simpson were accomplices as a matter of
    fact, and (3) the trial court should have granted a mistrial after the victim’s mother testified that the
    defendant had committed another murder. We affirm the trial court’s judgment of conviction.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed
    JOSEPH M. TIPTON, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS and
    ALAN E. GLENN, JJ., joined.
    Larry B. Hoover, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Christopher Duwan Robertson.
    Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; P. Robin Dixon, Jr., Assistant Attorney General;
    Victor S. Johnson, III, District Attorney General; and Roger D. Moore and Grady Alan Moore,
    Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
    OPINION
    This case stems from the February 21, 1999 shooting death of Tonya Denise Battle. Officer
    Lorena Hernandez of the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department testified that between 9:00 and
    9:30 p.m. on February 21, 1999, she was sent by radio dispatch to 1000 Presslor Drive at the Preston
    Taylor Homes. It took her five to ten minutes to arrive, and she was the first officer on the scene.
    A large crowd led her to a body on the sidewalk behind an apartment building, and she quickly
    realized that the victim had a gunshot wound to her head and was dead. She asked if anyone
    witnessed what occurred, but no one came forward. She secured the area with crime scene tape and
    kept the crowd away from the body. Officer Hernandez testified that the victim’s clothing was
    appropriate for the cold weather and that the victim had her hands in her pockets.
    Metro Officer William Stokes testified that in February 1999 he worked on the west patrol
    from 10:30 p.m. to 7:00 a.m. On February 21, 1999, he was dispatched to Presslor Drive. When he
    arrived, other officers were already present and crime scene tape surrounded a body on the ground.
    While there, no one approached him to give information about the shooting, but he overheard a
    woman standing in a large group of people say something he thought was important. He told the
    homicide detectives about her and which apartment she entered.
    Metro Officer Danny Orr of the Identification Section testified that on the evening of
    February 21, 1999, and early morning of February 22, 1999, he went to a crime scene at Preston
    Taylor Homes to collect evidence. When he arrived, he saw an African-American female who had
    been shot and who was lying face down on the sidewalk behind 1000 Presslor Drive. On the ground
    near the body, he found a Bic lighter and a shell casing, which had dirt on and in it. He did not recall
    recovering any fingerprints from the lighter. He agreed that if the victim was shot with a revolver,
    then the shell casing he found at the scene would be unrelated to the murder because revolvers do
    not eject the shell casings. He prepared a diagram of the area and measured from a nearby street
    light to the victim’s head, which was about fifteen yards.
    Retired Detective James Douglas Sledge testified that in February 1999, he worked on the
    Metro Murder Squad. On February 21, 1999, he was the lead investigator for a murder that occurred
    at 1000 Presslor Drive. When he arrived, the crime scene was secured, and homicide detectives were
    going door to door, asking residents if they had seen or heard anything. The victim was on the
    sidewalk beside a field that separates the Preston Taylor Homes from the Alameda Terrace
    Apartments. The residents call this area between the two complexes “the cut.” The victim’s body
    was between apartment 986 and apartment 1000 but was closer to 1000. The temperature was below
    twenty degrees Fahrenheit, and the victim had her hands in the outer pockets of her gold coat.
    Detective Sledge testified that he coordinated the investigation from the crime scene. He said
    that although a couple hundred people lived within one hundred yards of the murder scene, no one
    volunteered that they had seen what happened. Detectives Satterfield and Gray went to apartment
    968 to interview Karen Mullins and Chris Howse, but those interviews did not indicate that anyone
    had witnessed the crime. He said that they also investigated the victim’s ex-boyfriend but that he
    had an alibi. He testified that the shell casing found at the scene was partially in mud and had dirt
    and mud inside it. He stated that it did not appear to be connected to this crime but that they
    collected it out of an abundance of caution. He said the police were never able to determine whether
    the shell casing or a lighter found at the scene was related to this case. He stated that at 9:00 a.m.
    on February 22, 1999, he attended the victim’s autopsy. The victim had been shot in the left rear
    base of her skull and part of the shot exited through her right cheek.
    Detective Sledge testified that on February 23, 1999, the Tuesday following the murder, he
    spoke with Ms. Mullins twice and that he spoke with her again later that week. He said that on each
    occasion, Ms. Mullins said substantially the same thing she said on the night of the offense. He said
    that two or three days after the murder, Detective Gray interviewed nine-year-old DeQuan Howse,
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    who lived at 1004 Presslor Drive. He said that DeQuan Howse was the first person to mention a
    white jacket being connected with the case. He stated that during his investigation, he learned that
    Chris Howse was really Chris Robertson, the defendant, and that the defendant lived at apartment
    968 in the Preston Taylor Homes. He said that he had some information that the defendant was the
    shooter and might have been wearing a white jacket. He said that he also had information that Ms.
    Mullins and the victim were wearing a white coat that night. On February 26, 1999, he executed a
    search warrant at apartment 968 in an attempt to locate the handgun used to kill the victim and the
    clothing worn during the murder. He stated that he discovered no weapons in the apartment but that
    he found a white, waist-length jacket.
    Detective Sledge testified that in early April, he learned that Mario Newbern was with the
    defendant on the night of the shooting, and he interviewed Mr. Newbern. He also interviewed
    Michael Simpson on June 8, 1999, and learned that Mr. Simpson was with the defendant at the time
    of the murder. He said that he did not arrest Mr. Newbern or Mr. Simpson because he had no proof
    that they were involved in the murder. He said that neither of them told him that the defendant was
    wearing a white jacket on the night of the murder. Eventually, the defendant and Ms. Mullins were
    charged in connection with the crime. He interviewed Ms. Mullins after her arrest on July 26, 1999,
    and at this time, she changed her story. He said that he made Ms. Mullins no promises in exchange
    for her testimony in this case.
    Karen Mullins testified that at the time of trial, she was charged as an accessory after the fact
    with regard to the victim’s death and was facing a one-to-two-year sentence. She stated that no one
    had offered her a deal in exchange for her testimony, but she admitted that she was hoping she would
    get a break. She stated that she was convicted the month before trial of misdemeanor shoplifting or
    theft.
    Ms. Mullins testified that in late 1998 and early 1999, she was living in the Preston Taylor
    Homes. She said that she got to know the victim and the defendant from living in this area. She said
    that she and the victim were associates but not close friends. She said that she and the defendant
    became intimate and that he began living with her. She said that the day of the victim’s death was
    a Sunday and that the victim came to her apartment that morning and persuaded her to stay home
    from church in order that they could spend time together. She said that the defendant, her two
    daughters, and her son were also there that morning. She said that the defendant, who was wearing
    a black leather coat and blue jeans, was in and out of her apartment all day. She said that later in the
    day, she borrowed a radio from a neighbor and she lent the victim five dollars to buy some beer.
    Ms. Mullins testified that around 3:30 or 4:00 p.m., the victim said that she had to do
    something with the defendant, who was not there at that time. Ms. Mullins said that the defendant,
    Mario Newbern, Michael Simpson, and a woman named Rosalyn came to her apartment around 5:00
    p.m. She said that the defendant told the victim to come with him and that he left with the victim,
    Mr. Newbern, and Mr. Simpson. She said that thirty to forty-five minutes later, the men returned
    without the victim. She said that the police had stopped Mr. Simpson, who had been driving the
    group, and that the defendant told her to go outside and see what was happening. She said that she
    -3-
    did not see the victim talking to the police. She said that the police drove Mr. Simpson away in a
    police cruiser and then returned him. She said that Mr. Simpson returned to her apartment and that
    he, the defendant, and Mr. Newbern walked to Karen Wilson’s apartment.
    Ms. Mullins testified that she decided to find the victim in order to retrieve a red, white, and
    blue Nautica jacket that the victim had borrowed from her earlier that day. She said that she found
    the victim at a neighbor’s apartment and that the victim said that she would meet Ms. Mullins at Ms.
    Wilson’s apartment with the jacket. Ms. Mullins said that she went to Ms. Wilson’s apartment
    where she heard the defendant threaten to kill the victim. She said that Mr. Newbern and Mr.
    Simpson were also there when the defendant threatened the victim. She said that the defendant
    would often list people that he was going to kill and that she did not take him seriously. She said
    that the victim arrived a few minutes later, and Ms. Mullins overheard the defendant tell the victim
    that a man in another housing project wanted a trick. She said that the victim said she would go.
    Ms. Mullins said that she was at Ms. Wilson’s apartment for five to ten minutes before she walked
    home with her son. She said that as she left, the defendant, the victim, Mr. Newbern, and Mr.
    Simpson were also leaving in a different direction. She said that she later heard a gunshot but that
    she did not look outside because shooting occurred every day and night at Preston Taylor Homes.
    Ms. Mullins testified that when the defendant, Mr. Newbern, and Mr. Simpson returned to
    her apartment that night, she did not know that the victim had been shot. She said that the police
    arrived at the Preston Taylor Homes but that she did not go outside. She said that later that evening,
    she learned that the victim was dead. She said that when the police came to talk to her, she told the
    police that they were in bed. She said the police did not ask her about the defendant. She stated that
    the following Tuesday, the defendant began acting strangely. She asked him if he had killed the
    victim but said that he did not respond. On Thursday night after the Sunday shooting, she again
    asked the defendant if he had shot the victim. She said he told her that if she said anything about it,
    he was going to kill her and her children. She said she took this threat seriously. She said she told
    the police about the events that she testified to at trial when she was arrested in July 1999.
    Ms. Mullins testified that the defendant had a small .22 caliber gun but that he gave it back
    to the man who had pawned it to him before the victim was shot. She said that the defendant kept
    rifles at her apartment but that on the day after the shooting, he removed all of his guns from her
    apartment. She denied knowing the shooting was going to occur or having any role in the killing.
    She also denied covering up anything and said she did not know why she had been charged in the
    case.
    On cross-examination, Ms. Mullins testified that once or twice during the time they knew
    each other, she and the victim disagreed about things the victim and others had said but that she and
    the victim never really argued. She said she gave the victim money on occasion. Ms. Mullins said
    she was wearing a sweater, not a white coat, on the night of the shooting, but she admitted she had
    worn a white coat before. She said no one had on a white coat that night.
    -4-
    Ms. Mullins testified that on the night of the shooting, she and the victim arrived at Ms.
    Wilson’s apartment at practically the same time but entered through different doors. She said that
    the defendant threatened to kill the victim as the victim came in Ms. Wilson’s back door and that the
    victim may not have heard him. She said that Mr. Simpson heard the defendant threaten to kill the
    victim and that if he denied hearing the threat, he would be lying. She said her son also overheard
    the defendant threaten the victim and told the defendant not to kill the victim because the victim was
    a woman. She said both Mr. Newbern and Mr. Simpson were acting normally that night and did not
    seem reluctant to be there.
    Ms. Mullins testified that Ms. Wilson later came to Ms. Mullins’ apartment and was there
    when the men returned. Ms. Mullins denied knowing that the victim had been shot or crying and
    being upset at this time. She said that five to ten minutes after the men returned, she and the
    defendant went to bed and had sex. She said that they were about to fall asleep when someone
    knocked on the window and said that the victim was dead. She said that after someone else reported
    the same thing, she dressed and that she and the defendant went to see the victim’s body. She said
    that a group of people were already looking at the body. She said that the time from the return of
    the men to her apartment and her leaving to see the body was longer than ten minutes and could have
    been as much as one to two hours. She stated that the police had not arrived yet and that she began
    knocking on doors, including Shonda Howse’s door, in order to try to call an ambulance. She said
    she was wearing a black Raiders coat at this time. She said that she and the defendant returned to
    her apartment and that he told her to go get Ron D. She said that she and Mr. Simpson went outside
    and that the police were at the crime scene.
    Ms. Mullins testified that on the night of the victim’s death, a detective came to her
    apartment asking when she had last seen the victim. She said she told the detective that she had been
    in bed. She said the detective did not ask about the defendant. She said that detectives came to her
    apartment again the following day and that she told them when she had last seen the victim. She said
    the defendant had not admitted shooting the victim at this point. She said that on the Tuesday
    following the shooting, the defendant told her that his mother was taking him downtown for
    questioning. She said this was when she first asked him if he killed the victim. She denied telling
    Detective Sledge in her July 1999 statement that she asked the defendant if he shot the victim on the
    night of the murder, that she asked him again later that night when he had been tossing and turning
    in bed, or that he admitted that he shot the victim on the day following the murder. She said that the
    defendant did not respond to her questions about whether he shot the victim until Thursday when
    he threatened to kill her and her children. She said she waited until she was arrested to tell the police
    what really happened because she was afraid of the defendant and that she might be charged with
    murder.
    Mario Newbern testified that he was twenty-one years old and that in February 1999, he was
    living in the Georgia Court Apartments with his sister. He said he knew the defendant because they
    had previously been in Woodland Hills Youth Development Center together. He said he knew the
    victim and Karen Mullins from the Preston Taylor Homes neighborhood. He said that during the
    day on February 21, 1999, the defendant came to Georgia Court, pointed a gun at him, and told him
    -5-
    to come with the defendant. He said that the defendant gave him a .22 caliber automatic weapon and
    that he helped the defendant rob some Mexicans. He said that he did not shoot anyone and that the
    defendant took the gun back afterward. On cross-examination, he stated that he had a rifle instead
    of a pistol.
    Mr. Newbern testified that later that day, he, the defendant, and Michael Simpson went to
    a party at Ms. Mullins’ apartment in Preston Taylor Homes. He said that the victim was there and
    that he believed Ron D. was also there. He said the defendant told him that the defendant was going
    to kill the victim. He said Mr. Simpson and Ms. Mullins were present when the defendant said this.
    He said he, the victim, the defendant, and Mr. Simpson left Ms. Mullins’ apartment and walked
    toward the cut to Alameda Terrace Apartments. He said he was in front, the victim was behind him,
    the defendant was behind her, and Mr. Simpson was in the rear. He said that he heard the defendant
    say “bitch” and that one second later, he heard a gunshot. He said he turned around and saw the
    victim lying on the ground with a gunshot wound to the head. He said blood was on the ground and
    the victim was not moving. He said the defendant was putting a black revolver in his jacket pocket.
    He said that the victim was shot around 10:30 p.m.
    Mr. Newbern testified that the defendant told them to walk away and that he, the defendant,
    and Mr. Simpson walked to Ms. Mullins’ apartment, arriving there one minute after the shooting.
    He said that Ms. Mullins and her children were there and that the defendant told Ms. Mullins that
    she did not have to worry about the victim anymore, “She ain’t talking.” He said Ms. Mullins looked
    like she wanted to cry. He said someone knocked on the door and said that the victim was dead. He
    said he, the defendant, Ms. Mullins, and Mr. Simpson walked around outside before the police
    arrived and that the defendant and Ms. Mullins were knocking on doors. He said they did not leave
    Ms. Mullins’ apartment again after the police arrived at the crime scene. He said the defendant told
    him to stay at Ms. Mullins’ apartment until the detectives came. He said that after the defendant
    went to sleep, he stayed at Ms. Mullins’ apartment until after the detectives left, which was around
    1:00 a.m. He said that the police asked him if he had seen the victim in the last hour and he denied
    seeing her because the defendant told him to say that. He said he then left and went home alone.
    Mr. Newbern testified that a couple of months after the shooting, he spoke with a detective
    and gave the same account to which he was testifying at trial. He said he also spoke with the
    defendant’s lawyer. He said he told the lawyer that they were at the party but that he did not say
    anything about the shooting because he did not know who the lawyer was.
    On cross-examination, Mr. Newbern testified that he told Detective Sledge that the defendant
    came and got him at Georgia Court and took him to Ms. Mullins’ apartment. He said that when they
    arrived, he saw Ms. Mullins, her son Michael, Ms. Wilson, Mr. Simpson, and the victim there
    listening to music and smoking “blunts.” He admitted telling Detective Sledge that the defendant
    asked if they wanted to make some money. Mr. Newbern testified that actually, Mr. Simpson, who
    was not involved in the robbery of the Mexicans earlier that day, picked him up and took him to
    Presslor Drive where Ms. Mullins lived. He said that while he was at Ms. Mullins’ apartment, the
    defendant told him to carry the defendant’s shotguns to Ms. Wilson’s house. He said he, the
    -6-
    defendant, the victim, and Mr. Simpson went from Ms. Mullins’ apartment to Ms. Wilson’s
    apartment and left from Ms. Wilson’s apartment to go to Alameda Terrace. He said they took all
    of the guns, including the .22 caliber, to Ms. Wilson’s apartment before the shooting. He said that
    after the shooting, he, the defendant, and Mr. Simpson were upset about it. He said that the shooting
    continued to bother him for two weeks. He denied that he was the one who shot the victim.
    Mr. Newbern agreed that the defendant’s detective, Patrick Wells, came to interview him on
    July 10, 2000. He said that Mr. Wells did not identify himself at first. He denied telling Mr. Wells
    that on the night of the murder, he saw Ms. Mullins and the victim leave Ms. Mullins’ apartment
    together. He also denied telling Mr. Wells that the defendant was in bed asleep when the victim was
    shot. He said that when Mr. Wells returned with a subpoena and identified himself, he did not tell
    him the truth because Mr. Newbern was coming to court. He denied telling Detectives Sledge and
    Gray that the defendant was wearing a white coat on the night of the shooting. Although at first he
    denied seeing a white Nautica jacket, he subsequently agreed that Ms. Mullins was wearing a white
    jacket on the night of the murder. He said that he did not know the name brand of her jacket. He
    said that the defendant wore a black coat that night. He denied discussing his testimony with Ms.
    Mullins and Mr. Simpson.
    Patrick Wells, the defendant’s private investigator, testified that on July 10, 1999, he
    interviewed Mario Newbern. He said that he identified himself to Mr. Newbern by giving him a
    business card and telling him that he was working for the defendant. He said that Mr. Newbern told
    him that Mr. Newbern was at Ms. Mullins’ party; that the defendant fell asleep; and that sometime
    after 10:00 p.m, Ms. Mullins and the victim left together.
    Michael Simpson testified that he was nineteen years old at the time of trial and had known
    the defendant about one month before the victim’s death. He said he believed that he and the
    defendant were related through his grandfather. He said that in February 1999, he would see the
    victim from time to time but that he did not really know her. He said that he knew Ms. Mullins, who
    was the defendant’s girlfriend at that time, and that she allowed him to stay at her apartment in
    Preston Taylor Homes. He said that on Sunday, February 21, 1999, he was at Ms. Mullins’
    apartment all day. He said he, the defendant, Mario Newbern, Ms. Mullins, and the victim were
    together at Ms. Mullins’ apartment that evening. He said that the defendant was going to Alameda
    Terrace and that the victim said she was going with him. He said he thought that they were going
    to the home of a friend that the defendant knew at Alameda Terrace. He said that on the way to
    Alameda Terrace, Mr. Newbern walked beside the victim, that the defendant was behind the victim,
    and he was behind the defendant. He said that when they were between the two apartment
    complexes, the defendant screamed out “bitch,” pointed a black .38 caliber revolver at the back of
    the victim’s head, and shot her. He said that the victim was talking just before she was shot but that
    he was not paying attention to what she was saying. He said that the defendant had pulled the gun
    from a pocket.
    Mr. Simpson testified that after the shot, the victim fell and everyone froze for a minute. He
    said that the defendant told them to walk, not run, and that they walked to another Karen’s
    -7-
    apartment. He said that after a minute, they went to Ms. Mullins’ apartment. He said the defendant
    told them if they told anyone, he would kill them. He said he believed the defendant. He said that
    about a month later, Detective Sledge contacted him and that he told Detective Sledge what he had
    seen. On cross-examination, he agreed that he did not speak to the police until June 8, 1999. He
    said he waited almost four months to tell about the shooting because he did not want to die.
    On cross-examination, he denied taking Mr. Newbern to Ms. Mullins’ apartment on the day
    of the shooting. He stated that at Ms. Mullins’ apartment, he did not hear the defendant threaten the
    victim but that he was not paying attention to what the defendant was saying. He agreed that he
    would not have accompanied the defendant to Alameda Terrace if he had heard the defendant
    threaten the victim. He denied shooting the victim or knowing what was going on when the victim
    was shot.
    Mr. Simpson testified that when they returned to Ms. Mullins’ apartment after the shooting,
    she was crying. He said that no one was wearing a white Nautica coat that night and that he and the
    other two men wore black jackets. He said he did not remember what type of jacket Ms. Mullins
    wore that night. He said he did not know of Ms. Mullins leaving her apartment before the police
    arrived at Preston Taylor Homes after the shooting. He said that after the police and ambulances
    arrived that night, he and Ms. Mullins walked over to a friend’s apartment near the body but no one
    answered the door. He said that when they returned to Ms. Mullins’ apartment, the defendant told
    him to stay there. He said Mr. Newbern left and that Mr. Simpson and the defendant walked to
    Georgia Court. He denied knowing whether Mr. Newbern had a .22 caliber gun when he left. He
    said he never saw the defendant point a gun at Mr. Newbern. He said that in the days following the
    shooting, he continued to stay at Ms. Mullins’ apartment because the defendant told him that the
    defendant did not want him to go anywhere and because he had nowhere else to stay. He stated that
    he had not talked with Mr. Newbern or Ms. Mullins about the case while waiting to testify.
    Delores Morris, the victim’s mother, testified that the victim was thirty-three years old at the
    time of her death. She said the victim was staying with different people in the Preston Taylor Homes
    area at that time. She said that about three weeks before the victim’s murder, she overheard the
    victim and the defendant talking in front of a store across from Preston Taylor Homes. She said the
    defendant told the victim, “Get out of my face, junkie bitch, before I kill you before I’m going to kill
    you anyway.”
    Dr. Bruce Phillip Levy, the County Medical Examiner for Metropolitan Nashville and
    Davidson County, testified as an expert in forensic pathology. On February 22, 1999, he performed
    an autopsy on the victim. The victim was shot in the back of the head with the bullet entering at the
    base of her skull and exiting through her right cheek. Dr. Levy said that the bullet severed the
    victim’s spinal cord and that the wound was instantly incapacitating and nearly instantly fatal. He
    collected bullet fragments from the victim’s right cheek, but he said neither the fragments nor the
    wound allowed him to determine the type of bullet used. He said that the victim also had abrasions
    and lacerations around the bony tissues on the left side of her face that were consistent with the
    victim striking the ground. He said that the lack of gunshot residue on the victim indicated that the
    -8-
    gun was at least two to three feet away from the victim when fired. He said that the victim’s hair
    could have filtered out the gunshot residue. He stated that a toxicology test revealed that the victim’s
    blood contained tetrahydrocannabinol, the active ingredient in marijuana; cocaine; and a cocaine
    metabolite. He said the presence of cocaine in the victim’s blood meant that she had used cocaine
    within several hours of her death. He said the test did not reveal the presence of alcohol in the
    victim’s blood.
    Detective Sledge was recalled by the defendant and testified that he interviewed Ms. Mullins
    on July 26, 1999. He agreed Ms. Mullins told him that when the defendant, Mr. Newbern, and Mr.
    Simpson returned to her apartment on the night of the victim’s death, she asked the defendant if he
    shot the victim. He said Ms. Mullins told him that the defendant did not respond. He agreed that
    Ms. Mullins told him that later that night while she and the defendant were in bed, she again asked
    him if he had shot the victim but that he did not respond. He acknowledged that Ms. Mullins told
    him that on the Monday following the shooting, the three men returned from the store. He said she
    told him that she again asked if he did it and that the defendant told her that he shot the victim but
    that he would kill her if she told anyone. He said that he did not recall Ms. Mullins saying that the
    defendant told her this on a Thursday but that she was repeatedly asking the defendant about the
    shooting and getting no answer.
    Detective Sledge testified that during his interview, Mr. Newbern told him that the defendant
    was wearing a white nautical jacket. He said that at that time, he was not aware that Nautica was
    a brand name and that at the time of trial, he now believed that Mr. Newbern had said Nautica
    instead of nautical. He explained that the question about how the defendant was dressed was not
    asked in the context of the time of the shooting. Detective Sledge said that he saw the defendant
    wearing a white Nautica jacket when he interviewed the defendant on Tuesday, February 23, 1999,
    and that he recovered this jacket from the apartment in Preston Taylor Homes where the defendant
    stayed. He said this was the only white jacket found in the apartment. He recalled that there was
    a jacket that had been borrowed and worn by many people at Preston Taylor Homes, but he said that
    he did not know if it was the white Nautica jacket. He said that after charges were placed against
    Ms. Mullins in July 1999, she told him that the defendant was wearing a long, black leather coat on
    the night of the shooting.
    Erica Howse, the defendant’s cousin, testified that on the night the victim was shot, she was
    at her sister’s apartment at 1004 Presslor Drive where she was living at the time. She heard a
    gunshot that evening but did nothing about it because she heard shots everyday in that area. About
    five minutes later, someone knocked on the door, and Karen Mullins ran into the apartment. She
    said Ms. Mullins was wearing a white, South Pole bomber jacket. The police arrived at Preston
    Taylor homes around fifteen minutes after she heard the gunshot. Ms. Howse said that earlier that
    day, she had attended a party at Ms. Mullins’ apartment. She said that the defendant, the victim,
    Mario Newbern, and Michael Simpson were at Ms. Mullins’ apartment while she was there.
    DeQuan Howse testified that he was eleven years old at the time of trial. He said he knew
    the victim and the defendant, who is his cousin. He said that on the night the victim was shot, he
    -9-
    was nine years old and living with his mother Shonda Howse and with his aunt Erica Howse. He
    said that the windows in his bedroom face the back of the apartment building and that on the night
    in question, he had his window opened slightly because it was hot in his room. He said that from
    his window, he saw a woman who was screaming “please don’t shoot me.” He said he later learned
    that the woman was the victim. He said two people were with the victim. He stated that one of the
    people wore a white coat and that he could not tell if the person was male or female. He said that
    the other person was a man dressed all in black. He said that the victim was looking at the man in
    black, who took a gun from his pocket and shot the victim. He said that once the bullet hit the
    victim, she turned her head and fell. He said both people ran away. He said the victim had her hands
    in her pockets during the entire incident. He said the shooter did not look like the defendant. He
    agreed that he did not get a good look at the people and that it was about thirty feet from the victim
    to his window. He said that although a street light was near the area where the victim was shot, that
    the area was not well-lit. He said that after the shooting, he told his uncle what he had seen but that
    his uncle did not believe him and that he went back to bed. He denied discussing the shooting with
    his family after the night of the murder.
    Shonda Howse, the defendant’s first cousin, testified that on February 21, 1999, she was
    living at 1004 Presslor Drive near where the victim was killed. She said her son DeQuan Howse’s
    room is upstairs, faces the back of the building, and has windows facing the backyard. She said she
    heard a gunshot that evening but did not do anything about it because gunshots were common. She
    said that after the gunshot, her son was looking out of his window and kept telling her that someone
    was there. She said she told him to go to sleep. She said that ten to fifteen minutes after the
    gunshot, Karen Mullins came to her door wearing a white coat. She said Ms. Mullins told her that
    the victim was lying on the sidewalk in the back and was dead. She said that she accused Ms.
    Mullins of lying but that Ms. Mullins said she knew it was the victim because she had just walked
    from Alameda Terrace, which is directly behind Ms. Howse’s apartment. Ms. Howse said she ran
    outside and saw the victim’s body. She said that later, she viewed the scene from her son’s window.
    She said it was six yards from the window to the ground and then nine yards over to the body. She
    said she did not discuss this event with her son afterward because he went to stay with his father.
    Corey Austin testified that she was living in apartment 1012 on the night that the victim was
    shot. She said that she heard the gunshot but that shooting occurred so often in the back that she did
    not pay any attention to it. She said that about three to four minutes after the gunshot, someone
    knocked on her door and used her telephone to call the police. She agreed that the person was Karen
    Mullins.1 She said that she did not recall what Ms. Mullins was wearing.
    Based upon this testimony, the jury convicted the defendant of first degree, premeditated
    murder.
    1
    The transcript of the evidence reflects that the witness agreed that the person was Karen “Mulling,” but from
    the context of the question and the witness’s statement that the woman she saw that night was outside the co urtroo m in
    the hall, it is evid ent that M s. Austin m eant K aren M ullins.
    -10-
    I. SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
    The defendant contends that the evidence is insufficient to support his first degree murder
    conviction. Specifically, he argues that Karen Mullins and Mario Newbern gave inconsistent
    testimony about the events surrounding the murder and that evidence existed that Ms. Mullins was
    with the victim at the time of the shooting and had a motive to kill the victim. He concludes that no
    rational jury could have found him guilty. The state contends that the evidence is sufficient to
    convict the defendant. We agree with the state.
    Our standard of review when the sufficiency of the evidence is questioned on appeal is
    “whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier
    of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Jackson
    v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319, 
    99 S. Ct. 2781
    , 2789 (1979). We do not reweigh the evidence but
    presume that the jury has resolved all conflicts in the testimony and drawn all reasonable inferences
    from the evidence in favor of the state. See State v. Sheffield, 
    676 S.W.2d 542
    , 547 (Tenn. 1984);
    State v. Cabbage, 
    571 S.W.2d 832
    , 835 (Tenn. 1978). Any questions about the credibility of the
    witnesses were resolved by the jury. See State v. Bland, 
    958 S.W.2d 651
    , 659 (Tenn. 1997).
    First degree, premeditated murder is defined as a “premeditated and intentional killing of
    another.” 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-202
    (a)(1). Additionally, “premeditation” is defined as
    an act done after the exercise of reflection and judgment.
    “Premeditation” means that the intent to kill must have been formed
    prior to the act itself. It is not necessary that the purpose to kill
    pre-exist in the mind of the accused for any definite period of time.
    The mental state of the accused at the time the accused allegedly
    decided to kill must be carefully considered in order to determine
    whether the accused was sufficiently free from excitement and
    passion as to be capable of premeditation.
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-202
    (d). The element of premeditation is a question for the jury and may
    be established by proof of the circumstances surrounding the killing. Bland, 
    958 S.W.2d at 660
    . Our
    supreme court has noted the following factors that demonstrate the existence of premeditation: the
    use of a deadly weapon upon an unarmed victim, the particular cruelty of the killing, declarations
    by the defendant of an intent to kill, evidence of procurement of a weapon, preparations before the
    killing for concealment of the crime, and calmness immediately after the killing. 
    Id.
    Viewed in the light most favorable to the state, we believe that the evidence is sufficient to
    support the defendant’s conviction. Mario Newbern and Michael Simpson testified that while they
    were walking to Alameda Terrace with the victim and the defendant, the defendant pulled a gun from
    his jacket pocket and shot the victim in the back of the head. Nothing in the record indicates that
    the victim was armed at the time of the shooting, and the deceased victim was found with both hands
    in her pockets. Karen Mullins and Mario Newbern testified that on the day of the murder, the
    -11-
    defendant threatened to kill the victim. Additionally, the victim’s mother testified that she overheard
    the defendant threaten to kill the victim three weeks before the victim’s death. Finally, Mr. Newbern
    and Mr. Simpson testified that the defendant instructed them to walk, not run, from the murder
    scene. Taken in the light most favorable to the state, this testimony reveals that the defendant was
    calm immediately after the killing. The evidence presented at trial supports the defendant’s
    conviction for first degree, premeditated murder.
    In challenging the sufficiency of the evidence, the defendant emphasizes inconsistencies in
    the witnesses’ testimony and evidence suggesting that Ms. Mullins was the perpetrator of the crime.
    He contends that the proof shows that Ms. Mullins had a motive to kill the victim because she had
    lent the victim money in the weeks preceding the crime, had disagreements with the victim, and had
    seen the victim with the defendant, whom she was dating. He also argues that the evidence reveals
    that Ms. Mullins had the opportunity to kill the victim. He points to Patrick Wells’s testimony,
    which he argues exonerates him and places Ms. Mullins with the victim at the time of the shooting.
    Although he acknowledges that at trial, Mr. Newbern denied telling Mr. Wells this, he maintains that
    the jury could not reasonably believe Mr. Newbern because of his testimony that the defendant
    forced him to commit robbery on the morning of the victim’s death and that he attended a party with
    the defendant that afternoon. Additionally, he states that DeQuan Howse saw an individual in a
    white coat with the victim at the time she was killed and that proof exists that Ms. Mullins was
    wearing a white coat on the night of the murder. Finally, he argues that Ms. Mullins’ testimony is
    of limited value because it is filled with inconsistencies.
    We note that the jury heard the evidence implicating Ms. Mullins yet determined that the
    defendant committed the crime. As for the inconsistencies in the witnesses’ testimony, the
    credibility and weight to be given to a witness’s testimony are issues to be resolved by the trier of
    fact. See State v. Pappas, 
    754 S.W.2d 620
    , 623 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1987). The jury heard the
    inconsistencies and alternate theories raised by the defendant and decided to accredit the state’s
    theory of the offense. The evidence is sufficient.
    II. ACCOMPLICE INSTRUCTION
    The defendant contends that the trial court should have allowed the jury to determine whether
    witnesses Karen Mullins and Michael Simpson were accomplices as a matter of fact. He argues that
    if the jury had found them to be accomplices, then no evidence existed to corroborate Mario
    Newbern’s, Ms. Mullins’, and Mr. Simpson’s accounts of the offense or the defendant’s involvement
    therein. The state contends that no evidence exists that Ms. Mullins or Mr. Simpson knowingly and
    voluntarily united with the defendant to kill the victim. We hold that the trial court should have
    instructed the jury to determine whether Ms. Mullins and Mr. Simpson were accomplices.
    Nevertheless, we hold that the trial court’s failure to do so is harmless error because of the existence
    of corroborating evidence linking the defendant to the victim’s murder.
    The defendant requested that the trial court instruct the jury that Karen Mullins, Mario
    Newbern, and Michael Simpson were accomplices. He argued that evidence placed Mr. Newbern
    -12-
    and Mr. Simpson at the scene at the time the victim was shot and that DeQuan Howse’s testimony
    that he saw someone in a white jacket with the shooter at the time of the murder implicated Ms.
    Mullins in the offense. The trial court refused to give the instruction as to Ms. Mullins and Mr.
    Simpson ruling that a person’s mere presence at the scene of a crime does not make him or her an
    accomplice but that the accomplice must join in the crime voluntarily, knowingly, and with shared
    intent. It found that “there isn’t a whit of evidence from anybody that [Ms. Mullins] was even there.”
    With regard to Mr. Simpson, it found that he “heard nothing, and there is nothing to the contrary,
    you know, saying that he was there and was in a position and could have heard, you know, is, you
    know, not sufficient because his testimony is he didn’t hear anything.” The trial court found that Mr.
    Simpson was not an accomplice simply because he accompanied the defendant and the others to
    Alameda Terrace.
    The trial court gave the following accomplice instruction for Mr. Newbern:
    An accomplice is a person who joins another person in
    committing a crime. The accomplice must do so knowingly,
    voluntarily, and sharing the intent of the other person in doing the
    crime. In this case, it is a question for you to determine whether the
    witness, Mario Newbern, was an accomplice in this alleged crime. If
    you find that a witness is an accomplice, then you must find that the
    accomplice’s testimony is supported by other evidence. The
    testimony of an accomplice by itself cannot convict the defendant.
    This other evidence must independently lead to the conclusion that a
    crime was committed and that the defendant was involved in it. This
    other supporting evidence must connect the defendant to the crime.
    The supporting evidence may be direct or circumstantial, and it need
    not be sufficient by itself to justify a conviction. The supporting
    evidence is enough if it fairly and legitimately tends to connect the
    defendant with the crime charge[d]. It is for you, the jury, to decide
    whether an accomplice’s testimony has been sufficiently supported by
    the evidence.
    It is well settled in Tennessee that a conviction may not be based upon the uncorroborated
    testimony of an accomplice. See State v. Bigbee, 
    885 S.W.2d 797
    , 803 (Tenn. 1994). An
    accomplice is an individual who knowingly, voluntarily, and with common intent participates with
    the principal offender in the commission of an offense. State v. Lawson, 
    794 S.W.2d 363
    , 369
    (Tenn. Crim. App. 1990). Neither guilty knowledge nor participation in a related but distinct crime
    is sufficient to make a witness an accomplice. State v. Foster, 
    755 S.W.2d 846
    , 848 (Tenn. Crim.
    App. 1988). “Mere presence at the scene of the crime does not make one an accomplice, nor does
    the mere fact that one was indicted for the same offense as the accused.” Letner v. State, 
    512 S.W.2d 643
    , 647 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1974). On the other hand, generally, a common test is whether the
    witness could have been indicted for the offense along with the accused. Monts v. State, 
    214 Tenn. 171
    , 191-92, 
    379 S.W.2d 34
    , 43 (1968); State v. Perkinson, 
    867 S.W.2d 1
    , 7 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    -13-
    1992). Finally, being an accessory after the fact does not make one an accomplice whose testimony
    must be corroborated. Monts, 214 Tenn. at 192, 379 S.W.2d at 43; Pennington v. State, 
    478 S.W.2d 892
    , 897 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1971).
    When it is clear and undisputed that the witness participated in the crime, the trial court
    decides as a question of law whether he or she is an accomplice. Perkinson, 
    867 S.W.2d at 7
    . The
    question becomes one of fact for the jury to decide when the facts are in dispute or susceptible to
    different inferences. 
    Id.
     In other words, when a witness denies involvement in the crime, the
    question of whether he or she is an accomplice is one of fact to be submitted to the jury with proper
    instructions from the court on how to consider such testimony. Ripley v. State, 
    189 Tenn. 681
    , 687,
    
    227 S.W.2d 26
    , 28 (1950).
    In the present case, the discussion concerning the defendant’s request for the accomplice
    instruction reveals that the trial court instructed the jury to determine whether Mr. Newbern was an
    accomplice based upon his presence at the time the victim was shot, his overhearing the defendant
    threaten to kill the victim shortly before the shooting, and his leaving with the defendant and the
    others after hearing the threat. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the defendant,
    the same factors were present for Ms. Mullins. See, e.g., Perkinson, 
    867 S.W.2d at 7
     (viewing the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the defendant in determining whether the trial court should
    have given an accomplice instruction). Ms. Mullins testified that she overheard the defendant
    threaten to kill the victim at Ms. Wilson’s apartment on the evening of the victim’s death. DeQuan
    Howse testified that a person in a white coat was present when the victim was shot. Erica Howse
    testified that five minutes after she heard a gunshot, Ms. Mullins arrived at her apartment wearing
    a white, South Pole bomber jacket. Shonda Howse testified that ten to fifteen minutes after the
    gunshot, Ms. Mullins came to her door wearing a white coat. On cross-examination, Mr. Newbern
    admitted that Ms. Mullins was wearing a white jacket on the night of the murder. This testimony
    suggests that Ms. Mullins was present when the victim was shot after having heard the defendant
    threaten to kill the victim.
    With regard to Mr. Simpson, he testified that he was present when the defendant shot the
    victim. He denied hearing the defendant threaten the victim before leaving for Alameda Terrace but
    explained that he was not paying attention to what the defendant was saying. Both Mr. Newbern and
    Ms. Mullins testified that Mr. Simpson was present when the defendant made the threat. Ms.
    Mullins testified that Mr. Simpson heard the threat and that if he denied hearing it, he would be
    lying. Viewing this evidence in the light most favorable to the defendant, it suggests that shortly
    before the shooting, Mr. Simpson heard the defendant threaten to kill the victim and then he
    accompanied the defendant, the victim, and Mr. Newbern to Alameda Terrace. Thus, we believe that
    the trial court erred in finding that no evidence existed to place Ms. Mullins at the scene of the
    murder or to show that Mr. Simpson overheard the defendant’s threat to kill the victim.
    We turn to the question of whether overhearing the threat to kill, then leaving with the person
    making the threat and his intended victim, and presence at the time of the shooting creates a jury
    question about whether the witness is an accomplice. In Pennington, this court faced a fact pattern
    -14-
    similar to that in the present case in addressing the defendants’ contentions regarding accomplice
    testimony. In the case, the state’s witnesses Brenda and Robert Lawson were initially indicted with
    the three defendants, but their cases were severed, and the Lawsons were subsequently convicted of
    involuntary manslaughter. Brenda Lawson testified that she was driving around with her husband
    on the evening of the murder and that they eventually picked up the three defendants with whom they
    continued to drive around and drink beer. At one point, one of the defendants obtained a shotgun.
    At the direction of one of the defendants, Clifton Pennington, Ms. Lawson drove to the victim’s
    house. Clifton Pennington announced his intention to rob the victim, and Mr. Lawson attempted to
    dissuade him from committing the crime. Pennington threatened to beat the Lawsons and kill their
    entire family if they said anything or tried to leave. During the robbery and murder of the victim,
    the Lawsons and one of the unarmed defendants remained in the car. Afterward, the other two
    defendants returned to the car and directed the Lawsons to drive away. The Lawsons spent the next
    several days with the defendants who forced the Lawsons to take them out of state. This court held
    that whether the Lawsons were accomplices was a matter for the jury. Pennington, 
    478 S.W.2d at 898
     (presuming that the trial court instructed the jury on accomplice testimony because the
    defendants did not object to the jury charge nor include it in the bill of exceptions).
    Similar to the witnesses in Pennington, if the evidence is viewed in the light most favorable
    to the defendant, Mr. Newbern, Mr. Simpson, and Ms. Mullins knew of the defendant’s intention
    to kill the victim and yet remained with him. Making the inferences in the defendant’s favor, the
    situation is even more suggestive of intent than that in Pennington where the alleged accomplices
    waited in the car during the commission of the crime. In the present case, we believe that the
    witnesses’ leaving with the defendant and the intended victim after hearing the threat to kill creates
    the inference that the witnesses shared the common intent to commit the crime. Evidence exists
    from which a jury could infer that the witnesses in question assisted the defendant in committing the
    crime. For this reason, the trial court should have allowed the jury to determine whether Ms. Mullins
    and Mr. Simpson were accomplices as a matter of fact.
    The defendant contends that he was harmed by the trial court’s failure to give his requested
    accomplice instruction because aside from the testimony of Mr. Newbern, Mr. Simpson, and Ms.
    Mullins, no independent evidence implicates him in the victim’s murder. To corroborate the
    testimony of an accomplice,
    there must be some fact testified to, entirely independent of the
    accomplice’s testimony, which, taken by itself, leads to the inference,
    not only that a crime has been committed, but also that the defendant
    is implicated in it; and this independent corroborative testimony must
    also include some fact establishing the defendant’s identity. This
    corroborative evidence may be direct or entirely circumstantial, and
    it need not be adequate, in and of itself, to support a conviction; it is
    sufficient to meet the requirements of the rule if it fairly and
    legitimately tends to connect the defendant with the commission of
    the crime charged. It is not necessary that the corroboration extend
    -15-
    to every part of the accomplice’s evidence. The corroboration need
    not be conclusive, but it is sufficient if this evidence, of itself, tends
    to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense,
    although the evidence be slight and entitled, when standing alone, to
    but little consideration.
    Hawkins v. State, 
    4 Tenn. Crim. App. 121
    , 133, 
    469 S.W.2d 515
    , 520 (1971) (citations omitted).
    The testimony of one accomplice may not corroborate the testimony of another accomplice. State
    v. Allen, 
    976 S.W.2d 661
    , 666 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997). Whether an accomplice’s testimony is
    sufficiently corroborated is a matter entrusted to the jury. Stanley v. State, 
    189 Tenn. 110
    , 117-18,
    
    222 S.W.2d 384
    , 387 (1949).
    In the present case, no physical evidence connects the defendant with the crime. Aside from
    the testimony of Mr. Newbern, Mr. Simpson, and Ms. Mullins, the only other testimony about the
    offense itself was that of DeQuan Howse. DeQuan Howse testified that on the night of the victim’s
    death, he saw from his bedroom window a woman pleading for her life with a figure in a white coat
    and a man dressed all in black. He testified that the man in black shot the victim but that the man
    did not look like the defendant, who was his cousin. Due to the unique circumstances of this case,
    we believe that the jury could not have determined that Mr. Newbern, Mr. Simpson, and Ms. Mullins
    were all accomplices. Mr. Simpson and Mr. Newbern testified that Ms. Mullins was not there at the
    time of the shooting. Thus, the jury could have found that Mr. Newbern and Mr. Simpson were
    accomplices and that Ms. Mullins was not present when the victim was killed. Alternatively,
    DeQuan Howse testified that he saw two people with the victim. The jury could have found that Ms.
    Mullins was an accomplice and that either Mr. Newbern, Mr. Simpson, or the defendant were with
    her at the scene. Any suggestion that Ms. Mullins was at the scene with Mr. Newbern and Mr.
    Simpson is merely speculative under the evidence submitted.
    In light of the two possible versions for the commission of the crime, corroborating evidence
    exists for all three witnesses. If the jury found that Mr. Newbern and Mr. Simpson were
    accomplices, then Ms. Mullins’ testimony that the defendant admitted the crime to her corroborates
    their testimony and ties the defendant to the murder. If the jury found Ms. Mullins to be an
    accomplice, then the testimony of Mr. Newbern and Mr. Simpson corroborates her account and
    identifies the defendant as the one who shot the victim. We conclude that although the trial court
    should have instructed the jury to determine whether Ms. Mullins and Mr. Simpson were
    accomplices, the defendant was not harmed by this error due to existing corroborative evidence. See
    T.R.A.P. 36(b); State v. Maddox, 
    957 S.W.2d 547
    , 554 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997) (noting that this
    court has analyzed the failure to instruct on accomplice testimony under the harmless error standard
    found in T.R.A.P. 36(b)); State v. Carpenter, 
    773 S.W.2d 1
    , 12 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1989) (applying
    a harmless error standard).
    -16-
    III. MISTRIAL
    The defendant contends that the trial court should have sua sponte granted a mistrial after the
    victim’s mother testified that he had committed another murder. He argues that although it was
    apparent from the jury-out hearing that the victim’s mother would have trouble confining her
    testimony to admissible matters, the trial court permitted her to testify. He claims that her testimony
    about this other crime poisoned the jurors’ minds thereby preventing them from reaching an
    impartial verdict. He insists that the trial court’s curative instruction following the testimony in
    question was not sufficient to alleviate the prejudice to him. The state contends that no manifest
    necessity existed for a mistrial and that even if it had, the defendant invited any potential error by
    telling the trial court that he was not moving for a mistrial. We agree with the state that the
    defendant has failed to take steps reasonably available to him to obviate the error.
    In a jury-out hearing, Delores Morris, the victim’s mother, testified that while waiting in a
    car in front of a store, she overheard the defendant threaten the victim’s life because the victim was
    threatening to tell things the defendant had done. The trial court ruled that the statements of the
    victim were admissible under the hearsay exceptions for excited utterances or for statements of a
    then existing mental, emotional, or psychological state. It stated that it would give limiting
    instructions for the jury to consider the victim’s statements to show her state of mind but not for the
    truth of the matter. Although it believed that the statements attributed to the defendant presented a
    Rule 404(b), Tenn. R. Evid., issue, it ruled that what the witness overheard the defendant tell the
    victim was admissible to show the defendant’s motive and intent and was highly relevant to the
    relationship between the parties. The court expressed concern over the state’s ability to control the
    witness and emphasized that her testimony was to be limited to what she overheard.
    Following the jury-out hearing, the state called several other witnesses before calling Ms.
    Morris. Just before her testimony, the defendant asked the trial court if they needed to speak to the
    witness before she testified in order to control her. The court reminded the state that the witness’s
    testimony was limited to what she overheard the defendant and the victim say in the incident in front
    of the store. It instructed the state to use leading questions and the defense not to object to leading
    on direct examination.
    As Ms. Morris began her testimony on how she came to know the defendant, the trial court
    admonished her to answer the prosecutor’s question without embellishment. The state asked Ms.
    Morris to repeat for the jury what she had overheard the defendant say to the victim in front of the
    store. Ms. Morris said, “My daughter was talking about telling on a murder thing on him about what
    they had been in, she was accessory to a murder that he had did and–.” The defendant objected, and
    the court instructed the jury that the witness’s answer was unresponsive and that it was not to
    consider the answer for any reason.
    With the jury out, the trial court instructed the witness that she could testify only to what she
    had told them in her jury-out proffer. Ms. Morris agreed that she could limit her testimony to this
    and not give additional details. Then, the following exchange occurred:
    -17-
    [Defense Counsel]: Your Honor, all the corrective measures aside,
    you know, one more slip from her and then we really are into a
    mistrial situation here. She just testified about him committing
    another murder. I mean, I don’t think it is worth the risk. I ought to
    be asking for it now, but, you know, I don’t think–we are going to go
    on forward with it, but this is an incredible risk, and I will just leave
    it at that.
    THE COURT: All right, so you are not asking for a mistrial at this
    point?
    [Defense Counsel]: I’m not asking for it at this point, Your Honor,
    but I don’t think she needs to be testifying.
    Following this exchange, the trial court limited the witness’s testimony to what she overheard the
    defendant say and prohibited her from testifying about what the victim said. The court then stated
    that it was denying the defendant’s motion for a mistrial, although it believed the defendant did not
    ask for a mistrial given the limitations that it had placed on the victim’s testimony.
    The grant or denial of a mistrial is within the sound discretion of the trial court, and this court
    will not disturb that decision absent a finding of abuse of discretion. State v. Adkins, 
    786 S.W.2d 642
    , 644 (Tenn. 1990); State v. Williams, 
    929 S.W.2d 385
    , 388 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996). A mistrial
    will be declared in a criminal case only when there is a “manifest necessity” requiring such action
    by the trial court. State v. Millbrooks, 
    819 S.W.2d 441
    , 443 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1991). A manifest
    necessity exists when “no feasible alternative to halting the proceedings” exists. State v. Knight, 
    616 S.W.2d 593
    , 596 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1981). The defendant shoulders the burden of establishing a
    manifest necessity. State v. Seay, 
    945 S.W.2d 755
    , 764 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996).
    If a motion for mistrial is not made contemporaneously, then the issue is waived absent plain
    error. See T.R.A.P. 36(a); State v. Robinson, 
    971 S.W.2d 30
    , 42-43 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997). In
    this case, the defendant did not move for a mistrial but affirmatively stated that he wanted to
    continue with the trial despite the witness’s testimony regarding another murder. The trial court’s
    subsequent denial of a mistrial despite the lack of a request suggests that any request for a mistrial
    on the part of the defendant may have been futile. Nevertheless, we do not fault the trial court for
    failing to grant a mistrial sua sponte in light of the defendant’s affirmative assurance that he did not
    want one. We also note that the trial court immediately instructed the jury to disregard the witness’s
    statement and, at the close of the proof, instructed the jury that it “must not consider for any purpose
    any offer of evidence that was rejected, or any evidence that was stricken out by the Court; such
    matter is to be treated as though you had never known it.” We believe failure to declare a mistrial
    under these circumstances does not constitute plain error. See Tenn. R. Crim. P. 52(b).
    -18-
    Based upon the foregoing and the record as a whole, we affirm the judgment of conviction.
    ___________________________________
    JOSEPH M. TIPTON, JUDGE
    -19-