Thomas Lee Anderson was convicted of the murder of Jim Hurt and sentenced to sixty years imprisonment. He presents three issues in his direct appeal, restated as follows:
I. Were Anderson’s federal or state constitutional rights violated by participation of an inactive member of another state’s bar in his prosecution?
II. Was Anderson’s trial counsel ineffective for failing to request a competency hearing?
III. Was the evidence sufficient to support the conviction of murder?
We affirm.
Factual and Procedural History
The principal evidence at trial was the testimony of Michael Mortenson, Anderson’s roommate. Anderson, Hurt and Mortenson had been acquaintances for several years. When the three returned to Hurt’s house after an evening of driving around and drinking, Hurt asked Anderson to help him carry a case оf beer into his garage. Mortenson waited in the car in the driveway. Morten-son soon witnessed a fight between Anderson and Hurt that started in the garage and moved first to the lawn near the driveway and then back into the garage. Mortenson could not determine who started the fight or which of the two chased the other out of the garage, onto the lawn and then back to the garage. Anderson eventually returned to the car and told Mortenson that they had to leave. On their way home Anderson told Mortenson, “I stabbed Jim Hurt.” Hurt made his way to a neighbor’s porch where he died from blood loss due to a stab wоund to the neck. He suffered four other stab wounds, one of which would also have been fatal.
At trial, Officer Kohne testified that when he arrived at Anderson’s apartment on the night Hurt died, Anderson told him that he knew why he was there. Anderson identified the folding knife on his coffee table as the knife he carried with him to Hurt’s house that day. Anderson told Kohne that after Hurt started a fight by hitting Anderson in the back of the head, “he pullеd out his knife ... and stuck it into Jimmy’s (Hurt’s) neck.”
The jury returned a guilty verdict and the trial court sentenced Anderson to sixty years.
I. Prosecution by an Unlicensed Attorney
Lisa Pratt Benson was admitted by the trial court pro hoc vice and participated in the prosecution team led by Chief Deputy Prosecuting Attorney John Meyers. Benson had represented to the trial court that she was a member in good standing of the bars of Louisiana and Texas. In fact, she was at the time on inactive status in Louisiana and not admitted in Tеxas. When this circumstance came to light after the trial, Anderson moved to set aside the verdict based on Benson’s participation in the prosecution team, contending that it violated his federal and state constitutional rights.
If Anderson’s claim amounts to an attack on Benson’s authority as a
de facto
prosecutor it requires a showing of prejudice to reverse Anderson’s conviction.
Cox v. State,
The lack of authority of a
de facto
prosecutor must result in harm to the defendant in order to constitute reversible error.
Cox v. State,
In a final effort to plug the gap in his argument, Anderson points to
Butler v. State,
II. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
To prevail оn a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, Anderson must both show that counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness based on prevаiling professional norms and demonstrate that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.
Strickland v. Washington,
Anderson had been diagnosed as suffering from schizophrenia. In light of this faсt he contends that his counsel’s failure to request a competency hearing constituted ineffective assistance. Anderson’s argument requires us to assume that had the trial court been presеnted with the evidence of his schizophrenia, a competency hearing would have been granted, and that the result of both the examination and hearing would have been a determination of incompetence. The record does not support either of these significant assumptions. The standard for deciding competency is whether or not the
III. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Finally, Anderson argues that there was insufficient evidence to establish the mens rea element of murder. In reviewing a sufficiency of evidencе claim, we do not reweigh the evidence or assess the credibility of witnesses.
Gant v. State,
Conclusion
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. "Usurper of a public office" is defined as: one who intrudes on office or assumes to exercise its functions without legal title or color of right. Black’s Law Dictionary 1545 (6th ed. 1990).
. Without pointing to particular incidents of wrongdoing during the trial or any evidence of imрropriety in the manner of prosecution, Anderson also states that his rights were violated because of prosecutorial misconduct. Without more, Anderson’s argument on prosecutorial misconduct cannot be evaluated and is deemed waived. Ind. Appellate Rule 8.3(A)(7);
Hopping
v.
State,
. Anderson also asserts that because trial counsel did not request a competency hearing, he was unable to assert an insanity defense. Anderson offers no citation to authority or explanation of how a competency hearing would have led to the conclusion that he was not "responsible for his actions.” The argument is deemed waived for failure to present a cogent argument on the issue. App. R. 8.3(A)(7);
Hopping v. State,
