for the Court:
¶ 1. Peter Grossley appeals after being convicted of aggravated assault and armed robbery based in part on accomplice testimony. He argues that the testimony was
Facts and Procedural History
¶ 2. On July 25, 2007, Thomas Moore and Grossley allegedly hatched a plan to rob the Northpark Discount Package Store in Ridgeland, Mississippi. Shortly after discussing the robbery, the two picked up their friend Carey Dobbs, whom they let drive Moore’s rented Chevrolet Malibu. The group next picked up another friend of theirs, Dianne Barnes, an admitted prostitute, who had just met with a client at a nearby Cabot Lodge hotel. As the crew left the hotel and drove towards the liquor store, Moore noticed there were no customers in the store. Believing this was the perfect opportunity to rob the store, Moore had Dobbs pull into the liquor store’s parking lot and told Grossley, “Let’s do it.” At this point, Moore and Grossley concealed their faces with bandanas. Moore got out of the vehicle first, followed a bit after by Grossley. Moore approached the store with his pistol drawn, while Grossley waited behind him providing cover.
¶ 3. Just as Moore walked through the door and raised his .38 revolver, Marshall Williams, the store’s owner, opened fire with his .38-special handgun. As Moore retreated, Grossley allegedly fired several shots in Williams’s direction. Though Williams could not say which of the two masked men actually fired, officers were able to recover two .32 caliber projectiles and numerous .32 caliber bullet fragments from inside the liquor store.
¶ 4. Based on a description given by a security guard working at the Cabot Lodge, officers traced the getaway vehicle to the rental-car company Moore had used. Moore initially denied involvement, but after Williams later identified him from a photographic lineup, Moore admitted participating in the robbery. According to Moore, he had used a .38 caliber revolver while Grossley brandished and fired a .32 caliber revolver. Moore claimed that after the botched heist he threw his .38 caliber revolver in the Ross Barnett Reservoir. With Moore’s assistance, the Ridgeland Fire Department’s dive team recovered the .38 caliber revolver in the lake near Moore’s houseboat.
¶ 5. Moore also implicated Grossley, whom he knew as “Kalo,” and Barnes in the robbery attempt. Grossley, who had allegedly fired the pistol into the store, was charged with aggravated assault and armed robbery, while Moore and Barnes— who both testified at Grossley’s trial — pled guilty to lesser charges and received sentencing recommendations from the State. Moore pled guilty to simple robbery and received a fifteen-year sentence, with the last eight years suspended. And Barnes worked out a deal to plead guilty as an accessory after the fact and received a six-month sentence.
¶ 6. At Grossley’s trial, Moore testified that Grossley had covered his retreat from the liquor store by firing a .32 caliber revolver several times in the liquor-store owner’s direction. Moore also testified that Grossley commented that “if [Gross-ley] wouldn’t have fired then maybe [Moore] would have gotten shot.”
¶ 7. Barnes also testified at Grossley’s trial. Though she denied seeing Grossley with a gun on the night of the attempted robbery, she did remember Moore and Grossley quickly returning to the car after several gunshots were fired. Barnes also
¶ 8. Grossley was convicted of aggravated assault and armed robbery. He was sentenced to twenty years on the aggravated-assault charge, with nineteen years suspended, and forty years on the armed-robbery charge, with ten years suspended and five years of supervised probation. The court ordered Grossley’s sentences to run consecutively. The circuit court denied Grossley’s motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) or alternatively a new trial.
Discussion
I. Sufficiency and Weight of the Evidence
¶ 9. On appeal, Grossley argues he was entitled to a directed verdict because the State presented insufficient evidence on either count. Alternatively, he requests a new trial, claiming the jury’s verdict was against the overwhelming weight of the evidence.
A. Sufficiency of the Evidence
¶ 10. The purpose of a motion for a JNOV is to test the sufficiency of the evidence. Smith v. State,
1. The Charged Offenses
¶ 11. There were two substantive counts in Grossley’s indictment, one charging aggravated assault, the other armed robbery. To prove an aggravated assault, the State had to show Grossley “attempt[ed] to cause or purposefully or knowingly cause[d] bodily injury to another with a deadly weapon or other means likely to produce death or serious bodily harm.”
¶ 12. In addition to the substantive-count instructions, the trial judge also instructed the jury on accomplice liability. Under this long-recognized theory of criminal liability, the jury was entitled to find Grossley guilty of aggravated assault and armed robbery by merely finding Grossley had aided or acted in concert with Moore in the robbery attempt. See King v. State,
¶ 13. Grossley first takes issue with the accomplice testimony. As he sees it, because the store owner did not identify him as the second gunman, the State’s case rested solely on the substantially impeached, self-contradictory, uncorroborated accomplice testimony of Moore and Barnes, which Grossley claims is insufficient to sustain his convictions.
¶ 14. Generally, uncorroborated accomplice testimony may be sufficient to convict a defendant. Osborne v. State,
¶ 15. Our review shows the accomplice testimony implicating Grossley in both crimes was neither unreasonable, nor self-contradictory or substantially impeached. While there were some inconsistencies between the two accomplices, their testimonies were in large part corroborated by the store owner, Williams, and other evidence. For example, Williams testified about a second African American male standing next to the getaway car during the attempted robbery. That man’s face, like Moore’s, was covered with a bandana. Unbeknownst to Williams at the time, Grossley and Moore were the car’s only African American occupants. Dobbs, the driver of the Malibu, is a white male, and Barnes is a female of Asian descent. So Williams’s description of the second masked man tends to support Moore’s testimony that Grossley participated in the attempted robbery.
¶ 16. Second, officers recovered several spent .32 caliber projectiles from inside Williams’s store. At trial, the State’s ballistics expert testified that these bullets had unquestionably been fired from a .32 caliber revolver — not the .38 caliber revolver Moore claimed he displayed during the failed robbery then threw in the lake. We find this forensic evidence, when taken in the light most favorable to the State, more than “slightly corroborates” Moore’s testimony that Grossley provided cover during the robbery attempt by firing a .32 caliber revolver at Williams. The evidence that Grossley shot at the store owner is also sufficient to support the aggravated-assault charge.
¶ 17. Furthermore, even if the jury believed that Moore, not Grossley, was the more culpable of the two, since he had planned the robbery and actually entered the store, the evidence was sufficient to find Grossley guilty under an accomplice-liability theory, on which the jury was instructed. There is sufficient record evidence to establish that Grossley, who had donned a bandana to cover his face and was providing cover to Moore, was “present, consenting, aiding, and abetting the commission of the crime charged.” Brooks v. State,
B. Weight of the Evidence
¶ 18. Grossley next challenges the weight of the evidence supporting his con-
¶ 19. A motion for a new trial challenges the weight of the evidence. Bush,
¶ 20. We disagree with Grossley that the verdicts were against the weight of the evidence. While there were some discrepancies between Moore’s and Barnes’s testimonies, this is simply not enough to find sustaining the verdict would be “an unconscionable injustice.” And we note that Moore and Barnes were consistent if not identical on some material matters. For example, both Moore and Barnes agreed on the participants’ seating arrangements in Moore’s rental car both before and after the attempted robbery. They also agreed the only two African American males in the vehicle were Moore and Grossley. Both also similarly described the sequence of events immediately proceeding the shootout. Also, Barnes was not in the vehicle, when Moore and Grossley supposedly discussed the robbery.
¶21. But perhaps most important to our review is the fact that the jury was free to accept the testimony of one accomplice over the other’s, as “issues of weight and credibility of a witness’s testimony are within the sole province of the jury as fact-finder.” Price v. State,
II. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
¶ 22. Grossley also claims his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to request a cautionary instruction about accomplice testimony and for not objecting to prejudicial statements made by the State during closing arguments.
¶ 23. To prove ineffective assistance of counsel, Grossley must show: (1) his counsel’s performance was deficient, and (2) this deficiency prejudiced his defense. Strickland v. Washington,
¶ 24. After review, we find neither of Grossley’s claims are sufficiently developed on direct appeal, as they indeed may have been trial strategy. As to Grossley’s first claim, that his lawyer was ineffective for failing to seek a cautionary
¶ 25. Grossley’s other accusation concerns his attorney’s failure to object to what he deems improper remarks by the State during its closing argument. The State argued that Grossley’s attorney essentially defended the case on the premise that Grossley was not even present during the robbery attempt and that Moore and Barnes roped him in to limit their criminal liability when seeking more lenient plea deals. Though there was no objection to this line of argument at trial, Grossley now claims the State impermissibly mentioned that his mere “presence” was enough to convict him of both counts. From our review, this was not the context of the State’s argument, and apparently Gross-ley’s trial counsel did not think so either.
¶ 26. Our appellate courts have been instructed to ‘“strongly presume that counsel’s conduct falls within a wide range of reasonable professional assistance, and the challenged act or omission might be considered sound trial strategy. In other words, defense counsel is presumed competent.’ ” Liddell v. State,
¶ 27. THE JUDGMENT OF THE MADISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT OF CONVICTION OF COUNT I, AGGRAVATED ASSAULT, AND SENTENCE OF TWENTY YEARS, WITH NINETEEN YEARS SUSPENDED; AND COUNT II, ARMED ROBBERY, AND SENTENCE OF FORTY YEARS, WITH TEN YEARS SUSPENDED, TO RUN CONSECUTIVELY TO THE SENTENCE IMPOSED IN COUNT I, ALL IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, FOLLOWED BY FIVE YEARS OF SUPERVISED PROBATION, IS AFFIRMED. ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO MADISON COUNTY.
Notes
. Miss.Code Ann. § 97-3-7(2)(b) (Rev.2006). Effective July 1, 2012, section 97-3-7(2) was amended. 2012 Miss. Laws ch. 514, § 8 (H.B.780). The aggravated-assault provision applicable in this case, which had been codified as section 97 — 3—7(2)(b), is now codified as Mississippi Code Annotated section 97-3-7(2)(a)(ii) (Supp.2012).
