Aрpellant was convicted after a jury trial of first-degree felony murder, D.C. Code §§ 22-2401 (1981), -3202 (1988 Supp.); attempted robbery while armed,
id.
§§ 22-2902 (1981), -3202 (1981 Supp.); and carrying a pistol without a license,
id.
§ 22-3204 (1981). On appeal, we remanded the case for vacation of the attеmpted armed robbery conviction
1
but affirmed in all other respects.
Townsend v. United States,
I
As the facts adduced at trial in this case arе set out in some detail in our earlier decision,
see Townsend, supra,
When they arrived at Gantt’s apartment, Walker knocked on the door; Gantt answered and invited him in. Just as Gantt was closing the door behind them, Pixley and appellant attemptеd to force their way in. Gantt tried to block the door, but Pix-ley pulled his gun and fired three shots at him — two of which found their mark. Gantt managed to force his way past his attackers, was shot once by appellant, and *726 staggered out of the apartment building wherе he died. His three assailants retreated to their car and drove Walker, who had been hit by one of Pixley’s three shots, to a local hospital.
Walker later confessed to his role in the murder, and inculpated appellant and Andy. Appellant was arrested and approximately 310 days later, on February 3, 1983, a grand jury returned an indictment against appellant. On March 2, 1983, appellant went to trial. After a mistrial, a new jury was impaneled and two days later found appellant guilty on all counts. Tоwnsend subsequently appealed from his conviction, asserting, inter alia, a violation of his right to a speedy trial and an abuse of discretion by the motions court in refusing to grant a new trial based on newly discovered evidence and ineffective assistancе of counsel. We affirmed his convictions on all but the attempted armed robbery count which we directed the trial court to vacate.
In a bid to place before the motions court arguments advanced for the first time on appeаl, appellant filed a § 23-110 motion alleging a speedy trial violation, as well as a motion for a new trial. After a hearing on March 20, 1987, the court denied the motions, issuing a written order filed on June 1, in which it set forth its reasons for the denial. This appeal fоllowed.
II
A.
Initially, we address appellant’s contention that the motions court erred in denying without an evidentiary hearing
4
his motion for a new trial. He argues that he is entitled to a new trial based on what he characterizes as “newly discovered evidence.” We review the motions judge’s grant or denial of a new trial motion only for abuse of discretion,
Hawthorne v. United States,
In order to prevail on a motion for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence, a defendant must show that
(1) [ ] the evidence was newly discovered since trial; (2) [the defendant] has demonstrated diligence in [his] efforts to procure the evidencе; (3) [ ] the evidence is [not] merely cumulative or impeaching; (4) [] the evidence is material to the issues involved; and (5) [ ] the evidence is of such a nature that an acquittal would likely result from its use.
Smith v. United States,
We are thus left to review the motions court’s application of the fifth prong to the “newly discovered evidence” offered by appellant: a statement given by Anita Bealle on April 18,1983. In her statement, Bealle recalled her version of the events that occurred the morning of the shooting:
Last March sometime I was sitting in my living room on the couch.... I heard some pеople walking up the steps. And then I heard some loud knocking on a door like somebody was banging on a door with his fists. Then I heard somebody talking kinda loud. I hear someone say “No man, you got our shit!” Then I heard the gun shot. After I heard the gun shot I heard some people running *727 down the stairs and then I heard three more shots. I looked out the peephole and saw three guys running out the door.
Appellant points to the apparent discrepancy between Bealle’s statement that she heard somеone say “You got our shit!” and the government’s principal witness at trial who testified that he said “Where is the shit?” From this semantic variance, appellant constructs a scenario in which “whoever climbed the stairs to Gantt’s apartment that morning did so ... because Gantt had reneged on a narcotics deal and was holding narcotics (“our shit”) that Walker and his companions claimed to be theirs.” Thus, he concludes, the Bealle affidavit establishes a claim of right defense for appellant negating the attempted armed robbery count and undermining the felony murder count. In addition, appellant concludes that the discrepancy raises serious questions about Walker’s veracity.
In contrast, in the view of the motions judge,
5
the discrepancy between the use of the possessive “our” аnd the article “the” was insufficient to satisfy the fifth prong of
Heard.
We agree. Appellant s “newly discovered evidence” is not of “such a nature that an acquittal would likely result from its use.”
Heard, supra,
B.
Appellant next contends that the motions court erred in denying without an eviden-tiary hearing
7
his motion for a new trial based on ineffective assistance of counsel.
8
*728
To prevail on a claim that the actions (or inactions) of counsel have abridged the right to effective assistance of counsel, the movant must show both that his trial counsel’s performance was deficient and that the deficient рerformance prejudiced the defense.
Strickland v. Washington,
The error upon which appellant predicates his argument that the performance of his attorney was deficient was counsel’s failure to unearth Bealle’s statement and call her as a witness at trial. Although the issue was not actually before us in Townsend’s previous appeal, we noted that such а contention was without merit.
Townsend, supra,
insufficient to establish that the entire trial cannot be relied on as having produced a just result.... [Cjounsel ably рresented an alibi defense, which the jury declined to credit. In presenting that defense, and generally throughout the trial, counsel was functioning as “counsel” as contemplated by the Sixth Amendment.
Id.; see Hill v. United States,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
See Price v. United States,
. This last, contention is without merit. Appellant bases his speedy trial argument on the onе year and ten day delay between his indictment and trial. In considering appellant’s original appeal, we accepted the government’s explanation for the delay at face value, as appellant urged us to do, and cоncluded there was no speedy trial violation.
Townsend, supra,
Even if we were to disbelieve the government’s proffered explanation, appellant’s argument would fail to meet the test set forth in
Barker v. Wingo,
.We also deny appellee’s Motion to Strike Non-record Material from Appеllant’s Volume of Appendices, and grant appellant’s Motion to Supplement the Record.
. For the sake of clarity, we note that while both parties presented their arguments orally to the trial court at the March 20 hearing, the court did not permit appellant to subpoena and introduce into evidence certain grand jury and other documents regarding his claims. Thus, while there was a hearing on the topic, it was not an “evidentiary hearing” as that term is ordinarily used in the Superior Court. It is the trial court’s failure to take this extra step to which appellant assigns error.
. And in our view, albeit in dictum, in Townsend.
. Appellant’s reliance on a claim of right defense as a basis for acquittal is misplaced. We have never held that a person can use forcible sеlf-help to retake illegal drugs from another. Nor do we now,
cf. People v. Reid,
The cases cited by appellant to support his position are inapplicable here.
Cates, supra,
. See supra n. 4.
. We note that the preferred method of leveling a challenge at the effectiveness of trial counsel is through a motion pursuant to D.C. Code § 23-110.
See United States
v.
Higdon,
. In passing, wе observe an inconsistency between appellant’s assertion that counsel was deficient in failing to discover the Bealle statement, and his argument regarding the new trial motion based on newly discovered evidence where he contends that counsel “has demonstrated diligence in [his] efforts to procure the [statement.]”
Smith, supra,
