TBA Law Blog


Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Mar 11, 2024

The Tennessee Supreme Court last week abolished a common law rule that required testimony of a criminal defendant’s accomplice to be supported by other evidence. The change, which will apply prospectively, was made in an opinion upholding a first-degree murder conviction. The court found that the “accomplice-corroboration rule is effectively obsolete as a common law rule and that the General Assembly is better equipped to decide whether such a rule should exist in Tennessee.” Supreme Court Justice Sharon G. Lee agreed in a separate opinion that the conviction should be affirmed but disagreed with abolishment of the accomplice-corroboration rule. She argued that the rule has long served to safeguard against untrustworthy accomplice testimony. Justice Sarah K. Campbell also filed a separate opinion agreeing with much of the majority, but argued that abolishing the rule should have been applied retroactively. Read more about the decision from the Administrative Office of the Courts.