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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION – SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P 65.37
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
Appellee :
:
v. :
:
ABRAHAM MITCHELL, :
:
Appellant : No. 1309 WDA 2012
Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence March 19, 2012,
Court of Common Pleas, Allegheny County,
Criminal Division at No. CP-02-CR-0016261-2010
BEFORE: DONOHUE, ALLEN and MUSMANNO, JJ.
MEMORANDUM BY DONOHUE, J.: FILED SEPTEMBER 09, 2014
Abraham Mitchell (“Mitchell”) appeals from the March 19, 2012
judgment of sentence entered by the Allegheny County Court of Common
Pleas following his conviction of third-degree murder and carrying a firearm
without a license.1 Specifically, Mitchell asserts that the trial court abused
its discretion by permitting the Commonwealth to admit a photograph that
depicted the victim’s body after the shooting. Upon review, we affirm.
The trial court summarized the facts of the case as follows:
On November 13, 2010, [Mitchell] and Bradley Smith
arranged to purchase fifteen bricks of heroin from
Duerryl Whitaker for $3,750. The purchase was
facilitated and arranged by Jasmine Howard and
Clarence White, who were relatives and friends of
Whitaker. (T.T. 191, 197, 244, 453, 459, 729-733).
That evening Howard and White drove to the
Carnegie section of Allegheny County and picked up
1
18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2502(c), 6106(a)(1).
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[Mitchell] and Smith. They returned to Howard’s
apartment in the Crafton Heights section of the City
of Pittsburgh where they awaited Whitaker’s arrival.
(T.T. 41-42, 49, 193-194, 456, 729-730, 732). At
approximately 7:00 P.M., Whitaker arrived with a
small cardboard box containing the heroin. (T.T.
196, 751, 774-775). Whitaker had a brief
conversation with Howard in her bedroom and then
went to the living room where he approached
[Mitchell] and Smith to discuss the heroin purchase.
T.T. 196-197, 244-245, 247, 458, 750).
The money and drugs were placed on the couch for
the transaction, but Smith took back the money
when he saw that Whitaker had only brought
approximately thirty bundles of heroin. (733-735,
747, 751, 753, 780). When Smith took back the
money, Whitaker stated, ‘No, whoa, whoa, nah,’ and
a struggle ensued between Smith and Whitaker.
(T.T. 754). Whitaker managed to get on top of
Smith, and Smith pulled out a .22 revolver and shot
it once, not striking Whitaker. Smith and Whitaker
began to struggle over the gun, and [Mitchell] pulled
out a .380 semiautomatic and fired a shot into the
couch. Howard ran into her bedroom to retrieve her
handgun while Smith and Whitaker continued to
struggle. [Mitchell] ran over to Whitaker and shot
him multiple times (‘emptied the gun’), and fled the
apartment. (T.T. 198, 250, 252-255, 735-739, 742-
743, 755, 760, 780). Smith, now freed from the
struggle as a result of Whitaker being shot by
[Mitchell], also shot Whitaker, grabbed the heroin,
and fled the apartment. (T.T. 199, 210, 255-256,
743, 760). Howard pursued Smith and shot him in
the leg as he ran down the hallway outside the
apartment. [Mitchell] and Smith escaped down a
staircase to the outside of the building. (T.T. 199-
201, 224, 257, 269, 761-763, 789, 793).
Howard returned to her apartment to find Whitaker
unresponsive and lying on his face. After turning him
over, she called 911 and yelled out the window for
help. (T.T. 201-202). Whitaker was pronounced dead
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on scene by responding paramedics. (T.T. 43). As a
result of being shot a total of seven times, Whitaker
suffered a perforated lung, spleen, stomach,
pericardium, aorta, and femoral vein, as well as a
fractured rib and left shoulder. The cause of death
was multiple gunshot wounds to the trunk, and the
manner of death was homicide. (T.T. 410, 412-416,
418-419, 450).
The gunshots inside Howard’s apartment alerted
Victory Security guard Ian Clinton, who saw
[Mitchell] and Smith emerge from the building.
Clinton drew his weapon and ordered both fleeing
shooters to stop. (T.T. 383-385, 387). [Mitchell] and
Smith disregarded Clinton and fled down the fence
line adjacent to the building, with Clinton in pursuit
and continuously ordering them to stop. (T.T. 385).
[Mitchell] jumped down a steep hill to a parking lot
below, and escaped through a pathway. (T.T. 340-
341, 385). Smith jumped down the hill and fell,
dropping the box of heroin. He limped to the
pathway without the heroin. (T.T. 341-342, 349-350,
385, 389). Clinton pursued Smith until Clinton
tripped at the entrance to the pathway. The pathway
led to the Crucible Street side of the apartment
complex and access to a Port Authority busway. (T.T.
341, 385-386). Unable to continue the pursuit,
Clinton returned to the apartment building and gave
a detailed description of what Smith was wearing
and his direction of flight to City of Pittsburgh Police
on scene. Officers Aaron Loughran and Vincent
Pacheco began to search for [Mitchell] and Smith in
their respective marked police vehicles. (T.T. 370,
387, 390, 514). After a brief chase, officers Pacheco
and Loughran apprehended Smith, and Clinton
identified Smith as one of the individuals he chased
from the apartment building complex. (T.T. 374-375,
386-387, 515-516). Smith was transported to the
hospital for a gunshot wound to the leg. (T.T. 379,
517). Howard identified [Mitchell] in a photo array as
one of the two individuals who shot Whitaker and he
was later arrested and charged as noted
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hereinabove. (T.T. 204-205). Smith was charged as
a co-defendant.
Police recovered one .22 caliber bullet, four .380
cartridge casings, and one .380 caliber bullet
fragment from inside the apartment. The medical
examiner’s office removed one .22 caliber bullet and
two .380 caliber bullets from Whitaker during the
autopsy. The crime lab was able to determine that
the .380 caliber bullets and fragment matched each
other and were discharged from the same firearm,
and that Howard’s .380 pistol was excluded as a
match. It was determined that three .380 cartridge
casings, one .380 caliber bullet, and two .380 caliber
bullet fragments recovered from the hallway
matched Howard’s .380 pistol. (T.T. 637, 639, 641-
642, 644-646).
Trial Court Opinion, 1/10/14, at 4-7 (footnotes omitted).
A jury trial took place from December 13 through December 19, 2011.
The jury convicted Mitchell of the above-listed offenses and acquitted him of
robbery and criminal conspiracy.2 The trial court sentenced him on March
19, 2012 to an aggregate term of 20 to 40 years of imprisonment.
Mitchell filed timely post-sentence motions on March 22, 2012,
requesting reconsideration of his sentence and challenging the weight of the
evidence to support his conviction of third-degree murder, asserting that the
jury instead should have convicted him of voluntary manslaughter. Trial
counsel also filed a motion seeking leave to withdraw. The trial court
granted trial counsel permission to withdraw and appointed new counsel to
represent Mitchell. Prior to the trial court disposing of Mitchell’s post-
2
18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 3701(a)(1), 903(a)(1).
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sentence motions, new counsel prematurely filed a notice of appeal on April
18, 2012. On July 27, 2012, the post-sentence motions were denied by
operation of law. On August 8, 2012, new counsel filed a praecipe to
withdraw the original appeal filed and subsequently filed a timely notice of
appeal on August 27, 2012.3 The trial court issued an order for counsel to
file a concise statement of errors complained of on appeal pursuant to
Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b). Counsel requested, and the trial court granted,
numerous continuances because of the unavailability of several volumes of
the notes of testimony from trial.4 Counsel ultimately complied with the trial
court’s request, and the trial court filed its written opinion pursuant to
Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a).
Mitchell raises one issue for our review: “Whether the trial court
abused its discretion in allowing Exhibit 8 (a photograph) into evidence?”
3
Although Mitchell filed his notice of appeal 31 days after the denial of post-
sentence motions, the thirtieth day fell on a Sunday, and thus the notice of
appeal was timely filed the following Monday. See Pa.R.A.P. 903(a)
(appeals from the lower courts must be filed within 30 days of the entry of
the order appealed from); Pa.R.C.P. 106(b) (“Whenever the last day of any
such period shall fall on Saturday or Sunday, or on any day made a legal
holiday by the laws of this Commonwealth or of the United States, such day
shall be omitted from the computation.”).
4
According to the trial court, on May 9, 2013, it issued a Rule to Show
Cause why the court reporter should not be held in contempt based upon the
court reporter’s failure to produce all notes of testimony from trial. Trial
Court Opinion, 1/10/14, at 3 n.5. The court held a contempt hearing, and in
June, the court reporter produced the notes of testimony. Id.
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Mitchell’s Brief at 5. We review this issue according to the following well-
settled standard:
Traditionally, in reviewing trial court decision making
regarding the admissibility of evidence, an appellate
court determines whether the lower tribunal abused
its discretion. An abuse of discretion is not merely an
error of judgment, but if in reaching a conclusion the
law is over ridden or misapplied, or the judgment
exercised is manifestly unreasonable, or the result of
partiality, prejudice, bias or ill-will, as shown by the
evidence or the record, discretion is abused.
Commonwealth v. Walker, 92 A.3d 766, 772-73 (Pa. 2014) (internal
citations and quotations omitted). This is also true for our review of the
admission of photographic evidence, which we will likewise affirm absent an
abuse of discretion. Commonwealth v. Spell, 28 A.3d 1274, 1279 (Pa.
2011).
When considering the admissibility of photographs of
a homicide victim, which by their very nature can be
unpleasant, disturbing, and even brutal, the trial
court must engage in a two-step analysis:
First a [trial] court must determine whether the
photograph is inflammatory. If not, it may be
admitted if it has relevance and can assist the jury’s
understanding of the facts. If the photograph is
inflammatory, the trial court must decide whether or
not the photographs are of such essential evidentiary
value that their need clearly outweighs the likelihood
of inflaming the minds and passions of the jurors.
Id.
Mitchell contends that Commonwealth’s Exhibit 8 – a color photograph
of the victim, lying as police found him, with blood on the floor beneath and
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next to his left arm – was inadmissible because its probative value was
outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, and its admission warrants the
grant of a new trial. Mitchell’s Brief at 17-21. The trial court found that
Mitchell waived consideration of the inflammatory nature of the photograph
because of his failure to include it in the certified record. Trial Court
Opinion, 1/10/14, at 11. Nonetheless, the trial court found that the
photograph was relevant and admissible, as it aided the jury in
understanding the crime scene and witness testimony. Id. at 11-12.
We begin by addressing the trial court’s finding of waiver. We believe
the trial court misconstrues waiver involving the certified record. It is true
that “appellate courts are limited to considering those facts that have been
duly certified in the record on appeal.” Commonwealth v. Williams, 715
A.2d 1101, 1103 (Pa. 1998) (emphasis added). It is also true that an
appellant’s failure to ensure the record certified for appeal contains
information needed for this Court to conduct a review results in waiver of the
issue(s) raised. Commonwealth v. Martz, 926 A.2d 514, 524-25 (Pa.
Super. 2007). These statements of the law, however, are not applicable to
trial courts, as the record is not “certified” prior to its transmission to this
Court on appeal. Rather, pursuant to Rule 1931(c) of the Pennsylvania
Rules of Appellate Procedure, the clerk of the lower court transmits the
complete record to this Court for review, certifying at that time that it is the
entire record. See Pa.R.A.P. 1931(c). In this case, the record reflects that
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Kate Barkman, the Allegheny County Clerk of Courts certified for
transmission to this Court the entire record on January 13, 2014. See
Certificate and Transmittal of Record to Appellate Court, 1/13/14.
Furthermore, once the record is transmitted to this Court, parties still
have an avenue to supplement the record that has been certified for appeal.
Pursuant to Rule 1926, a party may seek to correct or modify the record:
(a) If any difference arises as to whether the record
truly discloses what occurred in the trial court, the
difference shall be submitted to and settled by that
court after notice to the parties and opportunity for
objection, and the record made to conform to the
truth.
(b) If anything material to a party is omitted from
the record by error, breakdown in processes of the
court, or accident or is misstated therein, the
omission or misstatement may be corrected by the
following means:
(1) by the trial court or the appellate court upon
application or on its own initiative at any time; in the
event of correction or modification by the trial court,
that court shall direct that a supplemental record be
certified and transmitted if necessary; or
(2) by the parties by stipulation filed in the trial
court, in which case, if the trial court clerk has
already certified the record, the parties shall file in
the appellate court a copy of any stipulation filed
pursuant to this rule, and the trial court clerk shall
certify and transmit as a supplemental record the
materials described in the stipulation.
(c) The trial court clerk shall transmit any
supplemental record required by this rule within 14
days of the order or stipulation that requires it.
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(d) All other questions as to the form and content of
the record shall be presented to the appellate court.
Pa.R.A.P. 1926.
In the case at bar, the record reflects that on February 7, 2014,
pursuant to Rule 1926, the parties stipulated that Exhibit 8 “was admitted
into evidence” at trial but “was not transmitted to the Superior Court” in the
certified record, and that the exhibit “should be transmitted to the Superior
Court.” Stipulation, 2/7/14, at ¶¶ 1, 3, 4. The trial court signed the order
attached to the stipulation, requiring the clerk of courts “to promptly forward
[Exhibit 8] to the Prothonotary of the Superior Court of Pennsylvania to be
made part of the official record[.]” Trial Court Order, 2/7/14. We therefore
have Exhibit 8 before us and there is no basis for us to find waiver of the
issue relative to the certified record.
We note that Pennsylvania Rule of Criminal Procedure 113(B) requires
that the clerk of courts maintain a list of docket entries, defined as “a
chronological list, in electronic or written form, of documents and entries in
the criminal case file and of all proceedings in the case.” Pa.R.Crim.P.
113(B). The docket entries in a criminal case must include, inter alia, “the
location of exhibits made part of the record during the proceedings[.]”
Pa.R.Crim.P. 113(C)(7). Thus, the trial court should always be able to
ascertain the location of the exhibits entered and obtain them if necessary.
Our review of the record reveals that, in contravention to Rule 113, there
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are no notations in the docket to indicate the location of the exhibits.5 Thus,
if the trial court was hampered by the inability to locate Exhibit 8, the issue
was an administrative one more appropriately directed to the clerk of courts
or her designee and not the basis for finding waiver by the Appellant.
Turning now to the substantive issue before us, we agree with the trial
court that it did not abuse its discretion by admitting Exhibit 8 into evidence.
The cases cited by Mitchell in support of his argument all pertain to
photographs of autopsies or of the wounds sustained by the victim. See
Mitchell’s Brief at 19-20 (citing Commonwealth v. Eckhart, 242 A.2d 271,
274 (Pa. 1968) (granting a new trial based on the trial court’s admission of a
photograph of the murder victim’s skull, which included her “gruesome scalp
and bloody web of tangled hair,” which were irrelevant and could easily have
been excised from the picture); Commonwealth v. Powell, 241 A.2d 119,
121 (Pa. 1968) (granting a new trial based on the trial court’s admission of
color photographs of the victim’s autopsy, as “[w]hatever aid these
photographs may have been, their use was clearly outweighed by the
emotional impact it would undoubtedly have on the jury”); Commonwealth
5
In his appellate brief, counsel for Mitchell indicates that it is local practice
in Allegheny County for admitted trial exhibits to be returned to counsel for
the party that presented them for admission. Mitchell’s Brief at 16 n.4. If
that is in fact what occurred in this case, the trial court could have contacted
the Commonwealth to obtain Exhibit 8 for its review prior to authoring its
1925(a) opinion. There is no indication that the trial court made any
overture to the Commonwealth in order to obtain Exhibit 8 prior to authoring
its 1925(a) opinion.
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v. LeGares, 709 A.2d 922, 924-25 (Pa. Super. 1998) (granting a new trial
based on the trial court’s admission of a “gruesome” and “gory” color picture
of the victim’s skull from the homicide by shotgun, including the depiction of
“flesh flayed from the skull and folded back, the fractured skull wired
together to reveal the gaping entry wound, and the victim’s brain
removed”)). In the case at bar, on the other hand, the only objectionable
feature of the photograph in question is the presence of blood. It is not an
autopsy photo, no gunshot wounds are visible in the photograph, and there
is nothing particularly gruesome or gory. See Commonwealth’s Exhibit 8.
In Commonwealth v. Spell, our Supreme Court stated that a finding
that a color photograph is inflammatory “is not [required] by the mere
depiction of blood. Although the presence of blood on the victim depicted in
the photographs is unpleasant, it is not in and of itself inflammatory. Murder
evidence is not often agreeable, but sanguinity does not equal
inadmissibility.” Spell, 28 A.2d at 1279. The Court in Spell found no abuse
of discretion in the admission of photographs of the victim’s bloody face
because they “aided the jury in understanding witness testimony regarding
the body’s condition and location.” Id. at 1280.
In Commonwealth v. Woodward, 394 A.2d 508 (Pa. 1978), the trial
court permitted the Commonwealth to enter into evidence black and white
photographs of the bloodied body of the victim at the scene of the murder.
Id. at 511. Our Supreme Court found no abuse of discretion in the trial
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court’s finding that the photographs were relevant “not only to corroborate
the testimony of the medical pathologist, but also for the additional purpose
of aiding and providing the jury with an overall view of the scene of the
crime and the position of the body in relation to it.” Id.
Here, as in Woodward, the contested photograph was of the victim at
the scene of the murder, lying in a pool of blood, which the trial court
admitted “for the purpose of allowing [the jury] to view the scene as it [was]
being described by [Detective Boose].” N.T., 12/13/11, at 64. The trial
court further issued a cautionary instruction to the jury, informing it of the
purpose of the admission of the photograph and warning that the jury
“should not let it stir up any motion to the prejudice of either defendant,”
again stating that the photograph was being admitted for a “limited
purpose.” Id. The trial court reiterated this cautionary instruction during its
closing charge to the jury. N.T., 12/19/11, at 875-76.
The trial court found the photograph in question was not inflammatory
and was relevant and assisted the jury’s understanding of the crime scene
and testimony concerning the crime scene. Trial Court Opinion, 1/10/14, at
11-12. Based upon our Supreme Court’s holdings in Spell and Woodward,
we find no abuse of discretion in this decision. See Spell, 28 A.3d at 1279;
Woodward, 394 A.2d at 511.
Judgment of sentence affirmed.
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Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 9/9/2014
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