J-A19006-15
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
PENNSYLVANIA
Appellee
v.
EUGENE JAMES MCCARTHY, JR.,
Appellant No. 11 WDA 2014
Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence November 18, 2013
In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County
Criminal Division at No(s): CP-02-CR-0011401-2012
BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., JENKINS, J., and MUSMANNO, J.
DISSENTING MEMORANDUM BY BENDER, P.J.E.: FILED JANUARY 15, 2016
I agree with the Majority that there was sufficient evidence to disprove
that Appellant’s co-defendant, Quintelle Rankin, shot the victim in self-
defense. However, I disagree that there was sufficient evidence to hold
Appellant vicariously liable for third-degree murder and, relatedly, I disagree
that there was sufficient evidence to convict him of the most serious form(s)
of robbery. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
It is undisputed that Appellant did not shoot and kill Johns.
Commonwealth’s Brief, at 13 (“In the instant case, [A]ppellant was not the
actual gunman.”). Furthermore, the Commonwealth did not charge
Appellant with conspiring to commit a homicide offense. Thus, Appellant’s
culpability for third-degree murder in this case can only derive from either
his role as an accomplice to the killing itself (accomplice-to-murder), or
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through his role as co-conspirator to the crime of robbery (conspiratorial
liability). To establish either theory of guilt, I believe it was critical for the
Commonwealth to demonstrate that Appellant knew Rankin possessed a gun
at the time he acted in concert with Rankin to rob Johns of his marijuana.
Proof of Appellant’s knowledge in this regard was essential to establish that
Appellant acted with malice for purposes of proving accomplice-to-murder;
or, for the purposes of conspiratorial liability, that the killing was the natural
and probable consequence of the robbery to which Appellant conspired.
Critical to my analysis of these theories, therefore, is whether the
Commonwealth proved that Appellant knew that Rankin was armed when
their fatal interaction with Johns began or, at least, whether such knowledge
could be reasonably inferred from the established facts. If that inference
was reasonable, then Appellant’s sufficiency claim regarding his conviction
for third-degree murder is meritless.1 First, however, I briefly address the
trial court’s faulty analysis of this issue.
The trial court’s theory of culpability is defunct
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1
This is true despite Appellant’s contention that conspiratorial liability did
not survive the adoption of our Crimes Code. Appellant’s argument
regarding the Commonwealth’s failure to prove malice for purposes of
accomplice liability for third-degree murder hinges upon his contention that
he was unaware that Rankin was armed. If Appellant is guilty of third-
degree murder as Rankin’s accomplice, his liability for that offense as a co-
conspirator to robbery is superfluous.
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The trial court sidesteps answering whether there was adequate
proof that Appellant knew that Rankin was armed, even though the
Commonwealth implicitly acknowledges the importance of that inference in
establishing Appellant’s guilt (as the Commonwealth does not present any
arguments supporting Appellant’s culpability for third-degree murder that do
not rely on that inference). This is apparently due to the trial court’s
adoption of a common misunderstanding of the scope of accomplice liability
under the Pennsylvania Crimes Code.
The trial court’s Rule 1925(a) opinion implies that, because Appellant
was Rankin’s accomplice in a robbery (a position somewhat conceded by
Appellant2), that Appellant can be held liable for third-degree murder on that
basis alone, presumably under the theory that the murder was a natural and
probable consequence of the robbery. See Trial Court Opinion (TCO),
7/18/14, at 10 (concluding, after summarizing the evidence demonstrating
Appellant’s complicity in the robbery, that the court “believes this evidence
was sufficient to prove that [Appellant] acted in concert with Mr. Rankin to
aid and assist in the robbery which resulted in the shooting of … Johns”)
(emphasis added). However, as our Supreme Court has recently made
clear:
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2
As discussed in greater detail, infra, Appellant does not dispute his
involvement in a robbery. However, Appellant does contend that he did not
act as an accomplice to an armed robbery, and thus disputes the specific
provisions of the robbery for which he was convicted.
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Per the express terms of the Crimes Code, … accomplice
liability has been made offense-specific. Accordingly, the
general rule is that a person is an accomplice of another in the
commission of “an offense” if, acting with the intent to promote
or facilitate the commission of “the offense,” he solicits the other
person to commit it or aids, agrees, or attempts to aid the other
person in planning or committing it. 18 Pa.C.S. § 306(c). The
broader approaches—including the common-design theory and
the related precept that an accomplice was liable for all of
natural and probable consequences of the principal's actions in
the commission of a target offense—were supplanted by the
General Assembly with the adoption of the Crimes Code and its
incorporation of core restraints on criminal liability taken from
the Model Penal Code. See generally Commonwealth v.
Roebuck, 612 Pa. 642, 651–56, 32 A.3d 613, 618–22 (2011)
(discussing the interrelationship between the culpability
provisions of the Crimes Code and the Model Penal Code in
terms of the treatment of accomplice liability).
In particular, the salient terms of Section 306 of the
Crimes Code (“Liability for conduct of another; complicity”) are
derived from Section 2.06 of the Model Penal Code, which
expressly rejected the expansive common-design and natural-
and-probable-consequences doctrines, refocusing liability for
complicity squarely upon intent and conduct, not merely results.
See American Law Institute, Model Penal Code and
Commentaries § 2.06 cmt. 6(b), at 312 (1985) (“[T]he liability
of an accomplice ought not to be extended beyond the purposes
that he shares. Probabilities have an important evidential
bearing on these issues; to make them independently sufficient
is to predicate the liability on negligence when, for good reason,
more is normally required before liability is found.”). After the
passage of the Crimes Code, status as an accomplice relative to
some crimes within a larger criminal undertaking or episode no
longer per se renders a defendant liable as an accomplice for all
other crimes committed. See Commonwealth v. Flanagan,
578 Pa. 587, 607–08 & n. 11, 854 A.2d 489, 501 & n. 11
(2004). Rather, closer, offense-specific analysis of intent and
conduct is required.
Commonwealth v. Knox, 105 A.3d 1194, 1196-97 (Pa. 2014).
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Thus, the trial court appears to apply the now-defunct “natural and
probable consequence” theory of pre-Crimes Code, common law accomplice
liability to hold Appellant accountable for third-degree murder based on
Appellant’s role as an accomplice to robbery. However, because accomplice
liability is offense-specific, Appellant’s conviction for third-degree murder can
only be sustained via accomplice liability if Appellant was an accomplice to
the crime of third-degree murder itself.
Appellant’s knowledge of Rankin’s firearm
The Commonwealth concedes that no direct testimony supports the
factual conclusion that Appellant knew that Rankin was armed.
Commonwealth’s Brief, at 15. Instead, the Commonwealth argues that
“through the compelling circumstantial evidence in this case, the only
reasonable inference is that [A]ppellant was fully aware of the firearm within
Rankin’s possession.” Id. Thus, I would undertake a review of the evidence
to determine whether it was sufficient to support a reasonable inference that
Appellant knew that Rankin was armed when they conspired to rob Johns.
To support its assertion, the Commonwealth recounts the facts leading
up to the robbery of Johns, with special emphasis on Appellant’s comment to
Rankin and Estes regarding potential robbery targets (“licks”) as they
surveyed the area where the robbery occurred. The Commonwealth also
relies on the fact that Rankin “simultaneously pulled out a gun” when
Appellant declared that Johns “might as well give me all of it.”
Commonwealth’s Brief, at 16.
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I disagree that such evidence was sufficient to demonstrate Appellant’s
knowledge that Rankin was armed. The Commonwealth provided no
evidence, testimonial or otherwise, directly demonstrating, or tending to
demonstrate, Appellant’s knowledge of Rankin’s possession of a firearm.
Even assuming that the Commonwealth adequately proved that Appellant
and Rankin had formed an implicit agreement to rob Johns, it does not
necessarily follow, in combination with Rankin’s use of the firearm during the
robbery, that Appellant knew that Rankin was armed. Such knowledge is
certainly not, as the Commonwealth claims, ‘the only reasonable inference’
to flow from such a fact. The Commonwealth also embellishes the record by
suggesting that Johns drew his weapon simultaneous to Appellant’s demand.
The trial court’s summary of the facts indicates that Rankin pulled his gun
several seconds after Appellant demanded the rest of Johns’ marijuana.
TCO, at 2.
It is not unreasonable to believe, based on the facts and circumstances
proven at trial, that 1) Appellant intended to simply grab Johns’ marijuana
and run; or 2) Appellant intended to use his 3-to-1 numerical advantage to
physically intimidate Johns, but without any intent to employ the use of
force; or 3) Appellant intended or anticipated the use of some physical force
to get Johns to comply, but did not anticipate Rankin’s use of a firearm. It is
patently unreasonable to suggest Appellant’s knowledge of Rankin’s firearm
flows directly from the fact that they shared the intent to rob, and nothing
more. Moreover, to suggest that Rankin’s use of a firearm demonstrated
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Appellant’s knowledge of it at an earlier time is simply bootstrapping.
Clearly, Appellant knew Rankin had a firearm when Rankin began shooting
Johns. Far more important, however, is what Appellant knew beforehand.
Simply put, although there was clearly sufficient evidence to
demonstrate Appellant’s complicity in a robbery, the same evidence speaks
very little to the question of whether Appellant knew that Rankin was armed.
It is pure speculation on the Commonwealth’s part to suggest otherwise, and
such speculation is not congruent with our sufficiency standard.3 As this
Court explained in Commonwealth v. Paschall, 482 A.2d 589 (Pa. Super.
1984):
In assessing [the] appellant's sufficiency of the evidence claim,
we are mindful that the Commonwealth may sustain its burden
of proof by means of wholly circumstantial evidence, which, of
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3
The Commonwealth also suggests that the “precise coordination of
[A]ppellant’s and Rankin’s efforts to steal the marijuana leads to the
reasonable inference … that [A]ppellant knew that Rankin was armed[.]”
Commonwealth’s Brief, at 19. The Commonwealth fails to justify its use of
the term “precise” in this context, and appears to simply be rehashing the
same argument—that Appellant and Rankin’s common scheme to rob Johns
necessarily involved Appellant’s knowledge that Rankin was armed. This is
still an argument rooted in speculation, suggesting Appellant had specific
knowledge of the presence of a concealed firearm on Rankin merely because
the two had implicitly agreed to engage in a criminal enterprise. However,
the fact that Rankin drew his weapon soon after Appellant initiated the
robbery is not particularly suggestive of Appellant’s prior knowledge of
Rankin’s gun. Hypothetically speaking, Appellant could have known that
Rankin had a gun regardless of Rankin’s choice to draw and use it during the
robbery. The fact that Rankin drew the gun during the robbery does
suggest, quite strongly, that Rankin anticipated using a gun during that
robbery, but implies nothing regarding Appellant’s knowledge.
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necessity, draws into play the affixing of a line of demarcation
between the requisite degree of persuasion (“beyond a
reasonable doubt”) and impermissible speculation. See
Commonwealth v. Cimaszewski, 447 Pa. 141, 288 A.2d 805
(1972). The former is required while the latter is not tolerated
as the basis for a conviction. Commonwealth v. Meredith,
490 Pa. 303, 416 A.2d 481 (1980). Thus, in the
Commonwealth's efforts to establish guilt predicated upon
circumstantial evidence, it must be kept in mind that, “[t]he
inferred fact must flow, beyond a reasonable doubt, from the
proven fact where the inferred fact is relied upon to establish the
guilt of the accused or the existence of one of [the] elements of
the offense.” Commonwealth v. Meredith, supra, 490 Pa. at
310, 416 A.2d at 485.
Id. at 591-92.
Despite an extensive direct examination of Cory Estes,4 and an equally
extensive cross-examination of Rankin, the Commonwealth never once even
attempted to solicit testimony or evidence tending to demonstrate that
Appellant knew that Rankin was armed.5 Thus, I agree with Appellant that
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4
Cory Estes was the Commonwealth’s primary witness against Appellant and
Rankin. Estes had conspired with Appellant and Rankin to rob the victim.
5
Obviously, neither Estes nor Rankin could have testified directly as to the
content of Appellant’s mind. However, one can imagine any number of
hypothetical scenarios which could form the basis for the jury to have
rationally inferred Appellant’s knowledge that a firearm might be used in the
robbery. For instance, if Rankin displayed his firearm to his cohorts prior to
the robbery, an inference of Appellant’s knowledge of Rankin’s possession of
that weapon would clearly be beyond dispute, let alone reasonable.
Similarly, if Appellant had threatened to shoot Johns, it would be reasonable
to conclude that an armed robbery was intended, even if such a threat did
not specifically address which robber was armed. However, no facts or
circumstances found in the record of this case tend to support the notion
that Appellant knew that Rankin was armed, other than the fact that Rankin
used the weapon during the robbery.
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the Commonwealth failed to prove that he knew that Rankin was armed
when he grabbed Johns’ marijuana. With this factual issue resolved, I would
move on to consider Appellant’s culpability as an accomplice to the murder
itself or by means of conspiratorial liability.
Accomplice to third-degree murder
To demonstrate Appellant’s guilt as an accomplice to third-degree
murder, the Commonwealth was required to show at trial that, “with the
intent of promoting or facilitating the commission of” third-degree murder,
Appellant “solicit[ed] such other person to commit it;” or “aid[ed] or
agree[d] or attempt[ed] to aid such other person in planning or committing
it[.]” 18 Pa.C.S. § 306(c). Fundamental to this task is demonstrating that
Appellant shared with the principal, Rankin, the requisite mens rea for the
offense of third-degree murder—malice. See Commonwealth v. Roebuck,
612 Pa. 642, 660, 32 A.3d 613, 624 (Pa. 2011) (“[A] conviction for murder
of the third degree is supportable under complicity theory where the
Commonwealth proves the accomplice acted with the culpable mental state
required of a principal actor, namely, malice.”). Malice is defined as follows:
Malice exists where there is a “wickedness of disposition,
hardness of heart, cruelty, recklessness of consequences, and a
mind regardless of social duty, although a particular person may
not be intended to be injured.” Commonwealth v. Pigg, 391
Pa.Super. 418, 571 A.2d 438, 441 (1990), appeal denied, 525
Pa. 644, 581 A.2d 571 (1990) (quoting Commonwealth v.
Drum, 58 Pa. 9, 15 (1868)). Where malice is based on a
reckless disregard of consequences, it is not sufficient to show
mere recklessness; rather, it must be shown the defendant
consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk
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that his actions might cause death or serious bodily injury. See
Commonwealth v. Scales, 437 Pa.Super. 14, 648 A.2d 1205,
1207 (1994), appeal denied, 540 Pa. 640, 659 A.2d 559 (1995)
(regarding third degree murder). A defendant must display a
conscious disregard for almost certain death or injury such that
it is tantamount to an actual desire to injure or kill; at the very
least, the conduct must be such that one could reasonably
anticipate death or serious bodily injury would likely and logically
result.
Commonwealth v. Kling, 731 A.2d 145, 147-48 (Pa. Super. 1999).
No evidence in this case tended to show that Appellant specifically
planned to injure or kill Johns, nor does the Commonwealth contend
otherwise. Thus, I would focus on the question of whether Appellant
exhibited conduct which displayed a “conscious disregard for almost certain
death[,]” or from which one could “reasonably anticipate death or serious
bodily injury would likely and logically result.” Id. Appellant argues that
the Commonwealth’s failure to prove that he knew that Rankin was armed
precluded the jury from finding that he acted with malice sufficient to
support his conviction for third-degree murder as an accomplice, given the
lack of other facts or circumstances demonstrating it:
Since Appellant thought that he and his companions w[ere]
going to commit a weaponless barehanded assault (at most)
upon the Decedent in order to take his marijuana, and since
there was no discussion of, e.g., beating Johns to death (even
only if need be), there was simply nothing in this case
suggesting to Appellant that death or extraordinary injury was a
remotely possible outcome, let alone an outcome that was
virtually certain to occur.
Appellant’s Brief, at 39. The Commonwealth does not offer a counter-
analysis other than to suggest that Appellant did, in fact, know that Rankin
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was armed when the robbery began. As discussed above, I have concluded
that the Commonwealth did not provide adequate evidence to allow that
inference.
To address whether Appellant was proven to have acted with malice, I
would direct our legal analysis to several cases discussed by the parties in
their briefs, beginning with Commonwealth v. Baskerville, 681 A.2d 195
(Pa. Super. 1996). Therein, the appellant had argued that the evidence was
“insufficient to prove malice in order to sustain his conviction for third-
degree murder.” Id. at 199. The Superior Court sustained Baskerville’s
conviction for third-degree murder, and, as necessary, the jury’s finding of
malice, based on the following facts:
On or about the night of March 30, 1994, Baskerville and
his friend, Baron Simmons, were walking through their West
Philadelphia neighborhood when they came upon the co-
defendant, John Haynes, and another man, Mark Malloy. Malloy
asked Baskerville if he had $100.00 that he owed him.
Baskerville, realizing that Haynes had a gun, replied that he did
not and began to walk away. Haynes called to Baskerville and
asked him if he knew who was sitting in a car that was parked
nearby. When Baskerville responded that he did not know,
Haynes suggested that they investigate the occupants of the car
together. Upon investigation of the auto, Baskerville discovered
that he knew both the driver's side occupant, Darren Williams,
and the passenger's side occupant, David Anderson. After a
brief conversation with the occupants, both Baskerville and
Haynes walked away from the car.
Upon reaching the street corner, Haynes asked Baskerville
whether Williams or Anderson was wearing any jewelry. After
Baskerville replied that both men were wearing jewelry, Haynes
asked Baskerville to return to the auto and ask the occupants for
a cigarette. Baskerville agreed, walked to the car and asked
Anderson for a cigarette. Meanwhile, Haynes approached the
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driver's side window and demanded Williams' jewelry at
gunpoint. As Williams was handing his watch to Haynes, he tried
to push the gun aside and drive away. Once Williams stepped
on the accelerator, Haynes shot him four times in the back. The
car, driven by Williams, crashed into a nearby, parked car.
Williams later died from massive blood loss. The day after the
robbery, Baskerville saw Haynes in the neighborhood, where he
promised Baskerville $50.00 for keeping quiet about the crime
and also forgave Baskerville's $100.00 debt owed to Malloy.
Id. at 197-98 (footnote omitted).
In rejecting Baskerville’s claim that he did not act with malice, it was
critical to the Baskerville Court’s analysis that he “entered into a criminal
conspiracy to commit armed robbery” and that “[a]t the time of the
agreement, Baskerville had knowledge that his co-conspirator, Haynes,
possessed a gun.” Id. at 200 (emphasis added). The Baskerville Court
concluded that Baskerville’s “actual participation in the crime” of robbery, in
addition to his knowledge that his cohort was armed, combined to
demonstrate “an extremely high risk that his actions might cause death or
serious bodily harm,” thereby justifying a finding that he acted with malice.
Id.
Similarly, in Commonwealth v. King, 990 A.2d 1172 (Pa. Super.
2010), the appellant argued that he lacked the requisite malice to be
convicted of third-degree murder, where the appellant was not the shooter
but knew the shooter was armed before the robbery commenced. The King
Court rejected his claim, noting that “[e]ven if [the a]ppellant did not
necessarily anticipate that [the shooter] would kill the Victim, the killing was
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a natural and probable consequence of the armed robbery in which [the two]
conspired.” Id. at 1179.
In Commonwealth v. Roebuck, 32 A.3d 613 (Pa. 2011), our
Supreme Court upheld a conviction over a challenge that accomplice to
third-degree murder was not a legally cognizable offense. Therein, our
Supreme Court remarked that malice had been proven because the
appellant had “participat[ed] in a scheme designed, at a minimum, to stage
an armed confrontation with the victim.” Id. at 615 n.4 (emphasis added).
In the instant case, however, Appellant did not know, or at least was
not proven to know, that Rankin was armed when the robbery of Johns
began. This fact stands in stark contrast to Baskerville and King, where
the appellants knew their cohorts intended to commit armed robbery, and to
the facts of Roebuck, where the appellant conspired with others to ambush
the victims with firearms. In all three of those cases, knowledge of the
intent of others to commit crimes of violence with firearms appears
dispositive as to whether the non-shooter appellants “consciously
disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk that [their] actions might
cause death or serious bodily injury” or “anticipate[d] death or serious bodily
injury would likely and logically result” from their actions.6 Kling, supra.
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6
In Baskerville and King, this critical fact had been established by the
appellants’ own defense theories that they had only participated in their
respective robberies while under duress from their armed cohorts. How this
fact was established in Roebuck was not discussed by our Supreme Court.
(Footnote Continued Next Page)
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It is certainly true that accomplice liability does not demand complicity
in the result of an offense. Roebuck, 32 A.3d at 623 (holding “accomplice
liability does not require the defendant to have the conscious objective to
cause a particular result when such an outcome is an element of the
offense”). Thus, the Commonwealth was not required to prove that
Appellant intended the death of Johns in order to prove that he was an
accomplice to third-degree murder. However, Appellant’s complicity in a
‘robbery’ does not, ipso facto, render him culpable for a homicide that
resulted from that robbery. See Knox, 105 A.3d at 1197 (“After the
passage of the Crimes Code, status as an accomplice relative to some crimes
within a larger criminal undertaking or episode no longer per se renders a
defendant liable as an accomplice for all other crimes committed. Rather,
closer, offense-specific analysis of intent and conduct is required.”) (citation
omitted).
As was the case in Baskerville and King, armed robbery is the sort of
offense that permits the inference that the perpetrator(s) acted with malice.
But ‘armed robbery’ is, a priori, not mere ‘robbery.’7 If all robberies carried
the same risk of harm, it would have been nonsensical for the Baskerville
and King decisions to have distinguished armed robbery. Armed robbery is
_______________________
(Footnote Continued)
7
All armed robberies are robberies, but not all robberies are armed
robberies.
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different from unarmed robbery precisely because the former carries a
significantly greater risk of harm than the latter, because the use of
weapons inherently increases the risk of death or serious bodily injury.
Thus, it is not at all unfathomable that Appellant and Rankin, although
sharing a common intent to steal marijuana from Johns, intended to commit
conduct constituting different types of robbery, which involved significantly
different risks to the victim. Accordingly, it is particularly relevant to my
analysis what type of robbery was intended by Appellant, for it is his
culpability for third-degree murder which is at issue.
Our Crimes Code defines the various forms of robbery as follows:
(1) A person is guilty of robbery if, in the course of committing a
theft, he:
(i) inflicts serious bodily injury upon another;
(ii) threatens another with or intentionally puts him in fear
of immediate serious bodily injury;
(iii) commits or threatens immediately to commit any
felony of the first or second degree;
(iv) inflicts bodily injury upon another or threatens another
with or intentionally puts him in fear of immediate bodily injury;
(v) physically takes or removes property from the person
of another by force however slight; or
(vi) takes or removes the money of a financial institution
without the permission of the financial institution by making a
demand of an employee of the financial institution orally or in
writing with the intent to deprive the financial institution thereof.
18 Pa.C.S. § 3701(a).
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Notably, the robbery statute contemplates three categories of physical
harm, whether such harm is inflicted or merely threatened: serious bodily
injury, bodily injury, and force however slight. Clearly, subsections (a)(1)(i)
and (a)(1)(ii) contemplate the most serious forms of physical harm, and the
last offense, subsections (a)(1)(vi), does not require any degree of harm,
inflicted or threatened. Generally speaking, therefore, as one reads down
the list of robbery offenses, the risk of death or significant injury involved
decreases. In other words, the risk of death from a robbery is greatest
when the robbery involves the infliction of serious bodily injury, and least
when it involves no injury or no threat of injury, as per subsection (a)(1)(vi).
When Appellant grabbed Johns’ marijuana, he certainly intended to
commit, at a minimum, an offense pursuant to Section 3701(a)(1)(v), as he
was committing a theft with “force however slight.” As will be discussed
infra, he could also be said to have intended to commit a crime pursuant to
3701(a)(1)(iv). This is because, in the circumstances of this case, it would
not be unreasonable for the jury to have concluded that Appellant intended
Rankin’s and Estes’ presence to physically intimidate Johns into not resisting
the theft of his marijuana (thus rationally implicating the “intentionally puts
him in fear of immediate bodily injury” language of that provision).
However, just because Appellant may have intended to utilize the threat or
infliction of bodily injury, that does not, by itself, demonstrate that he
intended to cause or threaten serious bodily injury. It is undisputed that
such an inference could reasonably arise if it were true that Appellant knew
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that Rankin was armed. However, as discussed above, there was no
evidence at all that Appellant possessed such knowledge, or at least no
evidence that was legally sufficient to permit such an inference.
I would conclude, therefore, that the Commonwealth failed to prove
that Appellant consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk
that his actions could cause death or serious bodily injury, nor did it prove
that Appellant reasonably anticipated that death or serious bodily injury
would likely and logically result from his participation in the robbery to which
he conspired.8 In so concluding, I emphasize that my analysis is specific to
the facts of this case. I would not conclude, generally, that participants in
unarmed robberies can never be found to be complicit in, and therefore
liable for, resulting homicides. However, in the present case, it was not
proven that Appellant knew that a firearm would be involved in the robbery
of Johns, and no other evidence suggested that Appellant intended anything
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8
The trial court supports a contrary conclusion by stating that Appellant
“stole the marijuana by force as Mr. Rankin was pointing a gun at Brandon
Johns.” TCO, at 10 (emphasis added). The trial court does not cite to the
portion of the record that supports this assertion, nor does that statement
comply with the trial court’s own summary of the facts, quoted supra, which
indicates that Rankin did not pull his gun until after Appellant grabbed Johns’
marijuana. See id. at 2 (“At that point, [Appellant] attempted to steal the
marijuana by grabbing the bag of marijuana and telling Brandon Johns that
‘you might as well give me all the shit.’ A few seconds later, Mr. Rankin
pulled out a gun.”) (emphasis added). Moreover, I have reviewed the record
and cannot find any evidence or testimony that directly supports, or tends to
support, the notion that Appellant stole Johns’ marijuana while Rankin was
brandishing his firearm.
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more than to grab Johns’ marijuana by, at most, physical intimidation.9 As
such, I believe the Commonwealth failed to prove that Appellant acted with
malice and, consequently, Appellant’s conviction for third-degree murder
was not supported under an accomplice theory of vicarious liability.
Conspiratorial liability for third-degree murder
Appellant also argues that he cannot be held liable for the third-degree
murder of Johns based on his role as a co-conspirator in the robbery. First,
he claims that his conviction is unsustainable under that theory because the
conspiratorial liability rule no longer exists in Pennsylvania. Second, even
assuming conspiratorial liability does still exist in Pennsylvania, Appellant
contends that such a theory does not support his culpability for third-degree
murder because Johns’ death was not a foreseeable consequence (i.e.
natural and probable consequence) of the conspiracy.
Post-crimes code conspiratorial liability
I begin this stage of my analysis by noting that the first aspect of
Appellant’s claim is not unfounded. Historically speaking, at common law,
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9
For instance, were there evidence that Appellant threatened to kill or maim
Johns if Johns refused to submit, regardless of his knowledge of Rankin’s
possession of a firearm, there might have been sufficient evidence to
support his complicity for third-degree murder because Appellant could have
fairly been said to have “threaten[ed] another with or intentionally put[] him
in fear of immediate serious bodily injury.” 18 Pa.C.S. § 3701(a)(1)(ii). In
such circumstances, it appears reasonable to presume that death or serious
bodily injury would be foreseeable because death or serious bodily injury
was actually threatened. No such evidence was presented to the jury in this
case.
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“[w]here the existence of a conspiracy is established, the law imposes upon
a conspirator full responsibility for the natural and probable consequences of
acts committed by his fellow conspirator or conspirators if such acts are
done in pursuance of the common design or purpose of the conspiracy.”
Commonwealth v. Thomas, 189 A.2d 255, 258 (Pa. 1963). As noted
above, with the adoption of the Crimes Code, the “natural and probable
consequences” theory of culpability has been expressly rejected as it relates
to accomplice liability. See Knox, 105 A.3d at 1197. Despite this
alteration, the Crimes Code clearly provides for vicarious, accomplice liability
under 18 Pa.C.S. § 306 (“Liability for conduct of another; complicity.”). Yet,
that provision does not expressly provide for conspiratorial liability as a
distinct theory of vicarious criminal liability separate and apart from
accomplice liability:
(b) Conduct of another.--A person is legally accountable for
the conduct of another person when:
(1) acting with the kind of culpability that is sufficient for
the commission of the offense, he causes an innocent or
irresponsible person to engage in such conduct;
(2) he is made accountable for the conduct of such other
person by this title or by the law defining the offense; or
(3) he is an accomplice of such other person in the
commission of the offense.
18 Pa.C.S. § 306(b).
At first glance, one might assume that Section 306(b)(2) might resolve
this matter and save conspiratorial liability as a viable theory. However, the
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law defining the offense of conspiracy, 18 Pa.C.S. § 903, does not speak at
all to the question of vicarious criminal liability, conspiratorial or otherwise.
Indeed, I cannot find any mention of conspiratorial liability in the Crimes
Code at all.10 Thus, one must wonder if conspiratorial liability exists merely
as a remnant of the common law. As recently as King, a decision issued
several decades after the adoption of the Crimes Code, this Court applied
conspiratorial liability as a form of vicarious liability separate and distinct
from accomplice liability.11 King, 990 A.2d at 1177 (“We need not address
the question of accomplice liability because the evidence was sufficient to
support the conviction under conspiratorial liability.”). In other cases, this
Court has tended to blur the distinction between accomplice-based and
conspiracy-based vicarious criminal liability. E.g. Commonwealth v.
Robinson, 505 A.2d 997, 1000-01 (Pa. Super. 1986) (discussing accomplice
liability to define the culpability of co-conspirators); Commonwealth v. La,
640 A.2d 1336, 1345 (Pa. Super. 1994) (same). However, 18 Pa.C.S. § 107
____________________________________________
10
This is even true with respect to second-degree murder, the statutory
implementation of the felony-murder rule. See 18 Pa.C.S. § 2502(b).
11
We recognize that it is highly problematic to cite King as support for any
matter concerning conspiratorial liability, as the appellant in that case was
convicted only for third-degree murder, while having been acquitted of
second-degree murder, robbery, and conspiracy. Thus, the King Court’s
application of conspiratorial liability to King for third-degree murder, based
on his status as a co-conspirator, is inexplicable. We can uncover no other
case in the history of this Commonwealth where a defendant was held liable
as a co-conspirator without having been convicted of a conspiracy offense.
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dictates that all common law crimes were abolished by our legislature’s
adoption of the Crimes Code. See 18 Pa.C.S. § 107(b) (“Common law
crimes abolished.--No conduct constitutes a crime unless it is a crime
under this title or another statute of this Commonwealth.”) (bold in original,
italics added).
Thus, it appears that the Crimes Code, and Section 107 in particular,
can be fairly read to have terminated, by omission, the common law theory
of conspiratorial liability. The Majority does not appear to address this
matter at all. However, for two reasons, I would decline to dispose of
Appellant’s conspiracy-related, third-degree murder sufficiency claim on that
basis. First, as a practical matter addressed below, I would hold that
conspiratorial liability does not apply to Appellant under the facts of this
case, even if that theory of vicarious culpability survived our
Commonwealth’s adoption of the Crimes Code in 1972. Second, “[t]his
panel is not empowered to overrule another panel of the Superior Court.”
Commonwealth v. Beck, 78 A.3d 656, 659 (Pa. Super. 2013). The King
decision, despite some obviously unsustainable analysis (see footnote 11),
purports to recognize the continued validity of both accomplice and
conspiratorial liability as distinct theories of vicarious criminal liability.
Accordingly, this panel lacks the authority to conclude otherwise. Beck,
supra.
Conspiratorial liability for third-degree murder
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I would conclude that there was insufficient evidence to demonstrate
Appellant’s guilt for third-degree murder based on his role as a co-
conspirator to robbery. In La, this Court summarized the scope of
conspiratorial liability as follows:
All theories of vicarious responsibility for criminal conduct
require the existence of a shared criminal intent.
Commonwealth v. Bachert, 271 Pa.Super. 72, 78, 412 A.2d
580, 583 (1979). The nexus which renders all members of a
criminal conspiracy responsible for the acts of any of its
members is the unlawful agreement. Commonwealth v. Cox,
466 Pa. 582, 586, 353 A.2d 844, 846 (1976); Commonwealth
v. Yobbagy, 410 Pa. 172, 188 A.2d 750 (1963). The law in
Pennsylvania is settled that each conspirator is criminally
responsible for the actions of his co-conspirator, provided it is
accomplished in the furtherance of the common design.
Commonwealth v. Robinson, 351 Pa.Super. 309, 316, 505
A.2d 997, 1001 (1986); Commonwealth v. Bachert, supra,
271 Pa.Super. at 77, 412 A.2d at 583. In discussing
conspiratorial accountability, our Supreme Court has held:
When there is evidence that one, who has not struck the
fatal blow, has, nonetheless, shared in the criminal intent
and the criminal activity, that person has aided and
abetted in the commission of the crime and, thus, may be
held responsible as an accomplice to another's acts and
the consequences of those acts. Commonwealth v. Rife,
454 Pa. 506, 312 A.2d 406 (1973); Commonwealth v.
Wilson, 449 Pa. 235, 296 A.2d 719 (1972);
Commonwealth v. Lowry, 374 Pa. 594, 98 A.2d 733
(1953). “The least degree of concert or collusion between
parties to an illegal transaction makes the act of one the
act of all.” Commonwealth v. Strantz, 328 Pa. 33, 40,
195 A. 75, 79 (1937).
Commonwealth v. Vaughn, 459 Pa. 35, 39–40, 326 A.2d 393,
395 (1974). Accordingly, despite the fact that an individual co-
conspirator did not contemplate a killing, where such killing is a
natural and probable consequence of a co-conspirator's conduct,
murder is not beyond the scope of the conspiracy.
Commonwealth v. Bigelow, 416 Pa.Super. 449, 455, 611 A.2d
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301, 304 (1992); Commonwealth v. Riley, 330 Pa.Super. 201,
212, 479 A.2d 509, 515 (1984).
La, 640 A.2d at 1345.
To state the obvious, a killing is a natural and probable consequence of
a conspiracy to commit murder and, thus, under the above standard, a
participant in such a conspiracy will be held responsible for a killing
conducted by one of his co-conspirators to that agreement, regardless of
whether the murder was accomplished in the same manner in which it was
planned.12 However, it appears to me that any co-conspirator to the crime
of homicide in such a scenario would also be an accomplice to that crime as
well, at least where the target victim of the conspiratorial agreement is the
person actually killed. See 18 Pa.C.S. § 306(c). If the distinction between
conspiratorial and accomplice liability is at all meaningful, it must be with
reference to an individual conspirator’s liability for crimes of co-conspirators
other than the crime that was the express purpose or common design of the
conspiratorial agreement.13
____________________________________________
12
Unsurprisingly, the natural and probable consequence of any
conspiratorial agreement is some variation of the crime to which the co-
conspirators have agreed to commit.
13
What I am describing here is to be distinguished from the felony-murder
rule, which only applies to the crime of second-degree murder in
Pennsylvania. It is certainly true that, “[i]n felony-murder, the malice
necessary to sustain a conviction for murder is inferred from the underlying
felonious act.” Commonwealth v. Spallone, 406 A.2d 1146, 1147 (Pa.
Super. 1979). However, there is no authority known to this Court that holds
that the felony-murder rule applies outside the context of second-degree
murder as defined in the Crimes Code: “A criminal homicide constitutes
(Footnote Continued Next Page)
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La presents at least one case where conspiratorial liability of this sort
may have applied. In La, this Court held that the trial court properly
instructed a jury that “if [the] appellant shared the intent with his co-
conspirators to commit aggravated assault on the victims and one of the
victims was killed as a result of this attack, [the] appellant is criminally
responsible for the act of his cohorts.” La, 640 A.2d at 1345-46. Thus, the
La decision, at least implicitly, endorses the notion that one need not
conspire to kill in order to be held criminally liable for a killing committed by
a co-conspirator. However, there is no doubt that the malice necessary for a
third-degree murder conviction is the same malice necessary for a conviction
for aggravated assault. See Kling, 731 A.2d at 147 (“There is no distinction
between the malice essential to third[-]degree murder and that necessary
for aggravated assault.”). Malice, again, involves a conscious disregard of
an unjustified and extremely high risk of death or serious bodily injury. Id.
at 148. Logically, then, the death of the victim is at least one of the natural
_______________________
(Footnote Continued)
murder of the second degree when it is committed while defendant was
engaged as a principal or an accomplice in the perpetration of a felony.” 18
Pa.C.S. § 2502(b). The statute goes on to define “perpetration of a felony”
as follows: “The act of the defendant in engaging in or being an accomplice
in the commission of, or an attempt to commit, or flight after committing, or
attempting to commit robbery, rape, or deviate sexual intercourse by force
or threat of force, arson, burglary or kidnapping.” 18 Pa.C.S. § 2502(d).
Interestingly, the codification of the felony-murder rule also fails to
specifically identify the crime of conspiracy as an enumerated felony and,
although it references accomplice liability, it makes no mention of
conspiratorial liability.
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and probable consequences of a conspiracy to commit aggravated assault,
even though death was not specifically intended.14
Before the adoption of the Crimes Code, conspiratorial liability may
have permitted holding a co-conspirator to the crime of robbery guilty for
murder, committed by another co-conspirator during the course of that
robbery, regardless of the circumstances of the robbery and the
foreseeability of the resulting murder. For instance, in Commonwealth v.
Joseph, 304 A.2d 163 (Pa. 1973), our Supreme Court stated:
The principle by which a member of a conspiracy may be held
criminally responsible for crimes which were actually committed
by other members of the conspiracy stems from the belief that,
in the case of each co-conspirator, since his knowing entry into
the conspiracy is proof of his own criminal intent, it is perfectly
fair and proper to hold him responsible for any crimes committed
in furtherance of the conspiracy. Thus, in the instant case, if
[the] appellant entered into a conspiracy to rob [the victim], the
law will hold him responsible for her death which resulted from
that robbery.
____________________________________________
14
Aggravated assault always involves the causing or the attempt to cause
serious bodily injury, with some notable caveats that involve specific
protections for certain public employees, see 18 Pa.C.S. § 2702(a)(2), (3),
(5), or for other vulnerable members of society, such as children and/or the
elderly, see 18 Pa.C.S. § 2702(a)(8), (9). However, apart from these
special classes of victims, the statue generally concerns the risk of causing
serious bodily injury as its basic element. See Commonwealth v. Donton,
654 A.2d 580, 584 n.1 (Pa. Super. 1995) (“The statute prohibits the attempt
to cause serious bodily injury to another or the causing of such injury.”).
This is also true with other provisions of the aggravated assault statute that
involve the use of deadly weapons, see 18 Pa.C.S. § 2702(a)(4), because
the risk of serious bodily injury is greater even if one only attempts to cause
mere ‘bodily injury’ with such a weapon.
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Id. at 166.15 However, Joseph can also be read to be an application of the
felony-murder rule which, prior to the Crimes Code, was applied to first-
degree murder. Today, however, the felony-murder rule only applies to
second-degree murder, and I am cognizant of no case law, whatsoever,
suggesting that the felony-murder doctrine applies to crimes other than
second-degree murder after the adoption of the Crimes Code. To hold
otherwise would effectively apply the felony-murder rule outside the limited
circumstance to which that common law rule has been explicitly retained in
the Crimes Code, i.e., in the context of second-degree murder.
Thus, the question before us is whether Rankin’s killing of Johns was a
foreseeable consequence of the robbery to which Appellant conspired. Here,
there was sufficient evidence that Appellant conspired to rob Johns.
However, there was not sufficient evidence to show that that conspiratorial
agreement encompassed a risk of death or serious bodily injury. Appellant
did not himself use such force, nor do the facts establish that he threatened
the use of deadly force or force that could result in serious bodily injury.
Appellant merely grabbed the marijuana out of Johns’ hands. Moreover, as
discussed supra, the Commonwealth also did not prove that Appellant was
aware that Rankin possessed any weapons at all, let alone a firearm.
____________________________________________
15
Although the Joseph opinion was issued in 1973, that case was tried prior
to the adoption of the Crimes Code in 1972.
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To be sure, Appellant may have intended a robbery that involved force
however slight, or the implicit threat of bodily harm from the numerical odds
faced by Johns. However, just as one does not reasonably foresee a death
resulting from a simple assault, it follows that one who intends to threaten
or utilize less than serious-bodily-injury-inducing force during the
commission of a robbery does not reasonably foresee a resulting death.
Consequently, because the Commonwealth did not prove Appellant’s
knowledge of Rankin’s possession of a firearm, and because Appellant did
not threaten Johns with serious bodily injury or death, I would hold that the
killing of Johns was not foreseeable to Appellant when he conspired to
commit the crime of robbery, nor are there any other facts that would
suggest otherwise. Consequently, I would reverse Appellant’s conviction for
third-degree murder.16
____________________________________________
16
The Majority reaches the opposite conclusion by what I believe to be a
misapplication of the felony-murder rule to third-degree murder. I am
aware of no authority that suggests that the felony-murder rule applies
outside the context of second-degree murder since the adoption of the
Crimes Code. Since Appellant was not convicted of second-degree murder, I
believe our standard of review dictates that we must evaluate whether
Appellant acted with malice sufficient to commit third-degree murder without
reliance on the felony-murder rule.
To be clear, as a practical matter, if I were convinced that there was
sufficient evidence to convict Appellant as an accomplice or co-conspirator to
robbery under 18 Pa.C.S. § 3701(a)(i) and/or (ii) (“Felony-1 Robbery”), then
I would agree that such evidence simultaneously supported a finding of
malice for purposes of third-degree murder, because I consider death to be
a natural and probable consequence of the conduct that defines those
(Footnote Continued Next Page)
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For the same reasons, I would also vacate Appellant’s sentence for
Felony-1 Robbery, and remand for resentencing under a lower grading of
robbery. Consistent with my analysis regarding Appellant’s lack of
culpability for third-degree murder, I agree that he did not commit, nor
conspire to commit, Felony I robbery. As discussed at length above,
Appellant clearly agreed with Rankin to rob Johns of his marijuana.
However, because I conclude that there was no proof offered at trial that
Appellant knew that Rankin was armed, nor proof that Appellant himself
inflicted or threatened to inflict death or serious bodily injury, Appellant did
not conspire to commit, nor did he commit, an armed robbery pursuant to
18 Pa.C.S. § 3701(a)(1)(i) or (ii).17 There is also no evidence that Appellant
_______________________
(Footnote Continued)
specific crimes. However, I would not conclude that Appellant is culpable for
Felony-1 Robbery under the facts of this case.
Generally, I do not believe that all the codified forms of robbery
present the same degree of risk so as to justify imputing malice necessary
for third-degree murder equally from all. That all forms of robbery are not
created equally should be obvious from the legislature’s prescription of
significantly different penalties for different forms of robbery. In the context
of second-degree murder, conflation of these varied risks is effectively
codified. However, outside the context of second-degree murder, we should
evaluate the facts of each individual case and not rely on the one-size-fits-all
precepts of the felony-murder rule. Here, I believe that the record failed to
demonstrate that Appellant intended to commit a Felony-1 Robbery because
it was not sufficiently demonstrated that he knew Rankin was armed. Thus,
I do not believe that he acted with the malice sufficient to convict him of
third-degree murder, because, based on his own conduct, it appears that he
only intended to commit a snatch-and-grab robbery.
17
“A person is guilty of robbery if, in the course of committing a theft, he:
(i) inflicts serious bodily injury upon another; (ii) threatens another with or
(Footnote Continued Next Page)
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himself inflicted or threatened to inflict death or serious bodily injury. See
Commonwealth v. Ostolaza, 406 A.2d 1128 (Pa. Super. 1979) (holding
evidence insufficient to support conviction for robbery under Section
3701(a)(1)(ii) where the defendant grabbed the victim’s wallet and the
victim resisted, causing “a brief tug of war over the wallet”).
However, the factual record would support the jury’s finding that
Appellant conspired to, and ultimately committed, a robbery pursuant to 18
Pa.C.S. § 3701(a)(iv). I agree with Appellant that he only used “force
however slight” when he grabbed the marijuana from Johns. See 18 Pa.C.S.
§ 3701(a)(v) (stating that a robbery is committed when, during the course
of committing a theft, the accused “physically takes or removes property
from the person of another by force however slight”). However, Appellant
also put Johns in “fear of immediate bodily injury” by stealing his marijuana
while accompanied by Rankin and Estes, his co-conspirators in the robbery,
before the robbery was unilaterally escalated by Rankin. See 18 Pa.C.S. §
3701(a)(iv) (stating that a robbery is committed when, during the course of
committing a theft, the accused “inflicts bodily injury upon another or
threatens another with or intentionally puts him in fear of immediate bodily
injury”) (emphasis added); but cf. Ostolaza, supra (wherein the defendant
acted alone when he wrestled the victim’s wallet away from her). That
_______________________
(Footnote Continued)
intentionally puts him in fear of immediate serious bodily injury ….” 18
Pa.C.S. § 3701(a).
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Appellant conspired to commit the same type of robbery is also supported by
sufficient evidence. The jury could have reasonably inferred that the plan to
steal Johns’ marijuana was to be effectuated by the implicit threat of force
presented by the superior number of the co-conspirators in relation to the
solitary victim. Thus, I agree with Appellant that there was insufficient
evidence to convict him of Felony-1 Robbery and the related conspiracy
offense, but conclude that there was sufficient evidence to establish a
robbery conviction under 18 Pa.C.S. § 3701(a)(iv), and that he conspired to
commit the same.
In summary, I agree with the Majority that the Commonwealth
presented sufficient evidence that Rankin did not act in self-defense.
However, contrary to the Majority, I would conclude that there was not
sufficient evidence to support Appellant’s conviction for third-degree murder.
Finally, I would hold that there was not sufficient evidence to convict
Appellant of Felony-1 Robbery, or conspiracy to commit the same, but I do
believe that the evidence was sufficient to convict him of the lesser included
offense set forth in Section 3701(a)(iv), and conspiracy to commit the same.
Accordingly, I would reverse Appellant’s conviction for third-degree murder,
vacate his sentences for robbery and conspiracy, and remand for
resentencing on those convictions.
I respectfully dissent.
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