J-S33043-20
2020 PA Super 217
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
:
v. :
:
:
KEVIN ROBINSON :
:
Appellant : No. 3114 EDA 2019
Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered August 14, 2019
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at
No(s): CP-51-CR-0009186-2017
BEFORE: DUBOW, J., MURRAY, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*
OPINION BY STEVENS, P.J.E. FILED SEPTEMBER 04, 2020
Appellant, Kevin Robinson, appeals from the judgment of sentence
entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County after a jury
convicted him of third-degree murder, firearms not to be carried without a
license, carrying a firearm of the public streets of Philadelphia, and possession
of an instrument of crime. Herein, Appellant raises two issues challenging the
court’s denials of his pre-trial and post-sentence motions seeking DNA testing
of a green hoodie sweatshirt he was seen wearing when he committed his
crimes. We affirm.
The trial court aptly sets forth the facts and procedural history of the
present matter:
____________________________________________
* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
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PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On September 12, 2017, Kevin Robinson [hereinafter “Appellant”]
shot Michael Nathaniel Jones (the “decedent”) four times in the
back as he walked down the 5100 block of Frankford Avenue. The
decedent was taken to Temple University by responding officers
where he succumbed to his injuries.
On November 30, 2018, Appellant was found guilty by a jury,
presided over by the Honorable Rose Marie DeFino-Nastasi, of
third-degree murder, firearms not to be carried without a license,
carrying a firearm on the public streets of Philadelphia, and
possession of an instrument of crime.
On August 14, 2019, Appellant was sentenced to sixteen to thirty-
two years imprisonment for firearms not to be carried without a
license. No further penalty was imposed for the remaining
charges.
On August 22, 2019, Appellant filed a Motion to Modify the
Sentence and a Motion for DNA testing pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. §
9543.1.
On October 4, 2019, Appellant’s Motion to Modify the Sentence
and Motion for DNA Testing was denied.
On October 31, 2019, Appellant filed a Notice of Appeal to the
Superior Court. On December 2, 2019, Appellant filed a Rule
1925(b) Concise Statement of Matters Complained of on Appeal.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
Police Officer Michael Schaffer [of the Philadelphia Police
Department] testified that on September 12, 2017, he was on
vehicle patrol when he heard gunshots coming from the 5100
block of Frankford Avenue. Officer Schaffer arrived on location in
approximately one minute. Upon arrival, a large crowd was
gathered and proceeded to wave down Officer Schaffer near the
1500 block of Dyre Street at the intersection of Frankford Avenue,
where Officer Schaffer observed an “unresponsive” male face-
down in a pool of blood. Based on the decedent’s condition,
Officer Schaffer immediately transported him to Temple University
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Hospital where he was pronounced dead. N.T., 11/27/2018, at
64-74.
Police Officer Stephen Burgeon testified that on September 12,
2017, he and Officer Kennelly received a radio call reporting
gunshots with a description of the suspect as a black male wearing
a green hooded sweatshirt. A witness on the scene directed the
officers to the alleyway off Dyer Street where the suspect ran. A
set of keys and a green hooded sweatshirt with a “PUMA” logo
were recovered from the alleyway. N.T. at 83-99.
Saayed Williams testified that he knew the decedent for a few
years. The decedent was a friend of his and he knew him as Mizz.
Williams was on the corner of Frankford and Dyre on September
12, 2017 when the decedent was shot and killed. He was standing
a few feet away from the decedent, who was involved in an
argument over drug territory on the block with another male, who
then shot the decedent. At trial, Williams denied knowing the
identity of the shooter. Williams was then impeached with his
signed statement to detectives wherein he identified the
Defendant [hereinafter “Appellant”] as the shooter. Williams was
also shown a surveillance video which depicts the shooting.
Williams is depicted on video within feet of the shooter and can be
seen looking directly at him. N.T. at 122-138.
Jay Johnson, a close friend of the decedent, testified that he had
seen the Appellant around the neighborhood for a few months
prior to the murder. On September 11, 2017, he saw the
Appellant in passing wearing the same green hooded sweatshirt
with the “PUMA” logo that Appellant can be seen wearing on the
7-Eleven surveillance video. Johnson also identified Appellant on
the surveillance video from 7-Eleven, on September 12, 2017, just
prior to the murder. Additionally, Johnson testified that Appellant
drove a “red, small, crappy car.” N.T. at 78-81.
Detective Thorsten Lucke testified as an expert in video recovery
and analysis. Detective Lucke retrieved and compiled video
footage from the 7-Eleven at the corner of Dyre Street and
Frankford Avenue; a Philadelphia pole camera also at the corner
of Dyre Street and Frankford Avenue, and a private residence on
the 1500 block of Dyre Street.[]
The compilation starts with the video from the camera located in
the 7-Eleven store on the corner of Frankford and Dyre Streets.
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The video depicts a male wearing a green hooded sweatshirt, with
a “PUMA” logo on the front and something dangling off both shoes
walking in front of the camera and exiting the store at
approximately 10:40 a.m. He is accompanied by another male.
The two turn left onto Dyre Street where they come into view on
the Philadelphia Police pole camera.[] At approximately 10:45
a.m., a male dressed in the same clothing as seen on Appellant
the previous day and on the 7-Eleven surveillance video minutes
prior, shoots the decedent and runs. A male in the same clothing
then comes into view on the private residence video at 10:45:22
a.m., where he can be seen running into the alley off Dyre Street
where a green hooded sweatshirt with a “PUMA” logo and a set of
keys were later recovered by the Crime Scene Unit. N.T.,
11/28/18, at 7-36.
Officer Edward Fidler, from the Philadelphia Crime Scene Unit,
testified that he processed the crime scene. Officer Fidler
recovered three fired cartridge casings (FCCs), a lead copper
projectile and a lead copper fragment from the shooting scene.
He also recovered one green “PUMA” hooded sweatshirt and a set
of keys from the alley off Dyre Street. The keys were swabbed
for DNA. The sweatshirt was sent for gunshot residue testing.
N.T. at 38-61.
Officer Mark Wilusz, from the Philadelphia Firearms Identification
Unit, testified that the three fired cartridge casings recovered from
the crime scene were Blazer brass 9 millimeter Luger[] rounds. No
weapon was recovered to provide additional ballistics. N.T. at 75-
104.
Officer Stephen Berardi, from the Philadelphia Crime Scene Unit,
testified that on September 15, 2017, he executed a search
warrant on a red Geo with a Pennsylvania tag KLW 4359,
registered and owned by Appellant. A search of the vehicle
produced a blue duffel bag containing “a lot of cash,” a mobile
phone, two live .22 caliber rounds of ammunition, and a 50-count
box containing 37 live Blazer brass 9 millimeter rounds. N.T. at
62-74.
Forensic Scientist 3, Gamal Emira, of the Philadelphia Police
Department’s Forensic and Trace lab, testified that he performed
gunshot residue testing on the green hooded sweatshirt and found
the presence of gunshot residue on the right cuff and right side of
the green hooded sweatshirt. N.T. at 135-151.
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Forensic Scientist 4, Benjamin Levin, of the Office of Forensic
Science at the Philadelphia Police Department, Criminalistics Unit,
DNA Laboratory, testified that he tested DNA recovered from a
swab of the keys recovered in the alley. The DNA swab provided
a partial profile and the major contributor was consistent with
Appellant. Additionally, Mr. Levin testified that a piece of clothing
related to the case was transferred from the laboratory
responsible for gunshot residue trace testing to the queue for DNA
testing, but had not yet been assigned an analyst. N.T. at 118-
130.
Detective John Komorowski, from the Philadelphia Police
Department’s Homicide Unit, testified that he obtained a warrant[]
for Appellant’s Facebook user account…. A photo contained on
that Facebook page depicted Appellant wearing a green hooded
sweatshirt with a “PUMA” logo on it.[] N.T. at 153-171.
Dr. Lindsay Simon, an associate medical examiner for the City of
Philadelphia, testified that she performed an autopsy on the
decedent on September 12, 2017. The decedent was shot four
times. The fatal shot traveled through the decedent’s right lung
and perforated his jugular vein. N.T., 11/27/18, at 103-119.
Appellant gave a video and audio recorded statement to Detective
John Komorowski on October 4, 2017, admitting to shooting the
decedent, stating he did so after the decedent threatened him. In
the course of his statement, during which he insisted that he shot
the decedent once, he stated “I walked behind him and he was
like “why you following me, like it’s cool I got something for you.’
I was like ‘damn, fuck it. I am in a bad situation. I ain’t have no
other choice.’ Appellant denied knowing of the location of the gun,
which was never recovered.[]
Trial Court Opinion, 1/6/20, at 1-6.
On appeal, Appellant raises the following questions for our review:
1. Did the lower court err in failing to grant Appellant’s request
for a continuance so that potentially exculpatory DNA testing
on the green hooded sweatshirt placed on property receipt no.
9022269 could be completed?
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2. Did the lower court err in failing to grant Appellant’s request
pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. § 9543.1 for potentially exculpatory
post-conviction DNA testing on the green hooded sweatshirt
placed on property receipt no. 9022269?
Appellant’s brief, at 3.
The grant of a continuance is discretionary and a refusal to grant is
reversible error only if prejudice or a palpable and manifest abuse of discretion
is demonstrated. Commonwealth v. Williams, 640 A.2d 1251, 1259 (Pa.
1994). An abuse of discretion “is not merely an error of judgment, but if in
reaching a conclusion the law is overridden 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. Poplawski, 130 A.3d 697, 718 (Pa. 2015).
An accused has a fundamental right to present evidence so long as the
evidence is relevant and not excluded by an established evidentiary rule.
Commonwealth v. Ward, 605 A.2d 796, 797 (Pa. 1992). It is well
established that evidence which demonstrates that the crime was committed
by someone else is admissible. Id. The reviewing court should examine the
nature of the crime and the surrounding circumstances to determine if the
denial of a continuance was an abuse of discretion. Commonwealth v.
Chamberlain, 731 A.2d 593, 597 (Pa. 1999).
In Chamberlain, the defendant was convicted on two counts of murder
in the first degree for shooting to death his estranged wife and her boyfriend
in their residence in the early morning hours. Just moments before dying, Ms.
Chamberlain managed to phone a neighbor and asked her to call an
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ambulance because “Terry [Appellant] shot Greg and me.” Id. at 598. Three
minutes after the phone call, the neighbors discovered the bodies of the
deceased.
Based on this evidence, the defendant was charged as noted. No
eyewitnesses and no physical evidence linked the defendant to the crime. No
DNA testing was done on the blood samples to determine whether another
person was involved. The only asserted link was the neighbor’s quote of Ms.
Chamberlain’s final words to her, which the trial court ruled, over defense
objection, would be admissible at trial as either an excited utterance or a dying
declaration. Id.
One month before the trial was scheduled to begin, defense counsel
informed the court that he had not received a number of requested discovery
items, including the results of DNA testing. The Commonwealth denied
requesting DNA testing, but the defense produced a written request by the
Commonwealth for laboratory analysis on items obtained from Ms.
Chamberlain’s residence. One test was “for blood, type of blood and DNA.”
The defense requested the blood samples so that it could conduct its
own DNA testing and moved for a six week continuance to allow for testing.
The Commonwealth informed the defense that the samples sent to the
laboratory were probably destroyed but that the bloody clothes remained. The
trial court refused to grant the continuance, and the remaining blood samples
were not delivered to the defense despite repeated requests.
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Under the circumstances, the Supreme Court determined that the trial
court abused its discretion when it denied the defense request for a
continuance:
Based on the circumstances of this case, the trial court abused its
discretion in denying the motion for a continuance. The record
supports the claim that the defense: relied on the
Commonwealth's request for DNA analysis; was informed for the
first time at the April 25 conference that the Commonwealth had
not conducted DNA testing; and was never given an opportunity
to conduct its own testing. The defense reasonably argued
that DNA testing might reveal that someone other than
appellant was at the scene and committed the murders.
Without the results of the testing, however, the defense is unable
to demonstrate prejudicial error.[] On the facts of this case, given
the capital charges and the potential death penalty, and given that
no opportunity to conduct testing on the available blood samples
was given, the trial court abused its discretion in denying the
motion for a continuance.
Id. at 599 (emphasis added).
In contrast, the circumstances of the case sub judice do not include a
reasonable argument advanced by the defense that someone other than he
committed the murder in question. Whereas Chamberlain was marked by
limited evidence implicating the defendant, such that the presence of another
person’s DNA in the decedent’s bedroom could have created reasonable doubt
in the Commonwealth’s case, in the present case, overwhelming evidence
pointed to Appellant’s guilt.
Specifically, at the time the trial court denied Appellant’s motion for a
continuance, the admissible evidence collected against Appellant included: his
own confession to shooting the decedent; an eyewitness’s sworn statement to
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police identifying Appellant as the shooter; a witness who testified he saw
Appellant wearing the green “PUMA” hooded sweatshirt the day before the
shooting, and who identified Appellant as the man depicted on an in-store
video wearing the same sweatshirt minutes before the shooting; a compilation
of surveillance videos depicting a male in the green sweatshirt shooting the
decedent and running in an alley where investigators would later retrieve the
sweatshirt and a set of keys, subject each to testing, and find gunshot residue
on the sweatshirt and Appellant’s DNA on the keys; a police report that a
search of Appellant’s car uncovered the same type of ammunition as was used
in the murder; and a police report that an investigation of Appellant’s
Facebook page revealed a photo of him in a green hooded sweatshirt with a
“PUMA” logo on it.
When viewed in the context of such highly incriminating cumulative
evidence, the absence of Appellant’s DNA—or even the presence of
another’s—on the green sweatshirt would not have been exculpatory, for it
would fail to demonstrate a reasonable possibility that someone else could
have committed the murder in question.
Accordingly, we discern no abuse of discretion in the court’s denial of
Appellant’s motion for a continuance for DNA testing.
For essentially the same reason, Appellant’s second issue, in which he
claims the court erred in failing to grant his post-sentence request for testing
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under the post-conviction DNA testing statute,1 also fails. The post-conviction
DNA testing statute permits “[a]n individual convicted of a criminal offense in
a court of this Commonwealth” to apply by “written motion to the sentencing
court at any time for the performance of forensic DNA testing on specific
____________________________________________
1 We note that Section 9543.1(a)(1) and (2) sets forth threshold
requirements, as follows:
(1) An individual convicted of a criminal offense in a court of this
Commonwealth may apply by making a written motion to the
sentencing court at any time for the performance of forensic
DNA testing on specific evidence that is related to the
investigation or prosecution that resulted in the judgment of
conviction
(2) The evidence may have been discovered either prior to or after
the applicant's conviction. The evidence shall be available for
testing as of the date of the motion. If the evidence was
discovered prior to the applicant's conviction, the evidence
shall not have been subject to the DNA testing requested
because the technology for testing was not in existence at the
time of the trial or the applicant's counsel did not seek testing
at the time of the trial in a case where a verdict was rendered
on or before January 1, 1995, or the evidence was subject to
the testing, but newer technology could provide substantially
more accurate and substantially probative results, or the
applicant's counsel sought funds from the court to pay for the
testing because his client was indigent and the court refused
the request despite the client's indigency.
42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9543.1(a)(1) and (2) (emphasis added).
Even assuming, arguendo, that Appellant essentially met the last of these
requirements when the court refused to grant Appellant’s pretrial motion for
a continuance to allow him to pursue DNA testing when it was discovered the
Commonwealth did not conduct such testing as it said it would, we find
Appellant’s motion still failed to present a prima facie case demonstrating that
exculpatory DNA testing results would establish his actual innocence. See
infra.
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evidence that is related to the investigation or prosecution that resulted in the
judgment of conviction.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 9543.1(a)(1). “DNA testing may be
sought at any time if the motion is made in a timely manner and for the
purpose of demonstrating the applicant’s actual innocence and not to delay
the execution of sentence or administration of justice.” 42 Pa.C.S. §
9543.1(a)(4).
The statute further provides:
(c) Requirements.--In any motion under subsection (a), under
penalty of perjury, the applicant shall:
***
(3) present a prima facie case demonstrating that the:
(i) identity of or the participation in the crime by the
perpetrator was at issue in the proceedings that
resulted in the applicant’s conviction and
sentencing; and
(ii) DNA testing of the specific evidence, assuming
exculpatory results, would establish:
(A) the applicant’s actual innocence of the
offense for which the applicant was
convicted[.]
***
(d) Order.--
***
(2) The court shall not order the testing requested in a
motion under subsection (a) if, after review of the record
of the applicant’s trial, the court determines that there is
no reasonable possibility that the testing would produce
exculpatory evidence that:
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(i) would establish the applicant’s actual innocence
of the offense for which the applicant was
convicted[.]
42 Pa.C.S. § 9543.1(c)(3)(ii) and (d)(2)(1).
“[O]n its face, the prima facie requirement set forth in §
9543.1(c)(3) and reinforced in § 9543.1(d)(2) requires that an
appellant demonstrate that there is a reasonable possibility[ ] that
favorable results of the requested DNA testing would establish the
appellant’s actual innocence of the crime of conviction.”
[Commonwealth v.] Conway, 14 A.3d [101,] 109 [(Pa. Super.
2011)] (internal quotation marks omitted). In order for new
evidence resulting from DNA testing to establish “actual
innocence,” it “must make it ‘more likely than not that no
reasonable juror would have found [the appellant] guilty beyond
a reasonable doubt.’ Thus, this standard requires a reviewing
court ‘to make a probabilistic determination about what
reasonable, properly instructed jurors would do,’ if presented with
the new evidence.” Id. (quoting Schlup v. Delo, 513 U.S. 298,
327, 329 (1995)). Accordingly, the PCRA court must “review not
only the motion [for DNA testing], but also the trial record, and
then make a determination as to whether there is a reasonable
possibility that DNA testing would produce exculpatory evidence
that would establish ... actual innocence.”
Commonwealth v. Williams, 35 A.3d 44, 50 (Pa. Super. 2011) (quoting
Commonwealth v. Smith, 889 A.2d 582, 584 (Pa. Super. 2005)).
As discussed, the trial court viewed Appellant’s post-sentence motion in
light of a trial record comprising multiple sources, such as eyewitnesses,
surveillance video, and Appellant, himself, offering his own voluntary
confession, supplying direct identification evidence implicating Appellant as
the decedent’s shooter.
Moreover, substantial circumstantial evidence corroborated such
accounts. Appellant’s motion thus failed to demonstrate a reasonable
possibility that DNA evidence would establish his actual innocence.
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Accordingly, we find no abuse of discretion in the denial of Appellant’s
post-sentence motion for post-conviction testing.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm judgment of sentence.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 9/4/20
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