Com. v. Waring, M.

J-S59011-16


NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,                     IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                                        PENNSYLVANIA
                            Appellee

                       v.

MACEO EMERSON WARING,

                            Appellant                  No. 978 EDA 2015


      Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered December 16, 2014
             In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
                          Criminal Division at No(s):
                           CP-51-CR-0000373-2013
                           CP-51-CR-0000379-2013
                           CP-51-CR-0000380-2013


BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., OLSON, J., and FITZGERALD, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY BENDER, P.J.E.:                      FILED OCTOBER 18, 2016

        Appellant, Maceo Emerson Waring, appeals from the judgment of

sentence of an aggregate term of life imprisonment without the possibility of

parole, imposed after a jury convicted him of first-degree murder, carrying a

firearm without a license, and two counts of aggravated assault of a police

officer. Appellant challenges the sufficiency and weight of the evidence to

sustain his convictions. After careful review, we affirm.

        We begin by addressing the inadequacy of Appellant’s brief to this

Court.     Appellant’s argument in support of his sufficiency-of-the-evidence

claim, and his identical argument to support his weight-of-the-evidence
____________________________________________


*
    Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
J-S59011-16



issue, each span only 1½ pages of his brief. Other than setting forth our

applicable standard of review, Appellant cites no case law to support either

of these issues. See Commonwealth v. Hardy, 918 A.2d 766, 771 (Pa.

Super. 2007) (“The brief must support the claims with pertinent discussion,

with references to the record and with citations to legal authorities.

Citations to authorities must articulate the principles for which they are

cited.”). Additionally, he does not specify, in his sufficiency argument, which

of his three offenses he is challenging, nor identify which element(s) of those

offenses the Commonwealth failed to prove.

      Based on Appellant’s briefing defects, we could deem both his issues

waived.    See id. at 771 (“[W]hen defects in a brief impede our ability to

conduct meaningful appellate review, we may dismiss the appeal entirely or

find certain issues to be waived.”) (citations omitted).     Rather than find

waiver, however, we conclude that Appellant’s scant and legally unsupported

argument bolsters our determination that the detailed opinion by the

Honorable Steven R. Geroff of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia

adequately addresses Appellant’s claims. See Trial Court Opinion, 9/2/15,

at 1-40.    Thus, we adopt Judge Geroff’s opinion as our own, and affirm

Appellant’s judgment of sentence based on the rationale set forth therein.

      Judgment of sentence affirmed.

      Justice Fitzgerald joins this memorandum.

      Judge Olson concurs in the result.




                                     -2-
J-S59011-16




Judgment Entered.




Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary



Date: 10/18/2016




                          -3-
                                                                                                           Circulated 10/05/2016 03:17 PM




                            - IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
                       FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                           TRIAL DIVISION - CRIMINAL SECTION



COMMONWEALTH OF                                                                                 CP- 51-CR-000373-2013
PENNSYLVANIA                                                                                    CP- 51-CR-000379-2013
                                                                                                CP- 51-CR-000380-2013
           vs.

MACEOWARING
                                                                                                SUPERIOR COURT
                                                                                                NO. 978 EDA 2015

                                                                                                         FILED
                                                           OPINION                                        SEP O 2 2015
                                                                                                      CriminalAppeals Unit
                                  CP-51-<:R--000037~2013   Com' The victim then turned around in a "fighting stance" and unzipped his jacket, a black

hoodie. Burton stated that before the victim was able to take off his hoodie, the Defendant, who

was five to six feet away from him, "[ran] past [Burton], hit [the decedent] in the back of the

head with the gun, turned around, [and] shot [the decedent] twice in the chest." After the victim

slid down the wall, the Defendant walked up to him and "shot him some more" as he was

standing only inches away from him. When the Defendant started firing, the "little white guy,"

who was standing close to the decedent, ran. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/09/2014, pp. 96, 98-100, 102,

107).

        Burton was not sure whether the victim was drinking that night. He only saw the "little

white guy" drink; he noticed that the victim did not hold anything in his hand. (N.T. Volume 1,

12/09/2014, p. 144).




                                                8
            Burton explained that he came around to get the Defendant's back, because they were

 friends.     He noted that he expected a fistfight, not a killing.         (N.T. Volume 1, 12/09/2014,          pp.

 146-147).

            Following the shooting, the Defendant slowly walked around the corner, and Burton

 followed him.'       Burton was "nervous, shocked."          (N.T. Volume 1, 12/09/2014,          p. 108).      He

 thought the Defendant was going to Keisha's house and he went to Keisha's house, too. Burton

had no idea why the Defendant was going to Keisha's house until he saw the Defendant hand the

gun to Keisha's uncle Allen. Id

            When they got to Keisha's house, Allen met them at the door and then the Defendant

said, "Take this jawn."8        (N.T. Volume 1, 12/09/2014,          p. 110).    Allen took the gun, and the

Defendant and Burton thenjunipedif the carand left. Id

            The Defendant drove to Burton's grandmother's house.              He was silent; Burton saw "the

nervous look on [the Defendant's] face, like, he just did something wrong, like, out of the

ordinary." (N.T. Volume 1, 12/09/2014, p. 110).

         The Defendant's dropped Burton off at his grandmother's house in No11h Philadelphia;

the car ride took no more than half an hour. Burton shared with his mother what had happened.

(N.T. Volume 1, 12/09/2014,        pp. 111-112).

         The following day, the Defendant called Burton. He then came by and picked Burton up;

they rode around Taney Street where Mooka's grandmother lived.9                    The Defendant and Mooka




        7
          Burton later clarified - "I ain't going to say follow. We went in the same direction. I ain't nm. I didn't
nm nowhere. I was nervous. I seen him go into Keisha house so I went to Keisha house. I was behind him, yes."
(N.T. Volume I, 12/09/2014, p. 109).
        8
          By "jawn" he meant "gun." (N.T. Volume I, 12/09nOl4, p. 110).
        9
           Mooka was Keisha's daughter; she was on Horrocks Street the night before. (N.T. Volume I,
12/09/2014,p. 113).

                                                         9
···-·----·------------·-         -   ··-··   ----···   -



         (also known as Maurisa) talked for a while outside, on the steps of her grandmother's house,

         while Burton remained in the car. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/09/2014, p. 114).

                     When the Defendant returned to the car, he told Burton "what the situation was like, what

        they had."         (N.T. Volume 1, 12/09/2014, p. 114).             The Defendant informed Burton that the

        detectives had talked to Brianna and that they were calling people and asking them to come talk

        to them." The Defendant dropped Burton off on Garnett Street; Burton had not seen him since

        that time. (N.T. Volume l , 12/09/2014, pp. 113-115).

                    Burtori recalled that two or three days after the incident, homicide detectives came to his

        grandmother's house. (N.T. Volume I, 12/09/2014, p. 116). The detectives told him, "James,

        we know you ain't kill him but we got some questioning to do, we know you left with him."

       ·(N.t:\iohiine ..1, ·i2/09/2014, p. 117).           They took Burton down to the "Rom1dHouse" at g•h and

        Race Streets and gave him the Miranda warnings. Burton decided to tell his story; he indicated

       that he was truthful with the detectives.            After obtaining his statement, the detectives called his
                                                                                                                  11
       mother to validate what he had told them. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/09/2014, pp. 117-118).

                   Burton also testified at the preliminary hearing on January 9, 2013.                   David Glanzberg,

       Esquire, was appointed as Burton's attorney prior to the preliminary hearing.                        Burton received

       immunity in exchange for testifying against the Defendant. Burton confirmed that everything he

       said in court on that day was the truth. Burton stated that although he took immunity, he was

       going to tell the truth regardless of having received it.




                  '0 Burton noted that he had seen Brianna at the scene at the time of the incident: she was sitting on the steps
       of the first house on the side of the store "talking to a gentleman." (N.T. Volume I, 12/09/2014, pp. 114-115).
                  II
                     Burton testified that at some point, he had learned that he was a suspect in the murder. · Under cross-
       examination, he stated that when the detectives initially came to see him, they handcuffed him before bringing him
       to Homicide. While riding in the car, the detectives informed him that he was a suspect in this case. (N.T. Volume
       1, 12/09/2014,p. 150-151).
                                                                  10
             Although Burton conceded on cross-examination that it was not easy to "rat out" his

 friend, he explained that he "Wasn't trying to rat [his] friend out just because [he] had immunity."

 (N.T. Volume 1, 12/09/2014, p. 160).               He also noted that he was truthful before anything was

 offered to him. On re-direct examination, Burton stated that he never asked the Defendant to get

 his back in this fistfight by shooting the g~n. (N.T. Volume I, 12/09/2014, pp. 160-161).

             Carmelo 011iz testified that he knew the victim, Naeem Giles (also known by his

 nickname "Spook") who was a friend of a friend. Ortiz estimated that he had known Giles over

 eight or nine months before September 2012. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 22-23).

         Ortiz testified that on· September 10, 20 I 2, at about 10:30 pm or 11 :00 pm, he was in the

 area of Horrocks and Orthodox Streets.               He was walking by the area with a couple of friends

when he saw Spook and Johnny and his               ·,vife12   aridanother person, Basheer, who was probably a

friend of a friend. They engaged in a conversation and chatted for about half an hour to forty-

five minutes in front of J's corner store. Ortiz also stated that he might have also seen two girls

standing around the corner by the store.13            (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 23-24, 25, 30).

         Ortiz, Johnny, and his wife then started walking eastbound,                   toward the intersection of

Pilling and Orthodox Streets. They decided to visit one of Ortiz's friends whom he had not seen

for six or seven months. The victim, Spook, was still "hanging around" the Puerto Rican store.

(N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 30-32).

        1t was about I 0:45 pm or I I :00 pm, and by the time they passed a few blocks, Ortiz felt

that they were running out of time as they needed to return before 1 I :30 pm or 12:00 midnight,

to make sure Johnny's grandmother did not lock them out of her house.                     Ortiz told Johnny that it



        12
             Also referred to as Johnny's girlfriend. See, e.g., N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 33.
        13
            Ortiz believed the girls' names were Mooka and Nee Nee. He had seen them around the neighborhood;
he believed they lived around the comer. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 26-27).

                                                              11
                                         -··-·-···-----·-·--····-   ··-   ..   -   .   .   ·-··   -·------···   ·-------·-·   --- ···----------·--



 would be best if they visited the friend another day; they walked back westbound on Orthodox

Street. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 32).

        Ortiz noted that Burton was probably also around Horrocks Street at that time although

he did not see him on the corner when he walked by with Johnny's wife. Ortiz stated that he did

not know Burton personally but that he had seen him before.                                          Ortiz confirmed that he had

identified Burton's photo when it was shown to him by the police. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014,

pp. 33, 35).

        Ortiz stated that Johnny and his wife crossed the street from the mini market's corner to

the 1100 block of Orthodox Street.           Ortiz was walking "on an angle of the street."                                        (N.T.

Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 35). Ortiz remembered that when he looked back, he saw that Johnny

was sitting. at the- "corner: .. fI(tcalled Johnny twice in an effort to urge him to hurry; "to no avail;

When Ortiz turned around the third time, Johnny and Spook were standing at the "little retaining

wall at the 1100 block of Orthodox Street." Out of the comer of bis eye Ortiz could see "muzzle

flashes," like a ball of fire.   He then saw Johnny and Spook "diving." Ortiz did not hear any

disputes or arguments immediately prior to seeing those muzzle flashes. (N.T. Volume 2,

12/10/2014, pp. 36-37).

       Ortiz stated that his initial reaction was to get Johnny's wife out of the way.                                                He

"grabbed" her and ran up the alleyway.             They were about 10 to 15 feet away from Spook and

Johnny when Ortiz heard two or three additional gunshots. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 38).

       Ortiz explained that because he was rushing, it was only after he was already halfway up

the alleyway that he noticed a man in blue jeans and· a dark sweatshirt standing there.                                            011iz

believed the man also had a hood on his head. Ortiz did not see a gun.                                            (N.T.       Volume 2,

12/10/2014, p. 39).



                                                               12
              Ortiz headed toward the 1100 block of Overington Street where his aunt lived.                 While

 still in the alleyway, Ortiz called 911.     He kept walking; a couple of minutes later, he saw Johnny

 run by him. By the time he got to the corner of Overington and Naples Streets, a police cruiser

 picked him up and took him to Homicide. The detectives wanted to talk to him because "(he]

 was the fellow that called 9-1-1."      (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 42).

          Ortiz acknowledged the Defendant's presence in court.               He also confirmed that he had

seen the Defendant in the past - probably around Horrocks Street. He also stated that he had

seen the Defendant with Burton once or twice. Ortiz denied seeing the Defendant personally the

night of the shooting.     (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014,        pp. 43-44).

         011iz confirmed that he gave a statement at Homicide where he was interviewed by

Detective Burns (first name not" stated).            He· recognized the. first 'statement he gave to the

homicide detectives on September 11, 2012 into September 12, 2012.                   Ortiz also confirmed that

during that first interview, he identified Burton's photograph on an 8-picture photo spread,

circled it and put the name "James" above. Ortiz then signed his name and placed the date next

to it.   (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 54-56).

         He also confirmed that on September 13, 2012, Detectives Bums and Keen (first name

not given) met Ortiz at Large and Overington Streets. The meeting took place in an unmarked

police car. During the meeting, Ortiz also confirmed that everything he said in his first statement

was accurate. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 47).

         Ortiz remembered that during the second meeting, the detectives showed him another

array of eight photographs. He remembered identifying the Defendant on the photo array (he

believed that it was photograph #7) by scribbling "Guy with James" on top of the photo. 14 Ortiz


         14
              Ortiz was not sure if he circled the Defendant's photograph but acknowledged that the photograph did
look circled. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 49).

                                                       13
 recognized his signature underneath the photograph and the date, 9/13/2012.                      He also confirmed

 that when asked about the person on the photograph, he said to the detective: "That's James'

 friend. He was the one in the hoodie that night when Spook got killed.'' He also recalled telling

 the detectives that the Defendant was the person in the hoodie who had a gun the night of the

 shooting. Ortiz acknowledged putting his· signature at the bottom of each page of his statement. ·

 (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 48~52, 54).

              Although on cross-examination 011iz conceded that he likely had had a shot of E & J

liquor that day, he indicated that it would have been no later than around 3 pm or _4 pm. (N.T.

Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 69).

              Brianna Dockery testified that on September IO, 2012, at about 11 :00 pm or 11 :30 pm

she was at her friend's house," on the 4600 block of Horrocks Street. After she left her friend.'s"·

house, she was waiting for her stepfather to pick her up at the corner of Horrocks and Orthodox

Streets, in front of J's Mini Market; however, he never showed up. Dockery had her laundry bag

with her. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014,             pp. 88-89, 94).

          Dockery stated that her sisters Courtney, Maurisa, and Aneesha were also standing

outside. She also noticed some other people outside including the decedent, a male who looked

Puerto Rican, a white male, and the white male's girlfriend. Dockery testified that she also saw

two black males there, "Jay and Moo" (Burton and the Defendant) whom she had known.15 The

males were standing across Horrocks Street, as was Spook, the victim.                             (N.T.      Volume 2,

12/10/2014, pp. 89~91, 95, 97).

          Dockery acknowledged the Defendant's ("Moo's") presence in the courtroom.                            Dockery

stated that "Jay"         (Burton) grew up across the street and that once in a while he would get


          15
               Dockery stated that the Defendant was a family friend of her stepsister Maurise.      (N.T.    Volume 2,
12/10/2014,     pp. I 09-110).

                                                           14
   ··-   ... -----··-·     -- ·------·----·········-    --                                        - ·-·   ...   -· ..   --·-··- - .. -· --·- .. --   . - ··--- -··· ---·----- ..



                         together with the Defendant on Horrocks Street; she sometimes saw Burton and the Defendant at

                         Keisha's house. Dockery also stated that she knew of Allen Young and that he sometimes was at

                         Keisha's house.               (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 91, 93).

                                      Dockery was sitting on some steps directly across the street; although there was a bush

                         blocking Dockery's view, she was able to hear an argument involving the Defendant, Burton,

                         and the victim and to see them from the chest up. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 98-99, 144).

                                    Dockery testified that following the argument, Burton hit Spook in the back of his head;

                         the Defendant then shot Spook. Spook was shot three times. (N.T.                               Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p.

                         100).

                                    According to Dockery, after the shooting, everyone ran away.                           Dockery ran up Naples
......
                         Street; she left her laundry bag behind. Then she went to· Ortiz's house and stood on the porch

                         for a little while before returning to Horrocks Street to retrieve her laundry bag. She saw the

                         police when she came back to the scene; the police asked Dockery whether the things left on the

                         corner belonged to her.                The police then took her down to Homicide.                          (N.T. Volume 2,

                         12/10/2014, pp. 101, 143).

                                    Dockery went to Homicide and gave her first statement to Detectives Harkins (first name

                     not given) and Burns (first name not given) in the early morning hours of September 11, 2012.

                     She asked the detectives if she could stay overnight because she was scared and did not want to

                     go back to the neighborhood.                 Dockery was allowed to stay at Homicide and was given food and

                     a place to sleep.                 She ended up staying at Homicide for three days and did not return to the

                     Horrocks Street neighborhood afterwards.                   Dockery noted that when she first got to Homicide,

                     she did not tell the detectives the truth because she did not want to get in trouble (the officer told




                                                                                   15
her that she was going to get locked up for "harboring a fugitive" if she did not tell the truth).

(N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 102-104, 108, 115).

       Dockery gave her second statement to Detectives Harkins and Peterman (first name not

given) on September 12, 2012, at 11: 15am. She acknowledged her signature on the bottom of

each page of the statement.   Dockery confirmed that in her statement, she stated, inter alta: "I

didn't want to go back to the neighborhood, because I thought that everyone would think that I

told on Moo and James. Besides, Moo scares me." Responding to the detectives' question, "Do

you know the male that did the shooting?" she said "Yes. It was Meo." She also stated that what

she said was true. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 104, 115-116).

       She remembered that the Defendant drove a white car that night because she saw her

sisters get out of that car after the shooting; shealso saw Burton get into that car. Dockery stated

that at the time of the shooting, the Defendant's car was parked on Horrocks Street, across from

Keisha's house. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 110-111).

       After the shooting, Dockery ran in the direction of Naples Street and then eastbound on

Orthodox Street, past the decedent. She did not pass the Defendant or Burton as she was running;

when she came back around, the Defendant's car was gone. Dockery did not know where the

Defendant and Burton went. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 112-113).

       Dockery gave her third statement on September 13, 2012. On that day, the detectives

came to her house and showed her a spread of eight photographs.               She recognized her

handwritten statement and acknowledged the authenticity of her signature at the bottom of each

page; she also confirmed that she wrote down the date and the time. Dockery stated that she

identified "Moo," the Defendant, on the photo array. She placed a circle around the Defendant's




                                                16
 photograph (photograph #7) on the photo spread and wrote "Moo" in the corner; she also signed

 and dated it at the bottom. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014,           pp. 104, 116-119).

             Dockery stated that she was truthful when she said to the detectives, "I know him as

 Moo. He's the one that shot Spook." (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014,                p. 120).

             In her statement that day, Dockery said, inter alia:

         They was there for about a couple of minutes before I started hearing Moo and James and
         Spook start to get loud .... That's when I seen James lean over and smack Spook in the
         back of the head .... After Spook got slapped, he put his hands up to fight."

(N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 141).

         Dockery also stated that she then observed the Defendant pull out his gun and start

shooting; she heard three shots and saw the flashes of light coming from the gun. The Defendant

was backing up as he was shooting.              Spook and John had fallen to the ground. · After the

shooting, the Defendant and Burton ran around the corner to Horrocks Street and jumped into a

car. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 141-142).

         Allen Young testified that at the time of the Defendant's trial, he was in custody16 and

that he received no promises with regard to the sentence he was serving in exchange for his

testimony in court. He stated that he did not remember giving a statement to the detectives in

this matter. He confirmed that his attorney Kadish (first name not given) explained to him that

he had been given immunity with regard to this incident. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 148-

150).

        Young did not recall living at 4605 Horrocks Street on September 10, 2012 when the

shooting occurred. Young acknowledged that he knew Lakeisha in September 2012 but noted

that he was not sure where she was living. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 152).

        16
         Young testified that he was serving an eleven-and-a-half (11 ~) to twenty-three (23) months' sentence at
CFCF ona drug charge. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 173).

                                                       17
        Young stated that the Defendant looked familiar and that he had seen him around though

he did not know him personally.     He stated that he did not remember "any James Burton" and

denied knowing Brianna Dockery. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 153).          He denied signing a

statement or the photographs.     He· also indicated that· the paperwork he was shown in court

contained someone else's name as his name was spelled differently. Id.

        Young maintained that he did not recall using other names or aliases or giving a false

name to Jaw enforcement. However, he conceded that in October of 2014, he pleaded guilty in

Delaware County to giving a false identification to a Jaw enforcement officer. (N.T. Volume 2,

12/10/2014, pp. 154-155).

       Young confirmed that he goes by the name "Allen Young" and also "Allen A. Young."

He stated he did not remember being interviewed by detectives George Pirrone and Gregory

Santamala at the Homicide Unit on September 14, 2012 with regard to the shooting death of

Naeem Giles. He also did not remember being advised of his constitutional rights, putting his

initials next to the answers or being questioned about the shooting death of Naeem Giles. Young

also had no memory of putting his signature at the bottom.     (N.T.   Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp.

155, 157-158, 160).

       Young did not remember stating that Lakeisha Young was his niece.         He denied being

asked whether or not he was present when the decedent was shot and killed; he also denied

saying that he was inside his niece Lakeisha Young's house when the shooting happened. (N.T.

Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 161, 163).

       Young stated that he had no recollection of giving the detectives the following account of

the circumstances surrounding the decedent's death:

       I was inside Lakeisha's house. It was about 11: 15 p.m. or 11 :30 p.m. on the 10th [ of
       September]. . .. I was helping her in the house. I took a bucket of dirty water outside the

                                               18
         house to empty the dirty water out. When I was outside, I saw some people standing on
         the comer of Orthodox and Horrocks Street. One of the guys up on the comer had a hood
         on, but I could not tell who they were. I went back inside the house and then a couple
         minutes later I heard three gunshots then I heard three more. . . . Then this boy James
         [Burton] came running inside Lakeisha's house and then a guy, Mace, followed him
         inside. Mace threw a gun on the couch and they ran back outside. I went to the couch
         and grabbed the gun. I didn't know what to do. Itook the gun outside the house that night
         and put it in some bushes around the comer. I was off from work the next morning so I·
        went and picked the gun up from the bushes. I didn't want some kids to find the gun so I
        took it to my girl's house .... Ihid the gun in her house from her. Ihid it in the bedroom. I
        was off from work on· Tuesday and Wednesday and went back to work on Thursday.
        Then [that] morning I got a call from my niece Lakeisha when I was working. She told
        me that some detectives were at her house. She told me that the detectives picked up her
        husband, Charles Holmes. [ ... ] She told me that they were looking to speak to me too. I
        then asked her what it was about, and I asked her for the detective's number. I called the
        detective, but there was no answer. I tried again about a half hour later when I was on
        break. The detective called me back .... I met them [at my niece's house] and brought
        them to my girl's house on Magee Street. I went inside and I got the gun. I took the clip
        from the gun and the bullet in the barrel and handed it to the detectives.

(N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/20.14, pp. 163-165).

        Young did not recall telling the detectives that he had known the Defendant for about two

years or that he had known Burton for about ten years. Young testified that the Defendant had a

familiar face but that he did not know him. He also did not recall identifying the Defendant's or

Burton's photographs as well as writing «Mace" by the Defendant's photograph and "James" by

Burton's photograph. and putting his signature underneath. He did not recall being shown the

photograph ofNaeem Giles, the decedent (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 165-167, 170-172).

       Young had no recollection of the Defendant or Burton coming to Lakeisha's house the

night of the shooting.   Young also did not recall being asked if he had seen the Defendant or

James since the night of the shooting and answering in the negative.            (N.T.   Volume 2,

12/10/2014, pp. 165, 167-168).

       He also did not remember being asked why he did not call the police after the Defendant

and James ran out of the house after the shooting or explaining his inaction the following way: "I



                                                19
just wasn't thinking. I know the situation with the house. It is a Section Eight home, and I didn't

want her or her home involved. I just .wanted to get the gun out of there." (N.T. Volume 2,

12/10/2014, p. 169). Young also did not recall describing the gun to the detectives as a black

semiautomatic or giving the gun to them. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 171).

       Police Officer James Putro testified that on September 10, 2012, he was on duty at

approximately 11 :30 pm when he received a radio call about a shooting in the area. He and his

partner, Officer Galiczynski (first name not given) were the first officers to arrive on location.

(N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 4-5).        Upon arrival, they observed a black male on the

northwest corner of Horrocks and Orthodox Streets.       The male was kneeling down; his upper

body was "kind of turned and his head was laying on a stone window ledge." (N.T. Volume 1,

12/11/2014, pp. 6-7).

       Officers Putro and Galiczynski exited the vehicle; upon approaching the male, they saw

blood on the wall and around the area. Officer Putro pulled the male's shoulders back to try to

give him CPR and check his vital signs at which time he noticed that the male's "eyes were

white and rolled to the top of his head." (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, p. 6). The male had

multiple wounds and blood was coming from his torso. Officer Putro and his partner started

securing the area with crime scene tape.    The medics arrived on the scene shortly afterwards.

(N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, p. 7).

       While on the scene, the officers talked to a few people on the block; they learned from

them that the victim's name was Naeem Giles. The officers found a couple of spent shell casings

and one or two projectiles on the ground around the body. The decedent had on a black hooded

sweatshirt, blue jeans and black boots. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, p. 7).




                                                20
                                                                                 Circulated 10/05/2016 03:17 PM




        Officers Putro and Ga!iczynski located Brianna Dockery around the 4600 block of

Horrocks Street, close to the corner. She appeared to be willing to speak to them. As a result of

what she told them, they transported her to the Homicide Unit. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp.

8-9).

        Detective Gregory Santamala testified that while he was .not assigned to work on this

case, he and his partner, Detective Pirrone (first name not given) "were asked to interview a

gentleman in relationship to this investigation."   (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, p. 33) .. The

interview took place on September 14, 2012, at about 12:00 noon, in the Homicide Unit. The

person they interviewed was Allen Young. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 32-34).

        Detective Santamala testified that the interview began at 12:10 pm after the Miranda

warnings were given to Young.         Detective Santamala confirmed that Young was being

interviewed in connection with the weapon recovery (Young was the one who gave the

detectives the gun used in this case). (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 34-35).

        Detective Santamala confirmed that he explained to Young that he was being questioned

in connection with the shooting death of Naeem Giles. Detective Santamala stated that Young

was "very cooperative and very coherent."    (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, p. 38). He noted that

they took a verbatim statement from Young and that the interview took about 40-45 minutes

from start to finish. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 38-39, 45).

        At the request of the Prosecution, Detective Santamala read the interview questions they

posed to Young as well as the answers which Young provided. See N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014,

pp. 39-42.




                                               21
         In the statement, Young said, inter alia, that he had seen the victim walking around the

 neighborhood previously but that he had never spoken to him.       He also stated 'that he was not

 present on the scene when Naeem Giles was shot and killed and that he was inside the home of

 his niece, Lakeisha Young, when the shooting happened.      (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 39-

 40).

         Detective Santamala also stated that Young mentioned in the statement that he had

known the Defendant for about two years and Burton for ten years.            He also confirmed that

Young identified the photographs of the Defendant and Burton.           (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014,

pp. 41-42).

         Young understood that the Defendant and Burton ran into Lakeisha's house because they

knew her daughters and "it was just a familiar' house."      (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014; p. 43).

Young stated that the gun that he turned over to the detectives was a black semiautomatic. Id.

        Detective Santamala indicated that after giving the statement, Young reviewed it before

signing each page without making any additions or corrections.            Detective Santamala   also

confirmed that at the bottom of the Defendant's photograph, Young wrote, "Mace" and that he

signed his name under the photograph.      Young also wrote the name "James" under Burton's

photograph and signed underneath; he did not sign the decedent's          photograph shown to him.

(N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 44-45).

        Detective James Burns testified that he was the assigned detective in this matter and that

he was in charge of coordinating      the investigation,   conducting    interviews, and collecting

physical evidence.      Detective Burns was "knocking on doors and interacting         with several

neighbors on the block," while his partner was supervising the crime scene. (N.T. Volume 1,

12/11/2014,   pp. 50-52).



                                               22
        Detective Burns stated that he interviewed Carmelo Ortiz twice, on September 12, 2012

 and on September 13, 2012.      Ortiz did not appear impaired when he gave the statement on

 September 12, 2012.   Initially, Ortiz was reluctant to talk and insisted that he had only heard the

 gunshots.   Eventually, however, 011iz admitted that he, in fact; was on the scene when the

shooting occurred. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 52-54, 65-68).

        In his statement, Ortiz explained that he concluded that the Defendant was the shooter

because there was a muzzle flash coming from his gun. Ortiz heard a total of four or five shots.

Ortiz was given an opportunity to look over his statement; he confirmed to Detective Bums that

the statement was accurate. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 55-56, 58).

        Detective Burns also testified that at some point the following day, on September 13,

2012, at approximately 3:40 pm,    he went to the..areaof Large and Overington      Streets to meet

with 011iz again.   Their meeting took place in an unmarked police car. The purpose of the

meeting was to show Ortiz a spread of photographs of eight males. Detective Burns stated that

Ortiz identified the Defendant on photograph #7. Ortiz stated that the male was Burton's friend

and that he was the shooter. 011iz also confirmed that Burton, too, was on the scene that night.

(N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 56-59).

       Based on the interviews of Carmelo Ortiz and Brianna Dockery as well as the statement

taken from James Burton and other available information, Detective Burns obtained an arrest

warrant for the Defendant on September 14, 2012. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, p. 59). As is

common practice, the arrest warrant was logged into the computer so that "in the event that an

officer is out there and stops him ... he knows who he's stopping." (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014,

p. 60). Detective Burns stated that he turned the file over to the Fugitive Squad so that they

could attempt to find the Defendant. Id.



                                               23
        Detective Burns also testified that he was privy to the interview of James Burton which

 was conducted by other detectives in his squad.    The information provided by Burton led the

 detectives to Allen Young.   They made an attempt to locate Young on September 14, 2012, in

 the residence at 4605 Horrocks Street.   He was not home at the time, and they left their office

 telephone number for him. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 60-61).

        Young got in touch with Detective Bums a short while later and took him to a "secondary

location" on Magee Street. The detectives waited outside, and Young emerged from the house

shortly afterwards with the gun which he turned over to Detective Burns. The 45-caliber gun

was placed on Property Receipt 3033053.      Young also gave Detective Bums the clip from the

gun. There were live rounds in the clip. It was at that point that Young was brought down to

Homicide fora formal Interview. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 62-63).

       Police Officer Brian Hollman testified that on September 28, 2012, he was doing his tour

of duty with his partner, Police Officer Kochmer (first name not given). The officers were in a

marked police car equipped with a Mobile Data Terminal ("MDT") system for running tags and

names. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 73-75).

       Upon observing the Defendant disregard a posted stop sign at 23rd and Oxford Streets,

they turned on their overhead lights and sirens and followed him. Eventually, they pulled the

Defendant over before 32"d Street. The information they received from the MDT showed that

the car was "valid" but that it belonged to a female not the Defendant.        (N.T. Volume 1,

12/11/2014, pp. 77-79).

       Officer Hollman approached the driver's side and his partner approached the passenger's

side. The Defendant was the only occupant. When Officer Hollman approached the driver's

side, the Defendant already had his license hanging out of the window. Officer Hollman took the



                                               24
Defendant's     license and asked him for his registration and car insurance; he informed the

Defendant that he was stopped for disregarding a stop sign.       (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp.

80-81).

          Officer Hollman stated that when he received the driver's license from the Defendant, he

noticed that the Defendant was physically shaking: "His hand was physically shaking hanging

out the window when he gave me the information.         I asked him for the rest. He gave me the

driver's registration, insurance card.   As we're walking back, I ... let my partner know, you

know, he seemed nervous. He's shaking." (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, p. 81).

          Officers Hollman and Kochmer got back in the car and ran the male's name through the

MDT system. The information they received was that Maceo Waring was wanted for homicide

and that he was considered armed and dangerous. Because theMfrf" system 'was "acting up" and

taking time to process the information, they also ran the driver's name over the radio. After just

a few seconds, the radio dispatcher asked the officers whether they had the male in custody and

alerted them that the "male needs to be in custody right now." (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp.

81-83).

          Officers Hollman and Kochmer returned to the Defendant's car. Officer Kochmer went

up to the driver's side and Officer Hollman proceeded to the passenger's side with his gun out.

Officer Kochmer asked the Defendant if there were any weapons inside the car; the Defendant

answered in the negative.      Officer Kochmer then asked the Defendant to step out, and the

Defendant complied.      Thereafter, Officer Kochmer patted him down for weapons; he did not

discover any. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 83-85).

          Officer Kochmer instructed the Defendant to put his hands behind his back; at that point,

Officer Hollman grabbed the Defendant's right arm. The Defendant started tightening his fist



                                                 25
 and making it hard to place him in handcuffs.          Officer Hollman requested help over the radio.

 After Officer Hollman got the Defendant in a headlock, he felt that the Defendant was trying to

 grab his gun.    Officer Hollman alerted his partner, and Officer Kochmer then got behind the

 Defendant and started "wrestling with him." (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 87-88).

         Officer Hollman remembered hearing "two loud bangs» and seeing smoke fill the car.

He got out of the car and saw his partner Officer Kochmer laying on his back on the street with

the Defendant holding him in "almost like a tackling motion."         Officer Kochmer warned Officer

Hollman that the Defendant was trying to get his gun out of its holster. (N.T. Volume 1,

 12/11/2014, p. 89).

        Officer Hollman stated that he feared for bis life and for his partner's life.          As he

observed Officer Kochmer and 'the Defendant struggle on the ground, Officer Hollman drew his

weapon, fired a shot at the Defendant, holstered his weapon back up, and grabbed the Defendant.

After another unit arrived, they were able to handcuff the Defendant and place him under arrest.

(N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 90, 92).

        As a result of this incident, Officer Hollman was injured.           Though it was "nothing

major," his arm "swelled up" and he had to go to Jeanes Hospital for a check-up.               Officer

Kochmer was bitten in his inner thigh although Officer Hollman testified that he did not know

the extent of the severity of his injury. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 92-93).




                                             Expert Testimony


Testimony of Dr. Sam Gulino, an Expert in the Field of Forensic Pathology

        Dr. Sam Gulino, Chief Medical Examiner for the City of Philadelphia, testified as an

expert in the field of forensic pathology.    (N .T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014,   pp. 4-5).

                                                   26
           Dr. Gulino stated that he was not personally involved in the autopsy of Naeem Giles, the

 decedent. (The autopsy was performed by Dr. Marlon Osborne, one of the associate medical

 examiners who used to work for Dr. Gulino and who had since taken a job in Florida.)            Dr.

 Gulino attested to bis familiarity with this case; he reviewed the entire medical examiner case

 file including Dr. Osborne's autopsy report issued in this case and the photographs taken during

the autopsy. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 7-8).

          Dr. Gulino confirmed that the autopsy was performed on September 11, 2012, at about

8:50 am. Dr. Gulinio explained that the decedent had sustained four gunshot wounds and a graze

wound to the right shoulder; he also had a small area of abrasion on the right forearm. (N.T.

Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 8-9).

      - The first gunshot wound described by Dr, Osborne in his report 'was a perforating

gunshot wound to the neck. The bullet went through the muscles of the neck and hit the left and

right common carotid artery as well as the right internal jugular vein. The same bullet then also

hit the esophagus before exiting out of the right side of the neck. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014,

p. 10).

          The second gunshot wound was a gunshot wound to the chest; it was associated with

bleeding into the right chest cavity. The bullet, which was recovered during autopsy, fractured

the right collarbone and the first and second ribs in the front part of the chest; it then went

through the right lung, hit the right fifth rib in the back part of the chest and then lodged just

under the skin on the right side of the back. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 11 ).

          The third gunshot wound entered on the outer part of the left arm.         The bullet went

through the musculature of the arm and the shoulder and also the upper part of the back. The

bullet did not enter any of the body cavities and did not hit any major organs or blood vessels.



                                                27
 The bullet recovered at autopsy lodged in the trapezius muscle on the right side.                  (N.T. Volume

 2, 12/10/2014, p. 11).

          The fourth gunshot wound was a perforating wound through the region of left elbow.

 The bullet traveled under the skin before exiting just above the elbow on the backside of the arm.

No bullet was recovered. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 11-12).

          Finally, there was a very small (less than an inch long) wound on the outer aspect of the

 right shoulder. Dr. Gulino agreed with Dr. Osborne's conclusion that the bullet had just grazed

across the skin without actually going in, and that it was angled upward.                      (N.T.    Volume 2,

 12/10/2014, p. 12).

          Dr. Gulino concluded that the gunshot wound to the neck, which hit the blood vessels in

the decedent's neck and caused bleeding, and· the gunshot wound to the right collarbone region,

which hit the decedent's lung and caused bleeding in his chest cavity, were both mortal wounds

in combination. (N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 15-16).

         Based on Dr. Gulino's independent review of the records and photographs, he concluded

to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, in line with Dr. Osborne's conclusion, that the victim

died as a result of multiple gunshot wounds and that the manner of his death was homicide.

(N.T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, pp. 16-17).17


Testimony of Police Officer Kelly Walker, an Expert in the Field of Firearm Identification and
Ballistics

         Police Officer Kelly Walker testified as an expert in the field of firearm identification and

ballistics. Officer Walker testified that she received numerous pieces of physical evidence and




         17
           A toxicology report established that the decedent had PCP in his urine but not in his blood. He also had
a trace amount of alcohol (less than a quarter of what would have been the legal limit for driving.) (N.T. Volume I,
12/11/2014, pp. 20-22).

                                                        28
that she issued two separate reports in this case, the original report and an addendum to the

report.18     (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 14-16).

            Officer Walker stated that she received the following items of evidence for examination:

six fired cartridge casings, one bullet specimen, one bullet jacket, one bullet jacket fragment, and

one pistol as well as some live ammunition and a magazine with some cartridges. All the fired

cartridge casings were .45 auto caliber. Officer Walker also received a pistol - a Glock

semiautomatic model 21, which was a .45 auto caliber. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 17, 19-

21).

         Officer Walker did a microscopic comparison of the evidence. She noted that the six

fired cartridge casings (FCCs) came from the .45 caliber automatic, P-1. (N.T. Volume 1,

12/11/2014, pp. 22, 24). 19

         Officer Walker explained that the addendum to the report dealt with the two bullets taken

from the Medical Examiner's Office. Each came from the decedent's body. (N.T. Volume 1,

12/11/2014, pp. 25-26). Officer Walker concluded that both bullet specimens were also fired

from P-1. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, pp. 26, 29).

         Officer Walker confirmed that all of the opinions she offered were rendered to a

reasonable degree of scientific certainty. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/201414, p. 29).

        Under cross-examination, Officer Walker conceded that the report stated, inter alia,

"Bullet jacket one, bullet jacket fragment one, when compared against each other and P-1,

insufficient corresponding microscopic markings to permit an identification." Officer Walker




         18  The report C-36 had an examination date of January 15, 2013; the report C-55 had an examination date
ofJanuar;,; 23, 2013. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, p. 31 ).
           9 There were enough microscopic markings to determine whether or not the bullet jacket and the bullet

jacket fragment had been fired from P- l . (N .T. Volume 2, 12/10/2014, p. 25).

                                                        29
admitted that theoretically that meant that bullet jacket one and bullet jacket fragment one could

have come from different guns. (N.T. Volume 1, 12/11/2014, p. 30).




                                     Self-Authenticating Document

       This court accepted as a self-authenticating document the Certificate of Non-Licensure

signed and sealed by the commissioner of the Pennsylvania State Police, Colonel Frank Noonan,

stating that Maceo Waring on the date in question, September 10, 2012, did not have a valid

license to carry a firearm issued under the provisions of Section 6109 of the Crimes Code, and

that he did not have a valid sportsman's firearm permit issued under the provisions of Section

6106 C of the Crimes Code. (N.T. Volume l, 12/11/2014, pp. 48-49).




SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

       The Defendant claims that there is insufficient evidence to establish beyond reasonable

doubt his guilt of each of the crimes for which he stands convicted.    The Defendant argues that

the Commonwealth did not prove its case beyond reasonable doubt.

       Upon review of the record, this court finds the Defendant's claims to be meritless. This

court is satisfied that the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth as

the verdict winner, was sufficient to sustain each of the Defendant's convictions.

       The standard for reviewing whether the conviction was based on sufficient evidence is

whether, viewing all the evidence admitted at trial in the light most favorable            to the

Commonwealth as verdict winner, the comi is able to ascertain that there existed sufficient

evidence to enable the fact-finder to find every element of the crime beyond reasonable doubt.

Commonwealth v. Lewis, 2006 PA Super 314, ~ 4, 911 A.2d 558, 563 (2006).



                                                30
          To sustain the conviction, the facts and circumstances relied on by the Commonwealth

 must show that every essential element of the crime is established beyond reasonable doubt.

Com. v. Hargrave, 2000 PA Super 5, ~ 7, 745 A.2d 20, 22 (2000).           While guilt may never rest

upon conjecture or surmise, a conviction may stand on "wholly circumstantial              evidence."

Commonwealth v. Diggs, 597 Pa. 28, 36, 949 A.2d 873, 877 (2008). See also Commonwealth v.

Roscioli, 454 Pa. 59, 62, 309 A.2d 396, 398 (1973) C'[T]he Commonwealth does not have to

establish guilt to a mathematical         certainty, and may in the proper case rely wholly on

circumstantial evidence .... ").



First-degt·ee Murder

          The Defendant clainis that the evidence was insufficient to support the guilty verdict on

the charge of murder of the first degree. The Defendant's claim is without merit.

          To support a conviction for first-degree murder, the Commonwealth must prove that the

victim is deceased; that the Defendant killed him; and that the Defendant acted with the specific.

intent to kill. Montalvo, 986 A.2d at 92; Commonwealth v. Pagan, 597 Pa. 69, 83, 950 A.2d 270,

279 (2008); Commonwealth v. Koehler, 558 Pa. 334, 350, 737 A.2d 225, 233 (1999).

          The mens rea required is the specific intent to kill; it is the factor which distinguishes

first-degree murder from murder of a lesser grade. Commonwealth v. Taylor, 583 Pa. 170, 186,

876 A.2d 916, 926 (2005); Commonwealth v. Moore, 473 Pa. 169, 174, 373 A.2d 1101, 1104

(1977).

          The Commonwealth         can establish the specific intent to kill through circumstantial

evidence. Commonwealth v. Rega, 593 Pa. 659, 681, 933 A.2d 997, 1010 (2007). The jury may

infer that the use of a deadly weapon on a vital part of the human body is sufficient to establish



                                                   31
                                                  ..   ·----·--··-   .. ..   . .. .   - ·- ...... ---·---   ·•   ····--·-··-··   - .   -· - ··--·------   .....




 the specific intent to kill. Commonwealth v. May, 584 Pa. 640, 647, 887 A.2d 750,.753 (2005);

 Commonwealth v. Rivera, 565 Pa. 289, 295, 773 A.2d 131, 135 (2001); Commonwealth v.

 Commander, 436 Pa. 532, 538-39, 260 A.2d 773, 777 (1970).

        Here, the cause of death was officially ruled homicide.                        Testimony of James Burton and

 Brianna Dockery directly implicated the Defendant as the killer . Each witness testified at trial

that he or she saw the Defendant (whom each identified in court) shoot and kill the decedent and

described the circumstances under which the killing occurred.                            Each witness had also given a

prior statement to homicide detectives identifying the Defendant as Naeem Giles' killer; each

witness had also previously identified the Defendant in a photo array as the shooter.

        The evidence demonstrated       that the victim's killing was premeditated                                               and that the

Defendant was conscious of his intentions.     While the Defendant                          was riot armed                       when he first

arrived on location, he later went to Keisha's house to pick up the gun he stored there upon

determining that he did not know any of "those guys" standing in front of the Puerto Rican store

and that, therefore, he should get his "gat." Even though the victim was unarmed and wanted to

engage in a fistfight, the Defendant pulled out his gun and fired three shots at the victim at close

range following a verbal altercation.   After the victim fell on the ground, the Defendantwalked

over to him and fired three more shots at him. As established by the expert testimony, the victim

died of multiple gunshot wounds.

       The killing of Naeem Giles was done with malice as evidenced by the Defendant's use of

a deadly weapon on vital parts of the victim's body, including his chest and neck.

       Moreover, about two and a half weeks after the murder was committed, after a routine

traffic stop for ignoring a stop sign, the Defendant .engaged in a struggle with Police Officers




                                                32
 Hollman      and   Kochmer    and   attempted   to take   each   officer's   service   weapon   thereby

 demonstrating his consciousness     of guilt.

        This court concludes that the record at trial was more than sufficient for the jury to find,

 beyond reasonable doubt, that the Defendant was guilty of murder of the first degree.



Possessing an Instrument       of Crime

        The Defendant     further argues that the evidence was insufficient       to support the guilty

verdict on the charge of possessing        an instrument   of crime.    The Defendant' s argument is

without merit.

        Under the Jaw, a person commits a misdemeanor          of the first degree if he possesses any

instrument of crimewith       intent to employ it criminally. 18 Pa.C.S. § 907(a). An instrument of·

crime includes any item the actor used for criminal purposes and had in his possession under

circumstances not manifestly appropriate for any lawful uses the item may have. Id. To convict

of this offense, the Commonwealth must prove that the Defendant "possessed [the] gun under

circumstances manifestly inappropriate for such lawful uses the gun may have had and with an

intent to employ it criminally." Commonwealth v. Jeter, 275 Pa. Super. 89, 94, 418 A.2d 625,

628 (1980).

       Here, there was sufficient evidence for the jury to find beyond reasonable doubt that the

Defendant possessed an instrument of crime, a firearrn, of which he had control and which he

intended to use criminally. The Defendant purposely retrieved his gun from Keisha's house the

night of the incident upon encountering unfamiliar people in front of the convenience store. The

Defendant used the gun criminally when he fired multiple shots at the victim, Naeem Giles.




                                                  33
  Furthermore, the Defendant fired the gun at close range at vital parts of the victim's body

  thereby demonstrating his intent to commit the crime of murder.

           The Defendant was linked to the .45 auto caliber firearm, a Glock semiautomatic model

  21, which was determined to be the shooting weapon in this case. The gun was given to the

 detectives by Allen Young, who witnessed the Defendant bring the gun to Keisha's house and

  leave it there after the shooting.   The analysis of the ballistics evidence presented in this case

 demonstrated that all of the recovered fired cartridge casings were .45 auto caliber.           The two

 bullets submitted through the Medical Examiner's Office were also linked to the same firearm.

          This court is firmly of the belief that, viewing all the evidence admitted at trial in the light

 most favorable to the Commonwealth as the verdict winner, there was sufficient evidence to

.. enable the jury to finl every element of possessing an instrument of crime beyond reasonable

 doubt.



 Firearms Not to Be Carried without a License

          The Defendant also claims that the evidence was insufficient to support the guilty verdict

 on the firearms not to be carried without a license charge.            The Defendant's argument is

 meritless.

          18 Pa.C.S. § 6106 states, in pertinent part:

          § 6106. Firearms not to be carried without a license

          (a) Offense defined.--
          (!) Except as provided in paragraph (2), any person who carries a firearm in any vehicle
          or any person who carries a firearm concealed on or about his person, except in his place
          of abode or fixed place of business, without a valid and lawfully issued license under this
          chapter commits a felony of the third degree.

 18 Pa.C.S. § 6106 {a)(l).



                                                    34
         Here, the evidence established that the Defendant carried a AS auto caliber firearm, a

 Glock semiautomatic-model 21, on his person at the time of the incident. The Defendant was not

 at his place of residence or business, and he did not have a valid and lawfully issued license for

 carrying the firearm. This court accepted as a self-authenticating document the Certificate of

Non-Licensure which indicated that on September 10, 2012, the Defendant did not have a valid

license to carry a firearm.

        It follows, therefore, that there was sufficient evidence for the jury to find beyond

reasonable doubt that the Defendant violated the firea1ms-not-to-be-carried-without-a-license

statute. The Defendant's rneritless claims must fail.


Aggravated Assault - Attem_pt_. t_o Cause Serious Bodily Injury             to Law Enforcement
Officers

        The Defendant also alleges that the evidence was insufficient to support the guilty verdict

on the charges of aggravated assault by attempting to cause serious bodily injury to law

enforcement officers. The Defendant's meritless argument fails ..


        18 Pa.C.S. § 2702 states, in pertinent part:

        (a) Offense defined.--A person is guilty of aggravated assault if he:

       (2) attempts to cause or intentionally, knowingly or recklessly causes serious bodily
       injury to any of the officers, agents, employees or other persons enumerated in subsection
       (c) or to an employee of an agency, company or other entity engaged in public
       transportation, while in the performance of duty;

       (c) Officers, employees, etc., enumerated.--The officers, agents, employees and other
persons referred to in subsection (a) shall be as follows:

       ( 1) Police officer.

18 Pa. C. S. § 2702 (a)(2).




                                                  35
        For purposes of aggravated assault, "an 'attempt' is found where the accused, with the

 required specific intent, acts in a manner which constitutes a substantial step toward perpetrating

a serious bodily injury upon another." Commonwealth v. Gray, 2005 PA Super 22, ~ 9, 867 A.2d

560, 567 (2005) (citation and quotation omitted).     To support a prima facie case of aggravated

assault on a police officer, the Commonwealth does not need to establish that the police officer

actually suffered bodily injury; instead, the Commonwealth needs to establish an attempt to

cause serious bodily injury, and the intent may be shown by circumstances reasonably suggesting

the defendant's intent to cause such injury. Commonwealth v. Marti, 2001 PA Super 194, 779

A.2d 1177 (2001).      See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Lloyd, 2008 PA Super 101, ~ 22, 948 A.2d 875,

883 (2008) (the defendant swerved his car toward police officer's vehicle attempting to cause a

head-on collision; evidence was found sufficient to demonstrate an attempt to place the officer in

fear of imminent serious bodily injury while the officer was in the performance of his duty);

Commonwealth v. Stevenson, 2006 PA Super 38, 140, 894 A.2d 759, 774 (2006) ("[T]he totality

of the evidence does show that Appellant, by attempting to take hold of his handgun during the

arrest struggle, took a significant and substantial step towards inflicting serious bodily injuries

upon the officers."); Commonwealth v. Marti, 2001 PA Super 194,        1   10, 779 A.2d 1177, 1181

(2001) (prima facie case of aggravated assault established by evidence that at the time police

officer was responding to domestic dispute, defendant punched him in the jaw, causing "slight

swelling and pain").

       Here, Officers Brian Hollman and Joseph Kochmer were performing their duties as

Philadelphia police officers when the Defendant engaged in conduct which constituted a

substantial step toward causing serious bodily injury to each officer. The evidence established

that on September 28, 2012, after a routine traffic stop for ignoring a stop sign, the Defendant



                                                36
engaged in a struggle with Officers Hollman and Kochmer;                 he placed them in fear for their lives

as he attempted      to take each officer's service weapon in an attempt            to escape an arrest for the

murder ofNaeem           Giles on September      10, 2012.    As a result of the Defendant's actions, Officer

Hollman      sustained    injuries   which   required   going to the hospital     for a check-up,   and Officer

Kochmer received a bite in his inner thigh.


          The    evidence    showed     beyond     reasonable    doubt   that   the Defendant   committed     an

aggravated      assault against the police officers and that he took a significant         and substantial   step

toward inflicting serious bodily injuries upon the police officers.




WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE

        The Defendant also claims that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence.                   The

Defendant's meritless claim fails.

        The weight given to the evidence is wholly within the province of the finder of fact who

is free to believe all, part, or none of the evidence and to determine the credibility of the

witnesses.      Commonwealth v. Hunzer, 2005 PA Super 13, ,I 11, 868 A.2d 498, 506-07 (2005).

When reviewing the evidence adduced at trial, the court may not weigh the evidence and

substitute its judgment for that of the fact-finder. Commonwealth v. Derr, 2004 PA Super 10, ,I

5, 841 A.2d 558, 560 (2004 ). A trial court should award a new trial on the ground that the

verdict is against the weight of the evidence only when the jury's verdict is so contrary to the

evidence as to shock one's sense of justice, thereby making the award of a new trial imperative

so that what is right and just may be given another opportunity to prevail.                 Commonwealth v.

Wall, 2008 PA Super 151, ,I 16, 953 A.2d 581, 586 (2008); Commonwealth v. Whitney, 511 Pa.

232, 239, 512 A.2d 1152, 1155-56 (1986). "A new trial should not be granted because of a mere


                                                         37
 conflict in the testimony or because the judge on the same facts would have arrived at a different

 conclusion."     Commonwealth v. Widmer, 560 Pa. 308, 321, 744 A.2d 745, 752 (2000). See also

 Commonwealth v. Hargrave, 2000 PA Super 5, ~ 7, 745 A.2d 20, 22 (2000) ("[A) a mere conflict

 in the testimony of the witnesses does not render the evidence insufficient, for it is within the

 province of the fact[-]finder to determine the weight to be given to the testimony and to believe

all, part, or none of the evidence.") (citations and quotations omitted).

           This court finds that the Commonwealth presented sufficient evidence to uphold the

Defendant's convictions and that the convictions in the present case were not against the greater

weight of the evidence.

           Here, the jury was aware that on earlier occasion, Carmelo 011iz made statements to

homicide detectives which in some respects were inconsistent with the testimony this witness

gave at trial, The jury chose to regard this evidence as proof of the truth of what Ortiz said in the

earlier statement.

           The jury was also informed that at the time of the Defendant's trial, Allen Young was

serving a sentence of eleven and a half (11 Yi) to twenty-three (23) months for a drug offense and

that he testified as a prisoner brought to court for the purpose of offering testimony.     Although

the jury was aware that Young did not receive             any promises      of assistance   from the

Commonwealth on that case, the jury was notified that prior to being called to the witness stand,

Young was given immunity with regard to any criminal involvement in hiding the Defendant's

firearm.    This court instructed the jury that it could have considered this evidence in deciding

what part, if any, of Young's trial testimony the jury could believe as compared to his earlier

statement to Detective Santamala given on September 14, 2012, and the jury chose to regard the




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•



     evidence relating to that statement as proof of the truth of what Young said to Detective

     Santamala.

               Similarly, the jury was also aware that James Burton testified under a grant of immunity.

     The jury was also on notice that it had to decide whether James Burton was an accomplice in the

     homicide charged in this case. This court instructed the jury on accomplice liability explaining

     to the jury that an accomplice's testimony has to be assessed by special cautionary rules as he

    may try to testify falsely in the hope of obtaining favorable treatment, but that, on the other hand,

    an accomplice may be a perfectly truthful witness.

              This court also instructed the jury that it could decide on the credibility, weight and effect

    of the evidence pertaining to the Defendant's struggle with. police officers as he attempted to

    resist an arrest. It was up to the jury to decide whether this conduct also tended to show that the

    Defendant was conscious of his guilt.

              In addition, the jury was aware that it was charged with determining the credibility and

    weight of expert testimony taking into consideration, inter alia, each expert's training, education,

    experience and ability as well as the factual information on which he or she based each opinion,

    the source and reliability of that information, and the reasonableness       of any explanation each

    expert gave to support his or her opinions.

              Upon review of the challenge to the weight of the evidence, this court concludes that the

    verdict was consistent with the evidence. The jury - the sole judges of the credibility and weight

    of all of the testimony - was free to believe all, part or none of the evidence, and it clearly found

    the evidence to be credible and reliable.

              We conclude, therefore, that the jury verdict did not shock any sense of justice. No relief

    is due.



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CONCLUSION

       In summary, this court has carefully reviewed the entire record and finds no harmful,

prejudicial, or reversible error and nothing to justify the granting of Defendant's request for

relief. For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed.




                                              BY THE COURT:




                                             . STEVEN R. GEROFF, J.




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