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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37


COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,               :     IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                            :          PENNSYLVANIA
                            Appellee        :
                                            :
                    v.                      :
                                            :
CORDERO SMITH,                              :
                                            :
                            Appellant       :     No. 2243 EDA 2013


             Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence August 1, 2013
              In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
               Criminal Division No(s).: CP-51-CR-0001649-2012

BEFORE: GANTMAN, P.J., ALLEN, and FITZGERALD,* JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY FITZGERALD, J.:                    FILED NOVEMBER 21, 2014

        Appellant, Cordero Smith, appeals from the judgment of sentence

entered in the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas following his jury

conviction of murder in the first degree1 and related offenses.       Appellant

argues the trial court erred in admitting, under Pennsylvania Rule of

Evidence 804(b), the preliminary hearing testimony of a Commonwealth

witness because police failed to make reasonable efforts to locate the

witness and therefore the Commonwealth did not establish the witness was

unavailable for trial. We affirm.

        The instant convictions stem from the shooting death of Shawn

*
    Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
1
    18 Pa.C.S. § 2502(a).
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Jackson, nicknamed Shizz, in Philadelphia on February 7, 2011, around 5:00

p.m. The witness at issue in this appeal is Appellant’s friend, B.C. At the

time of the shooting, B.C. was approximately seventeen and a half years

old.2 We set forth in detail the relevant facts.

      On the first day of trial, July 30, 2013, out of the jury’s presence, the

Commonwealth requested the court to declare B.C. unavailable and to admit

B.C.’s preliminary hearing testimony as substantive evidence.       N.T., Trial

Vol. 1, 7/30/13, at 15.       In support, the Commonwealth called Sergeant

Steven Purcell, of the juvenile unit of the District Attorney’s Office, who

testified to the following.    Approximately two months earlier, on June 3,

2013, Sergeant Purcell attempted to serve a subpoena on B.C. at juvenile

court. The sergeant was in the waiting room outside a courtroom, and the

court crier pointed out B.C. and his mother as they exited the courtroom. As

Sergeant Purcell introduced himself, B.C. “took off and ran out of the waiting

room.”    Id. at 20.    B.C.’s mother said she would tell B.C. about the

subpoena and took a copy of it, but she refused to sign the subpoena.

      Police Officer Alfred Hindley then testified to the following efforts to

find B.C. He and his partner “culled the different databases in Philadelphia

Police Department” and found “several locations within the residence [sic] in

the 19th district in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania.”     Id. at 24.   Twelve days

2
   Appellant was eighteen years and ten months old at the time of the
shooting.




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before trial, on July 18, 2013, the two officers went to the home of his

mother (“Mrs. C.”) on Dunlap Street; there was no response. On July 23rd,

they returned to the mother’s house, and later that day went to the home of

B.C.’s father (“Mr. C.”).   There was no response at either home.         The

following day, July 24th, the officers again went to Mr. C.’s residence, and

this time a woman, who stated she lived there, met them.         The woman

called Mrs. C., and Mrs. C. told Officer Hindley she had not seen B.C. since

June 4th and “had no idea of his whereabouts.” Id. at 26. Officer Hindley

gave Mrs. C. contact information for the prosecuting attorney, and Officer

Hindley “believe[d] she did” call the attorney shortly afterward.   Id.   The

woman at Mr. C.’s house said she would leave a message for Mr. C. about

the officers’ visit.

      “[D]uring all of this time throughout these dates from July 18 on,

[Officer Hindley and his partner] found out [B.C. had] several interactions

with police in the 19th District in and around the area of Dunlap Street

where [they] attempted to make service. [They] also checked those areas

of where he was frequently stopped by police to no avail.” Id. at 27. On

the day before trial, the court issued a bench warrant for B.C. For “a little

bit over an hour,” the officer surveyed the area in the 19th Police District,

where B.C. previously “had several interactions with police.” Id. at 27, 29.




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Officer Hindley was unable to find B.C.3

      Appellant argued the officers had not made enough efforts to prove

B.C. was unavailable. The trial court disagreed and found the officers were

“unable      by process   or   other   reasonable   means   to   procure   [B.C.’s]

attendance.”     Id. at 30-31.     The court thus allowed B.C.’s preliminary

hearing testimony.

      We now review the following trial evidence, which is pertinent to

Appellant’s argument on appeal.          Approximately five months after the

shooting, on August 2, 2011, B.C. provided the following written statement

to police:

          [Appellant] and I walked towards Girard Avenue from 56th
          and Thompson Street. We were walking down 57th Street.
          [Appellant] said that he was going to walk down to Girard
          Avenue to see who was down there. We seen Shizz[, the
          victim,] out on the corner. [Appellant] started walking
          faster and he walked in front of me. [Appellant] pulled his
          shirt up and got the gun out. [Appellant] was in the
          middle of the street and he started shooting at the corner
          that Shizz was standing on. I just turned around and ran
          back toward 57th Street and went home.

N.T. at 146.      The gun was black and Appellant fired about ten shots

“straight,” without pause between them. Id. at 147. A few days later, B.C.

saw Appellant at 56th Street and Lansdowne Avenue. B.C. told police:

          I asked [Appellant] was he cool [sic] and he said yeah.
          Then I asked who did he hit and he told me the guy’s


3
   Both Sergeant Purcell and Officer Hindley later provided the same
testimony to the jury.



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           name was Shizz. I asked him if the boy died and he told
           me yeah. Then we changed the conversation.

Id. at 148. Appellant did not say why he shot the victim, and B.C. did not

know the victim. Id. at 143, 148, 164. B.C. signed all three pages of the

statement after reading it. Id. at 140, 149.

      On February 7, 2012—approximately six months after giving the above

statement—B.C.      appeared     at   Appellant’s   preliminary   hearing   as   a

Commonwealth witness.          B.C. testified that he knew Appellant but, in

contradiction to his above statement, denied that he was with Appellant at

the time of the shooting and denied seeing him shoot the victim. Id. at 139.

The Commonwealth confronted B.C. with the prior written statement to

police.    B.C. acknowledged that he signed the statement, but stated that

some of statements were not true and that he had not in fact made other

statements. Specifically, B.C. denied telling the police that he walked with

Appellant down 57th Street, they saw the victim standing in the middle of

the street, and Appellant shot at him. Id. at 146. B.C. also denied telling

the police that he heard and saw the gun and that he saw Appellant a few

days later. Id. at 147, 148.

      On cross-examination—at the preliminary hearing—B.C. testified as

follows.   He was at juvenile court with his parents when three detectives

arrived and took him, in handcuffs and without his parents, to the police

station. Id. at 151-53. The detectives took B.C. to an interrogation room

and he was kept there for eight to nine hours.          Id. at 153, 156.    After


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making the statement, the detectives took B.C. back to the detention center.

B.C. called his parents, who did not know where he was or who took him.

Id. at 165.    When asked several times why the police statement had

statements that B.C. purportedly did not make, B.C. replied that the police

told him the narrative and warned that if he did not agree to it, they would

charge him with the murder. Id. at 157, 159-60, 161. B.C. again testified

that he was not with Appellant at the time of the shooting, and specifically

stated that he “lied to the detectives.” Id. at 158. Finally, B.C. stated that

he had a prior gun adjudication in juvenile court, for which he was in

placement at the time of the preliminary hearing. Id. at 163. We note that

at trial, the transcript of B.C.’s entire preliminary hearing testimony was

introduced, including his direct, cross-, redirect, and re-cross examinations.

Id. at 138-170.

      The Commonwealth also called eye-witness Aleisha Pope, whose

occupation was a corrections officer; she testified to the following. She and

her daughter were sitting in her car, parked one block from the shooting and

facing the corner of Girard Avenue and 57th Street.      Id. at 74, 82. Pope

heard ten to twelve gunshots and saw a man “standing in the middle of

[the] street, raise his arm, and . . . fire[ ] shots” toward the corner of 57th

Street and Girard Avenue. Id. at 77-80. Pope shielded her daughter but did

not duck down and saw the man “fire the entire time.” Id. at 78, 79, 100.

When the shooting stopped, the man walked or lightly jogged away and



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passed Pope’s car on the passenger side. Id. at 80, 84-85. Pope “[got] a

good look at his face.” Id. at 85.

        Pope talked to the police when they arrived five to ten minutes later,

and about an hour after the incident, she went to the police station. Id. at

88. On May 24, 2011, Pope again went to the police station and identified

Appellant in a photo array.    Id. at 90.   Pope did not know Appellant but

stated at trial that she had no doubt he was the person she saw firing the

gun. Id. at 93.

        Defense counsel cross-examined Pope on her inconsistent testimony

as to when she first told the police that she saw tattoos on Appellant’s face,

id. at 102, 108, as well as her direct-examination testimony that she chose

Appellant in the photo array by “process of elimination” and “pick[ing] out

[the] light skinned person . . . because the rest are dark skinned.” Id. at

108.     On redirect examination, however, Pope testified that she chose

Appellant in the photo array because she “remember[ed] the tattoo.” Id. at

112.

        The jury found Appellant guilty of first-degree murder, possessing an

instrument of crime, and carrying a firearm without a license.4      The trial

“Court immediately imposed the mandatory sentence of life in prison for the




4
    18 Pa.C.S. §§ 907, 6106.




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murder charge.”5 Trial Ct. Op., 1/13/14, at 1. Appellant did not file a post-

sentence motion but took this timely appeal.6

      On appeal, Appellant challenges the court’s admission of B.C.’s

preliminary hearing testimony as substantive evidence at trial.       Appellant

asserts “that four police visits to a witness’ parents’ homes[ ] and looking ‘in

the area[ ]’ cannot suffice . . . to prove a witness’ unavailability.”

Appellant’s Brief at 13. He asserts the police’s efforts to find B.C. were a

“paucity,”   and   lists reasonable   actions the    police   should have   also

undertaken: notifying the police in the district about B.C., posting his photo,

contacting B.C.’s known associates or acquaintances, and checking hospitals,

morgues, and jails. Id. at 13-14. Appellant also asks this Court to adopt

the federal “principle that ‘the more crucial the witness, the greater the

effort required to secure his attendance.’”         Id. at 13 (citing Cook v.

McCune, 323 F.3d 825, 835 (10th Cir. 2003)). Appellant maintains there

was “absolutely no scientific or physical evidence” adduced at trial, and

instead the Commonwealth only presented “two witnesses who could

allegedly link [him] to the crime.”         Id.   Appellant contends that the

eyewitness, Pope, “had a limited opportunity to observe” and had omitted

5
   The court also imposed sentences of nine months to two years for
possessing an instrument of crime and three to six years for the firearm
offense, all to run concurrently. Sentencing Order, 8/1/13.
6
  Previously, upon Appellant’s motion, this Court remanded this case to allow
Appellant to file a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement and the trial court to prepare
a responsive supplemental opinion. Order, 2243 EDA 2013 (Nov. 8, 2013).



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“the one signature detail” about him—a facial tattoo—to the police.          Id.

Appellant describes the Commonwealth’s other witness, B.C., as “a juvenile

delinquent who failed to appear and who police never aggressively searched

for.” Id. We find no relief is due.

      We note the relevant standard of review:7

         “Questions regarding the admission of evidence are left to
         the sound discretion of the trial court, and we, as an
         appellate court, will not disturb the trial court’s rulings
         regarding the admissibility of evidence absent an abuse of
         that discretion.” An abuse of discretion is not merely an
         error of judgment; rather, discretion is abused when “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.” . . .

Commonwealth v. Trinidad, 96 A.3d 1031, 1036 (Pa. Super. 2014)

(citations omitted).

      Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 804(b) allows, as an exception to the

hearsay rule,8 former testimony “if the declarant is unavailable as a



7
  In his reply brief, Appellant avers that the standard of review of a
Confrontation Clause claim is plenary and the scope is de novo. Appellant’s
Reply Brief at 1. However, in ruling on the Commonwealth’s request to
admit B.C.’s former testimony, the trial court stated, “There is no
confrontation clause issue because you had all the discovery and no vital
impeachment evidence was not turned over [sic].” N.T. at 31. Appellant did
not object to this statement. Accordingly, we deem the issue before this
Court as whether the trial court erred in admitting evidence under the
hearsay exception of Rule 804.
8
  “Hearsay is ‘a statement, other than one made by the declarant while
testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the



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witness.”   Pa.R.E. 804(b)(1)(A)-(B).         While Rule 804 includes several

parameters for the admission of former testimony, Appellant’s sole claim in

the instant appeal is that the Commonwealth failed to establish the

unavailability of B.C. Accordingly, we consider Subsection (a)(5) of the rule:

            (a) Criteria for Being Unavailable. A declarant is
         considered to be unavailable as a witness if the declarant:

                                 *     *      *

               (5) is absent from the trial or hearing and the
            statement’s proponent has not been able, by process or
            other reasonable means, to procure:

                  (A) the declarant’s attendance, in the case of a
                hearsay exception under Rule 804(b)(1)[.]

Pa.R.E. 804(a)(5)(A) (emphasis added).

      This Court has stated:

         The test for availability under the Sixth Amendment is
         broad: a witness is unavailable if the prosecution has made
         a good faith effort to introduce its evidence through the
         live testimony of the witness and, through no fault of its
         own, is prevented from doing so. Ohio v. Roberts, [448
         U.S. 56, 74 (1980)] (the “ultimate question is whether the
         witness    is  unavailable    despite    good-faith   efforts
         undertaken prior to trial to locate and present that
         witness”)[.]

Commonwealth v. Melson, 637 A.2d 633, 637 (Pa. Super. 1994)

(additional citations omitted). “The length to which the prosecution must go

to produce the testimony is a question of reasonableness.” Id. at 638.



matter asserted.’ Pa.R.E. 801(c).” Trinidad, 90 A.3d at 727. Generally,
hearsay is not admissible. Pa.R.E. 802.



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      Our review of Pennsylvania caselaw has not revealed a discussion on

what constitutes “reasonable means” with a similar factual scenario.      See

e.g. Commonwealth v. Stays, 70 A.3d 1256, 1263 (Pa. Super. 2013)

(stating witness “was clearly unavailable under” meaning of Rule 804(b)

where witness died before trial); Commonwealth v. Lebo, 795 A.2d 987,

990-91 (Pa. Super. 2002) (holding Commonwealth did not make good faith

effort under 42 Pa.C.S. § 5917 to locate witness where Commonwealth

stated at trial that two days earlier, officer learned witness was in boot camp

in North Carolina and had two more weeks, but Commonwealth did not offer

any information of whether it had subpoenaed witness); Commonwealth v.

Nelson, 652 A.2d 396, 398 (Pa. Super. 1995) (upholding trial court finding

that Commonwealth made good faith effort to produce witness’ live

testimony where witness was called to stand at trial, Commonwealth asked

numerous, repeated questions, offered notes of testimony to refresh

recollection, and promised not to ask questions about witness’ unrelated

homicide indictment, but witness “steadfastly refused to answer any

questions or to read any prior statements to refresh his recollection”);

Commonwealth v. Smith, 647 A.2d 907, 910-11 (Pa. Super. 1994) (noting

trial court precluded former preliminary hearing testimony of confidential

informant (“CI”) where CI appeared but refused to testify at defendant’s

trial, but upholding preclusion of confidential informant’s former testimony

on ground that defense counsel did not have fair and full opportunity to



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cross-examine CI at preliminary hearing about any plea deals he made with

Commonwealth).9

      We find guidance in Commonwealth v. Faison, 305 A.2d 44 (Pa.

1973), which was decided before the 1988 adoption of Rule 804.            In that

case, our Supreme Court stated, “A defendant’s right to confront witnesses

guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment [is] violated by the use of prior

testimony unless the prosecution can establish that a good faith effort was

made to secure the witnesses[’] attendance.” Id. at 46. The prosecution

knew that the arresting police officer-witness was retired and lived in New

Jersey, and it had the address where he received pension payments.             Id.

This Court found the Commonwealth failed to establish the witness was

unavailable where it “only established that efforts to contact [the witness] by

telephone were not successful,” and “[n]o attempt was made to secure [his]

compulsory attendance at the . . . hearing.” Id. at 47. Nevertheless, this

Court held that the trial court’s error was harmless, where the prior

testimony admitted “covered less than one page” and “was only background

testimony   about   [the   defendant’s]   arrest   and   did   not   concern   the

[defendant’s] signed written confession or any of the circumstances

surrounding the obtaining of the confession[, which was the main issue].”

9
  See also CONRAIL v. Del. River Port Auth., 880 A.2d 628, 631 (Pa.
Super. 2005) (holding plaintiff’s reliance solely on witness’ membership in
witness protection program and failure to take any steps to procure
witness’s appearance did not establish witness was unavailable under Rule
804).



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Id.

        We find the underlying facts present a close case.        The actions

undertaken by police to locate B.C. are not in dispute. Instead, whereas the

trial court found the actions amounted to reasonable efforts under Rule 804,

Appellant argues they did not. We are mindful that our standard of review

for evidentiary rulings is abuse of discretion.   See Trinidad, 96 A.3d at

1036.    We also emphasize that “[t]he test for availability under the Sixth

Amendment is broad” and that that the Commonwealth must show

reasonableness and good faith in its efforts to locate a witness.     Melson,

637 A.2d at 637, 638 (emphasis added).

        Pursuant to this authority, we decline to disturb the court’s holding.

The witness B.C. was a juvenile, though at the time of trial, he was one

month shy of turning twenty years old.         Nevertheless, his mother had

accompanied him to juvenile court on June 3, 2013. Despite the fact that

they were in a courthouse and B.C. had just emerged from a proceeding in

his own delinquency matter, B.C. fled upon Sergeant Purcell’s mere

introduction of himself.10   Twelve days before trial, Officer Hindley and his

partner went to the homes of both of B.C.’s parents and on the following

day, spoke with a woman at his father’s house. This woman called B.C.’s

mother, who told Officer Hindley she had not seen her son since June 4th,

10
   Later, while testifying to the same events before the jury, Sergeant Purcell
stated, “I told him I was a sergeant, I needed to talk to him about a
subpoena I had for him.” N.T. at 120.



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the day her mother was buried—and which we note was the day after the

unsuccessful attempt of service at juvenile court. “During all of this time . .

. from July 18 on,” Officer Hindley and his partner also canvassed the area

around Mrs. C.’s house, where B.C. previously “had several interactions with

police.”   N.T. at 27.    We decline to find the trial court’s ruling that the

officers made good faith and reasonable efforts to locate B.C. was manifestly

unreasonable or the result of partiality, bias, or ill will.      See Pa.R.E.

804(a)(5)(A); Trinidad, 96 A.3d at 1036; Melson, 637 A.2d at 637.

      Finally, we decline Appellant’s request to adopt as law “the principle

that ‘the more crucial the witness, the greater the effort [is] required to

secure his attendance.”     See Appellant’s Brief at 13.   Finding no basis for

relief, we affirm Appellant’s judgment of sentence.

      Judgment of sentence affirmed.

Judgment Entered.




Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 11/21/2014




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