J-S49028-19


NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
                                                      OF PENNSYLVANIA
                             Appellee

                        v.

    LEEVERNE M. JAMES

                             Appellant                No. 2190 EDA 2018


               Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered July 20, 2018
              In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
                Criminal Division at No: CP-51-CR-0012427-2008


BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., STABILE, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*

MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.:                       FILED NOVEMBER 25, 2019

        Appellant, Leeverne M. James, appeals from the July 20, 2018 order

dismissing his petition pursuant to the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”), 42

Pa.C.S.A. § 9541-46. We affirm.

        The PCRA court recited the pertinent facts in its Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a)

opinion:

              On June 14, 2008, Philadelphia Police Officer Nick Lei
        received a radio call of a shooting in the 5400 block of Gibson
        Drive. He arrived on the scene less than a minute later and
        observed the decedent lying on the sidewalk. The victim was
        facing up and there was a lot of blood underneath the victim. He
        performed CPR until rescue personnel arrived.

              Police Officer David Gerrard also heard the radio call and
        arrived at approximately the same time. While other officer [sic]
        performed CPR, Officer Gerard noticed a large wound around the
        victim’s stomach area. Officer Gerard also noticed six (6) spent
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*   Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
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     green shotgun shells around the victim’s body. Most of the shells
     were within two (2) to three (3) feet of the victim. The farthest
     one was approximately six (6) feet away.

           Amy Harris walked from the shooting scene across the
     street to a ‘Chinese Store’ immediately following the shooting. Ms.
     Harris testified that while she was in the store, she heard
     gunshots. After the shooting stopped, Ms. Harris ran over and
     saw the decedent down on the ground and saw Appellant, whom
     she knew as ‘Q’ carrying a large gun and leaving the scene in a
     gold car.

           Tamika Sims, the victim’s sister, was an eyewitness to the
     shooting. Ms. Sims testified that she observed the shooting from
     the ‘Papi store’ which was next to the ‘Chinese store.’ Ms. Sims
     saw Appellant, whom she knew as ‘Q’ fire multiple shots into her
     brother. After the first shot the decedent fell and Appellant then
     stood over him and continuously shot at him. Ms. Sims described
     the gun as a big pump gun. When Appellant finished shooting, he
     jumped into a gold car and left. At the time of the shooting, Ms.
     Sims had known Appellant for nine (9) or ten (10) years.

            Tayanna Slusher also witnessed the shooting. Ms. Slusher
     testified that as she was walking from the ‘Papi store’ towards the
     shooting scene, she saw Appellant get out of a gold car carrying a
     big black gun with two hands. Ms. Slusher saw Appellant shoot
     the decedent. Ms. Slusher saw the decedent fall to the ground
     while Appellant stood over the victim and continued to fire.

            Dr. Edwin Lieberman, the medical examiner, testified that
     the victim received six shotgun blasts to his body from a distance
     of approximately three (3) feet. Two blasts were to the left side
     of his body, which shredded both lungs, his heart, his left kidney,
     his spleen and his bowel. Another blast was to the left chest,
     which struck the left lung and bowel. Another blast was to the
     abdomen and two were to the upper left arm. The victim died as
     a result of those injuries. Numerous shotgun pellets and other
     material from the shotgun shells were recovered from the victim’s
     body.

            Officer Ernest Bottomer, the ballistics expert, examined the
     ballistics evidence recovered from the crime scene, as well as the
     evidence received from the medical examiner and from the search
     of Appellant’s mother’s home. The recovered pellets were all .33
     caliber Double O buckshot, usually found in a 12 gauge shotgun.

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      A total of 33 pellets were recovered from the crime scene and from
      the decedent’s body. The fired cartridge shells recovered from the
      scene were all Remington shells, which were chambered and
      extracted from the same gun. Each shell was designed to contain
      eight (8) Double O buckshot pellets. The other shotgun material
      recovered from the decedent’s body was consistent with
      Remington design. An unfired shotgun cartridge recovered from
      the rear bedroom in Appellant’s mother’s apartment3 was a
      Remington Double O buckshot with an eight (8) pellet load.
                  3 Evidence was presented that Appellant used
            that address as his legal address. This evidence was
            recovered during a search pursuant to consent. Also
            recovered from that bedroom was a safe, which
            contained two boxes of Remington Shotgun Shells.
            The safe was taken pursuant to the consent search,
            but was not opened until a warrant was obtained
            authorizing a search of the safe.

      The arresting officer, Sgt. Robert Worrick of the Clementon, NJ
      Police Department testified that Appellant had a tattoo of a Q on
      his forearm.

             Appellant also testified at trial and denied shooting the
      victim. He further testified that, on the day of the shooting he
      had been playing basketball with some of his old friends from high
      school. The game ended at approximately 4:30 p.m. Appellant
      testified that he received several telephone calls from friends
      informing him that Mr. Sims had been shot and that he was
      accused of the crime. Appellant testified that he never sought out
      any of these people to support his alibi.

PCRA Court Opinion, 12/5/18, at 2-4.

      At the conclusion of trial, a jury found Appellant guilty of first-degree

murder and possessing an instrument of crime. On June 24, 2011, the trial

court imposed a mandatory life sentence for murder and a concurrent one to

two years of incarceration for possessing an instrument of crime. This Court

affirmed the judgment of sentence on March 3, 2013. Our Supreme Court

denied allowance of appeal on August 6, 2013. Appellant filed this timely first

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PCRA petition on April 23, 2014. Appointed counsel filed an amended petition

on June 22, 2016. The Commonwealth filed a motion to dismiss the petition

on March 15, 2018. On May 25, 2018, the PCRA court filed its notice of intent

to dismiss the petition without a hearing pursuant to Pa.R.Crim.P. 907.

Appellant filed no response, and the PCRA court entered the order on appeal

on July 20, 2018. This timely appeal followed.

     On appeal, Appellant claims the trial court erred in dismissing his

petition without a hearing because a hearing was necessary to assess the

October 2014 affidavit of Appellant’s mother, Shirley Dunbar, which forms the

basis for Appellant’s Amended PCRA petition. In that affidavit, Dunbar stated:

            On June 13, 2008, I was met by two (2) Police Officers
     outside my door. They asked me if I lived there. I said yes, and
     then I asked them what was going on. They asked me, where
     was Q. I told them, my son’s name was not Q, but Marqui, and
     that he doesn’t live here. As I opened the door to my apartment
     to go inside, the two (2) Police Officers walked right in behind me,
     with their guns out. The Spanish Officer told me that they had to
     look inside to check and make sure if he is here or not. At that
     time, I was under the impression that I had no choice but to allow
     them to search my apartment without a warrant, because I never
     said they could. After they search all of the bedrooms and found
     that my son was not there, the Spanish Police Officer came and
     told me that he had to Secure my apartment. I asked him why,
     and he said it was because he saw ammunition in the back
     bedroom, and that my son had shot somebody. So I asked, ‘What,
     is this you-all’s apartment now?’ The Spanish Police Officer said,
     yes, it’s our apartment now. I was upset and scared about the
     whole situation, so I left out the apartment for a few to calm my
     nerves. I came back a little later and the Spanish Officer yelled
     and cursed at me. He told me, I can’t be running in and out of
     my own apartment, and to either stay in or get the hell out.




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Appellant’s Memorandum of Law in Support of Amended PCRA Petition,

6/23/16, at Exhibit D.1 Based on this affidavit, Appellant claims trial counsel

was ineffective for failing to call Dunbar as a witness and for failing to file a

motion to suppress evidence gathered from the search of Dunbar’s home.

       On review, we must discern whether the record supports the PCRA

court’s   order,   and    whether     the      court   committed   an   error   of   law.

Commonwealth v Spotz, 18 A.3d 244, 258 (Pa. 2011). We review the PCRA

court’s legal conclusions de novo. Id. “A petition for post-conviction collateral

relief may be granted without a hearing when the petition and answer show

that there is no genuine issue concerning any material fact and that the

defendant is entitled to relief as a matter of law.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 907(2).

       To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a PCRA

petitioner must plead and prove that 1) the underlying issue is of arguable

merit; 2) counsel had no reasonable strategic basis in support of the contested

action or inaction; and 3) counsel’s error was prejudicial to the petitioner such

that the outcome of the proceeding would have been different but for the

error. Commonwealth v. Fears, 86 A.3d 795, 804 (Pa. 2014). Counsel is


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1  The page quoted above is labeled as page one of two. The second page
was omitted, apparently inadvertently, from Exhibit D. Appellant’s brief
represents that the affidavit went on to state that police were transporting her
to the homicide department but then turned around and brought her back
home. When she arrived and signed the consent form without reading it,
police were already searching her home. Appellant’s Brief at 5. These facts,
even if they appeared of record, would not alter our conclusion that the
absence of Dunbar’s testimony did not prejudice Appellant.

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presumed effective, and the petitioner bears the burden of proving otherwise.

Id.    A petitioner alleging that counsel was ineffective for failing to call a

potential witness must establish the following:

               (1) the witness existed; (2) the witness was available to
       testify for the defense; (3) counsel knew of, or should have known
       of, the existence of the witness; (4) the witness was willing to
       testify for the defense; and (5) the absence of the testimony of
       the witness was so prejudicial as to have denied the defendant a
       fair trial.

Commonwealth v. Sneed, 45 A.3d 1096, 1109 (Pa. 2012).

       The PCRA court found, and the record confirms, that Appellant failed to

allege that his mother would have testified at a suppression hearing, or that

his trial counsel knew or should have known of the alleged grounds for

suppression. We observe, in addition, that Appellant did not list his mother

among the witnesses he would have presented at a PCRA hearing. Appellant’s

Amended PCRA Petition, 6/22/16, at 11-12 (listing only Appellant and his trial

counsel as PCRA hearing witnesses).         As to counsel’s knowledge of the

grounds for suppression, Appellant makes the following concession in his brief:

“Even though it may not have been expressly stated that trial counsel was

aware of Appellant’s mother, it can be inferred from Appellant’s claim that he

requested a motion to suppress that trial counsel was aware as the lack of

consent would have been the basis for the motion.” Appellant’s Brief at 14,

n.1.   There appears to us to be no record support for drawing such an

inference, inasmuch as Dunbar did not execute her affidavit until October of

2014, more than three years after the conclusion of trial and approximately

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six months after Appellant filed his pro se PCRA petition. The record supports

the PCRA court’s finding that Appellant failed to allege prongs three and four

of the analysis described in Sneed.

      In hope of avoiding this conclusion, Appellant states in his brief that he

would have testified at a PCRA hearing that he informed trial counsel about

his mother’s allegedly defective consent to the search.         Id. at 13.    This

allegation should have been included in Appellant’s petition or amended

petition or, at the very least, in a response to the trial court’s Rule 907 notice.

See American Housing Trust, III v. Jones, 696 A.2d 1181, 1185 n.6 (Pa.

1997) (noting that appellate courts will not consider facts alleged for the first

time in an appellate brief). We will not consider factual allegations raised for

the first time in Appellant’s brief.

      In addition to Appellant’s failure to allege that Dunbar would have

testified at a suppression hearing and/or that trial counsel was aware of

Dunbar’s potential testimony, we agree with the PCRA court’s conclusion that

the absence of Dunbar’s testimony was not prejudicial to Appellant. As set

forth in the PCRA court’s opinion, quoted above, the Commonwealth presented

the testimony of multiple eyewitnesses. They accounted for all of Appellant’s

actions during the shooting, including emerging from the driver’s side of a

gold car with a large firearm in both hands, shooting the victim, standing over

and continuing to shoot the fallen victim, getting back into the gold car and

departing from the scene. One eyewitness, the victim’s sister, Tamika Sims,


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had known Appellant for nearly a decade and so could recognize him. In our

memorandum on direct appeal, in which we rejected Appellant’s challenge to

the sufficiency of the evidence, we observed that “both Tamika Sims and

Tayanna Slusher unequivocally identified [Appellant] as the murderer.”

Commonwealth v. James, 3025 EDA 2011 (Pa. Super. June 24, 2011)

unpublished memorandum, at 7. Appellant was known as “Q,” and the record

confirms that Appellant had that letter tattooed on his right forearm. In light

of the overwhelming body of evidence against Appellant, we cannot conclude

that the outcome of trial would have been different without the fruits of the

search—a stash of live shotgun shells identical to the spent shells recovered

from the scene.

      Moreover, Appellant fails to address the likelihood of success of a

suppression motion, even had trial counsel filed one.              The record contains

Dunbar’s consent form, which she signed directly underneath a sentence

printed   in   large   font   and   all   capitalized   letters,   acknowledging   her

understanding of her constitutional right to refuse permission for the search.

Appellant’s Memorandum of Law in Support of Amended PCRA Petition,

6/23/16, at Exhibit C. Dunbar signed the same form a second time on the

bottom, acknowledging a list of items removed from her home.                 Id.   The

suppression court would have considered this form in assessing the credibility

of Dunbar’s subsequent claim that she did not understand the form and did

not consent to the search.


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      Philadelphia Police Officer Manuel Soto described how he arrived at

Dunbar’s apartment and gained entry shortly after the shooting. He testified

that he responded to a radio call of shots fired on June 14, 2008. N.T. Trial,

6/22/11, at 153. He arrived while another officer was performing CPR on the

victim. Id. at 154. Officer Soto spoke with Slusher, who identified Appellant

as Q and stated that she knew he lived on Conestoga Drive.         Id. at 156.

Another witness, the victim’s girlfriend, accompanied Officer Soto in his

service vehicle to Dunbar’s apartment building and pointed to an apartment

on the third floor. Id. at 157-59. Officer Soto and his partner received no

answer when they knocked, but they encountered Dunbar on their way back

down the steps. Id. at 160. Dunbar let them into her apartment and they

searched “for Mr. Q to clear the premises.” Id. at 161. Dunbar acknowledged

that Appellant was her son and gave police a photograph and told them

Appellant’s real name. Id. at 162-63. While in Dunbar’s apartment, Soto and

his partner observed a cartridge tray with live .9mm ammunition. Id. at 164.

Officer Soto then called for another officer to secure the scene. Id. at 165.

      Detective Timothy Bass testified that he arrived at Dunbar’s apartment

with another detective, introduced himself, presented Dunbar with a consent

form and explained it to her. N.T. Trial, 6/23/11, at 37. Detective Bass stated

that he and Dunbar filled out the form together and she signed it. Id. Thus,

to succeed in a motion to suppress, Appellant, at a minimum, would have had

to persuade a suppression court that Officer Soto and Detective Bass were not


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credible. Additionally, we observe that Appellant’s brief does not develop any

argument with regard to Dunbar’s apparent consent to Officer Soto’s entry,

and/or whether the doctrine of hot pursuit or any other legal doctrine would

or would not have justified Officer Soto’s entry.

      In light of all of the foregoing, we discern no error in the PCRA court’s

decision to dismiss Appellant’s petition without a hearing. The record supports

the PCRA court’s finding that Appellant failed to allege that Dunbar would have

testified and that trial counsel was aware of her potential testimony.

Furthermore, the PCRA court did not err in finding that no prejudice arose

from the absence of Dunbar’s testimony. We therefore affirm the PCRA court’s

order.

      Order affirmed.

Judgment Entered.




Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary



Date: 11/25/19




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