J-S60018-19


NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                     IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
                                                    OF PENNSYLVANIA
                        Appellee

                   v.

DAVID ARTURO NUNEZ CISNEROS

                        Appellant                   No. 623 MDA 2019


     Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence entered February 28, 2019
               In the Court of Common Pleas of York County
             Criminal Division at No: CP-67-CR-0003719-2018


BEFORE: SHOGAN, J., STABILE, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.:                       FILED JANUARY 21, 2020

     Appellant, David Arturo Nunez Cisneros, appeals from the judgment of

sentence entered on February 28, 2019 in the Court of Common Pleas of York

County after a jury convicted him of delivering heroin.      35 P.S. § 780-

113(a)(30). Appellant contends the evidence was insufficient to support the

verdict. Alternatively, he claims the verdict was against the weight of the

evidence. Upon review, we affirm.

     A review of the record reveals that police officers from the City of York

conducted a drug “buy/walk” on March 28, 2018 outside a residence located




*Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court
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at 832 West Locust Street in York.1 Using a confidential informant (“CI”)2 to

execute the buy, officers were stationed at locations designed to keep the CI

in view at all times. One of the officers observed Appellant and the CI interact

in front of the residence. However, construction equipment prevented the

officer from seeing the hands of the two men during their brief interaction.

Appellant then went back into the residence and the CI returned to the

unmarked vehicle in which he had been transported to the scene. The CI,

who had been searched prior to the buy/walk, turned over heroin to the

officer.

       At trial, the Commonwealth offered two witnesses. They were Detective

Glatfelter, who searched the CI and drove him to the scene, and Sergeant

Irvin, who observed the CI’s interaction with Appellant. The CI did not testify

and the trial court delivered a “missing witness” jury instruction at the request

of the defense. Appellant did not testify and the defense did not present any

witnesses in its case.

       Following deliberations, the jury found Appellant guilty of delivering

heroin. On February 28, 2019, the trial court imposed a sentence of one and



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1 A “buy/walk” is an investigation method in which either a confidential
informant or a police officer uses recorded money to purchase narcotics while
under surveillance. Notes of Testimony (“N.T.”), Trial, 1/24/19, at 97-98.

2 At trial, the CI was not identified by name. However, testimony established
that the CI was a male. N.T., Trial, 1/24/19, at 101-02. Therefore, when
referring to the CI in this Memorandum, we shall use “he” and “him.”

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a half to three years’ incarceration. Appellant filed a post-sentence motion

challenging the weight of the evidence. The trial court denied the motion on

March 29, 2019. This timely appeal followed. Both Appellant and the trial

court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.

      Appellant asks us to consider two issues in this appeal, both of which he

frames as statements rather than questions, as follows:

      1. The evidence was insufficient beyond a reasonable doubt to
         convict Appellant of Delivery of Drugs. Even taking the
         evidence in [the] light most favorable to the Commonwealth,
         the search of the [CI] prior to and after a “buy-walk” situation
         failed to demonstrate the CI did not already have or did not
         obtain drugs from another source. Moreover, the observations
         of the “buy-walk” between the [CI] and Appellant failed to
         demonstrate that [an] actual drug transaction occurred
         between the two.

      2. The trial court erred in denying Appellant’s request for a new
         trial. The weight of evidence did not prove Appellant delivered
         heroin to a [CI] during a “buy-walk” because (1) the testimony
         of the search of the [CI] before and after the “buy-walk” did
         not demonstrate the informant did already not have or did not
         obtain drugs from another source, and (2) the testimony of the
         “buy-walk” between the informant and Appellant failed to
         demonstrate that an actual drug transaction occurred between
         the two.

Appellant’s Brief at 5.

      In his first issue, Appellant challenges the sufficiency of evidence. Our

standard of review for a sufficiency challenge is as follows:

      When reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, an appellate court
      must determine whether the evidence, and all reasonable
      inferences deducible from that, viewed in the light most favorable
      to the Commonwealth as verdict winner, are sufficient to establish
      all of the elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. It
      [is] incumbent upon the Superior Court to consider all of the

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      evidence introduced at the time of trial, and apparently believed
      by the fact finder, including the expert’s testimony. In applying
      this standard, [the reviewing court must] bear in mind that: the
      Commonwealth may sustain its burden by means of wholly
      circumstantial evidence; the entire trial record should be
      evaluated and all evidence received considered, whether or not
      the trial court’s ruling thereon were correct; and the trier of fact,
      while passing upon the credibility of witnesses and the weight of
      the proof, is free to believe all, part, or none of the evidence.

Commonwealth v. Ratsamy, 934 A.2d 1233, 1237 (Pa. 2007) (internal

citations and quotations omitted; second alteration in original).      “Because

evidentiary sufficiency is a question of law, our standard of review is de novo

and our scope of review is plenary.” Commonwealth v. Diamond, 83 A.3d

119, 126 (Pa. 2013) (citation omitted).

      Appellant focuses his sufficiency challenge on specific aspects of the

officers’ actions and testimony.    With respect to Detective Glatfelter, for

example, he complains that the detective offered testimony explaining his

general procedure in conducting the search of a CI, rather than what he did

specifically in his search of the CI in this case, and questions the detective’s

failure to check the CI’s underwear. However, as the detective explained, he

conducts approximately 500 controlled buys in a year—some with CIs and

some without—and he employs a certain routine depending on how the CI

presents, e.g., whether he is wearing a hat, in which case he checks the hat

band, and whether his clothes are bulky, in which case he pats down the

clothing. N.T., Trial, 1/24/19, at 104. And, while he has seen drugs hidden

in underwear, he does not generally search areas that cannot be easily


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accessed. As the detective noted, the CI is under surveillance and the officers

can see what the CI is doing.       Id. at 103.    “We’re not going to search

somebody, do a cavity search where they may have to walk down the street

and dig into their rectum to pull out drugs to later try to pass off as what they

bought.” Id.

      With respect to Sergeant Irvin, Appellant complains that the detective

did not witness an actual hand-to-hand transaction, i.e., the delivery of the

controlled substance, because his view of the CI’s and Appellant’s hands was

blocked by construction equipment.          However, from his vantage point

approximately twenty feet away, the sergeant did observe the CI and

Appellant engage in a brief interaction lasting five to ten seconds at a distance

of one foot to a foot and a half. Id. at 146-47. He was able to see that their

arms were moving and that they were looking down at their hands. Id. at

147. Importantly, testimony established that this interaction was the only

interaction in which the CI was engaged from the time he left Detective

Glatfelter’s car until he returned to it. Id. at 147.

      It is well established that “the Commonwealth may sustain its burden of

proving every element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt by means of

wholly circumstantial evidence.” Commonwealth v. Ellison, 213 A.3d 312,

319 n. 2 (Pa. Super. 2019) (quoting Commonwealth v. Roberts, 133 A.3d

759, 767 (Pa. Super. 2016)). Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable

to the Commonwealth as the verdict winner, we conclude there was sufficient


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evidence for the jury to conclude that Appellant delivered heroin without

authority to do so in violation of 35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(30).         Appellant’s

sufficiency challenge fails.

       In his second issue, Appellant asserts that the verdict was against the

weight of the evidence, a claim he preserved for review by raising it in a post-

sentence motion.3 As our Supreme Court has instructed:

       An appellate court’s standard of review when presented with a
       weight of the evidence claim is distinct from the standard of review
       applied by the trial court:

          Appellate review of a weight claim is a review of the exercise
          of discretion, not of the underlying question of whether the
          verdict is against the weight of the evidence. Because the
          trial judge has had the opportunity to hear and see the
          evidence presented, an appellate court will give the gravest
          consideration to the findings and reasons advanced by the
          trial judge when reviewing a trial court’s determination that
          the verdict is against the weight of the evidence. One of the
          least assailable reasons for granting or denying a new trial
          is the lower court’s conviction that the verdict was or was
          not against the weight of the evidence and that a new trial
          should be granted in the interest of justice.

Commonwealth v. Clay, 64 A.3d 1049, 1055 (Pa. 2013) (quoting Widmer,

744 A.2d at 753 (internal citations omitted) (emphasis in original)).

       In its Rule 1925(a) opinion, the trial court commented:

       When examining the evidence presented at trial, there was
       sufficient evidence for a jury to find [Appellant] guilty beyond a
       reasonable doubt. The CI was under constant surveillance during
____________________________________________


3 We note that “[a] motion for new trial on the grounds that the verdict is
contrary to the weight of the evidence, concedes that there is sufficient
evidence to sustain the verdict.” Commonwealth v. Widmer, 744 A.2d 745,
751 (Pa. 2000).

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      the buy-walk and did not interact with any person other than
      [Appellant]. Detective Glatfelter searched the CI immediately
      before the buy and no drugs were found on the CI. The CI was
      also searched upon returning to the vehicle and, other than the
      heroin turned over to Glatfelter as a result of the buy, no drugs
      were found as a result of that search of the CI.

Rule 1925(a) Opinion, 6/27/19, at 8.

      Further, following argument on Appellant’s post-sentence motion, the

trial court announced:

      Essentially what this comes down to in this trial is a credibility
      determination. The – because the defense did some effective
      cross examination there, the jury could have chosen to find that
      the officers’ memory was faulty and that they were going to
      choose not to find that there was an adequate search, but they
      didn’t.

      The evidence in the case was not so strong that that was the only
      conclusion, however. It doesn’t rise to the level that, as the
      defense argues, that there was a serious miscarriage of justice or
      that there was only one conclusion that there could have been –
      that there was an inadequate search.

      [E]ven in her own argument right now, [] the defense counsel
      invoked the key word, credibility. It’s a credibility determination.
      That’s up to the jury. The judge does not replace their view of
      credibility for that of the jury.

      Under the rule cited by the defense, if it does rise to the level that
      these is a serious miscarriage of justice, in other words, if there is
      a verdict against the weight of the evidence, the court can
      intervene. The court doesn’t find that the verdict was against the
      weight of the evidence.

N.T., Post-Sentence Motion, 3/29/19, at 8-9 (some capitalization omitted).

      Having given due consideration to the findings and reasons advanced

by the trial court, we discern no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s denial




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of Appellant’s motion for a new trial based on weight of the evidence.

Therefore, Appellant’s second issue fails.

      Judgment of sentence affirmed.

Judgment Entered.




Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary



Date: 1/21/2020




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