PA Supreme Court: Prosecutorial Misconduct to Call a Witness the Prosecution Knows Will Refuse to Testify
Criminal Defense Lawyer Zak T. Goldstein, Esquire
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has decided the case of Commonwealth v. Belgrave, No. 31 WAP 2024 (Pa. March 26, 2026), holding that it is prosecutorial misconduct to call a witness to testify before a jury when the prosecution knows in advance that the witness intends to refuse to answer questions. The Court reversed the Superior Court’s decision, vacated the defendant’s judgment of sentence, and remanded for a new trial. The opinion was authored by Justice Wecht and joined by every member of the Court.
The Facts of Commonwealth v. Belgrave
The Court summarized the facts as follows: the charges in this case arose from a drug sale at a Marriott Hotel in Erie, Pennsylvania, on February 7, 2019, that ended in a gunfight. Four men, including the defendant, drove from Chicago to Erie and rented a hotel room. Hotel surveillance video showed that Belgrave and his associate, Charles Baizar, were parked in a Chevrolet Impala when a dark-colored SUV arrived in the parking lot. Baizar and another man walked toward the SUV, and when Baizar attempted to enter it, the SUV’s driver exited the vehicle and began shooting. Baizar ran, dropping a package. Belgrave exited the Impala and fired two shots in the direction of the SUV. Belgrave was shot and seriously injured.
Police stopped the Impala as it was leaving a nearby parking garage. The package that Baizar dropped during the gunfight contained 239 grams of heroin. Baizar was separately charged with conspiracy to commit PWID and pleaded guilty to conspiracy in December 2019. Belgrave was charged with conspiracy to commit PWID (amended on the eve of trial to PWID), aggravated assault, and other offenses. A jury convicted Belgrave of PWID, reckless endangerment, and carrying a firearm without a license.
The Prosecutorial Misconduct Issue
The central issue in this appeal was the prosecution’s decision to call Baizar to the witness stand at Belgrave’s trial despite knowing in advance that Baizar would refuse to answer any questions. Belgrave’s defense counsel identified this problem early, filing a motion in limine on the eve of trial. The concern was well-founded: Baizar had filed his own Motion to Quash Subpoena the day before Belgrave’s trial began, stating clearly that he had no intention of testifying and intended to invoke his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.
The Commonwealth sought to compel Baizar’s testimony by offering him immunity. But even with immunity, which eliminated any valid Fifth Amendment basis for refusing to testify, Baizar still refused to testify and was subject to contempt sanctions. Despite all of this, the prosecutor went ahead and called Baizar to the stand in front of the jury.
What followed was remarkable. In his opening statement, the prosecutor told the jury to look forward to Baizar’s testimony while simultaneously revealing that Baizar did not want to cooperate. When Baizar took the stand, he refused to answer every substantive question. But the prosecutor pressed on, asking eighteen predominantly leading questions that were loaded with accusations. The prosecutor asserted that Baizar was Belgrave’s cousin, that they came to Erie to sell heroin together, that Baizar had made prior statements to police about the incident, and that Baizar was refusing to testify because he wanted to protect Belgrave. Baizar answered none of the questions. The prosecutor essentially became the de facto testifying witness, putting allegations before the jury in the form of unanswered questions.
The trial court gave a limiting instruction telling the jury that questions are not evidence and that only answers may be considered. But the Supreme Court found this wholly insufficient to cure the prejudice. In closing arguments, the prosecutor doubled down, telling the jury that Baizar knew what happened, knew who was involved, and refused to say anything. He implored the jury to infer facts from an interaction that consisted entirely of unanswered questions.
The Supreme Court’s Analysis
The Supreme Court engaged in a thorough review of its prior case law governing this issue, beginning with the 1973 cases of Commonwealth v. Terenda, 301 A.2d 625 (Pa. 1973), and Commonwealth v. DuVal, 307 A.2d 229 (Pa. 1973). In Terenda, the Court found it was prejudicial error for the prosecution to call co-indictees to the stand knowing they would invoke the Fifth Amendment. In DuVal, the Court held that summoning a witness with foreknowledge that the witness would invoke the privilege against self-incrimination constitutes prejudicial error in itself, regardless of whether the prosecutor believed the privilege claim would be legally invalid. The DuVal Court explained that the proper procedure is for the prosecution to test the witness’s willingness to testify in advance, outside the jury’s presence, and obtain a ruling before bringing the witness before the jury.
The Superior Court had distinguished Terenda and DuVal on a narrow basis: in those cases, the witnesses expressly invoked the Fifth Amendment in front of the jury, while Baizar simply refused to answer without specifically mentioning the Fifth Amendment. The Superior Court relied on the separate case of Commonwealth v. Todaro, 569 A.2d 333 (Pa. 1990), where this Court found no error when a witness quietly informed the court of his intent to invoke the Fifth Amendment, was excused before the jury, and never appeared again.
The Supreme Court found the analogy to Todaro deeply flawed. In Todaro, the prosecutor did not have advance notice that the witness would refuse to testify, the witness was quickly excused, and no accusatory questions were asked before the jury. In Belgrave, by contrast, everyone knew Baizar would not answer, the prosecutor called him anyway, and then peppered him with leading, accusatory questions designed to plant inculpatory information in the jurors’ minds through the questions themselves.
The Court also rejected the Superior Court’s reasoning that the absence of an express Fifth Amendment invocation before the jury somehow made Baizar’s defiant silence less prejudicial. The Court found that this distinction defied common sense, observing that the prejudicial harm lies in the refusal to deny accusations, which a reasonable juror can treat as an implied admission, and that this harm exists regardless of whether the witness cites a specific legal basis for the refusal.
The Court further held that the error was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. The prosecution’s extensive efforts to obtain Baizar’s testimony, including securing immunity directly from the District Attorney, demonstrated how critical the prosecution considered Baizar’s testimony to be. The prosecutor’s repeated emphasis on Baizar’s knowledge and silence, in both opening and closing statements, confirmed this.
The Takeaway
Commonwealth v. Belgrave is a significant decision for criminal defendants in Pennsylvania. It reaffirms and strengthens the rule from DuVal that prosecutors may not call witnesses they know will refuse to answer questions before a jury. The Court made clear that it is the act of summoning the witness, not what happens after the witness takes the stand, that constitutes the misconduct. And it rejected the artificial distinction between an express invocation of the Fifth Amendment and a simple refusal to answer, holding that the prejudice to the defendant is the same either way.
The decision also underscores the obligation of trial courts to resolve these issues before a witness ever appears in front of the jury. As the Court emphasized, citing DuVal and Commonwealth v. Davenport, 308 A.2d 85 (Pa. 1973), the proper procedure is a pre-appearance hearing to assess the witness’s willingness to testify and determine whether the witness’s appearance before the jury would serve any legitimate purpose.
This is a unanimous decision, with all seven justices joining Justice Wecht’s opinion, which gives it particular force as precedent. If you or someone you know is facing criminal charges and believes that the prosecution engaged in misconduct at trial, it is critical to consult with an experienced criminal defense attorney who can evaluate whether the issue warrants appellate relief or a new trial.
Facing Criminal Charges or a Wrongful Conviction?
Criminal Defense Lawyer Zak T. Goldstein, Esquire
If you are facing criminal charges or believe that the prosecution engaged in misconduct in your case, we can help. Our award-winning Philadelphia criminal defense lawyers offer a free criminal defense strategy session to any potential client. We have successfully defended thousands of clients against criminal charges in courts throughout Pennsylvania and New Jersey. We have successfully obtained full acquittals and dismissals in cases involving charges such as Conspiracy, Aggravated Assault, Rape, Violations of the Uniform Firearms Act, and First-Degree Murder. We have also won criminal appeals and PCRAs in state and federal court, including the successful direct appeal of a first-degree murder conviction and the exoneration of a client who spent 33 years in prison for a murder he did not commit. Our experienced criminal defense lawyers are typically available for same-day phone consultations and in-person meetings so that we can begin investigating your case, obtaining exculpatory evidence, and planning your defense. Call 267-225-2545 for a free criminal defense strategy session.