Philadelphia Criminal Defense Blog
PA Superior Court: Trial Court Must Bifurcate Felon in Possession of Firearm Charges from Other Criminal Charges
The Pennsylvania Superior Court has announced its decision in Commonwealth v. Brown, holding that when the Commonwealth prosecutes 18 Pa. C.S.A. § 6105 (Persons Not to Possess a Firearms) (hereinafter § 6105), along with other charges, the trial court must sever the § 6105 charge from the other offenses and hear those other offenses first when the defendant’s prior conviction is only relevant for purposes of § 6105.
Criminal Defense Attorney Zak Goldstein
The Pennsylvania Superior Court has announced its decision in Commonwealth v. Brown, holding that when the Commonwealth prosecutes 18 Pa. C.S.A. § 6105 (Persons Not to Possess a Firearms) (hereinafter § 6105), along with other charges, the trial court must sever the § 6105 charge from the other offenses and hear those other offenses first when the defendant’s prior conviction is only relevant for purposes of § 6105. This is a significant decision because it prohibits the Commonwealth from circumventing PA Rule of Evidence 404. Rule 404 prohibits the Commonwealth from telling the jury that the defendant has a criminal record, barring certain exceptions which do not apply in the typical gun case.
The Facts of Commonwealth v. Brown
On March 26, 2015, a paratransit driver in Westmoreland County was at work. He was in the process of picking up patients and transporting them to various medical facilities. While working, he had a leather jacket with him, and in one of the pockets, he had a loaded gun. The jacket was draped over the driver’s seat in a way that made it accessible to the backseat passengers. The driver picked up the defendant and transported him to Latrobe Hospital. There were other occupants in the vehicle with the defendant. While driving, he felt a tug on his jacket. Although he was concerned about the gun, the paratransit driver decided he would not check on his gun until he transported the other occupants to their destinations. When the driver dropped the defendant off, he noticed that his gun was missing. He then called the police. Police went to the defendant’s house, frisked him, and searched the house, but they did not find the gun. The defendant told the police that he did not have it.
Police eventually determined that the defendant’s nephew had the gun. When they questioned the nephew, he led the police to the gun and explained that the defendant gave it to him along with $50 for storing it. Police arrested the defendant and charged him with Theft, Receiving Stolen Property, § 6105, and Firearms Not to be Carried Without a License (VUFA 6106). Appellant had previous convictions for aggravated assault and robbery. These prior convictions made it illegal for him to possess a firearm.
Pre-Trial Motions
Prior to trial, the defense attorney filed a Motion for a Bifurcated Trial for the § 6105 charge. The defense attorney argued that it would be prejudicial for the jury to hear that his client had the prior convictions. The trial judge agreed to bifurcate, however, seeking to aid the Commonwealth in its prosecution, the judge allowed the prosecution to proceed with the case as it saw fit. In other words, the trial court did not require that the Commonwealth present evidence of the § 6105 offense and relevant, unfairly prejudicial convictions after it presented evidence of the other alleged crimes like theft and receiving stolen property. Unsurprisingly, the Commonwealth chose to proceed with the § 6105 case first, and then that same jury heard evidence relating to the other charges. Consequently, the jury knew of the defendant’s prior criminal history before it heard the evidence for the other charges. The jury convicted the defendant and found him guilty of all four charges. The trial court sentenced him to three and a half to eight years of incarceration. Appellant appealed, and on appeal, he raised several issues. First, he attacked the sufficiency of the evidence. However, the main issue for purposes of the appeal was whether he was unfairly prejudiced when the trial court allowed the Commonwealth to proceed with the § 6105 charge before the other charges.
Can the Prosecution Introduce Evidence of a Prior Criminal Record in a Criminal Trial?
Generally, no. The rules of evidence often prohibit this because of the fact that juries are extremely likely to convict when they hear that a defendant has a prior criminal record. Rule 404 (a)(1) prohibits the use of evidence of a person’s character to show that on a particular occasion that this person acted in accordance with that character or trait. 404(b)(1) prevents the introduction of a crime in order to show that individual committed this particular crime. What these two subsections seek to prevent is the Commonwealth introducing evidence that a defendant, at some point in his or her life, did something morally wrong or committed some crime to show that he or she committed the crime that they are currently charged with. Obviously, this is a significant rule. If a jury were to hear that the person on trial had previously been convicted of a crime, then the jury is much more likely to convict. There are certain exceptions to this rule. For example, the Commonwealth can file what is referred to as a “Prior Acts Motion” to introduce prior crimes committed by a defendant to show a common scheme, motive, knowledge, lack of mistake, or intent. For example, if the defendant has been charged with burglary in which he or she wore a unique mask, the Commonwealth could probably introduce evidence of prior Burglary cases in which the defendant wore the same mask to show the identity of the defendant. These 404(b) exceptions typically do not apply in a routine gun case, and the Commonwealth did not file the required motion to admit prior bad acts evidence in advance.
However, the Commonwealth may also introduce evidence of a prior crime when it is an element of the crime charged (i.e. § 6105). However, courts have consistently held that the introduction of the underlying conviction that makes the defendant ineligible to possess a firearm should be severed from the other parts of the case. The reason is obvious: as stated above, hearing that the defendant has a prior conviction will unfairly prejudice the jury.
In Philadelphia, the common practice is that the Commonwealth and the defendant agree to have the judge decide whether the defendant has an underlying conviction that makes him or her ineligible to possess a firearm. Typically, there will be a stipulation because it is usually very clear whether or not the person is eligible to possess a firearm. Thus, the jury will not be privy to this information when deciding whether the Commonwealth met its burden for the other elements of § 6105 and the other, if applicable, charges against the defendant. Alternatively, the parties may agree to stipulate to an acquittal or conviction on the 6105 charge that matches the jury’s decision on the other charges. However, each jurisdiction has its own quirks, so you need an attorney who is familiar with the particular jurisdiction and its customs and practices to represent you if you are charged with § 6105.
Superior Court Finds Commonwealth Must Bifurcate at Trial and Introduce Evidence for § 6105 After it Proves Other Charges
Although the Superior Court held that the trial court was correct in severing the § 6105 charge from the other charges, it stated that allowing the Commonwealth to choose the order in which to introduce evidence was “an exercise in futility.” The reason is obvious: allowing the Commonwealth to proceed with the § 6105 charge first clearly prejudiced the jury because the jurors became aware of the defendant’s prior convictions for robbery and aggravated assault. This, in essence, allowed the Commonwealth to circumvent the prohibitions outlined in Rule 404(b). The Superior Court saw through this and found that the defendant was clearly prejudiced and ordered that he receive a new trial.
Call the Award Winning Law Office of Goldstein Mehta LLC if You Are Charged With Illegally Possessing a Firearm
Philadelphia Criminal Defense Lawyers
Gun crimes are very serious, and you need a skilled defense attorney if you are charged with illegally possessing a firearm. Our award-winning Philadelphia criminal defense lawyers have successfully fought countless cases at trial and on appeal. We offer a 15-minute criminal defense strategy session to any potential client. Call 267-225-2545 to discuss your case with an experienced and understanding criminal defense attorney today.
PA Superior Court: Four or More Years Older Means a Full Four Years under Statutory Sexual Assault Statute
The Superior Court has held that four or more years older means exactly that for purposes of Statutory Sexual Assault in Pennsylvania. This article explains how the age difference must be calculated under Pennsylvania law before prosecutors can charge a defendant with statutory rape.
Criminal Defense Attorney Zak Goldstein
What does four or more years older mean in a statututory sexual assault case?
The Superior Court has just decided the cases of Commonwealth v. Price. In Price, the court held that the defendants had not been properly convicted of Statutory Sexual Assault because they were less than four years older than the 16-year-old complainant in the case. The court held that the term “four or more years older” as used in the Statutory Sexual Assault (Statutory Rape) statute requires just that; that a defendant be four years or more older than the complainant. Here, because both defendants were actually a few hours less than four years older than the complainant, the trial court erred in finding them guilty of Statutory Rape.
The facts of Commonwealth v. Price
The facts of Price are relatively straightforward. The defendants were twin brothers who were charged with Statutory Sexual Assault for having sexual intercourse with the complainant. The complainant was born on a certain date in May 1998, at 8:16 am. The brothers were identical twins who were born on the same day and month in 1994 at 7 pm. This means that they were just a few hours less than four years older than the complainant. Both brothers admitted to having sex with the complainant when she was 14 and they were 18. Accordingly, they were charged with Statutory Sexual Assault.
Statutory Sexual Assault in Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania’s Statutory Sexual Assault statute creates a number of different offenses. For purposes of this appeal, the defendants were charged with the Felony of the second degree section of the statute. That section makes it illegal for a person to have sexual intercourse with a complainant to whom the person is not married if the complainant is under the age of 16 years AND the defendant is four years older but less than eight years older than the complainant. This means that the case depended on whether the defendants were four years older or less than four years older than the complainant. If they were four or more years older than the complainant, then they would be guilty of Statutory Sexual Assault even if the complainant consented to the sexual intercourse. If they were less than four years older, then they could not be convicted of Statutory Rape.
The trial court found that because they were born on the same day, they were four years older than the complainant. The court reasoned that for purposes of defining a year, the measurements should not be reduced below days to hours. The court found that a person becomes a certain age on their birthday, so the defendants became four years or more older than the complainant when the day began. Accordingly, the trial court convicted both brothers of Statutory Sexual Assault. The defendants appealed to the Superior Court.
The Superior Court Appeal
The Superior Court recognized that the issue in the case was how to define a year for purposes of the statute. It was not disputed that the defendants were three years, 364 days, and approximately ten hours older than the complainant. The Superior Court reversed. It noted that criminal statutes must be strictly construed and that any ambiguity in a statute must be construed in favor of a criminal defendant pursuant to the Rule of Lenity.
The Pennsylvania Crimes Code does not define the meaning of the term “four years older.” However, the court noted that the federal Third Circuit Court of Appeals and a previous panel of the Superior Court had interpreted four years to mean 1,461 days and that the defendants had been born 1,461 days before the complainant. Thus, if the period of time is counted in days, the defendants would be guilty. If it were counted in smaller increments like hours, minutes, or seconds, then the defendants would be innocent. Because the crimes code does not provide a method by which to measure years, the court accepted the defendants’ argument that they had to be a full 1,461 days older than the complainant. Because a day is 24 hours, they were not a full 1,461 days older than the complainant. They were 14 hours short of a full day from the age of the complainant.
The court concluded that the statute could reasonably be interpreted either way. Given the ambiguity in the statute, the court was required to give the benefit of the doubt to the defendants. Therefore, the court reversed the convictions.
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Criminal Lawyer Demetra Mehta
If you are facing criminal charges, we can help. Our Philadelphia criminal defense lawyers have successfully defended thousands of cases in state and federal courts throughout Pennsylvania and New Jersey. We offer a complimentary 15-minute criminal defense strategy session to any potential client who is facing criminal charges or who may be under investigation by law enforcement. We can also provide advice to anyone who is considering the merits of filing an appeal or Post-Conviction Relief Act Petition. Call or text 267-225-2545 to speak with an experienced and understanding defense attorney today.
PA Superior Court: Drug Overdose Response Act Defense Cannot Be Waived
PA Superior Court: Drug Overdose Response Act Defense Cannot Be Waived
Criminal Defense Lawyer Zak Goldstein
An en banc panel of the Superior Court has just decided the case of Commonwealth v. Markun. In Markun, the Court reversed the prior decision of a three-panel judge and found that the immunity to minor drug possession charges provided to an overdose victim by the Drug Overdose Response Act cannot be waived by an attorney’s failure to raise the defense in pre-trial motions or at trial.
The Facts of the Case
The facts of Markun are straight-forward. First responders found the defendant unconscious in a Delaware County Motel 6. Housekeeping personnel had called 911 and reported the medical emergency. She was treated by EMTs and transported to a nearby hospital. Police later arrested her and charged her with misdemeanor knowing and intentional possession of a controlled substance. In this case, the controlled substance was heroin.
The defendant filed a motion to suppress statements that she had made to the investigating police officer. After the trial court denied the motion to suppress, the defendant went to trial in the Delaware County Court of Common Pleas. She was convicted and sentenced to probation. She appealed to the Pennsylvania Superior Court.
The Criminal Appeal
Although the defendant never argued that she should have been immune to prosecution under the Drug Overdose Response Act either in pre-trial motions or at trial, her appellate attorneys raised this issue on appeal. Initially, the Superior Court denied the appeal. Her attorneys, however, filed an Application for Re-Argument En Banc, meaning they asked the entire court to hear the appeal and overrule the decision of the initial three-judge panel. The court agreed to hear the appeal en banc and overturned the defendant’s conviction.
The Court's Reasoning
On appeal, the court ruled that the defenses provided by the Drug Overdose Response Act cannot be waived and can be raised for the first time in an appeal. The Act provides that a person may not be charged and shall be immune from prosecution for many misdemeanor drug possession and paraphernalia offenses if the person can show that they reported an overdose by calling 911, provided their name, and remained with the person who needed immediate medical attention until emergency services personnel arrived. In a recent opinion, the Superior Court found that the Act applies not only to the person who calls 911, but also the victim of an overdose where that victim calls 911 on their own behalf.
The Commonwealth argued that the defendant waived the immunity from prosecution for the misdemeanor drug charge provided by the Act by not raising it in the trial court. The Superior Court, however, rejected this argument. The court found that the immunity provided by the act is similar to subject matter jurisdiction or soverign immunity, and those types of immunity defenses cannot be waived and can be raised for the first time in an appeal. Because the trial court never had jurisdiction to hear the case, the defendant could not waive the defense by failing to raise it previously. The court reasoned that the purpose of the act is to prevent people who discover an overdose victim, who may also be drug users and afraid of incurring criminal liability themselves, from hesitating when deciding whether to call the police out of fear of criminal charges. In order to avoid that possibility, the court found that the Act’s defenses should not be waivable. Accordingly, the Superior Court reversed the conviction.
Limitations to the Drug Overdose Response Act
The Superior Court’s decision properly encourages drug users to get help for themselves or their friends if someone experiences an overdose. At the same time, there are still major limitations to the Act’s immunity provisions. The Act does not provide immunity to serious offenses. For example, the statute does not provide immunity to Possession with the Intent to Deliver charges or the extremely serious and increasingly-prosecuted homicide charges of Drug Delivery Resulting in Death. Accordingly, someone who gave or sold the drugs to the person who overdosed can still be prosecuted for PWID or homicide.
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Philadelphia Criminal Defense Lawyers
If you are facing criminal charges, we can help. Our Philadelphia criminal defense lawyers have successfully defended thousands of cases in state and federal courts throughout Pennsylvania and New Jersey. We offer a complimentary 15-minute criminal defense strategy session to any potential client who is facing criminal charges or who may be under investigation by law enforcement. Call 267-225-2545 to speak with an experienced and understanding defense attorney today.
Recorded Prison Visits and Phone Calls Are Admissible as Evidence Against You in PA
Prison phone calls and recorded visits can usually be used against you in Pennsylvania. If you are a defendant facing criminal charges and you say something incriminating in a recorded phone call, that incriminating statement can often be used as evidence of guilt in court. This article explains when a telephone or other audio recording is admissible as evidence in court.
Are Prison Tapes Admissible at Trial?
Criminal Defense Lawyer Zak Goldstein
The Pennsylvania Superior Court has decided the case of Commonwealth v. Byrd. In Byrd, the Superior Court re-affirmed the long-standing rule that prison tapes and recorded prison visits may be used against a defendant at trial. This means that if a defendant says something incriminating in a recorded phone call, that incriminating statement can be used against the defendant as a confession as long as the defendant was on notice that the call could be recorded.
The Facts of Byrd
Byrd involved gun charges and Possession With the Intent to Deliver charges. Police officers testified at a motion to suppress that they received a phone call for a specific address in McKeesport, PA that a female received threatening phone calls from a suspect who was parked outside of her residence in a grey, F-150 truck. Police arrived at the house, spoke with the woman who had called 911, and learned that a man known to her as “Reek” had threatened to kill her, had a gun, and was parked outside the house in the truck. She pointed at the grey truck.
The officer then went to confront the man in the truck, who turned out to be the defendant. The officer attempted to stop the defendant, and the defendant rolled the window down 2-3 inches. The officer could immediately smell a strong odor of marijuana through the window. The officer also testified that the defendant was acting in a nervous manner, his hands were shaking, and he was breathing rapidly. The officer called for back-up.
When back-up arrived, the officer ordered the defendant to get out of the truck. The defendant refused, so officers pulled him out. The defendant resisted, pulled away, and eventually began to run. Officers caught him. After placing him into custody, they returned to the truck and looked in the window. They observed a gun magazine under a piece of cloth on the front seat of the truck. They then searched the car. When an officer lifted the cloth, he found a .40 caliber handgun. Police also found other drugs and drug paraphernalia in the car which suggested that the defendant may have been likely to sell those drugs.
After police arrested the defendant, he made a number of incriminating statements in recorded inmate visits while awaiting trial in custody at the Allegheny County jail.
The Motion to Suppress
Prosecutors charged the defendant with persons not to possess firearms, carrying a firearm without a license, three counts of possession with the intent to deliver, and three counts of possession with a controlled substance. The defendant moved to suppress the gun and drugs. He also subsequently moved to suppress statements recorded at the Allegheny County jail after prosecutors notified his attorney that they planned to use the recordings at trial. Prison authorities had recorded conversations in which the defendant made incriminating statements to visitors while in custody. Thus, he moved to suppress the statements, arguing that the prison violated Pennsylvania’s Wiretap Act when it made the recordings. The trial court granted the motion with respect to the priosn tapes and some of the drugs.
The Criminal Appeal
The Commonwealth appealed the trial court's order. The Pennsylvania Superior Court reversed the trial court’s decision to suppress both the physical evidence and the recorded statements. With respect to the physical evidence, the Court concluded that because officers had smelled marijuana coming from the vehicle and because the defendant seemed nervous and resisted arrest, the officers had probable cause to search the entire vehicle for contraband pursuant to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision in Commonwealth v. Gary. As a general rule, police do not need a search warrant for a car because cars may be easily moved. Instead, police must establish at a suppression hearing only that they had probable cause to search a vehicle. The odor of marijuana, coupled with the defendant’s behavior, gave the officers the probable cause necessary to search the car.
The Admissibility of Prison Phone Calls in Pennsylvania
The Superior Court also found that the prison phone calls were admissible in evidence against the defendant. The Court noted that Pennsylvania’s Wiretap Act makes Pennsylvania a two-party consent state. This means that a person may not make secret audio recordings of another person in Pennsylvania. It can actually be a felony to do so, and a violation of the Act typically leads to the suppression of the evidence. Under the Wiretap Act, both parties to a call must consent to its recording, or they must at least be on notice of a potential recording and implicitly consent to the recording by continuing to make a call, anyway.
Although the trial court reasoned that the defendant had not been sufficiently warned that the phone calls would be recorded, the Superior Court rejected this analysis. The testimony at the motions hearing was that inmate visitation at the Allegheny County Jail is conducted over a closed-circuit system using telephone receivers. Guards take a visitor to the jail to a windowed cubicle with chairs and a telephone receiver. The inmate is escorted to a room on the other side of the visitor window with another telephone receiver. The inmate picks up the receiver, enters his or her jail ID number, and then the visitor picks up the receiver. Before the parties speak through the phone, a recording stating that the visit “may be monitored or recorded” is played. However, there is nothing in the inmate handbook which indicates that the visits are recorded and there was no testimony regarding whether [Byrd] heard the recording before each visit. The Commonwealth called the defendant’s visitor, however, to testify that she did hear the warning before the conversations. Additionally, in some of the phone calls, the defendant attempted to whisper and suggested that he did not care if he was being recorded, suggesting that in addition to hearing the warning, he did know that he was being recorded.
Prison Tapes Are Admissible
The Superior Court rejected the defendant’s argument that the evidence did not establish that he actually heard the warning or that the warning that he “may be” recorded instead of “would be” recorded somehow rendered the recording illegal. The Court concluded that the defendant was properly warned that he could be recorded, knew that he was being recorded based on the things that he said, and that he implicitly consented to the recordings by continuing with the visits, anyway. Thus, the Court found that the evidence was not obtained in violation of the Wiretap Act and could be used at trial.
The bottom line is that prison phone calls, and in many cases in-person prison visits, are recorded. This is particularly true in Philadelphia where all prison phone calls are recorded and a warning is played before each call. As long as the prison provides some sort of notice that the phone calls could be recorded, those conversations are admissible in evidence against a criminal defendant if the defendant says something incriminating. They are often even more damaging to a case than a detective or police officer claiming that a defendant confessed because in many cases, the jury will actually be able to listen to the recordings. Many prosecutors throughout the Commonwealth will listen to these recordings prior to trial and see if the defendant confessed at any point during a visit or phone call, and if the defendant did, it could seriously undermine the defense at trial. There is very little that can be done to mitigate the potential damage caused by incriminating statements once they are made. Even statements which seem harmless can often be used against a defendant if the prosecutor can suggest that the defendant was speaking in code or that the statement meant something else. The Superior Court’s opinion re-affirms that prison inmates have very few privacy rights, and if they make recorded phone calls, law enforcement may listen in and use those phone calls at trial.
Experienced and Understanding Philadelphia Criminal Defense Lawyers
Philadelphia Criminal Lawyers
If you are facing criminal charges or deciding whether to appeal a conviction or sentence, we can help. We have successfully defended thousands of clients in jurisdictions throughout Pennsylvania and New Jersey. We can also provide advice on the merits of pursuing an appeal or post-conviction relief act petition. We offer a free 15-minute criminal defense strategy session to each potential client. Call 267-225-2545 to speak with an experienced and understanding criminal defense attorney today