Com. v. Adams, S.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 31, 2025
Docket234 EDA 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Adams, S. (Com. v. Adams, S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Com. v. Adams, S., (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-A10040-24

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : SHATAAN ADAMS : : Appellant : No. 234 EDA 2023

Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered April 23, 2021 In the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-23-CR-0002312-2008

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J.E., DUBOW, J., and BECK, J.

MEMORANDUM BY PANELLA, P.J.E.: FILED JULY 31, 2025

Shataan Adams appeals pro se from the order entered in the Delaware

County Court of Common Pleas on April 23, 2021, denying Adams’s petition

filed pursuant to the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”), 42 Pa. C.S.A. §§

9541-9546. For the reasons discussed below, we find the PCRA court properly

denied relief and affirm.

This case returns to our Court following a remand for the PCRA court to

file a responsive opinion to the issues raised in Adams’s Rule 1925(b) Concise

Statement filed on March 14, 2023. We reiterate the facts as summarized prior

to remand as follows:

During August and September 2007, [Adams] and co- defendants Byron Hammond and Charles Redfain plotted to rob the Blackwood family, who lived in the same neighborhood in the City of Chester as the co-defendants. Some of their plotting and some of their preparations were overheard or seen by a neighbor of the Blackwood family. After 8:00 p.m. on September 27, 2007, J-A10040-24

[Adams] and Redfain were sitting together when Hammond approached them and said, “it’s about to go down,” and gave Redfain a shotgun. [Adams] gave Redfain a mask. [Adams] and Hammond each had a firearm of their own.

At about 10 p.m., M.B., wife of the victim, was lying in bed with her children, when Hammond kicked in the back door of the house. M.B. saw three men coming up the stairs with guns, and Hammond yanked her by the hair away from her children and downstairs to the kitchen. Hammond struck M.B. repeatedly demanding money and marijuana. Meanwhile Redfain and [Adams] ransacked the first floor of the home. At some point, Redfain digitally penetrated M.B. while [Adams] was in the kitchen with them.

The victim returned to the house in a truck driven by a friend. [Adams] alerted his cohort and ordered them to tie up M.B. [Adams] and Hammond turned off the lights in the house and took positions with their guns drawn to ambush the victim. M.B. slipped away from her captor and screamed a warning to her husband. The victim grabbed his friend’s firearm while M.B. escaped into the friend’s truck. Gunfire erupted as the truck sped away from the house. The friend called the police, circled the block and upon arriving back at the house, found the victim lying on the ground with a single bullet wound to the head.

On May 8, 2009, following a trial during which [Adams] did not testify, a jury found [Adams] guilty of the aforementioned crimes. On July 14, 2009, the trial court sentenced [Adams] to life imprisonment on the charge of second-degree murder, with consecutive terms of ten to twenty years’ imprisonment for robbery and burglary.

In his direct appeal, [Adams] raised three claims: trial court error in allowing testimony and closing argument on his pre-arrest silence; sufficiency of the evidence for aggravated indecent assault; and the merger of burglary into murder of the second degree for sentencing purposes. We ruled that “[Adams]’s constitutional right to silence was not violated,” and the evidence was sufficient to sustain [Adams]’s conviction of aggravated indecent assault under a theory of accomplice liability. We also vacated the judgment of sentence and remanded for resentencing because Adams’s consecutive term for burglary was illegal.

-2- J-A10040-24

The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania granted an allowance of appeal on the issues of whether admitted testimony was an impermissible reference to [Adams]’s pre-arrest silence, and if so, whether the error was harmless. On November 20, 2014, the Supreme Court affirmed “the trial court and Superior Court’s conclusions that the testimony in this case did not unconstitutionally burden [Adams’s] right against self- incrimination, because the reference was contextual and brief and did not highlight [his] silence as evidence of guilt.”

On July 2, 2015, the Honorable George A. Pagano, resentenced [Adams]. The burglary conviction merged. The court imposed a term of life imprisonment for murder of the second degree and consecutive terms of 10 to 20 years’ imprisonment for robbery and 5 to 10 years’ imprisonment for aggravated indecent assault.

Commonwealth v. Adams, 235 EDA 2023, at *1-2 (Pa. Super. filed August

23, 2024) (unpublished memorandum) (citations omitted).

Relevant to the instant proceedings, on April 28, 2016, Adams filed a

pro se PCRA petition, raising 10 issues, including claims of ineffective

assistance of trial counsel, prosecutorial misconduct, and a claim challenging

the legality of his sentence. Counsel was appointed but was granted

permission to withdraw from representation due to having represented co-

defendant Redfain in a 2010 PCRA proceeding. New PCRA counsel was

subsequently appointed in August 2017.

Over the next two years, while represented by counsel, Adams filed

multiple pro se documents purporting to amend or supplement his petition.

After seeking, and being granted, multiple extensions of time, PCRA

counsel filed a “no-merit” letter on January 28, 2021, pursuant to

Commonwealth v. Turner, 544 A.2d 927 (Pa. 1988), and Commonwealth

-3- J-A10040-24

v. Finley, 550 A.2d 213 (Pa. Super. 1988) (en banc) (“Turner/Finley”), and

a petition to withdraw as counsel.

The PCRA court thereafter granted PCRA counsel leave to withdraw and

issued notice of its intent to dismiss the PCRA petition without an evidentiary

hearing, pursuant to Pa.R.Crim.P. 907.

In response, Adams filed a motion seeking leave to proceed pro se and

alleging ineffective assistance of PCRA counsel for not raising trial counsel’s

ineffective assistance by failing to object to the trial court’s accomplice liability

instruction. The PCRA court granted Adams’s request to proceed pro se.

Adams thereafter filed a pro se response to the Rule 907 notice, followed

two months later with a supplemental response. The two filings together

raised 8 issues, including new issues that had not previously been raised.

On April 23, 2021, the PCRA court entered an order denying Adams’s

PCRA petition. Less than a month later, on May 19, 2021, Adams filed pro se

a Rule 1925(b) Concise Statement, raising 5 separate issues for appeal. No

other filings were made by Adams until June 16, 2021, when he sought a copy

of his docket sheet from the court through a letter to Judge Pagano and a right

to know request. Over the course of the next year, Adams filed additional right

to know requests directed to the “clerk of courts” seeking a copy of his docket,

Rule 1925(b) Statement and other motions he had filed.

On January 13, 2023, Adams filed a notice of appeal, along with a

request for transcripts and a new Rule 1925(b) concise statement. The PCRA

-4- J-A10040-24

court ordered Adams to file another Rule 1925(b) concise statement. After

being granted an extension of time, Adams filed his third Rule 1925(b) concise

statement, raising 6 claims. We note that Adams’s concise statement is

anything but “concise”, spanning over 12 pages. However, his issues can be

distilled as follows:

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