Com. v. Alvin, T.

2024 Pa. Super. 257
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 4, 2024
Docket2872 EDA 2023
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 Pa. Super. 257 (Com. v. Alvin, T.) 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. Alvin, T., 2024 Pa. Super. 257 (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

J-S32005-24

2024 PA Super 257

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : TROY TAQUELL ALVIN : : Appellant : No. 2872 EDA 2023

Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered August 17, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Northampton County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-48-CR-0001323-2003

BEFORE: LAZARUS, P.J., STABILE, J., and KING, J.

OPINION BY LAZARUS, P.J.: FILED NOVEMBER 4, 2024

Troy Taquell Alvin appeals, pro se, from the order, entered in the Court

of Common Pleas of Northampton County, dismissing his petition filed

pursuant to the Post Conviction Relief Act (PCRA), 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 9541-9546.

After careful review, we affirm.

This Court previously summarized the factual history as follows:

On March 11, 2002, at approximately 9:26 p.m., the police responded to a reported shooting at the corner[] of 7th and Bushkill Streets in Easton, Pennsylvania. When the police arrived, they discovered a white male with several gunshot wounds to the torso lying next to the open driver’s side door of his vehicle. The victim was identified as Ronald Plum. [Plum] was transferred to the hospital[,] where he died as a result of the gunshot wounds.

At the scene of the shooting, police interviewed neighbors and potential witnesses[, who] stated that two men were observed arguing, several shots were fired, and one man slumped onto the vehicle. The witnesses reported seeing a black male running from the scene. They stated that he ran up Bushkill Street in the direction of 9th Street. The police also recovered several 9mm J-S32005-24

shell casings from the area. Additionally, a cell phone and a pager were taken from the victim’s automobile.

Several minutes after arriving at the scene, police received a complaint from a resident of 915 Bushkill Street that a suspicious black male was in his backyard talking on a cell phone. Before the police could arrive, however, the individual jumped a fence and fled the area. Upon investigating, the police discovered a blue “do[]-rag” lying in close proximity to where the individual had jumped the fence. A police [] dog followed the scent from the do[]-rag to 10th Street. A reverse track was also completed, where the [police] dog traced the scent from the do[]-rag back to the area of the shooting.

As part of the investigation, police sent the do[]-rag to the forensic laboratory to determine whether any DNA was present. The laboratory discovered that DNA was present, and analyzed and compared the DNA to those samples contained in CODIS (the Combined DNA Index System). [Alvin] could not be excluded as the donor of the DNA. Consequently, a search warrant was executed authorizing the seizure of two vials of blood from [Alvin]. The results of the comparative analysis of the DNA from the do[]- rag to [Alvin]’s blood [showed] that [Alvin] could not be excluded as a DNA match.

Police also examined [cell phone and pager records and, ultimately,] applied for and received a court order directing Sprint Telephone Company to furnish information for several [] telephone numbers. The order was entered pursuant to 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 5743, the Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance and Control Act. The information revealed that [Alvin] was the subscriber [of those phone numbers] and that he was in communication with [Plum] prior to the homicide. The records also established that [Alvin] had been in contact soon after the murder with the user of a phone that belonged to Donna Joseph.

At trial, Edward Pope testified that he had arranged a meeting between [Plum] and [Alvin] on the night of the murder. The purpose of the encounter was so that [Alvin] could buy marijuana from [Plum]. [Later t]hat evening, [Alvin] told [] Pope that [Plum] had not shown up for the transaction. A few days later, however, [Alvin] expressed his belief that [Plum] was a police officer. Several weeks after that, [] Pope asked [Alvin] if he had, in fact,

-2- J-S32005-24

met with [Plum]. [Alvin] admitted that he had, and then stated that “he had to do what he had to do.”

James Lambert testified that [Alvin] and Markeith Webb, [Alvin’s] cousin, arrived together at [Lambert’s] home on the night of the murder. [Alvin] told [Lambert] that he had just “blazed a white guy.” [Alvin] explained that he had intended to rob [Plum], but that [Plum] was acting as if he were “5-O.”

Angela Joseph testified that she and [] Webb were driving in Easton when [Alvin] called the cell phone she was using, which was registered to her mother, Donna[.] While [Angela] drove, [] Webb gave her directions. Ultimately, they picked up [Alvin] in the area of 10th and Bushkill Streets.

John Culpepper testified that he knew [Alvin] from the time [Alvin] was a child because he was friends with [Alvin’s] father. While incarcerated in the Northampton County [Jail] together, [Alvin] told [] Culpepper that he had “murked[,]” [which is slang for killing a person,] a guy, and that he had been seen by a neighbor whose backyard he had been in. [Alvin] was concerned about the neighbor being able to identify him[] and asked [] Culpepper if he would “take care of” the person. [Alvin] was also worried about [] Webb “running his mouth.”

Testimony was presented that [Alvin] accompanied Gail Stump, the mother of his children, to purchase a 9mm Ruger two weeks before the murder. [] Stump testified that the last time she saw the weapon, it was in a box that [Alvin] was moving into a storage unit for her prior to the murder. A gun with the same serial number was recovered after the murder during the [unrelated] arrest of Tamir Jackson. [] Jackson acquired the gun from Wilfredo Torres, who acquired the gun from [] Webb. Although ballistic testing of the gun did not produce identification marks on the casings consistent with those found at the crime scene, this discrepancy was accounted for because the gun’s barrel had been changed.

[Alvin] was arrested on January 30, 2003. . . . [He] proceeded to a jury trial on February 9, 2004[ and] was convicted on February 16, 2004, of first-degree murder[.] Alvin was sentenced to life imprisonment.

-3- J-S32005-24

Commonwealth v. Alvin, 2206 EDA 2004, **1-5 (Pa. Super. filed June 28,

2005) (unpublished memorandum decision).

On appeal, this Court affirmed Alvin’s judgment of sentence, see id.,

and our Supreme Court denied Alvin’s timely petition for allowance of appeal

on April 4, 2006. See id., 897 A.2d 1183 (Pa. 2006). Between June 2006

and September 2016, Alvin filed six PCRA petitions. 1

This Court summarized the subsequent procedural history as follows:

On December 21, 2020, [Alvin] filed the instant pro se motion for DNA testing[, pursuant to section 9543.1 of the PCRA. Alvin] requested that the State Police conduct additional DNA testing on the do[]-rag using a new testing method known as the TrueAllele probabilistic genotyping software program. See Mot[ion] for DNA Testing, 12/21/20, at 3-4, 7. In support of his motion, [Alvin] asserted that TrueAllele had been evaluated in peer-reviewed studies in 2009 and 2011. [Alvin] also cited studies from 2005 and 2013[,] which examined DNA mixture interpretation. [Alvin] claimed that DNA testing would establish his actual innocence because it could reveal the identity of the actual assailant when compared to results in state and federal DNA databanks. See id. at 5.

The PCRA Court appointed Talia Mazza, Esq[uire,] as [PCRA] counsel for [Alvin]. PCRA counsel did not file an amended motion.

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