Com. v. Barry-Gibbons, S.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 6, 2022
Docket759 WDA 2021
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Barry-Gibbons, S. (Com. v. Barry-Gibbons, 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. Barry-Gibbons, S., (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

J-S14037-22

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : STEPHEN BARRY-GIBBONS : : Appellant : No. 759 WDA 2021

Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered June 4, 2021 In the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-25-CR-0003148-2016

BEFORE: McLAUGHLIN, J., McCAFFERY, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY PELLEGRINI, J.: FILED: June 6, 2022

Stephen Barry-Gibbons (Barry-Gibbons) appeals from the order entered

in the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County (PCRA court) dismissing his

timely first petition filed pursuant to the Post-Conviction Relief Act (PCRA), 42

Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-9546. Barry-Gibbons contended that trial counsel was

ineffective in the litigation of his motion to suppress evidence, failure to object

to a curative jury instruction, and failure to call two potential witnesses. We

affirm.

____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-S14037-22

I.

A.

After a jury trial, Barry-Gibbons was convicted of criminal conspiracy ─

possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance (PWID), two counts of

PWID, possession of drug paraphernalia, two counts of possession of a

controlled substance, person not possess a firearm and receiving stolen

property. The charges stem from the City of Erie Police Department’s recovery

of five baggies of heroin, ten baggies of cocaine, three handguns (one of which

had been reported stolen), a digital scale, a hydraulic press, plastic baggies,

razor blades, a manual press and lidocaine1 from Barry-Gibbons’ apartment

located at 1055 West 30th Street in Erie on May 19, 2016, during the

execution of a search warrant. Barry-Gibbons resided primarily in Detroit and

was operating a drug business out of the apartment he rented in Erie.

After police received information in March 2016 that the West 30th

Street residence was being used as location to store and sell drugs, Barry-

Gibbons and co-defendant Franzora Smith (Smith) became the principal

targets of a narcotics investigation. Police conducted a considerable amount

of surveillance in the months leading up to securing the warrant and gathered

evidence though controlled buys conducted with three confidential informants

(CI).

1 Lidocaine is a topical sedative routinely used as a cutting agent for drugs.

-2- J-S14037-22

On the day of Barry-Gibbons’ arrest, Sergeant Michael Chodubski and

multiple other plainclothes detectives followed Barry-Gibbons for most of the

day because a CI had provided a tip that he would be in town to sell heroin.

At about 4:20 p.m., Barry-Gibbons drove to the 3400 block of Cascade

Avenue, where a female later identified as Ashley Dumas (Dumas) entered his

vehicle and exited after a few minutes. Police stopped Dumas as she walked

to her car and recovered a five-gram bag of heroin from her.2 Barry-Gibbons

drove to a local drug store where police arrested him and searched his vehicle

incident to his arrest.3 A search warrant for his residence was issued and

executed a short time later.

Before trial, Barry-Gibbons filed an omnibus pre-trial motion seeking

suppression of the evidence seized from his residence because the search was

not supported by probable cause, later supplemented by raising several claims

challenging the veracity and reliability of the CIs. Following an evidentiary

hearing, the trial court denied the suppression motion.

The case proceeded to trial against Barry-Gibbons and Smith in August

2017 and the Commonwealth presented the testimony of Lieutenant Michael

2 Dumas died of a heroin overdose in August 2016.

3Nothing of evidentiary value was found on Barry-Gibbons’ person. Three passengers were in his vehicle, along with multiple cell phones and a purse belonging to the female passenger containing $14,000 in cash.

-3- J-S14037-22

Nolan, the arresting officer in this case. The following exchange took place

during direct examination:

Q. Okay. Now, real quick here, Sergeant Chodubski testified that Stephen Barry-Gibbons was transported to the Erie Police Department where Sergeant Chodubski began an interview with Mr. Barry-Gibbons, right?

A. Yes.

Q. And you came into that interview halfway through, right?

Q. Just . . . tell me what happened when you walked into that room, Lieutenant Nolan?

A. I walked─ Stephen Barry-Gibbons was seated in the far corner of the room from the door, so when you walk in, he’s the first one I see. So I walked into the room and I saw him and he was sitting. He looked up at me and he said, “Good job, Mike, good fucking job,” and he kind of put his head down and shook his head.

Q. Now, he was freely talking to you, correct?
Q. From that point on?
Q. Was there a reference made to the drugs that were recovered from this house?

Q. Okay. If you could tell us about that part of your conversation with Mr. Barry-Gibbons?

A. Well, Sergeant Chodubski and Triana were talking to him. I was doing something else. Triana called me, said, “Hey, he’s starting to talk to us, do you want to come down and help?” So I did, that’s when my initial encounter with him occurred there.

-4- J-S14037-22

They had not told him yet what we had found. And one of the detectives, I heard him ask him . . . how much did you bring here when you came? Apparently, they were that far along in the conversation. How much did you bring here? And his answer was, how much did you find? And I looked at him, and said, we found it, we got it all, we found it. And so I didn't tell him how much, but I told him we found it. And then he kind of . . . let out a big sigh, then he . . . explained what he said. Can I refer to my report to get that?

Q. Absolutely.

A. Okay. Well, I quoted him here. He said, “Oh, you got it all?” That was a question he asked me. And then he said that he had sent a brick of cocaine and a hundred grams of heroin to Erie and that it arrived two days before he got here. He didn’t elaborate on how it got here or who brought it here. And he also explained that he hid the three guns. I didn’t note that he said where, but he said he hid the three guns and that someone else, though, had brought them to the apartment not him.

Q. Okay. Now, lastly, it’s also common that, from time to time you do use people that you think may be beneficial for you to further investigations, correct?

A. Yes, we do.

Q. Did Mr. Barry-Gibbons make any proposals to you about wanting to work for the Erie Police Department?

A. Yes, he did.
Q. What did he say in that respect?

A. Well, he told us that he’d be willing to help us get some bigger fish, and that. But he said he couldn’t go to the county prison. So what that means is he can’t charge me now, because if I go to the county prison, I’m on parole, and I’ll be locked up in there or . . . everyone is going to know that I was ─ that’s what it was. Everyone is going to know that I was locked up.

[Defense Counsel:] Your Honor, excuse me. May we have a sidebar?

-5- J-S14037-22

(N.T. Trial, 8/15/17, at 111-14) (emphasis added).

Because Lieutenant Nolan mentioned that he was on parole, counsel for

Barry-Gibbons requested a mistrial, arguing that Lieutenant Nolan’s comment

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Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Barry-Gibbons, S., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-barry-gibbons-s-pasuperct-2022.