Com. v. Branch-Samuels, A.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 26, 2019
Docket548 WDA 2018
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Branch-Samuels, A. (Com. v. Branch-Samuels, A.) 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. Branch-Samuels, A., (Pa. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

J-A08036-19

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : ANDRE BRANCH-SAMUELS : : Appellant : No. 548 WDA 2018

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered January 10, 2018 In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-02-CR-0006189-2016

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., STABILE, J., and McLAUGHLIN, J.

MEMORANDUM BY McLAUGHLIN, J.: FILED JULY 26, 2019

Andre Branch-Samuels appeals the judgment of sentence entered on his

convictions for first-degree murder, firearms not to be carried without a

license, and tampering with or fabricating physical evidence.1 We affirm.

We glean the following facts and procedural history from the certified

record. On April 1, 2016, Dontae Thompson was shot multiple times while

driving his vehicle by someone driving a white Ford Focus. N.T., Trial at 6.

Police recovered two surveillance videos, which were introduced at trial as

Commonwealth Exhibits 23 and 40. Exhibit 23 was a video of the shooting;

Exhibit 40 showed an unidentified male parking a Ford Focus and the driver

leaving with a male. Detectives Gary Messer and Judd Emery identified the

male in Exhibit 40 as Branch-Samuels. He was arrested and charged.

____________________________________________

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2502(a), 6106(a)(1), and 4910(1), respectively. J-A08036-19

Before trial, Branch-Samuels filed a Motion in Limine to preclude

Detective Messer from testifying that Branch-Samuels was the male in Exhibit

40 because such testimony would be “an opinion based on a piece of evidence

that he’s looking at.” Pre Trial Motions Hearing, 9/29/17, at 8. The trial court

denied the motion and ruled that Detective Messer could “testify as to his

knowledge of Mr. Branch-Samuels, how he knows him, and [defense counsel]

can cross-examine him on it.” Id. at 10. Following a motion to reconsider, the

trial court reiterated the same ruling:

[Commonwealth]: [Detective Messer] told the other detectives that that’s [Branch-Samuels]. He identified him as Andre Branch- Samuels. Can he say that?

The Court: Yes, I believe he can. Not while he is narrating the video. I think after the jury has a chance to view the video, because it is their determination that prevails. That’s the ultimate finding. But this officer can say, based on my interactions with him in the community over a period of time, my knowledge of what he looked like at that time, I told the other officers the person that I saw in the video was [Branch-Samuels], and we took steps to get him.

What he can’t do is tell the jurors, while they are watching the video, this is Mr. Branch-Samuels, because that’s a conclusion that he is making. He is making an investigative conclusion, which is different than a conclusion to a jury when he is testifying, I believe.

So what he did as a result of viewing the video, and why, he can testify to that.

N.T., Pretrial Motions Hearing, October 10-11, 2017, at 9-10. It further

explained its ruling as follows citing Commonwealth v. Brown, 134 A.3d

1097 (Pa.Super. 2016):

-2- J-A08036-19

The Court: . . . As I’ve already ruled, my understanding of the law at this point is that a witness cannot speculate as to what he sees in the video. However, he can testify, based on his personal knowledge, training and experience, as to what he is seeing in the video. Whether that goes to a realtime identification of a person in the video, while he is watching the video, I’ve said I don’t think he can do that. But I think he can state what he did as a result of watching the video in furtherance of the investigation. And that is to tell the other officers this is so and so, I’ve interacted with him.

[Defense Counsel]: I’m not seeing the distinction.

The Court: Because the distinction is right here in Brown, paragraph 11: Trial court sustained an objection prohibiting the detective from speculating as to the identity of individuals seen in the footage and instructed the jury that their own observations controlled.

So, it is their own observations of what the video depicts, whether or not that is consistent with the actions that the police took. It is the jury’s determine of what they view in the video and whether or not it is your client or not.

Id. at 12-14.

At trial, the Commonwealth presented the following evidence. Detective

Edward Fallert testified that he was one of the first detectives at the scene of

the shooting. While there he was contacted by the public safety coordinator

for the Pittsburgh Housing Authority, Jade Burka, who told him that he had

obtained surveillance footage of the shooting, i.e., Exhibit 23. After viewing

the video, Burka determined that the shooter was driving a white Ford Focus;

he also obtained the license plate number. With this information, Detective

Fallert learned that Jenea Price had rented the vehicle on the day in question

from Enterprise Rent-A-Car. Detective Messer also watched the video and

recognized a male named Shawn Yancey. Police brought Yancey to the police

-3- J-A08036-19

station and Yancey handed over the keys to the Ford Focus. N.T. at 186-187,

525. After speaking with Yancey, Detectives Messer and Emery located the

Ford Focus in a parking lot. Additionally, police seized Yancey’s cell phone as

evidence and Detective Emery found on it a photo taken a day before the

murder, depicting Yancey, Branch-Samuels, and another male. Yancey was

wearing the same clothing in the photo as he was wearing the day of the

murder. Id. at 663-65. Detectives also recovered surveillance footage of the parking lot where

they found the Ford Focus, i.e., Exhibit 40. Detective Emery in his testimony

at trial described the contents of the video as follows:

The white car comes in, driven by a person that I recognized as Shawn Yancey. It pulls into a spot and another individual gets out of the back of the gray car that followed it in there. An individual gets out of the back of that car goes over and talks to Yancey then walks back over and gets in the car and Yancey turns the car around.

Id. at 219.

Detective Messer testified that when he viewed the video, he also

recognized Yancey in the video. He testified that from his prior dealings with

Branch-Samuels he knew that Yancey associated with Branch-Samuels. Id. at

167, 173. He also testified that he recognized Branch-Samuels in the video as

well, again based on his prior interactions with him. While he admitted that

he could not clearly see the face of the individual that he believed to be

Branch-Samuels, he testified that other factors including his “gait, meaning

the way he walks, his mannerisms, his height, build, his hair, who he was

-4- J-A08036-19

associated with at the time of the incident, where he was at when it occurred,”

led him to believe that it was Branch-Samuels. Id. at 175. After Detective

Messer testified that he recognized both Branch-Samuels and Yancey in the

video, the court gave a cautionary jury instruction:

The Court: Ladies and gentlemen, I’m going to give you a cautionary instruction at this point.

You are the fact finders and it is your observation of the video which does prevail in this case. The testimony of Detective Messer is for the purpose of laying a foundation for you to understand what exactly the investigation was as a result of Detective Messer’s input, but it is for you and you alone to determine rather what is reflected in the video.

Id.

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