Com. v. Brown, C.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 14, 2025
Docket60 EDA 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Brown, C. (Com. v. Brown, C.) 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. Brown, C., (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-S40044-24

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : CRISTIAN ENRIQUE BROWN : : Appellant : No. 60 EDA 2024

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered June 26, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-15-CR-0003748-2021

BEFORE: STABILE, J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and LANE, J.

MEMORANDUM BY LANE, J.: FILED MARCH 14, 2025

Cristian Enrique Brown (“Brown”) appeals from the judgment of

sentence imposed following his convictions for seven counts of sexual abuse

of children — possessing child pornography (“possessing child pornography”)

and criminal use of communication facility. 1 We affirm.

The trial court summarized the following:

On May 24, 2021, the Chester County Detectives’ Office received information from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children [(“NCMEC”)]. The information was a cyber tip from analysts at the Delaware County Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force [(“ICAC”)]. The tip indicated that an electr[onic] service provider, Adobe Systems, Inc. [(“Adobe Systems”)], reported that on May 8, 2021, someone using the IP address of 100.14.100.41 uploaded two . . . still images that

____________________________________________

1 See 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 6312(d), 7512(a).The Commonwealth initially charged Brown with 100 counts of possessing child pornography for possessing 700 images of child pornography. However, at trial, the Commonwealth reduced the charges to seven counts, each comprising 100 images. J-S40044-24

appeared to depict child pornography. The IP address belonged to [Brown. Brown lived with his brother and parents.]

A search warrant was obtained and six (6) computers were taken from [Brown’s] residence [on July 13, 2021. Brown] was working when the search warrants were executed. [Chester County] Detective Gerald Davis, Jr. [(“Detective Davis”),] went to [Brown’s] work to seize his cell phone pursuant to the search warrant. While there, [Brown] elected to speak with the detective[, and his interview was audio recorded]. He admitted that he viewed child pornography. He would look at images on his cell phone or school computer, and then transfer the images to the computer tower in the living room of his residence. [In this statement, Brown also repeatedly claimed that some of the images “were left over” from a prior juvenile adjudication for possessing child pornography.]

A search of [Brown’s] computer tower revealed 700 images of child pornography. A majority of the child victims shown in the photographs were between two and [fourteen] years old. The two . . . images originally reported by Adobe Systems were discovered among the 700 pictures found. Based on the foregoing, [on November 16, 2021, the Commonwealth charged Brown] with multiple counts of [possessing child pornography] and criminal use of a communication facility. . . .

Trial Court Opinion, 4/10/24, at 1-2, 5 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).

On July 21, 2022, Brown filed a motion to exclude, at trial, any reference

to his prior 2019 juvenile adjudication for possessing child pornography. 2 The

trial court deferred ruling on this motion until the Commonwealth filed a

2 The certified record on appeal did not include this motion to exclude evidence, although there is a docket entry, in the trial docket, showing Brown filed this motion. We further note that at the suppression hearing, the trial court indicated that it had not received a copy of the motion. See N.T., 8/25/22, at 13.

-2- J-S40044-24

Pa.R.E. 404(b) motion regarding other acts evidence. See N.T., 8/25/22, at

14.

On the same day he filed the above motion, Brown also filed a motion

to suppress the computers recovered from his house. He challenged the

search warrant for his residence, asserting that there was no probable cause

to search his home computer.

On August 25, 2022, the trial court held a hearing on Brown’s motion to

suppress. Brown’s sole argument, in both his motion and at the hearing, was

that: (1) the cyber tip from the NCMEC or ICAC stated “that two pornographic

images were sent to laptops at a school;” (2) based on that information, the

police obtained and executed search warrants for the school and learned that

the laptops were registered to Brown; however (3) a search of the laptops

revealed no incriminating evidence. N.T., 8/25/22, at 7; see also Motion to

Suppress, 7/21/22, at 1. At the suppression hearing, Brown explained:

[T]he police filed a third application for a search warrant to search the computers at [Brown’s] house where he lives with his mother, father and brother. And my point is just that, I don’t see how the MEC [sic] report that . . . two pornographic images were sent to the laptops at the school gives them probable cause to search the computer at the home.

N.T., 8/25/22, at 7.

The Commonwealth disputed Brown’s characterization of the cyber tip.

Instead, the Commonwealth maintained that the tip: (1) did not state what

devices the images were uploaded to; and (2) stated that the images were

“uploaded from an IP address” that matched Brown’s home. Id. at 9. The

-3- J-S40044-24

trial court agreed with the Commonwealth that the search warrant for Brown’s

house stated that Verizon reported the “IP address is going back to [Brown’s]

home.” N.T., 8/25/22, at 11-12. The court reasoned that this evidence

sufficiently linked the crime to Brown’s home. See id. at 12. On September

26, 2022, the trial court issued an order denying Brown’s motion to suppress.

Subsequently, the Commonwealth filed a Pa.R.E. 404(b) motion seeking

to admit evidence of Brown’s 2019 juvenile adjudication for possessing child

pornography. On January 20, 2023, the trial court conducted a hearing on

this motion, as well as Brown’s earlier-filed motion to exclude this same

evidence. At issue was the audio-recorded statement Brown gave to Detective

Davis, claiming that the images found on his computer were “left over” from

his prior adjudication. See N.T., 1/20/23, at 3, 11-13.

At the hearing, and in its motion, the Commonwealth argued that the

trial court should permit the evidence of Brown’s prior adjudication to rebut

the anticipated defense of mistake or accident — that the images were “mere

remnant[s] of the previous” possessing child pornography adjudication. Id.

at 5. The Commonwealth further argued the evidence would show Brown’s

state of mind, intent, and knowledge, and serve as res gestae evidence. The

Commonwealth claimed that Brown would suffer no undue prejudice. Brown

contended that he only made the statement because the detective referred to

the prior adjudication first during the interview. See id. at 9-11.

-4- J-S40044-24

The trial court ruled that Brown’s prior adjudication was admissible, and

that the Commonwealth could present the full audio recording of Brown’s

interview, as well as a transcript of the recording. See N.T., 1/20/23, at 14-

17. In making its ruling, the trial court reviewed aloud the statements Brown

gave to Detective David and pointed out, without dispute, that Brown

“repeatedly” stated the images were “remnants from the old offense.” Id. at

11; see also id. at 12-13. The court reasoned:

Knowledge is always going to be the case, whether I know what’s on my computer, whether you can tie it to me, whether I know it’s involved, which would seem to be the same type of defense in this case.

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