Com. v. Carroll, R.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 26, 2020
Docket2687 EDA 2018
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Carroll, R. (Com. v. Carroll, R.) 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. Carroll, R., (Pa. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

J-S14004-20

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : REGINALD CARROLL : : Appellant : No. 2687 EDA 2018

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered August 24, 2018 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0001941-2017

BEFORE: BOWES, J., KING, J., and FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED MAY 26, 2020

Reginald Carroll appeals from his August 24, 2018 judgment of sentence

of ten to twenty years of imprisonment, imposed after he was found guilty of

conspiracy to commit kidnapping. Appellant’s counsel has filed a petition to

withdraw and a brief pursuant to Anders v. California, 386 U.S. 738 (1967),

and Commonwealth v. Santiago, 978 A.2d 349 (Pa. 2009). Appellant filed

several pro se responses. We grant counsel’s petition to withdraw, and affirm.

The trial court summarized the facts as follows:

On January 30, 2017, during late afternoon[,] Agent Louis Schmidt of the Drug Enforcement Agency of the Federal Government was conducting an investigation in the area of a Metro PCS Cell Phone store situated on Frankford Avenue in Philadelphia when he observed Appellant and his three co- defendants exit the store and enter a red Jeep Cherokee. When the Jeep drove away, the agent followed the vehicle to Erie Avenue but lost it in traffic. Upon losing visual contact with the vehicle, the agent contacted Officer Torres of the Philadelphia Police Department’s Narcotics Enforcement Team so that Officer J-S14004-20

Torres could advise other police personnel of what the agent had just observed. At the time, the agent was using a video camera and recorded the defendants leaving the store and entering the Jeep.

Agent Schmidt also informed Philadelphia Police Sergeant Wali Shabazz, assigned to the 25th District’s Narcotics Enforcement Team, about what he had observed and that he thought that there was a good chance that a woman was going to be kidnapped. Based upon that information, Sgt. Shabazz and members of his team proceeded to the 2400 block of Aramingo Avenue, the location of a shopping plaza, where the sergeant had two members of his team watch the store in which the alleged victim worked. While driving around the lot, the sergeant saw a red Jeep that matched a description of the vehicle mentioned by Agent Schmidt driving in the parking lot of the shopping center and a black male later identified as [Appellant], who had been described by the agent. He informed the officers conducting the surveillance of the store about what he observed and left the lot to avoid the suspects from identifying his vehicle as a police vehicle.

Sergeant Shabazz drove a couple of blocks away and parked his car. While there, he received a radio call from the officers conducting the surveillance advising him that a woman had been grabbed by two men who forced her into a silver Toyota. The sergeant drove to the shopping center and he and other officers unsuccessfully attempted to box in the Jeep and the Toyota, when they were driven in different directions once they left the parking lot. Sergeant Shabazz pursued the Toyota, which crashed a couple of blocks from the shopping center. Upon crashing, [Appellant] and [Michael Cruz] exited the Toyota and fled. The sergeant proceeded to the vehicle and had contact with the woman who had been abducted as other officers pursued the two males who ran from the Toyota. [Appellant], who was depicted in a video recorded at the scene of the vehicle crash running from the vehicle, was apprehended a short time thereafter and brought over to the Toyota.

After the Toyota crashed, Agent Schmidt was informed that the Jeep was stopped on Aramingo Avenue and that a female, later identified as Crystal Reyes, the complainant herein, had been grabbed by persons earlier observed in the Jeep and placed in another car in the parking lot. The agent immediately drove to Lehigh Avenue and Thompson Street and learned that police were

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searching for defendants. At some point, he had contact with [Appellant] who said, essentially, that he had not done anything. The agent showed [Appellant] a photograph of himself which the agent had copied from the video he recorded earlier that day.

In January of 2017, Ms. Reyes, who, at the time knew each of the defendants, worked at a dental office located in the shopping mall at 2400 Aramingo Avenue. On January 31, 2017, Ms. Reyes was at work and noticed a burgundy Jeep driving back and forth outside the dental office. When Ms. Reyes left work that day at about 7:45 p.m., she observed a male wearing clothes that covered him from head to toe walking toward her and another male wearing gray clothing that also covered his entire body get out of the Jeep and approach her. She also saw the Jeep she had seen earlier in the day parked outside another store. The two males forced Ms. Reyes to get into her car, a silver Toyota that belonged to her paramour, at which time the males, who . . . were in phone contact with Torres and who w[ere] giving them directions, took Ms. Reyes’[s] cell phone and purse and told Ms. Reyes to be quiet and cooperate with them because they had her children. One of the males then began driving the Toyota but almost immediately police vehicles drove up to the Jeep and Ms. Reyes’[s] vehicle and unsuccessfully attempted to box in the Jeep, which was occupied by Torres and co-defendant Rodriguez, and the Toyota containing Ms. Reyes and the two other males. After a short pursuit the car containing Ms. Reyes crashed and the two men inside it fled. Police came up to the car and directed Ms. Reyes to stay inside it. Other officers chased after [Appellant] and [Cruz] and [Appellant] was apprehended shortly thereafter following a short pursuit but Cruz avoided apprehension.

Philadelphia Police Officers John Logan and his partner pursued the Jeep, which co-defendant Rodriguez was driving and in which Torres was a passenger. However, the officers lost sight of the Jeep in traffic and later found it abandoned in the 3000 block of Livingston Street. During the pursuit, which continued for about fifty blocks, co-defendant Rodriguez committed numerous traffic violations.

Shortly after the Toyota crashed, the police brought [Appellant] to Ms. Reyes and in Sergeant Shabazz’s presence, she identified [Appellant] as being the male who was wearing the gray sweater when she was abducted and who forced her into the Toyota. Subsequent thereto, Ms. Reyes was interviewed by police and told

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them about what happened to her when she left work. During the interview, she identified photographs depicting co-defendants Torres and Rodriguez.

On February 1, 2017, police interviewed Ms. Reyes. During [the interview] she indicated that after the car crashed, she began driving the car and threw a gun into a flowerpot that [Appellant] left in the Jeep when he fled. She also identified a photograph of [Cruz]. She added that after giving her first statement to police she told her paramour about the gun she hid in the flowerpot and that he retrieved and ultimately brought [it] to the police. She also stated that [Appellant] showed her a gun when he and [Cruz] accosted her and that [Cruz] was the person who took her purse and cell phone from her.

Mr. Elin Gonzalez-Ramirez was working as a cab driver the evening when the incident herein occurred. At about 8:15 p.m., he went to 1100 Belgrade Street in Philadelphia, which was near where the Jeep was found, and picked up Torres and Rodriguez and drove them to the 4000 block of I Street in Philadelphia.

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Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Carroll, R., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-carroll-r-pasuperct-2020.