J-S12024-25
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : DANIEL CARTER : : Appellant : No. 1328 EDA 2024
Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered April 25, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-1213321-1992
BEFORE: STABILE, J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and BENDER, P.J.E.
MEMORANDUM BY McLAUGHLIN, J.: FILED JULY 23, 2025
Daniel Carter appeals from the order dismissing his Post Conviction
Relief Act (“PCRA”) petition. See 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 9541-9546. Carter maintains
that he raised meritorious Brady1 claims and challenges the admission of
evidence at the evidentiary hearing. We affirm.
Following a bench trial, the trial court convicted Carter of first-degree
murder, possession of an instrument of crime, possession of prohibited
offensive weapon, and criminal conspiracy. 2 The charges arose from a
shooting in the early morning hours of July 3, 1992. The court sentenced
Carter to life imprisonment. We affirmed the judgment of sentence in 1995,
and the Pennsylvania Supreme Court denied review in 1996. Commonwealth
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1 Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 87 (1963).
2 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2502(a), 907(b), 908, and 903(a)(1), respectively. J-S12024-25
v. Carter, 661 A.2d 390, 396 (Pa.Super. 1995), appeal denied,
Commonwealth v. Carter, 675 A.2d 1242 (Table) (Pa. filed April 9, 1996).
Carter filed the instant PCRA petition, his fourth, in 2022. Counsel filed
a supplemental petition claiming newly discovered evidence and raising the
unknown facts time-bar exception. See 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9545(b)(ii). The
petition noted that counsel had reviewed the Philadelphia Police Department’s
file for Carter’s case and, relevant to this appeal, found two statements “that
were never provided to the defense[.]” Corrected Supplemental Petition for
Post-Conviction Relief (“PCRA Petition”), filed 2/2/23, at 8. The statements
were from Latrina Jones and Verinda Weekly. Id. at 10-13; Exhibit 8 (“Jones
Statement); Exhibit 9 (“Weekly Statement”).
Jones’s statement was dated July 5, 1992, two days after the murder.
Jones stated that she had previously lived with the victim and had seen him
one day before the murder at her home. According to her statement, at around
1:00 a.m. on the morning of the homicide, the victim was talking to his sister
on the phone at Jones’s house. While on the phone with his sister, the victim
received another call, and Jones heard him say, “You are at 3 rd [and]
Dickinson. Meet me at 5th [and] Moore.” Jones Statement, at 2. The victim
finished speaking with his sister on the phone and then told Jones, “I’ll be
back in a few minutes,” and left the house. Id. The victim did not tell Jones
where he was going or whom he was meeting. She stated that the victim had
a friend named “Dave” and knew a man named “Jamil.” Id. When asked if she
knew who killed the victim, Jones stated:
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The only thing I can think of is about 3 weeks ago [the victim] told me that he wasn’t going to mess with Kev or David. He said[,] “[I]f Kev calls I don’t live here anymore”. Last week [the victim] talked to David on the phone and I said[,] “I thought that you weren’t going to mess with Dave anymore.” [T]he victim said, “Dave is all right.” “I don’t want to be with Kev.”
Id. at 3. Jones said that she did not know about the victim selling or using
drugs. Id. Additionally, Jones shared that the victim carried a silver gun and
that he “probably” took the gun with him when he left her home. Id. at 4.
When she searched her home, she did not find the gun. Id.
Weekly’s statement was dated July 4, 1992, the day after the murder.
She stated she dated the victim for two and a half years. Weekly Statement,
at 1. The victim had been at her house on July 2 between 7 p.m. and 10 p.m.
Id. at 2. When asked if the victim had any problems with anyone, she stated:
A couple weeks ago he told me that he couldn’t go to West Philly because someone was looking for him but I saw him at the Deli . . . after that and a couple of my friends said they saw him around there too. So I guess whoever was supposedly looking for him wasn’t really because he wouldn’t be hanging on 52nd St.
Id. She further explained that when she asked the victim who was looking for
him, he would say, “It’s nobody you know.” Id. at 4. She then went on to
explain a time when a man arrived at her home looking for the victim.
About a week or a week and a half ago this young guy came to my house looking for [the victim]. They [sic] guy asked for “D”. It was about 4AM. I told the guy that [the victim] didn’t live here no more and the guy left. He went across the street to the phone booth and then he walked straight down 61st towards Cedar. Then a couple days later I saw him walking past my house and he was looking over. This
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must have been about 5PM because I had just got home from work.
Id. She described the man and said she did not know the man’s name but
stated, “I would know him if I see him again.” Id.
Police also asked her whether the victim sold drugs, and she responded,
“He never had no money so I would say no. He was a user though.” Id. at 3.
She said that the victim had a friend named Dave and another male, but she
could not remember his name. Id. Weekly said that the victim told her that
he carried a gun during the time when he said people were looking for him,
but she never saw it. Id. at 4. Weekly’s statement ended with her saying that
the victim gave people a hard time in the neighborhood but “I can’t figure why
someone would shoot him. I don’t think he knew anyone in South Philly.” Id.
Counsel also found a death penalty memorandum (“memorandum”),
dated January 13, 1994, authored by a prosecutor. See PCRA Petition at 13;
Exhibit 11 (Death Penalty Memo). The memorandum read in part:
The victim, according to his mother, rips off drug dealers, defendant is known by police to sell drugs in the area. The salient facts are as follows: the victim was beeped and went to the playground after midnight on July 3, 1992. One of the individuals defendant was with that evening asked eyewitness D. Witherspoon’s son, Shawn Bain, a/k/a/ Ali, for his (the son’s) sawed-off shotgun; eyewitness refused. The individual came back with the defendant and the sawed- off shotgun was turned over to defendant and his co- conspirator. The three defendants walked into the playground and met up with the victim. The eyewitness followed them and saw defendant shoot the victim.
No where [sic] in record, either in statements or in the testimony, is there a “drug” motive for the shooting. The victim’s mother who stated her son rips off drug dealers (is
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not on paper) lives in New York City and does not want to get involved. []Eyewitness’s stepson, Ali, corroborates the giving of the shotgun to the defendant. He has an open bench warrant for drugs in juvenile court. Fourth district officers are trying to locate him to arrest him. He recanted as well at the preliminary hearing.
Death Penalty Memo at 1 (unpaginated).
Carter raised Brady claims for these newly discovered documents. See
PCRA Petition at 15. He argued that the Jones and Weekly statements were
“critical” because they identified alternative suspects for the murder and
“Jones’s statement puts a firearm” in the victim’s possession before the
shooting. Id. at 18. Additionally, he claimed that the memorandum was
“significant” because it revealed an alternative motive for the murder. Id. at
19.
Counsel attached an affidavit where he represented that he spoke with
trial counsel, who did not “have a specific recollection of the case.” Id. at 22.
He averred that trial counsel would “testify that he would have used much of
the information discovered in the homicide files if it had been available to him
insofar as it would have been consistent with his usual pattern and practice of
defending cases.” Id. Additionally, counsel filed an affidavit from Carter that
he did not know that Jones and Weekly had given statements to the police
and the statements were not in the discovery given to his trial counsel. See
Affidavit, filed 2/27/23.
Counsel also included a letter from Edward Geigert, a private
investigator, to James Lammendola, Esquire, Carter’s first PCRA counsel. The
letter read, “Pursuant to our conversation of Monday, February 16, 1998[,]
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and pursuant to Mr. Daniel Carter’s letter dated January 31, 1998[,] I started
an investigation on behalf of Mr. Daniel Carter.” PCRA Petition at Exhibit 4
(“Geigert Letter”). Relevant to this appeal, the letter also stated, “In Mr. Daniel
Carter’s letter he indicates that he had several witnesses who should have
been called on his behalf at his original homicide trial[,]” including Jones and
Weekly. Id.
The PCRA court determined that Carter had satisfied the unknown facts
time-bar and held an evidentiary hearing to address the merits of his Brady
claims. The court heard testimony from Carter’s direct appeal counsel, Patrick
Egan, Esquire, and Carter’s habeas corpus counsel, Carole McHugh, Esquire. 3
Attorney Egan testified that he represented Carter for his death penalty
phase hearing and his direct appeal. N.T., Evidentiary Hearing, 1/3/24, at
8,10. In preparation for the appeal, he received Carter’s file from Carter’s trial
counsel. Id. at 12. At the hearing, counsel reviewed Jones’s and Weekly’s
statements and testified that he was “confident [he] never” saw them. Id. at
19-20, 25. He testified that if he had received the statements in the file from
trial counsel, he “would have raised [trial counsel’s] failure to introduce these
witnesses and this evidence in and at the trial because of the fact that these
are both evidence that is exculpatory and goes against the Commonwealth’s
theory of the case[.]” Id. at 20. Attorney Egan agreed that he did not have
3 The court also heard testimony from Mark Culler. Carter does not challenge
the denial of his after-acquired evidence claim as to Culler. Therefore, we do not reference his testimony.
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an independent memory of everything included in the file given to him by trial
counsel. Id. at 26-27. However, he testified that he felt if he had seen the
statements, he would have remembered. Id.
Attorney McHugh testified that she represented Carter for his federal
habeas corpus filing. Id. at 114. She received his file from Attorney
Lammendola. Id. She testified that she had not seen Jones’s and Weekly’s
statements and did not remember any reference to the statements in Carter’s
file. Id. at 115, 117. Attorney McHugh also testified that the statements
“refer[red] to other possible doers and people in the neighborhood who were
not happy” with the victim. Id. at 116. Attorney McHugh agreed that the
addresses referenced for Jones and Weekly in the letter matched the
addresses listed on their statements. Id. at 121-22.
On cross-examination, the Commonwealth questioned Attorney McHugh
about Geigert’s letter to Attorney Lammendola. See id. at 120. Attorney
McHugh testified that she did not believe she had seen the letter before, and
did not recall it being in the file Attorney Lammendola handed over, but stated
that it “might have been there.” Id. She recalled reading the notes of
testimony from a 1998 PCRA hearing involving Attorney Lammendola but did
not recall the Geigert letter being used at that hearing. Id. at 118-19. The
Commonwealth also admitted the notes of testimony into evidence. Id. at
118, 128.
The Commonwealth moved to admit the Geigert letter into evidence.
Id. at 129. PCRA counsel objected to the authentication of the letter. Id. at
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146. The court reserved its decision on whether to admit the letter, and gave
the parties time to brief the issue. At a subsequent hearing, the court
addressed the admissibility of the letter. The court noted that PCRA counsel
withdrew his objection to the letter based on authentication but challenged
the admission of the letter on the basis of judicial estoppel, the coordinate
jurisdiction rule, and hearsay. See N.T., PCRA Hearing, 4/25/24, at 7. The
court agreed that the letter amounted to double hearsay and no exception
applied. However, it determined that it was “extremely pro[bative] on the
Brady suppression issue for its non-hearsay value.” Id. at 8.
The court concluded that regardless of whether the contents of the letter
were true, it was compelling evidence that Jones’s and Weekly’s statements
were not suppressed or “alternatively the defense knew about them during
the pendency of the first [PCRA] petition and failed to make a Brady claim[.]”
Id. at 9. It pointed out that Carter presented no evidence to show how the
defense would have known that Jones and Weekly “could’ve helped the
defense at trial and what their 1992 addresses were, without the Jones and
Weekly statements.” Id.
The court also determined, based on the Geiger letter, that even if the
statements were suppressed, Carter had waived his Brady claim. The court
concluded that the letter showed that by 1998, Carter knew about the
statements or the information contained in them. Id. at 10. The court went
on to find that the testimony presented at the evidentiary hearing did “not
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establish that the statements were not turned over” to trial counsel. Id. at 5.
The PCRA court dismissed the petition, and this timely appeal followed.
Carter raises the following claims:
1. Whether the PCRA Court erred in denying relief insofar as:
a. the ruling that [Carter] failed to prove the Commonwealth withheld exculpatory statements was neither supported by the record nor free of legal error; and
b. the ruling that [Carter] waived his Brady claim with respect to the exculpatory statements was neither supported by the record nor free of legal error?
2. Whether the [c]ourt erred in dismissing [Carter’s] Brady claim pertaining to information gleaned from a death penalty memo in the prosecution’s file, i.e., that decedent was known for robbing drug dealers, without an evidentiary hearing?
3. Whether the [c]ourt erred and/or abused its discretion when it received a letter from a private investigator into evidence as proof that the Commonwealth had not withheld the aforementioned statements?
Carter’s Br. at 7 (reordered).4
Our standard of review of the dismissal of a PCRA petition is settled:
In reviewing the denial of PCRA relief, we examine whether the PCRA court’s determinations are supported by the record and are free of legal error. Commonwealth v. Spotz, 610 Pa. 17, 18 A.3d 244, 259 (2011). The PCRA court’s credibility determinations, when supported by the record, are binding on this Court; however, we apply a de ____________________________________________
4 Carter’s second and third issues are reversed in the argument section of his
brief. We have listed the issues based on the order they are addressed in the brief.
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novo standard of review to the PCRA court’s legal conclusions. Id.
Commonwealth v. Natividad, 200 A.3d 11, 25 (Pa. 2019).
A PCRA petition must be filed within one year of the judgment of
sentence becoming final. 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9545(b). Beyond this one-year
deadline, the petitioner must plead and prove at least one time-bar exception.
Id. at § 9545(b)(1)(i)-(iii). Where the petitioner establishes a time-bar
exception, the court may address the merits of the claims raised in the PCRA
petition. See Natividad, 200 A.3d at 29.
Here, Carter raised the unknown facts time-bar exception, which the
PCRA court concluded he had satisfied. See 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9545(b)(1)(ii). The
court accordingly addressed the merits of Carter’s Brady claims.
To establish a Brady violation, a defendant must show that “the
prosecution suppressed the evidence, either willfully or inadvertently; the
evidence is favorable to the defendant; and the evidence is material.”
Commonwealth v. Birdsong, 24 A.3d 319, 327 (Pa. 2011). A court
reviewing a Brady claim does not review the evidence in isolation but instead
must evaluate the omission of evidence “in the context of the entire record.”
Commonwealth v. Dennis, 17 A.3d 297, 309 (Pa. 2011).
Carter argues that the PCRA court erred in its conclusion that he failed
the first prong for a Brady violation: that the prosecution suppressed Jones’s
and Weekly’s statements. He maintains that Attorney Egan testified credibly
that he did not remember seeing the statements in Carter’s file. Additionally,
Carter points out that the Commonwealth did not present any evidence to
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rebut Attorney Egan’s testimony, such as providing a discovery log or
testimony from the trial prosecutor. He also claims that the Geigert letter did
not prove that the Commonwealth gave trial counsel the Jones and Weekly
statements. Instead, Carter claims the letter merely show that the defense
knew of the witnesses and their addresses. He argues “[t]hat someone may
have information that is contained in a document does not prove the person
had possession of that document, especially if the information at issue (such
as a name and address) could have been obtained elsewhere.” Carter’s Br. at
29.
The PCRA court concluded Carter had not established that the
Commonwealth failed to turn over Jones’s and Weekly’s statements. The court
explained that “neither attorney could definitely say that the Commonwealth
failed to turn over the Jones and Weekley Statements in discovery, and neither
of them knew whether the statements had been turned over to [trial
counsel].” Rule 1925(a) Opinion (“1925(a) Op.”), filed 7/25/24, at 15-16. The
court also pointed out that the Commonwealth passed discovery to trial
counsel, but trial counsel did not testify at the evidentiary hearing. See id. at
15.
Carter bore the burden of proving that the Commonwealth withheld the
statements. See Birdsong, 24 A.3d at 327. Viewing the record in its entirety,
the statements were found in a police homicide file. Both Attorney Egan and
McHugh gave speculative testimony about whether the statements were in the
trial file. As the PCRA court noted, neither attorney could definitively say that
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the statements were not in the files handed to them by trial counsel or Carter’s
first PCRA counsel, Attorney Lammendola. Although PCRA counsel filed an
affidavit stating that he spoke with trial counsel and that he would testify he
would have used much of the information discovered in the police
department’s file, if it had been available to him, trial counsel did not testify
at the evidentiary hearing. In any event, the PCRA court determined, as a
matter of weight and credibility, that Carter had failed to carry his burden of
proving his claim. The PCRA court’s determinations are supported by the
record and are without legal error.
Carter also argues that the court’s determination that he waived his
Brady claim as to the statements was erroneous. He maintains that the
court’s conclusion “rests again on the assumption that the Commonwealth’s
proofs establish that Mr. Carter was actually in possession of these statements
in 1998.” Id. at 30. Because we have determined that Carter failed to prove
the suppression of the statements, we do not address whether the court erred
in concluding in the alternative that Carter waived his Brady claim.
Next, Carter alleges that the court erred in dismissing his Brady claim
as to the death penalty memorandum. He notes that the court determined
that the memorandum would be inadmissible. Carter maintains that the
admissibility of the memorandum is irrelevant for purposes of Brady and
argues that the memorandum is relevant because it gave another motive for
the victim’s murder.
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The PCRA court rejected Carter’s Brady claim as to the death penalty
memorandum “because the information contained in the memorandum is not
exculpatory.” 1925(a) Op. at 17. As Carter states, the court also determined
that the memorandum “would not be admissible in evidence and would not,
in any manner, undermine the Commonwealth’s case or be otherwise helpful
to the defense.” Id.
As previously discussed, to succeed on a Brady claim, the defendant
must show that the suppressed evidence is favorable to the defendant. See
Birdsong, 24 A.3d at 327. Evidence is considered favorable to the defendant
if it is “exculpatory or because it impeaches[.]” Commonwealth v. Roney,
79 A.3d 595, 607 (Pa. 2013) (citation omitted). Exculpatory evidence for
purposes of Brady includes “evidence that reflects upon the culpability of the
defendant” and “evidence of an impeachment nature that is material to the
case against the accused.” Commonwealth v. Strong, 761 A.2d 1167, 1171
(Pa. 2000).
Here, Carter did not establish that the death penalty memorandum was
exculpatory. The information contained in the memorandum was not
exculpatory or of impeachment value. See id. The memorandum stated that
according to the victim’s mother, he “rips off drug dealers” and that Carter
had been known by police to sell drugs in the area. See Death Penalty Memo
at 1 (unpaginated). Although the prosecutor noted that there was no evidence
of a drug motive, if the words of the victim’s mother are considered true, the
memorandum establishes a motive for Carter to have killed the victim. As
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such, we conclude that the PCRA court correctly concluded that Carter failed
to establish that the memorandum was exculpatory.
For his final claim, Carter alleges that the court erred in admitting the
Geigert letter. He challenges the admissibility of the letter based on judicial
estoppel, the coordinate jurisdiction rule, and hearsay. He claims the court
relied on the letter for the truth of the matter asserted. Carter points out that
at a 1998 PCRA hearing, the Commonwealth convinced the court that the
letter was not admissible for its truth but in the present proceeding, it sought
to use the letter for its truth. See Carter’s Br. at 38 (citing N.T., Evidentiary
Hearing, 10/28/98, at 33). Carter claims the Commonwealth was judicially
estopped from changing its position. Id. at 39 (emphasis removed).
Carter also claims that the admission of the letter was barred by the
coordinate jurisdiction rule. He notes that the judge at the 1998 PCRA hearing
found the letter to be inadmissible and alleges the Commonwealth is asking
this Court to overrule that judge’s determination. Additionally, Carter asserts
that the rule against hearsay prevents the admission of the letter. He argues
that no hearsay exception applies. Carter also claims there is a question as to
who wrote the letter and “whether Geigert himself accurately summarized”
what he referenced in the letter. Id. at 42.
The PCRA court states that it admitted the letter into evidence “not for
its truth but rather for its non-hearsay value.” 1925(a) Op. at 14. It maintains
that regardless of the truth of the contents of the letter, the letter was
compelling evidence either that the Jones and Weekly statements were not
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suppressed or that the defense knew of the statements during Carter’s first
PCRA petition but failed to raise a Brady claim then. See id. at 14-15 (quoting
N.T., PCRA Hearing, 4/25/24, at 9).
We review the admission of evidence for an abuse of discretion. See
Commonwealth v. Watkins, 108 A.3d 692, 736 (Pa. 2014). Hearsay is an
out of court statement used to prove the truth of the matter asserted. Pa.R.E.
801(c). Hearsay evidence is inadmissible unless an exception applies. Pa.R.E.
802. However, “[a]n out-of-court statement is not hearsay when it has a
purpose other than to convince the fact finder of the truth of the statement.”
Commonwealth v. Busanet, 54 A.3d 35, 68 (Pa. 2012).
Carter’s claim is meritless. The court did not abuse its discretion by
admitting the letter into evidence. The letter referenced Jones and Weekly as
helpful witnesses, and Carter’s Brady claim alleged the suppression of Jones’s
and Weekly’s statements. Jones and Weekly were the victim’s girlfriend and
ex-girlfriend at the time of the statements. Notably, at the evidentiary
hearing, Attorney Egan testified that Carter did not know the victim and had
no relationship with the victim. N.T., Evidentiary Hearing, 1/3/24, at 21. Thus,
the mention of the victim’s girlfriends in the letter was relevant to Carter’s
Brady claim regarding their statements. Regardless of the truth of the
contents of the letter, it demonstrated that the defense had access to the
letter mentioning Jones and Weekly in 1998 and that it had been used by
defense counsel at a hearing related to Carter’s first PCRA petition. Therefore,
the court properly admitted the letter for a non-hearsay purpose. Carter’s
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challenges to the admission of the letter under principles of judicial estoppel
and coordinate jurisdiction fail since the letter was not admitted for its truth.
Order affirmed.
Date: 7/23/2025
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