Com. v. Carter, L.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 26, 2015
Docket2588 EDA 2014
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Carter, L. (Com. v. Carter, L.) 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. Carter, L., (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

J-S37029-15

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

LARRY CARTER,

Appellant No. 2588 EDA 2014

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence April 25, 2014 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CCR-0014438-2011

BEFORE: GANTMAN, P.J., SHOGAN, and LAZARUS, JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY SHOGAN, J.: FILED AUGUST 26, 2015

Appellant, Larry Carter, appeals from the judgment of sentence

entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County on April 25,

2014, following a bench trial. We affirm.

The trial court summarized the facts of this case as follows:

On June 23, 2011, at approximately 11:00 p.m., Albert Young-El (“Young-El”) was visiting a family member at 615 Perth Place in the City and County of Philadelphia. Young-El disembarked from his bicycle and began to ask people whether they knew his cousin “Miz.” It was a pleasant night and many people from the neighborhood were outside. Someone in the area pointed Young-El towards Appellant, who he knew from the neighborhood as “El Train.” Appellant was sitting on a stoop with a young woman wearing yellow. Young-El introduced himself, and Appellant told him to “get out of here.”

Nydira Price (“Price”), who lived at 743 Green Street in the Spring Garden Apartments, was at home that night with her mother and her eight-year-old daughter. She saw Appellant, who she knew from the neighborhood by the nickname “El J-S37029-15

Train,” speaking with Young-El. Appellant was with several other men from the neighborhood. Appellant yelled, “I want my fuckin’ money back.” Price had previously seen Appellant selling drugs in the neighborhood.

As Young-El turned around, Appellant went to a small depression in a grassy area and removed a blue steel automatic gun. He then shot Young-El in the lower left side of his back, between his hip bone and his back. Young-El fell off the bike. Young-El, laying on the ground, could not see what was happening around him but heard many doors closing. Someone yelled, “Somebody call the cops, somebody call the cops.” That was the last Young-El remembered before losing consciousness.

Appellant then walked away across the blacktop. Price observed the scene and saw that people were going about their business as though nothing had happened. Children were still playing and neighbors walked over Young-El’s prone body; at least two people kicked him. When she realized that no one had called the police, Price backed into her doorway and tried to think of what to do. Price was terrified that if she called 911, the police would come to her home, potentially putting her family in danger. Then, however, she remembered that she had previously met Officer Joseph Ferrero[1] and had his cellphone number.9 9 Price had previously met Officer Ferrerro May 18th, 2011, when she had gone to the police station to make a report. She had identified a number of neighbors on a computer screen and Officer Ferrerro asked her to call him if she observed any crimes in the neighborhood.

Philadelphia Police Officer John Crichton and his partner Officer Lutz, after receiving information of the shooting over the radio, responded to the scene at approximately 11:13 p.m. As he pulled up to the projects and entered the courtyard, Officer Crichton observed a bike lying on the ground with Young-El collapsed atop it, shot in the left side . . . . Approximately ____________________________________________

1 The trial court spelled Officer Ferrero’s surname is a variety of ways. The correct spelling is Ferrero. N.T., 1/15/14, at 52.

-2- J-S37029-15

fifteen (15) to twenty (20) people were in the courtyard at the time. Young-El mumbled that he had been shot. Price remained at her door, watching as the police arrived. She heard Young-El mumble, “El Train did it; that fuckin El Train did it.” However, Officer Lutz also asked Young-El who had shot him and he responded, “I don’t know.”

Officer Crichton decided that it was in Young-El’s best interest not to wait for a medic, and so he and his partner transported Young-El in the police car to Hahnemann Hospital. As they picked up Young-El, other officers began to arrive on the scene.

It was approximately 11:15 p.m. when Price called Officer Ferrerro. He was in bed with his girlfriend when the phone rang, but he answered anyway. Price was very excited as she informed Officer Ferrerro that she had just seen “El Train,” who Ferrerro knew as Larry Carter, shoot someone. She stated that the two men were involved in an argument, that Young-El was on a bicycle, and that “El Train” had shot him. Officer Ferrerro asked her if she had called 911 and informed Price he would have to call her back. Officer Ferrerro called Officer David Blackburn, who was working that night, and spoke with him regarding the information he had received.

Officer Ferrerro then called Price back and stated that he had notified the police officers who were on location, and Price responded, “Well, he’s still standing out there.” Officer Ferrerro then called Officer Blackburn, but Officer Blackburn did not see Appellant. Officer Ferrerro then informed Officer Blackburn that Appellant was still in the area. Although Officer Ferrerro called Price back and asked her if she would speak with a detective, . . . she was reluctant to do so. Price did not have further contact with the police that night due to her fear of retaliation; cooperating with the police is not safe.10 Following his conversation with Officer Blackburn, Officer Ferrerro went back to bed. 10 At trial, Price testified that she was afraid because of an incident where neighborhood girls had called the police regarding a drug dealer in the neighborhood, and he had shot up their house. Officer Ferrerro also discovered that Price had witnessed a few neighbors from the Penn Town

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Homes beat up due to “snitching,” and heard of someone’s house being shot up.

Officer Blackburn responded in plain clothes and an unmarked car to the area of the shooting with his partner, Officer Butler. Upon arrival they were informed that the victim had already been transported, and thus they left the immediate area to patrol the neighborhood until receiving flash information. They then received information over the radio that “El Train” may have been involved in the shooting, as well as the phone call from Officer Ferrerro. Officer Blackburn knew “El Train” was Appellant’s nickname. Officer Blackburn then searched the area for Appellant, and found his car, a 2000 GMC Yukon, black in color, parked west of 6th Street on Green Street. The officers then parked their car to set up surveillance.

Appellant then came through a cutout in a fence that lead into Marshall Place, stopped and looked around, then walked across the street and into the car. Appellant drove eastbound on Green Street, made a left hand turn the wrong way up 6 th Street to Fairmount, and made several turns until finally stopping at 4 th Street and Callowhill Street. The officers followed him, calling to marked cars for assistance in making the stop. Upon stopping Appellant, they asked for license, registration, and insurance. Although Appellant provided the officers with registration and insurance, he stated he did not have a license, at which time Officer Blackburn initiated a live stop and placed Appellant under arrest. Appellant was then taken directly to Central Detective Special Investigations Unit (“SIU”).

Philadelphia Police Detective Edward Keppol was on duty at the Central Detectives SIU that evening. He and his partner, Detective Polumbo, responded to the crime scene at 615 Perth Place.

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