Com. v. Crumbley, T.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 20, 2020
Docket1899 WDA 2019
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Crumbley, T. (Com. v. Crumbley, T.) 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. Crumbley, T., (Pa. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

J-S36033-20

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : THADDEUS CRUMBLEY : : Appellant : No. 1899 WDA 2019

Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered December 13, 2019 In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-02-CR-0002820-2012

BEFORE: OLSON, J., KING, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY PELLEGRINI, J.: FILED AUGUST 20, 2020

Thaddeus Crumbley (Crumbley) appeals the order of the Court of

Common Pleas of Allegheny County (PCRA court) denying his petition filed

pursuant to the Post-Conviction Relief Act (PCRA), 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-9546.

The central claim in his petition is based on after-discovered evidence in the

form of a purported eyewitness. Crumbley also argues for the first time in his

appellate brief that PCRA counsel was ineffective for failing to assert trial

counsel’s ineffectiveness due to lack of an objection to improper closing

statements and failing to preserve a jury instruction issue. We affirm.

____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-S36033-20

I.

In 2012, Crumbley and his co-defendant, Matthew Ebo (Ebo), were

found guilty of murder and several-related offenses. See Commonwealth

v. Crumbley, 127 WDA 2016 (Pa. Super. June 21, 2017). The

Commonwealth’s only eyewitness was Saday Robinson (Robinson), who

testified that she saw Crumbley and Ebo shoot the victim, Todd Mattox.

Crumbley and Ebo were sentenced, each receiving life terms, and they

filed direct appeals. Prior to filing briefs, they applied for a remand to the trial

court for an evidentiary hearing based on after-discovered evidence, namely,

Robinson’s recantation of her identification in a letter dated November 12,

2014. We granted the application for a remand so that the trial court could

determine whether to grant Crumbley and Ebo relief.

However, at the evidentiary hearing, Robinson withdrew her previous

recantation, explaining that she gave it due to threats by Crumbley and Ebo’s

associates, and the trial court ruled that a new trial was not warranted. The

direct appeal then resumed before this Court, and in 2017, Crumbley’s

judgment of sentence was affirmed,1 becoming final on March 13, 2018.2 We

1 Ebo’s convictions were also affirmed, but this Court ordered a resentencing to remedy violations of Alleyne v. United States, 570 U.S. 99 (2013). Crumbley’s sentence was not affected.

2 Crumbley filed a petition for allowance of appeal before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, which was denied on December 13, 2017, and he did not seek relief before the United States Supreme Court. His judgment of sentence,

-2- J-S36033-20

found no merit in any of Crumbley’s direct appeal issues, including the claim

that Robinson’s recantation entitled him to a new trial.

Crumbley timely filed his first PCRA petition, pro se, and he was

appointed PCRA counsel who submitted an amended version claiming that a

new eyewitness to the Mattox murder had come forward.3 This witness,

Robert Raglin (Raglin), submitted a signed statement dated July 31, 2018,

describing what he had seen. The PCRA court held a hearing on May 10, 2019,

to assess Raglin’s credibility. See PCRA Hearing, 5/10/2019, at pp. 44-46.

After he testified, the PCRA court made the following findings:

a. On May 16, 2011, the day Todd Mattox was shot to death at the Leechburg Gardens Apartments in Penn Hills, Mr. Raglin was working as a jitney driver.

b. That evening, shortly before the shooting occurred, Mr. Raglin picked up two (2) African American men and drove them to the Leechburg Gardens apartment. He claimed that he recognized these men because they had used his jitney services “more than ten” times in the past. He described one of the men as being “really tall” with “dark skin,” approximately 6’8 in height. He described the other man as being “short” and “light-skinned.”

therefore, became final on March 13, 2018, when the 90-day period for seeking a writ of certiorari expired. Crumbley had a year from that date to timely file a PCRA petition, which he did, pro se, on February 13, 2018.

3 Crumbley’s PCRA counsel abandoned several of the claims Crumbley had asserted in his initial pro se petition, including Claims IV and VI, which became the basis of Crumbley’s layered ineffectiveness claims in this PCRA appeal. Both issues – regarding improper prosecutorial comment and denial of a missing witness instruction – were found to be waived by trial counsel in Crumbley’s direct appeal. See Commonwealth v. Crumbley, 127 WDA 2016 (Pa. Super. June 21, 2017).

-3- J-S36033-20

c. When presented with photographs that were marked as Defense Exhibits A and B, he was able to identify the individuals in those pictures as the men he had driven to the Leechburg Gardens apartment that day. (He had nicknamed them “stretch” and “young buck” but recalled that they referred to each other as “Ron and Rome or something like that.”)

d. Mr. Raglin testified that he dropped these men off at the Leechburg Gardens [apartment] at approximately 7:00 p.m., when it was getting dim outside.

e. After he dropped them off, Mr. Raglin testified to the following series of events:

I was turning my car around so I could go out. I had to go to the bathroom by the fire hydrant and the big Christmas tree. As I’m standing up peeing, a white car comes in [the parking lot], two guys started busting off caps, and everybody started shooting at each other. I dove on the ground, crawled in my car, dropped my seat back and pulled out.

f. Mr. Raglin testified that he “clearly” saw that “Ron and Rome” were firing their guns “[o]ver in that direction towards the parking lot in that area” where the white car was located.

g. However, he also testified that he “wasn’t paying no attention” to what or who they were shooting at because he dropped to the ground as soon as he saw “the sparks and fires.” As he described it: “I dropped down, peed on myself, crawled in my car, kicked my seat back and just pulled off. I started lifting my head up as I am pulling out.”

h. After Mr. Raglin got back inside of his vehicle, he noticed that the white car had pulled out behind him, and he thought that the people inside of the white car were going after him because of what he had just witnessed.

i. Even though Mr. Raglin saw Ron and Rome shooting at the people in the white car, Mr. Raglin thought that Ron and Rome were now in the white car behind him. However, Mr. Raglin never saw anyone get in or out of the white car, and he could not see inside of the vehicle at any point. Mr. Raglin was able to retreat safely from the scene, but he never went to the police to report

-4- J-S36033-20

the shooting that he had allegedly witnessed, and, at that time, he was unaware that anyone had been killed in the shootout. Law enforcement also never attempted to contact him in 2011 about the shooting.

***

k. When asked why he decided to come forward with this information in 2018, Mr. Raglin testified as follows: I was in the [Allegheny] county jail, and I was on the fourth floor just coming in, and these gentlemen was talking and they was pointing at me. So they called me to be released. As I am coming downstairs to be released, some young guy told me - he was from Turtle Creek or something - he told me that I was there.

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