Com. v. Curry, A.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 26, 2025
Docket726 MDA 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Curry, A. (Com. v. Curry, A.) 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. Curry, A., (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-S13041-25

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : ASHLEY ROSE CURRY : : Appellant : No. 726 MDA 2024

Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered April 26, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-36-CR-0001038-2015

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J.E., KUNSELMAN, J., and NICHOLS, J.

MEMORANDUM BY NICHOLS, J.: FILED: AUGUST 26, 2025

Appellant Ashley Rose Curry appeals from the order denying her first

Post Conviction Relief Act1 (PCRA) petition. Appellant argues that her trial

counsel was ineffective and claims that the PCRA court erred in denying her

petition. After review, we affirm.

A prior panel of this Court summarized the factual history of this case

as follows:

Appellant was charged with [aggravated assault, ethnic intimidation, and simple assault2] after she shot Ms. Jamie Roland . . . on the afternoon of February 3, 2015. Appellant proceeded to a jury trial, which was held on July 18-22, 2016. Both the Commonwealth and the defense presented the testimony of numerous witnesses who observed the altercation in question.

____________________________________________

1 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-9546.

2 18 Pa.C.S. §§ 2702(a)(1), 2710(a), and 2701(a)(1), respectively. J-S13041-25

The Commonwealth first presented Ms. Alecia Glen[n]-McCowin,[3] who testified that on the afternoon of February 3, 2015, she was driving on Lancaster Avenue in Columbia, Pennsylvania, when she was forced to stop behind a vehicle driven by Appellant. Although Appellant had the green light and the right of way to turn, Appellant did not proceed even though there was no traffic coming from the opposite direction. Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin chose to “toot the horn” of her vehicle to get Appellant’s attention. N.T. Jury Trial (N.T.), July 18–22, 2016, at 278. Appellant looked back at Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin in her rearview mirror and continued to hesitate.

After Appellant turned into the parking lot of Musser’s Market, Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin followed and parked near the Dollar Store. Appellant’s boyfriend, Stephen Smith, exited Appellant’s vehicle and told Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin that it was rude of her to honk the horn. Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin asserted that she approached the couple to explain why she honked her horn and to apologize if she had offended them. Appellant began repeatedly yelling “n----r” out her window to Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin, who is African-American. Id. at 268, 278. Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin accused Appellant of being on drugs and responded, “I don’t have time for this.” Id. at 268.

After Appellant exited her vehicle, Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin claimed Appellant kicked her, spit at her, and spouted racial slurs. Appellant kicked Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin so hard that she caused an open cut to begin bleeding through [Ms. Glenn-McCowin’s] pants. As Appellant continued to scream, the altercation got the attention of bystanders, several of whom rushed to assist Ms. Glen[n]- McCowin, including [Ms. Roland]. None of the bystanders knew Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin before this encounter.

Thereafter, Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin observed Appellant pull out a firearm. Although Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin admitted that she did not “know where [Appellant] got the gun from,” she indicated that when she saw the black gun, “[w]e all thought we was gonna get shot.” N.T. at 284, 333–35. Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin testified that Appellant shot [Ms. Roland] in the stomach when [Ms. Roland] was standing in front of Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin. After [Ms. Roland] collapsed to the ground, Appellant got in her car and remained ____________________________________________

3 In the notes of testimony from trial, the witness’ name was spelled “Glenn-

McCowin.” N.T., 7/19/16, at 266. Accordingly, we will utilize that spelling throughout this Memorandum.

-2- J-S13041-25

there until the police arrived. Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin averred that no one verbally or physically threatened Appellant before the shooting and indicated that no one prevented her from leaving the parking lot.

[Ms. Roland] . . . survived the attack [and] testified that on the afternoon in question, she was about to enter Musser’s Market with her sister, Crystal Manfred, when they saw Appellant kicking and spitting on a black woman, who was later identified as Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin. [Ms. Roland] indicated that she and Ms. Manfred ran to . . . Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin’s aid while she was on the ground near Appellant’s vehicle. [Ms. Roland] confirmed that Appellant was repeatedly yelling racial slurs at all of them; all three women ([Ms. Roland], Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin, and Ms. Manfred) are African–American.

Observing Appellant retrieve a firearm from her vehicle, [Ms. Roland] heard Appellant threaten to shoot Ms. Manfred. After “[a]drenaline kicked in,” [Ms. Roland] “jumped[,] and [Appellant] shot” her in the stomach. Id. at 366. [Ms. Roland] denied chasing or running after Appellant and testified that Appellant could have walked or driven away during the entire encounter. As a result of the shooting, [Ms. Roland] sustained a shattered hip and a broken femur.

Ms. Manfred testified similarly, indicating that as she and [Ms. Roland] were about to enter Musser’s Market on the day in question, they heard a commotion between an older African– American woman and a younger Caucasian woman, neither of whom she knew. Ms. Manfred indicated that she and [Ms. Roland] felt it necessary to settle the conflict down because . . . Appellant[] was screaming racial slurs at the African-American woman (Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin), who “was so much older.” Id. at 401–402. Ms. Manfred observed Appellant reach into her vehicle, pull out a gun, and shoot [Ms. Roland]. As Ms. Manfred’s immediate concern was for [Ms. Roland], who is her sister, she ran to the aid of [Ms. Roland], who had collapsed behind Appellant’s car. Ms. Manfred was worried about [Ms. Roland’s] location as Appellant stated that she would “run her . . . black a-- over.” Id. at 407, 417. Ms. Manfred denied hitting, grabbing, or threatening Appellant in any way.

The prosecution also presented the testimony of Edward Hamilton Young, who was employed as the store manager of Musser’s Market. Young was about to enter the market when he heard

-3- J-S13041-25

Appellant repeatedly screaming “f-----g n----r” at a black woman in the store parking lot. Id. at 442–43. Young had not met either woman before this occasion. Young approached the women, thinking he would have to try to deescalate the situation as store manager. Even after Appellant spit in Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin’s face and kicked her, Mr. Young observed that Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin “was amazingly calm, trying to talk [Appellant] down a little bit.” Id. at 445.

Mr. Young also saw two women “race[ ] past” him to “form a wall . . . and back[ Appellant] off, away from [Ms. Glen[n]-McCowin] to protect [her].” Id. He also observed Appellant, who was empty-handed, enter the driver’s side of her vehicle and return with a gun. At that point, Mr. Young rushed to call authorities from the manager’s office and when he returned, Appellant had shot [Ms. Roland], and Ms. Manfred was hysterical on the ground.

Sergeant Samuel Stein of the Columbia Borough Police Department testified that after Appellant was arrested and transported to the station, Appellant was placed in a cell, where she attempted to commit suicide by removing her shirt and tying it around her neck and the bars of the call. When officers found Appellant unconscious, they took her to the hospital where she repeatedly became enraged and stated that “the b---h got what she deserved and that she had shot her.” Id. at 504.

Defense counsel first presented the testimony of Ms. Judy Kulish and her husband, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Curry, A., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-curry-a-pasuperct-2025.