Com. v. Easley, S.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 9, 2025
Docket552 EDA 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Easley, S. (Com. v. Easley, S.) 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. Easley, S., (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-A28037-24

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : SAMUEL EASLEY : : Appellant : No. 552 EDA 2024

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered October 16, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0002147-2022

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

MEMORANDUM BY NICHOLS, J.: FILED APRIL 9, 2025

Appellant Samuel Easley appeals from the judgment of sentence

imposed following his convictions for burglary and related offenses. Appellant

challenges the sufficiency and weight of the evidence. We affirm.

The trial court summarized the underlying facts of this matter as follows:

At trial, the Commonwealth presented the testimony of [the victim]. [The victim] testified that, in early 2020, she commenced a romantic relationship with [Appellant], which ended in October 2021. On or about November 3, 2021, she was inside her home on the 4900 block of North 11th Street in Philadelphia, when [Appellant] “broke into [her] house.” [The victim] testified that she was in her second floor bedroom when she heard [Appellant] bust through her front door and run up the stairs. [Appellant] barged into her bedroom, striking her with the door, and demanded his “papers” from her. [Appellant] then grabbed [the victim] by the neck and threw her. [The victim] yelled out to her daughter downstairs to “call for help, call 911, call for help.” [The victim] testified that at the time of [Appellant’s] entry, she was holding her handgun, which she was about to place in the safe in her room, but put it down on her bed: “I had a gun in my hand. I was getting ready to put it inside of the safe, but he bust the J-A28037-24

door down and I put it on the bed.” (N.T. 06/09/23 at 7-14; 07/24/23 at 15, 22-23).

[The victim] testified that she ran down the stairs and out the front door. She could not find her phone, so she yelled for her daughter to call for help. [Appellant] then came downstairs and punched her before leaving. [The victim] thereafter reviewed the video footage from her bedroom camera, which showed [Appellant] picking up her gun from the bed and placing it in his waistband before leaving the room. The video depicting the above events was played at trial and submitted into evidence as Exhibit “C-1”; the Commonwealth also introduced a still shot from the video (Exhibit “C-11”), depicting [the victim] holding her gun immediately prior to the attack. (See N.T. 06/09/23 at 11-15; Commonwealth Exhibits “C-1” & “C-11”).

[The victim] testified that she reported the above incident to police. On the following day, she went to [Appellant’s] home with her newly adopted baby to get her gun and phone back from him. [Appellant’s] son let her into the home, where she confronted [Appellant] in the kitchen:

[I said] that’s my phone -- I see my phone over there on the counter, and then he grabbed me ... [b]y my hair.

* * *

He dragged me into the living room and he said, bitch, I was going to do you real dirty, real dirty for bitches like you that want to open your mouth. He stuck a gun in my mouth, but the gun was not my gun; it was all silver. He stuck a gun in my mouth. He told me [to] go get the money and pay him for my gun if I wanted the gun back. And I just started screaming and crying.

I just told him okay [and that] I was going to go to the ATM and get him some money. And I had the baby with me, and then I left and went straight to the police station.

(N.T. 06/09/23 at 15-17).

[The victim] testified that she never got her gun back from [Appellant]. She further testified that the gun was operable, having previously used it at the gun range. Finally, [the victim] testified that [Appellant] did not have permission to be inside her home on the day he attacked her. (N.T. 06/09/23 at 17-18).

-2- J-A28037-24

On cross-examination, defense counsel challenged [the victim’s] testimony regarding the timing of the events. More specifically, counsel presented [the victim] with a police report dated November 3, 2021, referencing a “date of occurrence” as “10/31/21.” [The victim] explained that she reported the incident immediately to police, but they were short-staffed and the detectives brought her back in a few days later. She testified that she met with three different detectives -- “one female detective” and “two male detectives” -- between the day of the assault and the formal interview. Counsel also questioned [the victim] regarding the timing of the bedroom video, which contained a timestamp of October 26, 2021. [The victim] responded that she believed the timestamp was accurate, explaining that it was a hectic period in her life and she could not recall exact dates: “I was going through so much going back and forth to Pittsburgh to get a child out of the system ... [t]hat is why I can’t tell you exact dates.” (N.T. 07/24/23 at 7-12).

[The victim] was rehabilitated on re-direct examination as follows:

Q. [] I think the last time we were here we were talking about November 3rd. Do you remember what the actual date was of the first incident?

A. No.

Q. Do you remember when the actual date was of the second?

(N.T. 07/24/23 at 20).

Finally, prior to resting, the Commonwealth introduced stipulated evidence that [Appellant] was ineligible to carry a firearm based on a prior conviction. (N.T. 07/24/23 at 20- 21).

For his case-in-chief, [Appellant] took the stand in his own defense. He testified that, prior to the incident, he had been in a relationship with [the victim] for two and one-half years. During that time, he had been to [the victim’s] house on numerous occasions, although he never had a key. On the date at issue, at approximately 9:00 or 10:00 p.m., [Appellant] went to [the victim’s] house to get his “home aid” paperwork, which contained his personal/ banking information. [Appellant] testified that when he got to the house, he rang the doorbell and [the victim’s]

-3- J-A28037-24

daughter let him in. He went upstairs because he heard [the victim] talking on the phone. [Appellant] admitted to slamming the door into [the victim] because he was angry with her. In [Appellant’s] words, “I was upset because she wouldn’t give me my paperwork.” (N.T. 07/24/23 at 26-31).

[Appellant] testified that when he got into the bedroom, [the victim] was holding a phone in her hand -- which he admitted to taking and leaving the house with, and never returning it to [the victim] [Appellant], however, denied taking a gun from her. According to [Appellant], “[the victim] would no way in the world let me take her gun or throw her.” [Appellant] also adamantly denied placing a gun in [the victim’s] mouth on the following day:

Q. You heard her describe this second incident the next day or some time after. She alleges she came over to your house where you pointed a gun at her, put a gun in her mouth.

Did anything like that ever happen?

A. Never. Never. My son was there. Her son was there, a baby. I would not do that. Never.

(N.T. 07/24/23 at 30-33).

On cross-examination, [Appellant] admitted that he “never had a key” and was angry with [the victim] on the date in question. He admitted that he had been arguing with her over the paperwork and further admitted that [the victim] did not invite him to her house that night: “No. No. No. I just went down there.” [Appellant] also admitted to slamming the door into [the victim], grabbing her by the neck, throwing her out of the way, and taking something from the bed because, “Well, it shows [in the video].” While [Appellant] claimed he only took a phone, he acknowledged that [The victim] did own a gun:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Easley, S., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-easley-s-pasuperct-2025.