Com. v. Everett, J.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 7, 2026
Docket200 WDA 2025
StatusUnpublished
AuthorBowes

This text of Com. v. Everett, J. (Com. v. Everett, J.) 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. Everett, J., (Pa. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

J-S46015-25

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : JENKINS RAKEE EVERETT : : Appellant : No. 200 WDA 2025

Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered February 3, 2025 In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-02-CR-0013164-2016

BEFORE: BOWES, J., NICHOLS, J., and KING, J.

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED: April 7, 2026

Jenkins Rakee Everett appeals pro se from the order dismissing his

petition filed pursuant to the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”). We affirm.

We previously recounted the facts of this matter as follows:

Appellant shot Earl Bivins (the victim) several times in the early morning hours of June 11, 2016, in an apartment in the City of Pittsburgh. Appellant and two other individuals then wrapped the victim’s body in a blanket and put the body in a vehicle where they ultimately dumped it in a wooded area. At some point later, Appellant returned to the body and attempted to burn it. Police . . . found the victim’s body on June 16, 2016.

Commonwealth v. Everett, 220 A.3d 671, 2019 WL 3287087, at *1

(Pa.Super. 2019) (non-precedential decision) (cleaned up). Appellant was

charged with one count each of criminal homicide, persons not to possess a

firearm, carrying a firearm without a license, abuse of a corpse, tampering J-S46015-25

with or fabricating physical evidence, and conspiracy. At the time, he also

had unrelated federal charges pending.

The Commonwealth offered to reduce the homicide charge to voluntary

manslaughter if Appellant pled guilty to that offense and the remaining crimes.

The agreement further provided that the sentences for the other offenses

would run concurrently to whatever the court imposed for voluntary

manslaughter. Appellant accepted the offer. On the same day, he was

sentenced on both his state and federal crimes. The Honorable Alexander

Bicket sentenced Appellant to an aggregate term of seven and one-half to

seventeen years in prison, running that consecutively to his federal sentence.

Appellant filed an unsuccessful post-sentence motion to withdraw his

guilty plea. He appealed, and we affirmed his judgment of sentence on July

22, 2019. Specifically, we rejected Appellant’s assertion that he was entitled

to withdraw his plea where he assumed that his state sentence would run

concurrently to his federal sentence, since no such promise had been made.

See Everett, 2019 WL 3287087, at *4. Appellant did not file a petition for

allowance of appeal. As such, his judgment of sentence became final on

August 22, 2019. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(3) (stating that a judgment of

sentence becomes final “at the expiration of time for seeking” discretionary

review in the Supreme Court). Accordingly, any PCRA petition needed to be

filed by August 24, 2020, to be deemed timely, as August 22, 2020, fell on a

Saturday. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(1) (“Any petition under this subchapter,

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including a second or subsequent petition, shall be filed within one year of the

date the judgment becomes final[.]”).

On May 21, 2024, Appellant authored a pro se PCRA petition. Therein,

he alleged that plea counsel was ineffective for failing to preserve claims as

to the deadly weapon enhancement, and stated that he was entitled to

withdraw his plea because his prior record score was miscalculated. See PCRA

Petition, 5/21/24, at ¶¶ 4, 5. The court appointed Suzanne Swan, Esquire,

who filed a motion to withdraw and no-merit letter pursuant to

Commonwealth v. Turner, 544 A.2d 927 (Pa. 1988), and Commonwealth

v. Finley, 550 A.2d 213 (Pa.Super. 1988) (en banc). Before the court acted

on counsel’s motion, Appellant filed another pro se PCRA petition seeking

credit for time served. The court ordered Attorney Swan to address this

additional claim, and she submitted a supplemental motion to withdraw and

no-merit letter.

The court thereafter issued a notice of its intention to dismiss the PCRA

petition without a hearing in accordance with Pa.R.Crim.P. 907. No response

was filed. The court then granted counsel’s request to withdraw and dismissed

the petition. Appellant timely appealed. In the meantime, he submitted a pro

se request for a sentence modification. On May 19, 2025, the court issued an

order directing Appellant to file a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) concise statement of

errors within twenty-one days. Instead, Appellant submitted an additional

-3- J-S46015-25

motion for reconsideration of sentence. He subsequently filed a late Rule

1925(b) concise statement dated June 16, 2025.1

The court ostensibly treated the PCRA petition and Rule 1925(b)

statement as timely and authored a Rule 1925(a) opinion.2 In this Court,

____________________________________________

1 Although Appellant did not timely file a Rule 1925(b) statement, which typically results in waiver of all issues on appeal, the PCRA court’s 1925(b) order did not properly inform Appellant that any issues not presented in a Rule 1925(b) statement will be deemed waived. See Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)(3)(iv) (mandating that all Rule 1925 orders specify that “any issue not properly included in the Statement timely filed and served pursuant to subdivision (b) shall be deemed waived” (emphasis added)). Therefore, we decline to apply waiver in this instance. See Commonwealth v. Bush, 197 A.3d 285, 287 (Pa.Super. 2018) (concluding that court’s defective Rule 1925(b) order precluded a finding of waiver).

2 Attorney Swan’s application to withdraw was not based on untimeliness, but

upon the merits of Appellant’s claims. According to Attorney Swan, Appellant’s May 21, 2024 filing could be considered an amended first timely PCRA petition because she discovered a pro se letter, dated August 24, 2020, and addressed to Judge Bickett, wherein Appellant requested a thirty-day extension to file a PCRA petition to assert that the Department of Corrections failed to accurately credit him for time served. No action had been taken on the letter, and although it is included in the certified record, it is not on the criminal docket. Additionally, there is no envelope indicating the date it was given to prison authorities for mailing.

Unlike Attorney Swan and the court, we do not consider this letter contemplating the potential future filing of a PCRA petition to itself constitute a timely petition where Appellant did not seek relief pursuant to the PCRA therein, and did not patently send it within one year of when his judgment of sentence became final. See Commonwealth v. Fantauzzi, 275 A.3d 986, 995 (Pa.Super. 2022) (explaining that “regardless of how a petition is titled, courts are to treat a petition filed after a judgment of sentence becomes final as a PCRA petition” but only “if it requests relief contemplated by the PCRA.”). See also Thomas v. Elash, 781 A.2d 170, 176 (Pa.Super. 2001) (clarifying that “[t]o avail himself of the prisoner mailbox rule, . . . an incarcerated litigant must supply sufficient proof of the date of mailing”).

-4- J-S46015-25

Appellant presents a two-page brief raising five claims. He abandoned his

assertion that plea counsel was ineffective, and rather contends that: (1) his

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Related

Thomas v. Elash
781 A.2d 170 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2001)
Commonwealth v. Finley
550 A.2d 213 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1988)
Commonwealth v. Turner
544 A.2d 927 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1988)
Commonwealth v. Bush
197 A.3d 285 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Ballance
203 A.3d 1027 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2019)
Commonwealth v. Dozier
208 A.3d 1101 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2019)
Com. v. Fantauzzi, R.
2022 Pa. Super. 75 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2022)
Com. v. Ortiz-Pagan, C.
2024 Pa. Super. 186 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2024)

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Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Everett, J., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-everett-j-pasuperct-2026.