Com. v. Frazier, C.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 16, 2020
Docket2532 EDA 2019
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Frazier, C. (Com. v. Frazier, C.) 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. Frazier, C., (Pa. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

J-S42030-20

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA Appellant : : : v. : : : CARNELL FRAZIER : No. 2532 EDA 2019

Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered August 12, 2019 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0011395-2012

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., OLSON, J., and MUSMANNO, J.

MEMORANDUM BY OLSON, J.: FILED NOVEMBER 16, 2020

The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania appeals from the order entered on

August 12, 2019, which granted Carnell Frazier (“Defendant”) relief, in the

form of a new trial, under the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”), 42 Pa.C.S.A.

§§ 9541-9546. We vacate and remand.

Defendant was arrested on June 12, 2012; the Commonwealth

subsequently charged him with persons not to possess firearms, possession

of a firearm with an altered manufacturer’s number, carrying firearms in public

in Philadelphia, possessing instruments of crime (“PIC”), recklessly

endangering another person (“REAP”), simple assault, and resisting arrest.1

Defendant’s jury trial began on February 26, 2014. Yolanda Williams

testified first for the Commonwealth. Ms. Williams testified that, on June 12, ____________________________________________

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 6105(a)(1), 6110.2, 6108, 907(a), 2705, 2701(a), and 5104, respectively. J-S42030-20

2012, she was sitting outside of a Philadelphia house, which was located at

2454 Douglas Street, and talking with her niece, Sharee Thomas. Ms. Williams

testified that, as she was sitting outside of the house, a neighbor came by and

informed her niece that an argument was occurring inside of the nearby house,

located at 2437 Douglas Street. N.T. Trial, 2/26/14, at 7-9. Defendant and

Defendant’s wife, Kimberly Frazier, lived in the 2437 Douglas Street house.

Id. at 10.

Ms. Williams testified that she and her niece walked down the street and

went inside of Defendant’s house to investigate. Id. at 11-13. When they

entered the house, she stayed in the first-floor entryway while her niece

attempted to mediate the verbal argument between Defendant and Mrs.

Frazier on the second-floor of the house. Id. at 14-15. After about five or

ten minutes, Defendant came down the stairs, loudly saying, in an aggressive

tone, “who’s in my damn house, everybody mind their damn business. . . .

Get the fuck out my house and mind your business.” Id. at 17 and 19. Ms.

Williams testified that Defendant then “went into the kitchen and went on the

top of the cabinet and grabbed a gun.” Id. at 17-18. She stated that the gun

“was a MAC-10” and, after Defendant grabbed the gun, Defendant walked

“toward us [and] . . . point[ed the gun] at everybody . . . [and said] get the

fuck out of his house.” Id. at 20-21 and 24. Ms. Williams testified that she

immediately “ran out [of] the door” and ran into a neighbor’s house. Id. at

20 and 25.

-2- J-S42030-20

As Ms. Williams testified, from her vantage point inside of the neighbor’s

house, she watched Defendant walk outside of his house with the gun in his

hand and begin “just pointing the gun [at people on the street] asking if

anybody got anything to say.” Id. at 26-27. Ms. Williams testified that, at

this point, the people on the street ran into their houses. Id. at 26-28.

According to Ms. Williams, she backed away from the window because

she was fearful that Defendant would begin firing the gun. Id. at 28.

However, when Ms. Williams began looking outside again, she saw Defendant

walking “towards York Street.” Id.

Ms. Williams testified that she did not call the police upon Defendant.

Id. at 44-45. However, the police arrived on scene approximately five or ten

minutes after she entered the neighbor’s house and, when the police arrived,

Ms. Williams left the neighbor’s house and went outside. Id. at 29. When

she was outside, she looked around and saw Defendant “at the corner at the

playground . . . coming back up Douglas Street,” without the gun. Id. at 29-

30 and 55. She then saw the police approach Defendant. Upon approach,

Defendant threw punches at the police, swore at them, and spit in one of their

faces. Id. at 30-31.

Ms. Williams further testified that, after she gave her statement to the

police, Defendant’s wife, Kimberly Frazier, called her and offered her money

if she would not testify in court. Id. at 41.

The Commonwealth next presented the testimony of Philadelphia Police

Officer Ross Scott. Officer Scott testified that, on June 12, 2012, he was

-3- J-S42030-20

on-duty and driving a marked patrol car when he and his partner received a

“radio call for a black male with a gray sweatshirt, blue sweat pants, on the

highway . . . [in] the area of 2400 Douglas Street . . . with a MAC-10.” Id. at

63. Officer Scott testified that, when he turned onto Douglas Street, he

“noticed a man matching the flash, gray sweatshirt and blue sweat pants,”

and Officer Scott also noticed that “people on the block [were] pointing at”

the man in the gray sweatshirt and blue sweat pants, who was later identified

as Defendant. Id. at 66. As Officer Scott testified:

I got out of the car weapons drawn, I asked [Defendant] to place his hands up against the wall. He complied at that moment. The moment that I holstered my weapon, he tried to take off on me and I grabbed his wrist and told him put his hands against the wall. He said he [did not] have to put his hands against the wall[. At this] point . . . we don’t know if he got a weapon. He got into a defensive stance. . . . He swings for my head. I ducked his swing, ducked his [closed] fist, my partner tackles him against the red step. He punch[ed] him in his face and his knees [gave] out and I [tried] to cuff him. . . . [We] frisked him and made sure he didn’t have a weapon on him. . . . [He did not] have a weapon on him.

...

We tried to put him [in] the police car, he [was] fighting the whole way, he won’t get in the car. He spit in my partner’s face and once he’s almost in the car after struggling with him, he tries to kiss my partner and [said], I’m going to make you my bitch.

Id. at 69-72.

The Commonwealth also presented the testimony of Philadelphia Police

Sergeant Gregory Caputo. As Sergeant Caputo testified, on June 12, 2012,

-4- J-S42030-20

he “received a radio call . . . for a person with a gun on the 2400 block of

Douglas Street[. Specifically,] for a black male in a gray sweatshirt, walking

down the street with a gun in his hand.” Id. at 99. Indeed, Sergeant Caputo

testified that, after the first call, the police “received one call after that which

led to a third call which led to a fourth call.” Id.

Sergeant Caputo testified that he arrived at the corner of York and

Douglas Streets, exited his vehicle, and was approached by two females, who

told him that “the male your officers stopped down there threw a gun in the

lot by the alleyway right there.” Id. at 100-101. He testified:

[A] K-9 was called, K-9 officer arrived. [He] and his dog began to search the alleyway. As soon as he began to search the alleyway there was one trash can that was chained to this half moon circle monkey bars, a piece of [] playground equipment here, there was some trash bags in it.

As he was searching the alleyway, I lifted the one trash bag out of it and there was a black handgun.

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