Com. v. Gilliard, D.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 2024
Docket853 EDA 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Gilliard, D. (Com. v. Gilliard, D.) 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. Gilliard, D., (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

J-A08025-24

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : DARNELL GILLIARD : : Appellant : No. 853 EDA 2023

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered December 16, 2022 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0005937-2019

BEFORE: BOWES, J., OLSON, J., and McLAUGHLIN, J.

MEMORANDUM BY OLSON, J.: FILED SEPTEMBER 30, 2024

Appellant, Darnell Gilliard, appeals from the judgment of sentence

entered on December 16, 2022, following his jury trial convictions for

third-degree murder, conspiracy, and related firearms violations. 1 After

careful consideration, we affirm.

The trial court summarized the facts of this case as follows:

On March 19, 2019, [Appellant], along with two co-conspirators, killed eighteen-year-old Nikolas Montez, the decedent, during a robbery. At approximately[] 11:38 p.m., Akeem Graham drove [Appellant] and Jermal Bizzel to the corner of Ontario and “F” [S]treets in a black Hyundai Sonata. As the decedent walked east on the 600 block of Ontario Street in Philadelphia[, Pennsylvania], a mere three houses south of his home, [Appellant] and Bizzel robbed the decedent at gunpoint.

____________________________________________

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2502(c) (third-degree murder), 903(a) (conspiracy), 6106(a) (firearms not to be carried without a license), 6108 (carrying firearms on public streets in Philadelphia), and 907 (possessing an instrument of crime), respectively. J-A08025-24

During the robbery, the decedent was on [a cellular tele]phone with Gabriella Montanez, his paramour of one year, who heard the decedent tell the conspirators, “Take it. You can have it all.” Montanez heard scuffling sounds and then gunshots. Montanez[] desperately asked the decedent if he was okay but the decedent did not respond. Immediately, Montanez ran to her mother and told her that she thought the decedent [had been] shot. After hearing police sirens, Montanez ended the call, so she could call [the] decedent’s mother to tell her what happened.

As [Appellant] and Bizzel ran back to their waiting getaway car, Bizzel collapsed [outside the car] from two gunshot wounds to [his] chest[.] [Appellant] instruct[ed the driver,] Graham[,] to leave Bizzel at the scene [but] Graham helped the fatally injured Bizzel into the car and drove off. [Appellant] refused to go to the hospital with his co-conspirators and got out of the car before Graham arrived at Temple [University] Hospital with Bizzel.

After receiving a radio call, Philadelphia police arrived at the scene and rushed the decedent to Temple Hospital where they arrived mere seconds after the co-conspirators. Both the decedent and Bizzel died at the hospital shortly after their arrival. The decedent was shot five times at close range in the head, buttocks, left thigh, and knee.

The Philadelphia Police Crime Scene Unit recovered two .38/.357 caliber bullet jacket fragments, one bullet fragment of indeterminate caliber, and one .32 caliber bullet from the scene. From the decedent, the Medical Examiner recovered three .38/.357 caliber projectiles and four bullet fragments and, from Bizzel, he recovered two .32 caliber projectiles. [Hospital staff recovered an additional bullet fragment from the decedent.] The .32 caliber projectiles were fired from the same firearm. The ballistics evidence was inconclusive regarding whether the .38/.357 caliber projectiles were fired from the same firearm.

The day after the incident, [Demina] Johnson[, Bizzel’s paramour,] called [Dorothy] Perkins, Graham’s paramour and the owner of the black Hyundai Sonata, to learn about the details of [Bizzel’s] death. On a three-way call [in which Graham, Johnson, and Perkins participated while Graham was in prison,] Graham explained that he was in the car when Bizzel was shot [and] that [Appellant] said [to] leave [Bizzel behind] after Bizzel collapsed outside the car. Graham told Johnson that[,] along with himself and Bizzel, [Appellant] was also at Johnson’s home the night

-2- J-A08025-24

before the incident. Perkins gave Johnson [Appellant’s cellular tele]phone number, so she could learn more about Bizzel’s death.

The next day, Johnson called [Appellant] and arranged a meeting at Sugar[H]ouse Casino [on North] Delaware Avenue. Between 9:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m., Johnson and her aunt met with [Appellant] in a car in the parking lot of the casino[. Appellant [] was in the front passenger seat and an unknown male [was] in the driver’s seat. Johnson unintentionally set her [cellular tele]phone to record the audio of the meeting.

Johnson confronted [Appellant] and asked for answers about what happened that night. [Appellant] confirmed that he was one of the individuals at Johnson’s home the night before the incident and told her that she would know him by the nickname “D.” [Appellant] further [confirmed that he was present during the incident. Appellant] confessed to Johnson that the robbery “just went bad” and the decedent and Bizzel shot each other. [Appellant] claimed that he took Bizzel’s gun from the scene to protect him. When asked whether he or Graham was the driver, [Appellant denied driving.] [Appellant] confirmed that the police found a fake gun in the [escape] vehicle and that he instructed Graham to erase all of his communications when Graham called him from the back of [a] police car [after he was arrested].

Cell[ular telephone] site analysis of the co-conspirators’ [] locations confirmed their movements [on] the day of the incident. All three [telephones belonging to the co-conspirators] were connected to the same close range Distributed Antenna System cell[ular] site covering the area of the crime scene at the time of the shooting [and their subsequent movements after the shooting.] After the shooting, [Appellant’s] cell[ular tele]phone location diverges from his co-conspirators’ [location] as they rush[ed] to Temple Hospital. After arriving at Temple Hospital, Graham’s cell[ular tele]phone location [showed] when he was taken to police headquarters. On March 21, 2019, from approximately 9:12 p.m. to 9:36 p.m., [Appellant’s] cell[ular tele]phone was connected to the cell site which covers Sugar[H]ouse Casino.

Graham’s fingerprints were found on the front and rear passenger side doors of the black Hyundai and on two different beverage containers found in the vehicle. Bizzel’s fingerprints were found on the back of the cell[ular tele]phone from the vehicle[’s] glove

-3- J-A08025-24

box. In addition[,] police also recovered a bb-gun from the black Hyundai.

On April 12, 2019, [Appellant] was arrested and, from his residence, police recovered a cell[ular tele]phone and a Sugar[H]ouse [C]asino receipt.

[Appellant] was not licensed to carry a firearm at the time of the incident.

Trial Court Opinion, 5/12/2023, at 2-5 (footnotes omitted or incorporated).

The case proceeded as follows:

On April 12, 2019, [Appellant] was arrested and charged with murder and related offenses. On October 18, 2022, [Appellant] elected to be tried by a jury. On October 24, 2022, a jury convicted [Appellant of the aforementioned crimes, but found him not guilty of robbery and conspiracy to commit robbery]. On December 16, 2022, [the trial] court sentenced [Appellant] to [10 to 20] years of incarceration for third-degree murder with consecutive sentences of six to [12] years for conspiracy to commit third-degree murder and one to two years of incarceration for [carrying a firearm without a license], for a total [aggregate] sentence of [17 to 34] years of incarceration.

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Com. v. Gilliard, D., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-gilliard-d-pasuperct-2024.