Com. v. Greene, Z.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 28, 2018
Docket2298 EDA 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Greene, Z. (Com. v. Greene, Z.) 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. Greene, Z., (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

J-S46033-18

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : ZACHARY GREENE : : Appellant : No. 2298 EDA 2016

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence, June 14, 2016, in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0002215-2013.

BEFORE: BOWES, J., SHOGAN, J., and KUNSELMAN, J.

MEMORANDUM BY KUNSELMAN, J.: FILED NOVEMBER 28, 2018

Zachary Greene appeals from the judgment of sentence, which the trial

court imposed after a jury convicted Greene of robbery, possession of an

instrument of a crime, simple assault, and recklessly endangering another

person.1 For the reasons below, we affirm.

Factual Background

On September 4, 2012, in the early evening, Greene robbed the

Neighborhood Convenience Store, located in a residential part of Philadelphia.

He pulled a gun on the cashier, Ms. Jatnna Angeles. Ms. Angeles, a young

woman, had immigrated to the United States from the Dominican Republic

____________________________________________

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 3701(a)(1)(ii), 907(a), 2701(a), and 2705, respectively. J-S46033-18

around 2006. English is her secondary language, and she has difficulty with

measurements in inches and feet.

During the crime, Greene hid most of his firearm inside a dark plastic

bag but exposed the barrel of the gun on top of the cashier’s counter. He told

Ms. Angeles to place the money from the register into the bag; it came to

between $200 and $300. He also stole a pack of cigarettes.

The robbery greatly traumatized Ms. Angeles. She soon resigned her

job at the Neighborhood Convenience Store, out of fear that she might become

the victim of another armed robbery. Moreover, Greene’s crime so distressed

Ms. Angeles that she was afraid he would attack her at the line-up, preliminary

hearing, and trial, despite the presence of police officers and/or deputies at

all three locations.

Due to her unfamiliarity with the English system of measurements, Ms.

Angeles had trouble providing investigators with a consistent height for the

robber. However, she constantly maintained that her assailant – whom she

viewed for a full 20 seconds, face-to-face, from only a yard or two away – was

an African-American man, had a lighter complexion, facial hair, and a slender

build. Greene matches that description, and she successfully picked him out

a photo array, which led to his arrest.

Also, Ms. Angeles’ description matched the image of Greene in the

convenience store’s surveillance video, which recorded him robbing the store

from above and behind her head. In other words, the camera had the same

view of Greene as Ms. Angeles.

-2- J-S46033-18

Although she could not identify Greene during the line-up, Ms. Angeles

testified that she had never been in a prison before and that she was afraid

he would see her through the glass. She was also scared that Greene or one

of his friends might harm her for cooperating with the authorities. Thus, she

was very upset and nervous during the line-up to the point of tears. Critically,

Ms. Angeles successfully identified Greene as the robber at the preliminary

hearing and several times during the jury trial without equivocation.

Also, one the investigating officers, Detective John Harrigan, testified at

trial regarding the steps he took to identify and arrest the robber. As a part

of that testimony he explained that he watched the video surveillance from

the Neighborhood Convenience Store. The assistant district attorney then

asked him, “Detective, based on your view of the video in your investigation,

who did you believe was in that video?” N.T., 4/18/16, at 33.

Defense counsel objected, on the grounds that the question called for

Detective Harrigan to give lay opinion testimony. The trial court overruled the

objection and said the testimony was proper “if he obtained the information,

he believed it was the defendant, or gathered information that he believed

developed the defendant as the suspect.” Id. The detective then indicated

that he believed that Greene was the man in the surveillance video, and,

therefore, he included Greene’s picture in the photo array that he presented

to Ms. Angeles. Sure enough, she picked Greene’s picture out of the photo

array as the robber.

-3- J-S46033-18

The jury convicted Greene on all counts – i.e., robbery, possession of

an instrument of a crime, simple assault, and recklessly endangering another

person.2

The trial judge received and reviewed the pre-sentencing report, which

contained Greene’s prior offenses as well as his personal information. That

background information included the facts that he had graduated high school

and attended one semester of college and “that he didn’t have any kind of

support, whether material or otherwise, from his family.” N.T., 6/14/16, at

8. Defense counsel also pointed out that Greene worked as a chimney sweep

from 2006 to 2013. See Id. at 9.

These mitigating factors did not persuade the trial judge, who imposed

a sentence in the aggravated range of the guidelines. In crafting an aggregate

sentence of 7 to 14 years of incarceration, she opined from the bench as

follows:

this is the kind of case that sort of – unfortunately – typifies urban life in Philadelphia. You have a neighborhood store. I believe the complainant came from the Dominican Republic to try to create a life for herself. She is in a small store in the community, urban community, trying to make out a living as a cashier, and [Greene] comes in and robs her at gunpoint, I believe with a plastic bag if my memory serves me correctly. And it was broad daylight from what I can recall. The images were captured on video, so it’s very, very disturbing that a young woman was subjected to this

2 The Commonwealth had also charged Greene with various firearm-based offenses, but the trial judge acquitted him on those charges before submitting the case to the jury. See N.T., 4/18/16, at 78-79.

-4- J-S46033-18

kind of situation over nothing – over I don't know. I don't recall how much money.

DISTRICT ATTORNEY: It’s $200.

THE COURT: With her life and her safety on the line for nothing really. Looking at [Greene’s] history, as we’ve heard, his Record Score is a one, and he doesn’t have any juvenile history. But he has had, according to the PSI, eight arrests, which includes the arrest that brings us here today; five convictions, two commitments. We have DUIs, disorderly conduct, [unauthorized use of an automobile], this drug case in Municipal Court before Judge Deleon. You could look at that and say, well, those are relatively minor matters. But then you really stepped up with pulling an armed robbery of a neighborhood store and terrorizing a complainant, who now has difficulty being able to function. I believe she had to leave the employment. She can’t work there anymore, because of that horrific experience. So all that has to be considered.

As Commonwealth has indicated, [Greene has] pretty much had a pretty good go of it, in terms of light sentences and moving back and forth between Montgomery County and Philadelphia and pretty much having his way. Getting arrested while out on this case, so certainly that’s disturbing, in that he has no regard for the process to . . . stay clear while the trial was pending. He’s still out with drugs and doing all kinds of things.

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