Com. v. Holder, A.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 25, 2021
Docket891 EDA 2020
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Holder, A. (Com. v. Holder, A.) 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. Holder, A., (Pa. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

J-S05011-21

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : ANDREW HOLDER : : Appellant : No. 891 EDA 2020

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered February 12, 2020 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0004884-2017

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

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED MAY 25, 2021

Andrew Holder appeals from the judgment of sentence of seventeen and

one-half to thirty-five years of imprisonment imposed following non-jury

convictions of third-degree murder, burglary, and conspiracy. We affirm.

The trial court offered the following detailed summary of the underlying

facts established at Appellant’s trial:

On the evening of January 3, 2017, Marcella Vance watched movies with her cousin, Jessica Kidd, and her paramour, the decedent Darryl “Kwan” Curtis, in the back room of her apartment located at 8029 Erdrick Street in Northeast Philadelphia. Vance shared the apartment with her roommate Nashieta Noland, who was present in the front room with her paramour, the codefendant Jamal Washington. At approximately 8:30 p.m., Vance left the apartment to drive Kidd home. Shortly thereafter, both Noland and Washington left the apartment, leaving the decedent alone inside.

Between 7:52 p.m. and 8:24 p.m., Washington received multiple phone calls from and individual named Robert Thorogood and [Appellant]. At 8:24 p.m., Washington called [Appellant]. J-S05011-21

[Appellant], who was wearing a global position-tracking electronic monitor while under the supervision of the Pennsylvania State Parole Board, travelled to the area of 8029 Erdrick Street. There, he and an unidentified individual met Washington, and all three walked in the direction of the apartment, which [Appellant] entered at 9:35 p.m., armed with a pistol. Inside, [Appellant] searched a safe inside Noland’s room and encountered the decedent inside Vance’s bedroom. There, he shot and killed the decedent.

Detective Thorsten Lucke, an expert in both video surveillance recovery and cell phone data extraction, recovered video surveillance recordings from private residences at 8052 and 8045 Erdrick Streets, along with video recorded from a church located at the corner of W[e]lsh and Erdrick Streets. Surveillance footage recovered from the corner of Erdrick and W[e]lsh Streets depicted two vehicles make a left-hand turn from W[e]lsh Street onto Erdrick, in the direction of the apartment. The camera located at 8052 Erdrick Street captured video of [Appellant], Washington, and another individual walking down Erdrick Street at 9:32 p.m. towards the decedent’s location, before disappearing from view. At 9:34 p.m., the cameras at 8052 Erdrick Street recorded . . . Washington speaking on a cellular device while walking back towards Welsh Street, away from the crime scene. At 9:38 p.m., both cameras captured [Appellant], armed with a pistol, running away from the murder scene with the unidentified individual, with an object consistent with a backpack seen carried in the frame. [Appellant]’s positive identity was captured as he ran past the camera located at 8052 Erdrick Street at 9:39 p.m.

Vance, who had dropped Kidd off at her home before purchasing dinner and cigarettes at other locations, called the decedent at 9:48 p.m. but received no response. Upon entering the apartment less than fifteen minutes later, Vance discovered the decedent’s body lying in a pool of blood in the back bedroom. After attempting to give CPR, both Vance and her upstairs neighbors called 911. Philadelphia Police Sergeant Conway and Officer Theodore Brown answered a radio call for an unresponsive male and discovered the decedent’s body on location. The decedent was pronounced dead at the scene at 10:19 p.m.

Forensic pathologist Dr. Lindsay Simon performed the decedent’s autopsy and determined that the cause of death was a single gunshot wound to the head, and the manner of death was

-2- J-S05011-21

homicide. The projectile entered the decedent’s head above the right eyebrow, traveled through his skull and brain, before exiting behind the left ear, causing immediate incapacitation and death. There was no soot or stippling discovered on the body to determine the distance of the shooter.

After calling the police, Vance called Noland, described the bloody crime scene, and asked her to return to the apartment. Washington also returned to the apartment upon Noland’s request. All three spoke to detectives at the scene and traveled to the Police Administration Building where they each provided statements, and Washington surrendered his cell phone for further investigation.

Officer Brown inspected the apartment and observed misplaced items in Noland’s bedroom, including a gun-cleaning kit and boxes of unfired projectiles, but did not find any signs of forced entry. At 1:10 a.m. on December 4, 201[7], Officer Brian Stark of the Crime Scene Unit arrived at the location and recovered forty-nine bullets of different brands that had been previously stored in Vance’s safe. A fired projectile was discovered inside a dresser drawer in Vance’s bedroom, demonstrating that the projectile was fired inside the room. Officer Stark also recovered five latent fingerprints from the crime scene, which he submitted for review. Patrick Raytek, a forensic scientist with the police department’s latent print unit, examined all five latent prints and determined that a print lifted from the ammunition box matched [Appellant].

On the morning [after the shooting], Vance returned to the apartment and discovered a fired cartridge casing (“FCC”) on the floor between her bed and nightstand. Vance further noticed that the decedent’s backpack, which usually contained valuable coins, comic books and possibly narcotics, was missing from her bedroom. After contacting the police, she returned to the Police Administration Building and provided a second statement, wherein she explained that her ex-husband, Stacy Strange, previously kept a firearm in the searched safe, but that the firearm had been removed from the home prior to the shooting. She further noted that the safe did not contain valuables.

Later that morning, [Appellant]’s State Parole Officer . . . Jacqueline Vaughn discovered an email alerting her that the battery charge of [Appellant’s] GPS ankle monitor had fallen below

-3- J-S05011-21

the alert threshold at 8:51 p.m. on the night of the shooting and went into violation at 9:21 p.m. for failure to charge the device. Because the monitor was in violation, it recorded [Appellant’s] location every fifteen seconds. Vaughn cross-referenced the GPS information with a map of the city. Her analysis demonstrated that, starting at 9:00 p.m., [Appellant] traveled from Wissahickon Avenue and onto Roosevelt Boulevard, towards the crime scene. GPS records further revealed that [Appellant] arrived on Erdrick Street at 9:32 p.m., and remained until 9:44 p.m. The GPS monitor tracked [Appellant]’s location as he returned home between 9:44 p.m. and 10:11 p.m., whereupon he began charging the device above the alert threshold.

The next day, Vaughn watched a news program reporting the decedent[’]s murder in his apartment on Erdrick Street. After reviewing her report showing [Appellant] at the location at the time of the shooting, Vaughn contacted homicide detectives.

David Webb, an account manager with Attendi Electronic Monitoring, the company that manufactures and stores records for [Appellant]’s GPS monitor, reviewed the data associated with [Appellant]’s device from the night of the murder.

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