Com. v. Holmes, W.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 1, 2023
Docket818 EDA 2022
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Holmes, W. (Com. v. Holmes, W.) 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. Holmes, W., (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

J-S10022-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : WINDEL HOLMES : : Appellant : No. 818 EDA 2022

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered January 7, 2022 In the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-23-CR-0001793-2019

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., LAZARUS, J., and STABILE, J.

MEMORANDUM BY LAZARUS, J.: FILED MAY 1, 2023

Windel Holmes appeals from the judgment of sentence, imposed in the

Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County, after a jury convicted him of two

counts each of criminal conspiracy1 and aggravated assault (F-1 and F-2),2

and one count each of possessing instruments of crime3 and possession of a

firearm without a license.4 The trial court also convicted Holmes of possession

of a firearm prohibited.5 After our careful review, we affirm.

____________________________________________

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 903.

2 Id. at § 2702.

3 Id. at § 907.

4 Id. at § 6106.

5 Id. at § 6105. J-S10022-23

The Honorable Kevin F. Kelly6 set forth the facts of this matter as

follows:

Angelica Pena met [] Holmes in 2018, both having lived on Baltimore Pike in East Lansdowne, when they entered a “relationship” that continued to August 2018. N.T. [Trial,] 11/16/21, [at] 74-75. [In 2018,] Holmes lived on Melrose Street in East Lansdowne with his grandmother and his brother, Jermaine Jackson. [Id. at] 76. [Holmes] was known to carry a gun that he kept in his bed. [Id. at] 149.

Sometime in early August 2018, Ms. Pena knew of tension between [] Holmes and Kevan Jackson, who resided at 70 East Penn Boulevard in East Lansdowne, two (2) blocks from Melrose Street. Kevan Jackson is a brother of the victim, Kahleef Jackson ([“Victim”]). [Id. at] 80[,] 83. Ms. Pena[,] through her relationship with [Holmes] and local residency[,] was aware these “rivals” (Kevan Jackson and [] Holmes) disagreed about “who runs the block, Melrose.” [Id. at] 123.

Relatedly, Kevan Jackson and [Holmes] had exchanged adversarial social media posts. [Id. at] 81. These combative media postings led [] Holmes to desire a direct conversation with Kevan Jackson, while he relatedly observed, “Yeah he’s talking crazy. He’s talking crazy about our block.” [Id. at] 112-13.

Early on August 18, 2018, [] Holmes saw his brother, Jermaine Jackson, and Angelica Pena at a store on the corner of Melrose Street and Baltimore Pike, and announced his intention to then “talk” to Kevan Jackson. [Id. at] 82, 83 and 114. Ms. Pena described [] Holmes’ mood as confrontational. [Id. at] 114.

[Holmes] walked the two (2) to five (5) minutes from the store to the sidewalk of Kevan Jackson’s home accompanied by Ms. Pena, and his sibling, Jermaine Jackson. [Id. at] 83-84.

[] Holmes walked alone onto the driveway of 70 East Penn Boulevard and talked for ten (10) to fifteen (15) seconds with ____________________________________________

6 The Honorable James P. Bradley was the trial judge in this matter. When Judge Bradley retired on December 31, 2021, the matter was administratively reassigned to the Honorable Linda A. Cartisano and, ultimately, to Judge Kelly, who authored a thorough and comprehensive Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion.

-2- J-S10022-23

Kevan Jackson. [Id. at] 20[,] 25. Tensions rose, then a fight. [Id. at] 25 and [Id.,] 11/17/21, [at] 86. [] Holmes grappled with Kevan Jackson and [the Victim], while Jahlil Jackson, another brother of the victim, took on Jermaine Jackson. [Id.,] 11/16/21, [at] 117. Pugilism held the stage for sixty (60) to ninety (90) seconds[,] [resulting in] Jermaine Jackson [falling] to the ground. [Id. at] 91 and [Id.,] 11/17/21, [at] 27. As he righted himself, Jermaine Jackson, according to [the victim,] “tells his brother[, Holmes,] to shoot me, shoot me—or shoot him, shoot him, and he pulls out a gun to shoot me.” [Id.,] 11/17/21, [at] 27. Ms. Pena, describing the same command, testified that Jermaine Jackson said to his brother, [Holmes], “pop them, pop them.” [Id.,] 11/16/21, [at] 94. [] Holmes then took a sock from the waist of his pants, removed a silver firearm from the sock, and shot once at the victim [] from just fifteen (15) feet away. [Id. at] 118, 47-48 and [Id.,] 11/17/21, [at] 20. “Everybody scattered.” [Id.,] 11/16/21, [at] 148.

[Holmes] ran toward Pembroke Street then disappeared from the view of Ms. Pena and Jermaine Jackson, who had trailed him. Ms. Pena and Jermaine Jackson continued to walk together on Pembroke[,] holding hands to evade suspicion[,] and visited Jermaine Jackson’s friend’s house on Melrose Street. [Id. at] 100, 122.

At some point later that day, [] Holmes engaged a car service for passage to his mother’s house in North Philadelphia, where Ms. Pena joined him that evening. [Id. at] 122. On direct examination, Ms. Pena said they did not talk about the shooting until the next day when she asked [Holmes] about the “fallout” and he said everything will be fine. [Id. at] 101-02.

Detective [James] Cadden [of the East Lansdowne Police Department] recorded a statement from [the victim] in the hospital the same day as the shooting (August 18, 2018) and returned on August 21, 2018[,] with two (2) photo arrays from which [the victim] identified [] Holmes and Jermaine Jackson as having been involved in his shooting. [Id.,] 11/17/21, [at] 72- 76.

On August 21, 2018, the detective’s application for a search warrant was judicially approved for 16 Melrose Avenue, Apartment B, East Lansdowne, where [Holmes] and Jermaine Jackson were lessees; and where[,] with arrest warrants for the three (3),

-3- J-S10022-23

Detective Cadden found [] Holmes, Jermaine Jackson and Angelica Pena on August 23, 2018. [Id. at] 76-77, 83-87.

Ms. Pena gave two (2) custodial statements, both recorded after her rights against self-incrimination were imparted, acknowledged, and waived, on August 23, 2018[—]one at 7:40 hours and the second at 14:28 hours, military time.

On February 17, 2021, Ms. Pena, then represented by counsel and at liberty, gave a third statement. [Id. at] 88-90.

Detective Cadden became privy to recordings of three (3) phone calls that [] Holmes was said to be party to while incarcerated and awaiting trial. Those calls seemingly occurred between November 4, 2021 and November 9, 2021. The first[,] identified as from a November 4, 2021, call to telephone number (215) 980-1764[,] contained a person uttering the phrase “three times and out.” Detective Cadden, without objection, identified the declarant as [] Holmes and then interpreted the reference to mean that[,] if a witness fails to appear in criminal court three (3) times[,] the case will be thrown out. [Id. at] 99-103. The second tape was made from a phone call to (267) 281-0872 on November 5, 2021, with the detective again authenticating the voice of [Holmes]. [Id. at] 103. The third audio recording was offered as originating from a November 9, 2021, call to (267) 281-0872[,] in which Detective Cadden recognized [] Holmes voicing the name “Jermaine.” Detective Cadden testified that [Holmes] was referring to his sibling, Jermaine Jackson. [Id. at] 105.

Trial Court Opinion, at 14-17 (footnotes omitted).

A trial was held on November 16 through 18, 2021, after which the jury

and trial court convicted Holmes of the above-stated offenses. On January 7,

2022, Judge Bradley sentenced Holmes to 10 to 20 years’ incarceration for

aggravated assault graded as a felony of the first degree, and consecutive

terms of 2½ to 5 years’ incarceration for one count of criminal conspiracy and

15 to 30 months’ incarceration for carrying a firearm without a license. The

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