Com. v. Johnson, E.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 19, 2024
Docket2613 EDA 2022
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Johnson, E. (Com. v. Johnson, E.) 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. Johnson, E., (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

J-S40025-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : ERIC JOHNSON : : Appellant : No. 2613 EDA 2022

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered July 6, 2022 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0002426-2020

BEFORE: NICHOLS, J., SULLIVAN, J., and COLINS, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY SULLIVAN, J.: FILED APRIL 19, 2024

Eric Johnson (“Johnson”) appeals from the judgment of sentence

imposed after a jury convicted him of third-degree murder, three violations of

the Uniform Firearms Act, and possessing an instrument of crime.1 We affirm.

The trial court summarized the factual background of this appeal as

follows:

[In November 2019, Johnson] entered a bar located on the corner of Emerald and East Tioga streets in Philadelphia. Sometime after [Johnson] entered the bar, the decedent, Harry Speech [(“Speech”)], entered. Within minutes of . . . Speech entering the bar, [Johnson] and Mr. Speech began arguing. [Johnson] and . . . Speech continued to argue as they exited the bar. . . . [A]cross the intersection from the bar, [Johnson] pulled out a handgun and shot . . . Speech in the face, abdomen, thigh, and buttocks. . . . Speech’s friend, Michael Hart ([“Hart]”]), helped him into an SUV and attempted to get . . . Speech to the hospital. Police stopped . . . Hart’s car and realized that . . . Speech had been shot. . . . ____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.

1 See 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2502(c), 6105(a)(1), 6106(a)(1), 6108, 907(a). J-S40025-23

Speech was placed into a police car and taken to Temple University Hospital, where he was pronounced dead on November 21, 2019. The medical examiner determined that . . . Speech’s death was caused by gunshot wounds to his head and abdomen. [A police log about the stop of Hart’s car indicated that Hart initially described the suspect who shot Speech as a Hispanic male.2 Hart later described the suspect to detectives as a Black male.]

Police collected video surveillance from several different locations and prepared a compilation video, which showed the shooting in its entirety [(“the compilation video”). The compilation video showed the shooting suspect run off with two other people.]

Trial Court Opinion, 1/3/23, at 2 (citations to the record omitted).

Officer Tyler Smith (“Officer Smith”) worked in the district covering the

neighborhood around the bar, and he had known Johnson for about three

years from seeing him in the area on an almost daily basis. See N.T., 4/6/22,

at 115, 120-21. Officer Smith viewed the compilation video and identified the

shooting suspect as Johnson. See id. at 114-15, 117. Officer Smith contacted

the detectives investigating the shooting, gave them a statement, and

identified Johnson again from still photographs taken from surveillance

cameras. See N.T., 4/7/22, at 81.

Detectives also interviewed Johnson’s paramour, Karley Weisenbach

(“Weisenbach”). See id.at 50, 82. Weisenbach stated that the day before

the shooting, she had given birth to her and Johnson’s child and, on the night

____________________________________________

2 Johnson is a Black male. Hart did not testify at trial because the Commonwealth was not able to locate him. See N.T., 4/6/22, at 104. Upon the defense’s request, the Commonwealth stipulated to the reading of the police log into the record. See id. at 106-08, 112.

-2- J-S40025-23

of the shooting, she was still in Holy Redeemer Hospital (“the hospital”). See

id. at 45-46. She told detectives that she had texted Johnson about the birth

of their daughter, and he called her, but she did not see him until after her

discharge a few days after giving birth. See id. at 46-47. Weisenbach

identified Johnson from still photographs and gave detectives Johnson’s phone

number. See id. at 50-51, 52-53, 82. Detectives obtained a warrant for

phone records based on Johnson’s phone number, and they obtained cell site

location information that placed Johnson’s SIM card around the scene of the

shooting of Speech.3 See id. at 82-83, 118. Police arrested Johnson in

February 2020. See id. at 85. While Johnson was in custody pending trial, a

fellow inmate, Thomas Graham (“Graham”), who was familiar with both

Johnson and Speech, spoke with Johnson while on a prison bus; Graham later

told his stepfather, a former police detective, that Johnson admitted to

shooting and killing Speech, and Graham’s stepfather contacted police. See

N.T., 4/6/22, at 128-33, 150.

Shortly before trial, defense counsel advised the Commonwealth of

Johnson’s intent to raise an alibi defense that he was with Weisenbach at the

3 There were different phones at issue in this case, a red phone seen on the

compilation video, and a pink and white phone later seized from Johnson at the time of his arrest. The cell site location information was based on the SIM card associated with Johnson’s phone number, and the Commonwealth presented circumstantial evidence that the SIM card had been in the red phone on the night of the shooting. See N.T., 4/7/22, at 86-88, 123-25, 133-44.

-3- J-S40025-23

time of the shooting. See N.T., 4/5/22, at 5-6.4 The Commonwealth

undertook a further investigation into the possible alibi defense and obtained

additional evidence against Johnson. This included a recording of a March

2022 prison phone call from Johnson to Weisenbach, during which Johnson

and Weisenbach argued about her contacting his attorney to say that he was

with her at the hospital. See id. at 10-14. Weisenbach also gave another

statement to detectives two days before trial, and she indicated that Johnson

was trying to have her corroborate his alibi, but she refused to lie. See id. at

13; see also N.T., 4/7/22, at 48, 58.

At trial, the Commonwealth played the compilation video that showed

the shooting of Speech, and the events before and after the shooting. See

N.T., 4/7/22, at 129-62. Detective Thorsten Lucke (“Detective Lucke”), who

had prepared the compilation video and analyzed the data from Johnson’s

phone number, corroborated information obtained from Johnson’s phone

number to portions of the compilation video. See id. at 138-41 (indicating

that the phone records of a sixty-three second phone call matched the video

of the suspect receiving a phone call and then hanging up after sixty-three

seconds). Detective Lucke further indicated that the cell site location

4 Johnson, through defense counsel, had also requested that the Commonwealth search his phone for pictures of him with Weisenbach at the hospital. See N.T., 4/5/22, at 8-9. The Commonwealth was not able to access the phone taken from Johnson at the time of his arrest. See id. at 9; see also N.T., 4/8/22, at 92-93.

-4- J-S40025-23

information never located Johnson’s phone number near the hospital where

Weisenbach gave birth. See id. at 119.

The Commonwealth presented testimony from Officer Smith concerning

his identification of Johnson after viewing the compilation video. See N.T.,

4/6/22, at 115. During cross-examination, defense counsel noted that the

portion of the compilation video showing the shooting of Speech were in black

and white and less clear than the other portions of the compilation video. See

id. at 122-23.

Weisenbach testified that Johnson never visited her at the hospital

where she gave birth. See N.T., 4/7/22, at 45.

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