Com. v. Johnson, M.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 13, 2017
DocketCom. v. Johnson, M. No. 2432 EDA 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Johnson, M. (Com. v. Johnson, M.) 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, M., (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

J-S29029-17

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

v.

MARCUS R. JOHNSON

Appellant No. 2432 EDA 2016

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence dated June 27, 2016 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0014428-2014

BEFORE: LAZARUS, J., SOLANO, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*

MEMORANDUM BY SOLANO, J.: FILED JULY 13, 2017

Appellant, Marcus R. Johnson, appeals from the judgment of sentence

imposed after a jury convicted him of first-degree murder and possessing an

instrument of crime (PIC).1 We affirm.

The trial court recounted the evidence presented at trial as follows:

During the summer of 2014, [Appellant] lived at 987 South th 5 Street in the City and County of Philadelphia with his longtime paramour, the decedent Nekeisha Eugene, and their nine-year-old son, Marcus Johnson, Jr. Although [Appellant] and the decedent were romantically involved for the preceding seventeen years, [Appellant] had numerous affairs between 2011 and August 2014.

In 2011, after the decedent discovered that [Appellant] had an affair during a trip to Las Vegas, she moved out of the house for two weeks. Subsequently, [Appellant], a manager of a ____________________________________________ * Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. 1 18 Pa.C.S. §§ 2502(a) and 907(a). J-S29029-17

Walmart, cheated on the decedent with several fellow Walmart employees. In mid-August 2014, the decedent discovered some of these affairs and confronted [Appellant], resulting in numerous arguments.

On September 4, 2014, [Appellant] celebrated his birthday and, despite his promises to remain faithful, he had sex with another woman. Two days later[,] on September 6, 2014, the decedent discovered [Appellant]’s infidelity through text messages sent to his phone and confronted him. During the ensuing argument, the decedent broke [Appellant]’s cell phone, scratched him with a steak knife, and threw a whiskey bottle at him. After the argument, while the decedent was alone in her bedroom, she fired [Appellant]’s .25 caliber Beretta pistol into the bedroom wall.

On September 8, 2014, [Appellant] inserted his own SIM card into the decedent’s phone and used it to exchange text messages with several women throughout the day. He later travelled to the Firing Lane gun store in South Philadelphia and attempted to sell his Beretta. After the store owner told [Appellant] that he did not want to purchase the firearm, [Appellant] returned home and placed the Beretta on a computer desk in an upstairs room.

On the evening of September 8, 2014, [Appellant] and his brother, Robert Jackson Jr., were watching Monday Night Football in Jackson’s home at 411 Washington Avenue, located across a small parking lot from [Appellant]’s home. At approximately 9:15 p.m., Jackson left his home to drive his wife home from work. At 9:17 p.m., [Appellant] used Jackson’s phone to call the decedent, who quickly hung up on him.

Immediately after the phone call, [Appellant] walked home to 987 South 5th Street and confronted the decedent. Upon [Appellant]’s arrival, the decedent revealed that she had seen the text messages [Appellant] sent through her phone, and admonished him because he “keep[s] texting those fucking girls.” Despite it being past his bedtime on a school night, [Appellant] immediately ran upstairs and ordered Johnson Jr. to get out of bed and run to Jackson’s house. After Johnson Jr. left, the decedent showed [Appellant] a photo she had discovered of him holding an infant he fathered with another

-2- J-S29029-17

woman. The decedent did not know the baby existed until [Appellant] inadvertently downloaded it onto her phone.

Confronted with this evidence, [Appellant] again ran upstairs, retrieved his .25 caliber Beretta pistol, and returned downstairs to the living room, gun in hand. [Appellant] then slammed the pistol on the TV stand and warned the decedent not to “talk to me like that now,” acknowledging the pistol. As the argument continued, [Appellant] grabbed the pistol, pointed it at the decedent, and fired six times.

As the decedent lay bleeding on the living room floor, instead of calling for medical help, [Appellant] called his brother over to 987 South 5th Street. Jackson arrived at [Appellant’s] home to discover the decedent lying face up with her eyes twitching, and immediately called 911. Moments later, Police Officers Nicholas Polini, Confesor Nieves, and Martin Berkery arrived at the scene, observed the severity of the decedent’s injuries, and immediately transported the decedent in a police van to Jefferson Hospital, where she expired.

As the officers investigated his home, [Appellant] fled and walked to a nearby 7-Eleven convenience store and purchased two containers of NyQuil. [Appellant] ingested the NyQuil in an alleged suicide attempt, but returned to Jackson’s home the morning of September 9, 2014, where police arrested him. After his arrest, [Appellant] gave a statement to police wherein he indicated that the decedent held the gun during the argument, that he snatched it from her, and fired between four and five times.

Officer Polini recovered [Appellant]’s Beretta in the living room and discovered six live rounds in the magazine and one in the chamber. Officer Terry Tull of the Crime Scene Unit discovered six Fired Cartridge Casings (“FCCs”), four fired projectiles, and two unfired live rounds in the living room and forwarded them to the ballistics unit. Tull further took three DNA swabs from the handgun and submitted them to the criminalistics laboratory.

Officer Robert Stott, a ballistician with the Philadelphia Firearms Unit and an expert in ballistics identification, inspected the recovered Beretta, the FCCs, and the four projectiles, observed a six right twist identification marker on each

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projectile, and determined that each projectile was fired from [Appellant]’s Beretta. Officer Stott further concluded that each of the FCCs were fired from [Appellant]’s firearm. At trial, Officer Stott testified that the Beretta was semi-automatic and in working condition, requiring the shooter to pull the trigger once for each round expended. A shooter would have to apply five- and-one-half pounds of force to pull the trigger of the Beretta, and the recovered firearm had a maximum capacity of nine rounds, indicating that the shooter had reloaded the weapon in the time between the incident and the weapon’s recovery.

According to Philadelphia Deputy Medical Examiner Dr. Albert Chu, an expert in forensic pathology, the decedent suffered six distinct gunshot wounds, including two penetrating, fatal wounds to the back of her head, two non-fatal wounds to the left forearm, a non-fatal wound to the right forearm, and a graze wound to the left shoulder. One penetrating, fatal wound to the back of the decedent’s head travelled through the victim’s skull and brain back to front, left to right, and slightly upward, coming to rest near the decedent’s right ear. The decedent’s other head wound entered the neck near the base of the skull, fractured the first cervical vertebra, and was recovered on the right side of the decedent’s back, near the lower neck. Dr. Chu characterized the second wound as immediately fatal, as the projectile struck the part of the spinal cord that controlled the decedent’s breathing and heartbeat. Each of the decedent’s wounds was consistent with shots fired while the decedent’s back faced the shooter. Dr. Chu concluded, to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, that the manner of death was homicide caused by multiple gunshot wounds.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Fiebiger
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Com. v. Johnson, M., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-johnson-m-pasuperct-2017.