Com. v. Ledford, W.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 5, 2014
Docket966 MDA 2013
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Ledford, W. (Com. v. Ledford, 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. Ledford, W., (Pa. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

J-S07029-14

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

WILLIAM TERRY LEDFORD

Appellant No. 966 MDA 2013

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence of December 6, 2012 In the Court of Common Pleas of Huntingdon County Criminal Division at No.: CP-31-CR-0000260-2011

BEFORE: MUNDY, J., WECHT, J., and FITZGERALD, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY WECHT, J.: FILED AUGUST 05, 2014

William Ledford appeals his December 6, 2012 judgment of sentence.

We vacate the judgment of sentence and remand for a new trial.

On September 25, 2012, following a jury trial, Ledford was convicted

of aggravated assault1 2

for a shooting incident that occurred on May 11, 2011 in Huntingdon

-sentence

motions, the trial court provided the following summary of the facts

____________________________________________

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. 1 18 Pa.C.S. § 2702(a)(1). The jury acquitted Ledford of criminal attempt criminal homicide, 18 Pa.C.S. §§ 901, 2501. 2 18 Pa.C.S. § 2705. J-S07029-14

The event giving rise to this prosecution occurred in the late afternoon of May 11, 2011, at an apartment building at 1211 Mifflin Street, Huntingdon, Pennsylvania.

Patrolman Adam McBride, a four (4)[-]year veteran of the Huntingdon Borough Police Department, testified [that] he was working the 5:00 p.m. to 3:00 a.m. shift that day and was dispatched to investigate gunshots at the 1211 address. The officer proceeded to the address and parked his patrol car on Mifflin Street in front of 1211, an apartment building owned by

dispatch that he had arrived, [Ledford] appeared at the window ride described [Ledford] as

told him he was referring to Jeremiah Shoop who throughout the McBride [testified that] he was familiar not only with [Ledford] but also Miah Shoop.

McBride testified [that] he followed Ledford into the building where Ledford showed him a door that led downstairs. [Ledford] told [Officer McBride that] Shoop was downstairs. Thinking it

asked if there was another way to get in. Ledford, he said, took him around the side of the house and showed him a door and stairway to the basement.

Security personnel from nearby Juniata College arrived and backed up Officer McBride as he entered the building with gun drawn.

Going down the stairs, Officer McBride said he immediately smelled gun powder. To the right of the stairway the officer said he saw a door with a large number of bullet holes exiting out into the hallway. There was, he said, a belt through the doorknob hole securing the door.

Officer McBride made entry into the basement apartment. He immediately encountered Rex Cuff and Dustin Scott. Also to his right, he saw Josh Lemin lying on the floor with a wound that was bleeding. [Officer] McBride knew all these young men. [Ledford], who was behind [Officer] McBride, ran to Lemin. Officer McBride cleared all the other rooms to make certain [that] Miah Shoop was not there since he had every reason to believe Mr. Shoop, whom he believed to be the shooter, was still there.

-2- J-S07029-14

[Officer] McBride retrieved his personal trauma kit from his patrol car and began to administer first aid to Lemin. Soon thereafter EMS arrived and took over treatment of Lemin.

clothing. Lemin, he said, was screaming in pain.

McBride reported that he saw a Ju hand. He picked it up, [] cleared it and set it aside. Since he observed a lot of shell casings in different calibers on the floor, he asked [Ledford] if there were other weapons. Ledford retrieved two (2) from a back bedroom. The officer cleared both weapons and found no rounds. The weapons in the apartment were 1) a Tarus Judge model revolver; 2) a Sportsman 12 auto 12[-]gauge shotgun; and 3) a Sega SKS style .223 semi- automatic rifle with scope.

Officer McBride said he questioned [Ledford] and was told [that] Miah Shoop was responsible for the scene he found that afternoon. [Ledford] related that Mr. Shoop shot and they shot back.

EMS removed Lemin and Officer McBride moved all the players outside where other Huntingdon Borough officers were waiting. Thereafter, McBride assisted in the collection of evidence.

John C. Stevens, a twenty-seven (27)[-]year veteran of the Huntington Borough Police Department, testified [that] he interviewed [Ledford] on May 11 at the police offices. He had known [Ledford] since he was ten (10) or eleven (11). Miranda rights were administered, and the statement was recorded and played at trial. It lasted an hour and provided listeners with an appreciation for the effects of bath salts on users.

On May 11[, Ledford] related that he was living in the small basement apartment at 1211 Mifflin Street. His roommate was Josh Lemin. His best friend, Dustin Scott, lived several doors further up Mifflin Street.

On the days leading to May 11, Ledford said that he and Scott were experimenting with bath salts. On May 11, the evidence in the case was unequivocal that all three (3) Ledford, Scott, Lemin were using the salts prior to the events which brought Officer McBride to the apartment. For reasons that are anything but clear, on May 11, [Ledford] and his friends were convinced

-3- J-S07029-14

that Miah Shoop and his friends were going to come to the apartment to take their bath salts by force. [Ledford] told Officer Steven to the assault the trio believed was imminent. Rex Cuff, a friend of all the players in this event, arrived late in the afternoon and involuntarily became a participant. No evidence indicated the use of bath salts by Cuff.

[Ledford] related a phone call from Shoop and his warning to

knew that they were going to try to get me tonight. I knew it in

[Ledford] said [that] they barricaded [themselves] inside the apartment by using belts to secure the knobless door. Rex, he said, started getting calls from Garrett Steele, and then, he said,

apartment), [Ledford] told Stevens [that] he saw two (2) guys climb out of a dark SUV and retrieve weapons from the back of the vehicle. He said he could hear Miah taunting him to come outside and the yanking on the door was becoming harder.

into the floor joists. [Scott], he said, fired a warning shot from the Judge.

Subsequently, Scott obtained the shotgun, and Lemin, the Judge revolver. The description of the subsequent shooting inside the apartment was difficult to understand[,] but when the shooting was over, Josh Lemin had been shot in his arm with the shotgun.

[Ledford] told Officer Stevens that the guns were all his, and that Scott and Lemin followed his orders that afternoon. He readily accepted responsibility for Josh [Lemin] getting shot but insisted that they had to defend themselves.

Jeremiah Shoop, 32, testified [that] he knew [Ledford] on May 11 since he was a friend of his friend, Dustin Scott. He acknowledged knowing Josh Lemin and Rex Cuff as well. He never, he said, had a problem with any of these guys until that day.

[Shoop testified that, on May 11, he had] multiple phone conversations with Dustin [Scott]. At one point, he said he talked to [Ledford]. They told him, he said, to come down. It seemed, he said, like he was being goaded into going to 1211.

-4- J-S07029-14

He went to 1211. He testified [that] he wanted to get to the bottom of it. He took a friend but no weapons. In fact, he denied owning any guns. He knew [that] they had weapons. He

to find out what the problem was.

Shoop testified [that] he never entered the building but yelled down the steps. There was a lot of yelling back and forth, he said, but no shooting. This dialogue lasted [] five (5) minutes[,] after which he left and went home.

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Com. v. Ledford, W., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-ledford-w-pasuperct-2014.