Com. v. Nealy, D.

2025 Pa. Super. 55
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 10, 2025
Docket303 MDA 2024
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Pa. Super. 55 (Com. v. Nealy, D.) 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. Nealy, D., 2025 Pa. Super. 55 (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-S01029-25 2025 PA Super 55

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : DAVID ANDREW NEALY : : Appellant : No. 303 MDA 2024

Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered February 23, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-40-CR-0004591-2017

BEFORE: NICHOLS, J., KING, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*

OPINION BY KING, J.: FILED: MARCH 10, 2025

Appellant, David Andrew Nealy, appeals from the order entered in the

Luzerne County Court of Common Pleas, which denied his first petition filed

pursuant to the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”).1 We affirm.

This Court has previously set forth the relevant facts of this case as

follows:

On the night of October 12, 2013, [Appellant] and Roberto Battle drove together to Outsiders bar in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, in a silver 2005 Mercedes C230 sedan that [Appellant] had borrowed from Michael Goodrich. As the two men entered the bar, security overheard [Appellant] introduce Battle as his “shooter.” Multiple staff and patrons of the bar observed [Appellant] and Battle in the bar. As the evening progressed, Battle fought with another patron of the bar, and was evicted by security. [Appellant] left the bar shortly thereafter, the two men departed together in the silver Mercedes, and proceeded to the residence of Shakim ____________________________________________

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.

1 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 9541-9546. J-S01029-25

Varick and Jessica Fox. Varick grew up with [Appellant] and Battle, and Battle occasionally stayed at Varick’s residence. Battle knew where Varick stored a Keltec handgun in his home. Battle entered the residence and removed Varick’s Keltec handgun, loaded with Hornady Zombie 9mm ammunition, then returned to [Appellant] in the waiting Mercedes. Shortly after 2:00 a.m., [Appellant] and Battle drove back to Outsiders.

The victim, Michael Onley, was in Outsiders on the evening of October 12, 2013, taking promotional photographs for the bar. Onley had several friends on the Outsiders security staff, and was known to them and other patrons for his work as a local DJ. When the bar closed, Onley exited the building with patrons and staff, but lingered at the door where security typically congregated after they made a final patrol of the parking lot. As security was returning to the bar, [Appellant] and Battle drove past on Pennsylvania Avenue, and Battle fired multiple shots out of the passenger side window of the Mercedes into the parking lot and building. Dalair Edwards and Prince Rodriguez, bar security, heard gunshots and saw muzzle flashes coming from the passing silver sedan. Rodriguez, who testified that he could see the car clearly, identified it as the one in which [Appellant] and Battle left the club earlier. Security footage shows a passing car with muzzle flashes coming from the passenger window. When Edwards and Rodriguez returned to the bar entrance, they saw the victim lying on the ground with a gunshot wound to his head. Damien Pitters, a club patron in the parking lot when the shots were fired, saw the victim fall from a chair by the bar’s door. Pitters, an army combat medic, moved to help, but despite efforts to revive the victim, he died of the gunshot wound.

Following the shooting, [Appellant] and Battle drove together to the home of Jamie Compton, where several people were gathered. While there, the group learned that the victim had been shot. In response to this news, Battle laughed and said that he had “shot the place up.” After leaving Compton’s residence, [Appellant] and Battle returned together to Shakim Varick’s residence sometime between 3:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m., where they encountered Varick and Jessica Fox. …Battle told Varick that [they] “did a drive-by” on Pennsylvania Avenue, and admitted that he

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had used Varick’s gun. Upon learning this, Varick checked and saw that the gun was no longer in the nightstand. Two days later, Battle returned the gun to Varick, empty of bullets. [Appellant] did not deny Battle’s statement.

[Appellant], when testifying on his own behalf, denied knowing that Battle had a gun and intended to fire shots into Outsider’s parking lot as staff and patrons exited the bar, but [Appellant] admitted to hearing those shots being fired and to abandoning the borrowed silver Mercedes after learning that the victim had been killed. Additionally, although [Appellant] expressed his remorse for the victim’s death by the time the jury trial occurred, [Appellant] had not aided in the investigation of the crime by divulging to the police his knowledge of the night’s events, or Battle’s identity as the shooter.

Commonwealth v. Nealy, No. 1021 MDA 2019, unpublished memorandum

at 1-3 (Pa.Super. filed Nov. 17, 2020), appeal denied, 666 Pa. 284, 252 A.3d

592 (2021) (quoting Trial Court Opinion, 12/10/19, at 6-8).

Procedurally:

A joint jury trial commenced on December 11, 2018, and, on December 17, 2018, the jury found both [Appellant] and Battle guilty of first-degree murder and criminal conspiracy. On January 31, 2019, the trial court sentenced [Appellant] to a mandatory life sentence on the first-degree murder conviction, and a consecutive seventeen to forty-year term of imprisonment on the conspiracy conviction. [Appellant] filed a timely post-sentence motion in which he challenged the sufficiency and the weight of the evidence supporting his convictions. The trial court denied [Appellant’s] post- sentence motion on June 4, 2019. …

Id. at 3. This Court affirmed Appellant’s judgment of sentence on November

17, 2020, and our Supreme Court denied allowance of appeal on April 13,

2021. See id.

On May 27, 2022, Appellant timely filed a pro se PCRA petition. The

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court appointed counsel, who filed a supplemental PCRA petition on May 9,

2023. The court held a PCRA hearing on November 30, 2023, after which the

court took the matter under advisement. On February 23, 2024, the court

denied PCRA relief. Appellant timely filed a notice of appeal on February 29,

2024. On March 1, 2024, the court ordered Appellant to file a concise

statement of errors complained of on appeal per Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b), and

Appellant timely complied on March 8, 2024.

Appellant raises one issue for our review:

Whether the PCRA Court erred by holding Trial Counsel was not ineffective for failing to object to or file motions in limine to prevent the admission of out of court statements from a non-testifying codefendant during trial that violated [Appellant’s] rights to Confrontation under the Pennsylvania and Federal constitutions?

(Appellant’s Brief at 4).

“Our standard of review of [an] order granting or denying relief under

the PCRA calls upon us to determine whether the determination of the PCRA

court is supported by the evidence of record and is free of legal error.”

Commonwealth v. Parker, 249 A.3d 590, 594 (Pa.Super. 2021) (quoting

Commonwealth v. Barndt, 74 A.3d 185, 191-92 (Pa.Super. 2013)). “The

PCRA court’s factual findings are binding if the record supports them, and we

review the court’s legal conclusions de novo.” Commonwealth v. Prater,

256 A.3d 1274, 1282 (Pa.Super. 2021), appeal denied, ___ Pa. ___, 268 A.3d

386 (2021). Further, where the PCRA court makes credibility determinations,

we are bound by them if they are supported by the record. Commonwealth

-4- J-S01029-25

v. Mojica, 242 A.3d 949 (Pa.Super. 2020), appeal denied, 666 Pa. 290, 252

A.3d 595 (2021).

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