Com. v. Peters, A.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 30, 2018
Docket2176 EDA 2015
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Peters, A. (Com. v. Peters, A.) 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. Peters, A., (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

J. S15036/17

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION – SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA v. : : ALANAH F.F. PETERS, : No. 2176 EDA 2015 : Appellant :

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence, June 2, 2015, in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No. CP-51-CR-0001270-2012

BEFORE: BOWES, J., DUBOW, J. AND FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.

MEMORANDUM BY FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.: FILED JANUARY 30, 2018

Alanah F.F. Peters appeals from the judgment of sentence entered in

the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County after a jury convicted her

of attempted murder, aggravated assault, robbery, conspiracy to commit

murder, possession of an instrument of crime, recklessly endangering

another person, firearms not to be carried without a license, and carrying

firearms on public streets or public property in Philadelphia.1 The trial court

imposed an aggregate sentence of 13 to 30 years of imprisonment. We

affirm.

The trial court set forth the following factual history gleaned from

appellant’s jury trial:

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 901(a), 2702(a), 3701(a)(1)(ii), 903, 907(a), 2705, 6106(a)(1), and 6108, respectively. J. S15036/17

[The] events began on August 17, 2011, when uniformed Philadelphia Police Lieutenant Steffan Gallagher responded to a radio call for a person screaming at an apartment building located at 8836 Cottage Street in Northeast Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Upon arriving at this second floor of the reported address, Lieutenant Gallagher saw the victim, Jesse Hicks, suffering from a gunshot wound to his face and other critical injuries alone inside the bedroom of this apartment. Mr. Hicks was bleeding profusely from his face and chest and wearing only a sleeveless T-shirt and underwear. Mr. Hicks immediately informed Lieutenant Gallagher that he had been brutally beaten, shot in the mouth and robbed by two men of his cash and clothes inside his bedroom after his girlfriend, [appellant], had permitted the perpetrators to enter his single bedroom apartment. Lieutenant Gallagher testified that he had observed the bedroom where he had found the victim to be in complete disarray. He observed broken furniture including an open safe and blood covered papers strewn across the floor. Lieutenant Gallagher estimated that the distance from [the] victim’s bedroom was 15 feet to the single apartment entrance located on the second floor of the building.

Lieutenant Gallagher further stated that he had observed [appellant] standing near the downstairs apartment or outside the building upon his arrival. At the scene, Lieutenant Gallagher eventually convinced Mr. Hicks to seek emergency treatment for his gunshot wounds, other injuries and heart disease related difficulties and transported him to Aria Torresdale Hospital. During his initial investigation at the scene, Mr. Hicks informed the responding police officers that two males knocked on the door of the property, and were let in by [appellant]. Mr. Hicks further communicated his belief to law enforcement during the transportation to the hospital that he was set up to be robbed and shot by [appellant, his girlfriend].

-2- J. S15036/17

Mr. Hicks explained that he and [appellant] had been arguing over money and her amorous activities with other men. He said that he had been upset because [appellant] continued to whisper or text on her cellphone through the night with other men as they argued. He said that shortly after [appellant’s] suspicious telephone conversations, there was a knock at the apartment door. He told the officer that [appellant] let the two males into the apartment, who threatened, beat, shot and robbed him while [appellant] stood near and directed the men to check his pockets as they rifled through his belongings, shot him in the mouth and stripped him of his pants. [Appellant’s] three year old son was present in the apartment during this violent episode.

Jesse Hicks’s trial testimony corroborated and supplemented Lieutenant Gallagher’s accounts to the jury of that fateful evening. Mr. Hicks credibly recalled that prior to the attack around 1:00 a.m. on August 17, 2011, he and [appellant] had been involved in a volatile paramour relationship. They had been continually arguing because [Jesse] Hicks threatened to stop his financial support of [appellant] and members of her family. He had become resentful of [appellant’s] increasing contact and texting of other men throughout the night. Mr. Hicks recalled that he told [appellant] that he was tired of arguing and that he was going to bed. [Appellant] continued to communicate on the cellular telephone and yelled out to him that he was going “to get it.”

[Jesse] Hicks testified that a few minutes after he went to his bedroom, [appellant] yelled up to him that his friend Henry Houston, also known as Tupac, was at the apartment door. Mr. Hicks testified that he had been confused because Henry Houston had also been at the house that day, but he left earlier in the night well before any disputes arose with [appellant]. Because [appellant] insisted that he had a friend at the door, [Jesse] Hicks went to the living room to see who was knocking.

-3- J. S15036/17

When Mr. Hicks entered the living room, he immediately noticed that the front door to his apartment was widely opened. He testified that this was odd to him because he had constantly kept a deadlock bolt on the front door. The only method for anyone to gain access, was for someone on the inside of the apartment to unlock the deadbolt and open the door. He deduced that [appellant] was the only person who could have successfully unlocked the deadbolt and opened the door. [Appellant] at a later point in the trial corroborated this data when she admitted both in her statement to the Detective and during her testimony that she had permitted the perpetrators to enter [Mr.] Hicks’s apartment by unlocking and opening the front door.

At the same time he noticed the open door, [Jesse] Hicks turned to see two men standing with [appellant] in his kitchen. When he saw one [of] the two males carrying a gun in his hand, he ran to his bedroom with this gunman in fresh pursuit. As Mr. Hicks attempted to shut his bedroom door, it split open and the second male without an observable gun forcefully entered his room followed by the gunman. Mr. Hicks stated this unarmed man began to ransack his furniture room and closet, and repeatedly demanded for him to tell him where he had his money stashed.

Mr. Hicks testified that the gunman also assisted the other male in ransacking his apartment and harming him. He stated that after apparently not locating enough money, the gunman shot him directly into his mouth in his bedroom and hit him repeatedly. Mr. Hicks further testified that as this was occurring[, appellant] directed the assailants to check [Jesse’s] pockets. Mr. Hicks noticed that throughout this attack his girlfriend simply stood by acting as if a shooting did not occur. He later overheard [appellant] try to convince the frightened neighbors in the downstairs apartment to tell responding police that she had not been present for the robbery and shooting.

-4- J. S15036/17

Mr. Hicks distinctly recalled that [appellant] was the only person he had informed that he had been keeping large amounts of cash that night. Mr. Hicks testified that shortly before the robbery, he and [appellant] had spoken about her father’s financial misfortune and that Mr. Hicks had roughly $700.00 in cash in his apartment intended for [appellant’s] father.

[Mr. Hicks] vividly recollected that while he was being brutally beaten by both males, [appellant] told them that the money was in his pocket.

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Com. v. Peters, A., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-peters-a-pasuperct-2018.