Com. v. Poole, D.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 10, 2017
DocketCom. v. Poole, D. No. 1159 WDA 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Poole, D. (Com. v. Poole, 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. Poole, D., (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

J-S35009-17

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

DETRICK DARNELL POOLE

Appellant No. 1159 WDA 2016

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence June 9, 2016 In the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-25-CR-0001223-2015

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

MEMORANDUM BY LAZARUS, J.: FILED AUGUST 10, 2017

Detrick Darnell Poole appeals from the judgment of sentence,1 entered

in the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County, following the denial of his

post-sentence motion. In 2016, Poole was convicted by a jury of receiving

stolen property (RSP),2 possession of drug paraphernalia,3 possession with

____________________________________________

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. 1 Although Poole filed his notice of appeal from the July 5, 2016 order denying his post-sentence motions, we have amended the caption to reflect that the appeal is technically taken from the judgment of sentence. See Commonwealth v. Chamberlain, 658 A.2d 395 (Pa. Super. 1995) (order denying post-sentence motion acts to finalize judgment of sentence; thus, appeal is taken from judgment of sentence, not order denying post-sentence motion). 2 18 Pa.C.S.§ 3925(A). 3 35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(32). J-S35009-17

intent to deliver4 and simple possession.5 After careful review, we vacate

Poole’s judgment of sentence on the RSP conviction 6 and remand for

resentencing.

The trial court set forth the facts of the case as follows:

The convictions arose from eyewitness testimony that on March 21, 2015, near 10th and Raspberry Streets in Erie, Pennsylvania, [Poole] was in an altercation outside his upstairs apartment at 1110 Raspberry Street; [Poole] hurriedly entered the residence, and returned outside brandishing an AK[-]47 rifle; [Poole] fired numerous shots in the air with the weapon and ran back into the residence; [Poole] exited the residence once again, this time without the weapon, got into a vehicle and drove away, heading north on Raspberry Street.

City of Erie Police were dispatched to the area based upon a call about a domestic incident, and shots fired in the air. When Officer James Cousins arrived, he observed approximately one dozen people standing in the road, very excited and yelling. They indicated to the officer the shooter had just left the residence and was headed in a silver vehicle across 11th Street. The officer quickly looked down 11th [S]treet and spotted a silver vehicle traveling down the street. The officer proceeded after the vehicle, activating the lights and sirens on the patrol vehicle. Initially, [Poole] did not slow his vehicle, and the officer increased his speed to keep up with [Poole]. When [Poole] finally pulled over, Officer Cousins conducted a felony stop. He approached the vehicle with his weapon drawn and ordered [Poole] to show his hands out the window. Instead of heeding the officer’s commands, [Poole] opened the door and began to exit the vehicle. The officer repeatedly ordered [Poole] to remain in the vehicle and show his hands. Eventually, [Poole] ____________________________________________

4 35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(30). 5 35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(16). 6 All other judgments of sentence on Poole’s remaining convictions are affirmed.

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complied. Officer Cousins next directed [Poole] to exit the vehicle and go to the ground. [Poole] refused, and instead re- entered the vehicle. When [Poole] finally exited the vehicle, despite further repeated orders, he refused to go to the ground. Once Officer Cousins enlisted the assistance of a passerby, [Poole] became more compliant, and he was arrested.

That evening, pursuant to a search warrant, five police officers entered [Poole’s] residence and conducted a search. The police found a 9 mm handgun, reported as stolen, [in the drawer of]7 an entertainment center in the residence. An AK[-]47 rifle was found under the mattress of a child’s bedroom. The police found powder cocaine and crack cocaine in the residence. Police also recovered clear sandwich-style plastic bags and a spoon with white powdery residue on it, and ties for knotting off the bags. Based upon the quantity of the cocaine recovered from the residence, and the absence of evidence of means to ingest cocaine, other than a spoon that was found, the police concluded the cocaine was possessed with the intent to deliver or sell. Detective Michael Chodubski, sergeant of the vice and narcotics division of the City of Erie Police Department and an expert in determining whether illicit drugs are used for consumption or delivery, testified to the violent nature of the drug-dealing business; the practice of drug dealers in using firearms to protect their proceeds and inventory; and his experience that firearms and drug-dealing go hand-in-hand.

[Poole’s] mail was found at the residence, indicating [Poole] lived there. In a recorded telephone conversation between [Poole] and his mother on March 22, 2015, [Poole] acknowledged the residence was his. [Poole] also told his mother, “I got caught with an AK[-]47 and a nine, the nine Hi- point.”

William Miller identified the 9mm handgun as one of two guns that were stolen from his vehicle on July 14, 2014, while the

7 While the trial court’s opinion indicates the 9mm was found “on an entertainment center,” Trial Court Opinion, 10/31/16, at 2 (emphasis added), at trial Officer Cheryl Frey testified that she found the gun “in a drawer that [she] pulled out” in the entertainment center. N.T. Jury Trial, 3/15/16, at 40.

-3- J-S35009-17

vehicle was parked outside a convenience store at 10th and French Streets in the City of Erie.

On July 23, 2015, [Poole] filed an Omnibus Pre-Trial Motion seeking suppression of evidence seized from the residence at 1110 Raspberry Street, Apartment No. 2, Upstairs, including crack cocaine and the AK[-]47 Assault Rifle. [Poole] asserted the search warrant was unconstitutional and overbroad, and the identity and reliability of the eyewitnesses who provided information to the police officers was not established. The parties submitted briefs, and a hearing on the suppression motion was held before the Honorable Shad Connelly, then President Judge, in August, 2015. . . . On December 23, 2016, Judge Connelly denied [Poole’s] Omnibus Pre-Trial Motion to Suppress Evidence.

Trial Court Opinion, 10/31/16, at 1-4.

A two-day jury trial was held on March 15-16, 2016. At the close of

the Commonwealth’s case, the Commonwealth withdrew Count 1

(possession of a firearm)8 and amended Count 4 (possession of a controlled

substance) to a misdemeanor offense. Poole moved for a judgment of

acquittal on the RSP charge; the court denied the motion. Poole was found

guilty of the above-mentioned crimes and, on June 9, 2016, was sentenced

to an aggregate term of 11½ months to 23 months of incarceration.9 Poole

8 On January 8, 2016, the Court severed the charge at Count One – Persons Not to Possess, Use, Manufacture, Control, Sell or Transfer Firearms (9 mm handgun), from the remaining charges. 9 Poole was sentenced on each count as follows: RSP - count 2 (11½ to 23 months’ incarceration, followed by 5 years of probation); possession with intent to deliver – count 3 (6 months to 23 months’ incarceration concurrent to count 2); possession of a controlled substance – count 4 (1 year of probation consecutive to counts 2 and 3); and possession of drug paraphernalia – count 5 (1 year of probation, concurrent to count 4).

-4- J-S35009-17

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