J-A23016-25
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : JEFFERY R. RANKER : : Appellant : No. 1162 WDA 2024
Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered August 30, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of Fayette County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-26-CR-0000761-2019
BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J.E., McLAUGHLIN, J., and BENDER, P.J.E.
MEMORANDUM BY BENDER, P.J.E.: FILED: April 20, 2026
Jeffery R. Ranker (“Appellant”) appeals from the order denying relief
under the Post-Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”)1. We conclude that Appellant
failed to meet his burden of pleading and proving that his counsel lacked a
reasonable strategic basis for declining to object to the guilty plea colloquy,
or that he was prejudiced by this failure. We therefore affirm.
I.
On October 10, 2018, Appellant was driving a vehicle that struck and
killed a motorcyclist waiting at a red light. The Commonwealth filed a criminal
information on May 14, 2019, charging Appellant with a dozen crimes,
including third-degree murder, homicide by vehicle while driving under the
influence (“DUI”), and homicide by vehicle. Of note, the criminal information
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1 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-9546. J-A23016-25
alleged the following substances were present in Appellant’s blood:
“Amphetamine, Buprenorphine-Free, and Norbuprenorphine-Free.” See
Criminal Information, 5/14/19. On June 17, 2019, Marco Sylvania, Esq., and
Christopher Nakles, Esq., entered their appearances on Appellant’s behalf.
Appellant filed a pre-trial omnibus motion, which was scheduled for a hearing
on December 17, 2019, and the parties otherwise prepared for trial. On
December 2, 2019, the trial court entered an order scheduling “a hearing to
consider [Appellant’s] entry of a plea of guilty” to take place on December 10,
2019. Order, 12/2/19. On that date, Appellant and the assistant district
attorney signed a written document setting forth the terms of the plea bargain.
Appellant agreed to plead guilty to eleven of the twelve charges, with the
Commonwealth withdrawing a summary traffic offense. The parties agreed to
an aggregate sentence of 11 to 22 years of incarceration.
The primary issue in this case concerns the adequacy of the trial court’s
oral colloquy with respect to the facts supporting Appellant’s plea to one of
those eleven charges, third-degree murder. The trial court set forth the
essential allegation as follows: “On the 10th of October, 2018, it’s alleged
that … you were under the influence of alcohol or drugs … at that time and
that you struck the motorcycle … which [the victim] was operating.” N.T.
Guilty Plea, 12/10/19, at 7. Appellant agreed with this basic summary, and
the trial court then asked what was in his system that day.
THE COURT: What was it that you had taken alcohol, drugs?
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[APPELLANT]: It has minimal side[] effects, the Suboxone was laying on the kitchen counter and I didn't want the dog getting it. And other than that --
THE COURT: You had taken Suboxone that morning?
[APPELLANT]: Yes.
THE COURT: There is lab report that indicates amphetamine, epinephrine and norepinephrine and I am not sure what those are --
[APPELLANT]: It's in Adderall.
THE COURT: Suboxone?
[APPELLANT]: It's in Adderall. I took it after the accident happened. Working six, six, seven days and put my mom in a home, already there, and was working to keep her there.
Id. at 7-8.
Neither attorney clarified whether Appellant’s comments were correct.
However, the Commonwealth added, “there is, also, a report of cocaine in his
system. Fentanyl and cannabis and epinephrine and benzodiazepine and
barbiturates and amphetamines.” Id. Attorney Sylvania interjected: “Your
Honor, just for the record, we’re not in possession of the report that shows
that there was cocaine in my client’s system.” Id. The court noted that
cocaine was “not in the information under the DUI.” Id. at 8-9. The
Commonwealth stated that the reports were “in the discovery.” Id. at 9. The
Commonwealth then offered the following summary to support Appellant’s
plea to the eleven counts.
Judge, at the time of the incident [the victim] was stopped at the red light on his scooter and it was approximately 6:00 o’clock in the morning and [Appellant] came up behind him and at sixty-three
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miles per hour and hit him … and pushed him down the road approximately one hundred ninety-two feet. Additionally, there are two witnesses that had testified at the preliminary hearing and those two witnesses indicated that they saw or were present when it happened and that [Appellant] said to one of them, he didn’t even know what happened. [“]What happened? I don’t know what is going on.[”] So he was extremely under the influence of drugs and alcohol.
Id.
Following a brief exchange, the trial court asked, “[t]he malice … for the
third degree is coming from the ingestion of Suboxone and driving the vehicle
and driving it at a speed greater than the speed limit?” Id. at 10. The
Commonwealth agreed, and added, “[i]f we would go to trial, what I would do
is amend the information to include that report,” presumably referencing the
report reflecting the presence of additional drugs in Appellant’s blood. Id. at
10-11. The Commonwealth also indicated that Appellant’s “blood alcohol
content was … point two zero nine, I believe.” Id. at 11. Attorney Sylvania
noted in response that the criminal information only charged a DUI based on
“drugs … not alcohol.” Id.
The trial court accepted the plea and imposed the agreed-upon
sentence. Appellant did not file post-sentence motions or a notice of appeal.
II.
On January 28, 2020, Appellant filed a timely pro se PCRA motion,
arguing that his plea counsel was ineffective. Notably, Appellant did not assert
that his attorneys ineffectively recommended that he accept the plea.
Instead, he presented a narrower claim: “[Plea] counsel provided ineffective
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assistance by allowing [Appellant] to plead guilty to murder of the third degree
when the facts did not support the charge.” Amended PCRA Petition,
12/28/22, at unnumbered 5. Specifically, Appellant argued that “[c]ourts
have continuously found that a sufficient factual basis must be met before a
guilty plea can be accepted.” Id. at unnumbered 6. Citing Commonwealth
v. Flanagan, 854 A.2d 489, 500 (Pa. 2004), and Commonwealth v.
D’Collanfield, 805 A.2d 1244 (Pa. Super. 2002), Appellant interpreted these
cases to hold that “the failure of a factual basis equates to an unknowing entry
of the plea resulting in a manifest injustice requiring a withdrawal of the plea.”
Id. Appellant discussed caselaw explaining that the mens rea for third-degree
murder in vehicular DUI deaths requires proof of more than the fact the driver
was intoxicated, and argued that the factual summary at his guilty plea
colloquy failed to establish malice.
The PCRA court held an evidentiary hearing on June 25, 2024. Appellant
resisted attempts to expand the inquiry to all facts that the Commonwealth
might present at trial, instead arguing that the legal inquiry is confined to the
facts adduced at the guilty plea colloquy, specifically the trial court’s statement
that Appellant's ingestion of Suboxone formed the basis for establishing the
element of malice. The following exchange on direct examination of Attorney
Sylvania is illustrative:
Q. Right, at the time did you have a reasonable basis to plea [Appellant] out to [t]hird [d]egree [m]urder based upon the factual basis that was presented in this case?
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A. So, at the time I thought so. But reflecting on it, if those were the facts on the record which I reviewed it and those are the facts on record – review of the evidence presented with the [S]uboxone that was the lone drug in his system and nothing else on the record, I don’t know if that – and I don’t think that that’s enough … to prove malice.
Q. Do you agree that you had no reasonable basis to tell your client to plead guilty based upon the factual basis in this case?
A. I wouldn’t say that I had no reasonable basis. There’s a lot of discussions with [Appellant] and it was myself and also Chris Na[]kles who was another attorney on the case. We discussed in very [sic] detail with him over a long period of time, and this plea was essentially a conclusion of our discussions with [Appellant] and also with [the Commonwealth]. So, I believe that answers that question.
Q. You’d agree with me that based upon the whole [g]uilty [p]lea colloquy and summary of the facts that that’s not sufficient to prove malice for [t]hird [d]egree [m]urder?
N.T. PCRA Hearing, 6/25/24, at 13-14.
On cross-examination, the Commonwealth asked Attorney Sylvania
about the discovery he reviewed in connection with the plea negotiations.
Appellant objected, arguing that the only facts relevant to his PCRA claim
pertained to the facts established at the plea hearing.
[Appellant’s Counsel]: I object to this, Your Honor. I don’t think it’s relevant to the factual basis issue that’s being presented in this [c]ourt.
THE COURT: Here’s the question I have because you’re both tap dancing around this question . . . . is the PCRA limited to exactly what was stated on the record at the time of the plea or does his knowledge of the factual context of this accident come into play?
[Appellant’s Counsel]: I believe, Your Honor[,] it’s the factual basis. That’s what was raised. And if you look at the –
THE COURT: Okay, here’s why I’m asking that question . . . . if the DA or defense counsel intentionally or unintentionally
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withholds things that they know of, how does that effect the plea on a PCRA proceeding?
[Appellant’s Counsel]: It affects it because – it doesn’t affect it because the fact is, Judge, you’re bound by the record. It is the factual basis that it is required at the time of the guilty plea.
Id. at 18-19 (emphasis added).
Appellant also testified. The relevant testimony on direct examination
was cursory: “Q. If the record does not support the factual basis for malice,
would you have pled guilty to [t]hird [d]egree [m]urder? A. No sir.” Id. at
31.
The PCRA court denied relief, and Appellant filed a timely notice of
appeal and complied with the order to file a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement. The
PCRA court filed its responsive opinion and Appellant now raises one issue for
our review: “Whether trial counsel gave ineffective assistance by advising
Appellant to plead guilty to third-degree murder when the factual basis did
not support the element of malice[.]” Appellant’s Brief at 5.
III.
Appellant alleges ineffective assistance of counsel. The basic principles
are well-settled.
Counsel is presumed effective. To succeed on a claim asserting the ineffective assistance of counsel, as is raised here, a petitioner must rebut that presumption by pleading and proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, three elements: (1) the underlying claim has arguable merit; (2) counsel had no reasonable basis for his or her action or inaction; and (3) the petitioner suffered prejudice as a result of counsel’s action or inaction.
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Commonwealth v. Rizor, 304 A.3d 1034, 1051 (Pa. 2023) (citations
omitted). To establish prejudice, Appellant must show “a reasonable
probability that the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
Commonwealth v. Lesko, 15 A.3d 345, 417 (Pa. 2011).
Presently, Appellant defines the “proceeding” as the guilty plea colloquy
hearing. Consistent with his amended PCRA petition and his evidentiary
hearing arguments, Appellant’s brief presents his argument with reference to
the diminished record set forth at the plea, particularly the discussion
regarding Suboxone as the sole basis for supporting the element of malice.
Appellant argues that he has established arguable merit to his claim that the
limited factual record at the colloquy would not support his third-degree
murder conviction under relevant caselaw. See Appellant’s Brief at 23-40.
Accordingly, he submits that there was a basis to object to the colloquy. Next,
to satisfy the second prong, Appellant cites Attorney Sylvania’s testimony that
he had no strategic basis not to object. Id. at 43 (citing N.T. PCRA Hearing,
6/25/24, at 12). Finally, as to prejudice, he argues there is “a reasonable
probability that the outcome of Appellant’s case would have been different had
counsel not advised Appellant to plead guilty to third-degree murder,” and he
“would not have been convicted of third-degree murder as the facts do not
establish the requisite mens rea.” Id. at 45.
As context for our discussion, we briefly discuss the trial court’s duties
when deciding whether to accept a guilty plea. The trial court acts as a
bulwark, protecting both defendants and societal interests.
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This Court, like the Supreme Court of the United States, has recognized that the best and surest way to assure both that the defendant’s rights are protected and that the plea is validly taken is to make an adequate record at the plea hearing:
What is at stake for an accused facing death or imprisonment demands the utmost solicitude of which courts are capable in canvassing the matter with the accused to make sure he has a full understanding of what the plea connotes and of its consequence. When the judge discharges that function, he leaves a record adequate for any review that may be later sought and forestalls the spin-off of collateral proceedings that seek to probe murky memories.
Commonwealth v. Hines, 437 A.2d 1180, 1187 (Pa. 1981) (cleaned up).
Thus, “the law of this Commonwealth has long required that before a judge
may properly accept a plea of guilty, a colloquy with the defendant must
demonstrate that there is a factual basis for the plea and that the defendant
understands the nature and elements of the offense charged.” Id. at 1182.
Rule of Criminal Procedure 590 addresses the trial court’s role in
accepting a guilty plea, and the comment lists several topics that the judge
should address, including whether there is a factual basis for the plea. See
Pa.R.Crim.P. 590, cmt. As stated by our Supreme Court in Flanagan, “[t]he
salutary purposes of the requirement include protecting against the situation
that Flanagan claims has occurred here, namely, a defendant’s mistaken plea
to an offense that is not actually implicated by his conduct.” Id. at 500. This
is Appellant’s essential claim. See Appellant’s Brief at 19 (arguing that “trial
counsel advised Appellant to plead guilty to third-degree murder when the
factual basis did not support the element of malice”).
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We accept that the limited factual basis presented at the guilty plea
colloquy would not suffice to meet the elements of murder in the third degree.
Accordingly, we accept that Appellant has established arguable merit2 to his
claim of ineffective assistance based on the failure to object to the colloquy.
However, we conclude that Appellant has failed to meet his burden to plead
and prove the remaining two prongs required to establish ineffective
assistance of counsel.
Reasonable strategic basis
Appellant has framed his ineffective assistance of counsel claim solely
with respect to the guilty plea colloquy and thus argues that the defective plea
colloquy should have prompted an objection.
The flaw with this argument is that a successful objection to the colloquy
may have resulted in the rejection of the proposed plea bargain3 that counsel
had decided was favorable and which Appellant had agreed to accept. “Where
2 Notwithstanding this concession, Appellant’s complaint is that the guilty plea hearing failed to present adequate facts to support the element of malice, which is a mental state. Appellant was uniquely situated to confirm whether he acted with malice, “[a]s intent is a subjective frame of mind, it is of necessity difficult of direct proof.” Commonwealth v. Matthews, 870 A.2d 924, 929 (Pa. Super. 2005). Thus, the fact Appellant agreed he acted with malice is arguably not the type of “fact” that must be covered by the colloquy. See Commonwealth v. Watson, 835 A.2d 786, 797 (Pa. Super. 2003) (“By pleading guilty, Watson acknowledged the facts and the necessary intent, regardless of the Commonwealth’s ability to prove them and how it might do so.”).
3 Appellant’s argument ignores the fact that the Commonwealth may have simply presented additional facts if counsel had objected.
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counsel is able to negotiate a favorable plea bargain, and where the defendant
understands the bargain and is satisfied with and accepts it rather than go to
trial, the decision by counsel not to object to a defective guilty plea colloquy
will be deemed a reasonable one.” Commonwealth v. Fluharty, 632 A.2d
312, 318 (Pa. Super. 1993). The Fluharty Court’s point is logical: an attorney
definitionally has no strategic reason to object to a colloquy—and risk rejection
of the plea bargain and force a trial—if the attorney concluded that the plea
bargain is a favorable resolution for his client.4
Appellant’s options were not simply to object to the colloquy or not. His
actual choices were to accept the negotiated guilty plea or proceed to trial.
Appellant makes a compelling case that the third-degree murder conviction
would not withstand scrutiny on appeal if the facts presented to the jury were
limited to what was said at the plea. However, plea counsel had to consider
all potential evidence the Commonwealth could offer in deciding how to advise
Appellant on whether to accept the proposed plea offer.5 ____________________________________________
4 It is not clear that an attorney could object to a defective colloquy based on an allegation the facts are insufficient to justify a plea that the defendant wishes to take. “[T]he accused has the ultimate authority to make certain fundamental decisions regarding the case, as to whether to plead guilty, waive a jury, testify in his or her own behalf, or take an appeal[.]” Jones v. Barnes, 463 U.S. 745, 751 (1983). If we accepted Appellant’s theory, an attorney may unilaterally override a defendant’s desire to take a plea bargain if the prosecutor’s factual summary is inadequate.
5 For example, it is not clear how much alcohol was in Appellant’s blood, nor is it clear whether Appellant had cocaine in his system. As previously quoted, the Commonwealth stated at the guilty plea that there was a “report of cocaine (Footnote Continued Next Page)
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By attempting to restrict our analysis to the facts presented at the guilty
plea hearing, Appellant ignores that counsel’s advice to accept the plea was
obviously not based just on the summary of facts that the Commonwealth
offered at the hearing. Nor was that advice limited to whether the
Commonwealth could prove third-degree murder. The Commonwealth
charged Appellant with, among other crimes, homicide by vehicle while DUI,
which as graded carried a maximum penalty of ten years’ incarceration,
including a mandatory minimum sentence of three to six years for the death
of the victim. 75 Pa.C.S. § 3735(a)(1)(i); (a)(2). The Commonwealth also
charged Appellant with homicide by vehicle, which carries a maximum penalty
of seven years of incarceration. 75 Pa.C.S. § 3732(a).6 Appellant’s focus on
third-degree murder thus ignores the reality that he faced serious charges
even if the Commonwealth could not secure a guilty verdict for third-degree
murder. It is simply incorrect to presume that the third-degree murder charge
was the only consideration that affected Appellant’s decision to accept the
in [Appellant’s] system.” N.T. Guilty Plea, 12/10/23, at 17. Here, Appellant skirts that issue by noting that fact was simply alleged at his plea. “Despite the Commonwealth alleging cocaine, there was no evidence of [Appellant] having cocaine in his system.” Amended PCRA Petition, 12/28/22, at unnumbered 14. Of course, the failure to offer that evidence at the guilty plea does not mean that the Commonwealth would not ultimately offer such evidence at trial.
6 Because these two crimes do not merge, Appellant ran the risk the trial court would impose consecutive sentences. See Commonwealth v. Neupert, 684 A.2d 627, 629 (Pa. Super. 1996).
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plea. Based on the factual summary presented at the plea colloquy, the
Commonwealth had a strong case for those other charges.
We do not know to what extent counsel considered other factors in
making his recommendations to Appellant such as the possible sentence
Appellant might receive if the case proceeded to trial or whether additional
facts not presented at the colloquy could be proven. We do not know because
Appellant chose not to ask. Because “the decision by counsel not to object to
a defective guilty plea colloquy will be deemed a reasonable one” where
counsel “is able to negotiate a favorable plea bargain,” Appellant has failed to
satisfy his burden to show that counsel lacked a reasonable strategic basis for
objecting to the colloquy. Fluharty, 632 A.2d at 318.7
Prejudice
Finally, we alternatively conclude that Appellant failed to establish
prejudice, as the plea, notwithstanding any deficiency regarding its factual
basis, was nonetheless knowingly and voluntarily made. Therefore, even
accepting that our prejudice analysis is limited to the colloquy itself and not
7 We acknowledge that plea counsel testified that he had no strategic basis for not objecting to the colloquy. We do not find this to be dispositive. First, that concession was in response to Appellant’s theory that the inquiry was limited to the facts discussed at the guilty plea hearing. See N.T. PCRA Hearing, 6/25/24, at 13 (PCRA counsel repeatedly referencing “the factual basis that was presented in this case”). Second, counsel also testified that he “wouldn’t say that [he] had no reasonable basis” not to object to the colloquy, as “[t]here’s a lot of discussions” between himself, Appellant, and co-counsel. Id.
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the broader decision to plead guilty and accept the negotiated sentence, 8 we
would still affirm the order.
Appellant’s prejudice argument appears to be that the colloquy’s
absence of an adequate factual basis warrants relief per se. Appellant cites
Flanagan for the proposition that “the failure of a factual basis equates to an
unknowing entry of the plea resulting in a manifest injustice requiring a
withdrawal of the plea.” Appellant’s Brief at 21. Flanagan does not hold that
a plea must be deemed unknowing or involuntary based strictly on a factual
deficiency.
In Flanagan, Dennis Flanagan and George Yacob were charged with
robbing, beating, and killing James Redman. Flanagan, 854 A.2d at 490.
Flanagan gave a statement to police, “relat[ing] that he and Yacob planned a
non-fatal assault on Mr. Redman on account of Mr. Redman’s sexual
orientation and his having made advances toward Yacob.” Id. Flanagan’s
account largely blamed Yacob for the assault and murder.
8 Typically, where the claim is that trial counsel ineffectively advised the client to accept a guilty plea, the prejudice prong requires the defendant to “show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s errors, he would not have pleaded guilty and would have insisted on going to trial.” Commonwealth v. Rathfon, 899 A.2d 365, 370 (Pa. Super. 2006) (quoting Hill v. Lockhart, 474 U.S. 52, 59 (1985)).
Here, Appellant testified only that he would not have pled guilty to third- degree murder. N.T. PCRA Hearing, 6/25/24, at 31 (“Q. If the record does not support the factual basis for malice, would you have pled guilty to [t]hird [d]egree [m]urder? A. No sir.”). Appellant did not testify that he would have rejected the plea agreement and proceeded to trial on all charges.
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Flanagan ultimately entered a plea to murder generally, with the trial
court to determine the degree of guilt.9 “During the course of the colloquy,
however, the plea court committed two errors[.]” Id. at 493. First, the court
“failed to adduce the factual basis for the plea” and instead “merely alluded
to its basic familiarity with the circumstances underlying the plea.” Id.
Second, the court “erroneously advised Flanagan that accomplice theory
renders an accomplice liable for ‘any crimes committed by any other
accomplice regardless of whether a particular accomplice committed the
particular crime about which we are talking.’” Id.
Flangan filed a petition under the predecessor to the PCRA. Id.
Flanagan argued the court “erred in accepting his pleas, and his plea counsel
was ineffective for failing to object to the plea colloquy, based on, inter alia,
the absence of a factual predicate for the pleas and the errors and omissions
in the plea court’s descriptions of accomplice and co-conspirator liability[.]”
Id. at 496. The court granted Flanagan’s petition and we affirmed.
The Supreme Court granted allowance of appeal and upheld this Court’s
decision. The Court held that the colloquy was defective “by reason of both
an absence of a contemporaneous record of the factual basis for the plea and
the erroneous accomplice liability instruction.” Id. at 500. However, the ____________________________________________
9 Flanagan therefore is distinguishable, as the case does not involve a negotiated sentence. The trial court concluded that “counsel’s contention that he believed that it was in Flanagan’s best interests to plead guilty to avoid the death penalty [was] flawed, as Flanagan faced the same possibility of the receiving a death sentence after pleading guilty that he did prior to the entry of his plea.” Flanagan, 854 A.2d at 497.
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Court did not hold that these defects required reversal per se, as the precedent
in this area requires “a more general assessment of the knowing, voluntary,
and intelligent character of the plea, considered on the totality of the
circumstances.” Id. In sustaining relief, the Court stressed that the defects
“caused Flanagan to affirm that his understanding of the controlling law was
exactly to the contrary.” Id. at 501. Addressing whether counsel had a
reasonable strategic basis for not intervening, the Court explained:
Indeed, it is difficult to hypothesize a more concrete example of a facially defective colloquy, and correspondingly legally unknowing plea, than a circumstance in which the plea court causes the defendant to affirm a materially erroneous understanding of the substantive law establishing criminal liability on the offenses charged. By supplying the wrong legal framework against which to assess the facts, the plea court exacerbated the effect of the substantial deficiency arising out of its failure to adduce the factual basis and rendered the plea unknowing on the face of the record presented.
Id. at 502 (citation omitted).
The Court did not explicitly address application of the prejudice prong
but quoted this Court’s analysis, which had found that “the record … indicates
that Flanagan apparently felt that he was guilty as an accomplice, and always
maintained that he never touched the victim, and only agree[d] to beat the
victim, never to kill him.” Id. at 498 (quoting opinion).
Unlike Flanagan, Appellant’s colloquy does not contain any comparable
legal misunderstanding which would justify invalidating the plea. The trial
court did not apply “the wrong legal framework against which to assess the
facts” in deciding whether to accept the plea. Instead, the trial court simply
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accepted the shared view of the Commonwealth and Appellant that, if the
Commonwealth proceeded to trial, the facts were sufficient to support a
verdict of third-degree murder. Unlike Flanagan, the colloquy does not
contain an explicit denial of any of the elements being charged or any
misunderstanding of applicable law. See Commonwealth v. Dinell, 270
A.3d 530, 536 (Pa. Super. 2022) (concluding colloquy was facially defective
where crime required proof that acts were done for purpose of gratifying
sexual desire and Dinell “explicitly denied that his conduct had any sexual
purpose”). Nor does the colloquy wholly lack any factual basis. See Hines,
437 A.2d at 1183 (concluding that the withdrawal of plea for murder was
warranted where “no facts underlying the alleged offense [we]re adduced”
and Hines “was not even asked the threshold question of whether he had killed
the victim”). The deficiency in Appellant’s colloquy is limited to a failure to
offer additional facts to support the mens rea of malice. Therefore, the
colloquy supplied a sufficient factual basis to support the plea and, containing
no misstatement of law, Appellant failed to prove that the colloquy caused an
unknowing or involuntary plea.
IV.
Because Appellant failed to develop a record regarding whether his attorneys’
advice to accept the negotiated plea and its defined term of imprisonment was
deficient, we conclude that Appellant failed to show that counsel lacked a
reasonable strategic basis for not objecting to the colloquy. Additionally, we
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conclude that Appellant failed to establish prejudice. Thus, Appellant has not
established that his counsel was ineffective.
Order affirmed.
President Judge Emeritus Panella joins this memorandum.
Judge McLaughlin files a dissenting memorandum.
DATE: 4/20/2026
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