Com. v. Reed, T.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 26, 2022
Docket1129 MDA 2021
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Reed, T. (Com. v. Reed, T.) 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. Reed, T., (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

J-A19038-22

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : TARENCE LAMAR REED : : Appellant : No. 1129 MDA 2021

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered November 2, 2017 In the Court of Common Pleas of Franklin County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-28-CR-0000267-2016

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

MEMORANDUM BY STEVENS, P.J.E.: FILED: SEPTEMBER 26, 2022

Appellant Tarence Lamar Reed appeals from the judgment of sentence

entered by the Court of Common Pleas of Franklin County after Appellant was

convicted of first-degree murder and related charges. After careful review,

we affirm.

Appellant was charged with first-degree murder and related offenses in

connection with the December 14, 2015 shooting death of Deval Green during

a home invasion orchestrated by six individuals. In September 2017,

Appellant and one of his-codefendants, Antoine Alphonzo Hunter, proceeded

to a joint jury trial, at which the four remaining defendants testified against

Appellant and Hunter as a part of their cooperation agreements. The trial court

aptly summarized the factual background of this case as follows:

____________________________________________

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. J-A19038-22

On Monday, December 14, 2015, at 12:51 a.m., a neighbor of 33-year-old Deval Green called 911 to report shots fired at Mr. Green’s mobile home located in Guilford Township, just outside the Borough of Chambersburg. Less than a minute later, the victim’s fiancé, Faith Carbaugh, called 911 to report that Mr. Green had been shot following a home invasion robbery. Police were on the scene almost immediately and began attempting to render aid to Mr. Green who had been shot three times. Mr. Green was transported to Chambersburg Hospital where he died of his injuries shortly thereafter.

Mr. Green had lived in the mobile home in question for around six months at the time of the murder. Also living at the residence and present at the time of the crime was Ms. Carbaugh; her son B.D., age fifteen (15) at the time of the crime; and S.G., the three (3) year-old daughter of Mr. Green and Ms. Carbaugh. Mr. Green and Ms. Carbaugh were both drug addicts and drug dealers, and they regularly sold drugs from their home. This included marijuana, which B.D. also used and sold. At the time of the crime, the three only sold marijuana at the insistence of B.D., who wanted his mother to stop using harder drugs. Ms. Carbaugh and Mr. Green stopped using heroin in October of 2015, but at the time of the crime, were both active and illegal users of crack cocaine, suboxone, methadone, and Percocets. B.D. believed that the crime occurred because the intruders incorrectly believed that Mr. Green and Ms. Carbaugh still sold harder drugs than marijuana.

Mr. Green was also a member of the Crip gang, and he went by the nickname “C” or “C-Money.” Also a member of the gang was a twenty-three (23) year old man named Tyree Swindell, who was like a “little brother” to Mr. Green and went by the nickname “Blue.”

Late Sunday evening, several hours before the crime, Tyree Swindell was visiting the home of co-conspirators 21-year-old Cheyenne Kline-Branche and her 21-year-old boyfriend Gerald Scarlett (also known as “Jamaica” or “Junior”). Also present in the home at the time was Appellant (also known as “Shottie”), co- Defendant Antoine Hunter (also known as “HT” or “Ocky”), and 20-year-old Damien Calloway, all of whom were associates of Kline-Branche and Scarlett. The group had been playing video games, drinking alcohol, and smoking marijuana. These six individuals conspired to rob Mr. Green because Swindell said he was a drug dealer, agreeing to split anything they took evenly

-2- J-A19038-22

between them. No one involved in the conspiracy knew Mr. Green except Swindell.

Kline-Branche then borrowed her mother’s gold minivan and drove Appellant, Scarlett, Calloway, and Swindell to a Giant grocery store on Wayne Avenue so that Swindell could buy cigarettes and Appellant could buy duct tape for his car. Just before 11:25 p.m., less than an hour before the crime, the gold minivan is captured on surveillance footage from the grocery store. Surveillance footage recovered from inside the store shows Swindell and Appellant enter the store and purchase cigarettes and two rolls of duct tape. … The co-conspirators then returned to the Kline-Branche residence and began planning their individual roles in the robbery.

Kline-Branche drove the gold minivan to Mr. Green’s home. Scarlett sat in the front passenger seat while Swindell and Calloway sat in the rear. Appellant, Hunter, and another unknown individual followed in a red sedan. The two vehicles arrived in the parking lot of a small warehouse next door to Mr. Green’s home. Appellant, Hunter, Calloway, Swindell, and Scarlett exited their vehicles.

Kline-Branche was armed with a purple .9 millimeter SCCY pistol which she testified remained holstered during the duration of the crime. Kline-Branche also owned a black .40 caliber Ruger pistol which is believed to be the murder weapon, but she testified that Scarlett generally carried this weapon and that the pair considered it to belong to him. Scarlett handed this gun to Appellant and told Appellant not to shoot or kill anybody. Hunter was already armed with a long gun. Calloway was not armed. Appellant, Hunter, and Calloway covered their faces and approached the house, with the expectation that Appellant and Hunter would commit the robbery while Calloway stood as a look- out. All three went onto the front porch of the residence.

[In Mr. Green’s home, a]round an hour before the crime, Ms. Carbaugh told B.D. that Swindell would be coming over that night to purchase a gram of marijuana. … [S]hortly after midnight[,] Ms. Carbaugh began making food while Mr. Green played video games on a PlayStation gaming system in the living room. B.D. had just gone to bed in another room and was trying to sleep. Ms. Carbaugh and B.D. testified that they heard someone knocking on the door. When Mr. Green answered the door, he either “lunged himself out the door” or “someone took

-3- J-A19038-22

him by the collar and pulled him out” of the door. Either way, a scuffle then ensued on the porch between Mr. Green and Appellant.

While many individuals testified to having heard the shooting, only one individual testified to having seen the shooting. Calloway testified that during the scuffle on the porch, stating “[Appellant] left off a shot from the pistol. That’s when I seen Mr. Green fall to the ground.” Calloway was unsure whether Mr. Green was shot at the time, but physical evidence corroborates this testimony and seems to indicate that Mr. Green was shot in the leg at this time. Appellant entered the house while Hunter and Calloway remained outside, returning shortly thereafter with two bags of stolen items. As Calloway turned around to run back to the gold minivan, Appellant tossed him a bag of items. Calloway then heard two more shots.

This pattern of the three gunshots is corroborated by the testimony of the next-door neighbor, Cole Deardorff. Mr. Deardorff lived in the house immediately adjacent to Mr. Green and testified that he had been watching television when he heard yelling coming from Mr. Green’s home. He then heard a single gunshot. At that time, Mr. Deardorff retrieved his own firearm from nearby and proceeded to Mr. Green’s residence. As he was exiting his own residence, he heard two more gunshots.

Immediately following the shooting, Mr. Deardorff ran underneath the branches of several low-hanging pine trees that separated his property from Mr. Green’s.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Commonwealth v. Lord
719 A.2d 306 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1998)
Commonwealth v. Hartzell
988 A.2d 141 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2009)
Commonwealth v. Fransen
986 A.2d 154 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2009)
Commonwealth v. Gibbs
981 A.2d 274 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2009)
Commonwealth v. Spotz
759 A.2d 1280 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2000)
Commonwealth v. Laboy
936 A.2d 1058 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2007)
Commonwealth v. Williams
959 A.2d 1252 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2008)
Commonwealth v. Liston
977 A.2d 1089 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2009)
Commonwealth v. Dowling
778 A.2d 683 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2001)
Commonwealth v. Rivera
773 A.2d 131 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2001)
In Re Estate of Daubert
757 A.2d 962 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2000)
Commonwealth v. Blakeney
946 A.2d 645 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2008)
Commonwealth v. Moreno
14 A.3d 133 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2011)
Commonwealth v. Freeman
128 A.3d 1231 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2015)
Commonwealth v. Manivannan
186 A.3d 472 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Clemons, J., Aplt.
200 A.3d 441 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2019)
Commonwealth v. Koch
39 A.3d 996 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2011)
Commonwealth v. Garland
63 A.3d 339 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2013)
Com. v. Juray, R., Jr.
2022 Pa. Super. 83 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2022)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Reed, T., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-reed-t-pasuperct-2022.