Com. v. Rivera, A.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 2, 2024
Docket2194 EDA 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Rivera, A. (Com. v. Rivera, 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. Rivera, A., (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

J-S12021-24

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : ANGEL RIVERA : : Appellant : No. 2194 EDA 2023

Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered July 26, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-39-CR-0002658-2010

BEFORE: DUBOW, J., SULLIVAN, J., and BENDER, P.J.E.

MEMORANDUM BY SULLIVAN, J.: FILED OCTOBER 2, 2024

Angel Rivera (“Rivera”) appeals from the order dismissing his serial

petition for relief filed pursuant to the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”).1

Additionally, Rivera has filed an application for relief in which he seeks leave

to amend his PCRA petition. We affirm the dismissal order and deny the

application.

In January 2011, Rivera entered a negotiated guilty plea to third-degree

murder and attempted murder arising from a shooting motivated by a drug-

deal. The factual basis of the plea was as follows:

[I]n May [] 2010, members of the Allentown Police Department were called to respond to . . . the area of 8 th and Turner Streets [] for a report of a shooting victim. There[,] they found Francisco Fordham [(“Fordham”)], who was sitting on the steps bleeding.

____________________________________________

1 See 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 9541-9546. J-S12021-24

He was taken via ambulance to the Lehigh Valley Hospital Center. While the police were on scene[,] they were notified that there was an additional victim located at 743 Turner Street; that was Ms. Barbara Heinrich [(“Heinrich”),] who was on the porch. Half of her body was in the vestibule area, and half was . . . leaning out towards a very small porch . . ..

Police backed up the ambulance containing [] Fordham and placed [] Heinrich inside that ambulance, where both were taken to Lehigh Valley Cedar Crest for immediate medical attention. [] Heinrich succumbed to the two gunshot wounds that were inflicted, and an autopsy was performed.

. . . [G]unshot wound number [one] entered through [] Heinrich’s upper right back area. It exited through her ear and grazed the left side of her head causing internal injuries to her ear[,] and . . . an injury to her brain. That injury alone would have been fatal, even with immediate medical attention.

The second shot entered through [] Heinrich’s lower right back. The path of the bullet was upwards[,] ripping through the kidneys and other internal organs, taking part of the liver, and lodged above her upper right breast. That bullet was removed . . . and subsequently tested . . ..

[] Fordham was treated in the emergency room. He was shot four times, once in the upper right chest, another in the upper left chest, and two shots both in the bottom left and bottom right torso. Bullets were removed from him[;] one remains in him and is located under his right armpit.

****

[] Fordham required two surgeries for his medical injuries and was in the hospital . . . [for] approximately ten to fifteen days for the treatment that he received.

Through investigation[,] police learned that the shooter was an individual . . . known by the . . . nickname of [“]KA[”]. There was a witness who was with [Rivera2] at the time of the shooting, and there was another individual who saw a person, matching ____________________________________________

2 Rivera was sixteen years old at the time of the shootings.

-2- J-S12021-24

[Rivera’s] description, tucking a gun into his waistband and running from the scene.[3]

Once the police learned that KA was [] Rivera[,] photo lineups were shown to all those witnesses, including [] Fordham[,] who positively identified . . . Rivera as the person who shot . . . Heinrich and [him].

Police received information . . . that the gun used in this homicide was . . . traveling in a vehicle that was driven by a gentleman by the name of Luis Reyes [(“Reyes”)]. Police stopped . . . Reyes and recovered what was later determined . . . to be the weapon that fired the bullet . . . recovered from [] Heinrich, as well as the casings that were recovered at the scene.[4]

[] Reyes indicated that he was aware that this gun had been used in a homicide, that . . . Rivera had shot people with this gun. He did not receive the gun from [] Rivera[;] he received it from another individual, and he was going to sell that gun to get rid of it.

[Police later apprehended Rivera.] He was taken to police headquarters[,] where [officers] Mirandized[5 him]. Initially, [] Rivera denied committing the crime, but he [later] ____________________________________________

3 The affidavit of probable cause attached to the criminal complaint identified

the person with Rivera at the time of the shooting as “Johnny Sweeney.” Criminal Complaint, Affidavit of Probable Cause, 5/27/10, at 1. The witness who saw Rivera tucking a firearm into his waistband was a neighbor, Eric Newsome (“Newsome”), whose May 2010 statement to police is at issue in this appeal. See PCRA Pet., 5/2/23, Ex. A at 2 & Ex. B.

4 Rivera maintains that the firearm recovered from Reyes and linked to the

shooting of Fordham and Heinrich was a silver Ruger. We note that the trial court previously indicated that Rivera confessed to discarding the Ruger in a bag by a backdoor, sometime after shooting Fordham. See Opinion, 1/4/11, at 5.

5 See Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).

-3- J-S12021-24

indicated that he . . . went to 743 Turner Street to collect at $400.00 drug debt.

He indicated that he . . . fired . . . [and] believed he hit [] Fordham. He knew he hit [] Heinrich[;] she fell to the ground, he walked over, he fired another shot into her. He then chased [] Fordham through the apartment.

[Fordham exited the apartment through the fire escape, crossed an alley] and went to the corner of 8th and Turner [Streets, where he was later found].

N.T., 1/10/11, at 16-22 (emphases added; some unnecessary capitalization

omitted).

Rivera agreed that the factual basis, as stated above, was accurate.

See id. at 23. He conceded guilt and admitted that he shot Fordham and

Heinrich over a four-hundred-dollar drug debt. See id. Rivera acknowledged

that by pleading guilty, he was giving up his right to appeal the trial court’s

denial of a pretrial motion he had filed seeking the suppression of his

confession. See id. at 31-32. Rivera acknowledged he was entering his plea

because he was guilty, and the trial court accepted his plea. See id. at 34.

Rivera requested immediate sentencing, and during allocution, he apologized

to his mother and advised, “Don’t’ feel guilty for nothin’, everything I did was

me, you know what I’m sayin’?” Id. at 35, 44. He additionally apologized to

the Fordham and Heinrich families: “. . . I’m sorry for what I did, but I know

it’s not going to change nothin’ . . ..” Id. at 44-45.

-4- J-S12021-24

The trial court sentenced Rivera to the agreed-upon aggregate sentence

of forty to eighty years of imprisonment. See id. at 47-48. As this Court has

previously concluded, Rivera’s judgment of sentence became final on February

23, 2011, following the expiration of his time to appeal from the order

modifying his judgment of sentence. See Commonwealth v. Rivera, No.

1459 EDA 2013, 2014 WL 11015566 (Pa. Super. 2014) (unpublished

memorandum at *2).6 Rivera filed five PCRA petitions, all of which the PCRA

court dismissed as untimely and/or lacking merit. See Commonwealth v.

Rivera, No. 1077 EDA 2019, 2019 WL 6499422 (Pa. Super. 2019)

(unpublished memorandum at *1).7

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