Com. v. Rivera, B.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 14, 2017
DocketCom. v. Rivera, B. No. 59 MDA 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Rivera, B. (Com. v. Rivera, B.) 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, B., (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

J-A30020-16

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

BENJAMIN J. RIVERA

Appellant No. 59 MDA 2016

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence December 8, 2015 In the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-22-CR-0000978-2015

BEFORE: BOWES, OLSON and STABILE, JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY OLSON, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 14, 2017

Appellant, Benjamin J. Rivera, appeals from the judgment of sentence

entered on December 8, 2015, as made final by the granting of his post-

sentence motion on December 28, 2015. We affirm.

The trial court accurately summarized the factual background of this

case as follows:

On November 11, 2014, around noon, Officer [Darrin] Bates [of the Harrisburg Police Department’s Street Crimes Unit (“SCU”)] was on surveillance in an area encompassing the 1200 and 1300 blocks of Derry Street where it intersects with Evergreen, Berryhill, Howard[,] and Vernon Streets. Officer Bates was working as part of the SCU. He testified that 95% of his work with the SCU involves illegal drug[-]related activity.

The area where Officer Bates was conducting surveillance on the date of the incident is, in his years of experience, an area of high-crime and high-drug activity including the sale of heroin. . . . Officer Bates identified Appellant as the person he had been surveilling on November 11, 2014. He testified to J-A30020-16

noticing Appellant because he saw him engage in what he perceived to be a hand-to-hand drug deal with an unidentified Hispanic male. Officer Bates did not radio other officers to respond because he was not absolutely certain of what he had seen and the other male had left the area very quickly. He did not want to cause confusion among the officers so he decided to continue watching [Appellant] to see if [he] engaged in drug related activity again. Following the first encounter, Appellant went back to the corner at Derry and Mulberry Streets where he stood by a corner store.

Officer Bates next saw another Hispanic male walk up to Appellant when they each took out a single monetary bill and exchanged them. [Officer] Bates saw Appellant put the bill in his wallet which he observed to be very thick with money. He explained that, in his extensive experience with street level drug dealers, the operations are run like a business in that separate people will hold the money and the drugs then the person with the money will exchange it in case it is marked by an undercover police officer posing as a buyer. Officer Bates believed that Appellant and the other man were engaging in the above- described money laundering activity. Appellant, who was wearing a grey and white zip-up hoodie, proceeded to ride away on his red bicycle down Evergreen Street, as he had periodically been doing during the surveillance period, and return to the corner to stand in front of the store.

While on the corner, Officer Bates saw a person later identified as Frank Wissler (“Wissler”) pull to the curb in a white vehicle with his wife on the north side of the 1200 block of Derry Street. The pair exited the car and walked to the intersection of Derry and Evergreen Streets where [Wissler] spoke on his cellphone briefly. Seconds later, Officer Bates saw Appellant arrive to the location on his red bicycle. Wissler and Appellant walked over to the vehicle with their backs turned, interacted for a couple of seconds then, Appellant rode away. Wissler and his wife entered the car and also pulled away failing to use a turn signal at an intersection. Based on all of his observations of Appellant that day and his law enforcement experience, Officer Bates firmly believed that a drug transaction had just taken place between Wissler and Appellant.

In light of his observations and conclusions drawn therefrom, Officer Bates radioed to other officers in the area to conduct a

-2- J-A30020-16

traffic stop of Wissler and to find and detain Appellant. When he radioed the other units, [Officer] Bates provided [] Appellant’s physical description and direction of travel. Appellant rode away on Derry Street to 13th Street where he made a right turn going southbound.

Officers Anthony Fiore and Jon Fustine, also of the SCU, spotted Appellant as he fled while picking up speed. Officer [] Fiore [] received the radio call from Officer Bates that instructed him to detain the described individual for further investigation of a suspected hand-to-hand illegal drug transaction. He and Officer Fustine drove to the location and spotted the individual who he identified as Appellant riding his red bicycle south on 13th Street. Officer Fiore testified that he could clearly see him as he was only half a block away and Appellant matched the description.

Officer Fiore stated that Appellant had been riding the bike at a normal speed until he and Officer Fustine exited their vehicle, at which time he sped up and travelled east on Kittatinny Street, then turned south on Buckthorn Street. He did not comply with their demand to stop. Officer Fiore continued to pursue Appellant on foot for several hundred feet and eventually discovered that he had abandoned the bike. The Officers eventually located him on foot when he exited an alley between two houses at 314 and 316 South 14th Street. Appellant was detained at that location while Officer Bates continued his investigation.

While waiting, Officer Fiore searched the footpath taken by Appellant on his flight. He found a large quantity of money in a roll that was few inches thick totaling $482[.00]. Appellant claimed that the bundle of money was not his. When Officer Bates arrived on scene he searched Appellant and retrieved his cellphone and wallet which only contained $20[.00].

While Officers Fiore and Fustine were pursuing Appellant, Officer Donald Bender [], a K-9 officer assigned to the SCU, assisted Officer Bates by conducting a traffic stop of Wissler. He had received radio instructions from Bates that included a description of Wissler’s car, the license plate number[,] and that the occupants were suspected to have been involved in an illegal narcotics transaction. Officer Bates testified that he had witnessed Wissler fail to use a turn signal when he left Derry

-3- J-A30020-16

Street. Officer Bender located the vehicle and made contact with Wissler, the driver, and his passenger. When Officer Bender ran his name, he discovered that Wissler was wanted in California on a felony charge. Wissler was taken out of the car, detained[,] and [read his rights. A fellow officer], who was also on the scene of the traffic stop, observed a packet of suspected heroin on the seat when Wissler exited the vehicle. Wissler then admitted to having three more packets in the center console of the car and gave officers permission to search the vehicle.

Once officers radioed Bates that Wissler had been detained, [Officer Bates] proceeded to that location to continue his investigation of the suspected drug deal. Officer Bates also [read Wissler his rights]. During Officer Bates’ questioning of Wissler he said a person named Benji had sold him some heroin. Wissler described Benji as a Hispanic male who was riding a red bike and wearing a white and grey hoodie. Wissler showed Officer Bates the number he called to contact Benji. Later, when [Officer Bates] recovered Appellant’s cellphone, [Officer Bates] had Officer Fiore dial the number provided by Wissler and the call connected to Appellant’s phone.

Trial Court Opinion, 3/25/16, at 2-7 (internal citations, footnotes, and

honorifics omitted).

The procedural history of this case is as follows. On April 20, 2015,

the Commonwealth charged Appellant via criminal information with

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