Com. v. Savage, K.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 18, 2020
Docket787 WDA 2019
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Savage, K. (Com. v. Savage, K.) 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. Savage, K., (Pa. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

J-A09035-20

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION – SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA Appellee : : v. : : KAREEM SAVAGE, : : Appellant : No. 787 WDA 2019

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered April 17, 2019 in the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-25-CR-0000154-2018

BEFORE: SHOGAN, J., MURRAY, J. and STRASSBURGER, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY STRASSBURGER, J.: FILED SEPTEMBER 18, 2020

Kareem Savage (Appellant) appeals from the April 17, 2019 aggregate

judgment of sentence of life imprisonment after a jury found him guilty of

one count each of assault by life prisoner, assault by prisoner, aggravated

assault, and third-degree murder. Upon review, we affirm.

We glean the following from the record. On September 1, 2016,

Appellant was serving a life sentence at SCI Albion in the Delta Alpha

housing unit. Anthony Wilson (Victim) was also an inmate in that unit. At

approximately 3:25 p.m., after inmates began coming into the day room

from the outdoor recreation area, corrections officer Ethan Smith heard a

commotion and observed several inmates fighting. Officer Smith reported

the fight on the prison radio system and began to lock down the area.

___________________ * Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-A09035-20

Corrections officer Keith Conley entered the day room within seconds

of the radio call and ordered the inmates to return to their respective cells.

As the group returned to their cells, two inmates remained prone on the

ground: Rosco Brown and Victim. Victim was unresponsive. Once the area

was secured, Victim was transported to the hospital.

A surveillance camera captured the prison fight.1 The camera was

programmed to pan continuously across the Delta Alpha housing block. As it

panned, it captured part of the altercation before panning past the day

room. Within seconds, the radio call alerted the control room to take manual

control of the camera, and the operator refocused the camera directly on the

fight.

Based on the prison investigation, prison officials believed that George

Spoonhour initially knocked Victim to the ground before joining in a separate

altercation with Shanne Jones-Coleman and Antwan Sheppard against

Brown. After Spoonhour knocked Victim onto the ground, Appellant was

identified on the surveillance video punching Victim and, once Victim was

prone and unresponsive, stomping repeatedly on Victim’s face with his

prison-issued boots.

1 Two videos were introduced at Appellant’s jury trial. The first video (Exhibit 2-A) captured the altercation and some of the aftermath; the second video (Exhibit 2-B) was a sequential continuation of what was captured in the first video, showing the aftermath of the altercation and Appellant returning to his cell. See N.T., 2/12/2019, at 58-59 (explaining the relationship between the two videos).

-2- J-A09035-20

At the hospital, Victim was diagnosed with a nasal fracture, a tear

above his right eyebrow, swelling of the brain, and blood on his brain, which

caused his brain to shift to the side. He remained in a persistent vegetative

state, requiring continuous mechanical ventilation to breathe. Over the next

couple months, Victim was transported multiple times between skilled

nursing facilities and hospitals due to blood infections and severe pneumonia

resulting from the continuous ventilation. On November 21, 2016, Victim’s

family decided to cease medical care and begin comfort care. Victim was

placed on a morphine drip the following day. Victim passed away on

December 6, 2016.

As a result of the foregoing, Appellant was charged with one count

each of assault by life prisoner, assault by prisoner, aggravated assault, and

criminal homicide. Appellant proceeded to a jury trial on February 12-13,

2019. At trial, the Commonwealth introduced, inter alia, forensic autopsy

reports from Dr. Ashley Zezulak and Dr. Lauren Huddle, DNA evidence, and

the surveillance videos.

Dr. Zezulak performed Victim’s autopsy, and concluded that Victim’s

cause of death was acute morphine overdose based on the level of morphine

found in Victim’s toxicology screen. Victim’s death certificate stated that the

cause of death was morphine toxicity, which was due to multi-organ failure,

which was due to long-term intubation and being in a vegetative state,

which was due to head trauma from the prison altercation.

-3- J-A09035-20

At trial,2 Dr. Huddle testified that Victim had been on a morphine drip

for two weeks prior to his death. Dr. Huddle noted that his morphine level

was within the therapeutic range, and Victim’s genotype contained an

indicator that Victim may have required higher doses of morphine for

adequate pain control. Based on the foregoing, Dr. Huddle did not agree

with Dr. Zezulak that a morphine overdose was the cause of Victim’s death.

Rather, based on her investigation, Dr. Huddle concluded that Victim’s cause

of death was “bilateral acute and bronchial pneumonia … due to

complications of blunt force trauma of the head.” N.T., 2/12/2019, at 210;

see also Dr. Huddle’s Report, 2/1/2019, at 5 (unnumbered). Specifically,

“[t]he initial event that caused his death was the blunt force trauma to his

head, which was sustained on September 1st of 2016. Following that event,

he remained unconscious and under continuous medical care, and he

ultimately died due to those complications on December 6th, 2016.” N.T.,

2/12/2019, at 210; see also Dr. Huddle’s Report, 2/1/2019, at 5

(unnumbered). When asked on cross-examination if Victim could have

received more medical care instead of only comfort care, Dr. Huddle testified

2 Dr. Zezulak was no longer employed by ForensicDX, the company that performed Victim’s autopsy, at the time of Appellant’s trial. ForensicDX tasked one of its current forensic pathologists, Dr. Huddle, with reviewing Dr. Zezulak’s autopsy report in preparation for the trial. Dr. Huddle did so, and also reviewed the autopsy photographs, Victim’s medical records, and histologic slides (slides created from pieces of Victim’s organs for examination under a microscope) to create her own forensic autopsy report for Victim. N.T., 2/12/2019, at 155-57.

-4- J-A09035-20

in her opinion that Victim could have continued to receive medical care, but

it “would have just prolonged the inevitable.” N.T., 2/12/2019, at 224.

Regarding the DNA evidence, Appellant’s boots were confiscated on

September 1, 2016, for processing. Following testing, it was determined

that the right sole, left toe, and left sole contained DNA mixtures. The DNA

profile obtained from the known reference sample for Victim matched the

DNA profile from the right sole and left sole of Appellant’s boots. In the

mixture on the left toe, Victim could not be excluded as a contributor to the

major component. Id. at 179-80.

After viewing the video of the altercation multiple times during the

Commonwealth’s case-in-chief, the jury requested and viewed the video

three more times at regular speed, and three times at half speed, during

deliberations. The jury found Appellant guilty as indicated above.

On April 17, 2019, the trial court sentenced Appellant to a term of life

imprisonment for assault by life prisoner and a consecutive term of 20 to 40

years of incarceration for third-degree murder.

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