Com. v. Shields, C.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 3, 2024
Docket543 EDA 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Shields, C. (Com. v. Shields, C.) 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. Shields, C., (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

J-A28044-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA Appellant : : : v. : : : CHARLES SHIELDS : No. 543 EDA 2023

Appeal from the Order Entered January 31, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0001484-2013

BEFORE: OLSON, J., STABILE, J., and COLINS, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY COLINS, J.: FILED JUNE 3, 2024

The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania appeals from the grant of relief in

the form of a new trial pursuant to the Post Conviction Relief Act, 42 Pa.C.S.

§ 9541 et seq. (the “PCRA”), entered by the Philadelphia Court of Common

Pleas on January 31, 2023. We reverse the PCRA court’s order granting a new

trial and remand for the filing of a supplemental opinion and order.1

This Court previously summarized the underlying facts:

When Dwayne Walters awoke in the early afternoon hours of November 17, 2012, his cell phone displayed numerous missed calls from [Appellee]. Around 1:30 p.m., Mr. Walters left his apartment to get a haircut. He walked through the parking lot of his apartment complex towards his rental car, a white Dodge. As he unlocked the car door, Lamar Roane, whom Mr. Walters did not ____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.

1 We are entering a similar order in the Commonwealth’s appeal in Appellee’s

co-defendant brother’s case. See Commonwealth v. Thomas Shields, No. 544 EDA 2023. J-A28044-23

know, approached Mr. Walters and asked him for a light. When Mr. Walters said he did not smoke, Roane grabbed his arm tightly. [Appellee] and his brother, Thomas Shields, appeared from their concealed locations and approached Mr. Walters and Roane. Thomas Shields displayed a long chrome-colored handgun and shoved the barrel into Mr. Walters’s stomach. Thomas Shields asked Mr. Walters about the money, a reference to $700 he believed Mr. Walters owed him from a drug transaction. Surrounded, and desperate to defend himself, Mr. Walters grabbed the gun. A brief struggle ensued between Mr. Walters and Thomas Shields. [Appellee] pulled out a black handgun and Thomas told [Appellee] to shoot Mr. Walters. Mr. Walters released his hold on the gun and stopped struggling. [Appellee] took Mr. Walters’ car keys, phone, watch and wallet and then forced him into the driver’s door of his white Dodge. He shoved Mr. Walters over the center console into the passenger seat, while Roane and Thomas Shields went around the car and entered the rear seats of the vehicle.

Mr. Walters pushed open the passenger door, and as he started to escape, Roane grabbed his jacket. Mr. Walters wiggled out of his grasp and ran while Roane pursued him. When Mr. Walters glanced back to see if anyone was chasing him, he saw [Appellee] and Thomas Shields aiming guns at him. He heard two gunshots and a single bullet struck him in the back and exited his chest.

Jennifer Boyle, a resident of the apartment complex, heard men arguing outside. When she went to the window of her apartment, she saw two men fire their guns. She later identified the shooters as [Appellee] and Thomas Shields.[2]

Mr. Walters, bleeding profusely from his gunshot wound, entered the back seat of a stopped vehicle occupied by two women and a young boy. He pressed his back against the seat of the vehicle in an attempt to stop the bleeding. The woman in the passenger seat panicked and asked Mr. Walters to exit her car, and he stumbled out and collapsed onto the sidewalk. As he lay there, he saw his assailants exiting the parking lot in his white Dodge rental car.

____________________________________________

2 Although this Court stated that Ms. Boyle identified Appellee and his brother

as the shooters, there is no testimony to that effect in the trial record. However, her testimony was consistent with a conclusion that it was the co- defendants who were shooting at Mr. Walters.

-2- J-A28044-23

At approximately 1:39 p.m., Philadelphia Police Officer Brandon Badey received a priority radio call reporting a shooting near 2607 Welsh Road, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Upon arriving at the scene, Officer Badey saw Mr. Walters on the ground, holding a blood-soaked towel to his chest. Mr. Walters, who was slipping in and out of consciousness, was unable to communicate to Officer Badey who shot him. Realizing that Mr. Walters’ condition was critical, Officer Badey and the second officer on scene placed Mr. Walters in the back of Officer Badey’s patrol car and rushed him to the hospital. Mr. Walters was immediately taken to the operating room and, after surgery, he was transferred to the Intensive Care Unit. He remained hospitalized for six weeks.

During the investigation of the crime scene, police located two .45 caliber casings, which the Commonwealth’s ballistician testified were fired from the same gun. Underneath a nearby car that had a bullet hole in its windshield, investigators found a cell phone that contained several videos and photos that Thomas Shields had taken of himself. Investigators obtained search warrants for that cell phone data, including call logs and text messages. It also obtained warrants for the data from Mr. Walters’ cell phone and information associated with the telephone numbers of [Appellee], Thomas Shields, and Lamar Roane. The search revealed that multiple telephone calls were made to and from Thomas Shields and [Appellee], and from Thomas Shields to Lamar Roane, on the day in question. At least four telephone calls and several text messages were sent from Thomas Shields’ phone to the victim on the morning of the shooting.

On November 20, 2012, Mr. Walters identified both [Appellee] and Thomas Shields from a photographic array. Several days later, Officers arrested Thomas Shields at 1758 East Washington Lane, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A search of the residence yielded one silver .45 caliber hollow point bullet. The Commonwealth’s ballistics expert could not determine if the spent .45 caliber casings found at the scene were hollow point bullets. On November 29, 2012, [Appellee] surrendered at the U.S. Marshall’s office.

At trial, Mr. Walters testified that he had previously sold drugs for [Appellee] and his brother. Mr. Walters reported that he received numerous threatening phone calls and text messages from [Appellee] and Thomas Shields about a $700 debt he allegedly owed Thomas following a recent drug transaction. Thomas Shields gave him an ultimatum: “either come up with money or there will

-3- J-A28044-23

be consequences[,]” which he understood to mean “physical harm.” N.T., 5/7/14, at 56.

Mr. Walters told the jury that, prior to trial, a mutual friend of [Appellee] and Mr. Walters offered him $5,000.00 not to testify in court, but he did not accept. On May 16, 2014, a jury found [Appellee] guilty of aggravated assault, conspiracy to commit aggravated assault, and attempted kidnapping. He was acquitted of attempted murder, firearms not to be carried without a license, and possession of an instrument of crime.

Commonwealth v. Charles Shields, 3376 EDA 2014, 2016 WL 5210901,

*1-*2 (Pa. Super., filed July 22, 2016), appeal denied, 160 A.3d 793 (Pa.

2016).

In addition, the Commonwealth presented at trial cell phone tower data

that demonstrated that someone in possession of Appellee’s T-Mobile cell

phone was within the service area of the southeast sector of a cell phone tower

at 2555 Welsh Road for about an hour and a half immediately before the

kidnapping attempt and shooting. N.T. 5/12/14, 9. The crime scene is close

to the base of that tower. Id. Inferring that it was Appellee in possession of

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