Com. v. Standish, Z.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 18, 2025
Docket2888 EDA 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Standish, Z. (Com. v. Standish, Z.) 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. Standish, Z., (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-S31018-25

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : ZEBBELIN STANDISH : : Appellant : No. 2888 EDA 2024

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered July 18, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of Northampton County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-48-CR-0003165-2022

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J.E., DUBOW, J., and NICHOLS, J.

MEMORANDUM BY DUBOW, J.: FILED SEPTEMBER 18, 2025

Appellant, Zebbelin Standish, appeals from the July 18, 2024 judgment

of sentence of 81 to 162 years of incarceration entered in the Northampton

County Court of Common Pleas following his conviction by a jury of numerous

child pornography-related offenses. Appellant challenges the sufficiency and

weight of the evidence; the denial of his motions for judgment of acquittal,

for a new trial, and to suppress evidence; an evidentiary ruling; and the

discretionary aspects of his sentence. After careful review, we affirm.

The relevant facts and procedural history are as follows. On August 31,

2022, the Child Predator Section of the Pennsylvania Office of the Attorney

General (“OAG”) received a CyberTip1 from the National Center for Missing

____________________________________________

1 A CyberTip is a report generated when an electronic service provider such

as a social media application discovers that one of its users has used its product to distribute or possess child pornography. J-S31018-25

and Exploited Children (“NCME”) that, on May 27, 2022, a user on KIK, a social

media/messaging platform, had shared four videos of apparent child

pornography via the app. The CyberTip reported the user ID, screen name,

and associated email address of the KIK account that shared the videos to

another user via a private chat message on KIK. The CyberTip also reported

the IP address from which the videos had been uploaded. Agent Brian King

of the Child Predator Section reviewed the videos provided by NCME and

determined they were, in fact, child pornography.

KIK also provided law enforcement with records that showed that the

account had been registered using a Samsung cell phone. Log-in records

reported that from May 29, 2022, to June 4, 2022—the day KIK was made

aware of the child pornography—the KIK user had accessed the account

exclusively from the same IP address that had been used to upload the

pornography in the CyberTip.

Law enforcement determined that the IP address from which the child

pornography was uploaded was registered to an Alexandra Schmidt at an

apartment in Easton, Pennsylvania. Police obtained a search warrant for all

electronic devices in the Easton apartment that had internet and video/photo

storage capability and executed the search warrant early on the morning of

October 7, 2022.

When law enforcement agents knocked on the door, Alexandra Schmidt,

Appellant’s then-girlfriend, answered and permitted the officers to enter. The

officers searched the house and recovered three electronic devices: Ms.

-2- J-S31018-25

Schmidt’s tablet, her cell phone, and a computer, each of which the officers

searched on-site. None of the devices contained any child sexual abuse

material. The officers also found a bin with some other cell phones, which the

officers were unable to search either because the phones were broken, or the

officers were unable to power them on.

During their search, the agents observed items that indicated another

person lived in the apartment, including luggage carrying a tag with

Appellant’s name on it. Ms. Schmidt told the officers that her then-boyfriend,

Appellant, also lived in the apartment with her, but he was currently at work.

The officers informed Ms. Schmidt that they were present pursuant to a

search warrant for child pornography. Ms. Schmidt became very upset but

cooperated with the officers. Ms. Schmidt told the officers that she was

unaware that Appellant had a KIK account but told the officers that the

username reported in the CyberTip was similar to one that Appellant used on

other social media profiles.

After speaking with Ms. Schmidt, the officers left her apartment and

travelled to Appellant’s workplace. Initially, the officers met with Dennis

O’Connell, the owner of the company. The officers told him they were

conducting an investigation and wanted to speak with Appellant. Mr.

O’Connell provided the officers with a place to speak with Appellant and

informed them that many of his employees carry weapons.

The officers approached Appellant, identified themselves, and informed

him that they wanted to speak with him. Agent King then conducted a pat-

-3- J-S31018-25

down of Appellant for officer safety. While patting Appellant down, Agent King

felt a bulge on Appellant’s right hip, which Agent King discovered was a cell

phone in a holster. The cell phone was a Samsung, but its model was not

readily identifiable. Agent King seized the cell phone and handed it to an

assisting officer and then read Appellant his Miranda2 rights.

Appellant agreed to speak with the officers. Agent King told Appellant

that they were investigating the dissemination and possession of child

pornography that had occurred using the internet at Appellant’s apartment.

Appellant indicated that he was surprised because only he and Ms. Schmidt

had access to the locked WiFi at their apartment. The officers informed

Appellant that they had already been to the apartment, spoken with Ms.

Schmidt, and discovered no child pornography on her devices.

Appellant denied that he currently used the KIK app and indicated that

he was not familiar with the specific account included in the CyberTip. He

declined to give consent for the officers to search his cell phone. The interview

ended shortly thereafter.

On October 14, 2022, Agent King applied for and received a search

warrant for Appellant’s cell phone. Agent James McDonald, a senior forensics

examiner at the Regional Computer Forensic Lab, extracted the data from the

phone on October 20, 2022. He then provided Agent King with a Cellebrite

Report, which is a review of all the data extracted from the phone.

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

-4- J-S31018-25

On October 24, 2022, Agent King analyzed the report, which revealed

that there were 364 still images and seven videos of child pornography on

Appellant’s cell phone. The videos recovered from Appellant’s cell phone were

not the same as those included in the CyberTip, but they were similar, and

each depicted prepubescent girls engaged in sexual acts with adult men. The

still images also depicted prepubescent children subjected to sexual contact.

Based on this evidence, and additional data implicating Appellant as the

owner and user of both the cell phone and the KIK accounts which transmitted

the child pornography images and videos, on November 2, 2022, the OAG

charged Appellant with four counts of Sexual Abuse of Children—

Dissemination of Child Pornography, 50 counts of Sexual Abuse of Children—

Possession of Child Pornography, and one count of Criminal Use of a

Communication Facility (“CUCF”)3 for incidents that occurred from May 27,

2022, to October 7, 2022.

Appellant was formally arraigned on March 23, 2023.

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Com. v. Standish, Z., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-standish-z-pasuperct-2025.