Com. v. Taylor, P.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 20, 2022
Docket138 MDA 2022
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Taylor, P. (Com. v. Taylor, P.) 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. Taylor, P., (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

J-S35017-22

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : PATRICK L. TAYLOR : : Appellant : No. 138 MDA 2022

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered September 21, 2021 In the Court of Common Pleas of Cumberland County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-21-CR-0001033-2020

BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., McLAUGHLIN, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*

MEMORANDUM BY McLAUGHLIN, J.: FILED: DECEMBER 20, 2022

Patrick Taylor appeals from the judgment of sentence entered following

his convictions for flight to avoid apprehension, trial or punishment (“flight to

avoid apprehension”), fleeing or attempting to elude police officer, reckless

driving, registration and certificate of title required, and stop signs and yield

signs.1 Taylor challenges the sufficiency and weight of the evidence, as well

as discretionary aspects of his sentence. We affirm.

Taylor was arrested and charged after leading police on a chase. In

October 2020, Taylor’s then-counsel moved to dismiss the flight to avoid

apprehension charge, arguing the statute required that the defendant must

have fled to avoid apprehension for a current criminal charge, and avoiding ____________________________________________

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.

118 Pa.C.S.A § 5126(a), 75 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 3733(a), 3736(a), 1301(a), and 3323(b), respectively. J-S35017-22

apprehension for a potential parole violation was not sufficient. The trial court

did not rule on the motion before trial. During trial, Taylor re-raised the issue

in a motion for judgment of acquittal, which the trial court denied. The

following day, the trial court declared a mistrial because a juror failed to

appear due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Prior to his second trial, Taylor, with

new counsel, again raised a motion to dismiss the flight to avoid apprehension

charge in an omnibus pre-trial motion. The court denied the motion.2

The trial court summarized the evidence presented at trial as follows:

The Commonwealth presented the testimony of Officer Ryan Scott McClure of the Camp Hill Police Department, who was sitting in his marked patrol vehicle on the side of Route 15 South in Camp Hill, Cumberland County on July 19, 2019 around dusk. Officer McClure said [Taylor], the sole occupant of a silver Jeep, drove by him on Route 15 South, passing by the Capital City Mall. Officer McClure ran the Jeep’s license plate and learned the registration was expired. Officer McClure pulled out onto Route 15 in his police vehicle and attempted to initiate a traffic stop on [Taylor] by activating his vehicle’s lights and sirens. [Taylor] slowed as if he intended to stop as he approached an exit, but continued driving and took the exit, at the end of which he drove “straight through” a stop sign without coming to a complete stop before making a right turn. [Taylor] ____________________________________________

2 The trial court stated:

[I]t appears that [the prior trial judge] previously ruled on this issue in a trial that occurred in 2020 that resulted in a mistrial due to a juror being sick, and such ruling is binding on this Court. To the extent he didn’t specifically rule on the Motion to Quash Count 1 of the Information, and following argument by both counsel, the Motion to Quash Count 1 of the Information is hereby denied[.]

Order, dated July 13, 2021.

-2- J-S35017-22

subsequently made a left turn to take him back to Route 15 North “so as to turn around.” As Officer McClure followed, his lights and sirens remained activated. On Route 15 North, [Taylor] accelerated in his Jeep at a higher rate of speed, exceeding the posted speed limit of 50 mph in a heavy- traffic area, which Officer McClure described as “pretty crowded” with “a lot of cars on the road.” Officer McClure decided to cease pursuing [Taylor’s] vehicle without ever effecting the stop for safety and department policy reasons, given the speed and traffic conditions.

Officer McClure did not know the identity of [Taylor] at the time of the pursuit, but noted at the time that the driver was a “light skinned male with afro style hair and a large scrip[t] style writing tattoo on his right arm,” which he could see because [Taylor’s] window was rolled down as he drove by Officer McClure and Officer McClure had an unobstructed view of [Taylor].31 Later, upon further investigation of the driver’s identity, Officer McClure learned that the Jeep was registered to a Caprice King and that a few months prior, Caprice King and [Taylor] were the subjects of a traffic stop in that Jeep by Lower Swatara Police Department in Dauphin County. Officer McClure identified [Taylor] in the courtroom as the driver of the Jeep at issue here, noting that [Taylor] had a short haircut and no longer had a “large afro style haircut” at the time of trial. The Commonwealth also presented the testimony of Officer Patrick Ribec, who conducted the traffic stop in Lower Swatara Township on the Jeep at issue in March 2019. He said [Taylor] was driving the Jeep at the time of the traffic stop with its owner, Caprice King, as a passenger. 31Officer McClure’s window was up, but he said his windows have no tint so he had a clear view.

The Commonwealth also presented the testimony of state parole agent Allen Shipley, who testified about the details of [Taylor’s] parole and parole conditions imposed following a felony conviction. Agent Shipley said he was assigned to [Taylor] when he absconded from a halfway house in April 2019 . . . . He said when [Taylor] entered the halfway house, [Taylor’s] parole agent would have required [Taylor] to sign a piece of paper “stating that this is your home plan and this is your approved address. If you leave this address, you are subject to violation of your parole.” Agent Shipley explained

-3- J-S35017-22

that when [Taylor] absconded from the halfway house, his agency obtained a felony parole warrant for [Taylor’s] arrest which was still active on July 19, 2019, the date of Officer McClure’s attempted traffic stop. Agent Shipley did not personally notify [Taylor] of the warrant for his arrest, however, and he was assigned to [Taylor’s] supervision only after [Taylor] absconded from the halfway house. He did not know whether [Taylor] knew about the warrant during the attempted traffic stop. [Taylor] turned himself in to the parole office in May 2020 on the warrant.

Finally, the Commonwealth presented recordings of four phone calls which were stipulated by defense counsel to have been made by [Taylor] in the months of May or June 2020. In the first call, placed on May 22, 2020, [Taylor] is on the telephone telling someone on the other end,

I need you to go talk to Caprice . . . . Tell her they’re trying to charge me with all this shit about from that time in her truck. I need her to at least see if she can come to court for me on Wednesday . . . . They gave me all these goddamn charges for a goddamn car and some bullshit that I can get taken care of Wednesday if she show[s] up and say[s] it wasn’t me. . . . Try to get in contact with Caprice A.S.A.P. . . . Get in contact with her, tell her I need to talk to her A.S.A.P., it’s important. . . . `Cause if she show[s] up, and she can get in contact with my lawyer then she can show up and say he wasn’t the one driving at that point in time. . . . I’ll be good, they gotta throw this shit out.

In the second call, placed on May 23, 2020, [Taylor] tells the other person on the phone,

I tried to call Caprice. . . . I need to talk to her. It’s very important. . . . I might need her to come to court Wednesday to say that it wasn’t me driving, it was somebody else.

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Com. v. Taylor, P., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-taylor-p-pasuperct-2022.