Com. v. Vaughn, A.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 14, 2015
Docket1771 MDA 2014
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Vaughn, A. (Com. v. Vaughn, A.) 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. Vaughn, A., (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

J-S45010-15

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

ALPHONSO VAUGHN,

Appellant No. 1771 MDA 2014

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence September 23, 2014 In the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-35-CR-0000391-2013

BEFORE: BOWES, WECHT, AND FITZGERALD * JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J: FILED AUGUST 14, 2015

Alphonso Vaughn appeals from the judgment of sentence of nine years

and two months to twenty-five years incarceration imposed by the trial court

after a jury found him guilty of possession with intent to deliver (“PWID”)

heroin, delivery of heroin, possession of heroin, resisting arrest, and

possession of drug paraphernalia. We vacate the judgment of sentence and

remand for a new trial.

The trial court recounted the salient facts as follows.1

____________________________________________

1 The trial court opinion refers to Appellant as Vaughan rather than Vaughn. Appellant in his own pro se filings spelled his last name as Vaughan, however, the caption of the case was entitled Commonwealth v. Vaughn.

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. J-S45010-15

On February 12, 2013, Ami Davis (hereinafter “the C.I.”), a third floor resident of 1201 Capouse Avenue in Scranton, met with Detectives Harold Zech and John Munley of the Lackawanna District Attorney’s Office at a local Wendy’s restaurant to “offer information to try and help her boyfriend get out of jail on bond.” According to her, this “information” was that somebody in the building named “Pee Wee,” identified at trial Defendant Vaughan, “was selling heroin.” Based on this information, Detectives Zech and Munley “began to initiate what they call a controlled purchase where the C.I. would be buying the narcotics under their control.” The C.I. testified that she was provided with $50 from the detectives “to purchase three bags of heroin.”

When they arrived at 1201 Capouse Avenue, the C.I. and the detectives gained entry due to the fact that she “had a key” and “lived there,” so she simply “opened the door and let [herself and the detectives] in.” Detective Zech explained that his role at that point “was to follow the C.I., to accompany her to Room 304 where she explained to me that Mr. Vaughan would be waiting for her to sell her the narcotic.” To initiate the buy, the C.I. said, “I just told Vaughan that I wanted something and then when I went in there, I asked him if he would give me three for $50 and he said yes.” She described the controlled buy as follows:

We had entered the building and one of the detectives followed me up the steps and one of the other detectives went up the back stairwell. I had went and knocked on the door and one of the detectives were [sic] able to see the door when I had knocked on it. He had opened the door, he went in. I had given him the money and received the three bags of heroin and then I was like in there for like maybe two seconds and turned around and went out. I handed the detective the heroin and then walked down the steps and both detectives—well, the one detective was right behind me and we all met out in the hallways and we went out together.

Detective Zech corroborated the C.I.’s testimony by stating:

I observed the C.I. began [sic] to walk down the hallway, get to Room 304 and knock on the door. Within moments I view Mr. Vaughan wearing jeans and a dark colored

-2- J-S45010-15

sweatshirt invite her in. The door closes. I walk down the hallway and used my cell phone to snap a photograph of the door which is marked in paint 304.

...

Within a minute of the C.I. entering this room, 304, she then exited and returned to me. We left. When she reached me, we began to go down the staircase and she surrendered to me three bags, glassine bags, of suspected heroin. And the stamp on the bags read Keisha, and it was stamped in purple ink. And the stamp is commonly used by heroin dealers as a marketing tool for their product.

The three bags were then “field tested and gave positive indication for heroin or opiates.”

Upon returning to Wendy’s, the C.I. stated that the detectives told her they wanted her “to arrange to buy a large amount of heroin off of Vaughan so that when they when they [sic] had went back that they can—that he would have a large amount of stuff on him.” On February 13, 2013, the C.I. had a conversation with Vaughan about the buy and agreed to purchase “a brick of heroin, which is 50 bags.” Based on this information, Detective Zech “made application for a search warrant for Room 304 at 1201 Capouse Avenue.” After the search warrant’s approval by the District Magisterial Court and confirmation from the C.I. that “there was a brick, 50 bags at the very least available,” Detective Zech and a team of officers from the Scranton Police Department executed the warrant at “approximately 12:30 in the afternoon.” Specifically, Detective Zech and the officers “gained access to the building through using the C.I.’s key . . . .” Finding that the door to Room 304 was open, Detective Zech “entered the threshold of the room and announced, [‘]Police, search warrant, get on the ground.[’]” After doing so, he viewed a white male in the back of the room, later identified as Joseph Healey, and “Mr. Vaughan standing over him.” He said that when he announced his presence and ordered them to get on the ground, “the white male did so, but Mr. Vaughan turned and ran toward me in an aggressive manner.” In particular, Detective Zech said that Vaughan “turned and ran at me with a full head of steam to the point

-3- J-S45010-15

where we’re in such close proximity to one another, if he had a weapon or anything on his person, he was going to close the gap very fast, so I deployed a taser into his chest.” He further stated that a pocketknife was recovered from “a dresser immediately to the right of us when we entered the doorway,” and that Vaughan was coming “directly at where I was standing and the knife was inches away from me.”

These points of testimony given by the C.I. and Detective Zech were corroborated by Detective Munley. Detective Munley also testified that, following the taser incident, Detective Zech “asked Alphonso Vaughan if he had any drugs on him,” to which “Vaughan said, Yes, I have heroin on me.” Thereafter, “Vaughan motioned to where the heroin was and Detective Munley confiscated the heroin out of his pocket.” Detective Munley described the search of Vaughan as a ‘joint effort,” which is consistent with Detective Zech’s testimony that he found “in Vaughan’s left front pants pocket . . . a sandwich baggie” containing “a suspected brick of heroin wrapped in magazine wrapping,” which is “common for large quantities of heroin . . . .” Detective Zech also recovered “12 additional bags rubber banded together inside that sandwich baggie,” and “a total of 62 bags of heroin on Vaughan.” Moreover, all bags “were stamped Keisha, which matches the stamp on the bags . . . purchased the day before.” Detective Zech further testified that he recovered “$258 in currency” from Vaughan, $10 of which was found to be part of the prerecorded “$50 that was used the day prior” during the C.I.’s controlled buy. Detective Munley noted that “two hyp[o]dermic needles, a crack pipe, and a chore boy, which is used to ingest crack cocaine,” were also found at the scene.” He further testified that “four empty bags of suspected heroin” were found on Healey following his arrest, and that “one of them was stamped Keisha.”

Trial Court Opinion, 1/27/15, at 2-5 (internal citations and brackets

omitted).

The Commonwealth initially charged Appellant with possession with

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Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Vaughn, A., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-vaughn-a-pasuperct-2015.