Com. v. Walker, R.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 18, 2020
Docket1025 WDA 2018
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Walker, R. (Com. v. Walker, R.) 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. Walker, R., (Pa. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

J-A18031-19

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : RAYMONT WALKER : : Appellant : No. 1025 WDA 2018

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered February 9, 2018 In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-02-CR-0006204-2007

BEFORE: BOWES, J., NICHOLS, J., and MUSMANNO, J.

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 18, 2020

Raymont Walker appeals from the February 9, 2018 order dismissing

his after-discovered evidence claim and resentencing him pursuant to

Commonwealth v. Miller, 567 U.S. 460 (2012), and Montgomery v.

Louisiana, 136 S.Ct. 718 (2016). We affirm.

The trial court summarized the relevant facts as follows:

. . . . Kendall Dorsey testified that on December 23, 2006, while sitting on the front porch with his friend Kevin Harrison, he saw [c]o-defendant Terrill Hicks shooting at him and at Harrison. Dorsey saw Appellant standing with Hicks. Dorsey scurried into the house and avoided injury, but Harrison was shot and killed shortly thereafter.

Dorsey testified that a few days earlier he was at his friend John McDonald’s house. He heard a knock on the door. Another friend, Michael Harris, answered the door. Immediately, Terrill Hicks attempted to pull Harris out of the house. The attempt was unsuccessful as Harris was able to close the door. Dorsey testified that he went upstairs, looked out a window and observed Appellant and Hicks in the street holding pistols. J-A18031-19

Dorsey testified that he encountered Hicks the following day, the day before the shooting. Hicks said that he had been robbed, and that he thought that Dorsey, Harris and Harrison did it. Dorsey said he did not rob Hicks.

The next day, the day of the murder, Dorsey testified that Hicks and [Appellant] drove up to Dorsey and Harrison while they were walking a dog. Hicks and [Appellant] exited the car, and [Appellant] said, “Where is Mike [Harris] at?” Dorsey observed that both Hicks and [Appellant] had weapons. Dorsey and Harrison lied, denying that they knew Harris’[s] location, and eventually Hicks and [Appellant] got back in their car, a white Impala, and left.

Dorsey testified that he and Harrison immediately returned to Harrison’s house, where Harris was. Dorsey noticed the white Impala circling the house, the same car in which he had just seen Hicks and [Appellant]. He safely entered the residence but eventually went outside to the front porch with Harrison to smoke a cigarette. Dorsey told Harris not to join them on the porch because Hicks and [Appellant] were looking for him. Hicks and Appellant approached the house. Hicks fired approximately ten shots, killing Kevin Harrison.

John McDonald testified similarly to the incident at his house. McDonald said that he encountered Hicks at a gas station the day before Hicks came to his house. McDonald said Hicks was upset because he had been robbed. Hicks did not know who had robbed him.

McDonald said that, on the following day, Hicks attempted to forcibly remove Harris from McDonald’s home when Harris answered the door. The day after, Hicks and [Appellant] came to his house again. By that point, Hicks had become convinced that Harris, Harrison and a third individual nicknamed “Dee” had robbed him. Hicks told McDonald that he was looking for the people that he thought had robbed him, and if Hicks found them, either they would get hurt or someone would die. [Appellant] added that what the robbers had done “wasn’t cool” and that he “was going to ride with [Hicks,]” his best friend. McDonald, an army sergeant with eight years of military experience, recognized the gun Hicks was carrying as a “Glock 45.”

-2- J-A18031-19

Michael Harris testified that he was inside the house on the couch in the front living room when the shots were fired. He heard the shots hit the house, so he moved to the floor and exited toward the rear of the house. He also reiterated that Hicks had attempted to pull him out of the residence of McDonald the day before the shooting.

John Betarie, a Homestead police officer, testified that he recovered six shell casings at the scene of the shooting where Dorsey said Hicks was standing and three additional projectiles from the kitchen floor. These shell casings were sent to the crime lab [for] analysis. Dr. Robert Levine, a forensics expert to the crime lab, testified that the [.]45 caliber casings found at the scene were all from the same weapon.

Dr. Abdulrezak Shakir, a forensic pathologist with the Allegheny County Medical Examiner’s Officer, conducted the autopsy of Kevin Harrison. Dr. Shakir stated that Harrison was shot three times. He concluded that Harrison died as a result of a gunshot wound to the head, and ruled the manner of death as homicide.

Trial Court Opinion, 1/3/11, at 3-5.

Appellant was fifteen years old at the time of the shooting. He was

arrested, charged, and tried jointly with Hicks as an adult for the murder of

Harrison. At the 2010 trial, neither of them testified on his own behalf. At

the conclusion of trial, the jury convicted Appellant of first-degree homicide,

criminal conspiracy, criminal attempt – homicide, aggravated assault, and

possession of a firearm by a minor. On August 2, 2010, Appellant was

sentenced to life without the possibility of parole (“LWOP”) for first-degree

murder, a consecutive prison term of ten to twenty years for criminal attempt,

and a consecutive thirty to sixty months for aggravated assault. The court

imposed no further penalty for the remaining convictions. Appellant filed a

-3- J-A18031-19

direct appeal and we affirmed his judgment of sentence on April 30, 2012.

See Commonwealth v. Walker, 48 A.3d 490 (Pa.Super. 2012) (unpublished

memorandum).

On July 30, 2012, Appellant filed his first PCRA petition. In the timely

petition, he raised a multitude of issues, including an argument that he was

entitled to resentencing pursuant to Miller. The PCRA court held a hearing

on May 31, 2013, and denied the petition on November 25, 2013. On appeal,

we affirmed that denial. See Commonwealth v. Walker, 125 A.3d 460

(Pa.Super. 2015) (unpublished memorandum). Appellant filed a petition for

allowance of appeal in our Supreme Court, which was held in abeyance

pending the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Montgomery.

While Appellant’s PCRA petition was pending in the Supreme Court,

Hicks, who was also a juvenile when the murder occurred, was resentenced

pursuant to Miller. At his resentencing hearing, on October 23, 2015, Hicks

admitted to firing the shots that killed the victim and said that Appellant was

not with him that night. On December 15, 2015, Appellant filed a second

PCRA petition, seeking a new trial on the basis of after-discovered evidence

due to Hicks’s confession at his resentencing hearing.

Following the United States Supreme Court’s ruling in Montgomery,

our Supreme Court vacated this Court’s order affirming Appellant’s judgment

of sentence, and remanded the case for further proceedings consistent with

Montgomery. See Commonwealth v. Walker, 132 A.3d 980 (Pa. 2016).

-4- J-A18031-19

We vacated Appellant’s judgment of sentence and remanded to the trial court

for resentencing. See Commonwealth v. Walker, 145 A.3d 782 (Pa.Super.

2016) (unpublished memorandum).

Upon motion by the Commonwealth, Appellant’s two PCRA petitions

were consolidated into one evidentiary hearing, which was held on February

9, 2018.

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