Com. v. Young, B.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 1, 2016
Docket163 EDA 2015
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Young, B. (Com. v. Young, B.) 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. Young, B., (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

J-A01014-16

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

BRETT YOUNG,

Appellant No. 163 EDA 2015

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence September 8, 2014 In the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-09-CR-0002095-2013

BEFORE: LAZARUS, J., OTT, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*

MEMORANDUM BY STEVENS, P.J.E.: FILED MARCH 01, 2016

This is an appeal from the judgment of sentence entered in the Court

of Common Pleas of Bucks County by the Honorable Albert J. Cepparulo on

September 8, 2014, following Appellant’s convictions of two counts of

Possession of a Controlled Substance with Intent to Manufacture or Deliver

(PWID) and five counts of Use or Possession of Drug Paraphernaila.1 On

appeal, Appellant contends the trial court erred in denying his motion to

suppress items seized from his home following a traffic stop. Following a

careful review of the record, we affirm.

____________________________________________

1 35 Pa.C.S. §§780-113(a)(30), (a)(32), respectively.

*Former Justice specially assigned to Superior Court. J-A01014-16

At the hearing held on Appellant’s pretrial motions, Officer Gregory

Smith, an eleven-year veteran of the Bensalem Township Police Department

specially trained in narcotics investigations, testified that in November of

2012 he was contacted by a reliable confidential informant (C.I.) who

informed him Appellant was a large-scale marijuana dealer in the area from

whom he or she had previously purchased marijuana. N.T., 8/21/13, at 26-

27. The C.I. relayed that Appellant lives near a bar and drives a black

pickup truck. Id. at 27. With a description of Appellant’s vehicle and home,

Officer Smith obtained Appellant’s name and address and discovered he

drove a black, Lincoln pickup truck. Id. at 27-29.

On November 26, 2012, Officer Smith set up a controlled buy between

Appellant and the C.I. Id. at 30. Officer Smith maintained constant

surveillance of the C.I., and Sergeant Robert Bugsch and Officer Joseph

Gansky, also of the Bensalem Township Police Department, maintained a

constant visual surveillance of Appellant’s residence at 5445 Flushing Road,

Bensalem Township, throughout the transaction.2 Id. at 31. Ultimately,

the C.I. purchased what was later determined to be one pound of raw

marijuana packaged in gallon-sized, plastic vacuum bags. Id. at 37-41.

2 Both Sergeant Bugsch and Officer Gansky had been employed in the field of law enforcement for a number of years and received narcotics training on the federal, state and local levels. Between them, they had been involved in over fifteen hundred (1,500) narcotics investigations. N.T., 8/22/13, at 183; N.T., 8/23/13, at 462.

-2- J-A01014-16

Officer Smith thereafter prepared an application for and obtained a GPS

Tracker Order for Appellant’s vehicle which allowed police to monitor his

movements in that when he left the small street on which his home was

located, the aforementioned officers would receive an alert on their cell

phones. N.T., 8/21/13, at 41-42, 43-44, 128-29; N.T., 8/22/13, at 197-98;

N.T., 8/23/13, at 469-70.

On December 3, 2012, Officer Smith received an alert that Appellant’s

truck had left his residence and was traveling southbound on Roosevelt

Boulevard into Philadelphia. N.T., 8/21/13, at 44-45. He communicated

with surveilling officers who located Appellant’s vehicle in the Hop Angel bar

parking lot. N.T., 8/23/13, at 494-95. Approximately twenty minutes after

officers arrived, Appellant left the bar and proceeded to a gas station and

then onto I-76 toward Center City at which time officers lost sight of the

truck. N.T., 8/22/13, at 204-05, 208, 245; N.T., 8/23/13, at 497, 499.

Officer Smith who had been monitoring the truck’s GPS movements at the

police department soon after informed Sergeant Christie and Officer Gansky

the vehicle had stopped in the area of 30th Street and Cambridge Street in

Philadelphia, and Sergeant Christie and Officer Gansky responded to this

location. N.T, 8/21/13, at 48-49; N.T., 8/22/13, at 208. Officer Smith

believed that the number of short, quick stops Appellant was making along

the way indicated he was delivering marijuana at different locations. Id. at

56-58.

-3- J-A01014-16

Conducting surveillance of Appellant’s truck on foot, the officers

observed Appellant and an unknown individual exit the residence and walk

over to the vehicle where Appellant retrieved what appeared to be a heavy

hockey-style bag. The bag’s weight was suggested by the fact that

Appellant struggled to heave it onto his shoulder. N.T., 8/21/13, at 53;

8/22/13, at 209, 211, 216, 246-47; N.T., 8/23/13, at 500-01, 505.

Appellant returned with his companion to the residence where they remained

for ten to twenty minutes after which they exited with Appellant carrying the

same, still apparently heavy bag which he placed in the bed of his truck.

N.T., 8/22/13, at 215, 218; N.T., 8/23/13, at 502, 507. Officer Gansky

noticed plastic material hanging out of the top of the then-opened bag.

N.T., 8/22/13, 215-26, 247. After a brief conversation, Appellant left the

area, and the individual reentered the home. N.T., 8/22/13, at 217-18. The

man was later identified as Jason Mellor.

Appellant proceeded onto northbound I-95 toward Bensalem. N.T.,

8/22/13, at 222. Officer Smith contacted a K-9 officer, Officer Brian Cowden

of the Bensalem Township Police Department, to initiate a stop of Appellant's

vehicle when he exited I-95 and conduct a subsequent search of the vehicle

for drugs. N.T., 8/21/13, at 57-58. Officer Smith informed Officer Cowden

of the controlled buy involving the C.I. and Appellant that occurred a week

earlier and provided him continuous updated information regarding

Appellant’s stops and their location in Philadelphia. N.T., 8/22/13, 222-23,

-4- J-A01014-16

324, 339-40. In addition, Officers Smith and Gansky both testified that he

informed Officer Cowden of Appellant’s behavior earlier that evening, and

specifically, that he believed he was heading home to Bensalem with a large

bag in the back of his vehicle which, in light of his training and experience,

he believed contained marijuana. N.T., 8/21/13, at 59; N.T., 8/22/13, at

223.

The trial court detailed what happened next as follows:

Officer Cowden had been a K9 officer at Bensalem Township Police Department for nine (9) years. N.T. 8/22/13, 287. During this time, he had become a certified K-9 handler and he had handled two (2) different canine officers. Id. at 288- 89, 290 -91. The K9 related to this case is "Edo." Id. at 290. Edo is cross-trained to locate both subjects and the tracking and recovery of evidence, building searches, and narcotics detection. Id. at 292-296. Edo is trained to detect marijuana, crack cocaine, powder cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine.10 Id. at 296. On December 3, 2012, Officer Cowden observed a 2007 black Lincoln pick-up truck at approximately 10:45 p.m. and followed the vehicle off Street Road and onto the Route 13 (Bristol Pike) exit. N.T. 8/21/13, 105; N.T. 8/22/13, 325. He followed the vehicle northbound on Bristol Pike in the area of Park Avenue and effectuated a traffic stop. N.T. 8/22/13, 325.

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