Commonwealth, Aplt. v. Johnson, R.

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 19, 2017
Docket713 CAP
StatusPublished

This text of Commonwealth, Aplt. v. Johnson, R. (Commonwealth, Aplt. v. Johnson, R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth, Aplt. v. Johnson, R., (Pa. 2017).

Opinion

[J-135-2016] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA EASTERN DISTRICT

SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, : No. 713 CAP : Appellant : Appeal from the Order of the Court of : Common Pleas, Berks County, Criminal : Division dated July 6, 2015 at No. CP- v. : 06-CR-0000118-1997, directing that a : new trial be held. : RODERICK ANDRE JOHNSON, : SUBMITTED: December 2, 2016 : Appellee :

OPINION

JUSTICE WECHT DECIDED: December 19, 2017 In 1997, Roderick Johnson was convicted on two counts of first-degree murder.

He was sentenced to death. Several years later, Johnson discovered that the

Commonwealth had concealed certain documents that would have cast doubt upon the

credibility of a key prosecution witness. The court of common pleas held that the

Commonwealth’s failure to disclose this evidence violated Johnson’s right to due

process of law, in accordance with Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 87 (1963) (holding

that the prosecution must disclose evidence favorable to the accused that is material

either to guilt or to punishment). The court awarded Johnson a new trial. We affirm.

On December 7, 1996, in the city of Reading, cousins Damon and Gregory

Banks (collectively, “the Banks cousins”) robbed Madelyn Perez at gunpoint in her

boyfriend’s apartment. The Banks cousins stated that they were looking for drugs and money. They found neither. Instead, they took a camcorder and a Sony PlayStation

before fleeing.

Perez told her boyfriend, Shawnfatee Bridges, about the robbery. She told him

that the robbers were wearing green masks and green hoodies. This fact was

significant, because Bridges recalled seeing the Banks cousins wearing green hoodies

earlier that day. When Bridges met with co-defendants Johnson and Richard Morales

that same evening, he was angry about the robbery. At one point, Bridges grabbed a

shotgun and stated that he wanted to go to the Banks cousins’ house and kill them.

Bridges also showed Johnson and Morales a 9-mm Glock pistol that he was carrying.

The following day, Johnson, Bridges, and Morales went to a nearby K-Mart and

purchased shotgun shells. The trio then traveled in a minivan to the Banks cousins’

home. When they arrived, Bridges pretended that he was interested in recruiting the

Banks cousins to oversee his drug-dealing business while he was out of town. The

Banks cousins, apparently believing this pretext, got into the minivan.

Later that evening, police officers found the dead bodies of the Banks cousins on

a gravel driveway leading to a silt basin. Around this time, police also received a report

from a local restaurant (located fewer than five miles from the silt basin) that an

unknown man had been shot. Upon arrival, the police identified the wounded man as

Johnson. He was transported to a local hospital.

A few days later, while still hospitalized, Johnson gave a statement to the police.

He confessed to his participation in the Banks cousins’ murders. According to Johnson,

his role in the conspiracy was limited to driving the minivan. Johnson told police that,

after picking up the Banks cousins, he drove Bridges, Morales, and the cousins to a dirt

road near a construction site. He recounted that Bridges and Morales got out of the van

and told the Banks cousins to follow them, claiming that they would show the cousins

[J-135-2016] - 2 where Bridges’ drugs were stashed. When the Banks cousins grew suspicious and

refused to comply, Bridges walked around to the front of the minivan and started

shooting. Johnson claimed that, as he was exiting the van, Bridges shot him in the

torso. Johnson stated that, as he was attempting to flee, he saw Bridges shoot into the

van at the Banks cousins. Johnson said he then walked to the restaurant, where the

police found him.

The Commonwealth’s scenario of the murders differed substantially from

Johnson’s. At Johnson’s capital murder trial, a forensic pathologist testified that one of

the bullets recovered from the body of Damon Banks was a .38 caliber projectile. The

Commonwealth presented evidence that a .38 caliber handgun was recovered close to

the murder scene, and the Commonwealth’s ballistics expert matched that firearm with

the bullet recovered during Damon Banks’ autopsy. In order to rebut Johnson’s claim

that he was merely present at the scene of the murders, the Commonwealth sought to

prove that Johnson fired the .38 caliber bullet recovered from Damon Banks’ body.

To refute Johnson’s version of events, the Commonwealth called George Robles

as a trial witness. Robles testified that Johnson owned a .38 caliber handgun like the

one found near the crime scene. He also testified that he visited Johnson in the hospital

just after the murder, and that Johnson confessed to taking the .38 caliber murder

weapon from the murder scene, wiping it off with his shirt, and then throwing it on the

side of the road about a quarter mile from the construction site. At trial, Robles provided

the crucial link between Johnson and the murder weapon, and supplied the testimony

that countered Johnson’s defense.

Given the importance of Robles’ testimony, defense counsel attempted to

undercut his credibility on cross-examination by showing that he was involved in

ongoing criminal activities and was an informant for the Reading Police Department.

[J-135-2016] - 3 The assistant district attorney objected to this line of questioning, characterizing as

“absurd” defense counsel’s belief that Robles was a drug dealer or an informant, and

emphasizing that Robles had never been convicted of, or even arrested for, any crime.

R.R. at 589a. Defense counsel responded that his questioning “does go to [Robles’]

credibility.” Id. at 590a. The trial court sustained the prosecutor’s objection in part, but

did not prevent the defense from “inquiring as to any legitimate area of [Robles’]

possible bias or interest in the outcome” of the trial. Id. at 591a.

The problem was that defense counsel was flying blind; he had the court’s

permission to inquire into Robles’ bias, self-interest, or motivation to lie, but he knew of

nothing concrete to ask Robles. Defense counsel did the best that he could. He asked

Robles if the Reading Police had ever paid him for information (Robles denied this). He

asked whether Robles’ nickname was “Gambino” (Robles admitted this). And he asked

if Robles was the leader of a gang (Robles denied this). To the extent that Robles’

answers did any harm to his credibility, the damage likely was repaired on redirect,

when Robles reminded the jury that he had never been arrested for, charged with, or

convicted of, any crime. Id. at 593a.

Ultimately, Johnson was convicted on two counts of first-degree murder.

Following a penalty phase trial, the jury sentenced Johnson to death. After his trial,

Johnson obtained a letter that Robles had sent to Reading Police Detective Angel

Cabrera while Robles was jailed as a material witness1 (after he failed to appear in court

to testify against Johnson). In the letter, Robles stated that he would “do anything” to

get out of jail. On direct appeal, Johnson argued that Robles’ letter constituted material

impeachment evidence that the Commonwealth was required to disclose pursuant to

1 See Pa.R.Crim.P.

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