Commonwealth v. Bozic

997 A.2d 1211, 2010 Pa. Super. 114, 2010 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1068, 2010 WL 2521771
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 24, 2010
Docket2213 EDA 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 997 A.2d 1211 (Commonwealth v. Bozic) 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
Commonwealth v. Bozic, 997 A.2d 1211, 2010 Pa. Super. 114, 2010 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1068, 2010 WL 2521771 (Pa. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION BY

STEVENS, J.:

¶ 1 Appellant, Simeon Bozic, appeals from the judgment of sentence of life imprisonment without parole entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, after a jury rejected his duress defense and convicted him of first-degree murder and related offenses for his role in beating and stabbing the twenty-one year old girlfriend of his co-defendant. 1 He claims the trial court abused its discretion in dismissing his weight of the evidence claim, in denying his requests for a mistrial or continuance when a purportedly key defense witness — co-defendant’s wife— avoided a subpoena and failed to appear in court, in overruling his objection to the prosecutor’s closing remarks, and in denying a presentence motion for extraordinary relief and post sentence motion for reconsideration, each asking for a new trial when the co-defendant’s wife was located after trial.

¶ 2 Contemporaneously with the filing of this appeal, Appellant has petitioned this Court for remand to allow a full hearing on his post sentence motion for a new trial. Specifically, Appellant claims he was denied his right to a full and fair hearing when both the court and the Commonwealth failed to inform him at sentencing that co-defendant and his counsel improperly persuaded co-defendant’s wife to avoid Appellant’s subpoena. Finally, counsel for Appellant has filed a court-ordered peti *1215 tion for remand responding to Appellant’s pro se allegation that counsel has rendered ineffective assistance of counsel in the present appeal. After careful review of the entire record, party briefs, and the trial court opinion, we deny Appellant’s petition for remand, counsel’s petition for remand, and affirm judgment of sentence.

¶ 8 In its Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion, the trial court provides an apt summary of salient facts, as follows:

The decedent in this case, Asia Adams, was a college student who came home to Philadelphia on the weekends. She had recently started going out with the co-defendant, Thomas [Napoleon] Strode, who was a close friend of [Appellant’s]. On the night of November 7, 2004, [Appellant] and co-defendant decided to kill and rob Ms. Adams. The two of them went to her house, and they beat and stabbed her so savagely that they knocked teeth out of her mouth and nearly decapitated her. After she was dead, they took her money and her ATM card and used the card [the following day to make eight withdrawals totaling over $700, which the men used to go shopping together].
The day after the murder, [Appellant] and co-defendant went back to the decedent’s house. They tried to clean up the blood from the beating and moved her body from the basement to the second floor. They then set the house on fire, starting with the bedroom in which they had placed the decedent’s body. After a neighbor called the fire department, the blaze was extinguished and the decedent’s body was found.
[Appellant] turned himself in to homicide detectives after they contacted his mother and let her know that they wanted to interview him. He gave a full[y] inculpatory statement and consented to having the statement videotaped. He admitted to killing the decedent and setting her house on fire, but he insisted that all of his actions were a result of his fear of the co-defendant. At the conclusion of the police interrogation, [Appellant] was arrested and charged with the murder of Asia Adams.

Trial Court Opinion dated 1/08/09 at 2-3.

¶ 4 Also adduced at trial was evidence of how co-defendant Strode related both to the women in his life and to his best friend, Appellant, with particular focus placed on whether he ever abused, subordinated, or controlled Appellant. According to Ms. Adams’ best friend, Alexis Be-thea-Lopes, she warned Adams not to become too deeply involved with Strode because he was an habitual liar who would say anything “to try to get you to take him seriously.” N.T. 11/13/07 at 163-64. For example, she said, Strode would frequently make claims without any indication they were true, such as when he said he worked for the Drug Enforcement Agency when it appeared he was altogether unemployed, or when he explained his absence for a two week period one time by saying he was a fugitive from the law. N.T. at 163. She also testified that Strode was having a relationship with another woman besides Adams by the name of Sabra Smith, and that a week before the murder Smith was preparing to end her relationship with him after learning about Adams. N.T. at 185. Bethea-Lopes also recounted how on the day of the murder she had called Adams to persuade her to go out for the evening, only to have Strode take the cell phone from Adams and pointedly tell Be-thea-Lopes that Adams was spending time with him that day. N.T. 11/13/07 at 165-66.

¶ 5 Never in her meetings with the two co-defendants, however, did she witness Strode abuse or in any way domineer Appellant. N.T. at 163. Bethea-Lopes also *1216 testified that on the day after the murder, when she learned Adams’ house was on fire and asked a friend to drive her to the scene, she saw Appellant and Strode walking down the street together each carrying shopping bags. N.T. at 172-73.

¶ 6 Kedar Johnson, a neighbor and friend to both Appellant and Strode, testified to receiving a late night phone call from Strode on November 7, 2004, offering to pay if Johnson would take him in for the night. N.T. 11/14/07 at 57-58. Johnson agreed, admitted Strode and Appellant into his mother’s home about 15 minutes later, and accepted around $20 from Strode, who, Johnson claimed, owed him money anyway. N.T. at 59-61.

¶ 7 The next morning, Johnson awoke and saw Appellant had been first to rise. N.T. at 64. According to Johnson, Appellant was tapping his watch and told Strode it was time to leave, but Strode told him to be quiet and started back to sleep until Johnson rose to start his work day, which prompted co-defendants to leave. N.T. at 64, 81. When asked if he had ever witnessed Strode strong arm Appellant or tell him what to do, Johnson answered that he never witnessed that kind of relationship between the two, who, he believed, were good friends. N.T. at 67.

¶ 8 Detective Gary White of the Philadelphia Police Department’s Homicide Unit testified about his investigation into the death of Asia Adams. Based on witness information indicating that Appellant may have been one of the last persons to see Ms. Adams alive, Detective White went to Appellant’s mother’s home, where Appellant was residing, to interview him. N.T. at 84-85. Appellant was not home at the time, so Detective White told Appellant’s mother that it was important that police speak to Appellant, and he gave her his card containing contact information. N.T. at 86.

¶ 9 Within a week, Appellant phoned Detective White and asked the detective to meet him at a street corner to talk about the case. N.T. at 87. When the detective arrived, Appellant appeared “a little shaken up” and said he wanted to explain what happened to Ms. Adams. N.T. at 88. Detective White stopped him in order to advise him of his Miranda rights and to transport him to the precinct. N.T. at 88. During the approximately seven minute drive, Appellant was volunteering information about Ms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
997 A.2d 1211, 2010 Pa. Super. 114, 2010 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1068, 2010 WL 2521771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-bozic-pasuperct-2010.