Commonwealth v. Davido, T., Aplt

106 A.3d 611, 630 Pa. 217, 2014 Pa. LEXIS 3334
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 15, 2014
Docket638 CAP
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 106 A.3d 611 (Commonwealth v. Davido, T., Aplt) 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 v. Davido, T., Aplt, 106 A.3d 611, 630 Pa. 217, 2014 Pa. LEXIS 3334 (Pa. 2014).

Opinions

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

In this capital case, Tedor Davido appeals from the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster County denying his petition for relief under the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”), 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-9546. We affirm.

I. Background

We set forth the facts of this case in our Opinion affirming Appellant’s sentence of death. Commonwealth v. Davido, 582 Pa. 52, 868 A.2d 431 (2005). The following is a summary of the facts pertinent to the issues raised on collateral review. Prior to 2000, Appellant served a sentence in Ohio for aggravated assault against a former girlfriend whom he had accused of having sexual relations with one of his brothers. In late April 2000, Appellant’s new girlfriend, Angelina Taylor, and her two-year-old son moved from Ohio to live with Appellant at 26 Hager Street in Lancaster. Appellant’s mother, sisters, brothers, and the girlfriend and children of Appellant’s brother, Spanky Davido, also resided there. On Sunday morning, May 14, 2000, an argument arose between Appellant and Ms. Taylor deriving from his suspicion that she had engaged in oral sex with Spanky Davido.

The dispute became violent, and Appellant began beating and loudly berating Ms. Taylor, calling her a “whore” and a “bitch” that “sucks d* *k.” N.T. Trial, 12/5/01, at 59. Ms. Taylor begged Appellant to stop hitting her and asked Appellant’s sister for help. When Appellant’s sister told Appellant to stop beating Ms. Taylor, Appellant cursed at her and ordered her to leave. Ultimately, all of Appellant’s relatives left the residence, taking Ms. Taylor’s son with them, leaving only Appellant and Ms. Taylor inside. At 7:52 a.m., shortly after leaving the residence, Appellant’s sister called 911 from a pay phone several blocks away. After identifying herself as a [227]*227neighbor, she reported that a man was beating a woman at 26 Hager Street.

Two police officers were immediately dispatched to investigate a “domestic situation” that involved a “man ... hitting a woman[,]” and were informed en route that loud screaming had been heard from inside the residence. Id. at 80. The officers arrived at the residence shortly before 8:00 a.m., but all was quiet. They knocked at the front and back doors, but no one answered. They opened an unsecured window in the front of the house, announced themselves and listened for any response, but heard nothing. The officers radioed police dispatch for information regarding the 911 caller or for the phone number within the residence. The officers were told by dispatch that the 911 call had come from a pay phone and that no phone number was listed for the address. The officers heard a phone ringing inside but the call was not answered. Responding to a “gut feeling” that someone inside might be injured or otherwise in need of assistance, one officer entered the residence through an unsecured window, unlocked a deadbolt on the front door, and admitted the other officer. N.T. Trial, 12/5/01, at 84. The officers continued to announce themselves and their reason for being there, and proceeded to conduct a floor-to-floor, room-to-room search for any injured person who might have been in need of assistance.

Appellant, who had been inside the house, heard the officers enter, and fled through a third-story window, wearing only a pair of sweatpants and socks. He ran along a rooftop, jumped onto a car parked in an adjacent alley, and then ran to the home of Michele Gray. He informed Ms. Gray that he had beaten Ms. Taylor, and that he had fled when he had heard the police in the house. He also told her that at the time he fled, Ms. Taylor had been pale, motionless, unresponsive, and having trouble breathing.

Meanwhile, the officers made their way to the rear bedroom on the third floor, where they discovered a woman, later identified as Angelina Taylor, naked under a sheet on a mattress on the floor. Ms. Taylor was seriously injured, with numerous bruises and cuts visible on her face and body, [228]*228including her pelvic region, as well as severe bruising on both sides of her throat and around both eyes. Her eyes were open but she was completely unresponsive and having difficulty breathing. The officers called for emergency response personnel, who took the victim to the hospital. The police then secured the scene and obtained a search warrant for the residence.

At the hospital, the victim (initially identified as Jane Doe) was placed on life-support after being diagnosed as comatose due to bleeding in the brain. In the trauma unit, a rape-kit examination was conducted, which revealed numerous lacerations, bruises and abrasions inside and outside the victim’s vagina. A large quantity of motile sperm was removed from inside her vagina as well. The victim never regained consciousness and her brainstem herniated from the swelling inside her head. The victim was pronounced brain-dead at 4:55 p.m. on May 14, 2000, and was removed from life-support the next day, after her identity had been established and her parents, who had been contacted in Ohio, arrived at the hospital and gave their consent to end life-support.

After he left Michele Gray’s house, Appellant fled to Harrisburg and stayed overnight at a motel under an assumed name. He returned to Lancaster the next day where, pursuant to a warrant, he was arrested on charges of murder and rape.1 After informing Appellant of his rights under Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S.Ct. 1602, 16 L.Ed.2d 694 (1966), the police questioned Appellant, who gave conflicting accounts of what had occurred. At first, Appellant denied strangling the victim, but he later admitted that he had choked her with his hands, while denying that he used a cord or other ligature device. He theorized that the bruising on the victim’s neck could have come from her shirt, because he had pulled on it. He admitted slapping the victim but denied hitting her with a closed fist. When asked about the bruises on her body and [229]*229face, he stated that the victim had fallen down the stairs from the second floor to the first floor and had landed on her face. He later explained that he and the victim had been standing near the top of the steps and that she had grabbed his shirt. He further stated that he then turned around and grabbed at her, and “she flew over my head like a dream” and tumbled down the steps face-first. N.T. Suppression Hearing, 3/28/01, at 55; N.T. Trial, 12/10/01, at 677.

Appellant also explained that the bruises to the victim’s pelvic area had been caused earlier during the weekend when he had thrown a football at her and had accidentally hit her in the groin. He theorized that the sperm inside the victim had been deposited the evening before, when she had engaged in consensual sex with him in the bathroom of a movie theater. He told police that the victim had been hoping to become pregnant, and so, after the sexual encounter in the theater bathroom, she had kept her legs up in the air for some time to aid the impregnation process. He also related that they had engaged in consensual sex twice more the prior evening, once in the car, and once in the bedroom, before the fight started.

Appellant stated that after Ms. Taylor tumbled down the stairs, she had become unable to move, so he carried her to the second floor. He stated that when he later heard the police enter, he carried her to the back bedroom on the third floor, and then fled the residence because he was scared.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Com. v. Cronin, D.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2025
TOWLES v. WETZEL
E.D. Pennsylvania, 2025
Com. v. Fisher, J.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2025
Commonwealth v. Walters, P., Aplt.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2024
Com. v. Foust, M.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2024
Com. v. McMaster, D., Jr.
2024 Pa. Super. 130 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2024)
Commonwealth, Aplt. v. Conforti, M.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2023
Com. v. Smith, H.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2023
WALKER v. MARSH
E.D. Pennsylvania, 2022
CANNON v. GARMAN
E.D. Pennsylvania, 2022
Com. v. Stiver, J.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2021
J.R. v. J.P.B.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2021
WANG v. OVERMYER
E.D. Pennsylvania, 2021
Com. v. Mieluchowski, J.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2020
Com. v. Harris, S.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2020
Com. v. Johns, P.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2020
Commonwealth v. Miller
212 A.3d 1114 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2019)
Commonwealth v. Coughlin
199 A.3d 401 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Wilmer, A., Aplt.
194 A.3d 564 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2018)
Michael Ball v. United States
185 A.3d 21 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 A.3d 611, 630 Pa. 217, 2014 Pa. LEXIS 3334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-davido-t-aplt-pa-2014.