Commonwealth v. Luketic

162 A.3d 1149, 2017 Pa. Super. 146, 2017 WL 2123441, 2017 Pa. Super. LEXIS 347
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 16, 2017
DocketCom. v. Luketic, C. No. 789 WDA 2016
StatusPublished
Cited by139 cases

This text of 162 A.3d 1149 (Commonwealth v. Luketic) 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. Luketic, 162 A.3d 1149, 2017 Pa. Super. 146, 2017 WL 2123441, 2017 Pa. Super. LEXIS 347 (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION BY

SOLANO, J.:

Appellant, Christopher Luketic, appeals from his judgment of sentence of six to twelve months’ incarceration. After careful review, we vacate the judgmént of sentence and remand for resentencing.

On September 22, 2015, Appellant and his friend Nicole Stevens were arrested for purchasing heroin from a drug dealer named Lanel Buckner. The Commonwealth described the transaction and arrest as follows:

[Police detectives] were conducting surveillance in a high-crime, high-drug trafficking area of the City of Pittsburgh, when they observed the [co-]defendant, Lanel Buckner, texting and continuously looking down the street.
They then observed a vehicle driven by another defendant, Chris Luketic, pull into oncoming traffic and stop directly in front of Mr. Buckner.
They also were able to later identify the front seat passenger of Mr. Luketic’s vehicle as the third co-defendant, Nicole Stevens.
At that time, detectives were able to observe a transaction where they observed Mr. Buckner hand Mr. Luketic suspected heroin in exchange for United States currency.
At that point, the detectives initiated a traffic stop on the vehicle in which Mr. Luketic and Miss Stevens were operating.
At that time, Miss Stevens did hand the detectives eight stamp bags of suspected heroin, and pointed out several more on the floor of the vehicle. They also observed a loaded syringe on the floor of the rear of their vehicle.

N.T., 6/1/16, at 18-19.

On June 1, 2016, Appellant entered an open plea of guilty to possession of a controlled substance. 1 Buckner also pleaded guilty, and he was sentenced immediately prior to Appellant to three to six years’ incarceration in a state correctional institution. N.T. at 21. 2 While sentencing Buckner, the trial judge stated

I’m giving you three to six years in the State Correctional Institution. You’ll be on probation for five years after you get through with that. And zero tolerance for drugs. Maybe marijuana will be legalized by then.
But I don’t know how many more opportunities I can give you. You are not a dumb kid. You have just chosen you are going to sell dope to people. And that’s the consequence. You have to deal with the consequences of having a bla *1153 tant disregard for everyone else’s life. You want to sell dope. You have dope fiends like him[ ] ([indicating [Appellant] )[.] He is going to jail, too. He is not walking out of here either.

N.T. at 21-22 (emphasis added).

At the conclusion of Buckner’s sentencing hearing, the court ordered that Appellant’s urine be tested. While Appellant was absent from the courtroom, the court had the following exchange with Appellant’s defense counsel:

[APPELLANT’S COUNSEL:] ... I have concerns with my client being sentenced before the Court, given the Court’s statement on the record and indicating that the Court was already predisposed to enter a jail sentence of some sort before I had the opportunity to elicit testimony—
THE COURT: He is sitting there sweating like a pig.[ 3 ] I believe he is going to have hot urine.
[APPELLANT’S COUNSEL:] I’m objecting to the Court imposing sentence if the Court was willing to enter a jail sentence without me eliciting any mitigating factors, because his guidelines in the standard range are either RS [restorative sanctions] to 1 and RS to 9 or an RS—[¶] The District Attorney and I are on two different pages as to what his prior record score is.
THE COURT: Why don’t you wait until your client comes back. I don’t want to address anything you are saying without him being here. I’ll give you an opportunity to address all of that.

N.T. at 26-27.

Upon Appellant’s return, his sentencing proceeding began. The court began by inquiring about Appellant’s urine test. Although the test showed that Appellant did have opiates in his system, the court determined that Appellant had a prescription for them. N.T. at 28. 4

Defense counsel then renewed his objection to Appellant being sentenced by the court, in the following exchange:

[APPELLANT’S COUNSEL:] Briefly, Your Honor—as the Court instructed, we were waiting for [Appellant] to come back [from his urine test], I want to impose an objection on the record since the Court indicated in this co-defendant case that the Court was inclined to send [Appellant] to jail.
THE COURT: I am going to send him to jail. Let’s not have any equivocation. He is going to jail, because he and the guy who went to jail, they are both opposite sides of the same coin. That’s why he is going to jail, because he creates the guy that is with him. But go ahead.
[APPELLANT’S COUNSEL:] If I can make a record on behalf of my client. The Court has already prejudged that matter before I got to even elicit any testimony out of my client that would bear upon any mitigating factors. [¶] My client, based upon a prior record score of one is within RS to 6 range. He is within a probationary range.[ 5 ] [¶] Our *1154 sentencing code is quite clear that before this Court imposes judgment of any kind, they need to pay attention in these matters.
THE COURT: I’m all ears. I’m all ears. Tell me something mitigating.
[APPELLANT’S COUNSEL:] I have concerns that this Court doesn’t care what is mitigating, based upon that determined—already expressed—
THE COURT: Tell me what is mitigating. We don’t have to have any guesswork. Tell me what is mitigating. Give me the mitigating facts.

N.T. at 28-29 (emphases added).

Appellant’s counsel then presented a case for a mitigated sentence based on the following factors: Appellant’s acceptance of responsibility, 6 his drug addiction, the fact he is not a drug dealer, his attempts at recovery, his employment status, and his relationship with his three-year-old daughter. N.T. at 29-36. Neither the court nor defense counsel made any reference during this discussion (or at any other time) to any pre-sentence investigation report (“PSI”) regarding Appellant, and there is no indication that the court ordered one, even though Appellant, who had a prior conviction for possession of a controlled substance, could have received a sentence' in excess of one year of incarceration for his misdemeanor. 7 There is no PSI in the record, and the record does not indicate whether either party waived ordering of a PSI.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 A.3d 1149, 2017 Pa. Super. 146, 2017 WL 2123441, 2017 Pa. Super. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-luketic-pasuperct-2017.