Commonwealth v. Shands

487 A.2d 973, 338 Pa. Super. 296, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5494
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 25, 1985
Docket2173 Philadelphia 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 487 A.2d 973 (Commonwealth v. Shands) 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. Shands, 487 A.2d 973, 338 Pa. Super. 296, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5494 (Pa. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

ROWLEY, Judge:

This is a direct appeal by Anthony Shands from a judgment of sentence imposing IIV2 to 23 months imprisonment following his conviction by a jury on charges of Robbery, Theft, Receiving Stolen Property and Criminal Conspiracy. We have concluded that the trial court erred in restricting appellant’s cross-examination of the prosecuting police officers and in failing to require the Commonwealth to make available for inspection the district attorney’s files concerning his investigation of the officers. Therefore, we reverse.

The facts as recited by the trial court in its opinion are as follows:

This is a “Granny Squad” case. On December 16, 1980, in the Concourse of the City of Philadelphia the defendant Anthony Shands, nineteen years old, attempted to take money from the pocket of Officer Flanagan. Officer Flanagan was walking and clothed as an aged derelict. He was a decoy with four back-up officers ready to come to his aid as soon as he gave the signal that he had been robbed. These Granny Squads had been operating in high crime areas in the City of Philadelphia for many months prior to December 16, 1980. Officer Flanagan as a decoy would carry with him a roll of stage money with *300 one or two genuine dollars on top. In this case the defendant was seized by the back-up officers as he held Flanagan’s roll of money in his hand.

The back-up officers assisted Officer Flanagan in the arrest of appellant and they all testified against him at his trial, which commenced on August 4, 1981.

Immediately preceding the trial, appellant’s counsel and the Assistant District Attorney sought a pre-trial ruling regarding the scope of permissible cross-examination of the members of the “Flanagan Squad”. At that time, the officers were under investigation by the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, the Philadelphia Police Department and the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office regarding allegations that, during 1980 and 1981, they had made false arrests, exhibited racial bias, used excessive force and testified falsely in criminal prosecutions of certain persons they had arrested. There was no indication that the investigation involved the charges made against appellant by the squad. Nonetheless, appellant’s counsel requested that he be allowed to cross-examine the arresting officers regarding the ongoing state and federal investigations into other arrests made by them, including the subsequent disposition of certain cases by the Philadelphia District Attorney.

Appellant’s counsel further requested that the District Attorney’s file regarding the ongoing investigation be made available for his review. (August 4, 1981, N.T., pp. 13, 17-18, 25). In response to this request, the Assistant District Attorney stated that he was in the Trial Division of the District Attorney’s Office, which was separate from the Investigation Division, and that he had nothing in his control that had not been provided to defense counsel. In response to defense counsel’s assertion that the files should be submitted to the trial judge, the prosecutor argued that if the court determined that such evidence was irrelevant in the first place, then there was no need for the court to review the investigatory files. (August 4, 1981, N.T. 17-18). The trial court ruled that appellant was “not to delve *301 into any previous cases involving this particular Granny Squad.” (August 4, 1981, N.T. p. 24).

Appellant was convicted by a jury on August 7, 1981 and on June 15, 1982, he was sentenced to two concurrent terms of 11 and xk to 23 months imprisonment. 1 In the interim, on September 9, 1981, the four officers in the Flanagan Squad were indicted by a federal grand jury on charges that they conspired to violate the civil rights of eight named individuals whom they had arrested in a fashion similar to that employed in appellant’s arrest. The District Attorney of Philadelphia cooperated in the federal investigation, and during the investigation, four cases in which the Flanagan Squad officers testified under oath at preliminary hearings held for persons they had arrested were nol prossed by the District Attorney. One week before the federal indictments were handed down, the District Attorney publically stated that he was convinced that at least four persons who had been accused by the squad were telling the truth when they denied the charges.

Thereafter, on February 11, 1982, Judge Richard B. Klein of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas entered an order holding that approximately twenty-five open cases involving arrests and prosecutions initiated by the Flanagan Squad would be dismissed unless the Commonwealth agreed to advise the trier of fact of, inter alia, the circumstances of the federal investigation and the action taken by the District Attorney in nol prossing four of the prosecutions.

On appeal, appellant claims that the trial court abused its discretion in limiting his counsel’s cross-examination of the police witnesses concerning the criminal investigation of their Granny Squad operation. Appellant argues that he had a right to show, by cross-examination, that the witnesses called to testify against him were biased or had an *302 interest in the outcome of the trial. 2 The trial court, relying on Commonwealth v. Cragle, 281 Pa.Super. 434, 422 A.2d 547 (1980), determined that the prosecuting officers could not be impeached by evidence of criminal activities for which they had not been convicted. We find that Cragle is distinguishable from the instant case and that appellant’s cross-examination of the police witnesses who testified against him was improperly restricted.

There are a multitude of ways to attack the credibility of a witness. See McCormick on Evidence § 33 at 72-73 (3d ed. 1984). In Cragle, defendant’s counsel, employing one method, attempted to impeach a Commonwealth witness’s character for truthfulness by showing that the witness had received stolen goods in the past and made a practice of handling stolen goods. However, the witness had not been convicted of the particular criminal activities referred to by defense counsel. Accordingly, our court determined that the trial court properly restricted defense counsel’s cross-examination regarding the witness’s alleged handling of stolen goods. Our court observed that, as a general rule, a witness must be convicted of an offense in the nature of crimen falsi before such evidence is relevant and admissible to impeach the witness’s character; otherwise, admission of such evidence would constitute reliance on a hearsay assertion of guilt. Commonwealth v. Cragle, 281 Pa.Super. at 437, 422 A.2d at 549. See Commonwealth v. Taylor, 475 Pa. 564, 381 A.2d 418 (1977). However, attempting to introduce evidence of prior misconduct, for which there has been no criminal conviction, to impeach a witness’s general character for truthfulness differs

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Bluebook (online)
487 A.2d 973, 338 Pa. Super. 296, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-shands-pa-1985.