K. George v. Com. of PA, DOC

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 16, 2026
Docket409 M.D. 2021
StatusUnpublished
AuthorFizzano Cannon

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

Bluebook
K. George v. Com. of PA, DOC, (Pa. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Kareem George, : Petitioner : : v. : : Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, : Department of Corrections, : Records Supervisor, Kathleen : Witmer, SCI Rockview, : Superintendent, Bobi Jo Solomon, : No. 409 M.D. 2021 Respondents : Submitted: February 3, 2026

BEFORE: HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, President Judge HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge HONORABLE STELLA M. TSAI, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE FIZZANO CANNON FILED: March 16, 2026

Before this Court in our original jurisdiction is an application for summary relief filed pro se by Petitioner Kareem George (George) concerning his pending petition for writ of mandamus (mandamus petition). The mandamus petition avers that Respondents, primarily the Department of Corrections and its personnel (collectively, the Department), wrongly amended the effective date of George’s prison sentence for offenses committed in 2002 while he was on parole from a prior conviction. George asks this Court to direct the Department to correct the sentence to reflect an effective date of August 27, 2007, the date of his guilty plea and colloquy. Upon review, we deny George’s application for summary relief. I. Factual and Procedural Background In December 2002, George, who was on parole at the time from a 1995 conviction, was involved in a dispute that began in a Harrisburg nightclub and ended in a nearby parking garage where he shot at several individuals, one of whom was killed. Guilty Plea Colloquy at 11.1 He fled, was ultimately arrested in New York State on January 6, 2005, and has been in Department custody since then. Id. at 11 & 25. On August 27, 2007, George appeared at his guilty plea and sentencing colloquy for the 2002 offenses. The prosecutor stated that a plea agreement had been reached: George would serve 15 to 30 years on a third-degree murder charge to run concurrently with sentences on lesser charges from the same incident. Guilty Plea Colloquy at 2 & 8. The prosecutor did not state that any time related to George’s back time on the 1995 conviction or his parole violations from the 2002 incident would run concurrently with his new sentence; the prosecutor stated only that “discussions” had taken place and that “any questions that [George] has” could be “cleared up” at the colloquy. Id. at 3. George’s counsel asked that the sentence on the 2002 offenses be effective as of the August 27, 2007, colloquy date and run concurrently with a one- year sentence that had already been imposed for George’s technical parole violations on his 1995 conviction. Id. at 9-10. The sentencing court responded: The sentence will be effective today. That was no question. Mr. George, I just want to be crystal clear, to the extent that I can make it concurrent with your technical violations I would do that. But I’m not even so sure I can do that. I just want to be clear with you that that may not happen. Do you understand that?

1 The colloquy transcript is appended to George’s mandamus petition.

2 ....

I’m recommending it. I’m stating that for the record. But that can be ignored by the Parole Board. Do you understand that?

Id. at 10. George nodded his agreement. Id. at 10. At the colloquy, after George formally pleaded guilty, the court confirmed that a plea agreement had been reached for George to serve 15 to 30 years on the 2002 offenses. Guilty Plea Colloquy at 14. The sentencing court reiterated that it was uncertain whether George’s parole violation or back time could run concurrently with his sentence on the new charges and stated that “even though I’m going to do what you ask” and recommend that George’s parole violation sentence run concurrently to the new sentence, “that’s not part of the plea agreement, that if the Parole Board does not give [George] credit that’s not a condition of the plea agreement?” Id. at 14-15. George’s counsel responded “Right.” Id. at 15. Near the end of the colloquy, the sentencing court reiterated that the sentence on the 2002 offenses “is effective today’s date” and that “[t]o the extent that the Court can, this sentence can run concurrently with” George’s parole violation sentence: “That seems to me to comply not with the plea agreement but with what our discussion was. The full understanding that that’s – the Court may not have the authority to do that. And if we don’t, we’ll give [George] the appropriate time credit.” Guilty Plea Colloquy at 27. The sentencing court lastly advised George that he had 10 days to file a post-sentence motion and 30 days from the outcome of that motion to further appeal to this Court. Id. at 29. The record before this Court does not indicate that George filed a post-trial motion or notice of appeal after the colloquy.

3 In December 2012, George filed a Post Conviction Relief Act (PCRA)2 petition raising issues regarding his August 27, 2007, sentencing for the first time.3 See Commonwealth v. George (Pa. Super., No. 465 MDA 2013, filed Jan. 23, 2014), 2014 WL 11016401 (unreported) (George I). The PCRA petition challenged the validity of his plea based on Commonwealth v. Zuber, 353 A.2d 441 (Pa. 1976). In Zuber, the sentencing court expressly adopted the prosecutor’s “specific promise” to recommend to the Parole Board that the defendant’s back time run concurrently with his sentence on new charges. Id. at 444-45. The Commonwealth acknowledged that the promise was void because “a parole violator convicted and sentenced to prison for another offense must serve his or her back time and the new sentence in consecutive order” and the Board had no power to grant such a request but asked that the matter be returned for an administrative remedy. Id. at 443. The Court instead reinstated the defendant’s original plea terms because “the natural and obvious underlying inference that the Parole Board had, at the least, the [o]ption to accept or reject such a request thereby became an integral part of the bargain” made by the defendant. Id. at 445-46. In George I, the Superior Court did not address the merits of George’s contentions regarding his plea because it concluded that the petition was untimely,

2 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-9546.

3 George’s first PCRA petition, filed in August 2008, pertained to the substance of the 2002 offenses but did not raise any issues regarding his sentence for those offenses. The Superior Court upheld the PCRA court’s dismissal of that petition. See Commonwealth v. George (Pa. Super., No. 66 MDA 2010, filed Oct. 18, 2010) (unreported). Previous unreported Superior Court decisions regarding George’s earlier filings are cited herein pursuant to the Superior Court’s Internal Operating Procedures, which allow citation of an unreported memorandum decision of that court filed prior to May 2, 2019 “when the memorandum is relevant to a criminal action or proceeding because it recites issues raised and reasons for a decision affecting the same defendant in a prior action or proceeding.” 210 Pa. Code § 65.37(B)(2).

4 having been raised more than five years after his sentence became final in September 2007; moreover, his “discovery” of Zuber did not meet the after-discovered evidence exception to the PCRA’s time bar rules. Id., slip op. at 6-9, 2014 WL 11016401, at *3. In February 2016, George filed another PCRA petition. Commonwealth v. George (Pa. Super., No. 202 MDA 2017, filed Dec. 8, 2017), 2017 WL 6163492 (unreported) (George II). He asserted that his plea agreement was for his parole violation and back time to run concurrently with his sentence on the 2002 offenses, that he learned in December 2015 that this was not the case, and that he was not receiving the benefit of his agreement.4 Id., slip op. at 1, 2017 WL 6163492, at *1.

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Bluebook (online)
K. George v. Com. of PA, DOC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/k-george-v-com-of-pa-doc-pacommwct-2026.