Com. v. Lindsey-Cooley, Q. ( 2018 )


Menu:
  • J-S21021-18
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    QURAN S. LINDSEY-COOLEY                    :
    :
    Appellant               :   No. 1276 WDA 2017
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence June 29, 2017
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County Criminal Division at No(s):
    CP-25-CR-0001356-2016
    BEFORE: OLSON, J., MURRAY, J., and FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.
    MEMORANDUM BY MURRAY, J.:                                 FILED MAY 07, 2018
    Quran S. Lindsey-Cooley (Appellant) appeals from the judgment of
    sentence imposed after he pled guilty to one count of aggravated assault and
    one count of possession of a firearm by a minor.1 We affirm.
    The trial court summarized the factual and procedural background of
    this case as follows:
    On March 6, 2016, Appellant removed a loaded semi-
    automatic Hi-point nine millimeter pistol from his waistband and
    shot Jessie Wolfgang at 23rd and Wallace Streets. The bullet
    traveled two feet through the victim’s body and the victim
    required a bowel resection. Appellant was 17 years old at the
    time.
    On June 29, 2016, Appellant filed a Motion to Decertify to
    Juvenile Court. On October 24, 2016, after a hearing on the issue,
    this [c]ourt denied Appellant’s Motion.      On May 10, 2017,
    Appellant filed a Motion to Recuse the Honorable John Garhart.
    ____________________________________________
    1   18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2702, 6110.1.
    J-S21021-18
    On May 12, 2017, Appellant’s Motion to Recuse was denied. On
    May 16, 2017, [Appellant] pled guilty to Aggravated Assault and
    Possession of a Firearm By a Minor. The Commonwealth nolle
    prossed the remaining counts of Criminal Attempt/Criminal
    Homicide, Aggravated Assault, Firearms not to be Carried Without
    a License, Possessing Instruments of Crime, two counts Recklessly
    Endangering Another Person, and Terroristic Threats. At the plea
    hearing, Appellant acknowledged that he fired the bullet and that
    the shooting was done without legal justification or defense.
    [Appellant] was sentenced on June 29, 2017 to a period of
    incarceration of 54 months to 108 months, followed by 10 years
    of probation on the Aggravated Assault charge, and a concurrent
    sentence of 5 years’ probation on the Firearms charge. This
    sentence was in the low end of the standard range. On July 7,
    2017, Appellant filed a post-sentence motion which was denied by
    this [c]ourt on August 7, 2017.
    On September 5, 2017, Appellant filed a timely Notice of
    Appeal. This [c]ourt filed a 1925(b) Statement on September 7,
    2017, to which Appellant filed a Concise Statement of Matters
    Complained of on Appeal on September 28, 2017, raising the
    following alleged errors: (1) the [c]ourt erred in failing to
    decertify the charges in this case to juvenile court; (2) the court
    erred in failing to recuse itself after a “scathing and far-reaching
    recitation of findings of fact and opinion” at the conclusion of the
    decertification hearing; (3) the court erred in failing to sentence
    Appellant in the mitigated range, or below, of the sentencing
    guidelines.
    Trial Court Opinion, 10/18/17, at 1-2 (citations to notes of testimony omitted).
    On appeal, Appellant presents two issues for our review:
    1. Did the trial court commit an abuse of discretion and/or error
    of law when it denied Appellant’s request for decertification to
    Juvenile Court?
    2. Did the trial court commit an abuse of discretion by relying on
    an impermissible factor, namely, uncharged criminal conduct,
    while fashioning his sentences?
    Appellant’s Brief at 8.
    -2-
    J-S21021-18
    In his first issue, Appellant asserts that the trial court erred when it
    denied his request to have his case decertified to juvenile court based on the
    court’s findings that a transfer of Appellant’s case would not serve the public
    interest and Appellant would not be amenable to treatment in the juvenile
    system. Appellant’s Brief at 33, 36-42. Appellant argues, “[s]pecifically, the
    Court erred when it concluded the three years remaining before Appellant’s
    21st birthday would not provide sufficient opportunity for rehabilitation and
    supervision and that old and unsubstantiated photographs posted to social
    media, purportedly depicting Appellant with guns/money, provided true
    insight in Appellant’s character and history.2 Id. at 36.
    We have discussed our review of an order in response to a request for
    a decertification order:
    The Juvenile Act, 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6301[,] et seq., is designed to
    effectuate the protection of the public by providing children who
    commit ‘delinquent acts’ with supervision, rehabilitation, and care
    while promoting responsibility and the ability to become a
    productive member of the community. 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6301(b)(2).
    The Juvenile Act defines a ‘child’ as a person who is under eighteen
    years of age. 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6302. Typically, most crimes
    involving juveniles are tried in the juvenile court of the Court of
    Common Pleas.
    Our legislature, however, has deemed some crimes so heinous
    that they are excluded from the definition of ‘a delinquent act.’
    Pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6322(a) and § 6355(e), when a
    juvenile is charged with a crime, including murder or any of the
    other offenses excluded from the definition of ‘delinquent act’ in
    ____________________________________________
    2   The Commonwealth has not filed a responsive brief, stating in
    correspondence to this Court that it “relies on the well-reasoned Order of the
    trial court and requests that appellant’s claims be dismissed.” Letter, 3/12/18.
    -3-
    J-S21021-18
    42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6302, the criminal division of the Court of Common
    Pleas is vested with jurisdiction. See 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6302[.]
    When a case involving a juvenile goes directly to the criminal
    division, the juvenile can request treatment within the juvenile
    system through a transfer process called ‘decertification.’ To
    obtain decertification, it is the juvenile's burden to prove,
    by a preponderance of the evidence, that transfer to the
    juvenile court system best serves the public interest. 42
    Pa.C.S.A. § 6322(a).
    Pursuant to § 6322(a), the decertification court shall consider the
    factors contained in § 6355(a)(4)(iii) in determining whether the
    child has established that the transfer will serve the public
    interest. These factors are as follows:
    (A) the impact of the offense on the victim or victims;
    (B) the impact of the offense on the community;
    (C) the threat to the safety of the public or any individual posed
    by the child;
    (D) the nature and circumstances of the offense allegedly
    committed by the child;
    (E) the degree of the child's culpability;
    (F) the adequacy and duration of dispositional alternatives
    available under this chapter and in the adult criminal justice
    system; and
    (G) whether the child is amenable to treatment, supervision or
    rehabilitation as a juvenile by considering the following factors:
    (I) age;
    (II) mental capacity;
    (III) maturity;
    (IV) the degree of criminal sophistication exhibited by the child;
    (V) previous records, if any;
    (VI) the nature and extent of any prior delinquent history,
    including the success or failure of any previous attempts by the
    juvenile court to rehabilitate the child;
    (VII) whether the child can be rehabilitated prior to the expiration
    of the juvenile court jurisdiction;
    (VIII) probation or institutional reports, if any;
    (IX) any other relevant factors[.]
    42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6355(a)(4)(iii).
    -4-
    J-S21021-18
    While the Juvenile Act requires that a decertification court
    consider all of these factors, it is silent as to the weight assessed
    to each by the court. However, [w]hen a juvenile seeks to
    have his case transferred from the criminal division to the
    juvenile division, he must show that he is in need of and
    amenable to treatment, supervision or rehabilitation in the
    juvenile system. If the evidence presented fails to establish that
    the youth would benefit from the special features and programs
    of the juvenile system and there is no special reason for sparing
    the youth from adult prosecution, the petition must be denied and
    jurisdiction remains with the criminal division.
    . . . This Court will not overturn a decision to grant or deny
    decertification absent a gross abuse of discretion. An abuse of
    discretion is not merely an error of judgment but involves the
    misapplication or overriding of the law or the exercise of a
    manifestly unreasonable judgment based upon partiality,
    prejudice or ill will.
    Commonwealth v. Brown, 
    26 A.3d 485
    , 491-193 (Pa. Super. 2011) (most
    quotations, some citations, and emphasis omitted; other emphasis added).
    Instantly, the trial court determined that Appellant failed to meet his
    burden of demonstrating that transfer of his case to juvenile court was
    warranted.    The trial court stated that it “properly considered the serious
    nature of the crime and Appellant’s calculated role in the shooting of the
    victim.”   Trial Court Opinion, 10/18/17, at 6.       The court referenced its
    “commentary [which] was an on-the-record consideration of the entire
    decertification record, which resulted in a 246 page transcript and a small
    Everest of Exhibits.” 
    Id.
     The trial court offered a detailed explanation:
    First of all, let’s go right through them. 6322(a) requires me
    to consider certain factors and I'll go through them.
    -5-
    J-S21021-18
    The impact of the victim - of the offense on the victim. And
    here there’s one primary victim. And in this case the
    defendant...was the person who shot the victim.
    A bullet tore into the victim’s body, tore through his internal
    organs and lodged in a leg. In doing so it did enormous damage
    to the intestinal tract of the victim and it is likely, although not
    certain, that the victim will forever be forced to wear a bag, and
    as he said, spend the rest of his life smelling like a two-year-old’s
    diaper. It will diminish every effect of his life; his ability to work,
    his ability to mate and procreate, his ability to simply enjoy life...
    What effect did it have on the community? Here, you know,
    I think the impact is enormous. This gunshot, this act, tends to
    cause people to move from communities, it destabilizes
    communities, and it was part of an act of drug dealing, which is
    literally pouring poison into the youth of the community from
    generation to generation...
    The threat of safety to the public. Here your expert focused
    on, "Well, he shot another addict," which frankly I find offensive
    and I reject. He shot a human being he had no right to shoot and
    whether that person was an addict or an addict that owed him
    money, that person was entitled to have his bodily integrity and
    his safety protected by the law...no less...than...an altar boy.
    Plus often these gunshots...don’t hit the intended
    target...And oftentimes...the bullet ricochets and hits an innocent
    child....
    So, the threat to the safety of the public by a defendant
    discharging a firearm in an urban environment, where he might
    hit the person intended, [is] enormous...
    The circumstances [of the offense] committed by - and here
    the statute uses the word child, but I will not use that word
    because the defendant, although he is a juvenile, is not a child.
    He was a young adult. And I’m already familiar with the literature
    that the expert points to me here about how the brains of
    adolescents aren't fully developed. And in certain circumstances
    that may come into play where a person doesn't make nice
    judgments...
    -6-
    J-S21021-18
    But here, the judgments made by this defendant, as the
    Commonwealth would have it, are much more gross. The
    judgments he made were, one, to engage in dealing heroin; to
    engage in that as a business; and to be prepared to carry a firearm
    to protect himself, and it appears here to inflict death on other
    human beings who didn’t pay him. This isn't a case brought to the
    razor's edge by nice judgments by an immature mind. This is a
    case which is brought to fruition by some very longstanding
    judgments by the defendant in this case...made with full
    awareness of his ability to be killed or to kill in his business
    endeavor.
    So in terms of the juvenile's culpability? Enormous,
    substantial.
    The adequacy [of dispositional alternatives] under this
    chapter, okay, let’s talk about that. (F). If the juvenile system
    handles this case, the defendant, who I think is largely resistant
    to treatment by virtue of some of the things he said in unguarded
    moments - and I do credit the Facebook posts more than most
    because I think they’re unguarded moments. You can say they are
    merely one kid bragging to another, but oftentimes they’re
    unguarded moments. They’re aspirational. And here he talks
    about having contempt for these stupid ass classes...And his
    demeanor is fuck the law. I don’t believe that can be mitigated or
    changed by a few months, in this case 24 months, in a juvenile
    facility...Certainly what's going to happen to him as an adult
    perhaps is not as nuanced as what might happen in the juvenile
    system, but the state has taken the steps to give some special
    treatment to him while he remains a minor....
    ...The next question, is the child amenable to treatment,
    rehabilitation as a juvenile. Given the time available to him, my
    answer is no, not in 24 months. If this crime had been committed
    at a younger age, we were talking about a 12 or 13 year old...and
    the juvenile system had longer to work, I might feel differently.
    But, on what I see on the defendant’s actions, on his willing to kill
    another human being for money, on his willing to deal in heroin,
    on his willing to say fuck the law, and on his expression of, “I
    would like to see a police officer dead,” I don’t think he’s amenable
    to treatment under the juvenile system.
    Age. He was a juvenile at the time of the offense, but he
    was in months, in months of his birthday.
    -7-
    J-S21021-18
    Mental capacity. He’s within the low normal range...
    Maturity. Here are some things we know about the
    defendant. He’s able to run a business, although it's an illegal
    business. He’s able to conceal that from his probation officer. He’s
    able to master the tools of youth, the social networks of Facebook
    and Twitter, or whatever. And he’s got a girlfriend that he’s
    involved in a fully mature [intimate] relationship...So he’s not
    quote, unquote, a mere child...
    The degree of sophistication. Granted we don’t have in order
    to be a drug dealer need to be Professor Moriarty from Sherlock
    Holmes, but nevertheless someone who's going to be involved in
    drugs has to make certain calculations. They have to make a risk
    reward calculation....How do I collect my debts? And more
    importantly in this case how do I enforce my will against those
    people who would choose not to pay me. So there's a good deal
    of sophistication here....It’s clearly not the impulsive act that we
    sometimes see. It’s not someone who takes a gun from their
    father's gun case and does something with alcohol. This is a
    deliberate act...
    In his favor, his prior record is not extensive, that’s true.
    What we have him for is a DUI; and he struck his girlfriend,
    allegedly, and that was thrown out. But it appears to the Court,
    given what the evidence of this crime reveals about him, what his
    phone calls reveal and what his Facebook postings reveal, is that
    he was able to conceal a criminal enterprise for a substantial
    period of time and people in his life blinded themselves to his
    criminality...
    The nature and extent of any prior delinquent history and
    here it’s minimal, here it’s minimal. But probation officer testified
    that their evaluation of him from the brief time they had to deal
    with him was that he was not amenable to further treatment. And
    he hadn’t failed in that, but he was not making progress. He was
    going through the steps. So under 6 and 7 of my checklist, they
    don’t think the child can be rehabilitated prior to the expiration of
    juvenile court jurisdiction and neither do I. 24 months is simply
    not enough.
    Those, I think are all the factors that are here. And so the
    question for me is, look, what do I do with him? Do I send him to
    -8-
    J-S21021-18
    Juvenile Court? And the answer is I think a clear and resounding
    no.
    Trial Court Opinion, 10/18/17, at 4-6, citing N.T., 10/21/16, at 237-245
    (footnotes omitted). Notably, the trial court concluded, “[t]his isn’t a case
    where the defense came close, close to convincing me.” N.T., 10/21/16, at
    245.
    Our review confirms the trial court’s findings.      The decertification
    transcript contains testimony from the following 10 witnesses:
    -    Jessica Macrino, a therapist who counseled Appellant at his
    high school on four occasions;
    -     Randolph Matuscak, an expert in forensic social work who
    evaluated Appellant, advocated for decertification and opined that
    Appellant would be amenable to treatment in the juvenile system;
    -     Daryl Craig, Sr., a family friend and minister who had
    frequent contact with Appellant through the years and expressed
    his concern that Appellant not be placed in an adult facility
    because Appellant “is not a bad kid” and the adult system is “very
    emotionally psychologically oppressive”;
    -      Ryan Gaines, a pastor from Appellant’s church with
    employment experience in the juvenile justice system who opined
    that “the adult system [would] not rehabilitate or help” Appellant;
    -      Dale Henderson, a retired school teacher and volunteer at
    the Erie County Prison who attested to Appellant’s positive
    attitude and academic capabilities;
    -      Gary Seymour, the Deputy Warden at the Erie County Prison
    who stated that Appellant had incurred three misconduct
    violations (1 for interfering with staff and using abusive language
    and 2 for fighting with other juveniles) during the seven months
    he had been imprisoned for the underlying offenses;
    -    Erie Police Detective Sean Bogart, the affiant in the
    underlying case who testified to recovering a gun, bullets and
    -9-
    J-S21021-18
    digital scales from the home Appellant shared only with his
    mother;
    -     Jesse Wolfgang, Appellant’s victim, who testified to knowing
    Appellant, being a heroin addict, purchasing from heroin from
    Appellant, and “stiffing” Appellant on a sale; Mr. Wolfgang opined,
    “I hate to say it, but if this incident hadn’t happened with
    [Appellant], I’d be dead” from the addiction or “other reckless
    behaviors.”
    -      Stephanie Ackley, who administers the program for youth
    and serves as the re-entry coordinator at SCI-Pine Grove, where
    Appellant likely would be imprisoned if convicted as an adult,
    testified that SCI-Pine Grove serves individuals ages 18-22, with
    programs “developed specifically to house juveniles convicted as
    adults,” and a multitude of programs including individualized
    educational, vocational, therapeutic and life skills training. Ms.
    Ackley stated her belief that “Pine Grove now offers everything
    that the youth system has to offer with the addition of now extra
    programming, extra transitional opportunities . . .”
    -     Nick Strauch, a juvenile probation officer who began
    supervising Appellant in December 2014 and testified to
    Appellant’s juvenile history.
    On this record, reviewed as a whole, we discern no abuse of discretion
    by the trial court. Brown, supra. Contrary to Appellant’s assertions, there
    is ample support for the trial court’s conclusion that Appellant failed to meet
    his burden that transfer of his case to juvenile court would serve the public
    interest, and that he would be amenable to treatment in the juvenile system.
    As noted above, the trial court stated that Appellant “did not come close to
    convincing” the court that decertification was appropriate. Further, the trial
    court’s reference to Appellant’s Facebook posts was a mere complement to
    the court’s detailed reasoning addressing myriad factors in support of its
    - 10 -
    J-S21021-18
    determination that Appellant would not be amendable to treatment in the
    juvenile system.3 Accordingly, Appellant’s decertification issue lacks merit.
    In his second issue, Appellant challenges the discretionary aspects of
    his sentence.     He claims that the trial court erred because it “fashioned a
    lengthier sentence based upon its conclusions about Appellant’s involvement
    in the drug trade, which was uncharged criminal conduct.” Appellant’s Brief
    at 45. We disagree.
    Preliminarily, we note that Appellant has failed to cite any case law or
    legal authority to support his sentencing argument. The Rules of Appellate
    Procedure provide:
    Rule 2119. Argument
    (a) General rule. The argument shall be divided into as
    many parts as there are questions to be argued; and shall
    have at the head of each part—in distinctive type or in type
    distinctively displayed—the particular point treated therein,
    followed by such discussion and citation of authorities as are
    deemed pertinent.
    Pa.R.A.P. 2119(a). Importantly:
    The argument portion of an appellate brief must include a
    pertinent discussion of the particular point raised along with
    discussion and citation of pertinent authorities. This Court
    will not consider the merits of an argument, which fails to
    cite relevant case or statutory authority. Failure to cite
    ____________________________________________
    3 This Court has affirmed the trial court’s denial of a motion in limine where
    the Commonwealth was precluded from admitting Facebook posts because it
    failed to authenticate them. Commonwealth v. Mangel, --- A.3d ---- (Pa.
    Super. March 15, 2018). In this case, Appellant did not challenge the
    authenticity of the Facebook posts admitted at the decertification hearing.
    - 11 -
    J-S21021-18
    relevant legal authority constitutes waiver of the claim on
    appeal.
    In re Estate of Whitley, 
    50 A.3d 203
    , 209 (Pa.Super. 2012), appeal
    denied, 
    69 A.3d 603
     (Pa. 2013) (citations and quotation marks omitted).
    Accordingly, Appellant’s sentencing claim is waived.
    Waiver notwithstanding, Appellant’s argument regarding “uncharged
    criminal conduct” lacks merit. When appealing the discretionary aspects of a
    sentence:
    [w]e conduct a four-part analysis to determine: (1) whether [the]
    appellant has filed a timely notice of appeal, see Pa.R.A.P. 902
    and 903; (2) whether the issue was properly preserved at
    sentencing or in a motion to reconsider and modify sentence, see
    Pa.R.Crim.P. 720; (3) whether [the] appellant's brief has a fatal
    defect, Pa.R.A.P. 2119(f); and (4) whether there is a substantial
    question that the sentence appealed from is not appropriate under
    the Sentencing Code, 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9781(b).
    Commonwealth v. Leatherby, 
    116 A.3d 73
    , 83 (Pa. Super. 2015) (citation
    omitted). Here, Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal, preserved the issue
    in his post-sentence motion, and included a Rule 2119(f) statement in his
    appellate brief. As to whether Appellant has raised a substantial question,
    “[i]n order to establish a substantial question, the appellant must show actions
    by the trial court inconsistent with the Sentencing Code or contrary to the
    fundamental norms underlying the sentencing process.” Commonwealth v.
    Treadway, 
    104 A.3d 597
    , 599 (Pa. Super. 2014) (citation omitted). “The
    determination of whether a particular case raises a substantial question is to
    be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.” Commonwealth v. Seagraves, 103
    - 12 -
    J-S21021-
    18 A.3d 839
    , 841 (Pa. Super. 2014), appeal denied, 
    116 A.3d 604
     (Pa. 2015)
    (citation omitted).
    To the extent Appellant may be deemed to have raised a substantial
    question, the trial court properly observed:
    Sentencing is a matter vested in the sound discretion of the
    sentencing judge, and a sentence will not be disturbed on
    appeal absent a manifest abuse of discretion. In this context,
    an abuse of discretion is not shown merely by an error in
    judgment. Rather, the appellant must establish, by reference to
    the record, that the sentencing court ignored or misapplied the
    law, exercised its judgment for reasons of partiality, prejudice,
    bias or ill will, or arrived at a manifestly unreasonable decision.
    Commonwealth v. Rodda, 
    723 A.2d 212
    , 214 (Pa. Super. 1999)
    (en banc) (internal quotations and citations omitted).
    Where the sentencing court has the benefit of a pre-
    sentence report, the law presumes that the court was aware of
    the relevant information regarding the appellant’s character and
    weighed those considerations along with the mitigating statutory
    factors delineated in the Sentencing Code. Commonwealth v.
    Cruz-Centeno, 
    668 A.2d 536
    , 545 (Pa. Super. 1995)(quotation
    and citations omitted). Having been fully informed by the pre-
    sentence report, the sentencing court’s discretion should not be
    disturbed. 
    Id.
    Here, [the trial court] considered the following: (1) pre -
    sentence investigative report; (2) the Pennsylvania Sentencing
    Code and all its factors; (3) the Pennsylvania Sentencing
    Guidelines; (4) statements by Appellant and counsel; (5)
    statements by the counsel for the Commonwealth; (6) letters from
    Appellant’s friends/relatives; (7) Appellant’s age, background and
    rehabilitative needs; (8) the nature, circumstances, and
    seriousness of the offense; and, (9) protection of the community;
    (9) the unusual fact that the victim felt that the shooting
    prevented the victim from dying of a drug overdose; (10) the
    posts and photographs of Appellant’s Facebook page. (Sentencing
    Transcript, June 29, 2017, pp. 22-23). [The trial court] further
    noted that [it] was sentencing Appellant in the low end of the
    - 13 -
    J-S21021-18
    standard range of the sentencing guidelines, rather than the
    mitigated range due, in part, to:
    The explanations [Appellant] has offered for me of how he came
    to be in that car, his denial of his relationship with drugs, and
    his denial of his relationship with guns, I find to be untruthful
    and I do not credit.
    (Sentencing Transcript, June 29, 2017, p. 23). The sentence was
    tailored to Appellant’s individual situation and the reasons for the
    sentence imposed were clearly set forth on the record. Any lesser
    sentence would have depreciated the nature of the offense.
    Because Appellant’s sentence was within the statutory limits and
    not manifestly excessive, there was no sentencing error.
    Trial Court Opinion, 10/18/17, at 7-8. The trial court’s reasoning is supported
    by the record and appropriate. See, N.T., 6/29/17, at 2-26. Finding no error,
    we affirm the judgment of sentence.
    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 5/7/2018
    - 14 -