Com. v. Olmeda, S. ( 2015 )


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  • J-S04012-15
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,                   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellee
    v.
    SEBASTIAN ENRIQUE OLMEDA,
    Appellant                No. 317 MDA 2014
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence November 18, 2013
    In the Court of Common Pleas of York County
    Criminal Division at No(s): CP-67-CR-0006494-2011
    BEFORE: BOWES, ALLEN, and STRASSBURGER,* JJ.
    MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                        FILED FEBRUARY 24, 2015
    Sebastian Enrique Olmeda appeals from the judgment of sentence of
    life imprisonment without parole after a jury found him guilty of first-degree
    murder. After careful review, we affirm.
    Appellant shot and killed Eddie Rivera on July 2, 2011, while Mr.
    Rivera was standing inside the home of Lydia Rivera-Ortiz. Ms. Ortiz’s niece
    was the victim’s girlfriend. Both Ms. Ortiz and Mr. Rivera returned to Ms.
    Ortiz’s home at 2:00 a.m., after returning from a local bar. Upon arriving,
    Ms. Ortiz saw a group of people in a parking lot across from her home.
    Recognizing some of the individuals, she went over to the group to socialize.
    Mr. Rivera joined her approximately fifteen minutes later, and            she
    ____________________________________________
    *
    Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-S04012-15
    introduced him to some of the people who she knew.           The victim then
    returned to Ms. Ortiz’s residence.
    After Mr. Rivera left, a man demanded that Ms. Ortiz leave and
    punched her in the face.      This individual continued to strike Ms. Ortiz.
    Another male and two females joined in the attack. Ms. Ortiz acknowledged
    that none of these individuals was Appellant, and Appellant’s brother helped
    push her away from the scuffle. However, after Ms. Ortiz retreated to her
    home, Mr. Rivera observed three men enter the gate to Ms. Ortiz’s fenced in
    backyard. One of those persons was Appellant. Mr. Rivera asked Ms. Ortiz
    where she kept her knives, but Ms. Ortiz asked the victim to remain inside
    and confronted the trespassers.
    Appellant, mistakenly believing Mr. Rivera was Ms. Ortiz’s son,
    demanded that she bring her son outside. In addition, he informed her that,
    if Mr. Rivera did not come outside, he would go after him inside the home.
    Ms. Ortiz told Appellant that he was not permitted inside and he brandished
    a firearm. When Ms. Ortiz attempted to take the weapon, another individual
    restrained her by pulling her hair.    Appellant, who was standing in the
    backyard, then fired a shot into the kitchen of the house. The bullet traveled
    through Mr. Rivera’s left arm into his left lung, heart, and right lung.
    Appellant and his two compatriots then fled.
    Ms. Ortiz found Mr. Rivera next to the front door of her house. Police
    arrived shortly thereafter.   A kitchen knife was found on the floor in the
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    kitchen. The victim was unresponsive and a large pool of blood had already
    accumulated underneath his body. Police located a .40 caliber shell casing
    approximately one foot from the back patio of the house and 8.85 feet from
    the back door. An officer observed a bullet hole in the back screen door and
    shattered glass inside the residence. Police also discovered a beer bottle in
    the parking lot where Ms. Ortiz had previously been.            That bottle had
    Appellant’s fingerprint on it. Appellant claimed that he acted in self-defense
    in shooting the victim and that the victim had come at him with a knife.
    In addition to these facts, the Commonwealth introduced evidence
    surrounding two other shooting incidents that occurred within two blocks of
    where the victim was found on the same night.1 A witness testified that at
    approximately 3:20 a.m., while in his vehicle, gunshots from a parking lot
    on Market Street, hit his truck. That witness then saw a person in a white T-
    shirt run across the street.       Police recovered eight shell casings from that
    area. Another individual indicated that he heard four or five gunshots. This
    witness also described seeing a man pistol whip a woman at the intersection
    of Franklin and Market Street after hearing those shots. When he confronted
    ____________________________________________
    1
    Contradictorily, the trial court previously severed Appellant’s murder trial
    from the charges relative to the other shootings. Severance is warranted
    where evidence of the other crimes is not admissible in both trials and/or
    trying both matters together would be too prejudicial. It is somewhat
    puzzling to sever the cases and then permit evidence from the other matters
    to be introduced, especially where the arguments by the Commonwealth
    opposing severance, and for the later introduction of the evidence, were
    identical.
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    the attacker, the person told him to get off his block and fired two shots in
    his direction before running across Market Street. The man was wearing a
    white T-shirt, dark pants and a hoody.
    Police arrested Appellant that same date after seeing him running in
    an area after hearing gunshots. Appellant was wearing a white T-shirt and
    blue jeans. Appellant provided a false name and date of birth and denied
    having possessed a firearm. Police located one of Appellant’s shoes and a
    firearm in the area where Appellant was apprehended.       The weapon was
    loaded with three rounds. The single casing found at Ms. Ortiz’s residence,
    the bullet fragments from the victim’s body, and shell casings found in the
    areas of the other shooting incidents were fired from the gun police
    discovered.
    The jury found Appellant guilty of the aforementioned charges and the
    court sentenced him to life imprisonment without parole. Appellant filed a
    timely post-sentence motion, which the court denied.      This timely appeal
    ensued.   The trial court directed Appellant to file and serve a Pa.R.A.P.
    1925(b) concise statement of errors complained of on appeal.       Appellant
    complied, and the trial court authored its opinion. The matter is now ready
    for our review.       Appellant presents three questions for this Court’s
    consideration.
    I.       Did the trial court err when it admitted 404(b) evidence
    tending to show that the Defendant was a suspect in a
    separate shooting in a separate matter?
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    II.    Did the trial court err when it found the weight of the
    evidence was not so lacking that the jury’s verdict did not
    shock one’s sense of justice so that a new trial was
    necessary?
    III.   Did the trial court err when it found the evidence
    presented at trial was sufficient to find Appellant guilty of
    Murder in the First-Degree?
    Appellant’s brief at 5.
    Since Appellant’s final claim relates to the sufficiency of the evidence
    for his murder conviction and a successful challenge would warrant a
    discharge rather than re-trial, we address that issue at the outset. In
    conducting a sufficiency of the evidence review, we view all of the evidence
    admitted, even improperly admitted evidence. Commonwealth v. Watley,
    
    81 A.3d 108
    , 113 (Pa.Super. 2013) (en banc). We consider such evidence in
    a light most favorable to the Commonwealth as the verdict winner, drawing
    all reasonable inferences from the evidence in favor of the Commonwealth.
    
    Id. When evidence
    exists to allow the fact-finder to determine beyond a
    reasonable doubt each element of the crimes charged, the sufficiency claim
    will fail. 
    Id. The evidence
    “need not preclude every possibility of innocence and the
    fact-finder is free to believe all, part, or none of the evidence presented.”
    
    Id. In addition,
    the Commonwealth can prove its case by circumstantial
    evidence.    Where “the evidence is so weak and inconclusive that, as a
    matter of law, no probability of fact can be drawn from the combined
    circumstances[,]” a defendant is entitled to relief.    
    Id. This Court
    is not
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    permitted “to re-weigh the evidence and substitute our judgment for that of
    the fact-finder.” 
    Id. Instantly, we
    conclude that there was more than sufficient evidence to
    establish that Appellant did not act in self-defense and intentionally shot and
    killed the victim. Appellant admitted to shooting the victim by claiming self-
    defense. Ms. Ortiz testified that the victim was inside the home and did not
    exit. The jury was free to believe this testimony and disregard Appellant’s
    self-defense assertion. Appellant’s sufficiency claim is without merit.
    Having addressed the sufficiency of the evidence, we now consider
    Appellant’s original claim. Appellant maintains that the trial court erred in
    admitting evidence regarding the other shooting incidents on the night of the
    victim’s death.    Evidence of bad acts is inadmissible to prove that a
    defendant has bad character or a criminal propensity. See Pa.R.E. 404(b).
    However, bad acts evidence is admissible for a host of reasons including to
    prove motive, intent, knowledge, absence of mistake, common scheme, to
    establish identity, and as part of the chain of events that form the history of
    the case. Pa.R.E. 404(b)(2); Commonwealth v. Brown, 
    52 A.3d 320
    (Pa.Super. 2012). The probative value of the bad acts evidence must also
    outweigh its prejudicial impact in order to be admissible. Commonwealth
    v. Powell, 
    956 A.2d 406
    , 419 (Pa. 2008).          In considering whether the
    probative value of the bad acts evidence outweighs its prejudicial nature,
    this Court has opined that:
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    courts must consider factors such as the strength of the “other
    crimes” evidence, the similarities between the crimes, the time
    lapse between crimes, the need for the other crimes evidence,
    the efficacy of alternative proof of the charged crime, and “the
    degree to which the evidence probably will rouse the jury to
    overmastering hostility.” McCormick, Evidence § 190 at 811 (4th
    ed. 1992). See also Commonwealth v. Frank, 395 Pa.Super.
    412, 
    577 A.2d 609
    (1990) (enumerating balancing test factors,
    including ability for limiting instruction to reduce prejudice).
    
    Brown, supra
    at 326-327.      We consider the admission of such evidence
    under an abuse of discretion standard. Commonwealth v. Patterson, 
    91 A.3d 55
    , 68 (Pa. 2014).
    The trial court admitted the evidence in question on four separate
    grounds: to prove identity, to establish intent, to show the chain of custody
    of the murder weapon, and to provide the history and full chain of events.
    Appellant contests each of these grounds and asserts that, even if the
    evidence met one of these bad act exceptions, it still was more prejudicial
    than probative.
    We find that the evidence was admissible as part of the history and
    natural sequence of events.     In this regard, Appellant cursorily argues,
    without citation to legal authority, that Appellant had not been convicted of
    the other shooting and that there was no testimony showing that the later
    shootings were an extension of the homicide.
    The history or “res gestae” exception was comprehensively outlined in
    
    Brown, supra
    .     Therein, this Court pointed out that “evidence of other
    criminal acts is admissible ‘to complete the story of the crime on trial by
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    proving its immediate context of happenings near in time and place.’”
    
    Brown, supra
    at 326.      We add that “bad acts evidence ‘is necessarily
    admissible as to acts which are so clearly and inextricably mixed up with the
    history of the guilty act itself as to form part of one chain of relevant
    circumstances, and so could not be excluded on the presentation of the case
    before the jury without the evidence being rendered thereby unintelligible.”
    
    Id. at 330-331
    (emphasis removed).
    Instantly, the later shootings were related to the investigation in this
    matter, and they established Appellant was apprehended and the firearm
    used in the murder was located. Indeed, several officers left the scene of
    the underlying crime to investigate the later shootings, before capturing
    Appellant. Police found the murder weapon after arresting Appellant fleeing
    from the area of one of the later shootings. The weapon was located next to
    a shoe belonging to Appellant.   Ballistic testing revealed that the gun was
    used in the killing of the victim. These subsequent events reveal the police
    investigation, how Appellant was captured, and how the murder weapon was
    recovered.
    The time lapse between the events was exceptionally short, taking
    place within an hour of the shooting in this case.     Each crime involved
    shootings within a two block radius and ballistics confirmed that the same
    weapon was used in each incident.       That Appellant had abandoned the
    weapon demonstrated a consciousness of guilt. Removing evidence of how
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    police arrested Appellant, found the murder weapon, and matched it to the
    scene of the crime herein would have left significant gaps in the presentation
    of the case.     Accordingly, we find that the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion in finding that the probative value of the evidence outweighed its
    prejudicial nature.
    Appellant’s remaining challenge is to the weight of the evidence.      A
    weight claim must be preserved in a timely post-sentence motion.
    Commonwealth v. Lofton, 
    57 A.3d 1270
    , 1273 (Pa.Super. 2012).
    “Appellate review of a weight claim is a review of the exercise of discretion,
    not of the underlying question of whether the verdict is against the weight of
    the evidence.”    Commonwealth v. Clay, 
    64 A.3d 1049
    , 1055 (Pa. 2013)
    (emphases removed). Accordingly, “[o]ne of the least assailable reasons for
    granting or denying a new trial is the lower court's conviction that the
    verdict was or was not against the weight of the evidence and that a new
    trial should be granted in the interest of justice.” 
    Id. A trial
    judge should not grant a new trial due to “a mere conflict in the
    testimony or because the judge on the same facts would have arrived at a
    different conclusion.”   
    Id. Instead, the
    trial court must examine whether
    “‘notwithstanding all the facts, certain facts are so clearly of greater weight
    that to ignore them or to give them equal weight with all the facts is to deny
    justice.’” 
    Id. Only where
    the jury verdict “is so contrary to the evidence as
    to shock one's sense of justice” should a trial court afford a defendant a new
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    trial. 
    Id. A weight
    of the evidence issue concedes that sufficient evidence
    was introduced.      Commonwealth v. Charlton, 
    902 A.2d 554
    , 561
    (Pa.Super. 2006).
    Appellant’s weight claim is untenable. Nothing in this case shows that
    certain facts supporting Appellant’s self-defense claim are “so clearly of
    greater weight” than the physical evidence and Ms. Ortiz’s testimony that to
    rely on this latter evidence is to deny justice. The verdict was not contrary
    to the evidence.    Accordingly, we find no abuse of discretion in the trial
    court’s determination that its conscience was not shocked by the verdict.
    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
    Judge Allen joins the majority
    Judge Strassburger concurs in the result
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 2/24/2015
    - 10 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 317 MDA 2014

Filed Date: 2/24/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/24/2015