Court Opinion

ID: 9377019
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-03-06 17:08:22.492933+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:17:11.231558
License: Public Domain

J-A21045-22

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                               :        PENNSYLVANIA
                                               :
                v.                             :
                                               :
                                               :
    ALAN PRESBURY                              :
                                               :
                       Appellant               :   No. 1897 EDA 2021

             Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered August 12, 2021
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at
                       No(s): CP-51-CR-0525482-1993

BEFORE:       LAZARUS, J., MURRAY, J., and McCAFFERY, J.

MEMORANDUM BY McCAFFERY, J.:                             FILED MARCH 6, 2023

        Alan Presbury (Appellant) appeals pro se from the order entered in the

Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, denying as untimely his serial

Post Conviction Relief Act1 (PCRA) petition.        In 1994, Appellant was found

guilty by a jury of first-degree murder2 and related offenses. He now avers

Philadelphia investigating detectives coerced false confessions by assaulting

him and his co-defendant, the Commonwealth committed a Brady violation3

____________________________________________

1   42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-9545.

2   18 Pa.C.S. § 2502(a).

3   See Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963).
J-A21045-22

by knowingly withholding this information, and the PCRA court erred in

requiring him to show he exercised due diligence. We affirm.

        Preliminarily, we note the certified electronic record, transmitted to this

Court on appeal, is incomplete. The earliest-filed document is a May 13, 1993,

Municipal Court order, directing that all charges be held for court, but the next

document is a March 22, 2005, notice of appeal from the denial of a serial

PCRA petition. No transcripts were included. Nevertheless, both the record

and the trial docket — which is similarly truncated — include the underlying

PCRA petition, the PCRA court’s disposal of it, and the present notice of appeal.

After review of Appellant’s arguments on appeal, we determine the record is

sufficient for our limited review of the present order denying his PCRA petition.

        In January of 1993, Appellant and co-defendant Maurice Revels (Co-

Defendant) pursued and fatally shot the victim, Brian Moore.          In March of

1994, a jury found both defendants guilty of first-degree murder, conspiracy,

possessing an instrument of crime, and carrying a firearm without a license.4

        On May 16, 1996, following a penalty hearing, the trial court imposed

on Appellant an aggregate sentence of life imprisonment without parole. On

direct appeal, this Court affirmed the judgment of sentence on September 21,

____________________________________________

4   18 Pa.C.S. §§ 903, 907, 6106.

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1995, and the Pennsylvania Supreme Court denied allowance of appeal on

April 24, 1996.5

        Appellant filed a first PCRA petition, timely, in February of 1997.

Counsel was appointed, and the PCRA court denied relief. This Court affirmed,

and our Supreme Court denied allowance of appeal.6             Subsequent PCRA

petitions were denied on the grounds they were untimely filed.7

        Appellant filed the instant PCRA petition, possibly his fourth, pro se, on

September 16, 2019. He acknowledged it was filed outside the general one-

year filing period,8 but nevertheless claimed prosecutorial misconduct at trial

and prior counsel’s ineffectiveness.9

____________________________________________

5 Commonwealth v. Presbury, 665 A.2d 825 (Pa. Super. 1995), appeal
denied, 822 E.D.Alloc. 1995 (Pa. Apr. 24, 1995).

6Commonwealth v. Presbury, 1327 PHL 98 (unpub. memo.) (Pa. Super.
May 13, 1999), appeal denied, 397 E.D.Alloc. 1999 (Pa. Oct. 14, 1999).

7Commonwealth v. Presbury, 986 EDA 2005 (unpub. memo.) (Pa. Super.
Feb. 24, 2006), appeal denied, 278 EAL 2006 (Pa. Sept. 27, 2006);
Commonwealth v. Presbury, 2193 EDA 2000 (unpub. memo.) (Pa. Super.
Mar. 12, 2001).

8   See 42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(1).

9 Specifically, Appellant averred: (1) trial counsel was ineffective for not
moving for a mistrial, when the trial court sustained a defense objection to an
unidentified witness’ testimony that Appellant’s father was in prison; (2)
appointed counsel for his first PCRA petition failed to raise trial counsel’s and
direct appeal counsel’s ineffectiveness, and this failure was after-discovered
fact of a violation of Appellant’s Sixth Amendment rights; and (3) at trial, the
prosecutor improperly expressed their personal opinion that Appellant was
guilty. On appeal, Appellant has abandoned these claims.

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       Next, on April 30, 2020, Appellant filed a motion to amend and/or

supplement the PCRA petition.           This motion: (1) invoked, without further

explanation, the governmental interference and newly discovered fact PCRA

timeliness exceptions; and (2) alleged the two lead detectives in his case,

Detective Devlin and Detective Worrell,10 forcibly coerced false confessions;

(3) the Philadelphia District Attorney’s office knowingly withheld this

information from the defense;11 and (4) Appellant learned of this “fact” “by

way of [a] 8/30/19 PCRA petition [filed in] Com. v. Veasy, CP-51-CR-

641521-1992, received through Smart Communications, Reference Number

1510969.”       Appellant’s Pa.R.Crim.P. Rule 905 Motion to Amend and/or

Supplement PCRA Petition, 4/30/20, exh. Motion for Post Conviction Collateral

Relief, at 3.

____________________________________________

10 Throughout the pleadings and the appellate brief, Appellant has not
provided the detectives’ first names.

11  Although this pleading did not cite the Brady decision, Appellant’s later
filings referred to it. Our Supreme Court has explained:

       [T]o establish a Brady violation, a defendant must show that: (1)
       evidence was suppressed by the state, either willfully or
       inadvertently; (2) the evidence was favorable to the defendant,
       either because it was exculpatory or because it could have been
       used for impeachment; and (3) the evidence was material, in that
       its omission resulted in prejudice to the defendant. . . .

Commonwealth v. Williams, 168 A.3d 97, 109 (Pa. 2017) (citations
omitted).

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       On June 17, 2021, the PCRA court issued Pa.R.Crim.P. 907 notice of its

intent to dismiss the PCRA petition without a hearing. The court determined

Appellant failed to meet the government interference exception. Specifically,

the court found: (1) Appellant’s allegations were “extremely vague[;]” (2) he

“failed to set forth any specific information or evidence [demonstrating] what

alleged misconduct was committed by [the] detectives in [this] case[;]” and

his mere reference, to a PCRA petition purportedly filed in another criminal

matter and obtained through “Smart Communications,” did not establish he

exercised due diligence.       Notice Pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Criminal

Procedure 907, 6/17/21, at 1-2 (Rule 907 Notice).

       Appellant filed a pro se response, first arguing the PCRA court

improperly grafted a due-diligence requirement onto a claim of a Brady

violation. Appellant’s Response to Court’s Pa.R.Crim.P. Rule 907 Notice to

Dismiss & Rule 905 Motion to Amend PCRA Petition, 7/7/21, at 3 (907

Response). Appellant further reasoned that as he has been imprisoned since

1993, there was no possibility he could have obtained the “exculpatory and

impeaching material evidence” that has been “secreted away in the D.A[.]’s

office.”12   Id. at 4.      Second, Appellant claimed, for the first time, that

Detectives Devlin and Worrell physically assaulted him and Co-Defendant,

____________________________________________

12 Here, Appellant also cited, for the first time, a “2021 PBS documentary,
‘Philly D.A.,’” which showed the Commonwealth’s history of corruption.
Appellant’s 907 Response at 4.

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which forced Co-Defendant to falsely implicate Appellant in the charges. Id.

at 6. In support, Appellant cited the trial testimony by his girlfriend, that she

saw Co-Defendant had a bloodied face and swollen mouth “as he was being

escorted from an interrogation room.”13 Id.

       The PCRA court dismissed the PCRA petition on August 12, 2021, and

Appellant filed a timely appeal.14

       On appeal, Appellant avers the PCRA court erred in rejecting his

invocation of the governmental interference and newly-discovered fact

exceptions. In support, he reiterates the various arguments set forth in his

response to the court’s Rule 907 notice. Appellant also cites Commonwealth

v. Small, 238 A.3d 1267 (Pa. 2020), and Commonwealth v. Burton, 158

A.3d 618 (Pa. 2017), which overruled prior precedent holding the public record

presumption (under which a matter of public record cannot be “unknown” to

a petitioner) applied to pro se inmates. Appellant’s Brief at 13. We conclude

no relief is due.

       We first consider the relevant standard of review:

       Our standard of review in a PCRA appeal requires us to determine
       whether the PCRA court’s findings of fact are supported by the
       record, and whether its conclusions of law are free from legal
       error. The scope of our review is limited to the findings of the
____________________________________________

13Without the inclusion of the trial transcript in the certified record, we cannot
verify this testimony.

14 The PCRA court did not order Appellant to file a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement
of errors complained of on appeal.

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      PCRA court and the evidence of record, which we view in the light
      most favorable to the party who prevailed before that court. . . .

Small, 238 A.3d at 1280 (citations omitted).

      “Any PCRA petition, including a second or subsequent petition, must be

filed within one year of the date that the petitioner’s judgment of sentence

becomes final. 42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(1). [T]he PCRA’s timing provisions [are]

jurisdictional in nature, and no court may entertain an untimely PCRA

petition.”   Small, 238 A.3d at 1280 (some citations omitted).        Appellant

acknowledges the instant petitions were filed beyond the general one-year

time bar. Thus, we review his reliance on the governmental interference and

newly-discovered fact exceptions. Those exceptions apply when:

           (i) the failure to raise the claim previously was the result of
      interference by government officials with the presentation of the
      claim in violation of the Constitution or laws of this Commonwealth
      or . . . the United States; [or]

          (ii) the facts upon which the claim is predicated were
      unknown to the petitioner and could not have been
      ascertained by the exercise of due diligence[.]

42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(1)(i)-(ii) (emphasis added).

      This Court has explained:

      “Although a Brady violation may fall within the governmental
      interference exception, the petitioner must plead and prove that
      the failure to previously raise these claims was the result of
      interference by government officials, and that the information
      could not have been obtained earlier with the exercise of
      due diligence.”

Commonwealth v. Smith, 194 A.3d 126, 133 (Pa. Super. 2018) (citation

omitted & emphasis added).

                                     -7-
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      Furthermore, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has recognized “the

newly discovered fact exception is limited by a presumption relating to matters

of public record, pursuant to which a court may find that information available

to the public is not a fact that is ‘unknown’ to the petitioner.” Small, 238

A.3d at 1271.      In Burton and Small, however, the Court held this

presumption does not apply when the petitioner is a pro se inmate. See id.

at 1286; Burton, 158 A.3d at 638. Nevertheless, that a pro se petitioner may

be relieved of the public record presumption does not mean they will

necessarily prevail on the merits. See Small, 238 A.3d at 1271.

      First, we reiterate Appellant’s April 30, 2020, supplemental or amended

petition averred only that Detectives Devlin and Worrell generally engaged in

a practice of forcibly coercing false confessions. In its Rule 907 notice, the

PCRA court aptly pointed out Appellant “failed to set forth any specific

information or evidence that” the detectives committed misconduct in this

case. See Rule 907 Notice at 2. We thus agree with the court’s summation

that Appellant’s claim was vague. See id.

      It is only in his response to the Rule 907 notice that Appellant claimed,

for the first time, that the detectives assaulted him, as well as Co-Defendant,

in an effort to coerce their false statements. Appellant provides no explanation

why he did not raise this claim in the underlying PCRA petition, and we

determine it is waived.   See Pa.R.Crim.P. 902(B) (“Failure to state . . . a

                                     -8-
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ground [for relief] in the [PCRA] petition shall preclude the defendant from

raising that ground in any proceeding for post-conviction collateral relief.”).15

       In any event, we reject Appellant’s contention that he only recently

discovered — he still has not identified a particular date when — the

detectives’ misconduct. Appellant ignores his own claim that the detectives

allegedly assaulted him and Co-Defendant, and his own reference to his

girlfriend’s purported trial testimony that Co-Defendant had visible injuries

immediately following his interrogation.         Thus, Appellant cannot show the

detectives’ alleged practice was unknown to him.

       Finally, we reject Appellant’s repeated insistence that the PCRA court

erred in considering whether he acted with due diligence. Appellant’s premise,

that due diligence is not relevant to a Brady claim, is mistaken. He ignores

that the PCRA court was reviewing the applicability of the governmental

interference and newly-discovered fact exceptions — both of which clearly

require a petitioner to show they could not have earlier obtained the relied-

upon information through due diligence.          See 42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(1)(ii);

Smith, 194 A.3d at 133.

____________________________________________

15 Recently, our Supreme Court held “a PCRA petitioner may, after a PCRA
court denies relief, and after obtaining new counsel or acting pro se, raise
claims of PCRA counsel’s ineffectiveness at the first opportunity to do so,
even if on appeal.” Commonwealth v. Bradley, 261 A.3d 381, 401 (Pa.
2021) (emphasis added & footnote omitted). Here, however, Appellant does
not raise any claim of PCRA counsel’s ineffectiveness, and in any event, he
had no counsel for the underlying PCRA petition.

                                           -9-
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     For the foregoing reasons, we conclude the record supports the PCRA

court’s finding that Appellant’s PCRA petition was untimely filed. See Small,

238 A.3d at 1280. Accordingly, we affirm the underlying order.

     Order affirmed.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 3/6/2023

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