Court Opinion

ID: 9898609
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-14 20:10:56.308558+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:15:15.831833
License: Public Domain

J-S32019-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

  COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                 :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                               :        PENNSYLVANIA
                v.                             :
                                               :
  JUSTIN ROBERT UNDERKOFFLER                   :
                                               :
                       Appellant               :   No. 92 MDA 2023

      Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered January 11, 2023
   In the Court of Common Pleas of Schuylkill County Criminal Division at
                     No(s): CP-54-CR-0001582-2021

BEFORE: DUBOW, J., KUNSELMAN, J., and NICHOLS, J.

MEMORANDUM BY KUNSELMAN, J.:                   FILED: NOVEMBER 14, 2023

                                  I.     Introduction

       After a jury convicted him of illegally possessing a gun,1 Justin Robert

Underkoffler appeals from the judgment of sentence imposing three to seven

years’ incarceration. Underkoffler contends the state trooper who arrested

him used an unconstitutional, two-step-interrogation procedure. When the

trooper first confronted Underkoffler and his father, the trooper extensively

questioned them. After they confessed, he read them the Miranda2 warnings,

in his words, “just to make this formal.” Commonwealth’s Ex. 1 at 26:34 –

26:36. Underkoffler restated his confession. As we discuss, many appellate

courts across this country would potentially suppress the restated confession.

See Note 9, infra. However, a prior panel of this Court has already rejected

Underkoffler’s Fifth Amendment argument. Thus, we affirm.
____________________________________________

1 See 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 6105(c)(1) and 6106(a)(1).

2 See Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966)
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                 II.     Factual & Procedural Background

      The Pennsylvania State Police (“PSP”) had obtained arrest warrants for

Underkoffler. Aware of those warrants, on the afternoon of June 28, 2021, a

state trooper drove past Underkoffler’s last known location, a residence in

Schuylkill County. Looking out the window of his unmarked car, the trooper

saw Underkoffler “walking towards a dark-blue, Chevy Trailblazer” SUV parked

in the home’s driveway. N.T., 3/18/22, at 7. The trooper did a U-turn and

pulled into a neighboring driveway, located a few hundred feet from the

Underkoffler property.

      The trooper waited there for a few seconds and checked a database to

confirm that Underkoffler’s warrants remained in effect. Soon, the blue SUV

drove onto the street. When it immediately stopped in the road and forced a

car following it to pass in the opposing lane of traffic, the trooper (who was in

uniform) inferred the driver of the SUV had seen him. See id. The SUV then

headed back into the driveway from which it had just departed.

      The trooper activated his lights, drove into the driveway, and blocked-

in the SUV. As recorded on the patrol-car-dashboard camera, the driver and

the trooper exited their vehicles. They met near the rear bumper of the SUV.

See Commonwealth’s Ex. 1 at 1:08. The trooper asked the driver, “Hey, is

Justin [Underkoffler] here?” Id. at 11:11.

      The driver shook his head and said, “No, huh-uh.” Id. at 1:12.

      “Oh, okay. I thought you were him in the [SUV] pulling out. Are you

[his] dad?” Id. at 1:13 - 1:17.

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      “Yeah. Yeah,” the driver said. Id. at 1:17.

      “Alright, you look like him. He’s not here, though?” Id. at 1:18-1:19.

      The father said, “No, no, not that I see,” and laughed nervously. Id. at

1:20. They momentarily discussed an incident from the night before, in which

the PSP responded to a 911 call, regarding the discharge of firearms. Troopers

had come to the property to look for Underkoffler, but they could not find him.

      “He’s not in your car or anything, right?” Id. at 2:10 – 2:12. The father

nervously laughed and replied, “There, there, there - - There’s a guy in there.

It’s not - -” Id. at 2:15 – 2:18. He trailed off as the trooper peered through

the window of the SUV.

      “That’s him!” the trooper declared. Id. at 2:19. He walked to the other

side of the SUV, opened the door, and handcuffed Underkoffler. See id. at

2:20 – 2:29.

      Underkoffler immediately asked, “What do I have a warrant for though?”

Id. at 2:31. The trooper explained that his arrest warrants were for drugs,

and he permitted Underkoffler to smoke a cigarette. See id. at 2:32 – 3:00.

      “You don’t have anything illegal on you, right?” the trooper asked. Id.

at 3:13 – 3:14.

      Underkoffler said, “No, no, no; you can search me if you want.” Id. at

3:15 – 3:18. The trooper then returned to his car and radioed headquarters

to notify other troopers that he had Underkoffler in custody. See id. at 3:20

– 5:10. Also, the trooper learned that the father had a suspended license.

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      When he confronted the father with that fact, father said, “Yeah, I know

- - I just - - All’s I did is - - I just wanted to make sure his trany was working

right.” Id. at 5:16 – 5:20.

      The trooper then asked Underkoffler, “So what was the deal yesterday

with you shooting a gun back here?” Id. at 7:16 – 7:20.

      Underkoffler, still sitting in the front seat of the SUV, handcuffed, and

smoking his cigarette, said, “Yeah -- oh, yeah, I was shooting a gun, yeah.

That’s all. It was my uncle’s . . . Yeah, they’re all his guns. Yeah.” Id. at

7:21 – 7:29.

      “What’s your criminal history like, though?” the trooper asked. Id. at

7:30 – 7:32.

      “Oh, I have - - I have no felonies. No felonies, no felonies at all, yeah,

I’m a [inaudible] guy; I have two kids. I try to do what’s right.” Id. at 7:33

– 7:38.

      The trooper inquired, “What drugs did you get caught with?           Was it

meth?” Id. at 7:39 – 7:40.

      “I had a little bit of meth, yeah. Yeah, I was - - I was an addict. Well,

I do - - I’m still an addict, but not . . . like I was, but I was way worse. I used

to be addicted to dope, because . . . .” Id. at 7:41 – 7:49. The trooper

interrupted Underkoffler and asked him to walk over to the hood of the patrol

car. He searched Underkoffler and found nothing illegal on him. See id. at

7:50 – 8:47.

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     They then moved to the driver’s side of the patrol car, which placed the

trooper and Underkoffler off camera. The trooper said, “Now, I want you to

be honest, because, obviously, you guys saw me. You backed right up; I’m

not stupid, alright? You obviously saw me sitting over there; as soon as you

saw me, you stopped right in the middle of the road.” Id. at 8:48 – 8:56.

     Underkoffler replied, “No, I honestly didn’t. No, no, I didn’t. I swear to

God, I didn’t see you. Believe me, Your Honor, I wouldn’t do that; I wouldn’t

wanna be on your shit list.” Id. at 8:57 – 9:00. He laughed nervously.

     The trooper asked, “Is there anything illegal in the car, right now?” Id.

at 9:01 – 9:02.

     “No, nothing, I’m sure; I swear,” Underkoffler said. Id. at 9:02 – 9:04.

     “The other issue is, technically, you shouldn’t be possessing a firearm

when you have warrants, but . . . .” Id. at 9:18 – 9:20.

     “Awe, I didn’t know that. I thought you were still allowed to shoot,”

Underkoffler said. Id. at 9:21 – 9:24.

     “Yeah, you’re technically a fugitive.” Id. at 9:25.

     “Oh, really? See, I - - I never even knew that.” Id. at 9:26 – 9:27.

     The trooper asked, “Any guns in the car, right now?” Id. at 9:28 – 9:29.

     “No. Just my uncle’s.” Id. at 9:29.

     “Is it in the car?” Id. at 9:31.

     Underkoffler said, “No, no, ah - - the AK got taken out. Actually, it’s

over there, actually.” Id. at 9:32 – 9:35. “It’s hung up, yeah; it’s hung up,

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yeah, yeah. Then, uh - - just uh - - uh, the - - the, uh - - he had a handgun.”

Id. at 9:36 – 9:41.

      “Is it in the car?” the trooper pressed. Id. at 9:42.

      “Yes, it’s in the car, in a bookbag.” Id. at 9:42 – 9:43.

      “Who’s it belong to?” Id. at 9:44.

      “Uh - - it’s my - - my uncle, my uncle’s, but it’s actually his friend’s.”

Id. at 9:44 – 9:46. “He, he, he - - you can call him; he, he can verify that

he, he, he uses it, cause he left it at the house. He was - - you know - - he

left it here, actually. He was shooting here yesterday, too.” Id. at 9:47 –

9:54. Underkoffler laughed nervously.

      “Where’s the gun at in the car, right now?” Id. at 9:56 – 9:58.

      “Uh - - um, just open door, there’s a backpack. In the first zipper part,

in there.” Id. at 9:59 – 10:04.

      The trooper then called the father over and related that Underkoffler

had said there was a gun in the SUV. The father answered, “Oh, yeah, they

were shooting.” Id. at 10:27.

      “Who does that belong to?” the trooper asked. Id. at 10:28 – 10:29.

      “Um - - I think, I think it’s Mark’s,” the father replied. Id. at 10:30 –

10:31.

      “Who’s that?” Id. at 10:32.

      “Mark Allya.” Id. at 10:33.

      “Do either of you guys have a permit to carry a firearm?” Id. at 10:34

– 10:36.

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      “I don’t. I don’t have permit, no. I don’t have no guns at all,” the father

said. Id. at 10:36 – 10:39.

      The trooper asked, “What’s your record look like?” Id. at 10:40.

      “I don’t have no felonies or nothing,” the father said. Id. at 10:41.

      “No felonies? Okay. Is this [SUV] your car?” Id. at 10:41 – 10:44.

      “Yeah, it’s mine.” Id. at 10:45.

      “Okay. Who came in possession of the gun?” Id. at 10:49 – 10:51.

      Father pointed at himself and said, “Well, actually - - I’ve - - I’ve had it.

Mark’s in jail. I mean, this - - this is his trailer. I brought his trailer out here.

I brought his car [inaudible] out here. He’s getting a pre-release; he should

be released this week, so - - I have a bunch of his stuff at my house.” Id. at

10:52 – 11:07.

      The trooper replied, “Well, just hang out by your bumper here. Stay off

your phone, until I figure out, because now I got an issue with the gun . . . in

the car . . . because you guys don’t have a permit to carry. And he’s a fugitive,

because he’s got warrants. So just hang tight, here; I don’t want everybody

walking around. Is it your car, then?” Id. at 11:08 – 11:18.

      The father answered, “Yeah, it’s in my name.” Id. at 11:19.

      “Who - - who does the backpack belong to that the gun’s in?” Id. at

11:20 – 11:22.

      Pointing to Underkoffler, the father said, “I guess Justin; I don’t know.”

Id. at 11:26 – 11:28.

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      Next, the trooper returned to his patrol car and radioed headquarters.

He related that firearms were present and requested backup. As the trooper

waited for backup, Underkoffler said, “I mean, Jamie was here. Big Kevin was

here; it’s his gun.” Id. at 12:38 – 12:43.

      This prompted the trooper to reemerge from the patrol car and resume

the interrogation. He said to Underkoffler, “Here’s the problem, alright? You

guys have a firearm . . . You guys have a firearm concealed in the [SUV]. You

don’t have a permit to carry, either, right?” Id. at 12:44 – 12:52.

      Underkoffler said, “My uncle does, yes.” Id. at 12:53.

      “Well, your uncle’s not here, though,” the trooper replied. Id. at 12:54.

      “Yes, he is; my uncle was here.” Id. at 12:55 – 12:56 (emphasis in

original).

      “He’s not in the vehicle with you guys.” Id. at 12:57.

      “Well, well, that’s supposed to go in the house; I’m sorry. It’s supposed

to be in the house,” Underkoffler pleaded. Id. at 12:58 – 13:03.

      “Either way, [911] got called yesterday for you shooting a gun. You,

specifically, shooting a gun,” the trooper explained. Id. at 13:03 – 13:05

(emphasis in original).

      “We all were. We all were,” Underkoffler said. Id. at 13:06.

      “Either way, you have the charges; you’re a fugitive. Okay? Cause you

got a warrant.” Id. at 13:07 – 13:10.

      “Okay, I understand. I didn’t know that.” Id. at 13:11 – 13:12.

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      The trooper said, “Wait until the backup gets here; we’ll deal with it

then. What’s your - - What’s Mark in jail for?” Id. at 13:13 – 13:16.

      The father answered, “Oh, oh, it wasn’t his. No, no - - I didn’t know - -

I didn’t, I didn’t know there was a gun in there.” Id. at 13:17 – 13:22.

      Underkoffler added, “And Jamie’s in there. I mean, he has his permit.

He was shooting with me yesterday! He left the gun here, cause he was gonna

come back today!” Id. at 13:23 – 13:30.

      The trooper said, “Well, you guys still can’t just drive around with a gun

in the car . . . .” Id. at 13:31 – 13:32.

      “Oh, I wasn’t driving around,” the father said. Id. at 13:33. “I was just

making sure the trany was working.” Id. at 13:34 – 13:35.

      “Ah, come on,” the trooper replied, “as soon as I pulled out, you pulled

right down here, as soon as you saw me. I saw you stop in the middle of the

road. You went right down the driveway; the car passed you on the left.” Id.

at 13:36 – 13:41.

      At that point, backup arrived, and the trooper explained the situation to

the new trooper. Next, he asked the father for permission to search the SUV;

the father consented. See id. at 14:08 – 14:10.

      The trooper opened the rear-passenger door; unzipped Underkoffler’s

backpack; removed a handgun; and held it up. He asked Underkoffler, “This

the gun, then?” Id. at 14:32.

      Underkoffler said, “Yeah, yeah - - That’s, yeah.” Id. at 14:33 – 14:34.

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     The trooper opened the chamber and found a bullet inside.       He also

found two loaded magazines in the backpack. The trooper then turned back

to Underkoffler and asked, “So you’re saying this is your backpack, then,

right? This is his gun?” Id. at 15:10 – 15:13.

     “Yeah, that’s – That’s my backpack, but that’s definitely his gun.” Id.

at 15:14 – 15:15.

     A few minutes later, the trooper said to Underkoffler, “Well, here’s the

problem, man: like I said, ‘You’re a fugitive.’ You’re carrying a gun around,

concealed in a vehicle, and neither of you guys have a permit. Alright? So

[the gun is] going with me, and you’re getting new charges.” Id. at 17:48 –

17:57.

     “Are you serious?” Underkoffler asked. Id. at 17:58.

     “Yeah, I’m serious; [troopers were] out here yesterday dealing with you

shooting outback, and you take off.” Id. at 17:59 – 18:06.

     “I wasn’t the only one shooting.” Id. at 18:07.

     “Doesn’t matter,” the trooper said. Id. at 18:08. “You’re still driving

around with a gun in your backpack. And you got one in the chamber.” Id.

at 18:09 – 18:11.

     Underkoffler began to cry and yelled, “Awe fuck, man! They’re giving

me gun charges for shit I didn’t even know was in the bookbag.” Id. at 18:16

– 18:22.

     The trooper said, “Alright, don’t do anything crazy. Alright?” Id. at

18:23 – 18:25.

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        Sobbing, Underkoffler answered, “I’m not. Don’t worry, man. It’s crazy,

man.” Id. at 18:26 – 18:28.

        “I’m sure these [other troopers] don’t want to be out here, every day,

dealing with you; that’s the problem, man.       Especially, when it involves a

gun.”    Id. at 18:29 – 18:33.     “It’s one thing if you’re shooting, I mean,

technically, you can’t even possess a firearm right now, because you’re a

fugitive, right? Because of the warrant.” Id. at 18:39 – 18:41.

        “And I didn’t know that. I didn’t know that!” Id. at 18:42 – 18:44.

        “Well, I understand that, but, at the same time, you can’t conceal a

firearm in a vehicle – Alright? – without a permit to carry.” Id. at 18:44 –

18:47.

        Underkoffler said, “I didn’t know it was - - I didn't know it was in my

bookbag!” Id. at 18:46 – 18:48.

        The trooper walked back to the SUV to continue the vehicle search. Still

crying, Underkoffler said, “I’m never gonna get to see my fucking kids, ever.”

Id. at 19:08 – 19:10. The trooper allowed Underkoffler’s father to give him

a new cigarette. See id. at 20:10. The search revealed no other illegal items.

See id. 20:15 – 21:00.

        Openly weeping, Underkoffler said, “I didn’t know there was nothing in

there!” Id. at 21:01.

        The trooper walked back to him and said, “Do you understand the issue,

though? You know what I mean?” Id. at 21:09 – 21:10.

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      “I do understand, and I . . . I didn’t know it was - - ” Underkoffler trailed-

off into unintelligible sobs. Id. at 21:10 – 21:13.

      “Well, you obviously knew it was in there. You told me right where it

was,” the trooper said. Id. at 21:13 – 21:14.

      “I knew it was in my bookbag, and I just threw it back there, and then

I forgot about it. I’m sorry.” Id. at 21:14 – 21:19.

      The trooper asked, “What have you been charged with before? What’s

your history like?” Id. at 21:37 – 21:40. Both Underkoffler and his father

claimed to have no felonies. The trooper said, “I just want to check that one.”

Id. at 21:47 – 21:49. After doing some research on his in-car computer, he

told the father, “You got a felony drug conviction.” Id. at 25:14 – 25:15.

      “No, I have no felonies,” father responded. Id. at 25:16 – 25:18.

      “From ’95,” the trooper said. Id. at 25:18.

      The father shook his head and said, “It wasn’t a felony.” Id. at 25:19

– 25:20.

      “It says you’re convicted, pled guilty to it.” Id. at 25:21 – 25:22. “Ugh,

you guys are killing me, here . . . It says an (a)(30), which is Possession with

Intent to Deliver, pled guilty. Alright?” Id. at 25:24 – 25:34.

      About a minute later, the trooper again exited his patrol car and said,

“Alright, just to make this formal - - if you [father] want to come over here,

too. Listen up.” Id. at 26:34 – 26:41. He removed a piece of paper from his

pocket and told father, “I’m not gonna put you in cuffs or anything, but I am

gonna read both of you guys your rights.” Id. at 26:42 – 26:46. The trooper

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then quickly recited the warnings required under Miranda v. Arizona, 384

U.S. 436 (1966).

      He asked, “You guys both understand your rights?” Id. at 27:00. The

father nodded yes, but Underkoffler, standing off camera, did not answer.

Thereafter, the trooper pointed to the father and said, “So, you’re a felon . . .

it’s in your criminal history.”   Id. at 27:01 – 27:09.     He next pointed to

Underkoffler and said, “You got the warrant, alright? So, who’s responsible

for this firearm right now?” Id. at 27:10 – 27:12.

      Underkoffler confessed: “It was me . . . I just threw it in my bookbag

and just threw it in there [i.e., the SUV].” Id. at 27:13 – 27:22.

      The trooper seized the handgun and the ammunition, and he charged

Underkoffler with various firearm violations. Underkoffler filed a motion to

suppress the physical evidence and the statements he made to the trooper.

      Following a hearing, the suppression court issued an Opinion and Order

regarding its findings of fact and conclusions of law. The court ruled that the

statements Underkoffler made prior to the trooper’s recitation of the Miranda

warnings were inadmissible at trial. In all other respects, it denied the motion.

      The case proceeded to trial. A jury convicted Underkoffler, and the trial

court entered an amended judgment of sentence on January 11, 2023.

      The day prior to the entry of the amended sentence, despite having legal

representation, Underkoffler drafted and mailed a pro se notice of appeal to

this Court and the trial court. This Court received and docketed the appeal on

January 13, 2023. See Notice of Appeal at 1. The trial court docketed it on

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January 18, 2023. Defense counsel did not file a separate notice of appeal on

Underkoffler’s behalf.

      The trial court issued a sua sponte order dismissing Underkoffler’s notice

of appeal. See Trial Court Order, 1/18/23, at 1. It reasoned that, because

the Office of the Public Defender of Schuylkill County represented (and still

represents) Underkoffler, “the pro se request [i.e., the notice of appeal] is

inappropriate . . . .” Id. (citing Commonwealth v. Pursell, 724 A.2d 263

(Pa. 1999) and Hall v. Dorsey, 534 F. Supp. 507 (E.D. Pa. 1982) (both

holding that a defendant is not entitled to “hybrid” representation by counsel

and by himself)). Thus, the trial court quashed Underkoffler’s pro se notice

as being a legal nullity. By quashing, the trial court essentially asserted that

this case remained pending in its original jurisdiction, rather than proceeding

to our appellate jurisdiction.

                                 III. Analysis

A.    Our Appellate Jurisdiction

      In light of the trial court’s order of quashal, we must decide whether we

have jurisdiction to entertain Underkoffler’s appeal. The order raises the issue

of whether a pro se notice of appeal vests appellate jurisdiction in this Court,

where, as here, a defendant has legal counsel at the time of the pro se filing.

      “Jurisdiction presents us with a purely legal issue, for which our standard

of review is de novo, and our scope of review is plenary; we may consider the

issue of jurisdiction sua sponte.” Commonwealth v. Pi Delta Psi, Inc., 211

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A.3d 875, 880 n.3 (Pa. Super. 2019), appeal denied, 211 A.3d 875 (Pa. 2019)

(some punctuation omitted).

      The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has held, “timeliness of an appeal

and compliance with the statutory provisions granting the right to appeal

implicate an appellate court’s jurisdiction and its competency to act.”

Commonwealth v. Williams, 106 A.3d 583, 587 (Pa. 2014). An “appellant’s

failure to appeal timely an order generally divests the appellate court of its

jurisdiction to hear the appeal.” Id. “In a criminal case, in which no post-

sentence motion has been filed, the notice of appeal shall be filed within 30

days of the imposition of the judgment of sentence in open court.”

Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 903(c)(3).

      Also, Pa.R.A.P. 902 “stipulates that failure of an appellant to take any

step other than the timely filing of a notice of an appeal does not affect the

validity of the appeal.” Id. (emphasis added). This wide latitude extends to

a pro se notices of appeal filed by counseled defendants.

      We have said, because “a notice of appeal protects a constitutional right,

it is distinguishable from other filings that require counsel to provide legal

knowledge    and   strategy   in   creating   a   motion,   petition,   or   brief.”

Commonwealth v. Williams, 151 A.3d 621, 624 (Pa. Super. 2016)

(“Williams II”). Thus, “this Court is required to docket a pro se notice of

appeal, despite [an] appellant being represented by counsel, based on

[Operating Procedure of the Superior Court] 65.24.” Id. That O.P., governing

hybrid representation, dictates, “A pro se notice of appeal received from the

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trial court shall be docketed, even in instances where the pro se [appellant]

was represented by counsel in the trial court.” O.P. 65.24, Except. 1.

      Hence, Underkoffler’s pro se notice of appeal perfected the appellate

jurisdiction of this Court, notwithstanding that it was hybrid representation.

See Williams II, supra. Even though the trial court correctly identified the

notice of appeal as hybrid representation, its order quashing the pro se notice

of appeal was an error of law.

      Therefore, we vacate the January 18, 2023 order of quashal and proceed

to the merits of Underkoffler’s appeal. He raises two issues as follows:

      1.    Whether the [suppression court] committed an error of law
            in ruling on [Underkoffler’s] pretrial motion that there was
            reasonable suspicion for the traffic stop of the [SUV?]

      2.    Whether the [suppression court] committed an error of law
            in allowing any evidence of [Underkoffler’s] statements to
            be introduced at trial, due to the fact that they were
            obtained in violation of his constitutional rights?

Underkoffler’s Brief at 4. We address each issue in turn.

B.    The Trooper’s Entrance onto the Property

      First, we address Underkoffler’s claim that the suppression court erred

by holding that the trooper had reasonable suspicion, sufficient to justify a

traffic stop of the SUV. He contends the trooper executed a traffic stop under

Pennsylvania Vehicle Code, 72 Pa.C.S.A. § 630(b), and that that section

required the trooper to articulate “reasonable suspicion that a violation of this

title is occurring or has occurred . . . .” Id. at 10 (quoting 72 Pa.C.S.A. §

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639(b)). Underkoffler believes reasonable suspicion was lacking. See id. at

13.

       In this case, however, whether the trooper had reasonable suspicion to

stop the SUV is moot,3 because his authority to enter the Underkoffler

property derived from another, unrelated source.         Instead of needing to

articulate facts that reasonably lead him to believe crime was afoot or that a

violation of the Vehicle Code may have occurred, the trooper had two warrants

for Underkoffler’s arrest. Thus, the trooper was not acting unilaterally; he had

prior, judicial authorization to enter the property.

       It is black-letter law that “An arrest warrant and ‘reason to believe’ that

a suspect can be found on the premises are sufficient for police to forcibly

enter the premises, whether they are the suspect’s own home or the premises

of a third party . . . .” 26 STANDARD PA PRACTICE 2d. §132:381 at 640 (2019)

(citing Commonwealth v. Felie, 581 A.2d 636 (Pa. Super. 1990), appeal

denied, 597 A.2d 1151 (Pa. 1991)); see also Commonwealth v. Stanley,

446 A.2d 583, 587 (Pa. 1982). Surely, this power of forcible entry extends to

the yard and any vehicle parked in the premises’ driveway, wherein a wanted

individual might be hiding.

____________________________________________

3 Mootness is a “pure question of law, and therefore this Court’s standard of

review is de novo, and our scope of review is plenary.” Commonwealth v.
Dixon, 907 A.2d 468, 472 (Pa. 2006). “An issue before a court is moot when
a determination is sought on a matter which, when rendered, cannot have any
practical effect on the existing controversy.” Crespo v. Hughes, 292 A.3d
612, 617 (Pa. Super. 2023).

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      Here, the trooper recognized Underkoffler as he walked towards the SUV

parked in the premises’ driveway. The trooper took a few moments to confirm

that the warrants for Underkoffler’s arrest were still active.       When the

database indicated that Underkoffler remained a fugitive, the trooper had

authority to enter the property, to search for Underkoffler, and to apprehend

him, because he had (1) a warrant for Underkoffler’s arrest and (2) reason to

believe Underkoffler was located either on the property or in the SUV. See

Felie, supra. Armed with warrants of arrest, the trooper not only had license

from the courts to enter the property, but judicial orders to do so and to

apprehend Underkoffler.

      Moreover, the Constitution provides that “no warrants shall issue, but

upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation. . .”        U.S. Const.

amend. IV.    Notably, Underkoffler never alleged that either of the two

warrants for his arrest lacked probable cause in their supporting affidavits.

      “Pennsylvania Rule of Criminal Procedure 581(D) requires that a motion

to suppress state specifically and with particularity the evidence sought to be

suppressed, the grounds for suppression, and the facts and events in

support thereof.” Commonwealth v. Banks, 165 A.3d 976, 980 (Pa. Super.

2017) (quotation omitted) (emphasis in original). Because Underkoffler did

not attack the legitimacy of the two warrants in his motion to suppress, he

has waived any potential defect or claim of unconstitutionality in those

warrants.

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      Thus, whether the suppression court erred by ruling that the trooper

had reasonable suspicion for a traffic stop is moot, because the trooper instead

met the highest of constitutional tests for invading someone’s privacy. He

“g[o]t a warrant.” Riley v. California, 573 U.S. 373, 403 (2014). In fact,

his entry onto the Underkoffler property was doubly constitutional, because

he possessed two warrants.

      Hence, we dismiss Underkoffler’s first issue as moot.

C.    Underkoffler’s Confession

      Finally, we turn to the trooper’s interrogation of Underkoffler and his

post-Miranda-warnings confession. Underkoffler urges that the suppression

court erred by failing to suppress all of the inculpating statements that he

made in the dashboard video, including those given after the trooper read him

the Miranda warnings. To support this position, he relies exclusively upon

Missouri v. Seibert, 542 U.S. 600 (2004) (Souter, J., Plurality Opinion

Announcing the Judgment in Support of Affirmation). See Underkoffler’s Brief

at 14-17. Based on the lead opinion from Seibert, Underkoffler contends the

trooper’s question-first-give-Mirada-warnings-second interrogation violates

the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

      This Court has held “whether a confession is constitutionally admissible

is a question of law . . . .” In re B.T., 82 A.3d 431, 435 (Pa. Super. 2013)

(some punctuation omitted). As such, our standard of review is de novo. See

id. Even so, our “scope of review is limited to considering only the evidence

of the prevailing party at the suppression hearing and so much of the evidence

                                     - 19 -
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of the non-prevailing party as remains uncontradicted when read in the

context of the suppression record.” Commonwealth v. Pacheco, 263 A.3d

626, 639 (Pa. 2021) (citing In re L.J., 79 A.3d 1073, 1080 (Pa. 2013)).

       The Fifth Amendment commands, in relevant part, that “No person . . .

shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself . . . .”

       To effectuate that constitutional provision, the Supreme Court of the

United States has explained that, once in police custody,4 “the accused must

be adequately and effectively apprised of his rights and the exercise of those

rights must be fully honored.” Miranda, 384 U.S. at 467. Thus, the High

Court held an arrested individual “must be warned prior to any questioning

that he has the right to remain silent, that anything he says can be used

against him in a court of law, that he has the right to the presence of an

attorney, and that if he cannot afford an attorney one will be appointed for

him prior to any questioning if he so desires.” Id. at 479.

       “Opportunity to exercise these rights must be afforded to him

throughout the interrogation.” Id. “After such warnings have been given,

and such opportunity afforded him, the individual may knowingly and

intelligently waive these rights and agree to answer questions or make a

statement.”

____________________________________________

4 The parties agree that Underkoffler was in custody throughout the trooper’s

interrogation.

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      When officers give the Miranda warnings prior to questioning suspects,

whether inculpatory statements made thereafter are admissible at trial is an

inquiry that:

      has two distinct dimensions. First, the relinquishment of the right
      must have been voluntary in the sense that it was the product of
      a free and deliberate choice rather than intimidation, coercion, or
      deception. Second, the waiver must have been made with a full
      awareness both of the nature of the right being abandoned and
      the consequences of the decision to abandon it. Only if the totality
      of the circumstances surrounding the interrogation reveal both an
      uncoerced choice and the requisite level of comprehension may a
      court properly conclude that Miranda rights have been waived.

Int. of N.M., 222 A.3d 759, 772 (Pa. Super. 2019). Thus, if the apprehended

suspect knowingly and voluntarily waived the Fifth Amendment right to remain

silent, then the prosecution may use the confession in its case-in-chief.

      Determining   whether    there    was     a   true   waiver   becomes   more

complicated when law enforcement performs a two-step interrogation by first

questioning the suspect and then reading the Miranda warnings. One might

well wonder what good are the warnings to the suspect after police have

obtained a full confession.   Is the subsequent reiteration of the confession

truly knowingly and voluntarily made?

      The Supreme Court of the United States first faced the dilemma of two-

step interrogations in Oregon v. Elstad, 470 U.S. 298 (1985). That case

involved an officer who casually elicited a single, inculpatory statement from

a teenage suspect, prior to the Miranda warnings, while the suspect sat in

his living room and police explained the situation to his mother. After taking

                                       - 21 -
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the teenager to the station and reading the Miranda warnings to him, the

officers obtained a full confession. The Elstad Court determined that the trial

court properly admitted the post-warnings confession into evidence.

      The High Court said, “absent deliberately coercive or improper tactics in

obtaining the initial statement, the mere fact that a suspect has made an

unwarned admission does not warrant a presumption of compulsion” with

respect to the second statement. Id. at 314. “The relevant inquiry is whether,

in fact, the second statement was also voluntarily made” and, “[a]s in any

such inquiry, the finder of fact must examine the surrounding circumstances

and the entire course of police conduct with respect to the suspect in

evaluating the voluntariness of his statements.” Id. at 318. The Supreme

Court held that the “subsequent administration of Miranda warnings to a

suspect who has given a voluntary but unwarned statement ordinarily should

suffice to remove the conditions that precluded admission of the earlier

statement.” Id. at 314.

      With these precedents in mind, we turn to the case that Underkoffler

would have us apply: Seibert, supra. There, Patrice Seibert’s twelve–year–

old son, Jonathan, who had cerebral palsy, died in his sleep. Seibert feared

charges of neglect, because Jonathan had bedsores on his body.

      In her presence, two of her teenage sons and two of their friends devised

a plan to conceal the facts surrounding Jonathan’s death by burning down the

family’s mobile home and incinerating his body. To avoid any appearance that

Jonathan had been neglected, they also planned to sedate a mentally ill

                                    - 22 -
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teenager who lived with the family and leave him inside the home. Seibert’s

son and a friend set the fire, and the mentally ill teenager died. Seibert, 542

U.S. at 604. Seibert was charged with first-degree murder for her role in the

teenager’s death.

      The officer who arrested Seibert conducted a two-step interrogation.

Following his local department’s policy, the officer deliberately withheld the

“Miranda warnings until after interrogating and drawing out a confession.”

Id. at 609. At the suppression hearing, the officer admitted the “interrogation

technique he had been taught: question first, then give the warnings, and

then repeat the question ‘until I get the answer that she’s already provided

once.’”   Id. at 606.   “Seibert’s ultimate statement was largely a repeat of

information obtained prior to the warning.” Id.

      The Missouri trial court suppressed the statements that Seibert made

prior to receiving Miranda warnings, but it refused to suppress the reiterated

confessions that followed the warnings. The court found that she voluntarily

gave the post-warning statements. The “Missouri Court of Appeals affirmed,

treating this case as indistinguishable from Oregon v. Elstad, [supra] . . . .”

Seibert, 542 U.S. at 606.

      The Supreme Court of Missouri reversed and ordered suppression of the

post-warning confession. According to the state supreme court, because “the

interrogation was nearly continuous . . . the second statement, clearly the

product of the invalid first statement, should have been suppressed.” State

v. Seibert, 93 S.W.3d 700, 701 (Mo. 2002) (en banc). The court concluded

                                    - 23 -
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Elstad did not apply, because, in Elstad, the officer briefly and casually spoke

with the suspect in his home, prior to the real interrogation at the police

station. By contrast, the officer in Seibert intentionally omitted the warnings

“to deprive Seibert of the opportunity knowingly and intelligently to waive her

Miranda rights.” Id. at 706. Because there were “no circumstances that

would seem to dispel the effect of the Miranda violation,” the Supreme Court

of Missouri held the post-warning confession was involuntary and therefore

inadmissible. Id. In that court’s view, giving the police an “end run” around

Miranda would encourage Miranda violations and weaken its protections

against self-incrimination. Id. at 706–07.

       The Supreme Court of the United States granted certiorari to resolve

the split of authority on the issue. See Siebert, 542 U.S. at 607. Regrettably,

the Justices were unable to reach a consensus. While five Justices agreed

with the Supreme Court of Missouri that the two-step-interrogation procedure

was unconstitutional, they failed to agree on the test for determining when

such an interrogation would be invalid.

       In his lead opinion in support of affirmation, Justice Souter insisted on

the use of a multiprong test, which Underkoffler urges us to apply.5 Writing
____________________________________________

5 Justice Souter articulated five factors for courts to consider when evaluating

a two-step interrogation and deciding whether a post-warning statement is
admissible:

       1)     completeness and detail of the questions and answers in the
              first round of interrogation;
(Footnote Continued Next Page)

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separately, Justice Kennedy agreed with the judgment that the post-warning

statement was inadmissible, but he employed a different test. He examined

the officers’ purpose for conducting the two-step interrogation. Because the

officer desired to evade Miranda, Justice Kennedy imposed the sanction of

suppressing the post-warning statements.6

       In her dissenting opinion, Justice O’Connor would have adopted the

approach of the Missouri Court of Appeals and the trial court to hold that

Elstad, supra, controlled the case. She explained that, under Elstad, the

proper inquiry is whether, despite the two-step interrogation, the post-

warnings statements were, in fact, still voluntarily given.7

       Several years following the Supreme Court decision in Seibert, this

Court was faced with a constitutional challenge to a two-step interrogation in

Commonwealth v. Charleston, 16 A.3d 505, 525 (Pa. Super. 2011),

partially abrogated on other grounds by In re L.J., supra.       After thoroughly

examining the writings by the Justices in Seibert (and the decisions of the
____________________________________________

       2)     overlapping content of the two statements;

       3)     timing and setting of the first and the second interrogations;

       4)     continuity of police personnel; and

       5)     degree to which the interrogator’s questions treated the
              second round as continuous with the first.

See Missouri v. Seibert, 542 U.S. 600 at 615 (2004) (plurality).

6 Oddly, Justice Breyer seemingly agreed with the approaches of both Justices

Souter and Kennedy, even though they appear mutually exclusive.

7 Justice O’Connor wrote Oregon v. Elstad, 470 U.S. 298 (1985).

                                          - 25 -
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federal, circuit courts thereafter), we held that nothing announced therein was

controlling law.       “Seibert establishes no new binding precedent, and

therefore, this Court is bound by the precedent established by the

Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Commonwealth v. DeJesus, [787 A.2d 394

(Pa. 2001)] which followed Elstad’s focus on the knowingness and

voluntariness of the waiver in cases where coercion is absent.”      Thus, we

rejected an appellant’s request to adopt the multiprong test of Justice Souter

in Seibert.8

       As a result, Pennsylvania currently follows Justice O’Connor’s dissent

and the reverse approach of the Missouri Court of Appeal in Seibert. When

an officer in this Commonwealth conducts a two-step interrogation and obtains

____________________________________________

8 Ultimately, in applying DeJesus and Elstad to the facts in Charleston, we
concluded that the appellant failed to demonstrate a violation of the Fifth
Amendment. Commonwealth v. Charleston, 16 A.3d 505, 525-526 (Pa.
Super. 2011), partially abrogated on other grounds by In re L.J., 79 A.3d
1073 (Pa. 2013). On appeal, the appellant did not argue that his first
statement was coerced. He focused on the circumstances of the interrogation
and claimed that, because there was no break in the events or any curative
measures taken after he gave the unwarned statement, the subsequent
warned statement was inadmissible. However, our analysis hinged upon
whether his post-warning statement was a knowing and voluntary waiver. Id.
at 526.

      We observed that from the beginning of the detective’s interaction with
appellant on the morning in question, appellant was “immediately receptive”
and was “very cooperative and eager to give his portion of the story.” Id.
During the interrogation, he was permitted to use a restroom and was given
a sandwich and something to drink. Id. Under those circumstances, we had
held that appellant’s waiver of his rights and the subsequent statement were
both knowing and voluntary. Id.

                                          - 26 -
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inculpatory statements from a suspect prior to giving the Miranda warnings,

pre-warnings statements are per se inadmissible.      Nevertheless, the post-

warnings statements are admissible provided they comport with Elstad.

     As Justice O’Connor explained:

     Elstad commands that if [a suspect’s] first statement is shown to
     have been involuntary, the court must examine whether the taint
     dissipated through the passing of time or a change in
     circumstances: “When a prior statement is actually coerced, the
     time that passes between confessions, the change in place of
     interrogations, and the change in identity of the interrogators all
     bear on whether that coercion has carried over into the second
     confession.” Id. at 310, 105 S.Ct. 1285 (citing Westover v.
     United States, decided with Miranda, 384 U.S., at 494, 86 S.Ct.
     1602). In addition, [the suspect’s] second statement should be
     suppressed if she showed that it was involuntary despite the
     Miranda warnings. Elstad, supra, at 318, 105 S.Ct. 1285 (“The
     relevant inquiry is whether, in fact, the second statement was also
     voluntarily made. As in any such inquiry, the finder of fact must
     examine the surrounding circumstances and the entire course of
     police conduct with respect to the suspect in evaluating the
     voluntariness of his statements”).

            Although I would leave this analysis for the Missouri courts
     to conduct on remand, I note that, unlike the officers in Elstad,
     Officer Hanrahan referred to Seibert’s unwarned statement during
     the second part of the interrogation when she made a statement
     at odds with her unwarned confession. App. 70 (“Trice, didn’t you
     tell me that he was supposed to die in his sleep?”); cf. Elstad,
     supra, at 316, 105 S.Ct. 1285 (officers did not “exploit the
     unwarned admission to pressure respondent into waiving his right
     to remain silent”). Such a tactic may bear on the voluntariness
     inquiry. Cf. Frazier v. Cupp, 394 U.S. 731, 739, 89 S.Ct. 1420,
     22 L.Ed.2d 684 (1969) (fact that police had falsely told a suspect
     that his accomplice had already confessed was “relevant” to the
     voluntariness inquiry); Moran, 475 U.S., at 423–424, 106 S.Ct.
     1135 (in discussing police deception, stating that simply
     withholding information is “relevant to the constitutional validity
     of a waiver if it deprives a defendant of knowledge essential to his
     ability to understand the nature of his rights and the consequences
     of abandoning them”); Miranda, supra, at 476, 86 S.Ct. 1602.

                                    - 27 -
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Seibert, 542 U.S. at 628–29 (O’Connor, J. dissenting).

       Here, consistent with Charleston, and Justice O’Connor’s dissent in

Seibert, the suppression court applied the Elstad test to Underkoffler’s post-

warning statements. See Trial Court Opinion, 11/26/22, at 5-6. On appeal,

Underkoffler does not claim that the suppression court misapplied Elstad (or

DeJesus, supra) to the facts of his case. Thus, any claim that the trooper

obtained his post-warning confession in violation of Elstad is waived.

       Additionally, Underkoffler’s claim that the suppression court should have

applied Justice Souter’s multiprong test from Seibert is meritless, in light of

our decision in Charleston.9 As such, his second appellate issue affords him

no relief.
____________________________________________

9 We note that, “It is beyond the power of a Superior Court panel to overrule

a prior decision of the Superior Court, except in circumstances where
intervening authority by our Supreme Court calls into question a previous
decision of this Court.” Commonwealth v. Pepe, 897 A.2d 463, 465 (Pa.
Super. 2006). Even so, the Charleston Court acknowledged that its refusal
to apply any test from the Seibert plurality is disfavored among the federal
appellate courts. A “majority of the Circuit Courts have adopted the position
that [Justice] Kennedy’s concurring opinion represents the precedent
established by Seibert.” Charleston, 16 A.3d at 524.

      That federal-appellate-court majority includes the United States Court
of Appeals for the Third Circuit. Our circuit court held in United States v.
Naranjo, 426 F.3d 221 (3d Cir. 2005), that “Justice Kennedy’s opinion [in
Seibert] provides the [test] for resolving the issues raised by two-step
interrogations where Miranda warnings are not administered until after police
obtain an inculpatory statement.” Id. at 231–32.

      Curiously, Charleston identifies the Third Circuit’s Naranjo decision,
but it fails to analyze Naranjo or its obvious implications for Pennsylvania
jurisprudence. This is unfortunate because Charleston and Naranjo create
(Footnote Continued Next Page)

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       January 18, 2023 Order quashing notice of appeal vacated. Judgment

of sentence affirmed.

       Judge Dubow joins. Judge Nichols concurs in result.

____________________________________________

a striking anomaly in our precedents. When two-step interrogations occur,
federal courthouses in Pennsylvania are providing higher protections to
criminal defendants than their state counterparts. Typically, the opposite is
true. See Commonwealth v. Edmunds, 586 A.2d 887 (1991) (holding that
the state courts may provide greater rights and protections for Pennsylvanians
under our charter than the federal courts under theirs).

      Moreover, it is surprising that we follow the approach of the four Justices
in the Seibert minority to validate police action, when a five Justice majority
deemed the two-step interrogation unconstitutional, albeit based on varying
theories and tests. Respectfully, by applying Justice O’Connor’s test, the
Charleston Court may have missed Seibert’s forest for its trees.

      Charleston invites every defendant in Underkoffler’s position to seek
federal habeas corpus relief, where, under Naranjo, they will ultimately
receive the protection of Seibert. See, e.g., Charleston v. Gilmore, 305 F.
Supp. 3d 612 (E.D. Pa. 2018) (applying Seibert to review Charleston’s habeas
corpus petition, after this Court refused to do so). It therefore seems absurd
that we decline to apply some test from the plurality in Seibert at suppression
hearings in our courts of common pleas and in this Court. By doing so, we
are almost daring the federal courts to overturn our state-court convictions.

     Thus, this Court en banc or the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania may
wish to review Underkoffler’s claim regarding which test from Seibert
Pennsylvania should apply.

                                          - 29 -
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Judgment Entered.

Benjamin D. Kohler, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 11/14/2023

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