Court Opinion

ID: 4687821
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-05-18 16:17:03.634782+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:04:43.579449
License: Public Domain

J-A25007-20

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

 COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA             :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                          :        PENNSYLVANIA
                                          :
              v.                          :
                                          :
                                          :
 IAN CHRISTOPHER BRENNER                  :
                                          :
                    Appellant             :   No. 610 MDA 2020

           Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered March 23, 2020
  In the Court of Common Pleas of York County Criminal Division at No(s):
                        CP-67-CR-0002170-2006

BEFORE: BOWES, J., OLSON, J., and KING, J.

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                               FILED MAY 18, 2021

      Ian Christopher Brenner appeals from the order that denied his Post

Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”) petition. Upon careful review, we affirm.

      On October 9, 2005, Appellant himself was the victim of a shooting.

Appellant was struck in the leg and arm. N.T. Jury Trial, 8/6/14, at 23. At

the hospital, Appellant refused to provide the name of the friend who had

driven him to the hospital and stated that he did not know who shot him. Id.

at 24-25. After he left the hospital, Appellant declined to respond to officers

when they attempted to speak further with him about the incident and the

case was closed. Id. at 34. A few days prior to the subsequent retaliatory

shooting that led to the convictions underlying this appeal, Apollonia Snyder

overheard Appellant talking on a cellphone, stating that “he was going to pop

Supreme when he seen him.” Id. at 42. During the conversation, Appellant

was handling a firearm in his lap. Id.
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      Ten days later, at 9:30 p.m. on October 19, 2005, shots were fired

outside of Allison’s Bar in the City of York, resulting in the death of Anna

Witter, who was struck by a ricocheting bullet.       Anthony Zawadzinki and

Alfonzo King were also shot, but survived. Alfonzo King had been standing

near Jeffrey Mable a/k/a “Supreme,” the person who was the shooter’s

apparent target. All of the victims were shot with the same firearm, which

was never recovered.

      Police responded quickly, detaining multiple potential eyewitnesses on

scene and in the immediate vicinity. Daniek Burns identified the shooter as

Appellant, the target of the first shot as Supreme, and gave a description of

the shooter’s appearance.     See N.T. Jury Trial, 8/5/14, at 402, 418, 437

(identifying Appellant, describing his outfit as a hoodie with the hood up, white

tee shirt underneath, blue jeans, and black shoes, and explaining that the

shooter aimed at Supreme first).            Other witnesses provided similar

descriptions, but did not identify the shooter. See N.T. Jury Trial, 8/5/14, at

246 (Alfonzo King describing the shooter as tall, stocky, and wearing a dark

hoodie); see also N.T. Jury Trial, 8/6/14, at 89-90 (explaining that while the

lighting was good, Tina Ashley could not identify the shooter because he wore

a gray hoodie with the hood up and had a dark complexion, but she was

certain that the shooter was not Appellant); id. at 124-25 (Alicia Brittner

describing the shooter as wearing jeans and a hoodie over the head, but that

it was too dark to see who the shooter was); id. at 179-80 (Lloyd Valcarcel

stating that the shooter was wearing a black hoodie with the hood up, white

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t-shirt, blue jeans, and black shoes.    However, he could not identify the

shooter because he did not get a good look at him, like Daniek Burns did); id.

at 225 (Supreme explaining that he only had a second or two to look before

he dropped to the ground and feigned death, but the shooter was wearing a

big black hoodie with the hood up). While being interviewed on the scene,

Tina Ashley pointed in Supreme’s general direction and yelled “he knows who

was shooting. They were shooting at him.” N.T. Jury Trial, 8/4/14, at 141.

      A warrant was issued for Appellant’s arrest, and six days after the

shooting, he turned himself in.      Upon arrest, Appellant’s black Jordan

sneakers, belt, and blue jeans were taken from him and submitted for forensic

testing. See N.T. Jury Trial, 8/5/14, at 356. The black hoodie that Appellant

was wearing when arrested was later separately submitted for forensic

testing. Id. at 295, 319-20. All of the items taken from Appellant matched

some of the eyewitness accounts of what the shooter was wearing and tested

either consistently with or positive for gunshot residue. Id. at 301, 325-30.

Appellant’s belt had by far the highest concentration of gunshot residue of all

the items that were submitted, and the inside had markings consistent with

“something rubbing up against it on a regular basis”. Id. at 297, 325-26.

      A federal grand jury proceeding was initiated against Appellant. N.T.

Jury Trial, 9/13/06, at 41-57. However, before the grand jury had finished

hearing testimony, the United States Attorney’s Office decided that “the first

jury to hear this case should be a jury from the court of common pleas of York

where the homicide allegedly took place.” N.T. Jury Trial, 9/13/06, at 46.

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Accordingly, the inquiry was concluded and Appellant proceeded to a jury trial

in the York County Court of Common Pleas.

      At the trial, the Commonwealth presented Charles Maner, who testified

that Appellant discussed the shooting with him while they were housed

together in the York County Prison. See N.T. Jury Trial, 9/12/06, at 209-12.

According to Maner, Appellant accidentally shot a woman and felt bad about

it, because he had intended to hit the person who had shot him earlier that

month. Id. at 212-14. The defense countered with Tawanna Chavis, who

testified that Appellant was at her house the entire night of the shooting. See

N.T. Jury Trial, 9/14/06, at 135.

      The jury convicted Appellant of the first-degree murder of Anna Witter,

aggravated assault—serious bodily injury of Alfonso King, aggravated

assault—bodily injury with a deadly weapon of Anthony Zawadzinski, and the

attempted homicide of Jeffrey Mable. See N.T. Jury Trial, 9/14/16, at 120.

In total, Appellant was sentenced to serve life imprisonment without the

possibility of parole (“LWOP”), plus a consecutive term of five to ten years.

On direct appeal, we affirmed Appellant’s judgment of sentence and our

Supreme Court denied his petition for allowance of appeal. Commonwealth

v. Brenner, 998 A.2d 998 (Pa.Super. 2010) (unpublished memorandum),

appeal denied, 13 A.3d 474 (Pa. 2010).

      Appellant filed a timely, counseled PCRA petition.     During the PCRA

proceedings, Appellant was represented by Joseph Sembrot, Esquire. After

two evidentiary hearings, at which PCRA counsel called former Assistant

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District Attorney (“ADA”) Bill Graff, trial counsel Mark Keenheel, Charles

Maner’s trial counsel, two character witnesses, his private investigator,

Appellant, and multiple fact witnesses, the PCRA court denied his petition. An

appeal followed, wherein Appellant reiterated the many allegations of

ineffective assistance of counsel and asserted that the Commonwealth had

committed a Brady1 violation by failing to disclose alleged consideration

afforded to Charles Maner in exchange for his testimony against Appellant.

We reversed the PCRA court order, vacated Appellant’s convictions, and

remanded for a new trial after finding that trial counsel was ineffective when

he failed to discuss the possibility of calling character witnesses with Appellant

pre-trial. See Commonwealth v. Brenner, 81 A.3d 1010 (Pa.Super. 2013)

(unpublished memorandum). Due to the resolution of this issue, we did not

reach the Brady issue or the other remaining issues. Appellant filed a petition

for allowance of appeal, which was denied.            See Commonwealth v.

Brenner, 80 A.3d 774 (Pa. 2013).

        Upon remand in a new trial court, Appellant proceeded with pre-trial

motions, including an omnibus pretrial motion seeking to suppress the

photographic identification of Appellant by Daniek Burns as unduly suggestive.

After a hearing and submission of a brief on the remaining issues, the trial

court denied Appellant’s omnibus pretrial motion. Appellant also filed a motion

in limine attempting to preclude the Commonwealth from admitting the prior

____________________________________________

1   Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963).

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testimony of now-deceased, and therefore unavailable, Daniek Burns. The

Commonwealth countered that Attorney Keenheel was not found ineffective

due to any alleged deficiencies in his handling of Burns. Since Appellant had

a full and fair opportunity for cross examination while represented by counsel,

the Commonwealth maintained that Daniek Burns’s prior testimony should be

admitted. The trial court agreed, denying Appellant’s motion in limine.

      Appellant proceeded to his second jury trial in August of 2014. Attorney

Sembrot continued to represent Appellant.       At re-trial, the Commonwealth

admitted and placed before the jury the prior trial testimony of Daniek Burns,

Anthony Zawadinski, and Detective Troy Cromer. Unlike the first trial, the

Commonwealth did not call Charles Maner or an Assistant United States

Attorney to explain the federal grand jury proceeding that preceded the filing

of these charges in state court. Appellant did not present an alibi defense or

any character witnesses. Instead, he called three fact witnesses in an attempt

to discredit Daniek Burns’s identification of Appellant as the shooter.       The

witnesses testified that the conditions did not allow for an accurate

identification of the shooter, beyond basic descriptors. At the conclusion of

the second trial, Appellant was again convicted of first-degree murder,

attempted murder, aggravated assault—serious bodily injury, and aggravated

assault—deadly weapon.

      The trial court imposed a sentence of LWOP plus a consecutive five to

ten years of imprisonment, which was the same sentence that Appellant

received after his first trial. A direct appeal followed, wherein Appellant raised

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eleven claims of trial court error which fell into three categories: weight of

the evidence, sufficiency of the evidence, and evidentiary challenges.         We

affirmed Appellant’s judgment of sentence and our Supreme Court denied his

petition for allowance of appeal. See Commonwealth v. Brenner, 156 A.3d
347 (Pa.Super. 2016) (unpublished memorandum), appeal denied, 165 A.3d
897 (Pa. 2017).

      Appellant submitted a timely counseled PCRA petition raising sixteen

allegations of ineffective assistance of Attorney Sembrot, who was original

PCRA and re-trial counsel.     The PCRA court held two days of evidentiary

hearings, during which PCRA counsel called Nathanial “Man” Williams, an

expert witness on eyewitness identification, Attorney Sembrot, Appellant, and

Yolanda Dorman. Appellant submitted a substantial post-hearing brief, which

the PCRA court closely scrutinized before issuing an order and opinion denying

the petition. This timely appeal followed. Both Appellant and the PCRA court

complied with the mandates of Pa.R.A.P. 1925, and thus, this appeal is ready

for our disposition.

      Appellant raises the following issues for our review:

      1.    Whether counsel was ineffective in neglecting to present
            evidence which would have demonstrated that a full and fair
            opportunity to cross-examine Daniek Burns did not occur?

      2.    Whether counsel was ineffective in failing to present expert
            testimony on the fallability [sic] of eyewitness identifications
            where counsel could not cross-examine the key eyewitness?

      3.    Whether counsel was ineffective in failing to object to the
            admission of gun shot residue evidence, which violated

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           [Appellant’s] confrontation clause rights under the federal
           and Pennsylvania constitutions?

     4.    Whether counsel was ineffective for failing to adequately
           cross-examine Detective Fetrow?

     5.    Whether counsel was ineffective in declining to present
           evidence that [Appellant] had legally purchased firearms,
           was licensed to carry a firearm, and that another sweatshirt
           not alleged to have been used in the crime had the same
           alleged gun-shot residue particles as other clothing
           introduced, which would have demonstrated legitimate
           reasons for gun-shot residue being on his belt?

     6.    Whether counsel was ineffective in neglecting to investigate,
           interview, and present witnesses that [sic] would have
           directly undermined Apollonia Snyder Johnson’s testimony?

     7.    Whether counsel was ineffective in failing to object to
           myriad instances of prosecutorial misconduct during closing
           arguments, including calling [Appellant] as “cold a killer as
           there exists”?

     8.    Whether counsel was ineffective in failing to question Tina
           Ashley and call Officer Randy Searfoss regarding statements
           Ms. Ashley made at the scene that the Commonwealth
           misleadingly used to imply that the shooter’s target was
           Jeffrey Mable?

     9.    Whether counsel was ineffective in failing to introduce
           photographs demonstrating the poor lighting conditions at
           the scene?

     10.   Whether counsel was ineffective in declining to file a pre-
           trial motion to bar re-trial based on double jeopardy under
           the Pennsylvania and federal constitutions, due to egregious
           prosecutorial misconduct related to Commonwealth witness
           Charles Maner?

     11.   Based on all of the aforementioned claims, the cumulative
           errors in this matter were so significant that they deprived
           [Appellant] of a fair trial in violation of his due process rights
           and his state and federal constitutional right to a fair trial.

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Appellant’s brief at 10-11.2

       We begin with the pertinent legal principles. Our “review is limited to

the findings of the PCRA court and the evidence of record” and we do not

“disturb a PCRA court’s ruling if it is supported by evidence of record and is

free of legal error.”       Commonwealth v. Rykard, 55 A.3d 1177, 1183

(Pa.Super. 2012). “We grant great deference to the factual findings of the

PCRA court and will not disturb those findings unless they have no support in

the record. However, we afford no such deference to its legal conclusions.”
Id. “[W]here the petitioner raises questions of law, our standard of review is

de novo and our scope of review is plenary.” Id. When examining a mixed

question of law and fact, the level of deference afforded to the PCRA court is

analyzed on an issue-by issue basis. See Commonwealth v. Martin, 5 A.3d
177, 197 (Pa. 2010). “The more fact intensive the determination, the more

deference a reviewing court should afford that conclusion.”       Id.; see e.g.

____________________________________________

2 We cannot overemphasize the importance of focused appellate advocacy.
Experienced advocates find that selecting the few most important issues
presents the greatest likelihood of success. See Jones v. Barnes, 463 U.S.
745, 751-52 (1983) (“Experienced advocates since time beyond memory have
emphasized the importance of winnowing out weaker arguments on appeal
and focusing on one central issue if possible, or at most on a few key issues.”);
Commonwealth v. Robinson, 864 A.2d 460, 480 (Pa. 2004) (“Legal
contentions, like the currency, depreciate through over-issue.”);
Commonwealth v. Ellis, 626 A.2d 1137, 1140-41 (Pa. 1993) (“Appellate
advocacy is measured by effectiveness, not loquaciousness.”). See also
RUGGERO J. ALDISERT, J. WINNING ON APPEAL: BETTER BRIEFS AND ORAL
ARGUMENT, 129 (2d ed. 2003) (“When I read an appellant’s brief that
contains more than six points, a presumption arises that there is no merit to
any of them.” (emphasis in original)).

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Commonwealth v. Cox, 983 A.2d 666, 689 (Pa. 2009) (concluding that the

PCRA court did not commit an abuse of discretion when it rejected appellant’s

IAC claim for failure to object to a prosecutor’s closing argument since the

remark constituted a fair response to trial counsel’s closing argument).

Finally, we “may affirm a PCRA court’s decision on any grounds if the record

supports it.” Id.

      Appellant alleges many claims of ineffective assistance of counsel

(“IAC”). In reviewing IAC claims, counsel is presumed to be effective, and a

PCRA petitioner bears the burden of proving otherwise. See Commonwealth

v. Becker, 192 A.3d 106, 112 (Pa.Super. 2018). To do so, a petitioner must

plead and prove that: (1) the legal claim underlying his ineffectiveness claim

has arguable merit; (2) counsel’s decision to act (or not) lacked a reasonable

basis designed to effectuate the petitioner’s interests; and (3) prejudice

resulted. Id. The failure to establish any of the three prongs is fatal to the

claim. Id. at 113.

      Where a petitioner asserts a layered IAC claim, he must plead and prove

each prong of the three-prong ineffectiveness test for each of the attorneys

involved. Commonwealth v. Chmiel, 30 A.3d 1111, 1128 (Pa. 2011). As

we have explained:

      Layered claims of ineffectiveness are not wholly distinct from the
      underlying claims, because proof of the underlying claim is an
      essential element of the derivative ineffectiveness claim . . . . In
      determining a layered claim of ineffectiveness, the critical inquiry
      is whether the first attorney that the defendant asserts was
      ineffective did, in fact, render ineffective assistance of counsel. If

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        that attorney was effective, then subsequent counsel cannot be
        deemed ineffective for failing to raise the underlying issue.

Rykard, supra at 1190 (citations and quotations omitted).

        With these principles in mind, we address Appellant’s IAC claims

seriatim.

I. Confrontation Clause: Prior Trial Testimony

        In Appellant’s first layered IAC claim, Appellant attacks the admission

of Daniek Burns’s prior trial testimony as a violation of the confrontation

clause. He alleges that Attorney Keenheel’s3 ineffectiveness denied him a full

and fair opportunity for cross-examination, and that Attorney Sembrot4 was

ineffective for not seeking to exclude this testimony from Appellant’s re-trial

on that basis. Specifically, Appellant alleges that Attorney Keenheel’s failure

to question Daniek Burns about an incident where he was allegedly stopped

for possession of a small amount of drugs, fled the scene, and was never

charged, denied him of a fair and full cross-examination of Daniek Burns. This

incident was discussed by Detective Fetrow during the federal grand jury

proceeding as a possible reason why Daniek Burns may have absconded.

While Detective Fetrow speculated that the reason for flight was Burns’s fear

that “he would be next” for identifying Appellant, the detective also opined

____________________________________________

3   Attorney Keenheel was Appellant’s counsel at his first trial.

4Attorney Sembrot was Appellant’s counsel at his first PCRA proceeding and
subsequent re-trial.

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that Burns’s fear of potential criminal prosecution could have also played a

role in the decision. See N.T. Grand Jury Proceeding, 2/15/06, at 20. The

Commonwealth provided Appellant with the transcript prior to the first trial,

and Attorney Keenheel referenced the proceeding in his opening statement.

      Whether the trial court’s admission of Daniek Burns’s prior trial

testimony violated Appellant’s constitutional right to confront the witnesses

against him is a question of law, as to which our review is de novo and plenary.

See Commonwealth v. Mitchell, 152 A.3d 355, 358 (Pa.Super. 2016).

Generally, an unavailable witness’s prior recorded testimony is admissible at

trial, and will not offend the right of confrontation, where the defendant had

counsel and a “full and fair opportunity” to cross-examine that witness at the

prior proceeding. Commonwealth v. Bazemore, 614 A.2d 684, 687 (Pa.

1992). Relying on Commonwealth v. Mangini, 425 A.2d 734 (Pa. 1981),

Appellant contends that Attorney Keenheel was ineffective in his cross-

examination of Burns and therefore, Appellant was denied his right to full and

fair cross-examination at the re-trial. Therefore, he contends that his right to

confrontation has been violated. For the following reason, we disagree.

      In Mangini, a new trial was granted after original trial counsel was

declared ineffective due to his failure to request a competency hearing for a

key Commonwealth witness. Prior to the retrial, a competency hearing was

held and the Commonwealth’s key witness was found incompetent. At the

second trial, the trial court allowed the Commonwealth to admit the now-

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unavailable witness’s prior trial testimony over defense objection. Mangini

was re-convicted.      On appeal, Mangini argued          that prior   counsel’s

ineffectiveness in failing to ask for a competency hearing had tainted the key

witness’s prior testimony, so that its later admission violated the confrontation

clause. Our Supreme Court agreed, and reversed the admittance of the prior

trial testimony. In doing so, the Mangini Court explained that the use of “the

very testimony which has been indelibly stamped with prior counsel’s

ineffectiveness [was] offensive to our sense of justice and the notion of fair

play.” Id. at 738. However, the Court also cautioned against construing its

holding too broadly, explaining that:

      our holding today is not a per se rule requiring the exclusion of
      any testimony from a prior trial wherein trial counsel had been
      ineffective. All of the factual variables of each case must be
      examined to determine if the ineffectiveness so tainted the
      testimony sought to be introduced as to affect its reliability or to
      otherwise render its subsequent use unfair.
Id. at 739.

      Here, Attorney Keenheel was found ineffective solely for failing to

consult with Appellant about whether he wished to call character witnesses.

However, Attorney Sembrot did not allege and Attorney Keenheel was never

found to be ineffective due to any alleged deficiencies in his handling of Daniek

Burns, a fact witness. Therefore, Mangini is distinguishable from this case

because there was no prior IAC ruling on the issue that would have

necessitated exclusion. As Mangini found, simply because trial counsel was

ineffective in one area does not necessarily taint his entire representation of

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Appellant.      Therefore, Appellant cannot rely solely on the previous

ineffectiveness     finding    to   prove      his   claim   of   Attorney   Keenheel’s

ineffectiveness. Instead, he must plead and prove that Attorney Keenheel

was ineffective in his cross-examination of Daniek Burns on these newly

asserted grounds.

        Since   Appellant     did   not   challenge     Attorney    Keenheel’s   cross-

examination of Daniek Burns in his first PCRA petition, this allegation is waived

unless he proves that Attorney Keenheel was ineffective in his cross-

examination and that Attorney Sembrot was ineffective for failing to raise it.

See Commonwealth v. Mason, 130 A.3d 601, 618 (Pa. 2015) (“A PCRA

claim is waived if the petitioner could have raised it but failed to do so before

trial, at trial, during unitary review, or on appeal or in a prior [PCRA]

proceeding”); see also Commonwealth v. Dennis, 950 A.2d 945, 954 (Pa.

2008) (“Where claims of trial counsel ineffectiveness . . . could previously

have been litigated . . . the only way a petitioner can successfully mount a

challenge to the effectiveness of counsel is to assert a “layered” claim of

ineffectiveness”).

        Here, Appellant has failed to establish that Attorney Keenheel was

ineffective in his cross-examination of Daniek Burns. While Appellant called

Attorney Sembrot5 at the PCRA hearing and questioned him regarding his trial

____________________________________________

5   PCRA counsel Attorney Sembrat also served as re-trial counsel.

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strategy with regard to this claim, Appellant did not attempt to introduce the

testimony of Attorney Keenheel.          Attorney Sembrat cannot be found

ineffective for failing to pursue this confrontation clause claim, unless Attorney

Keenheel was first ineffective in his handling of Daniek Burns’s cross-

examination. See Commonwealth v. Reaves, 923 A.2d 1119, 1127-28 (Pa.

2007) (explaining that to prevail upon a layered IAC claim a petitioner must

present argument on the three prongs of the IAC test as to each relevant layer

of representation).    By not calling Attorney Keenheel at the evidentiary

hearing at issue herein, Attorney Keenheel was never given the opportunity

to explain his strategy, or lack of it, to permit us to determine whether counsel

had a reasonable basis designed to effectuate Appellant’s interests.

      The burden of production and persuasion of a PCRA petition rests

squarely on the petitioner’s shoulders. See Commonwealth v. Jones, 596
A.2d 885, 888-89 (Pa.Super. 1991). In the absence of any evidence as to

what original trial counsel’s strategy may have been, we cannot find that the

PCRA court abused its discretion in denying relief on this issue. Jones, supra

at 888-89 (declining to find the reasonable basis prong satisfied after

Appellant failed to call the alleged ineffective attorney as a witness at his PCRA

hearing). Accordingly, this deficiency is fatal to his ineffectiveness allegations

surrounding Daniek Burns’s cross-examination.

      Since Appellant has failed to persuade us that a confrontation clause

violation occurred, the trial court did not err when it admitted the prior

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testimony of Daniek Burns at the retrial. Further, since Appellant has failed

to establish that Attorney Keenheel’s cross-examination of Burns was

constitutionally ineffective, Attorney Sembrot cannot be held ineffective for

waiving this claim by failing to pursue it in Appellant’s original PCRA petition.

See Commonwealth v. Spotz, 896 A.2d 1191, 1214 (Pa. 2006) (“[C]ounsel

will not be deemed ineffective for failing to raise a meritless claim[.]”).

Accordingly, Appellant’s first claim fails.

II. Eyewitness Expert Testimony

        In his second IAC claim, Appellant asserts that Attorney Sembrot as re-

trial counsel was ineffective for failing to call an expert in eyewitness

identification at his re-trial. While it had long been the law of Pennsylvania

that such expert testimony was not admissible, the law changed shortly before

Appellant’s re-trial, allowing for such an expert.    See Commonwealth v.

Walker, 92 A.3d 766 (Pa. 2014).

        In Walker, our Supreme Court recognized the potential advantages of

expert testimony in the eyewitness arena and held that such testimony was

no longer per se inadmissible. Id. at 792-93. In reaching this conclusion, the

Walker Court expressly rejected reliance upon cross-examination and closing

argument alone as sufficient to convey the relevant eyewitness factors to the

jury. Id. at 786.    Henceforth, expert eyewitness testimony would be

admissible, at the discretion of the trial court, in cases where the

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Commonwealth’s proof of identity was solely or primarily dependent upon

eyewitness testimony. Id. at 787-88.

      We agree with the PCRA court that the testimony of an expert on

eyewitness misidentifications would have been admissible. See PCRA Court

Opinion, 3/19/20, at 23. The Commonwealth’s primary evidence identifying

Appellant as the shooter came from Daniek Burns’s eyewitness identification.

Accordingly, the Commonwealth introduced photographs of the scene, and

asked officers who responded to the scene, as well as an emergency

management specialist for the City of York, to testify about the favorable

lighting conditions present in an attempt to buttress Daniek Burns’s

identification.   In contrast at re-trial, the defense aggressively sought to

discredit Daniek Burns’s identification in opening and closing statements,

through use of the prior cross-examination of Daniek Burns, and by calling

three eyewitnesses. The three eyewitnesses were standing near Daniek Burns

at the time that the shooting started. All three witnesses testified that they

were unable to make an accurate identification of the shooter.

      At the PCRA hearing, Dr. Dery Strange was qualified as an expert in

eyewitness identification and testified that eyewitness misidentification is

responsible in seventy to seventy-five percent of cases where DNA has

exonerated people. See N.T. PCRA Hearing, 7/2/18, at 19-20. The amount

of time needed to identify another person accurately is greatly influenced by

the quality of lighting and distance. Id. at 22-24. She went on to describe

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accepted measures for distance and lighting conditions necessary to make an

accurate identification and opined that, based on her review of scene

photographs and witness testimony, the conditions here fell below acceptable

thresholds. Id. at 25. She also testified to other factors that can impact the

validity of an identification, such as drug use, wearing a head covering, or

“weapon focus,” wherein crime victims focus exclusively on the weapon

present instead of other forensically useful information. Id. at 27-31. Dr.

Strange also described a study in which the results indicated that mis-

recognition of familiar faces is much more likely under bad lighting conditions

or shorter durations of time. Id. at 35-37.

        After observing the witnesses at the trial and the PCRA hearing, the

PCRA court held that Dr. Dery Strange’s testimony would have been

admissible at trial.6 See PCRA Opinion, 3/19/20, at 23-24. Additionally, the

court found that Attorney Sembrat had no reasonable basis for failing to seek

the admission of this type of evidence. Id. However, the PCRA court still

denied the claim due to a lack of prejudice, finding “no meaningful probability,

nor even any real possibility of a different verdict resulting from a presentation

of Dr. Strange’s proffered testimony.” Id. at 25. We find no basis to disturb

the court’s finding.

____________________________________________

6   The Honorable Michael E. Bortner served as the re-trial and PCRA judge.

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      While Attorney Sembrot made no attempt to call an expert on

eyewitness testimony, unlike in Walker, he also did not rely solely on cross-

examination and closing argument to convey the relevant eyewitness factors

to the jury.     Attorney Sembrot also sought to discredit Daniek Burns’s

identification of Appellant through the testimony of three eyewitnesses who

were standing near Daniek Burns at the time of the shooting. Each testified

that he could not see the shooter clearly due to the hoodie partially covering

his head and various combinations of light, distance, and timing constraints.

One of the witnesses even stated that he spoke with Daniek Burns after the

shooting and Burns stated that he was not able to identify the shooter. See

N.T. Jury Trial, 8/6/14, at 130-31.   Finally, Attorney Sembrot argued that

Burns’s identification was not believable in closing argument.

      Further, Burns’s identification of Appellant was not the only evidence of

his guilt.   The Commonwealth presented evidence of Appellant’s motive to

shoot Supreme, i.e., his belief that Supreme was responsible for the shooting

where he was injured ten days earlier than the shooting in question. See N.T.

Jury Trial, 8/6/14, at 21-57. In support of this theory, the Commonwealth

submitted the testimony of Apollonia Snyder, who overheard Appellant

threating to “pop” Supreme while stroking a firearm, along with the officer

who attempted to interview Appellant about the earlier shooting with limited

success. Id. Witnesses from the scene also identified Supreme as the target.

See N.T. Jury Trial, 8/4/14, at 141-42; N.T. Jury Trial, 8/5/14, at 257; id. at

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437. Finally, Appellant’s clothing tested positive for gunshot residue and the

inside of his belt contained markings consistent with a gun holster. See N.T.

Jury Trial, 8/5/14, at 297; id. at 325-26. Thus, in light of the other testimony

adduced, we find no abuse of discretion in the PCRA court’s determination that

Appellant was not prejudiced by the absence of expert testimony on

eyewitness identification.

III. Confrontation Clause: Gunshot Residue Experts

      In his third claim, Appellant alleges that Attorney Sembrot was

ineffective at the re-trial for failing to object to the admission of A.J.

Schwoebel’s expert report, Allison Murtha’s expert testimony, and Ms.

Murtha’s expert report regarding gunshot residue found on Appellant’s

clothing. The following legal principles pertain to our review.

      Whether Appellant’s rights under the confrontation clause were violated

by the admission and use of the gunshot residue reports and testimony from

Ms. Murtha is a question of law, for which our standard of review is de novo

and our scope of review is plenary. See Commonwealth v. Brown, 185
A.3d 316, 409 (Pa. 2018) (plurality). The United States Supreme Court has

held that forensic reports are testimonial in nature when their “primary

purpose” is to establish or prove past events for purposes of proof at a criminal

trial. See Davis v. Washington, 547 U.S. 813, 822 (2006). Therefore, the

right to confrontation is violated when a testimonial forensic report is offered

into evidence without the analyst’s corroborating testimony.       See Brown,

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supra at 417-18 (holding that an autopsy report was testimonial in nature,

so the report could only be introduced into evidence without its author’s

testimony if the author was “unavailable” and defendant “had a prior

opportunity to cross-examine” him).

      A.J. Schwoebel was the former manager and director of the forensic

laboratory for the R.J. Lee Group. See N.T. Jury Trial, 8/5/14, at 307, 323-

24. After the particle extraction samples were taken from each article and

submitted for testing, A.J. Schwoebel analyzed the results and generated a

report. Id. at 321-22. A.J. Schwoebel did not testify at the first trial and was

unavailable to testify at the second one. Id. at 336. Ms. Murtha held Mr.

Schwoebel’s previous position as of the date of the second jury trial. Id. at

307. Accordingly, Ms. Murtha took the results from Mr. Schwoebel’s reports

and re-analyzed them in accordance with the current standard operating

procedures, memorializing her findings in a supplemental report. Ms. Murtha

testified at trial, and both her report and Mr. Schwoebel’s report were admitted

as evidence. Id. at 307-54.

      The PCRA court found that A.J. Schwoebel’s report should not have been

admitted into evidence because its primary purpose was testimonial in nature,

Mr. Schwoebel was unavailable for trial, and he did not testify previously. See

PCRA Opinion, 3/19/20, at 91. However, Appellant was not prejudiced by this

error, since the report was cumulative of Ms. Murtha’s testimony and expert

                                     - 21 -
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report, which admission did not violate the confrontation clause. Id. at 90-

94. We agree.

      As the PCRA court accurately observed, the gunshot residue report

prepared by Mr. Schwoebel was testimonial in nature, Mr. Schwoebel did not

testify at the previous trial, and he was unavailable to testify at Appellant’s

second trial. Therefore, Appellant never had the opportunity to cross-examine

him and the admission of his report into evidence was error. See Bullcoming

v. New Mexico, 564 U.S. 647, 655 (2011) (holding that the admission of a

missing analysist’s report through a “surrogate” analysist who merely

introduced the findings of the missing analyst violated the confrontation

clause).   However, his report was cumulative of Ms. Murtha’s testimony.

Therefore, the impact of this error necessarily depends on our resolution of

Appellant’s allegations concerning the admissibility of Ms. Murtha’s testimony

and expert report.

      The High Court has held that the testimony of a surrogate analyst who

merely “parrots” the original unavailable analyst’s testimony is insufficient to

vindicate the right to confrontation, since such testimony cannot expose any

errors in the testing process employed by the analyst who authored the report.

See Bullcoming, supra at 662.           Our Supreme Court interpreted the

Bullcoming holding to mean that the confrontation clause is not implicated

where a surrogate analyst renders an “independent opinion” interpreting the

results. See Brown, supra at 420-22. Additionally, it previously considered

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what constitutes an “independent opinion” that satisfies the confrontation

clause. See Commonwealth v. Yohe, 79 A.3d 520 (Pa. 2013).

      The Yohe Court addressed whether the admission of a toxicology report

in a driving under the influence (“DUI”) case violated a defendant’s rights

under the confrontation clause. After the defendant’s blood sample was tested

three times by several analysts from one lab, a toxicologist received the raw

data, analyzed the three tests, and arrived at a blood alcohol concentration

(“BAC”) result, which the toxicologist set forth in a report. The toxicologist

signed the report, certifying its content and his own role in reviewing the data

and ensuring its accuracy.     At the defendant’s trial, the BAC result was

admitted into evidence through the toxicologist’s expert testimony.          The

defendant objected that his right to confrontation was violated because the

specific lab technicians who performed the tests did not testify. His objection

was overruled.

      On appeal, our Supreme Court found that the lab report was testimonial

and that the toxicologist had not performed any of the tests. However, our

Court nevertheless held that the defendant’s confrontation clause rights were

not violated.    While the toxicologist relied on raw data produced by lab

technicians in reaching an expert opinion, he was the only individual who

engaged in the critical comparative analysis of the results of the testing, which

was needed in order to generate a BAC. Id. at 539-40 (“[The toxicologist]

was at the top of the inferential chain, and utilized the data that preceded his

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analysis in reaching his conclusion.”). The Court highlighted the toxicologist’s

unique role. As the lab supervisor, he was generally familiar with standard

procedures and able to identify any deviations from his procedure or any

problems with a particular lab technician. Accordingly, he was able to evaluate

the entire record and was the proper object of the defendant’s right to

confrontation.

      Here, like the toxicologist in Yohe, Mr. Schwoebel and Ms. Murtha do

not appear to have played any role in extracting the particle samples from the

articles and submitting them for testing. See N.T. Jury Trial, 8/5/14, at 321.

Instead, Mr. Schwoebel took the raw data from the testing and analyzed it in

accordance with the standard operating procedures that were in place at the

time. Id. Ms. Murtha then reviewed Mr. Schwoebel’s report to ensure that

everything was done according to those standard operating procedures,

before taking the data and applying it under the updated format applicable at

the time of the re-trial, which caused her to reach a different and independent

conclusion. Id. at 324-25. Ms. Murtha also testified that she had performed

approximately 600 to 700 of these types of analyses, had been a member of

the forensic science department since 2008, was mentored by Mr. Schwoebel,

and had been the manager of the forensic science department since Mr.

Schwoebel retired.     Like the toxicologist in Yohe, she was familiar with

standard operating procedures and able to identify deviations from those

procedures.      After Mr. Schwoebel’s departure, Ms. Murtha was the only

                                     - 24 -
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individual available who had engaged in a critical analysis of the results of the

tests performed. Therefore, in line with the Yohe analysis, Ms. Murtha was

the witness at the top of the inferential chain whom Appellant had the right to

confront. Thus, the admission of Ms. Murtha’s testimony and expert report

did not violate the confrontation clause.

      Appellant argues that Ms. Murtha could not have produced an

independent report because she relied on information contained in Mr.

Schwoebel’s report in order to generate her own findings. See Appellant’s

brief at 58-62. Appellant fails to account for the distinction between results

and opinions. The results are raw data concerning the chemicals found on the

tested   specimens,   whereas    opinions     are   formed   from   an   analyst’s

interpretation of the raw data. This distinction is best exemplified by the fact

that Ms. Murtha reached a different opinion than Mr. Schwoebel. While Ms.

Murtha’s report necessarily incorporates the results of the testing conducted

by Mr. Schwoebel, it does not contain anyone’s opinion but her own.

Therefore, in contrast to Bullcoming, Ms. Murtha’s report did not simply

“parrot” the prior analysis of Mr. Schwoebel. See Yohe, supra at 390.

      Mr. Schwoebel’s report was inadmissible absent Mr. Schwoebel’s

testimony. However, even without the report, Pa.R.E. 703 and 705 would still

have permitted the type of expert opinion testimony given by Ms. Murtha. The

rules allow expert opinion testimony based in part on otherwise inadmissible

facts and data contained in a report upon which experts in the field would

                                     - 25 -
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reasonably rely in forming an opinion. See also Commonwealth v. Ali, 10
A.3d 282, 306 (Pa. 2010) (“[A] medical expert who did not perform the

autopsy may testify as to cause of death as long as the testifying expert is

qualified and sufficiently informed[.]”) (citation omitted).

        Ultimately, Ms. Murtha’s testimony was admissible because she formed

an independent conclusion and testified to that conclusion based on her review

of both inadmissible facts and data contained in Mr. Schwoebel’s report. Since

Ms. Murtha synthesized that information, formed an independent opinion, and

was available to be cross-examined regarding the basis of that opinion, we

conclude there was no confrontation clause violation with respect to her

opinion regarding the presence of gunshot residue on Appellant’s clothing.

Further, we determine that any error that arose from Ms. Murtha revealing

Mr. Schwoebel’s opinion, or the Commonwealth admitting Mr. Schwoebel’s

report as an exhibit, was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because her

own independent opinion testimony satisfied the confrontation clause.

        With the preceding in mind, we turn to the IAC analysis.    Since Ms.

Murtha’s testimony did not violate the confrontation clause, Appellant’s

ineffectiveness claim based on Attorney Sembrot’s7 failure to object to the

admission lacks arguable merit. Since Mr. Schwoebel’s report was cumulative

of Ms. Murtha’s testimony, Appellant was not prejudiced by counsel’s failure

____________________________________________

7   Attorney Sembrot was Appellant’s counsel at the re-trial.

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to object to its admission or the references to it throughout Ms. Murtha’s

testimony. Accordingly, Appellant’s claim was properly denied.

IV. Cross-Examination of Detective Fetrow

      Appellant’s fourth claim contains three subparts. Appellant alleges that

Attorney Sembrot was ineffective for failing to cross-examine Detective

Fetrow regarding: (1) Daniek Burns’s drug stop and flight from apprehension,

(2) Tina Ashley’s knowledge about whether Supreme was the shooter’s

intended target, and (3) the time lapse between Appellant’s arrest and the

seizure of his sweatshirt. See Appellant’s brief at 73-75. We address each

argument individually below.

      Detective Fetrow was the lead detective assigned to Appellant’s case

and he testified at Appellant’s federal grand jury proceeding. See N.T. Grand

Jury Proceeding, 2/15/06, at 20. At that proceeding, he was questioned about

Daniek Burns and where he was currently located.            Detective Fetrow

responded that he was “on the run right now. He’s scared. At the time he

was scared. He didn’t want to be next is one of the things he told us. I don’t

know all his reasons.” Id. He went on to opine that an additional possibility

existed for why Burns had fled, explaining: “I know there was another incident

involving Daniek and some of our patrol officers and a small amount of drugs.

When they found the drugs, Daniek took off running and I haven’t seen him

since. Neither has anybody else.” Id. Ultimately, he was not sure if Burns’s

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reason for running was the possibility of getting in trouble for a criminal charge

or his fear of Appellant. Id.

      At re-trial, Detective Fetrow testified and was cross-examined multiple

times. See N.T. Jury Trial, 8/4/14, at 135-47; N.T. Jury Trial, 8/5/14, at 293-

306; id. at 355-58.     However, he was never asked about his grand jury

testimony by either the Commonwealth or Attorney Sembrot.               Appellant

alleges that Attorney Sembrot was ineffective for failing to cross-examine

Detective Fetrow about Burns’s uncharged criminal conduct. See Appellant’s

brief at 73. Appellant further argues that he was prejudiced by this omission

because the incident implied that the Commonwealth would treat Burns

favorably due to his identification testimony. Id. The PCRA court agreed that

this claim had arguable merit and that counsel admitted to having no

reasonable basis for this omission at the PCRA hearing. See PCRA Opinion,

3/19/20, at 37-38. However, the court denied the claim because it found that

there was no prejudice suffered. Id. at 38-39. We find no abuse of discretion.

      First, Daniek Burns was questioned extensively regarding his criminal

history, so the jury was aware of his potential motive to lie in that regard.

Despite only being seventeen years old at the time of his testimony, Burns

admitted to being a “career criminal,” and told the jury about his prior criminal

convictions and charges in New York and York County. See N.T. Jury Trial,

8/5/14, at 390-410. While he testified that he had not received anything in

exchange for his testimony, Burns conceded that the night of the shooting he

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had been smoking marijuana and wearing a bulletproof vest. Id. at 397, 405,

410. Despite the vest, marijuana, and active warrants for his arrest, Burns

was not arrested that night. Id. at 430. Instead, the officers allowed Burns

to leave with a family member after he finished giving his statement

identifying Appellant as the shooter. Id. at 397, 405-06. Burns fled the York

area, but was later picked up on a material witness warrant. Id. at 408. At

the time of his testimony, Burns was serving a sentence at Rikers Island

Prison, an adult facility, because of a drugs charge.     See N.T. Jury Trial,

8/5/14, at 390.

      Second, even Appellant concedes that the alleged uncharged drug

incident occurred after Burns had already identified Appellant as the shooter

and Appellant had been arrested. See Appellant’s brief at 34. Therefore, it

could not have played a role in Burns’s motivation to make an earlier

identification.

      Finally, the questioning of Detective Fetrow about the uncharged

criminal conduct occurred in the context of explaining why Daniek Burns fled

the area. The main reason Detective Fetrow thought that Daniek Burns fled

was his fear of retribution, i.e., that “he would be next” because he identified

Appellant. N.T. Grand Jury Proceeding, 2/15/06, at 20. Therefore, if Attorney

Sembrot had questioned Detective Fetrow about the uncharged conduct, the

jury could have also heard about Daniek Burns’s fear of retribution from

Appellant. Such testimony could have hurt Appellant. Since Appellant has

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failed to convince us that he suffered prejudice, his first sub-claim merits no

relief.

          Next, Appellant alleges that Attorney Sembrot was ineffective for not

cross-examining Detective Fetrow about the validity of Tina Ashley’s excited

utterance in which she identified Supreme as the shooter’s intended target.

See Appellant’s brief at 73. At re-trial, Detective Fetrow testified that when

he arrived on scene, Tina Ashley was very emotional and loud. See N.T. Jury

Trial, 8/4/14, at 140.       While she was talking to Officer Randy Searfoss,

Detective Fetrow heard her yell, “He knows who was shooting. They were

shooting at him.” Id. at 141. As she yelled, he noticed that she was directing

her comments at two males that were walking down the street, Jeffrey

“Supreme” Mable and Valentine Bonilla, but then she specifically referred to

one by the name “Supreme,” and pointed him out. Id. After overhearing this

exchange, Detective Fetrow detained Supreme and Bonilla, keeping them

separate until he could interview each of them at the station. Id. at 141-42.

At the first trial, Tina Ashley testified that she did not know if Supreme was

the shooter’s target, only that the shooter appeared to be aiming for

Supreme’s group. See N.T. Jury Trial, 9/13/06, at 132. Testimony about this

excited utterance was omitted at the retrial.

          The PCRA court explained its reasoning for not believing that this

omission amounted to ineffective assistance of counsel as follows:

                 The potential targeting of Mr. Mable is but one fact in the
          trial and not a determinative one. The use of a firearm to target

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      someone is sufficient to undergird transferred intent for a first-
      degree murder charge. There is evidence of [Appellant’s] intent
      to target Mr. Mable, via Apollonia Snyder’s testimony that
      [Appellant] stated he was going to kill Mr. Mable. And there is
      evidence of [Appellant’s] motive to target Mr. Mable, via
      testimony that [Appellant] was evasive regarding who shot him
      prior to the murder of Ms. Witter. Detective Fetrow’s testimony
      merely supplied Ms. Ashley’s excited utterance that Mr. Mable,
      amongst others, knew they were being shot at. Detective Fetrow
      seems to have narrowed Ms. Ashley’s identification of targets
      down to just one; however, the other evidence of the trial points
      to [Appellant] having motive and intent regarding Mr. Mable. We
      do not believe arguable merit has been sufficiently made out.

             We look at whether retrial counsel’s actions lacked any
      reasonable basis. The alternative strategy offered is that retrial
      counsel should have cross-examined Detective Fetrow and
      ferreted out this inconsistency between his report and Ms. Ashley’s
      prior statements and Detective Fetrow’s certainty at trial. We
      cannot find a substantially greater chance of success had this
      strategy been pursued. Mr. Mable was, at the very least, identified
      as a possible target by Ms. Ashley. [Appellant] matched some
      descriptions of the shooter in stature and in the clothing worn by
      the shooter and, seemingly, by [Appellant] at the time of his
      arrest. [Appellant’s] clothes were covered in gunshot residue and
      its components. We do not believe that there was a substantially
      greater chance of success if this line of questioning had been
      pursued. A similar analysis persists for the third prong, which is
      prejudice.    There was too much other evidence indicating
      [Appellant] to have been the shooter for this supposed error by
      retrial counsel to have been determinative. It is therefore denied.

PCRA Opinion, 3/19/20 at 40-41.

      Our review reveals that the PCRA court’s findings are supported by the

record and not the result of any abuse of discretion.       Notably, Supreme

testified at the re-trial that he did not know who the shooter’s intended target

was. See N.T. Jury Trial, 8/6/14, at 232-33. Therefore, the probative value

                                     - 31 -
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of Tina Ashley’s excited utterance was reduced considerably by his testimony.

Accordingly, no relief is due on the second sub-part of Appellant’s fourth claim.

      Finally, Appellant challenges counsel’s effectiveness for not parsing out

a passing comment by Detective Fetrow that the sweatshirt was not seized at

the same time as Mr. Brenner’s other items.       See Appellant’s brief at 75.

Since Appellant’s sweatshirt was taken from the York County prison at a later

time, Appellant argues that this increased the probability of contamination and

Attorney Sembrot was ineffective for not pointing this out. Id. The PCRA

court did not find this allegation persuasive, explaining:

             We cannot find a substantially greater chance of success had
      the jury been aware of the conclusions drawn in the proffered
      articles. The jury was already aware from the testimony of the
      GSR expert, Ms. Allison Murtha, that there was very little evidence
      of GSR on the sweatshirt in question. Rather, the majority of the
      GSR located on [Appellant’s] clothing was found on items that
      were seized almost immediately upon [Appellant] surrendering to
      authorities. Detective Fetrow testified to the continual use of latex
      gloves to handle these articles of clothing, which acted as a
      safeguard to contamination. The GSR on items aside from the
      sweatshirt militates towards [Appellant] being a shooter – even if
      this is not conclusive when one considers lawful means of GSR
      being deposited. It is noteworthy that Ms. Murtha testified to the
      very high levels of GSR and related particulate on [the belt] as
      compared to the many other thousands [of articles] she has tested
      in her career. The low levels of GSR – indicated particles on
      [Appellant’s] hoodie comport with Ms. Murtha’s testimony that
      particulate loss can occur with increased motion and temporal
      delays from deposit to collection. We do not see that the articles
      supplied by the defense would have swayed a jurying regarding
      GSR evidence.       The [Appellant] was covered in GSR and
      associated particles on all items of clothing save the sweatshirt.

See PCRA Opinion, 3/19/20, at 42.

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      We agree with the PCRA court’s apt analysis. Appellant’s shoes, belt,

and sneakers, which contained the probative GSR evidence, were collected

within minutes of his being taken into custody. See N.T. Jury Trial, 8/5/14,

at 356. However, even with this evidence, the jury was made aware that

contamination was an issue because Appellant was not arrested until six days

after the shooting. Id. at 293. Ms. Murtha testified that gunshot residue can

easily dissipate from clothing by simply moving around, sweating, or even

exposing it to wind. Id. at 334. Therefore, the jury was well-aware of the

potential contamination issues present for even the most probative of the gun

shot residue evidence. The sweatshirt, which the jury was aware was collected

later than the other items, did not have any three-component gunshot residue

on it. Id. at 330. Therefore, its main relevance was not the presence of

particles consistent with gunshot residue, but that it matched the one worn

by the shooter according to some of the eyewitness descriptions. Thus, it is

not likely that the outcome would have changed if Detective Fetrow had been

cross-examined about the exact time and location that the sweatshirt was

seized, and no relief is due.

V. Failure to Present Legitimate Reason for Gun-Shot Residue

      In his fifth claim, Appellant alleges that Attorney Sembrot was

ineffective for declining to present evidence that would have shown legitimate

reasons for the gunshot residue found on his clothing at re-trial, namely: that

Appellant had legally purchased firearms in the past, that Appellant was

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licensed to carry a firearm, and that Appellant owned clothing with gunshot

residue on it that was not alleged to have been involved. See Appellant’s brief

at 78. Appellant argues that because these pieces of evidence would have

provided the jury with an alternate and legitimate explanation for why there

was gunshot residue on his belt, shoes, and clothing, he was prejudiced by its

omission. Id. at 80. The PCRA court disagreed, finding Attorney Sembrot’s

testimony at the PCRA hearing credible and persuasive evidence of a

reasonable trial strategy. See PCRA Opinion, 3/19/20, at 44-45. The PCRA

court’s findings are supported by the record.

      “In determining whether counsel’s action was reasonable, we do not

question whether there were other more logical courses of action which

counsel could have pursued; rather, we must examine whether counsel’s

decisions had any reasonable basis.” Commonwealth v. Washington, 927
A.2d 586, 594 (Pa. 2007) (citations omitted). At the PCRA hearing, Attorney

Sembrot testified that he was aware that Appellant had a license to carry and

legally owned firearms. See N.T., 8/27/18, at 73. While he discussed the

possibility of presenting this evidence to the jury with Appellant, he ultimately

took the position that “[he] didn’t want to put a gun in [his] client’s hands for

the jury to consider that fact. I wanted to distance my client from any gun.”
Id. at 74. Attorney Sembrot explained that because he could see the evidence

“cutting both ways” and could not anticipate how the jury would have accepted

such evidence, he chose to omit it. Id. Since Attorney Sembrot’s decision

                                     - 34 -
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was based upon a reasonable strategy to effectuate Appellant’s interests, this

claim fails.

VI. Failure to Contradict Apollonia Snyder’s Testimony

      In Appellant’s sixth claim, he alleges that Attorney Sembrot was

ineffective for failing to present two witnesses whom he alleges would have

contradicted Apollonia Snyder’s re-trial testimony. See Appellant’s brief at

84-85. At re-trial, Apollonia Snyder testified that, a couple of days before the

shooting, she was bar hopping with Appellant, who had been a friend of hers

since high school. See N.T. Jury Trial, 8/6/14, at 40-41. One of the bars they

went to that day was called “Cheers.” Id. While they were driving between

bars, Appellant made a phone call. Id. at 42. Accordingly to Ms. Snyder,

Appellant told the person on the other end of the line, someone whom he

referred to as “Man,” that he was going to “pop Supreme when he seen him,”

using “a very aggressive tone.” Id. at 42, 51. While he was talking to “Man,”

Appellant was also playing with a gun in his lap. Id. at 42. She testified that

no one else was in the car with them when this conversation occurred. Id. at

46.

      At the PCRA hearing, Appellant called two witnesses who he claimed

would have contradicted Snyder’s testimony.         Nathaniel “Man” Williams

testified that he knew Appellant and would have been willing to testify at

Appellant’s re-trial, but that he did not have Appellant’s phone number and

never had a conversation with him about shooting Supreme. See N.T. PCRA

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Hearing, 7/2/18, at 9-13.    Yolanda Dorman testified that she knew both

Appellant and Apollonia Snyder and that she would have been willing to testify

at Appellant’s re-trial. See N.T. PCRA Hearing, 8/27/18, at 46-47. Around

the time that the alleged bar hopping happened, she was a frequent patron of

Cheers bar. Id. However, she never saw Appellant and Apollonia Snyder at

Cheers or any other bar together. Id.    In fact, she was unsure whether

Appellant and Ms. Snyder knew each other. Id.

      The PCRA court found that, while there was arguable merit to Appellant’s

claims, he did not demonstrate prejudice by either witness’s absence. First,

the PCRA court did not find credible Man’s testimony that he was friends with

Appellant but did not have a cell phone and never spoke with Appellant on the

phone. See PCRA Court Opinion, 3/19/20, at 47. Therefore, this testimony

would not have impacted the credibility of Apollonia Snyder’s testimony. Id.

Next, the PCRA court found that the probative value of Ms. Dorman’s

testimony was questionable, since she did not seem to possess knowledge as

to whether Appellant and Ms. Snyder were even acquaintances. Id. In light

of the totality of the other evidence, and the fact that Attorney Sembrot found

other ways to challenge Ms. Snyder’s credibility on cross-examination, the

PCRA court concluded that no relief was due. Id. at 49-50.

      Since the PCRA court sits as the fact finder at the PCRA hearing, we

grant great deference to its credibility findings where, as here, they are

supported by the record. See Commonwealth v. Johnson, 966 A.2d 523,

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532 (Pa. 2009) (“Our standard of review in PCRA appeals is limited to

determining whether the findings of the PCRA court are supported by the

record and free from legal error.”). Even if believed, the proposed testimony

of these witnesses would not necessarily preclude the jury from also finding

Ms. Snyder’s testimony credible. Appellant could have been speaking on the

phone to someone else that he referred to as “Man” and they could have been

at the “Cheers” bar when Ms. Dorman was not present.

      Additionally, Attorney Sembrot found another way to challenge the

credibility of Ms. Snyder’s testimony. Counsel pointed out that, despite her

alleged concern regarding Appellant’s statements, she did not reach out to the

police with this information. See N.T. Jury Trial, 8/6/14, at 47. Instead, she

waited until the authorities contacted her, which was at a time when she was

serving probation. Id. at 48. Although she testified that she did not receive

any favorable treatment for her involvement in this case, she did admit to

working as an informant for the police at the time that she provided this

information about Appellant. Id. at 53. Accordingly, the PCRA court did not

abuse its discretion when it concluded that Appellant had failed to prove that

he was prejudiced by counsel’s failure to call these two witnesses at trial.

VII. Prosecutorial Misconduct

      In his seventh issue, Appellant asserts that Attorney Sembrot was

ineffective in failing to object to prosecutorial misconduct after the prosecutor

made “multiple intentional comments that were not consistent with inferences

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from the record” in his closing remarks to the jury. See Appellant’s brief at

90.   Appellant’s eight allegations of misconduct, that he alleges Attorney

Sembrot was ineffective for failing to object to, encompass the following

statements made by the prosecutor during his closing argument:               (1)

“[Apollonia Snyder’s] facing a guy who’s now on trial for a murder that she

knows did it;” (2) “nor is there any indication from [Apollonia Snyder] that in

any way Detective Fetrow, when he called, even mentioned the name of

[Appellant]. This was from her;” (3) Tina Ashley was “sitting on her porch

stoop watching Jeffrey Mable dodge bullets;” (4) Tina Ashley saw Daniek

Burns running past her after the second shot; (5) Ms. Ashley had Anna Witter

between herself and the shooter; (6) Ms. Ashley “claims she doesn’t know,

doesn’t know [Appellant], but did you see her waving and smiling to him when

we were up at sidebar with the judge?”; (7) “then there’s Lloyd Valcarcel.

What do you say about Lloyd Valcarcel? The man who couldn’t tell the truth

if his life depended on it;” and (8) “[Appellant]’s conduct was the direct cause

of the death of three innocent people . . . [Appellant] is about as cold a killer

as there exists.” Appellant’s brief at 90-95.

      The following principles guide our review:

      [A] claim of ineffective assistance grounded in trial counsel’s
      failure to object to a prosecutor’s conduct may succeed when the
      petitioner demonstrates that the prosecutor’s actions violated a
      constitutionally or statutorily protected right, such as the Fifth
      Amendment privilege against compulsory self-incrimination or the
      Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial, or a constitutional interest
      such as due process. To constitute a due process violation, the
      prosecutorial misconduct must be of sufficient significance to

                                     - 38 -
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      result in the denial of the defendant’s right to a fair trial. The
      touchstone is fairness of the trial, not the culpability of the
      prosecutor. Finally, not every intemperate or improper remark
      mandates the granting of a new trial; reversible error occurs only
      when the unavoidable effect of the challenged comments would
      prejudice the jurors and form in their minds a fixed bias and
      hostility toward the defendant such that the jurors could not weigh
      the evidence and render a true verdict.

Commonwealth v. Koehler, 36 A.3d 121, 144 (Pa. 2012). With respect to

the range of permissible comments in closing arguments, this Court has

stated:

            It is axiomatic that during closing arguments the
      prosecution is limited to making comments based upon the
      evidence and fair deductions and inferences therefrom. Indeed,
      given the critical role that the Commonwealth plays in the
      administration of justice, a prosecutor has been historically
      prohibited from expressing a personal belief regarding a
      defendant’s guilt or innocence or the veracity of the defendant or
      the credibility of his witnesses.

            However, because trials are necessarily adversarial
      proceedings, prosecutors are entitled to present their arguments
      with reasonable latitude.     Moreover, it is well settled that
      defendants are entitled to a fair trial, not a perfect one. Thus, a
      prosecutor’s remarks do not constitute reversible error unless
      their unavoidable effect [was] to prejudice the jury, forming in
      their minds fixed bias and hostility toward the defendant so that
      they could not weigh the evidence objectively and render a true
      verdict.

Commonwealth v. Ligon, 206 A.3d 515, 519-20 (Pa.Super. 2019) (citations

and internal quotation marks omitted).       As discussed infra, none of the

prosecutor’s statements preluded the jury from weighing the evidence

objectively.

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      First, Appellant asserts that the prosecutor improperly characterized Ms.

Snyder as being nervous on the stand because “she’s facing a guy who’s now

on trial for a murder that she knows did it.” N.T. Jury Trial, 8/7/14, at 338.

The trial court found no merit to this allegation. See PCRA Opinion, 3/19/20,

at 59. Instead, it determined that this was a fair inference from Ms. Snyder’s

testimony. Id. at 59. We agree. Ms. Snyder testified that she overheard

Appellant make a threat upon Supreme’s life in a “very aggressive tone” while

manipulating a gun. N.T. Jury Trial, 8/7/14, at 42. She later came forward

with this information “because it was the right thing to do.” Id. at 45.

Accordingly, the record supports the PCRA court’s conclusion that the

prosecutor’s comment regarding Ms. Snyder’s fear and belief that Appellant

committed the crime was a reasonable inference from the evidence adduced

at trial. See PCRA Opinion, 3/19/20, at 59. Therefore, Attorney Sembrot was

not ineffective for failing to object to it.

      Second, Appellant alleges that the prosecutor misrepresented the record

when he claimed that Ms. Snyder volunteered Appellant’s name to Detective

Fetrow. See Appellant’s brief at 90-91. Appellant asserts that this was error

because at the first trial, Ms. Snyder testified that Detective Fetrow called her

to discuss her involvement with gang activity and, at that time, asked her if

she knew Appellant. Id. citing to N.T. Jury Trial, 9/13/06, at 80-81. Ms.

Snyder responded that she did know Appellant and then brought up the

shooting in which she believed Appellant was involved. Id.

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      The   PCRA    court   agreed    that   the   prosecutor’s   remark    was   a

misstatement of Ms. Snyder’s testimony at the re-trial, in which she did not

discuss whether it was Detective Fetrow or herself who had initially brought

up Appellant’s name. Counsel did not object to it. However, the court found

that Appellant was not prejudiced by this misstatement because the court

cautioned the jury right before closing arguments were delivered that

counsel’s arguments should only be considered to the extent that the

inferences counsel asked them to draw were supported by the evidence. See

PCRA Court Opinion, 3/19/20, at 61; N.T. Jury Trial, 8/7/14, at 307-08. The

jury is presumed to follow the trial court’s instructions. See Commonwealth

v. Cash, 137 A.3d 1262, 1280 (Pa. 2016). Moreover, the court determined

that the prosecutor’s remark was fair response to Attorney Sembrot’s closing

argument, wherein he questioned Ms. Snyder’s credibility, reasoning that

“Apollonia never came forward, okay, never.” N.T. Jury Trial, 8/7/14, at 319.

      The record supports the PCRA court’s conclusion. Simply put, “not every

intemperate or uncalled for remark by the prosecutor requires a new trial.”

Commonwealth v. D’Amato, 526 A.2d 300, 309 (Pa. 1987). This fleeting

remark is plainly not the type of intentional misrepresentation that Appellant

claims. See Appellant’s brief at 90-91. Further, Appellant has not explained

how this remark had the unavoidable effect of prejudicing the jury such that

the jury could no longer render a fair verdict, particularly in light of the court’s

directive to disregard remarks that are not supported by the evidence.

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Accordingly, we discern no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s conclusion

that Appellant was not prejudiced by counsel’s failure to object to it.

      Appellant’s   third,   fourth,   and      fifth   sub-claims   allege   various

misstatements by the prosecutor regarding what Tina Ashley did or did not

see during the shooting. See Appellant’s brief at 91 (citing N.T. Jury Trial,

8/7/14, at 347). Attorney Sembrot did not object to any of these comments.

The PCRA court aptly summarized why the first of these three claims lacked

arguable merit as follows:

             Appellant complains that the ADA described Ms. Ashley as
      watching Mr. Mable dodge bullets and duck. The defense opines
      that this is inconsistent with Ms. Ashley’s testimony that she was
      pulled inside of her building after the first shot. This claim is
      inconsistent with the later claim that the shooter stopped shooting
      as his six-shooter was out of bullets. This is so because Ms. Ashley
      indicated that she heard the first shot, entered her building, and
      then, as she claimed to have heard three shots total, she heard
      two more shots. Thus, by [Appellant’s] own reckoning, Ms.
      Ashley’s memories were faulty or one could infer that she was
      outside for more shots than she testified to, which would have
      allowed an inference of her watching Supreme dodge bullets or
      ducking. It was for the jury to determine what the facts were and
      who was credible. [Appellant] is engaging in the very sort of
      absolutist characterization of evidence that the Commonwealth
      did in its closing. This is what litigants in an adversarial system
      do. They characterize evidence and it is a competitive and heated
      process.

PCRA Court Opinion, 3/19/20, at 64. The PCRA court went on to conclude

that the defense claim that the prosecutor’s insinuation that Ms. Ashley’s

excited utterance meant that Supreme was the intended target was also

meritless because it, too, was properly derived from Detective Fetrow’s

testimony. Id. at 65. Finally, the PCRA court concluded that the prosecutor’s

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remark that Ms. Ashley saw Daniek Burns flee the scene was also a permissible

inference from the record. Id. at 66.

      The PCRA court’s conclusions are supported by the record. What Ms.

Ashley did or did not see, how she was positioned in relation to the shooter

and Anna Witter, how quickly she fled inside her house, and at what point in

the shooting Daniek Burns fled were all contested points at re-trial. Ms. Ashley

testified that she saw Daniek Burns there that night. Id. at 97. She also

made conflicting statements about what she saw, the quality of the lighting,

and her ability to describe the physical features of the shooter. Id. at 87-91.

However, while she could not identify the actual shooter, she was certain that

it was not Appellant. Id. at 93-94. As the re-trial court noted, it was for the

jury to determine the witness’s credibility based on the evidence presented.

Accordingly, we discern no abuse of discretion in the PCRA court’s resolution

of Appellant’s third, fourth, and fifth sub-claims as lacking arguable merit

because they were all fair inferences from the evidence adduced at trial.

Accordingly, Attorney Sembrot was not ineffective for failing to object to any

of them.

      In his sixth sub-claim, Appellant asserts that Attorney Sembrot was

ineffective for failing to object to “another egregious instance of prosecutorial

overreach,” which was when the prosecutor claimed that Ms. Ashley acted like

she did not know Appellant, but later waved to him from the witness stand

while the attorneys were at sidebar. See Appellant’s brief at 94. The remark

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conflicts with Ms. Ashley’s general testimony that she had known Appellant

for sixteen years. See N.T. Jury Trial, 8/6/14, at 93. However, upon closer

examination of Ms. Ashley’s re-trial testimony, the PCRA court concluded that

the prosecutor’s statement was still a fair inference from her testimony

indicating that they were not closely acquainted. See PCRA Court Opinion,

3/19/20, at 70 (citing id. (explaining that she knew Appellant in the sense

that she would sometimes see him on the back patio of their building)). Ms.

Ashley, by detailing that she knew Appellant from seeing him occasionally

around her apartment complex, plainly implied that she was only a casual

acquaintance.    This level of familiarity is consistent with the prosecutor’s

closing argument. Thus, we agree with the PCRA court that no relief is due.

      In   his   seventh   sub-claim,   Appellant    attacks   the   prosecutor’s

characterization of Lloyd Valcarcel as follows:

      Then there’s Lloyd Valcarcel. What do you say about Lloyd
      Valcarcel? The man who couldn’t tell the truth if his life depended
      on it. Yes, yesterday he definitively said it wasn’t [Appellant].
      Yet, in his handwritten statement, he said, “I don’t know if he
      knew about it, let alone did it.” And in the same statement to the
      defense, he says, “Well, when I gave the shoe ID, I then named
      the color of my shoe because I was being smart, due to the fact
      that he was trying to place a drug sell [sic] on me,” meaning
      Detective Fetrow. He wasn’t even being interviewed by Detective
      Fetrow, but by Detective Nadzom, who got pulled out of bed and
      knew nothing about this case. Fetrow wasn’t even in the room.
      There’s no other way to put it, ladies and gentlemen he’s lying.

N.T. Jury Trial, 8/7/14, at 348. See also Appellant’s brief at 94-95. Appellant

asserts that the prosecutor improperly expressed his personal belief about the

falsity of Lloyd Valcarcel’s testimony. Id. at 95.

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      The PCRA court disagreed. When viewed in its proper context, the court

concluded that the prosecutor “merely highlighted what the jury knew

already[,]” namely, that “Mr. Valcarcel had either lied when he wrote his

statement that he could not say whether [Appellant] was the shooter or when

Mr. Valcarcel testified that [Appellant] was not the shooter.” PCRA Opinion,

3/19/20, at 73. The PCRA court cited relevant case law and concluded that

the prosecutor’s comments were neither “unfair nor unduly prejudicial.” Id.

Again, the well-reasoned conclusion of the PCRA court was supported by the

record and consistent with relevant precedent. Id. (citing Commonwealth

v. Carpenter, 515 A.2d 531, 536 (Pa. 1987)). Accordingly, we discern no

abuse of discretion and Appellant’s seventh sub-claim fails.

      In his final allegation of prosecutorial misconduct, Appellant attacks the

prosecutor’s characterization of him as “about as cold a killer as there exists.”

Appellant’s brief at 95 (citing N.T. Jury Trial, 8/7/14, at 354). Appellant relies

heavily on factually distinguishing his case from Commonwealth v. Clancy,

192 A.3d 44 (Pa. 2018), in order to support his contention that the statement

was impermissible. Appellant’s brief at 98. However, like the PCRA court, we

find Appellant’s argument unpersuasive.

      The murder in Clancy arose out of a street fight where the defendant

shot and killed an unarmed man. Id. at 47. The Commonwealth charged the

defendant with criminal homicide and, at trial, the defendant did not dispute

that he killed the victim. Instead, he argued that he lacked the necessary

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intent to kill because he acted in the heat of passion, discharging his firearm

accidentally. Id. at 48, 65.    In a PCRA petition, Clancy unsuccessfully

challenged his trial counsel’s ineffectiveness for failing to object to the

prosecutor’s closing remarks, which characterized him as a “dangerous man”

and a “cold blooded killer.” Id. at 47.

      Our Supreme Court affirmed the denial of PCRA relief, finding that the

term “cold blooded murder” directly related to the premeditation element of

the crime charged. Id. at 66-67. Therefore, the Clancy Court concluded that

the prosecution’s use of the term “cold blooded killer” “constituted permissible

(if aggressive) oratorical flair.” Id. at 67. The High Court went on to find that

the prosecutor’s statement was also a fair response to Appellant’s heat of

passion defense. Our Supreme Court thereafter instructed courts faced with

similar issues that:

      Prosecutorial remarks do not constitute permissible oratorical flair
      simply because they are based upon the underlying facts of the
      case or because they relate to an underlying element of the crime.
      Both requirements must be met. To fulfill his duty as an advocate,
      a prosecutor has numerous tools in his arsenal. Recourse to
      inappropriate invective is not one of them.
Id. at 68.

      In the instant case, the prosecutor’s characterization of Appellant as “as

cold a killer as there exists,” when viewed in its proper context, is tethered to

the premeditation element of the crime charged, first-degree murder, and the

evidence adduced at trial. In closing, the prosecutor stated the following:

                                     - 46 -
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      Certainly, when you kill or harm three people, [Appellant]’s
      conduct was the direct cause of the death of three innocent people
      at the time he had the specific intent to kill, you don’t get a free
      pass just because you’re a bad shot. [Appellant] is about as cold
      a killer as there exists. He used a deadly weapon that evening.
      The court will tell you that you can infer, based on that alone, that
      he had the specific intention to kill. He wantonly fired into a crowd
      of people on a busy York City street, multiple shots. What does
      that say about his intention, his specific intention? And he did so
      with callous disregard for anyone’s safety for his own personal
      vengeance. He is guilty of murder in the first degree. Thank you.

N.T. Jury Trial, 8/7/14, at 354.

      A conviction for first-degree murder requires malice, which can be

demonstrated by evidence of “wickedness of disposition, hardness of heart,

wanton conduct, cruelty, recklessness of consequences and a mind regardless

of social duty.”   Commonwealth v. Hall, 701 A.2d 190, 200 (Pa. 1997)

(holding that the statements that “the only thing colder than the grave of [the

victim] is this guy’s heart” and that “he walked out coolly, calmly, and

collected” were permissible to demonstrate malice). Throughout the trial the

Commonwealth alleged that, acting in revenge for an earlier shooting,

Appellant decided to open fire on a crowded street, aiming at one person, but

instead hitting three innocent victims, killing one of them.         Appellant’s

misidentification defense centered on discrediting the one eyewitness who

identified him as the shooter, showing that the GSR evidence was

contaminated, and disproving the Commonwealth’s motive for the shooting

with Jeffrey Mable’s testimony that he did not have a dispute with Appellant.

The prosecutor’s remark was merely suggesting the conclusion that the jury

                                     - 47 -
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should reach based upon the evidence, namely that the Commonwealth had

established the necessary mens rea required to convict Appellant of first-

degree murder of a bystander.

      Appellant counters that his case is distinguishable from Clancy because

he pursued a mistaken-identity defense, instead of Clancy’s heat of passion

defense. See Appellant’s brief at 98. While discussing fair response in the

context of closing argument, the Clancy Court considered the relevance of

Clancy’s heat of passion defense. In doing so, the court commented that “it

may not be proper to refer to a defendant as a “cold blooded killer” where the

defense argument does not warrant that reference. For example, where the

defense in first-degree murder trial is mistaken identity, rather than heat of

passion, the term “cold blooded killer” may not be appropriate.”       Clancy,

supra at 68.

      Although this is a mistaken identity case, not a heat of passion defense,

we cannot agree with Appellant’s rote, self-serving interpretation of the

Clancy decision. Our Supreme Court did not forbid the use of the term “cold

blooded killer” in a mistaken identity case, but rather stated that it might not

be proper. Id. In order to determine the propriety of such a label, the Clancy

Court instructed future courts to inquire whether that phrase was based upon

underlying facts and related to an underlying element of the crime. If so, then

such a remark was permissible.        The particular defense asserted, while

relevant to the Court’s analysis, was not outcome determinative.

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      In light of the foregoing, we conclude that the prosecutor’s use of the

term “as cold a killer as there exists” constituted an isolated use of oratorical

flair that does not require reversal in the particular factual and elemental

context presented here. The evidence outlining Appellant’s actions supported

the statement, which helped explain the necessary mens rea where the

murder victim was not the intended target. The PCRA court did not err when

it concluded that Appellant’s ineffectiveness claim lacked merit, since the

prosecutor’s closing argument was not impermissible, and thus Attorney

Sembrot was not ineffective for failing to object.

VIII. Tina Ashley and Officer Randy Searfoss

      In his eighth claim, Appellant asserts that Attorney Sembrot was

ineffective for failing to question Tina Ashley and call Officer Randy Searfoss

to testify about an excited utterance Ms. Ashley made at the crime scene.

See Appellant’s brief at 103-107.

      At the first trial, Tina Ashley was asked about the excited utterance and

she clarified that she was actually referring to the group of four men, which

included Supreme, as the shooter’s target. See N.T. Jury Trial, 9/13/06, at

131-32. She did not intend to single out Supreme as the shooter’s only target.
Id. At the re-trial, Tina Ashley was not asked about her excited utterance.

Instead, Detective Fetrow provided the sole testimony regarding Tina Ashley’s

excited utterance. He testified that, while at the crime scene, he overheard

Tina Ashley yell at Officer Searfoss, and in the direction of Jeffrey “Supreme”

                                     - 49 -
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Mable and Valentine Bonilla, that “He knows who was shooting. They were

shooting at him.” N.T. Jury Trial, 8/4/14, at 141. He then explained that she

named Supreme and pointed at him as the target of her frustration. Id.

     The PCRA court found that this claim had arguable merit, as Appellant

had identified a conflict between Detective Fetrow’s testimony at the re-trial

and Tina Ashley’s testimony at the first trial, which Attorney Sembrot did not

bring to the jury’s attention. See PCRA Opinion, 3/19/20, at 50. However,

the PCRA court did not find that Appellant suffered prejudice from this

discrepancy, reasoning:

     We cannot find that [Appellant] suffered prejudice. Even if a jury
     found that Ms. Ashley had not identified Supreme as the shooter’s
     target, the Commonwealth still would have had Daniek Burns’[s]
     identification of [Appellant] as the shooter.         And, though
     weakened, the jury still would have had the ability to infer motive
     based upon the earlier shooting of [Appellant] and his statements
     threatening Supreme’s life. In spite of the supposed error,
     [Appellant’s] clothes and accessories were still covered in GSR and
     its components. To our mind, the jury would likely still conclude
     that [Appellant] was the shooter, that [Appellant] intended to
     murder Supreme, or someone in the group of four that included
     Supreme, and that this intent transferred to the victim, Ms. Witter.
     We cannot conclude that there was any reasonable probability of
     a different outcome save retrial counsel’s supposed error in failing
     to re-elicit the exact meaning of Ms. Ashley’s excited utterance.
     Not relief is due for this claim.
Id. at 51-52.

     We discern no abuse of discretion in the PCRA court’s analysis. Given

that Tina Ashley’s excited utterance went to motive, not the shooter’s

identification, and was not the only evidence of motive, we cannot see how

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exposing this discrepancy would have altered the outcome of Appellant’s case.

Accordingly, no relief is due on the first sub-part of Appellant’s seventh claim.

      Next, Appellant argues that Attorney Sembrot should have called Officer

Searfoss to testify about a supplemental report he authored, wherein he

indicated that Tina Ashley told him that the shooter was aiming at a group of

four men which included Supreme. See Appellant’s brief at 73-74. Officer

Searfoss testified consistently with the contents of his report at the first trial,

corroborating Tina Ashley’s testimony. See N.T. Jury Trial, 9/12/06, at 184.

      The PCRA court found that this claim lacked arguable merit, explaining:

             Turning to our test for ineffectiveness, we do not believe
      that there is arguable merit as Ms. Ashley clearly contradicted
      herself when she variously claimed to Officer Searfoss, at the time
      that he took the initial report, that she did not get a good look at
      the shooter and, at the retrial, that the shooter could not have
      been [Appellant] who[m] she had known for years . . . . Had
      retrial counsel called Officer Searfoss and re-elicited the requested
      testimony, it would have necessarily undercut the credibility of
      Ms. Ashley who was called as a defense witness at the retrial to
      state, in part, that the shooter could not have been [Appellant].
      The defense would surely counter that the jury would have a right
      to pick and choose testimony from the various witnesses. We
      would not find this persuasive and so we do not believe that there
      is any arguable merit to this claim.

PCRA Court Opinion, 3/19/20, at 52-53.

      The record supports the PCRA court’s conclusion.              Furthermore,

testimony from Officer Searfoss or defense witness Tina Ashley suggesting

that the four individuals knew the identity of the shooter, not just Supreme,

could have actually harmed Appellant as Daniek Burns was one of the four

individuals with Supreme that night. A defense witness indirectly asserting

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that Daniek Burns knew the shooter’s identity, if believed by the jury, could

have bolstered Burns’s eyewitness identification of Appellant as the shooter to

Appellant’s detriment.    Accordingly, we agree that Appellant’s second sub-

claim merits no relief.

VIV. IAC Failure to Introduce Photographs

      In his ninth claim, Appellant alleges that Attorney Sembrot was

ineffective for failing to introduce photographs demonstrating poor lighting

conditions at the scene during the re-trial. See Appellant’s brief at 109. While

Appellant concedes that the jury saw several photographs of the scene, he

nonetheless argues that further photographs were required to demonstrate

accurately how poor the lighting conditions actually were. Id.

      The PCRA court found that this claim failed all three prongs of the

ineffectiveness test since the jury saw photos of the scene and heard differing

accounts of the lighting from various witnesses. See PCRA Court Opinion,

3/19/21, at 55. While there were additional photographs that could have been

shown, the PCRA court examined them and concluded that they were

cumulative of the ones already introduced at trial. Id. at 55-56. In fact, the

PCRA court did not agree that the unintroduced photographs actually

demonstrated poor lighting. Id. at 56.

      The record supports the PCRA court’s conclusion that additional

photographs of the crime scene would not have altered the outcome of trial.

The lighting conditions were a heavily contested point. Almost every person

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who testified that they were present at the scene that night, whether

eyewitness or officer, was questioned about his or her perception of the

lighting conditions. The Commonwealth admitted photographs of the scene

and the majority of the witnesses testified that the lighting conditions were

good. See N.T. Jury Trial, 8/4/14, at 151-52 (Detective Scott Hose testifying

that he photographed the scene without any additional light sources because

it was clear and mild outside and the block was “very well lit”); N.T. Jury Trial,

8/5/14, at 217-25 (emergency management specialist testifying about the

location of traffic lights, street lights, and building lights present at the crime

scene); id. at 248 (Alfonzo King testifying that there was a light above the

shooter when he was shooting); id. at 418 (Daniek Burns testifying that he

saw the shooter when he came under a street light on the corner of Newton

Street); N.T. Jury Trial 8/6/14, at 88-89 (Tina Ashley testifying that there was

a light pole that illuminated the shooter as he came out of the alleyway, a

light across the street, and a light up the street towards the corner).

      Only two defense witnesses testified to the contrary—that the lighting

conditions were poor. See N.T. Jury Trial, 8/6/14, at 179 (Lloyd Valcarcel

could not identify the shooter, in part, because it was dark outside); id. at

226 (Jeffrey Mable testifying that there was a light across the street from the

shooter, but he could not identify the shooter because it was not that bright).

Given the extensive attention that the lighting conditions received and the

admission of multiple      crime   scene photographs demonstrating those

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conditions, we concur that additional photographs would have been

unnecessarily cumulative. Accordingly, we find that the PCRA court did not

err when it denied this claim.

X. Double Jeopardy: Charles Maner

      In his tenth allegation of error, Appellant argues that former first ADA

Bill Graff engaged in “egregious prosecutorial misconduct,” such that a re-trial

should have been prohibited on double jeopardy grounds. Appellant’s brief at

112. Purportedly, there was an agreement between ADA Graff and Charles

Maner that if Maner testified against Appellant, he would not be sentenced on

two pending felony drug cases. Id. at 114. Since ADA Graff never revealed

the existence of this agreement to Attorney Keenheel, ADA Graff committed

an “outrageous Brady violation” and Attorney Sembrot was ineffective when

he failed to file a pretrial motion to bar retrial on double jeopardy grounds.
Id. at 119. The PCRA court disagreed, finding that a double jeopardy motion

on these grounds would not have succeeded since there was no evidence that

such an agreement existed. See PCRA Court Opinion, date at 80.

      “An appeal grounded in double jeopardy raises a question of

constitutional law. This court’s scope of review in making a determination on

a question of law is, as always, plenary. As with all questions of law, the

appellate standard of review is de novo.” Commonwealth v. Vargas, 947
A.2d 777, 780 (Pa.Super. 2008) (internal citations omitted). If the factual

findings of the PCRA court impact its double jeopardy ruling, we apply a

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deferential standard to review those assessments.         Commonwealth v.

Wood, 803 A.2d 217, 220 (Pa.Super. 2002).

      Prosecutorial misconduct can implicate the double jeopardy clause. In

assessing such a claim, we are guided by the following:

      The Double Jeopardy Clauses of the Fifth Amendment to the
      United States Constitution and Article 1, § 10 of the Pennsylvania
      Constitution protect a defendant from repeated criminal
      prosecutions for the same offense. Ordinarily, the law permits
      retrial when the defendant successfully moves for mistrial. If,
      however, the prosecution engages in certain forms of intentional
      misconduct, the Double Jeopardy Clause bars retrial. Article I, §
      10, which our Supreme Court has construed more broadly than its
      federal counterpart, bars retrial not only when prosecutorial
      misconduct is intended to provoke the defendant into moving for
      a mistrial, but also when the conduct of the prosecutor is
      intentionally undertaken to prejudice the defendant to the point
      of the denial of a fair trial. An error by a prosecutor does not
      deprive the defendant of a fair trial.       However, where the
      prosecutor’s conduct changes from mere error to intentionally
      subverting the court process, then a fair trial is denied.

Commonwealth v. Graham, 109 A.3d 733, 736 (Pa.Super. 2015) (cleaned

up). Thus, where a defendant alleges prosecutorial misconduct as a basis for

double jeopardy protection, the critical inquiry concerns the nature of the

alleged misconduct.    Commonwealth v. Minnis, 83 A.3d 1047, 1052

(Pa.Super. 2014).   Dismissal of the charges is only appropriate where the

actions of the Commonwealth are “egregious” and it is “demonstrable [that]

prejudice will be suffered by the defendant if the charges are not dismissed.”

Commonwealth v. Adams, 177 A.3d 359, 372 (Pa.Super. 2017). See also

Commonwealth v. Wilson, 147 A.3d 7, 13 (Pa.Super. 2016) (“[D]ismissal

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of charges is an extreme sanction that should be imposed sparingly and only

in cases of blatant prosecutorial misconduct.”).

      Charles Maner testified to the following at Appellant’s first trial.

Appellant approached him in the York County prison and told him that he felt

bad about accidentally shooting a woman. See N.T. Jury Trial, 9/12/06, at

205, 209-11.   Appellant explained that he was aiming at a man who had

previously shot him and that the woman was hit by a stray bullet. Id.

Appellant stated that he would get away with the crime if no one identified

him as the shooter. Id. at 219.

      After the jailhouse conversation, Maner contacted a state trooper he had

worked with in the past, who passed along the information to ADA Graff. Id.

at 238. While out on bail, Maner spoke with ADA Graff before leaving for

Florida, where he was arrested and began serving a sentence for drug

possession. Id. at 218. At trial, Maner testified that although he had not yet

been sentenced on his pending forgery conviction, he had not been promised

anything in exchange for his testimony and expected to serve time on that

case once he finished his sentence in Florida. Id. at 218-221. On cross-

examination, Maner agreed that he had many prior convictions for his

“dealings with drugs over the years and up to the present,” and that he had

provided information to the police in the past on other individuals who were

involved with drug charges. Id. at 238-40, 250-51.

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      During Appellant’s first PCRA proceeding, Attorney Sembrot discovered

the existence of two felony convictions for possession with intent to deliver to

which Maner had pled guilty prior to the shooting in this case. At the time of

Appellant’s first trial, however, Maner had not yet been sentenced on those

crimes. Attorney Sembrot’s investigations revealed that Maner was, in fact,

never sentenced at either case. Based on the foregoing, Attorney Sembrot

concluded that an agreement must have been reached between the

Commonwealth and Maner to avoid sentencing in these cases and counsel

raised a Brady violation in Appellant’s PCRA petition for the Commonwealth’s

failure to disclose the existence of this alleged plea agreement.

      At the subsequent evidentiary hearing, former first ADA Graff testified

that he was aware that Charles Maner had two felony drug cases pending

when he testified at Appellant’s first trial and that Maner had pled guilty in

exchange for a sentence that would be “no worse than a county sentence.”

N.T. PCRA Hearing, 4/13/12, at 10-15.         However, the reason for the plea

negotiated sentence was that Maner was an informant who “was setting up

drug dealers all over the place, and we expected him to continue to do that.”
Id. at 18. ADA Graff explained that he never turned over the plea agreement

to Attorney Keenheel because it was negotiated and entered into four months

before the shooting happened, so he did not think that its existence was

relevant to Appellant’s case. Id. at 15-19.

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       ADA Graff conceded that Maner was never sentenced, but denied that

this inaction was the result of an agreement in Appellant’s case. Id. at 41,

93. Instead, he explained that Maner was not sentenced because he fled to

Florida upon his release on bail. Id. at 37. A bench warrant was issued for

his arrest, but Maner was mistakenly transported from Florida to testify

against Appellant only at a grand jury proceeding in 2006. Id. While he was

here for the grand jury proceeding, the Commonwealth tried to serve the

outstanding warrants for the drug sentencing cases. Id. at 37-39. However,

attempts were unsuccessful because they did not use the Interstate Compact

Act properly.8     Id.; see also Order, 9/6/06 (vacating the service of the

warrants without prejudice to be reissued in the future).

       ADA Graff left the district attorney’s office in 2009 and was unsure why

Maner was never brought back for sentencing on the outstanding drug cases.
Id. While he had no specific recollection of what happened, he agreed that

he probably did not pursue Maner once he finished serving his sentence in

Florida because he had assisted with the prosecution of Appellant. Id. at 90-

94. Therefore, ADA Graff thought he would “pay him his dues” by ignoring

the pending charges. Id.     The original PCRA court found ADA Graff’s

testimony credible and denied Appellant’s Brady claim on the grounds that

____________________________________________

8A person who is summoned from out-of-state to appear before the court on
another matter cannot have outstanding warrants served upon him. See 42
Pa.C.S. § 5979.

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Appellant had not proven that Maner was offered a deal in exchange for his

testimony. See PCRA Court Opinion, 6/26/12, at 15-16.

      Almost two years later, and before the start of Appellant’s re-trial,

Charles Maner appeared for sentencing on the pending drug charges.          At

Maner’s sentencing hearing, ADA Graff reiterated the decision-making process

he testified to at Appellant’s PCRA hearing, explaining that the delay in

sentencing was due to his intention to “let [the cases] disappear and go away”

after Maner testified against Appellant.      See N.T. Sentencing Hearing,

4/22/14, at 19. While the plea agreement was based on information Maner

provided on other drug dealers, after he testified against Appellant, ADA Graff

decided on his own that he wanted to show Maner his appreciation by making

these two cases go away. Id. at 17. Maner also testified at the hearing,

consistent with the testimony of ADA Graff, that he was not offered anything

in exchange for his testimony against Appellant.       It was only after his

testimony was completed, and he inquired about his pending drug cases, that

ADA Graff told him to return to Florida and not worry about the cases. The

sentencing court found that an agreement between the Commonwealth and

Maner was entered into after he testified against Appellant, and dismissed the

charges with prejudice. Id. at 41-43.

      Based upon our review of the certified record in this matter, we discern

no error on the part of the PCRA court in concluding that Appellant failed to

prove the existence of an agreement between the Commonwealth and Charles

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Maner in exchange for his testimony against Appellant. To the extent that

any tacit or express agreements between Maner and ADA Graff existed, they

preceded the commission of Appellant’s crimes and were related to Maner’s

activity as a confidential informant in unrelated drug cases. There is support

in the record for that position based on ADA Graff’s testimony at two separate

hearings, which the original PCRA court and a separate sentencing court

deemed credible.    Appellant counters that he is entitled to relief because

Commonwealth v. Smith, 615 A.3d 321 (Pa. 1992), presents a contrary

result in a “scenario [that] is identical to the facts herein.” Appellant’s brief

112-13.

      In Smith, the defendant was convicted of murdering a woman and her

children, but was granted a new trial based upon the erroneous admission of

hearsay.   After the award of the new trial, Smith discovered that the

Commonwealth       deliberately   withheld    material    exculpatory   evidence.

Specifically, the prosecutor intentionally did not inform the defendant about a

plea agreement that it reached with its chief witness, who had actually lied on

the witness stand when he denied that the Commonwealth had promised him

favorable treatment in return for his testimony.         Furthermore, the district

attorney deliberately withheld physical evidence that he knew was exculpatory

to the defendant because it supported the defendant’s theory of the case.

Indeed, when a police officer testified about the existence of the evidence, the

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prosecutor presented testimony from other police witnesses suggesting that

the first officer was fabricating his testimony.

      The Smith Court characterized the actions of the district attorney as

egregious and clearly undertaken in bad faith. It discharged the defendant

and ruled that “the double jeopardy clause bars retrial following intentional

prosecutorial misconduct designed to secure a conviction through the

concealment of exculpatory evidence.” Id. at 322. It concluded that, when

the   record    demonstrates    the   presence     of   “prosecutorial   misconduct

undertaken in bad faith to prejudice or harass the defendant,” as opposed to

“prosecutorial error,” double jeopardy prevents a second trial because there

is a “breakdown of the integrity of the judicial proceeding[.]” Id. at 324.

Under Smith, discharge is warranted only when “the conduct of the

prosecutor is intentionally undertaken to prejudice the defendant to the point

of the denial of a fair trial.” Id. at 325.

      In this case, the prosecution’s actions did not come close to the type of

clearly egregious misconduct that occurred in Smith. Unlike in Smith, no

agreement existed between the Commonwealth and Charles Maner for his

testimony.     Therefore, the Commonwealth did not suborn perjury when it

allowed Maner to testify that he had not been offered anything in exchange

for his testimony.    The only agreement that existed was negotiated and

entered into before Appellant committed his crimes. Regardless of whether

the Commonwealth should have informed defense counsel of the existence of

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this prior agreement, this “prosecutorial error” was not directly linked to

Appellant’s case. Therefore, it did not amount to a breakdown in the judicial

proceeding. While the jury was not aware of the specific parameters of this

plea agreement, the jury was told about Maner’s extensive criminal history

and cooperation with the Commonwealth in the past. Since a double jeopardy

motion would have been unsuccessful, counsel was not ineffective for failing

to file one. See Commonwealth v. Spotz, 896 A.2d at 1191, 1222 (Pa.

2006). Accordingly, Appellant’s tenth claim is without merit.

XI. Cumulative prejudice

      In his final allegation of error, Appellant raises a cumulative prejudice

claim, contending that all of the alleged instances of ineffectiveness asserted

in his brief, when viewed together, render an even stronger case that he

should be granted a new trial. See Appellant’s brief at 120-25. The PCRA

court denied Appellant’s claim of cumulative effect based on its findings that

none of Appellant’s individual claims warranted relief. See PCRA Opinion at

97.

      Our Supreme Court has recognized that “no number of failed

[ineffectiveness] claims may collectively warrant relief if they fail to do so

individually.” Commonwealth v. Johnson, 966 A.2d 523, 532 (Pa. 2009)

(quoting Commonwealth v. Washington, 927 A.2d 586, 617 (Pa. 2007)).

However, our Supreme Court has clarified that this principle applies to claims

that fail because of a lack of merit or arguable merit. Commonwealth v.

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Sattazahn, 952 A.2d 640, 671 (Pa. 2008). When the failure of individual

claims is grounded in lack of prejudice, then “[the] cumulative prejudice from

individual   claims   may   be    properly    assessed     in   the   aggregate.”

Commonwealth v. Hutchinson, 25 A.3d 277, 319 (Pa. 2011).

      We have affirmed the denial of Appellant’s first, third, fifth, seventh,

ninth, and tenth claims based on a lack of merit or a finding that Appellant’s

attorney had a reasonable basis for his inaction. Therefore, there is no basis

for a claim of cumulative error with regard to these claims. With regard to

the few claims that we concluded were properly denied based on a lack of

prejudice, we are satisfied that prejudice is lacking on a collective basis

relative to those claims as well. These claims involved the absence of expert

testimony on eyewitness identification, the allegedly inadequate cross-

examination of Detective Fetrow, choice of impeachment for Apollonia Snyder,

and the failure to clarify to whom Tina Ashley was referring when she identified

the shooter’s target.   These claims are factually and legally independent,

except for the ones referring to Tina Ashley’s excited utterance. We previously

concluded that Tina Ashley’s excited utterance was but a small piece of the

evidence used to convict Appellant, and that further examination of it could

have actually bolstered Daniek Burns’s eyewitness identification.        Viewing

these two issues together does not alter our view that the alleged

ineffectiveness did not change the outcome of the trial.

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      Having reviewed all of Appellant’s issues and concluding that none

warrant relief, we affirm the order of the PCRA court denying Appellant’s

petition.

      Order affirmed.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 05/18/2021

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