Court Opinion

ID: 4035849
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-09-22 04:36:13.162143+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:36:45.759548
License: Public Domain

J-S61001-16

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                    IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                                      PENNSYLVANIA
                         Appellee

                    v.

NYGEL JACK

                         Appellant                   No. 761 WDA 2015

                 Appeal from the PCRA Order April 14, 2015
             In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County
            Criminal Division at No(s): CP-02-CR-0003132-2008

BEFORE: PANELLA, J., LAZARUS, J., and MUSMANNO, J.

MEMORANDUM BY PANELLA, J.                      FILED SEPTEMBER 21, 2016

      Apppellant, Nygel Jack, appeals from the order dismissing his petition

pursuant to the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”). Jack raises multiple

challenges to the PCRA court’s conclusion that his trial and direct appellate

counsel were not ineffective. After careful review, we affirm.

      After a melee in a bar left two victims with gunshot wounds, police

charged Jack with aggravated assault and prohibited possession of a firearm.

      [Jack] was arrested and … proceeded to a jury trial at which
      numerous witnesses testified. Specifically, Amanda Gould
      testified that, on September 7, 2007, at approximately 10:00
      p.m., she went to her family-owned bar, Sallade’s with her
      friends and family to celebrate the remission of her aunt’s
      cancer. At Sallade’s, [she] consumed two double shots of
      Jägermeister, at a large meal, and then left at approximately
      11:30 p.m., proceeding to different bar, Praha, with friends and
      family. At Praha, she consumed two or three vodka and
      cranberry drinks, she ran into some more friends, and after
      approximately an hour, [she returned to Sallade’s with a group
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     of people.] After she arrived back at Sallade’s, at approximately
     1:15 a.m., John Woody, Tyrone Woody, and Tom Shirey arrived
     together, and at approximately 2:15 a.m., “Cool,” “Mac,” and
     [Jack,] a/k/a “Mister,” arrived together. Amanda Gould, who
     sometimes bartended at Sallade’s, explained [Jack] was a
     regular customer, who people referred to as “Mister.”

     At approximately 2:30 a.m., [she] tried to get everyone to leave
     Sallade’s since it was past closing time. A lot of people left;
     however, Amanda Gould, her mother, Cindy Gould, Jeffrey
     Lanious, John Woody, Tyrone Woody, Tom Shirey, Ashley
     Catalano, Chris McGinty, “Mac,” “Cool,” Amy Verri, and [Jack]
     remained at the bar. At this time, everyone was still having fun
     and drinking when, at approximately 4:30 a.m., a verbal
     altercation occurred between “Cool” and Tom Shirey. Suddenly,
     Mr. Shirey fell on his head, and John Woody punched “Cool,”
     while “Mac” and [Jack] began physically fighting. The fight
     between “Mac” and [Jack] “broke up,” but then John Woody and
     Amy Verri cornered [Jack] in a booth, struck him with an
     ashtray, and punched him. At this time, Chris McGinty, “Cool,”
     and Tom Shirey were fighting with each other. Tyrone Woody
     was lying on the floor, having been “knocked out;” however, he
     suddenly got up and punched Amanda Gould in the face. Tyrone
     Woody then walked towards the front door, when Amanda Gould
     heard Ashley Catalano scream, “Oh, my God, he’s got a gun.”
     Amanda Gould turned and saw [Jack,] who had either left the
     bar and reentered or retreated to a hallway area, with a gun in
     his hand. Amanda Gould heard Ashley Catalano say, “Mister, you
     don’t want to do this.” [She then] saw [Jack] point the gun
     straight up in the air over his head, and Cindy Gould attempted
     to wrestle the gun from him. [Jack] punched Cindy Gould in the
     head several times, and [she] fell when someone else struck
     her. Amanda Gould observed as someone struck Ashley Catalano
     with a Gray Goose bottle, and as Amanda began to dial 911, she
     was shot through her elbow and into her side. [She] testified
     approximately a second passed from when she last saw [Jack]
     with the gun in his hand until she turned to dial 911 and was
     shot. [She] testified she definitely saw [Jack] with a gun in his
     hands as he stood in the hallway a second before she was shot,
     and she did not see anyone else with a gun that evening.

     As Amanda Gould stood feeling like she was “on fire,” she
     observed Ashley Catalano calling 911, Tyrone Woody, who also
     had been shot, on the floor screaming, Chris McGinty jumping up

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     and down on Tom Shirey, her mom on the floor, and John
     Woody running over to assist Tyrone Woody. She did not know
     where Amy Verri was at this point but she saw “Cool” and Chris
     McGinty, neither of whom had been standing by the hall, fleeing
     the bar. However, “Cool” and Chris McGinty came back into the
     bar after the police arrived.

     After the police arrived, an officer asked the remaining group of
     people for the identity of the shooter, and Amanda Gould told
     [the officer] that it was “Mister.” A few hours later, while she
     was the hospital, she again told the police “Mister” had shot her.
     Specifically, on September 8, 2007, a detective showed her a
     photo array, and she identified [Jack] as “Mister” and the
     shooter. Additionally, at the preliminary hearing on February 20,
     2008, Amanda Gould testified [Jack] was the only person she
     observed with a gun in his hand a “split second before” she was
     shot.

     Tyrone Woody testified he was very drunk on the night in
     question, but he remember[ed] being at the Praha and then
     later … Sallade’s with a group of people, including John Woody
     and Tom Shirey. He remember[ed] sitting at the bar, drinking
     alcohol, and talking with Cindy Gould while at Sallade’s. The next
     thing he remember[ed was] saying, “It hurts,” and then seeing
     the wing of a helicopter. He has no memory of anything that
     occurred from when he was talking to Cindy Gould to when he
     was being life-flighted in the helicopter. While Tyrone Woody
     acknowledg[ed] he suffered gunshot wounds to his stomach,
     hand, and finger on the night in question, he has no memory of
     being shot or engaging in any physical fights while at Sallade’s.
     [He] denied either he or any of his friends had a gun with them
     that evening.

     John Woody confirmed that he, Tyrone Woody, and some friends
     arrived at Sallade’s around 2:30 a.m. on the night in question,
     and he was “buzzed.” He recollected Tom Shirey and another
     man exchanged words and punches, and then he started fighting
     with someone. He testified:

        I felt something hit in the back of the head. I remember
        thinking “pussy.” I remember looking at my brother and
        someone hit him on the top of his head with something
        and it kind of gets blurry after that. Then I heard a
        gunshot and I see my brother fall. I went over to him and

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         I tried to pick him up and Amy was like “you can’t pick
         him up, you have [to] put pressure.” [He] said “it hurts
         and burns.” My memory gets a little blurry, but the next
         thing I went out [of] the bar and there [were] cops
         everywhere. That’s what I clearly remember.

     Ashley Catalano testified [that] on the night in question, she was
     with her sister, Amanda Gould, and Cindy Gould at Sallade’s
     around 8:00 p.m., they left Sallade’s at around 11:00 p.m., they
     went to Praha, and they went back to Sallade’s at around 1:00
     a.m. [She] was neither drinking nor using drugs as she was the
     designated driver for the evening. [She] indicated that, after
     they returned to Sallade’s, at some point, Tom Shirey became
     upset because the bartender would not serve him any more
     alcohol. Tom Shirey apparently knocked over a barstool;
     however, the Woody brothers believed “Cool” had hit Tom
     Shirey, resulting in men fighting. [She] recalled “little fights”
     occurring between different groups throughout the bar, and she
     attempted to leave the bar. As she made her way to the side
     exit, she saw Amanda and Cindy Gould standing near the door
     and [Jack] in the hallway with his hand in his jacket. She
     observed as [Jack] took his hand out of his jacket and pointed a
     gun in the air. [She] yelled “He has a gun,” and then someone
     hit her in the abck of the head, resulting in her falling to the
     ground. She then heard the gunshot, stood back up, and noticed
     [Jack] was no longer in the hallway.

     …

     [Jack] took the stand in his own defense, and he admitted that,
     on the night in question, he was with “Cool” and “Mac,” and they
     arrived at Sallade’s at approximately 2:40 a.m. Approximately
     thirty minutes later, a fight broke out among the patrons, and
     eventually someone tried to push everyone out the side door.
     [Jack] testified as follows on direct examination regarding a gun:

         [Jack]: [E]verybody was going out the door and Mr.
         Woody and Mac was [sic] in the hallway, which included
         myself. We was [sic] trying to leave and I see Mac pull
         out a handgun and Mr. Woody tried to grab it and take it
         from me. That’s when I heard the shot fire and I dove in
         the corner for cover.

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         [Defense Counsel]: Let me stop you there. Where were
         you in relation [to] Mac and Mr. Woody?

         [Jack]: Behind Mac.

         [Defense Counsel]: Where was he?

         [Jack]: Into the hallway.

         [Defense Counsel]: Towards [the] outside entrance into
         the hallway?

         [Jack]: Yes, sir.

         [Defense Counsel]: Do you know what kind of weapon
         Mac pulled out?

         [Jack]: Semi-automatic.

         [Defense Counsel]: What color was it?

         [Jack]: Black and chrome.

         [Defense Counsel]: Did you see anybody else with a gun?

         [Jack]: No, sir.

         [Defense Counsel]: How many shots did you hear fired?

         [Jack]: One.

         [Defense Counsel]: Did you see Mac actually holding the
         gun?

         [Jack]: Yes, sir.

         [Defense Counsel]: And could you describe what Mr.
         Woody did in an attempt to go after the gun?

         [Jack]: Yes, sir. He reached down and tried to grab it
         from him.

     …

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      At the conclusion of all testimony, the jury convicted [Jack] of
      aggravated assault as to Tyrone Woody and Amanda Gould; the
      jury acquitted [Jack] on two counts of attempted homicide. On
      April 19, 2010, the trial court imposed an aggregate sentence of
      16.6 years to 33.3 years in prison, and [Jack] filed a timely
      counseled post-sentence motion, which the trial court denied.

Commonwealth v. Jack, No. 1261 WDA 2010, at 2-16 (Pa. Super., filed

11/27/12) (unpublished memorandum) (citations omitted).

      This Court affirmed Jack’s judgment of sentence, and the Supreme

Court of Pennsylvania denied his petition for allowance of appeal. Jack filed a

timely, pro se PCRA petition. After the PCRA court appointed counsel to

represent Jack, counsel filed an amended PCRA petition as well as an

addendum. The PCRA court held a hearing on Jack’s amended petition before

ultimately denying it. This timely appeal followed.

      On appeal, Jack raises eight issues for our review. The first six issues

concern Jack’s allegations of trial counsel ineffectiveness, the seventh

concerns the effectiveness of his appellate counsel, and the eighth and final

issue asserts that the combined instances of ineffective assistance of counsel

rendered the trial and subsequent appeal unreliable. We therefore begin our

analysis with the applicable standards of review.

      “On appeal from the denial of PCRA relief, our standard and scope of

review is limited to determining whether the PCRA court’s findings are

supported by the record and without legal error.” Commonwealth v.

Edmiston, 65 A.3d 339, 345 (Pa. 2013) (citation omitted), cert. denied,

Edmiston v. Pennsylvania, 134 S. Ct. 639 (2013). “[Our] scope of review

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is limited to the findings of the PCRA court and the evidence of record,

viewed in the light most favorable to the prevailing party at the PCRA court

level.” Commonwealth v. Koehler, 36 A.3d 121, 131 (Pa. 2012) (citation

omitted).

      “[T]his Court applies a de novo standard of review to the PCRA court’s

legal conclusions.” Commonwealth v. Spotz, 18 A.3d 244, 259 (Pa. 2011)

(citation omitted). In order to be eligible for PCRA relief, a petitioner must

plead and prove by a preponderance of the evidence that his conviction or

sentence arose from one or more of the errors listed at 42 Pa.C.S.A.

§ 9543(a)(2).

      It is well settled that

      [t]o plead and prove ineffective assistance of counsel a
      petitioner must establish: (1) that the underlying issue has
      arguable merit; (2) counsel’s actions lacked an objective
      reasonable basis; and (3) actual prejudice resulted from
      counsel's act or failure to act.

Commonwealth v. Rykard, 55 A.3d 1177, 1189-1190 (Pa. Super. 2012)

(citation omitted). “Arguable merit exists when the factual statements are

accurate and could establish cause for relief. Whether the facts rise to the

level of arguable merit is a legal determination.” Commonwealth v.

Barnett, 121 A.3d 534, 540 (Pa. Super. 2015) (citation omitted).

“Generally, where matters of strategy and tactics are concerned, counsel’s

assistance is deemed constitutionally effective if he chose a particular course

that had some reasonable basis designed to effectuate his client’s interests.”

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Commonwealth v. Colavita, 993 A.2d 874, 887 (Pa. 2010) (citation

omitted). A failure to satisfy any prong of the test will require rejection of

the claim. See Spotz, 84 A.3d at 311.

      In his first issue on appeal, Jack contends that trial counsel was

ineffective in failing to more fully pursue a theory that the Commonwealth’s

witnesses had conformed their testimony after speaking to each other. Jack

concedes that trial counsel pursued this strategy. See Appellant’s Brief, at

14. In his collateral attack, however, he argues that trial counsel could have

done more to support this theory.

      First, he contends that trial counsel could have cross-examined Jeff

Lanious and John Woody to establish that their trial testimony differed from

their original statements to the police. At trial, both men testified that they

did not see anybody with a gun, let alone firing one, on the night of the

melee. See N.T., Trial, 1/21/10, at 220; 1/22/10, at 360. However, in their

initial statements to police after the incident, both men stated that they had

seen Jack with a gun that night, and Lanious stated that he saw Jack firing

the weapon.

      Jack contends that this shift in testimony was indicative of these two

witnesses conforming their testimony: “Amanda Gould believed she saw

[Jack] with a gun and soon everyone in the bar adopted that story as their

own.” Appellant’s Brief, at 16. At the PCRA hearing, trial counsel testified

that he felt that cross-examining these witnesses on their previous

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statements would have been detrimental to Jack’s case. Trial counsel felt

that any benefit to the strategy of demonstrating conformed testimony was

outweighed by the danger of exposing the jury to indications that these two

men had initially positively identified Jack as the shooter. See N.T., PCRA

Hearing, 4/13-14/15, at 15.

         Jack argues that trial counsel’s purported strategy is belied by the fact

that Lanious’s prior statement was eventually published to the jury without

any objection. However, as the Commonwealth correctly notes, trial counsel

did object to the introduction of Lanious’s prior statement, but the objection

was overruled. See N.T., Trial, 1/22/10, at 379.

         Despite skillful arguments, Jack has not established that trial counsel’s

chosen strategy was unreasonable. Part of the skillset of an effective trial

attorney is knowledge of a particular jury and an ability to gauge how

evidence will affect that jury. Here, while Jack has presented a plausible

strategy that trial counsel could have pursued, he has not established that

the strategy chosen by trial counsel was unreasonable. Thus, this argument

fails.

         In a related argument, Jack contends that trial counsel was ineffective

for failing to reiterate Tyrone Woody’s testimony that his only knowledge of

the melee and its immediate aftermath comes from what others have told

him. However, Jack’s minimal argument on this point fails to establish why

such     reiteration   was   necessary.   In    closing   arguments,   trial   counsel

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highlighted   the   argument    that    the     Commonwealth’s   witnesses   had

conformed their testimony. It is unclear what benefit reiterating one

witness’s unchallenged testimony would have provided Jack. This argument

thus provides Jack no relief.

      In his second issue on appeal, Jack argues that trial counsel was

ineffective for failing to more rigorously pursue a strategy of demonstrating

that the police had rushed to judgment in naming Jack the primary suspect

in the shooting. In particular, Jack contends that trial counsel should have

more vigorously cross-examined Detective Scott Sherer regarding his

testimony that “three” or “several” eyewitnesses had claimed that they saw

Jack with a gun in his hand immediately prior to the shooting.

      Jack concedes that during the course of the investigation multiple

witnesses provided such statements. He argues that all but one of these

statements were made only after the investigators had already determined

Jack to be the prime suspect, and that this fact should have been highlighted

by trial counsel. However, even assuming that this underlying claim has

arguable merit, we conclude that Jack has not established arguable merit in

his contention that trial counsel failed to rigorously pursue this defense

theory.

      Jack concedes that trial counsel presented the theory that the police

rushed to judgment in this investigation. Trial counsel presented evidence

that at the time Jack was charged, only one witness placed the gun in his

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hands – Amanda Gould. See N.T., Trial, 1/25/10, at 504-505. Furthermore,

trial counsel elicited evidence that the detective that had filed charges

against Jack was unaware that Amy Verri had identified “Mac” as the shooter

when the detective filed the charges. See id. However, Detective Scherer,

the detective highlighted in Jack’s argument, was not responsible for the

filing of charges against Jack. Detective Kenneth Ruckel filed the criminal

complaint. See Criminal Complaint, 9/8/07.

      Under these circumstances, we conclude that Jack cannot establish

that there was any benefit to pursuing the issue of what evidence was

available to Detective Scherer at the time that Detective Ruckel filed the

charges. Furthermore, Detective Scherer’s confusion over the timeline of the

investigation was evident from his testimony. Trial counsel opined that, in

his opinion, Detective Scherer had lost all credibility with the jury. See N.T.,

PCRA Hearing, 4/13-14/15, at 27. Rather than pursuing this line of defense

with a witness who had no direct knowledge of the reasons for filing charges

against Jack, was confused about the timeline involved, and possibly

discredited due to his confusion, trial counsel focused on establishing the

defense by questioning the detective who had filed the charges, and

provided clear, consistent answers to his questions regarding the timeline.

Thus, Jack has failed to establish arguable merit for his contention that trial

counsel should have cross-examined Detective Scherer further about the

timeline of the investigation.

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       In his third issue, Jack argues that trial counsel was ineffective for

failing to object when the assistant district attorney referenced arrest

“warrants” for Jack while questioning a police officer. Jack contends that the

pluralization implied participation in prior criminal activity unrelated to the

instant case. While possibly inappropriate,1 there is no evidence that the

prosecutor’s action was intentional. Furthermore, this reference was a

singular, passing statement on a prefatory matter. Trial counsel indicated

that he had not even been aware that the prosecutor had pluralized

“warrants” at the time. See id., at 18. It is thus unclear whether the jury

noticed this statement. As such, it is also unclear that the jury made the

unsupported inference of further criminal activity that Jack contends it did.

We therefore conclude that Jack has failed to establish that he suffered any

prejudice from trial counsel’s failure to object to the prosecutor’s question.

       Next, Jack asserts that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object

to nine questions propounded by the Commonwealth to Detective Scherer.

Jack had Detective Scherer read Amy Verri’s pre-trial statement into

evidence as a prior inconsistent statement. After trial counsel rested, the

Commonwealth asked nine questions of Detective Scherer. First, he was

____________________________________________

1
  At a hearing outside of the jury’s presence, the Commonwealth presented
evidence that there was a Pennsylvania warrant and an Ohio warrant,
presumably both related to the instant case. Thus, while there were
technically two active warrants for Jack’s arrest, it was arguably misleading
to indicate that Jack was the subject of multiple arrest warrants.

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asked whether Verri was “shaken” when she gave the statement, to which

he replied affirmatively. The remaining questioning proceeded to clarify

Detective Scherer’s understanding of the statement.

           Q     She didn’t know who was who that night?

           A     That’s correct.

           Q     She just said two individuals who she met at the bar
                 were in the hallway when the shot was fired?

           A     That’s correct.

           Q     She doesn’t know which one was which?

           A     That’s correct.

           Q     She couldn’t put a name to either one of them?

           A     That’s correct.

           Q     Where did she get the names that night?

           A     I just assumed from conversing with the other bar
                 patrons.

           Q     You put the names “Mac,” “Mister,” and “Tony” in
                 quotes, why did you do that?

           A     Because those were her exact words. You have to
                 understand, a report is taken on the scene and it is
                 confusing for us also to separate people and people
                 we interview. We take notes of the interview and
                 then turn it into a report form as quickly as we can.
                 There can be discrepancies in the report just as
                 perception is. This is the way she described it and I
                 perceive it can be different. We try to keep it as
                 accurate as we can with specifics especially with
                 dates and times and [that] kind of thing. But all we
                 do is document exactly what she told us as best we
                 can so that it can refresh my recollection when the

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                 case comes to trial and also          to   refresh   her
                 recollection from three years ago.

           Q     And Ms. Verri was unsure what individual had what
                 and who had been associated with how at the time
                 she gave the statement, correct?

           A      That’s correct.

N.T., Trial, 1/26/10, at 565-567.

      Jack does not provide authority for his contention that this questioning

was improper other than the requirement that a non-expert witness have

personal knowledge of the subject of their testimony. See Pa.R.E. 602. Jack

contends that the questioning called for Detective Scherer to opine on Verri’s

state of mind at the time of her statement. Even assuming that the

questioning was objectionable on this ground, Jack still must establish that

trial counsel did not have a reasonable strategy behind his decision not to

object.

      When questioned on why he did not object to this testimony, trial

counsel provided a detailed explanation.

      Q    Did you – having read that cross-examination, was there
           any element of that that you would in retrospect object to?

      A    No. He was just being asked as to how the statement was
           prepared.

      Q    Well, I think to be fair, his commentary went way beyond
           the factual observations. Do you have a recollection of
           that?

      A    Well, again, sitting in the courtroom observing the jurors,
           by this point half of the jurors were covering their mouths
           because they were smiling or covering muffled laughter

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               every time that particular detective would testify. He had
               lost all credibility with the jury. I was standing down at the
               end of the jury box when he was testifying and I could see
               all the jurors, and, as I said, they were frequently laughing
               and smiling at his response.

          Q    Okay.

          A    So in my opinion there was no point in not letting him
               testify. The more I can get the jury to laugh at him the
               better it is for me I figured.

Jack has not established that trial counsel’s observations of the jury were

false, nor has he established that given these observations, trial counsel’s

strategy was unreasonable. Jack’s fourth issue on appeal therefore merits no

relief.

          Next, Jack contends that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to

continue to object to statements that Jack was the “shooter.” Jack contends

that while eyewitnesses testified that they had seen Jack with a gun, none

testified that they had actually seen him firing it. As result, Jack argues, any

question or argument that characterized a witness’s testimony as identifying

Jack as the “shooter” was improper. Trial counsel apparently agreed, as he

lodged an objection to the characterization after the first instance of such a

characterization. See N.T., Trial, 1/25/10, at 436-437. As Jack now

concedes, the trial court overruled the objection, noting that the inference

was permissible due to the wounds suffered by the victims. See id., at 437.

          Jack persuasively argues that the trial court’s ruling was in error, as

there was evidence that more than one gun might have been involved. In

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other words, trial counsel argued that it was possible, based upon the

evidence at trial, for the jury to find that he had possessed the gun during

the melee, but that he had not fired it. However, as Jack clearly recognizes,

allegations of trial court error cannot be litigated under the PCRA.

Commonwealth v. Reyes-Rodriguez, 111 A.3d 775, 780 (Pa. Super.

2015) (en banc).

       Jack thus raises this claim in the context of trial counsel’s failure to

continue to object to this characterization after his initial objection was

overruled. However, Jack does not provide any evidence to establish that

subsequent objections would have changed the trial court’s mind. He

therefore    has     failed   to   establish       prejudice   for   this   claim.   See

Commonwealth v. Rovinski, 704 A.2d 1068, 1072 (Pa. Super. 1997).2

       In his sixth issue on appeal, Jack argues that trial counsel was

ineffective for failing to object to testimony from police witnesses relating

out-of-court statements made by eyewitnesses to the melee. This argument

is closely related to Jack’s fifth issue, in that he once again complains that

these officers characterized the eyewitness statements as identifying him as

____________________________________________

2
  Jack also argues in his brief that appellate counsel was ineffective for
failing to pursue this claim of trial court error on direct appeal. This claim is
waived as it was not present in his amended PCRA petition or addendum,
and therefore was not before the PCRA court. See Pa.R.A.P. 302(a).
Furthermore, this claim is not contained within Jack’s Rule 1925(b)
statement of matters complained of on appeal.

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the “shooter,” despite the absence of such identification in the eyewitnesses’

testimony.

      As noted above, one of Jack’s defense theories at trial was that the

police had rushed to judgment in charging him. Thus, the officers’ state of

mind during the investigation became a relevant issue at trial. As a result,

the   officers’   testimony   regarding   out-of-court   statements   made    by

eyewitnesses became admissible evidence for the purpose of establishing

the officers’ state of mind. See Commonwealth v. Jones, 658 A.2d 746,

751 (Pa. 1995). Jack cannot establish arguable merit, and this claim fails.

      Next, Jack contends that appellate counsel was ineffective in failing to

raise a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction

for prohibited possession of a firearm. Specifically, Jack contends that the

evidence at trial was insufficient to support this conviction as the trial court

never explicitly admitted the certified record of Jack’s prior conviction for a

felony.

      As Jack concedes in his brief, the Commonwealth moved for the

admission of the certified record of the felony conviction, and trial counsel

did not object to its admission. See N.T., Trial, 1/25/10, at 520. Under these

circumstances, the trial court’s failure to explicitly admit the record into

evidence is irrelevant; the evidence is to be treated as evidence of record

and given full consideration. See Commonwealth v. Diaz, 659 A.2d 563,

568 n.17 (Pa. Super. 1995). Jack’s argument therefore merits no relief.

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      Finally, Jack contends that the cumulative effect of all of the alleged

errors by trial and appellate counsel were sufficient to render the truth

determining process unreliable and suspect. Generally, “no number of failed

[ ] claims may collectively warrant relief if they fail to do so individually.”

Commonwealth v. Spotz, 18 A.3d 244, 321 (Pa. 2011) (citation omitted).

But “[w]hen the failure of individual claims is grounded in lack of prejudice,

then the cumulative prejudice from those individual claims may properly be

assessed.” Id. (citations omitted). Here, we dismissed only two claims for

lack of prejudice—the third and fifth issues. We see no danger of cumulative

prejudice based on our findings of just these two issues.

      In any event, while all parties involved concede that the melee that

preceded the shooting was chaotic, and that many of the Commonwealth’s

witnesses were under the influence of alcohol or other drugs, there was no

dispute that Jack was present. Furthermore, the witness whose account of

the shooting was most consistent from that night until trial placed a gun in

Jack’s hands moments before shots were fired. Clearly, the jury credited this

witnesses’ testimony, and Jack has provided nothing to establish that the

jury’s credibility determination was improperly influenced. Thus, even

assuming for the sake of argument the proposition that the aggregate of

prejudice flowing all of Jack’s contentions was significantly greater than the

prejudice from any single contention, we cannot conclude that the verdict

was unreliable as a matter of law.

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J-S61001-16

     Order affirmed. Jurisdiction relinquished.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 9/21/2016

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