Court Opinion

ID: 2815560
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-07-08 19:42:58.989916+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:34:02.722945
License: Public Domain

J. S33003/15

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION – SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                   :      IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                               :            PENNSYLVANIA
                       v.                      :
                                               :
KELVIN MONTERO,                                :          No. 452 EDA 2014
                                               :
                              Appellant        :

        Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence, September 10, 2013,
            in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
              Criminal Division at No. CP-51-CR-0000977-2012

BEFORE: FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E. DONOHUE AND LAZARUS, JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.:                           FILED JULY 08, 2015

       Kelvin Montero appeals from the judgment of sentence entered on

September 10, 2013 in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County.

The sole claim presented on appeal concerns whether the prosecutor

committed misconduct during the Commonwealth’s closing argument.                    No

relief is due.

       Saul Rodriguez and his companion stopped appellant from physically

abusing his girlfriend at the Puerto Rican Day Parade at 5th and Cambria

Streets.      Appellant and his cohort, John Perez, fought with Rodriguez and

then   left     the   area,     returning   several   hours   later   with   a   loaded

semi-automatic weapon.           After failing to find Rodriguez, appellant opened

fire into the street in several directions; approximately 30 shots were fired.

Jesus Rivera, a 16-year-old bystander, was struck by two errant bullets and
J. S33003/15

died of gunshot wounds.      The defense presented alibi testimony averring

that appellant was at his girlfriend’s home at the time of the shooting.

Following a jury trial, appellant was convicted of conspiracy to commit

murder.1 Appellant was sentenced to a period of incarceration of 18 to 40

years. Appellant filed a timely post-sentence motion, which was denied on

January 14, 2014. On February 8, 2014 this appeal was filed.

        Again, appellant argues that the trial court erred by denying his

request for a mistrial based on prosecutorial misconduct. (Appellant’s brief

at 4.) He claims that the prosecution’s repeated comments during closing

argument that the alibi witnesses were lying created a fixed bias with the

jury.

        In its Rule 1925(a) opinion, the trial court finds appellant’s claim

concerning the use of the term “lying” to be waived for failing to specify this

ground as a basis of his motion for a mistrial. The trial court explains that

the defense request for a mistrial identified the basis for the motion as the

prosecutor’s alleged expression of “personal opinion.”         (See notes of

testimony, 7/19/13 at 105.)     During the motion for the mistrial, defense

counsel subsequently referenced the “objections that you sustained”; but

1
  The jury failed to reach verdicts as to the charges of first degree murder,
carrying a firearm without a license, and possessing an instrument of crime;
thus, the Honorable M. Teresa Sarmina declared a mistrial as to those
charges. A second trial resulted in convictions as to all three crimes.
Appellant’s separate appeal from those judgments of sentence are pending
before this court at No. 1452 EDA 2014.

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J. S33003/15

again, did not specifically identify “lying” as an additional ground for the

motion. As the Commonwealth notes, “[i]t was instead [The Honorable M.

Teresa Sarmina] who referred to ‘lying’ when differentiating the ‘sustained’

objections from the remarks supposedly based on ‘personal opinion’ that

were advanced as the ground for the motion.” (Commonwealth’s brief at 9,

citing notes of testimony, 7/19/13 at 89, 91, 95, 106.) We agree that this

issue could be found waived for failing to explicitly identify lying as a basis

for the mistrial motion.

      In any event, if we were to address appellant's challenge, he would

not be entitled to relief. After a thorough review of the record, the briefs of

the parties, the applicable law, and the well-reasoned opinion of the trial

court, it is our determination that there is no merit to the question raised on

appeal.   We determine that Judge Sarmina ably and comprehensively

disposes of appellant’s claims in her Rule 1925(a) opinion; thus, we will

adopt it as our own and affirm on that basis.       (See trial court opinion,

5/7/14 at 5-11.)

      Judgment of sentence affirmed.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 7/8/2015

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                                                   PHILADELPHIA              COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
                                                                CRIMINAL TRIAL DMSION

                           COMMONWEALTH
                                                                                                    CP-51-CR-0000977-2012
                                                             FILED
                                   v.                         MAY O '1 20\4:                        Superior Court No.
                                                         Criminal Appeals Unit                      452 EDA2014
                           KELVIN MONTERO              First Judic\a\ Oistnct ot PA
                           Sarmina,J.
                           May 7, 2014
                                                                          OPINION

                           PROCEDURAL HISTORY

                                   On July 22, 2013, following a jury trial, Kelvin Montero (the defendant) was found guilty of

                           conspiracy to commit murder (F-1).1        Sentencing was deferred until September 10, 2013, on which

                       date this Court sentenced the defendant to a term of not less than 18 years nor more than 40 years

                       imprisonment. On September 17, 2013, post-sentence motions were filed, which were denied by

                       this Court on January 14, 2014. On February 8, 2014, a timely notice of appeal was filed.

                       FACTS

                                  After searching for a man with whom he had fought earlier in the day2 and failing to find

                       him, on September: 26, 2011) the defendant opened fire at the corner of 5th and Cambria Streets,

                       shooting approximately 30 shots down the street Notes of Testimony (N.T.) 7 /16/2013 at 150-

                       152. A 16-year-old boy, Jesus Rivera Qcsus), was struck by two of defendant's errant shots and died

                       from the gunshot wounds. Id. at 154; N.T. 7 /17 /2013 at 23.

                       1 18 Pa.C.S. § 903. The defendant had been charged with four crimes: murder, conspiracy ro commit murder, firearms
                       not to be carried without a license, and possessing instruments of crime (PIC). Notes of Testimony (N.T.) 7 /22/2013 at
                       52. The jury could not reach a verdict with respect to three of the four charges - murder, firearms not to be carried
                       without a license and PIC - and a mistrial was declared as to those. W,. The defendant was re-tried for those three
                       crimes in December 2013, and was convicted of all three. N.T. 12/20/2013 at 43-44. Post sentence motions were
                       denied as to those charges on April 23, 2014.

                       2   The figh1 had occurred on September 25, 2011 at the Puerto Rican Day Parade. N.T. 7 /16/2013 at 200-201. TI1e
                       festivities had carried on past midnight, into the 261h, when this shooting took place. li at 150-152.
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                 At approximately 8:30 PM the previous evening, the defendant found his girlfriend, Cynthia

          Vasquez (Vasquez), seated in a car at the c.orner of 5th and Cambria Streets. N.T. 7 /16/2013 at

          200-201; N.T. 7 /17 /2013 at 132. The defendant forcibly removed Vasquez from the car, walked

          her down the street, pushed her head into a gate, and slapped her .in the face. N.T. 7/16/2013 at

          201-202; N.T. 7 /17 /2013 at 132-133.         Angel Ducvo (Ducvo)3 and Saul Rodriguez (Rodriguez) saw

          the defendant strike Vasquez and came to her defense." N.T. 7 /16/2013 at 202; N.T. 7 /17 /2013 at

          133. A fight broke out between the defendant and Ducvo. N.T. 7 /16/2013 at .204. Eventually, the

      police broke up the .fight, and the defendant and Vasquez retreated to Vasquez's mother's car. N.T.

      7 /17 /2013 at 133.

                 At some point thereafter, the defendant exited the car. As the defendant walked away,

      Rodriguez approached the car and spoke with the girls therein. Id. at 134. Upon seeing Rodriguez

      speaking with the girls, the defendant became angry, returned to the car, and punched Rodriguez.

      Id. at 134-135. The defendant then ran away, mounted a bike, and rode off. Id. at 136. Rodriguez

      pursued the defendant During the chase, John Perez (Perez)' arrived on the scene in a red truck,

      exited the vehicle, and confronted Rodriguez, who abandoned his pursuit. Id.

                 Later that night, around 12:00 AM, the defendant and Perez returned to 5th and Cambria

      Streets wearing black hoodies, looking for Rodriguez and his friends. N.T. 7 /16/2013 at 207; N.T.

      7 /17 /2013 at 142. One of the people with whom the defendant spoke, Angel Figueroa, testified

      l   Angel Ducvo's nickname is "Abo." N.T. 7 /16/2013 at 203.

      4 Rodriguez provided a statement about this encounter to Detective Joseph Bamberski. When Rodriguez was called to
      testify, he recanted hrs prior statement. N.T. 7 /17 /2013 at 122-125. Rodriguez confirmed that be signed and adopted
      his prior statement. Id. Accordingly, Rodriguez's account of the events of September 25, 2011 was admitted for its truth
      pursua.at to Commonwealth y. Brady, 71 A.2d 34, 36 (Pa.Super. 1987) ~; Commonwealth v. Lively, 703 A.2d 467
      (Pa.Super, 1997) ~),        and their progeny.

      iPerez was initially charged as a co-defendanr. Price to jury selection, on .July 15, 2013, Perez entered a negotiated guilty
      plea to murder of the third degree (F-1), criminal conspiracy (F-1), and persons not to possess firearms (F-2). 18 Pa.C.S.
      §§ 2502(c), 903, and 6 lOS(a)(l), respectively; N .T. 7 /15/2013 at 26. Per the negotiations, this Court sentenced Perez to
      an aggregate term of not less than 22-and-a-half years nor more   than 45 years imprisonment. N.T. 7/15/2013 at 30.

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           that while the defendant was searching for Rodriguez, he was reaching to his waist as if to indicate

           that he possessed a gun. N.T. 7 /16/2013 at 208. After speaking with Figueroa, the defendant"

           opened fire, shooting 30 times in all directions,"       Id. at 95, l 50. Keyshla Rivera (Keyshla) testified

           that the defendant was "shooting all crazy like everywhere and bullets was going everywhere." Id. at

           150. Keyshla and her 16-year-old brothcr,Jesus, tried to run for cover. gl at 155-56. But before

        Jesus could get to safety, he was struck by two bullets, one to the right side of his torso and another

           to his right arm, and fell to the ground.8 Id. at 154; N.T. 7 /17 /2013 at 25-27.

                     The search for the defendant commenced on September 28, 2011, after an arrest warrant

           had been issued N.T. 7 /17 /2013 at 95-97. On November 1, 2011, Detective Burke found the

           defendant on the second floor of a home in the Hunting Park neighborhood of Philadelphia. Id. at

           103-04.

        LEGAL ANALYSIS

       The defendant raises the following issues on appeal:"

              1. The verdict was against the weight of the evidence.

       6 Keyshla Rivera, Jesus's sister, identified the defendant as the shooter. N.T. 7 /16/2013 at 168. Ducvo identified the
       defendant as the shooter pursuant to a photo array compiled by the police. N.T. 7 /17 /2013 at 196-97. During the
       shooting, Ducvo did not actually sec the shooter's face, but he was able to recognize the defendant as the shooter based
       on their earlier encounter, wherein the two had engaged in the fistfight. N.T. 7 /16/20'13 at 204; N.T. 7 /17 /2013 at 195-
       197. Ducvo's prior statement was also admitted for its truth pursuant to~/~.

       · 7 At the: crime scene, 30 fired cartridge casings (FCCs) were found. At 12:40 AM Officer Brian Waters responded to a
       call on 5th and Cambria Streets to look for a burgundy Ford P-150 pickup truck. N,T. 7 /16/2013 at 110. Officer
       Waters stopped the truck, which was being driven by Perez. ld· at 112-116. The Ford pick-up was taken in to the police
       station as evidence. N.T. 7 /17 /2013 at 71. A later search of the truck revealed a Glock 9lv1M handgun on the right side
       of the: front dashboard. Id. at 79. TI1e search also uncovered court documents with Perez's and the defendant's names.
       Additionally, two handgun magazines were found: one empty 30-round magazine and another full 15-round magazine.
       hi. at 80; N.T. 7 /18/2013 at 115-116. Officer Lawrence Flagler, a ballistics expert, determined that all 30 FCC's were
       fired from the 9mm handgun found in that truck. N.T. 7/17/2013 at 242.

       • Associate Medical Examiner, Dr. Aaron Rosen, testified that one of the bullets penetrated the right side of Jesus's body
       below his armpit, This bullet passed through the thoracic cavity and J esus's right rung, causing internal bleeding. Dr.
       Rosen stared that the other bullet was retrieved in the upper right arm and fractured Jesus's humerus. N.T. 7 / 17 /?JJ13
       ar 25-27. The cause of death was determined to be the gunshot wounds. l.ri. at 24.

       9For ease of disposition, this Court has rephrased the issues raised in the defendant's S la ternent of Matters Complained
       of on Appeal pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 192S(b) (l 92S(b) Starcmcnt).

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                  2  The evidence was insufficient co sustain a conviction for criminal conspiracy to commit
                     murder.
                  3. The trial court erred by refusing to grant the defendant's motion for a mistrial."

              Weight of the Evidence

                       The defendant's first claim is that t.he verdict as to the charge of conspiracy to commit

             murder was against the weight of the evidence. For the reasons set forth below, this claim has been

             waived.

                       When raising a claim that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence, a defendant bears

             the burden to specify why or how the verdict is against the weight of the evidence. Commonwealth

             v. Seibert, 799 A.2d 54, 62 (Pa.Super 2002). In Seibert, the defendant's 1925(b) Statement stated,

             "The verdict of the jury was against the weight of the credible evidence as to all the charges." Id.

             The Superior Court found that the defendant's weight of the evidence claim was "too vague to

             penmt. review
                       . " . _.
                             Id at 6"
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                      In the case subJudice, the defendant's 1925(b) Statement reads, "The verdict was against the

             weight of the evidence as to the charge of criminal conspiracy to commit murder." As in Sieber!,

             here, the defendant provides this Court with no justification as to why or how the verdict was

             against the weight of the evidence. As the defendant's weight of the evidence claim is "too vague to

             permit review," his claim has been waived.

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                In his t925(b) Statement, the defendant claims thar this Courr erred by refusing to grant the defendant's motion for
             arrest of judgment, as the verdict was the result of prosecutorial misconduct, "wherein the prosecutor said, in spite of
             the Court sustaining defense objection, at least seven (7) rimes that the alibi witnesses where [sic] lying. ·(See 7-19-13
             N.T., p. 77, 88, 93, 95)." 1925(b.) Staternem, 3/ 4/2014, at 1-2. There are two issues with this claim of error. First,
             defense counsel made a motion for a mistrial, not ll motion for arrest of judgment. N.T. 7 /19 /2013 at 105. In fact, a
             motion for arrest of judgment would be an improper vehicle to raise a claim of prosecurorial misconduct. No judgment
             had yet been enrcred so none could be arrested. The appropriate mechanism to challenge. prosecurorial misconduct is
             through a motion for mistrial. ~ Pa.R.Crim.P 605(B) ("When an event prejudicial to the defendant occurs during tnal
             only the defendant may move for a mistrial"). Second, defense counsel's motion for a mistrial was not based on the
             prosecutor's repeated contention that alibi wrtnesses were lying "in spite of the Court sustaining defense objection."
             Defense counsel specified that he moved for a mistrial because of"repeated expressions of personal - the prosecutor's
             personal opinion". N.T. 7 / 19 /2013 at 105. The defendant's claim that the prosecutor ignored sustained objections has
             been waived 5" Commonwealth y. Duffy, 832 A.2d 1132, 1136 (Pa.Super. 2003)("[A]n Appellant may not raise a new
             theory for an objection made at trial on his appeal."). This Court will address the claim of prosecutorial misconduct that
             was preserved at trial: that the prosecutor improperly inserted her personal opinion into bet closing argument.

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             Su.iiciency of the Evidence

                      The defendant's second claim is that the evidence was not sufficient to sustain a verdict for

             conspiracy to commit murder. This claim has also been waived.

                      When reviewing a sufficiency claim, the court must "examine whether the evidence admitted

             at trial, and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom, viewed in a light most favorable to the

             Commonwealth as verdict winner, support the jury's finding of all elements of the offense beyond a

             reasonable doubt." Commonwealth v. Montalvo, 598 A.2d 926, 932 (Pa.Super. 2008). However, a

             sufficiency of the evidence claim is waived if the 1925(b) Statement fails "to specify the element or

             elements upon which the evidence was insufficient"     Commonwealth v. Williams, 958 A.2d 1252,

             1257 (Pa.Super. 2008).

                      In the present case, the defendant stated only that "the evidence was insufficient to support

             the verdict of guilty as to the charge of criminal conspiracy to commit murder." The defendant

             makes no assertions as to why the evidence was insufficient, nor does he point to any element that

             the prosecution failed to prove. Therefore, due to lack   of specificity   in his 1925(b) Statement, the

             defendant's sufficiency claim is waived.

             Prosecutoriel Misconduct

                     The defendant's final claim is that this Court erred by denying defense counsel's motion for

             mistrial on the grounds that the prosecutor committed prosecutorial misconduct.         After the

             prosecutor's closing argument, defense counsel moved for a mistrial because of "repeated

             expressions of personal - the prosecutor's personal opinion." N.T. 7 / 19 /2013 at 105-06. This

             Court correctly denied defense counsel's motion, as the prosecutor did not proffer an improper

             personal opinion and, furthermore, the prosecutor's comments did not deprive the defendant of a

             fair and impartial trial.

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                  A trial court is vested with discretion       to   grant a mistrial when an allegedly prejudicial event

          "may be reasonably said to deprive the defendant of a fair and impartial trial." Commonwealth v.

         Judy, 978 A.2d 1015, 1019 (Pa.Super. 2009). When determining whether a mistrial should be

          granted, a trial court must (a) analyze whether misconduct actually occurred, and (b) assess the

          degree of resulting prejudice. Id.

                  A prosecutor's expression of his or her personal opinion during summation constitutes

          misconduct       .J.illh, 978 A.2d   at 1020. It is well settled that a prosecutor's closing argument must be

         based on the facts introduced at trial and the "legitimate inferences" therefrom. Commonwealth v.

         Stafford, 749 A.2d 489, 498-99 (Pa.Super, 2000). In Stafford, the prosecutor prefaced a number of

         statements about the evidence introduced at trial with, "I think" ot "We think." Id. The prosecutor

         there made the following remarks:

                  "I don't think that the fact that we didn't find greenhouses supports the proposition that Mr.
                  Walburn was trying to set anyone up and I think the evidence suggests - [Objection]." At
                  another point, he argued "I don't think there's any evidence that makes any paint cans or
                  odor of paint or anything significant here ... [Objection]." At a third point, the prosecutor
                  argued "we think that he possessed that controlled substance there with intent to
                  manufacture, based- [Objection]."

         Id. at 498 n.8.

                  The Staffqrd Court held that the prosecutor's use of "I think" and "We think" was not

         improper, as the prosecutor was "not attempting to express his personal belief as to the evidence,"

         but rather was intending to "'urge the jury to make a fair inference from the facts adduced at trial.":

         Id. at 499, quoting Commonwealth v. Martin, 416 A.2d 1102, 1104 (Pa.Super. 1979). Stafford relied

         on Commonwealth v. Gunderman, in which the Superior Court similarly analyzed a prosecutor's use

         of "I think," and found that preface to be permissible where the subsequent inference was based on

         the evidence introduced at trial. 407 A.2d 870, 873 (Pa.Super, 1979). In closing, the prosecutor had

         stated

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         Who has a greater interest, other than Mr. Gunderman, in the results of this case? I submit
         to you that it is his wife. She also tells us that he was with her from two o'clock in the
         morning or two o'clock in the afternoon until morning. I think she began to see just how
         difficult that might be to believe when she said 'I don't mean twenty-four hours a
         day, though.' Again, does she mean from the first day of her pregnancy or that she knew
         she was pregnant? Did he become such a concerned father-to-be that at that point, he
         began spending every solid day with her? Test her interest. Test her testimony and her
         demeanor on the stand.

 Id. (emphasis added).

         The Gunderman Court found that the prosecutor's statement about Mr. Gunderman's wife's

 credibility was a proper inference based on the evidence before the jury. The prosecutor pointed

 out that Mr. Gunderman's wife originally made a statement suggesting that she and her husband

were together for a significant period of time; she later retreated from that statement, noting that she

was not with her husband 'twenty-four hours a day.' Based on that, the prosecutor argued that Mt.

Gunderman's wife had realized she sounded incredible, and tailored her testimony accordingly.

"The prosecutor did not argue that the jury should find appellant guilty simply because the

prosecutor believed appellant to be guilty; rather, the prosecutor argued an inference based upon the

evidence. This type of argument is permissible." hi.

        In situations where a prosecutor has, in fact, made an improper statement, a trial court must

still evaluate the prejudice exacted by the misconduct in order to decide whether to grant a mistrial.

Assessing the degree of prejudice requires evaluating a prosecutor's statements in context.

Commonwealth v. Ragland, 991 A.2d 336, 341 (Pa.Super. 2010). Each isolated comment should not

be viewed in a vacuum; even where a prosecutor's statement "excecd[s] the acceptable bounds and

standards" and "overstep [s] the acceptable balance of the principles of summation," that statement

will not warrant a mistrial unless its unavoidable effect is to tender the jury incapable of weighing the

evidence objectively and reaching a true verdict. Commonwealth v. Harris, 979 A.2d 387, 398-99

(Pa.Super, 2009). A mist.rial is an extreme remedy that will only be granted "when an incident is of

such a nature that its unavoidable effect is to deprive the appellant of a fair and impartial tribunal."
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         Commonwealth v. Johnson, 719 A.2d 778, 787 (Pa.Super. 1998); ill        ihQ Commonwealth v. Chmiel,

         889A.2d 501, 542 (Pa. 2005) ("[P]rosecutorial misconduct does not occur unless the unavoidable

         effect of the comments at issue was to prejudice the jurors by forming in their minds a fixed bias

         and hostility toward the defendant, thus impeding their ability to weigh the evidence objectively and

         render a true verdict.").

                   In the case subJudice, defense counsel moved for a mistrial on the grounds that the

         prosecutor improperly asserted her personal opinion. As noted below, because the prosecutor made

        permissible inferences rooted in evidence, her comments did not constitute misconduct.

                At trial, the defendant called his former girlfriend, Vasquez, and her mother, Jeanette Bobe

        (Bobe), as alibi witnesses. N.T. 7 /18/2013 at 170, 300. Vasquez, who was only 16 years old at the

        time of the shooting, was living with Bobe at 3420 A Stteet in Philadelphia. Id. at 206. Vasquez

        testified that, on the night of the shooting, the defendant slept beside her in her mother's house for

        the entire night. Id. at 177. The prosecutor impeached Vasquez with a prior statement that she had

        given to police on January 25, 2012: Vasquez had told police that the defendant drove his car from

        her house on the night of the shooting and that she did not see him again until the next day. Id. at

        197-200.

                At trial, Bobe also claimed that the defendant was present inside the A Stteet residence on

        the night of the murder. Bobe testified that she slept on the sofa inside the home and would have

        known if the defendant had left. Id, at 309. On cross-examination, the prosecutor introduced

        evidence of Bobe's close relationship with the defendant: Bobe had received money from the

        defendant in the past to pay for gas; on July 27, 2011, after his arrest on an unrelated charge, Bobe

        posted bail for the defendant - $510 - to get him out of jail. Id. at 325-33.   Bobe also permitted the

        defendant to sleep overnight in the same room with her underage daughter. N.T. 7 /18/2013 at 325-

        33.

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               The prosecutor commented on the credibility of both women, suggesting that their

        testimony at trial was not believable because of their respective relationships with the defendant.

                ADA DONNELLY: Ladies and gentlemen, it's the evidence that all points to this
                defendant from the witnesses who were at that scene. And guess what, if all these witnesses
                see this defendant come back now all tough because he's got that gun, guess where he can't
                be? With his girlfriend and her mom back at their house at 3420 A Street, okay. So
                somebody is lying. Who do you think is lying?
                These witnesses either the day of within hours or within a couple of days went down and
                told everything that they knew. And again, Angel Ducvo, you can't get around this, he
                knows him, it's not a stranger. And even the other people, they recognize 'the defendant
                 from the earlier fight, the whole motive of the incident.
                So who is lying? Them or the people that have a motive to lie, his girlfriend and the
                girlfriend's mom who don't want to see him get in trouble, who never gave a statement to
                the detectives about th.is alleged alibi -
                MR. TURNER: Objection, Your Honor.
               THE COURT: Sustained.
               ADA DONNELLY: - who got on the stand and sounded scripted. Ladies and gentlemen,
                human nature has to come into this when you're evaluating these witnesses, human nature
               and common sense. Cynthia Vasquez when she got up there, she didn't turn to you and say,
               ladies and gentlemen, listen, I'm telling you, he was with me, he was there. I don't even
                think she wanted to be up there. It was pretty clear who was running the show here, and
                that was her mom.
               THE COURT: Don't express your personal opinions, Ms. Donnelly.
               MR TURNER: Objection.
               ADA DONNELLY: When you saw het mom testify, can you tell that there's something
               else going on here? Do you think it's unusual that this mom bails out her 16-year-old
               daughter's boyfriend from prison?
               MR. TURNER: Objection, Your Honor.
               THE COURT: Overruled.
               ADA DONNELLY: Do you think that it's unusual that two months after she bails out her
             . 16-year-old daughter's boyfriend she's allowing him to come to her house and sleep in her
               daughter's bed? Someone whose husband got killed nine 'months earlier who is a drug
               dealer? Someone who she admits that her husband is associates with J oho Perez, the get-
               away driver in this case? A mother who admits that this defendant gives her money
               sometimes for gas? Do you see what's going on here? This is about money and tnaybe
               something else.
               MR. TURNER: Objection
               THECOURT: Overruled
               ADA DONNELLY: There's a weird connection there with mom with th.is defendant.
               When this defendant is slapping around her daughter at the Puerto Rican Day Parade and
               her daughter is saying I don't want to talk to him, why is she getting involved and making
               her daughter sit in the back of the car and talk to this defendant? Why are you doing chat,
               mom? Why ate you involved in what a 16-year-old wants to do with her boyfriend or not?
               Why did you bail him out and is encouraging and enforcing [sic] your daughter to be with
               him? If you guys are alibi, why are you lawyering up and not talking to the police?
               MR. TURNER: Objection.
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       THE COURT: Sustained.
       ADA DONNELLY: If all you ate is alibi, when the police constantly come and want to talk
       to you, why not just tell them what you know?
       MR. 11JRNER: Objection.
       THE COURT: Overruled.
       ADA DONNELLY: Pretty obvious why. The defendant wasn't there the whole night. It
       happened the way Cynthia [Vasquez] told Detective Bamberski in her statement. It
       happened the way she admitted on that stand partially, chat the defendant was angry at her,
       he got jealous, he got enraged, Cynthia's sister bad to grab the defendant by the arm and pull
       him aside to calm him down. The defendant gets into a fight with those guys and now
       Cynthia wants to grab him and calm him down.

N.T. 7 /19/2013 at 87-91 (emphasis added).

       Out of an abundance of caution, this Court interjected, prior to any objection from defense

counsel, and directed the prosecutor not to express her personal opinion. N evertheless, according

to the case law discussed supra, her comment, "I don't even think she wanted to be up there," was

not an improper personal opinion. The evidence introduced at trial demonstrated that Vasquez's

mother, Bobe, had a curious relationship with the defendant. The defendant provided Bobe with

money when she needed it, and Bobe provided a service for the defendant - bailing him out of jail -

when he needed it. Additionally, the evidence demonstrated that Bobe exerted some degree of

control over Vasquez's relationship with the defendant; the defendant was able to sleep overnight

with the teenage Vasquez, as Bobe had granted them permission. The prosecutor's comment about

Vasquez's demeanor on the witness stand - that she did not want "to be up there" - was an attempt

to tie this evidence together, suggesting that Bobe was controlling Vasquez as a way to continue her

mutually beneficial relationship with the defendant. This comment about Vasquez's credibility was

drawn from the evidence produced at trial. As in Gunderman, the fact that the prosecutor prefaced

tlus inference with a first-person expression did not render it an improper personal opinion.

       Furthermore, even if the prosecutor's comment was improper, it was one isolated statement

in her closing argument and did not deprive the defendant of his right to a fair and impartial

tribunal. Stating that a witness appears as though she does not want to be on the witness stand does

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 not create "fixed bias" in the minds of a jury." The fact that Vasquez might have been reluctant to

 testify because of her mother's influence does not color the defendant in a negative light. This

 statement only addressed the credibility of these two alibi witnesses; it was not an inflammatory

 attack on the defendant. The prosecutor's comment did not have the unavoidable effect of

 prejudicing the defendant. A mistrial is an extreme remedy which was not requited here. This

 Court did not en by denying the defendant's motion for a mistrial.

            Accordingly, the judgment of sentence should be affirmed.

                                                                    BY THE COURT:

II   Prior to the summations, this Court instructed the jur:y that closing arguments were not evidence and that the jury was
not bound by counsel's perspectives on the evidence. N.T. 7 /19/2013 at 44-45.

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