Court Opinion

ID: 4242748
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-02-06 20:29:12.495978+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:44:13.715564
License: Public Domain

J-S79020-17

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                   :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                               :        PENNSYLVANIA
                                               :
                v.                             :
                                               :
                                               :
    RYAN LEE DUBOISE                           :
                                               :
                       Appellant               :   No. 2190 EDA 2016

             Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence June 27, 2016
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at
                       No(s): CP-51-CR-0011415-2014

BEFORE: GANTMAN, P.J., LAZARUS, J., and OTT, J.

MEMORANDUM BY LAZARUS, J.:                           FILED FEBRUARY 06, 2018

        Ryan Lee Duboise appeals, pro se, from his judgment of sentence,

entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, after he was

convicted of third-degree murder1 and possession of an instrument of crime

(PIC)2 in connection with the beating and strangulation death of his former

girlfriend. After careful review, we affirm.

        The trial court summarized the facts of the instant case as follows:

        From the time [the victim,] Monet Hall[,] and [Duboise] began
        dating, until the moment [Duboise] murdered her, the two had a
        violent and abusive relationship. In January 2014, Hall and
        [Duboise] moved into an apartment on Allegheny Avenue in
        Philadelphia. Not long after, on February 5, 2014, Hall sought
        treatment at Mercy Fitzgerald Hospital for rib injuries.      On
        February 22, 2014, Hall’s cousin, Angela Starks, called 911 after
____________________________________________

1   18 Pa.C.S. § 2502(c).

2   18 Pa.C.S. § 907(a).
J-S79020-17

     a crying Hall called her and told her that [Duboise] would not stop
     punching her in the stomach. On March 4, 2014, Hall was treated
     at Temple University Hospital for a closed head injury, contusions,
     and a facial laceration, after being hit in the head with a bottle.

     On the morning of April 2, 2014, two days before Hall was found
     dead, Police Officer Christopher Reeder and his partner responded
     to a 911 call for a person with a weapon on Allegheny Avenue.
     The police encountered Hall[,] who appeared under the
     influence[,] and requested transportation to a hospital. She
     informed police that she had had an altercation with her boyfriend
     and that her head hurt. That same day, Hall told Temple
     University Hospital staff that her boyfriend physically assaulted,
     punched, and kicked her. She was offered social service help but
     declined.

     On the morning of April 4, 2014, after [Duboise] returned to his
     apartment from spending the night at his best friend Dustin
     Taylor’s house, he called 911 and reported that he had found Hall
     unresponsive. When medics arrived at or around 7:30 a.m., they
     found Hall dead, lying naked on a bed. [Duboise] claimed that he
     did not know what had happened to her. After the medics
     informed [Duboise] that Hall was dead, [Duboise] swiftly left the
     apartment. Outside, he encountered Firefighter Captain Crespo.
     According to the captain, [Duboise] appeared nervous and
     uncomfortable and refused to give his name or relation to the
     deceased. [Duboise] then walked to the corner and disappeared.

     In the bedroom where Hall was found dead, Officer Guaraldo
     recovered a broken flat iron inside a wastebasket near the bed.
     The flat iron was broken into three pieces: a large piece connected
     to a cord, a paddle-like shaped piece, and a small plastic piece.
     Both Detective Crone and Officer Guaraldo observed a unique
     pattern of marks on Hall’s buttock and left hip consistent with the
     flat iron’s shape. After noticing injuries around Hall’s neck, they
     also found an audio-visual (“AV”) cord on the television stand at
     the foot of the bed. DNA mixtures found on both the flat iron and
     the AV cord were consistent with that of Hall and [Duboise].

     Dr. Gary Collins, former Deputy Chief Medical Examiner of
     Philadelphia, testified that Hall had numerous bruis[es],
     abrasions, and scrapes about her face, forearms, hips, legs, and
     buttocks. The cause of death was homicidal violence, including
     blunt impact injuries and strangulation. The victim’s bodily
     injuries were severe enough to cause a large amount of fat emboli

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     to enter the blood vessels of her lungs, preventing proper
     oxygenation of her blood, which may have contributed to her
     death.

     After [Duboise] returned to the scene, Captain Crespo pointed him
     out to police. When questioned by police, [Duboise] said that Hall
     had died from a drug overdose and that someone had beaten her.
     The officers decided to bring him to the homicide unit for further
     questioning. When placing [Duboise] in handcuffs, the officers
     noticed that his hands were swollen with several marks on his
     right hand. Officer Van Sciver observed that [Duboise’s] hands
     were so swollen that they were almost double their normal size.

     On April 4 and on May 20, 2014, Dustin Taylor gave statements
     to Philadelphia Police detectives.    He told detectives that
     [Duboise] came to his apartment on the night of April 3, 2014 (the
     night before Hall was found dead), and that his hands were
     swollen – his right hand was so puffy, it resembled “genetically
     modified chickens.” Taylor said he joked about [Duboise’s]
     swollen hands, but [Duboise] did not respond, something Taylor
     found strange.

     Taylor also informed detectives that [Duboise] and Hall had
     domestic problems and that [Duboise] had complained to Taylor
     several times about Hall stealing drugs (crack and heroin) from
     him. [Duboise] also told Taylor that he would kick and punch
     Hall’s ankles and legs and verbally abuse her, calling her a bitch,
     whore, and crack whore. Taylor said that two days before
     [Duboise] slept at his house, [Duboise] and Hall had a domestic
     incident after Hall stole $20.00 from [Duboise] and used it to get
     high.

     Recovered video footage from surveillance cameras located
     diagonally across and down the street from [Duboise] and Hall’s
     apartment showed an individual leaving at or about 8:20 p.m. on
     April 3, 2014, and returning to the apartment the next morning at
     or about 7:27 a.m. No one was seen on the video entering or
     exiting the property after the individual left. When [a] detective
     brought [Duboise] into the Homicide Unit on April 4, his clothing
     was consistent with the clothing worn by the individual in the
     video—a black, white, and grey checkered shirt with a hoodie.

     Francis Curry, [Duboise’s] cell mate while incarcerated in April or
     May 2014 at the George W. Hill Correctional Facility in Delaware
     County, testified that after [Duboise] was arrested for Hall’s
     murder, he told Curry that right before Hall died, he and Hall

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       argued over a phone call from another male and that Hall had
       stolen money for pills (Xanax). [Duboise] told Curry that he hit
       Hall a couple times and gave her more pills. He claimed that after
       Hall ingested the pills, she made gargling sounds and asked for
       [Duboise] to call 911, but he refused. [Duboise] claimed that he
       left Hall in the apartment; when he returned, she was dead.

Trial Court Opinion, 9/8/16, at 2-5 (footnotes and citations to record omitted).

       In December 2014, Duboise moved to have his trial attorney removed

from the case and sought to proceed pro se. On February 12, 2015, the trial

court granted Duboise’s request to proceed pro se.3 A five-day jury trial was

held in the matter in April 2016. On April 12, 2016, Duboise was found guilty

of the above-stated offenses. On June 1, 2016, prior to sentencing, Duboise

filed a motion for judgment of acquittal4 challenging the sufficiency and weight

of the evidence, as well as alleging prosecutorial misconduct. On June 27,

2016, the court sentenced Duboise to an aggregate term of 22½ to 45 years’

imprisonment.5

____________________________________________

3 W. Fred Harrison, Jr., Esquire, was appointed as standby counsel for
Duboise’s trial in April 2015. Prior to that date, Duboise had other standby
counsel who was removed at Duboise’s request in April 2015.

4 We note that “[u]nder extraordinary circumstances, when the interests of
justice require, the trial judge may, before sentencing, hear an oral motion .
. . for a judgment of acquittal[.]” Pa.R.Crim.P. 704(B)(1). The judge shall
decide such a motion “before imposing sentence, and shall not delay the
sentencing proceeding in order to decide it.” Id. at 704(B)(2). Duboise orally
renewed this motion immediately prior to sentencing, and that the court
denied it on the record. See N.T. Sentencing, 6/27/16, at 29.

5Specifically, the court sentenced Duboise to 20-40 years’ imprisonment for
murder, and a consecutive sentence of 2½-5 years in prison for PIC.

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       Duboise filed a timely notice of appeal and court-ordered Pa.R.A.P.

1925(b) concise statement of errors complained of on appeal.             Duboise

presents the following issues for our review:

       (1)    Was the evidence presented at trial legally sufficient to
              support the jury’s verdict beyond a reasonable doubt that
              [Duboise] committed [t]hird-degree murder where the
              evidence presented by the Commonwealth to establish
              [Duboise’s] guilt was at least equally consistent with his
              innocence?

       (2)    Was the evidence presented at trial legally sufficient to
              support the jury’s guilty verdict on the charge [of]
              Possession of an Instrument of Crime?

       (3)    Was the jury’s guilty verdict for the charge of [t]hird-degree
              murder against the weight of the evidence?[6]

       (4)    Did the trial court abuse its discretion, in violation of
              Pennsylvania Rules of Evidence, Rules, 402, 602, 802, by
              allowing the Commonwealth to admit into evidence Angela
              Starks’ testimony regarding declarations previously made
              by Ms. Hall over [Duboise’s] objection and did not St[ar]ks’
              testimony constitute inadmissible hearsay?

       (5)    Did the trial court abuse its discretion, in violation of
              Pennsylvania Rules of Evidence, Rule 702, by allowing
              Detective Crone to offer a medical and scientific opinion
              about the nature and causes of the victim’s injuries over
              [Duboise’s] objection and did not [sic] Crone qualify as an
              expert in forensic pathology?

       (6)    Did the trial court abuse its discretion, in violation of
              [Duboise’s] state and federal constitutional rights to due
              process of law, his right to a fair [trial]; his right to a
              compulsory process in obtaining witnesses in his favor and
              his right to present a meaningful defense, by refusing to
____________________________________________

6 We note that Duboise has preserved his challenge to the weight of the
evidence. See Pa.R.Crim.P. 607(A)(2) (“A claim the verdict was against the
weight of the evidence shall be raised with the trial judge . . . by written
motion at any time before sentencing.”).

                                           -5-
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           provide him funds to employ expert witnesses including, a
           forensic pathologist, expert in blood splattering and a video
           expert?

     (7)   Did the trial court abuse its discretion in violation of
           [Duboise’s] state and federal constitutional rights to due
           process of law, his right to a fair trial; his right to . . . present
           a meaningful defense and his right to a compulsory
           disclosure, by conducting an ex parte hearing without him
           present, sealing police records from the defense and did not
           the records contain exculpatory value?

     (8)   Did the prosecutor withhold exculpatory or impeachment
           video evidence in violation of [Duboise’s] state and federal
           constitutional rights to due process of law and his right to a
           fair trial, and did the undisclosed video evidence have a
           bearing on [Duboise’s] guilt or innocence?

     (9)   Did the trial court abuse its discretion, in violation of
           Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence Rule 404(b), by allowing the
           Commonwealth to admit into evidence the victim’s medical
           records and [were] not the records relevant to the murder
           of the victim?

     (10) Did the trial court abuse its discretion, when it allowed
          Officer Reeder to testify at trial and did not the trial court
          err when it ruled that [Duboise] elicited hearsay testimony
          from Officer Reeder?

     (11) Did the trial court abuse its discretion, when it ruled that
          [Duboise] elicited hearsay testimony from Detective Sierra?

     (12) Was Dr. Collins’ testimony at trial contradictory and beyond
          the scope of his opinion in his pre-trial report (Hall’s post-
          mortem exam) with respect to the date and time the victim
          sustained her fatal injuries?

     (13) Whether the method of prosecution used by the
          Commonwealth against [Duboise] was malicious and in bad
          faith, when the prosecutor elicited misleading testimony
          from Dr. Collins about the time when the victim’s murder
          occurred to mislead the jury?

                                       -6-
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       In his first three issues on appeal, Duboise challenges the sufficiency

and weight of the evidence. After reviewing the parties’ briefs, relevant case

law and certified record, we affirm those three issues based upon the trial

court opinion authored by the Honorable Barbara A. McDermott.7            See

Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) Opinion, 9/8/15, at 13-18.

       In his fourth issue on appeal, Duboise contends that the trial court

erroneously admitted Angela Starks’ testimony regarding statements the

victim made about him punching her in the stomach. Duboise argues this was

inadmissible hearsay testimony that is not subject to a hearsay exception. We

disagree.

       Hearsay testimony is a statement, other than one made by the

declarant, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted, and

is generally inadmissible at trial. See Pa.R.E. 801(c), 802. However, excited

utterances and statements relating to the declarant's existing state of mind

are admissible exceptions to the hearsay rule.      See Pa.R.E. 803(2), (3).

Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 803(2) defines an excited utterance as “[a]

statement relating to a startling event or condition made while the declarant

was under the stress of excitement caused by the event or condition.” The

Pennsylvania Supreme Court has explained that “it must be shown first, that

[the declarant] had witnessed an event sufficiently startling and so close in

point of time as to render her reflective thought processes inoperable and,
____________________________________________

7We instruct the parties to attach a copy of the trial court’s decision in the
event of further proceedings in the matter.

                                           -7-
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second, that her declarations were a spontaneous reaction to that startling

event.” Commonwealth v. Sherwood, 982 A.2d 483, 496 (Pa. 2009).

      Instantly, the trial court admitted Starks’ testimony, finding that:

      Starks’ testimony was not offered for the truth of the matter.
      Starks’ testimony about Hall informing her that [Duboise]
      punched her in the stomach was offered to show the reason why
      Starks dialed 911. Moreover, the court properly precluded any
      conversation between Starks and Hall that took place after Starks
      called 911. N.T. 4/5/[]16[,] at 46-55.

Trial Court Opinion, 9/8/15, at 6.

      Here, Starks testified that she received a phone call from Hall in the

afternoon on February 22, 2014. When she answered the phone, Hall was

“crying [and s]he sounded frightened, desperate. Just really it was a fear

response, scared, like she needed help.” N.T. Trial, 4/5/16, at 52-53. She

testified that Hall’s tone was like she was “hurt, [a] scared kind of thing,” id.

at 53, and that she told Starks that her boyfriend “wouldn’t stop punching

[her] in the stomach.” Id. at 53-54. We find that Hall’s statement to Starks

was made at a time when she believed that Duboise was trying to seriously

hurt her and, thus, that it qualifies as an “excited utterance” hearsay exception

under Rule 803(2).      Sherwood, supra. See also Commonwealth v.

Luster, 71 A.3d 1029 (Pa. Super. 2013) (where witness testified that victim

called him on cell phone while riding in car with defendant and that victim was

crying, said she was scared, and that defendant was trying to kill her,

statement properly admitted as excited utterance under Rule 803(2)).

                                      -8-
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Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court did not err in admitting the

statement.8

       Duboise next contends that the trial court improperly allowed a non-

expert, Detective James Crone of the Philadelphia Police Department, to

testify about medical and scientific matters relating to the nature and cause

of Hall’s injuries. Specifically, Duboise argues that Officer Crone’s testimony

regarding ligature marks and burn marks on Hall’s body should have been

excluded.

       Instantly, Officer Crone was the first police officer to arrive at the

victim’s apartment after it was determined to be a crime scene. During direct

examination the following exchange took place:

       Officer Crone: A physical examination of the decedent revealed
       that she had bruising on her entire body covering her face, neck,
       arms, shoulders, chest, back, buttocks, stomach and legs. She
       also had what I believed to be ligature marks.

____________________________________________

8 To the extent that the trial court admitted Starks’ testimony as relevant to
show motive, malice intent and ill-will towards the victim under Pa.R.E.
404(b)(2), we note that the testimony was plainly relevant to Duboise’s
motive only to the degree that the hearsay statements were true. See
Commonwealth v. Moore, 937 A.2d 1062 (Pa. 2007). Moreover to the
extent that the testimony was admitted as state of mind evidence under Rule
803(3), we note that this exception relates to the state of mind of the
declarant, not the defendant. See Pa.R.Crim.P. 803(3) (exception to hearsay
rule for a “statement of the declarant's then existing state of mind, emotion,
sensation, or physical condition, such as intent, plan, motive, design, mental
feeling, pain and bodily health.”) (emphasis added). Because Duboise’s
defense strategy was to establish reasonable doubt with regard to the person
who inflicted the fatal wounds to Hall, there was no issue concerning the
victim’s state of mind. Moore, supra.

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        Duboise: Objection to the ligature marks.

        Court: Members of the jury, he is testifying to what he saw. He
        can give what [he saw] based upon his experience, but, again,
        he’s not an expert, so you have to make a factual determination
        based on other evidence whether that’s what it is.

              So it’s partially sustained, the objection.

        District Attorney: So you described these as ligature marks.
        Without using what I guess would be medical terms, what did you
        see around the neck that led you to think that’s what they were?

        Officer Crone: The victim on both her right and left side of the
        neck had horizontal marks which would have been consistent with
        having some type of object wrapped around her neck consistent
        with strangulation. One of the things that we had looked for inside
        of that particular bedroom was any object that was nearby that
        may have been used to strangle the victim.

N.T. Trial, 4/6/16, at 100-101. Counsel then showed the jury a photograph,

admitted as Exhibit 28, showing horizontal marks on the right side of Hall’s

neck which Officer Crone confirmed were the “ligature marks” he referred to

in his testimony. Id. at 101-102. The district attorney then stated that Crone

was not an expert with regard to what might have caused those marks on the

victim. Id. 102. Finally, Officer Crone testified that, because of the marks on

Hall’s neck, as a detective he searched the bedroom for anything that might

have been wrapped around the victim’s neck to cause those injuries. Id. at

103.9

        Instantly, Officer Crone’s testimony regarding marks on the victim’s

neck was nothing more than observations made by a homicide detective in

____________________________________________

9The medical expert’s report noted that there were “band-like abrasions” on
Hall’s neck and that the cause of death, in part, was due to strangulation.

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the course of his business. As the trial court notes in its Rule 1925(a) opinion,

“a homicide detective’s primary purpose, along with the Crime Scene Unit, ‘is

to process the scene, to make all relevant observations about what is there

and what might have occurred, [and to] photograph, document[,] and recover

evidence.” Trial Court Opinion, at 9/8/15, at 17, citing N.T. Trial, 4/6/16, at

96. Moreover, the court clearly instructed the jury that Officer Crone is not

an expert in forensic pathology and that his testimony was offered solely to

explain what he observed at the crime scene and to explain his method of

investigation at a crime scene.         We find no error in the admission of his

testimony.

       Duboise next argues that the trial court violated his state and federal

constitutional rights to due process and equal protection, right to a fair trial,

and compulsory process when it denied him funds to employ expert witnesses,

including a forensic pathologist, an expert in blood splattering, and a forensic

video analyst.10

____________________________________________

10To support this claim, Duboise relies, in large part, on Ake v. Oklahoma,
470 U.S. 68 (1985), which held:

       [W]hen a defendant demonstrates to the trial judge that his sanity
       at the time of the offense is to be a significant factor at trial, the
       State must, at a minimum, assure the defendant access to a
       competent psychiatrist who will conduct an appropriate
       examination and assist in evaluation, preparation, and
       presentation of the defense. This is not to say, of course, that the
       indigent defendant has a constitutional right to choose a

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       On April 28, 2015, the trial court granted Duboise’s request to retain

experts. As of May 14, 2015, Duboise had not yet retained an expert or an

investigator. On July 20, 2015, the court entered an order permitting Duboise

to retain, at the cost of up to $4,000 each, a forensic pathologist and crime

lab. Order, 7/20/15. On August 18, 2015, the court entered another order

granting Duboise approval to hire a defense investigation service at the cost

of up to $3,000; the order specified that the court would not pay for the

service until Duboise “present[ed] proof of an invoice for said services and

[until the invoice was] approv[ed] by a judge of the Court.” Order, 8/18/15.

Both the July and August 2015 orders were entered without prejudice to

stand-by counsel’s right to apply to the court for additional funds in the future

upon a showing of need.

       On September 29, 2015, Duboise filed a pro se continuance motion

seeking 60 days to secure a new pathologist, as the pathologist he had

retained had become unavailable. On November 2, 2015, the court granted

Duboise’s motion for extra time to secure a pathologist, giving him until

December 15, 2015, to submit his expert reports. On December 7, 2015,

Duboise filed another pro se continuance motion seeking until January 15,

____________________________________________

       psychiatrist of his personal liking or to receive funds to hire his
       own.

Id. at 83. Ake, however, limits its holding to indigent defendants being
entitled to funding for psychiatric experts in the limited circumstances where
the defendant’s sanity at the time of the offense is a significant issue at trial.
Here, Duboise’s sanity was never an issue at the time of the offense or at trial.

                                          - 12 -
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2016, to permit his new pathologist additional time to conduct a full

examination of defense reports, alleging that the court-appointed investigator

had misled him to believe that a new pathologist had been retained.

      Appointment of expert witnesses and the provision of public funds to

hire them to assist in the defense against criminal charges are decisions within

the trial court’s sound discretion and will not be reversed absent an abuse

thereof.    Commonwealth v. Wholaver, 989 A.2d 883, 894 (Pa. 2010).

Indigent defendants have a right to access the same resources as non-indigent

defendants in criminal proceedings.    Commonwealth v. Konias, 136 A.3d

1014 (Pa. Super. 2016). “The State has an affirmative duty to furnish indigent

defendants the same protections accorded those financially able to obtain

them. Procedural due process guarantees that a defendant has the right to

present competent evidence in his defense, and the state must ensure that an

indigent defendant has fair opportunity to present his defense.” Id. at 1019.

In Commonwealth v. Carnutte, 871 A.2d 839, 842 (Pa. Super. 2005), our

Court noted that “[t]here must be some showing as to the content and

relevancy of the proposed expert testimony before such a request will be

granted.”

      Here, Duboise acknowledges that the trial judge granted his motion to

hire expert witnesses, with monetary limits for the cost of each expert.

Duboise also acknowledges that the court granted him a one-month

continuance to secure those experts.     Duboise argues that that trial court

deprived him of his right to a fair trial when it did not pay for a pathologist.

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While the court may not have ultimately paid for a pathologist for Duboise’s

defense, the court permitted him to secure one and offered to pay up to

$4,000 for him to retain one. The court, however, set a deadline by which the

Duboise had to submit proof of the expert’s services (an invoice) to be

approved by a trial judge before he would be given the funds.

      We find no abuse of the trial court’s discretion where it specifically

ordered that Duboise be provided funds to hire several experts at the expense

of the state, with the condition that he submit invoices before he receives the

money. Duboise had the fair opportunity to hire those experts and, had he

abided by the reasonable conditions set by the court, he would have had them

at his disposal during trial.   Moreover, we are not convinced that Duboise

demonstrated the need for a pathologist or forensic video analyst.

      Here, Duboise claims that a pathologist was needed for his defense

because “the Commonwealth . . . presented insufficient and incompetent

testimony from its pathologist that testified that he ultimately ‘didn’t [k]now’

when Ms. Hall sustained her fatal injuries.” Appellant’s Brief, at 42. He is

mistaken.   Doctor Gary Collins, former Deputy Chief Medical Examiner of

Philadelphia, testified for the Commonwealth that Hall could have been fatally

injured as early as 5:00 p.m. on the evening of April 3 or as late as the early

morning hours of April 4th. Although Collins listed Hall’s time of death on the

death certificate as 7:30 a.m. on the morning of April 4, he did so because

the time of death is when the deceased is pronounced dead, such as at the

scene of the crime when the paramedics found Hall’s lifeless body. Doctor

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Collins, however, distinguished this time from the actual time that Hall died,

which is determined after a post-mortem exam.            Thus, Duboise did not

demonstrate that he needed a forensic pathologist where there was no

substantial question over the time when Hall sustained her fatal injuries.

      Duboise also contends that he needed a forensic video analyst because

there was a “substantial question about whether or not video footage showing

the front door of Hall’s apartment displayed an intruder enter into Hall’s

apartment after 8:20 p[.]m[.], on April 3, 2014.” Appellant’s Brief, at 44.

Specifically, Duboise is referring to video footage introduced by the

Commonwealth showing the front door area and surrounding street area of

Hall’s apartment building on the evening of April 3 and the morning of April 4.

      At trial, Detective Thornsten Lucke testified that the video footage

outside Hall’s apartment building taken during the evening hours presented a

blurrier image than the footage taken during the day. N.T. Jury trial, 4/5/16,

at 100-101. Despite this fact, the expert testified that he did not see anyone

leave or enter Hall’s apartment after 8:20 p.m. on April 3 or before 7:00 a.m.

on April 4. Here, Duboise had the burden to show that such an expert was

necessary for him to present an adequate defense, the cost of retaining such

an expert, and that he was unable to pay for that necessary expert. Konias,

136 A.3d at 1019; Commonwealth v. Cannon, 954 A.2d 1222, 1227 (Pa.

Super. 2008) (“Cannon failed to introduce any evidence as to the cost of

retaining an expert to conduct an evaluation and to testify on his behalf. This

is a critical element of proof in a claim of indigency.”). The fact that Detective

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Lucke could not be 100 percent sure that nobody entered or left Hall’s

apartment during the relevant time period does not mean that there was a

“substantial question” about whether an intruder came in or left during that

time. In fact, Detective Lucke testified he “made 100 percent effort to view it

over and over and over and over again to see somebody come or go, but [he]

didn’t [see anybody].”     N.T. Jury Trial, 4/5/16, at 131.       Under such

circumstances we could alternatively find that Duboise did not show the

required necessity for the requested experts. Carnutte, supra.

      In his next several issues on appeal, Duboise contends that the trial

court improperly withheld exculpatory evidence, including raw video footage

of the front door of the victim’s apartment and police reports of the victim’s

criminal history and prior domestic abuse incidents with other men.      After

reviewing the parties’ briefs, the relevant law, and the certified record on

appeal, we conclude that Judge McDermott’s opinion adequately disposes of

these issues on appeal. See Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) Opinion, 9/8/15, at 9-11.

      Duboise also argues that the trial court improperly admitted Hall’s

medical records and Officer Reeder’s testimony as impermissible evidence of

prior bad acts under Pa.R.E. 404(b).

      Pursuant to Rule 404:

      (b) Crimes, Wrongs or Other Acts.

         (1) Prohibited Uses. Evidence of a crime, wrong, or other
         act is not admissible to prove a person's character in order
         to show that on a particular occasion the person acted in
         accordance with the character.

                                    - 16 -
J-S79020-17

         (2) Permitted Uses. This evidence may be admissible for
         another purpose, such as proving motive, opportunity,
         intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, absence of
         mistake, or lack of accident. In a criminal case this evidence
         is admissible only if the probative value of the evidence
         outweighs its potential for unfair prejudice.

         (3) Notice in a Criminal Case. In a criminal case the
         prosecutor must provide reasonable notice in advance of
         trial, or during trial if the court excuses pretrial notice on
         good cause shown, of the general nature of any such
         evidence the prosecutor intends to introduce at trial.

Pa.R.E. 404(b).   "In order for other crimes evidence to be admissible, its

probative value must outweigh its potential for unfair prejudice against the

defendant, Pa.R.E. 404(b)(2), and a comparison of the crimes proffered must

show a logical connection between them and the crime currently charged."

Commonwealth v. Hicks, 156 A.3d 1114, 1125 (Pa. 2017) (plurality).

      Instantly, Hall’s medical records and Officer Reeder’s testimony showing

that Hall had been physically assaulted by Duboise on numerous prior

occasions were properly admitted under Rule 404(b). There was a clear logical

connection between the proffered bad acts and the underlying charges, where

there were substantial similarities in the types of injuries Hall suffered, the

way in which she was beaten, and the areas of her body that sustained the

fatal injuries. The logical connection between the evidence and the current

crimes also strengthened the case that Duboise was the perpetrator.

Moreover, the probative value of the evidence clearly outweighed its potential

for unfair prejudice where the Commonwealth's case was otherwise based

largely on circumstantial evidence. Pa.R.E. 404(b)(2); Hicks, supra. Thus,

we find that the court did not err in admitting the evidence.

                                     - 17 -
J-S79020-17

      Duboise contends that the court violated his right to a fair trial when it

allowed hearsay testimony from Detective Sierra by permitting him to read

statements that Hall had made to hospital staff that she had been physically

assaulted by her boyfriend. He contends that Detective Sierra’s testimony did

not constitute fair response to his cross-examination of the detective.

      On redirect examination, the assistant district attorney asked Detective

Sierra if he had had “a chance to look at the language that [the victim] used

in all of her own medical records to suggest . . . there was a domestic problem

between her and the defendant?”        Id. at 66.    Duboise objected to the

question; the court overruled the objection, noting “[y]ou[, Duboise] opened

the door. You asked about what was said in the medical records. Up until

that point, the [c]ourt ruled it was not to come in.”     Id. Detective Sierra

replied, “[t]here was information when [s]he went to the hospital that her

boyfriend had beat on her.” Id. at 66-67.

      It is well established that if a defendant delves into what would be

objectionable testimony on the part of the Commonwealth, then the

Commonwealth      can    probe    further    into   the   objectionable   area.

Commonwealth v. Harris, 884 A.2d 920, 928 (Pa. Super. 2005). See also

Commonwealth v. Bey, 439 A.2d 1175, 1178 (Pa. Super. 1982) (holding

where defendant opens door to what otherwise might be objectionable

testimony, Commonwealth may probe further to determine veracity of

statement).

                                    - 18 -
J-S79020-17

      We agree with the trial court that the assistant district attorney’s

question on redirect was a fair response to the following questioning of

Detective Sierra by Duboise on cross-examination:

      Duboise: Now, April 2, where the decedent was transported to
      Temple Hospital, you read through a record, correct?

                                  *    *    *

      Det. Sierra: I didn’t look at them now.

                                  *    *    *

      Duboise: So you wouldn’t know that the records reflect that the
      decedent was treated negative for head injuries or any face
      injuries, correct?

      Det. Sierra: I would have to look at the actual document.

      Duboise: The actual diagnosis that day, Detective[,] was alleged
      assault, alcohol and drug abuse and his recommendation was an
      outpatient treatment for the decedent.          She was very
      uncooperative and was lethargic, slurring her words. . . .

                                  *    *    *

      Duboise: You recollect the record says alleged assault?

      Det. Sierra: Without looking at the actual document, I know that
      some alleged drug abuse was mentioned in the medical records.

N.T. Trial, 4/8/16, at 36-37.

      The Commonwealth’s line of questioning regarding the abusive

relationship between Hall and Duboise, as well as the injuries she sustained

by her boyfriend, as documented in Hall’s hospital records, were made in fair

response to Duboise’s questioning on cross-examination. We find no abuse

of discretion. Harris, supra; Bey, supra.

                                   - 19 -
J-S79020-17

      In his final two issues on appeal, Duboise argues that Dr. Collins’ trial

testimony violated Pa.R.C.P. 4003.5, where it was not only contradictory, but

also beyond the scope of his opinion in the victim’s autopsy report with respect

to the time she sustained her fatal injuries.      Duboise also claims that the

Commonwealth committed prosecutorial misconduct when the district

attorney intentionally elicited misleading testimony from Dr. Collins about the

date and time that Hall sustained her fatal injuries.        After reviewing the

parties’ briefs, relevant case law and the certified record, we find that the trial

court’s opinion properly disposes of this issue on appeal.         See Pa.R.A.P.

1925(a) Opinion, 9/8/15, at 12-13,

      Judgment of sentence affirmed.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 2/6/18

                                      - 20 -
                        ------ - -            --1       ------                                �1- ·- -----             .   -··- ---.:.......:...;...
                                                                                                  Circulated 01/22/2018 10:59 AM
                                       IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
                                  FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                                           CRIMINAL TRIAL DIVISION

        COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                                    : CP-51-CR-0011415-2014

                                                                             Fl LED Rece��i:W��For
                   v.
                                                                              SEP O 8 2016              SEP O 8 2015
    I
    I   RYAN DUBOISE
                                                                       Criminal Appeals UnicnminaJ AooeaJs urut
                                                                     First Judicial District �Judicial' Oistrict ot PA
I
l
I                                                            OPINION
I       McDermott, J.                                                                                  September 8, 2016

I       Procedural History

                   On August 5, 2014, the Defendant, Ryan Duboise, was arrested and charged with Murder

        and Possession of an Instrument of Crime (''PIC"). On February 2, 2015, the Honorable

        Benjamin Lerner granted the Defendant's request to proceed pro se.1 On April 4, 2016, the

        Defendant appeared before this Court and elected to be tried by a jury. On April 12, 2016, the

        jury returned guilty verdicts to Third-Degree Murder and PIC.

                   Sentencing was deferred for the completion and review of pre-sentence and mental health

        reports. On June 27, 2016, this Court sentenced the Defendant to twenty to forty years

        imprisonment for Third-Degree Murder and a consecutive sentence of two-and-a-half to five

        years for PIC, for a total sentence of twenty-two-and-a-half to forty-five years imprisonment. On

        July 5, 2016, the Defendant filed a timely notice of appeal and on July 26, 2016, filed a Rule

        1925(b) statement.

                                                                                IIII IIII7496532711
                                                                                           IIIIIIII Ill 111111
        I   On April 28, 2015, Judge Lerner appointed W. Fred Harrison Jr., Esq. as standby counsel.
    ---- - --------- --�-                                                    ----+ . . ·----- .. -�--

        From the time Monet Hall and the Defendant began dating, until the moment the

Defendant murdered her, the two had a violent and abusive relationship. 2 In January 2014, Hall

and the Defendant moved into an apartment on Allegheny Avenue in Philadelphia. Not long

after, on February 5, 2014, Hall sought treatment at Mercy Fitzgerald Hospital for rib injuries.

On February 22, 2014, Hall's cousin, Angela Starks, called 911 after a crying Hall called her and

told her that the Defendant would not stop punching her in the stomach.3 On March 4, 2014,

Hall was treated at Temple University Hospital for a closed head injury, contusions, and a facial

laceration, after being hit in the head with a bottle. N.T. 4/05/2016 at 48-50, 54; N.T. 4/08/2016

at 17-20, 69.

        On the morning of April 2, 2014, two days before Hall was found dead, Police Officer

Christopher Reeder and his partner responded to a 911 call for a person with a weapon on

Allegheny Avenue. The police encountered Hall who appeared under the influence and

requested transportation to a hospital. She informed police that she had had an altercation with

her boyfriend and that her head hurt. That same day, Hall told Temple University Hospital staff

that her boyfriend physically assaulted, punched, and kicked her. She was offered social service

help but declined. N.T. 4/06/2016 at 73-76, 90; N.T. 4/08/2016 at 67-68.

        On the morning of April 4, 2014, after the Defendant returned to his apartment from

spending the night at his best friend Dustin Taylor's house, he called 911 and reported that he

had found Hall unresponsive. When medics arrived at or around 7:30 a.m., they found Hall

dead, lying naked on a bed. The Defendant claimed that he did not know what had had happened

2 The two met while incarcerated in Delaware County prison in April 2012 and began dating in November 2012.
N.T. 4/05/2016 at48; N.T. 4/0812016 at 56.
3 Hall later told Starks that the police never came into the apartment. N.T. 4/05/2016 at 82.

                                                      2
                                    --    -1--- -- --

to her. After the medics informed the Defendant that Hall was dead, the Defendant swiftly left

the apartment. Outside, he encountered Firefighter Captain Crespo. According to the captain,

the Defendant appeared nervous and uncomfortable and refused to give his name or his relation

to the deceased. The Defendant then walked to the comer and disappeared. N.T. 4/05/2016 at

176-77, 201, 212; N.T. 4/06/2016 at 7-11, 222.

         In the bedroom where Hall was found dead, Officer Guaraldo recovered a broken flat

iron inside a wastebasket near the bed. The flat iron was broken into three pieces: a large piece

connected to a cord, a paddle-like shaped piece, and a small plastic piece. Both Detective Crone

and Officer Guaraldo observed a unique pattern of marks on Hall's buttock and left hip

consistent with the flat iron's shape. After noticing injuries around Hall's neck, they also found

an audio-visual ("AV") cord on the television stand at the foot of the bed. DNA mixtures found

on both the flat iron and on the AV cord were consistent with that of Hall and the Defendant.4

N.T. 4/05/2016 at 151, 153; N.T. 4/06/2016 at 104-06; N.T. 4/08/2016 at 100-27.

         Dr. Gary Collins, former Deputy Chief Medical Examiner of Philadelphia, 5 testified that

Hall had numerous bruising, abrasions, and scrapes about her face, neck, back, torso, chest,

abdomen, shoulders, arms, forearms, hips, legs, and buttock. The cause of death was homicidal

violence, including blunt impact injuries and strangulation. The victim's bodily injuries were

severe enough to cause a large amount of fat emboli to enter the blood vessels of her lungs,

4 A DNA mixture found on the flat iron was almost two million times more likely to occur from the Defendant and
Monet than two unrelated individuals, and 45.98 trillion times more likely to occur than if it had originated from two
random unrelated individuals in the African-American population. A second DNA mixture from the flat iron was
 10.21 thousand times more likely to come from the Defendant and Hall than random unrelated African-American
individuals. A DNA mixture on the cord of the flat iron was almost 46 trillion times more likely to come from the
Defendant and Hall than two random unrelated African-American individuals. And a DNA mixture recovered from
the AV cord was 14.42 quadrillion times more likely to come from the Defendant and Hall than two random
unrelated individuals from the African-American population. N.T. 4/08/2016 at 100-27.
5 Dr. Collins is
                 presently the Chief Medical Examiner for the State of Delaware, Division of Forensic Science.

                                                          3
                               _,_       ·'"-----·-· .. -             - -i----:--- -

preventing proper oxygenation of her blood, which may have contributed to her death. N.T.

4/07/2016 at 160-05.

       After the Defendant returned to the scene, Captain Crespo pointed him out to police.

When questioned by police, the Defendant said that Hall had died from a drug overdose and that

someone had beaten her. The officers decided to bring him to the homicide unit for further

questioning. When placing the Defendant in handcuffs, the officers noticed his hands were

swollen with several marks on his right hand. Officer Van Seiver observed that the Defendant's

hands were so swollen that they were almost double their normal size. N.T. 4/05/2016 at 210-14.

       On April 4 and on May 20, 2014, Dustin Taylor gave statements to Philadelphia Police

detectives. He told detectives that the Defendant came to his apartment on the night of April 3,

2014 (the night before Hall was found dead), and that his hands were swollen-his right hand

was so puffy, it resembled "genetically modified chickens." Taylor said he joked about the

Defendant's swollen hands, but the Defendant did not respond, something Taylor found strange.

N.T. 4/06/2016 at 158, 190-192.

       Taylor also informed detectives that the Defendant and Hall had domestic problems and

that the Defendant had complained to Taylor several times about Hall stealing drugs (crack and

heroin) from him. The Defendant also told Taylor that he would kick and punch Hall's ankles

and legs and verbally abuse her, calling her a bitch, whore, and crack whore. Taylor said that

two days before the Defendant slept at his house, the Defendant and Hall had a domestic incident

after Hall stole $20.00 from the Defendant and used it to get high. N.T. 4/06/2016 at 194-98;

N.T. 4/07/2016 at 50.

       Recovered video footage from surveillance cameras located diagonally across and down

the street from the Defendant and Hall's apartment showed an individual leaving at or about 8:20

                                                4
       --- ·-·--�                 ---1--- -... ·----·---· -t- -·---· ----                              ........_   �

p.m. on April 3, 2014, and returning to the apartment the next morning at or about 7:27 am. No

one was seen on the video entering or exiting the property after the individual left. When

detectives brought the Defendant into the Homicide Unit on April 4, his clothing was consistent

with the clothing worn by the individual in the video-a black, white, and grey checkered shirt

with a hoodie. N.T. 4/05/2016 at 97-112, 217, 224, 228; N.T. 4/08/2016 at 60, 64.

        Francis Curry, the Defendant's cell mate while incarcerated in April or May 2014 at the

George W. Hill Correctional Facility in Delaware County, testified that after the Defendant was

arrested for Hall's murder, he told Curry that right before Hall died, he and Hall argued over a

phone call from another male and that Hall had stolen money for pills (Xanax). The Defendant

told Curry that he hit Hall a couple of times and gave her more pills. He claimed that after Hall

ingested the pills, she made gargling sounds and asked for the Defendant to call 911, but he

refused. The Defendant claimed that he left Hall in the apartment; when he returned, she was

dead. N.T. 4/08/2016 at 158-181.

Discussion

        In his first issue, the Defendant claims that this Court erred in denying the Defendant's

motion in limine to exclude the testimony of Angela Starks. He argued before trial that Starks'

statement to detectives contained inadmissible hearsay. This motion was properly denied as

Starks was to testify at trial.

        In his l 925(b) statement, the Defendant also claims that Starks' trial testimony, that Hall

called her on the phone and said the Defendant would not stop punching her in the stomach,

contained hearsay, lacked relevance and personal knowledge, and was highly prejudicial. This

claim is merit]ess as hearsay is an out-of-court statement offered to prove the truth of the matter

asserted. Commonwealth v. Laich, 777 A.2d 1057, 1060 (Pa. 2001); see also Pa.R.E. 801.

                                                  5
..   ----   -- ·---·--        - .__ -- -l-
                                                                      - -----·- -1-----·-                 -�---- -·

        Starks' testimony was not offered for the truth of the matter. Starks' testimony about Hall

        informing her that the Defendant punched her in the stomach was offered to show the reason

        why Starks dialed 911. Moreover, this Court properly precluded any conversation between

        Starks and Hall that took place after Starks called 911. N.T. 4/05/2016 at 46-55.

                 The Defendant claims that this Court erred in denying the Defendant's motion in /imine

        to exclude Officer Reeder's testimony. The Defendant claims that the officer's testimony

        contained inadmissible hearsay, lacked relevance and personal knowledge, and was highly

        prejudicial. On April 2, 2014, Officer Reeder responded to a 911 call at the Defendant's

        residence. There, he met Monet Hall, who requested to go to the hospital because her head hurt.

        N.T. 4/08/2016 at 72-90. This Court made a pre-trial ruling that evidence of her injuries from

        April 2 was permissible because of t�e closeness in time to her actual death; but statements by

        Hall to police on April 2 that she had an altercation with her boyfriend were inadmissible.

                 On cross-examination, the Defendant suggested to Officer Reeder that drugs or alcohol

        might have been why Hall complained on April 2 about her head. This "opened the door" for the

        Commonwealth to ask Officer Reeder on re-direct what else might have caused her head to hurt,

        which could have included an altercation with her boyfriend. See Commonwealth v. Wharton,

        607 A.2d 710 (Pa. 1992) (finding a conversation between a detective and a witness admissible

        when in response to defense counsel's questioning about other possible suspects that may have

        been overlooked by the police); see also Commonwealth v. Trivigno, 750 A.2d 243, 249 (Pa.

        2000) (A "remark by a prosecutor, otherwise improper, may be appropriate if it is

        in fair response to the argument and comment of defense counsel."). Because the Defendant

        "opened the door," the officer's testimony was admissible. Accordingly, this claim is without

        merit.

                                                        6
    ---�       -- -· -------11---- ----�--
                                                              -�-----. :.-- .   t-·------- s •      --,   ..   --
        The Defendant further challenges admission of medical records from Temple University

Hospital emergency department from April 2, 2014. This Court ruled pre-trial that any mention

of abuse in the records was inadmissible. The Defendant, however, specifically asked Detective

Sierra on cross-examination about notes in the medical records, suggesting that the reason Hall

was at the hospital on this date was for drug use, and nothing more. N.T. 4/08/2016 at 36-37.

On re-direct, this Court permitted the Commonwealth-again, as a fair response-to clarify that

the medical records also indicated that Hall went to the hospital on this date not only for drug

use, but because she was "physically assaulted by her boyfriend. Punched and kicked." N.T.

4/08/2016 at 67. Because the Defendant, again, "opened the door," this testimony was

permissible.

        For his next issue, the Defendant claims that this Court erred in denying the Defendant's

motion in limine to exclude Dustin Taylor's testimony from trial. He argues that Taylor testified

to the Defendant's prior bad acts. At trial, Taylor testified to instances of domestic and verbal

abuse by the Defendant directed at Hall. The Defendant claims that these instances were

inadmissible because he was neither arrested nor charged. He maintains that the testimony was

solely used to taint his character.

       The Defendant's out-of-court statements to Taylor regarding prior domestic incidents

with Hall were admissible by the statements against interest and the party-opponent exceptions

to the hearsay rule. Commonwealth v. Brown, 52 A.3d 1139 (Pa. 2012); Commonwealth v.

Edwards, 903 A.2d 1139, 1157-58 (Pa. 2006); see also Pa.RE. 804(b)(3) and Pa.RE. 803(25).

The Defendant also fails to demonstrate how the alleged unfair prejudice outweighed the

probative value of Taylor's testimony. Courts have consistently held that "[e]vidence

of prior abuse between a defendant and a homicide victim tending to establish motive, intent,

                                                 7

                                                                     -------·-
    - ------- --- .           ---�-1- ---�-
                                                                           ------- -1�---- ---- ·- -----
                                                                                                       ·

    malice, or ill will is generally admissible." Commonwealth v, Passmore, 857 A.2d 697, 711 (Pa

     Super. 2004) (citation omitted). Evidence of prior abuse may show the chain or sequence of

    events that formed the history and natural development of the case. Commonwealth v.

    Drumheller, 808 A.2d 893 (Pa. 2002). Moreover, there is no set time limitation on when

    evidence of prior abuse becomes inadmissible. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Ulatoski, 371 A.2d

     186 (Pa. 1977) (finding evidence of bruising on the defendant's wife admissible even though it

    occurred seventeen months before her death). Lastly, there is no requirement that a defendant be

    arrested or charged with domestic abuse before said evidence is admissible in a homicide trial.

    See, e.g., Commonwealth v, Chandler, 721 A.2d 1040 (Pa. Super. 1998).6 For these reasons, the

    Defendant is not entitled to relief.

             The Defendant argues that this Court deprived him a fair trial when it denied him funds to

    employ expert witnesses, including a pathologist, an expert in blood splattering, a video

    specialist, and an IT expert These issues are unsupported. "Appointment of expert witnesses
i

I   and the provision of public funds to hire them to assist in the defense against criminal charges

    are decisions within the trial court's sound discretion and will not be reversed absent an abuse

    thereof." Commonwealth v. Who/aver, 989 A.2d 883, 894 (Pa 2010) (citing Commonwealth v.

    Albrecht, 720 A.2d 693 (Pa. 1998)). This Court informed the Defendant that any pathologist he

    secured must work within the monetary limits of this Court. After the Defendant could not

    secure a pathologist, this Court granted the Defendant a one-month continuance to locate one.

    The Defendant failed to locate one within the additional time.

    6
      In Commonwealth v. Chandler, where the victim's relatives testified to numerous instances where the victim
    appeared with black eyes, swollen lips, bite marks, and bruises after arguing with appellant, the court offered no
    analysis on whether the appellant was arrested or charged for these instances. Instead, the court held that
    "[e)vidence of Appellant's repeated abuse of [the victim] was properly admitted not only to establish motive and
    malice, but also to show the development of the case and the history of events leading up to the murder." 721 A.2d
    1040 (Pa. Super. 1998).

                                                             8
---------                            -�               -J--- ---- - - -- --,..                        �----
                                                                                                         ·        __., U•---.,....._ ..

           For the reimaging expert witnesses, the Defendant offered no offer of proof or a factual

basis for experts in blood splattering, video, or IT; nor did he demonstrate that any evidence or

information obtained from these witnesses was necessary for the preparation of his defense.

            The Defendant claims that this Court erred in denying the Defendant's pre-trial request to

exhume Hall's body, depriving him of a full and fair opportunity to challenge the

Commonwealth's theory on her death. The Defendant argues that Hall's death was a suicide or

an accidental drug overdose. An exhumation of a body is permitted only under extraordinary

circumstances. Commonwealth v. Kivlin, 406 A.2d 799 (Pa. Super. 1979). Here, the Defendant's

request to exhume Hall's body was groundless and absurd. There was no factual basis that in

any way suggested that Hall died from suicide or an accidental drug overdose. Although Hall

had alprazolam, benzolycgonine (the metabolite of cocaine) in the blood and urine, and very low

levels of cocaine in her vitreous (fluid from the eyes), none of these substances were of levels

that would cause Hall's death. Dr. Collins' autopsy report conclusively found that Hall died

from homicidal violence, not a drug overdose. For these reasons, the claim is devoid of merit.

           The Defendant asserts that the Commonwealth knowingly, deliberately, and intentionally

withheld exculpatory evidence, including: ( 1) video footage of unidentified males entering the

Defendant's apartment when the Defendant was not present; (2) a death certificate of the

victim's post-mortem exam; (3) CAD reports7 and police incident reports from Clifton Heights,

Delaware County; and (4) photographs of the crime scene, which contained images of Hall's

nude body.

           All four of these issues are unfounded. The Commonwealth passed a flash drive during

discovery-provided to the Defendant in prison-which contained all of the raw footage taken

7   A CAD report is a listing of all calls that police respond to at a particular address. N.T. 4/08/2016 at 7.

                                                              9

                                                                                            ---                    ,.__   ·-   ----
                                ---1
                                                                   . - . - - ------+--� ---------

from the video cameras in an around the date of the crime. N.T. 4/05/2016 at 127-134. The

Defendant acknowledged to this Court that he had the flash drive and standby counsel confirmed

that he (standby counsel) observed its footage prior to trial. Id. No one was seen on the video

entering or exiting the property after the Defendant left. N.T. 4/08/2016 at 60, 64.

          The Commonwealth passed the death certificate to the Defendant during discovery. Even

if the Commonwealth had not passed it in discovery, the Defendant fails-as is his burden-to

show its exculpatory value. See Commonwealth v. Koehler, 36 A.3d 121 (Pa. 2012). The death

certificate listed only general information related to Hall's death, all of which was included in

Dr. Collins' examination report, which was provided to the Defendant.

      · The Commonwealth also passed the Philadelphia CAD reports to the Defendant during

discovery. Again, even if they had not been passed, the Defendant fails to show their

exculpatory value-the CAD reports documented police calls to the Defendant's address and

reported inculpatory domestic incidents.

          On July 1, 2015, the Honorable Benjamin Lerner denied the Defendant's request for

Discovery of the Clifton Height reports after concluding that the reports were not discoverable.

Judge Lerner ordered the reports to be sealed. N.T. 7/01/15 at 1-12. These incident reports

included accounts of Hall's involvement in a robbery, a theft, drug possession, and a

miscellaneous report involving a lost child, who Hall claimed she was babysitting. 8 The reports

also included one domestic dispute between Hall and a male friend, another between Hall and a

boyfriend, and three domestic disputes between Hall and her mother. Finally, the reports

documented the Defendant's arrest for drug possession. On September 1, 2016, this Court

* Police discovered that Monet Hall's mother was actually babysitting the child.   The child was located and in fine
health.

                                                         10
    ·--- -··----                      ---- --1--
                                                              ----                ------ --!-----                 _....--�-·-      -------·

         ordered the reports unsealed.9 After careful review, this Court agrees with Judge Lerner's

         conclusion and finds that the reports contain nothing of exculpatory value, nor anything

         necessary for the preparation of the Defendant's case.

                  The Commonwealth, which depicted a naked Hall, were provided to the Defendant in

         pre-trial discovery. The Defendant was not proscribed from reviewing the photographs-both

         standby counsel and Sharon Williams, the Defendant's investigator, were permitted to show the

         photographs to the Defendant in prison, but this Court proscribed the Defendant from retaining

         them."

                  The Defendant claims that Detective Sierra's trial testimony contained inadmissible

         hearsay regarding what the victim's mother (Helena Hall) told him. On direct examination,

         Detective Sierra indicated that he obtained hospital records after talking to the victim's mother,

         but did not repeat the contents of that conversation. N. T. 4/08/2016 at 6. On cross-examination,

         the Defendant asked the detective several times why he was the only suspect and why detectives

         did not investigate any others. N.T. 4/08/2016 at 47-50. The Defendant's line of questioning,

         again, "opened the door" for the Commonwealth to ask on re-direct why the Defendant was a

         suspect. See Wharton, supra. The detective stated on re-direct that the Defendant was a suspect

         because he had learned from the victim's mother that the Defendant and the victim had a volatile

         relationship and that the Defendant had beaten her in the past. This testimony was not offered to

         prove the truth of the matter asserted, but was in fair response to the Defendant's questioning on

         9 The reports were forwarded to the Defendant along with a copy of this Opinion.
I        10
            This Court's ruling was in accordance with 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 5903(a)(8), which states that "No person, knowing

I
         the obscene character of the materials or performances involved, shall possess any obscene material while such
         person is an inmate of any State correctional institution, county prison, regional prison facility or any other type of
         correctional facility." This policy was confirmed with counsel for the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections on
         November 2, 2015.

                                                                    11
                  ________.....__ i __.                  _
                                                                           - ------�---·----- -· - �-- ---

why detectives did not focus on other suspects. The Defendant's claim, therefore, does not

warrant relief.

            The Defendant claims that this Court abused its discretion when it refused to give the jury

a "low-grade expert witness instruction." The Defendant argues that contradictions in the

Commonwealth forensic evidence warranted the instruction. This claim is baseless as this

instruction is no longer in existence.'! The Defendant is also mistaken on this instruction's

applicability. Historically, a "low-grade expert witness instruction" was used and designed

"specifically for dealing with the competency oflay witnesses and psychiatrists testifying on

questions of sanity." Commonwealth v, Hernandez, 615 A.2d 1337, 1344 (Pa. 1992).

Nonetheless, this Court instructed the jury on how to appropriately weigh the expert opinions of

witnesses. See, e.g., N.T. 4/07/2016 at 64. For these reasons, this claim is baseless.

           The Defendant argues that the method of the prosecution by the Commonwealth was

malicious and in bad faith because the Commonwealth knowingly misstated the evidence and

mislead the jury on Hall's time of death. He additionally claims that the Commonwealth had a

duty to correct Dr. Collins' testimony after he stated that he did not know the exact time Hall

died, even though his examination report stated that she died in the "early am." of April 4. N.T.

4/07/2016 at 207.12

           Because Dr. Collins testified that Hall could have died on April 3, the Commonwealth

did not knowingly misstate the evidence nor mislead the jury on Hall's time of death. Next,

although a prosecuting attorney has a duty to correct the testimony of a witness which she knows

11   The 2005 Suggested Jury Instructions eliminated the instruction.
12 See  further discussion on the contents of Dr. Collins' testimony and report in the facts section, supra.

                                                             12
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                                                                                                                           �--             ----.L. -

                 to be false, 13 Dr. Collins' testimony could not in any way be characterized as false, or even

                 misleading-the doctor offered a reasonable explanation for examination report's listed time of

    I            death. He explained that for the sake of documentation, he has to put the ti.me of death as the

I
                 date the person is pronounced dead (which was at or about 7:30 a.m., on April 4) because he

                 cannot guess when the person died, if it is unknown. N.T. 4/07/2016 at 222. He further testified

                 that he made the original assessment in his report (that Hall died in the "early a.m." on April 4)
i
1                "[b]ecause that was the best information that [h]e had at the time." N.T. 4/07/2016 at 210.14 For
I                these reasons, these claims are meritless.

                         Lastly, the Defendant challenges the Third-Degree Murder verdict on weight and

                 sufficiency grounds. He specifically argues that Dr. Collins' examination report establishes that

                the Defendant could not have been present at the time of the murder. In his report, Dr. Collins

                 stated that the time and date of death was the "early am." on April 4, 2014. The Defendant

                 asserts that video footage and cell phone records indicate that he left the apartment at around

                 8:20 p.m. on April 3 and did not return until about 7:30 am. the next morning. The Defendant

                maintains that because he called 911 minutes after arriving at the apartment on the morning of

                April 4, he was not there long enough to have been present when Hall's injuries occurred.

                         Evidence presented at trial is sufficient when, viewed in the light most favorable to the

                 Commonwealth as the verdict winner, the evidence and all reasonable inferences derived

                therefrom are sufficient to establish all elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.

                 Commonwealth v. Baumhammers, 960 A.2d 59, 68 (Pa 2008). The Commonwealth may sustain

                its burden of proving each element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt by means of wholly

                13 It is a well-established
                                            principle that a "prosecuting attorney has an affirmative duty to correct the testimony of a
                witness which he [or she] knows to be false." Commonwealth v. Romansky, 702 A.2d 1064, 1066 (Pa. Super. 1997)
                (citing Commonwealth v. Carpenter, 372 A.2d 806 (Pa. 1977)).
                14 Dr. Collins
                                performed the autopsy on April 5, 2014, the day after Hall was found dead. N.T. 4/07/2016 at 204.

                                                                           13

                                                                                          .   -·------ -
                ------    ·-----   -                 +---·-- - - _:.__ ._ ---:..._ ---1- ·--'---......__.__ ....._--..L._ -'---�-

                circumstantial evidence. Commonwealth v. Estepp, 17 A.3d 939, 943 (Pa. Super. 2011) (citing

                Commonwealth v. Brooks, 7 A.3d 852, 856-57 (Pa. Super. 2010)). The fact-finder is free to

                believe all, part, or none of the evidence, and credibility determinations rest solely within the

                purview of the fact-finder. Commonwealth v, Treiber, 874 A.2d 26, 30 (Pa 2005). The Superior

                Court considers all the evidence admitted, without regard to any claim of wrongly admitted

            I   evidence. Commonwealth v. Kane, 10 A.3d 327, 332 (Pa Super. 2010). The Superior Court will

                also not weigh the evidence or make credibility determinations. Id.

        .
        i
                        Weight of the evidence and sufficiency of the evidence are discrete inquiries. An
        I
        !       argument that the verdict is contrary to the weight of the evidence concedes that there is
        I
        I
        I
                sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict, but contends that the verdict is against the weight of the

                evidence. Commonwealth v, Davis, 799 A.2d 860, 865 (Pa Super. 2002). An allegation that the

                verdict is against the weight of the evidence is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court.

                Commonwealth v. Dupre, 866 A.2d 1089, 1101 (Pa. Super. 2005) (citing Commonwealth v.

                Sullivan, 820 A.2d 795, 805-06 (Pa. Super. 2003)).

                       For a weight of the evidence claim to succeed, the test is whether the verdict is so

                contrary to the evidence as to shock one's sense of justice. Commonwealth v, Diggs, 949 A.2d

                873, 879-80 (Pa. 2008). This is a lofty standard as generally this threshold is only met when

                "the figure of Justice totters on her pedestal," or when "the jury's verdict, at the time of its

                rendition, causes the trial judge to lose his [ or her] breath, temporarily, and causes him [or her] to

                almost fall from the bench; [only] then it is truly shocking to the judicial conscience."

                Commonwealth v. Davidson, 860 A.2d 575, 582 (Pa Super. 2004) (quoting Nudelman v.

                Gilbride, 647 A.2d 233, 237 (Pa. 1994)). To determine whether this standard is met, appellate

                review is "limited to whether the trial judge's discretion was properly exercised, and relief will

.,!
                                                                  14

.,  I

I
I
··--------            -----   ---      ---1 - -·---··          ----
                                                                  ·   - -·-- .... .:._.,.:. __,__   '----..-.   .....   __......   . . ·-·---- ....

      only be granted where the facts and inferences of record disclose a palpable abuse of discretion."

      Id. Hence, this Court's denial of a motion for a new trial based on a weight of the evidence

      claim "is the least assailable of its rulings." Id. at 880.

              Third-degree murder is when a person commits a killing that is "neither intentional nor

      committed during the perpetration of a felony, but contains the requisite malice. Malice is not

      merely ill-will but, rather, wickedness of disposition, hardness of heart, recklessness of

      consequences, and a mind regardless of social duty." Commonwealth v, Morris, 958 A.2d 569,

      576 (Pa. Super. 2008) (internal citations omitted); see also 18 Pa.C.S. § 2502(c).

             In the case at bar, sufficient evidence established that the Defendant had ample

      opportunity to murder Monet Hall. In spite of not knowing the precise time, Dr. Collins offered

      a twelve-hour window for Hall's time of death. He agreed at trial that Hall could have been

      beaten to death at 5 p.m. on April 3, fourteen hours before she was pronounced dead; or that she

      could have been beaten before 8:30 p.m. on April 3, but did not die right away. N.T. 4/07/2016 at

      218-19. The Defendant acknowledges, and the video footage indicates, that he was present in

      the apartment at or around these times.

             The evidence was more than sufficient to convict the Defendant of Third-Degree Murder.

      Hall was found strangled/beaten to death, lying naked on her bed, in an apartment she shared

      with the Defendant, who had a history of domestic abuse. The Defendant had access to that

      apartment as well as the opportunity to commit the crime. Following the murder, the

      Defendant's best friend noticed his hands were so swollen that they resembled "genetically

      modified chickens." Including his odd encounter with Captain Crespo after medics pronounced

      Hall dead, and his inculpatory statements to his cellmate, the jury had more than sufficient

      evidence to find him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

                                                          15

                                                                           --·-                                         --- �---··
          -�------                  -- -- I- -- ·-- --'"------
                                                                                                            .....   --·-

               The Defendant's weight of the evidence claim for Third-Degree Murder also must fail, as

        the verdict was consistent with the evidence and a far cry from shocking one's sense of justice.

        The record reflects that the Commonwealth presented extensive testimony along with ample

    I
        physical evidence that the Defendant-with malice-beat and killed Monet Hall. The verdict

        indicates that the jury chose to credit this evidence against the Defendant's theory of the case.

    •

I
               Finally, the Defendant claims that there was insufficient evidence for the PIC conviction

        for the AV cord and the flat iron. He asserts that the Commonwealth did not lay a proper

1       foundation for their admissibility and based the PIC charge solely on the speculative opinion of
l       Detective Crone, who was not an expert. The Defendant also maintains that his DNA found on

        said items could have been from any time, and not at the time of the murder, as he lived with the

        victim and the items were common household items.

               The "admissibility of evidence is a matter directed to the sound discretion of the trial

        court, and an appellate court may reverse only upon a showing that the trial court abused its

        discretion." Commonwealth v. McCloskey, 835 A.2d 801, 809 (Pa Super. 2003) (quoting

        Commonwealth v. Robinson, 721 A.2d 344, 350 (Pa. 1998), cert. denied, 528 U.S. 1082 (2000)).

        For PIC, the Commonwealth must prove that a defendant possessed an instrument of crime with

        intent to employ it criminally. 18 Pa C.S.A. § 907. An "Instrument of Crime" is: (1) anything

        specially made or specially adapted for criminal use; or (2) anything used for criminal purposes

        and possessed by the actor under circumstances not manifestly appropriate for lawful uses it may

        have. Id. For PIC, criminal intent can be inferred beyond a reasonable doubt from the

        surrounding circumstances. Commonwealth v. Foster, 651 A.2d 163 (Pa. Super. 1994).

               At trial, Detective Crone testified that he collected the AV cord after he observed

        horizontal ligature marks on Hall's neck, which he believed were consistent with strangulation

                                                         16
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                      and having some type of object wrapped around it. N.T. 4/06/2016 at 101.15 He further

                      observed that the marks on Hall's neck had a similar diameter as the AV cord, which was on a

                     television stand at the foot of Hall's bed. Detective Crone said he recovered the broken flat iron

                      inside a wastebasket next to the bed after noticing that the flat iron's shape was consistent with a

                     unique pattern of marks on Hall's hip and buttock. N.T. 4/05/2016 at 150-51; N.T. 4/06/2016 at

                      100-05.

                              This Court instructed the jury that Detective Crone was not an expert but was testifying

                     to what he observed. N.T. 4/06/2016 at 101. As the record clearly reflects, the detective did not
     f
                     offer speculative opinions about the AV cord or the flat iron; rather, he testified on why those
     I
     I                items were retrieved from the apartment. As Detective Crone stated, a homicide detective's
     i
                     primary purpose, along with the Crime Scene Unit, "is to process the scene, to make all relevant

                     observations about what is there and what might have occurred, [and to] photograph,

                     document[,] and recover evidence." N.T. 4/06/2016 at 96.

                              In any event, there was more than sufficient evidence for the jury to find the Defendant

                     guilty of PIC. Although Dr. Collins testified that he was not sure to a reasonable degree of

                     medical certainty that the AV cord or the flat iron were used in the commission of the crime, he

                     agreed that it was possible. N.T. 4/07/2016 at 183-84.16 Further, the Defendant, with a history of

                     domestic abuse, had access at the time of the murder to the room in which Hall and the

                     instruments were found. The instruments were in close proximity to Hall's body and contained

                     DNA consistent with that of the Defendant and Hall. Along with the unique pattern of marks on

                     15 During Detective Crone's testimony, the jury observed photographs that illustrated marks on both sides of Hall's
                     neck. N.T. 4/06/2016 at 100---05.
                     16 Photographs of Hall illustrated that the front of her neck was spared of any marks. Dr. Collins stated that the front
I'
                     of her neck could have been spared because the natural thing a person would do is grab the cord from the front to
                     protect the throat and breathing area. N.T. 4/07/2016 at 183-84.

                                                                                 17
         ----·--·-            --1- --- -             �----·-·----.   -- _,        .,     ...,_

Hall's neck and buttock, consistent with the AV cord and the broken flat iron, respectively, the

jury had sufficient evidence to find the Defendant guilty of PIC.

       For the foregoing reasons, the Defendant's judgment of sentence should be affirmed.

                                                             Barbara A. McDermott, J

                                                18