Court Opinion

ID: 2765563
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-12-31 00:06:06.922394+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:27:24.651334
License: Public Domain

[J-3-2014]
                   IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                              EASTERN DISTRICT

    CASTILLE, C.J., SAYLOR, EAKIN, BAER, TODD, McCAFFERY, STEVENS, JJ.

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, :              No. 680 CAP
                              :
              Appellee        :              Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence
                              :              entered on 10/04/2012* (post-sentence
                              :              motions denied 02/13/2013) in the Court of
         v.                   :              Common Pleas Criminal Division of Adams
                              :              County at No. CP-01-CR-0001180-2010.
                              :
CHRISTOPHER LYNN JOHNSON,     :              *The Trial Court entered an order granting
                              :              motion to reinstate appeal rights nunc pro
              Appellant       :              tunc on 04/16/2013.
                              :
                              :              ARGUED: March 11, 2014
                              :

             OPINION ANNOUNCING THE JUDGMENT OF THE COURT

MR. JUSTICE STEVENS                             DECIDED: December 30, 2014

      This is a direct appeal from the judgment of sentence of death following the

conviction of Appellant Christopher Lynn Johnson (“Appellant”) on one count of

first-degree murder 1 and related charges 2 entered in the Adams County Court of

Common Pleas. For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of sentence.

1 18 Pa.C.S. § 2501.
2  Related charges were Persons not to possess, use, manufacture, control, sell or
transfer firearms, 18 Pa.C.S. § 6105, Firearms not to be carried without a license, 18 Pa.
C.S. § 6106; and Possessing instruments of crime, 18 Pa.C.S. § 907.
       The record reveals that on the night of November 11, 2010, Officer David Grove, a

Deputy Wildlife Conservation Officer of the Pennsylvania Game Commission, was

patrolling the area near Gettysburg National Military Park in Freedom Township, Adams

County when he informed Adams County 911 center at 10:32 p.m. that he had

encountered a vehicle “spotlighting”3 just across from the Battlefield. N.T. 9/24/12 at 56.

According to the 911 operator who testified at trial, Officer Grove reported seconds before

10:34 p.m. that he was prepared to stop the vehicle.            At just after 10:35 p.m., he

transmitted the license plate number of the stopped pick-up truck, which was registered to

Appellant. At just before 10:37 p.m., Officer Grove stated that the driver and passenger

were out of the pickup truck and he was awaiting assistance before proceeding further.

       The next transmission the 911 center would receive came from responding Officer

Daniel Barbagello, who, at seconds before 10:39 p.m., called “officer down, officer down.”

N.T. at 59. Officer Barbagello detected no pulse when he examined Officer Grove, who

had been shot three times, including a fatal shot to the back of the neck.

       For the six hours leading up to that tragic shooting, 27 year-old Appellant and his

19 year-old friend Ryan Laumann had been drinking beer and driving Appellant’s pick-up

truck in the area looking for deer to shoot. N.T. 479-515.            Earlier that afternoon,

Laumann had returned home from work at about 4:00 p.m. to find Appellant waiting there

with the odor of an alcohol called “99 Bananas” on his breath. N.T. at 476. Laumann

perceived Appellant to be “walking fine, talking fine,” though he “seemed to be maybe a

3 “Spotlighting” is a term denoting the sighting of deer or other wildlife at night with the aid
of a high powered spotlight.

                                        [J-3-2014] - 2
little tipsy like buzzed a little bit. He was kind of giggly, more or less just kind of giggled at

the smallest little things a little bit.” N.T. at 477, 478. Laumann, a licensed hunter,

brought his compound bow with him and rode passenger as Appellant drove capably, in

Laumann’s opinion, for the approximately five minute drive to the Johnson’s hunting cabin

off Orrtanna Road. N.T. at 479-480.

       After drinking a beer or two, the two men shot Laumann’s compound bow, and

Appellant’s crossbow and .22 long rifle with a scope to make sure they were still “sighted

in.” N.T. at 480. They walked along the tree line and climbed up into their tree stand, a

three to four foot wide landing accessible by an 18-step, leaning metal ladder, N.T. at

488. Lauman carried his compound bow up the ladder while Appellant made his way up

the ladder carrying his crossbow without any problem. N.T. at 489. The two sat on the

tree stand until dark without any safety restraints, drank beer, and watched for deer. N.T.

at 480. Over the course of their time there, Lauman saw Appellant drink six or seven

cans from a 12-pack of Bud Light while he had two or three. N.T. at 484, 490. Another

source of beer available that night was a small stock of cans kept in the creek, though

Laumann did not state definitively whether Appellant drank any from that stock. N.T. at

492-93. Laumann was “pretty sure,” but not certain, that all empties were thrown into the

bed of the pick-up truck. N.T. at 493. At dark, the men climbed down from the tree stand

and walked back to the cabin, and again, Laumann saw nothing about Appellant to

indicate he was having difficulty with his balance. N.T. at 491. Other than the moment

Appellant quickly went back into the cabin before boarding the pick-up and leaving, the

two men were together the entire time. N.T. at 484.

                                         [J-3-2014] - 3
       Appellant drove the two to Ross Orchard, where they began spotlighting for deer.

N.T. at 494-95.     Appellant had no problem negotiating the orchard’s roads, which

Laumann described as “just little dirt lanes wide enough for a vehicle” and “a little bumpy

from time to time[,]” with one hand on the wheel while simultaneously holding a spotlight

out the driver’s side window with the other, Laumann testified. N.T. at 498. The two

spotted a number of deer without any attempt to hunt, and then left the orchard. They

drove along local roads, turning frequently, went across a bridge, down a stone lane, and

across a creek until they arrived at Red Rock Road. N.T. at 500. Laumann witnessed

Appellant drink “a few” more beers from the Bud Light 12-pack during this time, but noted

that Appellant negotiated a stretch of road where the two had gotten stuck only ten days

earlier. N.T. at 503.

       Appellant stopped the pick-up when his spotlight shone upon a doe. He leaned

out the window and over the roof and continued to aim the light directly on a doe

positioned 20 to 25 yards away in a field along the passenger side as Laumann registered

a strike just behind the deer’s left shoulder with his compound bow. N.T. at 503, 505.

The two did not retrieve the deer, opting instead to give it time to die. N.T. at 507.

Appellant drove further along Red Rock Road about a few hundred yards when he

spotted a deer in a field on the driver’s side. N.T. at 507. Saying he wanted the deer, he

backed up into a driveway to change directions on Red Rock Road. He regained sight of

the deer and shone a light on it while Laumann pointed the .22 long rifle outside the

passenger side window and fired, but he missed. Appellant grabbed the rifle from his

position in the driver’s seat and leaned across the console to poke his body out the

passenger window while still holding the spotlight with his left hand. He then braced the

                                      [J-3-2014] - 4
rifle between his right arm and torso and fired twice at the deer, causing it to stumble and

fall. N.T. at 507-512. On cross examination, Laumann confirmed that Appellant, whom

he described as an “average shot,” would have used his right hand to pull the trigger,

swing the oval lever beneath the trigger down to discharge the shell and back up to load

the next shell into place, and then pull the trigger to take the second shot. N.T. at 566-67.

       Appellant drove off, leaving the deer for later retrieval, and turned down nearby

Schriver Road when he and Laumann noticed headlights appear from behind. N.T. at

516. Laumann said he believed it was “DNR”4 and Appellant replied “Do you think?” as

they saw blue and red overhead lights activated. N.T. at 516. Appellant continued to

drive around a bend and pulled over alongside the road near pine trees and roadside

brush. N.T. at 517. On cross-examination, Laumann insisted Appellant pulled over

immediately, at the first safe opportunity, upon seeing the overhead lights. N.T. at 576.

       Before their encounter with Officer Grove would begin, Laumann worried aloud

that they were in "a lot of trouble" for shooting the deer, to which Appellant replied "[d]on't

worry, I got you, but I'm not going back to jail." N.T. at 518. Appellant said this in a

"normal tone like he was being serious, but [Laumann] did not take it as threatening...like

he was going to harm anybody."N.T. at 518.

       They remained seated as Officer Grove addressed them by loudspeaker from his

patrol SUV. N.T. at 517. He ordered Appellant to turn off the engine and drop the keys

out of the driver’s side window, and Appellant complied. N.T. at 517-18. Officer Grove

then directed Appellant to lean his arm outside the driver’s side window, open the driver’s

4 Presumably, Laumann used the DNR acronym for “Department of Natural Resources,”
though when asked to specify he said “Game Officer.” N.T. at 517.

                                        [J-3-2014] - 5
side door using the exterior handle, step outside the vehicle, close the door, and stand

with his hands atop the vehicle. Again, Appellant complied. N.T. at 518.

       When Officer Grove asked if there were any passengers in the vehicle, Appellant

nodded, and Officer Grove gave Laumann the same instructions for exiting and placing

his hands on the vehicle alongside Appellant. N.T. at 519-520. After ordering the men to

remain still at that time, Officer Grove remained in his vehicle for about one minute. He

asked if there were weapons in the car and, if so, where, and Appellant answered there

were weapons in the back seat of the cab. N.T. at 522.

       It was at this time Appellant whispered to Laumann that he had a .45 on his side.

N.T. at 521. Laumann warned there was nothing he could do about it and that it would be

discovered and taken away. N.T. at 521. Officer Grove then ordered Appellant to place

his hands on his head and walk backwards towards the patrol car. Appellant was able to

comply. N.T. at 522, 579. Officer Grove approached Appellant and placed a handcuff on

him, prompting Appellant to yell "What did I do? Why am I being arrested? N.T. at 523-24.

Officer Grove gave no answer and Appellant began to resist. Officer Grove’s voice rose,

Laumann testified, as he issued four or five commands during the struggle for Appellant

to get down on the ground. The next thing Laumann heard was the sound of gunshots,

and Laumann dropped to the ground behind the truck and lost sight of the encounter. N.T.

at 525-26.   When he peeked for a second, Laumann saw Appellant standing in a

backward leaning posture and firing at least three more shots in rapid succession with the

gun in his right hand and right arm fully extended. N.T. at 527, 530, 531, 581. Laumann

screamed Appellant's name and then everything went silent.

       When Laumann looked up, he saw Appellant rise from a lying position, run for his

truck, and stumble and fall while yelling "I'm hit, I'm hit." N.T. at 533. Appellant reached

around on the ground near the driver's side of his vehicle and found his keys where he

                                      [J-3-2014] - 6
discarded them minutes before as instructed. N.T. at 535. Laumann stood up and was

ordered by Appellant to get in the pick-up. N.T. at 535. Laumann then looked over at the

patrol vehicle and could see Officer Grove lying with his head facing the rear tires and his

legs pointed to the middle of the road. Laumann boarded the pick-up and Appellant

started the engine, put it in drive, and sped off. N.T. at 535.

       Leaving the scene at between 60 to 80 miles per hour, Appellant made numerous

turns and navigated the "real narrow...bumpy and real windy" pathways he had earlier

used to get to Red Rock Road. N.T. at 536, 539. As Appellant drove in this manner,

Laumann observed him open the center console and reach around to grab what

Laumann believed to be a clip for his .45, which already lay on his lap as he drove. N.T. at

538. Laumann believed it to be a clip because Appellant thereafter leaned forward over

his lap and Laumann heard the "click like a snap noise" as when a clip gets pushed into a

handgun. N.T. at 539. Laumann kept telling Appellant that he wanted to get out of the

pick-up, and about four to five minutes into his flight, Appellant stopped at a rural stop sign

and allowed Laumann to grab his belongings and get out of the vehicle. N.T. at 537.

       Hours later, Laumann denied knowledge of the incident when investigators visited

his house, saying that Appellant had dropped him off at his girlfriend's house at 6:30 p.m.

N.T. at 590. He recanted his false statement the following morning, however, and

provided investigators with a full eyewitness report of the crime, although he withheld an

admission to his having killed a deer with his bow and fired at another deer with a .22 rifle

until just two weeks before trial. N.T. at 548-550, 552, 591, 602.

       When asked at Appellant's capital trial whether he believed Appellant was drunk at

any time during the events of November 11, 2010, Laumann answered "no." N.T. at 553.

Appellant seemed "normal" and caused Laumann no concerns while he drove throughout

the evening, he said. "There were times he kind of giggled a little bit. That's when I took

                                        [J-3-2014] - 7
it that maybe he was tipsy. Like I wouldn't consider him drunk, but he was feeling the

alcohol." N.T. at 554.

         Later in his testimony, he elaborated that, to him, tipsy and buzzed meant halfway

between sober and drunk. N.T. at 571. He also stated he was not strictly counting the

number of beers Appellant drank and that six or seven was a "rough estimate." N.T. at

573. Laumann reiterated that while he saw Appellant pull the clear bag of full beer cans

out of the creek to check on them, he never saw Appellant pull a beer out of the bag. N.T.

at 573-74.

         The following morning, at approximately 9:30 a.m., Edmund Miller was driving

along Bingham Road in Franklin Township in his work capacity on what he described as a

cool but sunny and pleasant day when he spotted Appellant limping along the side of the

road. N.T. 9/25/12 at 280-81. Not knowing Appellant, Miller nevertheless stopped and

asked if he needed a ride, but Appellant acted “aloof” and did not seem to want one. N.T.

at 281. Miller said “you look like you’re hurt,” and Appellant then accepted his invitation

for a ride. N.T. at 281-82. Appellant gave his destination and directed Miller as they

drove.    When Miller asked why Appellant was limping, Appellant explained he had

slipped on a rock up in the hills. N.T. at 283. Miller drove the approximately two miles

toward Appellant’s Orrtanna Road hunting cabin, and as he turned onto Orrtanna Road,

he could see police cars ahead. About ten police officers converged on his truck when

he stopped in the dirt lane leading to the cabin, Miller said, and Appellant did “nothing.”

“He just wanted [me to turn] in the lane” and drop him off, and said he would walk the rest

of the way, Miller testified. Appellant then got out of the truck of his own accord. N.T. at

284, 286, 288, 289.

         Officers immediately secured Appellant on the ground with his hands cuffed

behind his back N.T. at 298-300.        Armed officers backed away from Appellant as

                                       [J-3-2014] - 8
Pennsylvania State Trooper Neal Navitsky of the Fugitive Apprehension Unit approached

to read Miranda warnings to Appellant. N.T. at 300, 315. After rolling Appellant on his

side to confirm his identity and rule out a possible gunshot wound to the abdomen,5

Trooper Navitsky crouched down to eye level with Appellant and explained to him the

extreme importance of what was about to be read to him, that if he had questions he

needed to interrupt and ask, and that he must maintain eye contact so the trooper would

know he was being attentive. N.T. at 316, 325.           Appellant acknowledged that he

understood Trooper Navitsky’s instructions and maintained eye contact throughout

Miranda warnings. N.T. at 317. When Trooper Navitsky asked him if he understood the

rights that were just explained, Appellant acknowledged that he did. N.T. at 317. Asked

“[w]ith these rights in mind do you wish to talk with us?” Appellant again answered in the

affirmative. N.T. at 318.

       When asked what brought everyone here to this point, Appellant replied that he

had made some bad decisions. Adams County Detective Frank Donnelly then asked

Appellant if he realized he shot a police officer last night. According to Trooper Navitsky,

Appellant replied he “didn’t shoot a police officer. He was just a game warden.” N.T. at

318. Appellant then attempted to clarify his remark by saying he was simply noting the

distinction between a police officer and a game warden. N.T. at 319.

       Trooper Navitsky redirected the conversation back to the previous night, and

Appellant described the entire sequence of events leading up to the shooting, specifically:

he and Laumann had poached a deer at night; they drove off but saw red and blue lights

appear from behind and pulled over for a vehicle stop; they were ordered to exit their

5 Initial information given to Trooper Navitsky was that Appellant sustained a possible
gunshot wound to the abdomen. N.T. at 324. His examination of Appellant revealed no
abdominal injury, however, but disclosed, instead, a small amount of blood just below
Appellant’s belt on his right hip, “as if a pen were to burst in your pocket and leak ink, it
was probably that amount of blood that was just below his belt line.” N.T. at 324.

                                       [J-3-2014] - 9
vehicle and place their hands on his truck; he “got to thinking” of the .45 caliber handgun

on his waistband because he was prohibited as an ex-felon from possessing it, and

contemplated removing it and kicking it under his truck to hide it from Officer Grove’s

detection; he complied with orders to walk backwards towards Officer Grove; he

“panicked” when Officer Grove placed a handcuff on his right hand, pulled it away and

drew his .45 with the left hand. N.T. at 319-322. When asked how he managed to grab

the gun, he explained that, while using his body to block Officer Grove’s sightline to the

gun, he used his left hand to manipulate the release on the holster, draw the gun, and

transfer it to his right hand to begin firing. N.T. at 322. He and Officer Grove exchanged

gunfire, Appellant reported, and afterward he retreated to his vehicle and drove away

without checking on Officer Grove’s condition. N.T. at 322-323.

       Appellant said he drove up to a road off of Teaberry and Mountain Cold Springs

Road, parked his truck, and began traveling by foot. N.T. at 324. He ascended a steep

slope in the woods until he reached a high peak, and threw his .45 handgun down one

side of the peak and threw his holster down the other side. N.T. at 324. He attempted to

treat the gunshot wound to his hip by cinching his leather belt to act as a tourniquet, he

said, to provide compression to the wound. N.T. at 324.

       During this initial ten minute interview, Trooper Navitsky found Appellant’s

answers “very much” responsive to the questions being put to him. N.T. at 327-28.

Appellant did not simply answer “yes” or “no,” but, instead provided detailed answers

demonstrating an understanding of the questions asked, the trooper stated. N.T. at 328.

Notably, Trooper Navitsky testified, Appellant gave no indication of experiencing pain or

discomfort during the interview. N.T. at 328. He maintained eye contact throughout and,

it appeared to Trooper Navitsky in his experience, spoke in an unguarded manner

consistent with the giving of truthful answers. N.T. at 328.

                                      [J-3-2014] - 10
       Trooper Navitsky paused the interview when EMS arrived to treat and transport

Appellant to a hospital. N.T. at 326-327. He gained access to a voice recorder in the

meantime, and he and another fully uniformed trooper waited about ten minutes while

EMTs prepared Appellant. They eventually boarded the ambulance with three EMTs

and Appellant to resume the interview. N.T. at 329. Once inside, Trooper Navitsky

began recording and held the recorder in front of Appellant where he could see it. N.T. at

330-331.

       Portions of the recording were played at trial. N.T. at 337. At the outset, Appellant

can be heard saying “ouch, ouch, ouch[,]” which Trooper Navitsky attributed to

Appellant’s being placed on his back on the litter causing him to lie directly on his cuffed

wrists. N.T. at 338. The troopers removed the cuffs, repositioned Appellant’s arms to the

front of his body, and cuffed each hand to the nearest siderail of the stretcher for comfort,

giving Appellant about six or eight inches of mobility with each arm. N.T. at 338.

       At that point, Trooper Navitsky noticed the EMT preparing to administer morphine

to Appellant. He can be heard on the tape asking if he could have five minutes to record

Appellant’s statement before the morphine was administered, and the EMT answered

“that’s fine.” N.T. at 339.

       Trooper Navitsky witnessed no change in Appellant’s mental status during the

course of his interrogation. N.T. at 340. “He was very coherent. He was calm. He was

attentive. He was being respectful and polite and he was answering my questions

accordingly and expounding on his answers[,]” Trooper Navitsky testified. N.T. at 340.

The recorded statement began with the question: “Before we spoke, did I read you

something?” and the answer was “Yeah, Miranda rights.” Appellant confirmed he knew

what Miranda rights were and denied having any illegal drugs in his system. N.T. at 341.

                                      [J-3-2014] - 11
When asked how many beers he had drunk, Appellant answered “two to three.” N.T. at

342.

       Appellant acknowledged having possessed the .45 handgun for three years,

starting shortly after his release from prison.         He answered questions about the

silhouette targets observed at his cabin and took credit for the closest grouping of three

bullet holes, attributing his accuracy from 35 yards out to having taken a “normal” stance

instead of turning the gun sideways, which he had apparently done on his other practice

shots. N.T. at 344-45. Appellant also took credit for shooting the deer on Red Rock

Road, saying he was pretty sure his shot hit its mark, and thought the deer was a

mechanical decoy at first like the kind he said he had seen on Iron Springs Road because

it had not moved after the first shot. N.T. at 345. When asked about the holstered .45 on

his left hip, Appellant explained that the holster was a Blackhawk brand, angled on the left

hip to allow the gun to go straight into the right hand reaching across and designed to

require the push of a release button before one draws so the gun won’t fall. N.T. at 346.

       The next portion of the recorded interview involved Trooper Navitsky noting

Appellant’s request to turn the tape recorder off so he could address a topic off the record.

Trooper Navitsky later explained at trial that Appellant wished to advise the trooper of

Ryan Laumann’s participation in the poaching of a deer the night before. N.T. at 348.

       Trooper Navitsky confirmed on cross-examination that Appellant’s initial statement

and his recorded statement were essentially identical. Nowhere in either statement, the

trooper testified, did Appellant explicitly admit that he attempted to shoot directly at or kill

Officer Grove. N.T. at 358.

       Doctor Kern Michael Hughes, York Hospital staff trauma surgeon testified that at

about 11:00 a.m. on the morning of November 12, 2010, Appellant was brought to his

trauma unit for the possibility of a serious gun-related injury. N.T. at 369. His vital signs

                                        [J-3-2014] - 12
were normal and, after taking a personal history, conducting a physical exam and

reviewing both a chest x-ray, and CT scan of Appellant’s abdomen and pelvis, Doctor

Hughes determined the bullet wound in Appellant’s hip was confined to the superficial

regions of the hip. N.T. at 371. This “flesh wound” as Dr. Hughes called it in layman’s

terms required no surgical intervention, and was treated with antibiotics and a dressing.

N.T. at 373. Dr. Hughes’ notes, furthermore, described Appellant as alert and oriented

during his examination. N.T. at 372.

      As he does with all trauma patients due to concern of blood loss, Dr. Hughes

continued, he sought to rule out hypothermia during his physical examination and

laboratory testing of Appellant. Appellant did not present with hypothermia, even with his

exposure to the cool night, and so he excluded it as a concern. N.T. at 374.          On

cross-examination, Dr. Hughes acknowledged that the hour-long ride in a heated

ambulance while receiving a 100 milliliter warm bolus IV would have affected Appellant’s

hydration and body temperature to some degree, bearing on the issue of hypothermia

and dehydration. N.T. at 382-83. Appellant did complain of pain to Dr. Hughes. N.T. at

374. Pain is a very subjective thing, Dr. Hughes explained, and so Appellant was

medicated in accordance to his complaint.

      The Commonwealth charged Appellant with one count of first degree murder and

related offenses and gave him notice of the aggravating circumstances it intended to

pursue in the event he was convicted on the main charge. The trial court thereafter

denied Appellant's omnibus pretrial motion to quash all but one aggravating

circumstances and to suppress his statements to police, the latter motion being denied

following a hearing. The court did grant Appellant's motion for a change of venire, and a

jury was selected in Lancaster County.

                                       [J-3-2014] - 13
       Trial commenced in the Court of Common Pleas of Adams County on September

24, 2012, with the Honorable Michael A. George presiding. On October 3, 2012, the jury

returned a guilty verdict on the charge of murder in the first degree and related charges.

The case proceeded to penalty phase where the Commonwealth sought the death

penalty on four aggravating factors: that the victim was a law enforcement official, 42

Pa.C.S. § 9711(d)(1); that the victim was a prosecution witness killed for the purpose of

presenting his testimony, § 9711(d)(5); that the killing happened while in the perpetration

of a felony, § 9711(d)(6); and that the defendant had a significant history of felony

convictions involving the use or threat of violence to the person, § 9711(d)(9).

Appellant's proffer focused on his loving relationship with friends and family, in particular

his nine year old daughter, Jasmine, and the substantial impairment he experienced from

alcohol consumption.     At the conclusion of the penalty phase, the jury found two

aggravating circumstances--that the victim was a law enforcement officer and that the

killing occurred while in the perpetration of a felony--whereas only one mitigating

circumstance was found, the catch-all at 42 Pa.C.S. § 9711(e)(8).                 Concluding

unanimously     that   the    aggravating   circumstances    outweighed     the    mitigating

circumstances, the jury sentenced Appellant to death for the murder of Officer Grove.

       The trial court subsequently denied Appellant's motion for reconsideration on

October 15, 2012.            This direct appeal followed, in which Appellant raises

three guilt-phase issues and six penalty phase issues for our review.

       I.     Sufficiency of the Evidence of First Degree Murder Conviction.

       Before addressing Appellant's enumerated issues, we consider, as we must in all

capital cases, whether the evidence is sufficient to support the convictions of first degree

murder. Commonwealth v. Zettlemoyer, 454 A.2d 937, 942 n.3 (Pa. 1982). Because

                                      [J-3-2014] - 14
evidentiary sufficiency presents a question of law, our standard of review is de novo and

our scope of review is plenary. Commonwealth v. Sanchez, 36 A.3d. 24, 37 (Pa. 2011).

       “In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, we must determine whether the

evidence admitted at trial, and all reasonable inferences drawn from that evidence, when

viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth as verdict winner, was sufficient

to enable the fact finder to conclude that the Commonwealth established all of the

elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.” Commonwealth v. Fears, 836 A.2d
52, 58–59 (Pa. 2003). The Commonwealth may sustain this burden by means of wholly

circumstantial evidence. Commonwealth v. Montalvo, 956 A.2d 926, 932 (Pa. 2008).

       To obtain a conviction of first degree murder, the Commonwealth must

       prove that a human being was unlawfully killed, that the defendant
       perpetrated the killing, and that the defendant acted with malice and a
       specific intent to kill. Commonwealth v. Kennedy, [ ] 959 A.2d 916, 920
       ([Pa.] 2008). Section 2502 of the Crimes Code defines murder of the first
       degree as an “intentional killing,” 18 Pa.C.S. § 2502(a), which, in turn, is
       defined as a “[k]illing by means of poison, or by lying in wait, or by any other
       kind of willful, deliberate and premeditated killing.” Id. at § 2502(d). It is
       well-settled that specific intent to kill can be established through
       circumstantial evidence such as the use of a deadly weapon on a vital part
       of the victim's body. Commonwealth v. Rega, [ ] 933 A.2d 997, 1009 ([Pa.]
       2007).
Commonwealth v. Diamond, 83 A.3d 119, 126 (Pa. 2013).

       The evidence as set forth above and admitted in Appellant's jury trial sufficed to

support his conviction of first degree murder. Both Appellant's and Ryan Laumann's

statements identified Appellant as the man who shot Officer Grove after making the

considered decision that he would not go back to prison. In that respect, Laumann

provided eyewitness testimony thoroughly detailing the circumstances in which Appellant

shot Officer Grove multiple times, including a fatal shot to the neck.

       Appellant also demonstrated no physical or mental impairment from alcohol up to

and including the time of the shooting, in Laumann's opinion, as Appellant acted and

                                       [J-3-2014] - 15
communicated in a normal manner. He was able to navigate narrow, windy roads while

aiming a spotlight and to shoot accurately at deer while holding a light from inside his

truck. He pulled over at the first available safe spot when Officer Grove had activated his

overhead lights. He stated clearly that he understood Laumann’s concern about their

impending arrest for poaching, but calmly said he was not going back to prison. He was

able to understand and execute Officer Grove's physically demanding orders to exit the

vehicle in a counterintuitive way and walk backwards toward the officer with his hands

atop his head. He exhibited coordination and dexterity in freeing his cuffed right hand

from the officer while simultaneously pressing the release button to his holster with his left

hand, drawing his gun, and switching it to his right hand to commence firing at Officer

Grove. He avoided crashing the pick-up during his high-speed flight from the scene, and

he honored Laumann's request to be let out of the pick-up truck by coming to a stop at a

rural stop sign and allowing Laumann to gather his belongings and exit the pick-up.

       Appellant gave a statement the following morning that not only contained

incriminating content but also displayed keen recollection of sequence and detail about

the prior evening, permitting the reasonable inference that drink did not affect his faculties

in any way pertinent to the element of forming specific intent. His admittedly bad

decisions led to Officer Grove's death, Appellant confessed to Trooper Navitsky, and he

provided an account reflecting a mindset during the encounter that was able to both

appreciate the implications of his poaching and gun possession and deliberate over his

options and understand their respective consequences. One example of the latter is

when he considered trying to hide his .45 from Officer Grove by tossing it under the pickup

truck as he stood alongside it, he said in his statement presumably to show he had

thought of non-confrontational possibilities. He clearly rejected this option as futile,

however, choosing instead to engage Officer Grove in violence to avoid arrest.

                                       [J-3-2014] - 16
        On the issue of Appellant’s alcohol use on the night in question and to what extent,

if any, it affected his state of mind at the time of the shooting, the Commonwealth's

toxicology expert, J. Ward Donovan, M.D., opined to a reasonable degree of medical

certainty that Appellant “was fully capable of forming intent and had capability of rational

judgment.” N.T. 9/28/12 at 1067. Specifically, even when factoring Appellant’s “buzzed”

state at the time he first met with Laumann and adopting for the sake of argument the

defense position that Appellant consumed about twelve beers over the next six and

one-half hours to bring him within an expected BAC range of .15 to .22 percent, Dr. Ward

interpreted Appellant’s physical deeds and statements at the critical time period, along

with his clear memory of the entire evening as demonstrating higher cognitive functioning

consistent with an intact mental state capable of forming specific intent. N.T. 9/28/12 at

1069-1086. Finally, the autopsy report and ballistics evidence provided further evidence

establishing that among the seven shots Appellant fired at Officer Grove from close

range, three struck the officer, including a fatal one to a vital part of the body--the officer’s

neck.    Accordingly, we conclude there was sufficient evidence establishing that

Appellant shot Officer Grove to death with malice and the specific intent to kill.

                   II. Penalty-Phase Admission of Rebuttal Evidence

        Appellant argues that the lower court erred in admitting a seven year-old

conviction for Endangering the Welfare of a Child--his then fourteen month-old daughter,

Jasmine--as rebuttal to his Section 9711(e)(8) “catch all” mitigation proffer that he

currently shares a close and loving relationship with now eight year-old Jasmine,

especially where such evidence was admitted without further limiting instruction. The

rebuttal evidence not only inflamed the passions of the jury by informing it that he had

driven over 100 miles per hour with his toddler daughter in the car, Appellant contends,

but also failed the test of relevancy, as it involved an act far too remote in time from the

                                        [J-3-2014] - 17
specific defense proffer that Appellant currently offers significant emotional support to his

daughter and would continue to do so while incarcerated. N.T. at 1845. As such, the

court’s denial of Appellant’s motion in limine seeking exclusion of the prior offense

constituted reversible error under Rules of Evidence 404 and 403, as well as under the

Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, Appellant asserts.

       The Commonwealth responds that the trial court properly admitted the rebuttal

evidence because Appellant’s Section 9711(e)(8) presentation went far beyond the

current parent-child relationship when it included testimony describing, and a slide show

depicting, their relationship from years ago, close in time to the 2005 offense. As such,

the mitigation proffer was subject to challenge with respect to its suggestion that

Appellant was a responsible, loving father throughout the course of his parenthood,

argues the Commonwealth.

       The standard of review for the denial of a motion in limine is an abuse of discretion.

Commonwealth v. Rosen, 42 A.3d 988, 993 (Pa. 2012). “An abuse of discretion is more

than just an error in judgment and, on appeal, the trial court will not be found to have

abused its discretion unless the record discloses that the judgment exercised was

manifestly unreasonable, or the result of partiality, prejudice, bias or ill-will.”

Commonwealth v. Smith, 673 A.2d 893, 895 (Pa. 1996).

       During the penalty phase, Appellant called several witnesses to provide mitigating

evidence as to his character.      Former next-door neighbor Barbara Garde watched

Appellant grow from a child to an adult and a father. She described him as a “very, very

good loving, loving, responsible father in my opinion.” N.T. 1546. On cross-examination,

she was asked whether she knew of his 2005 conviction for an incident in which he was

engaged in a high speed chase with the police while his daughter was in the back seat, to

which Garde responded “no, I wasn’t aware of that. It doesn’t change my opinion,

                                      [J-3-2014] - 18
though.” N.T. 1548. To the question of whether she would still consider Appellant a very

good, loving, responsible father, Garde replied “Well, maybe except for that one incident.

There’s a lot more to being a father than just one single incident. N.T. at 1548.

       Appellant’s younger sister, Brandy Johnson, described the loving relationship

between Appellant and Jasmine, saying “[s]he’s always been daddy’s girl since the day

she was born.     Christopher would do anything for her.” N.T. at 1555.          During her

testimony, a video was played depicting Jasmine’s third birthday party while Brandy

Johnson narrated scenes explaining how Appellant got the cake, prepared the whole day

beforehand, and doted on Jasmine at the party in a variety of ways. N.T. at 1558-59.

Brandy also described how Appellant helped raise her son and “taught him how to be a

boy” during this same timeframe. “He would do anything for them two little babies[,]”

Brandy testified. N.T. at 1560-61. She also testified as to how Appellant took better care

of her than their father did when they were children growing up together. N.T. 1572.

       Appellant’s mother, Kimberly Topper, gave extensive testimony about Appellant’s

history as a father starting from the day Jasmine was born: “I could see the lights in his

eyes was [sic] like the lights. I could see the beauty that he saw in her like the day he

was born that I saw in him.” N.T. at 1480-81. Topper described how Appellant assumed

primary responsibility for Jasmine’s emotional and financial support when Jasmine was

around one year old because of the mother’s drug using lifestyle:

       [TOPPER]: “He would say, mom, I can’t keep my eyes open anymore.
       He says, I’m afraid Jasmine is going to get hurt. Can you come here and
       just let me get an hours’s [sic] sleep, two hours, something like that and I’d
       go get her and bring her back to work with me. . . . Sometimes I’d have to
       wait until I got off work at three or four so he could get a couple hours sleep
       before he had to go back to work and sometimes she’d show up just before
       he had to go to work. She would be out, you know, she was running
       around with friends and --”

                                      [J-3-2014] - 19
N.T. at 1482 (emphasis added). Topper also narrated a slide show which included

photos depicting, among other things, Appellant and Jasmine together in her first years.

N.T. at 1499-1500.

         The trial court’s ruling was correct, as the record confirms Appellant’s proffer was

not confined to his current relationship with his daughter but extended well back to a time

proximate to his 2005 offense. Testimony referred to his parenting through the years,

while other witnesses described his daughter as having been “daddy’s girl since the day

she was born.” N.T. 1555. Additional character evidence portraying Appellant as a man

known to be loving and religious, kind and helpful to neighbors, and whose behavior up to

the time of the murder had been non-assaultive, also made relevant rebuttal evidence

revealing a moment in this time period where Appellant posed a serious threat to his child

with conduct marked by a disregard for her safety and welfare.

         Contrary to Appellant’s contention, therefore, admission of Appellant’s 2005

Endangering the Welfare of a Child conviction was relevant response to his subsection

(e)(8) proffer, as it bore upon mitigation evidence offered to show Appellant as a loving

and caring father throughout Jasmine’s life.6 To Appellant’s Pa.R.E. 403 argument that

the danger of unfair prejudice arising from evidence of his prior conviction outweighed its

probative value with respect to the issue of Appellant’s history as a loving, caring, and

selfless parent, well-taken is the trial court’s response that any prejudice in the admission

was not an unfair result of a jury’s potential emotional response but was, instead, a fair

result from the nature of Appellant’s act itself. N.T. at 1368.7 We thus find no merit to this

claim.

6 As such, we deem meritless Appellant’s argument that admission of his prior conviction
amounted to the introduction of a non-statutory, additional aggravating circumstance that
unduly “obliterated” his mitigation proffer. Properly admitted rebuttal evidence does not
fall under such category. See Commonwealth v. Lesko, 15 A.3d 345, 390 (Pa. 2011).

(continuedQ)

                                       [J-3-2014] - 20
          III. Penalty Phase Instruction on the Applicable Standard of Review for
                     Voluntary Intoxication as a Mitigating Factor

       Appellant next asserts the sentencing court erroneously charged the jury that the

same standard applicable in the guilt phase determination of whether intoxication

diminished Appellant’s capacity to form the specific intent to kill also applied in the penalty

phase determination of whether his voluntary intoxication served as a mitigating

circumstance under either 42 Pa.C.S. § 9711(e)(3)8 and the “catch-all” mitigator of 42

Pa.C.S. § 9711(e)(8)9. In so equating the penalty standard with a guilt standard the jury

had already applied to reject his voluntary intoxication defense, Appellant contends, the

lower court “categorically barred the penalty-phase jury from considering” his heavy

consumption of alcohol on the day of the murder as a mitigating factor and thus denied

him his rights under the Pennsylvania death penalty statute and the Eighth and

(Qcontinued)
7 Appellant raises an adjunct argument that a limiting instruction was required to cure the
inflammatory effect that admission of his prior conviction allegedly had on the jury.
Appellant waived this claim through his silence during both the admission of the evidence
and at the conclusion of jury instructions, particularly in light of the court’s pre-hearing
assurance that it would give a limiting instruction “at Appellant’s request” should the
Commonwealth offer into evidence his prior conviction. See Commonwealth v. Johnson,
668 A.2d 97, 104 (Pa. 1995) (deeming waived appellant’s claim of erroneous omission of
a curative instruction when appellant failed to pursue the instruction). Moreover,
Pa.R.A.P. 1925 waiver applies, as Appellant failed to include this claim in his concise
statement of matters complained of on appeal. See Commonwealth v. Lord, 553 Pa. 415,
719 A.2d 306 (1998) (holding issues not raised in Rule 1925 concise statement are
waived).
8 § 9711(e)(3) provides for a mitigating circumstance when “[t]he capacity of the
defendant to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the
requirements of law was substantially impaired.”

9 § 9711(e)(8) provides for a mitigating circumstance upon the existence “[a]ny other
evidence of mitigation concerning the character and record of the defendant and the
circumstances of his offense.

                                       [J-3-2014] - 21
Fourteenth Amendments. See Tennard v. Dretke, 542 U.S. 274 (2004) (recognizing a

defendant’s right to jury deliberation on mitigating evidence that a juror could reasonably

find warrants a sentence less than death).

       Appellant acknowledges that success on this claim with respect to the (e)(3)

mitigator depends on our taking up his call to overrule a line of precedent holding that the

guilt and penalty phase standards in this context are functionally equivalent.              He

attempts to distinguish the cases factually from his own, however, and further assails the

precedent as having inexplicably and erroneously grafted a guilt phase standard for

determining specific intent on penalty phase considerations of impaired capacity that are

specifically delineated by statutory language setting forth a different standard.

       Indeed, our jurisprudence has confirmed that it is “binding precedent” that a

defendant convicted of first degree murder in rejection of a voluntary intoxication defense

would seem “logically precluded” from proving § 9711(e)(3) substantial impairment by a

preponderance of the evidence in the penalty phase. Commonwealth v. Gibson, 19 A.3d
512, 529 n. 18 (Pa. 2011).10 See Commonwealth v. Spotz, 47 A.3d 63, 117 (Pa. 2012)

10 In Gibson, this Court recognized that substantial impairment of either capacity as
stated disjunctively in subsection (e)(3), i.e., capacity to appreciate the criminality of one’s
conduct or to conform one’s conduct to the requirements of the law, could stand alone as
a means by which to secure the mitigator: “There is no dispute that Appellee
appreciated the criminality of his conduct, for reasons already explained. The only
question is the degree to which the PCRA evidence would have demonstrated to the jury
that Appellee was substantially impaired in his capacity to conform to the law.” Id. at
528-29. Though recognizing a conceptual difference between the two subsection (e)(3)
expressions, we still acknowledged application of the same evidentiary standard to both.
As such, in specifically assessing the appellee/defendant’s capacity to conform to the
law, we applied, over the appellee’s opposing argument, the guilt-phase voluntary
intoxication defense standard in accordance with binding precedent that logical
preclusion applied given the facts of the case. Id. at 529 (citing Commonwealth v. Flor,
998 A.2d 606, 627 n. 7 (Pa. 2010) (recognizing that, to demonstrate the (e)(3) mitigator
based on voluntary intoxication, the defendant must have been “overwhelmed or
(continuedQ)

                                       [J-3-2014] - 22
(recognizing first degree murder conviction logically precludes application of the (e)(3)

mitigator); Marinelli, 810 A.2d at 1277 (applying guilt phase standard for voluntary
                                      11
intoxication in penalty phase).               In so doing, our Court effectively applied

interchangeably between guilt phase and penalty phase the standard that a defendant

must show he was so overwhelmed by intoxication as to be incapable of forming the

specific intent to kill at the time of the murder.

       The Commonwealth first responds that Appellant waived this claim by making a

vague and undeveloped objection to the jury charge. By both objecting ambiguously at

side-bar that the charge implicated “one of our mitigators” and refusing the court’s

invitation to explicate, answering instead, “that’s it, thank you, Judge[,]” Appellant fatally

(Qcontinued)
overpowered by alcohol to the point of losing his faculties so as to be incapable of forming
a specific intent to kill”) (quoting Commonwealth v. Marinelli, 810 A.2d 1257, 1277 (Pa.
2002)). To the extent that the subsection (e)(3) mitigating factor is thus logically
precluded by the jury’s verdict that a defendant formed the specific intent to kill, we
concluded, “the jury may consider voluntary intoxication of a lesser degree under
subsection (e)(8).” Id. at 531, n.18.

It is in light of this precedent that we consider, infra, Appellant’s underlying question of
whether the second part of the (e)(3) mitigator--regarding a substantially impaired
capacity to conform one’s conduct to the requirements of the law--imposes a less
stringent standard than the guilt phase standard on specific intent articulated above.
11 Our jurisprudence would seem to allow that exceptions to our observation on logical
preclusion may attend instances where the penalty phase defendant introduces a greater
quantum or quality of voluntary intoxication evidence than he did in the guilt-innocence
phase. For example, a penalty-phase defendant may elect to abandon a failed
guilt-phase “mistaken identity/alibi” defense, to which intoxication evidence would have
been irrelevant, and press an (e)(3) mitigation case through evidence of his intoxicated
state at the time of the murder. So, too, may a general guilt-phase strategy of foregoing
a voluntary intoxication defense because of its potential to spawn adverse character
judgments, see Gibson at 527 (collecting cases recognizing aggravating effect of
voluntary intoxication defense), be abandoned in a penalty-phase decision that a new
course of action is necessary. In the case sub judice, Appellant made no enhancement
of his guilt-phase intoxication proffer in the penalty-phase.

                                           [J-3-2014] - 23
omitted to specify whether it was the mitigator at subsection (e)(3) or subsection (e)(8)

that was, in his opinion, unduly affected by the charge. The Commonwealth also argues

that Appellant effectively acceded to the charge when he replied “there may be” to the

court’s comment that “there’s a case right on point” in support of the charge, thereby

providing alternate grounds for waiver.

       In any event, the Commonwealth contends, Appellant’s claim is meritless as to the

(e)(3) mitigator given binding precedent of this Court that the standards are the same.

As for Appellant’s argument assailing the charge with respect to the subsection (e)(8)

mitigator, the Commonwealth points to the dearth of voluntary intoxication evidence he

offered for this mitigator: “Defendant’s drinking on the day and night of the murder was a

small and hardly persuasive aspect of the defense mitigation case. Its primary, if not

exclusive, relevance was to the ‘extreme mental or emotional disturbance’ and

‘substantial impairment’ mitigators.” Brief for Appellee at 24.

       At the penalty phase hearing, the trial court issued the following pertinent

instruction:

       THE COURT: Now, ladies and gentlemen, in this case the Defendant has
       set forth and the Sentencing Code identifies what are known as mitigating
       factors. As I described earlier for you, mitigating factors must be only
       proven by a preponderance of the evidence.
       The mitigating factors identified by the defense include the following:

       The mitigating factor alleged that Christopher Johnson was under the
       influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance. A second and
       separate mitigating factor that the capacity of Christopher Johnson to
       appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the
       requirements of law was substantially impaired, and the third mitigating
       factor which is identified is--consists of evidence of mitigation concerning
       the character and record of Christopher Johnson and the circumstances of
       his offense.

                                      [J-3-2014] - 24
       In that regard, ladies and gentlemen, the . . . Defendant has identified
       factors that they would like you to consider in determining whether that
       mitigating circumstance exists.

       Those factors consist of the following: That Mr. Johnson was under the
       influence of alcohol when the accident occurred. In regard to that
       particular factor, ladies and gentlemen, the same standard of determining
       its applicability , which I described during the guilt phase of this trial, is
       applicable. In other words defining whether or not that is a consideration.
N.T. 10/4/12 at 1844-45 (emphasis added).

       During subsequent side-bar discussions about the charge, Appellant raised the

following objection to the above instruction on voluntary intoxication:

       DEFENSE COUNSEL:             We were--again, we were just objecting to the
       instructions on the victim impact evidence that we had talked about before.
       I don’t thik that was on the record. And I had a question for you because
       you said it quickly and I wasn’t sure I understood it. We had alleged as one
       of our mitigators he was under the influence of alcohol and did you say the
       same standard applied as the legal intoxication for first to third degree?

       THE COURT:           I did.

       DEFENSE COUNSEL:              Well, we would object to that.

       THE COURT:            I believe there’s a case right on point on that.

       DEFENSE COUNSEL:              There may be.

       THE COURT:           Any comment?

       PROSECUTOR:          Nope.

       DEFENSE COUNSEL:              That’s it. Thank you, Judge.

       THE COURT:           All right.
N.T. at 1860-61.

       This objection left the trial court to speculate as to which mitigating factor defense

counsel referred in his objection. Presuming the competency of counsel, as we must

under Sixth Amendment decisional law, we may presume counsel knew that for nearly a

decade our jurisprudence had held and reaffirmed in the subsection (e)(3) context that

                                         [J-3-2014] - 25
the guilt and penalty phase standards for voluntary intoxication were functionally

equivalent, whereas the subsection (e)(8) inquiry allows a lower standard permitting all

mitigation evidence to be considered, See Gibson, supra. It could therefore reasonably

be inferred that counsel objected to the application of the guilt phase voluntary

intoxication standard to the jury’s deliberations on the (e)(8) mitigation offer. It is just as

reasonable under the same presumption of Sixth Amendment competence, however, that

counsel directed his objection to the subsection (e)(3) proffer as a constitutional

challenge to the current state of our relevant jurisprudence. As can be seen, one cannot

be sure as to which mitigator counsel actually referred.

       Indeed, the trial court invited defense counsel to explicate his position, and

perhaps if counsel did so the court could have discerned the specific objection laid before

it and considered on the record whether a modification to the instruction was necessary.

As the record stands, however, Appellant declined the court’s invitation to clarify his

ambiguous objection, leaving the precise basis for counsel’s objection indeterminable.

As we may not base our review on presumptions and speculation about what counsel

meant when he offered an ambiguous objection to the court, invocation of the waiver

doctrine is appropriate. See Commonwealth v. Pressley, 887 A.2d 220, 224 (Pa. 2005).

(requiring a specific objection to the charge to preserve an issue involving a jury

instruction).

       Even if we were to address Appellant’s bare assertions that 1) a decade’s worth of

jurisprudence identifying the appropriate standard for voluntary intoxication in the penalty

phase is based upon a flawed interpretation of an inapposite seminal case; 2) the

language of the (e)(3) mitigator as a whole presents a less stringent standard than that

applicable in a guilt-phase voluntary intoxication defense; 3) at least one of the (e)(3)

mitigator component parts, i.e., the incapacity to conform one’s conduct to the

                                       [J-3-2014] - 26
requirements of the law contemplates an aspect of the mental state distinct from intent

that cannot, as a matter of linguistics, be contemplated by the guilt phase standard; and

4) the above instruction completely precluded the jury from considering the effects of

Appellant’s alleged heavy drinking in its (e)(8) deliberations, we would find each assertion

as briefed presents as a broad pronouncement which, though eloquent to the extent it is

made, is nonetheless devoid of specific references of support in the record and lacking in

developed analysis. One example is the paucity of argumentation on alcohol’s effect on

Appellant’s capacity to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law, the second

expression of the § 9711(e)(3) mitigating circumstance. Indeed, the only reference

Appellant makes to his subsection (e)(3) proffer is “Appellant offered evidence of his

heavy consumption of alcohol the day of the incident as mitigating factors under . . . 42

Pa.C.S. § 9711(e)(3) (ability to appreciate criminal conduct was substantially impaired).”

Brief for Appellant at 20-21. In referring only to the first of two parts of the subsection

(e)(3) mitigator, Appellant implies that he made no proffer relevant to a challenge that he

possessed a substantially impaired capacity to conform his conduct to the law. Later in

his brief, however, Appellant does make the statutory construction statement in the

abstract that our jurisprudence equating voluntary intoxication standards applicable in

each trial phase works the absurd result of precluding a jury from ever finding mitigation

through proof of a substantially impaired capacity to conform one’s conduct to the law.

Again, however, nowhere does Appellant indicate where in the record he advanced

argument on this part of the subsection (e)(3) mitigator to the jury.

       Another example is Appellant’s claim that the voluntary intoxication standard

applying to the subsection (e)(3) mitigation case must be less stringent than the standard

applying to a guilt-phase voluntary intoxication defense.         Other than stating this

proposition as if it were self-proving on its face, Appellant provides no further discussion

                                      [J-3-2014] - 27
as to why it is less difficult to bear the burden of proving by a preponderance of the

evidence that heavy drinking substantially impairs a defendant’s ability to appreciate the

criminality of his conduct or conform his conduct to the requirements of the law than it is to

present enough evidence that drink overwhelmed a defendant’s faculties so as to inject

reasonable doubt as to defendant’s ability to form specific intent. Our jurisprudence has

interpreted subsection (e)(3) to come under the guilt phase voluntary intoxication

standard for nearly a decade, and, under the doctrine of stare decisis, it was thus

incumbent upon Appellant in seeking the overhaul of such precedent to assume the

burden of developing a comprehensive discussion demonstrating that substantive

differences between the statutory (e)(3) mitigator and the guilt phase diminished capacity

by intoxication inquiry exist warranting different treatment of each.12 No such advocacy

appears before us.

        Elsewhere in his brief, Appellant argues that our equation of the two standards

works the indefensible result of rendering the statutory (e)(3) mitigator “absurd” and a

nullity, but this assertion fails to consider that our decisions have dealt only with cases in

which the defendant’s penalty phase proffer and guilt phase proffer were essentially the

same.    As addressed in footnote 11, supra, it would seem that in cases where a

penalty-phase defendant either presents an intoxication case for the first time--having

12 “‘Any departure from the doctrine of stare decisis demands special justification.’
Arizona v. Rumsey, 467 U.S. 203, 212, (1984). We have said also that the burden borne
by the party advocating the abandonment of an established precedent is greater where
the Court is asked to overrule a point of statutory construction. Considerations of stare
decisis have special force in the area of statutory interpretation, for here, unlike in the
context of constitutional interpretation, the legislative power is implicated, and Congress
remains free to alter what we have done.” Patterson v. McLean Credit Union, 491 U.S.
164, 172-73 (1989), superseded by statute as stated in CBOCS West, Inc. v. Humphries,
553 U.S. 442 (2008).

                                       [J-3-2014] - 28
elected to forego an intoxication defense at trial--or enhances his guilt phase intoxication

defense appreciably, the jury’s first-degree murder verdict would not logically preclude it

from finding the subsection (e)(3) mitigator satisfied on the basis of newly presented

penalty-phase evidence. Therefore, simply because a jury’s rejection of a guilt-phase

intoxication defense would logically foreclose (e)(3) mitigation on the same body of

evidence does not render the (e)(3) mitigator a nullity. § 9711(e)(3) mitigation is still

available, as a matter of logic, to the penalty phase defendant who adds to the quantum

or quality of intoxication evidence previously offered at trial.

       One final omission from Appellant’s argument is a fully developed discussion of

whether he even laid an evidentiary foundation entitling him to the subsection (e)(3)

mitigator instruction at all. In Gibson, supra, we reviewed a capital Post Conviction

Relief Act appeal relating to the appellee’s conviction for killing a Philadelphia police

officer and a bystander during a failed robbery attempt of a bar. In a unanimous decision

reversing the PCRA court’s order vacating sentence and remanding for a new penalty

hearing on, inter alia, PCRA testimony regarding the appellee’s (e)(3) proffer, this Court

observed that the evidentiary record called into question whether, as a matter of law, the

appellee was even entitled to an instruction on the (e)(3) mitigator. Noting initially that

there was no question that Appellee appreciated the criminality of his conduct--given the

guilt-phase presentation of evidence offered on specific intent to kill--we inquired into the

degree to which the evidence would have demonstrated a substantial impairment in his

capacity to conform to the law. On this point, however, the evidence was lacking, we

reasoned, as defendant’s own experts found insufficient evidence that defendant was

intoxicated on the critical moment. Gibson at 529.

       As to the sufficiency of Appellant’s proffer in this respect, we find only one passage

in his brief relevant, where he offers in his “Statement of the Case” that “Appellant put on

                                       [J-3-2014] - 29
expert toxicological evidence regarding his impairment, N.T. p. 937[,]” which, it should be

noted, directs the reader to an irrelevant portion of testimony some 50 pages removed

from the beginning of the toxicologist’s testimony. With no account of, or developed

discussion about, the toxicologist’s findings and the significance thereof in the argument

section of his brief, we find a second basis upon which Appellant failed to preserve this

issue for our review.

       In any event, our own review of testimony offered by Appellant’s toxicologist shows

it to have been equivocal at best on the effects alcohol had on Appellant’s powers of

judgment and intent formation as the expert was confronted with examples of Appellant’s

specific actions and statements with respect to the time leading up to, including, and after

he shot Officer Grove. There was some indication that at a .22 BAC, which represented

the absolute highest number in the hypothetical BAC range of .15 to .22 percent at the

time of the shooting rendered from the evidence, one could suffer impairment of judgment

and undergo a disinhibitory effect, but no further elaboration was made on that point.

The toxicologist also opined that Appellant’s ability to perform the distracted tasks

involved in aiming a spotlight to look for deer while driving, accurately shooting a deer with

two shots, and driving away to evade detection of his illegal conduct with the intention of

returning later to retrieve the deer reflected higher levels of cognitive function, which

militated toward inferring lower degrees of impairment to his cognitive abilities. This

equivocation manifested itself at the conclusion of the toxicologist’s testimony, where the

most he could state to a reasonable degree of medical certainty was that, even at the

hypothetical’s top end .22 BAC, “it could happen” that “an individual could lose his

faculties needed to form the specific intent to kill,” N.T. at 1009, and that such opinion

applies to this case. N.T. at 1047. To the follow-up question immediately posed by the

Commonwealth as to whether one can infer from the challenging circumstances

                                       [J-3-2014] - 30
overcome by Appellant in poaching a deer--just minutes before the police encounter--a

specific intent to kill the deer, the toxicologist answers “yes.” N.T. at 1047-48. Such a

qualified and equivocal opinion failed to lay an evidentiary foundation for an (e)(3)

mitigation instruction.

      IV.    Comparative Worth Remark in Penalty Phase Opening Statement

       Appellant next charges reversible error with the court’s refusal to grant mistrial in

response to the prosecutor’s penalty phase opening remarks inviting the jury to consider

whether the mitigation evidence it was about to hear concerning the life of Appellant

outweighs the life of the victim. Specifically, the controversial remark went as follows:

       You will be asked at the conclusion of this sentencing hearing to look at the
       facts presented in mitigation and the facts presented in aggravation. When
       listening to the testimony concerning the life of the Defendant, the one
       question I would like you to think about when hearing all the testimony in the
       sentencing hearing is does any of that evidence outweigh the life of Officer
       Grove?
N.T. at 1407. Defense counsel objected and moved for a mistrial. Side-bar discussion

ensued during which the trial court found it necessary to have the jury removed to the

deliberation room. After denying defense counsel’s motion, the court called for the jury’s

return and then issued the following curative instruction:

       THE COURT:          Your oath in this matter, ladies and gentlemen,
       commits you to a fair and impartial consideration of the evidence to
       determine the facts. Once your oath allows you to determine those facts,
       you are then required to apply to those facts the law which I give you and
       then reach an appropriate sentences based upon the facts as you and you
       alone determine and the law given to you by the court.

       Ladies and gentlemen, I will remind you once again that the aggravating
       circumstances which have been identified are the aggravating
       circumstances which the Commonwealth is alleging. They must be proven
       by proof beyond a reasonable doubt. The defense has identified mitigating
       circumstances. Once again, those are mitigating circumstances which
       must be proven by preponderance of the evidence.

                                      [J-3-2014] - 31
        Your obligation as jurors when this matter proceeds to sentencing, and I will
        give you more detailed instructions at the conclusion, is to weigh those
        aggravating circumstances against the mitigating circumstances.

        You may only take into account in that balancing process the aggravating
        circumstances which were proven to you by proof beyond a reasonable
        doubt and the mitigating evidence, if any, which was proven to you by a
        preponderance of the evidence. It is not a proper consideration to weigh
        the value of one life against another life and you may not do so. That
        would be a violation of your oath.
N.T. 10/2/12 at 1410-11.

        Appellant acknowledges the presumption under the law that juries follow

court-issued instructions, but argues that “words once spoke can never be recalled[,]”

particularly where a jury is asked to engage in the “legally improper but all-too-human

tendency to compare one life against another.” Brief for Appellant at 29.          No one

question may encompass the entire death penalty process, Appellant contends, citing

extra-jurisdictional caselaw,13 and an invitation to distill the many considerations a jury

must make into the single question of “whose life has more value” runs the risk of injecting

bias and caprice into the sentencing decision.

        The statement deprived him of a fair trial despite the issuance of a curative

instruction, Appellant continues, because the statement represented neither fair

comment on the evidence nor appropriate oratorical flair, but was, instead, “a

non-impassioned attempt to focus the jury, before mitigation had even begun, on an

improper and highly prejudicial consideration: ‘Does any evidence outweigh the life of

Officer Grove?’” Brief for Appellant at 30. That it was the “captain of the prosecution

team” who made the statement only adds to misconduct and creates the reasonable

possibility that the verdict was the product of the jury’s inflamed passions instead of

reason, Appellant concludes.

13   Storey v. State, 901 S.W.2d 886, 902 (1995).

                                      [J-3-2014] - 32
       The Commonwealth places its statement within the bounds of permissible oratory

directed at convincing the jury to disfavor the defense’s mitigation evidence in favor of

imposing a sentence of death. To that end, the Commonwealth asserts the remark was

primarily intended to place in sharp relief a decision the jury would have to make as to

whether the mitigation proffer outweighed the undisputed aggravating circumstance at

Section 9711(d)(1) for the killing of an officer during the performance of his duties. Even

if these words as uttered were improper, they were too innocuous and briefly stated to

prevent the jury from objectively weighing the evidence, the Commonwealth continues.

Finally, any possible taint from the statement was cured by the trial court when it

sustained the defense objection and delivered a curative instruction.

       Our standard of review in assessing the denial of a mistrial is as follows:

       The trial court is in the best position to assess the effect of an allegedly
       prejudicial statement on the jury, and as such, the grant or denial of a
       mistrial will not be overturned absent an abuse of discretion. A mistrial
       may be granted only where the incident upon which the motion is based is
       of such a nature that its unavoidable effect is to deprive the defendant of a
       fair trial by preventing the jury from weighing and rendering a true verdict.
       Likewise, a mistrial is not necessary where cautionary instructions are
       adequate to overcome any possible prejudice.

Commonwealth v. Rega, 593 Pa. 659, 692, 933 A.2d 997, 1016 (2007) (citation omitted).

       “It is well-settled that, during the penalty phase, where the presumption of

innocence no longer applies, a prosecutor is afforded reasonable latitude and may

properly comment on the evidence with oratorical flair.” Commonwealth v. Freeman, 827
A.2d 385, 408 (Pa. 2003) (collecting cases).       “[C]omments by a prosecutor do not

constitute reversible error unless their unavoidable effect was to prejudice the jury,

forming in their minds a fixed bias and hostility toward the defendant such that they could

not weigh the evidence objectively and render a true penalty determination.”

                                      [J-3-2014] - 33
Commonwealth v. Johnson, 668 A.2d 97, 107 (Pa. 1995), cert. denied, 519 U.S. 827, 117
S. Ct. 90, 136 L. Ed. 2d 46 (1996).

       The excerpt above shows that the prosecutor asked the jury to ask itself whether

any of Appellant’s mitigation evidence outweighed the life of Officer Grove. The trial

court’s interpretation of this request was that it asked jurors to assign a weight to the

respective lives of Appellant and Officer Grove and then decide whose life was worth

more. This, the trial court found, was impermissible and required an immediate curative

instruction. The Commonwealth’s insistence, on the other hand, is that the prosecutor

was attempting to focus jurors on their eventual obligation to weigh the mitigation

evidence against the Section 9711(d)(1) aggravating circumstance of having killed an

officer during the performance of his duties. The transcript shows that the prosecutor did

immediately offer this position in response to the objection, wherein he stated “[h]e is a

law enforcement officer is the aggravator, the killing of a law enforcement officer in the

line of duty. That’s what it means. That’s what was said.” N.T. at 1408.

       The issue as presented, therefore, is whether the prosecutorial comment was both

improper and so prejudicial that it rendered trial fundamentally unfair. Initially, while we

do not reject out-of-hand the possibility that a juror may have understood the prosecutor’s

remark as a reference to the (d)(1) aggravator, see infra, a plain reading of the statement

requires that we subordinate this possibility to the court’s interpretation, i.e., that the

prosecutor improperly invited the jury to weigh “the life” of Officer Grove against

Appellant’s mitigation presentation of his life.

       Prosecutorial calls to consider victim impact evidence alongside a defendant’s

mitigation evidence have increasingly come into practice following the United States

Supreme Court decision in Payne v. Tennessee, 501 U.S. 808 (1991), which recognized

                                       [J-3-2014] - 34
the constitutionality of victim impact statements.14 In Payne, the Court reconsidered

prior holdings prohibiting the admission of victim impact evidence in criminal trials. Id. at

817-27. Overruling both Booth v. Maryland, 482 U.S. 496 (1987) (discerning Eighth

Amendment violation in admission of victim impact statements, which prove irrelevant to

defendant’s culpability and risk arbitrary and capricious imposition of death penalty) and

South Carolina v. Gathers, 490 U.S. 805 (1989) (holding evidence of murder victim’s

personal characteristics irrelevant to circumstances of the crime and thus violative of

Eighth Amendment), Payne observed that “a State may properly conclude that for the jury

to assess meaningfully the defendant’s moral culpability and blameworthiness, it should

have before it at the sentencing phase evidence of the specific harm caused by the

defendant.” Id. at 825. The Booth paradigm, the Court opined, “unfairly weighted the

scales in a capital trial; while virtually no limits are placed on the relevant mitigating

evidence a capital defendant may introduce concerning his own circumstances, the State

is barred from either offering ‘a glimpse of the life’ which a defendant ‘chose to

extinguish,’” id. at 822, (quoting Mills v. Maryland, 486 U.S. 367, 397 (1988) (Rehnquist,

C.J., dissenting)), or “demonstrating the loss to the victim’s family and to society which

has resulted from the defendant’s homicide.” Id. Accordingly, the Court held that “if the

State chooses to permit the admission of victim-impact evidence and prosecutorial

argument on that subject, the Eighth Amendment erects no per se bar.” Id. at 827.

       The only constitution-sourced limit Payne recognized regarding the otherwise

constitutionally valid use of victim-impact evidence was in the Fourteenth Amendment’s

Due Process Clause:       “[i]n the event that evidence is introduced that is so unduly

14 With our decision in Commonwealth v. Means, 773 A.2d 143 (Pa. 2001), this
Commonwealth joined the majority of states permitting victim-impact statements allowing
evidence of the victim’s personal characteristics and the harm sustained by the victim’s
family and community.

                                      [J-3-2014] - 35
prejudicial that it renders the trial fundamentally unfair, the Due Process Clause of the

Fourteenth Amendment provides a mechanism for relief.” Id. at 825.           While Payne

provided no explicit delineation between fair and unduly prejudicial commentary in this

regard, it did observe that there was “no reason” to treat victim-impact evidence

“differently than other relevant evidence[,]” and cited Darden v. Wainwright, 477 U.S. 168

(1986) as authority on the application of due process limits.

       Darden addressed whether a prosecutor’s extreme and unquestionably improper

comments made during the guilt phase of a capital murder trial were so unfair as to render

the defendant’s conviction a denial of due process.             “It is not enough that the

prosecutors’ remarks were undesirable or even universally condemned. The relevant

question is whether the prosecutors' comments “so infected the trial with unfairness as to

make the resulting conviction a denial of due process.” Darden at 181 (quoting Donnelly

v. DeChristoforo, 416 U.S. 637 (1974)). As such, the court in making its due process

inquiry considered the challenged conduct in relation to the proceeding as a whole.

       Applying the “narrow [standard of review] of due process,” Id., the Court first

considered the nature and extent of the improper argument and determined the argument

“did not manipulate or misstate the evidence, nor did it implicate other specific rights of

the accused such as the right to counsel or the right to remain silent.” Id. at 181-82.

Other factors influencing the Court’s due process analysis included: much of the

argument was responsive to the opening summation by the defense (a point not meant to

excuse the impropriety of the argument but to help better ascertain the effect of the

comment by placing it in context); the issuance of curative instructions that the jury’s

decision must be based on evidence alone and that arguments of counsel were not

evidence; the weight of the evidence against the defendant was heavy; and defense

counsel’s “very effective[]” rebuttal argument “turning much of the prosecutors’ closing

                                     [J-3-2014] - 36
argument against them by placing [it] in a light that was more likely to engender strong

disapproval than result in inflamed passions against petitioner.” Id. For these reasons,

the Court concluded the defendant’s trial “was not perfect--few are--but neither was it

fundamentally unfair.” Id. at 183 (citation to federal district court decision omitted).

       As referenced in Payne, therefore, it is evident that the Darden and DeChristoforo

approach applies to a due process challenge to prosecutorial comment relating to

victim-impact and characteristics evidence. As a logical extension, the prosecutorial

practice of asking a jury to consider the defendant’s mitigation evidence in light of impact

and personal characteristic evidence of the victim’s life is likewise appropriate under the

aegis of Payne and its declaration that “there is nothing unfair about allowing the jury to

bear in mind that harm [i.e., that harm caused by the loss of the victim’s life] at the same

time as it considers the mitigating evidence introduced by the defendant.” Payne at 826

(emphasis added). As for the practical result of engaging in this deliberative exercise,

the very act of weighing mitigation evidence in light of victim impact/characteristics

evidence is endorsed by the Court’s opinion that a jury may fairly consider both “at the

same time” when deciding ultimately the weight given to aggravating and mitigating

factors, respectively.

       In the case sub judice, however, the question arises whether the prosecutor’s

explicit call for the jury to consider whether Appellant’s mitigation evidence outweighed

“the life” of Officer Grove comes under the above analysis, as the statement as made

goes beyond asking the jury merely to consider victim impact/characteristics evidence

and mitigation evidence together. The concern emerges that the prosecutor’s argument

as articulated would instead cause the jury to believe it was tasked with weighing one life

against another in an arbitrary procedure--one neither reflecting the facts of the case nor

expressed in the law they swore to apply in deliberations--whereby it should impose

                                       [J-3-2014] - 37
death simply if it finds Appellant’s life is worth less than Officer Grove’s. In this respect,

therefore, the prosecutorial comment fell outside the realm of Payne paradigm and was

plainly inappropriate.

           In our view, however, the totality of circumstances surrounding the comment

prevented it from prejudicing the jury. Looking at the extent and nature of the opening

comment, we see it was a brief, indeed truncated remark not couched in an otherwise

emotionally inflammatory plea recalling graphic details of the crime or describing

Appellant in derogatory terms, and the court’s sustaining of the defense objection

stopped the comment short of including an overt discussion on the relative worth of each

life. 15   Also going to the nature of the remark and its potential for prejudice is the

reasonable, albeit decidedly lesser possibility under the facts that a juror could have

understood it as a request to focus particular attention on how the mitigating proffer

weighed against the enumerated aggravating factor at 9711(d)(1) that Appellant took the

15   Compare Humphries v. Ozmint, 397 F.3d 206 (4th Cir.2005), in which the circuit court
reviewed the totality of circumstances and rejected a charge of fundamental unfairness in
the prosecutor’s closing at the sentencing phase. The statements in question included
(1) “Qwhen you look at the character of this Defendant, and when you look at [the victim],
how profane when you look at all the circumstances of this crime and of this Defendant,
how profane to give this man a gift of life under these circumstances.”; (2) “What
punishment do you recommend when you’ve got a character like that? What
punishment do you recommend when somebody like [the victim] is taken from us?”; and
(3) “if not in a case as aggravating as this, if not in a case with absolutely no mitigation like
this, if not in a case with a character like this, if not in a case when somebody like [the
victim] is taken, then when are you going to do it?”. The court based its decision on
several factors, including that the comparison between the defendant’s and victim’s life
was not the centerpiece of the prosecutor’s argument, and that the the solicitor did not
overtly say that the defendant’s life was worth less than the victim’s. In that latter regard,
it distinguished its facts from those in a recent state case in which the South Carolina
Supreme Court found fundamental unfairness in a prosecutor’s challenge to the jury that
it compare the life of the defendant to the lives of the two juvenile victims and ask itself
whether their lives were worth the life of the defendant, “the psychopath, this killer who
stabs and stabs and kills, and rapes and kidnaps.” Hall v. Catoe, 360 S.C. 353, 601
S.E.2d 335 (2004).

                                        [J-3-2014] - 38
life of a uniformed officer in the line of duty. Though, as noted above, we subordinate

this possibility to the far greater likelihood that the jury would have perceived the remark

as a comparative worth argument, and we are cautious not to otherwise overstate this

secondary aspect of the remark, we nevertheless find this possibility served as an

additional tempering feature under the facts.

       Most instrumental, however, in arresting any potential prejudice attendant to the

comment was the trial court’s swift and unequivocal response in issuing a detailed, and

comprehensive curative instruction reminding the jury that it was prohibited from basing

its sentence on the comparative worth of the victim’s and defendant’s respective lives,

and that it must, instead, make its sentencing decision on the evidence alone and in

accordance with instructions on applicable law.16 Finally, a two and one-half day penalty

trial replete with evidence wholly unrelated to the controversial remark followed, and the

jury returned with a verdict that denied several requested aggravating circumstances and

granted the subsection (e)(8) mitigating circumstances, further dispelling the notion of an

inflamed jury rendering a verdict on passions rather than reason.             Given these

circumstances of record, therefore, we find unavailing Appellant’s claim that the

prosecutor’s opening remark rendered his penalty trial fundamentally unfair.

V.      Precluding Witness Testimony Relating Appellant’s Purported Statements
                                  of Remorse
       Appellant next asserts that the lower court erred when it ruled his proffer of

testimony from friends and family relating his recent statements of remorse did not qualify

for admission as Pa.R.E. 803(1) (present sense impression) or 803(3) (then existing

16In most instances, the law presumes that the jury will follow the instructions of the
court. Commonwealth v. Rega, 933 A.2d 997, 1016 (Pa. 2007).

                                      [J-3-2014] - 39
mental, emotional, or physical condition) exceptions to the Rule against Hearsay.

Specifically, the trial court permitted the witnesses to testify as to their observations of

Appellant during their meetings with him but not to the particular statements he made.

N.T. at 1490. Barring the statements, Appellant contends, violated his rights not only

under the rules of evidence themselves, but also under the 8th and 14th Amendments’

mandate that reliable mitigation evidence, regardless of state evidentiary rules, be

admitted as articulated in Chambers v. Mississippi, 410 U.S. 284, 300-01 (1973).

       The Commonwealth responds that Appellant has waived his constitutional

challenge for failure to raise it first before the trial court, as he limited his argument to their

admissibility under the Pennsylvania Rules of Evidence, which, the Commonwealth

continues, provided no pathway to admission in any event because the statements

involved neither presently observed conditions or events as contemplated by Rule 801(1)

nor observations of his contemporaneous emotions made in the absence of a motive to

deceive, as required by Rule 803(3).

       The following side-bar exchange comprises the entire discussion on the matter:

       [Defense Counsel]:          Your Honor, in chambers we just had a
       discussion regarding evidence that we wanted to present. We have
       represented to the Court that we have multiple witnesses including the
       current witness, Kim Topper; her husband, Roger Topper; the Defendant’s
       cousin, Linda Yates: and sister, Brandy Johnson; among others who would
       testify that he has proclaimed to them on multiple occasions his remorse
       and his regret for what happened.

       We’re asking the Court to admit that under Rule 803(1), which would be
       present sense impression or under 803(3), which would be then existing
       emotional condition. We think are admissible -- those statements would be
       admissible under those exceptions to the hearsay rule.

       [Prosecutor]:        Your Honor, we’re objecting to that because for a
       number of reasons, but it’s hearsay and we don’t think it goes to state of
       mind in this under these circumstances.

                                         [J-3-2014] - 40
       THE COURT:            All right. The objection will be sustained. The
       defense is permitted to have witnesses describe objective observations of
       the Defendant. However, they may not testify as to statements made by
       him to them, that is hearsay, and it is not admissible and does not meet the
       exceptions outlined by the defense.
N.T. 6/18/12 at 1489-90.

       Rulings on the admissibility of evidence, including evidence proffered at the

penalty phase of a capital trial, are within the discretion of the trial judge, and such rulings

will form no basis for appellate relief absent an abuse of discretion. Commonwealth v.

Reid, 811 A.2d 530, 550 (Pa. 2002). See also Commonwealth v. Ragan, 645 A.2d 811,

818 (Pa. 1994) (noting the determination of whether hearsay, state of mind statements

are admissible is within the sound discretion of the trial court and will be reversed only

upon an abuse of that discretion).

       A capital defendant at the penalty hearing may present relevant evidence in

mitigation. 42 Pa.C.S. § 9711(a)(2); Commonealth v. May, 887 A.2d 750, 765 (Pa. 2005).

Evidence is relevant to mitigation if it is probative of any of the enumerated mitigating

circumstances set forth in 42 Pa.C.S. § 9711(e). Id.             “Given the broad standard

governing what qualifies as mitigation evidence, we have no doubt that a defendant's

testimonial expression of remorse at the penalty phase could be deemed relevant to his

character.” May at 766.

       Hearsay is “a statement, other than one made by the declarant while testifying at

the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted.” Pa.R.E.

801(c); Commonwealth v. McCrae, 832 A.2d 1026, 1034 (Pa. 2003). Rule 802 provides

that, “[h]earsay is not admissible except as provided by these rules [the Rules of

Evidence], other rules prescribed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, or by statute.” Id.

at 1034.    Although we are not informed what statements, exactly, the proffered

witnesses would have attributed to Appellant, we think it reasonable to infer from the

counsel’s motion to the court and Appellant’s own testimonial expression of remorse at

                                       [J-3-2014] - 41
penalty trial that the statements represented direct expressions of remorse, in the nature

of “I’m sorry for what happened.” As such, Appellant's alleged statements were relevant

to mitigation, but were also offered for their truth--indeed they were relevant only if used

for that purpose--and thus clearly would have constituted hearsay.

       On whether the statements were nonetheless admissible, the above excerpt from

the penalty hearing shows defense counsel offered summarily that admission was

required under state of mind exceptions to the rule against hearsay as articulated in

Pa.R.E. 803(1) and (3).17 The court, however, rejected the proffer as failing to meet the

exceptions, and defense counsel discussed the matter no further.              Counsel now

contends that the court erred in precluding Appellant’s statements of remorse through

17Rule 803, Exceptions to the Rule Against Hearsay--Regardless of Whether the
Declarant Is Available as a Witness, provides in pertinent part:

     The following are not excluded by the rule against hearsay, regardless of
     whether the declarant is available as a witness:

     (1) Present Sense Impression. A statement describing or explaining an
     event or condition, made while or immediately after the declarant perceived it.
     Comment: This rule is identical to F.R.E. 803(1).

     For this exception to apply, declarant need not be excited or otherwise
     emotionally affected by the event or condition perceived. The trustworthiness
     of the statement arises from its timing.               The requirement of
     contemporaneousness, or near contemporaneousness, reduces the chance
     of premeditated prevarication or loss of memory.

     ***
     (3) Then-Existing Mental, Emotional, or Physical Condition. A statement
     of the declarant's then-existing state of mind (such as motive, intent or plan) or
     emotional, sensory, or physical condition (such as mental feeling, pain, or
     bodily health), but not including a statement of memory or belief to prove the
     fact remembered or believed unless it relates to the validity or terms of the
     declarant's will.

Pa.R.E. 803(1) and (3).

                                      [J-3-2014] - 42
friends and family because the statements were both relevant to the critical issue of

mitigation in the penalty phase of trial and trustworthy, given they were (1) statements

against interest, (2) spontaneously made to family, (3) corroborated by his own

penalty-phase testimony, and (4) subject to cross-examination.            We disagree, as

counsel failed to edify the court sufficiently as to the trustworthiness component of the

proffered testimony.

      Apposite jurisprudence has denied categorical acceptance of hearsay testimony

as to an out-of-court defendant’s statement of remorse, requiring instead an additional

measure of trustworthiness beyond that which springs from the temporal coordination of

the statement and the remorseful emotion on which it remarks. In May, supra, the capital

defendant sought to admit as mitigation the testimony of his victim’s two adult daughters,

who would have testified that defendant apologized and expressed remorse during their

face-to-face meeting with them and in a three-page letter. The daughters, who were

opposed to the death penalty, were willing and available to testify regarding Appellant’s

expressions of remorse, but the trial court ruled the hearsay proffer inadmissible without

the additional assurances that cross-examination of the defendant would bring. We

upheld the ruling, reasoning:

      The case sub judice is very similar to [Commonwealth v.]Young, [637 A.2d
1313 ([Pa.]1993)] in which the defendant also declined to testify on his own
      behalf during the penalty phase. In an attempt to present evidence of his
      remorse, the defendant there sought to introduce letters he had written to a
      member of a religious order concerning his case, but the trial court ruled
      that the letters were inadmissible hearsay. On appeal, this Court held that
      the trial court properly excluded the letters because the Commonwealth
      could not cross-examine the defendant regarding their content. This Court
      specifically noted that “to allow the letters into evidence would have been
      tantamount to granting [the defendant] the right of allocution ... [which right]
      has been abrogated and replaced by the statutory law which specifies
      procedures for sentencing for first-degree murder.” Id. at 1322. The fact
      that the evidence here would have been admitted through testimony,
      whereas the evidence in Young would have been admitted through letters,
      makes no relevant difference.          Both constitute hearsay.        In both

                                      [J-3-2014] - 43
       circumstances, the defendants attempted to present favorable evidence
       while denying the Commonwealth an opportunity to challenge the
       statements through cross-examination. The trial court did not abuse its
       discretion and properly excluded the testimony of the victim's daughters.
May. at 887 A.2d 750, 765-66.

       Unlike the defendants in May and Young, Appellant eventually testified regarding

his remorse and would thus have been available for cross-examination as to his earlier

statements allegedly made to the proffered witnesses. This fact, however, fails to take

the case sub judice outside the ambit of May and Young, for, at the time defense counsel

offered the hearsay testimony in question, counsel made no indication to the court that

Appellant would later testify, let alone that he would testify as to his remorse. In death

penalty cases, our standard of review is to review the court’s evidentiary ruling at the time

it was made for an abuse of discretion or error of law. Reid, supra. With the record

revealing neither an indication by counsel that Appellant might testify, a request for a

conditional ruling in the event he did, nor a resubmission of the motion when it became

certain that he would, in fact, testify, we detect no abuse of discretion or error of law in an

evidentiary ruling made consistently with the controlling precedent of May that such

statements of remorse, unaccompanied by additional measures of trustworthiness, fail to

gain admission under our evidentiary rules pertaining to state of mind exceptions to the

rule against hearsay.

       An alternate basis on which to support the court’s refusal to admit the hearsay as a

state-of-mind exception derives from a capital defendant’s motive to affect remorse in

out-of-court conversations with potential character witnesses who may then relay his

ostensibly sympathetic statements to the penalty jury.              “When the declarant's

out-of-court statements demonstrate his state of mind, are made in a natural manner, and

are material and relevant, they are admissible pursuant to the exception.” Commonwealth

v. Begley, 780 A.2d 605, 623-24 (Pa. 2001) (quoting Commonwealth v. Riggins, 478 Pa.

                                       [J-3-2014] - 44
222, 234, 386 A.2d 520, 525 (1978)) (emphasis added). See also Commonwealth v.

Lonwenberg, 392 A.2d 1274, 1279 (Pa. 1978) (“In addition to the necessity for [the state

of mind] exception, the admission of this type of evidence is justified because the

circumstances in which these utterances were made indicate that they accurately

reflected the declarant's state of mind at that time and there was an absence of a motive

to deceive.”)

       A capital defendant has motive to deceive when declaring his remorse, as the

statement, if deemed credible, may advance his self-interest in mitigating punishment.

This danger of surreptitious self-serving that may accompany the capital defendant’s

statement thus removes it from that class of statements whose reliability flows from a

context showing the statement was naturally made. This is not to preclude the possibility

that capital defendants may sincerely express remorse to others in extra-judicial

conversations; it, instead, simply acknowledges that great pressures bearing upon the

capital defendant to make potentially mitigating statements warrant both the conclusion

that such statements are not “naturally made” for purposes of Pa.R.E. 803(1) and (3) and

the corresponding requirement that the defendant testify on the issue of his remorse

before a jury--who may then assess his sincerity in person and with the benefit of

cross-examination--as a prerequisite to possible admission of hearsay statements of his

remorse.

       Even if the trial court had ascertained that Appellant would, in fact, testify as to his

remorse--a circumstance neither alleged by Appellant nor appearing of record--such that

exclusion of witnesses’ hearsay testimony to that same effect constituted error, we would

nevertheless deem the error harmless.        Harmless error may be established in one of

three ways: (1) the error did not prejudice the defendant or the prejudice was only de

minimis; (2) the erroneously admitted evidence was cumulative of other properly admitted

                                       [J-3-2014] - 45
evidence; or (3) the prejudicial effect of the error is so insignificant by comparison to the

other evidence that it is clear beyond a reasonable doubt that the error could not have

contributed to the jury's decision regarding the death penalty. Commonwealth v. Smith,

861 A.2d 892, 897 (2004) (internal citation and quotation marks omitted).

       Here, Appellant personally expressed his remorse when he apologized to the

Grove family from the witness stand. This was the clearest, most direct expression of

remorse available as it gave the jury the opportunity to assess the sincerity of Appellant’s

statement. Moreover, the jury heard testimony from two faith ministers that Appellant

presented as witnesses to his character. Specifically, Prison pastor Ronald Cordell

testified that Appellant was a consistently devout and exemplary student at his prison

bible lessons who desired instruction and conversation on forming a relationship with God

and repentance. N.T. at 1527-28.        Pastor Robert Herr also testified that Appellant

displayed a level and complexity of religious searching consistent with genuine reflection

and a legitimate attempt to gain an understanding of biblical teaching that made sense to

him. N.T. at 1534-35. Herr testified as to his personal experience with so-called “prison

conversions,” wherein inmates feign newfound spiritual insight about their prior criminal

lives for the sole purpose of obtaining favorable results in pending legal proceedings, but

Herr differentiated Appellant’s approach to and participation in the faith exercises he

administered from the that typically practiced by charlatans. N.T. at 1535.

       How these three accounts of Appellant’s allegedly remorseful, reflective, and

repentant state of mind provided materially different or inferior evidence on the subject as

compared to the excluded proffer, Appellant does not explain and we do not perceive.

We therefore deem harmless any error attending the exclusion of cumulative testimony

as to Appellant’s alleged remorse.

    VI.      Denial of Appellant’s Motion to Quash the Aggravating Factor that
               Appellant Killed While in the Perpetration of a Felony

                                      [J-3-2014] - 46
       Appellant next contends that the lower court erred in denying his motion to quash

the aggravating factor that he killed while “in perpetration of a felony” under 42 Pa.C.S. §

9711(d)(6) when his underlying felony conviction was for Persons not to Possess a

Firearm. “The only felonies that the legislature intended as aggravating circumstances,”

Appellant argues, “are the six serious felonies of robbery, rape, deviate sexual

intercourse by force or threat of force, arson, burglary, and kidnapping[]” enumerated in
                                                                                     18
the Crime Code’s definition of “perpetration of a felony” at 18 Pa.C.S. § 2502(d).        Brief

for Appellant at 31. This Court has rejected the identical claim in both Commonwealth v.

Walker, 656 A.2d 90 (Pa. 1995) (holding jury may consider underlying felony conviction of

criminal trespass as felony for purposes of Sentencing Code’s § 9711(d)(6) aggravator)

and Commonwealth v. Robinson, 877 A.2d 433 (Pa. 2005) (holding “felony” for purposes

of (d)(6) are not those enumerated in Section 2502(d), but, instead, those contemplated

in Crimes Code at 18 Pa.C.S. § 101 et seq.). Appellant declares, however, “the time is

ripe for Robinson to be overruled[]” and, to that end, provides an argument that, he says,

“reiterates the convincing textual and legislative history arguments advanced by the

Robinson defendantQ.” Brief for Appellant at 31.

       Indeed, as Appellant acknowledges, our decision in Robinson reaffirmed

jurisprudence set forth in Walker that a jury may find an “in perpetration of a felony”

aggravating circumstance, and that “felonies” for such a purpose are expressly defined in

the Crimes Code at 18 Pa.C.S. § 101 et seq. We went on to reject the defendant’s

attempt to distinguish his argument from Walker’s through incorporation of legislative

history, which, he maintained, revealed how our Legislature’s severance of the former

18  Section 2502(d) defines “perpetration of a felony” as “[t]he act of the defendant in
engaging in or being an accomplice in the commission of, or an attempt to commit, or
flight after committing, or attempting to commit robbery, rape, or deviate sexual
intercourse by force or threat of force, arson, burglary or kidnapping.”

                                      [J-3-2014] - 47
death penalty statute to accommodate constitutional requirements espoused in the

United States Supreme Court decision in Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S. 238, 92 S. Ct.
2726, 33 L. Ed. 2d 346 (1972), and reformation into present-day Crime Code’s Section

2502 (murder statute) and Sentencing Code’s Section 9711 (death penalty statute)

inadvertently omitted importing into Section 9711 the definitional section of Section 2502

as a necessary component. Robinson, 877 at 446. Our General Assembly amended 42

Pa.C.S. § 9711 “on no less than five occasions” since our decision in Walker, we noted,

and in no amendment did it alter the pertinent law as interpreted by this Court. Id. So, we

held, was applicable the well-settled presumption of statutory construction that our

interpretation was in accordance with legislative intent. Id. (citing 1 Pa.C.S. § 1922(4);

Fonner v. Shandon, Inc., 724 A.2d 903, 906 (Pa. 1999)).

       A vigorous dissent, authored by Justice Saylor, noted that the appellant had

provided an extensive legislative history of Sections 9711 and 2502, together with a

well-developed argument in support of limiting the Section 9711(d)(6) aggravator to the

six enumerated felonies of Section 2502. A probing and comprehensive analysis of the

original severance, subsequent amendments to the capital sentencing scheme, and the

resultant incarnations and iterations of each Section followed, with the dissent ultimately

opining that Section 2502(d) avoids ambiguity and “gains full meaning only when read in

conjunction with the death penalty statute.” Robinson, at 457. Conjoining the statutes in

such a way as to limit felonies qualifying as an aggravator in sentencing, Justice Saylor

opined, aligns perfectly with the United States Supreme Court’s mandate that carefully

defined, narrowing criteria apply as a threshold to death eligibility. Id. Two justices joined

Justice Saylor in dissent.

       In Robinson, therefore, this Court rejected zealous advocacy and robust dissent

on the very same issue and argument that is now raised herein. Appellant concedes as

                                       [J-3-2014] - 48
much when he states “[i]n Robinson, the defendant’s arguments were substantially the

same as the ones in this briefQ.” Brief for Appellant at 42.19 We agree, and therefore

deem Robinson binding precedent, particularly given Appellant’s reiterations of the

defendant’s unavailing arguments made in that case. Furthermore, just as we inferred in

Robinson an accordance between legislative intent and our prior interpretations of the law

from the General Assembly’s failure to alter the law subsequently, so we continue to infer

accordance in our review of the case sub judice, where the General Assembly has left the

law unaltered for nine years following the fully-developed treatment the issue received in

Robinson. Accordingly, we dismiss this claim as meritless.

                     VII.    Admission of Victim Impact Evidence

       Appellant next contends the court committed reversible error when it instructed the

jury on the use of victim impact evidence, as the court's language allowed the jury to use

victim impact as a super non-statutory aggravator. Appellant filed a pre-hearing motion

seeking to preclude the Commonwealth from offering victim impact evidence. The lower

court denied the motion, and the jury considered victim impact evidence in violation of

Appellant's Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights, Appellant argues.

19  Indeed, though Appellant points to an additional aspect of Section 2502 in support of
his legislative history argument, this point is in no way transformative, as the nature of his
challenge still mirrors the legislative history-based challenge that the Majority in Robinson
dispatched. Appellant does argue elsewhere, however, that his case is factually
distinguishable from Robinson because it involved a non-violent felony, whereas
Robinson involved two violent felonies and a non-violent one. Appellant thus speculates
that the violent nature of the two felonies in Robinson “may have been sufficient to
convince the [C]ourt that Robinson’s overall crime warranted a punishment of death, and
therefore that the perpetration of a felony aggravating circumstance was in his case
serving the narrowing function required by [United States Supreme Court jurisprudence].
Brief for Appellant at 43. Nothing in Robinson substantiates this theory, as we confined
our opinion to the question regarding the statutory source of a “felony” as that term is used
in the “perpetration of a felony” aggravating circumstance and determined the applicable
definition comes from the Crimes Code at section 101: “What constitutes a felony in this
Commonwealth is defined in the Crimes Code at 18 Pa.C.S. § 101 et seq.”

                                       [J-3-2014] - 49
       Central to Appellant's claim is the proposition that the United States Supreme

Court decision in Payne, supra, erroneously overturned prior decisions of the Court that

held capital punishment must be based solely on evidence that tends to inform the jury

about the nature of the offense and character of the defendant. See Booth, supra, and

Gathers, supra. Quoting liberally from the dissent in Payne, Appellant argues that victim

impact statements serve no purpose other than to appeal to the sympathies or emotions

of the jurors. Payne, 501 U.S. at 856-57 (dissenting opinion of Stevens and Blackmun,

JJ.). The testimony of Officer Grove's family offered no insight to either the nature of the

offense or the character of Appellant and was therefore irrelevant, he maintains. Even if

relevant, he offers in the alternative, the victim impact statements were "overwhelmingly

more prejudicial than probative and should not have been admitted." Brief for Appellant at

45.

       Appellant candidly acknowledges, however, that our Court has held the statutory

authority at 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9711(c)(2) to instruct a jury that it may consider victim impact

evidence violates neither state or federal due process nor prohibitions against cruel and

unusual punishment. See Commonwealth v. Means, 773 A.2d 143 (Pa. 2001). He

maintains, however, that the standard jury instruction emanating from this provision and

substantially followed by the lower court in charging the jury in the case sub judice,

however, simply fails to provide adequate guidance on how to consider the victim impact

statement vis a vis the Eighth Amendment, which requires more accuracy in and factual

support for an instruction than would be required in a non-capital case. "On the one

hand, the Court says the jury can give the evidence whatever weight they think it

deserves, but on the other hand limits the jury to a 'rational inquiry into the culpability of

defendant.’ Is Appellant more culpable because the victim was loved by his parents?

Less culpable because the victim was not yet married? Was Appellant more culpable

                                       [J-3-2014] - 50
because of a community-wide outpouring of grief for the victim? Less culpable because

the victim had not yet had children?" Appellant asks, referencing argument from the

hearing at N.T. 1437-1464. Brief of Appellant at 46.

       The Commonwealth dismisses this claim as meritless because this Court has

approved not only the use of victim impact statements but also the substantially same

instruction that the court used in the case sub judice. See Means, supra.

       Our standard of review for penalty phase jury instructions is the same as that which

guides us in reviewing a guilt phase jury charge. In reviewing a challenge to a jury

instruction, the entire charge is considered, not merely discrete portions thereof.

Commonwealth v. Eichinger, 915 A.2d 1122, 1138 (Pa. 2007). The trial court is free to

use its own expressions as long as the concepts at issue are clearly and accurately

presented to the jury. Id. It is the policy of this Court to give our trial courts latitude and

discretion in phrasing instructions. Id.

       The trial court gave the following instructions regarding victim-impact testimony:

       However, if you find at least one aggravating circumstance and at least one
       mitigating circumstance, you may then consider the victim and family
       impact evidence when deciding whether or not the aggravating
       circumstance or circumstances outweigh the mitigating circumstance or
       circumstances.

       Each of you may give the family and victim impact statements whatever
       weight you think it deserves. Your consideration of this evidence,
       however, must be limited to a rational inquiry into the culpability of the
       Defendant and may not be an emotional response to the evidence which
       was presented.
N.T. 10/4/12 at 1848-49.

       We agree with the trial court that Appellant’s challenge against the above

instruction, which aptly covered accepted law on a jury’s consideration of victim impact

statements, has no merit.      Appellant relies exclusively on positions that have been

considered extensively by both the United States and Pennsylvania Supreme Courts and

                                       [J-3-2014] - 51
relegated to dissenting opinion status. Nor does Appellant identify a growing trend of

decisional law departing from such jurisprudence to warrant reconsideration of

precedent.     We therefore reject this claim.

                VIII   Denied Request for a Residual Doubt Instruction

        Appellant next charges reversible error with the trial court's refusal to instruct the

jury during the penalty phase that residual doubt could be considered as a mitigating

factor. Appellant acknowledges that no such request for the instruction appears of

record, but was made and denied, instead, in chambers, as confirmed by the trial court in

its Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion.      Appellant also acknowledges decisions of both the

Supreme Court of the United States and this Court denying a constitutional right in a

capital defendant "to an instruction telling a jury to revisit the question of his guilt as a

basis for mitigation." Franklin v. Lynaugh, 487 U.S. 164, 173 (1988). Accord

Commonwealth v. Fletcher, 750 A.2d 261, 277 (Pa. 2000).

        A shift towards the introduction of residual doubt and a subsequent jury instruction,

however, has occurred, Appellant says. Citing a 2001 federal district court decision from

Louisiana 20 holding such evidence and an instruction are entitlements under the

statutory construction of 18 U.S.C. § 3592 because it allows for a non-exclusive list,

Appellant draws the analogy that the similarly open-ended Section 9711(e)(8) "catch-all"

mitigator likewise entitles a defendant to argument and instruction on residual doubt.

Moreover, Appellant cites to Commonwealth v. Meadows, 787 A.2d 312 (Pa. 2001) as an

instance in which this Court recognized the residual doubt argument as a reasonable trial

strategy in arguing against the death penalty. See id at 321 (holding counsel's emphasis

on lingering or residual doubt jurors may have had about defendant's guilt was

reasonable penalty hearing strategy in case where grounds existed for counsel's belief

20 U.S. v. Davis, 132 F. Supp. 2d 455 (E.D.La. 2001).

                                       [J-3-2014] - 52
that defendant was poor witness and other witnesses were lacking). One year later, this

Court in a PCRA appeal held defendant's counsel could not be deemed ineffective for

presenting a residual doubt argument. See Commonwealth v. Fisher, 813 A.2d 761 (Pa.

2002).     This trend establishes, Appellant argues, that "the trial judge erred in not

instructing the jury during the penalty phase that residual doubt is an appropriate

mitigating factor." Brief for Appellant at p. 48.

         The Commonwealth retorts, initially, that this claim is waived for Appellant's failure

to place his request for the instruction on the record. See Commonwealth v. Spell, 28
A.3d 1274, 1280 (Pa. 2011) (imposing waiver where defendant failed to ensure that

discussions of issue in lower court were preserved in the record). In any event, the

Commonwealth argues alternatively that controlling jurisprudence has held, contrary to

Appellant's assertion, "there is no constitutional requirement that a convicted murderer be

permitted to argue residual doubt concerning guilt as a mitigating factor." Means, supra at

158-59 (discussing Lynaugh, supra).           A more recent pronouncement of this Court

marked not a trend toward recognizing residual doubt entitlements but, instead, a

reaffirmation against a right to such evidence presentation, argumentation, and

instruction. See Commonwealth v. Edmiston, 851 A.2d 883, 895 (Pa. 2004) ("Residual

doubt is not a statutory mitigating circumstance and, as noted, given its statutory

irrelevance, it is not clear that appellant should have been permitted to present this sort of

evidence/argument at all."). Finally, the Commonwealth notes that the court did not limit

the presentation of residual doubt evidence, it was Appellant's election not to present it.

         A trial court's denial of a request for a jury instruction is disturbed on appeal only if

there was an abuse of discretion or an error of law. Commonwealth v. Galvin, 985 A.2d
783, 798-799 (Pa. 2009). We discern no such infirmity with the court's denial here, as it

was consistent with prevailing law on the topic recognizing no right to a jury instruction on

                                         [J-3-2014] - 53
residual doubt, a non-statutory mitigator. Appellant's argument purportedly heralds a

trend in decisional law toward the recognition of such rights, but several decisions

rejecting ineffective claims that assailed counsel for advancing a residual doubt-based

mitigation theory does not a revolution make. The decisions were, instead, merely a

product of our review under the ineffectiveness rubric and its three-prong test wherein we

discerned no unreasonable trial strategy given the particular facts of the case. The

decisions did not concomitantly recognize a defendant’s right to a jury instruction

identifying residual doubt as a mitigating factor. Accordingly, this claim is meritless.

             IX.    Denial of Motion to Suppress Inculpatory Statements

       Appellant next argues that the lower court erred in denying his motion to suppress

his statements recorded in an ambulance while hypothermic, dehydrated, under the

influence of morphine,21 in pain, and having heard the police ask medical staff to withhold

pain medication until Appellant was interviewed. This confluence of adverse effects

overbore his ability to give a voluntary statement and critically impaired his capacity for

self-determination, Appellant asserts, thus making the admission of his statement a

violation of his Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment guarantees.

       For the 11 1/2 hours between the time of the shooting until his arrest the following

morning, Appellant says, he experienced severe pain from the bullet lodged in his hip,

cold, thirst, little sleep, and the "stark absence of friends, relatives or legal counsel before

the police arrived to interrogate him." Brief of Appellant at 51. These dire circumstances,

he continues, composed the prelude to a mentally coercive interrogation punctuated by

an officer's request of the paramedic to withhold administering morphine to Appellant until

21 Though Appellant initially refers to a morphine-induced statement, the crux of his
argument with respect to the administration of morphine is that it was the withholding of
the medication until he completed his statement--and the mental and physical anguish
such prolonging of his pain caused--that rendered his statement an invalid product of
coercion.

                                       [J-3-2014] - 54
a recording of Appellant's incriminating statement could be obtained. Compounding this

effect was the fact Appellant heard he was to be denied morphine until the statement was

obtained, Appellant continues. "To the patient experiencing severe pain, this denial of

medication constituted psychological

coercion, at the very least, and is precisely the type of situation that mandates the court to

consider statements taken in medical settings as 'extremely suspect.'" Brief of Appellant

at 50-51.

       Appellant analogizes his deprivation of pain medication during interrogation to that

of the defendant in Commonwealth v. Perry, 379 A.2d 545 (Pa. 1977). Hospitalized with

a gunshot wound, fed intravenously, and coping with the discomfort of a catheter, Perry

asked for, but was denied, pain medication during his interrogation. He had not seen

friends or family for over 12 hours and was under visible police guard. Id. at 547. These

facts led this Court to throw out the confession, which was not, we held, "the product of an

essentially free and unconstrained choice." Id.          Cited additionally for the same

proposition is Commonwealth ex rel Gaito v. Maroney, 220 A.2d 628 (Pa. 1966), wherein

the Court deemed an admission involuntary where obtained four hours post-surgery and

after administration of demerol, despite the district attorney's testimony that defendant did

not seem impaired. A unanimous court, Appellant states, based its decision "not only on

the lack of rational choice on the part of appellant but also on 'a strong conviction that our

system of law enforcement should not operate so as to take advantage of a person in this

fashion.'" Id. at 632 (quoting Blackburn v. State of Alabama, 361 U.S. 199, 208 (1960)).

Even though it was "quite possible that the challenged confession may have been

obtained while appellant was completely lucid and mentally competent[,]" Maroney

reasoned, "our judgment as to the effect of the circumstances under which the confession

was obtained upon appellant's mental capacity to confess must by its nature be one

                                       [J-3-2014] - 55
based upon probabilities." Maroney at 631. In much the same way, even if it were

possible that he was completely lucid and mentally competent, Appellant submits, the

confluence of circumstances makes that possibility too small to serve as a basis for the

admission of his statement.

       His case compares favorably to the hospitalization cases above, Appellant says,

because, unlike those defendants, who were at least receiving medical treatment at the

time, he had not yet come under the care of a physician when his statement was taken.

Instead, he lay handcuffed to a stretcher and surrounded by two police officers, one of

whom asked paramedics to delay pain relief until a statement was recorded. Moreover,

Appellant contends, his case is distinguishable from jurisprudence that a suspect's

wounded condition necessitating hospital care does not automatically render a

confession involuntary. Though we held in Commonwealth v. Johnson, 727 A.2d 1089

(Pa. 1999), that displaying the 'presence of mind in fabricating a story about his shooting'

designed to mislead police revealed a will uncoerced in the hospitatlized defendant and,

thus, a statement voluntarily rendered, Appellant notes no such deliberate falsification

exists in the case sub judice. His attempt to hide his vehicle occurred immediately after

the shooting and was far too remote in time from his statement given eleven hours later to

lend insight into his state of mind at that time. In sum, given the totality of circumstances

surrounding his statement obtained in the ambulance, admission of the statement

violated his constitutional rights and should have been suppressed by the lower court,

Appellant posits.

       The Commonwealth responds that the testimonial evidence adduced at the

suppression hearing dispelled any concern Appellant’s recorded confession was the

product of coercion. Pennsylvania state troopers arriving at the scene immediately

called for emergency assistance upon seeing a wounded Appellant and interviewed a

                                      [J-3-2014] - 56
lucid and responsive Appellant in accordance with the dictates of Miranda during the

14-minute wait for an ambulance, the Commonwealth argues.                Appellant freely

confessed during this time, the argument continues, and the interview stopped shortly

thereafter when the ambulance arrived to allow paramedics to prepare Appellant for

transport to York Hospital.

       Knowing a tape recorder was then recording all comments, Appellant answered

the paramedic’s questions clearly, indicating he had been shot in the right hip during the

night, the Commonwealth notes. Interrogation resumed only after the EMT’s ten minute

medical assessment of Appellant, during which time he obtained Appellant’s medical

history, determined the status of the gunshot wound appeared to be stable, as it was no

longer bleeding, applied a bandage to the hip, and placed heat packs on the IV tube in

response to Appellant’s report that he was cold.

       Contrary to Appellant’s assertion, the Commonwealth maintains, pain relief in the

form of IV morphine was not delayed pending Appellant’s provision of a confession. The

record establishes, instead, that Trooper Navitsky asked the paramedic if he could have

five minutes to interview Appellant before morphine was given, and the EMT agreed, as

that represented the time it would take the EMT to prepare for, and receive a physician’s

approval for, administration of morphine anyway. N.T. at 33-47, 198. Trooper Navitsky

indicated he only wanted to put on the recorder the substance of the conversation he and

Appellant had before the ambulance arrived. N.T. at 198. Recordation of Appellant’s

statement ensued and morphine was thereafter administered intravenously within the

five-minute time frame.

       As for the recorded statement itself, the Commonwealth argues, Appellant

answered all questions pertaining to his knowledge of Miranda rights and his culpability in

the shooting freely, clearly, and candidly. He knew the day of the week, denied having

                                     [J-3-2014] - 57
taken illicit drugs, and then offered a detailed account of spotlight hunting, the deadly

confrontation with Officer Grove and subsequent flight from the scene, and his night alone

in the woods, which, he said, gave him time to think and feel remorse for the killing.

       Then asking Trooper Navitsky to pause the recorder and informing him of Ryan

Laumann’s alleged involvement in another crime, the Commonwealth offers, further

revealed Appellant was neither physically nor psychologically overwhelmed but was,

instead, capable of rationale, independent, goal-oriented thought calculated to improve

his lot in a difficult circumstance. Also noted by the Commonwealth is that treating

paramedics testified Appellant was “stable, conscious, alert, oriented, and acting and

conversing appropriately.” Brief of Appellee at 45.       They observed no change in

Appellant’s demeanor or mental status after he received five milligrams of morphine,22

nor did they observe any evidence of hypothermia, dehydration, or severe blood loss on

the part of Appellant, the Commonwealth recounts. N.T. at 50, 57, 58-62, 114-116, 120,

146-48.

       These impressions were consistent, it is argued, with those of trauma surgeon Dr.

Kern Michael Hughes, who determined Appellant was stable and his vital signs and

mental status were normal. No surgery was necessary for what he discerned as a fairly

superficial, minor gunshot wound to the right hip area, nor did he detect any sign of

hypothermia or dehydration, the Commonwealth notes. Additionally noteworthy in this

regard, the Commonwealth says, is that Dr. Hughes discharged Appellant only several

hours after arrival.

22As to the effects of this dose of morphine, the Commonwealth also alludes to the
suppression hearing testimony of Dr. Ward Donovan, Chief of Toxicology at the Pinnacle
Health System, who, based on clinical findings of the case coupled with his own
pharmacological findings, “determined that the administration of five milligrams of
morphine in this case to Appellant between 10:10 a.m. and 10:25 a.m. would have
minimal or no impact whatsoever on his cognitive functioning.” Brief of Appellee at 46.

                                      [J-3-2014] - 58
      Finally bearing on the voluntariness of his statement, the Commonwealth adds, is

evidence that Appellant continued to cooperate with law enforcement after his hospital

discharge, showing them, in person, “the path he had taken the previous night and the

general area in which he had disposed of his weapons.” Brief of Appellant, p. 46, citing

N.T. 224-229.

      The trial court explained its order denying Appellant’s motion to suppress his

statement as follows:

      The cornerstone of Defendant’s challenge is his claim he was suffering from
      various medical infirmities at the time of his statement; however, his various
      claims of illness are not supported by the record. Medical professionals
      consistently indicated that during the examination at the scene, and
      subsequently at the hospital, there were no physical symptoms evidencing
      that Defendant suffered from dehydration, hypothermia, or significant blood
      loss. In addition, Commonwealth presented credible expert testimony
      corroborating the paucity of any evidence that the medical infirmities
      complained of ever existed. Defendant’s expert’s opinion to the contrary is
      unconvincing. While it is true Defendant complained of pain to emergency
      first responders, his primary initial complaint related to the tightness of the
      handcuffs rather than the bullet wound to his hip. Once the handcuffs were
      released, Defendant subsequently expressed pain only in response to
      questioning by medical professionals.            Indeed, the totality of the
      circumstances establishes that the pain suffered by Defendant, if any, did
      not interfere in any way with his ability to understand, process, and
      intelligently respond to police questioning. Defendant’s condition was not
      so impaired as to render him incapable of voluntarily waiving his rights or
      describing the incident that resulted in his custody.

      ***

      Defendant argues that despite manifestations of a cooperative, voluntary
      statement, his physical and psychological condition was impaired to the
      extent he was incapable of understanding and intelligently waiving his
      rights. Unfortunately for Defendant, the evidence at the suppression
      hearing does not support his claim. All medical and law enforcement
      personnel coming into contact with Defendant during the time period related
      to the interview testified Defendant was cognizant of time and place.
      Moreover, his statement evidenced the ability to recall and relate recent and
      distant past events.      Defendant accurately related information and
      provided rational answers to the proposed questions. At one point during
      the discussion, Defendant requested to have the recorded portion of the

                                     [J-3-2014] - 59
       interview suspended while he discussed a matter implicating another in
       criminal conduct. His ability to process such a consideration demonstrated
       the complexity of his thinking. These facts confirm Defendant had
       sufficient cognitive awareness to understand his Miranda warnings and
       intelligently waive his rights.

Trial Court Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, filed 11/16/11 at 11-12.

       In reviewing a suppression court's denial of a suppression motion,

       we may consider only the evidence of the Commonwealth and so much of
       the evidence for the defense as remains uncontradicted when read in the
       context of the record as a whole. Where the suppression court's factual
       findings are supported by the record, we are bound by these findings and
       may reverse only if the court's legal conclusions are erroneous.

Commonwealth v. Jones, 988 A.2d 649, 654 (Pa. 2010) (citing Commonwealth v. Bomar,

826 A.2d 831, 842 (Pa. 2003)). Nonetheless, we exercise plenary review over the

suppression court's conclusions of law. Id. (citations omitted).

       “There is of course no single litmus-paper test for determining a constitutionally

impermissible interrogation. Rather, the ultimate test of voluntariness is whether the

confession is the product of an essentially free and unconstrained choice by its maker.

‘If it is, if he has willed to confess, it may be used against him. If it is not, if his will has

been overborne and his capacity for self-determination critically impaired, the use of his

confession offends due process.’” Commonwealth v. Hallowell, 282 A.2d 327, 329 (Pa.

1971) (quoting Culombe v. Connecticut, 367 U.S. 568, 602, 81 S. Ct. 1860, 1879, 6
L. Ed. 2d 1037 (1961)).       Thus we must consider the totality of the circumstances,

including the accused's mental and physical condition. Id.

       In Perry, supra, this Court addressed the voluntariness of a confession made by a

defendant who, like Appellant, was at the time of his interrogation undergoing medical

                                        [J-3-2014] - 60
treatment and observation for a gunshot wound. In concluding Perry’s statement was

involuntarily made, we found dispositive the following facts:

       Thirteen hours after his arrest, the detective informed appellant of his
       constitutional rights and appellant indicated that he would give a statement.
       The interrogation continued for about one hour and twenty minutes, until
       11:15 a. m. During this time appellant gave and signed an incriminating
       statement.

       During the interview appellant was lying in bed and was alone in the room
       with the interrogating detective. During the interview he complained to the
       detective of pain and was experiencing discomfort from a catheter inserted
       through the penis into the bladder in order to monitor for any abnormal
       bleeding indicating injury to the bladder, urinary tract or kidney. At one
       point during the interview, when the appellant complained of pain, he asked
       the detective to call the nurse. When the nurse arrived, the appellant
       informed her that he was in pain and wanted some type of medication.
       Medication, however, was refused. Throughout the interview, appellant
       was being fed through an intravenous tube. The catheter remained in the
       appellant for over two days and the intravenous feeding continued
       constantly for about four days. At one point during the interrogation,
       appellant was asked by the detective if he wanted to continue the
       interrogation and the appellant answered that he “didn't care.”

Id at 546-47.

       Appellant offers Perry as controlling authority given the facts of his case, but it is

readily apparent that key differences exist between the factual scenarios of each case so

as to distinguish them. Whereas Perry was admitted to the intensive care unit for a

gunshot wound to the chest, gave his statement to an interrogator who kept him isolated

for one hour and twenty minutes in a small cubicle, complained of pain during the

interrogation to the point of calling for a nurse to administer pain medication, and was, in

fact, intentionally denied pain medication until he completed his statement, Appellant was

subject to a recorded statement lasting five minutes and taken in the company of

paramedics who agreed Trooper Navitsky had only that amount of time before morphine

would be administered. As such, Appellant had no reason to believe his pain medication

                                      [J-3-2014] - 61
had been denied; in fact, the tape recorder captured his response of “that’s fine” when the

necessary wait time before morphine would be given. See Trial Court’s Findings of Fact

and Conclusions of Law, supra at 15. Moreover, Appellant would have also noticed

Trooper Navitsky had yielded silently to paramedics for approximately ten minutes as

they initially cared for Appellant and prepared him for transport, had asked permission to

record Appellant’s statement, and had explained he needed only a short time to record a

statement that Appellant had already given before the ambulance had arrived. These

circumstances do not connote a psychologically coercive environment.

       Relevant, as well, to our inquiry is Appellant’s demonstrated presence of mind to

ask Trooper Navitsky to turn off the recorder at one point to allow him to relate information

incriminating Ryan Laumann in another crime.          Made presumably in an attempt to

cooperate with authorities in exchange for lenient treatment, Appellant’s offer further

evidenced not a coerced mind overborne with pain and intimidation but, instead, a freely

calculating mind exploring ways to secure a more favorable result for himself. We liken

the import of Appellant’s interrogation response in this regard to the falsified story offered

by the defendant in Commonwealth v. Johnson, 727 A.2d 1089 (Pa. 1999) to mislead a

police investigation into his shooting. As we inferred from the presence of mind to lie in

such circumstances a retained capacity to respond voluntarily to an interrogator, so, too,

do we infer from Appellant’s display of initiative in spontaneously departing from Trooper

Navitsky’s script to offer information and cooperation in the investigation of an unrelated

crime an unconstrained mind engaged in independent thinking and voluntary discourse.

       With respect to the question of whether the compromising effect of physical pain

on one’s ability to offer a voluntary statement may have played a role here, Appellant’s

                                       [J-3-2014] - 62
case is further distinguishable from Perry, given testimonial evidence from treating health

care providers as to the limited extent of injury and physical difficulty experienced by

Appellant at the time of the statement. Treating paramedics and Dr. Hughes all denied

observing symptoms of hypothermia, dehydration, or compromised mental status in

Appellant at the time during or immediately after his statement.            Unlike in Perry,

therefore, the invalidating suspicion that substantial physical pain and its diminishing

effect on one’s will to resist the influence of others simply fails to arise under the medical

testimony adduced at Appellant’s suppression hearing.

         Finally, Appellant’s provision of a voluntary statement was further substantiated by

evidence pertaining to the hours following his discharge, where in an apparent

continuation of his willingness to cooperate with authorities he accompanied them back to

the scene of the crime and retraced his steps taken before, during, and after he

committed his fateful act. For all the foregoing reasons, therefore, we discern neither an

abuse of discretion nor an error of law in the suppression court’s determination that

Appellant’s recorded confession was the voluntarily made product of an essentially free

and unconstrained choice to tell Trooper Navitsky about his role in the killing of Officer

Grove.

    X:       Admissibility of Guilt-Phase Proffer of Alcohol Consumption History

         In Appellant's final enumerated issue, he argues that the court erred in refusing to

permit testimony from witnesses regarding his alcohol consumption habit, or more

precisely, evidence of his ostensible alcoholism, as it existed prior to the criminal incident

as corroborative evidence to his guilt phase voluntary intoxication affirmative defense.

Specifically, Appellant sought to introduce testimony from his mother, Kimberly Topper,

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that: she had found a case of empty beer cans and four to six bottles of alcohol in his

bedroom one week before the murder; Appellant had come down from his bedroom one

morning, also about a week before the murder, smelling of alcohol and saying he had only

drunk one or two beers; and his girlfriend, Leslie Filer, had expressed concern about

Appellant's alcohol use, to which Topper explained he had a family history of alcoholism.

Also proposed was testimony from Ms. Filer herself as to Appellant’s recent bank

statements reflecting purchases from a local restaurant in the two week period leading up

to the murder. Though the statements did not indicate what was purchased, Ms. Filer

would testify the transactions were for alcohol. N.T. at 899-904, 943.

       The trial court excluded Mrs. Topper's proposed testimony on relevancy and

hearsay grounds. Neither her testimony about discovering bottles in his bedroom nor

her observation of Appellant’s condition one week or so before the murder was

sufficiently connected to the date of the incident, the court found, rendering each

irrelevant. N.T. at 900. Not only were Ms. Filer’s prospective interpretations of bank

statements in the weeks before the murder also irrelevant to the issue of Appellant’s state

of mind at the time of the murder, the court ruled, they were also speculative because

there was no way to ascertain what percentage of the purchases went for food as

opposed to alcohol. N.T. at 945.      As for Topper’s account of Ms. Filer's concerns,

moreover, the court excluded it on grounds it consisted of an out of court declarant’s

statement offered for the proof of the matter asserted and thus constituted inadmissible

hearsay. N.T. at 902.

      According to Appellant, the ruling of the trial court that evidence of general

consumption of alcohol was irrelevant because it was insufficient by itself to support a

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defense of voluntary intoxication and other evidence existed that Appellant drank on the

day of the murder was erroneous. In fact, Appellant contends, in so ruling, the trial court

substituted its judgment for that of the jury as to the weight of the evidence, rather than

actually making a relevancy determination, and thereby usurped the jury of its exclusive

role of determining credibility of witnesses and assessing weight to their testimonies.

      Under Pa.R.E. 402, Appellant argues, the proper relevancy analysis required a

determination as to whether the evidence about Appellant’s apparent alcoholism made

more or less probable the already admitted testimony of Appellant’s drinking and the

effects thereof. This excluded corroborative evidence, Appellant reasons, would have

lent credibility to his out-of-court statement, admitted through the testimony of

admitting/treating physician Fazila Lalani, M.D. of York Hospital that his alcohol

consumption on the day of the murder consisted of twelve beers. N.T. at 896. Because

the amount of alcohol he consumed on the day of the murder was a matter in factual

dispute, Appellant asserts,23 evidence of his purported alcoholism would have made it

more likely that the higher number he reported to Dr. Lalani was the accurate one, thus

making the proffer highly relevant and probative. In this vein, Appellant concludes, the

evidence could have resonated with the common understanding regarding the nature of

alcoholism and “could easily [have led]” the jury to conclude that Appellant’s brain was

23 For example, Appellant notes, Trooper Navitsky told the jury that Appellant reported
having drunk two or three beers prior to the shooting and Trooper Michael Weaver
testified that one empty Bud Light can was found at the deer poaching scene and another
at the scene of the shooting. Dr. Lalani testified that Appellant self-reported drinking
twelve beers on the day in question, while Ryan Laumann testified Appellant was “tipsy
and buzzed’ from alcohol at 4:00 p.m. and then drank six or seven more beers in his
company before the shooting.

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likely “overwhelmed or overpowered” for purposes of the voluntary intoxication defense.

Brief for Appellant at 56.

       The Commonwealth responds that this Court has previously rejected this very type

of appeal that alcohol consumption at times removed from the moment of murder is

relevant to an assessment of the state of mind element to First Degree Murder. In Spotz,

supra, we reviewed a PCRA claim that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to call

witnesses who collectively would have testified as to the defendant’s chronic drug use,

his intoxication from cocaine use some twelve hours after the early morning murder, and

his apparently high state about two to three hours after the murder. We dismissed the

testimony as irrelevant to a voluntary intoxication defense: “[n]one of this testimony

remotely suggests that Appellant was at all intoxicated by drugs or alcohol at the time of

Ms. Gunnet's murder, much less that he was so intoxicated as to be overwhelmed to the

point of losing his faculties and sensibilities and unable to formulate a specific intent to

kill[,]” we reasoned. Id. at 91-92.   Here, quite similar to Spotz, the Commonwealth

contends, none of the proffered witnesses saw Appellant consume alcohol, or otherwise

had information concerning his alcohol consumption at or near the time of the murder.

               The overriding principle in determining if any evidence [ ] should be
       admitted involves a weighing of the probative value versus prejudicial
       effect. We have held that the trial court must decide first if the evidence is
       relevant and, if so, whether its probative value outweighs its prejudicial
       effect. Commonwealth v. Hawk, [ ] 709 A.2d 373, 376 ([Pa.] 1998). This
       Commonwealth defines relevant evidence as “having any tendency to
       make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination
       of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the
       evidence.” Pa.R.E. 401.         Relevant evidence may nevertheless be
       excluded “if its probative value is outweighed by the danger of unfair
       prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by
       considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of
       cumulative evidence.” Pa.R.E. 403.

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Commonwealth v. Serge, 896 A.2d 1170, 1177 (Pa. 2006).

      To have prevailed in his voluntary intoxication defense, Appellant was required

under our law to inject reasonable doubt in the Commonwealth’s proof that he had

murdered Officer Grove with the specific intent to kill. This could be accomplished by

establishing he possessed a diminished capacity at the time of the crime:

      A diminished capacity defense does not exculpate the defendant from
      criminal liability entirely, but instead negates the element of specific intent.
      For a defendant who proves a diminished capacity defense, first-degree
      murder is mitigated to third-degree murder. To establish a diminished
      capacity defense, a defendant must prove that his cognitive abilities of
      deliberation and premeditation were so compromised, by mental defect or
      voluntary intoxication, that he was unable to formulate the specific intent to
      kill. The mere fact of intoxication does not give rise to a diminished
      capacity defense. [Rather, a defendant must] show that he was
      overwhelmed to the point of losing his faculties and sensibilities to prove a
      voluntary intoxication defense.

Spotz at 90-91.

      We agree with the Commonwealth’s position that the case sub judice comes

squarely under our holding in Spotz, which declared that evidence of chronic drug use or

intoxication at times other than the time of the murder is irrelevant to a voluntary

intoxication defense:

      Appellant cites the PCRA testimony of numerous witnesses who presented
      evidence concerning his chronic and acute drug use, as we summarize in
      the paragraph below. It is important to emphasize that none of the
      witnesses who testified at the PCRA hearing actually saw Appellant or had
      information as to his drug use at the time of Ms. Gunnet's murder, which is
      the only time that is relevant.

Id. at 91. As we held in Spotz with respect to the relevancy of evidence pertaining to the

defendant’s chronic and acute drug use at times other than the time of the murder, so,

too, do we hold here that evidence of Appellant’s allegedly chronic alcohol use and

possibly heavy use within a week of the murder bore no relevance to the question of

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whether he was intoxicated at the time he killed Officer Grove, much less to whether he

was so intoxicated as to be overwhelmed to the point of losing his faculties and

sensibilities and unable to formulate a specific intent to kill. See Spotz at 92. To that

latter point, the eyewitness testimony of Ryan Laumann, as recounted supra, provided

numerous detailed examples of how Appellant demonstrated control of his faculties and

sensibilities during “the only time that is relevant,” i.e., the hours leading up to and

including time of the murder. This testimony refuted the notion of a diminished capacity,

and Appellant could not have reasonably overcome it with irrelevant evidence pertaining

to a different period of time. Accordingly, we discern no manifest unreasonableness or

abuse of discretion in the court’s evidentiary ruling excluding alcohol consumption history

evidence.

               XI.        Passion, Prejudice, and Arbitrariness Review

       Though Appellant raises no specific argument under this final topic, we are

required to conduct an independent penalty review pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. § 9711(h)(3),

which provides that “[t]he Supreme Court shall affirm the sentence of death unless it

determines that : (i) the sentence of death was the product of passion, prejudice or any

other arbitrary factor; or (ii) the evidence fails to support the finding of at least one

aggravating circumstance specified in subsection (d).” Our careful review of the record

leads us to conclude that Appellant’s sentence of death was not the product of passion,

prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor, but was, instead, based on the overwhelming

evidence establishing that he fatally shot Officer Grove with the specific intent to kill. The

parties did not dispute, moreover, that evidence supported application of the Section

9711(d)(1) aggravating circumstance of taking the life of a law enforcement officer while

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acting in the line of duty. Accordingly, we hereby affirm Appellant’s convictions and

sentence of death.24

      Former Justice McCaffery did not participate in the decision of this case.

      Mr. Chief Justice Castille and Mr. Justice Eakin join the opinion.

      Mr. Justice Saylor files a concurring opinion.

      Mr. Justice Baer files a concurring and dissenting opinion in which Madame
      Justice Todd joins.

24   The Prothonotary of the Supreme Court is directed to transmit the complete record of
this case to the Governor of Pennsylvania. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 9711(i).

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