Com. v. Gerber, G. ( 2017 )


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  • J-S40033-17
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                   :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    GARY LEE GERBER, JR.                       :
    :
    Appellant               :   No. 3201 EDA 2016
    Appeal from the PCRA Order September 26, 2016
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County
    Criminal Division at No(s): CP-45-CR-0000112-2007
    BEFORE:      OTT, DUBOW, JJ., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*
    MEMORANDUM BY OTT, J.:                               FILED NOVEMBER 21, 2017
    Gary Lee Gerber, Jr., appeals from the order entered September 26,
    2016, in the Monroe County Court of Common Pleas, denying his first petition
    for collateral relief filed pursuant to the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”).1
    Gerber seeks relief from the judgment of sentence of life imprisonment
    following his conviction of first-degree murder2 for the August 1993 death of
    Robert Hagan. On appeal, Gerber raises several allegations of trial counsel’s
    ineffectiveness.3 For the reasons below, we affirm.
    ____________________________________________
    *
    Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
    1
    See 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-9546.
    2
    18 Pa.C.S. § 2502.
    3
    It is important to note that while Gerber challenges numerous decisions
    made by counsel during the course of his trial, he does not assert counsel’s
    overall defense strategy, was ineffective.
    J-S40033-17
    The facts underlying Gerber’s arrest and conviction were recounted by
    a panel of this Court in the memorandum decision affirming Gerber’s
    conviction on direct appeal:
    The majority of the facts are not in dispute: in the early
    morning hours of August 13, 1993, [Gerber] was alone[ ] with the
    victim in the victim’s vehicle while parked along Rimrock Road in
    Monroe County. At some point while inside the vehicle, [Gerber]
    “lashed out” on the victim, stabbing him four times in the back [7]
    .... [Gerber] admitted stabbing the victim. [Gerber] also cut the
    victim’s throat in a manner that showed no sign of hesitation; the
    victim’s neck wound was characterized as a superficial wound
    because no major arteries were cut, but the area had many blood
    vessels which would have resulted in fairly profuse bleeding.
    These stab wounds were potentially lethal because [of] the
    amount of hemorrhaging and blood loss the victim suffered, as
    well as his collapsed lung.
    __________
    7
    At trial, [Gerber] testified he was inebriated and parked
    his pickup truck in a parking lot. Two men approached, told
    him he could not park there and they would give him a ride,
    and helped him into what he believed was the victim’s car.
    The next thing [Gerber] remembered was waking up in the
    victim’s car, his pants and underwear were pulled down,
    “somebody was on top of” him and “trying to force
    something into” him, and he felt “excruciating pain.” On
    appeal, [Gerber] avers the victim was “trying to
    homosexually rape him.”
    __________
    After being stabbed, the victim exited the car and fled. The
    victim’s body was eventually found on a bridge on Rimrock Road
    approximately 290 feet away from where [Gerber] stabbed the
    victim. Blood drops were found in various locations along the road
    leading toward the bridge on Rimrock Road. [I]t was determined
    [the victim] had suffered massive injuries to his head, i.e. a
    crushed skull and brain, and massive injuries to his torso, i.e., a
    crushing injury to his entire side of his chest. These injuries were
    consistent with him being run over by a car.
    -2-
    J-S40033-17
    [Gerber] stated that, after he stabbed the victim, he got into
    the driver’s seat of the victim’s vehicle and drove up Rimrock Road
    toward Route 611, which is the same direction where the victim’s
    body was found. Thereafter, [Gerber] drove the vehicle to his
    father’s junkyard and wiped down the interior of the car to clean
    off the blood. [Gerber] stated that he only cleaned off the steering
    wheel and the shifter of the vehicle, but also noted that the “car
    [was] like forensically clean like somebody who knew what they
    were doing did it.” Although [Gerber] only admits having wiped
    down the interior of the vehicle, [Gerber’s] father testified that he
    also observed [Gerber] wiping down the car from the outside.
    Additionally, wipe marks were found on the passenger door
    window of the victim’s vehicle and blood was present on the front
    license plate of the vehicle in a manner that was consistent with
    someone wiping the license plate. Finally, [Gerber] admitted
    “getting rid of the car” by dumping it along Schaffer’s School
    House Road.
    ______
    [Gerber] testified that he never felt an impact of hitting a body
    that night, but he did admit that he could have driven through a
    “brick wall [because he] was so [expletive] scared that night.”
    ______
    In his closing argument, [Gerber’s] trial counsel made clear
    that the majority of these facts were not in dispute. However, the
    [d]efense argued that [Gerber] stabbed the victim in self[-
    ]defense, believing that he was being sexually assaulted by the
    victim. [Gerber] claims that he began driving the victim’s car, but
    never knew that he hit the victim because of his emotional state
    after being sexually assaulted and because of the foggy weather
    conditions that morning. Finally, [Gerber] claims that he dumped
    the vehicle on Schaffer’s Schoolhouse Road because his father told
    him to and that he never came forward to the police with his self-
    defense claim because he was ashamed of being sexually
    assaulted.
    We emphasize that at trial, [Gerber] admitted to hitting the
    victim with the car but averred he did not know he hit him.
    Commonwealth v. Gerber, 
    118 A.3d 440
     (Pa. Super. 2015) (unpublished
    memorandum at *1-*2) (quotation and record citations omitted).
    -3-
    J-S40033-17
    The tortured procedural history of this appeal is as follows. Although
    the victim was murdered on August 8, 1993, the crime remained unsolved for
    more than a decade until 2006, when the Pennsylvania Office of the Attorney
    General uncovered evidence related to the crime during the investigation of
    another matter.4       In November of 2006, a state investigating grand jury
    approved a presentment recommending a charge of criminal homicide against
    Gerber for the victim’s murder.                A criminal complaint followed shortly
    thereafter.
    On March 20, 2008, Gerber entered a guilty plea to one count of third-
    degree murder. However, one week before his scheduled sentencing hearing,
    Gerber filed a motion to withdraw the plea. On June 17, 2008, the trial court
    conducted a hearing and denied Gerber’s motion. The court sentenced Gerber
    that same day to a term of 10 to 20 years’ imprisonment. On appeal, a panel
    of this Court vacated the judgment of sentence, finding Gerber cited fair and
    just reasons for the pre-sentence withdraw of his plea. See Commonwealth
    v. Gerber, 
    981 A.2d 312
     (Pa. Super. 2009). The Supreme Court subsequently
    denied the Commonwealth’s petition for allowance of appeal.                     See
    Commonwealth v. Gerber, 
    989 A.2d 915
     (Pa. 2010).
    ____________________________________________
    4
    We note Gerber was subpoenaed to testify before a Monroe County grand
    jury investigating the murder in 1995. See N.T., 7/12/2010, at 122. At that
    time, he denied any knowledge of the crime. Id. at 130-131.
    -4-
    J-S40033-17
    Upon remand, Gerber withdrew his guilty plea and the case proceeded
    to a jury trial on one count of criminal homicide.5 On July 14, 2010, the jury
    found Gerber guilty of first-degree murder. The trial court sentenced Gerber
    to a term of life imprisonment on September 7, 2010.         Gerber filed post-
    sentence motions, which the trial court denied following a hearing. Thereafter,
    Gerber filed a timely direct appeal. However, while that appeal was pending,
    Gerber filed a petition for remand for consideration of newly discovered DNA
    evidence.    By order dated February 27, 2012, this Court granted Gerber’s
    petition, vacated his sentence, and remanded for an evidentiary hearing. See
    Order, 2/27/2012.         Specifically, this Court directed the trial court “to
    determine if a new trial is warranted based on after-discovered evidence
    pursuant to the four factors set forth in Commonwealth v. Pagan, [] 
    950 A.2d 270
    , 292 ([Pa.] 2008)[,]” and either “order a new trial or re-impose
    sentence.” Order, 2/27/2012.
    Upon remand, the trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing on July
    18, 2012. Subsequently, on November 14, 2012, the court denied Gerber’s
    claim of after-discovered evidence and re-imposed the judgment of sentence
    of life imprisonment. On December 7, 2012, Gerber requested permission to
    file post-sentence motions nunc pro tunc. The trial court granted the request,
    ____________________________________________
    5
    The verdict sheet permitted the jury to find Gerber guilty of either first-
    degree murder, third-degree murder, or voluntary manslaughter. See Verdict
    Sheet, 7/14/2010.
    -5-
    J-S40033-17
    and Gerber filed additional post-sentence motions on February 1, 2013.6 In
    an order dated March 6, 2013, the trial court granted Gerber relief on his claim
    that he was not permitted to address the court prior to re-sentencing.
    Accordingly, the court vacated the sentence and scheduled a new sentencing
    hearing for March 18, 2013. At that hearing, the trial court again imposed a
    sentence of life imprisonment.           Thereafter, on April 24, 2013, the court
    entered an order dismissing the remaining claims in Gerber’s post-sentence
    motions, as they all invoked challenges to the effective assistance of counsel
    and had to be raised in a collateral proceeding. A panel of this Court affirmed
    the judgment of sentence on direct appeal. See Gerber, supra, 
    118 A.3d 440
    .
    On July 27, 2015, Gerber filed the instant PCRA petition, his first, raising
    eight claims asserting the ineffective assistance of trial counsel. An amended
    petition followed on October 23, 2015. The PCRA court conducted three days
    of evidentiary hearings, on February 17, 2016, May 25, 2016, and May 26,
    ____________________________________________
    6
    As this Court noted on direct appeal, the trial court should not have allowed
    Gerber to file additional post-sentence motions on remand because the
    remand order specifically directed the trial court to either order a new trial or
    re-impose the sentence. Accordingly, “[Gerber] should have filed a notice of
    appeal within thirty days of the court’s denial of his motion based on newly-
    discovered DNA evidence and re-imposition of sentence.” Gerber, supra,
    
    118 A.3d 440
    , at *3. Nonetheless, we declined to quash the appeal “because
    the trial court perpetuated the error by specifically granting [Gerber] leave to
    file post-sentence motions nunc pro tunc and then denying them on the
    merits.” 
    Id.
    -6-
    J-S40033-17
    2016, respectively.      Subsequently, on September 27, 2016, the PCRA court
    entered an order denying Gerber relief. This timely appeal follows.7
    “In reviewing the denial of PCRA relief, we examine whether the PCRA
    court’s determination is supported by the record and free of legal error.”
    Commonwealth v. Mitchell, 
    141 A.3d 1277
    , 1283–1284 (Pa. 2016)
    (internal punctuation and citation omitted). Where, as here, all of the claims
    on appeal assert trial counsel’s ineffectiveness, we must bear in mind:
    “In order to obtain relief under the PCRA premised upon a
    claim that counsel was ineffective, a petitioner must establish
    beyond a preponderance of the evidence that counsel’s
    ineffectiveness ‘so undermined the truth-determining process that
    no reliable adjudication of guilt or innocence could have taken
    place.’” Commonwealth v. Payne, 
    794 A.2d 902
    , 905 (Pa.
    Super. 2002), quoting 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9543(a)(2)(ii). When
    considering such a claim, courts presume that counsel was
    effective, and place upon the appellant the burden of proving
    otherwise. Id. at 906. “Counsel cannot be found ineffective for
    failure to assert a baseless claim.” Id.
    To succeed on a claim that counsel was ineffective,
    Appellant must demonstrate that: (1) the claim is of arguable
    merit; (2) counsel had no reasonable strategic basis for his or her
    action or inaction; and (3) counsel’s ineffectiveness prejudiced
    him. Commonwealth v. Allen, 
    833 A.2d 800
    , 802 (Pa. Super.
    2003).
    Commonwealth v. Michaud, 
    70 A.3d 862
    , 867 (Pa. Super. 2013).
    Furthermore, “[t]o demonstrate prejudice, a petitioner must show that there
    is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s actions or inactions, the
    ____________________________________________
    7
    On October 12, 2016, the PCRA court ordered Gerber to file a concise
    statement of errors complained of on appeal pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b).
    Gerber complied with the court’s directive and filed a concise statement on
    October 24, 2016.
    -7-
    J-S40033-17
    result of the proceeding would have been different.”       Commonwealth v.
    Mason, 
    130 A.3d 601
    , 618 (Pa. 2015).
    In his first issue on appeal, Gerber contends trial counsel was ineffective
    for failing to object to the testimony of Pennsylvania State Police Sergeant
    Frank DeAndrea.     First, Gerber argues Sergeant DeAndrea inappropriately
    provided expert testimony on issues concerning the crime scene, and his
    opinion that Gerber ran over the victim twice.      Gerber claims the officer’s
    testimony was improper because: (1) the Commonwealth did not offer
    Sergeant DeAndrea as an expert witness or provide Gerber with a pretrial
    report discussing the officer’s findings; (2) the officer was not qualified to
    testify as an expert; (2) the officer did not offer his opinions within a
    reasonable degree of certainty; and (3) the trial court did not instruct the jury
    that the officer was an expert witness. See Gerber’s Brief at 12-29. Second,
    Gerber contends that even if Sergeant DeAndrea’s testimony did not
    constitute an expert opinion, the officer provided improper lay opinion
    testimony. See id. at 29-36. In either case, Gerber insists trial counsel had
    no reasonable basis for failing to object to Sergeant DeAndrea’s testimony,
    and Gerber was prejudiced as a result. See id. at 36-41.
    Preliminarily, we note decisions concerning the admissibility of evidence
    are within the sound discretion of the trial court. Commonwealth v. Brown,
    
    134 A.3d 1097
    , 1105 (Pa. Super. 2016), appeal denied, 
    145 A.3d 161
     (Pa.
    2016). Here, the court found Trooper DeAndrea did not testify as an expert
    -8-
    J-S40033-17
    witness at trial, but rather the trooper “gave permissible lay witness
    testimony[.]” PCRA Court Opinion, 9/26/2016, at 12. We agree.
    When a witness’s testimony is based upon “scientific, technical, or other
    specialized knowledge [] beyond that possessed by the average layperson,”
    the witness must be qualified as an expert “by knowledge, skill, experience,
    training or education.” Pa.R.E. 702(a). Nevertheless, Pennsylvania Rule of
    Evidence 701 permits a lay witness to offer opinion testimony so long as the
    opinion is:
    (a) rationally based on the witness’s perception;
    (b) helpful to clearly understanding the witness’s testimony or to
    determining a fact in issue; and
    (c) not based on scientific, technical, or other specialized
    knowledge within the scope of Rule 702.
    Pa.R.E. 701.    Further, this Court has noted that “lay opinion testimony
    embracing an ultimate issue in a case is admissible as long as the witness
    perceived the events upon which his opinion is based.” Commonwealth v.
    Bowser, 
    624 A.2d 125
    , 133 (Pa. Super. 1993), appeal denied, 
    644 A.2d 161
    (Pa. 1994), cert. denied, 
    513 U.S. 867
     (1994).
    This Court’s recent decision in Commonwealth v. Kennedy, 
    151 A.3d 1117
     (Pa. Super. 2016), is instructive. In Kennedy, the trial court denied an
    oral motion in limine to preclude a police crime scene investigator from
    testifying regarding her observations of the trajectory of bullets fired through
    the victim’s door. See id. at 1121. The officer later testified that “she placed
    rods in the bullet holes of the door” and that “the only logical conclusion based
    -9-
    J-S40033-17
    upon the bullet trajectories, … was that the door was slightly ajar when [the
    defendant] shot [the victim].” Id. at 1122. On appeal, the defendant argued
    the court erred in permitting the officer to offer her lay opinion that the door
    was “slightly open” at the time of the shooting.     Id.   However, the panel
    disagreed, concluding the officer’s testimony was a permissible lay opinion
    based on the officer’s perception of the crime scene, and did not require the
    specialized knowledge of an expert witness.       Indeed, the panel explained
    “[a]ny individual could place a rod in a bullet hole and discern which direction
    the bullet traveled.” Id. at 1123.
    In the present case, Sergeant DeAndrea testified extensively regarding
    his investigation and processing of the crime scene. See N.T., 7/8/2010, at
    14-144. See also Gerber’s Brief at 14 (stating Sergeant DeAndrea testified
    regarding “the appearance of the victim, the scene of the crime, and the
    measurements,     photographs    and   evidence   gathering   he   claimed   he
    undertook.”).   In doing so, the officer offered his interpretations of the
    evidence recovered, and his opinion as to how the events leading to the
    victim’s death unfolded. Specifically, Gerber complains the officer improperly
    provided “expert” testimony regarding the significance of a string found
    hanging from the suspension assembly underneath the victim’s vehicle. See
    Gerber’s Brief at 15-16. Sergeant DeAndrea testified the string was the same
    color and texture as the victim’s pants, which had a jagged tear in the
    buttocks. See N.T., 7/8/2010, at 31-32, 99. Because he observed the string
    hanging from the rear portion of the suspension support bar, Sergeant
    - 10 -
    J-S40033-17
    DeAndrea testified that he believed the “vehicle was traveling in reverse when
    it went across [the victim’s] pants.” Id. at 89. See also id. at 79-91. Gerber
    insists this opinion, as well as the officer’s testimony regarding a tire
    impression on the victim’s shirt, the state of the victim’s body, and the
    significance of a handprint and footprint in the dirt parking lot, crossed the
    line into expert opinion testimony.     See Gerber’s Brief at 15, citing N.T.,
    7/8/2010, at 33-48, 53-56.       Because the Commonwealth never offered
    Trooper DeAndrea as an expert witness, Gerber contends counsel was
    ineffective for failing to object to this “improper” testimony.
    The PCRA court concluded, however, that Sergeant DeAndrea gave
    “permissible lay witness testimony.” PCRA Court Opinion, 9/26/2016, at 12.
    The court explained:
    In this case, the Commonwealth called [Sergeant]
    DeAndrea to testify regarding the state of the crime scene on
    August 8, 1993 and the actions he took that day. [Sergeant]
    DeAndrea is … a member of the identification unit, which is
    involved in processing crime scenes.    That day, [Sergeant]
    DeAndrea’s duties included the documentation, collection and
    preservation of evidence.
    [Gerber] complains that [Sergeant] DeAndrea gave
    numerous expert opinions, which should have only been
    admissible under Pa.R.E. 702. We disagree. While subject to both
    direct and cross examination, [Sergeant] DeAndrea explained the
    actions he took on August 8, 1993 and at times, rendered certain
    opinions.     [Sergeant] DeAndrea, however, answered the
    questions posed in terms of what was “apparent” based on his
    application of common sense and logic to his physical
    observations.    These opinions were rationally based on the
    perceptions he made that day and presented in terms of what he
    believed based on his knowledge and experience as a trooper for
    22 years with the Pennsylvania State Police.       Each opinion
    - 11 -
    J-S40033-17
    rendered involved the use of common sense and logic. The term
    “common sense” itself is defined as sound practical judgment that
    is independent of specialized knowledge, training, or the like. The
    appellate courts have distinguished between a witness’ conclusion
    that is cast in the form of an appearance and one that is cast as
    an absolute statement of fact, holding that the former is
    admissible as lay opinion while the latter may require the
    expertise covered by Pa.R.E. 702.
    [Sergeant] DeAndrea’s statements to the jury constituted
    lay opinion testimony that was fully admissible under Pa.R.E. 701.
    None of his testimony required knowledge beyond that possessed
    by laypersons. Accordingly, [Sergeant] DeAndrea was properly
    treated as a lay witness … [and trial counsel] cannot be ineffective
    for not objecting to his testimony on those grounds.
    Id. at 14-15 (footnote and citations omitted).
    We find no basis to disturb the ruling of the PCRA court.       Sergeant
    DeAndrea’s testimony was grounded upon his observations at the crime scene.
    While he provided his opinion regarding the significance of certain evidence,
    all of those opinions were rationally based on his personal observations and
    did not require specialized knowledge.
    Gerber cites numerous cases for the proposition that a police officer who
    is not qualified as an expert witness “can testify only as to the facts he
    personally observed and cannot give an opinion to causation.” Gerber’s Brief
    at 30. See also id. at 33-35 (collecting cases). Indeed, it is well-established
    that “an investigating police officer who did not witness an accident may not
    render an opinion at trial as to its cause unless he/she has been qualified as
    an expert.”   McKee by McKee v. Evans, 
    551 A.2d 260
    , 264 (Pa. Super.
    1988) (en banc) (emphasis in original), appeal denied, 
    562 A.2d 824
    , 827 (Pa.
    1989). Nevertheless, an officer investigating a motor vehicle accident may
    - 12 -
    J-S40033-17
    provide lay opinion testimony regarding the point of impact so long as the
    opinion is based on “discernible factors.” Id. at 265. In McKee, supra, this
    Court identified relevant “discernible factors” as the officer’s observations of
    “debris on the roadway, the positions of the respective vehicles” when the
    officer arrived on the scene after the impact, and the officer’s “conversations”
    with eyewitnesses. Id.
    Here, Gerber concedes Sergeant DeAndrea “did not testify as to the
    ‘point of impact’ of the vehicle and [the victim].”      Gerber’s Brief at 32.
    However, he complains the officer implied the impact occurred “on the berm
    of the road” without sufficient facts to justify his opinion.8 Id. Moreover,
    Gerber insists Sergeant DeAndrea’s testimony regarding his conclusion that
    the vehicle rolled over the victim twice, based solely on his observation of a
    string hanging from the axle, “clearly went well beyond the scope of allowable
    testimony as to the ‘point of impact’ … but rather described how and where
    the vehicle moved and in what directions.” Id. at 36.
    We conclude, however, that Gerber’s argument implicates the weight of
    Sergeant DeAndrea’s testimony, not its admissibility.      Sergeant DeAndrea
    testified regarding his observations of the victim’s body when he arrived at
    the crime scene, as well as a blood trail leading back to the dirt parking lot,
    where he saw tire tracks, a footprint (which appeared to match the victim’s
    ____________________________________________
    8
    Gerber maintains Sergeant DeAndrea’s testimony that the impact was “off
    of the roadway and on the berm” was “critical” in supporting the
    Commonwealth’s argument that Gerber intentionally struck the victim.
    Gerber’s Brief at 32.
    - 13 -
    J-S40033-17
    sneakers), and a handprint.      See N.T., 7/8/2010, at 15-23.        He further
    testified regarding his observations of a pattern injury on the victim’s temple
    (which resembled the front license plate cover of his car), a tire impression on
    the victim’s shirt, black dirt and a tear on the victim’s pants, and the position
    of the victim’s body near the curb. See id. at 28-36. Moreover, Sergeant
    DeAndrea’s conclusion that the vehicle traveled over the victim forward and
    backwards was based upon the location of the string he found attached to the
    rear of the support bar, and the pattern observed on the victim’s head and
    shirt. He stated:
    [W]e realized that his head has been hit, the patterning injury that
    resembles the front license plate cover, and we know that a tire
    traveled over his torso because his ribs are crushed and the tire
    impression is left on his shirt.
    Recognizing that if the vehicle is traveling towards 611
    there’s no way for the driver’s side to be crushing him here without
    the passenger’s side being off the bridge, it only makes sense that
    the passenger’s side is what struck his head with the license plate
    on the passenger’s side front bumper. The front tire could run
    over his head, and the rear passenger’s side would simply run
    over his shirt.
    The problem becomes that the distance from this tire to this
    tear is about 30 inches, and the distance from the rear tire to the
    thread is only 8. So you can certainly say that that had to be
    made by the front license plate coming in contact with his head
    and that a tire -- a rear tire had to run over his torso if that’s hit
    with his head.
    But there’s no way that the front passenger’s side can hit
    his head and then the right rear tire run over his shirt and at the
    same time tear his pants and cause the patterning injury along
    with making the fiber be attached to that piece of steel. The only
    way for that to happen is to have the vehicle with the right rear
    tire hit him twice.
    - 14 -
    J-S40033-17
    Id. at 90-91. The officer further stated the location of the fiber on the rear
    support bar indicated the vehicle was traveling “backwards” when the string
    attached to the bottom of the vehicle. Id. at 91. It is evident that Sergeant
    DeAndrea’s “opinion” regarding the vehicle’s impact with the victim was based
    on both his observations at the scene of the crime and his inspection of the
    victim’s car, and was properly admitted as lay opinion testimony.         To the
    extent Gerber claims the officer’s testimony was inconsistent with the
    evidence, that argument, again, implicates the weight to be afforded Sergeant
    DeAndrea’s testimony, not its admissibility.        Accordingly, Gerber’s first
    ineffectiveness claim has no arguable merit.9 See Michaud, 
    supra.
    Next, Gerber contends trial counsel was ineffective for failing to present
    expert rebuttal testimony from a forensic pathologist and an accident
    reconstructionist. See Gerber’s Brief at 41. In support of this claim, Gerber
    obtained expert reports from forensic pathologist, Dr. Cyril Wecht, and
    accident reconstructionist, James Baranowski, and called both experts to
    testify regarding their opinions at the PCRA hearing. See N.T., 5/25/2016, at
    4-43, 143-192. He insists the testimony of both experts was necessary to
    ____________________________________________
    9
    We also note that during the PCRA hearing, trial counsel testified he had a
    reasonable basis for failing to object to Sergeant DeAndrea’s testimony
    regarding the movement of the vehicle, namely that he believed the expert
    witness coroner would contradict the officer’s opinion. See N.T., 5/25/2016,
    at 75-76, 81. Further, counsel testified he did not believe the officer’s
    testimony regarding the location of blood drops on the berm of the road was
    significant because his defense was that Gerber did not see the victim when
    he struck him with the vehicle. Id. at 67. Therefore, we could also conclude
    Gerber failed to establish the second prong of the ineffectiveness test. See
    Michaud, 
    supra.
    - 15 -
    J-S40033-17
    contradict the “very prejudicial opinions” of Sergeant DeAndrea that the victim
    was run over more than one time, and that the impact was on the berm of the
    road. Id. at 43.
    Our review of an allegation that trial counsel was ineffective for failing
    to present expert witnesses in rebuttal is well-established:
    “Where a claim is made of counsel’s ineffectiveness for
    failing to call witnesses, it is the appellant’s burden to show that
    the witness existed and was available; counsel was aware of, or
    had a duty to know of the witness; the witness was willing and
    able to appear; and the proposed testimony was necessary in
    order to avoid prejudice to the appellant.” “The mere failure to
    obtain an expert rebuttal witness is not ineffectiveness. Appellant
    must demonstrate that an expert witness was available who would
    have offered testimony designed to advance appellant’s cause.”
    “Trial counsel need not introduce expert testimony on his client’s
    behalf if he is able effectively to cross-examine prosecution
    witnesses and elicit helpful testimony. Additionally, trial counsel
    will not be deemed ineffective for failing to call a medical, forensic,
    or scientific expert merely to critically evaluate expert testimony
    [that] was presented by the prosecution. Thus, the question
    becomes whether or not [defense counsel] effectively cross-
    examined [the Commonwealth’s expert witness].”
    Commonwealth v. Chmiel, 
    30 A.3d 1111
    , 1143 (Pa. 2011) (internal
    quotations omitted).
    Here, the PCRA court found Gerber’s claim failed for several reasons.
    First, Gerber did not establish during the PCRA hearing that either Dr. Wecht
    or Mr. Baranowski were available and willing to testify on Gerber’s behalf at
    the time of trial. See PCRA Court Opinion, 9/26/2016, at 29-30, 34. We
    agree his preliminary omission is fatal to his claim. See Commonwealth v.
    Wayne, 
    720 A.2d 456
    , 470 (Pa. 1998) (finding ineffectiveness claim failed
    - 16 -
    J-S40033-17
    when appellant did not “establish that counsel knew or should have known of
    the existence” of potential alibi witness), cert. denied, 
    528 U.S. 834
     (1999).
    With respect to Dr. Wecht, the court also determined that his expert
    testimony was not necessary because trial counsel “effectively cross-
    examined” the Commonwealth’s expert forensic pathologist, Dr. Isidore
    Mihalikis. Id. at 31. At the PCRA hearing, Dr. Wecht opined the victim was
    lying on the ground when he was struck once by a vehicle, with the front right
    wheel crushing his head and the rear right wheel striking his “thoracic area.”
    N.T., 5/25/2016, at 18-19. Further, he testified he believed there would have
    been additional injuries if the victim had been struck a second time. See id.
    at 29. Dr. Wecht’s trial testimony was similar, in all relevant aspects, to Dr.
    Mihalikis’s testimony. On direct examination, Dr. Mihalikis testified that he
    did not see “any evidence there was any upright impact” on the victim, i.e.,
    he concluded the victim was lying on the ground when he was struck by a car.
    N.T. 7/8/2010, at 163. Furthermore, under cross-examination, Dr. Mihalikis
    agreed there were no crushing injuries or broken bones in the victim’s legs or
    hips.    See id. at 174-175.    See also id. at 176 (agreeing “the lower
    extremities of the [victim’s] body from … the waist down was not wheel run
    over”). The PCRA court opined this testimony, “that the [v]ictim did not suffer
    any crushing injuries from the waist down, [] militate[d] the theory that
    [Gerber] backed the vehicle over the [v]ictim.”         PCRA Court Opinion,
    9/26/2016, at 31. Accordingly, we agree with the PCRA court that Gerber’s
    - 17 -
    J-S40033-17
    assertion trial counsel was ineffective for failing to present Dr. Wecht’s
    testimony on rebuttal has no arguable merit.
    With respect to Mr. Baranowski, we agree with Gerber that his proposed
    testimony directly contradicted Sergeant DeAndrea’s testimony concerning
    the significance of the string recovered from the rear support bar, the point of
    impact with the victim (i.e., on the roadway rather than the berm of the road),
    and the number of times Gerber ran over the victim. See Gerber’s Brief at
    43; N.T., 5/25/2016, at 156-158. However, although we find portions of his
    testimony may have been helpful to the defense, we still agree with the PCRA
    court that trial counsel had a reasonable basis for not calling Mr. Baranowksi
    as a rebuttal witness, namely his version of the accident would have directly
    contradicted the defense. See Chimel, supra, 30 A.3d at 1143 (“Appellant
    must demonstrate that an expert witness was available who would have
    offered testimony designed to advance appellant’s cause.”).
    Mr. Baranowksi opined the victim was standing in the roadway when he
    was struck by the vehicle. See N.T., 5/25/2016, at 173. Furthermore, he
    testified that based on the skid marks in the roadway, he believed Gerber
    applied the brakes after he struck the victim. See id. Mr. Baranowski stated
    that when Gerber struck him, the victim was “probably lifted up onto the hood
    for a short time period, traveled with the vehicle as it slowed, he went down
    in front of the vehicle, and the vehicle traveled over top of him.” Id. at 173.
    This version of the accident directly contradicted Gerber’s defense,
    which trial counsel explained as follows:
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    J-S40033-17
    The defense was that [Gerber] acted in self-defense as far as the
    stabbing was concerned and that he had no intent, and that he
    claimed that he had no knowledge whatsoever that he had ran
    over Mr. Hagan on the bridge. It was foggy. He claimed that
    he did not see him. He did not feel his vehicle go over him.
    He did not – he didn’t remember that incident.
    N.T., 5/25/2016, at 49 (emphasis supplied).        Accordingly, trial counsel
    testified he was not concerned with where the impact occurred, i.e., on the
    roadway or berm of the road, “because it was Mr. Gerber’s position that he
    didn’t know where [the victim] was. He didn’t see him.” Id. at 57. Similarly,
    counsel acknowledged he made a strategic decision “not to reference any skid
    marks.” Id. at 64. He stated:
    Mr. Gerber did not indicate that he saw the victim or that he made
    any evasive maneuver or attempted to brake his vehicle; so I
    would not bring that out to the jury.
    ****
    Mr. Gerber’s position – my recollection of Mr. Gerber’s position
    from day one is that he did not see Mr. Hagan in the roadway, did
    not remember running over him.
    Id. at 64-65. See N.T., 7/13/2010, at 29 (Gerber testifying he did not see
    anyone when he drove away from the scene of the assault), at 66 (Gerber
    testifying he “didn’t realize at the time [he] ran anyone over” and he “never
    knew [he] hit Mr. Hagan”), at 67 (same).        Therefore, Mr. Baranowksi’s
    testimony that (1) Gerber braked when he struck the victim, and (2) the
    victim’s body was lifted onto the hood of the car for a short time, would have
    undermined counsel’s defense at trial – supported by Gerber’s own testimony
    - that Gerber was not aware he struck anyone with the vehicle. Consequently,
    we agree with the PCRA court that counsel was not ineffective for failing to
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    J-S40033-17
    call either expert witness on rebuttal. See PCRA Court Opinion, 9/26/2016,
    at 25-36.
    In his third issue, Gerber maintains trial counsel was ineffective for
    failing to effectively cross-examine Sergeant DeAndrea regarding his critical
    misstatement concerning the location of the trail of blood drops from the
    parking lot to the victim’s body.10 See Gerber’s Brief at 45-50. Gerber insists
    the officer’s testimony that “[a]ll of the blood that we found was on the berm
    side” and “not in the travel portion of the road” was directly contradicted by
    Commonwealth Exhibit 72, which “detailed the correct location of the blood
    drops.” Gerber’s Brief at 45 (emphasis and citations omitted). He maintains
    the exhibit establishes that of the 13 blood drops identified, only one was on
    the berm of the road, three were on the fog line, and the remaining nine were
    in the roadway. See id. at 46. Further, Gerber emphasizes that the exhibit
    shows skid marks were also on the roadway, “which would have established
    that the victim was on the roadway, not the berm, when he was struck.” Id.
    at 47. Gerber contends counsel’s failure to cross-examine Sergeant DeAndrea
    on these misstatements was prejudicial to his case because the prosecutor
    ____________________________________________
    10
    We note that in his statement of questions involved, Gerber also criticizes
    counsel’s failure to effectively cross-examine Trooper George Surma. See
    Gerber’s Brief at 4, 44. However, he fails to make any mention of Trooper
    Surma in the argument portion of his brief. Therefore, that claim is waived.
    See Commonwealth v. Phillips, 
    141 A.3d 512
    , 522 (Pa. Super. 2016)
    (“[I]ssues raised in a Brief’s Statement of Questions Involved but not
    developed in the Brief's argument section will be deemed waived.”) appeal
    denied, 
    161 A.3d 796
     (Pa. 2016).
    - 20 -
    J-S40033-17
    insisted in both his opening and closing statements that Gerber “intentionally
    drove the vehicle over the fog line to strike and kill the victim.” Id. at 49.
    The PCRA court concluded trial counsel had a reasonable basis for failing
    to cross-examine the officer about his misstatement.          See PCRA Court
    Opinion, 5/26/2016, at 16-19. We agree.
    As detailed above, counsel’s defense strategy was to emphasize Gerber
    stabbed the victim in self-defense, and fled the scene unaware that he had
    struck the victim with the car. See N.T., 5/25/2016, at 49, 57. This strategy
    was supported by Gerber’s trial testimony that he “didn’t realize at the time
    [he] ran anyone over” and “never knew he hit the victim.” N.T., 7/13/2010,
    at 66-67. Therefore, counsel testified he made the strategic decision not to
    cross-examine Sergeant DeAndrea regarding the location of the blood trail.
    He explained:
    I didn’t feel that I should get caught up into where [the victim]
    was, because it was Mr. Gerber’s position that he didn’t know
    where [the victim] was. He didn’t see him. So whether he was,
    you know, 6 inches on one side of the white line or the other or a
    foot on one side of the white line or the other, Mr. Gerber’s
    defense was that he didn’t see [the victim]. It was foggy.
    ****
    But, again, I did not want to get into an argument with the
    Commonwealth as to, you know, again, where exactly the blood
    drops were. I felt I would be falling into their trap as to whether
    he was on the berm or on the road surface, when the actual
    defense was he didn’t know where [the victim] was. We didn’t
    know where he was. Mr. Gerber testified he didn’t see him. So I
    felt that it was somewhat immaterial as to whether or not he was,
    you know, again, slightly over or over the fog line one way or the
    other.
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    J-S40033-17
    N.T., 5/25/2016, at 56-57, 61-62.
    Based on counsel’s stated strategy, the PCRA court opined:
    [Defense counsel’s] decision not to cross-examine
    [Sergeant] DeAndrea about the exact location of the blood drops
    was reasonable. [Gerber] was on trial for murdering the [v]ictim
    by stabbing him in the vehicle and, shortly thereafter, running him
    over with the vehicle. [Gerber’s] defenses throughout the entire
    case were that he stabbed the [v]ictim in self-defense and he did
    not intend to run over the [v]ictim with the vehicle. [Gerber]
    testified that he did not see the [v]ictim as he was driving the
    vehicle, mainly due to the darkness and fog. N.T. 7/13/10, pp.
    28-31, 67. Further, [Gerber] testified that he never knew he ran
    over the [v]ictim, stating "I was terrorized. I could have drove
    through the Mummers Day Parade and not even know I hit
    anybody I was so scared. All I wanted to do was get away." N.T.
    7/13/10, p. 67. Because [Gerber] never saw the [v]ictim on or
    near the road, nor did he know he ran over the [v]ictim, [trial
    counsel] made a strategic decision not to make an issue out of
    whether the majority of the [v]ictim's blood drops were on the
    berm side or roadway side of the fog line. Therefore, [counsel]
    believed the blood drops were immaterial and arguing whether the
    [v]ictim was on the berm side or roadway side could damage the
    defense’s theory.
    For the reasons stated above, [counsel’s] decision not to
    cross-examine [Sergeant] DeAndrea about the exact location of
    the blood drops was reasonable. Thus, we will not second-guess
    his tactics and our ineffectiveness inquiry ends.
    PCRA Court Opinion, 9/26/2016, at 18-19.
    We conclude the PCRA court’s analysis of this claim is legally correct,
    and supported by the record. See Mitchell, supra. We emphasize:
    “Generally, where matters of strategy and tactics are concerned,
    counsel’s assistance is deemed constitutionally effective if he
    chose a particular course that had some reasonable basis
    designed to effectuate his client’s interests.” Commonwealth v.
    Miller, 
    572 Pa. 623
    , 
    819 A.2d 504
    , 517 (2002). A claim of
    ineffectiveness generally cannot succeed through comparing, in
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    J-S40033-17
    hindsight, the trial strategy employed with alternatives not
    pursued. 
    Id.
    Commonwealth v. Washington, 
    927 A.2d 586
    , 599–600 (Pa. 2007). Here,
    counsel’s defense strategy was reasonable, particularly considering Gerber’s
    insistence that that he did not see the victim on the roadway, and did not even
    realize he had struck a person on the night in question.      Accordingly, this
    claim, too, fails.
    In his penultimate issue, Gerber asserts counsel was ineffective when
    he failed to object to the prosecutor’s repeated questions concerning Gerber’s
    strategic discussions with trial counsel, and his previously entered guilty plea
    to third-degree murder. See Gerber’s Brief at 50-57.
    Specifically, Gerber contends the following exchanges during the
    prosecutor’s cross-examination were improper:
    Q [by Prosecutor]      … Now, you’ve spoken to your lawyers
    about possible defenses in this case --- … did you not?
    …
    A [by Gerber]     I only ever had one defense.
    Q     Did your lawyers explain to you that if you were intoxicated
    to enough of a degree that it may lead to your conviction of a
    lesser charge?
    A     Well, that’s why I was convicted of a lesser charge to begin
    with.
    Q      Have you gotten advice from counsel that the more drunk
    you were the more that might benefit you in a defense of reducing
    first degree murder down?
    A    He made me aware of that, but I made him aware I was
    drunk. It was never an issue of first degree because I was drunk.
    ****
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    J-S40033-17
    Q     And your lawyers, I assume, also told you that before you
    could use deadly force to defend yourself that you had a duty to
    retreat if you could retreat. They told you that, correct?
    A     I’ve read the law. He didn’t tell me that.
    ****
    Q     And you realized that you’re going to have a tough time
    explaining why you would run somebody over at a time where you
    had no threat. I assume your lawyers told you that?
    [Defense Counsel]: Objection, Your Honor.
    THE COURT: Sustained.       You don’t have to answer that
    question, Mr. Gerber.
    N.T., 7/13/2010, at 60-61, 61-62, 67.        The prosecutor then proceeded to
    cross-examine Gerber regarding Sergeant DeAndrea’s testimony that after he
    struck the victim, Gerber backed over him again. Gerber testified that he
    “never knew [he] hit him, so [he] know[s he] didn’t put it in reverse and back
    over him.” Id. at 68-69. Thereafter, the following exchange took place:
    Q [by prosecutor]        That would be pretty hard to defend,
    wouldn’t it?
    A [by Gerber]      Backing over someone? I wouldn’t – I would
    have took the deal that you guys offered me, and I wouldn’t even
    be here if I was an animal like that. I never knew I hit Mr. Hagan.
    Q     What are you talking about?
    A     The 10 years.
    Q     What 10 years?
    A     I would only – I would be released in five years from this
    date if the Court didn’t overturn the case.
    Q     Overturn what case, sir?
    A     My conviction.
    Q     What conviction?
    - 24 -
    J-S40033-17
    A       When my attorney died before trial. …
    Three years ago, before trial was to start, my attorney died.
    I was given a choice of going to trial or taking a plea agreement.
    Id. at 69.     The prosecutor then continued to question Gerber about the
    circumstances surrounding his guilty plea, and referred to statements Gerber
    made during the plea colloquy, including his acknowledgment that he was
    “responsible for Mr. Hagan’s death” and while he did not intend to “run over
    him,” he did intend “to stab Mr. Hagan[.]” See id. at 75-76.
    On redirect, trial counsel also asked Gerber about the guilty plea,
    emphasizing that he only accepted the plea because his attorney had just
    died, and his replacement was unprepared for trial. See id. at 143-145. Prior
    to closing arguments, the parties entered into an agreement that neither
    attorney would refer to the withdrawn plea during closing arguments, and the
    trial court would charge the jury to disregard any evidence they heard
    regarding a prior disposition on the case. See id. at 162-164. Pursuant to
    the agreement, the trial court charged the jury as follows:
    During the course of the trial, you heard evidence about a prior
    disposition of this case. I’m instructing you that you are to
    disregard any evidence that you heard regarding the prior
    disposition of this case. You are to base your decision solely upon
    the evidence as it was introduced during the course of this trial
    and in accordance with my instructions.
    Id. at 288.
    With this background in mind, we consider Gerber’s ineffectiveness
    claim on appeal, namely that the prosecutor’s questions violated both
    attorney-client privilege and Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 410. Section 5916
    - 25 -
    J-S40033-17
    of Title 42 codifies the protection of confidential communications between an
    attorney and his client:
    In a criminal proceeding counsel shall not be competent or
    permitted to testify to confidential communications made to him
    by his client, nor shall the client be compelled to disclose the
    same, unless in either case this privilege is waived upon the trial
    by the client.
    42 Pa.C.S. § 5916.         It is well-settled that “the attorney-client privilege
    operates in a two-way fashion to protect confidential client-to-attorney or
    attorney-to-client communications made for the purpose of obtaining or
    providing professional legal advice.” Commonwealth v. Schultz, 
    133 A.3d 294
    , 313 (Pa. Super. 2016). Moreover, it is well-settled that the Pennsylvania
    Rule of Evidence 410 prohibits reference to a defendant’s prior plea agreement
    or statements made during plea discussions when, as here, the agreement
    was subsequently withdrawn.        See Pa.R.E. 410(a)(1), (4).    However, this
    Court has held [u]ltimately, it is clear that the rights provided for in Rule 410
    are waivable.”     Commonwealth v. Widmer, 
    120 A.3d 1023
    , 1028
    (2015), appeal denied, 
    158 A.3d 78
     (Pa. 2016) (defendant waived right to
    object to admissions he made in plea proffer when, as part of the agreement,
    defendant acknowledged his statements could be used against him if he
    decided not to proceed with the plea).
    In the present case, Gerber insists the prosecutor’s questions were
    highly improper, and counsel had no reasonable basis for failing to object.
    See Gerber’s Brief at 55. He further asserts his mere mention of “the deal”
    with the Commonwealth, did not justify the prosecutor’s in-depth cross-
    - 26 -
    J-S40033-17
    examination regarding statements he made at the guilty plea colloquy, which
    was subsequently invalidated as involuntary. Id. at 56. Gerber concludes:
    [His] claims of counsel ineffectiveness have arguable merit,
    counsel did not have a reasonable basis for failing to act, and he
    has suffered prejudice as a result of counsel’s deficient
    performance for the jury was not going to accept [Gerber’s]
    affirmative self-defense defense after hearing that he had
    previously pleaded guilty to third-degree murder, a malicious
    killing.
    Id. at 57.
    The PCRA court concluded both of these claims warranted no relief. See
    PCRA Court Opinion 5/26/2016, at 38-46.       First, with respect to counsel’s
    failure to object to questions concerning attorney-client privilege, the court
    acknowledged Gerber’s claim had arguable merit since at least some of the
    prosecutor’s questions inquired into the substance of Gerber’s discussions with
    his attorney. See id. at 45. Nevertheless, the PCRA court concluded counsel
    had a reasonable basis for failing to object, and Gerber failed to demonstrate
    prejudice. We agree.
    At the PCRA hearing, trial counsel explained why he neglected to object
    to the prosecutor’s questions implicating attorney/client discussions:
    I felt Mr. Gerber was handling the questions. Again, you know,
    strategically – you know, my experience is, you know, especially
    when your client’s on the stand and you start objecting to every
    question, it’s the situation like you’re trying to hide something.
    You’re trying to overly protect him. Again, there are rapid-fire
    questions and those were the decisions that I made.
    N.T., 5/25/2016, at 109. We are constrained to agree with the PCRA court
    that, based on the specific facts of this case, trial counsel demonstrated a
    - 27 -
    J-S40033-17
    “reasonable strategic basis for his actions.” PCRA Court Opinion 9/26/2016,
    at 45.    Furthermore, and more importantly, Gerber has utterly failed to
    establish prejudice.11     As the PCRA court opined:
    The Commonwealth presented other evidence for the trier of fact
    to find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that [Gerber] committed the
    offenses of which he was convicted. [Gerber] cannot show that,
    but for the Commonwealth’s questions about [Gerber’s]
    conversations with trial counsel, the outcome of the proceedings
    would have been different.
    Id. at 46.12 See Mason, supra.
    Second, with regard to the prosecutor’s questions concerning Gerber’s
    previously withdrawn guilty plea, the PCRA court determined the claim lacked
    arguable merit because Gerber “unilaterally introduced his withdrawn guilty
    plea for his own strategic purposes.” PCRA Court Opinion 9/26/2016, at 38.
    The court emphasized trial counsel “specifically advised [Gerber] to not
    discuss his withdrawn guilty plea.” Id. at 39, citing N.T., 7/13/2010, at 162.
    Nevertheless, Gerber broached the subject twice before the Commonwealth
    began to question him about the prior plea.        See N.T., 7/13/2010, at 60
    (Gerber stating, “Well, that’s why I was convicted of a lesser charge to begin
    ____________________________________________
    11
    We note Gerber provides no prejudice analysis in his brief specific to the
    attorney/client privilege issue. See Gerber’s Brief at 50-57.
    12
    The PCRA court found “there were numerous factors at trial that provide
    ample support for a jury to reject [Gerber’s] version of the incident,” including
    the fact that Gerber conceded he lied under oath during his prior grand jury
    testimony, and “the specifics of [his] story constantly evolved during the
    investigation process and even during his testimony at trial.” PCRA Court
    Opinion, 9/26/2016, at 51.
    - 28 -
    J-S40033-17
    with.”); at 69 (Gerber stating, “I would have took the deal that you guys
    offered me, and I wouldn’t even be here if I was an animal like that.”). The
    Pennsylvania Supreme Court has held that once a defendant “open[s] the
    door” to a subject, he “cannot [later] complain because the Commonwealth
    chose to further examine what was behind that door.”       Commowealth v.
    LaCava, 
    666 A.2d 221
    , 234 (Pa. 1995).         See also Commonwealth v.
    Patosky, 
    656 A.2d 499
    , 504 (Pa. Super. 1995) (“If a defendant delves into
    what would have been objectionable testimony on the Commonwealth’s part,
    then the Commonwealth can probe into this objectionable area.”), appeal
    denied, 
    668 A.2d 1128
     (Pa. 1995). Indeed, the PCRA court found Gerber’s
    unsolicited comments regarding his prior conviction were an attempt “to win
    favor with the jury” and “corroborate one of his multiple defenses offered at
    trial, i.e., that he was too intoxicated to form the requisite intent for first
    degree murder.” PCRA Court Opinion, 5/26/2016, at 40.
    Further, the PCRA court emphasized “the jury was specifically instructed
    to disregard any evidence with respect to the withdrawn guilty plea.” Id. at
    41. See N.T., 7/13/2010, at 288. “The law presumes that the jury will follow
    the instructions of the court.” Commonwealth v. Brown, 
    786 A.2d 961
    , 971
    (Pa. 2001). Therefore, the court concluded Gerber’s claim has no arguable
    merit.
    We find no basis to disagree. The first time Gerber mentioned he was
    “convicted of a lesser charge to begin with,” the prosecutor did not question
    him about the plea. N.T., 7/13/2010, at 60. However, Gerber brought up his
    - 29 -
    J-S40033-17
    prior plea again, commenting that if he had backed over the victim a second
    time, like the Commonwealth claimed, he “would have took the deal [the
    Commonwealth] offered [him].” Id. at 69. Because Gerber brought up his
    prior guilty plea, unsolicited by the Commonwealth, on two occasions, we
    agree the Commonwealth’s follow-up inquiry was permissible. Moreover, as
    noted by the PCRA court, the trial court provided the jury with a cautionary
    charge, instructing them to “disregard any evidence that [they] heard
    regarding the prior disposition of this case,”13 and we must presume the jury
    followed the court’s instructions. Brown, supra. Accordingly, we agree with
    the PCRA court’s conclusion that this claim has no arguable merit.
    Nonetheless, it merits mention the PCRA court also found counsel had a
    reasonable basis for failing to object to this line of inquiry. See PCRA Court
    Opinion, 9/26/2016, at 41-42.          Indeed, at the PCRA hearing, trial counsel
    explained:
    [O]nce it was blurted out, I was going to see where it was going.
    And where it went, if my recollection is correct, was that Mr.
    Gerber – I had anticipated and I think I was correct – Mr. Gerber
    was going to get out that a plea was offered to him, that he only
    took it because his lawyer had died and that the Commonwealth
    had offered him a plea to third-degree murder.
    He was attempting, and I believe he testified, around a
    situation of the plea that you guys wouldn’t have offered me the
    plea if you didn’t think that it was third degree or whatever.
    I felt strategically that what the jury was going to hear was
    that a plea was offered, that the only reason Mr. Gerber took it
    ____________________________________________
    13
    N.T., 7/13/2010, at 288.
    - 30 -
    J-S40033-17
    was because he felt pressured because his lawyer had died, that
    he had appealed it, that it was overturned, but that the
    Commonwealth on the other side had offered that plea because
    they felt that their case was weak or that they had a problem with
    the intoxication defense or the self-defense or whatever. That
    was the reason I did not object. That was also the reason why I
    asked some additional questions on [redirect]-examination to try
    to get that out to the jury.
    ****
    … I didn’t want it to come out when Mr. Gerber was
    testifying. And he was instructed that it was not going to come
    out, but he brought it out himself. Once he did that, then, yes –
    I decided that once it was out, that I was going to use it to his
    benefit. Because he had withdrawn the plea, and it was upheld
    that it was improperly, you know, entered, that he was, you know,
    pressured into taking it because of what he felt.
    But that didn’t, you know, diminish the fact that an
    agreement is just that, an agreement between both parties. And
    the Commonwealth had also agreed that it wasn’t first-degree
    murder. So, yes, I wanted the jury to hear that. Once it was out
    there and once we were in that position, I felt that was the best
    alternative to do.
    N.T., 5/25/2016, at 103-104, 105-106. Counsel’s stated basis for failing to
    object once “the bell was rung” constitutes a reasonable defensive strategy.
    Consequently, we agree Gerber’s fourth challenge to counsel’s ineffectiveness
    fails.
    In his final claim, Gerber insists that even if this Court concludes his
    individual claims do not warrant relief, “collectively the prejudice to him from
    all of these various failures of trial counsel was in combination so great that a
    new trial must be nevertheless awarded.” Gerber’s Brief at 58.
    It is axiomatic that “no number of failed [ineffectiveness] claims may
    collectively warrant relief if they fail to do so individually.” Commonwealth
    - 31 -
    J-S40033-17
    v. Johnson,      
    966 A.2d 523
    ,   532     (Pa.   2009)   (quotations   omitted).
    Nevertheless, our Supreme Court has clarified “that this principle applies to
    claims that fail because of lack of merit or arguable merit.” Commonwealth
    v. Spotz, 
    18 A.3d 244
    , 321 (Pa. 2011) (citation omitted). Rather, “[w]hen
    the failure of individual claims is grounded in lack of prejudice, then the
    cumulative prejudice from those individual claims may properly be assessed.”
    
    Id.
     (citations omitted).
    Here, we have concluded that all of Gerber’s claims failed because they
    either lacked arguable merit, or counsel had a reasonable basis for his actions.
    Therefore, having not reached the prejudice analysis for any of his claims
    (save one), we need not consider whether the cumulative prejudice of his
    allegations of error justifies a new trial.
    Order affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 11/21/2017
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