Com. v. Wells, E. ( 2018 )


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  • J-S72015-17
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,                     IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellee
    v.
    EDWARD WELLS,
    Appellant                   No. 60 EDA 2017
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered September 12, 2016
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
    Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0004435-2013
    BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., MUSMANNO, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*
    MEMORANDUM BY BENDER, P.J.E.:                      FILED JANUARY 25, 2018
    Appellant, Edward Wells, appeals from the judgment of sentence of 7
    to 14 years’ incarceration, followed by 15 years’ probation, imposed after he
    pled guilty to rape and related offenses. On appeal, Appellant argues that
    the trial court abused its discretion by denying his pre-sentence motion to
    withdraw his guilty plea. After careful review, we affirm.
    The trial court summarized the facts of this case, as stated at
    Appellant’s guilty plea hearing, as follows:
    The complainant, L.S., was 19 years old when[,] on
    December 11, 2011, she went to a club in Philadelphia with one
    of her girlfriends. As closing time neared[,] the complainant
    became separated from her girlfriend. She went through the
    club looking for her girlfriend. She entered a small, dark room
    looking for her friend and was followed into that room by []
    ____________________________________________
    *   Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
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    Appellant. As she attempted to leave[,] [] Appellant blocked her
    path and then forced her to the ground and got on top of her.
    The complainant repeatedly told [] Appellant that she did not
    want to have sex and that she was on her period. Undeterred[,]
    [] Appellant pushed her skirt up and pulled her underwear down.
    He snatched the maxi pad his victim had because of her period
    and tossed it on the floor.         Appellant then proceeded to
    penetrate his victim vaginally and anally with his penis. []
    Appellant got up and left the room. The complainant pulled her
    clothes up and located her friend who she told about the rape.
    Her friend and the friend’s boyfriend drove her to the hospital
    where she again reported the rape. She was transported to the
    Sexual Assault Response Center where she submitted to a rape
    kit examination.      Sperm fragments and swabs from the
    complainant’s rape kit were submitted to the Philadelphia DNA
    laboratory for testing. The DNA profile was then entered into a
    statewide database (CODIS). Over ten (10) months later on
    October 19, 2012, [] Appellant’s DNA was found to be a match
    for the DNA sample from the victim’s rape kit. Pursuant to a
    search warrant issued to secure a confirmatory DNA sample, []
    Appellant’s DNA was secured from him using an oral swab. That
    swab was submitted to the DNA lab. [] Appellant was found to
    be a match and he was arrested on March 4, 2013. The
    complainant was unable to identify [] Appellant at a lineup and
    in a photo array, but insisted that the sexual assault was not
    consensual. [] Appellant, who wore his hair in braids [on] the
    night of the attack, appeared at the lineup with his hair cut
    short.    Despite the change in his hair style, [] Appellant
    unsuccessfully tried to place fillers in the lineup who wore their
    hair in braids.[1]
    ____________________________________________
    1 At a hearing on Appellant’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea, discussed
    infra, the Commonwealth explained Appellant’s attempt to manipulate the
    lineup, as follows:
    [The Commonwealth]: [Appellant], in line with the standard
    practice, the standard lineup practice, he is permitted to select
    his own fillers for the lineup and he seeks out fillers who have
    braids in their hair. He, at the time of the lineup, had close-cut
    hair; but at the time of the incident, he, or the assailant, had
    braids. That’s how the complainant described her assailant[,] as
    a man who had braids.
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
    -2-
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    Trial Court Opinion (TCO), 1/26/17, at 2-3.
    Appellant was arrested and charged with rape, involuntary deviate
    sexual intercourse (IDSI), and related offenses.       On October 7, 2015, he
    pled guilty to rape and IDSI.          The court deferred sentencing for a pre-
    sentence report and a mental health evaluation. Subsequently, new counsel
    entered his appearance for Appellant, and on April 13, 2016, counsel filed a
    motion to withdraw Appellant’s plea. On May 16, 2016, a hearing was held
    on Appellant’s motion, at which defense counsel offered the following
    reasons that Appellant should be permitted to withdraw his plea:
    [Defense Counsel]: Your Honor, we’re here today before
    sentencing and my client, [Appellant], is proclaiming his
    innocence. He had a major disconnect with his previous counsel.
    He’s informed me that it was about three years that went
    between him speaking [to counsel,] and the day where he came
    in for the guilty plea, [counsel] told [Appellant]…, you’re going to
    fry unless you sign this. As soon as I was retained by the
    family, as soon as I spoke to this young man, I spoke to him
    several times, he’s always proclaimed his innocence.
    The legal standard we need to look at is how is this going
    to prejudice the Commonwealth moving forward.             I’m still
    getting to know the facts of this matter because, quite frankly,
    I’ve only been in it for about a month. But it seems like the
    complainant is an adult and that it’s a case we will be able to put
    on fairly quickly. It wouldn’t be the kind of prejudice where you
    (Footnote Continued) _______________________
    After a correctional officer repeatedly tells him that he
    cannot select fillers who don’t look like him, these people he’s
    trying to select with braids in their hair, the lineup proceeds with
    people who have a similar haircut to [Appellant].
    N.T. Hearing, 5/16/16, at 11.
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    see the Superior Court says no, you cannot withdraw a guilty
    plea before sentencing. My client has not been sentenced. He is
    proclaiming his innocence.
    There are many different issues that we have that we want
    to bring forward to trial. We feel like we have a great case. Like
    I said, he proclaimed his innocence. He has not been sentenced.
    We ask Your Honor to allow him to withdraw his guilty plea.
    N.T. Hearing at 3-5.
    In response, the Commonwealth argued that under our Supreme
    Court’s decision in Commonwealth v. Carrasquillo, 
    115 A.3d 1284
     (Pa.
    2015), Appellant’s assertion of innocence was not enough to warrant the
    withdrawal of his guilty plea.    N.T. Hearing at 5.     The Commonwealth
    stressed that the DNA evidence demonstrated that Appellant had sex with
    the victim, the victim had immediately reported the rape and she was
    prepared to testify that she did not consent to intercourse with Appellant,
    and Appellant’s conduct involving the lineup demonstrated his consciousness
    of guilt. Id. at 8-9. Additionally, the Commonwealth stressed that Appellant
    had waited until six months after his guilty plea was entered to assert his
    innocence and seek to withdraw the plea. Id. at 7, 12.
    Ultimately, the trial court agreed with the Commonwealth and denied
    Appellant’s motion to withdraw his plea. On September 12, 2016, the court
    sentenced Appellant to 7 to 14 years’ incarceration, followed by 15 years’
    probation.   Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal, and he also timely
    complied with the trial court’s order to file a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement.
    Herein, Appellant raises one issue for our review: “Whether the [trial] court
    erred in denying [Appellant’s] withdrawal of guilty plea before sentencing
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    J-S72015-17
    because [Appellant] proclaimed his innocence of these charges before
    sentencing and wanted to proceed to trial[?]” Appellant’s Brief at 6.
    In concluding that Appellant was not entitled to withdraw his guilty
    plea, both the trial court and the Commonwealth rely heavily on our
    Supreme Court’s decision in Carrasquillo.      There, the Court summarized
    the parameters for a pre-sentence withdrawal of a guilty plea, as follows:
    This Court’s [Commonwealth v.] Forbes[, 
    299 A.2d 268
    (Pa. 1973),] decision reflects that: there is no absolute right to
    withdraw a guilty plea; trial courts have discretion in
    determining whether a withdrawal request will be granted; such
    discretion is to be administered liberally in favor of the accused;
    and any demonstration by a defendant of a fair-and-just reason
    will suffice to support a grant, unless withdrawal would work
    substantial prejudice to the Commonwealth. See Forbes, … 299
    A.2d at 271.
    Carrasquillo, 115 A.3d at 1291–92. Importantly, the Carrasquillo Court
    also clarified that an assertion of innocence, alone, does not automatically
    warrant the pre-sentence withdrawal of a guilty plea. Instead,
    a defendant’s innocence claim must be at least plausible to
    demonstrate, in and of itself, a fair and just reason for
    presentence withdrawal of a plea. More broadly, the proper
    inquiry on consideration of such a withdrawal motion is whether
    the accused has made some colorable demonstration, under the
    circumstances, such that permitting withdrawal of the plea would
    promote fairness and justice. The policy of liberality remains
    extant but has its limits, consistent with the affordance of a
    degree of discretion to the common pleas courts.
    Carrasquillo, 115 A.3d at 1292 (internal citation omitted).
    Here, in explaining why it denied Appellant’s motion to withdraw his
    plea, the trial court stated:
    -5-
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    Appellant’s bare assertion of innocence was totally implausible.
    After assaulting his victim[,] Appellant fled and remained free
    until his DNA showed up in CODIS. [Appellant’s] DNA[,] which
    was recovered from the victim’s rape kit[,] established a 29.37
    quintillion to one odds of it being someone other than Appellant
    in the African-American population. [] Appellant’s behavior in
    attempting to manipulate the lineup procedure (See [N.T.,]
    5/16/16[,] … at 10-11), coupled with his DNA results make his
    bare assertion of innocence merely a ploy to delay and/or thwart
    the judicial process. No relief is warranted.
    TCO at 3-4.
    Appellant now claims that the court abused its discretion. In support,
    he stresses that he not only asserted his innocence, but he also claimed that
    his attorney “said he was going to fry if he [did not] sign” the plea colloquy,
    and he informed the court that his counsel had failed to visit him or
    communicate with him about the case prior to his entering his plea.
    Appellant’s Brief at 13. According to Appellant, these assertions constituted
    a “colorable claim” that withdrawing his plea would promote fairness and
    justice. Id.
    Initially, we disagree with the trial court that Appellant made only a
    bald assertion of innocence. Appellant attempted to support that assertion
    with claims that his prior attorney had not communicated with him, and that
    counsel had essentially compelled him to enter his plea by informing
    Appellant that he “would fry” if he chose to go to trial.     Thus, Appellant’s
    assertion of innocence was not ‘bald,’ as the trial court declared.
    Nevertheless, we cannot conclude that the court abused its discretion
    by deeming Appellant’s assertion of innocence implausible.            Appellant
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    J-S72015-17
    offered no evidence at the May 16, 2016 hearing – not even his own
    testimony - to demonstrate that his plea counsel acted in the manner he
    alleged, or that counsel’s purported conduct compelled him to enter the
    plea.   Such a demonstration was especially vital where the record, on its
    face, cast doubt on the plausibility of Appellant’s ineffectiveness claims and
    his related assertion of innocence. Namely, at the guilty plea proceeding on
    October 7, 2015, the court informed Appellant that he faced a maximum
    sentence of 40 years’ imprisonment (not death) for the offenses to which he
    was pleading guilty.       See N.T. Plea Proceeding, 10/7/15, at 5.      Appellant
    also confirmed that he had spoken about his case with his attorney, no one
    had forced or threatened him to enter his plea, and he was satisfied with the
    representation of his counsel. See id. at 6-8. This record calls into question
    Appellant’s assertion that counsel did not communicate with him for three
    years before his plea, and that he pled guilty based on counsel’s statement
    that he “would fry” if he did not.             Also diminishing the plausibility of
    Appellant’s claims is the fact that he waited until six months after entering
    his plea to declare his innocence and assert his allegations against plea
    counsel.2
    ____________________________________________
    2 On appeal, Appellant does not acknowledge, let alone discuss, the reason
    for this delay, let alone explain why it should not weigh in favor of our
    affirming the trial court’s decision.
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    Finally, as the trial court stressed, two separate tests showed that
    Appellant’s DNA matched the DNA taken from the victim, who reported the
    crime immediately, and who was prepared to testify at trial that she did not
    consent to the sexual encounter with Appellant. See N.T. Plea Proceeding at
    9-13. After his arrest, Appellant attempted to influence the lineup by picking
    ‘fillers’ who had braids in their hair, while his hair was cut short.     This
    evidence supports the court’s decision that Appellant’s claim of innocence
    was implausible.
    In sum, the record as a whole cast doubt on the veracity of Appellant’s
    claim of innocence, as well as his associated ineffective assistance of counsel
    claims. Because Appellant failed to further develop, or present any evidence
    to support, those assertions at the hearing on his motion to withdraw his
    plea, we cannot conclude that it was manifestly unreasonable for the trial
    court to deem Appellant’s belated claim of innocence implausible in light of
    the record before it.3, 4 See Commonwealth v. Biesecker, 
    161 A.3d 321
    ,
    329 (Pa. Super. 2017) (citation omitted) (“An abuse of discretion is not
    merely an error of judgment, but is rather the overriding or misapplication of
    ____________________________________________
    3 Nothing in our decision should be read as ruling on the merits of
    Appellant’s ineffectiveness claims, or precluding him from more fully
    developing those claims on collateral review.
    4 In light of our disposition, we need not assess Appellant’s argument that
    the Commonwealth would not be prejudiced by the withdrawal of his plea.
    -8-
    J-S72015-17
    the law, or the exercise of judgment that is manifestly unreasonable, or the
    result of bias, prejudice, ill-will or partiality, as shown by the evidence of
    record.”). Accordingly, we affirm Appellant’s judgment of sentence.
    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 1/25/18
    -9-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 60 EDA 2017

Filed Date: 1/25/2018

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/13/2024