Commonwealth v. Vargas ( 2014 )


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  • J-E01004-14
    
    2014 PA Super 289
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,                    IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellee
    v.
    JOSE VARGAS,
    Appellant                 No. 1415 EDA 2012
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence of February 6, 2012
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County
    Criminal Division Docket No: CP-09-CR-0001895-2011
    BEFORE:   GANTMAN, P.J., FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E., BENDER, P.J.E.,
    PANELLA, DONOHUE, ALLEN, LAZARUS, MUNDY, OLSON, JJ.
    OPINION BY OLSON, J.:                            FILED DECEMBER 31, 2014
    Appellant, Jose Vargas, appeals from the judgment of sentence
    entered on February 6, 2012, as made final by the denial of Appellant’s post-
    sentence motion on April 13, 2012.           Although we affirm Appellant’s
    convictions, we must vacate Appellant’s judgment of sentence and remand
    for resentencing.
    The trial court has provided us with a thorough and well-written
    summary of the underlying facts. As the trial court explained:1
    1
    Within the trial court’s opinion, the trial court summarized the evidence
    that was introduced at the June 6, 2011 pre-trial suppression hearing. We
    note that there were slight differences between the evidence that was
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
    J-E01004-14
    On November 3, 2010, at approximately 10:00 p.m.,
    Officers David Clee and Matthew Tobie of the Bensalem
    Township Police Department were patrolling the Route 1
    corridor in Bensalem. [N.T. Trial, 10/17/11, at 9]. The
    Route 1 corridor is considered a high-crime area, [and has
    an] extensive history of arrests for offenses including
    narcotics, robberies, prostitution[,] and other crimes at the
    various hotels in the region. [Id. at 12].
    In the course of their regular patrol, the [o]fficers pulled
    [their marked patrol car] into the parking lot of the Sunrise
    Inn on Route 1. . . . Officer Clee is specifically assigned to
    patrol the Route 1 corridor. As such, he is personally
    familiar with the crime that takes place in the area and has
    made numerous arrests along the corridor, including arrests
    at the Sunrise Inn. [Id. at 12]. Upon pulling into the
    parking lot, the [o]fficers noticed a car with darkly tinted
    windows parked in the parking lot. Officer Clee immediately
    recognized that the tint was a violation of [75 Pa.C.S.A.
    § 4524(e)(1)2]. [Id. at 15-16].
    As they approached the car, a Chevrolet Impala, Officer
    Clee saw movement inside the vehicle[,] which he described
    as someone moving from the front passenger’s side of the
    vehicle to the driver’s side. [Id. at 15. Officer Clee decided
    to investigate the vehicle. Id.] . . .
    [Officer Clee] parked his patrol car[, exited his vehicle, and
    approached the Chevrolet Impala. Id. at 15-16]. Officer
    Clee then . . . began to question the driver. As [Officer Clee
    was questioning the driver,] Officer Clee observed a
    _______________________
    (Footnote Continued)
    introduced at trial and the evidence that was introduced during the
    suppression hearing.     Therefore, within this memorandum, we have
    conformed the factual recitation to the evidence that was introduced during
    the October 17, 2011 trial.
    2
    75 Pa.C.S.A. § 4524(e)(1) declares: “[n]o person shall drive any motor
    vehicle with any sun screening device or other material which does not
    permit a person to see or view the inside of the vehicle through the
    windshield, side wing or side window of the vehicle.”          75 Pa.C.S.A.
    § 4524(e)(1).
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    baseball cap sitting on the rear floor of the car. Inside the
    baseball cap were several pieces of jewelry. From his
    experience, Officer Clee recognized that a baseball cap full
    of jewelry left in a safe place means the owner of the
    jewelry anticipated one of two things: [that] he was about
    to engage in a fight[] or that[,] as a drug dealer[,] he had a
    fear of being robbed. [Id. at 18-19].
    The occupant of the vehicle [was] later identified as Melvin
    Torres [from Camden, New Jersey. During their
    conversation, Torres] informed Officer Clee that he was not
    the owner of the vehicle. [Id. at 14-16]. Officer Clee
    questioned Torres in an attempt to ascertain the location of
    the vehicle’s owner[] and to determine [Torres’] connection
    to the hotel. Despite being questioned only about the
    ownership of the vehicle, Torres appeared [“extremely
    nervous”] and was evasive in his responses. . . . Id. at 16-
    17].
    After repeated questioning, Torres eventually told Officer
    Clee that the vehicle’s owner . . . was in Room 161 of the
    hotel. [Id. at 17]. . . . After Torres informed [Officer Clee]
    that the owner of the [Chevrolet] Impala was in Room 161,
    an individual opened the door to [Room 161] from within,
    locked eyes with Officer Clee[,] and[, when Officer Clee
    began to walk towards the room, the individual] quickly
    closed the door. [Id. at 20]. While Officer Tobie remained
    with Torres, . . . Officer Clee approached Room 161[,
    “knocked on the door several times[,] and then made an
    announcement outside that [he] was the police and [he]
    was inquiring about the owner or operator of the Chevrolet
    Impala that was occupied in the parking lot.”             Id.]
    Approximately [45] seconds passed before the door was
    opened by a person later identified as . . . [Francisco]
    Saldana. [Id. at 21].
    Standing outside the room, Officer Clee observed [Saldana,]
    Appellant[,] and [an individual who was later identified as
    Raymer Carrasco] standing just inside the doorway. [Id.]
    Officer Clee requested that each of the men produce
    identification. [Officer Clee] noted that all three [men] were
    from Camden, New Jersey. [Id. at 27]. None of the men
    identified themselves as the owner of the [Chevrolet]
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    Impala, and none would claim responsibility for renting the
    hotel room. [Id. at 21-22]. . . .
    From the doorway, Officer Clee looked around the room[
    and observed “a Tupperware container, two trash bags, and
    [] a black, . . . wheeled Tupperware container. Additionally,
    the trash can was . . . full of items, and just between the
    trash can and the wall was a small apple baggie.” 3 Id. at
    23]. . . .
    Acting on the belief, based on his experience, that there
    might be other people [in the rear bathroom], and the fact
    that the presence of the [a]pple bag[] indicated there might
    be illegal activity occurring inside the hotel room, Officer
    Clee entered the room [and] walk[ed] through the room[
    towards the rear] hotel bathroom. [Id. at 26]. . . . As he
    crossed the room, Officer Clee . . . observed at least one
    portable lamp sticking out of a Tupperware container, in
    addition to another Tupperware container and a large trash
    bag. As he passed the trash bag, [Officer Clee] identified
    more [a]pple bag[s]. Id. at 50. . . . [Further, Officer Clee
    observed a trail of small rubber bands on the floor, with the
    trail leading to the toilet, and then “two or three small
    rubber[] bands in the toilet.” Id. at 26-27. Officer Clee
    also noticed that the window in the bathroom was open, but
    that the window was “extremely small, so [the officer] knew
    that [none] of the three people standing at the door could
    have got out of it.” Id. at 27]. . . .
    Based on his observations, Officer Clee made the decision to
    detain all four suspects: the individual from the [Chevrolet]
    Impala and the three men from the hotel room. Once the
    men were secured, the[ men] were searched[] and Raymer
    Carrasco was found to be in possession of [heroin. The
    heroin in Carrasco’s possession was packaged in “clear
    plastic baggies wrapped in small rubber[] bands” and was
    later determined to weigh 0.22 grams. Id. at 68; Berks
    County Crime Laboratory Report, dated 11/23/10, at 1].
    3
    During the suppression hearing, Officer Clee testified that an “apple bag” is
    a larger plastic bag that “normally contains 500 [] baggies” within it. N.T.
    Suppression, 6/6/11, at 24.
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    [A search of Appellant’s person revealed that Appellant
    possessed car keys to a Honda vehicle; the police
    discovered this Honda vehicle parked next to the Chevrolet
    Impala in the Sunrise Inn lot. N.T. Trial, 10/17/11, at 29.
    Further, when questioned as to whether Appellant had any
    money on his person when he was searched, Officer Clee
    testified: “I don’t recall any money being recovered in this
    case.” Id. at 49-50.]
    Officer Clee then applied for a search warrant for the hotel
    room, the [Chevrolet] Impala[,] and [the] Honda
    [automobile that was parked next to the Chevrolet Impala
    (and to which Appellant possessed the keys)]. The four
    suspects were transported to the police station and the
    room was secured until a search warrant was obtained.
    [Id. at 30].
    Once the search warrant was obtained, all the evidence
    located in the hotel room was brought back to the police
    station to be inventoried.        Inside the containers and
    garbage bag located in the hotel room, police found [six
    coffee] grinders [that were used to grind heroin], [coffee
    filters that were used in the heroin-grinding process,] three
    lamps, thousands of glassine baggies, several digital scales,
    rubber stamps, wax paper[s that were stamped with brand-
    insignia and that are ordinarily used to bag heroin], and
    other items of drug paraphernalia. [Id. at 43-49]. All of
    the grinders[, filters,] and scales tested positive for residue
    of heroin or cocaine. [Id.; see also Bucks County Crime
    Laboratory Report, dated 12/13/10, at 1. Moreover, e]mpty
    condom[s] . . . were found in the hotel trash can. [N.T.
    Trial, 10/17/11, at 47]. [None of the four individuals were
    the named renter of the hotel room; none of the four
    individuals possessed any “luggage or overnight bags.” Id.
    at 21-22, 31, and 50].
    The cars were [] transported to the [police] station so [that]
    they could be searched. The officers located a concealed
    compartment in the dashboard of the [Chevrolet] Impala
    that contained a .40-caliber handgun and [377.73 grams of
    uncut heroin, some of which was packaged in rubber
    condoms “for transportation in a human body.” Id. at 32-
    35; see also Bucks County Crime Laboratory Report, dated
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    11/23/10, at 1. Officer Clee testified that the heroin-filled
    condoms were “extremely similar” to the empty condoms
    that were found in the hotel room trash can. N.T. Trial,
    10/17/11, at 47. In like fashion, Commonwealth expert,
    Detective Timothy Carroll, also testified that the heroin-
    filled condoms found in the Chevrolet Impala were “very
    similar, if not identical” to the “used empty condom[s]” that
    were found in the hotel room. Id. at 90-91. Further, within
    the Chevrolet Impala, the police discovered an “owe sheet”4
    in the vehicle’s trunk, as well as an additional ledger that
    was sitting on the vehicle’s front seat. Id. at 36]. . . .
    [Saldana] was identified as the person responsible for the
    [Chevrolet] Impala.     [Id. at 22].    Although no illegal
    substances or contraband of any sort were found in the
    Honda [to which Appellant possessed the keys], when
    Officer Clee introduced his trained narcotics dog to the
    [Honda, the dog] alerted to the presence of an illegal
    substance. [Id. at 28-30]. The K-9 also alerted to the
    presence of an illegal substance in the [Chevrolet] Impala,
    which was consistent with the findings of the search. [Id.]
    On November 4, 2010, Appellant was charged with [a
    number of crimes, including possession of a controlled
    substance with the intent to deliver (hereinafter “PWID”),
    possession of a controlled substance, possession of drug
    paraphernalia, and criminal conspiracy.]
    Trial Court Opinion, 7/10/12, at 1-6 (internal citations omitted).
    On August 18, 2011, Commonwealth provided Appellant with notice
    that, in the event Appellant was convicted of PWID, the Commonwealth
    intended to seek the five-year mandatory minimum sentence under 18
    Pa.C.S.A. § 7508(a)(7)(iii), because “the aggregate weight of the compound
    4
    Officer Clee testified that “[a]n owe sheet is a record that someone is
    owing them money for anything.          These sheets, specifically the items
    recovered in the trunk of the vehicle, appear to be daily amounts that people
    are making off a corner for ounces and grams of something.” N.T. Trial,
    10/17/11, at 60.
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    or mixture containing the heroin [was] 50 grams or greater.” 18 Pa.C.S.A.
    § 7508(a)(7)(iii).
    On October 17, 2011, Appellant proceeded to a bench trial, where the
    Commonwealth presented the above-summarized evidence.              Moreover,
    during trial, Appellant stipulated to the authenticity and accuracy of a Bucks
    County Crime Laboratory report, which declared that the substance in Mr.
    Saldana’s vehicle was heroin and that the heroin in Mr. Saldana’s vehicle
    weighed 377.73 grams.5      N.T. Trial, 10/17/11, at 39-41; Bucks County
    Crime Laboratory Report, dated 11/23/10, at 1.
    During trial, the Commonwealth presented the testimony of Detective
    Timothy Carroll, whom the trial court accepted as an expert in the field of
    narcotics trafficking.   Detective Carroll testified that – based upon his
    training, education, and experience, and upon the evidence of the case – all
    of the heroin in this case was possessed with the intent to deliver.     N.T.
    Trial, 10/17/11, at 87. Indeed, Detective Carroll testified that the operation
    in the hotel room constituted a “mobile heroin mill,” where the defendants
    cut raw heroin and proceeded to weigh and package the cut heroin into the
    small wax baggies. Id. at 87-88. As Detective Carroll testified:
    This is a matter, your Honor, really of a portable or mobile
    heroin mill. This heroin was possessed with the intent to
    5
    Appellant also stipulated to the chain of custody regarding all of the items
    that were tested by the Bucks County Crime Laboratory.             N.T. Trial,
    10/17/11, at 39-40.
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    package into these wax paper bags. It’s also obvious that
    some of it had been packaged and probably had left the
    room prior to that. The pellets are evidence of the actual
    raw heroin that was brought to the room. There is mannitol
    present, which would be used as cut to adulterate the
    heroin before it’s packaged in those small blue wax baggies,
    and there’s presence of actual new unstamped bags as well
    as stamped bags that are packaged and unpackaged and
    there’s the presence of the actual stamps and heat sealers.
    There is a plethora of evidence, really . . . that shows this is
    really a heroin mill.
    N.T. Trial, 10/17/11, at 87-88.
    Detective Carroll testified that, judging from the paraphernalia and
    residue that was discovered in the hotel room, the defendants had probably
    cut and packaged “thousands of bags of heroin” before the police arrived;
    the detective testified that the bags of cut heroin had then “left the [hotel]
    room” for ultimate sale “at the street level.” Id. at 87, 89, and 90.
    With respect to the remaining 377.73 grams of raw, uncut heroin that
    was discovered in Mr. Saldana’s vehicle, Detective Carroll testified:
    A gram of heroin is usually broken down into about 35 of
    these heroin packets. Those heroin packets retail for about
    $10[.00] a piece. Of course, they discount by quantity; if
    you buy a bundle you pay maybe 60 percent on the dollar.
    I believe there were 376[6] grams [of uncut heroin left]. If
    you do the math, you’re talking about 13,000 baggies that
    6
    As noted above, Appellant stipulated to the authenticity and accuracy of
    the Bucks County Crime Laboratory report, which declared that the
    substance in Mr. Saldana’s vehicle was heroin and that the heroin weighed
    377.73 grams. N.T. Trial, 10/17/11, at 39-41. Appellant also stipulated to
    the chain of custody regarding the items that were tested. Id. at 39-40.
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    possibly could have been produced here in this mill from
    what was left, what was discovered by the police, not
    counting the cut and not counting what was apparently
    already packaged.
    Id. at 92.
    Detective Carroll testified that the approximate street value of the
    seized heroin was “well over a hundred thousand dollars.” Id.
    During trial, the Commonwealth also introduced a surveillance video of
    the hotel parking lot, which was recorded on November 3, 2010. N.T. Trial,
    10/17/11, at 41-42.     As the video showed, at 10:03 p.m. on the night in
    question, Mr. Saldana drove his Chevrolet Impala into Sunrise Inn parking
    lot.7   See N.T. Suppression Hearing, 6/6/11, at 13.8       After parking his
    vehicle, Mr. Saldana exited the car carrying nothing, and walked empty-
    handed towards Room 161. Id. at 13-14. Mr. Saldana then knocked on the
    door to Room 161, and someone from inside Room 161 opened the door to
    allow Mr. Saldana entry into the hotel room. Id. Approximately one minute
    later, Officers Clee and Tobie drove their patrol car into the Sunrise Inn
    parking lot, and the above-summarized events transpired. Id. at 14-18.
    7
    The surveillance video began at 10:00 p.m. and ended two hours later, at
    12:00 a.m.
    8
    During Appellant’s trial, the parties stipulated to the admissibility of the
    surveillance video. N.T. Trial, 10/17/11, at 41-42. The parties also agreed
    that the surveillance video admitted at trial was “the same video” the trial
    court viewed during the June 6, 2011 suppression hearing. Id. at 42.
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    The trial court found Appellant guilty of PWID, possession of a
    controlled substance, possession of drug paraphernalia, and criminal
    conspiracy.9   Id. at 111.   On February 6, 2012, the trial court sentenced
    Appellant to serve the mandatory minimum sentence of five to ten years in
    prison for PWID, in accordance with 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 7508(a)(7)(iii).10    N.T.
    Sentencing, 2/6/12, at 32.
    On February 16, 2012, Appellant filed a timely post-sentence motion.
    Following a hearing, the trial court denied Appellant’s motion and Appellant
    filed a timely notice of appeal to this Court.
    Within Appellant’s initial brief on appeal, Appellant claimed that the
    evidence was insufficient to support his convictions and that the trial court
    erred when it sentenced him to serve the mandatory minimum term under
    18 Pa.C.S.A. § 7508(a)(7)(iii). Over the dissent of the Honorable Mary Jane
    Bowes, a three-judge panel of this Court initially concluded that the evidence
    was insufficient to sustain Appellant’s convictions.     Commonwealth v.
    Vargas, 1415 EDA 2012 (Pa. Super. filed July 8, 2013) (unpublished
    memorandum) (withdrawn) at 15-19. According to the panel majority, the
    Commonwealth had not proven that Appellant constructively possessed the
    9
    35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(30), (16), and (32), and 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 903(a),
    respectively.
    10
    The trial court also sentenced Appellant to serve a concurrent term of ten
    years’ probation for the conspiracy conviction.
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    contraband in either the hotel room or Mr. Saldana’s vehicle.    The panel
    majority also held that the Commonwealth had failed to prove that Appellant
    conspired to commit any crime.      Rather, the panel majority held, the
    Commonwealth had merely proven Appellant’s “presence in the hotel room”
    and Appellant’s “shared access to [the] drug-packaging paraphernalia” in the
    hotel room. Id. at 19.
    In her comprehensive and well-written dissent, Judge Bowes argued
    that, in reaching its decision, the panel majority had disregarded our
    standard of review, taken a myopic view of the Commonwealth’s evidence,
    failed to draw all reasonable inferences from the evidence in favor of the
    Commonwealth as the verdict winner, and re-weighed the evidence in
    Appellant’s favor. As Judge Bowes wrote:
    This is not a case where the evidence is so weak and
    inconclusive that no probability of fact can be drawn from
    the combined circumstances. . . .         Here, viewing the
    evidence in a light most favorable to the Commonwealth,
    thereby giving it the benefit of the reasonable inferences
    derived therefrom, the pertinent proof is sufficient to
    establish the aforementioned crimes. Appellant was inside
    a [hotel] room with two other individuals while a third
    person remained outside in a Chevy Impala with a New
    Jersey license plate.    The person in the Impala had
    indicated to police that the owner of the car was in the
    [hotel] room where police located Appellant. Police secured
    a search warrant for the [hotel] room and found four bags
    of heroin on another individual who was in the hotel room
    with Appellant. Also, police observed a large [Ziploc] bag
    that ordinarily contains smaller [Ziploc] bags, which one
    officer described as being used almost exclusively for the
    packaging of narcotics. Rubber bands, frequently used in
    packaging drugs, were found floating in the toilet, which
    appeared to have been flushed just before police arrived.
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    Drug sniffing dogs performed a sniff on the outside of both
    Appellant’s car and the Impala, which belonged to Francisco
    Saldana, one of the men who was inside the [hotel] room
    with Appellant. The dog alerted on both cars. Police then
    obtained a search warrant for the vehicles. Inside Mr.
    Saldana’s car, police found a bag containing over 370 grams
    of heroin and a loaded .40 caliber semi-automatic pistol.
    These items were located in a secret compartment in the
    vehicle. Part of the drugs found in Mr. Saldana’s vehicle
    were packaged in balloon and condom-like wrappers. . . .
    Inside the hotel room, an industrial-sized trash bag and
    large blue plastic containers were seized. The bag and
    containers as well as a trash can in the room contained
    numerous items used to package heroin, including rubber
    stamps, wax paper, digital scales, empty condom wrappers
    similar if not identical to those used to package the drugs in
    Mr. Saldana’s car, thousands of one-inch-by-one-inch
    [Ziploc] bags, grinders, and lamps. The trash bag and
    plastic containers were on the floor of the [hotel] room and
    were not hidden.        Six grinders and two scales tested
    positive[] for either cocaine or heroin residue. Additional
    packaging in the room tested positive[] for heroin residue.
    A surveillance video of Mr. Saldana entering the [hotel]
    room showed that he had arrived at the hotel shortly before
    [the] police and had entered the [hotel] room without any
    of the plastic containers or trash bag. No luggage or bags
    were located in Appellant’s vehicle. Expert testimony was
    introduced that the materials recovered indicated a mobile
    heroin packaging mill.
    Only by setting aside our standard of review can this
    evidence be viewed as Appellant merely being present while
    others were packaging heroin for purposes of distribution.
    Commonwealth v. Vargas, 1415 EDA 2012 (Pa. Super. filed July 8, 2013)
    (unpublished memorandum) (Bowes, J., dissenting) (withdrawn) at 2-4.
    The Commonwealth filed an application for reargument and, on
    September 13, 2013, this Court granted the Commonwealth’s application.
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    We thus withdrew the prior panel decision and listed the case for en banc
    consideration.    Order, 9/13/13, at 1.    Appellant now raises the following
    claims to this Court:
    [1.] Where the evidence at trial established only that
    [Appellant] was merely present in a hotel room where drug-
    packaging paraphernalia was recovered, was the evidence
    sufficient to sustain the verdict[]?
    [2.] Did the [trial court] err by imposing the mandatory
    minimum [sentence] under [18 Pa.C.S.A. § 7508] where
    the controlled substance in question was not in the actual or
    constructive possession of [Appellant]?
    Appellant’s Brief at 5.
    Appellant first claims that the evidence was insufficient to support his
    convictions. Appellant’s claim is based entirely upon his contention that the
    evidence “only showed [] Appellant’s mere presence in [the] hotel room.”
    Appellant’s Brief at 8. According to Appellant, since “the Commonwealth’s
    evidence established nothing more [than] presence alone in conjunction with
    access to the contraband[, the Commonwealth] did not establish that
    Appellant was in possession of the drugs . . . [and the Commonwealth] also
    failed to demonstrate that [] Appellant was part of a conspiracy.” Id. at 13
    and 15.
    Appellant’s claim fails.     Viewing the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the Commonwealth as the verdict winner, the evidence in this
    case was sufficient to show that:      Appellant constructively possessed the
    heroin residue and drug paraphernalia that was discovered in the “heroin
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    mill” of a hotel room; Appellant was engaged in an active, ongoing
    conspiracy with Messrs. Saldana and Carrasco – the purpose of which was to
    cut and package raw heroin “for sale at the street level;” as part of the
    conspiracy, Appellant, Mr. Saldana, and Mr. Carrasco intended to cut and
    package the 377.73 grams of raw, uncut heroin that was discovered in Mr.
    Saldana’s vehicle; and, as a member of the ongoing conspiracy with Mr.
    Saldana, Appellant is criminally liable for the substantive offense of
    possessing the 377.73 grams of raw, uncut heroin that was discovered in Mr.
    Saldana’s vehicle.
    We review Appellant’s sufficiency of the evidence claim under the
    following standard:
    The standard we apply in reviewing the sufficiency of the
    evidence is whether viewing all the evidence admitted at
    trial in the light most favorable to the verdict winner, there
    is sufficient evidence to enable the fact-finder to find every
    element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.             In
    applying the above test, we may not weigh the evidence
    and substitute our judgment for [that of] the fact-finder. In
    addition, we note that the facts and circumstances
    established by the Commonwealth need not preclude every
    possibility of innocence.        Any doubts regarding a
    defendant’s guilt may be resolved by the fact-finder unless
    the evidence is so weak and inconclusive that as a matter of
    law no probability of fact may be drawn from the combined
    circumstances. The Commonwealth may sustain its burden
    of proving every element of the crime beyond a reasonable
    doubt by means of wholly circumstantial evidence.
    Moreover, in applying the above test, the entire record must
    be evaluated and all evidence actually received must be
    considered. Finally, the trier of fact while passing upon the
    credibility of witnesses and the weight of the evidence
    produced, is free to believe all, part or none of the
    evidence.
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    Commonwealth v. Brown, 
    23 A.3d 544
    , 559-560 (Pa. Super. 2011) (en
    banc), quoting Commonwealth v. Hutchinson, 
    947 A.2d 800
    , 805-806
    (Pa. Super. 2008).
    At the outset, we reject Appellant’s claim that the evidence was
    insufficient to prove that Appellant constructively possessed the heroin
    residue and drug paraphernalia in the hotel room.
    “In narcotics possession cases, the Commonwealth may meet its
    burden by showing actual, constructive, or joint constructive possession of
    the contraband.” Commonwealth v. Thompson, 
    428 A.2d 223
    , 224 (Pa.
    Super. 1981).    Actual possession is proven “by showing . . . [that the]
    controlled   substance   [was]    found      on   the   [defendant’s]   person.”
    Commonwealth v. Macolino, 
    469 A.2d 132
    , 134 (Pa. 1983).                   If the
    contraband is not discovered on the defendant’s person, the Commonwealth
    may satisfy its evidentiary burden by proving that the defendant had
    constructive possession of the drug. 
    Id.
    Our Supreme Court has defined constructive possession as “the ability
    to exercise a conscious dominion over the illegal substance: the power to
    control the contraband and the intent to exercise that control.” Macolino,
    469 A.2d at 134.      In the words of our Supreme Court, “constructive
    possession is a legal fiction, a pragmatic construct to deal with the realities
    of criminal law enforcement.” Commonwealth v. Johnson, 
    26 A.3d 1078
    ,
    1093 (Pa. 2011) (internal quotations, citations, and corrections omitted). It
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    is a “judicially created doctrine . . . [that] enables law enforcement officials
    to prosecute individuals in situations where the inference of possession is
    strong, yet actual possession at the time of arrest cannot be shown.” Mark
    I. Rabinowitz, Note, Criminal Law Constructive Possession:              Must the
    Commonwealth Still Prove Intent? – Commonwealth v. Mudrick, 60 TEMPLE
    L.Q. 445, 499-450 (1987).
    To find constructive possession, the power and intent to control the
    contraband does not need to be exclusive to the defendant. Our Supreme
    Court “has recognized that constructive possession may be found in one or
    more actors where the item [at] issue is in an area of joint control and equal
    access.”     Johnson, 26 A.3d at 1094 (internal quotations, citations, and
    corrections omitted). Nevertheless, “where more than one person has equal
    access to where drugs are stored, presence alone in conjunction with such
    access     will   not   prove   conscious   dominion   over    the   contraband.”
    Commonwealth v. Davis, 
    480 A.2d 1035
    , 1045 (Pa. 1984) (emphasis
    omitted).
    For the Commonwealth to prove constructive possession where more
    than one person has access to the contraband, “the Commonwealth must
    introduce evidence demonstrating either [the defendant’s] participation in
    the drug related activity or evidence connecting [the defendant] to the
    specific room or areas where the drugs were kept.”            Commonwealth v.
    Ocasio, 
    619 A.2d 352
    , 354-355 (Pa. Super. 1993). However, “[a]n intent
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    J-E01004-14
    to maintain a conscious dominion may be inferred from the totality of the
    circumstances . . . [and] circumstantial evidence may be used to establish a
    defendant’s possession of drugs or contraband.”     Macolino, 469 A.2d at
    134-135 (internal citations omitted).       Moreover, we agree with the
    statement from the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit that,
    although “mere presence” at a crime scene cannot alone sustain a conviction
    for possession of contraband:
    a jury need not ignore presence, proximity and association
    when presented in conjunction with other evidence of guilt.
    Indeed, presence at the scene where drugs are being
    processed and packaged is a material and probative factor
    which the jury may consider. Drug dealers of any size and
    [illegal drug] manufacturers probably are reticent about
    allowing the unknowing to take view of or assist in the
    operation.
    United States v. Robinson, 
    978 F.2d 1554
    , 1157-1158 (10th Cir. 1992)
    (internal quotations and citations omitted); see also Rivas v. United
    States, 
    783 A.2d 125
    , 138 (D.C. 2001) (en banc) (“a claim of innocent
    presence becomes decidedly less plausible in an environment (vehicular or
    otherwise) that is rife with evidence of ongoing drug production or
    distribution, such as a manufacturing or cutting facility, a warehouse, or a
    staging or preparation area where a large quantity of drugs or drug
    paraphernalia is exposed to view”); United States v. Batista-Polanco, 
    927 F.2d 14
    , 18 (1st Cir. 1991) (casting doubt upon the “hypothesis that
    participants in a [large-scale heroin packaging] scheme would permit a
    noncontributing interloper to remain for an extended period of time in a
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    J-E01004-14
    small    apartment      while   their   conspicuous           criminal   conduct     continued
    unabated [since s]uch is not normally the conduct that one would expect of
    conspirators engaged in conduct which by its nature is kept secret from
    outsiders”) (internal quotations, citations, and corrections omitted); United
    States v. Staten, 
    581 F.2d 878
    , 885 n.67 (D.C. Cir. 1978) (“[i]t would
    seem that the voluntary presence of the accused in an area obviously
    devoted to preparation of drugs for distribution is a circumstance potently
    indicative of his involvement in the operation”).
    Viewing   the     evidence      in    the     light     most     favorable    to   the
    Commonwealth, the evidence in the case at bar was sufficient to prove that
    Appellant constructively possessed the heroin residue and the drug
    paraphernalia that was discovered in the hotel room. Indeed, a review of
    the totality of the circumstances reveals the following facts and permissible
    inferences, which – taken together – are sufficient to prove that Appellant
    possessed “the power to control the contraband [in the hotel room] and the
    intent to exercise that control.” Macolino, 469 A.2d at 134.
    First, Appellant was caught in a single, open hotel room, with drug-
    cutting and drug-packaging material strewn about the room, in plain view.
    Taken together, these circumstances furnished a sound basis for the fact-
    finder to reject the claim that Appellant was unaware of the substantial
    heroin-cutting and heroin-packaging operation that was occurring within his
    midst, in the confined space of a hotel room.
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    J-E01004-14
    Second, the Commonwealth introduced expert testimony that the
    operation in the hotel room constituted a multi-person “mobile heroin mill” –
    where raw heroin was cut, weighed, and then packaged into baggies for sale
    “at the street level.” N.T. Trial, 10/17/11, at 87, 89, and 90. As the Tenth
    Circuit has explained, Appellant’s presence in the middle of such an
    operation is highly probative and supports the inference that Appellant was
    an active participant in the activity. Indeed, as the Tenth Circuit explained,
    it is common knowledge that “[d]rug dealers of any size and [illegal drug]
    manufacturers probably are reticent about allowing the unknowing to take
    view of or assist in the operation.” Robinson, 
    978 F.2d at 1157-1158
    .
    Third, Appellant’s “mere presence” claim is further undercut by the
    fact that he was caught in a hotel room – rather than in an individual’s
    residence – and that no luggage was found in the hotel room or in
    Appellant’s vehicle.   These facts support a permissible inference that the
    hotel room was being used for one purpose: a mobile heroin mill. These
    facts also support a permissible inference that Appellant was not merely
    visiting the individuals in the hotel room (as he might if the operation had
    been conducted in one of the individuals’ residences) but that Appellant was
    an active participant in the only activity that was being conducted in the
    room: the cutting and packaging of heroin.
    Fourth, and on a related note, there is no evidence that the hotel room
    was being used as a place for the illegal sale of heroin. Most tellingly, there
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    J-E01004-14
    was no evidence that the police seized any money in this case.       See N.T.
    Trial, 10/17/11, at 1-112. Further, at trial, Officer Clee was asked whether
    “any money [was] found on [Appellant’s] person” during the search; Officer
    Clee answered: “I don’t recall any money being recovered in this case.” Id.
    at 49-50.   Admittedly, under a de novo standard of review, a fact-finder
    could ascribe a variety of different meanings to Officer Clee’s answer,
    including that Officer Clee actually did not remember whether any money
    was recovered in this case. We observe, however, that “I don’t recall” is a
    common idiomatic expression, which means “no.”          See, e.g., S.E.C. v.
    Woodruff, 
    778 F.Supp.2d 1073
    , 1094 n.24 (D.Colo. 2011) (recognizing the
    idioms “I don’t believe” and “I don’t recall”). Since our review of Appellant’s
    sufficiency of the evidence challenge requires that we interpret Officer Clee’s
    answer in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, we view Officer
    Clee’s answer as supporting the conclusion that Appellant possessed no
    money at the time he was searched and that no money was found in the
    hotel room.   Thus, when combined with the actual evidence in the case
    (which demonstrates that the police recovered no money from Appellant,
    Appellant’s co-defendants, or the hotel room), Officer Clee’s testimony
    further negates any suggestion that Appellant was present in the hotel room
    merely to purchase the heroin.
    Fifth, the evidence at trial supports the inference that Appellant was,
    at the very least, complicit in the destruction of evidence. At trial, Officer
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    J-E01004-14
    Clee testified that, when he was questioning Mr. Torres in the parking lot, he
    noticed an individual open the door to Room 161 and look directly at the
    officer. N.T. Trial, 10/17/11, at 20. Officer Clee testified that, right when he
    began to walk towards the room, the individual shut the door.              
    Id.
        In
    response, Officer Clee testified that he approached Room 161, “knocked on
    the door several times[,] and then made an announcement outside that [he]
    was the police and [he] was inquiring about the owner or operator of the
    Chevrolet Impala that was occupied in the parking lot.”          
    Id.
       Officer Clee
    testified that it took approximately 45 seconds for Mr. Saldana to open the
    door to the small hotel room – and that, when Officer Clee entered the
    room, the officer discovered a trail of small rubber bands on the floor, with
    the trail leading to the toilet, and then “two or three small rubber[] bands in
    the toilet.” Id. at 20-21.
    Viewing   this   evidence   in     the    light   most   favorable   to    the
    Commonwealth, the evidence supports the inference that the individuals in
    the hotel room flushed some of the contraband down the toilet. Moreover,
    even if Appellant did not actively take part in flushing the contraband down
    the toilet, Appellant’s failure to answer the door when Officer Clee knocked –
    while his compatriots flushed the contraband down the toilet – demonstrates
    that Appellant was, at the very least, complicit in the destruction of
    evidence.
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    Sixth, the evidence at trial supports the inference that Appellant
    brought all of the drug-cutting and drug-packaging paraphernalia to the
    hotel room in the Honda automobile.        At trial, Officer Clee testified that a
    search of the three individuals in the hotel revealed that the individuals only
    possessed vehicle keys to two cars:       the Honda vehicle and the Chevrolet
    Impala.   Appellant possessed the vehicle keys to the Honda and video
    evidence revealed that Mr. Saldana operated the Chevrolet Impala.               N.T.
    Trial, 10/17/11, at 22 and 29.
    Officer Clee testified that a trained narcotics dog alerted to the
    presence of narcotics on both the Honda and the Chevrolet Impala – and,
    while heroin was discovered in Mr. Saldana’s Chevrolet Impala, no narcotics
    were discovered in the vehicle to which Appellant possessed the keys. Id. at
    28-30. Nevertheless, the narcotics and the large amounts of paraphernalia
    in the hotel room needed to get into the room some way and surveillance
    video demonstrated that, when Mr. Saldana arrived at the hotel in his
    Chevrolet Impala, Mr. Saldana parked his vehicle in the lot and walked
    empty-handed into the hotel room.
    Viewing   this   evidence   in     the    light   most   favorable   to   the
    Commonwealth, it was permissible for the fact-finder to infer that the dog
    alerted to Appellant’s vehicle because Appellant brought much, if not all, of
    the drug-cutting and drug-packaging paraphernalia into the hotel room –
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    J-E01004-14
    and, therefore, that Appellant constructively possessed the contraband found
    in the hotel room.
    From the above, it is apparent that the Commonwealth’s case against
    Appellant was based upon far more than Appellant’s “mere presence in [the]
    hotel room.” See Appellant’s Brief at 8. Indeed, viewing the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the evidence is sufficient to
    support the trial court’s conclusion that Appellant was an active participant
    in the drug-cutting and drug-packaging operation that was being conducted
    in the hotel room – and that Appellant possessed both “the power to control
    the contraband [in the hotel room] and the intent to exercise that control.”
    Macolino, 469 A.2d at 134.
    We note that, within Appellant’s brief to this Court, Appellant claims
    that the factual pattern of this case is “strikingly analogous” to the factual
    pattern of Commonwealth v. Ocasio.            
    619 A.2d 352
     (Pa. Super. 1993).
    According to Appellant, since the Ocasio Court held that the evidence was
    insufficient to show that the defendant constructively possessed the
    contraband, we must likewise conclude that the evidence was insufficient to
    support Appellant’s convictions.    Appellant’s Brief at 12-14.    Appellant’s
    argument fails because the underlying facts in Ocasio were far less
    incriminating than the facts in the case at bar.
    In Ocasio, the police executed a search warrant for 2128 North
    Second Street, in Philadelphia. The residence was a multi-bedroom house,
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    J-E01004-14
    which housed multiple residents.       Ocasio, 
    619 A.2d at 353
    .       During the
    ensuing search, the police heard one of the co-defendants declare, in
    Spanish, “it’s in the trash.” 
    Id.
     A search of the kitchen trashcan uncovered
    12 baggies containing 567 vials of crack cocaine. 
    Id.
     The police searched
    the rest of the house and discovered: in a third floor bedroom, “a baggie
    containing a large chunk of crack cocaine” and $5,882.00; in the basement,
    “a triple beam scale, one baggie containing numerous empty clear plastic
    vials with gray and black caps, two strainers, and one baggie containing
    numerous empty clear smaller packets;” and, in an unspecified area of the
    house, a plastic grinding apparatus and “a substance commonly used to
    dilute or ‘cut’ cocaine before selling it.” 
    Id.
    Mr. Ocasio returned home during the search and the officers on scene
    arrested him.    A search of Mr. Ocasio’s person revealed $422.00 in small
    denominations and a driver’s license, which declared that Mr. Ocasio’s
    residence was 2128 North Second Street.           
    Id.
       A jury subsequently found
    Mr. Ocasio guilty of PWID and criminal conspiracy.
    On appeal, Mr. Ocasio claimed that the evidence proved only his
    “presence” in the house and that the Commonwealth thus failed to prove he
    constructively possessed the contraband.          We agreed with Mr. Ocasio and
    vacated his convictions. 
    Id.
    Within our Opinion, we noted that Mr. Ocasio “was present at the
    scene of the crime and, as a resident, had access to the drugs in the house.”
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    J-E01004-14
    
    Id. at 354
    . We explained, however, that since other individuals had equal
    access to the drugs in the house, the Commonwealth was required to prove
    more than Mr. Ocasio’s “mere presence” in the house. 
    Id.
     Rather, we held
    that the Commonwealth needed to introduce evidence “demonstrating either
    [Mr. Ocasio’s] participation in the drug related activity or evidence
    connecting [Mr. Ocasio] to the specific room or areas where the drugs were
    kept.” 
    Id. at 354-355
    .
    We concluded that the Commonwealth failed its burden, as “[t]he only
    evidence linking [Mr. Ocasio] to any drug related activity [was] the $422[.00
    in] cash found in his pocket at the time of his arrest” – and this limited
    evidence was insufficient to prove that Mr. Ocasio was involved in drug sales
    or in the drug packaging and distribution that was occurring at the residence
    where the warrant had been executed. 
    Id. at 355
    . Moreover, we concluded
    that there was no evidence linking Mr. Ocasio to any room in which the
    contraband was discovered and that there was no evidence that Mr. Ocasio
    “even knew of the criminal activity in the house.” 
    Id.
     Finally, we concluded
    that, even though Mr. Ocasio was present at the scene of a crime, “[a]s a
    resident of the house, [Mr. Ocasio’s] presence at the scene of the crime was
    not out of the ordinary.” 
    Id.
    Appellant’s reliance upon Ocasio cannot succeed, as the evidence in
    the case at bar is far more incriminating than the evidence that was present
    in Ocasio. To start, unlike Mr. Ocasio, Appellant simply cannot persuasively
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    J-E01004-14
    claim that he was unaware of the criminal activity that was occurring in the
    hotel room. Indeed, Appellant was caught in a single, open hotel room, with
    drug-cutting and drug-packaging material in plain view and strewn about the
    confined space.
    Moreover, when the police arrested Mr. Ocasio, Mr. Ocasio was inside
    of his own residence – where he had a legitimate right to be – and the police
    did not discover any contraband in any room in which Mr. Ocasio exclusively
    controlled.   In the case at bar, however, the evidence demonstrates that
    Appellant drove to an out-of-state hotel, with no overnight luggage, and was
    found inside of a room that was being used exclusively as a “mobile heroin
    mill” – and, thus, for no legitimate purpose.       Echoing the District of
    Columbia Court of Appeals, Appellant’s claim of “innocent presence” in such
    an incriminating and secretive environment is “decidedly less plausible” than
    was the claim in Ocasio. Rivas, 
    783 A.2d at 138
    .
    Finally, the Ocasio Court held that (beyond Mr. Ocasio’s mere
    presence in his own residence) there was a dearth of evidence supporting
    Mr. Ocasio’s convictions. In the case at bar, however, the Commonwealth
    introduced additional evidence supporting the inference that Appellant
    constructively possessed the contraband in the hotel room.       Indeed, as
    summarized above, the Commonwealth introduced evidence supporting the
    inference that Appellant was, at the very least, complicit in the destruction
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    J-E01004-14
    of contraband and that Appellant transported the drug-cutting and drug-
    packaging paraphernalia to the hotel room.
    Appellant’s dependence upon Ocasio thus does not entitle him to
    relief.11   The evidence in the case at bar is sufficient to support the trial
    court’s conclusion that Appellant was an active participant in the drug-
    cutting and drug-packaging operation that was being conducted in the hotel
    room and that Appellant possessed “the power to control the contraband [in
    the hotel room] and the intent to exercise that control.”     Macolino, 469
    A.2d at 134.
    Moreover, we conclude that the evidence is sufficient to support the
    trial court’s conclusion that Appellant and Mr. Saldana conspired to cut and
    package for sale the 377.73 grams of raw, uncut heroin that was discovered
    in Mr. Saldana’s vehicle.    As such, the evidence is sufficient to support
    11
    In support of his sufficiency claim, Appellant also cites to
    Commonwealth v. Valette. 
    613 A.2d 548
     (Pa. Super. 1992). However,
    from Appellant’s standpoint, the facts of Valette are even weaker than the
    facts of Ocasio. Therefore, we will not separately analyze Valette. See
    Valette, 613 A.2d at 548 (the police raided a two story apartment and
    arrested Mr. Valette, along with multiple people who were present at the
    time of the raid; a search revealed that contraband was secreted in various
    places throughout the apartment; while the Commonwealth produced
    evidence that Mr. Valette’s co-defendants lived in the apartment, there was
    no evidence that Mr. Valette resided in the apartment and the police
    discovered no contraband on Mr. Valette’s person; we held that, since “the
    record demonstrates nothing more than that [Mr. Valette] was present in an
    apartment in which drugs were found,” the evidence was insufficient to
    support Mr. Valette’s conviction for possession).
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    J-E01004-14
    Appellant’s conviction for the substantive offense of PWID, insofar as it
    related to the raw and uncut heroin.
    As our Supreme Court has explained:        “to sustain a conviction for
    criminal conspiracy, the Commonwealth must establish that the defendant
    (1) entered into an agreement to commit or aid in an unlawful act with
    another person or persons, (2) with a shared criminal intent and (3) an
    overt act was done in furtherance of the conspiracy.” Commonwealth v.
    Fisher, 
    80 A.3d 1186
    , 1190-1191 (Pa. 2013) (internal quotations, citations,
    and corrections omitted); see also 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 903. We have held:
    The essence of a criminal conspiracy is the common
    understanding that a particular criminal objective is to be
    accomplished. Mere association with the perpetrators, mere
    presence at the scene, or mere knowledge of the crime is
    insufficient. Rather, the Commonwealth must prove that
    the defendant shared the criminal intent, i.e., that the
    Appellant was an active participant in the criminal
    enterprise and that he had knowledge of the conspiratorial
    agreement. The defendant does not need to commit the
    overt act; a co-conspirator may commit the overt act.
    Commonwealth v. Lambert, 
    795 A.2d 1010
    , 1016 (Pa. Super. 2002) (en
    banc) (internal quotations and citations omitted).
    “Proof of a conspiracy is almost always extracted from circumstantial
    evidence. The Commonwealth may present a ‘web of evidence’ linking the
    defendant to the conspiracy beyond a reasonable doubt.         The evidence
    must, however, rise above mere suspicion or possibility of guilty collusion.”
    Commonwealth v. Hennigan, 
    753 A.2d 245
    , 253 (Pa. Super. 2000)
    (internal quotations and citations omitted).   We have held that, “[a]mong
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    J-E01004-14
    the circumstances which are relevant, but not sufficient by themselves, to
    prove a corrupt confederation are:       (1) an association between alleged
    conspirators; (2) knowledge of the commission of the crime; (3) presence at
    the scene of the crime; and (4) in some situations, participation in the object
    of the conspiracy.”   Lambert, 
    795 A.2d at 1016
     (internal quotations and
    citations omitted). Moreover:
    Once there is evidence of the presence of a conspiracy,
    conspirators are liable for acts of co-conspirators committed
    in furtherance of the conspiracy. Even if the conspirator did
    not act as a principal in committing the underlying crime, he
    is still criminally liable for the actions of his co-conspirators
    taken in furtherance of the conspiracy.
    ...
    The premise of the rule is that the conspirators have formed
    together for an unlawful purpose, and thus, they share the
    intent to commit any acts undertaken in order to achieve
    that purpose, regardless of whether they actually intended
    any distinct act undertaken in furtherance of the object of
    the conspiracy. It is the existence of shared criminal intent
    that is the sine qua non of a conspiracy.
    Lambert, 
    795 A.2d at 1016-1017
     (internal quotations and citations
    omitted).   “The duration of a conspiracy depends upon the facts of the
    particular case, that is, it depends upon the scope of the agreement entered
    into by its members.” Johnson, 26 A.3d at 1092 (internal quotations and
    citations omitted).
    As stated above, the only remaining issue with respect to Appellant’s
    sufficiency of the evidence claim is whether the conspiracy between
    Appellant and Mr. Saldana encompassed, as its object, the cutting and
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    J-E01004-14
    packaging of the 377.73 grams of uncut heroin that was discovered in Mr.
    Saldana’s vehicle. We conclude that the evidence was sufficient to support
    this conclusion.
    We have explained that the evidence at trial was sufficient to support
    the trial court’s conclusion that Appellant was an active participant in an
    ongoing, multi-person “mobile heroin mill,” where raw heroin was cut,
    weighed, and packaged for sale “at the street level.” Moreover, viewing the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the evidence at
    trial demonstrated that the hotel room within which the operation was being
    conducted was being used exclusively for the cutting and packaging of raw
    heroin – and that Appellant and his compatriots had already cut and
    packaged “thousands of bags of heroin” before the police arrived. Further,
    Detective Carroll testified that, by the time the police arrived, the
    “thousands of bags” of cut and packaged heroin had already “left the [hotel]
    room” for ultimate sale “at the street level.” N.T. Trial, 10/17/11, at 87, 89,
    and 90.
    Under such circumstances, it takes a very small inferential step to
    conclude that Appellant and Mr. Saldana understood, agreed, and intended
    to cut, weigh, and package for sale the 377.77 grams of raw heroin that was
    discovered in Mr. Saldana’s vehicle.     To be sure, the facts of this case
    demonstrate that Mr. Saldana transported “well over a hundred thousand
    dollars” of raw heroin to an out-of-state hotel and then entered a room
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    J-E01004-14
    where the only activity being conducted was the cutting of raw heroin and
    the packaging of the cut heroin for sale on the street. Indeed, the grinders,
    scales, lamps, stamps, and packaging materials were consistent with the
    items needed to process raw heroin such as that found in Mr. Saldana’s
    vehicle.
    Moreover, the evidence at trial demonstrated that some of the raw
    heroin discovered in Mr. Saldana’s vehicle was packaged in rubber condoms
    “for transportation in a human body;” and, as Detective Carroll testified, the
    heroin-filled condoms found in Mr. Saldana’s vehicle were “very similar, if
    not identical” to the “used empty condom[s]” that were found in the hotel
    room.      N.T. Trial, 10/17/11, at 90-91.     Since the evidence at trial
    demonstrates that Appellant and his compatriots had already cut and
    packaged “thousands of bags” of raw heroin before the police arrived, a fair
    inference from the evidence is that the “used empty condom[s]” in the hotel
    room had previously been filled with raw heroin, and that Appellant and his
    compatriots had already cut and packaged the heroin that had filled those
    condoms. Further, since the heroin-filled condoms in Mr. Saldana’s vehicle
    were “very similar, if not identical” to the “used empty condom[s]” in the
    hotel room, the fact-finder could have fairly inferred that Appellant and Mr.
    Saldana had intended to cut and package the raw heroin that filled the
    condoms in Mr. Saldana’s vehicle.
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    J-E01004-14
    Simply stated, the evidence in this case was not “so weak and
    inconclusive that as a matter of law no probability of fact [could have been]
    drawn from the combined circumstances.”         Brown, 
    23 A.3d at 559-560
    (internal quotations and citations omitted). Rather, viewing the evidence in
    the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the evidence is sufficient to
    support the trial court’s conclusion that Appellant and Mr. Saldana were
    engaged in an ongoing conspiracy and that they conspired to cut and
    package for sale the 377.73 grams of raw, uncut heroin that was discovered
    in Mr. Saldana’s vehicle.     Moreover, since the evidence is sufficient to
    support Appellant’s conviction for criminal conspiracy, the evidence is also
    sufficient to support Appellant’s conviction for the substantive offense of
    PWID with respect to the 377.73 grams of raw heroin. Commonwealth v.
    Roux, 
    350 A.2d 867
    , 871 (Pa. 1976) (“[w]here the existence of a conspiracy
    is established, the law imposes upon a conspirator full responsibility for the
    natural and probable consequences of acts committed by his fellow
    conspirator or conspirators if such acts are done in pursuance of the
    common design or purpose of the conspiracy”); Commonwealth v. Perez,
    
    931 A.2d 703
    , 709 (Pa. Super. 2007) (“successful proof of a conspiracy
    makes each co-conspirator fully liable for all of the drugs recovered, without
    the necessity of proving constructive possession”).
    Appellant’s sufficiency of the evidence claim thus fails.
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    For Appellant’s second and final claim on appeal, Appellant contends
    that the trial court erred in sentencing him to the mandatory minimum
    sentence under 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 7508(a)(7)(iii), as “there was no proof that []
    Appellant was in actual or constructive possession of the narcotics in
    question.”   Appellant’s Brief at 17 (some internal capitalization omitted).
    Appellant’s specific claim fails.   Nevertheless, precedent from this Court
    requires that we sua sponte consider whether Appellant’s mandatory
    minimum sentence is illegal.     Because we must conclude that Appellant’s
    sentence is unlawful, we are required to vacate Appellant’s judgment of
    sentence and remand for resentencing.
    In relevant part, 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 7508 provides:
    (a) General rule.--Notwithstanding any other provisions of
    this or any other act to the contrary, the following
    provisions shall apply:
    (7) A person who is convicted of violating [35 P.S.
    § 780-113(a)(30) (“PWID”)] . . . where the controlled
    substance or a mixture containing it is heroin shall, upon
    conviction, be sentenced as set forth in this paragraph:
    ...
    (iii) when the aggregate weight of the compound or
    mixture containing the heroin involved is 50 grams
    or greater: a mandatory minimum term of five years
    in prison and a fine of $25,000 or such larger
    amount as is sufficient to exhaust the assets utilized
    in and the proceeds from the illegal activity. . . .
    ...
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    J-E01004-14
    (b) Proof of sentencing.--Provisions of this section shall
    not be an element of the crime. Notice of the applicability
    of this section to the defendant shall not be required prior to
    conviction, but reasonable notice of the Commonwealth’s
    intention to proceed under this section shall be provided
    after conviction and before sentencing. The applicability of
    this section shall be determined at sentencing. The court
    shall consider evidence presented at trial, shall afford the
    Commonwealth and the defendant an opportunity to
    present necessary additional evidence and shall determine,
    by a preponderance of the evidence, if this section is
    applicable.
    18 Pa.C.S.A. § 7508(a)(7)(iii) and (b).
    Appellant argues in his brief that the trial court erred in sentencing
    him   to   the   mandatory     minimum       sentence   under   18   Pa.C.S.A.
    § 7508(a)(7)(iii), as “there was no proof that [] Appellant was in actual or
    constructive possession of the narcotics in question.” Appellant’s Brief at 17.
    We have already explained why Appellant’s actual claim on appeal fails. As
    was explained above, Appellant was convicted of participating in an ongoing
    criminal conspiracy with Mr. Saldana, which encompassed as its object the
    cutting and packaging of the 377.73 grams of raw heroin that was
    discovered in Mr. Saldana’s vehicle.      Since the evidence was sufficient to
    support Appellant’s conviction for participating in this ongoing conspiracy,
    the evidence was also sufficient to support Appellant’s conviction for the
    substantive offense of PWID, with respect to the 377.73 grams of raw
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    heroin.        Roux, 350 A.2d at 871; Perez, 
    931 A.2d at 709
    .12                 Hence,
    Appellant’s claim on appeal fails.
    Yet, we are required to vacate Appellant’s judgment of sentence.              A
    panel     of    this   Court   recently   held     that   our   en   banc   opinion   in
    Commonwealth v. Newman, 
    99 A.3d 86
     (Pa. Super. 2014) (en banc) and
    the panel decision in Commonwealth v. Valentine, 
    101 A.3d 801
     (Pa.
    Super. 2014) mandate that we hold 18 Pa.C.S.A. §7508 unconstitutional in
    its entirety.      Thus, a mandatory minimum sentence imposed under this
    statute is illegal.13     Commonwealth v. Fennell, 
    2014 WL 6505791
    , *1-8
    (Pa. Super. Nov. 21, 2014). Specifically, the Fennell Court noted that 18
    Pa.C.S.A. § 7508 is structured in the same manner as the statutes that were
    12
    We also note that Appellant stipulated to the fact that the heroin weighed
    377.73 grams (which constitutes heroin in the amount of 50 grams or
    more). 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 7508(a)(7)(iii); see N.T. Trial, 10/17/11, at 39-41
    (Appellant stipulated to the authenticity and accuracy of the Bucks County
    Laboratory Report and to the chain of custody regarding the items tested);
    see also Bucks County Crime Laboratory Report, dated 11/23/10, at 1
    (declaring that the substance in Mr. Saldana’s vehicle was 377.73 grams of
    heroin).
    13
    Although Appellant has not raised any issue relating to the legality of his
    sentence, we note that “[l]egality of sentence questions are not waivable
    and may be raised sua sponte by this Court.” Commonwealth v. Watley,
    
    81 A.3d 108
    , 118 (Pa. Super. 2013) (en banc). Moreover, this Court has
    held that “a challenge to a sentence premised upon [Alleyne v. United
    States, ___ U.S. ___, 
    133 S.Ct. 2151
     (2013)] . . . implicates the legality of
    the sentence and cannot be waived on appeal.” Newman, 99 A.3d at 90.
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    J-E01004-14
    at issue in Newman and Valentine14 – and, as was true with the statutes
    at issue in Newman and Valentine, one particular subsection of 18
    Pa.C.S.A. § 7508 is clearly unconstitutional under Alleyne v. United
    States, ____ U.S. ____, 
    133 S. Ct. 2151
     (2013).                   See 18 Pa.C.S.A.
    § 7508(b).     In   particular,   Section       7508(b)    contains   the    following
    unconstitutional burdens and procedures: it declares that the substantive,
    “aggravating facts” contained in Section 7508(a) are “not . . . an element of
    the crime;” it declares that notice of either the “aggravating facts” or of the
    applicability of the mandatory minimum sentencing statute is “not . . .
    required prior to conviction;” it declares that the applicability of the
    mandatory minimum statute “shall be determined at sentencing;” it declares
    that the Commonwealth need only prove the “aggravating facts” by a
    preponderance of the evidence; and, it declares that a judge – and not a
    jury – is to act as the fact-finder for purposes of determining the
    “aggravated facts.” 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 7508(b). Alleyne rendered all of these
    burdens and procedures unconstitutional.
    The Court in Fennell concluded that, pursuant to Newman and
    Valentine,    the   unconstitutional    portion    of     18   Pa.C.S.A.    § 7508   is
    14
    Newman dealt with 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9712.1 (mandatory minimum
    sentence to be applied to a person convicted of certain drug charges when,
    at the time of the offense, said person or said person’s accomplice is in
    physical possession or control of a firearm).     Valentine dealt with 42
    Pa.C.S.A. § 9712 and § 9713 (mandatory minimum sentence to be applied
    to a person convicted of certain enumerated crimes of violence if said crime
    occurred in or near public transportation).
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    J-E01004-14
    unseverable from the remainder of the statute. Thus, even though Fennell
    stipulated to the weight of the heroin at issue, the Fennell Court held that
    the trial court erred in imposing the mandatory minimum sentence as
    Section 7508 is unconstitutional in its entirety. Hence, as the Appellant in
    the case sub judice was sentenced to a mandatory minimum under Section
    7508, which has been deemed unconstitutional, we must vacate Appellant’s
    judgment of sentence and remand for resentencing, without consideration of
    the mandatory minimum sentence.
    Appellant’s convictions for PWID, possession of a controlled substance,
    possession    of   drug   paraphernalia,   and   criminal   conspiracy   affirmed.
    Judgment of sentence vacated.         Case remanded for resentencing only.
    Jurisdiction relinquished.
    P.J.E. Ford Elliott and Judges Allen and Mundy join this opinion.
    P.J.E. Ford Elliott files a concurring statement in which Judges Panella,
    Donohue and Lazarus join.
    P.J. Gantman and Judge Panella concur in the result.
    P.J.E. Bender files a concurring and dissenting opinion in which Judges
    Donohue and Lazarus join.
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    J-E01004-14
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 12/31/2014
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