Commonwealth v. Palmer , 192 A.3d 85 ( 2018 )


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  • J-S02036-18
    
    2018 PA Super 185
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :    IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :         PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                           :
    :
    :
    ROBERT PALMER                              :
    :
    Appellant              :    No. 3618 EDA 2016
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence October 28, 2016
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-51-CR-0010047-2015
    BEFORE:      BOWES, J., NICHOLS, J., and RANSOM*, J.
    OPINION BY BOWES, J.:                                    FILED JUNE 26, 2018
    Robert Palmer appeals from the judgment of sentence of nineteen to
    eighteen years incarceration imposed following his convictions for, inter alia,
    aggravated assault. We affirm.
    The facts of this case read like a law school exam. A man is captured
    on surveillance video extending his arm in a position consistent with firing a
    gun. At the same time as indicated on the video, a vehicle carrying three
    persons arrives at an intersection near the gunman’s location, and turns down
    a road. That vehicle is followed by two more cars. The driver of the first car,
    Danielle Kelsey, is struck in the back with a single bullet, causing significant
    injuries.   No one else is hit.    There is no forensic or ballistics evidence to
    establish the path of the bullet that struck the victim, nor are any other bullets
    recovered.    However, police discover ten fired cartridge casings from the
    ____________________________________
    * Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-S02036-18
    location of the gunman as indicated by the video, all of which were fired from
    the same weapon. The gunman is identified, arrested, and speaks to police.
    He asks what his bail would be if the shooting was an accident. What crimes
    have been committed?
    I
    Appellant’s charges
    The Commonwealth charged Appellant with, inter alia, two counts of
    attempted murder, and two counts of aggravated assault.            The crimes
    identified Ms. Kelsey and John Doe as the respective victims.1 The statutory
    text for those crimes reads as follows.2 A person is guilty of criminal homicide
    “if he intentionally, knowingly, recklessly or negligently causes the death of
    another human being.” 18 Pa.C.S. § 2501. A person is guilty of aggravated
    assault if he:
    (1) attempts to cause serious bodily injury to another, or causes
    such injury intentionally, knowingly or recklessly under
    circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the value of
    human life[.]
    18 Pa.C.S. § 2702(a)(1). The aggravated assault counts were charged as
    lesser included offenses of attempted homicide, as those charges were
    ____________________________________________
    1 The Commonwealth proceeded to trial on eight crimes: the aforementioned
    four charges, plus carrying a firearm without a license, carrying a firearm in
    Philadelphia, and two counts of recklessly endangering another person.
    2  Appellant’s argument attaches significance to the trial court’s judgment of
    acquittal on the attempted homicide counts. Since the intent to commit
    serious bodily injury is subsumed within the intent to kill, we use the terms
    interchangeably for ease of reference.
    -2-
    J-S02036-18
    predicated on the same acts. See Commonwealth v. Dale, 
    836 A.2d 150
    ,
    154 (Pa.Super. 2003) (“The conviction for aggravated assault, being a lesser
    included offense, is supported by the same facts which support Dale’s
    conviction for attempted murder, since the elements of aggravated assault
    are necessarily included in the offense of attempted murder and merge with
    it for sentencing purposes.”).
    Criminal attempt is separately codified at 18 Pa.C.S. § 901, which
    states, “A person commits an attempt when, with intent to commit a specific
    crime, he does any act which constitutes a substantial step toward the
    commission of that crime.” 18 Pa.C.S. § 901(a).
    Criminal attempt is a specific-intent crime.   Thus, attempted murder
    required a specific intent to kill. Commonwealth v. Robertson, 
    874 A.2d 1200
    , 1207 (Pa.Super. 2005) (“For the Commonwealth to prevail in a
    conviction of criminal attempt to commit homicide, it must prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the accused with a specific intent to kill took a
    substantial step towards that goal.”). Furthermore, the aggravated assault
    statutory language includes attempt within its definition, and we therefore
    apply the language contained within § 901 when analyzing the sufficiency of
    attempted aggravated assault. See Commonwealth v. Fortune, 
    68 A.3d 980
    , 984 (Pa.Super. 2013) (en banc) (“For aggravated assault purposes, an
    attempt is found where an accused who possesses the required, specific intent
    acts in a manner which constitutes a substantial step toward perpetrating a
    -3-
    J-S02036-18
    serious bodily injury upon another.”) (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    Specific intent, in turn, is defined as follows:
    (b) Kinds of culpability defined.—
    (1) A person acts intentionally with respect to a
    material element of an offense when:
    (i) if the element involves the nature of
    his conduct or a result thereof, it is his
    conscious object to engage in conduct of
    that nature or to cause such a result; and
    (ii) if the element involves the attendant
    circumstances, he is aware of the
    existence of such circumstances or he
    believes or hopes that they exist.
    18 Pa.C.S. § 302.
    The trial court granted Appellant’s motion for judgment of acquittal at
    the two counts of attempted homicide. The jury convicted Appellant of the
    remaining six charges, and the trial court imposed an aggregate sentence of
    nine to eighteen years incarceration. Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal,
    and the trial court ordered him to file a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) concise statement
    of matters complained of on appeal. The trial court authored its opinion in
    response, and the matter is ready for review of Appellant’s two claims:
    A. Is the evidence insufficient as a matter of law to sustain a
    conviction for aggravated assault, attempt to cause serious bodily
    injury to a John or Jane Doe, 18 Pa.C.S. § 2702(a)(1), beyond a
    reasonable doubt because attempt crimes require a specific intent
    and the Commonwealth failed to prove the requisite men[s] rea?
    B. Did the trial court err in permitting Detective Wearing to testify,
    over numerous objections, that the person or persons seen in the
    videos in the area of 17th Street and Susquehanna Avenue on July
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    J-S02036-18
    16, 2015 at 8:12 p.m., 8:19 p.m., 8:22 p.m., 10:00 p.m., 10:27
    p.m., 10:59 p.m., and 11:01 p.m., were the same person
    appearing in the video at the time of the shooting whereas
    Detective Wearing improperly offered lay opinion evidence in
    violation of Pa.R.E. 701 because the testimony was not helpful to
    the jury, was prejudicial, and intruded upon the jury’s
    independent assessment of a video?
    Appellant’s brief at 4.
    II
    Sufficiency of the evidence
    Appellant’s first claim challenges the sufficiency of the evidence
    supporting the aggravated assault with respect to John Doe. For purposes of
    sufficiency of the evidence review, it is undisputed that the Commonwealth
    established that Appellant was the gunman.3 The following principles govern
    our review.
    Because a determination of evidentiary sufficiency presents a
    question of law, our standard of review is de novo and our scope
    of review is plenary. In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence,
    we must determine whether the evidence admitted at trial and all
    reasonable inferences drawn therefrom, viewed in the light most
    favorable     to    the   Commonwealth       as    verdict   winner,
    were sufficient to prove every element of the offense beyond a
    reasonable doubt. [T]he facts and circumstances established by
    the Commonwealth need not preclude every possibility of
    innocence. It is within the province of the fact-finder to determine
    the weight to be accorded to each witness’s testimony and to
    believe all, part, or none of the evidence. The Commonwealth may
    sustain its burden of proving every element of the crime by means
    of wholly circumstantial evidence. Moreover, as an appellate
    court, we may not re-weigh the evidence and substitute our
    judgment for that of the fact-finder.
    ____________________________________________
    3   Appellant’s defense at trial was that he was not the shooter.
    -5-
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    Commonwealth v. Williams, 
    176 A.3d 298
    , 305-06 (Pa.Super. 2017)
    (citations and quotation marks omitted).
    A
    Specific intent, transferred intent, and inchoate crimes
    The crimes at issue all required proof of specific intent.   There is no
    dispute that firing ten bullets at a person constitutes a substantial step
    towards the commission of attempted homicide if directed at a particular
    person.   The debate between the parties focuses on what Appellant was
    intending to do when he fired those bullets.     The key point of contention
    revolves around the fact that the Commonwealth conceded that Appellant did
    not target Ms. Kelsey’s vehicle, based upon his statement to police:
    [Appellant’s] purposeful conduct of extending his arm in a
    shooting position and firing ten shots from a semi–automatic
    weapon into a populated street proved his intent to cause serious
    bodily injury to the unidentified person designated "John Doe."
    That is why he asked Detective Rocks what the consequences
    would be if shooting Ms. Kelsey was an accident.
    Commonwealth’s brief at 12.
    The fact that the Commonwealth explicitly alleged that Appellant did not
    intend to hit Ms. Kelsey or her vehicle means that he did not, in the
    Commonwealth’s view, specifically intend to kill her. Rather, Appellant had
    intended to kill someone else, but the Commonwealth could not identify him.
    The decision to charge specific intent crimes naming Ms. Kelsey as a victim
    despite the presence of only one purported victim is permissible under
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    J-S02036-18
    Pennsylvania law. The dissonance is resolved by the doctrine of transferred
    intent.4
    In Commonwealth v. Thompson, 
    739 A.2d 1023
     (Pa. 1999), our
    Supreme Court held that transferred intent applies to inchoate crimes.
    Therein, Donovan Aitken exited his apartment along with his girlfriend and
    another man, Francisco Forbes.           As Forbes crossed the street towards his
    vehicle, he observed Thompson pull out a gun and shoot in his direction.
    Forbes, thinking that Thompson was firing at him, ran in a zig-zag pattern to
    ____________________________________________
    4   The doctrine is codified at 18 Pa.C.S. § 303:
    § 303. Causal relationship between conduct and result
    ....
    (b) Divergence between result designed or contemplated
    and actual result.--When intentionally or knowingly causing a
    particular result is an element of an offense, the element is not
    established if the actual result is not within the intent or the
    contemplation of the actor unless:
    (1) the actual result differs from that designed or
    contemplated as the case may be, only in the respect
    that a different person or different property is injured
    or affected or that the injury or harm designed or
    contemplated would have been more serious or more
    extensive than that caused; or
    (2) the actual result involves the same kind of injury
    or harm as that designed or contemplated and is not
    too remote or accidental in its occurrence to have a
    bearing on the actor's liability or on the gravity of his
    offense.
    18 Pa.C.S. § 303(b).
    -7-
    J-S02036-18
    avoid being shot. As it turned out, Thompson was targeting Aitken, who fell
    to the ground during the melee. Forbes then saw Thompson shoot Aitken
    several more times, killing him. Thompson was convicted of, inter alia, first-
    degree homicide for killing Aitken, and attempted aggravated assault with
    respect to Forbes.
    The theory supporting the attempted aggravated assault conviction was
    that Thompson’s specific intent to murder Aitken transferred to Forbes, even
    though Forbes did not suffer serious bodily injury. Thompson asserted that
    the evidence was legally insufficient, and claimed that the trial court
    erroneously issued a transferred intent instruction over his objection since he
    did not intend to cause any injury to Forbes. Our Supreme Court disagreed:
    Appellant claims that the transferred intent instruction was not
    warranted because Forbes was never actually shot and because
    Forbes was not an intended victim. As noted above, however, in
    order to sustain the conviction for aggravated assault, the
    Commonwealth only needed to establish that appellant attempted
    to cause serious bodily injury. There is no requirement that the
    victim actually be injured. Moreover, appellant's argument that
    the transferred intent instruction was not warranted because he
    did not intend to shoot Forbes ignores the essence of the
    transferred intent doctrine, that is, the person who ultimately is
    the victim not be the original intended victim. The transferred
    intent theory provides that if the intent to commit a crime exists,
    this intent can be transferred for the purpose of finding the intent
    element of another crime. The evidence here demonstrated that
    appellant shot in the direction of Forbes even though he may have
    only intended to shoot Aitken. This evidence was sufficient to
    warrant the transferred intent instruction.
    Id. at 1029–30 (footnote, quotation marks, and citations omitted) (emphasis
    in original). Since Thompson sustained a conviction of attempted aggravated
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    assault, an inchoate crime, its analysis categorically applies to other inchoate
    crimes such as attempted murder.
    B
    Transferred intent – aggravated assault
    Since attempted aggravated assault and attempted homicide both
    require specific intent, there was no legal impediment to charging two counts
    of each crime. An additional complexity arises, however, due to the fact that
    the aggravated assault crime is disjunctive. Thus, with respect to victim Ms.
    Kelsey, the Commonwealth could satisfy the elements of the crime by
    establishing, via transferred intent, that Appellant attempted to cause serious
    bodily to her, or, in the alternative, that he “caused [serious bodily] injury
    intentionally, knowingly or recklessly[.]”   For purposes of sustaining that
    charge, the jury was required to answer this question: was the bullet that
    struck Ms. Kelsey actually meant to strike another person? If so, then the
    intent transfers, and the Commonwealth would not even have to establish
    serious bodily injury.   If, on the other hand, that bullet was fired with no
    specific intent to hit a person, then Appellant could be found guilty based on
    the fact he actually caused serious bodily injury via reckless behavior
    manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human life. Appellant avers
    that the jury could not have determined that the bullet was meant for a person
    under these circumstances.     See Appellant’s brief at 16-17 (“The shooting
    could have occurred for any myriad of reasons - trying to stop a moving car
    -9-
    J-S02036-18
    by shooting the tires, shooting at an attacking stray dog, target practice on a
    stop sign, firing warning shots, or even shooting at imagined flying monkeys
    during an intoxicated state.”).
    Appellant does not contest the sufficiency of the evidence regarding Ms.
    Kelsey. At this juncture, we note that the Commonwealth argued, with respect
    to Ms. Kelsey, that either theory applied:
    Everyone agrees it is the fundamental principle of this case that
    Danielle Kelsey was a completely innocent victim, that she had
    nothing to do with it, that Mr. Palmer was not trying to shoot her.
    And I have to be honest, Mr. Krouse said and he's right, we will
    never know who Mr. Palmer was trying to shoot that night, we
    won't.
    Ladies and gentlemen, that doesn't change what we saw and that
    doesn't change what happened. He's charged with shooting
    someone, shooting at someone and hitting Danielle Kelsey. The
    reason he's responsible for Danielle Kelsey, even though he
    wasn't shooting at her it's transferred intent.
    The Judge will instruct you on this because what it says is you
    don't get to miss and get one for free. Right? If Mr. Krouse is
    stands up [sic] and tries to shoot me and shoots Sam, we don't
    get to say, oh, but I was shooting for Mr. Krouse. It doesn't count
    that way. It's ridiculous, that's what we are talking about here. He
    is shooting at someone, we will never know who. It doesn't matter
    who because we know what he's doing. We know what he's trying
    to do. He's trying to very seriously hurt someone. He happens to
    very seriously hurt Danielle Kelsey. It is aggravated assault on the
    person Jane Doe or John Doe, we don't know. Maybe an ex-
    girlfriend, maybe an ex-friend, maybe a rival, I have no idea.
    Whoever it is he's charged with trying to shoot them and cause
    them serious bodily injury and he's charged with hitting Danielle
    Kelsey and causing her serious bodily injury. That's the standard
    for aggravated assault, that's what I want you to focus on.
    Attempting to cause serious bodily injury and causing
    injury.
    - 10 -
    J-S02036-18
    N.T., 8/18/16, at 62-63 (emphases added).5
    The trial court instructed the jury on both theories.      Id. at 85-89.
    Accordingly, the jury could have determined that Appellant specifically
    intended to cause serious bodily injury to John Doe, but hit Ms. Kelsey instead.
    Alternatively, it could have decided that Appellant, while doubtlessly causing
    serious bodily injury, did so recklessly.
    III
    Specific intent as applied to an unidentified victim
    As in Thompson, the theory in this case was that Appellant’s specific
    intent transferred to Ms. Kelsey. This case is distinguishable from Thompson,
    however, in that there is no readily identifiable victim at whom Appellant was
    firing. Appellant emphasizes that distinction. “[O]ne can infer that by firing
    a gun at a crowd of people, the intent is to hit or kill at least someone in the
    crowd. However, that law does not apply here where there are no facts to
    support the existence of a single possible human target, let alone a crowd.”
    Appellant’s brief at 19-20 (citation omitted).6 Thus, Appellant argues that he
    could not possess a specific intent to cause serious bodily injury directed
    ____________________________________________
    5As indicated by the last sentence, the Commonwealth referenced both types
    of aggravated assault with respect to Ms. Kelsey: an attempt to cause serious
    bodily injury via transferred intent, and causing actual serious bodily injury.
    6  If there is no intended victim, then the Commonwealth’s theory of
    transferred intent as to Ms. Kelsey fails, at least in the absence of evidence
    that Appellant believed or hoped that a potential victim was present.
    - 11 -
    J-S02036-18
    towards anyone. For the following reasons, we disagree and find that the
    jury could have determined that Appellant fired into a crowd of people, and,
    in turn, possessed the specific intent to cause serious bodily injury to someone
    in that crowd.
    A
    The trial court’s ruling on attempted homicide
    We now briefly discuss the trial court’s granting of Appellant’s motion of
    acquittal on the attempted homicide charges, since the court’s remarks are
    significant to Appellant’s argument. Appellant’s brief at 18-19 (“Not only is
    there no evidence that the street was ‘crowded,’ the trial court even
    recognized as much when Appellant moved for a judgment of acquittal on the
    charge of attempted murder.”). The trial court ruled as follows:
    THE COURT: We did have this argument at the motion to quash
    and at that time I disagreed and found that there was prima fascia
    [sic] evidence based on the ten shots. We are at a different level
    now. We are at a point where you would be asking this jury based
    on the firing of ten shots and the firing of ten shots only --
    [COMMONWEALTH]: And the location of the shots which I think
    is particularly significant.
    THE COURT: I didn't finish my sentence.
    [COMMONWEALTH]: I apologize.
    THE COURT: That that shows specific intent to kill. There is no
    intended victim here, there is no evidence of an intended victim,
    it could just as easily be that the shooter was shooting down the
    street of an empty block as it could be, or shooting randomly as
    it could be that there was some specific intent [to] kill some
    - 12 -
    J-S02036-18
    person. I just find that the Commonwealth's case falls short of
    that.
    N.T., 8/18/16, at 12-13.
    If it were equally likely that Appellant was shooting down an empty
    street as it was he fired down a crowded street, then any conviction based on
    specific intent to a hit a person would be based on speculation. “When two
    equally reasonable and mutually inconsistent inferences can be drawn from
    the same set of circumstances, a jury must not be permitted to guess which
    inference it will adopt, especially when one of the two guesses may result in
    depriving a defendant of his life or his liberty.” Commonwealth v. Hubbard,
    
    372 A.2d 687
    , 692 (Pa. 1977) (quoting Commonwealth v. Woong Knee
    New, 
    47 A.2d 450
    , 468 (Pa. 1946)); Commonwealth v. Johnson 
    818 A.2d 514
     (Pa.Super. 2003) (reversing judgment of sentence where “two opposing
    and mutually inconsistent inferences could be drawn from the facts presented
    herein”).
    Appellant presented this argument in his concise statement.      “Is the
    evidence insufficient as a matter of law . . . because attempt crimes require a
    specific intent and in the trial court’s own words, the Commonwealth
    presented ‘no evidence of an intended victim[?]’”         Concise Statement,
    2/17/17, at 2. The trial court responded in its opinion as follows:
    In granting Appellant's motion for acquittal on the attempted
    murder charges, this Court did not state that the Commonwealth
    lacked sufficient evidence to prove a specific intent "to cause
    serious bodily injury" to someone. This Court stated that the
    Commonwealth lacked sufficient evidence to prove "some specific
    - 13 -
    J-S02036-18
    intent to kill some person." Although the specific intent to kill
    necessarily includes the intent "to cause serious bodily injury," the
    reverse is not necessarily true. The "intent to kill" that is necessary
    to prove attempted murder is "greater" than the intent required
    to prove attempted aggravated assault - i.e., intent to cause
    serious bodily injury. Thus the jury could properly find that the
    evidence established a specific intent to commit aggravated
    assault but did not establish the "greater" specific intent to kill
    someone.
    Trial Court Opinion, 4/10/17, at 8 n.10 (emphasis added).
    We disagree with the learned trial court’s analysis. There is no doubt
    that some acts which are intended to cause serious bodily injury fall short of
    an intent to kill.    However, the trial court did not grant the judgment of
    acquittal on the basis that the evidence was insufficient to find, as a matter of
    law, that Appellant’s actions could establish an intent to inflict serious bodily
    injury on an unknown person, yet somehow those some acts could not
    establish the intent to kill that same person.7 Rather, the trial court explicitly
    stated that the Commonwealth failed to produce sufficient evidence that there
    was any victim as a matter of fact.
    B
    Presence of a crowd
    Appellant claims that the trial court’s ruling is definitive on this point,
    writing:
    Here, there was no person or persons present to whom specific
    intent could apply. The trial court even believed the block was
    ____________________________________________
    7 We do not discern any difference between an intent to kill and an intent to
    inflict serious bodily injury under these facts.
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    J-S02036-18
    empty. How its conclusion transformed from "empty" to "crowded"
    when the only change was Palmer's challenge to the conviction is
    confusing at best. It is also unsupported by the record.
    Speculation about intent cannot suffice to establish guilt. The
    conviction for aggravated assault on a John or Jane Doe is
    insufficient.
    Appellant’s brief at 21.
    That argument claims that the trial court’s ruling requires this Court to
    accept that Appellant was shooting at an empty street as a matter of fact to
    which we apply our conclusions of law. “Here, the Commonwealth did not
    establish the presence of a person nor that Appellant knew or incorrectly
    believed that someone was the target of his assault.” Id. at 12.
    We disagree, as that argument misapplies our standard of review. As
    the Commonwealth observes, the trial judge was not the finder of fact. We
    view the relevant inquiry as encompassing three separate but related
    questions: Could the jury find that: (1) A group of people was present; (2)
    Appellant fired into that group; and (3) Appellant fired into the group with the
    specific intent to inflict serious bodily injury?
    Assessed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth as verdict
    winner, the facts establish that there was a group of people and that Appellant
    shot in its direction. Appellant fired ten bullets towards the intersection of
    17th Street, which runs north to south, and Susquehanna Avenue, which runs
    east to west. At the time he fired those bullets, Ms. Kelsey, who was driving
    two friends in her vehicle, turned left at the intersection of Susquehanna and
    17th Street. Her vehicle was followed by two other cars containing more of
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    J-S02036-18
    her friends. Approximately five seconds after making a turn onto 17th Street,
    she heard gunshots. N.T., 8/16/16, at 49.          She heard the gunshots from
    behind her, and felt pain in her back shortly thereafter. These facts constitute
    sufficient circumstantial evidence that numerous people were present and that
    Appellant fired in their direction.
    C
    Firing into that group sufficiently establishes the requisite intent
    Since we have determined that the jury could find that Appellant fired
    into a group of people, the remaining question is whether the jury could
    conclude that Appellant did so with the specific intent to cause serious bodily
    injury.     We discuss the following precedents discussing closely-related
    circumstances:       Commonwealth v. Lopez, 
    654 A.2d 1150
     (Pa.Super.
    1995); Commonwealth v. Fierst, 
    620 A.2d 1196
     (Pa.Super. 1993); and
    Commonwealth v. Jackson, 
    955 A.2d 441
     (Pa.Super. 2008). None is on
    point; however, we find that elements of these cases apply to the facts herein.
    In Lopez, the defendant fired shots into the residence of his ex-
    girlfriend, which, unbeknownst to him, was unoccupied at the time. Other
    evidence indicated that Lopez wished to kill her.        We determined that the
    Commonwealth established prima facie evidence of attempted aggravated
    assault. Lopez establishes that impossibility is not a defense. “[A] person
    who discharges a weapon into an empty residence can commit an aggravated
    assault if he possesses the requisite intent to cause serious bodily injury . . .
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    even though it is impossible for that person to actually cause such injury
    because of the absence of a person inside[.]” Id. at 1152. Herein, unlike
    Lopez, there is no evidence that Appellant hoped or believed that a person,
    let alone any particular person, was on the street.
    In Fierst, the appellant intentionally drove into an oncoming vehicle.
    The case establishes that the harm need not be directed at a specific person.
    Fierst is distinguishable on the grounds that Fierst knew that there was a
    person inside the vehicle, even if he did not know the identities of the
    particular occupants.
    Finally, in Jackson, this Court applied Thompson, supra.        Therein,
    three police officers were investigating a shooting that occurred earlier that
    day. The victim of that shooting, Charles Wesley, was walking nearby. Five
    men, including Jackson, approached Wesley and commenced shooting. The
    three officers plus four other bystanders took cover. We concluded that the
    evidence was insufficient to sustain seven aggravated assault convictions for
    those seven persons.
    In his second issue, Appellant questions the sufficiency of the
    evidence to sustain his convictions for the aggravated assaults of
    Detective Waring, Officer Hood, Officer Allen, Sharee Norton,
    Sharron Norton, Shanya Wesley, and Gene Palmer. While
    Appellant admits that he intended to shoot Wesley, Appellant
    contends that these other persons were simply in the way.
    Appellant argues that the Commonwealth failed to establish that
    he had the specific intent to cause serious bodily injury to any of
    these persons, and thus, the requisite intent for his aggravated
    assault convictions is lacking.
    ....
    - 17 -
    J-S02036-18
    [T]he evidence shows that Detective Waring, Officer Hood, Officer
    Allen, Sharee Norton, Sharron Norton, Shanya Wesley, and Gene
    Palmer were near Appellant's intended victim. The evidence also
    shows that Appellant fired a deadly weapon toward them. There
    is, however, no other evidence, in the form of circumstances,
    actions or words, occurring before, during, or after the shooting,
    that tends to demonstrate that Appellant specifically intended to
    inflict injury upon these particular persons. Therefore, the only
    circumstance in the record from which it may be inferred that
    Appellant had the intent to cause these persons serious bodily
    injury was his firing a deadly weapon in their direction. Based on
    the totality of the circumstances, we conclude that the evidence
    was insufficient to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that
    Appellant harbored the specific intent to cause serious bodily
    injury with a deadly weapon to any of these persons.
    Jackson, supra at 445-48.
    We   nevertheless    upheld    the   convictions   based     on   attempted
    aggravated assault, relying on Thompson.         “It is an established fact that
    Appellant specifically intended to cause serious bodily injury to Wesley with a
    deadly weapon. Under the doctrine, Appellant's intent in this regard is
    transferred to [the others].” Id. at 450. This case differs from Jackson in
    that there was an actual victim therein at whom the shots were directed.
    Additionally, in that case, the other victims were identifiable.
    There is no doubt that a readily-identifiable victim is sufficient to sustain
    the convictions in these cases, but we are not of the view that it is a necessary
    component. The jury could find under the totality of the circumstances that
    Appellant fired into the group of people with intent to inflict serious bodily
    injury upon someone within that group. See Commonwealth v. Matthew,
    
    909 A.2d 1254
     (Pa. 2006) (applying totality of the circumstances to determine
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    J-S02036-18
    if actions constituted aggravated assault). The most significant circumstantial
    evidence in this regard is the fact that Appellant fired ten bullets.
    Additionally, Lopez establishes that the focus is on what Appellant
    sought to do, as neither legal impossibility nor factual impossibility are
    defenses.     While Lopez is readily distinguishable in that the evidence
    established that Lopez clearly sought to kill a particular person, the focus must
    be on what Appellant failed to do as opposed to what he did do. We find that
    the jury could infer that Appellant hoped to or believed that he hit someone
    in that crowd with one or more bullets. Fierst. It is difficult to accept that
    this behavior was designed to do anything other than kill or inflict serious
    bodily injury, and the jury was permitted to attach significance to the natural
    and probable outcome of that behavior when assessing intent.8                   See
    ____________________________________________
    8A number of our cases have discussed similar circumstances in analyzing
    whether behavior was sufficiently reckless for purposes of establishing the
    completed crime of aggravated assault:
    [F]or the degree of recklessness contained in the aggravated
    assault statute to occur, the offensive act must be performed
    under circumstances which almost assure that injury or death will
    ensue. The recklessness must, therefore, be such that life
    threatening injury is essentially certain to occur. This state of mind
    is, accordingly, equivalent to that which seeks to cause injury.
    Examples of such behavior make the distinction clear.
    In Commonwealth v. Daniels, 
    467 Pa. 35
    , 
    354 A.2d 538
    (1976), appellant       had fired a         gun into       a crowd;
    in Commonwealth v. Laing, 
    310 Pa.Super. 105
    , 
    456 A.2d 204
    (1983), appellant drove his car into a crowd, after having aimed
    it at an individual; in Scofield, the appellant drove at a
    pedestrian. See also, Commonwealth v. Hlatky, 426 Pa.Super.
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    J-S02036-18
    Commonwealth v. Fry, 
    491 A.2d 843
    , 844-45 (Pa.Super. 1985) (“A fact
    finder may find that a person intends the natural and probable consequences
    of his actions.”).
    D
    Analogous authority
    Finally, we note that a number of States have adopted a “kill zone”
    theory.    Briefly stated, the kill zone theory addresses scenarios such as
    Thompson and Jackson wherein an assailant specifically intends to kill a
    particular person, but in so doing exposes other, unintended targets to the
    same risk of death. That theory describes the intent as concurrent instead of
    transferred:
    California cases that have affirmed convictions requiring the intent
    to kill persons other than the primary target can be considered
    “kill zone” cases even though they do not employ that term.
    In People v. Vang (2001) 
    87 Cal.App.4th 554
    , 563–565, 
    104 Cal.Rptr.2d 704
    , for example, the defendants shot at two occupied
    houses. The Court of Appeal affirmed attempted murder charges
    as to everyone in both houses—11 counts—even though the
    ____________________________________________
    66, 
    626 A.2d 575
     (1993); Commonwealth v. Rohach, 
    344 Pa.Super. 229
    , 
    496 A.2d 768
     (1985). In each of these instances,
    the defendant could reasonably anticipate that serious bodily
    injury or death would be the likely and logical consequence of his
    actions. In each case, the consequence was ignored.
    Commonwealth v. O'Hanlon, 
    653 A.2d 616
    , 618 (Pa. 1995). As discussed
    at length supra, the aggravated assault statute is disjunctive. We do not
    interpret the cases describing recklessness as applied to completed crimes of
    aggravated assault to foreclose the possibility that some behavior is so
    manifestly reckless that a jury could determine the behavior was specifically
    intended to commit serious bodily injury when examining the inchoate crime
    of attempted aggravated assault.
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    J-S02036-18
    defendants may have targeted only one person at each house.
    “The jury drew a reasonable inference, in light of the placement
    of the shots, the number of shots, and the use of high-powered,
    wall-piercing weapons, that defendants harbored a specific intent
    to kill every living being within the residences they shot up.... The
    fact they could not see all of their victims did not somehow negate
    their express malice or intent to kill as to those victims who were
    present and in harm's way, but fortuitously were not killed.”
    This case permits—virtually compels—a similar inference. Even if
    the jury found that defendant primarily wanted to kill Wilson
    rather than Wilson's passengers, it could reasonably also have
    found a concurrent intent to kill those passengers when defendant
    and his cohort fired a flurry of bullets at the fleeing car and thereby
    created a kill zone. Such a finding fully supports attempted murder
    convictions as to the passengers.
    People v. Bland, 
    48 P.3d 1107
    , 1118–19 (Ca. 2002) (footnote and some
    citations omitted, emphasis in original).
    The “kill zone” theory thus rejects Thompson and the notion that
    transferred intent applies to inchoate crimes.9 But see State v. Dean, 54
    ____________________________________________
    9 In Jackson, we urged our Supreme Court to revisit the application of
    transferred intent to specific intent crimes. We add our voice to that request.
    As discussed at length supra, the application of transferred intent to inchoate
    crimes is confusing. Herein, the Commonwealth charged Appellant with
    specifically intending to kill Ms. Kelsey, while admitting that Appellant did not
    specifically intend to kill Ms. Kelsey.
    In this respect, we believe that the kill zone theory may represent a more
    logical approach to situations such as Thompson and Jackson. Relatedly,
    transferred intent can still supply the necessary intent for a completed crime,
    i.e., where the unintended target actually dies, and that remains true even
    when the actual target is murdered. See Henry v. State, 
    19 A.3d 944
    , 951
    (Md. 2011) (rejecting notion that transferred intent is “used up” after the
    intended target is killed; “We agree with the Supreme Courts of California,
    Connecticut, and New Jersey, as well as with the above cited federal courts,
    that the doctrine of transferred intent is fully applicable where both the
    intended victim and an unintended victim are killed.”)
    - 21 -
    J-S02036-
    18 N.E.3d 80
     (Oh. 2015) (rejecting Bland; “We hold that the doctrine of
    transferred intent was properly applied to the attempted-murder charges.”).
    Under the logic of the kill zone theory, the prosecution may only charge the
    inchoate crime of attempted murder for each targeted victim:
    One difference regarding intent to kill does exist between murder
    and attempted murder. A person who intends to kill can be guilty
    of the murder of each person actually killed, even if the person
    intended to kill only one. The same is not necessarily true
    regarding attempted murder. Rather, guilt of attempted murder
    must be judged separately as to each alleged victim. But this is
    true whether the alleged victim was particularly targeted or
    randomly chosen. As the district attorney aptly summarizes in this
    case, “A defendant who intends to kill one person will be
    liable for multiple counts of murder where multiple victims
    die, but only one count of attempted murder where no one
    dies.” But when no one dies that person will be guilty of
    attempted murder even if he or she intended to kill a random
    person rather than a specific one.
    People v. Stone, 
    205 P.3d 272
    , 278–79 (Ca. 2009) (emphasis added,
    quotation marks and citations omitted).
    In Stone, the Supreme Court of California addressed a factual situation
    similar to the circumstances herein, in that the prosecutor, like the
    Commonwealth here, informed the jury that the person Stone intended to kill
    was unknown. “[I]n his argument to the jury, the district attorney agreed he
    had not proven that defendant intended specifically to kill [the victim named
    in the charges] rather than someone in the group of 10 persons.” 
    Id. at 277
    .
    (emphasis in original). Stone noted that the kill zone theory would thus not
    apply since that theory requires that there be a particular target.   Stone
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    J-S02036-18
    nevertheless concluded specific intent to kill could be found.     We find the
    following discussion persuasive:
    Can a person who shoots into a group of people, intending to kill
    one of the group, but not knowing or caring which one, be
    convicted of attempted murder? Yes. The mental state required
    for attempted murder is the intent to kill a human being, not
    a particular human being.
    ....
    Now that we consider the question, we conclude that a person who
    intends to kill can be guilty of attempted murder even if the person
    has no specific target in mind. An indiscriminate would-be killer is
    just as culpable as one who targets a specific person. One
    of Bland's kill zone examples involved a bomber who places a
    bomb on a commercial airplane intending to kill a primary target
    but ensuring the death of all passengers. We explained that the
    bomber could be convicted of the attempted murder of all the
    passengers. But a terrorist who simply wants to kill as many
    people as possible, and does not know or care who the victims will
    be, can be just as guilty of attempted murder.
    ....
    We explained in Bland that difficulties can arise when deciding
    whether a person can be convicted of the attempted murder of an
    untargeted person in addition to the murder or attempted murder
    of the target, and regarding how many attempted murder
    convictions are permissible. After all, the world contains many
    people a murderous assailant does not intend to kill. But this case
    does not involve such difficulties. Defendant was not charged with
    the attempted murder of all the world, or even everyone in the
    group at which he fired, but only of one attempted murder.
    Whatever difficulties exist in deciding how many attempted
    murders a would be indiscriminate killer has committed do not
    exist here.
    
    Id. at 274
    ; 278 (emphases in original; quotation marks and citations omitted).
    For the reasons set forth supra, we find that the jury could determine
    that Appellant was guilty of one attempted aggravated assault.        Whatever
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    J-S02036-18
    difficulties there may be in deciding exactly how many attempt crimes may lie
    in these scenarios, that problem does not exist here.10 It does not matter
    whether Appellant’s intent was generalized or specific with respect to his
    target. It matters only that he had a specific intent to inflict serious bodily
    injury upon someone. The jury could determine that he did, and Appellant’s
    first claim fails.
    IV
    We now address Appellant’s second claim, which concerns the trial
    court’s overruling his objections to testimony by Detective Wearing during the
    presentation of video surveillance testimony. Appellant urges this Court to
    find that “the trial court allowed a detective to offer lay opinion evidence in
    violation of Pa.R.E. 701 regarding the identity of individuals seen in a video
    because it was not based upon his own perceptions, not helpful to the jury,
    and prejudicially altered the independent determination by the jury.”
    Appellant’s brief at 22.
    The admission of evidence is committed to the sound discretion of
    the trial court, and a trial court’s ruling regarding the admission
    of evidence will not be disturbed on appeal unless that ruling
    reflects manifest unreasonableness, or partiality, prejudice, bias,
    or ill-will, or such lack of support to be clearly
    erroneous.
    ____________________________________________
    10For example, under Thompson the facts would presumably support, at
    minimum, attempt charges for the other two passengers in Ms. Kelsey’s
    vehicle, plus the occupants of the vehicles following Ms. Kelsey.
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    J-S02036-18
    Commonwealth v. Akrie, 
    159 A.3d 982
    , 986–87 (Pa.Super. 2017) (citation
    omitted).
    Here, Appellant claims that, during trial, Detective Wearing “narrated
    the video” recovered from the deli and “opine[d] on the similarity and identity
    of the person seen in each video clip.”               Appellant’s brief at 22.   Appellant
    maintains that, instead, “[t]he correct method would have been to play the
    portion of the video showing the shooting, and have the detective describe
    the time, date, locations, and the directions of movements of the person seen
    in the video. . . . That is not what the Commonwealth did.” Id. at 23. The
    Commonwealth answers that “Detective Wearing’s testimony about the video
    . . . was not opinion evidence, but merely explained the basis for [Appellant]’s
    arrest, the DNA testing of the drugs, and [Appellant]’s question about what
    would     the   consequences       be   if     the    shooting   were   an   accident.”11
    Commonwealth’s brief at 16.          The trial court responded to the claim in its
    opinion as follows:
    Detective Wearing testified that he physically investigated the
    shooting scene and surrounding neighborhood, and obtained
    video footage of the area from the time of the shooting. While the
    jury viewed the videos, Detective Wearing placed the footage in
    context by describing the intersection that was videotaped, the
    camera locations, the location of Ms. Kelsey when she was shot,
    the location of the fired cartridge casings, the location of the
    narcotics, and the location of the “suspect” alleged to be
    Appellant. Defective Wearing further testified that immediately
    after viewing the videos on the day following the shooting, he saw
    ____________________________________________
    11Drugs were found near the location of the bullet casings. Appellant’s DNA
    was discovered on the drugs.
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    J-S02036-18
    Appellant in the shooting area and determined he was the shooter
    shown in the videotapes.
    Overall, Detective Wearing’s testimony was relevant to the jury’s
    understanding of the timing of events shown on the videos, the
    location of the shooter when he fired the gun, the location of the
    victim (Ms. Kelsey) in relation to the shooter, and the location of
    Appellant’s DNA in relation to where the gun was fired. See e.g.
    [Commonwealth v. Cole], 
    135 A.3d 191
    , 196 [(Pa. Super.
    2016)] (finding that a detective’s video narration “was relevant to
    the jury’s understanding of the timing, the actors, and the location
    of events depicted in the video.”). Detective Wearing’s testimony
    also was relevant as an explanation to the jury of how and why
    the detectives developed Appellant as the prime suspect on the
    day after the shooting; why they compared his DNA to the DNA
    on the narcotics baggie recovered near the cartridge casings; and
    why they interviewed Appellant about the shooting and the videos.
    “Once evidence is found to be relevant, it will be inadmissible only
    if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of
    unfair prejudice or confusion.” Commonwealth v. McFadden,
    [
    156 A.3d 299
    ] (Pa. Super. []) (citations omitted here)[, appeal
    denied, 
    170 A.3d 993
     (Pa. 2017)]. “Unfair prejudice is a tendency
    to suggest a decision on an improper basis or to divert the jury’s
    attention away from its duty of weighing the evidence impartially.”
    
    Id.
     (citing Pa. R.E. 403). “The trial court will be reversed only if
    an error in the admission of evidence contributed to the verdict.”
    
    Id.
    The core dispute in this case was not whether Appellant ever
    appeared on the video footage from the evening of the shooting.
    [Detective] Rocks testified that although Appellant denied he was
    shown on video shooting a gun, Appellant admitted the videos
    showed him earlier that evening in the shooting area. DNA
    evidence also placed Appellant at the location of the fired cartridge
    casings, and the videos themselves convincingly demonstrate that
    Appellant was captured on camera in several of the videos’
    timeframes.
    The central dispute was whether it was Appellant, wearing a dark-
    colored jacket, who appeared on video around 11:00 p.m. when
    the shooting occurred. [Detective] Rocks testified that Appellant
    denied he was the “suspect” who allegedly shot Ms. Kelsey in the
    11:00 p.m. portion of the videos, and Appellant’s trial counsel
    - 26 -
    J-S02036-18
    effectively cross-examined Detective Wearing regarding his
    testimony that the videos showed the “same suspect” shooting a
    gun. During closing arguments, defense counsel again contested
    that the person captured on video around 11:00 p.m., allegedly
    shooting a gun, was Appellant.
    When viewing the testimony in its overall context, it is clear that
    the jury knew exactly what issue it was charged with determining;
    in fact the very first question from the jury was a request to view
    the video again. Detective Wearing did not induce a verdict on any
    improper basis nor did his testimony “divert the jury’s attention
    away from its duty of weighing the evidence impartially.” Pa. R.E.
    403 (comment). Rather, the issue of the shooter’s identity was
    fairly placed before the jury for its impartial determination[.]
    Trial Court Opinion, 4/10/17, at 11-14 (citations to the record omitted).
    We agree with the trial court’s assessment of Detective Wearing’s
    testimony and therefore must decide whether it is properly classified as
    opinion testimony. “Concededly, the division whether testimony constitutes
    fact or opinion may be difficult, for ‘there is no litmus test for fact versus
    opinion.” Bucchianeri v. Equitable Gas Co., 
    491 A.2d 835
    , 839 (Pa.Super.
    1985) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). “Fact testimony may
    include opinion or inferences so long as those opinions or inferences are
    rationally based on the witness’s perceptions and helpful to a clear
    understanding of his or her testimony.” Crespo v. Hughes, 
    167 A.3d 168
    ,
    182 (Pa.Super. 2017).
    Herein, Detective Wearing merely testified that he identified the shooter
    by finding and watching the video surveillance of the shooting, then examining
    earlier portions of the video for other instances where the suspect appeared.
    As the Commonwealth asserted, Detective Wearing’s testimony about the
    - 27 -
    J-S02036-18
    surveillance videos explained the basis for Appellant’s arrest, the DNA testing
    of the drugs, and Appellant’s question about what the consequences would be
    if the shooting were accidental. Thus, Detective Wearing’s testimony about
    the videos was based upon his perception of them, placed his subsequent
    actions in context, and was helpful in allowing the jury to reach a clear
    understanding of all his testimony. Crespo, supra at 182. Hence, his fact
    testimony permissibly included non-expert opinions and was properly
    admitted.
    Furthermore, we note that the videos had little relevance if Appellant
    was not the person appearing at the times highlighted by the Commonwealth.
    The jury was obviously aware that the Commonwealth believed that the
    person was Appellant, and it was the jury’s duty to determine if the
    Commonwealth proved that fact beyond a reasonable doubt. The jury itself
    watched the videos, and was free to reach a different conclusion if it disagreed
    with Detective Wearing’s conclusion that it was Appellant depicted on the
    video at specific moments in the footage.      We therefore find no abuse of
    discretion.
    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
    Judge Nichols joins the opinion.
    Judge Ransom files a concurring dissenting opinion.
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    J-S02036-18
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 6/26/18
    - 29 -