Com. v. Felder, D. ( 2022 )


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  • J-S10044-22
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    DAMON LAMONT FELDER                        :
    :
    Appellant               :   No. 1082 MDA 2021
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered July 14, 2021
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-36-CR-0000989-2019
    BEFORE:      MURRAY, J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and COLINS, J.*
    MEMORANDUM BY COLINS, J.:                              FILED AUGUST 09, 2022
    Appellant, Damon Lamont Felder, appeals from the aggregate judgment
    of sentence of 15 months to 3 years’ incarceration imposed by the Court of
    Common Pleas of Lancaster County following a jury trial at which he was
    convicted of possession of cocaine with intent to deliver (PWID), possession
    of drug paraphernalia, possession of a small amount of marijuana, and the
    summary offenses of driving with a suspended license and driving an
    unregistered vehicle.1 For the reasons set forth below, we affirm Appellant’s
    drug paraphernalia, marijuana, and summary offense convictions, but vacate
    ____________________________________________
    *   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    1 35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(30), 35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(32), 35 P.S. § 780-113 §
    (a)(31), 75 Pa.C.S. § 1543(a) and 75 Pa.C.S. § 1301(a), respectively.
    J-S10044-22
    Appellant’s judgment of sentence and PWID conviction and remand for a new
    trial on the PWID charge.
    This case arises out of a traffic stop that occurred on the night of January
    7, 2019, when Lancaster City Police Officers McCormick and Bingham, while
    on routine patrol in a marked car, ran the license plate of a car on PennDOT’s
    mobile licensing and registration database and learned that its registration
    was expired. Trial Court Opinion at 1-2. The officers followed the car for a
    short distance before initiating a traffic stop based on the expired registration.
    Id. at 2.
    There were two people in the car, Appellant, who was the driver, and
    one passenger. N.T. Suppression Hearing at 11, 20. After Appellant pulled
    the car over, Office McCormick approached the driver’s side door and spoke
    to him. Id. at 11. While talking to Appellant, Office McCormick saw a pipe
    with marijuana in Appellant’s jacket pocket. Id. at 11-12. Officer McCormick
    had Appellant come out of the car and asked Appellant for permission to pat
    him down and Appellant consented. Id. at 12-14. When the car door was
    opened, Officer McCormick smelled an odor of fresh marijuana coming from
    the inside of the car.      Id. at 13-14, 27.    Officer McCormick seized the
    marijuana pipe and, in the pat-down, found a pack of Game cigars in
    Appellant’s back right pants pocket and concluded that Appellant’s front left
    pants pocket felt like it contained a large wad of folded money. Id. at 13-16,
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    34-35. Officer McCormick knew from his experience as a narcotics officer that
    Game cigars are often used to roll marijuana blunts. Id. at 14.
    After the pat-down, Appellant was taken back to Officer McCormick’s
    patrol car and Officer McCormick had the passenger get out of the car. N.T.
    Suppression Hearing at 16, 38. When the passenger got out of the car, Officer
    McCormick saw from outside the car a baggie of what he recognized as crack
    cocaine on the front passenger seat. Id. at 38-40.   Officer McCormick then
    conducted a search of the car and found fresh marijuana in a compartment
    near the steering wheel and another baggie of crack cocaine under the front
    passenger seat. Id. at 16-17, 29, 31, 39-43. Appellant was placed under
    arrest while Officer McCormick was searching the car and $833 in cash was
    found in his front left pants pocket. Id. at 17-18. A third baggie of crack
    cocaine was later found on the person of the passenger. Id. at 43.
    On January 8, 2019, Appellant was charged with PWID, possession of
    drug paraphernalia, possession of a small amount of marijuana, driving with
    a suspended license and driving an unregistered vehicle. On March 8, 2019,
    and August 13, 2019, Appellant filed omnibus pretrial motions in which he
    sought to suppress the items found during the traffic stop on the ground that
    there was no reasonable suspicion or probable cause for the traffic stop and
    no probable cause for the searches of Appellant’s person and the car and also
    sought to suppress statements made by Appellant. On September 20, 2019,
    the trial court held a hearing on the motions to suppress, at which Officer
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    McCormick testified. Following the hearing, the trial court denied the motions
    to suppress the drugs and drug paraphernalia found during the traffic stop,
    but granted Appellant’s motion to suppress statements concerning two cell
    phones on the ground that they were obtained in violation of Appellant’s
    Miranda2 rights. N.T. Suppression Hearing at 64-65.
    The charges against Appellant were tried to a jury on April 12 and 13,
    2021.     The Commonwealth called four witnesses: Officers McCormick and
    Bingham; the passenger who was in the car with Appellant, Mandy Kauffman;
    and a police detective who testified as an expert in the area of controlled
    substance use, distribution, packaging and sales.     Immediately before the
    start of trial, Appellant presented a written motion in limine notifying the
    Commonwealth of his intent to use nine crimen falsi convictions to impeach
    Kauffman’s credibility and seeking a ruling that these convictions, including a
    1999 false swearing conviction, were admissible. The trial court ruled that
    seven convictions that were less than 10 years old for access device fraud,
    theft by deception, forgery, theft, and receiving stolen property were
    admissible, but denied Appellant’s motion with respect to Kauffman’s 1999
    ____________________________________________
    2   Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966).
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    false swearing conviction and barred him using that conviction to impeach her.
    N.T. Trial at 58-59; Trial Court Order, 4/12/21.3
    Officers McCormick and Bingham testified concerning the January 7,
    2019 traffic stop. The officers identified Appellant as the driver of the car and
    Kauffman as the passenger and testified that both Appellant and Kauffman
    were arrested, but that Kauffman was released with no charges. N.T. Trial at
    78-79, 101-02, 130-31, 140-42, 144-46, 148-49.
    Officer McCormick testified that he found a marijuana pipe and cigars
    that that are used to make marijuana blunts on Appellant’s person during the
    traffic stop and that $833 was found on Appellant when he was searched
    incident to arrest. N.T. Trial at 81-90, 106. Officer McCormick testified that
    Kauffman was in the front passenger seat and that after he had Kauffman get
    out of the car, he found a one-gram baggie of crack cocaine on the front
    passenger seat of the car, a two-gram baggie of crack cocaine under the front
    passenger seat, and a plastic container holding marijuana in a compartment
    near the driver’s seat.       Id. at 90-93, 97-98, 110-11.   Officer McCormick
    further testified that after Kauffman was arrested, a two-gram baggie of crack
    cocaine was found in her pants, and that no crack cocaine was found on
    ____________________________________________
    3 The ninth conviction listed in the motion was an additional, old conviction for
    receiving stolen property. The trial court’s order did not permit Appellant to
    use that conviction, Trial Court Order, 4/12/21, but Appellant does not
    contend that the exclusion of the additional receiving stolen property
    conviction was error.
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    Appellant’s person. Id. at 104-05, 128. A stipulation was read to the jury
    that the Pennsylvania State Police laboratory tested the substance in the
    baggies and confirmed that it was crack cocaine and had tested the substance
    in the plastic container and confirmed that it was marijuana. Id. at 213-14.
    Kauffman testified that she was with Appellant in the car on January 7,
    2019 because she wanted to get crack cocaine from him. N.T. Trial at 157-
    58, 167. Kauffman testified that she took crack cocaine from Appellant and
    put it in her pants to hide it when the police pulled the car over, that she had
    no drugs when she got into Appellant’s car, and that the drugs that were on
    the front passenger seat, under that seat, and in her pants were not hers. Id.
    at 159-60, 164-65, 167, 184-85. In addition, the Commonwealth played to
    the jury Kauffman’s January 7, 2019 statement to police, in which she denied
    that the drugs were hers and contended that Appellant handed off the drugs
    to her to hide. Id. at 166; C-7.
    Kauffman was examined on the fact that she had pled guilty to access
    device fraud, theft by deception, forgery, theft, and receiving stolen property.
    N.T. Trial at 152-54, 177. She also testified on direct examination by the
    Commonwealth that she had pled guilty to drug charges, criminal trespass,
    and driving under the influence, and was cross-examined concerning a 1994
    conviction for possession with intent to deliver after she had testified that she
    has never been a drug dealer. Id. at 153-54, 172-73.
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    On April 13, 2021, the jury found Appellant guilty of PWID, possession
    of drug paraphernalia, and possession of a small amount of marijuana, and
    the trial court found him guilty of the summary offenses. N.T. Trial at 276-
    78. On July 14, 2021, the trial court sentenced Appellant to 15 months to 3
    years’ incarceration for PWID and a concurrent term of 1 to 12 months’
    incarceration for possession of drug paraphernalia, imposed only costs for the
    marijuana conviction, and imposed fines and costs for the summary offenses,
    resulting in an aggregate sentence of 15 months to 3 years’ incarceration.
    Sentencing Order; N.T. Sentencing at 11-12. This timely appeal followed.
    Appellant presents the following two issues for our review:
    I. Did the trial court err in denying Mr. Felder’s Motion to Suppress
    the marijuana and cocaine seized during the search of Mr. Felder’s
    vehicle, where police lacked probable cause to search the vehicle?
    II. Did the trial court err in denying defense counsel’s motion in
    limine to admit Mandy Kauffman’s 1999 conviction for false
    swearing, where this conviction was highly relevant to Ms.
    Kauffman’s truthfulness when testifying in the instant case, and
    the probative value of Ms. Kauffman’s conviction for false
    swearing substantially outweighed its prejudicial effect?
    Appellant’s Brief at 7 (trial court’s answers omitted).      We conclude that
    Appellant is entitled to no relief on his suppression issue, but that the trial
    court committed reversible error in excluding Kauffman’s false swearing
    conviction.
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    In his first issue, Appellant argues only that the police lacked probable
    cause to search the car.4 Our standard and scope of review on this issue are
    well-settled:
    Our standard of review in addressing a challenge to a trial court’s
    denial of a suppression motion is whether the factual findings are
    supported by the record and whether the legal conclusions drawn
    from those facts are correct. When reviewing the ruling of a
    suppression court, we must consider only the evidence of the
    prosecution and so much of the evidence of the defense as
    remains uncontradicted when read in the context of the record.
    Where the record supports the findings of the suppression court,
    we are bound by those facts and may reverse only if the legal
    conclusions drawn therefrom are in error.
    Commonwealth v. Heidelberg, 
    267 A.3d 492
    , 498-99 (Pa. Super. 2021)
    (en banc) (quoting Commonwealth v. Bumbarger, 
    231 A.3d 10
     (Pa. Super.
    2020)).
    A police officer has probable cause to search a vehicle where the facts
    and circumstances within the officer’s knowledge are sufficient for a person of
    reasonable caution to believe that a crime has been or is being committed or
    ____________________________________________
    4 Appellant does not challenge on appeal the trial court’s determination that
    the police had probable cause for the traffic stop. Although our Supreme Court
    held in Commonwealth v. Alexander, 
    243 A.3d 177
     (Pa. 2020) that
    warrantless searches of vehicles are constitutional under Article I, Section 8
    of the Pennsylvania Constitution only if the Commonwealth shows both
    probable cause and exigent circumstances or another exception to the warrant
    requirement, Appellant did not seek in the trial court to suppress on the
    ground that Commonwealth failed to show exigent circumstances for the
    search or any other exception to the warrant requirement. Alexander is
    therefore inapplicable to this appeal. Commonwealth v. Heidelberg, 
    267 A.3d 492
    , 503 (Pa. Super. 2021) (en banc).
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    that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in the vehicle.
    Commonwealth v. Barr, 
    266 A.3d 25
    , 40 (Pa. 2021); Bumbarger, 231 A.3d
    at 18; Commonwealth v. Scott, 
    210 A.3d 359
    , 363 (Pa. Super. 2019).
    Observation of illegal drugs or items related to illegal drug use or trafficking
    in the vehicle or on the defendant’s person while he was in the vehicle, made
    by the police from outside the vehicle before the search, can be sufficient to
    support probable cause to search the vehicle for drugs.      Bumbarger, 231
    A.3d at 18; Commonwealth v. Bozeman, 
    205 A.3d 1264
    , 1278-79 (Pa.
    Super. 2019); Commonwealth v. Bailey, 
    545 A.2d 942
    , 945-46 (Pa. Super.
    1988).    Because marijuana may legally be possessed and used under the
    Medical Marijuana Act (MMA),5 an odor of marijuana is not sufficient by itself
    to show probable cause for a search, although it can be a factor supporting
    probable cause in combination with other information known to the police at
    the time. Barr, 266 A.3d at 41-44.
    Here, the trial court found that the facts known to Officer McCormick
    before he searched the car included not only the odor of marijuana coming
    from the car, but also Appellant’s possession of marijuana-smoking
    paraphernalia and the presence in the car of a baggie of what he knew from
    his training and experience was likely crack cocaine. Trial Court Opinion at 7-
    8. This finding is supported by the record. Officer McCormick, who the trial
    ____________________________________________
    5   35 P.S. § 10231.101 et seq.
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    court found credible, id. at 4; N.T. Suppression Hearing at 64, testified that
    he saw a marijuana pipe in Appellant’s pocket from outside the car, found
    cigars that are used to make marijuana blunts in a pat-down to which
    Appellant had consented, and saw the crack cocaine on the passenger seat
    from outside the car before he began his search.     N.T. Suppression Hearing
    at 11-14, 38-40.
    These additional facts, coupled with the odor of marijuana coming from
    the inside of the car, were sufficient to support probable cause to search the
    passenger compartment of the car. Because the MMA does not permit the
    smoking of marijuana, 35 P.S. § 10231.304(b)(1); Barr, 266 A.3d at 41 n.13,
    knowledge that Appellant had paraphernalia for smoking marijuana gave the
    Officer McCormick reason to believe the marijuana was being used illegally.
    The baggie of crack cocaine on the passenger seat gave him reason to believe
    that there were other drugs in the car that were illegal.
    The fact that Officer McCormick did not see the crack cocaine until after
    he had Kauffman get out of the vehicle does not make it part of a search that
    required probable cause. A police officer who has lawfully stopped a vehicle
    does not need to have reasonable suspicion or probable cause to request the
    driver and passengers to come out of the vehicle. Bumbarger, 231 A.3d at
    17-18; Commonwealth v. Brown, 
    654 A.2d 1096
    , 1097, 1102-03 (Pa.
    Super. 1995). Because Officer McCormick saw the crack cocaine from a lawful
    vantage point outside the car, under the plain view doctrine, his obtaining this
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    knowledge did not violate Appellant’s rights under the Fourth Amendment of
    the United States Constitution or Article I, Section 8 of the Pennsylvania
    Constitution.   Commonwealth v. Lutz, 
    270 A.3d 571
    , 577 (Pa. Super.
    2022); Heidelberg, 267 A.3d at 504-05; Bumbarger, 231 A.3d at 20. The
    trial court therefore did not err in denying Appellant’s motion to suppress.
    In his second issue, Appellant contends that the trial court erred in
    excluding Kauffman’s false swearing conviction. We agree.
    A trial court’s rulings regarding the admissibility of evidence may be
    reversed only on a showing that the trial court abused its discretion.
    Commonwealth v. Bowens, 
    265 A.3d 730
    , 746 (Pa. Super. 2021) (en
    banc); Commonwealth v. Lowmiller, 
    257 A.3d 758
    , 763 (Pa. Super. 2021).
    Misapplication or overriding of the law constitutes an abuse of discretion.
    Bowens, 265 A.3d at 746; Lowmiller, 257 A.3d at 763; Commonwealth v.
    D.J.A., 
    800 A.2d 965
    , 970 (Pa. Super. 2002)         In addition, a trial court’s
    judgment is manifestly unreasonable, and therefore an abuse of discretion, if
    it is unsupported by the record. D.J.A., 
    800 A.2d at 970
    .     Whether the trial
    court properly applied our rules of evidence involves a question of law as to
    which our standard of review is de novo and our scope of review is plenary.
    Commonwealth v. Raboin, 
    258 A.3d 412
    , 422 (Pa. 2021); Commonwealth
    v. Brown, 
    52 A.3d 1139
    , 1176 (Pa. 2012).
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    Admissibility of a witness’s criminal convictions to impeach her
    credibility is governed by Rule 609 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Evidence,
    which provides in relevant part:
    (a) In General. For the purpose of attacking the credibility of any
    witness, evidence that the witness has been convicted of a crime,
    whether by verdict or by plea of guilty or nolo contendere, must
    be admitted if it involved dishonesty or false statement.
    (b) Limit on Using the Evidence After 10 Years. This
    subdivision (b) applies if more than 10 years have passed since
    the witness’s conviction or release from confinement for it,
    whichever is later. Evidence of the conviction is admissible only if:
    (1) its probative value substantially outweighs its prejudicial
    effect; and
    (2) the proponent gives an adverse party reasonable written
    notice of the intent to use it so that the party has a fair opportunity
    to contest its use.
    Pa.R.E. 609(a), (b). Because Kauffman’s false swearing conviction was from
    1999, more than 10 years before her testimony at Appellant’s trial, Rule
    609(b) applies and its admissibility turned on whether the probative value of
    this conviction outweighed its prejudicial effect.           Pa.R.E. 609(b)(1);
    Commonwealth        v.   Rivera,   
    983 A.2d 1211
    ,   1226-27     (Pa.   2009);
    Commonwealth v. Cascardo, 
    981 A.2d 245
    , 255 (Pa. Super. 2009).
    In making this determination, the trial court was required to consider
    the following factors: 1) the degree to which the prior offense reflects upon
    the veracity of the witness; 2) the likelihood, in view of the nature and extent
    of the prior record, that it would have a greater tendency to smear the
    character of the witness and suggest a propensity to commit the crime at
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    issue, rather than provide a legitimate reason for discrediting her as an
    untruthful person; 3) the age and circumstances of the witness; 4) the
    strength of the prosecution’s case and the need to resort to this evidence as
    compared with the availability of other witnesses; and 5) the existence of
    alternative means of attacking the witness’s credibility. Rivera, 983 A.2d at
    1227; Commonwealth v. Palo, 
    24 A.3d 1050
    , 1056 (Pa. Super. 2011);
    Cascardo, 
    981 A.2d at 255
    .       Although the trial court acknowledged these
    factors, Trial Court Opinion at 12-13, it failed to properly apply them, and
    when properly applied, they require the conclusion that the probative value of
    the 1999 false swearing conviction with respect to the PWID charge far
    outweighed the virtually non-existent prejudicial effect of admitting that
    conviction.
    The first factor, the degree to which the offense bears on credibility,
    strongly supported admission of the false swearing conviction, as the crime of
    false swearing goes to the heart of a witness’s credibility. Commonwealth
    v. Osborn, 
    528 A.2d 623
    , 627 (Pa. Super. 1987) (explaining that “a prior
    conviction of perjury is a manifestly appropriate basis upon which to impeach
    … credibility” in holding that a 16-year-old perjury conviction was admissible
    to impeach defendant’s credibility in rape and terroristic threat trials). The
    trial court, however, discounted this factor solely based on the age of the
    conviction without considering the nature of the offense and how strongly it
    strongly relates to credibility, as it was required to do. Trial Court Opinion at
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    13.   Age of the conviction, moreover, goes to the third factor, not to the
    relationship between the offense and credibility. Osborn, 528 A.2d at 628.
    The trial court did not evaluate the second factor, whether the false
    swearing conviction would have a greater tendency to smear the character of
    the witness and suggest a propensity to commit the crime at issue, rather
    than provide a legitimate reason for discrediting her as an untruthful person.
    This factor, too, clearly and strongly weighed in favor of admitting the false
    swearing conviction.    The crimes at issue here were drug crimes and the
    conviction was for the completely unrelated offense of false swearing. Where
    a crimen falsi conviction involves a crime of a different type than the crime for
    which the defendant is being tried, this factor weighs in favor of admissibility
    of the conviction, as it reduces the possibility of prejudice. Rivera, 983 A.2d
    at 1229; Cascardo, 
    981 A.2d at 256
    ; Osborn, 528 A.2d at 627-28.
    Moreover, the only negative character trait that a false swearing
    conviction suggests is untruthfulness, which is precisely the appropriate and
    non-prejudicial reason for which such prior convictions are admissible. Rather
    than considering the dissimilarity between the charges at issue and the false
    swearing conviction, however, the trial court erroneously characterized the
    possibility that the jury would properly conclude that Kauffman was again
    being untruthful as prejudice that outweighed the probative value of the
    conviction. Trial Court Opinion at 14.
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    With respect to the third factor, age and circumstances, the trial court
    correctly noted that the fact that the conviction was 22 years old weighed
    against its admissibility. Trial Court Opinion at 13. The trial court, however,
    failed to consider Kauffman’s age at the time of the conviction. Where the
    witness was an adult at the time of the conviction, that weighs in favor of
    admissibility. Cascardo, 
    981 A.2d at 256
    ; Osborn, 528 A.2d at 628. The
    record showed that Kauffman was an adult at the time of her 1999 false
    swearing conviction, as she testified that she was 18 years old in 1994, five
    years earlier. N.T. Trial at 173.
    The fourth factor turns on the importance of the witness’s credibility and
    strongly favors admission of the prior crimen falsi conviction where the
    witness’s testimony is central to the case.    Rivera, 983 A.2d at 1228-29;
    Palo, 
    24 A.3d at 1057
    ; Cascardo, 
    981 A.2d at 256
    ; Osborn, 528 A.2d at
    628. The trial court held that Kauffman’s testimony was not central to the
    Commonwealth’s case and that this factor therefore did not weigh in favor of
    admitting her false swearing conviction. Trial Court Opinion at 13-14. With
    respect to the PWID charge against Appellant, that conclusion was contrary to
    both the record and the law. While other evidence that was introduced was
    sufficient to prove the drug paraphernalia, marijuana, and summary offense
    charges and Kauffman’s testimony was irrelevant to those charges,
    Kauffman’s testimony was essential to prove that Appellant possessed the
    crack cocaine on which the PWID charge was based.           Officer McCormick
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    testified that he found the crack cocaine that was in the car on and under the
    passenger seat where Kauffman had been sitting, that Kauffman had crack
    cocaine on her person, and that no cocaine was found on Appellant.            N.T.
    Suppression Hearing at 16, 31, 39-43; N.T. Trial at 90-93, 104, 110-11, 128.
    Mere proof that contraband was found in a vehicle that the defendant was
    driving is not sufficient to show that the defendant had constructive possession
    where the contraband was in a location not near the defendant and near
    another occupant. Commonwealth v. Wisor, 
    353 A.2d 817
    , 818-19 (Pa.
    1976); Commonwealth v. Parrish, 
    191 A.3d 31
    , 33, 37-38 (Pa. Super.
    1918); Commonwealth v. Boatwright, 
    453 A.2d 1058
    , 1058-59 (Pa. Super.
    1982). The credibility of Kauffman’s testimony that the crack cocaine was not
    hers and that she had taken it from Appellant to hide was therefore critical to
    the   Commonwealth’s      PWID     case   against   Appellant.      Indeed,    the
    Commonwealth in its closing argument conceded that its PWID case turned
    on Kauffman’s credibility. N.T. Trial at 241.
    With respect to the final, fifth factor, the trial court correctly noted that
    Appellant had other, more recent crimen falsi convictions that he could and
    did use to impeach Kauffman’s credibility. Trial Court Opinion at 13-14. The
    trial court, however, failed to consider that the false swearing conviction
    involved an offense far more directly relevant to credibility than Kauffman’s
    other convictions, none of which were for perjury or false swearing.           The
    Commonwealth was able to minimize the impact of those other convictions on
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    Kauffman’s credibility because they did not involve lying under oath,
    characterizing the evidence of her crimen falsi convictions as an argument
    that “she’s a liar because she has crimes because she … is a drug user, and
    she commits crimes to support her habit” and describing them as “receiving
    stolen property, thefts, things you do when you are a drug user to support
    your habit.” N.T. Trial at 241-45. Because the impeachment value of a false
    swearing conviction was significantly greater than the effect on credibility of
    the crimen falsi convictions that Appellant was permitted to use, this factor
    did not strongly favor exclusion of the false swearing conviction.
    For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the trial court misapplied
    the law and abused its discretion in excluding witness Kauffman’s 1999 false
    swearing conviction.   Because a proper application of the law compels the
    conclusion that the probative value of that conviction on credibility
    substantially outweighed any possible prejudicial effect, we vacate Appellant’s
    PWID conviction and his judgment of sentence and remand for a new trial on
    that charge. This erroneous exclusion of evidence, however, had no effect on
    any of the other charges and the trial court did not err in denying Appellant’s
    motion to suppress. Accordingly, we affirm Appellant’s possession of drug
    paraphernalia, possession of a small amount of marijuana, driving with a
    suspended license, and driving an unregistered vehicle convictions.
    Judgment of sentence and conviction for possession with intent to
    deliver vacated. Convictions for possession of drug paraphernalia, possession
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    of a small amount of marijuana, driving with a suspended license, and driving
    an unregistered vehicle affirmed. Case remanded. Jurisdiction relinquished.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 08/09/2022
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