Com. v. Duson-Carter, A. ( 2020 )


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  • J-S40013-20
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    AMIR DUSON-CARTER                          :
    :
    Appellant               :   No. 1317 EDA 2019
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered December 17, 2018
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-51-CR-0004846-2017
    BEFORE:      SHOGAN, J., KING, J., and COLINS, J.*
    MEMORANDUM BY SHOGAN, J.:                           FILED DECEMBER 09, 2020
    Appellant, Amir Duson-Carter, appeals from the judgment of sentence
    entered December 17, 2018, following his conviction by a jury of one count
    each of first-degree murder, carrying a firearm on a public street in
    Philadelphia, carrying a firearm without a license, and possession of an
    instrument of crime (“PIC”).1       We affirm.
    The trial court summarized the facts of the case, as follows:
    At trial, the Commonwealth presented the testimony of
    Philadelphia [P]olice [O]fficers Henry Simmons, David Dohan,
    Michael Maresca, Norman DeFields, and Keith Samarco,
    Philadelphia [P]olice [D]etectives Jamal Rodriguez, Thorsten
    Lucke, James Dunlap, and John Harkins, Philadelphia [P]olice
    [F]orensic [S]cientist Andrea Williams, Philadelphia [A]ssistant
    [M]edical [E]xaminer Dr. Lindsay Simon, and Cedric Council.
    ____________________________________________
    *   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    1   18 Pa.C.S. §§ 2502(a), 6108, 6106, and 907, respectively.
    J-S40013-20
    [Appellant] presented the character testimony of Courtnay
    Robinson, Atiyah Rahman-Anderson, and Mark Voce. Viewed in
    the light most favorable to the Commonwealth as the verdict
    winner, the evidence established the following.
    On the evening of March 18, 2017, Cedric Council made
    arrangements to purchase marijuana from [Appellant] and to
    have [Appellant] bring it to Council’s mother’s house, where
    Council was staying. However, because [Appellant] took too long
    to show up at the house, Council eventually made other
    arrangements to acquire marijuana. Council then decided to walk
    to a store at 6400 Stenton Avenue near the corner of Stenton
    Avenue and Johnson Street. As he was walking to the store,
    [Appellant] pulled up next to Council in a white Toyota Corolla
    along with two passengers. [Appellant] asked Council if he still
    wanted to buy marijuana. Council told [Appellant] he did not want
    to buy marijuana and that he was walking to the corner store.
    [Appellant] then offered Council a ride to the store, which Council
    accepted. [Appellant] dropped Council off at the store and waited
    for him in the car. Council made a purchase, left the store, and
    then got back into the driver’s side backseat of [Appellant’s] car
    so that [Appellant] could give him a ride home. [Appellant] then
    pulled away and made a U-turn on Stenton Avenue that placed
    him in a small parking area that ran parallel to Stenton Avenue.
    As [Appellant] was making the U-Turn, the decedent,
    Haneef Brown [(“the victim”)], walked in front of [Appellant’s] car.
    [Appellant] stopped his vehicle and [the victim] said something to
    [Appellant]. In response, [Appellant] rolled down his window and
    both men said “What’s up?” to each other. The two men had a
    brief conversation, during which [the victim] was pacing back and
    forth in front of the driver’s window and seemed agitated. Then
    [Appellant], who was still sitting in the driver’s seat of his car, shot
    [the victim] four times. After shooting [the victim, Appellant]
    drove away and, shortly thereafter, dropped Council off at his
    house. Officers responding to the shooting rushed [the victim] to
    the hospital where he was pronounced dead thereafter.
    Philadelphia police officers and detectives then conducted
    an investigation of the shooting. Officers recovered two 9 mm
    Luger fired cartridge casings (“FCCs”) from the crime scene.
    Officers also recovered surveillance video from several businesses
    in the area. On the same night as the murder, an officer reviewed
    the surveillance video from the corner store on Stenton Avenue
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    and Johnson Street in hopes of identifying a suspect. The officer
    noticed a man in the store stare right into the surveillance camera,
    leave the store, and then enter a white sedan, which pulled away
    and made a U-turn. That man was later identified as Council. On
    March 20, 2017, detectives obtained a search warrant for
    Council’s cell phone records and brought him to the Homicide Unit
    at 750 Race Street for questioning. The next day, Council gave a
    written statement to detectives wherein he admitted that he was
    in the white Toyota when [the victim] was shot, identified the
    driver of the vehicle as “Mir,” and stated that while he had heard
    the sound of a gun firing multiple times, he did not see who shot
    [the victim].
    On April 5, 2017, detectives brought Council back to the
    Homicide Unit for a follow-up interview. Council gave another
    statement to detectives in which he admitted that his previous
    statement was not entirely truthful. Council informed detectives
    that he witnessed “Mir” shoot [the victim] and that “Mir” lived on
    Tulpehocken Street. Using this information, detectives searched
    a police database that contained residents of Tulpehocken Street
    and obtained a photograph of [Appellant]. Council subsequently
    identified [Appellant] from the photograph as “Mir,” the man who
    shot and killed [the victim].
    Based on this information, detectives secured a search
    warrant for 31 East Tulpehocken Street, which [Appellant] had
    listed as his address on his driver’s license. Detectives also
    discovered that the property was owned by Amber Carter, who is
    [Appellant’s] mother.      Upon executing the search warrant,
    detectives searched a bedroom in [Appellant’s] apartment and
    recovered [Appellant’s] driver’s license, a small amount of
    marijuana, a significant amount of drug paraphernalia that is
    commonly used to package illegal drugs for distribution, a spent
    .40 caliber FCC, and a full box of 9 mm Luger bullets. The box of
    9 mm Luger bullets had the same head stamp as the two 9 mm
    Luger FCCs recovered at the crime scene.
    Detectives also discovered a white 2007 Toyota Corolla
    parked outside of the residence that was registered to
    [Appellant’s] mother and towed it to a police garage. Police
    records indicated that [Appellant] was stopped as the driver in
    that vehicle several times in the months preceding the murder.
    Upon inspection, detectives discovered a 9 mm Luger FCC in the
    gap of the vehicle between the rear window and the trunk.
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    On May 10, 2017, officers observed a man named Anthony
    Spellman attempt to shoot three males who were running away
    from him. Spellman, however, was unable to fire the gun and the
    magazine fell out as he attempted to pull the trigger. Officers
    then arrested Spellman and confiscated the firearm. The Firearms
    Identification Unit later determined that the two FCCs recovered
    from the crime scene and the FCC recovered from [Appellant’s]
    vehicle were all fired from that firearm. GPS tracking data from
    Spellman’s cellphone showed that he was moving in tandem with
    [Appellant] on the night of the murder.
    Trial Court Opinion, 8/16/19, at 2–5 (internal citations to the record omitted).
    Appellant was arrested on June 7, 2017, and charged with murder and
    related offenses.     Following a jury trial, Appellant was found guilty of the
    above-described charges.           The trial court sentenced Appellant to life
    imprisonment for first-degree murder and imposed no further penalty on the
    remaining counts of conviction. Trial counsel filed timely, boilerplate post-
    sentence motions.         Appellant obtained new, present counsel, who filed
    supplemental post-sentence motions, which the trial court denied on April 18,
    2019. Appellant filed a notice of appeal.2 Both Appellant and the trial court
    complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.
    Appellant raises the following issues on appeal, which we have reordered
    for ease of disposition:
    ____________________________________________
    2  Appellant filed his notice of appeal to this Court from the denial of post-
    sentence motions on April 18, 2019. Notice of Appeal, 5/3/19. In a criminal
    action, the appeal properly lies from the judgment of sentence made final by
    the denial of post-sentence motions. Commonwealth v. Kuykendall, 
    2 A.3d 559
    , 560 n.1 (Pa. Super. 2010). Therefore, we have amended the caption
    accordingly.
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    A. Did the court below err in denying a post sentence motion
    to set aside the ve[r]dict where the evidence was
    insuffic[i]ent as a matter of law?
    B. Did the court below err in denying a post senten[c]e motion
    where the verdict was against the weight of the evidence?
    C. Did the court below err in denying the motion to suppress
    where the search warrant failed to state with particularity
    the place to be searched?
    D. Did the court below err in denying post sentence motion
    seeking a new trial where the verdict was called into
    question due to prosecutorial misconduct in the prosecutor’s
    closing?
    Appellant’s Brief at 6 (full capitalization omitted).
    When an appellant raises both a sufficiency-of-the-evidence issue and a
    suppression issue, we address the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the
    conviction first, and we do so without a diminished record:
    We are called upon to consider all of the testimony that was
    presented to the jury during the trial, without consideration as to
    the admissibility of that evidence. The question of sufficiency
    is not assessed upon a diminished record. Where improperly
    admitted evidence has been allowed to be considered by the jury,
    its subsequent deletion does not justify a finding of insufficient
    evidence. The remedy in such a case is the grant of a new trial.
    Commonwealth v. Stanford, 
    863 A.2d 428
    , 431–432 (Pa. 2004) (emphasis
    in original).
    In reviewing a sufficiency challenge, “we must decide whether the
    evidence admitted at trial, and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom in
    favor of the Commonwealth, as verdict winner,” are sufficient to support all
    elements of the offense. Commonwealth v. Hitcho, 
    123 A.3d 731
    , 746 (Pa.
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    2015). The jury, as fact-finder, is free to believe some, all, or none of the
    evidence.   Commonwealth v. Gomez, 
    224 A.3d 1095
    , 109 (Pa. Super.
    2019).   Moreover, the Commonwealth may sustain its burden of proof by
    wholly circumstantial evidence.   Commonwealth v. Diggs, 
    949 A.2d 873
    (Pa. 2008); Commonwealth v. Vogelsong, 
    90 A.3d 717
     (Pa. Super. 2014).
    As an appellate court, we may not re-weigh the evidence and substitute our
    judgment for that of the fact-finder. Commonwealth v. Rogal, 
    120 A.3d 994
     (Pa. Super. 2015).
    In making his argument, Appellant concedes that “the evidence that the
    fatal shots were fired from the white Toyota is virtually unassailable.”
    Appellant’s Brief at 24. He also acknowledges that “[o]ne may even conclude
    from the totality of the evidence that [he] was operating that vehicle.” 
    Id.
    Appellant disputes only that he was the person who shot the victim.
    Appellant’s Brief at 25.
    Appellant attempts to assail Mr. Council’s identification of Appellant as
    the shooter, but Appellant wholly fails to direct us to any testimony in the
    record. Appellant’s Brief at 24–25. Appellant refers to various statements by
    Mr. Council without any citation to their admission in the record. Id. at 24.
    “It is not this Court’s responsibility to comb through the record seeking the
    factual underpinnings of an appellant’s claim.” Commonwealth v. Samuel,
    
    102 A.3d 1001
    , 1005 (Pa. Super. 2014). Despite the lack of references to the
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    record, we address the issue and rely upon the trial court’s thorough response
    to the claim, as follows:
    Here, [Appellant] argues that Council’s statement to
    detectives in which he identified [Appellant] as the person who
    shot and killed [the victim] was legally insufficient to sustain the
    verdict because it was unreliable and not corroborated by other
    evidence. Statement of Matters at pp. 2-3. On March 21, 2017,
    Council provided a written statement to detectives in which he
    admitted that he was in the white Toyota when [the victim] was
    shot, identified the driver of the vehicle only as “Mir,” and stated
    that while he heard the sound of a gun firing, he did not see who
    shot [the victim].      See N.T. 12/11/2018 at 151-160, 168;
    Commonwealth Exhibit C-14. Later, on April 5, 2017, Council
    provided another statement to detectives in which he admitted
    that his previous statement was not entirely truthful. See N.T.
    12/11/2018      at   186-87;     N.T.    12/13/2018     at   93-94;
    Commonwealth Exhibit C-19. Council identified [Appellant] as the
    man who was driving the white Toyota Corolla and as the man
    who shot and killed [the victim]. See N.T. 12/11/2018 at 190,
    196-97. Then, on June 1, 2017, Council provided a statement to
    [Appellant’s] investigator, in which he stated that he “heard two
    to three pops,” that he did not know that the “pops” were gunshots
    and that, after he heard the “pops,” he saw [the victim] “walking
    away normally crossing Stenton [Avenue].” N.T. 12/11/2018 at
    214, 223-25; Commonwealth Exhibit C-24.
    At trial, Council recanted his statement to police that
    [Appellant] shot [the victim] and claimed that he did not hear the
    sound of any gun firing and that none of the occupants of the
    vehicle shot [the victim]. N.T. 12/11/2018 at 129-132. Council’s
    three signed statements were admitted at trial during his
    testimony. The statements to police were admissible for their
    truth as prior inconsistent statements that were signed and
    adopted by the declarant. See Pa.R.E.803.1(1)(b). It is well-
    established that where a witness at trial recants a statement he
    made to police, the fact-finder is “free to evaluate both the
    [witness’s] statement to police as well as his testimony at trial
    recanting that statement, and [is] free to believe all, part, or none
    of the evidence.” Commonwealth v. Hanible, 
    836 A.2d 36
    , 40 (Pa.
    2003).       Such recantations are “notoriously unreliable,”
    Commonwealth v. Johnson, 
    966 A.2d 523
    , 541 (Pa. 2009), and
    “the mere fact that the only eyewitness recanted a statement he
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    had previously made to the police certainly does not render the
    evidence insufficient to support the conviction.” Hanible, 836 A.2d
    at 40.    Moreover, a conviction may rest entirely on prior
    inconsistent statements of witnesses who testify at trial, and such
    statements “must...be considered by a reviewing court in the
    same manner as any other type of validly admitted evidence when
    determining if sufficient evidence exists to sustain a criminal
    conviction.” Commonwealth v. Brown, 
    52 A.3d 1139
    , 1171 (Pa.
    2012).
    Accordingly, Council’s out-of-court statements to police, in
    which he gave a detailed rendition of the incident here at issue,
    were legally sufficient to establish [Appellant] as the shooter,
    notwithstanding Council’s recantation.       Moreover, Council’s
    statements to the police identifying [Appellant] as the shooter
    were corroborated by compelling evidence.
    First, the Commonwealth presented surveillance footage
    recovered by police that corroborated much of the narrative
    Council presented in his statements. Surveillance video showed
    an individual exit from the rear driver’s side door of a white sedan
    and enter a store near the corner of Stenton Avenue and Johnson
    Street. See N.T. 12/12/2018 at 190; Commonwealth Exhibit C-
    68 (compilation video). The video then showed the man exit the
    store, and get back into the driver’s side backseat of the car. See
    N.T. 12/12/2018 at 190-91; Commonwealth Exhibit C-68. Next,
    video showed that as the driver of the car pulled away and made
    a U-turn on Stenton Avenue, a man walked in front of the vehicle.
    See N.T. 12/12/2018 at 191-93; Commonwealth Exhibit C-68.
    Video also showed the man and the driver have a brief exchange,
    and then gunfire, whereafter, the man outside the door collapsed.
    See N.T. 12/12/2018 at 193-94; Commonwealth Exhibit C-68.
    Council’s detailed rendition of the events was fully consistent with
    the video evidence.
    Next, Council’s statements provided information to
    detectives about [Appellant] that was both previously unknown to
    police and accurate. In his second statement to detectives,
    Council stated that the shooter, whom he identified only as “Mir,”
    lived on Tulpehocken Street, and Council provided detectives with
    “Mir’s” phone number. See N.T. 12/11/2018 at 190, 194; N.T.
    12/13/2018 at 97-98, 104; Commonwealth Exhibit C-19.
    Detective Harkins testified that based on this information,
    detectives searched a police database that contained residents of
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    Tulpehocken Street, procured a photograph of [Appellant], and
    showed it to Council, who identified [Appellant] as “Mir,” the man
    who shot and killed [the victim]. N.T. 12/13/2018 at 98; see
    Commonwealth Exhibit C-19.         Further, Detective Rodriguez
    testified that [Appellant] listed 31 Tulpehocken Street as his
    address on his driver’s license. N.T. 12/12/2018 at 123-24.
    Finally, Detective Rodriguez testified that, after [Appellant’s]
    arrest, [Appellant] gave him his phone number, which was the
    same phone number Council identified as [Appellant’s] number to
    detectives. N.T. 12/12/2018 at 135-36.
    Moreover, evidence seized from [Appellant’s] apartment
    corroborated Council’s assertion that [Appellant] sold marijuana.
    See N.T. 12/11/2018 at 196; Commonwealth Exhibit C-19.
    Detective John Harkins testified that while executing a search
    warrant on [Appellant’s] apartment, police found a small amount
    of marijuana and a considerable amount of packaging that is
    commonly used to package illegal drugs for distribution. N.T.
    12/13/2018 at 97, 110.
    In addition, there was substantial evidence to substantiate
    Council’s assertion that [Appellant] was driving the vehicle,
    depicted in the surveillance video, from where the gunshots that
    killed [the victim] were fired.         Cell site location analysis
    demonstrated that [Appellant’s] cellphone was located in the area
    of where the shooting occurred at the time the shooting occurred.
    See N.T. 12/13/2018 at 158-59. Detective Jamal Rodriguez
    testified that after conducting the search of [Appellant’s] dwelling,
    he discovered a white Toyota Corolla parked outside that was
    registered to [Appellant’s] mother, Amber Carter.                 N.T.
    12/12/2018 at 129. Detective Rodriguez also testified that police
    records indicated that [Appellant] was stopped as the driver in
    that vehicle five times in the months preceding the murder,
    including twice in the month before the murder occurred. N.T.
    12/12/2018 at 130-34. Further, Andrea Williams, a forensic
    scientist for the Philadelphia police department, whom the [c]ourt
    accepted as an expert in fingerprint identification, testified that an
    analysis of a palm print recovered from the driver’s side front roof
    rail of the vehicle was determined to belong to [Appellant]. N.T.
    12/13/2018 at 62.
    In addition, there was no doubt that the white Toyota
    Corolla was the vehicle from which the gunshots were fired. In
    the surveillance footage, the vehicle from which the shots were
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    fired from was missing its hubcaps. See N.T. 12/12/2018 at 86-
    87; Commonwealth Exhibit C-68. The vehicle detectives found
    outside [Appellant’s] home also had no hubcaps. See N.T.
    12/12/2018 at 58. Further, Officer Michael Maresca testified that
    he recovered a 9 mm FCC in the gap of the vehicle between the
    rear window and the trunk. N.T. 12/12/2018 at 60-61. Officer
    Norman DeFields from the Firearms Identification Unit confirmed
    that the FCC, along with the two FCCs recovered from the crime
    scene and the bullet found in [the victim’s] abdomen, were all
    fired from the same firearm. N.T. 12/13/2018 at 32.
    Moreover, the evidence demonstrated that the driver of the
    vehicle shot and killed the decedent. The surveillance footage
    combined with the ballistic evidence established that the gunshots
    came from a gun being held outside of the driver’s window.
    Surveillance video clearly showed that the gunshots that killed
    [the victim] came from the area around the driver’s window. See
    N.T. 12/12/2018 at 193-94; Commonwealth Exhibit C-68. In the
    video, two flashes of light can be seen outside the vehicle before
    [the victim], who was standing in front of the driver’s window,
    collapsed. 
    Id.
     Detective Thorsten Lucke testified that those two
    flashes were muzzle flashes. N.T. 12/12/2018 at 194-196. Officer
    DeFields explained that muzzle flash is the flash that can be seen
    as a bullet is exiting the barrel of a firearm. N.T. 12/13/2018 at
    38-39. He further explained that muzzle flash occurs right at the
    barrel of a firearm; therefore, if the gun was fired from inside the
    car, then muzzle flash would not have been visible outside of the
    car. N.T. 12/13/2018 at 39-40. Officer DeFields also testified that
    if the gun was fired from inside the car, the FCCs would be
    expected to land inside the vehicle. N.T. 12/13/2018 at 46. Three
    FCCs were recovered outside of the vehicle. See N.T. 12/12/2018
    at 45, 60. Accordingly, it would have been extremely difficult for
    anyone but the driver to have shot [the victim] from anywhere in
    the vehicle other than the driver’s seat.
    The evidence seized from [Appellant’s] apartment also
    substantiated that [Appellant] was the shooter. The full box of
    bullets that officers discovered in [Appellant’s] room when
    executing a search warrant of his dwelling were consistent with
    the two FCCs recovered from the crime scene, the FCC recovered
    from in between the rear window and the trunk of the Toyota
    Corolla, and the bullet found in [the victim’s] abdomen. See N.T.
    12/13/2018 at 27-28, 41.
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    Finally, although cell phone site location analysis indicated
    that Anthony Spellman was located in the same areas as
    [Appellant] before, during, and after the shooting, N.T.
    12/13/2018 at 165-66, and Spellman was arrested with the
    murder weapon, see N.T. 12/13/2018 at 32, 80-82, the evidence,
    described above, demonstrated that the driver of the vehicle was
    the shooter and that [Appellant] was the driver. In addition, the
    evidence showed that Spellman did not know how to operate the
    firearm that was used to kill [the victim]. Officer Keith Samarco
    testified that, before arresting Spellman, he observed him chase
    [three] males and attempt to shoot at them; however, he was
    unable to fire the gun and released the magazine as he attempted
    to pull the trigger. N.T. 12/13/2018 at 80. In addition, while the
    bullets seized from [Appellant’s] room were consistent with the
    FCCs found at the crime scene and [the victim’s] abdomen,
    Spellman was using different ammunition. See N.T. 12/13/2018
    at 34-35.
    Accordingly, the evidence was more than sufficient to enable
    the jury to find [Appellant] guilty of the crimes for which he was
    convicted. No relief is due.
    Trial Court Opinion, 8/16/19, at 10–15 (footnotes omitted).
    Next, Appellant argues his first-degree murder conviction is against the
    weight of the evidence. This claim assails the jury’s underlying verdict and
    credibility determinations, as Appellant maintains that Mr. Council “was not to
    be believed” and “is as unreliable and as untrustworthy as they come.”
    Appellant’s Brief at 26. His argument lacks substantive support.
    We have held that a motion for a new trial on the grounds that the
    verdict is contrary to the weight of the evidence “concedes that there is
    sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict.” Commonwealth v. Rayner, 
    153 A.3d 1049
    , 1054 (Pa. Super. 2016) (quoting Commonwealth v. Widmer,
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    744 A.2d 745
    , 751 (Pa. 2000)).        Our Supreme Court has described the
    standard applied to a weight-of-the-evidence claim as follows:
    The decision to grant or deny a motion for a new trial based
    upon a claim that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence
    is within the sound discretion of the trial court. Thus, “the function
    of an appellate court on appeal is to review the trial court’s
    exercise of discretion based upon a review of the record, rather
    than to consider de novo the underlying question of the weight of
    the evidence.” An appellate court may not overturn the trial
    court’s decision unless the trial court “palpably abused its
    discretion in ruling on the weight claim.” Further, in reviewing a
    challenge to the weight of the evidence, a verdict will be
    overturned only if it is “so contrary to the evidence as to shock
    one’s sense of justice.”
    Commonwealth v. Williams, 
    176 A.3d 298
    , 312 (Pa. Super. 2017) (quoting
    Commonwealth v. Cash, 
    137 A.3d 1262
    , 1270 (Pa. 2016) (internal citations
    omitted)). A trial court’s determination that a verdict was not against the
    weight of the evidence is “[o]ne of the least assailable reasons” for denying a
    new trial. Commonwealth v. Colon–Plaza, 
    136 A.3d 521
    , 529 (Pa. Super.
    2016) (quoting Commonwealth v. Clay, 
    64 A.3d 1049
    , 1055 (Pa. 2013)). A
    verdict is against the weight of the evidence where “certain facts are so clearly
    of greater weight that to ignore them or to give them equal weight with all the
    facts is to deny justice.” Commonwealth v. Lyons, 
    833 A.2d 245
    , 258 (Pa.
    Super. 2003) (quoting Widmer, 744 A.2d at 751–752). “[W]e do not reach
    the underlying question of whether the verdict was, in fact, against the weight
    of the evidence . . . . Instead, this Court determines whether the trial court
    abused its discretion in reaching whatever decision it made on the motion.”
    Williams, 176 A.3d at 312.
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    In rejecting Appellant’s argument, the trial court acknowledged that the
    claim was solely premised on the credibility of Commonwealth witness Cedric
    Council. Trial Court Opinion, 8/16/19, at 16. The trial court stated that while
    it is true that Mr. Council recanted his statement to police that Appellant was
    the person who shot the victim, as noted in the trial court’s explanation supra
    explaining the rational of its findings concerning the sufficiency of the
    evidence,   “the   Commonwealth       presented    compelling   evidence    that
    corroborated Council’s statement and plainly established that [Appellant] was
    guilty of the crimes for which he was convicted.” Id.
    It is well settled that it is within the province of the jury to assess the
    credibility of witnesses, and a trial judge will not grant a new trial merely
    because of a conflict in the testimony or because he may have reached a
    different conclusion if he had been the trier of fact.     Commonwealth v.
    Vandivner, 
    962 A.2d 1170
    , 1178 (Pa. 2009).               Our review is not a
    reassessment of the weight of the evidence; it is for an abuse of discretion.
    Cash, 137 A.3d at 1270; Commonwealth v. Ferguson, 
    107 A.3d 206
    , 213
    (Pa. Super. 2015). For the reasons set forth above, we discern no abuse of
    discretion in the trial court’s denial of a new trial based on the weight of the
    evidence.
    We next address Appellant’s claim that the trial court erred in denying
    Appellant’s motion to suppress based on his allegation that the search warrant
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    failed to state with particularity the place to be searched. Appellant’s Brief at
    20.
    Our standard of review in addressing a challenge to a
    trial court’s denial of a suppression motion is limited
    to determining whether the factual findings are
    supported by the record and whether the legal
    conclusions drawn from those facts are correct.
    We may consider only the evidence of the prosecution
    and so much of the evidence for the defense as
    remains uncontradicted when read in the context of
    the record as a whole. Where the record supports the
    findings of the suppression court, we are bound by
    those facts and may reverse only if the court erred in
    reaching its legal conclusions based upon the facts.
    Commonwealth v. Williams, 
    2008 PA Super 6
    , 
    941 A.2d 14
    ,
    26–27 (Pa. Super. 2008) (en banc) (citations, quotations, and
    quotation marks omitted). Moreover, it is within the lower court’s
    province to pass on the credibility of witnesses and determine the
    weight to be given to their testimony. See Commonwealth v.
    Clemens, 
    2013 PA Super 85
    , 
    66 A.3d 373
    , 378 (Pa. Super. 2013).
    Commonwealth v. McCoy, 
    154 A.3d 813
    , 815–816 (Pa. Super. 2017)
    (quoting Commonwealth v. Roberts, 
    133 A.3d 759
    , 771 (Pa. Super. 2016)).
    “Furthermore, our Supreme Court in In the Interest of L.J., 
    622 Pa. 126
    ,
    
    79 A.3d 1073
    , 1085 (2013), clarified that the scope of review of orders
    granting or denying motions to suppress is limited to the evidence presented
    at the suppression hearing.” McCoy, 
    154 A.3d at 816
    .
    Appellant contends the trial court erred by denying his motion to
    suppress the evidence found in his room because the search warrant “failed
    to state with particularity the place to be searched.” Appellant’s Brief at 20.
    He maintains that “this is not a case where the police acted in bad faith, rather
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    J-S40013-20
    they acted on incomplete information.”       
    Id.
       Appellant contends that the
    warrant was invalid because it referred to the premises to be searched as 31
    East Tulpehocken Street without further specification.     N.T. (Suppression),
    12/10/18, at 11.
    The trial court resolved the issue as follows:
    Here, [Appellant] filed a motion to suppress all evidence
    seized from 31 East Tulpehocken Street, which is owned by
    [Appellant’s] mother, Amber Carter. Police obtained a search
    warrant and conducted a full search of the property pursuant to
    that warrant. While the police’s real estate record check prior to
    obtaining the warrant indicated that the property had been
    converted from a single unit building to a building with a separate
    apartment on each of its 3 floors, N.T. 12/10/2018 at 35-36;
    Defense Exhibit D-7, the warrant described the premises as “31
    E. Tulpehocken Street, Phil., PA 19144, a three story dwelling.”
    Commonwealth Exhibit C-20; see N.T. 12/10/2018 at 14.
    [Appellant] contends that since the property is a building with a
    separate apartment on each of its 3 floors, and because the
    police’s real estate record check prior to obtaining a warrant
    informed the police of the separate dwellings, the warrant failed
    to describe with sufficient particularity [Appellant’s] third floor
    apartment as the only place to be searched.
    For a search warrant to be valid, it “must describe the
    person or place to be searched with particularity.” Commonwealth
    v. Carlisle, 
    534 A.2d 469
    , 471 (Pa. 1987); see Pa.R.Crim.P[].
    205(a)(3). “Normally, separate living units of a multiple tenant
    building must be treated as if they were separate dwelling houses
    and probable cause must be shown to search each one.”
    Commonwealth v. Copertino, 
    224 A.2d 228
    , 230 (Pa. Super.
    1966) (citation omitted); see In re Interest of Wilks, 
    613 A.2d 577
    , 579 (Pa. Super. 1992). However, “a warrant directing the
    search of more than one living unit may be valid if . . . there is
    cause to believe the premises covered by the warrant are being
    used as a single unit.” Copertino, 224 A.2d at 230 (citation
    omitted). In such a situation, courts “essentially ignore the actual
    nature of the building and examine the warrant as if the building
    were occupied by a single tenant.” Commonwealth v. Waltson,
    703A.2d 518, 521 (Pa. Super. 1997) (citation omitted).
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    J-S40013-20
    Here, the evidence presented at the pre-trial suppression
    hearing established that while officers may have known that the
    property was a building with an apartment on each of its 3 floors,
    they had cause to believe that 31 East Tulpehocken Street was
    being used as a single dwelling. Although the record check
    conducted by Detective Rodriguez indicated that the property was
    converted from a single unit building to a building with an
    apartment on each of its 3 floors, Detective Rodriguez testified
    that he did not know this and, at the time he obtained the warrant,
    he believed that the property was being used as a single dwelling.
    N.T. 12/10/2018 at 36. Detective Rodriguez further testified that
    this belief was based on review of numerous records in which
    [Appellant] and his mother, who owned the property, presented
    their address as 31 East Tulpehocken Street and did not include
    an apartment designation.           N.T. 12/10/2018 at 11-14.
    [Appellant’s] numerous arrest records and vehicle and pedestrian
    reports associated with [Appellant] revealed that [Appellant]
    provided authorities the above address without specifying an
    apartment number. N.T. 12/10/2018 at 11. Likewise, Detective
    Rodriguez discovered that when [Appellant] had been pulled over
    in a vehicle that was registered to [Appellant’s] mother, the
    vehicle registration listed the same address without an apartment
    designation. N.T. 12/10/2018 at 12.
    Moreover, when police arrived at the premises to execute
    the search warrant, their observations supported their belief that
    the property was being used as a single unit. The property is a
    row home and from the outside it is not apparent that it is a
    building with an apartment on each of its 3 floors. See Defense
    Exhibits D-SA-5E. While there appears to be four doorbells on the
    front door to the property, the doorbells have no names of
    occupants or apartment designations. N.T. 12/10/2018 at 28;
    Defense Exhibits D-5R-5T. On the first floor, there are two doors
    with deadbolt locks. See N.T. 12/10/2018 at 28-29; Defense
    Exhibits D-5U-5V. One door has stairs that lead to the second and
    third floors. See Defense Exhibits D-5CC-5EE. The second and
    third floors both have doors with deadbolt locks. See N.T.
    12/10/2018 at 29. However, there are no apartment designations
    on the doors.      See Defense Exhibits D-5U-5V, D-5CC-5EE.
    According to Detective Rodriguez, before the search, police had
    no information that indicated multiple families were living in the
    premises. N.T. 12/10/2018 at 36. Likewise, Detective Rodriguez
    testified that when he entered the property to execute the search
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    J-S40013-20
    warrant, it was not apparent whether this was a single-dwelling
    home or a multi-dwelling family home. N.T. 12/10/2018 at 17.
    In addition, Detective Rodriguez testified that only [Appellant] and
    one other individual were in the building when the search warrant
    was executed. N.T. 12/10/2018 at 20.
    From the evidence outlined above, it is clear that the
    Commonwealth established that officers had cause to believe that
    [Appellant’s] residence was being used as a single unit. See
    Commonwealth v. Copertino, 
    224 A.2d 228
    , 230 (Pa. Super.
    1966).
    Trial Court Opinion, 8/16/19, at 6–9.
    We have reviewed the testimony and evidence presented at the
    suppression hearing held on December 10, 2018. Detective Jamal Rodriguez,
    who obtained and executed the warrant, explained that when Appellant
    previously was arrested and stopped in a vehicle, the address he provided was
    “31 East Tulpehocken Street,” without specifying an apartment unit. N.T.,
    12/10/18, at 11–12. Moreover, Detective Rodriguez investigated the property
    at 31 East Tulpehocken Street, and real estate records revealed that
    Appellant’s mother, Amber Carter, was the owner of the house, described as
    a “three-story brickmason building” 
    Id.
     at 13–14. The vehicle that Appellant
    drove on the night of the murder and in which he previously had been stopped
    was registered to Amber Carter, Appellant’s mother, to the same address with
    no apartment number delineated.      
    Id.
     at 12–13, 20.    Rather than having
    notice that the house was being utilized as multiple apartments, police, based
    on their investigation, had notice to the contrary; neither Appellant nor his
    mother indicated an apartment number when providing their addresses to
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    J-S40013-20
    police or for registration purposes.    While Detective Rodriguez reviewed
    records reflecting that at some point, the house had been subdivided, that
    information did not indicate that multiple families lived in the house. 
    Id.
     at
    35–36; Defense Exhibit D-7.
    Appellant’s reliance on In the Interest of Wilks, 
    613 A.2d 577
     (Pa.
    Super. 1992), is misplaced.    Appellant’s Brief at 21.   In Wilks, the police
    clearly were aware in advance that the building to be searched had multiple
    apartments on each floor. Despite that knowledge, the officers improperly
    sought and obtained a warrant to search the entire “second floor” of the
    premises. Wilks, 
    613 A.2d at
    578–579. In contrast, herein, the officers had
    no information that multiple families lived in the row home to be searched; in
    fact, they had information supporting that only one family resided therein.
    As our Supreme Court explained in Commonwealth v. Carlisle, 
    534 A.2d 469
    , 472 (Pa. 1987), the determination of whether an application for a
    search warrant identified the place to be searched with sufficient particularity
    requires a practical, common-sense approach. We conclude that Detective
    Rodriguez’s belief that the property “was used as a single-family dwelling,”
    N.T. (Suppression), 12/10/18, at 36, was reasonable based on the information
    he possessed, when viewed with the required common-sense approach.
    Moreover, contrary to Appellant’s suggestion, without support, that the
    evidence “established that [Appellant] occupied a separately secured
    apartment,” Appellant’s Brief at 21, upon execution of the warrant police found
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    J-S40013-20
    no evidence of multiple families.        There were no names or number
    designations labeling the doorbells or on the doors to the first and second
    floors. N.T. (Suppression), 12/10/18, at 17–18, 29–32. The trial court did
    not err in denying Appellant’s suppression motion.
    In his final issue, Appellant argues that the trial court erred in denying
    his request for a mistrial based on a statement by the prosecutor during his
    closing argument. Appellant’s Brief at 27. Initially, we note that the record
    lacks evidence of a request for a mistrial, but defense counsel did object during
    the prosecutor’s closing argument, and the resulting discussion was held at
    sidebar and not transcribed.     N.T., 12/14/18, at 109.      Appellant’s entire
    argument is as follows:
    In this case, the prosecutor stated facts not in evidence,
    specifically, that the murder weapon, a pink 9 mm Lugar was
    owned by [Appellant’s] mother. While defense counsel promptly
    objected to this remark and the court promptly issued a curative
    instruction the damage was done. The prosecutor apparently
    believed that placing the murder weapon in the hands of
    [Appellant’s] mother provided a crucial evidentiary link that would
    firmly identify [Appellant] as the shooter without having to rely as
    heavily as he did on Council’s testimony. Despite th[e] court’s
    best efforts, the damage was done and, just as a bell cannot be
    unrung, what the jury heard could not easily have been put out of
    mind.
    Appellant’s Brief at 28.
    The Commonwealth asserts that the prosecutor’s inference that the gun
    may have belonged to Appellant’s mother was a fair response to the defense’s
    closing argument, during which counsel argued that “[Mr.] Council was the
    actual shooter, that he had access to guns because he stole his girlfriend’s
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    J-S40013-20
    gun ‘just this year,’ and that in the surveillance video Council can be seen
    adjusting his pants consistently with carrying a gun (N.T. 12/14/18, 50-51).”
    Commonwealth’s Brief at 28 (citing Commonwealth v. Manley, 
    985 A.2d 256
    , 270 (Pa. Super. 2009) (a prosecutor may make fair response to defense
    arguments)).
    “Prosecutorial misconduct does not take place unless the ‘unavoidable
    effect of the comments at issue was to prejudice the jurors by forming in their
    minds a fixed bias and hostility toward [Appellant], thus impeding their ability
    to   weigh   the   evidence    objectively    and   render   a   true   verdict.’”
    Commonwealth v. Holley, 
    945 A.2d 241
    , 250 (Pa. Super. 2008) (quoting
    Commonwealth v. Paddy, 
    800 A.2d 294
    , 316 (Pa. 2002)). “In reviewing a
    claim of improper prosecutorial comment, our standard of review is whether
    the trial court abused its discretion.” Commonwealth v. Noel, 
    53 A.3d 848
    ,
    858 (Pa. Super. 2012). When considering such a contention, “our attention
    is focused on whether [the appellant] was deprived of a fair trial, not a perfect
    one, because not every inappropriate remark by a prosecutor constitutes
    reversible error.” 
    Id.
     at 858 (citing Commonwealth v. Lewis, 
    39 A.3d 341
    ,
    352 (Pa. Super. 2012)). “A prosecutor’s statements to a jury do not occur in
    a vacuum, and we must view them in context.” Noel, 
    53 A.3d at 858
    .
    In rejecting this issue, we rely on the trial court’s explanation, as
    follows:
    During closing arguments, the prosecutor made the following
    statement:
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    J-S40013-20
    [The Commonwealth]: Here’s the point I really want
    to point out. Whose gun is this? Think about this.
    You got a car full of what [defense counsel] calls hard
    career criminals. These guys are about showing off
    and whatever—scary dudes—got criminal records.
    How many do you think are rolling around with this, a
    pink gun. I know it’s the 21st Century. Do you really
    think Cedric Council was rolling around with this thing
    or Mr. Spellman was rolling around with this thing?
    Why pink? Why pink? Think about this. It’s his
    mom’s car, mom’s house, mom is in the military. He
    doesn’t have a license to carry a gun, pink gun in a
    house. Who do you think had a pink gun in there?
    N.T. 12/14/2018 at 108-09. An objection was immediately made,
    and, after a brief side bar, the [c]ourt instructed the jury as
    follows:
    The Court: Folks, there hasn’t been any evidence as
    to the ownership of that gun. Okay. Counsel was
    arguing what he believes to be an inference from the
    evidence. Defense counsel disagrees with that. I’m
    going to direct you to disregard that argument since
    you haven’t heard any evidence as to the ownership
    of the pink gun. You can consider all of the other
    arguments, but I direct you to disregard that one. Go
    ahead.
    N.T. 12/14/2018 at 109.        Later, after the jury began its
    deliberations, defense counsel requested that the [c]ourt instruct
    the jury that a background check revealed that the gun had no
    registered owner, which the [c]ourt denied. See N.T. 12/14/2018
    at 145-47.
    Here, the Commonwealth was asking the jury to draw an
    inference from the evidence based on the color of the gun, which
    was not improper. However, because no evidence had been
    presented regarding ownership of the gun, in an abundance of
    caution the [c]ourt sustained [Appellant’s] objection and issued a
    curative instruction, which a jury is presumed to follow. See
    [Commonwealth v.] Freeman, 827 A.2d [385,] 409 [(Pa. 2003)].
    Accordingly, even if the argument was improper, any prejudice
    that may have arisen from the argument was adequately cured by
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    J-S40013-20
    the trial court’s instruction. See Freeman, 827 A.2d at 409;
    Commonwealth v. Carter, 
    643 A.2d 61
    , 77 (Pa. 1994) (court’s
    prompt curative instruction was sufficient to avoid any unfair
    prejudice to defendant); Commonwealth v. Thornton, 
    791 A.2d 1190
    , 1193 (Pa. Super. 2002) (same).
    Trial Court Opinion, 8/16/19, at 17–18.
    Our Supreme Court has noted that the trial court is in the best position
    to assess the effect of an allegedly prejudicial statement on the jury.
    Commonwealth v. Simpson, 
    754 A.2d 1264
    , 1272 (Pa. 2000). Considering
    the prosecutor’s comments in context, we cannot conclude that the trial court
    abused its discretion. Noel, 
    53 A.3d at 858
    . Thus, this issue lacks merit.
    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 12/9/20
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