¶ 1 Gregory Pennington appeals nunc pro tunc from judgment of sentence arising from the robbery and murder of a University of Pennsylvania graduate student. We affirm.
¶ 2 The trial court succinctly set forth the relevant facts and procedural history:
On August 29, 1994, at approximately 10:00 p.m., in the 1200 block of Peach Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the defendants, Gregory Pennington and Anthony Archer, 1 along with co-defendants Antoine Saunders, Ollie Taylor and Khalis Edmondson, hatched a plot to commit a robbery. At that time, no specific victim was chosen as the object of the robbery. Their plan was to search the streets of West Philadelphia, in the extended are [sic] of the University of Pennsylvania, to find a target of their scheme. The plan was most likely conceived when Anthony Archer, Ollie Taylor and Khalis Edmondson met earlier that evening at their friend, Tyrik’s house, where Mr. Archer procured a sawed off .22 caliber rifle from Tyrik and gave it to Mr. Saunders. Gregory Pennington joined the group at 55th & Chester Avenue as they walked from Tyrik’s house to Peach Street. In the 1200 block of Peach Street, they encountered a fifth member of the band, Antoine Saunders. While at Peach Street, all five defendants agreed to commit a robbery and they left to roam the streets to look for a victim. The defendants encountered their first potentialvictim, a young lady[,] at 49th & Springfield Avenue. They did not rob her because the lighting conditions were too good. At 48th & Osage, the defendant’s encountered Mr. Al-Moez Alimohamed, the ultimate victim, at or near the 4700 block of Pine Street where he was using a public phone. When the victim was finished with the phone, the defendants approached him in front of a Rite Aid Pharmacy, pushed him against a wall, went through his pockets, taking his keys and identification, punched him, kicked him and knocked him to the ground. This was all while Mr. Saunders threatened Mr. Alimohamed at gun point [sic]. The police also observed this incident from a vehicle stopped near the intersection of Pine Street and Hanson Street. The defendants retreated across the street and Mr. Pennington and Mr. Edmondson fled. Mr. Saunders and Mr. Taylor returned to the victim and Mr. Saunders attempted to shoot him but was unable to disengage the safety of his rifle. Mr. Taylor grabbed the gun from Mr. Saunders and shot Mr. Alimohamed one time in the right chest while he lay helpless on the ground after the robbery. The bullet passed through his right lung and through his heart. Mr. Saunders and Mr. Taylor pleaded guilty to first degree murder and testified at the trial of Mr. Archer and Mr. Pennington.
Trial Court Opinion, 6/1/99, at 2-4 (citations omitted).
¶ 3 Before trial, appellant made a motion to transfer to decertify the case to the juvenile court pursuant to the Juvenile Act. The Honorable Carolyn Temin originally granted appellant’s motion, but, after learning more information about appellant’s role in the incident, vacated her previous order and denied decertification. See Judge Temin Opinion, 3/5/96, at 11-12. After a trial, a jury acquitted appellant of murder and convicted him of robbery, conspiracy to commit robbery, and theft. See Trial Court Opinion, 6/1/99, at 1. The trial judge, the Honorable James J. Fitzgerald, III, then denied appellant’s motion to transfer the case to Family Court for sentencing without a hearing. See id. at 6. The court then sentenced him to ten to thirty years imprisonment. See id. at 2. On September 19, 1997, we dismissed appellant’s initial appeal for failure to file a brief. See Supplemental Trial Court Opinion, 7/14/99, at 1. On March 8, 1999, the trial court granted appellant leave to file this appeal nunc pro tunc. See id.
¶ 4 Appellant first argues that the lower court erred in applying the weapons enhancement provision of the sentencing guidelines to appellant’s sentence. Appellant claims that he did not have actual possession of the gun used to kill the victim, nor, he claims, was the gun within his immediate physical control when the crime was committed. Consequently, appellant argues that the court imposed an еxcessive sentence. We disagree.
¶ 5 Because he claims that his sentence is excessive, he does not challenge its legality; rather, he challenges its discretionary aspects. Pennsylvania law mandates that an appellant cannot appeal as of right from the discretionary aspects of a sentence.
See
42 Pa.C.S.A § 9781(b). Rather, appellant must meet two requirements before we will review his challenge on the merits.
See Commonwealth v. Coss,
¶ 6 The trial court enhanced appellant’s sentence because “a firearm was used during the ■ commission of the robbery.” Supplemental Trial Court Opinion, 7/14/99, at 5. In 1994, when appellant committed the crime, the sentencing guidelines provided that the dеadly weapon enhancement shall be applied “[w]hen the court determines that the offender possessed a deadly weapon, as defined in [the Crimes Code] during the commission of the current conviction offense.” 204 Pa.Code § 303.9 (1994). Further, “the term ‘possessed’ means on the defendant’s person or within his immediate physical control,” 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 2154(b) (emphasis added). We agree with appellant that the court erroneously concluded that all that was required for the enhancement to apply was that a weapon was, used in the commission of the crime, but find, as a matter of law, that appellant “possessed” the gun during its commission.
¶ 7 In
Bowen,
the defendant and his accomplices displayed weapons to their victims before robbing them.
See Bowen,
when [the victim] was surrounded by [the defendant] and two accomplices inside the car, two of the accomplices had weapons in their hands. One of the gunmen was in the front seat inches away from [defendant].... Even if we were to assume that [defendant] did not possess a gun at the point [the victim] was cornered, assaulted[,] and robbed inside the car, we would conclude that a gun was within [defendant’s] immediate physical control.... [I]t is hard to imagine weapons more within his immediate physical control than were the weapons of his companions at that moment. [Defendant] had ready access to the physical possession of a gun, under the circumstances described here.
Id.
¶8 The present matter is analogous to
Bowen.
There, as here, appellant and his co-conspirators all had knowledge of the existence of a weapon and had ready access to it during the robbery. Likewise, in
Hatcher,
we applied the weapons enhancement to an assault and reckless endangerment conviction where “[a]ppellant was shoulder-to-shoulder with the other two assailants, who handed the gun back and forth.”
Hatcher,
¶ 9 While appellant claims that
Greene
supports his contention thаt the court erred in applying the weapons enhancement, this reliance is misplaced. There, the defendant waited in a car while his co-conspirator attempted to rob a jewelry store.
See Greene,
¶ 10 Appellant also argues that the court applied an incorrect offense gravity score (OGS) for robbery in calculating his sentence. The court assigned an OGS of 11 (inflicts serious bodily injury) rather than an OGS of 9 (threatens another with or intentionally puts him in fear of immediate serious bodily injury). We recently addressed this exact issue in our
en banc
review of Anthony Archer’s appeal.
2
See Archer,
¶ 11 Appellant next argues that the court failed to take into account his particular circumstances whеn sentencing appellant, relying instead on the seriousness of the crime. “Generally, the imposition of sentence is a matter vested within the sound discretion of the trial court. To constitute an abuse of discretion, the sentence must either exceed statutory limits or be manifestly excessive.”
Commonwealth v. duPont,
¶ 12 Appellant also argues that the denial of his two motions to decertify and transfer the case to juvenile court was error. First, he argues that Judge Temin erred when she denied appellant’s motion for decertification (transferal) pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6322(a). He also claims that Judge Fitzgerald erred when he refused to decertify the case after appellant was acquitted of murder.
¶ 13 In 1994, the Juvenile Act provided,
3
that exclusive jurisdiction vested in the juvenile court when a juvenile had committed a crime.
See
42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6322(a). There was an exception, however, when a minor was charged with murder.
See id.
In such cases, “jurisdiction remains in the criminal division and any transfer from the criminal division to the juvenile division is within the sound discrеtion of the trial court.”
Archer,
¶ 14 The Act provided that “the child shall be required to show the court that the child is amenable to treatment, supervision or rehabilitation as a juvenile” in order to have his case decertified to the juvenile court. 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6322(a);
see also Commonwealth v. Aziz,
the age, mental capacity аnd maturity of the minor; the degree of criminal sophistication of the child; previous records; if any; the nature and extent of the juvenile history; whether the child can be rehabilitated prior to the expiration of the Juvenile Court jurisdiction; probation or institutional report; the nature and circumstances of the acts for which the transfer is sought; and any other relevant factors.
Archer,
¶ 15 We will reverse a decision not to decertify a case only upon “ ‘a misapplication of the law or an exercise of manifestly unreasonable judgment based on partiality, prejudice or ill will.’ ”
Commonwealth v. Johnson,
¶ 16 Appellant contends that the court did not consider all the required factors in making its determination. He relies, as did his co-conspirator Archer, on our Supreme Court’s decision in
Commonwealth v. Greiner,
¶ 17 Judge Temin’s opinion denying appellant’s motion for decertification outlines
¶ 18 The record reflects, contrary to appellant’s assertion, that the court considered all factors, and not only his activities before the robbery. The court fоund that the severity of the crime and appellant’s role in it, as well as appellant’s prior contacts with the justice system, outweighed the factors favoring decertification. Appellant has not provided any proof that the court’s decision was based on any improper factors.
See Commonwealth v. Shaffer,
¶ 19 Appellant also contends that Judge Fitzgerald erred in not transferring the case to juvenile court after appellant was acquitted of murder. At the time of appellant’s crime, the Juvenile Act provided that if a child was acquitted of murder the case could be transferred to the juvenile court for sentencing.
See
42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6322(b). In determining whether to transfer such a case, the court must apply the same fаctors as used in a pre-trial decertification determination.
See Archer,
¶ 20 Appellant disingenuously argues that Judge Fitzgerald incorrectly relied on Judge Temin’s order denying decertification before trial. The record reflects otherwise. In Archer, we noted that Judge Fitzgerald conducted an independent examination of these factors. See id. at 208. Appellant baldly asserts the contrary. See Appellant’s brief, at 17 (“Moreover, the Honorable Trial Court seemed to feel that Judge Temin’s amenability finding was binding upon it.”). In his opinion denying decertification in both appellant’s and Mr. Archer’s cases, Judge Fitzgerald noted
[t]his court made a determination independent from Judge Temin that the defendants were not amenable to treatment within the juvenile justice system. This Court had access to most of the material set forth in Judge Temin’s Opinions including both defendants’ juvenile records; the notes of testimony from the decertification hearing before Judge Temin (Mr. Pennington’s juvenile record and the notes frоm his decertifi-cation were actually made part of the sentencing record in this matter).; all of the statements of both defendants and the codefendants given prior to trial andduring the trial and other relevant factors considered by Judge Temin. This court also had the benefit of the presen-tence and mental evaluations conducted on both defendants for the purposes, of sentencing.
Regarding Mr. Pennington, the court considered all of the factors as set forth by Judge Temin in the aforementioned Opinion. Of particular note was Mr. Pennington’s discharge from the juvenile system on August 22, 1994, seven days before he committed the offense. The presentence report confirms that Mr. Pennington was using a significant amount of marijuana the night before the incident. This was after the defendant had the opportunity to work within the juvenile justiсe system and was recently discharged from its care. Despite the efforts of the juvenile justice system according to all of these reports, this defendant was using drugs and committed this offense after recent discharge. The mental health evaluation prepared for this case evidenced no mental illness and that Mr. Pennington was competent to receive a sentence. ... [Tjhis court concluded from all of these factors that ... Mr. Pennington who was almost 19 years of age at the date of sentencing ... could [not] be rehabilitated within the juvenile justice system prior to the expiration of the juvenile court jurisdiction when [he] reached age 21....
Trial Court Opinion, 6/1/99, at 10 (citation omitted). This opinion and the record both indicate that the court applied the required factors and did not abuse its discretion in denying decertification after appellant’s trial.
¶ 21 Judgment of sentence affirmed.
¶ 22 JOHNSON, J., concurs in the result.
Notes
. A different panel of this Court heard Mr. Archer's appeal. Our
m banc
decision is reported at
. Technically, because the panel found that appellant had not properly preserved his argument on appeal, our discussion of the merits of Archer's claim is dicta. We find the panel’s reasoning persuasive, however, and adopt the analysis in this case.
. Amendments to the Juvenile Act became effective after the date of the appellant’s crimes. See Pub.L. No. 1127, § 8.
