417 A.2d 715 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1980
Lead Opinion
On November 4, 1976, at approximately 12:45 A.M., Officer Raymond Jacquelin of the Buckingham Township police was in his patrol car making his customary inspection of the Buckingham Shopping Center, when he spotted appellant and another individual on a rear stairway leading up to the service entrances of the stores. The two men were lying on the stairs, facing the stairs and the upward-sloping ground below. While Officer Jacquelin was questioning the two men, a call came in over the police radio reporting that an alarm had been tripped at the Buckingham Pharmacy, one of the six to eight stores in the shopping center. Officer Jacquelin arrested the men and conducted a search of the area, discovering a hammer and folded paper bag on the ground beneath the steps, within arm’s length of where the
A day or so later, Detective Daniels was speaking with appellant’s father in appellant’s presence, when appellant remarked that there had been a third subject, Mark Kosminoski of Clementon, New Jersey, who had been “the driver of the car that night”, and that Kosminoski had probably left the scene because he saw the police car coming. (No such car had been noticed by Officer Jacquelin).
Appellant was tried and found guilty by a jury of attempted burglary, possession of instruments of crime (the hammer, sock, and glove), and conspiracy, and was sentenced to a term of one to twelve months imprisonment. The case is before us on direct appeal.
At the trial, in addition to the testimony of Officer Jacquelin and Detective Daniels (upon which testimony the preceding recitation of facts was based), the Commonwealth presented the testimony of Jacqueline Croce, who had been on duty at Holicong Locksmith on the night in question. Ms. Croce testified that at approximately 12:48 A.M. an alarm went off where she was working, alerting her that something or someone had set off a motion detector at the Buckingham Pharmacy. Ms. Croce notified the Buckingham police, which apparently resulted in the call which Officer Jacquelin received while questioning appellant and his companion.
Appellant argues that the evidence was insufficient to convict him of any of the charges. We have examined the record, keeping in mind appellant’s specific arguments, and we find that the record does support the convictions. The jury could have found that the Buckingham Pharmacy was the target of the burglary (rather than one of the other stores), and also that appellant took a “substantial step”
Judgment of sentence affirmed.
Concurrence in Part
concurring and dissenting:
Under existing law, a hammer is not an instrument of crime. Commonwealth v. Rios, 246 Pa.Super. 479, 371 A.2d 937 (1977). Similarly, neither a sock nor a glove, whether leather or rubber, is an instrument of crime. Therefore, I would arrest judgment on the conviction for possessing instruments of crime. The evidence to convict of conspiracy and attempted burglary, however, was adequate, and those convictions I would affirm.