Com. v. Brown-Camp - Criminal Appeal
Summary
The Pennsylvania Superior Court reversed orders granting post-conviction relief to defendants Bryan Brown-Camp and Maurice Smith. The court found that the lower court erred in granting relief on PCRA petitions related to their convictions for third-degree murder and conspiracy to commit robbery.
What changed
The Pennsylvania Superior Court, in a non-precedential decision dated March 2, 2026, reversed orders that had granted post-conviction relief to co-defendants Bryan Brown-Camp and Maurice Smith. The appeal stemmed from orders entered on April 1, 2025, by the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, Criminal Division, under the Post Conviction Relief Act (PCRA). The defendants were previously convicted of third-degree murder and conspiracy to commit robbery for their involvement in a 2013 homicide.
This decision means that the original convictions for Brown-Camp and Smith are reinstated, and the relief previously granted by the lower court is nullified. The Commonwealth, as the appellant, successfully argued against the PCRA relief. This outcome has direct implications for the defendants' legal status and the finality of their convictions. Legal professionals involved in this case or similar PCRA appeals should note the court's reasoning, which will be detailed in the full opinion, for potential application in future cases.
What to do next
- Review the full opinion for detailed reasoning on the reversal of PCRA relief.
- Assess implications for ongoing or similar PCRA appeals in Pennsylvania.
Source document (simplified)
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by Bowes](https://www.courtlistener.com/opinion/10802492/com-v-brown-camp-b/about:blank#o1)
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March 2, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
Com. v. Brown-Camp, B.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania
- Citations: None known
- Docket Number: 977 EDA 2025
- Precedential Status: Non-Precedential
Judges: Bowes
Combined Opinion
by [Mary Janes Bowes](https://www.courtlistener.com/person/8225/mary-janes-bowes/)
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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
Appellant :
:
:
v. :
:
:
BRYAN BROWN-CAMP : No. 977 EDA 2025
Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered April 1, 2025
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at
No(s): CP-51-CR-0003503-2015
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
Appellant :
:
:
v. :
:
:
MAURICE SMITH : No. 976 EDA 2025
Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered April 1, 2025
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at
No(s): CP-51-CR-0003502-2015
BEFORE: BOWES, J., BECK, J., and FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.*
MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED MARCH 2, 2026
The Commonwealth appeals from the orders granting the petitions filed
by co-defendants Bryan Brown-Camp and Maurice Smith, pursuant to the Post
Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”). For the reasons discussed infra, we reverse
the orders granting relief.
- Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-S41010-25 J-S41011-25
This homicide has a long history in this Court. 1 In 2017, Smith and
Brown-Camp were convicted by a jury of third-degree murder and conspiracy
to commit robbery for their involvement in the shooting death of Tevan
Patrick. According to the Commonwealth, on April 22, 2013, the co-
defendants had “lured the victim into their car to ostensibly commit a robbery,
but [ended up] kill[ing] him.” Commonwealth v. Brown-Camp (“Brown-
Camp I”), 209 A.3d 525, 2019 WL 310813, at *1 (Pa.Super. 2019)
(unpublished memorandum).
Since their jury trial, we have had multiple occasions to address the
propriety of their convictions. In doing so, we supplied the following
background and outline of the evidence produced at trial:
On April 25, 2013, the body of [Mr.] Patrick . . . was found inside
an abandoned property in Philadelphia. [Mr. Patrick] had been
shot nine times at close range. After an investigation, the
Commonwealth charged [Smith and Brown-Camp], with murder,
conspiracy to commit murder, robbery, conspiracy to commit
robbery, possession of a firearm prohibited, firearms not to be
carried without a license, carrying a firearm in Philadelphia, and
possession of an instrument of crime. A jury trial occurred from
February 22, 2017 to March 2, 2017.
....
1 Indeed, this author alone has already drafted three non-precedential
decisions in prior appeals from orders disposing of the same PCRA petitions at
issue in the matters sub judice. See Commonwealth v. Brown-Camp, 336
A.3d 973, 2025 WL 817162 (Pa.Super. 2025) (non-precedential decision);
Commonwealth v. Brown-Camp, 287 A.3d 901, 2022 WL 16545564
(Pa.Super. 2022) (non-precedential decision); Commonwealth v. Smith,
287 A.3d 849, 2022 WL 6906967 (Pa.Super. 2022) (non-precedential
decision).
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The circumstantial evidence presented in this case weaves
together a tale of the actions of [Smith] and Brown-Camp
throughout the day on April 22, 2013. The day began with [Mr.
Patrick] sending a text message to Janeicia Jackson, Brown-
Camp’s girlfriend, requesting Brown-Camp’s new cell phone
number. Sometime after Jackson provided the number, Brown-
Camp called [Smith] and asked [Smith] to pick him up. [Smith]
and his girlfriend, Jackie Brown, picked up Brown-Camp in her
four[-]door silver Hyundai. [Smith] and Brown-Camp dropped
Brown off at work, at approximately 3:00 p.m., and borrowed her
car. Reginald Tyler, [Mr. Patrick’s] childhood friend, saw [Mr.
Patrick] get into a silver[,] four[-]door car at the Citgo Station in
Delaware. The phones of Brown-Camp and [Mr. Patrick] were
both utilizing a cell phone tower near the Citgo Station at 7:26
p.m. and were in contact with one another at that time. The
phones were geographically tracked to Southwest Philadelphia,
along with [Smith’s] cell phone. All three phones were utilizing
cell towers that covered that site where [Mr. Patrick’s] body was
recovered. The property where [Mr. Patrick’s] body was
recovered was an abandoned property where [Smith’s] cousin
stayed sometimes. [Mr. Patrick’s] cell phone went off-line at
approximately 10:00 p.m., somewhere over the Schuylkill River,
within a half-hour of being geographically located near Southwest
Philadelphia with the phones of [Smith] and Brown-Camp. When
the phone went offline, it was utilizing cell towers in the same area
as [Smith’s] phone, on the Schuylkill Expressway. Finally, [Smith]
is seen by Jackson arriving in Brown’s four[-]door silver car, a
little after 10:00 p.m., at [Smith’s] home, located at 3830 Parish
Street (which is a short distance from the Schuylkill Expressway).
[Mr. Patrick] is last seen at the Citgo Station in Delaware on April
22, 2013. The last time he is heard from is close to 9:30 p.m.
that evening when he states he is with Brown-Camp.
Commonwealth v. Smith (“Smith I”), 2019 WL 473575, at *1-2 (Pa.Super.
2019) (unpublished memorandum) (cleaned up).
Specifically, he sent two text messages shortly before his phone went
offline, which referred to Brown-Camp by his known nickname of “B-Y.” First,
at 9:22 p.m., Mr. Patrick texted a female friend that “if some fishy shit happen
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I was wit B-Y.” Id. He also texted Reginald Tyler that “if anything fishy
happened to me, B-Y did it.” Commonwealth v. Brown-Camp (“Brown-
Camp II”), 287 A.3d 901, 2022 WL 16545564, at *1 (Pa.Super. 2022) (non-
precedential decision) (cleaned up). Importantly, “[a]round that time, the cell
phones of [Mr. Patrick], [Smith], and Brown-Camp were all traced in the area
of the abandoned house where [Mr. Patrick’s] body was found.” Smith I,
2019 WL 473575, at *2 (cleaned up).
Within the following week, Brown-Camp sought advice from his cousin,
Melissa Palmer, about potential questions that homicide detectives might ask
him because her ex-boyfriend had previously been investigated for and
convicted of murder.2 Brown-Camp explained that he had set up Mr. Patrick
and was being blamed for his death based upon text messages Mr. Patrick
sent. He admitted that he was present during the shooting, but was not the
one who shot Mr. Patrick. See N.T. Jury Trial, 2/24/17 (morning), at 69.3
Meanwhile, Smith told Terry Kearney and William Cummings “that he
2 At the subsequent trial, the Commonwealth frequently refreshed Ms.
Palmer’s recollection during her direct examination with her prior statement
to police.
3 The certified record contains two transcripts for February 24, 2017, both of
which are labeled Volume I. For ease of reference, we named the volume
containing the full testimony of Officer Raymond Andrejczak and Ms. Palmer
and the direct examination of Terry Kearney as the morning volume, and the
volume containing the remainder of Mr. Kearney’s testimony as the afternoon.
See N.T. Jury Trial, 2/24/17 (afternoon), at 5 (indicating that Mr. Kearney’s
cross-examination began at 3:16 p.m.).
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committed the murder during the course of a robbery that he and Brown-
Camp planned.” Smith, 2019 WL 473575, at *2 (cleaned up).
Eugene Baylor, an individual from the neighborhood who knew the co-
defendants, testified at trial that in the spring of 2013, Smith asked him about
serving in the Vietnam War and what it had felt like to kill someone. See N.T.
Trial, 2/27/17, at 31. Later, Smith showed Mr. Baylor a .22 caliber shell and
said “I did that.” Id. at 32-35. Mr. Baylor stopped Smith before he could say
anything else. Although Mr. Baylor admitted to frequent drug use in 2013,
which he used to purchase from the co-defendants, and having used heroin
the morning he testified, he had provided the same statement to police in
June of 2014. He further relayed that Brown-Camp was present for these
conversations.
We summarized the pertinent forensic evidence like so:
The Commonwealth’s evidence established that Mr. Patrick was in
full rigor mortis when he was found on April 25, 2013. Gary
Collins, M.D., conducted Mr. Patrick’s autopsy the following day,
at which time Mr. Patrick remained in full rigor. Dr. Collins
authored an accompanying report, but by the time of trial, no
longer worked at the medical examiner’s office in Philadelphia.
Therefore, the Commonwealth called Albert Chu, M.D., to testify
about the post-mortem findings. Smith’s trial attorney elicited on
cross-examination of Dr. Chu that rigor mortis typically starts
within a few hours of death and usually persists for roughly forty-
eight hours.
Commonwealth v. Brown-Camp (“Brown-Camp III”), 336 A.3d 973,
2025 WL 817162, at *2 (Pa.Super. 2025) (non-precedential decision) (cleaned
up). Thus, the standard window of rigor mortis indicated that Mr. Patrick’s
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death likely occurred sometime after April 22, in contravention of the
Commonwealth’s theory of guilt. Furthermore, during the autopsy, several
bullets and bullet fragments were recovered from Mr. Patrick’s body, four of
which were confirmed as .22 caliber. See N.T. Jury Trial, 2/24/17 (morning),
at 29. Finally, Dr. Chu explained that two of the nine gunshot wounds were
fatal. The first, which penetrated Mr. Patrick’s brain, “in most cases, . . . will
cause immediate unconsciousness, if not death.” N.T. Jury Trial, 2/23/17, at
- The gunshot wound that struck his skull but did not enter the brain, “could
have caused immediate incapacitation and/or death[.]” Id. at 98.
After hearing all this evidence, the jury adjudged Smith and Brown-
Camp guilty of third-degree murder and conspiracy to commit robbery, and
“not guilty of first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit murder, robbery, and
all firearms charges. On August 2, 2017, [Smith] and Brown-Camp were both
sentenced to an aggregate term of [twenty-two and one-half to forty-five]
years of incarceration.” Smith I, 2019 WL 473575, at *1 (footnote omitted).
The co-defendants’ post-trial proceedings did not follow identical paths.
Therefore, we separate out much of the timeline between 2017 and today by
each defendant and procedural stage. We begin with Brown-Camp’s post-trial
proceedings.
I. Brown-Camp Direct Appeal & First PCRA Petition
Brown-Camp’s direct appeal garnered him no relief in this Court or our
Supreme Court. Notably, he challenged, among other things, the admissibility
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of the text message Mr. Patrick sent to Mr. Tyler concerning B-Y being
responsible if anything “fishy” happened to Mr. Patrick. Since Mr. Tyler no
longer had the text message at the time of trial, the court permitted the
Commonwealth to introduce its contents through testimony. On direct appeal,
Brown-Camp argued that the testimony about the text message was
inadmissible hearsay. However, we did not reach the merits of that issue
because Brown-Camp’s counsel had waived it by only objecting at trial based
upon the best evidence rule.
Brown-Camp subsequently timely filed his first PCRA petition. Therein,
he argued, inter alia, that trial counsel was ineffective for not objecting to the
text message as hearsay and for failing to call Dr. Collins as an expert witness
to rebut the Commonwealth’s theory of when Mr. Patrick died. That petition
resulted in the following disposition:
The PCRA court dismissed the claim without a hearing for lack of
merit. It offered no substantive analysis at the time it provided
Brown-Camp notice of its intent to dismiss, nor did it proffer any
explanation in the order of dismissal. In a later opinion to this
Court, the PCRA court described that it had concluded that,
although Brown-Camp established that a witness was willing and
able to testify, and counsel should have been aware of the
witness, he could not establish prejudice due to the overwhelming
evidence that Mr. Patrick was murdered on April 22, 2013. See
PCRA Court Opinion (Brown-Camp), 1/24/22, at 9-12.
Upon review, we determined that the PCRA court erred because
its conclusion was premised upon a credibility determination made
without the benefit of an evidentiary hearing[.]
....
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Consequently, we vacated the PCRA order dismissing that claim
and remanded for an evidentiary hearing on the prejudice prong
of the ineffective assistance of counsel test for the claim
challenging trial counsel’s effectiveness in choosing not to call Dr.
Collins as an expert as to Mr. Patrick’s time of death.
Brown-Camp III, 2025 WL 817162, at *2-3. Similarly, we “vacate[d] the
portion of the PCRA court’s order denying relief for counsel’s failure to object
to the text message on hearsay grounds and remand[ed] for an evidentiary
hearing on the reasonable basis and prejudice prongs.” Brown-Camp II,
2022 WL 16545564, at *9. We now briefly set forth Smith’s post-trial
proceedings.
II. Smith Direct Appeal & First PCRA Petition
Like Brown-Camp, Smith filed a direct appeal to this Court from his
judgment of sentence. One of the issues he raised was whether the
Commonwealth adduced sufficient evidence to sustain his convictions. In
affirming, this Court set forth the body of evidence that had been introduced
against Smith, which we recounted hereinabove. Smith timely filed his first
PCRA petition after our Supreme Court denied his petition for allowance of
appeal. The PCRA court appointed counsel, who submitted amended and
supplemental petitions, challenging the effectiveness of trial counsel’s
representation. Of particular importance to the instant appeal, Smith added
a claim, identical to that of Brown-Camp, that his trial counsel provided
ineffective assistance for failing to call a forensic expert to rebut the
Commonwealth’s theory as to when Mr. Patrick was killed. Ultimately, like
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with Brown-Camp, the PCRA court dismissed Smith’s petition without a
hearing.
Smith appealed that decision to this Court. In his concise statement,
he alleged for the first time “that trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance
for failing to challenge Smith’s conviction based upon a discrepancy between
the date of the crime on the bills of information (April 25) and the
Commonwealth’s theory at trial of when the murder occurred (April 22).”
Brown-Camp III, 2025 WL 817162, at *4. We granted PCRA counsel’s
petition to remand the matter so that new counsel could be appointed to
pursue the bills of information claim in the PCRA court and to re-raise any
original PCRA claims. See Commonwealth v. Smith (“Smith II”), 287 A.3d
849, 2022 WL 6906967 (Pa.Super. 2022) (non-precedential decision).
III. Post-Remand Joint Evidentiary Hearing & Granting of Relief
To recap, this Court vacated both orders denying PCRA relief as to the
co-defendants. We remanded for an evidentiary hearing in Brown-Camp’s
case, and the appointment of counsel in Smith’s. In compliance with our
directive, the PCRA court appointed new counsel to represent Smith. Although
it rejected his claim regarding the bills of information, the court scheduled a
joint evidentiary hearing on the co-defendants’ claims that their respective
trial attorneys were ineffective for failing to call Dr. Collins to refute the
Commonwealth’s trial theory that Mr. Patrick was shot and killed on April 22,
2013.
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By way of further background, Dr. Collins had authored a supplemental
report for Brown-Camp’s PCRA petition, which provided as follows:
[Dr. Collins] concluded that, based on the forensic evidence, it
was highly unlikely that Mr. Patrick was shot and killed on April
22, 2013, and opined instead that his time of death was sometime
between 5:00 p.m. on April 24 and 5:00 a.m. on April 25, 2013.
Additionally, Dr. Collins opined that the two penetrating gunshot
wounds to Mr. Patrick’s head would have been immediately
incapacitating and thus it was not possible that Mr. Patrick would
have been shot on April 22, 2013, and survived his injuries until
April 25, 2013.
Brown-Camp III, 2025 WL 817162, at *2 (cleaned up). He further clarified
that the two gunshot wounds to Mr. Patrick’s head would have caused death
“at most within [five] to [ten] minutes[.]” Amended PCRA Petition (Brown-
Camp), 12/28/20, at Exhibit K (Dr. Collins’s Report, 12/15/20, at 5).
We summarized the evidence adduced at the April 5, 2023 PCRA hearing
thusly:
Of relevance, Brown-Camp and Smith introduced a chart
cataloging the outside temperature in the area surrounding the
abandoned house from April 22 to April 25, 2013, and called as
witnesses the two pertinent medical examiners, Dr. Chu and Dr.
Collins. Smith also presented testimony from his trial counsel,
James Berardinelli, Esquire, regarding, inter alia, his investigation
into calling an expert witness and cross-examining Dr. Chu about
Mr. Patrick’s time of death. The Commonwealth put forward
Brown-Camp’s trial attorney, Ch[r]istopher Phillips, Esquire.
Dr. Chu explained that he was unaware of the Commonwealth’s
theory that Mr. Patrick died on April 22 when he testified at the
jury trial. While he could not opine as to a specific time of death
when asked at the PCRA hearing, he did provide a range. In doing
so, he noted that the duration of the different stages of rigor
mortis can be affected by the temperature where the body is kept.
Dr. Chu acknowledged that he did not know the temperature
inside the abandoned home where Mr. Patrick’s body was found
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or how that affected the duration of rigor mortis in this case.
Nonetheless, he declared, based upon the status of Mr. Patrick’s
rigor mortis and the outdoor temperatures during the relevant
period, that “it is possible he was killed on the 22 nd but it is
probably more likely he was killed closer to the 25 th.” He further
clarified: “In my opinion, and, again, this is all sort of subjective
based on observations of bodies, it is more likely that he was killed
on the 23rd, or the 24th, or even earlier on the 25th, yes but I can't
rule out that he was killed on the 22 nd.
Dr. Collins testified that he conducted the autopsy of Mr. Patrick.
His post-mortem findings included that Mr. Patrick remained in full
rigor at the time of the exam, which, as noted, was conducted on
April 26, 2013, one day after his body was found. Additionally,
Dr. Collins discerned that his body showed no signs of
decomposition, the internal organs were not dusky or discolored,
and there had been no indication of rodent or insect activity. In
consideration of these observations and the details reported from
the crime scene, Dr. Collins determined the time of death to be
“anywhere from most likely the 24 th or the 25th . . . maybe as
early as the 23rd but that's about it. Anything beyond that would
be highly unlikely.” N.T. PCRA Hearing, 4/5/23, at 110; id. at 137
(maintaining even after cross-examination that it was “highly
unlikely” the shooting occurred on April 22). According to Dr.
Collins, a theory of death occurring on April 22 was “outside of
reason.” Id. at 113.
Attorney Berardinelli did not remember his preparation of Smith’s
case or whether he investigated bringing in his own expert witness
on this issue but conceded that he obviously did not present one.
Despite being unaware whether he made a conscious decision to
forego [sic] calling an expert witness on the issue, he admitted
that attacking the Commonwealth’s theory of the time of death
was important for undermining the evidence regarding when Mr.
Patrick last used his cell phone. Upon questioning by Brown-
Camp’s PCRA attorney about reaching out to Dr. Collins, he stated
that he believed that he could, and did, get the answers he wanted
on that issue from Dr. Chu during cross-examination. Attorney
Berardinelli further expounded upon the general pros and cons of
calling his own expert witness. Specifically, he noted that he
generally preferred to challenge the Commonwealth’s theory on
cross-examination, instead of via his own expert witness, because
cross-examination allows for an element of surprise that would be
dispelled if the Commonwealth were instead put on notice of the
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content of a defense expert’s report. He concluded that the
answers he elicited from Dr. Chu “gave [them] what [they]
wanted in terms of when rigor occurred.” Id.
At the conclusion of the hearing, Brown-Camp’s attorney provided
extensive argument on the expert witness issue, while Smith’s
attorney focused primarily upon the alleged prosecutorial
misconduct in failing to amend the bills of information, and
otherwise rested on the amended petitions filed before and after
remand as to the expert witness issue. Id. at 230-244 (argument
for Brown-Camp), 245-48 (argument for Smith).
Brown-Camp III, 2025 WL 817162, at *4–5 (cleaned up).
Following that hearing, the PCRA court “found that the co-defendants
were prejudiced by their attorneys’ failures to call Dr. Collins as an expert
witness at trial” and therefore granted their PCRA respective petitions and
ordered new trials. Id. at *5. In light of this determination, the court declined
to rule on the purported ineffectiveness of Brown-Camp’s counsel for failing
to object on hearsay grounds to the text message Mr. Tyler claimed he
received from Mr. Patrick stating that “B-Y” was responsible if anything
untoward happened to him. See PCRA Court Opinion, 9/15/23, at 9 n.4.
IV. Commonwealth’s First PCRA Appeal
The Commonwealth appealed those rulings to this Court, and we
disposed of the cases in a single writing that remanded the matters, once
again, to the PCRA court. In conducting our analysis, we set forth the relevant
legal principles that guided our review both then and continues to do so now:
In every ineffectiveness claim, a petitioner must “rebut the
presumption that counsel rendered effective assistance and prove,
by a preponderance of the evidence, that (1) the claim has
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arguable merit, (2) counsel’s action or inaction was not based
upon a reasonable trial strategy and (3) petitioner suffered
prejudice because of counsel’s act or omission.” Commonwealth
v. Williams, 141 A.3d 440, 454 (Pa. 2016) (cleaned up). This
three-pronged test was “originally established by the United
States Supreme Court in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S.
668 (1984), and adopted by Pennsylvania appellate courts.”
Commonwealth v. Wantz, 84 A.3d 324, 331 (Pa.Super. 2014)
(cleaned up). Failing to satisfy any prong of the Strickland test
is fatal to the ineffectiveness claim. See Commonwealth v.
Thomas, 323 A.3d 611, 621 (Pa. 2024).
Where the ineffectiveness claim is premised upon counsel’s failure
to call an expert witness, our Supreme Court has explained the
particular modification of these three prongs thusly:
To satisfy the “arguable merit” prong for a claim of
ineffectiveness based upon trial counsel’s failure to
call an expert witness, the petitioner must prove that
an expert witness was willing and available to testify
on the subject of the testimony at trial, counsel knew
or should have known about the witness, and the
defendant was prejudiced by the absence of the
testimony. Prejudice in this respect requires the
petitioner to show how the uncalled witnesses’
testimony would have been beneficial under the
circumstances of the case. Therefore, the petitioner’s
burden is to show that testimony provided by the
uncalled witnesses would have been helpful to the
defense.
When assessing whether counsel had a reasonable
basis for his act or omission, the question is not
whether there were other courses of action that
counsel could have taken, but whether counsel’s
decision had any basis reasonably designed to
effectuate his client’s interest. This cannot be a
hindsight evaluation of counsel’s performance, but
requires an examination of whether counsel made an
informed choice, which at the time the decision was
made reasonably could have been considered to
advance and protect the defendant's interests. Our
evaluation of counsel’s performance is highly
deferential.
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Trial counsel need not introduce expert testimony on
his client’s behalf if he is able effectively to cross-
examine prosecution witnesses and elicit helpful
testimony. Additionally, trial counsel will not be
deemed ineffective for failing to call a medical,
forensic, or scientific expert merely to critically
evaluate expert testimony that was presented by the
prosecution. Thus, the question becomes whether or
not defense counsel effectively cross-examined the
Commonwealth’s expert witness.
Turning to the prejudice determination, the question
is whether there is a reasonable probability that, but
for trial counsel’s errors, the result of the proceeding
would have been different.
Williams, 141 A.3d at 460, 463-465 (cleaned up).
To summarize, there are two prejudice questions a PCRA
petitioner must prove to sustain this type of ineffectiveness claim.
As in every case alleging ineffectiveness, a petitioner must
establish Strickland prejudice, i.e., a “reasonable probability”
that the result of the proceeding would have been different had
counsel called the witness. Id. at 465. Additionally, as part of
the arguable merit prong, a petitioner must show that the
testimony would be helpful.
Brown-Camp III, 2025 WL 817162, at *7–8 (ellipses and brackets omitted).
The Commonwealth argued that the PCRA court utilized the wrong
prejudice test in granting relief to the co-defendants. We reached the same
conclusion, explaining our findings in this way:
The PCRA court did not author an opinion to accompany its oral
order granting relief, and it did not clearly articulate the prejudice
test it was using when discussing its findings on the record.
Thereafter, in its [Pa.R.A.P.] 1925(a) opinions, the PCRA court
framed its prejudice analyses within the context of prejudice as
required for the arguable merit prong when the assertion relates
to counsel’s failure to call a witness. See PCRA Court Opinion
(Smith), 9/19/23, at 8-9; PCRA Court Opinion (Brown-Camp),
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9/15/23, at 8. It also incorrectly declined to address the
reasonable basis prong in Smith’s case because it stated that we
remanded solely for the prejudice prong. See PCRA Court Opinion
(Smith), 9/19/23, at 9. Therefore, we agree that the PCRA court
utilized the wrong standard in assessing Strickland prejudice in
each case and improperly ignored the reasonable basis prong in
its Rule 1925(a) opinion in Smith’s case.
Id. at *9.
Nonetheless, our review of the record revealed that “the court clearly
determined, at the time it granted relief, that Smith had proved that Attorney
Berardinelli’s failure to investigate or call Dr. Collins was not reasonably
designed to effectuate his interest.” Id. at *11 (cleaned up). Therefore, we
ultimately rejected the Commonwealth’s claim that the PCRA court erred in
not considering the reasonable basis prong when granting relief, and affirmed
the court’s determination that Attorney Berardinelli had failed to act
reasonably in not calling Dr. Collins. Id. at *11.
Based on the foregoing, we vacated the PCRA orders that had granted
relief “and remand[ed] for the PCRA court to analyze, under the proper
Strickland standard, whether Brown-Camp and Smith proved prejudice on
their claims regarding ineffective assistance of trial counsel for not calling an
expert witness on the forensic science surrounding Mr. Patrick’s time of
death.” Id. at *11. We clarified that “the question before the PCRA court on
remand [wa]s whether there [wa]s a reasonable probability that, but for [each
attorney’s] failure to call Dr. Collins, the result of [their] trial would have been
different.” Id. at *10 (cleaned up). Finally, we ordered the court to reduce
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its reasoning to writing in a final order either granting or denying relief as to
each co-defendant.
V. PCRA Remand for Prejudice Prong
On remand, the court appointed new counsel to represent Smith and
provided its analysis of the Strickland prejudice prong in final orders
disposing of the PCRA petitions. The court first noted the strong cell phone
evidence linking Brown-Camp, Smith, and Mr. Patrick together on the evening
of April 22, 2013. Specifically, that evidence established that the three men
“traveled together from the State of Delaware to southwest Philadelphia,
where [Mr. Patrick’s] body was recovered on April 25, 2013. [Mr. Patrick’s]
cell phone went off-line the evening of April 22, 2013, while traveling over the
Schuylkill River.” PCRA Court Opinion (Brown-Camp), 4/1/25, at 3.
The court then weighed what it deemed to be the strongest remaining
trial evidence against Brown-Camp with that cell-phone evidence, and
assessed whether the absence of Dr. Collins’s testimony prejudiced Brown-
Camp, along these lines:
In addition to the cell phone evidence, the Commonwealth also
introduced a statement by [Brown-Camp] to [Ms.] Palmer, who
testified that [Brown-Camp] admitted to setting up [Mr. Patrick]
to be robbed, that he picked up [Mr. Patrick] in Delaware, and that
[Mr. Patrick] had been shot, but not by him. However, [Ms.]
Palmer admitted that she was taking Percocet and Xanax, and had
just been released from an inpatient mental health facility and
could not remember dates or details she had told the detectives
in her statement. [Ms.] Palmer was then impeached with her prior
statement, and the court gave the jury the prior inconsistent
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statement charge stating they could use the prior statement
substantively.
The Commonwealth also introduced testimony from [Mr.] Baylor.
Mr. Baylor testified that in April 2013, he was smoking crack
cocaine and using heroin. Mr. Baylor also testified that he suffers
from [post-traumatic stress disorder], bipolar disorder, and manic
depression, for which he takes a number of medications. Mr.
[Baylor] was also convicted of burglary in 2006[,] and violated his
term of probation numerous times. Substantively, Mr. Baylor’s
testimony was largely irrelevant, as he testified that he stopped
[Smith] from making what Mr. Baylor expected would be an
incriminating statement.
Due to the impeachment evidence against the witnesses, the
Commonwealth’s evidence at trial was primarily based on the cell
phone records placing [the] co-defendant[s] with [Mr. Patrick] on
April 22, 2013. However, there was testimony that [Mr. Patrick’s]
body was in full rigor mortis when he was found on April 25, 2013.
The evidence presented at the April 5, 2023 evidentiary hearing
established that Dr. Collins was willing and able to testify at trial
that, in his medical opinion, the date of death was April 24th or
April 25th, which was even further removed from the evidence
placing [Brown-Camp] with [Mr. Patrick] at the time of his death.
This would have significantly strengthened the defense’s
argument that the Commonwealth’s evidence failed to prove
beyond a reasonable doubt that [Brown-Camp] was involved in
[Mr. Patrick’s] death. Given that the only other evidence
presented at trial outside of the cell phone testimony was through
witnesses with significant credibility issues, [the PCRA court
found] that [Brown-Camp] proved by a preponderance of the
evidence that there is a reasonable probability that, but for trial
counsel’s errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
different. If the jury believed the testimony from the forensic
pathologist that the time of death was two to three days after the
cell phone evidence placed [Brown-Camp] and his co-defendant
with [Mr. Patrick], the additional testimony from the forensic
pathologist likely would have changed the jury’s mind and resulted
in [Brown-Camp’s] acquittal.
Id. at 3-5 (cleaned up).
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In reaching its conclusion that Smith had proved prejudice, the court
conducted a practically identical analysis, noting the testimony provided by
both Mr. Kearney and Mr. Baylor were subject to bias and impeachment, and
therefore the strongest evidence, as with Brown-Camp, was that regarding
the proximity of the parties based upon their cell phones’ locations on April
22, 2013. See PCRA Court Opinion (Smith), 4/1/25, at 3-4.
Based on the foregoing, the PCRA court granted the PCRA petitions of
both Smith and Brown-Camp, and ordered new trials.
VI. The Present Appeals
The Commonwealth timely filed the instant appeals from the new orders
granting PCRA relief.4 In this Court, the Commonwealth presents a single,
4 The PCRA court did not order the Commonwealth to submit a concise
statement pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) in either case, and none was filed.
However, the PCRA court did supply a Rule 1925(a) opinion in support of
affirmance as to each co-defendant.
The parties submitted several filings in this Court, with the Commonwealth
seeking to consolidate the two appeals, and Brown-Camp (1) opposing
consolidation and asking that his case instead be heard by a different panel
than Smith’s, and (2) requesting that portions of the Commonwealth’s brief in
the Smith appeal be stricken. We denied the Commonwealth’s motion to
consolidate and denied without prejudice Brown-Camp’s request for his case
to be assigned to another panel. Upon consideration by this panel, we have
chosen to consolidate these cases sua sponte into a single writing for ease of
disposition in light of the interrelated nature of these cases.
We deferred disposition of Brown-Camp’s motion to strike to the panel. As
has been borne out by the above procedural history, we are intimately familiar
with the facts underpinning these cases. Notwithstanding whether Brown-
(Footnote Continued Next Page)
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identical issue in each case: “Did the [PCRA] court err by granting post-
conviction relief on grounds of ineffective assistance of trial counsel for not
retaining a forensic pathologist, where defendant was not prejudiced by the
omission?” Commonwealth’s brief (Smith) at 4; Commonwealth’s brief
(Brown-Camp) at 4.
VII. Standard of Review & Relevant Legal Principles
We briefly reiterate the pertinent legal precepts guiding our analysis for
both appeals:
When reviewing an order granting PCRA relief, we must determine
whether the decision of the PCRA court is supported by the
evidence of record and is free of legal error. Moreover, we will
not disturb the findings of the PCRA court unless those findings
have no support in the certified record.
Commonwealth v. Rivera, 154 A.3d 370, 377 (Pa.Super. 2017) (en banc)
(cleaned up). “[O]ur scope of review is limited to the findings of the PCRA
court and the evidence of record, viewed in the light most favorable to the
Camp has standing to ask this Court to strike portions of an appellant’s brief
in another matter, we note that just as a trial court in a bench trial, we are
limited by the facts of record and are more than capable of ignoring any
portion of a brief that is not grounded in fact or which improperly implicates
Brown-Camp. See Commonwealth v. Williams, 715 A.2d 1101, 1103 (Pa.
1998) (“The fundamental tool for appellate review is the official record of what
happened at trial, and appellate courts are limited to considering only those
facts that have been duly certified in the record on appeal.” (cleaned up));
Commonwealth v. McFadden, 156 A.3d 299, 309 (Pa.Super. 2017) (“[A]
trial court acting as the fact-finder is presumed to know the law, ignore
prejudicial statements, and disregard inadmissible evidence.” (cleaned up)).
Thus, we deny Brown-Camp’s motion to strike portions of the
Commonwealth’s brief in Smith’s appeal.
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prevailing party at the trial level[,]” which was the Commonwealth.
Commonwealth v. Burkett, 5 A.3d 1260, 1267 (Pa.Super. 2010) (cleaned
up). Further:
Success on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel requires
the petitioner to rebut the presumption that counsel rendered
effective assistance and prove, by a preponderance of the
evidence, that (1) the claim has arguable merit, (2) counsel’s
action or inaction was not based upon a reasonable trial strategy
and (3) petitioner suffered prejudice because of counsel’s act or
omission.
Commonwealth v. Williams, 141 A.3d 440, 454 (Pa. 2016) (cleaned up).
Since the only prong of the co-defendants’ ineffectiveness claims that is
before us in these appeals is the prejudice prong, the salient “question is
whether there is a reasonable probability that, but for [each] trial counsel’s
errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Id. at 465
(cleaned up). Our High Court has clarified that “[t]his does not mean a
different outcome would have been more likely than not; a reasonable
probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome
of the proceeding. Still, a speculative or attenuated possibility of a different
outcome is insufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.”
Commonwealth v. Jones, 210 A.3d 1014, 1019 (Pa. 2019) (cleaned up).
Finally, the Strickland Court offered the following additional instruction
regarding the scope of a PCRA court’s review when assessing whether a
petitioner has proved prejudice:
In making this determination, a court hearing an ineffectiveness
claim must consider the totality of the evidence before the judge
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or jury. Some of the factual findings will have been unaffected by
the errors, and factual findings that were affected will have been
affected in different ways. Some errors will have had a pervasive
effect on the inferences to be drawn from the evidence, altering
the entire evidentiary picture, and some will have had an isolated,
trivial effect. Moreover, a verdict or conclusion only weakly
supported by the record is more likely to have been affected by
errors than one with overwhelming record support. Taking the
unaffected findings as a given, and taking due account of the
effect of the errors on the remaining findings, a court making the
prejudice inquiry must ask if the defendant has met the burden of
showing that the decision reached would reasonably likely have
been different absent the errors.
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 695–96.
VIII. Strickland Prejudice in Smith’s Case
We begin with the Commonwealth’s appeal in Smith’s case. At large,
the Commonwealth contests the PCRA court’s consideration of the evidence
produced at trial in finding prejudice as to Smith. To wit, it alleges that the
court failed to reckon with the statement of Mr. Cummings, to whom Smith
had confessed to murdering Mr. Patrick, and who otherwise provided
corroborating evidence to the other witnesses’ accounts of what happened on
April 22, 2013. See Commonwealth’s brief (Smith) at 35-36. The
Commonwealth also contends that the PCRA court mischaracterized and
inadequately weighed Mr. Kearney’s testimony, and ignored the possibility
that his pending federal matters could have been interpreted by the jury as
increasing the likelihood of him telling the truth, instead of serving to impeach
his credibility. Id. at 37-39. Further, it maintains that Mr. Baylor’s testimony
was more relevant than the court acknowledged. Id. at 39. Specifically, the
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Commonwealth insists that the court failed to view Smith’s statement to Mr.
Baylor about the .22 caliber bullet in its proper context, explaining in this
fashion:
First, [Mr.] Patrick was shot nine times with a .22 caliber gun.
Second, this conversation occurred in the context of defendant
asking Baylor what it was like to kill a person. The combination
of showing Baylor a .22 caliber bullet and telling him “I did that,”
in the context of a conversation about killing, is strong
circumstantial evidence that defendant Smith did, indeed, do that.
Id. (cleaned up, emphasis in original).
As further background relating to the Commonwealth’s claims, Mr.
Kearney testified that Smith was concerned about the text message Mr.
Patrick sent to Mr. Tyler about “B-Y,” and how it could implicate him. See
N.T. Jury Trial, 2/24/17 (morning), at 141, 148-49. Additionally, Smith
admitted to Mr. Kearney that he had set up Mr. Patrick for a robbery and then
shot Mr. Patrick in the head a few times when he tried to run away. Id. at
143-44. According to Mr. Kearney’s testimony, Brown-Camp never provided
any such confession to him, but would laugh whenever Smith talked about
shooting Mr. Patrick. See N.T. Jury Trial, 2/24/17 (morning), at 150-51. Mr.
Kearney was adamant that although his police statement indicated that “they”
had both told him about the murder, his use of “they” when speaking to police
referred only to Smith. Id. at 152; N.T. Jury Trial, 2/24/17 (afternoon), at
21.
Our review of the certified record bears out that the evidence against
Smith established not only that he was with Brown-Camp and Mr. Patrick on
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April 22, but also that Smith boasted time and again that he shot Mr. Patrick
to death. He told Mr. Cummings that he killed Mr. Patrick. Smith also
confessed to Mr. Kearney that he shot Mr. Patrick in the head when he tried
to run away during the robbery and would joke about it in his presence.
Moreover, he showed Mr. Baylor a .22 caliber bullet, which was the caliber of
bullet recovered from Mr. Patrick’s body, and told him “I did that,” after a
conversation about what it felt like to kill someone. Finally, Mr. Patrick’s body
was recovered from an abandoned home that Smith’s cousin also utilized.
Hence, the addition of Dr. Collins’s testimony about a later date of death
would not conflict with Smith repeatedly declaring that he shot Mr. Patrick nor
meaningfully diminish the quantum of evidence connecting him to the murder.
The jurors could conclude that Smith killed Mr. Patrick on a later date,
consistent with the standard range for rigor mortis and Smith’s confessions,
or they could deduce that Smith shot Mr. Patrick on April 22 around the time
that Mr. Patrick’s phone went offline, and the environmental conditions were
such that rigor mortis did not follow its usual schedule.
Phrased differently, in light of the incredibly damning evidence against
Smith, the unlikelihood of Mr. Patrick’s death occurring on April 22 based upon
it being inconsistent with the normal rigor mortis timetable would “have had
an isolated, trivial effect.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 696; Id. (“[A] verdict or
conclusion only weakly supported by the record is more likely to have been
affected by errors than one with overwhelming record support.”).
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Thus, we agree with the Commonwealth that the PCRA court erred in
determining that Smith suffered prejudice based upon the failure to call Dr.
Collins. Since we conclude that Smith failed to prove prejudice on his
ineffectiveness claim, we reverse the PCRA court’s order granting his petition.
IX. Strickland Prejudice in Brown-Camp’s Case
We now turn to the Commonwealth’s appeal in Brown-Camp’s case. It
again argues that the PCRA court erred by not including certain pieces of trial
evidence within its prejudice analysis. Specifically, it assails the court’s failure
to address the text message Mr. Patrick sent to Mr. Tyler on April 22, as well
as Mr. Kearney’s related testimony. See Commonwealth’s brief (Brown-
Camp) at 45-46. Since the text message had not been deemed inadmissible
by any formal ruling, the Commonwealth insists that it was “part of the totality
of the evidence that must be considered when conducting the prejudice
analysis.” Commonwealth’s reply brief (Brown-Camp) at 12 n.5. Similarly, it
alleges that the PCRA court “erroneously concluded that [Ms.] Palmer’s trial
testimony was unreliable[.]” Commonwealth’s brief (Brown-Camp) at 43.
The Commonwealth also laments the PCRA court’s simplification of Dr.
Collins’s testimony in which he had conceded that, while it was highly unlikely
that Mr. Patrick died on April 22, it was not impossible. Id. at 50.
Furthermore, it contends that the PCRA court did not credit Dr. Chu’s
testimony, which had explained that notwithstanding the difficulties of precise
dating, Mr. Patrick could have died on April 22. Id. at 50-51. It maintains
- 24 - J-S41010-25 J-S41011-25
that Brown-Camp had put forth a challenge to the date of death at trial based
upon the length of time that Dr. Chu testified rigor usually lasts, and therefore
the argument “had already been fully presented to the jury.” Id. at 51. In
sum, the Commonwealth concludes that the court erred because “both experts
could not rule out the Commonwealth’s theory of the case, that [Mr. Patrick]
died on April 22, 2013.” Id. at 53 (emphasis in original).
At the outset, we observe that the Commonwealth’s argument rests
upon a misapplication of the prejudice standard. Brown-Camp did not need
to disprove the Commonwealth’s theory of the case to prove a reasonable
likelihood that the outcome would have been different. Instead, he must have
demonstrated that had counsel not erred, there would have been reasonable
doubt in some of the jurors’ minds as to whether he was guilty of third-degree
murder.
Nonetheless, we agree with the Commonwealth that we do not adjudge
prejudice on a diminished record because, as with a challenge to the
sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a conviction, our review requires us to
consider the PCRA court’s factual findings and “the evidence of record, viewed
in the light most favorable to the prevailing party at the trial level.” Burkett,
5 A.3d at 1267 (cleaned up). Moreover, when the PCRA court considers
whether a petitioner has proved prejudice for an ineffectiveness claim, it must
do so upon the totality of the evidence presented to the jury, “[t]aking the
unaffected findings as a given, and taking due account of the effect of the
errors on the remaining findings[.]” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 696.
- 25 - J-S41010-25 J-S41011-25
While the court must conduct such an analysis and therefore should
have included such evidence as the text message in its consideration, the
PCRA court need not detail in its writing every piece of evidence proffered
during a murder trial. Indeed, the PCRA court explained that it was not
providing a full accounting of the evidence presented at trial because the
evidence has been discussed ad nauseum by this Court, the trial court, and
the PCRA court over the last six years. See PCRA Court Opinion (Brown-
Camp), 5/1/25, at 3 n.1. Instead, it focused upon what it deemed the
Commonwealth’s strongest evidence.
However, our review reveals that the court’s finding of Strickland
prejudice cannot be supported by the trial record. As recounted at length
hereinabove, the evidence presented to the jury painted a clear picture of:
(1) Brown-Camp setting up Mr. Patrick to be robbed by Brown-Camp and
Smith; (2) the three being together on the evening of April 22; and (3), when
Mr. Patrick tried to foil the planned robbery and run away, Smith shot him to
death. Brown-Camp admitted to setting up Mr. Patrick for the robbery and
being present for the shooting. He merely claimed that he was not the one
who pulled the trigger. Finally, Mr. Patrick alerted two different individuals
that if anything happened to him, Brown-Camp was responsible.
As with Smith, the introduction of Dr. Collins’s testimony about the usual
parameters of rigor mortis could only “have had an isolated, trivial effect”
upon the exhaustively inculpatory evidence adduced during the four-day
murder trial against Brown-Camp. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 696; Id. (“[A]
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verdict or conclusion only weakly supported by the record is more likely to
have been affected by errors than one with overwhelming record support.”).
Accordingly, we also reverse the PCRA court’s order granting Brown-Camp
relief because he failed to prove prejudice.
In doing so, we note that the PCRA court, despite holding a hearing as
previously directed by this Court, has not yet ruled on Brown-Camp’s PCRA
claim that trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance in failing to raise a
hearsay objection to the text message Mr. Patrick sent to Mr. Tyler implicating
Brown-Camp. Thus, we remand solely for the PCRA court to enter a final order
as to whether Brown-Camp is entitled to PCRA relief based upon that
ineffectiveness claim.
X. Conclusion
Based on the foregoing, we reverse the PCRA court’s orders granting
relief to Smith and Brown-Camp, remand with instructions to the PCRA court
in Brown-Camp’s case, and reinstate Smith’s judgment of sentence.
PCRA order granting relief to Brown-Camp reversed. Case remanded
with instructions.
PCRA order granting relief to Smith reversed.
Jurisdiction as to both cases relinquished.
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Date: 3/2/2026
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