Commonwealth v. H.G.

Mr. Walker subpoenaed the custodian of records from AT&T to show his client possessed a phone, not a gun and that he was on a call when the police chased him.

Commonwealth v. S.D.

Man accused of possession of 106 packets of crack cocaine with the intent to deliver. Motion to Suppress GRANTED.

Commonwealth v. T.R.

Man accused of possessing a gun and making a statement admitting to possessing the gun. Motion to Suppress both the statement and the gun GRANTED prior to trial.

Commonwealth v. D.B.

Man accused of possessing 8 pounds of marijuana and a gun inside his home. Mr. Walker convinced the judge that the police unlawfully searched the house without a warrant.

Commonwealth v. L.C.

Man accused of selling narcotics from a car. Mr. Walker convinced the jury that the police had lied about what they saw. Years later those same officers were indicted on federal corruption charges.

Commonwealth v. L.R.

Man charged with illegally possessing a weapon and selling narcotics. Mr. Walker subpoenaed the police officers’ employment records and discovered the police had lied about which officers were present at the time of the arrest, and who performed the search of the client’s vehicle. Mr. Walker provided the District Attorney’s office with the information.

Commonwealth v. R.W.

Man accused of possession of two guns. Mr. Walker convinced the judge that the police had fabricated the reason for the car stop. Motion to Suppress GRANTED on credibility grounds.