[J-14-2022]
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
MIDDLE DISTRICT
BAER, C.J., TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, BROBSON, JJ.
A.L., : No. 57 MAP 2021
:
Appellee : Appeal from the Order of the
: Commonwealth Court dated March
: 8, 2021 at No. 674 CD 2020
v. : Reversing the Order of the
: Pennsylvania State Police at No.
: PSP-2019-SLAP-000814 dated June
PENNSYLVANIA STATE POLICE, : 30, 2020.
:
Appellant : ARGUED: March 10, 2022
OPINION
JUSTICE MUNDY DECIDED: May 17, 2022
We allowed appeal in this matter to determine whether sexual assault as defined
under the Uniform Code of Military Justice is comparable to sexual assault as defined
under the Pennsylvania Crimes Code so as to make Appellee a lifetime Megan’s Law
registrant.
In 2013, while in the Navy, Appellee had intercourse with the adult victim when her
ability to consent was impaired by alcohol. He was charged with sexual assault under
the Uniform Code of Military Justice, which defines the offense, in relevant part, as:
(3) commit[ting] a sexual act upon another person when the other person is
incapable of consenting . . . due to (A) impairment by any drug, intoxicant,
or other similar substance, and that condition is known or reasonably should
be known by the person[.]
10 U.S.C. § 920(b)(3)(A) (emphasis added).
Appellee was tried by general court-martial, with a panel of service members acting
as fact-finders. The panel returned a verdict of guilty which was recorded on a military
form (essentially a verdict slip) stating the victim’s condition “was known or reasonably
should have been known by” Appellee. N.T., Dec. 5, 2019, at Exh. PSP-1, reprinted at
RR. 108a. Appellee was sentenced to sixty days’ confinement, a reduction in rank, and
a dishonorable discharge. He appealed to the United States Navy-Marine Corps Court
of Criminal Appeals, which affirmed the conviction and sentence. See United States v.
[A.L.], 2015 WL 5610560, at *1 (N-M. Ct. Crim. App. Sept. 24, 2015). After his discharge
from the Navy, Appellee moved to Pennsylvania. He registered with the Pennsylvania
State Police (“PSP”) as a sex offender subject to registration under Megan's Law IV, also
referred to as the Sexual Offender Registration and Notification Act (“SORNA”). See 42
Pa.C.S. § 9799.13(1) (relating to who must register).
By way of brief statutory background, as to crimes committed on or after December
20, 2012, SORNA sets forth a three-tier classification system appearing in Subchapter H
of the Sentencing Code to specify the length of a sex offender’s registration. Individuals
convicted of a Tier I offense are obligated to register for 15 years, those convicted of a
Tier II offense must register for 25 years, and persons convicted of a Tier III offense are
subject to lifetime registration. See id. § 9799.15(a); see also Commonwealth v.
Lacombe, 234 A.3d 602, 611 (Pa. 2020) (describing this legislative scheme);
Commonwealth v. Torsilieri, 232 A.3d 567, 580-81 (Pa. 2020) (discussing Subchapters H
and I of the Sentencing Code). Each tier lists predicate offenses defined under
Pennsylvania’s Crimes Code, and each tier states that “comparable” military offenses are
also included in that tier.1
1 In full, those provisions indicate the respective tier includes “[a] comparable military
offense or similar offense under the laws of another jurisdiction or country or under a
former law of this Commonwealth.” 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9799.14(b)(21), (c)(17), (d)(13).
[J-14-2022] - 2
In light of the above, PSP undertook to determine Appellee’s registration tier. To
do this, it sought to ascertain the enumerated Pennsylvania crime to which the military
offense was comparable. PSP eventually concluded the military offense was comparable
to sexual assault under the Crimes Code, which is committed when a
person engages in sexual intercourse . . . with a complainant without the
complainant’s consent.
18 Pa.C.S. § 3124.1.2 As the above is a Tier III offense, PSP notified Appellee he was a
lifetime registrant under SORNA. Appellee appealed, arguing PSP’s action was
adjudicative and not merely ministerial. As such, he contended PSP violated his
procedural rights by not holding a hearing. The Commonwealth Court agreed, and it
directed PSP to afford Appellee adequate process. See [A.L.] v. PSP, No. 587 M.D. 2016,
2019 WL 3102125, at *6 (Pa. Cmwlth. July 16, 2019).
On remand, PSP convened an administrative hearing at which the commander of
PSP’s Megan’s Law Section testified to his belief that A.L.’s conviction under 10 U.S.C.
§ 920(b)(3)(A) was comparable to sexual assault as defined by 18 Pa.C.S. § 3124.1.
In his proposed report, the hearing officer agreed and he opined that, although
Section 3124.1’s mens rea requirement does not encompass negligent conduct, the two
offenses are nonetheless equivalent. In this respect, the hearing officer concluded
Appellee did, in fact, know of his victim’s impaired condition. To support this conclusion,
the hearing officer pointed to a passage in the opinion issued by the military appellate
court in which that tribunal remarked the record contained compelling evidence Appellee
2 This definition does not include the “reasonably should be known” – i.e., negligence –
language appearing in the military offense, thereby reflecting a different minimum mens
rea. In particular, because no scienter is specified as to the victim’s non-consent, it
defaults to at least recklessness under 18 Pa.C.S. § 302(c) (“When the culpability
sufficient to establish a material element of an offense is not prescribed by law, such
element is established if a person acts intentionally, knowingly or recklessly with respect
thereto.”). That difference lies at the heart of this dispute and is discussed below.
[J-14-2022] - 3
“was aware of [the victim’s] intoxicated state and intentionally acted to take advantage of
her incapacitated condition.” [A.L.], 2015 WL 5610560, at *3.
The hearing officer additionally observed the enumerated Tier III offenses involving
intercourse generally arise where the victim is unconscious, is otherwise unaware of what
is occurring, is mentally disabled, has refused consent, or is physically incapable of
communicating an unwillingness to participate. By contrast, he continued, Tier I and Tier
II offenses involving intercourse tend to be predicated on the status of the victim, such as
where the victim is underaged, a child receiving services at a center for children, a student
at the school where the defendant works, or an individual being confined in (or supervised
by) an institution where the defendant works. Thus, the hearing officer concluded that,
because the Tier I and Tier II offenses do not involve the victim’s refusal to consent or
inability to consent, they are not comparable to the military offense in question.
The hearing officer attached a proposed order affirming PSP’s initial determination
that Appellee was convicted of a Tier III offense.
Appellee filed exceptions, asserting, inter alia, his conviction may have been based
on mere negligence, and hence, the hearing officer erred in relying on the appellate
court’s commentary on the evidence as establishing the requisite mens rea for guilt under
the Pennsylvania offense. He pointed out his sentence of confinement was only sixty
days and, as such, it is plausible the court martial which returned the actual conviction
found he had acted negligently. Appellee added that, at a minimum, any doubt on this
topic should be resolved in his favor under established legal precepts.
PSP overruled Appellee’s exceptions and adopted the proposed report and order
as its own final adjudication. Appellee appealed to the Commonwealth Court.
That court reversed in a published opinion, finding the two offenses are not
comparable. The court reasoned the military offense encompasses negligent conduct,
[J-14-2022] - 4
which could have been the basis for Appellee’s conviction, whereas the Pennsylvania
crime requires a reckless mental state or above. See supra note 2. Therefore, the court
held the military offense could not be the basis for a Tier III classification under SORNA.
See A.L. v. PSP, 247 A.3d 120, 128-29 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2021).
We granted PSP’s petition for allowance of appeal in which the following questions
were framed for our review:
1. When comparing a military criminal offense to a Crimes Code offense
pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. § 9799.14(b)(21), (c)(17), or (d)(13), is the
Pennsylvania State Police required to ensure that all of the elements of
crimes, including the mens rea, are equivalent?
2. If the Pennsylvania State Police is required to consider the mens rea
when comparing a military criminal offense to a Crimes Code offense
pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. § 9799.14(b)(21), (c)(17), or (d)(13), should the
mens rea requirement only be considered a factor when making the
determination?
A.L. v. PSP, 260 A.3d 920 (Pa. 2021) (per curiam).
The need to compare two criminal offenses, one in-state (the “reference offense”)
and the other out-of-state (the “offense of conviction”), raises the question of how that
comparison should be made and how the reviewing court – or the administrative agency
as in the present case – should determine whether the answer is “yes” they are
comparable, or “no” they are not comparable. Our intermediate appellate courts have
addressed this issue in several reported decisions.
In Shewack v. PennDOT, 993 A.2d 916 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2010), the court held that,
when comparing an out-of-state offense to a Pennsylvania offense to determine whether
they are “essentially similar” – so that a conviction of the out-of-state offense disqualifies
the individual from holding a commercial driver’s license in Pennsylvania for one year –
“the comparison is between the elements of the foreign state’s statute and the elements
of Pennsylvania’s statute.” Id. at 919. Although the Maryland and Pennsylvania statutes
[J-14-2022] - 5
in that matter prohibited driving with a suspended license, the court found they were not
essentially similar because the Pennsylvania law specifically prohibited driving a
commercial vehicle with a suspended commercial driver’s license, whereas the Maryland
law was broader in that it precluded driving virtually any type of vehicle with suspended
privileges. The underlying concept was that, where the elements of the offense of
conviction cover a broader range of conduct than the elements of the reference offense,
the two are not “essentially similar.” Notably, applying the same test, the Commonwealth
Court reached the opposite conclusion in Aten v. PennDOT, 649 A.2d 732 (Pa. Cmwlth.
1994), where the reference offense of driving a commercial vehicle without holding or
being in immediate possession of a valid commercial driver’s license was compared to
West Virginia’s counterpart – which, unlike the Maryland law, applied specifically to
commercial vehicles.
This comparison-of-the-elements method has also been used by the Superior
Court. In Commonwealth v. Whisnant, 568 A.2d 259 (Pa. Super. 1990), the court affirmed
a DUI sentence enhancement based on two prior New Jersey convictions for an
equivalent DUI offense. The court found the elements of the offenses to be “substantially
identical.” Id. at 260. It reasoned that, even though the New Jersey statute, unlike the
Pennsylvania statute, stated in the alternative that a defendant was guilty of DUI if he
allowed another intoxicated person to drive his (the defendant’s) car, that aspect of the
New Jersey statute was immaterial because it was clear that was not the basis for the
defendant’s out-of-state convictions. See id. at 261.
These decisions demonstrate that gauging offense similarity or equivalency has
generally been accomplished by comparing the elements of the out-of-state offense with
those of the in-state offense. Accord Freeman v. PSP, 2 A.3d 1259, 1262 (Pa. Cmwlth.
2010) (comparing offense elements to determine whether a New York conviction
[J-14-2022] - 6
restricted the appellant’s ability to possess firearms in Pennsylvania); cf. Commonwealth
v. Bolden, 532 A.2d 1172, 1175-76 (Pa. Super. 1987) (expressing that, to calculate a
prior-record score under the sentencing guidelines based on a foreign conviction, courts
should identify the elements of the foreign offense and determine the equivalent
Pennsylvania offense). If the elements are the same, or if the offense of conviction is
narrower than the reference offense – meaning it captures a subset of the conduct of the
reference offense – the two are comparable. If, however, the offense of conviction defines
the crime in terms of alternative elements, the question becomes whether the offense of
conviction was based on the same elements as defined under the Pennsylvania statute.
Whisnant is an example of this: where the New Jersey DUI statute made it an offense to
either drive while intoxicated or, alternatively, to allow another intoxicated person to drive
one’s vehicle, but the defendant’s New Jersey convictions did not implicate that
alternative basis for criminal liability, the New Jersey convictions were deemed equivalent
to Pennsylvania DUI convictions. This approach to comparing offenses ensures that, to
count as a predicate, the out-of-state conviction signifies the individual was found guilty
in that jurisdiction of every element of the Pennsylvania offense. It has been endorsed
by the United States Supreme Court for precisely this reason. See Descamps v. United
States, 570 U.S. 254, 272 (2013).
In the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence, the topic has often arisen in the context of
the Armed Career Criminal Act, 18 U.S.C. § 924 (“ACCA”). That statute imposes a
sentence enhancement upon defendants convicted under federal law of being a felon in
possession of a firearm, where the defendant has three prior convictions for certain violent
felonies. Under ACCA, the reference offense is referred to as the “generic” crime,
meaning, the crime as commonly understood, see Descamps, 570 U.S. at 257; Taylor,
495 U.S. at 598-99 (referring to generic burglary as the way burglary is defined in the
[J-14-2022] - 7
criminal codes of most states); Quarles v. United States, 139 S. Ct. 1872, 1877 (2019),
and the predicate convictions are usually at the state level. But cf. Shular v. United States,
___ U.S. ___, 140 S. Ct. 779, 782 (2020) (where the offense of conviction is a state-level
“serious drug offense,” the reference offense is not a generic crime, but the conduct
specified in ACCA’s definition of a serious drug offense).
To evaluate whether a prior state conviction counts as an ACCA predicate, the
Supreme Court compares the elements of the generic crime with the elements under state
law, a method it refers to as the “categorical approach.” Taylor v. United States, 495 U.S.
575, 602 (1990). The sentencing court does not focus on the particular facts underlying
the predicate conviction as to do so could entail an “elaborate factfinding process” that
would be impractical, including where the conviction was based on a guilty plea. Id. at
601. The Court has articulated three reasons for choosing this approach: Congress
made the sentence enhancement to depend on “convictions” not actions; any effort at
fact-finding for sentencing purposes would be problematic under the Sixth Amendment;
and “daunting” difficulties and inequities would arise from a sentencing court’s effort at
belated fact-finding based on aged documents, especially when their content is subject
to interpretation. See Descamps, 570 U.S. at 267-71.3
With that said, the Supreme Court has also consistently recognized that some
state offenses are defined by a “divisible” statute, meaning the statute gives alternative
3 In terms of the inequities, the Court pointed out that at the criminal proceedings in state
court, the defendant may have little incentive to correct errors that do not really matter in
that context and may have good reason not to, as extraneous facts and arguments may
confuse the jury. Similarly, during a plea hearing, “the defendant may not wish to irk the
prosecutor or court by squabbling about superfluous factual allegations.” Id. at 270. It
would thus be unfair for a sentencing court, later on, to use uncorrected (but erroneous)
statements by the prosecutor or judge as proof specific actions were taken in committing
the offense. See id. at 269-70 (explaining the only facts the ACCA sentencing court can
be sure the jury found are those constituting elements of the offense); accord Mathis v.
United States, 579 U.S. 500, 512-13 (2016).
[J-14-2022] - 8
elements, usually phrased in the disjunctive, that could make up the offense. In such
cases, the Court has approved what it calls the “modified categorical approach,” allowing
the sentencing court to “consult a limited class of documents” from the conviction record,
such as indictments and jury instructions, to determine the alternative element, and thus,
the alternative crime, of which the defendant was previously found guilty. Id. at 257; see
also Johnson v. United States, 559 U.S. 133, 144 (2010) (indicating the court can consider
charging documents, plea agreements, transcripts of plea colloquies, jury instructions,
verdict slips, and findings of fact and conclusions of law from a bench trial); Nijhawan v.
Holder, 557 U.S. 29, 35 (2009). Assuming the sentencing court can, in fact, determine
from that limited set of documents the specific alternative crime of which the defendant
was convicted, the court “can then do what the categorical approach demands: compare
the elements of the crime of conviction (including the alternative element used in the case)
with the elements of the generic crime.” Descamps, 570 U.S. at 257. While this was first
characterized as an “exception” to the categorical approach, Shepard v. United States,
544 U.S. 13, 17 (2005), the Court later clarified it was not an exception but a “tool”
because it “retains the categorical approach’s central feature: a focus on the elements,
rather than the facts, of a crime.” Descamps, 570 U.S. at 263.4
Because SORNA is not a sentencing statute, the Sixth Amendment concerns
identified in relation to ACCA are not in sharp relief. But the other two considerations
4 The Supreme Court has been careful to distinguish alternative elements – which in
reality define different crimes – from alternative means of satisfying a single element. It
has clarified that the modified categorical approach is not applicable to different means,
as in that instance the extra-jurisdictional offense sweeps more broadly than the generic
one. As well, considering the means by which an element of the state offense was
committed leads to the inequities described above. See supra note 3. See generally
Mathis, 579 U.S. at 513 (recognizing the modified categorical approach serves only “as
a tool to identify the elements of the crime of conviction when a statute’s disjunctive
phrasing renders one (or more) of them opaque”).
[J-14-2022] - 9
motivating the categorical approach are: just as Congress determined ACCA sentencing
enhancements should be based on prior convictions as opposed to prior actions, the
duration of an individual’s obligation to register under SORNA is likewise premised on
whether that person has been “convicted” of a Tier I, II, or III offense. 42 Pa.C.S.
§ 9799.15(a). Additionally, any attempt by PSP to engage in fact-finding relative to the
particular circumstances of the underlying offense could result in the types of inequities
identified by the Supreme Court, see supra note 3, not to mention ad hoc and inconsistent
outcomes. See United States v. Wilson, 951 F.2d 586, 390 (4th Cir. 1991) (suggesting a
factual approach could devolve into “a series of mini-trials in which the defendant
rehashes his version of the events that led to his predicate convictions and the
prosecution searches for stale evidence to prove an element that was necessarily proved
or admitted at the prior proceeding”). And it may be noted the Supreme Court applies the
categorical approach in the civil context as well as criminal. See Kawashima v. Holder,
565 U.S. 478, 483 (2012) (using the categorical approach for deportation decisions).
PSP’s main objection to this approach is that it does not allow PSP to fully
implement its obligation to impose registration based on “comparable” military offenses.
PSP understands the approach as requiring “identical” rather than “comparable” crimes
which, it claims, does not fully comport with the statute. See Reply Brief for Appellant at
9-11. More generally, PSP contends the adjective “comparable” has enough leeway that
the military offense does not need to be the same as, or a subset of, the Pennsylvania
offense. PSP adverts to dictionary definitions of “comparable” which suggest mere
similarity, or ability to be compared. It offers the analogy of comparable homes, a concept
used in real-estate valuation. See Brief for Appellant at 15. PSP takes particular issue
with having to compare scienter thresholds when assessing if two crimes are comparable.
[J-14-2022] - 10
See Brief for Appellant at 18 (arguing the General Assembly “did not intend for the PSP
to ensure” the equivalency of “each and every element, to include mens rea”).
To the extent PSP argues the object of our exercise in statutory interpretation is to
give effect to legislative intent, and the best indication of that intent is the statute’s plain
text, we have no occasion to disagree. See, e.g., In re B.W., 250 A.3d 1163, 1170-71
(Pa. 2021). The difficulty in the present controversy arises from the use of the word
“comparable” which, as PSP’s real-estate analogy demonstrates, can be rather loose and
subjective, as anyone who has reviewed a real-estate appraisal knows.
As PSP recognizes, the General Assembly has used variations on the theme of
comparability in statutes addressing circumstances in which a person’s conviction history
is material in civil and criminal settings. These include such circumstances as the ability
to obtain a commercial driver’s license, the ability to possess firearms, the ability to be
certified as an athlete’s agent, DUI sentencing, whether a mandatory minimum sentence
should apply under the three-strikes statute, and pension forfeiture, to name a few. In
these instances, the General Assembly’s policy toward out-of-state convictions is that
they count as part of the relevant criminal history so long as the extra-jurisdictional offense
is similar to a Pennsylvania predicate offense.
To express the concept of similarity in these arenas, the legislative body has used
different adjectives such as “equivalent,” “similar,” “essentially similar,” “comparable,” and
“substantially the same.” See 18 Pa.C.S. § 6105(b) (encompassing “equivalent” offenses
in relation to firearms possession); 75 Pa.C.S. § 1611(d) (including “similar” convictions
relative to commercial driver’s licenses); id. § 1611(h) (superseded) (referencing
“essentially similar” offenses relative to commercial driver’s licenses); 5 Pa.C.S. § 3304(c)
(embracing “comparable” offenses as to athlete-agent certification); 75 Pa.C.S.
§ 3731(e)(1)(iii) (superseded) (referring to “equivalent” offenses for repeat-DUI
[J-14-2022] - 11
sentencing); 42 Pa.C.S. § 9714(g) (defining crime of violence to subsume “equivalent”
crimes under prior Pennsylvania law or in another jurisdiction); 43 P.S. §1312 (basing
pension forfeiture on “substantially the same” extra-jurisdictional offenses). Although the
Crimes Code, SORNA Subchapter H, and the Statutory Construction Act all have
definitional sections, see 18 Pa.C.S. § 103, 42 Pa.C.S. § 9799.12, 1 Pa.C.S. § 1991, they
do not define terms such as “comparable” “equivalent,” and “similar,” and neither party
suggests that a “comparable” military offense is a term of art. Thus, we consider the
word’s “common and approved” usage. 1 Pa.C.S. § 1903(a).
The dictionary defines “comparable” as capable of being compared, worthy of
comparison, like or equivalent – as in “artists of comparable talent.” W EBSTER’S NEW
COLLEGE DICTIONARY 234 (3d ed. 2008). An on-line thesaurus suggests the word means
“fairly similar so that comparison is reasonable,” and it gives synonyms including similar,
alike, close, and not unlike.5 As for Merriam-Webster’s thesaurus, it provides the following
synonyms: akin, alike, analogous, cognate, correspondent, corresponding, ditto, like,
matching, parallel, resemblant, resembling, similar, such, and suchlike.6 It is evident PSP
prefers the meaning conveyed by words like “resembling” and “fairly similar so that
comparison is reasonable.” See generally State v. Wetrich, 412 P.3d 984, 990 (Kan.
2018) (surveying various definitions of “comparable” and describing these kinds of words
as terms which “more closely support the State’s close-enough-for-horseshoes-and-hand
grenades view of comparable”). We find that, in view of this variety of possible meanings
for “comparable,” the term is ambiguous – or at least “not explicit,” 1 Pa.C.S. §1921(c) –
5 See MacMillan Thesaurus, https://www.macmillanthesaurus.com/us/comparable, last
viewed April 14, 2022.
6 See https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/comparable, last viewed April 14,
2022.
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thus warranting consideration of the factors set forth in the Statutory Construction Act.
See Nicole B. v. Sch. Dist. of Phila., 237 A.3d 986, 997 (Pa. 2020).
The occasion and necessity for this aspect of the statute, the mischief to be
remedied, and the object to be attained, see 1 Pa.C.S. § 1921(c)(1), (3), (4), are all
straightforward: to avoid any unfairness or harm to the public that would result if an
offender were treated more leniently due to the fortuity that his or her prior conviction
arose in a different jurisdiction. Accord Whisnant, 568 A.2d at 260-61. See generally
Bolden, 532 A.2d at 1174-75 (“Fairness required that the prior record score include
convictions . . . from other states and from the United States courts . . .. To do otherwise
would have treated some defendants as first offenders merely because they had
committed their crimes in another jurisdiction.”). While one might argue this consideration
weighs in favor of a fairly loose comparison along the lines of that suggested by PSP, it
would remain problematic to implement that standard in practice without leading to
inconsistent results. As the Kansas court observed in a related context:
Allowing sentencing courts to utilize an imprecise, ad hoc comparison of
out-of-state crimes to Kansas offenses . . . to enhance the current Kansas
sentence promotes, rather than curtails, the disparate treatment of similarly
situated persons that the [Kansas sentencing guidelines] sought to cure.
Moreover, statutes fixing sentences that are so vague that the test for
enhancement devolves into “guesswork and intuition” can run afoul of due
process considerations.
Wetrich, 412 P.3d at 991 (citing Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at 2556-59 (finding the enhancement
residual clause of ACCA unconstitutionally vague)). This concern is substantial, and it
speaks to the Legislature’s dual directives that reviewing courts should consider the
consequences of a particular interpretation, 1 Pa.C.S. § 1921(c)(6), and presume the
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General Assembly did not intend an unreasonable result, see id. § 1922(1). We find that
the Kansas court’s concern applies equally to tier selection under SORNA.7
Thus, to remove guesswork, inconsistency, and ad hoc agency decision-making,
to promote the legislative focus on prior convictions rather than prior actions, and to
foreclose the type of “daunting” difficulties and potential unfairness the Supreme Court
pointed out would arise if a reviewing entity years later were to sift through voluminous
aged documents to ascertain exactly what the SORNA registrant did (as opposed to what
he was convicted of), we hold the categorical approach as described by the Supreme
Court is to be applied when ascertaining whether a prior extra-jurisdictional offense is
“comparable” or “equivalent” under SORNA Subchapter H. Consistent with the Supreme
Court’s explanation and terminology as outlined above, the categorical approach includes
the “tool” that Court refers to as the “modified categorical approach.”
We note as well that this approach takes into account all elements of the offenses
being compared, including scienter. To the extent PSP’s advocacy can be read to
suggest scienter is of diminished importance, see Brief for Appellant at 18 (“Clearly, the
General Assembly did not intend for the PSP to ensure that each and every element, to
include mens rea, of a military offense and an enumerated offense in 42 Pa.C.S.
§ 9799.14 are equivalent.”), we do not endorse such a view. For example, involuntary
7 Federal courts of appeal in a number of circuits have applied the categorical approach
to tier selection under the federal SORNA law, see United States v. Morales, 801 F.3d 1,
4-5 (1st Cir. 2015); United States v. Berry, 814 F.3d 192, 196 (4th Cir. 2016); United
States v. Young, 872 F.3d 742, 746 (5th Cir. 2017); United States v. Barcus, 892 F.3d
228, 231-32 (6th Cir. 2018); United States v. Walker, 931 F.3d 576, 579 (7th Cir. 2019);
United States v. Cabrera-Gutierrez, 756 F.3d 1125, 1133 (9th Cir. 2014); United States
v. White, 782 F.3d 1118, 1130-35 (10th Cir. 2015), as have several United States District
Courts in the remaining circuits, see, e.g., United States v. Church, 461 F. Supp. 2d 875,
883 (S.D. Iowa 2020); United States v. Marrero, 2020 WL 6637584, at *2 (E.D.N.Y. Nov.
12, 2020); United States v. Gilchrist, 2021 WL 808753, at *4 (M.D. Pa. Mar. 3, 2021);
United States v. Phillips, 2016 WL 5338711, at *2-*3 (M.D. Fla. Sept. 23, 2016).
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manslaughter, see 18 Pa.C.S. § 2503(a), and first-degree murder, see id. § 2502(a), are
both forms of criminal homicide, see id. § 2501, and they are drastically different crimes
although they differ only in the actor’s mental state. As for SORNA predicate offenses,
the Sixth Circuit has emphasized the importance of the “intent” element in comparing two
offenses under the categorical approach, see Barcus, 892 F.3d at 232-34, and there is
no principled basis to view mens rea as a second-class citizen among the broad array of
items that may be included within the definitional elements of an offense triggering
SORNA registration.
Applying the categorical approach to this dispute, the only element on which the
parties focus their advocacy is the defendant’s scienter. Appellee submits that, by
encompassing negligent conduct, the military crime sweeps more broadly than the state
crime and, consequently, cannot be deemed “comparable” to it under the categorical
approach. PSP’s position is that the “knowingly” mens rea under the Crimes Code is
captured by the military offense’s requirement that the victim’s impaired state must have
been “known” by the victim. Brief for Appellant at 21. Thus, PSP in effect adopts the
view that the military statute is divisible and, moreover, that Appellee was convicted of
the more serious of the two crimes in that he was found to have had actual knowledge of
the victim’s impaired condition.8
To support this position, PSP appears simply to assume Appellee had such
knowledge, see A.L., 247 A.3d at 128 (“PSP’s entire analysis . . . is based upon a
presumption that [A.L.] was convicted because he ‘knew’ that the [victim] was intoxicated
and, therefore, unable to consent.”), although at times PSP also cites to trial testimony
8 PSP goes farther and argues Appellee could not have been convicted absent a finding
he knew of the victim’s impairment. See id. at 24 (“Had the general court-martial found .
. . that [Appellee] was mistaken as to believing his victim had consented . . . it would have
had to acquit.”). This is incorrect as 10 U.S.C. § 920(b)(3)(A) allows for culpability based
on an unreasonable belief the victim had consented.
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and draws inferences from it. For example, PSP references testimony given at the court-
martial indicating Appellee spoke to the victim the following day, stating they had had
protected sex the night before and urging her not to report the incident; PSP contends
Appellee would only have made those statements if he was, in fact, aware she had been
too intoxicated to consent to the encounter. See Reply Brief for Appellant at 2.
Initially, we find that, by using the word “or” – i.e., by stating that liability arises if
the victim’s impaired condition “is known or reasonably should be known” by the
defendant – the mens rea reflected in the military offense is divisible in that it allows for
culpability if the defendant either knew of the victim’s impaired state or reasonably should
have known of it. This means PSP was authorized to consult such items as the charging
document, plea agreements, transcripts of plea colloquies, jury instructions, and verdict
slips, to see if it could ascertain Appellee’s precise scienter level – and thus, the particular
crime set forth in the military offense definition of which Appellee was convicted. As the
Commonwealth Court pointed out, however, the record does not reflect that the court
which heard the evidence made any finding that Appellee in fact knew that his victim was
too impaired to consent. To the contrary, that tribunal’s equivalent of a verdict slip tracks
the statutory language as it records the panel’s finding that the victim’s impairment “was
known or reasonably should have been known by” Appellee. It is true the military
appellate court expressed its view that the proofs adduced at trial were sufficient to
support a finding that Appellee knew of the victim’s impairment. But the panel of fact-
finders did not make any such finding. That being the case, PSP was not entitled to rely
on the appellate court’s commentary.
A fortiori, PSP was not permitted to rely on the notes of testimony and its own
inferences drawn therefrom. For example, the fact-finders at the court-martial might have
disbelieved the testimony currently emphasized by PSP and nonetheless returned a guilty
[J-14-2022] - 16
verdict based on other evidence. See generally Commonwealth v. Johnson, 231 A.3d
807, 818 (Pa. 2020) (recognizing that courts which “rely on a cold record” defer to the
fact-finder’s factual findings as the latter “hears witness testimony first-hand [and] is able
to take into account not only the words that are spoken and transcribed, but the witnesses’
demeanor, tone of voice, mannerisms, and the like”). Further, allowing such inferences
to form the basis for tier selection by PSP administrators could open the door to the
registrant arguing from the evidence he did not commit the crime charged notwithstanding
the guilty verdict. See United States v. Uhl, 210 F. 860, 862-63 (2d Cir. 1914) (making a
similar observation about immigration officials who purported to base an immigration
decision on evidence presented at a foreign trial rather than on the conviction alone). Just
as important, the trial transcript does not comprise one of the “limited class of documents,”
Mathis, 579 U.S. at 505, which PSP was allowed to consult per the modified categorical
approach.
In sum, the military statute under which Appellee was convicted effectively defines
two crimes, one when the victim’s impairment is known to the actor, and the other when
that impairment reasonably should be known but is not. See 10 U.S.C. § 920(b)(3)(A).
PSP lacked a valid foundation to discern which of the two formed the basis for the military
panel’s finding of guilt. For present purposes, then, that statute “criminalizes a broader
swath of conduct,” Descamps, 570 U.S. at 258, than the predicate Pennsylvania offense
defined by the Crimes Code, which, as noted, bases culpability on a mens rea of
recklessness or above. See 18 Pa.C.S. § 3124.1 (containing no express mens rea,
thereby defaulting to at least recklessness under 18 Pa.C.S. § 302(c)). As a
consequence, the military offense is not “comparable” to 18 Pa.C.S. § 3124.1 for
purposes of 42 Pa.C.S. § 9799.14(d)(13), and thus, Appellee’s court-martial conviction
cannot be the basis for his classification as a Tier III lifetime registrant under SORNA.
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Accordingly, the judgment of the Commonwealth Court is affirmed.
Chief Justice Baer and Justices Todd, Donohue, Dougherty and Wecht join the
opinion.
Justice Brobson did not participate in the consideration or decision of this matter.
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