J-S05041-22
2022 PA Super 142
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
:
v. :
:
:
MICHAEL DAVID LAKE :
:
Appellant : No. 456 MDA 2021
Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered November 4, 2020
In the Court of Common Pleas of Franklin County Criminal Division at
No(s): CP-28-CR-0001660-2019
BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., STABILE, J., and DUBOW, J.
OPINION BY DUBOW, J.: FILED AUGUST 15, 2022
Appellant, Michael David Lake, appeals from the Judgment of Sentence
entered on November 4, 2020, after a jury convicted him of Intimidation of
Witnesses or Victims (“Intimidation”), Terroristic Threats, Simple Assault, and
Recklessly Endangering Another Person (“REAP”).1 Appellant challenges the
sufficiency and weight of the evidence to convict him of Intimidation, the jury
charge on Intimidation, and the legality of his sentence. After careful review,
we affirm.
On August 22, 2019, Appellant became angry with his romantic partner,
(“Victim”) after she questioned him about his excessive drinking. In response,
Appellant, who was in the kitchen, threw a chair and a fan into the living room,
where the Victim was located.
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1 18 Pa.C.S. §§ 4952(a)(1), 2706(a)(1), 2701(a)(1), and 2705, respectively.
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Appellant then came into the living room and pushed the Victim into a
closet door and slapped her. The Victim then retrieved her phone from the
kitchen and went to the bedroom. Appellant and the Victim struggled over the
phone in their bedroom. Appellant was able to obtain control over the phone
and began to twist and pound the phone. Appellant then took the phone to
the other side of the bed and stomped on it, breaking the phone.
Appellant then threw the Victim onto their bed, punched her in the face
multiple times, breaking her left orbital bone, and attempted to strangle her.
The Victim’s injuries required emergency surgery and the implantation of a
metal plate into her face.
As a result of the above, the Commonwealth charged Appellant with
Terroristic Threats, Simple Assault, REAP, Strangulation, Aggravated Assault
as a first-degree felony,2 and Intimidation as a first-degree felony.
Appellant’s one-day jury trial occurred on July 16, 2020. The Victim
testified on behalf of the Commonwealth consistent with the above recitation
of facts. She further elaborated that when she picked up her phone after
Appellant slapped her, Appellant “got angry because he thought I was going
to call 911, and we struggled with the phone[.]” N.T. Trial, 7/16/20, at 39.
Appellant did not object to this testimony.
At the conclusion of trial, the jury convicted Appellant of Intimidation,
Terroristic Threats, Simple Assault, and REAP. The jury found Appellant not
____________________________________________
2 18 Pa.C.S. § 2702(a)(1).
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guilty of Aggravated Assault and Strangulation. On November 4, 2020, the
court sentenced Appellant to an aggregate term of 72 to 180 months’
incarceration.
Appellant timely filed a post-sentence motion challenging, inter alia, the
sufficiency and weight of the evidence and the propriety of the court’s jury
charge on Intimidation. On March 15, 2021, after a hearing and supplemental
briefing, the court denied Appellant’s motion. Appellant timely filed a Notice
of Appeal, and both he and the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.
Appellant raises the following issues for our review:
1. Did the Commonwealth present sufficient evidence to sustain
the conviction on Count 2, Intimidation of a Witness, as a matter
of law?
2. Was the verdict reached by the jury against the weight of the
evidence as to Count 2, Intimidation of a Witness?
3. Did the trial court commit an error of law or abuse its discretion
by providing an erroneous jury instruction as to Count 2,
Intimidation of a Witness?
4. Did the trial court commit an error of law by sentencing
Appellant to Count 2 Intimidation of a Witness as a felony of the
first degree?
Appellant’s Br. at 10 (edited and reordered for ease of analysis).
I.
In his first two issues, Appellant asserts that the evidence of his mens
rea to commit Intimidation was based solely on the Victim’s speculative
testimony that Appellant destroyed her phone “because he thought I was
going to call 911[.]” Appellant’s Br. at 26-30, 34-38 (citing N.T. Trial at 39).
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He first argues that this evidence was legally insufficient to establish that he
intimidated the Victim with the intent to or with knowledge that his conduct
would prevent the Victim from contacting the police. Id. at 29.
When reviewing a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, we
evaluate the record in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth as
verdict winner, giving it the benefit of all reasonable inferences to be drawn
from the evidence. Commonwealth v. Widmer, 744 A.2d 745, 751 (Pa.
2000). “Evidence will be deemed sufficient to support the verdict when it
establishes each material element of the crime charged and the commission
thereof by the accused, beyond a reasonable doubt.” Commonwealth v.
Lynch, 72 A.3d 706, 708 (Pa. Super. 2013) (en banc) (citation omitted). Any
doubt about the defendant’s guilt is to be resolved by the fact-finder unless
the evidence is so weak and inconclusive that, as a matter of law, no
probability of fact can be drawn from the combined circumstances. See
Commonwealth v. DiStefano, 782 A.2d 574, 582 (Pa. Super. 2001).
Additionally, the Commonwealth may sustain its burden solely by means of
circumstantial evidence. Lynch, 72 A.3d at 708.
The Crimes Code provides that a defendant commits the crime of
Intimidation if “with the intent to or with the knowledge that his conduct will
obstruct, impede, impair, prevent or interfere with the administration of
criminal justice, he intimidates or attempts to intimidate any witness or victim
to[ r]efrain from informing or reporting to any law enforcement officer . . .
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any information . . . relating to the commission of a crime.” 18 Pa.C.S. §
4952(a)(1).
The trial court found that the Commonwealth’s evidence was sufficient
to prove that Appellant destroyed the Victim’s phone with the intent of
preventing her from contacting the police. Trial Ct. Op., 3/15/21, at 8. It
observed that a person acts knowingly when “he is aware that it is a practical
certainty that his conduct will cause such a result.” Id. at 7 (citing 18 Pa.C.S.
§ 302(b)(2)(ii)). The court explained that the jury could reasonably infer from
the evidence that Appellant “was aware that it was practically certain that
breaking [Victim’s] phone, the primary means through which she [c]ould
contact police, would obstruct the administration of justice.” Id. at 8.
We agree. Appellant destroyed the Victim’s phone during an escalating
assault. In particular, the Victim testified that Appellant threw furniture in her
direction, then pushed and slapped her. N.T. Trial at 37-39. The Victim then
walked from the living room to the kitchen to retrieve her phone. Id. at 39.
She took the phone to the bedroom, where Appellant grabbed it out of her
hand, and “began twisting the phone and pounding the phone, and he took it
to the other side of the bed and he stomped it into pieces that it broke the
whole screen[.]” Id. at 39-40. After destroying the Victim’s only access to call
the police, Appellant continued the assault, inflicting serious injuries on her,
including breaking her orbital bone. Id.
Viewing this evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth
and granting it all reasonable inferences, the jury could reasonably infer that
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Appellant was aware that the practical certainty of his breaking the Victim’s
phone while he was engaged in an escalating assault of the Victim would
prevent Victim from reporting the assault to the police. As a result, we
conclude that the Commonwealth’s evidence was sufficient to support the
jury’s finding that Appellant acted with the requisite mens rea to prevent her
from contacting the police and thus, commit the crime of Intimidation.
Appellant also argues that the mens rea element of his Intimidation
conviction is against the weight of the evidence because the jury relied solely
on Victim’s testimony that he broke her phone “because he thought [she] was
going to call 911[.]” Appellant’s Br. at 34-38. We disagree.
Appellate review of a weight claim is a review of the trial court’s exercise
of discretion in denying the weight challenge raised in the post-sentence
motion; this Court does not review the underlying question of whether the
verdict is against the weight of the evidence. See Commonwealth v.
Talbert, 129 A.3d 536, 545-46 (Pa. Super. 2015). “In order for a defendant
to prevail on a challenge to the weight of the evidence, the evidence must be
so tenuous, vague and uncertain that the verdict shocks the conscience of the
court.” Id. at 546 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). As our
Supreme Court has clarified, reversal is only appropriate “where the facts and
inferences disclose a palpable abuse of discretion[.]” Commonwealth v.
Morales, 91 A.3d 80, 91 (Pa. 2014) (emphasis omitted).
To establish the elements of Intimidation, the Commonwealth presented
evidence in addition to the Victim’s testimony that Appellant “got angry
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because he thought I was going to call 911, and we struggled with the
phone[.]” N.T. Trial at 39. The Commonwealth also presented testimony about
the details of Appellant’s escalating assault of the Victim during which
Appellant grabbed and destroyed the Victim’s phone. As a result, the jury did
not convict Appellant solely on the basis of the Victim’s testimony about
Appellant’s motivation for destroying her phone, but rather on the entire
assault, from which the jury could reasonably infer that Appellant intended to
prevent the Victim from calling the police. Therefore, the jury’s conviction for
Intimidation is not based on tenuous, vague, or uncertain evidence, but rather
a reasonable inference from an escalating assault. Thus, the trial court did not
abuse its discretion in denying Appellant’s post-sentence weight challenge.
II.
In his third issue, Appellant challenges the trial court’s jury instruction
on Intimidation. Appellant’s Br. at 30-34. When reviewing a challenge to a
jury instruction, we review the charge as a whole to determine if it is fair and
complete. Commonwealth v. Postie, 200 A.3d 1015, 1026 (Pa. Super.
2018) (en banc). “The trial court commits an abuse of discretion only when
there is an inaccurate statement of the law.” Id. (citation omitted). “A charge
is considered adequate unless the jury was palpably misled by what the trial
judge said or there is an omission which is tantamount to fundamental error.”
Id. (citation omitted).
In relevant part, the court instructed the jury as follows:
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Fourth, [you must find] that the most serious offense charged in
the case in which the defendant sought to influence or intimidate
a witness or victim was a felony of the third degree.
N.T. Trial at 152 (emphasis added). The trial court, however, then stated: “I
instruct you that in this case the most serious offense charged, aggravated
assault, is a felony of the first degree.” Id. (emphasis added).
Appellant argues that the court erred when instructing the jury that it
must find that the most serious offense charged for the Intimidation offense
was a felony of the third degree and not a felony of the first degree. Appellant
argues that by instructing the jury that it only had to find that the
Commonwealth had charged Appellant with a third-degree felony, the court
lessened the degree of proof for a conviction of first-degree Intimidation.
Appellant’s Br at 32-33.
The trial court, however, found that Appellant waived this issue by failing
to object to this portion of the jury instruction after the trial court charged the
jury. Trial Ct. Op. at 10-11. We agree. “In order to preserve a claim that a
jury charge was erroneously given, the Appellant must have objected to the
charge at trial.” Commonwealth v. Parker, 104 A.3d 17, 29 (Pa. Super.
2014). See also Pa.R.Crim.P. 647(C) (“No portions of the charge nor
omissions from the charge may be assigned as error, unless specific objections
are made thereto before the jury retires to deliberate.”); Pa.R.A.P. 302(a)
(“Issues not raised in the trial court are waived and cannot be raised for the
first time on appeal.”); Pa.R.A.P. 302(b) (“Specific exception [must] be taken
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to the language or omission [in the charge] complained of.”). As Appellant did
not object after the trial court charged the jury, this issue is waived.
Even if Appellant did not waive the issue, we would find that Appellant
did not suffer prejudice from the trial court’s misstatement that the jury must
find that the Commonwealth charged Appellant with a third, and not a first,
degree felony. Immediately after the misstatement, the trial court stated that
“I instruct you that the most serious offense charged, aggravated assault, is
a felony of the first degree.” N.T. Trial at 152 (emphasis added). Also, as the
trial court notes, the verdict slip contained an accurate statement of the law,
asking whether the “case in which [Appellant] sought to influence or intimidate
[Victim] involved a felony of the first degree.” Trial Ct. Op. at 10 (citing
Verdict Slip at 2) (emphasis added).
III.
In his final issue, Appellant challenges the legality of his sentence for
Intimidation on the grounds that the trial court erroneously graded the
Intimidation conviction as a felony of the first degree. Appellant’s Br. at 22-
26. Appellant’s challenge to the grading of the sentence invokes the legality
of his sentence, to which we apply a de novo standard of review and plenary
scope of review. Commonwealth v. Mendozajr, 71 A.3d 1023, 1027 (Pa.
Super. 2013).
A.
Appellant first argues that the sentencing court should have graded the
Intimidation conviction as a third-degree felony, and not a first-degree felony,
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because the evidence established that, at most, Appellant prevented the
Victim from reporting a simple assault, not an aggravated assault. Appellant’s
Br. at 22-24.
The Crimes Code provides that when determining the grade for a
conviction for Intimidation, the sentencing court must grade an Intimidation
conviction according to the most serious crime that a defendant prevented a
witness from reporting or testifying about. Of most importance to our analysis,
however, is that the sentencing court must consider the charge that the
Commonwealth filed against a defendant to determine the grading of the
crime that the defendant prevented a witness from reporting. The statute does
not require the sentencing court to consider whether the defendant is
convicted of the underlying crime:
(b) Grading.—
(1) The offense is a felony of the degree indicated in
paragraphs (2) through (4) if:
***
(2) The offense is a felony of the first-degree if a felony of
the first-degree or murder in the first or second degree was
charged in the case in which the actor sought to influence
or intimidate a witness or victim as specified in this
subsection.
(3) The offense is a felony of the second degree if a felony
of the second degree is the most serious offense
charged in the case in which the actor sought to influence
or intimidate a witness or victim as specified in this
subsection.
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(4) The offense is a felony of the third degree in any other
case in which the actor sought to influence or intimidate a
witness or victim as specified in this subsection.
(5) Otherwise the offense is a misdemeanor of the second
degree.
18 Pa.C.S. §§ 4952(b)(1)-(5) (some emphasis added).
In fact, the Superior Court, in interpreting Section 4952(b), rejected the
argument that the grading of a conviction for Intimidation is based on a
conviction of the crime that the defendant prevented a party from reporting.
Instead, the Superior Court held that the grading was based on the type of
offense the Commonwealth charged. In Commonwealth v. Felder, 75 A.3d
513, 516-17 (Pa. Super. 2013), the Commonwealth charged the defendant
with Intimidation for preventing the victim from reporting an aggravated
assault against the victim. The jury convicted the defendant of Intimidation
but was deadlocked on the aggravated assault charge. The Commonwealth
then nolle prossed the aggravated assault charge. The sentencing court,
however, graded the Intimidation conviction as a first-degree felony because
that was the most serious crime for which the Commonwealth had charged
the defendant. Id.
The Superior Court affirmed the Judgment of Sentence, finding that the
defendant’s “alternative interpretation of this subsection would require us to
insert additional language into the statute, namely that the first-degree felony
charge ‘continued to exist in the case at the time of sentencing.’” Id. at 517.
The Court reasoned that “nothing in [S]ection 4952(b)(2) suggests that the
legislature intended such a result. To the contrary, the statute's focus on the
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most serious crime charged makes eminent sense, since the relevant charge
is the most serious one a criminal defendant attempted to escape by use of
intimidation.” Id. (emphasis added).
In this case, an Aggravated Assault, a felony of the first degree, was the
most serious crime with which the Commonwealth charged Appellant. Since
the jury determined that Appellant sought to prevent the Victim from reporting
a felony of the first degree, the sentencing court properly graded the
Intimidation conviction as a felony of the first-degree. We, thus, reject
Appellant’s argument that the sentencing court should have graded the
Intimidation offense based the conviction for simple assault.3
B.
Appellant’s next argument is based on Appellant’s interpretation of
Apprendi and its progeny. Appellant argues that the trial court violated the
Sixth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution by instructing the jury that the most
serious crime that the Commonwealth had charged Appellant with was an
aggravated assault, a felony of the first degree, rather than allowing the jury
to determine the most serious charges that the Commonwealth had lodged
against Appellant. Appellant’s Br. at 25-26. Appellant bases this argument on
his characterization of the charges that the Commonwealth filed against him
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3 Since the statutory language directs the sentencing court to grade
Intimidation conviction on the charges that the Commonwealth filed against a
defendant, we need not address Appellant’s statutory interpretation that a
defendant can only intimidate a witness from reporting a crime that has
already occurred and not one that a defendant is about to commit. We,
however, do not read the statutory language so narrowly.
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as “an essential fact” that resulted in the “upper limits of [Appellant’s]
sentence to be fifteen years, rather than a statutory limit of seven years.” Id
at 26.
We disagree that the Sixth Amendment requires the jury to make a
factual finding of the charges that the prosecutor lodged in the prosecution for
which a defendant intimidated a witness. Rather, the factual determination is
whether the act of intimidation is connected to the particular prosecution.
In Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466, 490 (2000) the U.S.
Supreme Court found that the Sixth Amendment requires a jury to find beyond
a reasonable doubt “any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond
the prescribed statutory maximum[.]” In other words, “any fact that
increase[s] the prescribed statutory maximum sentence must be an ‘element’
of the offense [and] be found by a jury.” Alleyne v. United States, 570 U.S.
99, 106 (2013). The U.S. Supreme Court applied this principle to a criminal
statute that increased the mandatory minimum sentence based on a finding
that the defendant “brandished” a firearm and concluded that “facts that
increase the mandatory minimum sentence are therefore elements and must
be submitted to the jury and found beyond a reasonable doubt.” Id. at 117.
Our Supreme Court recently applied the Apprendi analysis to the
grading provisions of an Intimidation conviction. In Commonwealth v.
Dixon, 255 A.3d 1258, 1264 (Pa. 2021) the Supreme Court addressed
whether Section 4952(b)(2) is “a mere grading provision relative to the
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offense of witness intimidation or, as Appellant argues, an element of the first-
degree-felony graded offense under Apprendi and its progeny.”
The Supreme Court initially noted that Section 4952(a) of the Crimes
Code defines the elements of the crime of Intimidation. This section focuses
on the defendant’s conduct in, inter alia, intimidating a witness so the witness
refrains from testifying. Id. at 1260. If the jury finds that the defendant
intimidated a witness, Section 4952(b) determines the grade of the
conviction. Id. at 1261. Section 4952(b)(1) sets forth aggravating factors
that focus on, inter alia, whether a defendant used violence to intimidate a
witness. Id. As the Supreme Court found, if “no aggravating factors are
present, the offense is graded as a second-degree misdemeanor.” Id. at
1260. If the jury finds aggravating factors, “the offense is, by default, graded
as a third-degree felony.” Id. at 1261 (citing 18 Pa.C.S. § 4952(b)(4)).
The process of grading an Intimidation conviction with aggravating
factors does not end there. Section 4952(b)(2), which is the provision at
issue in this case, focuses on the underlying prosecution for which the
defendant intimidated the witness from testifying and applies the principle
that if a defendant intimidated a witness from testifying at a trial where more
serious crimes were charged, the sentencing court should grade the
Intimidation conviction more severely. See 18 Pa.C.S. § 4952(b)(2). See also
Commonwealth v. Raymond, 233 A.3d 809 (Pa. Super 2020) (observing
that “[i]f the predicate criteria in Subsection 4952(b)(1) are met, the level of
the intimidation charge can be further elevated by looking to the grading of
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the underlying case in which the witness/victim was involved”). In particular,
Section 4952(b)(2) provides that if a defendant intimidated a witness from
testifying at a trial in which the Commonwealth had charged a defendant with
a first-degree felony, then the sentencing court is to grade the Intimidation
conviction as a first-degree felony. 18 Pa.C.S. § 4952(b)(2). Similarly, if the
charges in the underlying prosecution are for a felony of the second degree,
the sentencing court must grade the Intimidation conviction as a felony of the
second degree. 18 Pa.C.S. § 4952(b)(3). See Dixon, 255 A.3d at 1261.
Before applying the statutory language of Section 4952(b)(2), the
Supreme Court considered the facts in Dixon. Dixon, the defendant, shot, but
did not kill, a witness who was scheduled to testify in a murder trial involving
a friend of Dixon’s, Evans. Dixon, 255 A.3d at 1260. The jury convicted Dixon
of Intimidation and the sentencing court graded the conviction as a first-
degree felony because Dixon sought to prevent a witness from testifying at
Evans’ murder trial, a prosecution involving a first-degree murder charge. Id.
at 1262. The Commonwealth, however, had not presented any evidence about
the prosecution of Evans. Instead, the trial court instructed the jury that it
was Evans’ prosecution at which Dixon had intimidated a witness from
testifying. Id.
Dixon challenged the grading of the conviction as a first-degree felony,
arguing that the Commonwealth did not present evidence linking Dixon’s
intimidating actions to Evans’ murder trial; rather, the trial court made the
factual connection itself by instructing the jury:
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The case in which the actor sought to influence or intimidate a
witness or victim was first or second degree murder or a felony of
the first degree. I instruct you that the crime is a felony of the
first degree.
Id at 1262-63 (citation and emphasis omitted). Dixon concluded that since
the trial court identified which prosecution Dixon attempted to intimidate a
witness for, a factual determination connecting the acts of intimidation to a
particular prosecution, the trial court usurped the role of the jury by making
a factual determination that impacted the grading of the Intimidation
conviction and violated the defendant’s Sixth Amendment rights. Id. at 1263.
Our Supreme Court agreed.
The Supreme Court started its analysis by concluding that Section
4952(b)(2) “undoubtedly relates to a factual finding, namely, that ‘a felony of
the first degree of murder in the first or second degree was charged in the
case in which the actor sought to influence or intimidate a witness.”
Id. at 1264-65 (emphasis added). In other words, Apprendi and its progeny
require that to grade an Intimidation conviction as a felony of the first or
second degree, the jury must connect the act of intimidation with a specific
prosecution (i.e., “the case in which the actor sought to influence or intimidate
a witness”). Applying this principle to the facts of Dixon, the Supreme Court
found that the trial court usurped the duty of the jury and violated Dixon’s
Sixth Amendment rights by making the factual determination of the
prosecution that Dixon attempted to hinder. Id. at 1265.
In addition, the Supreme Court rejected the Commonwealth’s argument
that since the Commonwealth had presented evidence that it had charged
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Dixon with an aggravated assault, a felony of the first degree, in Dixon’s trial,
the jury made a determination that the defendant hindered the prosecution of
Evans’ murder trial. Id. The Supreme Court emphasized that the
Commonwealth was required to provide evidence of Evans’ prosecution in
order to grade Dixon’s conviction as a first-degree felony and the
Commonwealth failed to do so. Id. It was irrelevant that the Commonwealth
charged Dixon with a first-degree felony because that was not the prosecution
Dixon attempted to hinder:
Here, “the case” Appellant sought to influence was that of Evans.
Thus, to establish the (b)(2) predicate, the Commonwealth had to
introduce proofs showing that in Evans’ case a first-degree felony
or murder in the first or second degree had been charged.
Consequently, it is immaterial that other first-degree felonies were
charged in this case.
Id.
We finally note that the Supreme Court distinguished Felder, finding
that since the prosecution in Felder involved the defendant intimidating a
witness in the same prosecution, “there was no need to distinguish the two
cases. In many instances, however, the witness intimidation charge is
prosecuted separately from the underlying charge.” Id. The Supreme Court
continued that “to establish the (b)(2) predicate, the Commonwealth had to
introduce proofs showing that in Evans’ case a first-degree felony or murder
in the first or second degree had been charged.” Id.
In this case, the jury made a factual determination about which
prosecution Appellant intimidated the Victim from reporting. The jury
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answered “yes” to the question on the verdict slip about whether the “case in
which [Appellant] sought to influence or intimidate the [Victim] involves a
felony of the first degree.” Verdict Slip, filed 7/17/20, at 2 (unpaginated). See
also Trial Ct. Op. at 10 (observing that “[t]he verdict slip asked . . . the jurors:
“Did the case in which Michael Lake sought to influence or intimidate [the
Victim] involve a felony of the first degree?”). Thus, the jury made the factual
determination that the case that Appellant intimidated the Victim from
reporting was the prosecution for a first-degree felony. Since the jury made
this factual determination, the sentencing court correctly graded the
Intimidation conviction as a felony of the first degree.
Contrary to Appellant’s arguments, Apprendi does not require the jury
to identify the actual charges the Commonwealth filed in the underlying
prosecution. The actual charges that the prosecution lodges are not subject to
dispute and are not an “essential” fact that resulted in the trial court’s grading
the Intimidation conviction as a first-degree felony. The charges merely
establish the existence of a prosecution. The factual determination for the jury
to make is to link the intimidating conduct to that particular prosecution. Since
the jury did so, we reject Appellant’s argument.
IV.
For the reasons discussed above, we affirm the Judgment of Sentence.
Judgment of Sentence affirmed.
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Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 08/15/2022
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