J-A16033-22
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
Appellant :
:
:
v. :
:
:
NATHANIEL WILLIAMS : No. 980 EDA 2021
Appeal from the Order Entered April 22, 2021
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at
No(s): MC-51-CR-0030428-2019
BEFORE: McLAUGHLIN, J., McCAFFERY, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*
DISSENTING MEMORANDUM BY PELLEGRINI, J.:FILED NOVEMBER 03,
2022
I respectfully dissent from the majority’s decision to affirm the trial
court’s determination that the Commonwealth did not present sufficient
evidence to hold over for court a former police officer, Nathaniel Williams, on
one count each of unsworn falsification (18 Pa.C.S. § 4904(a)); fabricating
physical evidence (18 Pa.C.S. § 4910); tampering with public records (tier-3
felony) (18 Pa.C.S. § 4911); and obstructing administration of law or other
governmental function (18 Pa.C.S. § 5101).
At a preliminary hearing, the Commonwealth only has to present a prima
facie case as to a defendant’s guilt of the charged crimes. There is undisputed
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* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
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evidence here that, while employed as a detective in the Philadelphia Police
Department, Nathaniel Williams (a) used police databases to look up a
woman’s personal information at the behest of his cousin, enabling his cousin
to then stalk that woman; (b) lied to an internal affairs investigator about
having no contact with his cousin; (c) concocted an implausible justification
for using the police databases, implicating the stalking victim as a person of
interest in a murder investigation; and (d) altered a homicide investigation
file in an effort to thwart the inquiry into this conduct.
By nevertheless affirming the trial court’s ruling, the majority has
departed from well-settled law and imposed on the Commonwealth a more
stringent test for establishing a prima facie case. Under the majority’s
rationale, the Commonwealth is required to disprove or rebut interpretations
of the evidence that favor the defendant, even where the evidence presented
allows a reasonable inference of guilt and the defendant’s interpretation is
uncorroborated. For the reasons below, I would find that the evidence was
more than sufficient as a matter of law as to all four charged offenses which
the Commonwealth seeks to hold over for court.
I.
A.
I will begin by summarizing the underlying material facts which are
critical to our review. On October 14, 2017, at about 12:00 p.m., Theresa
Williams was in a parking lot with her children. While she was preparing to
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leave, Ms. Williams was approached by Edwin Williams, who she had never
met before.1 Edwin Williams asked for Ms. Williams’ phone number,2 but she
declined. Nevertheless, about one or two weeks after that encounter, Ms.
Williams was alarmed to find Edwin Williams knocking on the front door of her
house. She asked how he had learned her address and Edwin Williams did
not give her an explanation.
When Edwin Williams appeared reluctant to leave Ms. Williams’ home,
she attempted to gather his personal information. Ms. Williams asked him to
write down his phone number and he did so. During their conversation, she
also learned that Edwin Williams worked for the Southeastern Pennsylvania
Transportation Authority (SEPTA).
In the next few weeks, Edwin Williams continued contacting Ms. Williams
indirectly by leaving her gifts such as flowers or greeting cards on her vehicle.
Ms. Williams reported this conduct to SEPTA and the Philadelphia Police
Department. The Internal Affairs Division of the Philadelphia Police
Department then assigned Lieutenant James Clough to investigate.
B.
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1 Edwin Williams was charged as a co-defendant, but the allegations against
him are not at issue in the present appeal.
2 Despite sharing the same surname, Ms. Williams and Edwin Williams are not
related.
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On November 7, 2017, Lieutenant Clough began his investigation by
auditing police databases to determine whether they had recently been used
to access Ms. Williams’ personal information. These systems included the
National Crime Information Center (NCIC), the Police Crime Information
Center (PCIC), and the Pennsylvania Justice Network (JNET).
Lieutenant Clough discovered that three days after she was first
accosted by Edwin Williams in a parking lot, on October 17, 2017, the Police
Payroll Number belonging to Nathaniel Williams had been used to access the
above databases and make inquires relating specifically to Ms. Williams.
Moreover, Lieutenant Clough found that on that same date, October 17, 2017,
Nathaniel Williams and Edwin Williams had exchanged a series of text
messages between 3:00 p.m. and 3:15 p.m.
The timing of the messages between the two men was significant
because they were sent less than a half hour before Nathaniel Williams first
queried Ms. Williams on JNET. Nathaniel Williams also used NCIC and PCIC to
search for more information about Ms. Williams later that day. Nathaniel
Williams and Edwin Williams continued exchanging messages and phone calls
from October 17, 2017, until November 5, 2017.
Lieutenant Clough interviewed Edwin Williams on November 24, 2017.
During the questioning, Edwin Williams denied receiving information about Ms.
Williams from a police officer, and he specifically stated that he did not know
Nathaniel Williams. However, later that same day, Nathaniel Williams
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replaced the personal cell phone he had been using to communicate with his
cousin in the preceding months.
Nathaniel Williams was then interviewed by Lieutenant Clough on
December 27, 2017. This interview was done orally, but the questions and
answers were reduced to a written statement and signed by Nathaniel
Williams. See Preliminary Hearing Transcript, 12/27/2017, at p. 29.
C.
On November 21, 2019, Nathaniel Williams was charged with one count
of tampering with records, one count of tampering with evidence, four counts
of unsworn falsification to authorities, and obstruction of administration of
law/other governmental function. These charges were all dismissed following
a preliminary hearing on September 11, 2020, on the ground that the
Commonwealth had not carried its burden of presenting enough evidence to
establish a prima facie case that Nathaniel Williams had committed the
offenses.
The Commonwealth moved to refile its complaint on September 17,
2020. This time, the charges included one count each of unsworn falsification
(18 Pa.C.S. § 4904(a)); fabricating physical evidence (18 Pa.C.S. § 4910);
tampering with public records (tier-3 felony) (18 Pa.C.S. § 4911); and
obstructing administration of law or other governmental function (18 Pa.C.S.
§ 5101). A second preliminary hearing was held on April 22, 2021.
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At the second hearing, the Commonwealth was for the first time
permitted to read into evidence the transcribed questions and answers given
during Lieutenant Clough’s interview of Nathaniel Williams. See Hearing
Transcript, 4/22/2021, at pp. 29-45.3 It was undisputed that the transcribed
interview was signed by Nathaniel Williams on all six pages of the
transcription, and that he had signed the document in the presence of
Lieutenant Clough. The very end of the transcribed statement included the
clause, “I have read the foregoing statement consisting of six pages and it is
true and correct to the best of my knowledge.” Id. at pp. 44-45.
In the interview, Nathaniel Williams denied that he had allowed anyone
else to login with his credentials to search the license plate number of Ms.
Williams’ vehicle or look up any other information about her. Nathaniel
Williams claimed that he ran the searches himself only because he had then
suspected that Ms. Williams was somehow involved in a homicide he had been
investigating for about three months. Specifically, Nathaniel Williams stated
that on October 16, 2017, he saw a murder suspect entering a white SUV or
van, and a day later, Nathaniel Williams saw what he thought was the same
vehicle parked near the suspect’s home, learning after looking up its license
plate number that it belonged to Ms. Williams:
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3 The trial court had precluded the admission of the written statement at the
first preliminary hearing held on September 11, 2020.
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I saw the target of my investigation[,] Tashaun Curtis[,] get into
a car a couple of months ago on the 6600 block of Ogontz right in
front of his house. I was driving by. I saw him get into a white
or white-colored SUV or van, and I drove around the block and
the car was gone. A day later [on October 17, 2017,] I surveyed
the neighborhood, and I saw a vehicle that I thought he had
gotten into. I ran that tag.
Id. at p. 35.4
Nathaniel Williams admitted that Edwin Williams was his cousin, but he
claimed that he had not “spoken” to him for “maybe a year or more” and that
he had not given him any of Ms. Williams’ personal information. Id. at p. 36.
Nathaniel Williams claimed to be completely unaware of any of Edwin Williams’
conduct toward Ms. Williams. See id. at p. 40.
It is worth mentioning here that Nathaniel Williams’ responses to
Lieutenant Clough were inconsistent with phone records demonstrating
substantial communications between Nathaniel Williams and Edwin Williams
at the relevant times. In the preceding year, the two men had exchanged
over 20 recorded phone calls and over 100 text messages. This regular
contact abruptly ceased at nearly the precise moment when Lieutenant
____________________________________________
4The shooting occurred on July 31, 2017, and the decedent succumbed to his
wound on August 1, 2017. The subject database searches were performed on
October 17, 2017. Nathaniel Williams’ interview with Lieutenant Clough took
place on December 27, 2017. There is no corroboration in the record for
Nathaniel Williams’ claim that he ever saw a murder suspect, Tashaun Curtis,
enter a white van which he suspected belonged to Ms. Williams.
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Clough’s investigation began. See Preliminary Hearing Transcript, 9/11/2020,
at pp. 86-88.
After Lieutenant Clough had interviewed Nathaniel Williams, he began
attempting to verify the explanation given for his inquiries as to Ms. Williams.
To that end, he contacted Nathaniel Williams’ superior officer so that he could
obtain a copy of the police department’s “homicide file” concerning the subject
murder in Ms. Williams’ neighborhood. Lieutenant Clough went to the
Homicide Division Unit and obtained the homicide file relating to the murder
investigation referred to by Nathaniel Williams. The file was marked with the
numerical designation, “M17-185,” and it contained not a single reference to
Ms. Williams. See id. at pp. 77-78.
However, the next day, Lieutenant Clough learned from a colleague in
Internal Affairs that Nathaniel Williams had contacted him to supplement the
homicide file with additional documentation. Nathaniel Williams produced a
second folder containing, among other things, a photograph of Ms. Williams
and her family which had been printed from her publicly accessible Facebook
account. On the back of the photograph were some handwritten notes
concerning Ms. Williams’ personal information and the license plate number of
her vehicle. See id. at pp. 77-80. No explanation has been given as to why
this information was written on the back of a photo rather than printed directly
from a database.
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Lieutenant Clough testified that the printout of the Facebook photo
differed from the form and content of documented searches of other
individuals in the homicide file, suggesting to him that Nathaniel Williams only
added the printout to the file to make it appear as if his inquiry into Ms.
Williams was part of a legitimate homicide investigation.5
At the conclusion of the hearing held on April 22, 2021, the trial court
denied the Commonwealth’s motion to refile its complaint. The
Commonwealth timely appealed, and the trial court entered an opinion giving
its reasons why the order should be affirmed. See Trial Court Opinion,
10/18/2021. As to the charge of unsworn falsification, the trial court found
that the Commonwealth failed to establish a prima facie case because no
evidence was introduced showing that Nathaniel Williams acted with intent to
mislead or deter Lieutenant Clough during his investigation.
As to the charge of tampering with or fabricating physical evidence, the
trial court found that there was no evidence that Williams had altered,
destroyed, concealed or removed a government record with the intent to
thwart a proceeding or investigation. As to the count of tampering with public
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5 Lieutenant Clough stated in an affidavit for an arrest warrant that the subject
homicide file “contained no computerized print outs or ‘workups’ of Theresa
Williams inside. The activity sheets for M17-185 also do not include any
documentation of the alleged sighting of Tashaun Curtis getting into a car in
the area of [Ms. Williams’ neighborhood].” Affidavit for Arrest Warrant,
11/18/2019, at 3.
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records or information, the trial court reasoned only that the evidence was
insufficient, and that the statute was not intended to criminalize Nathaniel
Williams’ conduct. Finally, as to count of obstruction of the administration of
law or other governmental function, the trial court found that a prima facie
case had not been established by the Commonwealth. Id. at 9-10.
The Commonwealth now argues that the trial court erred as a matter of
law in ruling that the evidence was insufficient to establish a prima facie case
on all four counts. See Appellant’s Brief, at 4. The Commonwealth contends
that it carried its burden at the preliminary hearing because, when accepted
as true and viewed in the light most favorable to the prosecution, the evidence
satisfies the elements of each of the four charged crimes.6
II.
The majority overlooks key components of what constitutes a prima
facie case at the preliminary hearing stage resulting in an erroneous
disposition. I would, therefore, expand on the majority’s summary of law with
the following points of emphasis that should guide our determination.
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6 An order denying the refiling of charges is final and immediately reviewable.
The charges against Nathaniel Williams in this case were initially dismissed
following a preliminary hearing before the Honorable William Austin Meehan,
Jr. on September 11, 2020. The Commonwealth then moved to refile the
complaint, but the successor judge, the Honorable Crystal Bryant-Powell,
denied the refiling of the charges after a second hearing. This was a final and
appealable order because the Commonwealth had unsuccessfully sought to
refile the charges pursuant to Pa.R.Crim.P. 520(H), and an appeal from the
order denying refiling was the Commonwealth’s only recourse.
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At a preliminary hearing, the Commonwealth does not have to present
proof beyond a reasonable doubt as to each element of an offense – it is
enough that the evidence “establishes probable cause to warrant the belief
that the accused committed the offense.” Commonwealth v. Karetny, 880
A.2d 505, 513-14 (Pa. 2005); see also Pa.R.Crim.P. 542(D). Reasonable
inferences may be drawn from the evidence to establish a prima facie case,
and the reasonableness of the inferences is evaluated on a “more-likely-than-
not” test. Commonwealth v. Wojdak, 466 A.2d 991, 996 (Pa. 1983).
“[T]he prima facie showing is a low threshold for the Commonwealth to
surpass.” Commonwealth v. Munson, 261 A.3d 530, 540 (Pa. Super.
2021).
“[T]he trial court is afforded no discretion in ascertaining
whether, as a matter of law and in light of the facts presented to it,
the Commonwealth has carried its pre-trial, prima facie burden to make out
the elements of a charged crime.” Karetny, 880 A.2d at 513 (emphasis
added). “Weight and credibility of evidence are not factors at the preliminary
hearing stage.” Munson, 261 A.3d at 540 (emphasis added).
With these points in mind, I will now examine each of the four charges
at issue and explain how the trial court and the majority have adopted an
improper evidentiary test for preliminary hearings.
A.
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The first issue on appeal is whether the trial court erred as a matter of
law in finding that the Commonwealth failed to establish a prima facie case as
to the count of unsworn falsification. A defendant commits this offense where,
“with intent to mislead a public servant in performing his official function, he:
(1) makes any written false statement which he does not believe to be true[.]”
18 Pa.C.S. § 4904(a). In its opinion, the trial court gave little explanation for
its disposition on this count, but Nathaniel Williams argues for the most part
that he could not have made an unsworn falsification because his statements
were not false, and even if they were false, Nathaniel Williams had not himself
reduced them to writing. See Trial Court Opinion, 10/18/2021, at 8;
Appellee’s Brief, at 25-27.
The majority did not squarely address whether Nathaniel Williams lied
to or misled Lieutenant Clough, but the falsehoods are so apparent from the
record that they must be taken as a given. The majority’s decision, therefore,
hinges on a finding that Nathaniel Williams did not produce a “written false
statement” for the purposes of Section 4904(a). See Maj. Op., at 9. Here
too, though, the majority’s reasoning is hard to discern, as the analysis is
minimal and only one case was cited in support of the conclusion –
Commonwealth v. Gaithers, 13 Pa. D&C.3d 668, 670 (Pa.C.P. Montg.
1978).
The majority’s reason for citing Gaithers is not immediately obvious
because it is a 1978 decision of the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery
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County discussing why a conviction for unsworn falsification was sustained by
sufficient evidence. The defendant in Gaithers had signed a written
statement using a false name when taken into police custody, and the court
of common pleas rejected the defendant’s recantation defense as a matter of
law. The case had nothing to do with whether the evidence met the lower
evidentiary standard applicable at a preliminary hearing.
I would hazard a guess that the majority intended to analogize the facts
of Gaithers to those in the present matter. That is, since Nathaniel Williams
signed his name on a document typed up by someone else, the only thing
Nathaniel Williams himself put in “writing” was true, precluding his conviction
for making a written false statement under Section 4904(a). If that is what
the majority intended to suggest, it finds no support in Gaithers, the plain
language of Section 4904(a) or any other authorities.
First, the fact that the defendant in Gaithers violated Section 4904(a)
by signing a document with a false name in no way suggests that a defendant
cannot violate the statute by signing an otherwise fraudulent document with
his true name. Such facts were never contemplated in that case.
Second, Nathaniel Williams’ conduct would clearly amount to “making”
a false written statement, since his transcribed oral statements would be
meaningless without the signed written attestation that the content or
substance of the writings was indeed uttered by him. The record establishes
that during their interview, Lieutenant Clough contemporaneously transcribed
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Nathaniel Williams’ verbal responses to questioning, and Nathaniel Williams
then voluntarily adopted the entire transcription by initialing all six pages of
the document. He further adopted the written statements by signing his name
under the final clause, which reads, “I have read the foregoing statement
consisting of six pages and it is true and correct to the best of my knowledge.”
Motion to Refile Hearing Transcript, 4/22/2021, at pp. 44-45.
These attestations make the document his own, just as if he had typed
or written the document in his own hand. There is no cogent reason why a
defendant would not be liable under Section 4904(a) for attesting to the truth
of a false written statement that happened to be memorialized by a third
party. In fact, it is commonplace for signatories to affidavits prepared by third
parties to be subject to the penalties prescribed by Section 4904. See e.g.,
42 Pa.C.S. § 102 (definition of “affidavit” in the Judicial Code, including “an
unsworn document containing statements of fact and a statement by the
signatory that it is made subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S. 4904[.]”).
Third, and consistent with the discussion above, we have previously
affirmed a conviction under Section 4904(a) where a false written statement
was memorialized by a third party and then adopted by way of the defendant’s
signature. See e.g., Commonwealth v. Cherpes, 520 A.2d 439 (Pa. Super.
1987) (holding that defendant could be convicted for making false written
statements under Section 4904(a)(1) regardless of whether the defendant
had personally memorialized the statements); Commonwealth v Herd, 81
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Pa. D. & C.4th 85, 92 (Pa.C.P. Burks), aff'd, 935 A.2d 12 (Pa. Super. 2007)
(“[Defendant] gave a signed written witness statement to the Colebrookdale
Township Police Department detailing the events described above[.]”).
Nathaniel Williams, therefore, “made” the written statements by attesting in
writing that the statements were his and that they were true, subjecting him
to liability under the statute.
The remaining elements of Section 4904(a) are the presence of a
deliberately false statement and an intent to mislead. Again, the majority did
not address these points, likely because it is so apparent from the record that
there is ample record evidence proving these elements. However, in any
event, a summary of the most pertinent facts will provide some useful context.
In his interview with Lieutenant Clough, Nathaniel Williams gave a false
statement by denying having “spoken to” his cousin for the preceding year.
Nathaniel Williams made this statement despite having communicated
extensively with his cousin via phone calls and text messages at the relevant
times. The two men also curiously stopped communicating right when
Lieutenant Clough’s investigation began. Nathaniel Williams even started
using a new phone the day after Edwin Williams was interviewed.
Moreover, Nathaniel Williams denied that he used government
databases to assist his cousin in learning the personal information of Ms.
Williams, but there is compelling evidence that this is exactly what happened.
The record easily supports the reasonable inference that Nathaniel Williams
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looked up Ms. Williams’ personal information at his cousin’s behest, within
minutes of having conversations with him and within two days of Edwin
Williams’ first encounter with Ms. Williams in a public parking lot.
Nathaniel Williams has claimed that he had a legitimate reason for his
interest in Ms. Williams, denying that he looked up her information as a favor
to his cousin. However, consideration of his alternative account, his credibility
and the weight of conflicting evidence must be reserved for the jury in the
first instance. The trial court was also not permitted to credit Nathaniel
Williams’ dubious story at a preliminary hearing because all reasonable
inferences from the evidence had to be drawn in favor of the Commonwealth.
See id. Thus, because Nathaniel Williams gave a false written statement to
Lieutenant Clough with an intent to mislead, the trial court erred as a matter
of law in denying the Commonwealth’s motion to refile the charge of unsworn
falsification.
B.
The next issue is whether the trial court erred in finding that the
Commonwealth had failed to establish a prima facie case as to the count of
tampering with or fabricating physical evidence (18 Pa.C.S. § 4910). A
defendant commits an offense under Section 4910 if he:
(1) alters, destroys, conceals or removes any record, document
or thing with intent to impair its verity or availability in such
proceeding or investigation; or
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(2) makes, presents or uses any record, document or thing
knowing it to be false and with intent to mislead a public servant
who is or may be engaged in such proceeding or investigation.
18 Pa.C.S. § 4910.
At the two preliminary hearings, the Commonwealth’s evidence allowed
the reasonable inference that Nathaniel Williams added a notated photograph
of Ms. Williams to a homicide file so that he could falsely establish the
legitimacy of his prior inquiries using police databases. The Commonwealth
established that during Lieutenant Clough’s investigation, he reviewed a
homicide file corresponding to a pending case Nathaniel Williams claimed he
was working on when he looked up Ms. Williams’ information. A hard copy of
the homicide file was kept in the Homicide Division Unit of Nathaniel Williams’
department, and it was designated with the number, M17-185. At Lieutenant
Clough’s request, the homicide file was retrieved by Nathaniel Williams’
superior officer. The homicide file contained no references to Ms. Williams
whatsoever.
It was only the day after being interviewed by Lieutenant Clough that
Nathaniel Williams turned up a supplemental homicide file which, among other
things, contained a printout of a Facebook photo, on the back of which
Nathaniel Williams had made handwritten notes with some of Ms. Williams’
personal information.
The majority reasons that the Commonwealth did not present a prima
facie case as to the tampering charge because (a) there was no evidence as
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to when the material about Ms. Williams was added to the second homicide
file, and (b) there was no evidence that Lieutenant Clough received the
entirety homicide file M17-185 on the date he initially retrieved it.
Respectfully, the majority has erred by discounting reasonable inferences that
Nathaniel Williams tampered with police records.
I have already recounted above how Nathaniel Williams lied to and
misled Lieutenant Clough in connection with his use of police databases,
diminishing his credibility. No doubt he also had a motive and opportunity to
add materials to the homicide file in order to corroborate his purported reason
for using those resources to inquire about Ms. Williams. Moreover, the
purported incident prompting the searches – seeing a murder suspect enter a
white van in Ms. Williams’ neighborhood – is completely uncorroborated.
Nevertheless, aside from that, the contents of the second homicide
folder were independently suspect. Lieutenant Clough described at length
why he believed that Nathaniel Williams manufactured research in the
homicide file only after the internal affairs investigation was underway:
Lieutenant Clough: I inspected the contents of that [second]
file folder as well. And it was within that file folder there were
several references to Ms. Williams which included a Facebook
photograph, a photograph of Ms. Williams and her children that
was printed from Facebook. And on the back of it there were some
handwritten notes. And the handwritten notes had some things
such as it said Ms. Williams’ name, no record/no wants, 75-48A
negative, no friends shared, autism supporter, the abbreviation
for possibly, p-o-s-s and neighbors.
Commonwealth: Did it also include some of the biographical
information of Ms. Williams like her license tag?
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Lieutenant Clough: The license tag, the one that I had queried
previously, that was on there as well. That was definitely on there
along with those other things that I stated.
Commonwealth: The Facebook picture, did that appear to you
that it came from a publicly available Facebook profile?
Lieutenant Clough: Yes, because I actually logged in and
viewed it myself and I was able to see it without being restricted,
without having to be a friend of Ms. Williams.
Commonwealth: And those handwritten notes, was that all
information that you would have referred to in Detective Williams
interview with him?
....
Lieutenant Clough: Those things that were handwritten on
there, yes. They were in -- some of them were in the interview
of Detective Williams, yes. And he received a copy of that
interview at the conclusion of his statement.
Commonwealth: Besides that Facebook page and the notes on
the back was there any other reference to Theresa Williams in the
file?
Lieutenant Clough: No, there was not. I looked extensively
through that file. A lot of the inquiries that were made there was
copies, there was printouts of various license plates, tags, houses
that were checked. And this was the only one, the only thing that
was not printed out, it was just handwritten on the back of a
Facebook page.
Commonwealth: So you are saying this information was
different from other checks that you saw in the file; is what you’re
saying?
Lieutenant Clough: Yes.
Preliminary Hearing Transcript, 9/11, 2020, at pp. 77-80.
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In sum, the only material in the second file about Ms. Williams was a
print-out of a publicly available Facebook photo, on the back of which
Nathaniel Williams had handwritten her personal information corresponding to
the same information that Lieutenant Clough had provided to Nathaniel
Williams at the conclusion of their interview the day earlier. Nathaniel
Williams did not print out any of the queries of Ms. Williams from October 17,
2017. Unlike all of the other materials in the homicide file, the one piece of
paper referring to Ms. Williams was publicly available, the information on the
back of the photo was handwritten, and the inclusion of the photo into the file
was not logged or time-stamped. How convenient.
The majority nevertheless seems to suggest that the Commonwealth
had to present direct evidence as to when the Facebook photo was printed
and when Nathaniel Williams wrote notes on the back of it. However, this is
erroneous because at a preliminary hearing, courts are compelled to consider
all the evidence of guilt (including circumstantial evidence) to make
reasonable inferences of guilt that are more likely than not to be true, and to
view the evidence in the Commonwealth’s favor. Ignoring the inferences of
guilt and accepting the explanations given by Nathaniel Williams amounts to
an improper credibility determination and weighing of the evidence.
When viewed in the most favorable to the Commonwealth, the record
facts and circumstantial evidence allow the reasonable inference that
Nathaniel Williams added a photo to the second file to mislead Lieutenant
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Clough and thwart an official investigation. The lack of direct evidence as to
when the photo was added is of no moment, particularly because Nathaniel
Williams himself made it impossible to track the date of that activity. Because
Nathaniel Williams’ conduct satisfies the elements of Section 4910, the trial
court erred as a matter of law in ruling that a prima facie case had not been
established as to this offense.
C.
The trial court also erred as a matter of law in finding that the
Commonwealth had failed to establish a prima facie case as to the count of
tampering with public records (18 Pa.C.S. § 4911), graded as a third-degree
felony. A person commits the offense defined in Section 4911 if he:
(1) knowingly makes a false entry in, or false alteration of, any
record, document or thing belonging to, or received or kept by,
the government for information or record, or required by law to
be kept by others for information of the government;
(2) makes, presents or uses any record, document or thing
knowing it to be false, and with intent that it be taken as a genuine
part of information or records referred to in paragraph (1) of this
subsection; or
(3) intentionally and unlawfully destroys, conceals, removes or
otherwise impairs the verity or availability of any such record,
document or thing.
18 Pa.C.S. § 4911(a).
Where, as in this case, the offense is charged as a felony, it must also
be shown that the defendant acted with an intent to “defraud or injure.” 18
Pa.C.S. § 4911(b). “Fraud” generally means “anything calculated to deceive,
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whether by single act or combination, or by suppression of truth, or suggestion
of what is false, whether it be by direct falsehood or by innuendo, by speech
or silence, word of mouth or look or gesture.” Moser v. DeSetta, 589 A.2d
679, 682 (Pa. 1991).
Here, when viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth,
there is evidence which establishes a prima facie case. The majority found,
and I agree, that the homicide file relied upon by Nathaniel Williams to
establish the legitimacy of his inquiries into Ms. Williams was a “record,
document or thing belonging to, or received or kept by, the government for
information or record.” See Commonwealth v. Barger, 375 A.2d 756, 763-
64 (Pa. Super. 1977) (“It is a written report of an investigation of a motor
vehicle accident which, at the very minimum, is kept by the State Police for
informational purposes.”).
Where the majority and I differ is whether there is evidence that
Nathaniel Williams altered the homicide file. The majority finds that such an
alteration to the file is merely speculative, reiterating the idea discussed above
that the Commonwealth had to present direct evidence that the material about
Ms. Williams was added only after the internal affairs investigation began.
See Maj. Op., at 14.
Once again, the majority is applying the wrong evidentiary standard in
reviewing whether a prima facie case has been presented. Circumstantial
evidence of the crime is sufficient, and a court’s conclusions must be drawn
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from all reasonable inferences that favor the Commonwealth. The elements
of tampering (with intent to defraud) were proven circumstantially by
irrefutable facts and reasonable inferences drawn therefrom:
• Theresa Williams was first accosted by Edwin Williams in a
parking lot on October 14, 2017;
• Nathaniel Williams used police databases on October 17,
2017, within minutes of communicating with his cousin, Edwin
Williams, to look up information about Theresa Williams;
• Nathaniel Williams and Edwin Williams then both lied to and
misled an internal affairs investigator about the extent of their
communications with each other at the relevant times;
• Nathaniel Williams suggested a link between Ms. Williams
and a murder suspect that is both tenuous and uncorroborated;
• Nathaniel Williams produced a photo of Ms. Williams a day
after his interview with Lieutenant Clough in a second homicide
file that was for some reason not kept with the first file retrieved
by Lieutenant Clough at the police department; and
• Unlike all of the other items in both homicide files, the one
photo of Ms. Williams was publicly accessible, with handwritten
notes on it which were not time-stamped.
The reasonable inference from this evidence is that Nathaniel Williams
used official recourses to enable his cousin to stalk a woman and then tried to
cover it up by manipulating a government record to make it appear that the
woman was implicated in a murder investigation. While Nathaniel Williams
has given innocent explanations for his conduct, it is not proper for a court at
a preliminary hearing to disregard reasonable inferences of guilt by relying on
the defendant’s uncorroborated word, especially a defendant who has already
been caught making false statements to an internal affairs investigator. The
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trial court erred in ruling that the Commonwealth had not made out a prima
facie case as to the count of tampering with public records.
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D.
Finally, I would find that the trial court erred in ruling that the
Commonwealth had not established a prima facie case as to the count of
obstructing administration of law or other governmental function (18 Pa.C.S.
§ 5101). A defendant may be found guilty of this offense “if he intentionally
obstructs, impairs or perverts the administration of law or other governmental
function by force, violence, physical interference or obstacle, breach of official
duty, or any other unlawful act[.]” 18 Pa.C.S. § 5101. This crime requires
more than “mere lying” or giving false information to a police officer. See
Commonwealth v. Shelly, 703 A.2d 499, 503 (Pa. Super. 1997). The
conduct causing obstruction or interference must be an independently illegal
act. See id.
I have outlined above why the record evidence compels the inference
that Nathaniel Williams lied to Lieutenant Clough during his interview and
altered a homicide file to give the false impression that he made inquiries
about Ms. Williams for a legitimate purpose. This conduct was sufficient to
establish a prima facie case that Nathaniel Williams violated Sections 4904(a),
4910 and 4911 of the Crimes Code. Since there is no doubt that Lieutenant
Clough was engaged in the administration of a government function during
his investigation into Nathaniel Williams’ conduct, all of the elements of
Section 5101 were met. I would, therefore, hold that the evidence was
sufficient to establish a prima facie case of guilt as to this count.
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In dismissing the four charges that the Commonwealth brought against
Nathaniel Williams and precluding the requested refiling of the charges, the
trial court erred as a matter of law in misapplying the test for whether a prima
facie case has been presented. Accordingly, I would reverse the trial court’s
order so that all four counts may be bound over for trial.
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