Com. v. Abreu, J.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 9, 2024
Docket3 MDA 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Abreu, J. (Com. v. Abreu, J.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Com. v. Abreu, J., (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

J-S26025-24

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : JABEZ LUIS ABREU : : Appellant : No. 3 MDA 2024

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered December 20, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Huntingdon County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-31-CR-0000464-2022

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J.E., OLSON, J., and KUNSELMAN, J.

MEMORANDUM BY OLSON, J.: FILED: SEPTEMBER 9, 2024

Appellant, Jabez Luis Abreu, appeals from the judgment of sentence

entered on December 20, 2023. We affirm.

The trial court ably summarized the underlying facts of this case:

On May 28, 2022, [Appellant] was staying at the vacation home of his cousin, Alaric Abreu, and Alaric's paramour, Erin Barley, located in Penn Township, Huntingdon County. Alaric and Erin had invited [Appellant] and other friends and family members up to their vacation home for the Memorial Day holiday weekend and to celebrate Alaric's birthday. The group that had been invited included Sean Heckman, a mutual friend. For unknown reasons [Appellant] had been in a bad mood since early in the trip, and when he was invited to go with Alaric, Erin, and the others to Raystown Lake for an afternoon of boating and swimming, he elected to stay behind at the house. The group was away from the house from approximately 11:00 am to 4:00 [p.m.]

While the group had been at the lake, [Appellant] had been texting with Alaric. While Alaric could not recall the specific details of the texts, they pertained to [Appellant’s] mood, and [Appellant] relayed that he was going to leave and walk to J-S26025-24

the train station to get a ride home. Alaric told [Appellant] that trying to walk there was not a good idea and that one of them would give him a ride to the train station after they returned. [Appellant] declined.

Alaric, Erin, and Sean had each seen [Appellant] drinking alcohol (beer and liquor) at various times during the day, and when they returned from the lake, they observed [Appellant] to be intoxicated. [Appellant] admitted that he had been drinking.

The incident that led to [Appellant’s] conviction began when Sean heard [Appellant] yelling and carrying on in the sunroom at the vacation house. Sean went in to try to calm [Appellant] down. He did not recall what [Appellant] was yelling about in detail, but recalled specifically "he said he's tired of Alaric's shit . . . and he just wants to leave." Sean was having some success in calming [Appellant] down until Alaric came into the room to get a drink. [Appellant] began yelling at Alaric, and Sean asked Alaric to leave so he could calm things down again. As Alaric was attempted to walk out, [Appellant] stepped in his path and "got in [his] face," standing nearly chest-to-chest with him. Alaric could not recall what [Appellant] was saying specifically, but did remember that half of it was unintelligible "because [Appellant] was slurring his words." The situation quickly turned physical. Alaric could not recall whether he pushed [Appellant] in an attempt to create distance so he could leave the room, or if [Appellant] began by pushing Alaric as Alaric was trying to step by him. (Sean's recollection was that [Appellant’s] first move was to try to punch Alaric, but miss[ed] landing the blow). [Appellant] then quickly got Alaric into what was alternately referred to by the witnesses as a "headlock" or "reverse headlock," the description of which more accurately matches what is commonly known as a chokehold, with [Appellant] positioned behind Alaric with his arm encircling Alaric's neck, cutting off Alaric's ability to breathe.

It was at this time that Erin entered the sunroom, having been drawn there by the sound of the verbal altercation.

So when I walked up – voices had been elevated and when I walked in the sunroom [Appellant] had Alaric in a

-2- J-S26025-24

headlock and Alaric was struggling to breathe and it was just two big guys and not breaking apart. And Alaric was trying to get out of the headlock and [Appellant] was thrown off of him and when he looked up at us continuing to fight, [Appellant] had a large gash on his head.

Alaric's and Sean's testimony was in line with Erin's. Both testified that the incident moved quickly from the first point of physical engagement to [Appellant] putting Alaric into the "headlock," from the headlock to the two struggling for physical control, and from the two struggling for physical control to the two ending up on the floor with Alaric working to catch his breath and [Appellant] bleeding from a laceration on his head. The entire incident happened quickly enough that none of them were sure precisely how [Appellant] and Alaric wound up on the floor or how the laceration occurred on [Appellant’s] head. []Alaric's recollection of what occurred once [Appellant] put him in the [headlock was as follows:]

I couldn't breathe. I remember pushing him back into the glass door area where there was a table, a table and chairs, and he was on the ground. I was like on top of him and that's when I saw he had a cut on his face and I went, this is an emergency and tried to calm him down and get him to the hospital.

Neither Erin nor Sean recalled seeing Alaric strike or punch [Appellant] in any specific manner (that would have caused the head laceration or otherwise), and Alaric did not recall doing so.

Erin, Sean, and Alaric were in agreement that the physical altercation stopped once [Appellant] realized he was bleeding, and that [Appellant] remained verbally combative and reluctant to accept help until it became clear that he had to. Erin called 911, put the call on speaker, and the group initially sought to have [Appellant] transported to the hospital by ambulance. [Appellant] refused, but did finally acquiesce to allowing them to transport him to the hospital in their own vehicle.

[Appellant] was interviewed at the hospital by Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Cody Booher. The version of events that [Appellant] told Trooper Booher, and the testimony that he

-3- J-S26025-24

gave at trial, differ significantly from the testimony of Erin, Sean, and Alaric. [Appellant] claimed that Alaric had been treating him poorly, and that he had found evidence of cocaine use in the house. He also claimed that he had called his parents, told them of the alleged cocaine use, and attempted to have them come pick him up. With respect to the incident itself, [Appellant] claimed that while in the sunroom Alaric tugged on his arm to get his attention, he turned around to find Alaric and Sean confronting him "in his face" with their fists clenched, the two dared him to go outside to "scrap," he tried to "gently" push Alaric away from him, and then Alaric grabbed him. When Alaric grabbed him, [Appellant] grabbed Alaric's head in an attempt to prevent Alaric from using his hands, and Alaric lifted [Appellant] up and slammed him to the ground. [Appellant] woke up on the ground with one of Alaric's hands on his throat, and Alaric then punched him in the forehead. Sean said "whoa, whoa" and Alaric stopped, got up, and stepped away while Sean handed [Appellant] a sweatshirt to try to staunch the bleeding. [Appellant] further claimed that Erin was not present, but another friend, Timmy, was there and witnessed the incident.

[Appellant] suffered a five-inch laceration to his scalp which required stiches to close. The wound started at the hairline slightly to the right of center, and extended rearward at a slight angle toward the right side of his head. Alaric suffered carpet burns on his legs, arms, and chin.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Abreu, J., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-abreu-j-pasuperct-2024.