Com. v. Cuffie, T.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 2, 2015
Docket3597 EDA 2013
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Cuffie, T. (Com. v. Cuffie, T.) 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. Cuffie, T., (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

J-A32018-14

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

TINA CUFFIE,

Appellant No. 3597 EDA 2013

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence November 26, 2013 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0005034-2012

BEFORE: PANELLA, OLSON AND FITZGERALD,* JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY OLSON, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 02, 2015

Appellant, Tina Cuffie, appeals from the judgment of sentence entered

on November 26, 2013, as made final by the denial of Appellant’s post-

sentence motion on December 9, 2013. We affirm.

The trial court has thoroughly summarized the underlying facts of this

case. As the trial court explained:

On March 20, 2012, [Appellant] and Latiff Hadi [(hereinafter “Hadi”)] were arrested and charged with murder and related charges in the death of their son, Khalil Wimes. . . . [Appellant and Hadi proceeded to a consolidated bench trial, where the following evidence was produced].

Alicia Nixon was approached in 2006 to raise the child victim in this case, Khalil Wimes, who was not yet born but whose parents [(Appellant and Hadi)] had three children under the supervision of Philadelphia’s Department of Human Services [(hereinafter “DHS”)]. [Hadi’s] mother initially asked if [Ms. Nixon] and her husband [c]ould take in the unborn child, and then a week after he was born, [Hadi], who is [Ms.] Nixon’s cousin, asked if [Ms. Nixon]

*Retired Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. J-A32018-14

were still willing to take [in the baby]. When [Ms.] Nixon said yes, [Appellant, Hadi, Hadi’s mother, and] a representative of DHS came with Khalil to her home. [DHS] permitted [Appellant and Hadi] to see Khalil, but not to take custody of him because their home was unfit for a child.

For a time, this arrangement was agreeable to all parties, and [Appellant and Hadi] saw Khalil during the day several times a week[,] but always returned [Khalil] to [Ms. Nixon’s] home at night. Eventually, however, [Hadi] exchanged words with [Ms. Nixon] as he was picking Khalil up for [a] day, and threatened not to return [Khalil to Ms. Nixon] that evening. [Ms. Nixon] became worried that [Hadi] would follow through on his threat, and [Ms. Nixon] called the police, directing them to meet her at a supermarket where [Appellant] worked and where [Appellant, Hadi, and Khalil] frequently spent time together during the day. The police made sure that Khalil was returned to [Ms. Nixon’s] care, but shortly thereafter [Ms. Nixon] initiated legal proceedings to gain permanent custody of Khalil. . . .

[Appellant and Hadi] contested [Ms. Nixon’s custody petition], and [they] were temporarily awarded custody of Khalil shortly after he turned [one year old], in February [] 2007. One week later, Khalil was returned to [Ms. Nixon’s] custody, because [Appellant and Hadi] had failed to obtain [Khalil’s] necessary asthma medication and had not followed an appropriate diet for [Khalil, thus causing Khalil] to be hospitalized. . . .

During his first three years when he lived with [Ms. Nixon], Khalil thrived. He reached early milestones [(like holding a bottle, crawling, and walking)] on or ahead of schedule. By the time he was three, [Khalil] was learning both English and Arabic, and could read certain words and write his name with assistance. He was also a healthy eater. [Ms. Nixon] addressed Khalil’s early issues with asthma and eczema with diet and skin cream, and both [issues] cleared up. [Ms. Nixon] kept many photographs she had taken of Khalil, and in those photographs he appears to have a healthy weight, clear, unscarred skin, and a bright demeanor. . . .

-2- J-A32018-14

[In] March [] 2009, [] Khalil was removed from [Ms. Nixon’s] care and returned to [Appellant and Hadi. Appellant and Hadi did not] allow [Ms. Nixon] any visitation with [Khalil, and Ms. Nixon] did not see [Khalil] again until his funeral.

At approximately 1:00 a.m. on March 20, 2012, Gary Hines, a social worker with DHS, received a hotline call from the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, [(hereinafter “CHOP”)] about a child who had recently come to the hospital and was dead. [Mr. Hines] went to the hospital, as the call indicated that there were other small children in the deceased child’s family. . . .

[Once he arrived at CHOP, Mr. Hines] spoke to [Appellant and Hadi]. [Appellant told Mr. Hines] that Khalil had fallen getting out of the tub. She also told him that [Khalil] would not eat regular food, so [she and Hadi] fed him primarily fast food, and that [Khalil] was constantly vomiting. Hadi told [Mr. Hines] that he received a call that Khalil was injured, and then he went to the house and immediately arranged for an elder son to drive them to the hospital.

[Mr. Hines] also observed the body of [Khalil], who at the time of his death was six years of age but [who] appeared [to be] three years of age and was extremely thin. [Mr. Hines] saw a knot on [Khalil’s] forehead and lesions in his mouth, as well as marks up and down his body on both sides. [Mr. Hines] also examined [Appellant and Hadi’s] other minor child, [but] saw no evidence of abuse [on the child].

Kiwan DaCosta, a social worker at [CHOP], met with [Appellant and Hadi] at the hospital on the night that Khalil died. [Appellant] told [Ms. DaCosta] that Khalil had fallen during his morning bath and injured his face, but had [an] otherwise [] normal day, and that when she went to check on [Khalil] in the evening he was not breathing. . . .

When [Ms. DaCosta] saw Khalil’s body, she immediately noticed that he was emaciated and covered with scars and injuries. [Ms. DaCosta testified that, a]lthough [Khalil] was six years old, he looked to her as if he [were] only three. When [Appellant and Hadi] indicated to [Ms. DaCosta] that

-3- J-A32018-14

they were about to leave the hospital, [Ms. DaCosta] called the police to make sure that they were on their way and would arrive soon. The police arrived before [Appellant and Hadi] left the hospital.

Philadelphia Police Detective Mark Webb took a statement from [Hadi] on March 20, 2012. In that statement, Hadi said that Khalil was accident-prone, and that [Appellant and Hadi] had trouble keeping [Khalil’s] weight up because of [Khalil’s] vomiting. Philadelphia [Police] Detective Michael McGoldrick took a statement from [Appellant] on March [20], 2012[,] at 4:35 a.m. In [the statement, Appellant] said that Khalil fell getting out of the bath the prior morning and [had] landed on his face. [Appellant] also said that [Khalil] tended to fall frequently and [that Khalil] “marked easily.”

Philadelphia [Police] Detective Gregory Santamala took a second statement from [Hadi] on March 21, 2012[,] at 2:30 a.m. In [the statement, Hadi] indicated an awareness that if a doctor saw Khalil’s pre-death physical condition, “yes, you would get in trouble.” [Hadi] acknowledged that he would “tap him on his butt” but denied using a belt on him. [Hadi] said that sometimes Khalil was punished by [Appellant and Hadi] withholding [Khalil’s] food from him. [Hadi] also said that he [had] intended to find housing with his [new] girlfriend [], and move Khalil in with them. . . .

Philadelphia [Police] Detective Howard Peterman took a statement from [Appellant] on March 21, 2012, at 11:35 a.m., in which [Appellant] said that as Khalil was getting out of the bathtub on the morning of the day he died, [Appellant] “popped him in the back of his head and knocked him to the floor,” causing [Khalil] to hit his face and split his lip. [Appellant] also reported that for the rest of the day, Khalil seemed weak, wobbly, and disoriented.

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Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Cuffie, T., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-cuffie-t-pasuperct-2015.