Com. v. Drake, M.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 18, 2015
Docket753 EDA 2014
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Drake, M. (Com. v. Drake, M.) 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. Drake, M., (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

J-S35010-15

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

MICHAEL ERIC DRAKE

Appellant No. 753 EDA 2014

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence February 7, 2014 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0012343-2011

BEFORE: MUNDY, J., OLSON, J., and PLATT, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY MUNDY, J.: FILED JUNE 18, 2015

Appellant, Michael Eric Drake, appeals from the February 7, 2014

aggregate judgment of sentence of 20 to 40 years’ imprisonment, imposed

after a jury found him guilty of one count each of aggravated assault, rape

by forcible compulsion, sexual assault, and indecent assault by forcible

compulsion.1 After careful review, we affirm.

The trial court set forth the facts of this case as follows.

Late in the evening of November 27, 2010, [Victim] went to a bar located at 52nd and Girard Avenue with some friends. Before entering the bar, [Victim] observed [Appellant] who was standing ____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. 1 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2702(a)(1), 3121(a)(1), 3124.1, and 3126(a)(2), respectively. J-S35010-15

outside of the bar. He started a conversation with her and asked her if she wanted to get a drink. They then went into the bar to have a drink together. After drinking one or two beers, [Victim] told [Appellant] that she was leaving the bar to meet a friend. [Appellant], who lived about a block away from [Victim’s] friend, asked to walk with her. As they were walking, [Victim] called her friend and learned that he would not be home for another 10 minutes. While she waited for the friend to arrive, [Victim] asked if she could use the bathroom at [Appellant]’s house.

After [Victim] used the bathroom on the second floor, she walked downstairs toward the front door. [Appellant] asked her where she was going. [Victim] replied that she was leaving to meet her friend. [Appellant] then grabbed [Victim] from behind by her hair. He told her that she was not going anywhere and punched her several times on the left side of her face with a closed fist, which caused her face to swell and her mouth to bleed. He then dragged her to the dining room and laid down a blanket. [Appellant], who had already taken off his clothes, started to rip off [Victim’s] clothes. He pushed [Victim] to her knees and forced his penis into her mouth. [Appellant] also forced her to have vaginal sex. After he ejaculated, [Victim] asked if she could use the bathroom to look at her face and put her clothes back on.

After looking at her face in the bathroom, [Victim] left the bathroom and walked back downstairs. [Appellant] asked her, “What was I doing?” [Victim] replied, “I have family. I have kids. I have to go home. I have people waiting for me.” In response, [Appellant] hit her again and threw her to the floor. He said, “Shut up, B. Be quiet. I didn’t ask you to talk. You’re not going anywhere. I’m not finished with you yet. I’m having anal sex with you. It’s not over yet. I’m not finished with you.”

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At this point, [Victim] feared for her life. She stood up and looked for anything that she could use as a weapon to ward off another assault by [Appellant]. With nothing in sight, [Victim] decided to punch the glass window of a china cabinet to obtain a piece of broken glass as a weapon to cut [Appellant]. When she punched the glass, [Victim] suffered severe cuts to her right arm and was bleeding heavily. As [Victim] went to lash at [Appellant] with the broken shard of glass, he fled the house wearing only his jeans. [Appellant] left his wallet, jacket, identification, and money in the dining room where he had assaulted [Victim]. In an effort to alert someone, [Victim] broke the front windows of the house. She ultimately went to the house next door and told the boy who answered the door that she needed help because she had just been raped.

[Victim] was transported to Jefferson Hospital where she received stitches to her arm and hand. Hospital staff documented injuries to her lip, swelling to her face, and cuts on the inside of her mouth. A rape kit was performed on [Victim]. Prior to the rape kit being performed, however, doctors had to remove a tampon, which was pushed very far inside of [Victim’s] vagina. [Victim] had used a tampon because she was in her menstrual period.

Detective Lara Hammond of the [s]pecial [v]ictims [u]nit met with [Victim] at her home on November 29, 2010. [Victim] provided a signed statement to Detective Hammond regarding the assault. [Victim] also positively identified [Appellant] from a photo array. Detective Hammond issued a warrant for [Appellant]’s arrest. Detective Hammond also collected evidence from and took photographs of [Appellant]’s home.

At trial, [Victim] testified that she never consented to sexual intercourse with [Appellant], and that she never made any deal with him to trade sex for drugs. She admitted that, prior to going to the bar, she smoked two marijuana cigarettes laced with crack and took her prescribed medications of

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Flurazine and Remeron. During the trial, [Victim] was in custody for violating her probation. She testified that the prosecutor made no promises to her regarding her violation of probation for her testifying at trial. On cross-examination, [Victim] conceded that her statement to Detective Hammond contained inconsistencies, but stated that they were the result of her being hysterical at the time and “coming down off medicine from the hospital.”

[Philadelphia police officer Mark McDermott testified that] [o]n November 28, 2010, at 5:38am, [he] was on routine patrol in a marked police vehicle in the area of 58th and Master Streets when he observed [Victim] “waving her arms, flailing as she was in a panic mode. As we got closer, we could see that she was covered in blood, and she looked to be in extreme need of emergency assistance.” Officer McDermott asked [Victim] what happened. [Victim] replied that she had just been raped at 5802 Master Street. Officer McDermott went to the house and observed blood all over the porch, a broken front window, large amounts of blood in the living room, a china cabinet that had a broken pane of glass, and blankets and pillows next to the china cabinet.

[Philadelphia police officer Jeffrey McMahon testified that] [o]n July 19, 2011, [he] was on routine patrol in a marked police vehicle. Officer McMahon conducted a traffic stop of a gold Nissan Altima driven by [Appellant] to investigate the vehicle’s brake light that was not operating. When Officer McMahon asked [Appellant] for his driver’s license, [Appellant] provided the officer with a false name. After being unable to confirm his identity based upon the false name, Officer McMahon removed [Appellant] from his vehicle. [Appellant] then provided his real name and was arrested pursuant to the warrant by Detective Hammond.

Gamal Emira testified as an expert in forensic science. Based upon his review of certain samples from the rape kit performed on [Victim], he testified,

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inter alia, that the vaginal and vulva swabs were positive for sperm.

David Hawkins testified as an expert in forensic DNA analysis. Based upon his review of certain samples from the rape kit performed on [Victim] and from a swab from [Appellant], he testified, inter alia, that [Appellant] was a male source of the DNA mixture contained in the vaginal swab sperm cell infraction and the rectal swab E cell fraction.2

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Com. v. Drake, M., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-drake-m-pasuperct-2015.