Com. v. Evans, K.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 12, 2026
Docket36 EDA 2025
StatusPublished
AuthorStevens
Cited by1 cases

This text of Com. v. Evans, K. (Com. v. Evans, K.) 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. Evans, K., (Pa. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinions

J-S37019-25

2026 PA Super 96

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : KHALILH JAFAR EVANS : : Appellant : No. 36 EDA 2025 :

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered July 10, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-46-CR-0004819-2023

BEFORE: DUBOW, J., KUNSELMAN, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E. *

OPINION BY STEVENS, P.J.E.: FILED MAY 12, 2026

Appellant, Khalilh Jafar Evans, appeals from the judgment of sentence

entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County after a jury

convicted him of false imprisonment of a minor. 1 Sentenced to serve a three-

and-one-half to ten years’ incarceration and to register as a Tier I sex offender

pursuant to the Sexual Offender Registration and Notification Act (“SORNA”), 2

he raises challenges to the trial court’s jury instructions, ex parte questioning

of a juror and eventual replacement of the juror, and to the sufficiency of the

evidence offered to prove the charge of false imprisonment. We affirm.

At Appellant’s criminal trial, the Commonwealth presented the

testimony of the 14 year-old girl who encountered 45-year-old Appellant at

____________________________________________

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2903(b). 2 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9799.15. J-S37019-25

the Willow Grove Mall, and it supported her testimony with both the shopping

mall’s security video and the girl’s contemporaneous cell phone recording via

a Snapchat app. Specifically, on July 12, 2023, at approximately 7:00 p.m.,

the girl was shopping with three of her friends on the second floor of the Willow

Grove Mall when she became “a little upset” with one of them and decided to

walk alone to a jewelry store located on the first floor. N.T. (trial), 4/17/24,

at 51-52. She boarded the down escalator while listening to music on her

earphones and looking at her phone, when she happened to notice an

unfamiliar adult man about ten steps ahead of her was talking to her and

waving for her to come to him. N.T. at 53; See Commonwealth’s Ex. 5 at

00:20.

The man summoning her was Appellant, and he was accompanied by

another man. The girl did not move toward Appellant. The two men

dismounted the escalator, but only Appellant waited for her, while the other

man walked slowly ahead. See Commonwealth Ex. 5 at 00:38. When the girl

reached the bottom of the escalator, Appellant offered his arm and told her to

walk with him. N.T. at 54.

The mall security video shows the girl walking around him and looking

back. See Commonwealth’s Ex. 5 at 00:46. The jewelry store she was

interested in was behind her, but she continued to walk straight ahead and

Appellant stayed alongside her. See Commonwealth’s Ex. 6 at 00:25-31.

When asked why she walked that way rather than turning towards the jewelry

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store, she answered, “because I couldn’t get away from him, and that’s where

he was walking.” N.T. at 67.

In her testimony, the girl denied voluntarily taking his arm, N.T. at 55,

asserting instead that Appellant “grabbed my wrist, and he put it inside his

arm” and “pressed down” to prevent her from withdrawing it. N.T. at 55. See

Commonwealth’s Ex. 6 at 00:32-33. She testified that she asked why she

needed to walk with him, and Appellant replied during the walk that she

needed to know who he was, that his name was Alex, and he was 25 years

old. N.T. at 55-56. She told him she was 13 years old, one year younger

than her actual age, to emphasize to him that she was a minor. N.T. at 56.

She testified that she was fearful during this walk, which prompted her

to record secretly the event on her cell phone, which, she explained, “was

already on Snapchat, so I just had my phone, like, by my leg, and I was just

recording him.” N.T. at 56. The Commonwealth introduced the video into

evidence and played it for the jury. N.T. at 57-58, 65. Three photographs,

or “still shots,” were taken from the video and admitted into evidence after

the girl authenticated these, as well. N.T. at 58-59. She stopped recording

when Appellant suggested he put his phone number in her phone and she put

her number in his. N.T. at 66. She testified, however, that phone numbers

were not exchanged. N.T. at 66.

She asserted that Appellant’s grip was so tight that she either could not

remove herself from it or, when she tried to pull free, he would resecure it.

N.T. at 67-68. He loosened his grip after he said he was 25. N.T. at 68. She

-3- J-S37019-25

pulled away as fast as she could and said she was 13 years old. N.T. at 68.

This did not dissuade Appellant, according to the girl, as she testified Appellant

“asked if he was too old for [her],” and he “kept coming towards me and kept

trying to get me to go with him. . . . He kept, like, putting his arm towards

me and kind of trying to get me to, like, hold his arm again.” N.T. at 68; See

Commonwealth’s Ex. 7 at 00:49.

She took several steps back, yelled at him, and began to walk away.

N.T. at 68-69; Commonwealth Ex. 7 at 00:50-55. She testified that at that

moment, “after I yelled, I kind of just started walking away in, like, shock,

and then I started, like, running. N.T. at 69; Commonwealth Ex. 7 at 1:07-

17. She acknowledged there were other people around, including a woman

who “came up to me and asked if I needed help, [but] I just kind of ran.” N.T.

at 69.

The girl phoned a friend and regrouped with her and the others, who

advised her to report her encounter to mall security. N.T. at 69-73. She

spoke with both a security guard and a supervisor and showed them her video,

but they did not contact police. N.T. at 73. The security guard escorted the

girl and her friends to the mall exit, and they walked across the street to

Panera Bread and waited there for about one hour until the girl’s father picked

them up. She returned home, where a uniformed police officer from the

Abington Police Department visited her home and conducted an interview of

her and watched the video recording on her phone. N.T. at 78-79. A second

-4- J-S37019-25

officer with the Abington Police Department drove them down to the Abington

police station, where the girl provided a statement. N.T. at 79.

Police arrested Appellant and charged him with False Imprisonment of

a Minor and two counts of Harassment. The trial court provides an apt

recitation of the ensuing relevant procedural history, as follows:

From April 17 through April 18, 2024, the [trial court] held a jury trial. During the course of deliberations, the court discharged a jurorfn after it determined that the juror was refusing to perform her duties with respect to deliberations. Following the replacement of the discharged juror with one of the alternate jurors, the jury found Appellant guilty of the charge referenced above.

Fn. This specific juror was designated as Juror Number 8 following voir dire.

On July 7, 2024, Appellant filed a Motion for Arrest of Judgment asserting that the [trial] court’s discharge of the juror on the grounds she was refusing to deliberate constituted an abuse of discretion. On July 10, 2024, the court denied Appellant’s motion.

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