Com. v. Ford, K.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 27, 2017
DocketCom. v. Ford, K. No. 515 EDA 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Ford, K. (Com. v. Ford, 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. Ford, K., (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

J-S10038-17

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

KINTE FORD

Appellant No. 515 EDA 2016

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence dated October 5, 2015 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0003558-2013

BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., DUBOW, J., and SOLANO, J.

MEMORANDUM BY SOLANO, J.: FILED JUNE 27, 2017

Appellant Kinte Ford appeals from the judgment of sentence following

a jury trial and convictions for rape by forcible compulsion, aggravated

assault, sexual assault, and terroristic threats.1 Appellant contends that the

trial court erred in admitting testimony related to his prior abuse of the

victim in this case, there was insufficient evidence to sustain the verdict, and

the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. We affirm.

The trial court set forth the evidence presented at Appellant’s jury

trial, for which testimony commenced on October 1, 2014, as follows:

Drelanda Tyler, the complainant, was Appellant’s girlfriend on January 25, 2013. She often stayed at Appellant’s home . . . with him and his mother, Gloria Ford.

____________________________________________ 1 18 Pa.C.S. § 3121(a)(1), 2702(a)(1), 3124.1, and 2706(a)(1), respectively. J-S10038-17

Ms. Tyler testified that Appellant had left the home around 11:00 pm on January 25, 2013. In the early morning hours of January 26, around 1:00 am, Appellant came back home while Ms. Tyler was in his room on the third floor, talking with a friend on her cell phone. Ms. Tyler testified that Appellant was upset, because “he basically thought I was on the phone with a guy.” The couple briefly argued, then Appellant hit Ms. Tyler on the face with a closed fist, breaking her glasses. He told her to sleep on a couch in the first floor living room instead of upstairs. Ms. Tyler took her phone and charger downstairs.

After a few minutes, Appellant came downstairs, took Ms. Tyler’s cell phone from her, and returned upstairs. Ms. Tyler testified that, about three or four minutes later, Appellant came back downstairs and stood in front of Ms. Tyler, cursing and calling her a liar. Appellant then punched her and pinned her on the couch. She tried to get Appellant off her, telling him to “calm down, just stop.” Appellant then “thrust” Ms. Tyler around with his hands on her shoulders. At a certain point in the struggle, Appellant pulled down Ms. Tyler’s green elastic-waist pants and ripped off her panties. He pulled down his own pants and put his penis inside Ms. Tyler’s vagina. Ms. Tyler was trying to kick Appellant off her body, until she eventually “[got] tired and restless of trying to fight [him] off,” and “shut down” at a certain point during the assault.

The commotion woke up Ms. Ford. She came out of her room. In her statement to Detective Jenkins, Ms. Tyler said that Ms. Ford “came all the way downstairs and got [Appellant] off [her] while [they] were having sex.” At trial, however, Ms. Tyler testified that Appellant had actually pulled his penis out and “fixed himself” before his mother approached the top of the stairs. Ms. Ford came downstairs and went into a closet to get “something metal . . . a bat or a golf club.” Ms. Ford then took Ms. Tyler upstairs to the third floor in order to keep her away from Appellant, who was “still pissed off flying through the house, pacing back and forth, up and down the stairs.” Ms. Tyler sat down on Ms. Ford’s bed. Appellant came upstairs and began arguing with his mother as she blocked him from entering through the doorway. Ms. Tyler stood up behind Ms. Ford. Appellant threw a left fist at Ms. Tyler’s right eye, followed by a right fist to her forehead. Ms. Tyler’s forehead was cut, causing blood to drip down her face and onto her clothes. Ms. Ford told

-2- J-S10038-17

Appellant to leave and took Ms. Tyler into the bathroom, where she gave her a rag for the blood on her face.

Ms. Ford exited the bathroom, leaving Ms. Tyler in there and closing and locking the door behind her. Shortly thereafter, Appellant began hitting the door, eventually busting through it. Appellant balled up his fist and made a threatening jump at Ms. Tyler before finally leaving the house. Ms. Tyler testified that Appellant had his hands in his pockets, and she later told detectives that Appellant was holding a gun. On his way out of the house, Appellant touched Ms. Tyler's temple and said “I’ll blow your brains out.”

Once he left, Ms. Ford drove Ms. Tyler to her best friend Latiya’s house . . . . Around 3:30 am, Ms. Ford dropped Ms. Tyler off near the McDonald’s . . . , about halfway to Latiya’s house. Once she got to the house by foot, Ms. Tyler “banged on the door” but Latiya did not answer. One of Latiya’s neighbors eventually opened the door and let Ms. Tyler sleep in a spare room for the night.

Trial Ct. Op., 7/25/16, at 2-4 (citations to the trial transcript omitted,

brackets in original).

Ms. Tyler also testified that she was nervous when Appellant first

became angry and took her telephone, because Appellant had physically

abused her during arguments in the past. N.T., 10/1/14, at 16. That

evidence was allowed pursuant to a pretrial order by the trial court that

granted a motion by the Commonwealth to admit evidence of Appellant’s

prior bad acts.2 Ms. Tyler testified that Appellant would frequently hit her

over the course of their two year relationship (which commenced when she ____________________________________________ 2 See Pa.R.E. 404(b)(3) (requiring advance notice by prosecutor of intent to use evidence of prior bad acts in criminal cases). The trial court’s order was entered following a hearing held on the motion on August 25, 2014, and September 12, 2014.

-3- J-S10038-17

was nineteen years old, and Appellant was 34 or 35), but that she never

reported Appellant to the police or sought medical treatment. Id. at 22-23,

32-34. Ms. Tyler did not report the instant crime until her friend called the

police the following day. Id. at 38-39.

The trial court’s narrative of the evidence continues:

On January 26, uniformed officers brought Ms. Tyler into Special Victims’ Unit for an interview. After the interview, Ms. Tyler went to Philadelphia Sexual Assault Response Center (PSARC) for an examination. Nurse examiner Karen Doughtery observed an abrasion, laceration and tenderness on Ms. Tyler’s head; swelling, a bruise, and tenderness on her eyes; abrasion and tenderness on her mouth; bruising and swelling with tenderness to her right eye lower lid; an approximate 1 cm linear laceration to the forehead above the eyebrow with tenderness; a 3 cm scratch-like wound to the left face and orbit (the area that surrounds the eye); and an approximate half centimeter abrasion to the upper lip and gum.

Acid phosphatase, a component of human seminal fluid, was inconclusive in all the swabs from Ms. Tyler’s sexual assault kit. Neither P30 (another component of human seminal fluid) nor sperm was found on any of the swabs. A brown stain, similar in appearance to blood, was found on the outside of Ms. Tyler’s sweat pants. Additionally, microscopic examinations found sperm on Ms. Tyler’s torn thong-style panties. Lissette Vega of the Philadelphia Police DNA lab concluded that Appellant, to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty, is the source of the sperm. However, there are no tests that can be performed to conclusively determine whether a rape occurred, due to the physical nature of genital tissue.

Ms. Ford’s testimony conflicted with Ms. Tyler’s on several points. She testified that Ms.

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