Com. v. Frye, T.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 4, 2025
Docket764 MDA 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Frye, T. (Com. v. Frye, 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. Frye, T., (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-A15003-25

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : TYLER BRANDON FRYE : : Appellant : No. 764 MDA 2024

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered January 16, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of Cumberland County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-21-CR-0001475-2022

BEFORE: BOWES, J., STABILE, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED: SEPTEMBER 4, 2025

Tyler Brandon Frye appeals from the aggregate sentence of 108 to 220

months in prison following his convictions for involuntary deviate sexual

intercourse (“IDSI”) and sexual assault. We affirm.

This matter arises from a series of escalating incidents throughout March

2022 between Appellant and his wife, Amanda Frye, culminating in an attack

by Appellant on March 29. The trial court summarized the pertinent

background, based on the evidence presented at trial, as follows:

Ms. Frye testified that during the month of March 2022, [Appellant] began accusing her of having an affair, hiring someone to “watch” him, and installing cameras and microphones in the house. He began regularly interrogating her about those accusations and further accused her of hiring someone to kill him. Ms. Frye stated that [Appellant] had always been jealous, but his behavior was becoming more extreme. [Appellant] made holes in the walls of the residence, rummaged through drawers and ____________________________________________

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. J-A15003-25

closets, and dismantled electronics looking for listening devices. [Appellant] would often take [Ms. Frye’s] cell phone and search through her contacts list and call logs. Each time, [Appellant] would destroy the phone after purportedly “catching her in a lie.” Ms. Frye repeatedly denied all of [Appellant]’s allegations and even offered to take a polygraph test to assuage his fears. [Appellant] eventually only permitted Ms. Frye to use a flip-phone with a list of contacts that he approved.

Ms. Frye stated that [Appellant] made threats to harm her friends and family, and that if he ever found her “boyfriend,” he would kill him. She testified that [Appellant] believed that she had new duct work installed in the house so someone could crawl through it and place listening devices in the house, and he said that if he ever found someone in the house “everyone was going to die.” She testified that she was so scared of [Appellant] that she could not sleep or eat for weeks, noting that [Appellant] would wake her up several times a night to accuse her of infidelity and misdeeds.

Ms. Frye testified that [Appellant]’s behavior became physical. On one occasion, [he] accused [her] of misplacing a piece of paper and “held her by her throat against the wall.” Ms. Frye stated that it hurt, and she was shocked that he did it. Ms. Frye [attested] that on another occasion, [Appellant] woke her, took her down to her office, and yelled at her about “stuff” on the computer. While he was yelling at her, he forced her to perform oral sex on him. Ms. Frye stated that “it happened so fast,” that she was unable to say “no,” but she did not give any indication that she consented to sexual contact at that time.

Ms. Frye then testified that [Appellant] at times employed the use of firearms during his episodes of erratic behavior. [On one occasion, he] was driving with a gun in his hand and screaming so loudly, “his veins were popping and he was in tears.” Ms. Frye was so frightened, she asked [Appellant] to let her out of the vehicle, and he left her in the parking lot of Lowe’s in Carlisle[, Pennsylvania]. Another time, they were driving in [Appellant]’s vehicle while [Appellant] was interrogating her with a gun in his hand. He abruptly drove into their backyard, where [Appellant] proceeded to get out of the vehicle because he was convinced that [the] neighbors were watching him. She stated that at that point, “nothing made sense and it made her feel like she was going crazy.” She stated that she believed the gun was

-2- J-A15003-25

loaded. [Appellant] then drove them down a wooded road near their house and tossed the gun out of the vehicle. Officers later retrieved the gun.

Another incident with a firearm occurred in the couples’ master bathroom. Ms. Frye testified that [Appellant] was interrogating and intimidating her while holding a gun. Though the gun was not pointed at her, she stated that she did not know why he would need a gun to end an argument because she was not fighting back. She stated that [Appellant] continued to yell at her when the gun discharged, and the bullet went through the mirror above the sink in their bathroom in the direction of their daughter’s bedroom. Ms. Frye testified that [Appellant] said that the discharge was an accident. Ms. Frye noted that there were several guns present in the home, and that [Appellant] was a collector of guns.

....

[Appellant]’s erratic behaviors led Ms. Frye to seek a Protection from Abuse (“PFA”) order. She testified that she initially sought the PFA [order] after the incident in which [Appellant] pinned her against the wall by her neck. After the temporary order was granted, Ms. Frye stated that she was staying with her parents when [Appellant] began to call her parents repeatedly begging for her to come home and give him another chance. Ms. Frye testified that she felt obligated to do so because they “were married and together for [thirteen] years and they had children together.” She stated that she wanted to give him the benefit of the doubt to change, and that she did still love him. Ms. Frye testified that she withdrew the PFA and returned home with the conditions that [Appellant] never force oral sex upon her again, that he would “stop talking crazy,” and that he would seek mental health treatment.

Trial Court Opinion, 9/25/24, at 3-7 (cleaned up).

On the evening of March 29, 2022, several days after the couple

reunited, Ms. Frye came home from taking her daughter and stepson to

McDonald’s. Appellant summoned her to the basement and showed her duct

work that he believed allowed someone to get into the house. Ms. Frye told

-3- J-A15003-25

him that she needed to put their daughter to bed and went upstairs. Appellant

later approached her in the couple’s bedroom and started to kiss her. Ms.

Frye did not want to engage in any intimacy at that time, but did not tell him

“no.” She felt that if she did not agree, things would potentially get violent.

Ms. Frye described her mental state as “very scared and timid.” N.T. Trial,

8/30/23, at 67. At some point, Appellant began having vaginal intercourse

with Ms. Frye from behind while he was still wearing underwear. She indicated

that he grabbed her hair and began pulling it violently, hurting her. Ms. Frye

told Appellant to stop.

In response, Appellant forced Ms. Frye to perform oral sex upon him

while she was pinned against the bed. Ms. Frye testified that Appellant then

thought he heard a noise and turned around. She observed that Appellant

had her personal pistol tucked into the waistband of his underwear, which she

believed he had on him during the entire encounter. She implored him not to

fire any rounds. While Appellant was distracted, Ms. Frye grabbed a robe and

ran to retrieve her daughter. They then went to the house of their next-door

neighbor and called 911.

Troopers Derek Leib and Matthew Rutt of the Pennsylvania State Police

arrived at the couple’s residence within several minutes. Trooper Leib

primarily interacted with Appellant, noting that he was highly agitated.

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Com. v. Frye, T., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-frye-t-pasuperct-2025.