Com. v. Hatfield, M.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 3, 2022
Docket2359 EDA 2021
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Hatfield, M. (Com. v. Hatfield, 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. Hatfield, M., (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

J-A13038-22

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA Appellee : : v. : : MICHAEL DARRELL HATFIELD : : Appellant : No. 2359 EDA 2021

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered October 19, 2021 In the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-46-CR-0002427-2020

BEFORE: OLSON, J., DUBOW, J., and KING, J.

MEMORANDUM BY KING, J.: FILED OCTOBER 3, 2022

Appellant, Michael Darrell Hatfield appeals from the judgment of

sentence entered in the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, following

his jury trial convictions for first degree murder and possession of an

instrument of crime (“PIC”).1 We affirm.

The trial court set forth the relevant facts and procedural history of this

case as follows:

On April 10, 2020 at about 11:00 a.m., Officer Matthew Maciejewski of the Pottstown Borough Police Department was dispatched to 331 North Hanover Street, Apartment 89, for a report of an assault victim. He knew from dispatch that there was a domestic incident and that the male caller to 911 said he had hurt his wife. Officer Maciejewski, along with another Pottstown Borough Police Officer, Officer Sovari, knocked on the apartment door. When Appellant ____________________________________________

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2502(a), and 907(a), respectively. J-A13038-22

answered, Officer Maciejewski asked him “[i]s your wife here? Is she okay?” Appellant told the officers that he strangled her, and permitted them inside. Officer Maciejewski walked over to what looked like a person on the living room floor, while Appellant walked to the adjacent kitchen with Officer Sovari.

Officer Maciejewski determined that it was a female on the floor, and that the victim had no pulse. He observed that that there was dried blood coming from her ears and a large pool of blood under her mouth. He overheard Appellant tell Officer Sovari that he had strangled his wife two days prior using an orange electrical cord. Officer Maciejewski was able to locate the orange electrical cord in the bottom of a trash can.

Next on-scene was Officer Michael Damiano of the Pottstown Borough Police Department. While both Officer Maciejewski and Officer Damiano cleared the crime scene, Appellant spontaneously stated twice to Officer Sovari that he just snapped. This was overheard by Officer Maciejewski. After about 15 to 20 minutes of the police arriving, Appellant was taken into custody.

Lieutenant Todd Richard of the Montgomery County Detective Bureau, Homicide Unit, participated in the investigation as the lead detective, and took Appellant’s voluntary statement at the Pottstown Police Department[, which reads in relevant part as follows:]

[QUESTION:] Did you call 9-1-1 today?

ANSWER: Yes.

[QUESTION:] Why[?]

ANSWER: I needed a police officer at the residence. I hurt my wife.

[QUESTION:] What did you do to her?

ANSWER: Strangulation.

[QUESTION:] What did you use to strangle her?

-2- J-A13038-22

ANSWER: An electrical cord, a standard electrical cord.

[QUESTION:] When did you strangle her?

ANSWER: Wednesday night, [i]t was after dark. I remember we were watching Channel 69 Weather, but that’s a continuous show. It runs all the time, so I can’t give you the exact time.

[QUESTION:] What happened that led to you to strangling her?

ANSWER: I snapped and lost it. It started out we were going over her medicines, like everything that she is taking and what we could get rid of. Next thing I knew, she called me an asshole and some other choice words. I spoke her name, Mary, and told her to calm down. She got verbally abusive towards me. I don’t recall the exact words she was using. I could just describe it was verbally abusive. I went around the table, opened the door to the closet and grabbed the electrical cord. I wrapped the cord around her neck and strangled her.

[QUESTION:] Where were you in the house when this occurred?

ANSWER: We were in the living room. Mary was sitting in her recliner chair. Mary has several medical problems, heart patient. She had a bypass several years ago. She uses a breather because she has COPD, knee replacements, high blood pressure.

[QUESTION:] Did you say anything to Mary prior to strangling her?

ANSWER: Nothing other than telling her to calm down.

[QUESTION:] Did Mary see you get the extension cord?

ANSWER: - -

[QUESTION:] Excuse me, electrical cord?

-3- J-A13038-22

ANSWER: No, [s]he was facing away from the closet where I got it.

[QUESTION:] Did you say anything while you were strangling her?

ANSWER: No.

[QUESTION:] How long did you strangle her before she died?

ANSWER: A short period of time. I couldn’t give you a time.

[QUESTION:] How did you know she had died?

ANSWER: She went limp.

[QUESTION:] Did she try to fight you at all?

ANSWER: She moved her arms like downward, but she didn’t really put up a fight.

[QUESTION:] Had you been drinking or using drugs when this occurred?

[QUESTION: What] did you do after she was dead?

ANSWER: I laid a blanket on the rug. I also removed a plastic cover from the bed and put the bed back together and laid the plastic on top of the blanket, and then I laid Mary on the plastic.

[QUESTION: Why] did you do that?

ANSWER: I just did.

[QUESTION:] Did you think about trying to move her out of the apartment?

ANSWER: I couldn’t move her. I just didn’t know what to do.

-4- J-A13038-22

[QUESTION:] Did you call anyone after this happened?

ANSWER: No. I talked to my youngest daughter Wednesday after this happened. I didn’t tell her what happened though.

[QUESTION:] What is your daughter’s name?

ANSWER: Lisa Hatfield or Jordan, which is one of her married names. She lives up in Reading.

[QUESTION:] What made you call the police today?

ANSWER: I had to get help for Mary and for myself. I mean, I just didn’t know what to do.

[QUESTION:] Where is the electrical cord that you used to strangle Mary?

ANSWER: In the trash can in the living room sitting next to the recliner. Also there is a sheet in there. That sheet had been on her recliner. I didn’t use it for anything. I just threw it away.

[QUESTION:] Did you leave Mary lying on the living room floor from the time you killed her to the time you called the police?

ANSWER: Yes. I never move her once. I put her on the floor.

[QUESTION:] Can you describe to me how you strangled Mary?

ANSWER: I went around the table. I knew that there was an extension cord in the closet because I used it before. After I grabbed it, I walked behind her. She was seated in her recliner. I wrapped it around her neck and pulled with both hands until she stopped moving.

[QUESTION:] Did you know what you were doing was wrong?

-5- J-A13038-22

ANSWER: Yes, I did.

* * *

[QUESTION:] Is everything you told me in this statement the truth?

[N.T. Trial, 10/19/21, at 48-49, 50-56].

(Trial Court Opinion, filed 1/4/22, at 2-7) (some internal citations and

quotation marks omitted).

Prior to trial, Appellant filed a motion requesting individual voir dire.

Appellant also filed a motion in limine to preclude the testimony of Mary

Hatfield’s granddaughter, Charlotte Butterfield. Specifically, Appellant aimed

to preclude anticipated testimony from Ms. Butterfield that days before Ms.

Hatfield’s death, Appellant uncharacteristically told Ms. Butterfield and her

cousins that he loved them and asked if they would abandon him if anything

happened to their grandmother.

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Com. v. Hatfield, M., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-hatfield-m-pasuperct-2022.