Com. v. Hooper, W., III

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 8, 2025
Docket1564 MDA 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Hooper, W., III (Com. v. Hooper, W., III) 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. Hooper, W., III, (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-S20021-25

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : WILLIAM VAUGHN HOOPER, III : : Appellant : No. 1564 MDA 2024

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered October 4, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of Huntingdon County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-31-CR-0000102-2023

BEFORE: OLSON, J., LANE, J., and BENDER, P.J.E.

MEMORANDUM BY LANE, J.: FILED: JULY 8, 2025

William Vaughn Hooper, III (“Hooper”) appeals from the judgment of

sentence imposed following his convictions for three counts each of

aggravated indecent assault of a child and indecent assault of a person less

than thirteen years of age.1 We affirm.

Hooper’s convictions resulted from acts of sexual abuse and assault that

he committed against M.M., the granddaughter of his then-wife C.H.

(“Grandmother”), between August 2010, and December 2012, when M.M. was

between five and seven years old. In 2021, while undergoing therapy, M.M.

disclosed the sexual assaults to her therapist, who reported the assaults to

Childline. Following an investigation, police arrested Hooper and charged him

with the above offenses.

____________________________________________

1 See 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 3125(b), 3126(a)(7). J-S20021-25

The matter was scheduled for a jury trial to commence on January 8,

2024. When that date arrived, however, Hooper refused to leave his cell at

the Centre County Correctional Facility (“CCCF”) for transport to the

Huntingdon County courthouse. As a result, the trial court continued the

matter and rescheduled jury selection for the morning of March 4, 2024. On

that date, during morning jury selection, Hooper verbally requested a

continuance, referencing an ex parte letter he had sent to the trial court on

January 21, 2024. In that letter, Hooper attempted to excuse his refusal to

appear for jury selection on January 8 on the basis that he was unprepared

for trial because defense counsel did not adequately meet with him or permit

him to review discovery materials as often as he wished. Hooper additionally

sought a continuance on the basis that he was required to leave his trial-

related paperwork at the CCCF when he was transported to the Huntingdon

County jail, as he was not permitted to bring anything with him during the

transport. The trial court perceived the request as a delay tactic and denied

a continuance. The trial then proceeded as rescheduled.

The trial court summarized the evidence and testimony presented at

trial, as follows:

During their marriage Grandmother and [Hooper] lived together at Grandmother’s residence, located . . . in Smithfield Township, Huntingdon County. M.M. apparently often spent time at Grandmother’s house, including overnight. M.M. did not have her own room at Grandmother’s house, so when she slept over[,] she would either sleep on the couch or in Grandmother’s and [Hooper’s] shared bed. N.T., [3/7/24], at 10-13. At times, M.M.

-2- J-S20021-25

would be watched solely by [Hooper], without Grandmother or anyone else present. Id. at 13.

Grandmother’s relationship with [Hooper] ended violently, after an incident that occurred at Grandmother’s house [in] 2012. On that date, [Hooper] assaulted Grandmother in their home after an argument between the two. The incident resulted in [Hooper’s] conviction . . . of one count each of simple assault and terroristic threats.

M.M. witnessed the assault, and provided statements to Pennsylvania State Police troopers about what she had seen. She did not, however, make any statements or disclosures to the troopers about having been sexually assaulted by [Hooper].

Approximately nine years later, in late 2021, M.M. was being treated by a therapist. She became comfortable enough with the therapist that she opened up about what had occurred with [Hooper], and disclosed to the therapist that [he] had sexually assaulted her on multiple occasions. [Id.] at 27-28. M.M.’s therapist, as a mandated reporter, reported M.M.’s disclosures to Childline, leading to a criminal investigation and the instant case. Id. at 48-49.

Because of M.M.’s young age at the time of the sexual assaults, she did not recall the exact time or location of each incident. Rather, she recalled specific details and then worked out the timing and location based on associated recollections. For example, she knew that the assaults all occurred when she was between the ages of five and seven because her first memory of being at Grandmother’s house was her fifth birthday party, when she received a kitten as a present. Id. at 13. She knew that they ended when she was seven because she specifically recalled the events of December 27, 2012 (when [Hooper] assaulted Grandmother), and she never saw [Hooper] again after that day. Id. at 28. And while she did not remember the exact location of Grandmother’s house, she remembered that there was a large, red and white “84” sign beside it. Id. at 11-12. M.M. recalled three assaults specifically[:]

• The first assault occurred at Grandmother’s house, when M.M. was five, as it was not long after her fifth birthday party at the house. She did not know the time of year, but recalled that it was cold enough that she could not play

-3- J-S20021-25

outside. She was in the computer room, which was off the kitchen, and [Hooper] called her to come to the living room. [Hooper] was sitting on the recliner in a corner of the living room, watching baseball, and told M.M. to sit on his lap. When she did so, [Hooper] started reaching into her pants, and eventually began penetrating her vagina with his fingers. M.M.’s reaction was to “just lay there,” because she did not know what was happening. Id. at 13-16. [Hooper] told her that “we weren’t doing anything wrong and that this is normal.” M.M.’s thoughts reflected her young age; “I knew it wasn’t normal[,] but I didn’t know that it was bad.” Id. at 16. [Hooper] then sat M.M. down on the couch in the living room, which was located diagonally across from the recliner, and told her to masturbate in front of him. He used the word “masturbate,” but M.M. did not know what it meant, so “he told me to just put my fingers in me.” She did so, but was again confused by what was going on. Id. at 17. At some point before the incident ended, either after he stopped digitally penetrating her or after he told her to masturbate in front of him, [Hooper] also told M.M. that he would kill her if she said anything to anyone about what had occurred. Id. at 16, 18. M.M. did not remember how the assault ended, but remembered going back to the computer room after it was over and just sitting there, crying. Id. at 18. She did not tell anyone about what had occurred, as she believed [Hooper’s] threats that he would kill her. Id. at 18-19

• The second assault occurred at [Hooper’s] place of work, a garage that M.M. recalled was located near Huntingdon Borough, across from a grocery store. She believed that she was six years old when it happened, and that it happened “a good bit of time” after the first assault. Id. at 19, 21-22. She specifically remembered that she was wearing a “Monster High” shirt and skirt, which was pink and was one of her favorite outfits to wear when she was little. Id. at 21. She was spending the day with [Hooper], and the two went out to eat pizza at Domino’s. She could not recall the time of year, only that “it wasn’t cold[,] but it wasn’t warm out either.” Id. at 20. [Hooper] was driving a car that he needed to make repairs on, and after getting pizza, he drove it to the garage and pulled it inside. No one else was there. M.M.

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Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Hooper, W., III, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-hooper-w-iii-pasuperct-2025.