Com. v. Livingston, A.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 15, 2023
Docket1637 EDA 2022
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Livingston, A. (Com. v. Livingston, A.) 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. Livingston, A., (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

J-S10006-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : ANDRE LIVINGSTON : : Appellant : No. 1637 EDA 2022

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered April 13, 2022 In the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-46-CR-0002809-2020

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., LAZARUS, J., and STABILE, J.

MEMORANDUM BY PANELLA, P.J.: FILED MAY 15, 2023

Andre Livingston appeals the judgment of sentence entered by the

Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas on April 13, 2022. Specifically,

Livingston claims the evidence was insufficient to sustain an aggravated

assault conviction where he was thrashing around while resisting arrest,

resulting in a police officer suffering a fractured finger. Livingston maintains

the evidence does not show he intentionally or knowingly caused the injury.

We find the claim without merit and hereby affirm.

For purpose of this appeal, the following facts are not disputed. See

Appellant’s Brief, 11/2/2022, at 7-13. On June 1, 2020, Norristown Police

Officer Ashley Gaeta was responding to reports about a group of males with

guns. Nobody was there when she arrived at the scene but a man and woman

passing by in a vehicle asked Officer Gaeta if she was responding to reports J-S10006-23

of a man walking around with a machete. While driving around the block to

investigate, someone pointed to a sheath on the sidewalk and a woman from

a window above described the man who was carrying a machete. While Officer

Gaeta was speaking to the woman in the window, the woman identified

Livingston, who was walking by, as the individual who had the machete.1

Officer Gaeta followed Livingston and called for backup before approaching.

Officer O’Neill and Officer Samuels responded.

As they approached Livingston and asked to speak with him, he fled,

and they pursued. When Livingston encountered Officer O’Neill, he struck her

with the heel of his palm to her face which knocked her down and left bruises

and abrasions on her face and a sprained knee. Officer Samuels brought

Livingston down with a taser but, even after multiple tasings and additional

assistance from Officer Romano and Corporal Wiley, Livingston remained

uncooperative and tried to grab Officer Samuels’s taser, arm and gun.

Detective Charles Leeds was working at his desk at the police station

when he received reports that officers were in a physical altercation. He

responded to the scene and saw patrol officers in a physical fight with

Livingston. Detective Leeds went over to assist but he described Livingston as

____________________________________________

1 No machete was found on Livingston when he was arrested. While the Commonwealth initially charged Livingston with possessing the machete as a form of drug paraphernalia, see Information, filed 6/1/2020, at Count 26, it withdrew that charge prior to trial. See N.T., Bench Trial, 2/8/2022, at 11.

-2- J-S10006-23

thrashing about, pulling his arms from officers, and continuing to resist and

pull away and fight.

After struggling with Livingston for about seven minutes, the officers

were able to detain him with two handcuffs linked together. They patted

Livingston down and recovered an Altoids container holding 11 small baggies

containing a rocklike material consistent with crack cocaine.

When the police attempted to put Livingston in the patrol vehicle, he

kicked his legs and pushed off the car to prevent being placed inside. At this

time, he grabbed Officer Romano’s taser so hard that he broke the bottom

portion off and grabbed the microphone cord of Detective Leeds’s radio.

Officer Samuels had to pry Livingston’s fingers from the radio cord. Once

Livingston was finally secured in the vehicle, Detective Leeds noticed pain in

his left hand and his finger appeared out of place. Later, when treated at

Einstein Montgomery Hospital, an x-ray revealed a small fracture in his finger.

When the police transported Livingston to the station, he placed his foot

in the doorjamb to prevent police from removing him from the vehicle. Once

out of the vehicle, he refused to walk and had to be carried into the station.

In accordance with police department procedures, when force is used in an

arrest, paramedics are called to evaluate the patient. Livingston requested to

be taken to the hospital. Officer Choiniere and Officer Boyer, who were

responsible for crowd control during the initial arrest, were tasked with

accompanying Livingston to the hospital and remaining with him there.

-3- J-S10006-23

At the hospital, Livingston remained uncooperative and had bursts of

thrashing and yelling threats. Despite being handcuffed to the bed, Livingston

spat at the officers twice. The first spit missed but the second landed blood

and mucous on Officer Boyer’s uniform.

The Commonwealth originally charged Mr. Livingston on 33 counts but

withdrew seven counts before the two-day bench trial began on February 8,

2022.2,3 Livingston represented himself at trial and was found guilty of

2 “In Amended Bill of Information at docket no. 2809-20, the Commonwealth charged Defendant with the following: Count One (Aggravated Assault), Count Two (Aggravated Assault), Count Three (Aggravated Assault of Ofc. O'Neill), Count Four (Aggravated Assault Ofc. Det. Leeds), Count Five (Aggravated Assault of Ofc. O'Neill), Count Six (Aggravated Assault of Det. Leeds), Count Seven (Aggravated Harassment by Prisoner), Count Eight (Aggravated Harassment of Ofc. Boyer by Prisoner), Count Nine (Aggravated Harassment of Ofc. Choiniere by Prisoner), Count Ten (Terroristic Threats), Count Eleven (Simple Assault of Det. Leeds), Count Twelve (Simple Assault of Ofc. O'Neill), Count Thirteen (Simple Assault of Ofc. O'Neill), Count Fourteen (Simple Assault of Det. Leeds), Count Fifteen (Resisting Arrest), Counts Sixteen through Nineteen (Disarming Law Enforcement Officer), Counts Twenty through Twenty-Three (Disarming Law Enforcement Officer), Count Twenty- Four (Possession of a Controlled Substance), Count Twenty-Five (Drug Paraphernalia - Altoids container containing cocaine), Count Twenty-Six (Drug Paraphernalia - Black Cellphone and/or Machete), Count Twenty-Seven (Harassment/Strike, Shove, Kick, Etc. - Ofc. O'Neill), Count Twenty-Eight (Harassment/Strike, Shove, Kick, Etc. - Det. Leeds), Count Twenty-Nine (Disorderly Conduct/Engaging in Fighting), Count Thirty (Recklessly Endangering Another Person - Ofc. O'Neill), Count Thirty-One (Recklessly Endangering Another Person - Corp. Wiley), Count Thirty-Two (Recklessly Endangering Another Person - Det. Leeds), and Count Thirty-Three (Recklessly Endangering Another Person - Ofc. Romano).” Trial Court Opinion, 8/22/2022, at 6-7.

3“At the commencement of the bench trial, the Commonwealth withdrew Counts 1, 2, 7, 10, 16-19, 24, and 26.” Trial Court Opinion, 8/22/2022, at 7.

-4- J-S10006-23

seventeen counts, including the aggravated assault of Detective Leeds, and

not guilty of six counts.4 Id. at 118. Livingston was subsequently sentenced

to an aggregate sentence of four to eight years of incarceration.5

While the case consists of multiple convictions and the 1925(b)

statement raises several issues, Livingston’s brief only challenges the

sufficiency of the evidence to find that Livingston’s thrashing about during the

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Related

Commonwealth v. Brown
23 A.3d 544 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2011)
Commonwealth v. Olsen
82 A.3d 1041 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2013)

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Com. v. Livingston, A., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-livingston-a-pasuperct-2023.