Com. v. McWaters, T.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 27, 2021
Docket1059 EDA 2020
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. McWaters, T. (Com. v. McWaters, 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. McWaters, T., (Pa. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

J-S05023-21

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : TOMAS MCWATERS : : Appellant : No. 1059 EDA 2020

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered February 21, 2020 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0000487-2019

BEFORE: BOWES, J., LAZARUS, J., and McLAUGHLIN, J.

MEMORANDUM BY LAZARUS, J.: FILED APRIL 27, 2021

Tomas McWaters appeals from the judgment of sentence, entered in the

Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, following his convictions, after

a non-jury trial, of strangulation,1 simple assault,2 and recklessly endangering

another person (REAP).3 McWaters challenges the weight and sufficiency of

the evidence to support his convictions. Upon careful review, we affirm.

This case arises from an altercation that occurred between McWaters

and the complainant, Yavah Briggs, on November 1, 2018. The trial court

summarized the facts as follows:

[McWaters] and [Briggs] [] were once romantic partners who share a child. On the afternoon of November 1, 2018, [Briggs] ____________________________________________

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2718(a)(1).

2 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2701(a).

3 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2705. J-S05023-21

was living with [McWaters] at 1735 North 53rd Street in the City and County of Philadelphia. After entering the house and greeting Malcolm, [McWaters’] grandmother’s boyfriend and Mikkell Brooks, [McWaters’] Uncle (“Brooks”), [Briggs] went upstairs and tried to open the door to [McWaters’] bedroom as she “normally would.” [Briggs] found the door locked and called to [McWaters] to open it. [McWaters] asked who was there, and [Briggs] responded that she had their baby and wanted to set the child down to avoid dropping her. From behind the locked door, [Briggs] heard the voice of Chanelle Adechokan [], whom she knew from their work together in the army. [Briggs] told [McWaters] she did not “care what [he was] doing” and to “just let [her] come in and get [her] things and set the baby down.” [Briggs] heard the door unlock, and when she attempted to open it, someone was pushing back against it. [Briggs] worked her foot between the crack of the door and reminded [McWaters] for a third time that all she wanted was to set their baby down and get her bag. [McWaters] pushed back on the door with so much force that [Briggs] shouted that she was worried [McWaters] would break her foot. Adechokan told [Briggs] to wait “a damn minute[],” and continued to hold the door to prevent [Briggs] from entering.

When [McWaters] and Adechokan pushed back on the door again, [Briggs] nearly dropped her baby. Consequently, [Briggs] and Adechokan got into a verbal and physical altercation through the small crack in the door. In response, [McWaters] swung his arm through the crack and punched [Briggs] in the face. After [Briggs] finally struggled her way into the room to get her things, she managed to set down their baby on [McWaters’] bed just before [McWaters] “charged at [her]” and shoved her into the closet where she fell into a pile of wire hangers. While the hangers tugged and scratched [Briggs’] skin, [McWaters] tried to “stomp [her] face in the ground.” As [Briggs] struggled to get up, [McWaters] grabbed her by the neck, pulled her to the ground, and strangled her[. Briggs] testified that she could not breathe for “about three, four seconds.”

Once [Briggs] was able to stand again, [McWaters] grabbed her by her neck, picked her up, and “choked[-]slammed her to the ground” where she landed hard on her back. [Briggs] could not breathe for “about five seconds this [second] time.” [Briggs] smacked [McWaters] across the face and Adechokan called [Briggs] “disrespectful” for slapping [McWaters] and threatened

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to “knock [Briggs] the F out.” [Briggs] then lashed out and attempted to hit Adechokan, but was yanked back by [McWaters]. The baby was on the bed during this altercation until Brooks finally came and removed her from the room.

Malcolm told Adechokan to leave the house and advised [Briggs] to “stop putting [her] hands on [McWaters because] he’s a man. At some point in time[,] he’s going to get angry.” [McWaters] followed Adechokan outside the house, and [Briggs] followed [McWaters]. As they were arguing outside, [McWaters] continued to antagonize [Briggs] by pulling and dragging her around. To resist [McWaters], [Briggs] held onto a pillar supporting the roof on the porch, and [McWaters] “tr[ied] to yank [her] off...” [Briggs] told [McWaters] to “stop pulling [her before he] break[s] [her] arm,” and [McWaters] ignored her. [Briggs] pleaded with [McWaters] to “go and check on the baby” to no avail. When [McWaters] finally let her go, [Briggs] went inside alone to retrieve their baby from Brooks and gather her belongings.

[Briggs] returned inside, and Malcolm handed her a phone to talk to [McWaters’] grandmother, Sherye Robbins []. Robbins asked [Briggs] what was going on at the house, and [Briggs] responded that [McWaters] was cheating on her, she’s “never coming back here,” and she would not be leaving their baby at [McWaters’] house any longer. Robbins testified she could hear in the background “hollering, screaming, that ‘I’m going to get you.’”

After returning the phone to Malcolm, who went back outside, [Briggs] saw [McWaters] leaning on the passenger’s side window of Adechokan’s car. [Briggs] approached to ask why [McWaters] was “so worried about [Adechokan]” when his daughter was inside and had just been nearly injured by his attack. Seeing [Briggs] walk towards the car, Adechokan suddenly tried to “pull off and almost hit [Briggs] with her car.” [McWaters] then “ran around the car and grabbed [Briggs] from behind,” hooking his elbow around her neck. [McWaters] strangled her a third time for “ten to fifteen” seconds, making this attack “one of the longest times he was choking [her].” When [McWaters] let [Briggs] go, she “had to really catch her breath.” Adechokan got out of her car and continued to accost and attempt to assault her, forcing [Briggs] to “move so [Adechokan] wouldn't hit [her],” and eventually she got back in her car and sped off.

-3- J-S05023-21

[McWaters] then grabbed [Briggs] by the head and shoved her backwards. [Briggs] pushed [McWaters] back and “he got upset.” [McWaters] grabbed [Briggs] by the neck for the fourth time and slammed her into a metal box on a utility pole. [McWaters] strangled [Briggs] for “maybe seven, eight seconds” against the pole before finally letting her go. [McWaters] and Malcolm went back inside the house, leaving [Briggs] alone to stumble back inside, dizzy from the impact and feeling as though she “was going to pas[s] out.”

After catching her breath, [Briggs] again tried to collect her and the baby’s belongings from [McWaters’] room, but [McWaters] was constantly “getting in her way.” [Briggs] tried to use her elbow to keep him away, but [McWaters] pushed her around his room, shoving her into the desk in the [corner]. When [Briggs] got up, [McWaters] pushed her again and slammed her down onto his bed, strangling her for the fifth and final time with one hand while raising the other as if to punch her. [Briggs] could not determine how long [McWaters] strangled her, but she could not breathe the entire time [McWaters] had his hand wrapped around her neck. Cumulatively, [McWaters] strangled [Briggs] and obstructed her breathing for over twenty-five seconds. After this final attack, [Briggs] was able to finish packing up her belongings, get the baby from Brooks, and leave the [McWaters] house. Brooks helped [Briggs] carry her belongings outside and loaded her car.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Com. v. McWaters, T., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-mcwaters-t-pasuperct-2021.