Com. v. Myers, E.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 10, 2025
Docket3079 EDA 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Myers, E. (Com. v. Myers, E.) 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. Myers, E., (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-S05018-25

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : ERIC MYERS : : Appellant : No. 3079 EDA 2023

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered November 21, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0010257-2014

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

MEMORANDUM BY MURRAY, J.: FILED MARCH 10, 2025

Eric Myers (Appellant) appeals from the judgment of sentence imposed

following the revocation of his probation, based upon Appellant’s direct

probation violation and commission of numerous new crimes. Appellant

challenges the discretionary aspects of his revocation sentence, and also

claims the violation of probation (VOP) court imposed unlawful rehabilitative

conditions in connection with Appellant’s sentence. Because we agree the VOP

court lacked legal authority to impose the rehabilitative conditions, we vacate

that part of Appellant’s sentence. In all other respects, we affirm.

The VOP court explained the factual and procedural history underlying

this case as follows:

____________________________________________

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. J-S05018-25

On February 29, 2016, [at docket number CP-51-CR- 0010257-2014 (case 10257),] Appellant … tendered a non- negotiated guilty plea to … robbery – threat[en] immediate serious bodily injury, 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 3701(a)(1)(ii), theft by unlawful taking, id. § 3921(a); receiving stolen property, id. § 3925(a); and possessing [an] instrument [of crime] (“PIC”), id. § 907(a) [(collectively, the underlying offenses)]. The underlying [offenses] stemmed from [Appellant’s] arrest on July 15, 2014, for committing a [] knife[-]point robbery two days earlier of a seventeen-year-old victim, who had been simply walking toward [his] home in the 3200 block of Willits Road, Philadelphia, PA. Sentencing was deferred pending completion of a presentence investigation [(PSI) report] and mental health evaluation.

[Previously,] on October 21, 2013, [Appellant] and a conspirator had committed a strikingly similar knife[-]point taking of another [] teenager’s cellular phone [] in the 4600 block of Pennypack Street, Philadelphia, PA. In that case, which had been docketed under MC-51-CR-00042122-2013 [(case 42122)], on November 19, 2013, [Appellant] … entered a negotiated guilty plea and [was] sentenced to twelve months [of] reporting probation. [Appellant’s] supervising probation [in case 42122] had been in place just four months when he [] committed the [underlying offenses]. ….

[The matter proceeded to sentencing for the underlying offenses. The trial court, the Honorable Anne Marie B. Coyle, who also presided over the instant VOP proceedings,] reviewed [Appellant’s PSI] reports and mental health assessments and considered the recommended [sentencing] guidelines…. As a then twenty-four-year-old adult, [Appellant] had been arrested five times and convicted five times, and had been committed once. [The underlying offenses] posed a direct violation of [Appellant’s probation in case No. 42122.] ….

[Judge Coyle] noted within the [PSI] reports and mental health assessments that although [Appellant] had earned his high school diploma in 2010, he remained largely unemployed. [Appellant] reported a significant history of alcohol, opiates, heroin, and marijuana (“THC”) abuse. He complained that opiates had been his drug of choice. The [PSI] report reflected that [Appellant’s] prior attendance in an inpatient [drug] treatment program at the Wedge Medical Center in 2014 [] had not been successful. [The PSI further reflected that Appellant] had been

-2- J-S05018-25

raised by his working father and [] “felt loved and provided for” by his dad because his mom had suffered from opiate addiction.

The [PSI] reports noted that [Appellant] had previously fathered one son, then aged two years, [who] had been removed from [Appellant’s] care, and from [the] care of that child’s mother, by the City of Philadelphia Department of Human Services [(DHS)]. This child was subsequently adopted by a family who declined to allow [Appellant] to have any contact. The Presentence Investigator recommended that [Appellant] be intens[iv]ely supervised, [perform] random urinalysis and engage in drug treatment, engage in educational or vocational training, and gain, maintain, and prove legitimate employment. ….

On May 12, 2016, after [a] hearing and consideration of all relevant factors, Appellant was sentenced [at case 10257] to a term of three (3) years to six (6) years [in prison] …, followed by four (4) years of intensively supervised probation [for] the robbery conviction, and five (5) years of intensively supervised probation assigned to the PIC offense. The convictions for theft by unlawful taking and receiving stolen property merged for purposes of sentencing. Rehabilitative conditions were imposed, including obtaining and maintaining legitimate employment, engaging in ongoing drug and alcohol treatment, and submitting to random [drug] testing[.] …. No appeal was filed[.]

VOP Court Opinion, 5/28/24, at 2-4 (footnote citations modified and moved

to body; capitalization and punctuation modified).

The VOP court also explained the procedural history relative to

Appellant’s direct probation violation:

[O]n or about April 6, 2022, [the VOP] court was notified that Appellant had incurred a new arrest for the charges of first degree felony offenses of aggravated assault …, recklessly endangering another person, endangering [the] welfare of children - parent/guardian[] commits offense [(EWOC)], and simple assault … [(collectively, the new offenses)], for events that had occurred on November 1, 2021, with an arrest date of April 5, 2022.

-3- J-S05018-25

Gagnon I & II1 reports were generated. [The VOP court subsequently] … appointed [Appellant] counsel. Following COVID- 19 protocols in place at the time, the violation of probation hearing was continued pending disposition of Appellant’s open bills….

On May 4, 2023, following a bench trial [regarding the new offenses] …, Appellant was found guilty of aggravated assault … [and two counts each of EWOC] … [and] simple assault …, under [two] docket number[s,] CP-51-CR-0004336-2022[, and CP-51- CR-0004343-2022]. The charges stemmed from documented social and medical reports that … [Appellant], a 200-pound plus, 5-foot 10-inch adult male, had physically abused two minor children. [Appellant] repeatedly choked, grabbed, shook and head[-]banged his girlfriend’s five-year[-]old daughter, causing bruising to her neck and ears, and [] he had also choked her ten- year-old son. …. Sentencing [at both dockets] was deferred until July 14, 2023, following preparation of [PSI] reports and mental health assessments.

[At case 10257, o]n September 14, 2023, following [a VOP] hearing, and upon thorough review of all [PSI] reports, mental health assessment[s], the Gagnon reports, and of the transcribed trial record …, [the VOP] court found Appellant to be in violation of probation and revoked probation. Revocation was uncontested. Following revocation of probation, and upon review of all salient sentencing factors, [the VOP] court imposed a sentence [(original VOP sentence)] of seven (7) years to fourteen (14) years [in prison] … [for Appellant’s] robbery conviction, and a consecutive term of two (2) to five (5) years of incarceration … on the PIC charge. No further penalty was imposed on the theft by unlawful taking and receiving stolen property convictions, as both convictions merged for purposes of sentencing. The aggregate sentence was nine (9) years to [nineteen (19) years in prison].

1 See Gagnon v.

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