Com. v. Reichert, S.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 27, 2025
Docket1077 WDA 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Reichert, S. (Com. v. Reichert, S.) 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. Reichert, S., (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-A23010-25

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : SCOTT R. REICHERT : : Appellant : No. 1077 WDA 2024

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered July 3, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of Beaver County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-04-CR-0000829-2023

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J.E., McLAUGHLIN, J., and BENDER, P.J.E.

MEMORANDUM BY PANELLA, P.J.E.: FILED: October 27, 2025

Scott R. Reichert appeals from the judgment of sentence entered in the

Court of Common Pleas of Beaver County after he was convicted of various

offenses at a non-jury trial. Appellant challenges the sufficiency and weight of

the evidence. After careful consideration, we affirm.

This case arises out of a series of events that occurred on April 30, 2023,

when Appellant and his son, Zachary Reichert (“Son”), were involved in a

verbal and physical altercation that escalated to implicate other family

members. On May 31, 2023, Appellant was charged by criminal information,

and a non-jury trial was held on June 3, 2024. The trial court accurately

summarized the evidence presented at trial as follows:

At trial, four witnesses testified to the events of the day in question. For the Commonwealth, Zachary and Samantha Reichert, as well as Officer Ethan Fuchs testified. [Appellant testified] on his own behalf. J-A23010-25

The first witness was [Son, who] testified that he had come to [Appellant’s] home [around noon] to bury his dog, [which] had passed that morning, [because Appellant] had land and he did not. … [Son testified] that he had been injured earlier in the day and as a result, could not manually dig, [which led] to the use of the tractor and other machine equipment[.] Something broke on the tractor while [Son] was attempting to drive it[,] which led to an argument between [him] and [Appellant]. [Son stated] that the argument escalated[,] and as he was [leaving], [Appellant] pulled a gun and pointed it at him. The Commonwealth then played a video, taken from [Appellant’s] porch camera, which displayed the events [that unfolded] in front of the home. [See Commonwealth’s Exhibit 1.] [Son] identified [Appellant and himself in] the video and identified a moment when [Appellant] hit him with a cane in the rib cage, noting that it caused him some pain. [Son] and his family, his wife and three minor children, retreated to his vehicle while [Appellant] went to his own car and retrieved a handgun[.] [Son] stated that he saw [Appellant] obtain his gun and then point it down the driveway towards [him] and his family. [The] Commonwealth then submitted two photos of bruises left by [Appellant] on [Son], arising from the cane strikes. On cross-examination, [Son] stated that he was on the property for around twenty minutes prior to the video footage shown. He explained that the tractor’s hitch was damaged because his injury prevented him from braking quickly enough when trying to align the hitch with a piece of equipment. It was this incident, according to [Son], that caused [Appellant] to become enraged. He admitted that, in the heat of the moment, he threatened to “fuck up” [Appellant]. [N.T. Trial, 6/3/24, at 16.]

The next witness [presented] by the Commonwealth was [Son’s] wife, Samantha Reichert [(“Daughter-in-Law”)]. She explained that the family was there to bury their dog when her husband and [Appellant] began to argue. She claim[ed] that during the fight, she [yelled] at her kids to get in the car[, and that she] was the one driving the vehicle [and] attempting to back out of the driveway in the video. While backing up the vehicle, she saw [Appellant] retrieve what she believed was a gun from his own vehicle. She stated that they fled to the closest gas station where her husband called the police, due to her being in a state of hysteria. She was terrified for her and her children’s lives [because Appellant approached] them with a gun. On cross-examination, she confirmed that they had only been at the house for around

-2- J-A23010-25

[twenty] minutes when things escalated. She stated that she did see the gun[, and that her kids were “freaking out.” Id. at 23.]

The Commonwealth then called Officer Ethan Fuchs as their final witness. [Officer] Fuchs was a patrolman with the New Sewickley Township Police Department and at the time of [trial], had been employed there for four years. He stated that on April 30, 2023, he was dispatched to a gas station on Route 989 to speak to [Son and Daughter-in-Law] about an incident with [Appellant]. After questioning, [Officer Fuchs] sent the Reicherts home, proceeded to obtain an arrest warrant for [Appellant], and then later placed [Appellant] under arrest. … Through a search warrant, two rifles and two handguns were obtained from [Appellant’s] home. One of the handguns was a black Glock, identified as the weapon in question, which had an amount of dirt on the grip and slide.

The Commonwealth closed its [case-in-chief,] and [Appellant testified] in his own defense. [Appellant] testified that [Son] called him earlier in the day and asked if he could bury his dog [on Appellant’s property]. [Appellant] agreed, but [informed Son] that he was recovering from surgery. [Appellant stated that he] was unsure how he was able to do what [he was depicted doing] in the submitted video given his injuries. [Appellant claimed he was not supposed to do anything because] there was a risk of paralysis [from] the surgery he had undergone[, and he informed Son] that he would have to do [] the work [because Appellant] was injured. … Ultimately, due to both of their injuries, [Appellant] testified that he wanted to give up on burying the dog, but [Son] insisted on [hooking] the backhoe [up] to the tractor. Despite [Son] not [knowing how to operate Appellant’s tractor, Appellant] acquiesced and allowed him to attempt to use it anyway. Issues in the attempt [] caused tempers to flare between [Appellant and Son]. [Appellant testified] that a scuffle arose when [Son became] increasingly agitated with the tractor and was [] in danger of damaging the equipment and harming either himself or [Appellant]. [Appellant] attempted to stop the tractor and, in the process, nearly fell. To steady himself, he gripped onto [Son], who allegedly responded by kicking him in the chest and onto the ground. [Appellant testified that he] then took the keys to the tractor and left the barn, leading to the events that unfolded [in] the video. [Appellant] claimed that he [retrieved] his firearm after he repeatedly told [Son] to leave[,] and after [Son] continued to threaten him, he became afraid. [Appellant testified] that he [pointed] the gun at the ground the whole time and was instead

-3- J-A23010-25

simply [commanding Son] to leave his property. He then testified that his girlfriend[, Sherri Painter (“Girlfriend”), approached and grappled] with him over the gun. He further [testified that during the altercation with Girlfriend,] he ejected the magazine for safety, and at the end of the scuffle he discharged the round in the chamber to completely empty the firearm. He testified that the gun was totally empty while he and [Girlfriend wrestled] over it and that he never pointed the firearm at anyone. On cross- examination, he stated that the kick delivered to him by [Son] was aggressive[] but not meant to physically hurt him. He further testified that [Son] took no physically aggressive actions toward him, nor drew a weapon, during the confrontation. When questioned about when [and why he retrieved his firearm], he stated it was when the family was backing out of the [driveway] and because [] he needed to use “the appropriate amount of force” to protect himself and make [Son] leave his property. [Id. at 52.]

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Com. v. Reichert, S., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-reichert-s-pasuperct-2025.