Com. v. Williams, G.

2022 Pa. Super. 50, 274 A.3d 722
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 28, 2022
Docket1311 EDA 2020
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 2022 Pa. Super. 50 (Com. v. Williams, G.) 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. Williams, G., 2022 Pa. Super. 50, 274 A.3d 722 (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

J-A03007-22

2022 PA Super 50

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

GEORGE WILLIAMS

Appellant No. 1311 EDA 2020

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence December 2, 2019 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No: CP-51-CR-0009727-2017

BEFORE: STABILE, J., DUBOW, J., and MCCAFFERY, J.

OPINION BY STABILE, J.: FILED MARCH 28, 2022

Appellant, George Williams, appeals from his judgment of sentence of

thirty to sixty years’ imprisonment for involuntary deviate sexual intercourse

with a child, aggravated indecent assault of a person under thirteen years of

age, indecent assault of a person under thirteen years of age and unlawful

contact with a minor.1 We hold that the trial court abused its discretion by

permitting a supervisor from Philadelphia Children’s Alliance (“PCA”) to give

expert testimony that it is common for child victims to “under-disclose” sexual

abuse to PCA interviewers, where the PCA witness was not qualified as an

expert to provide such testimony. We uphold the trial court’s discretion not

to provide a “prompt complaint” instruction to the jury. Accordingly, we

vacate the judgment of sentence and remand for a new trial.

____________________________________________

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 3123(b), 3125(a)(7), 3126(a)(7), and 6318, respectively. J-A03007-22

In September 2017, Appellant was charged with the above offenses. On

October 3, 2019, following trial and several days of deliberations, the jury

found Appellant guilty of all charges. On December 2, 2019, the court

imposed sentence. Appellant filed timely post-sentence motions, which were

denied by operation of law on June 24, 2020. This timely appeal followed.

Both Appellant and the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.

The trial court summarized the evidence adduced during trial as follows:

The victim was twelve years old when she testified at Appellant’s jury trial. In August 2016, the victim, her mother, and her brother, who is five years older than the victim, moved into Appellant’s apartment on Emlen Street in Philadelphia. The victim testified that she loved Appellant “like he was family.” He was “like a father figure” and her mother’s best friend.

The victim described an incident where she was lying on a couch in the apartment’s living room when Appellant was positioned behind her on the sofa and started to touch her. Appellant touched the victim’s buttocks, breasts, and “private area” as he reached his hands into her pants and rubbed her skin. She was ten years old when Appellant began to touch her inappropriately.

The victim testified about another incident, which occurred in her bedroom. On this occasion, when the victim woke up, Appellant was in bed with her and touching her. Appellant touched the skin of the victim’s breasts and buttocks. She also stated that, on more than one occasion, when she was in her bedroom, Appellant “made [her] suck on his penis.”

The victim also told the jury about a different episode when the victim sat on the couch in the apartment’s living room, and Appellant pulled off her shorts and underwear. Then, Appellant licked the victim’s vagina with his tongue and touched her vagina with his fingers. At the time, her mother and brother were not in the apartment because they were at a laundromat.

-2- J-A03007-22

Later, the victim, her mother, and her brother moved out of Appellant’s apartment and lived at Appellant’s mother’s house along with Appellant’s sister and her children. While there, the victim told another child that Appellant “molested” her. Then, she told her mother about what Appellant did. Upon hearing about the incidents, the victim’s mother cried and vomited. Her brother “sat there in shock,” and someone called the police.

Philadelphia Police Officer Charles Durham testified that he met with the victim on May 24, [2017]. The officer testified,

[S]he said that she was touched inappropriately ... underneath her dress on her vagina, and ... that she was being asked to perform oral sex as well.... [A]ll of the things that she was telling me ... happened about a month prior to me being called out to the residence and that it was a continuous action for approximately three months.

Colleen Getz, a manager of the forensic interview unit at the [PCA], testified for the Commonwealth. PCA is an independent, nonprofit child advocacy service which works with a team of individuals from the Department of Human Services, the police, local children’s hospitals, and mental health services in Philadelphia. PCA brings all those organizations together to provide a joint response to allegations of child abuse. When she testified, Ms. Getz had been employed with PCA for nine years. She had conducted more than 2,300 forensic interviews, which are fact-finding, unbiased methods of questioning children. The forensic interview provides a “child with an opportunity to provide as [] cohesive a statement as possible without having to be questioned multiple times.”

Ms. Getz confirmed that the victim was interviewed at PCA on June 6, 2017. Takeisha Allen conducted the interview but was no longer working at PCA on the date of Appellant’s trial. When she interviewed the victim, Ms. Allen had worked at PCA for two years and had conducted about five hundred interviews. After Ms. Getz’s testimony, the Commonwealth played a video recording of the victim’s forensic interview at PCA.

The victim’s brother, K.G., was seventeen years old when he testified at Appellant’s trial. K.G. described the victim’s relationship with Appellant as “creepy.” K.G. explained, “[M]y

-3- J-A03007-22

little sister was always laying on him in some form or shape. Just either laying on his side or laying next to him ....” The victim’s brother stated that the interactions between Appellant and the victim “felt wrong.”

Tamika Weaver, the victim’s mother, confirmed that she and her children lived with Appellant in his apartment on Emlen Street. Ms. Weaver stated that Appellant’s behavior never troubled her. After moving out of his apartment, Ms. Weaver learned of the incidents involving Appellant and her daughter.

Appellant’s wife, Vivian Williams, testified that she never saw any inappropriate contact between the victim and Appellant.

Appellant testified on his own behalf and claimed that he did not molest, sexually assault, or inappropriately touch the victim.

Trial Court Opinion, 4/30/21, at 3-5 (record citations omitted).

We note several other important facts from the record. The alleged

assaults took place between August 2016, when the victim and her family

moved into Appellant’s apartment, and April 2017, when the victim and her

family moved out. According to the victim, Appellant began sexually abusing

her shortly after her tenth birthday, December 22, 2016, and after he

impregnated the victim’s mother. N.T. 9/26/19, at 55. By that time, the

victim had come to “love him like he was family” and view him as her “god-

dad” and “father figure.” N.T. 9/26/19, at 49-50. She did not report the

assaults while she lived with Appellant because he had been hitting the

victim’s brother, and she did not want to get hit herself. Id. at 65. She also

did not want to tell her mother, explaining, “She was pregnant and she . . .

might not have been in the right state of mind for me to say anything to her.”

Id.

-4- J-A03007-22

In April 2017, the victim moved with her family into Appellant’s mother’s

residence. One month later, in May 2017, the victim reported the assaults to

Appellant’s niece. Id. at 70-71; N.T.

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Bluebook (online)
2022 Pa. Super. 50, 274 A.3d 722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-williams-g-pasuperct-2022.