Court Opinion

ID: 9301423
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-02 17:07:47.794775+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:14:03.697375
License: Public Domain

J-A18033-22

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                               :        PENNSYLVANIA
                                               :
               v.                              :
                                               :
                                               :
    NICOLETTA MICHELLE ROBINSON                :
                                               :
                      Appellant                :   No. 1177 WDA 2021

          Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered May 7, 2021
      In the Court of Common Pleas of Mercer County Criminal Division at
                                   No(s):
                           CP-43-CR-0001795-2019

BEFORE: STABILE, J., MURRAY, J., and McLAUGHLIN, J.

MEMORANDUM BY McLAUGHLIN, J.:                        FILED: December 2, 2022

        Nicoletta Michelle Robinson appeals the judgment of sentence entered

after a jury found her guilty of drug delivery resulting in death (“DDRD”),

aggravated assault, criminal use of communication facility, simple assault,

recklessly endangering another person (“REAP”), and possession with intent

to deliver a controlled substance (“PWID”).1 We vacate the conviction for

aggravated assault and affirm the judgment of sentence in all other

respects.

        On June 16, 2019, the victim searched the internet for a taxi service,

found Robinson’s service, and contacted her. That day and the following day,

____________________________________________

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2506(a), 2702(a)(1), 7512(a), 2701(a)(1), 2705, and 35
P.S. § 780-113(a)(30), respectively.
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June 17, 2019, Robinson drove the victim, who had Crohn’s disease, to

various locations, including to hospitals in both Pennsylvania and Ohio. The

two women were in communication via text message during those two days.

The victim lived with her father in Mercer County, Pennsylvania, while

Robinson was based in Youngstown, Ohio.

       On June 16, the victim and Robinson exchanged the following texts:2

          Victim: thank you so much for everything. I appreciate you
          more than you know

          Robinson: No problem, hun. Trust me, the money helped
          me, too. It’s been rough with school. Hopefully you’ll feel
          better soon.

          Victim: Hoping

          Victim: Really, really hoping.

          Robinson: FYI my house is only 34 minutes.

          Robinson: There’s no way nor.

          Robinson: Not

          Victim: Should I wait to take the other? Only think I’m
          scared of is I actually have a blockage.

          Robinson: It should still help, though. If it’s not you might
          have blockage [because] you should vm [sic] feel better.

          Victim: Maybe I should have went in ugh this pain is
          agony.

          Victim: It’s like a stabbing pain that just won’t go away.

          Robinson: Did it ease up at all?
____________________________________________

2 The Commonwealth presented the text messages as exhibits. Those
exhibits are not part of the record. However, portions of the text messages
were put into the record through the testimony of Trooper Joseph Morris.

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        Victim: I couldn’t ask you to come back. I have no cash lol.
        I have money in the bank but couldn’t get it till tomorrow.
        I left my debit card in Cleveland.

See N.T., 3/10/21 (Morning Session), at 40-43.

     That same day, June 16, the victim searched the internet for “side

effects and long-term effects of methadone,” “is methadone an opiate,”

“how much methadone is too much,” and “does methadone make you high.”

Id. at 57-58.

     The next day, June 17, the victim texted Robinson, “Do you have 250

ml of that stuff I can buy?” Id. at 67. Robinson texted back, “yeah.” Id.

According to cell phone records and medical records, the victim was in

Sharon Regional Medical Center in Mercer County, Pennsylvania, when she

sent the message. See id. at 50 (victim sent text on June 17, 2019, at 7:37

p.m.); N.T., 3/10/21 (Afternoon Session), at 61 (victim was admitted to

Sharon Regional Medical Center on June 17, 2019, at 11:43 a.m.); id. at 64

(victim left Sharon Regional Medical Center on June 17, 2019, at 8:43 p.m.).

     Robinson and the victim then discussed payment and decided that the

victim would pay Robinson $100 by check. N.T., 3/10/21 (Morning Session),

at 67. Robinson picked the victim up from the hospital in Sharon and the two

went to a gas station in Hermitage, Pennsylvania. Id. at 3-16. After they

purchased some items, Robinson drove the victim home to her father’s

house in Mercer County, Pennsylvania. When they arrived, the victim paid

Robinson. Id. at 71. Later that night, the victim texted Robinson not to cash

the check and told her that she would pay her in cash the following day. Id.

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At 72. During that night, the victim ingested the methadone and died. The

victim’s father, who had been on vacation at the time of her death,

discovered her body in the home six days later. Trooper Joseph Morris

recovered a vial with pink fluid from the home that the lab determined

contained methadone, a Schedule II substance. See N.T., Trial, 3/9/21

(Afternoon Session), at 85, 114-15.

     An expert in forensic pathology, Dr. Eric Vey, testified that the victim’s

cause of death was a lethal dose of methadone. N.T, Trial, 3/10/21

(Afternoon Session), at 80. He also testified that upon a review of her

autopsy photographs, certain characteristics of her body were indicative of

an overdose. Id. at 99. Dr. Vey also testified about the effect of postmortem

redistribution on the level of methadone found in the decedent’s blood,

which he described as a phenomenon that occurs when time has elapsed

between the time of death and when the blood of the decedent is tested.

During this time, “the blood that got deposited into the central tissues and

organs, the lungs and the liver and the heart, diffuses back out of the

tissues and into the blood creating an elevated central blood level compared

to peripheral blood level.” Id. at 95. He said that postmortem redistribution

had not affected the level of methadone they found.

     The chief deputy coroner in Mercer County, Robert L. Snyder, testified

that the victim had dried secretions in her nose consistent with a drug

overdose. N.T., 3/9/21 (Afternoon Session), at 14. He testified that with an

overdose, “the lungs become compromised, they fill with fluid, and then the

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frothiness comes out of the nasal cavity.” Id. at 15. He also testified that the

dose of methadone in the victim’s body was in the fatal range. Id. at 30. Dr.

Snyder ruled that the manner of death was accidental, and the cause of

death was “respiratory failure due to drug toxicity.” Id. at 31. In layman’s

terms, he stated that it was a way of saying her cause of death was from a

drug overdose or a combination of the drugs. Id.

      The Commonwealth also presented portions of Robinson’s interview

with Trooper Morris, after the victim died.

         [Commonwealth]: Okay. Now, Ms. Robinson - - we also
         heard her say right about the 20-minute mark, and I might
         be misquoting here, but essentially, so you are saying
         she overdosed and you think I gave it to her. My
         question is up until that point had you ever said the word
         overdose to her?

         [Trooper Morris]: No.

         [Commonwealth]: Not in the lobby, not on the phone, not
         anywhere?

         [Trooper Morris]: No[.]

         [Commonwealth]: Up until that point had you ever told her
         how [the victim] died?

         [Trooper Morris]: No.

N.T., Trial, 3/10/21 (Afternoon Session), at 32-33 (emphasis added).

      Following a four-day trial, the jury found Robinson guilty. The court

sentenced Robinson for the DDRD and criminal use of a communication

facility convictions to an aggregate term of nine years and three months to

27 years of imprisonment. The court determined that aggravated assault,

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PWID, REAP, and simple assault merged for sentencing purposes. Robinson

filed a post-sentence motion which the trial court denied.3 This timely appeal

followed.

       Robinson raises the following issues:

          I.     Was the evidence at trial insufficient to support
                 Robinson’s conviction for drug delivery resulting in
                 death because:

                 a. It was insufficient to support a finding that the
                    alleged drug delivery occurred within the
                    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; and/or

                 b. It was insufficient to support a finding that
                    Robinson was reckless as to the allegedly
                    delivered   drug,   methadone,  causing   the
                    decedent’s death; and/or

                 c. It was insufficient to supporting a finding that the
                    allegedly delivered drug actually caused the
                    decedent’s death because the Commonwealth’s
                    expert testimony concluding as much was
                    predicated on a basic statistical error ruling out an
                    exculpatory phenomenon by resort to the average
                    effect of that phenomenon rather than the range
                    of effects of that phenomenon?

          II.    Was the evidence at trial insufficient to support
                 Robinson’s conviction for aggravated assault
                 because:

                 a. It was insufficient to support a finding that
                    Robinson was malicious as to the allegedly
                    delivered   drug,   methadone,    causing the
                    decedent’s death; and/or not true
____________________________________________

3 The court sentenced Robinson on May 10, 2021. On May 17, the court
granted Robinson’s motion for an extension to file her post-sentence motion.
Robinson filed her post-sentence motion on May 25, within the allotted time
ordered by the court. Thus, this appeal is timely.

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               b. It was insufficient to support a finding that she
                  engaged in any assault?

        III.   Was the evidence at trial insufficient to support
               Robinson’s conviction for simple assault because it
               was insufficient to support a finding that she
               engaged in any assault?

        IV.    Was the evidence at trial insufficient to support
               Robinson’s conviction for recklessly endangering
               another person because it was insufficient to support
               a finding that she engaged in contact or created a
               risk of [contact] causing harm?

        V.     Was the evidence at trial insufficient to support
               Robinson’s conviction for delivery of a controlled
               substance because it was insufficient to support a
               finding that she delivered a controlled substance
               within the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania?

        VI.    In light of the foregoing, was the evidence at trial
               insufficient to support Robinson’s conviction for
               criminal use of a communication facility because it
               was qualitatively or quantitatively insufficient to
               support a finding that she used communications
               facility to commit the predicate violation of the Drug
               Act?

Robinson’s Br. at 4-5 (suggested answers omitted).

     Robinson challenges the sufficiency of the evidence for each of her

convictions. When reviewing a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence,

we determine “whether viewing all the evidence admitted at trial in the light

most favorable to the verdict winner, there is sufficient evidence to enable

the fact-finder to find every element of the crime beyond a reasonable

doubt.” Commonwealth v. Storey, 167 A.3d 750, 757 (Pa.Super. 2017)

(citation omitted). We review the entire record and the evidence. See id. We

do not “weigh the evidence and substitute our judgment for the fact-finder.”

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Id. (citation omitted). Furthermore, “the trier of fact while passing upon the

credibility of witnesses and the weight of the evidence produced, is free to

believe all, part or none of the evidence.” Id. (citation omitted).

Drug Delivery Resulting in Death (DDRD)

      Robinson claims that the Commonwealth failed to present sufficient

evidence for the crime of DDRD. She argues that it failed to show that the

drug delivery occurred in Pennsylvania, that she was reckless in delivering

methadone to the victim, and that the ingestion of methadone caused the

victim’s death. Robinson points to an alleged gap in the timeline and claims

that the evidence suggested that she drove the victim through Ohio to

return to the victim’s house. She also maintains that the record does not

support a finding that she delivered the methadone to the victim once they

arrived at her home in Pennsylvania. According to Robinson, the evidence

shows “that Robinson had been providing services and goods to [the victim]

with promises of future payment, and that they had agreed to simply settle

the proverbial tab at the trailer.” Robinson’s Br. at 21.

      Robinson also challenges the mens rea. She argues that the evidence

suggested that she was not reckless but rather “believed that providing

methadone to [the victim would help her[.]]” Id. at 24. She also takes issue

with the Commonwealth’s evidence of causation because, in her view, Dr.

Vey erred in his statistical calculation of postmortem redistribution.

      DDRD occurs when someone dies as a result of using a controlled

substance   and    the   defendant   intentionally   administered,    dispensed,

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delivered, gave, prescribed, sold, or distributed it in violation of specified

provisions of the Controlled Substance, Drug, Device and Cosmetic Drug Act

(“Drug Act”). See 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2506(a). Pursuant to the terms of the Drug

Act, the delivery must have occurred “within the Commonwealth [of

Pennsylvania].” 35 P.S. § 780-113(a).

         Thus, to sustain its burden, the Commonwealth must prove that the

delivery of the drug occurred in Pennsylvania and the use of that drug

resulted        in    the    death   of   another.   See   18    Pa.C.S.A.   §   2506(a);

Commonwealth v. Peck, 242 A.3d 1274, 1285 (Pa. 2020) (vacating

judgment of sentence for DDRD where drug delivery occurred in Maryland).

As for mens rea, the Commonwealth must show that the defendant acted

intentionally when delivering the drug and that the decedent’s death was a

result     of        the    defendant’s    recklessness.   See    Commonwealth         v.

Kakhankham, 132 A.3d 986, 992, 995 (Pa.Super. 2015). The crime

consists of “an intentional act in providing contraband, with a reckless

disregard of death from the use of the contraband.” Commonwealth v.

Carr, 227 A.3d 11, 16-17 (Pa.Super. 2020).

         Robinson’s claims lack merit. The evidence was sufficient to prove

circumstantially that the delivery occurred in Pennsylvania. Robinson and the

victim discussed via text message the purchase of 250 ml of “stuff” while the

victim was in the hospital in Sharon. Robinson then picked up the victim

from the hospital, took her to the gas station in Hermitage, and ultimately to

her home in Mercer County. The evidence of the trip between points in

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Pennsylvania     was    sufficient   to   prove    that   the   delivery   occurred   in

Pennsylvania. Robinson points to an alleged gap in the timeline and local

geography to argue that the gap is better explained by a route through Ohio,

rather than only through Pennsylvania. We think the evidence was sufficient

to raise the reasonable inference that they did not needlessly double-back

into Ohio, particularly in the absence of any affirmative evidence that the

trip crossed the border. The Commonwealth has to prove guilt beyond a

reasonable doubt, not to a mathematical certainty or beyond all possibility of

innocence.4

       Robinson’s claim that the Commonwealth failed to prove recklessness

likewise fails. The Commonwealth presented evidence that Robinson sold the

victim methadone. Methadone is an opioid “used to help dependent patients

reduce their craving and symptoms of withdrawal.” See Int. of L.J.B., 199

A.3d 868, 871 n.3 (Pa. 2018). Robinson sold this opioid to the victim without

any consideration of the effects that it would have on the victim, including

whether she could possibly overdose. See id. at 870 n.2 (discussing opioid

addiction crisis in the United States and noting “[r]ecent statistics place

Pennsylvania among the states with the highest rates of drug overdose

____________________________________________

4 In her reply brief, Robinson includes Google maps to support her claim that
she and the victim could have driven though Ohio. However, these maps
were not presented to the jury, and the jury was not offered any evidence
that would suggest Robinson and the victim left the state while traveling to
the trailer.

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deaths, with opioid-related overdose deaths occurring at a rate of 18.5 per

100,000 persons”). The Commonwealth also presented Robinson’s interview

with Trooper Morris where she stated, “So you’re saying that she overdosed

and you think I gave it to her.” N.T., Trial, 3/10/21 (Afternoon Session), at

32. Robinson made this statement with no knowledge of the cause of the

victim’s death, thus exhibiting that she understood the risk of death from the

ingestion of methadone. See Commonwealth v. Burton, 234 A.3d 824,

833 (Pa.Super. 2020) (stating the sale of fentanyl establishes the mens rea

for recklessness for drug delivery resulting in death).

       As   to   Robinson’s   claim    regarding    causation,   we   conclude     the

Commonwealth established causation. Robinson takes issue with Dr. Vey’s

statistical calculations of the postmortem redistribution. She faults him for

basing his opinion on the average effect of postmortem redistribution, rather

than on its average effect. This argument does not render the evidence

insufficient. Her challenge goes to the weight and not the sufficiency of the

evidence. See Commonwealth v. Meals, 912 A.2d 213, 223–24 (Pa.

2006).

Aggravated Assault

       Robinson maintains that the evidence was insufficient to support the

conviction of aggravated assault because the Commonwealth did not prove

that   Robinson    “assaulted”   the    victim.    She   also   maintains   that   the

Commonwealth failed to show that she acted maliciously, arguing there was

“no evidence that Robinson knew . . . that[] providing methadone to

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McConnell was virtually certain to result in her death or serious bodily

injury.” Robinson’s Br. at 33.

       To prove aggravated assault, the Commonwealth was required to

prove that Robinson attempted “to cause serious bodily injury to [the

victim], or cause[d] such injury intentionally, knowingly or recklessly under

circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human

life[.]” 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2702(a)(1).5 The required mens rea for aggravated

assault is malice, which is defined as “wickedness of disposition, hardness of

heart, cruelty, recklessness of consequences, and a mind regardless of social

duty, although a particular person may not be intended to be injured.”

Commonwealth v. Packer, 168 A.3d 161, 168 (Pa. 2017) (citation

omitted). The crime of aggravated assault requires a state of mind that is

“equivalent to that which seeks to cause injury.” Commonwealth v.

O’Hanlon, 653 A.2d 616, 618 (Pa. 1995).

       Here, the Commonwealth suggests that it established the mens rea by

showing that Robinson “seized upon an opportunity to make money at the

expense of a person in chronic pain and who was naïve as to the effects of

methadone.” Commonwealth’s Br. at 30-31. It maintains that Robinson
____________________________________________

5 Serious bodily injury is defined as “[b]odily injury which creates a
substantial risk of death or which causes serious, permanent disfigurement,
or protracted loss or impairment of the function of any bodily member or
organ.” 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2301 (“Serious bodily injury”). Bodily injury is
defined as “[i]mpairment of physical condition or substantial pain.” Id.
(“Bodily injury”).

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“consciously disregarded an unjustifiable and extremely high risk her actions

of selling a narcotics naïve victim methadone.” Id. at 31. It also suggests

that Robinson’s malice may be inferred from her statement to police that she

understood that they were suggesting that the victim overdosed and that

she had given the victim methadone. It further points out that Robinson “not

only negotiate[d] the sale of 250 ml of methadone to the victim, but actively

encouraged the victim to consume the methadone over the victim’s

concerns,” noting that Robinson encouraged the victim through text

messages to take the methadone even though the victim was concerned

about a blockage. Id. at 30. Similarly, the trial court suggests that Robinson

“knowingly preyed upon a naïve and vulnerable victim” and because of this,

the element of malice was satisfied. Opinion, 9/16/21, at 6.

       The    Commonwealth          contends       that   this   case   is   akin   to

Commonwealth v. Busbey, No. 186 MDA 2019, 2020 WL 865044

(Pa.Super. filed Feb. 21, 2020) (unpublished memorandum).6 There, the

victim, the defendant, and the defendant’s boyfriend purchased heroin. The

victim was “narcotics naïve,” as he had not developed a tolerance to heroin.

Id. at *1. The defendant injected the victim with heroin, while the

defendant’s boyfriend injected the defendant and himself. Id. The defendant

watched as the victim started convulsing and his lips turned blue. To

____________________________________________

6  Non-precedential decisions are not binding, but may be cited as
“persuasive” authority pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 126(b)(2).

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“distance herself from the whole issue” and not be involved, the defendant

left the victim and went home, without calling 911. Id. The Commonwealth

presented the testimony of three medical witnesses at trial, including an

expert in forensic toxicology who testified, among other things, that the

victim “had a long period of survival following the ingestion of the drug.” Id.

at * 2.

      On appeal, this Court concluded the evidence was sufficient to prove

malice. We pointed out that the defendant knew the victim was narcotic-

naïve and the heroin was of good quality and that she watched the victim

begin to exhibit signs of an overdose, as he began to convulse and his lips

turned blue. Id. at *5. We pointed out that the defendant and her boyfriend

discussed calling for medical assistance but did not, choosing instead to

leave and sell or stash the remainder of the heroin. Id. We noted that the

victim “suffered from a slow, hours-long overdose death that could have

been halted if medical personnel had been called.” Id. We concluded that

the defendant’s actions of injecting the victim with heroin, watching him

overdose, and then leaving the victim to die, “showed the hardness of heart,

and disregard of social duty characteristic of the mental state of malice.” Id.

We also concluded that providing the heroin to the victim and then not

seeking medical care “created ‘an unjustified and extremely high risk that

[her] actions might cause death or serious bodily harm.’” Id. (quoting

Packer, 168 A.3d at 168). We further noted that heroin “has a ‘high

potential for abuse’” and its dangers are “legendary and known on a

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widespread basis[.]” Id. (quoting Minn. Fire and Cas. Co. v. Greenfield,

805 A.2d 622, 627 (Pa.Super. 2002)).

         Here, we agree with Robinson that the Commonwealth failed to

present sufficient evidence to prove malice. Unlike the defendant in Busbey,

no evidence showed that Robinson knew that the victim had overdosed or

that she failed to seek medical assistance while knowing the victim was in

danger due to the drug. Even considering the victim’s apparent naivety and

the text messages that occurred on the day prior to her death, there is no

evidence that at the time Robinson sold the methadone or at the time the

victim ingested the methadone, Robison had a “wickedness of disposition,

hardness of heart, cruelty, recklessness of consequences, and a mind

regardless of social duty[.]” Packer, 168 A.3d at 168. Nor was there

evidence that, like heroin, methadone’s dangers are “legendary and known

on   a    widespread   basis.”   Busbey,   2020   WL   865044,   at   *5;   see

Kakhankham, 132 A.3d at 996 (discussing inherent dangerous nature of

heroin and that the risk of death that comes with ingesting the drug is

foreseeable). The Commonwealth failed to present evidence that Robinson

sought to cause the victim’s death or injury, or that she acted with an

extreme difference to human life.

Simple Assault

         Robinson maintains that there was no evidence that she “assaulted”

the victim and therefore the Commonwealth failed to sustain its burden for

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simple assault. Robinson argues that a physical, contact-based assault is

required to satisfy the element of bodily injury.

      The Commonwealth presents sufficient evidence for the charge of

simple assault where it proves that the defendant “attempt[ed] to cause or

intentionally, knowingly or recklessly cause[d] bodily injury to another[.]” 18

Pa.C.S.A. § 2701(a)(1). Bodily injury is defined as “[i]mpairment of physical

condition or substantial pain.” Id. at § 2301 (“Bodily injury”).

      Here, the court rejected Robinson’s claim that the Commonwealth was

required to prove physical contact to prove an actual assault. The court held

that because Robinson did not cite “any authority directly on point for the

proposition that her actions must have conformed to a traditional notion of

an assault,” the claim had no merit.

      Before this Court, Robinson relies on the common-law definition of

assault and argues that it is reasonable to believe that the crime of simple

assault requires a physical, contact-based assault. Robinson has not

supported this claim with any citation to legal authority. Therefore,

Robinson’s claim is waived. See Commonwealth v. Miller, 212 A.3d 1114,

1131 (Pa.Super. 2019) (“waiver of an issue results when an appellant fails to

properly develop an issue or cite to legal authority to support his contention

in his appellate brief”) (citation omitted). Moreover, this claim fails on the

merits. The plain statutory language merely requires that the defendant

“cause . . . bodily injury,” which is defined in a way as not to require

contact. This claim fails.

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REAP

       Robinson maintains that the REAP statute implies that physical contact

must occur, and because the Commonwealth failed to present any evidence

that she physically touched the victim, the evidence was not sufficient to

support the conviction.

       The Commonwealth may sustain its burden for REAP if it proves that

the defendant recklessly engaged in conduct that placed or may have placed

another person in danger of death or serious bodily injury. See 18 Pa.C.S.A.

§ 2705. Recklessness may be proven when the Commonwealth shows that

the defendant consciously disregarded “a substantial and unjustifiable risk

that the material element exists or will result from his conduct.” 18

Pa.C.S.A. § 302(b)(3).

       Like her argument for simple assault, Robinson relies on the common-

law definition of recklessness and argues that it is reasonable to believe that

the crime of REAP requires a physical, contact-based assault. Robinson’s

claim is waived because she has not supported her claim with any citation to

legal authority. See Miller, 212 A.3d at 1131.

       Even if Robinson had supported her claim, we would conclude that the

issue lacks merit. The evidence in the light most favorable to the

Commonwealth shows that Robinson placed the victim in danger of death or

serious bodily injury by giving her methadone. Robinson did not consider

any risk that could have resulted from her conduct of selling the victim

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methadone and the eventual ingestion of the methadone by the victim. This

sufficiently sustains the REAP conviction.

PWID

       Robinson claims that the Commonwealth presented no evidence that

she delivered a controlled substance to the victim while in the state of

Pennsylvania. Robinson incorporates her argument regarding her conviction

for DDRD.

       An individual is guilty of PWID where the Commonwealth proves that

the   individual   possessed   a   controlled   substance   with   the   intent   to

manufacture, distribute, or deliver it. See 35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(30).

       As discussed above, the evidence was sufficient to show that Robinson

sold methadone to the victim in Pennsylvania. Therefore, the evidence is

sufficient to support the PWID conviction. Robinson’s claim fails.

Criminal Use of Communication Facility

       Robinson alleges that “[i]nasmuch as the evidence produced at trial

was insufficient to support a finding that Robinson engaged in the delivery of

a controlled substance,” the evidence is also insufficient to support the crime

of criminal use of a communication facility. Robinson’s Br. at 50.

       To prove the crime of criminal use of a communication facility, the

Commonwealth must show that a person “use[d] a communication facility to

commit, cause or facilitate the commission or the attempt thereof of any

crime which constitutes a felony under this title[.]” 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 7512(a).

A communication facility includes a cell phone. Id. at § 7512(c); see

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Commonwealth v. Kane, 210 A.3d 324, 327-28 (Pa.Super. 2019)

(judgment of sentence affirmed for criminal use of a communication facility

where defendant used cell phone to obtain child pornography).

      The evidence was sufficient to sustain the conviction. Robinson used

her cell phone to commit a felony, i.e., PWID. Robinson’s claim is meritless.

      We vacate the sentence on the conviction of aggravated assault, but

otherwise affirm the judgment of sentence.

      Judgment of sentence affirmed in part and vacated in part. Case

remanded. Jurisdiction relinquished.

Judge Murray joins the memorandum.

Judge Stabile concurs in the result.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 12/2/2022

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