Court Opinion

ID: 4156002
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-03-28 15:12:59.532492+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:37:48.929694
License: Public Domain

[J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.]
                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                                 EASTERN DISTRICT

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,                  :   No. 718 CAP
                                               :
                     Appellee                  :   Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence
                                               :   entered on 1/6/2015 in the Court of
                                               :   Common Pleas, Monroe County,
              v.                               :   Criminal Division at No. CP-45-CR-
                                               :   0000391-2008
                                               :
CHARLES RAY HICKS,                             :   ARGUED: September 13, 2016
                                               :
                     Appellant                 :

                                  DISSENTING OPINION

JUSTICE DONOHUE                                          DECIDED: March 28, 2017

       I am compelled to dissent from the Majority’s analysis and ultimate allowance of

the bad acts evidence in this case. In my view, the Majority contorts the exceptions to

the prohibition against the admission of bad acts evidence, thereby stripping the

Appellant, Charles Ray Hicks (Hicks), of his presumption of innocence and allowing a

conviction based upon Hicks’ prior propensity to commit violent acts.

       Historically, this Court has held that use of prior bad acts evidence should be

strictly limited – recognizing that “[i]t is not proper to raise a presumption of guilt on the

ground that, having committed one crime, the depravity it exhibits makes it likely [the

same person] would commit another,” thereby relieving the Commonwealth of its

constitutional burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Shaffner v. Commonwealth,
72 Pa. 60, 65 (1872). Rule 404(b)1 was adopted to codify our common law prohibition

on the admission of propensity evidence while also providing, as at common law, that

bad acts may be admissible, under special circumstances, to prove “motive,

opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, absence of mistake, or lack of

accident.” See Pa.R.E. 404(b). To patrol the boundaries between the prohibition and its

exceptions, we have consistently required evidence of purportedly admissible bad acts

to evince either signature-like similarities or a true logical connection to the charged

crime.

         The Majority posits that the testimony of Kim Alston, Misty Chavez and Lakisha

Washington was probative of Hicks’ common scheme, intent, lack of accident, and

identity. Majority Op. at 21, 23. Under the guise of our established standards, but in

fact advancing a troubling departure therefrom, the Majority allows evidence of three

1
   Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 404(b) was enacted in 1998 and its basic principle
was intended to be consistent with both Federal Rule of Evidence 404 and prior
Pennsylvania case law. See Pa.R.E. 404, Order of Feb. 28, 2006, Cmt. Rule 404(b)
provides:
               (1) Evidence of a crime, wrong, or other act is not admissible
               to prove a person’s character in order to show that on a
               particular occasion the person acted in accordance with the
               character.

               (2) This evidence may be admissible for another purpose,
               such as proving motive, opportunity, intent, preparation,
               plan, knowledge, identity, absence of mistake, or lack of
               accident.

               (3) Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts proffered under
               subsection (b)(2) of this rule may be admitted in a criminal
               case only upon a showing that the probative value of the
               evidence outweighs its potential for prejudice.

Pa.R.E. 404(b).

                            [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 2
alleged choking incidents – bearing little relationship either to this case or to each other

– as proof that Hicks beheaded the victim in this case with a saw blade. The

Commonwealth conceded that it needed the bad acts testimony to prove its case.2

       At most, the bad acts evidence admitted in this case is probative of Hicks’ status

as a drug-addicted man who, when faced with similar, random encounters, has

(allegedly) exhibited violent tendencies toward women.           Because the similarities

between the circumstances surrounding the victim’s death and those of the prior bad

acts are grossly insufficient to establish a true signature, no grounds exist for proving

identity, common scheme, intent or lack of accident. And because the bad acts do not

support an inference that Hicks conceived of a single, overarching plan encompassing

each of the prior acts and the charged crime, the testimony does not demonstrate a

logical connection for purposes of showing motive or common scheme. Therefore, I

would hold that the trial court abused its discretion in allowing the Commonwealth to

introduce its 404(b) evidence.

       Two exceptions to the prohibition against propensity evidence are embedded in

our decisional law: Bad act evidence is admissible if 1) a logical connection exists

between the bad acts and the crime on trial, linking them together for some purpose the

2
   The Commonwealth argues “the bad acts evidence was necessary in this
circumstantial evidence case. The evidence rebutted any defense of accident. The
evidence established a motive for the crime. The evidence helped to identify the
defendant as the perpetrator of the murder. The evidence also helped the fact finder in
determining the defendant’s intent at the time of the murder.” Commonwealth’s Brief
at 1; see also infra, pp. 28-29. That bad acts evidence is helpful, or even necessary,
does not render it admissible. Indeed, such evidence is typically exceptionally helpful to
the Commonwealth but if it does not evince a logical connection to the crime at issue or
a true signature, it should not be allowed.

                           [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 3
defendant intended to accomplish, or 2) the bad acts evince a signature crime. These

principles derive from our landmark decision in Shaffner v. Commonwealth:

                To make one criminal act evidence of another, [1] a
                connection between them must have existed in the mind of
                the actor, linking them together for some purpose he
                intended to accomplish; or [2] it must be necessary to
                identify the person of the actor, by a connection which shows
                that he who committed the one must have done the other.

Shaffner, 72 Pa. at 65 (emphasis added); see also Majority Op. at 17. Shaffner thus

provides substantial guidance as to the type of link that will create an exception to the

“general rule that a distinct crime, unconnected with that laid in the indictment, cannot

be given in evidence against a prisoner.” Shaffner, 72 Pa. at 65. If such a link exists,

bad act evidence may be admitted to prove motive, common scheme, intent, lack of

accident, or identity, so long as the evidence is more probative than prejudicial. See

Rule 404(b).3

       In Shaffner, the defendant stood trial for murdering his wife. The Commonwealth

sought to offer bad act evidence at trial that:

                John Sharlock died from poison, the same kind of which
                Nancy, the [defendant]'s wife, died; that his symptoms were
                the same as hers, that the [defendant] attended upon both,
                and that both died at the [defendant]'s house; Sharlock on
                the 17th of February 1871, and Nancy, the wife, on the 11th
                of June 1871. In substance, this was an offer to show that

3
  Although there is significant overlap between the various 404(b)(2) purposes, it is my
view that a “signature” does not itself establish a “common scheme,” even though a
“signature” and a “common scheme” may, for example, both prove identity. See infra,
pp. 8-9; cf. McCormick, Evidence, § 190 (2013 7th ed.) (citing Stone, Exclusion of
Similar Fact Evidence: America, 51 Harv. L. Rev. 988, 1026 n.190 (1938) (“Motive,
intent, absence of mistake, plan and identity are not really all on the same plane. Intent,
absence of mistake, and identity are facts in issue—facta probanda. Motive, plan, or
scheme are facta probantia, and may tend to show any facta probanda.”)

                             [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 4
                the [defendant] poisoned Sharlock, as evidence that he also
                poisoned his own wife.

Shaffner, 72 Pa. at 65–66.            Despite some apparent similarities between the

circumstances surrounding the death of Sharlock, the defendant’s paramour’s husband,

and the death of the defendant’s wife, we held the evidence of Sharlock’s death lacked

the required connection to the death of Nancy.

                It is obvious that to connect together the deaths of Sharlock
                and Nancy, and make the former bear upon the latter, they
                must have been both contemplated by the prisoner as parts
                of one plan in his mind, in which the taking of Sharlock's life
                was part of his purpose of taking the life of Nancy. He must,
                therefore, have contemplated the death of Nancy before
                taking the life of Sharlock. In order to let in the poisoning of
                Sharlock, the judge must have had before his mind some
                fact or facts exhibiting this pre-existing determination to take
                Nancy's life. Herein the evidence was defective.

Id. (cautioning that “if the judge does not clearly perceive the connection, the benefit of

the doubt should be given to the prisoner,” and concluding that the other act evidence

was inadmissible).

         Thus, to show motive, plan, design or scheme (which in turn may tend to show

identity, intent, absence of accident, or some other fact in issue), it must be possible to

conclude that the bad acts and the charged crime were “both contemplated by the

prisoner as parts of one plan in his mind” such that “it is obvious” that committing the

prior act “was part of his purpose” in committing the charged crime. Id.4 It must appear

“that the other offenses, though distinct crimes, are in fact … part of a larger field of

operation, previously conceived and in part executed.” Commonwealth v. Chalfa, 169

A. 564, 565 (Pa. 1933) (citing Shaffner, 72 Pa. at 65); see also Commonwealth v.
4
    Or vice versa, in the case of subsequent act evidence.

                             [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 5
Weiss, 130 A. 403, 404 (Pa. 1925) (explaining “if the act which is proven may indicate

the motive or plan of action of the defendant, either preceding or following the

commission of the crime, and is so closely joined thereto as to show the probability that

he was guilty of the offense charged, it can be properly received”); Commonwealth v.

Schwartz, 285 A.2d 154, 158 (Pa. 1971) (excluding evidence “to show intent[,] design or

motive for … killing” a police officer where the prior shooting of another police officer did

not “give sufficient ground to believe that the crime currently being considered grew out

of or was in any way caused by the prior set of facts and circumstances”); see also

McCormick, Evidence, §190 (2013 7th ed.) (cautioning that to prove the existence of a

common scheme, “each crime should be an integral part of an over-arching plan

explicitly conceived and executed by the defendant”). Absent a true plan or motive,

mere similarities between the bad acts and the crime on trial are insufficient to establish

grounds for admissibility.

       A second way “to make one criminal act evidence of another” is to demonstrate

“a connection [showing] that he who committed the one must have done other,” making

it impossible not to “identify the person of the actor.” Shaffner, 72 Pa. at 65. To this

end, for the purpose of proving identity, we have consistently held that the bad acts and

the crime on trial must share “an almost uncanny similarity in all the details.”

Commonwealth v. Wable, 114 A.2d 334, 337 (Pa. 1955). Further clarifying the high bar

for admissibility based on similar acts, our Court has explained that bad act evidence is

admissible to prove the accused committed the crime on trial, when the incidents are:

              so nearly identical in method as to earmark them as the
              handiwork of the accused. Here much more is demanded
              than the mere repeated commission of crimes of the
              same class, such as repeated burglaries or thefts. The

                             [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 6
              devise used must be so unusual and distinctive as to be
              like a signature.

Commonwealth v. Rush, 646 A.2d 557, 560-61 (Pa. 1994) (citing McCormick, Evidence,

§ 190 (1972 2d ed.) (emphasis added); Commonwealth v. Bryant, 530 A.2d 83, 86

(Pa. 1987) (“Bryant I”).   In sum, where the circumstances surrounding each of the

crimes demonstrate a distinctive signature method, the connection between the bad

acts and the crime on trial is sufficient, and allowing the bad acts to be evidence of the

crime charged is appropriate.

       By way of example, in Wable, the defendant was on trial for the murder of Harry

Pitts, a truck driver who was shot in the head on July 28, 1953 while asleep in the cab of

his truck on the Pennsylvania Turnpike.       Wable, 114 A.2d at 336.       The trial court

admitted evidence of two other crimes – a July 25, 1953 murder and a July 31, 1953

shooting – both perpetrated against truck drivers sleeping in their cabs on or near the

Pennsylvania Turnpike.     In holding that the trial court’s admission of evidence was

proper, this Court articulated the “signature” nature of the crimes:

              Apart from the fact, however, that the crimes all occurred at
              three day intervals and two of them in the same
              neighborhood, there was a striking similarity in the manner
              in which they were committed. Woodward and Pitts were
              each found lying on the seat of his cab with his head against
              the door and resting on a pillow. Each had apparently been
              attacked in the early morning hours. In each instance the
              murderer had poked his gun through the door window and
              shot his victim in the head, death being instantaneous. In
              each instance the bullet had entered the head at about the
              same angle. In each instance the motive was evidently
              robbery, Woodward being actually robbed but apparently a
              hurried getaway in the case of Pitts prevented
              accomplishment of that purpose. Shepard also was robbed
              and the shooting in his case was practically identical in detail
              with the other crimes, except that he was fortunate that his
              wound did not result in death. What led to defendant's arrest

                           [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 7
             was that a watch which had been stolen from Shepard was
             discovered in a pawnshop in Cleveland and found to have
             been pawned there by defendant. The weapon with which all
             the shootings had been performed was identified as
             belonging to defendant.

Id. (emphasis added).

      By virtue of demonstrating a distinct signature method, identically executed as to

each crime, the evidence in Wable was properly admitted. It established a connection

between the bad acts and the crime on trial such that “proof of one will naturally tend to

show that the accused is the person who committed the crime on trial.”           Id.; see

Shaffner, 72 Pa. at 65 (indicating that “a connection which shows that he who

committed the one must have done the other” is admissible to show identity). Although

the bad acts in Wable did not necessarily establish that the defendant had conceived an

overarching plan of which the attack on each truck driver was an integral part, or that

one was committed for the purpose of the other, this Court indicated that because of the

striking similarities between the bad acts and the crime charged, the bad acts were

probative of a common scheme. Wable, 114 A.2d at 337. This erroneous (and perhaps

inadvertent) conflation of the signature requirement with the requirement for proving

common scheme opened the door to a decades-long misunderstanding about what type

of connection is truly required for the purpose of proving a common scheme.

      Indeed, many of our cases since Wable have, like Wable, properly allowed bad

acts showing signature-like “striking similarities” to the charged crime while improperly

characterizing identity evidence as admissible for the purpose of proving a common

scheme. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Miller, 664 A.2d 1310, 1318 (Pa. 1995) (positing,

incorrectly, that bad acts evincing a true signature are “relevant and admissible for the

purpose of establishing a common scheme, plan or design embracing the commission

                           [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 8
of two or more crimes so related to each other that proof of one naturally tends to prove

the others”); Commonwealth v. May, 656 A.2d 1335, 1340 (Pa. 1995) (equating,

incorrectly, the “common scheme” exception and the “‘signature crime’ exception”);

Commonwealth v. Hughes, 555 A.2d 1264, 1283 (Pa. 1989) (admitting evidence of

strikingly similar bad acts for the purpose of showing identity and common scheme,

despite absence of an overarching plan). Contrary to the conflation of the requirements

shown in these cases, invocation of the common scheme exception should be limited to

circumstances from which a true plan or motive can be inferred. Striking similarities, on

the other hand, may be admissible to show identity, intent or lack of accident, which

may also be shown by evidence of a common scheme.

       In contrast to the bad act evidence in Wable that clearly earmarked those crimes

as the “handiwork” of the accused, the bad act evidence in Commonwealth v. Bryant,

611 A.2d 703 (Pa. 1992) (“Bryant II”), merely showed general similarities, insufficient to

establish the identity of the perpetrator, or any other permissible purpose. In Bryant II,

the defendant was on trial for the murder of an elderly woman named Edith Steckle,

who had been found lying on the ground floor of her home, “brutally and viciously

injured in the face, head, body, arms and legs.” Id. at 706. The trial court admitted bad

act testimony about a subsequent attack for which the defendant had been convicted.

Id. We vacated the defendant’s judgment of sentence and remanded the case for a

new trial because we could not conclude that there was anything “unusual” or

“distinctive” connecting the two crimes so as to prove “that both … were perpetrated by

the same individual.” Id.

              Both crimes occurred at approximately the same time of
              night and within a one and one-half block of the Appellant's

                            [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 9
             home. However, the victims' ages varied drastically, in
             addition to the victims being of different races. Furthermore,
             the evidence was questionable as to whether Mrs. Steckle
             was sexually assaulted although Ms. Phillips was assaulted.
             It was also widely known that Mrs. Steckle lived alone while
             Ms. Phillips lived with her three-year-old son. Furthermore,
             [unlike Mrs. Steckle,] Ms. Phillips was punched only in the
             head. [Unlike Mrs. Steckle], Ms. Phillips was dragged to the
             second-floor bedroom. Finally, a television, radio, and ring
             were taken from Mrs. Steckle's home, while only thirty
             dollars in cash was taken from Ms. Phillips even though a
             portable television and radio were in full sight of the burglar.

Id.

      We confirmed in Bryant II that where the similarities between the crimes lack

“any uniqueness” and where differences between them abound, we will “be hard

pressed to conclude that the same individual committed both crimes.” Id.; see also,

e.g., Commonwealth v. Patterson, 399 A.2d 123, 127 (Pa. 1979) (finding that bad act

evidence did not establish “identical method” where charged crime involved attacker

who wielded an ice pick, wore light-tinted sunglasses, and raped his victim in a garage

while bad act involved attacker who carried a gun, wore dark sunglasses, and raped his

victim in an apartment, despite both rapes occurring in same area, late at night, and

commencing in alleyways); Commonwealth v. Fortune, 346 A.2d 783, 787 (Pa. 1975)

(where victims were different ages and weapons were not identical, “too many details …

are unexplained or incongruous to say that one crime naturally tends to show that the

accused is the person who committed the other”).

      This analysis of our case law is consistent with commentators who are generally

critical of courts admitting 404(b) evidence based on mere similarities, as opposed to

either a true signature or a true plan.    See 1 Imwinkelried, Uncharged Misconduct

                          [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 10
Evidence, § 3:24 (2005) (collecting authorities); see also McCormick, Evidence, §190

(2013 7th ed.). According to Imwinkelried, proof of a number of similar bad acts

               may be probative of the defendant's status as a professional
               criminal; and the similarities may tend to show that when
               faced with similar, random opportunities for committing a
               crime, the defendant repeatedly chooses to use roughly the
               same methodology. However, if the similarities are
               insufficient to establish modus [i.e., signature] and there
               is no inference of a true plan in the defendant's mind,
               the proponent is offering … forbidden … character,
               disposition, or propensity evidence.

1 Imwinkelried, Uncharged Misconduct Evidence, § 3:24 (2005) (emphasis added).

Specifically, Imwinkelried admonishes the use of “common scheme” as a justification to

admit unlinked acts on the theory that a pattern or systematic course of conduct

amounts to a “plan.” Id. Neither a “spurious plan” nor a plan to commit a series of

similar crimes should be permitted as evidence that the accused committed the crime

on trial. Id.; see also Shaffner, 72 Pa. at 65-66.

         Signature-like similarities are as essential for proving absence of accident as

they are for proving identity. See Commonwealth v. Boczkowski, 846 A.2d 75, 89 (Pa.

2004).     In Boczkowski, we explained that “the remarkable similarity between the

manner in which both of appellant's wives were killed” makes evidence concerning the

circumstances of one death support a reasonable inference that the other’s death “was

not accidental, but rather, was a result of appellant's deliberate act.” Id. (emphasis

added). There, the defendant was on trial for murdering his wife who died in a hot tub.

She was in her thirties and in good health. The defendant reported to police that she

had been drinking before getting in the tub and that he and his wife had argued the

previous night. Her autopsy revealed she died of asphyxiation, not from drowning, as

                           [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 11
the defendant had suggested.          The court admitted evidence concerning the

circumstances of the defendant’s former wife’s death, and we found no abuse of

discretion. His former wife, who died in her bathtub, was also in her thirties and in good

health. At the time of his former’s wife death, the defendant had reported to police that

she had been drinking before getting in the tub and that they had fought the previous

night. His former wife’s autopsy revealed that asphyxiation was her cause of death. In

each case, the defendant had fresh scratch marks on his arms, hands and torso

following his wife’s death. Id. at 82. Given these striking similarities, the prior bad act

was admissible mens rea evidence to establish the defendant’s intent and to rebut his

claim of an accident.

      The learned Concurrence agrees with my view that bad acts evidence must

evince “striking similarities” or constitute a “signature crime” to be admitted for the

purpose of proving identity, i.e., that the accused is the person who committed the crime

on trial. See Concurring Op. (Saylor, C.J.) at 2; see also Commonwealth v. Arrington,

86 A.3d 831 (Pa. 2014) (Saylor, C.J., dissenting).    Concluding, (as I do), that the prior

acts here do not present a signature and are not “strikingly similar” to the circumstances

surrounding the death of the victim in this case, the Concurrence would also find the

testimony inadmissible to prove the defendant’s identity.

      Chief Justice Saylor, however, would admit the evidence anyway, based upon a

much lower standard for admission. Concurring Op. (Saylor, C.J.) at 14. To show

absence of accident, the Concurrence posits that “roughly similar” bad acts may be

introduced on a “doctrine of chances” rationale to prove a defendant committed the

                          [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 12
actus reus5 when the defendant asserts no actus reus occurred at all, because the

victim’s harm resulted instead from some innocent force. Id. at 5. I fail to see how the

admission of “roughly similar” bad acts, for the stated purpose of proving the act of

murder (by none other than Hicks), is any different than allowing evidence of Hicks’

violent propensity toward women to serve as proof that he committed the charged

crime.

         The Concurrence urges that the doctrine of chances allows for the admission of

similar acts (within the same general category as the charged crime) “to establish the

objective improbability of so many accidents befalling the defendant or the defendant

becoming innocently enmeshed in suspicious circumstances so frequently.” Id. at 7

(citing Edward J. Imwinkelried, An Evidentiary Paradox: Defending the Character

Evidence Prohibition by Upholding a Non-Character Theory of Logical Relevance, The

Doctrine of Chances, 40 U. Rich. L. Rev. 419, 439). I strongly disagree and I am

unpersuaded by the Concurrence’s effort to characterize the doctrine of chances – in

largely academic terms – as a “non-character” theory of logical relevance.

         As a practical matter, the doctrine is, in my view, merely an excuse for admitting

otherwise inadmissible propensity testimony. Especially as applied to the facts of the

case before us, its application threatens to swallow the rule.6    I oppose the notion that

5
  Black’s Law Dictionary defines actus reus as “the wrongful deed that comprises the
physical result of human conduct and that generally must be coupled with mens rea to
establish criminal liability; a forbidden act.” As to first-degree murder, the actus reus is
the act of killing. Black’s Law Dictionary 39 (8th ed. 2004).
6
  Notably, “several commentators have argued that prosecutors are now smuggling
inadmissible bad character evidence into the record under the guise of invoking the
doctrine of chances.” Imwinkelried, The Use of Evidence of an Accused’s Uncharged
Misconduct to Prove Mens Rea: The Doctrines Which Threaten to Engulf the Character
(continued…)

                            [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 13
we should apply a less stringent (“roughly similar”) standard for admitting evidence

when the purported purpose is to prove the actus reus.

      Even if I were to concede that the doctrine of chances rests upon a non-

character rationale, which I do not, I would limit its application to a narrow set of

circumstances, consistent with its theoretical underpinnings. Citing Imwinkelried, the

Concurrence recognizes, but fails to apply, at least three important limitations. See

Concurring Op. (Saylor, C.J.) at 13-14. First, the required degree of similarity between

the bad acts and the charged crime must place them, at the very least, within “the same

general category.”    Id.7     In the instant case, the victim was, according to the

(…continued)
Evidence Prohibition, 51 Ohio St. L.J. 575, 586 (1990). The doctrine’s potential to
eviscerate the character evidence prohibition is stronger still given the reality that
limiting instructions do little to curb the jury’s common-sense or perhaps unconscious
mis-application of 404(b) evidence. See Concurring Op. (Saylor, C.J.) at 15-16 n.16.
7
 In discussing the degree of similarity necessary to achieve a non-character application
of the doctrine of chances, another commentator (cited by Imwinkelried but not by the
Concurrence), explains:

             The closer the physical similarities in the acts, the less likely
             the acts were a coincidence. For example, a pair of accused
             car thieves may claim to have had a good faith belief that
             they had permission to take an automobile. Evidence
             showing that they had previously stolen a stereo would have
             very little inferential value in proving or disproving
             coincidence. However, evidence showing that defendants
             had made a similar ‘mistake’ with other cars would strongly
             indicate a lack of coincidence.

Eric D. Lansverk, Admission of Evidence of Other Misconduct in Washington to Prove
Intent or Absence of Mistake or Accident: The Logical Inconsistencies of Evidence Rule
404(b), 61 Wash. L. Rev. 1213, 1230–31 (1986) (internal footnote omitted).

                             [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 14
Commonwealth, severely beaten on her entire body prior to being suffocated and

beheaded. See infra, note 11. By contrast, the 404(b) witnesses did not allege that

Hicks inflicted any blunt force trauma upon them, and they certainly were not

decapitated. Id. Moreover, as to the 404(b) witnesses, Hicks did not attempt and was

never charged with any class of murder. In fact, the violence he allegedly inflicted upon

the 404(b) witnesses – putting his hand or hands on their necks or throats – did not lead

to any charges whatsoever against Hicks. Clearly, the bad acts admitted in this case

were not in “the same general category” as the one perpetrated against the victim.

Accord Commonwealth v. Donahue, 549 A.2d 121, 127 (Pa. 1988) (explaining that, for

the purpose of proving absence of accident through bad acts that are not “strikingly

similar,” the Commonwealth must show that “a similar result obtained in both cases”).

      In Donahue, the defendant was on trial for murder in which the death of the

victim was caused by alleged child abuse. Id. We affirmed the allowance of evidence

of alleged prior acts of child abuse resulting in a “pattern of bruises” over the prior

victim’s body because it was probative of whether the same injuries on the victim in

the charged case were accidental, as the defendant claimed they were.             Id.   As

described in detail herein, the differences between the bad acts and the charged crime

in the instant matter far outnumber their similarities. Given the extreme brutality of the

charged crime, it cannot be said that the same injuries or “a similar result obtained in

[all] cases,” making this case distinguishable from Donahue. See id.

      A second important limitation that the Concurrence acknowledges, but fails to

apply, is that the doctrine of chances depends upon the defendant having committed

the similar bad act many times, indeed many more times than “the frequency rate for

                          [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 15
the general population.”8 Concurring Op. (Saylor, C.J.) at 14. The large number and

high frequency of the prior incidents are what give the doctrine any claim, however

tenuous, to embodying a non-character rationale. Absent numerosity and frequency

(not to mention “striking similarities”), the proffered 404(b) evidence cannot support the

necessary determination of “objective improbability” that the defendant would face

so many similar accusations, yet be innocent as to this one. Id. at 6-7 (emphasis

added). Thus, in my view, any application of the doctrine of chances should be limited

to textbook-type cases like United States v. Woods, 484 F.2d 127 (4th Cir. 1973).

       In Woods, the defendant was charged with murdering her seven-month-old foster

son, Paul, by means of cyanosis (oxygen deprivation). The prosecution offered and the

trial court admitted evidence of twenty prior instances of cyanosis occurring in a total of

nine children under the defendant’s care, including seven other deaths. Woods, 484

F.2d at 130. In all cases, the children were under the age of three. On appeal, the

Fourth Circuit affirmed the trial court’s admission of the prior acts to show the

defendant’s criminality, or absence of accident. The Woods court explained:

              With regard to no single child was there any legally sufficient
              proof that defendant had done any act which the law forbids.
              Only when all of the evidence concerning the nine other
              children and Paul is considered collectively is the conclusion
              impelled that the probability that some or all of the other

8
  As Imwinkelried has explained, it must be clear that “the accused has suffered the loss
more frequently than the typical person endures such losses accidentally.”
Imwinkelried, The Use of Evidence of an Accused’s Uncharged Misconduct to Prove
Mens Rea: The Doctrines Which Threaten to Engulf the Character Evidence Prohibition,
51 Ohio St. L.J. at 591. Accordingly, “it is highly relevant to consider the number of
losses the accused has suffered” and “if the judge has no basis for determining the
frequency of such accidental occurrences among the general populace” or “if the judge
… genuinely doubt[s] whether the frequency of the accused’s losses exceeds the
incidence for the general population[,]” the judge must exclude the evidence. Id. at 590.

                          [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 16
               deaths, cyanotic seizures, and respiratory deficiencies were
               accidental or attributable to natural causes was so remote,
               the truth must be that Paul and some or all of the other
               children died at the hands of the defendant. We think also
               that when the crime is one of infanticide or child abuse,
               evidence of repeated incidents is especially relevant
               because it may be the only evidence to prove the crime.

Woods, 484 F.2d at 133.

         Unlike here, the prior acts in Woods were indisputably of the same general

category as the charged crime. Also unlike here, the similar incidents (cyanosis) in

Woods had occurred at least twenty other times and led to seven other deaths. There

was little doubt that, as a matter of objective probability (as opposed to subjective bad

character), the defendant in Woods committed the criminal act of infanticide.            By

contrast, the three bad acts admitted in the instant case were entirely insufficient both in

degree of similarity to the charged crime and in number/frequency to support anything

other than an improper inference as to Hicks’ character.9

         A third limitation to the application of the doctrine of chances is that there must

be some disclaimer of liability both with respect to the prior instances and the charged

crime.     The commentators cited by the Concurrence almost universally describe the

9
  For similar reasons, I question whether Donahue properly applies the doctrine of
chances. In that case, a single prior incident bearing no signature-like similarities to the
charged crime was nonetheless admitted to show lack of accident. The frequency
requirement underpinning the doctrine was clearly absent in Donahue but, at least in
that case (unlike here), the injuries in the charged crime and the prior incident were the
same. Id. at 127. Moreover, Donahue (like Woods) was a child abuse case, for which
other evidence is commonly unavailable. This fact may well have driven the result. See
Imwinkelried, The Use of Evidence of an Accused’s Uncharged Misconduct to Prove
Mens Rea: The Doctrines Which Threaten to Engulf the Character Evidence Prohibition,
51 Ohio St. L.J. at 586 (discussing the particular relevance of the doctrine of chances in
child abuse cases where the accused often contends the victim’s injuries were
sustained accidentally).

                            [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 17
doctrine in these terms. See, e.g., Imwinkelried, An Evidentiary Paradox, 40 U. Rich. L.

Rev. at 437 (explaining that the evidence is offered “to establish the objective

improbability of so many accidents befalling the defendant or the defendant becoming

innocently enmeshed in suspicious circumstances so frequently”)(emphasis added);

Mark Cammack, Using the Doctrine of Chances to Prove Actus Reus in Child Abuse

and Acquaintance Rape, 29 U.C. Davis. L. Rev. 355, 411 n.225 (1996) (noting that “the

doctrine focuses on the improbability of repeated false accusations against the same

person”); id. at 387-88 (indicating that the prior “acts” should really be called

“happenings” in the context of a doctrine of chances analysis).           It is difficult (if not

impossible) to determine the objective improbability that one or all of the incidents in

question are accidents when they are not all claimed to be such. Accordingly, this third

limitation, like the first two, affords theoretical integrity to the doctrine.   In the instant

matter, there was no contention at the time the prior acts occurred, or otherwise, that

they somehow occurred by accident. The present scenario simply does not lend itself

to application of the doctrine of chances.

       The Majority does not dispose of the present matter with any specific “absence of

accident” analysis. Instead, with respect to the existence of a common scheme or

signature, the Majority relies heavily on this Court’s recent Rule 404(b) decision in

Commonwealth v. Arrington, 86 A.3d 831 (Pa. 2014). Arrington, in my view, is the

unfortunate culmination of the conflation of the requirements to establish a signature

crime with those necessary to establish a common scheme or plan, which conflation

had its genesis in Wable.       See supra, p.8.     It falls squarely within the admonition

articulated herein that where the similarities are insufficient to establish a signature

                            [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 18
crime, and there is no true plan, the evidence shows only the defendant’s propensity

and must be prohibited. See supra, p.11.

       In Arrington, the defendant stood trial for first-degree murder in the shooting

death of his ex-girlfriend, Tondra Dennis, who had him arrested following years of

physical and emotional abuse, including beatings, death threats and break-ins. Ten

days after Arrington’s release from custody, an unidentified man shot Dennis on the

street near a home Arrington had once shared with his mother. Arrington, 86 A.3d at

839. The trial court admitted evidence that Arrington had physically assaulted and

harassed three other girlfriends, characterizing the abuse in each relationship as

triggered by the woman attempting to break up with him or interacting with other men.

Id. at 842.

       One former girlfriend testified that Arrington had followed and telephoned her

incessantly, threatened to harm her brother, set fire to her apartment, slashed furniture,

threw her belongings off a terrace, and inflicted two beatings upon her and two attacks

upon her brother.    Id. at 843.    A second ex-girlfriend testified that Arrington had

physically assaulted her three times over the course of their two-year relationship,

including a punch to the face, and two separate pistol-whippings to her jaw and head,

respectively. Id. The jury heard additional testimony that Arrington had struck this

woman’s male friend on the shoulder with an axe and fired a gun at her friend’s brother.

Id.   The third ex-girlfriend testified that Arrington had punched her in the face,

continually harassed and followed her, and threatened to kill her and her family when

she ended their relationship. Id. at 843-44.

                          [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 19
        A Majority of this Court held that the “shared characteristics of each relationship”

– monitoring his girlfriend’s daily activities; resorting to violence when his partner

wanted to end a relationship or interacted with other men; inflicting head or neck injuries

with his fist, a handgun or an edged weapon; and harming or threatening to harm

members of his girlfriend’s family – rendered the evidence admissible under Rule

404(b)(2). Id. at 844. Notably, the Arrington Majority did not purport to find a “signature

method” or “striking similarities,” departing even from our Wable line of cases. See

supra, pp.8-9. Indeed, these crucial terms appear nowhere in the opinion, and for good

reason; there was clearly nothing signature-like to connect Arrington’s disparate violent

acts.   They were not carried out in an identical fashion, as the Arrington Majority

ostensibly conceded by listing the five distinct methods Arrington employed to inflict

injury on his partners or their male friends. See Arrington, 86 A.3d at 844.

        Instead, we explained that “in order for evidence of other criminal activity to be

admissible to establish a common scheme … ‘a comparison of the crimes must

establish a logical connection between them.’” Id. at 842 (quoting Commonwealth v.

Miller, 664 A.2d 1310, 1318 (Pa. 1995)). The Arrington Majority then concluded that

Arrington’s “repeated efforts to preserve intimate relationships through harassment,

intimidation, and physical violence culminating in the use of a deadly weapon”

amounted to a “common plan or scheme.” Id. at 844. Thus, in Arrington, we ultimately

held that similar, repeated, but entirely unconnected acts, constituting, at most, a

pattern of abusive behavior toward women, establish the kind of logical connection

                           [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 20
necessary for the purpose of showing a common scheme to establish identity.10 See id.

As my historical overview of our jurisprudence makes clear, they do not. The other bad

acts in Arrington were clearly not part of the defendant’s purpose in committing the

crime charged. Thus, the holding in Arrington lacks precedential support and, under a

very thin veil, permits evidence of the violent propensity of a defendant to prove the

crime charged. For the same reasons I dissent in the present matter, I would overrule

our decision in Arrington as it is a departure from our cornerstone jurisprudential

requirements for establishing a common scheme or plan and evinces nothing close to

the required signature for purposes of showing identity. See Arrington, 86 A.3d at 860-

61 (Saylor. C.J., dissenting) (cautioning that “as the decisional law gravitates further and

further away from the centering ground of signature crimes, the identity/propensity

distinction devolves to a matter of semantics”).

       Turning to the case at bar, if there is anything “unusual and distinctive” about the

circumstances surrounding the victim’s death, it is the fact that she was brutally beaten,

strangled, decapitated and dismembered with a saw blade; her body parts were then

strewn in garbage bags along two highways; and her hands were found buried in the

wall of Hicks’ bedroom closet, wrapped in athletic socks, newspaper, layers of detergent

and plastic bags. See N.T., 11/5/2015, at 91-93; N.T., 11/6/2014, at 28-90; N.T.,

11/7/2014, at 162-68. Had the Commonwealth sought to introduce evidence that Hicks

10
   As noted, the Arrington Court did not rely on the bad acts evidence to support a “lack
of accident” exception. Even if it had, Arrington’s conclusion that the shared
characteristics of the prior abusive relationships sufficed to establish a logical
connection between them and the crime charged is a monumental leap from the
standard articulated in Donahue (a child abuse case) that required a similarity in the bad
act and outcomes to establish lack of accident.

                           [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 21
had previously attacked a number of women in a manner demonstrating an “uncanny

similarity in all the details” surrounding the victim’s death, there would be little question

as to its admissibility. See Wable, 114 A.2d at 337. Instead, the bad acts admitted here

merely share some generic characteristics with each other and, to a lesser degree, with

the violent acts perpetrated against the victim.       There are simply no “striking” or

“remarkable” similarities.     See id. at 336; see also Boczkowski, 846 A.2d at 89.

Moreover, there is nothing “distinctive” about the bad acts that would set them apart

from other “crimes of the same class.” See Bryant I, 530 A.2d at 86 (citing McCormick,

Evidence, § 190 (1972 2d ed.)). Indeed, the bad acts relied on here are not even “of the

same class” as the charged crime.11 See id.

11
        Although the Commonwealth’s forensic expert, Dr. Ross, testified that the victim
was alive when she was beaten, strangled, and decapitated, and that her cause of
death was a combination of strangulation and sharp force injury to the neck, N.T.,
11/6/2014, at 59-90, Hicks’ expert, Dr. Shane, testified that the victim’s bruising and
lacerations occurred after her death, and that her cause of death was most likely related
to substance abuse. N.T., 11/12/2014, at 15-38. Notably, Dr. Shane testified that
“there was nothing to indicate that [the victim] was strangled” or that there was “any
intervention while she was still alive.” Id. at 27. He further testified that there were no
compression injuries, no fingernail injuries, and no other signs of “forceful strangulation”
or “manual strangulation” on the victim’s body. Id. at 28. He also testified that the bite
marks on the victim’s tongue were consistent with a drug overdose, countering Dr.
Ross’ conclusion that they resulted from strangulation. Id. at 38. Another of Hicks’
experts, Dr. Mihalakis, concurred with Dr. Shane that there was no evidence of
strangulation or choking on the victim’s body. See id. at 78-79. He testified, “I did not
see any fingernail markings in the neck. I didn’t see any ligature marks, and I didn’t see
any scratching in the neck.” Id. at 79. Moreover, both Dr. Shane and Dr. Mihalakis
testified that immunohistochemistry, the method of forensic analysis used by Dr. Ross,
is typically used on live tissue, and considered unnecessary or unreliable when used on
decomposed tissue like that of the victim. See id. at 27, 67.
In his Concurrence, Justice Baer draws an ex post facto conclusion that there was no
controversy as to the cause of death. See Concurring Op. (Baer, J.) at 6. While I
recognize that Dr. Shane’s testimony may be viewed as ambiguous, it nonetheless
raised the question whether the victim could have died from an overdose. The
defendant had no burden to prove, unequivocally, that the victim’s death resulted from
(continued…)

                             [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 22
       The absence of a signature is particularly apparent from the extraordinarily broad

categories the Majority creates in its strained effort to elucidate the required “striking

similarities.” See Majority Op. at 21. The Majority indicates that, in each case, Hicks

“(1) was introduced to drug-dependent women of similar body types for purposes of

using drugs” and “(2) showed a sexual interest in the women, sometimes involving

prostitution.” Id. The fact that Hicks allegedly attacked women is hardly a distinctive

feature. It merely narrows his victims to approximately half the population. That these

women were drug dependent and encountered Hicks in the context of drug-use and,

sometimes, prostitution, is also unremarkable, especially given that Hicks was himself

drug addicted. Moreover, I find no support in the record for the Majority’s statement that

all of the women had similar body types.12

(…continued)
an accident. He only had to raise a reasonable doubt as to the Commonwealth’s cause
of death theory. Contrary to Justice Baer’s assertion, ambiguous testimony is not
tantamount to uncontradicted testimony. See id. Moreover, in charging the jury, the trial
court correctly presented the jury’s role in considering contradictory expert evidence:
“In this case, the testimony and opinions of Dr. Ross, Dr. Shane, and Dr. Mihalakis may
seem to conflict with each other in certain aspects. If you find that the conflict is more
than superficial, that the conflict is real and irreconcilable, you may decide what parts, if
any, of the contradictory testimony and opinions you choose to believe.” N.T.,
11/14/2014, at 109.
Even setting aside any violence inflicted to the victim’s neck, none of the bad acts come
close to resembling the savage treatment of the victim’s body at issue in this case.
Unlike the victim, none of the 404(b) witnesses suffered blunt force trauma, let alone an
estimated seventeen impacts to the head and face inflicted by a hand, fist or foot said to
have been suffered by the victim. See N.T., 11/6/2014, at 27-45. Unlike the victim,
none of the 404(b) witnesses suffered injuries to their torsos, let alone multiple fractures
to each of their ribs by stomping or kicking. Id. at 46-54. And, unlike the victim, none of
the 404(b) witnesses suffered a laceration to the back of her head, likely inflicted by a
crowbar, pipe or claw end of a hammer. Id. at 35-42.
12
   The victim was a white woman, approximately 5’7” tall, 150-160 pounds with long
black hair. Commonwealth’s Exhibit 35 (Autopsy Report). At the time she was
(continued…)

                           [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 23
       The Majority next posits that, in each case, Hicks “(3) resorted to violence when

the women behaved in a way he found disagreeable; (4) inflicted injuries on each

woman by targeting her neck area with his hands, a sharp edged object, or both; and

(5) verbally threatened to kill each woman.” Id. Regrettably, these are descriptions that

could easily be applied to the vast majority of violent crimes, maybe even more so to

crimes of violence that arise between drug-addicted sexual partners.        Even putting

drugs and sex aside, one might safely assume that a substantial majority of violent

interactions in this world occur as the result of one person finding another person’s

behavior “disagreeable.” Moreover, as a factual matter, the record offers no evidence

that the victim behaved in a way Hicks found disagreeable prior to her death or that he

verbally threatened to kill her.

       The differences between the attacks in this case are far more pronounced than

the similarities, making this case much more like Bryant II, Patterson and Fortune than

Wable or Boczkowski.         Hicks allegedly choked Ms. Alston, causing her to lose

(…continued)
murdered, she was approximately 36 years old. The record reveals that Ms. Alston is a
black woman and was approximately 41 years old when the alleged incident with Hicks
occurred. Commonwealth’s Offers of Proof, 4/27/2011, at Exhibit C (Alston Police
Report). Ms. Chavez is a white woman and was approximately 24 years old at the time
Hicks allegedly attacked her. Id. at Exhibit B (Chavez Police Report). Ms. Washington
is a black woman who was approximately 31 years old at the time of her encounter with
Hicks. Id. at Exhibit E (Washington Police Report). I have discovered no evidence in
the record indicating the respective heights, weights or other descriptors of the body
types of the 404(b) witnesses. The Majority cites to the trial court’s 1925(a) opinion
which, notably, does not cite to anything when it finds that “the victims [sic] and the
three witnesses were all of a similar body type.” See Majority Op. at 13, 21 (citing Trial
Court Opinion, 8/18/2015, at 31). To the extent the trial court was relying on its own
observations as to the witnesses’ body types, I would observe that many years had
elapsed between the prior bad act incidents and the trial, and there would be no way for
the trial court to know that the witnesses’ body types had not changed during that time.

                            [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 24
consciousness. He threatened her with a gun (his) and a pocket knife (hers), and raped

her during the assault. He also threw a glass table at her. She was not a prostitute and

was not trading sex for drugs. To the contrary, she was providing drugs to Hicks, who

was apparently upset that she was not more freely sharing her supply. The incident

occurred in Hicks’ Hampton, Virginia home on the first and only occasion the two met, in

2006. See N.T., 11/6/2014, at 184-200.

      Unlike Ms. Alston, Ms. Washington was a prostitute. She allegedly did drugs

with Hicks on the occasion of the alleged attack, which occurred during their first and

only encounter, in Fort Worth, Texas in 2003. Unlike the incident with Ms. Alston, Hicks

did not threaten Ms. Washington with a gun or a knife, but with his car. Rather than

grabbing her throat while in his home, he grabbed the back of her neck while in a car.

She never lost consciousness. In fact, following the alleged assault, she was able to

drive the car, which Hicks allowed her to do. He told her that he wanted someone to

love him, but he did not attempt to penetrate her during the assault. He did not throw a

glass table (or anything else) when she tried to leave. Although he allegedly threatened

to run her over with his car if she got out, he did not follow through on this threat. See

N.T., 11/7/2014, at 60-86.

      Ms. Chavez was a prostitute at the time Hicks allegedly attacked her. She had

been seeing him a couple times a week (or every couple of weeks) for three to five

months. She testified that their encounters always involved her using drugs but did not

always involve sex. Hicks was reportedly clean and sober at the time he attacked her,

unlike his state when he allegedly attacked the other two witnesses.        He allegedly

grabbed Ms. Chavez’s neck with both hands while they were driving in Hicks’ truck

                             [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 25
together. She testified that she felt like she was blacking out but did not say that she

became unconscious. Hicks threatened to kill Ms. Chavez when she opened the car

door but he ultimately pulled off the road and calmed down. He did not throw anything

at her or use an edged weapon. He apologized for hurting her and he brought her to his

house to clean blood from her neck caused by his fingernails. Their encounter occurred

in Arlington, Texas in 2002-2003. See N.T., 11/7/2014, at 86-106.

      To the extent there are similarities between the bad acts and the charged crime,

they are entirely insufficient to show a true signature for purposes of proving identity,

intent or lack of accident. The infrequency of the prior acts, which do not fall in the

same general category as the charged crime, also weighs heavily against their

admission for the latter purpose, even if we applied some diluted version of the doctrine

of chances. Moreover, the required connection from which a true common scheme or

motive might be inferred is absent. The admitted testimony is indicative of nothing more

than a pattern of violent behavior.    There is no evidence from which to draw an

inference that Hicks conceived of an overarching plan encompassing any of the bad

acts and the charged crime, or that he committed any of the bad acts as “part of his

purpose” to murder the victim.        See Shaffner, 72 Pa. at 65–66.        Neither the

Commonwealth nor the Majority claim otherwise.          By the Commonwealth’s own

admission, there was no plan at all, as Hicks’ violent behavior was merely a

spontaneous reaction to a speculated disagreement. Rather, it advances a definition of

“common scheme” that requires no scheme at all but instead justifies the admission of

random, unlinked acts so long as it is possible to discern some similarity with the

charged crime, no matter how attenuated or unintentional.

                          [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 26
      If Rule 404(b) is to accomplish its intended purpose, it must be strictly construed

in light of the common law principles underlying it, as articulated by this Court more than

a century ago. See Shaffner, 72 Pa. at 65-66. Instead, the bad acts testimony allowed

here was used to establish precisely what Rule 404(b) prohibits, i.e., that because Hicks

had acted violently toward three women in the past, he was therefore capable of, and

would have a propensity to commit, the far more extensive, brutal and ultimately fatal

acts of violence perpetrated on the victim in this case, several years later. By permitting

such an inference to be drawn, the Majority all but eliminates Hicks’ presumption of

innocence and the Commonwealth’s burden to prove, in this case, that Hicks is guilty of

first-degree murder. See Commonwealth v. Stanley, 398 A.2d 631, 633 (Pa. 1979).

      Finally, the admission of bad act evidence completely lacking in the necessary

connection to the charged crime is not harmless error. See Fortune, 346 A.2d at 787

(remanding for a new trial because “whenever a jury improperly receives evidence of

other crimes, the impact is significant”). Our standard for determining harmless error is

clear. If an appellate court “concludes beyond a reasonable doubt that the error could

not have contributed to the verdict,” the error is harmless. Commonwealth v. Mitchell,

839 A.2d 202, 214 (Pa. 2003) (citing Commonwealth v. Story, 383 A.2d 155, 164 (Pa.

1978)).   However, “if there is a reasonable possibility that the error may have

contributed to the verdict, it is not harmless.” Id. The Commonwealth bears the burden

of establishing harmlessness beyond a reasonable doubt. Id. Specifically, we will find

harmless error where:

              (1) the error did not prejudice the defendant or the prejudice
              was de minimis;

                          [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 27
              (2) the erroneously admitted evidence was merely
              cumulative of other untainted evidence which was
              substantially similar to the erroneously admitted evidence; or
              (3) the properly admitted and uncontradicted evidence of
              guilt was so overwhelming and the prejudicial effect of the
              error was so insignificant by comparison that the error could
              not have contributed to the verdict.
Commonwealth v. Young, 748 A.2d 166, 193 (Pa. 1999).

       In   the   instant   matter,   the   Commonwealth    itself   has   repeatedly   and

unambiguously argued that its case against Hicks was largely circumstantial and that it

viewed the bad acts testimony as essential to proving the elements of first-degree

murder beyond a reasonable doubt. See Commonwealth’s Brief at 12-14 (arguing the

“fact that the case was circumstantial in its evidence coupled with the defense of

accident being the suggested manner in which the victim died, all warrant the

conclusion that the Commonwealth’s need for the [404(b)] evidence was, in fact, great”);

see also Offer of Proof, 4/27/2011, ¶ 15 (arguing that “the need for other crimes

evidence is high in that the case against [Hicks] is primarily based on circumstantial

evidence and [Hicks] has already placed an [sic] issue the precise cause and manner of

the victim’s death”); see also Statement Pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b), 8/8/2011

(explaining that “the proof of murder in this case is entirely circumstantial” and “[t]he

[404(b)] evidence would allow the jury to conclude that the victim’s death was the result

of defendant’s assault”).

       There were no witnesses to the crime and Hicks did not confess to the murder.

See Commonwealth Brief at 12-13. As described hereinabove, whether strangulation

and decapitation played a role in the victim’s death was very much in question. See

supra, note 11. The 404(b) evidence permitted the jury to draw the improper inference

                            [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 28
that because Hicks had allegedly inflicted injury to the throat or neck of the 404(b)

witnesses, he must also have strangled the victim and beheaded her. In fact, the trial

court stated in its opinion ruling on post-sentence motions that the 404(b) evidence

helped “elucidate that it was [Hicks] who killed the victim,” as opposed to another. See

Trial Court Opinion, 8/18/2015, at 16. As we said in Young, “[i]t is difficult to imagine

any evidence more prejudicial to a defendant than that which identifies [him] as a

perpetrator of a capital crime.” Young, 748 A.2d at 193.         Accordingly, there is no

question that the testimony of Ms. Alston, Ms. Washington and Ms. Chavez significantly

prejudiced Hicks.

       For these same reasons, it is impossible to conclude that the 404(b) evidence

“was merely cumulative of other untainted evidence.” See id. By the Commonwealth’s

own admission, absent the 404(b) testimony, it lacked sufficient evidence to prove that

Hicks caused the victim’s death beyond a reasonable doubt.                Moreover, the

“uncontradicted evidence” did not overwhelmingly point to Hicks committing the murder,

as opposed to merely committing the crime of abuse of corpse following the victim’s

death by drug overdose.      See supra, note 11.      Even the most damning of the

uncontradicted evidence – that the victim’s hands were found buried in Hicks’ wall – is

consistent with Hicks’ guilt of abuse of corpse and innocence as to the murder itself.

Because the bad acts evidence was wrongly admitted and because its admission was

far from harmless, I would reverse the judgment of sentence and remand this case for a

new trial.

                          [J-81-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 29