Com. v. Massi, J. ( 2016 )


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  • J-A09001-15
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,                   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellee
    v.
    JEFFERY MASSI,
    Appellant                No. 98 EDA 2014
    Appeal from the Order December 9, 2013
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
    Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0001179-2012
    BEFORE: BOWES, DONOHUE, AND STABILE, JJ.
    MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                               FILED MAY 19, 2016
    Have to put that judge Donohue did not participate in this
    appeal
    Jeffery Massi appeals from the order entered December 9, 2013,
    denying his motion to dismiss based on double jeopardy grounds. 1       We
    affirm.
    ____________________________________________
    1
    This panel initially remanded this matter for compliance with Pa.R.Crim.P.
    587(B)(4-6) (requiring judge to make finding as to whether double jeopardy
    motion is frivolous and to advise defendant of appellate procedure that must
    be followed after frivolity determination). We retained jurisdiction. In a
    March 4, 2016 order, the trial court determined that the motion was not
    frivolous and thus immediately appealable as a collateral order and so
    advised Appellant. Pa.R.Crim.P. 587(B)(6); see also Commonwealth v.
    Orie, 
    22 A.3d 1021
    , 1024 (Pa. 2011) (orders denying double jeopardy
    claims are final orders for purposes of appeal absent a finding by the trial
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
    J-A09001-15
    The pertinent facts of this matter are as follows. Appellant was on
    probation for an unrelated crime. Agent Shawn Patrick Butler, who was
    employed by the West Philadelphia Division of Probation and Probation, was
    Appellant’s probation officer. On December 28, 2011, Agent Butler went to
    7434 Merdick Place, Philadelphia, Appellant’s designated residence, to
    conduct a home visit.         Appellant admitted that he had recently consumed
    Percocet and was therefore handcuffed and placed under arrest.             Agent
    Butler and his partner started to search the area. In so doing, Agent Butler
    made a sweep of the utility room, which was accessible only through
    Appellant’s bedroom.
    On a shelf in that room, Agent Butler discovered a loaded gun that was
    wrapped in material and plastic.           When asked, Appellant admitted that he
    was aware of the weapon’s existence, said that it belonged to his father, and
    reported that he had not placed it in the utility closet. A glass pipe used to
    consume drugs was found in a dresser in the bedroom.              Accordingly, on
    _______________________
    (Footnote Continued)
    court that the double jeopardy motion was frivolous): Commonwealth v.
    Barber, 
    940 A.2d 369
    , 376 (Pa.Super. 2007) (“a defendant is entitled to an
    immediate interlocutory appeal as of right from an order denying a non-
    frivolous motion to dismiss on state or federal double jeopardy grounds.”).
    Accordingly, the present appeal is considered timely as of the date of entry
    of the March 4, 2016 order. Pa.R.A.P. 905(a)(5) (“A notice of appeal filed
    after the announcement of a determination but before the entry of an
    appealable order shall be treated as filed after such entry and on the day
    thereof.”).
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    December 29, 2011, Appellant was charged in this action with possession of
    a firearm by a prohibited person and possession of drug paraphernalia. On
    January 27, 2012, after a preliminary hearing, the charges were bound over
    for trial.   Appellant then filed an omnibus pretrial motion to suppress
    evidence and for habeas corpus relief, seeking dismissal of the charges due
    to the lack of a prima facie case that he possessed a firearm.
    On July 20, 2012, the Commonwealth conducted a violation of
    probation (“VOP”) hearing in the other case based on Agent Butler’s
    discovery of the drug paraphernalia and weapon.       At that hearing, Agent
    Butler testified to the above-cited facts.   Specifically, he recounted that,
    during the home visit on December 28, 2011, Appellant admitted that he
    had recently consumed drugs and was arrested. Agent Butler searched the
    vicinity and found the loaded gun on a shelf in the utility room next to
    Appellant’s bedroom.    Appellant admitted that he knew of the weapon.
    Agent Butler also testified that Appellant told him that the gun in question
    had “been in our family for a long time. My fingerprints will probably be on
    it because my father always lets me hold it.     I didn’t know it was there.”
    Motion to Dismiss, 12/5/13, at Exhibit C (N.T., 7/20/12, at 14).
    At the VOP hearing, Appellant’s father confirmed that he had
    purchased the gun and was licensed to own it.        Additionally, Appellant’s
    mother testified that she wrapped the gun and placed it on the shelf in the
    utility room. She explained that she wanted to hide the weapon from their
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    grandchildren who visited the home. At the conclusion of the VOP hearing,
    the court determined that the Commonwealth failed to establish by a
    preponderance of the evidence that Appellant violated his probation by
    illegally possessing a firearm or the drug paraphernalia and declined to find
    Appellant in violation of the terms of his probation.
    As a result of the VOP court’s ruling, on December 5, 2013, Appellant
    filed a motion to dismiss this action based on “collateral estoppel principles
    that are embodied in the [double jeopardy clause of the] Fifth Amendment
    as well as the same principles that are embodied in Article 1, § 10 of the
    Pennsylvania Constitution.” N.T., 12/9/13, at 7. According to Appellant,
    since the Commonwealth failed to establish by a preponderance of the
    evidence that he illegally possessed the firearm and pipe in question at his
    VOP hearing, it was precluded from trying him for the same criminal
    conduct. The Commonwealth countered that jeopardy had not yet attached
    in either action and therefore no double jeopardy violation could occur by
    trying Appellant.
    The trial court held a hearing on the double jeopardy motion on
    December 9, 2013, and denied it on the record. Appellant timely appealed.
    The sole issue Appellant levels on appeal is:
    Did the trial court err in denying Appellant’s motion to dismiss
    this prosecution on double jeopardy grounds where the
    Commonwealth first elected to proceed with a violation of
    probation hearing in the court of common pleas and attempted
    to punish the defendant and take away his liberty for the same
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    alleged criminal conduct that now forms the basis for the instant
    prosecution, but received an adverse ruling in the earlier
    proceeding when the Commonwealth failed to sustain its burden
    of proving a violation by a preponderance of the evidence.
    Appellant’s brief at 4.
    Our standard of review is as follows. “[A]n appeal grounded in double
    jeopardy raises a question of constitutional law. This Court's scope of review
    in making a determination on a question of law is, as always, plenary. As
    with all questions of law, the appellate standard of review is de novo.”
    Commonwealth v. Martin, 
    97 A.3d 363
    , 364 (Pa.Super. 2014) (citation
    omitted).
    The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides, in
    pertinent part, “No person shall . . . be subject for the same offence to be
    twice put in jeopardy of life or limb . . . . .” U.S.C.A. Const. Amend. V. “The
    double   jeopardy     protections    afforded   by   our   state   constitution   are
    coextensive with those federal in origin; essentially, both prohibit successive
    prosecutions    and       multiple   punishments     for   the     same    offense.”
    Commonweatlh v. States, 
    938 A.2d 1016
    , 1017-19 (Pa. 2007) (emphasis
    added). “In a jury trial, jeopardy attaches when the jury is empaneled and
    sworn; in a non-jury trial jeopardy attaches when the court begins to hear
    evidence.” Commonwealth v. Rosario, 
    613 A.2d 1244
    , 1247 (Pa.Super.
    1992), aff'd, 
    679 A.2d 756
     (Pa. 1996) (Serfass v. United States, 
    420 U.S. 377
     (1975)). Additionally, our Supreme Court has recognized that “[a] VOP
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    hearing differs from a trial, as probation and parole are not part of the
    criminal prosecution[.]” Commonwealth v. Mullins, 
    918 A.2d 82
    , 85 (Pa.
    2007).
    While collateral estoppel is most commonly used in the civil context,
    criminal double jeopardy protections incorporate the doctrine of collateral
    estoppel or issue preclusion. Ashe v. Swenson, 
    397 U.S. 436
     (1970). In
    Ashe, six men were playing poker in the basement of a home. Three or four
    masked individuals entered the home armed with shotguns and pistols. The
    assailants robbed the poker players and then escaped in one of the victim’s
    cars. Police arrested three men within a close distance of that car, after it
    had been abandoned. Ashe was arrested by another officer “some distance
    away.” Ashe, supra at 437.
    The state charged Ashe with six robberies and theft of the vehicle.
    Ashe proceeded to trial on one count of robbery against a single poker
    player. “The trial judge instructed the jury that if it found that the petitioner
    was one of the participants in the armed robbery, the theft of ‘any money’
    from [the one victim] would sustain a conviction.”       Ashe, supra at 439.
    The court added, “if the petitioner was one of the robbers, he was guilty
    under the law even if he had not personally robbed [the individual].” Id.
    The jury acquitted Ashe.
    Subsequently, the state sought to prosecute Ashe for the robbery of
    another poker player. The trial court denied Ashe’s double jeopardy motion,
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    and the jury found him guilty.          After the Missouri State Supreme Court
    affirmed, Ashe sought federal relief. Ultimately, the United States Supreme
    Court reversed, concluding that double jeopardy included the federal
    collateral estoppel doctrine. It held that, based on the facts presented in the
    first trial, the issue of whether Ashe had been one of the individuals to take
    part in the robbery and theft had been decided.
    The civil concept of collateral estoppel and that utilized in the criminal
    context are distinct. States, supra at 1020. “With respect to the criminal
    law defendant, collateral estoppel is treated as a subpart of double jeopardy
    protection    and   is   defined   as   follows:   ‘Collateral   estoppel   does   not
    automatically bar subsequent prosecutions, but does bar redetermination in
    a second prosecution of those issues necessarily determined between the
    parties in a first proceeding which has become a final judgment.’” Id.
    (partially quoting Commonwealth v. Smith, 
    540 A.2d 246
    , 251 (Pa.
    1988)). Thus, collateral estoppel's application in criminal matters is “not as
    straightforward as it is in the civil context because it must be viewed
    through the lens of double jeopardy.” States, 
    supra at 1020
    .
    In the civil context, the doctrine of collateral estoppel promotes
    efficiency by having an issue, once decided, given final effect in another
    matter.      However, “[t]he efficiency concerns that drive the collateral
    estoppel policy on the civil side are not nearly as important in criminal cases
    because criminal cases involve a public interest in the accuracy and justice
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    of criminal results that outweighs the economy concerns that undergird the
    estoppel doctrine.” 
    Id.
     Thus, “[a]pplication of collateral estoppel principles
    to the criminal law was intended to enhance the traditional double jeopardy
    protection and to provide relief from the growing threat of multiple
    prosecutions[, and] it is to be applied with realism and rationality and not
    applied with the hypertechnical and archaic approach of a 19th century
    pleading book.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    In Pennsylvania, the criminal iteration of the concept of collateral
    estoppel is derived from Ashe and employs “the federal three-part test to
    determine if collateral estoppel applies to limit further litigation on a
    particular issue.” Id. at 1021. We apply collateral estoppel criminally where
    there is:
    1) an identification of the issues in the two actions for the
    purpose of determining whether the issues are sufficiently
    similar and sufficiently material in both actions to justify invoking
    the doctrine;
    2) an examination of the record of the prior case to decide
    whether the issue was “litigated” in the first case; and
    3) an examination of the record of the prior proceeding to
    ascertain whether the issue was necessarily decided in the first
    case.
    Id.;   Commonwealth        v.   Smith,    
    540 A.2d 246
    ,   251   (Pa.   1988);
    Commonwealth v. Hude, 
    425 A.2d 313
    , 320 (Pa. 1980).
    In the present case, Appellant seeks to apply collateral estoppel since
    the issue herein, whether he possessed the gun, was identical to that
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    involved in the VOP proceeding, wherein the Commonwealth sought to
    revoke his probation based upon his possession of the weapon. That issue
    was litigated at the VOP proceeding and the VOP court determined that a
    violation did not occur. Appellant also notes that the Commonwealth in the
    VOP proceeding had a lesser standard of proof, a preponderance of the
    evidence.
    We conclude that our decision in Commonwealth v. Cosgrove, 
    629 A.2d 1007
     (Pa.Super. 1993), is controlling herein. The precise issue decided
    in that case is the same one in the instant appeal: “The issue presented in
    this appeal is whether the Commonwealth may continue to prosecute at trial
    offenses which have been already found by a court not to constitute a
    violation of the terms of the accused's probation.” 
    Id. at 1008
    . As in this
    case, the defendant therein maintained that the collateral estoppel aspect of
    double jeopardy prevented the Commonwealth from proceeding to trial in
    that matter since he was previously found not to be in violation of the terms
    of probation.
    The facts were as follows.    Cosgrove pled guilty to burglary in a
    different case and was sentenced to a probationary term.           While on
    probation, he was arrested and charged at the criminal action in question in
    Cosgrove. The charges included attempted murder, aggravated assault, a
    weapons offense, and related crimes.    Those charges were based upon an
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    altercation between Cosgrove and James Plenderleith in a parking lot after a
    concert when Cosgrove stabbed Plenderleith.
    Cosgrove was charged with VOP in the other criminal case. The
    Commonwealth first proceeded to the VOP hearing.        At the VOP hearing,
    Plenderleith claimed that Cosgrove was the aggressor in their confrontation.
    However, the evidence established that Plenderleith was a member of a neo-
    Nazi skinhead group and the Ku Klux Klan, and the melee in the parking lot
    was started by one of those organizations. After the conclusion of the VOP
    hearing, the VOP court found that it could not determine if Cosgrove or
    Plenderleith was the aggressor in the fight, and declined to find Cosgrove in
    violation of the terms of his probation.
    Cosgrove then moved for dismissal of the pending criminal charges
    arising from the stabbing.     The trial court in Cosgrove found that the
    Commonwealth’s failure to carry its burden of proving a probation violation
    “by a preponderance of the evidence did not collaterally estop the
    prosecution of the underlying charges.” 
    Id. at 1009
    . It “concluded that a
    probationer has not been placed in jeopardy for new criminal charges when
    a probation revocation hearing is held prior to trial on the new charges.” 
    Id. at 1010
    .   The trial court also relied upon cases from other jurisdictions
    wherein the courts ruled that a prior revocation hearing does not bar a
    criminal trial for the conduct upon which the VOP proceeding was premised.
    The trial court found that “the societal interest in prosecuting charges
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    requires that the Commonwealth have a fair opportunity to prove the
    charges against a defendant beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id.
    We adopted the reasoning of the trial court. In so doing, we rejected
    Cosgrove’s invocation of the decision in Commonwealth v. Brown, 
    469 A.2d 1371
     (Pa. 1983). Brown involved the reverse of the scenario at issue
    in Cosgrove. Specifically, Brown was on probation when he committed new
    offenses.   The Commonwealth decided to go to trial on the new offenses
    before it proceeded with the VOP proceeding. The defendant was acquitted
    of the charges at the criminal trial.   The Commonwealth then proceeded
    successfully with a probation revocation hearing based upon the same
    conduct for which the defendant had been acquitted.    Our Supreme Court
    reversed.   It found that the prior acquittal prevented the Commonwealth
    from re-litigating the issue of the defendant's commission of the crimes.
    The Supreme Court reasoned that, since the Commonwealth decided to
    proceed to trial before a jury, it was not entitled to a second bite of the
    apple by relitigating the same issue at the VOP hearing.   It noted that a
    defendant is bound in a subsequent revocation hearing by an earlier
    determination that he is guilty of the charges, and concluded that the
    Commonwealth is likewise bound by an acquittal.
    In distinguishing Brown, the Cosgrove Court noted that it is
    permissible for the Commonwealth to proceed to a probation violation
    proceeding before it elects to try the defendant for the same conduct.   If
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    probation is revoked before the defendant is tried on the charges, “the ruling
    of the probation judge that the defendant committed the criminal act does
    not control the outcome of the guilt-determination process at trial” since the
    defendant is presumed innocent before a trial. Id. at 1010. “A defendant
    who has been found to be in violation of probation because of commission of
    a subsequent criminal act is nevertheless entitled to a trial . . . There is no
    application of the doctrine of collateral estoppel in such a situation because
    the defendant enjoys the presumption of innocence at trial.” Id. at 1010-
    1011.
    The Cosgrove panel reasoned that “collateral estoppel should also not
    apply when the outcome of a pre-trial revocation proceeding is adverse to
    the Commonwealth and favorable to the defendant.”          Id. at 1011.    We
    observed that the Commonwealth’s right to conduct a pre-trial revocation
    hearing, as provided in the case law, “would be severely constrained if the
    exercise of the right were subject to possible forfeiture of the ability to
    prosecute defendant at trial.” Id.
    This Court further observed that VOP hearings are “frequently held
    without the benefit of preparation that precedes a criminal trial” and are
    more informal than a trial so as to advance the interest of the purpose of a
    VOP hearing, which is to determine whether probation has been effective in
    rehabilitating the defendant. Id. Additionally, the function of a VOP hearing
    is not “to serve as a final arbiter of an individual's guilt or innocence of
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    criminal charges. It is only through a criminal trial at which the defendant is
    presumed innocent and the Commonwealth bears the burden of proof of
    guilt beyond a reasonable doubt that contested issues of criminal culpability
    are determined with finality.” Id. In Cosgrove, we refused to transfer the
    responsibility of determining guilt or innocence to a probation revocation
    “setting that does not adhere to the procedural safeguards necessary for a
    fair adjudication of guilt” since shifting that responsibility from a jury “would
    result in a perversion of the criminal justice system.” Id.
    In that decision, this Court articulated our cognizance that other state
    and federal courts addressing the same issue had reached different
    conclusions in connection with the identical issue. We specifically adopted
    the reasoning employed by those decisions that permit “a criminal
    prosecution to follow a revocation proceeding that resulted in an outcome
    adverse to the Commonwealth [as] founded upon sound public policy.” Id.
    This Court held “that in order to ensure that the function of a criminal trial is
    not usurped by that of the probation revocation hearing, the Commonwealth
    may prosecute an individual on criminal charges even where a court has
    previously determined that it will not revoke the individual's probation based
    upon those charges.” Id.
    Since our decision in Cosgrove, additional jurisdictions have adopted
    the same precept that adjudications in the probation violation setting are not
    given collateral estoppel effect for purposes of a criminal prosecution for the
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    same conduct.      In State v. Brunet, 
    806 A.2d 1007
     (Vt. 2002), the
    defendant was on probation for a domestic assault and was not permitted to
    be in contact with the victim.      He thereafter was charged with a new
    domestic assault on the same victim in a criminal action as well as violating
    his probation for committing that assault. The VOP hearing was held first,
    and the VOP court concluded that the defendant had not assaulted the victim
    a second time and had acted defensively when she happened to come into
    the same bar where the defendant was located. It declined to revoke the
    defendant’s probation.
    The defendant thereafter was tried and convicted of assault.           On
    appeal, he claimed that collateral estoppel prevented his criminal trial in
    that, at the VOP hearing, the Commonwealth had had a full and fair
    opportunity to litigate the question of whether he had assaulted the victim at
    the bar. The Brunet Court turned to “evaluation by other courts that have
    considered the identical issue.”    
    Id. at 1010
    .     It observed, “Most have
    concluded that probation revocation hearings are so fundamentally different
    from criminal trials in their purpose and procedures that it would be unfair to
    apply collateral estoppel in these circumstances.” 
    Id.
    The Vermont Supreme Court observed, that, in its state, the rules of
    evidence and procedure vary between the VOP and criminal settings.            It
    noted that this variation is a result of the recognition that the purpose of the
    VOP hearing is not to determine a defendant’s guilt or innocence of the
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    underlying crime but, rather, to determine if probation has been an effective
    alternative to incarceration.   The Court opined, “Thus, it is universally
    acknowledged that a revocation proceeding is not essentially ‘criminal’ in
    nature, and that double jeopardy does not attach at a revocation hearing to
    bar a trial of the new criminal charges.” 
    Id. at 1011
    . Simply put, in a VOP
    setting, the defendant has not been tried for the offense in question.
    Instead, the defendant’s amenability to treatment was examined.
    The Brunet Court also observed that the prosecution, in the VOP
    setting, will ordinarily not prepare as fully as it does for a criminal trial,
    given the lower standard of proof (preponderance of the evidence) and less
    stringent rules of evidence and procedure. The prosecution, after the VOP
    hearing, may have garnered additional evidence.        Therefore, the Court
    concluded, it would not be fair or sound public policy to apply collateral
    estoppel after a VOP hearing.     The Brunet Court additionally observed,
    “Most courts have also concluded that applying collateral estoppel to bar a
    criminal prosecution based upon an earlier probation-revocation decision
    would undermine the interests of justice, and erode public confidence in the
    criminal justice system.” 
    Id.
    The Supreme Court of Rhode Island, applying previous precedent,
    likewise concluded that double jeopardy does not attach at a VOP hearing.
    State v. Gautier, 
    871 A.2d 347
     (R.I. 2005).           The defendant therein
    contended that he could not be prosecuted for a murder after a VOP court
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    refused to revoke the defendant’s probation due to its specific finding that
    the state had failed to establish that the defendant murdered the victim in
    question. The defendant contended that the state could not prosecute him
    on the murder charge since “relitigation of his criminal liability on that
    charge would violate the prohibitions against double jeopardy as guaranteed
    by the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and its state
    counterpart[.]” 
    Id. at 361
    . The Rhode Island Supreme Court rejected that
    position, articulating that it was
    settled law that double jeopardy does not operate to bar
    prosecution of a defendant for criminal misconduct after the
    state alleges that very same misconduct as a basis for a finding
    of a violation of the defendant's preexisting probation. As this
    Court previously established, a probation-revocation hearing is
    considered a continuation of the original prosecution for which
    probation was imposed—in which the sole purpose is to
    determine whether a criminal defendant has breached a
    condition of his existing probation, not to convict that individual
    of a new criminal offense. Consequently, it is black letter law
    that jeopardy does not attach to probation-revocation
    proceedings, because these proceedings are not designed to
    punish criminal defendants for violation of a criminal law.
    
    Id.
     (citations and quotation marks omitted); See also, e.g., Jonas v.
    Wainwright, 
    779 F.2d 1576
    , 1577 (11th Cir. 1986) (“double jeopardy
    clause does not apply to parole revocation proceedings”); United States v.
    Whitney, 
    649 F.2d 296
    , 298 (5th Cir. 1981) (“Double jeopardy of the Fifth
    Amendment does not apply to parole and probation proceedings since they
    are not designed to punish a criminal defendant for violation of a criminal
    law.   The purpose of parole and probation revocation proceedings is to
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    determine whether a parolee or probationer has violated the conditions of
    his parole or probation.”); In re Interest of Rebecca B., 
    783 N.W.2d 783
    ,
    789 (Neb. 2010) (“it is black letter law that double jeopardy is not implicated
    by probation revocation proceedings”); People v. Hilton, 
    745 N.E.2d 381
    (N.Y. 2000) (the finding at a probation revocation hearing that the
    prosecution had failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that
    defendant had violated his probation by sexually abusing a child did not
    operate as collateral estoppel so as to bar prosecution of defendant for
    sexual abuse based on charge arising from same incident); Duke v. State,
    
    2 S.W.3d 512
    , 515-16 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999) (holding that double jeopardy
    does not apply in a probation revocation hearing, which results in “neither a
    conviction nor an acquittal,” but in “a finding on which the trial court can
    then exercise its discretion by revoking or continuing probation”); State v.
    Terry, 
    620 N.W.2d 217
     (Wis.App. 2000) (rejecting defendant’s request to
    overturn his conviction for possession of narcotics based upon the fact that,
    during antecedent VOP proceedings, it was determined that the state did not
    prove that he was in possession of the drugs).
    Cosgrove is determinative of the issue presented herein.            It is
    grounded in strong public policy considerations.           Moreover, a VOP
    adjudication is not a determination of whether a defendant is guilty of the
    crime in question; it is a decision as to whether the defendant’s conduct is
    such that he should remain on probation. A defendant is not tried for the
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    offense at issue in the criminal action for purposes of the VOP adjudication.
    As noted, double jeopardy attaches when a jury is empaneled or a trial court
    proceeds to here evidence at a nonjury trial.     Neither event occurred at
    Appellant’s VOP hearing.   Hence, he will not be placed in jeopardy for that
    offense twice when the prosecution proceeds to trial on the crime after a
    VOP hearing.
    Appellant maintains that the Brown decision and Commonwealth v.
    Holder, 
    805 A.2d 499
     (Pa. 2002) (OAJC), “compel the dismissal of the
    instant prosecution.” Appellant’s brief at 13. We disagree. In Cosgrove,
    we expressly distinguished Brown since the procedural posture of the case
    was the converse of that involved therein.      The Holder decision was a
    plurality and involved an evidentiary matter. In Holder, the defendant was
    on probation for an earlier crime. He was then accused of committing a rape
    and other charges arising out of that incident.         The Commonwealth
    conducted his revocation hearing before trial. Holder attempted to introduce
    into evidence facts that allegedly would have shown that the victim had
    previously made a false rape allegation. The VOP court precluded admission
    of that evidence based upon the Rape Shield Law. At trial, a different judge
    ruled that the defendant was collaterally estopped from presenting the same
    evidence based on the prior ruling.   Writing for only two Justices, Justice
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    Nigro agreed with the application of collateral estoppel as to the VOP
    evidentiary ruling.2     That case is not precedential.   Moreover, it does not
    involve the issue presented herein, which is whether the Commonwealth can
    proceed to trial on crimes when a VOP court has refused to revoke probation
    based upon the defendant’s commission of the acts supporting the crimes.
    Cosgrove directly addresses that contention.
    Order affirmed. Jurisdiction relinquished. Case remanded.
    Judge Donohue did not participate in the consideration of this case.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 5/19/2016
    ____________________________________________
    2
    Justice Zappala concurred in the result. Justice, now Chief Justice Saylor,
    joined by Justices Castille and Newman, authored a concurring and
    dissenting opinion. Justice Saylor concluded that the Commonwealth should
    not be able to use collateral estoppel offensively, which is not the situation
    herein.
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