Com. v. Jenkins, B. ( 2023 )


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  • J-A20032-23
    
    2023 PA Super 207
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                 :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    BENJAMIN JORDAN JENKINS                      :
    :
    Appellant               :   No. 1665 MDA 2022
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered November 18, 2022
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Adams County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-01-CR-0001044-2021
    BEFORE:      PANELLA, P.J., MURRAY, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*
    OPINION BY STEVENS, P.J.E.:                    FILED: OCTOBER 19, 2023
    Appellant Benjamin Jordan Jenkins appeals from the judgment of
    sentence entered by the Court of Common Pleas of Adams County after the
    trial court convicted Appellant of Driving Under the Influence of a Controlled
    Substance (DUI). Appellant claims that the trial court erred in removing
    Appellant from the Accelerated Rehabilitative Disposition Program (ARD).
    After careful review, we affirm.
    The trial court summarized the relevant factual background and
    procedural history of this case as follows:
    On May 16, 2021, an incident occurred which resulted in this
    case of driving under the influence of a controlled substance as an
    ungraded misdemeanor and first offense.
    On July 31, 2021, Appellant was operating a motor vehicle
    which was stopped by the Pennsylvania State Police. Appellant
    was again arrested for driving under the influence of a controlled
    substance and was taken to the hospital where blood was drawn
    ____________________________________________
    * Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-A20032-23
    with Appellant’s consent. That blood sample was then sent to NMS
    Laboratories for analysis. Charges were not immediately filed,
    pending the lab results.
    On August 17, 2021, Appellant waived his preliminary
    hearing in this case.
    On September 24, 2021, at formal arraignment in this case,
    Appellant applied for and was admitted to the ARD-DUI Program
    for a term of 9 months. At that time, the [trial court] was not
    made aware of, and the Commonwealth did not know about,
    Appellant’s arrest on July 31, 2021 for a second offense DUI.
    Neither Appellant nor Counsel disclosed that arrest to the [trial
    court] during Appellant’s admission into the ARD-DUI Program in
    this case.
    On March 22, 2022, while Appellant was on ARD in this
    case[,] a criminal complaint was filed by the Pennsylvania State
    Police against Appellant setting forth charges for a second offense
    DUI based on the July 31, 2021 incident.
    On April 7, 2022, the Commonwealth promptly moved to
    revoke Appellant from the ARD Program in this case on the basis
    of the newly filed criminal complaint for the previously undisclosed
    DUI arrest occurring shortly before Appellant’s application to and
    admission into the ARD Program.
    An ARD review hearing was scheduled for April 28, 2022. At
    Defense Counsel’s request[,] the ARD review hearing was
    continued to May 26, 2022.
    On May 26, 2022, at an ARD review hearing on the record,
    Defense Counsel was given an opportunity to be heard. Defense
    Counsel referenced his email exchange to [the trial court that]
    essentially acknowledged the timeline set forth above. At the ARD
    review hearing, Appellant did not argue or contest that while in
    the ARD-DUI Program[,] he was charged with a second DUI
    offense for the incident that occurred on July 31, 2021, which
    offense was before Appellant was admitted to ARD in this case.
    Trial Court Opinion (T.C.O.), 1/4/23, at 2-3.
    At the conclusion of the review hearing, the trial court entered an order
    terminating Appellant’s participation in ARD as a result of the new DUI charges
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    filed against Appellant after he had been admitted to ARD on the instant
    charges. Although it was undisputed that the new charges were based on
    Appellant’s second DUI arrest that occurred before Appellant’s application for
    ARD on the instant charges, the trial court emphasized that Appellant’s failure
    to disclose his second DUI arrest and the possibility that he would be charged
    with a second DUI, made Appellant unsuitable for ARD.
    Appellant proceeded to a bench trial conducted on November 18, 2022
    at which the trial court convicted Appellant of DUI – controlled substance
    pursuant to 75 Pa.C.S.A. § 3802(d)(1)(i) as an ungraded misdemeanor. The
    same day, the trial court sentenced Appellant to six months’ probation with
    restrictive DUI conditions (ten days’ house arrest). Appellant filed a timely
    appeal and complied with the trial court’s direction to file a concise statement
    of errors complained of on appeal pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate
    Procedure 1925(b).
    Appellant raises one issue for our review on appeal:
    Did the lower court err in granting the Commonwealth’s Motion to
    Revoke ARD based on new charges filed after ARD began for an
    incident involving a DUI arrest occurring before ARD began?
    Appellant’s Brief, at 4.
    Our standard of review is as follows: “[t]ermination of ARD participation
    is charged to the sound discretion of the trial court. On appeal we will only
    reverse an ARD termination where the court abused its discretion or
    committed an error of law.” Commonwealth v. Lebo, 
    713 A.2d 1158
    , 1161
    (Pa.Super. 1998) (citations omitted).
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    ARD is a pretrial diversionary program that “suspends formal criminal
    proceedings before conviction and provides the accused with certain
    rehabilitative conditions, the completion of which results in the dismissal of
    the pending criminal charges and a clean record for the defendant.” J.F. v.
    Dep't of Hum. Servs., 
    245 A.3d 658
    , 661–62 (Pa. 2021) (citing Pa.R.Crim.P.
    314-319). ARD was established to promptly resolve “relatively minor cases
    involving social or behavioral problems which can best be solved by programs
    and treatments rather than by punishment.” Commonwealth v. Armstrong,
    
    434 A.2d 1205
    , 1208 (Pa. 1981) (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted). “[T]he procedural rules governing the ARD program contemplate
    that ordinarily the defendants eligible for the ARD program are first offenders
    who lend themselves to treatment and rehabilitation rather than punishment
    and that the crime charged is relatively minor and does not involve a serious
    breach of the public trust.” Commonwealth v. Verbeck, 
    290 A.3d 260
    , 265
    (Pa. 2023) (citing Pa.R.Crim.P. Ch. 3, Explanatory Cmt.).
    Our courts have emphasized that “[a]dmission to an ARD program is
    not a matter of right, but a privilege.” Commonwealth v. Jagodzinski, 
    739 A.2d 173
    , 175 (Pa.Super. 1999) (quoting Commonwealth v. Lutz, 
    495 A.2d 928
    , 933 (Pa. 1985)). In Lutz, the Supreme Court held that the district
    attorney has “the sole discretion in any criminal case, including drunk driving
    cases, to move for the admission of a defendant into ARD.” Lutz, 495 A.2d at
    932. See also Armstrong, 434 A.2d at 1208 (noting that “[o]ur rules give
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    district attorneys broad discretion to select which crimes and which individuals
    qualify for diversion into ARD”)). The Supreme Court has acknowledged that:
    [o]ur restrictive approach to admission to ARD programs is
    intentional and purposeful, for it ensures that no criminal
    defendant will be admitted to ARD unless the party to the case
    who represents the interests of the Commonwealth, the district
    attorney, has made the determination that a particular case is best
    handled by suspending the prosecution pending the successful
    completion of a diversionary ARD program. Society has no interest
    in blindly maximizing the number of ARD's passing through the
    criminal justice system, and the criminal defendant has no right
    to demand that he be placed on ARD merely because any
    particular offense is his first. Rather, society, for its own
    protection, has an interest in carrying out the penalties prescribed
    by the legislature for drunk driving, except in the cases where
    even society's representative in the case, the district attorney,
    acting in conjunction with the court … determines that ARD is
    preferable to conviction because of the strong likelihood that a
    given criminal defendant will in fact be rehabilitated by an ARD
    program.
    Lutz, 495 A.2d at 933. As such, this Court has specifically held that “[s]ince
    the judgment about who can benefit from ARD is subjective, and since society
    may be seriously damaged by a wrong judgment, the district attorney is not
    to be faulted if he errs on the side of caution.” Commonwealth v. Stranges,
    
    579 A.2d 930
    , 932 (Pa.Super. 1990).
    Further, our Supreme Court has highlighted the seriousness of the crime
    of drunk driving and its threat to society, rejecting any suggestion that lenient
    treatment of drunk drivers is warranted due to the fact that such a crime does
    not require criminal intent. Lutz, 495 A.2d at 936. In addition to the fact that
    such a view conflicts with “clear legislative mandate,” the Supreme Court
    asserted that:
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    the essence of the seriousness of the crime of drunk driving is that
    it is a life-threatening act. The fact that the drunk's state of mind
    may technically be described as grossly negligent or grossly
    reckless, not “driving with the intent to kill,” does not negate the
    fact that as a result of his recklessness, innocent people and the
    drunk himself may be and often are injured or killed. In the face
    of the rather simple realities associated with drunk driving-that
    terrible costs in human life, injury and potential are exacted for
    no reason except the transitory pleasure of the drunk-it would be
    folly to encourage those who consume alcohol to believe that if
    they are caught driving while intoxicated, society will take a light
    view of it.
    Id.
    Our rules of criminal procedure provide that the Commonwealth may
    make a motion for the removal of a defendant from ARD upon the violation of
    a condition of the program. Pa.R.Crim.P. 318(a). In determining whether ARD
    participation should be terminated, the trial court must provide the defendant
    with an opportunity to be heard. Pa.R.Crim.P. 318(c). “If the judge finds that
    the defendant has committed a violation of a condition of the program, the
    judge may order, when appropriate, that the program be terminated, and that
    the attorney for the Commonwealth shall proceed on the charges as provided
    by law.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 318(c).
    In this case, after a review hearing, the trial court terminated Appellant’s
    participation in ARD based on the new charges filed against Appellant while
    he was on ARD. As noted above, it is undisputed that neither the trial court
    nor the Commonwealth was aware that Appellant had been arrested for a
    second DUI when he applied for ARD in connection with the instant charges.
    Due to a delay that was in part attributed to the need to send Appellant’s
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    blood for laboratory testing, Appellant was not charged with the second DUI
    offense until after he had been admitted to the ARD-DUI program.
    Appellant claims the trial court abused its discretion in removing him
    from the ARD program based on these new charges as his ARD application
    only required him to report pending charges against him and did not require
    him to disclose that he had been arrested for a second DUI for which the
    Commonwealth had not yet filed formal charges. Appellant alleges that he is
    not responsible for the Commonwealth’s delay in filing the criminal complaint
    for his second DUI offense.
    The trial court concluded that its removal of Appellant from the ARD
    program was a proper exercise of its discretion as Appellant’s failure to
    disclose his second DUI arrest carried an “element of deception by omission
    which if allowed to stand would defeat the spirit and purpose of the ARD
    program.” T.C.O. at 5. The trial court asserted that it would have summarily
    denied the application for Appellant’s admission into the ARD-DUI program
    had it known that Appellant had been arrested a second time for DUI.
    In similar circumstances, this Court has expressly held that a defendant
    “should not be permitted to benefit from the concealment of his arrests” when
    applying for ARD. Commonwealth v. Jones, 
    650 A.2d 60
    , 64 (Pa.Super.
    1994). In Jones, the trial court terminated Jones’s participation in ARD based
    on the fact that he failed to disclose in his criminal history statement that he
    had been previously arrested in 1983 for indecent exposure, been previously
    charged with simple assault in 1991, and arrested and charged with
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    involuntary deviate sexual intercourse while in the ARD program in 1992. The
    trial court noted that, had Jones been truthful when filling out the form, he
    would not have been accepted into ARD. Accordingly, this Court held that it
    was not an abuse of discretion to remove Appellant from the ARD program
    based on the fact that he “deliberately withheld” information concerning his
    prior arrests.
    In Commonwealth v. Boos, 
    620 A.2d 485
     (Pa. 1993), the Supreme
    Court held that trial court did not abuse its discretion in terminating Boos’s
    participation in ARD when he failed to disclose two prior DUI convictions that
    made him ineligible for ARD. The Supreme Court noted the trial court’s
    rationale in finding that Boos should not be permitted to benefit from ARD
    when concealing his prior convictions:
    [w]e believe that the defendant had a duty to come forward and
    affirmatively make it known, prior to the time he was placed on
    the ARD program, of the existence of prior offenses, particularly
    since he had been made known and made aware by letter from
    the District Attorney's office that the program was only open to
    first time offenders. It is not the duty of the Commonwealth to go
    on a hunting expedition on these matters. There is an equal or
    greater responsibility on the defendant, who is in a position to
    know, to come forward and make known his prior offenses. In
    fact, we find the failure to make this known to the District Attorney
    is a clear indication of the sense of irresponsibility which might
    otherwise make him unqualified for the ARD program anyway and,
    therefore, we enter an order terminating him from the program
    and listing the matter for trial.
    Boos, 620 A.2d at 487.
    We agree that Appellant was properly removed from the ARD program
    when Appellant was charged with DUI in connection with his previous July 31,
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    2021 arrest that Appellant failed to disclose in applying for ARD for the instant
    charges. Upon his application for the ARD program, Appellant filed out a
    written application agreement that contained the following language:
    No prior convictions or ARD or Pending Criminal Charges: In
    consideration for my admission to the ARD program, I hereby
    affirm and acknowledge that I have not been convicted of a
    misdemeanor or felony criminal offense in the State of
    Pennsylvania or in any other state or federal jurisdiction; that I
    have never been placed on the Accelerated Rehabilitative
    Disposition Program in this or any other jurisdiction; that I have
    not previously been admitted to a pre-disposition program similar
    to ARD in this or in any other state; that I have not been convicted
    of Driving Under the Influence within the last ten years from date
    of this offense in Pennsylvania or in another state and that I do
    not have any pending misdemeanor or felony charges pending in
    the State of Pennsylvania or in any other state or federal
    jurisdiction. I understand that should this information be incorrect,
    that I may be removed from the ARD Program, and further, that
    I may be prosecuted subject to the provisions of 18 Pa.C.S.A.
    Section 4904 relating to unsworn falsification to authorities.
    Accelerated Rehabilitative Disposition Program: DUI Application Agreement,
    Motion, and Order, 9/28/21, at 2-3.
    In this application, Appellant was put on notice that he could not have
    any pending criminal charges in applying for and while participating in ARD.
    Appellant should not be able to benefit from his failure to disclose to the
    Commonwealth or the trial court in his ARD application the fact that he had a
    second DUI arrest simply due to the delay in formal charges being filed.
    We agree with the trial court’s suggestion that excusing a defendant’s
    failure to disclose prior arrests in an ARD application would “violate the spirit
    and intent of the ARD program” which was designed for first-time offenders
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    who show a likelihood to succeed in rehabilitation after a relatively minor
    charge that does not involve a serious breach of the public trust. Verbeck,
    supra. Appellant was in the best position to report his offense, which was
    clearly relevant to the prosecutor’s decision on whether to recommend
    Appellant for ARD and the trial court’s evaluation on whether to accept the
    ARD recommendation. The trial court emphasized that it would have
    summarily denied the application for Appellant’s admission to ARD had it
    known of the second arrest.
    It would be unfair to allow Appellant to deliberately withhold information
    about his arrest and place the responsibility on the prosecution to uncover
    Appellant’s relevant criminal history before evaluating whether to recommend
    him for ARD. Prosecutors would be less inclined to recommend defendants for
    ARD in the early stages of criminal proceedings if they were unsure whether
    they had an accurate account of a defendant’s relevant criminal history when
    they could not yet confirm if the defendant had withheld information of prior
    arrests where formal charges had not yet been filed.
    We are not persuaded by Appellant’s reliance on Commonwealth v.
    Simmons, 
    262 A.3d 512
     (Pa.Super. 2021) to argue that a trial court may not
    terminate a defendant’s participation in ARD as a result of new charges arising
    from conduct committed before he is accepted into ARD. In Simmons, the
    defendant was sentenced to 6-23 months’ imprisonment followed by three
    years’ probation. After Simmons was released on parole but before his
    probationary tail commenced, Simmons was charged with drug and firearms
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    offenses. The trial court revoked both parole and probation and resentenced
    Simmons to 2½ - 5 years’ imprisonment.
    On appeal, this Court held that while the trial court properly revoked
    Simmons’ parole, the trial court erred in anticipatorily revoking Simmons’
    probation before his probationary period had begun. This Court cited to the
    language in 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9771, which provides that a trial court may only
    “revoke an order of probation upon proof of the violation of specified
    conditions of the probation.” This Court held that a defendant’s probationary
    sentence, if imposed consecutively after a term of imprisonment, does not
    begin until the prior sentence has been served. Simmons, 262 A.3d at 525.
    As such, this Court found that Simmons could not have violated his probation
    as he was still serving parole at the time in question and had not yet begun
    serving the probationary tail of his sentence. Id.
    Appellant’s argument is unconvincing as ARD is not sufficiently
    analogous to probation. As emphasized above, ARD is a pretrial diversionary
    program that gives a first-time offender a chance to avoid prosecution if he
    successfully completes certain rehabilitative conditions. ARD is a privilege, not
    a right, for those individuals who are recommended for and accepted into the
    program.
    In comparison with probation, ARD applicants are not bound by an
    admission or finding of guilt, have not been convicted of a crime, nor are they
    subject to any sentence. When ARD participation is terminated or a defendant
    simply withdraws from participation, a defendant does not face punishment
    - 11 -
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    or any other consequence other than removal from the voluntary program
    after which the prosecution proceeds “on the charges as provided by law.”
    Pa.R.Crim.P. 318(c). ARD has simply suspended the criminal proceedings,
    which may be reactivated upon the defendant’s withdrawal or removal from
    the program.
    In this case, the fact that Appellant had been arrested for DUI on two
    occasions in a three-month period and subsequently failed to disclose the
    second arrest to the Commonwealth in applying for ARD supports the trial
    court’s decision that Appellant was unsuitable for ARD upon his application to
    the program. Despite having notice that he was not permitted to have pending
    criminal charges in applying for and while participating in ARD, Appellant
    deliberately withheld information concerning his second DUI arrest from the
    prosecution and trial court in applying for ARD. The trial court did not abuse
    its discretion in terminating Appellant’s participation in the program after new
    charges relating to Appellant’s second DUI arrest were filed while Appellant
    was on ARD for the instant charges.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of sentence.
    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
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    J-A20032-23
    Judgment Entered.
    Benjamin D. Kohler, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 10/19/2023
    - 13 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1665 MDA 2022

Judges: Stevens, P.J.E.

Filed Date: 10/19/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2023