Com. v. Crenshaw, E. ( 2023 )


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  • J-A02020-23
    J-A02030-23
    
    2023 PA Super 250
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA            :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                         :
    :
    :
    ELLIOTT MORRISON CRENSHAW, JR.          :
    :
    Appellant             :   No. 49 WDA 2022
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered December 8, 2021
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-02-CR-0002820-2020
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA :             IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :                  PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                 :
    :
    :
    KEVIN RAY MCBRIDE            :
    :
    Appellant      :             No. 46 WDA 2022
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered December 8, 2021
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-02-CR-0008685-2020
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA            :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                         :
    :
    :
    KEVIN RAY MCBRIDE                       :
    :
    Appellant             :   No. 50 WDA 2022
    J-A02020-23
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    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered December 8, 2021
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-02-CR-0007367-2020
    BEFORE:      BOWES, J., MURRAY, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*
    OPINION BY BOWES, J.:                              FILED: December 1, 2023
    These unrelated appeals by Elliott Morrison Crenshaw, Jr., and Kevin
    Ray McBride (collectively “Appellants”) were taken from their respective
    judgments of sentence imposed after they were convicted pursuant to 18
    Pa.C.S. § 4915.2(1)(a) for failing to comply with the provisions of Subchapter
    I of Pennsylvania’s Sexual Offender Registration and Notification Act
    (“SORNA”), 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9799.51-9799.75.1 Both appeals present the same
    legal issue: whether Appellants’ convictions pursuant to the North Carolina
    statute proscribing taking indecent liberties with children obligated them to
    register under Subchapter I of SORNA.            Following careful review of the
    implicated statutes in light of the applicable law, we are constrained to hold
    that Appellants had no duty to register in Pennsylvania.        Accordingly, we
    vacate their judgments of sentence, reverse their convictions, and discharge
    them.
    ____________________________________________
    *   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    1 For the sake of brevity, in discussing statutes within Subchapter I, we
    hereafter omit the initial “9799.” and reference only the number that follows
    the decimal point. For example, rather than repeatedly stating “§ 9799.55”
    and “§ 9799.56,” we shall refer to those provisions as “§ 55” and “§ 56.”
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    I.     Facts and Procedural History
    We glean the relevant factual and procedural history of these cases from
    the certified records, particularly from the affidavits of probable cause and
    Megan’s Law packets compiled by the respective law enforcement agencies in
    the underlying cases.2
    A.     Crenshaw
    Crenshaw committed the offense of taking indecent liberties with
    children in North Carolina on July 30, 1993.      See N.C.G.S. § 14-202.1(a)
    (defining conduct that is prohibited with children under the age of sixteen if
    the perpetrator is at least five years older than the child, as discussed more
    fully infra). He was sentenced in September 1994 to three to ten years of
    imprisonment.3 See N.T. Trial (Crenshaw), 12/8/21, at 7 (Commonwealth
    Exhibit 2). Upon release in September 2002, Crenshaw became subject to
    North Carolina’s thirty-year sexual offender registration requirement.      See
    N.C.G.S. §§ 14-208.6(4)(a), (5) (defining taking indecent liberties with
    children as a sexually violent offense that results in a reportable conviction);
    14-208.7(a) (mandating that a resident with a reportable conviction register
    immediately upon release from confinement and maintain registration for at
    ____________________________________________
    2 The parties stipulated to the factual averments contained within the affidavits
    of probable cause and Megan’s Law packets. See N.T. Trial (Crenshaw),
    12/8/21, at 7; N.T. Trial (McBride), 12/8/21, at 7-8. Thus, the underlying
    facts in these matters are undisputed.
    3Crenshaw was not found to be a sexually violent predator (“SVP”). See
    Commonwealth’s Exhibit 1 (Out of State Registration/Tier Form, 5/11/18).
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    least thirty years unless successfully petitioning to shorten the period); 14-
    208.10 (identifying registration information regarding offenders that is
    available for public inspection). See also Commonwealth’s Exhibit 1 (Out-of-
    State Registration Questions, 12/20/10).
    Crenshaw subsequently relocated to Pennsylvania and first registered
    here in 2011 while housed as an inmate at the Allegheny County Jail. See
    Commonwealth’s Exhibit 1 (Pennsylvania State Police (“PSP”) Megan’s Law
    Section Offender Court Information at 6).          In 2019, the Allegheny County
    Sheriff’s Office began investigating non-compliant sex-offenders, including
    Crenshaw, who last registered in 2017.         In January 2020, Crenshaw was
    charged for failing to register in 2018 and 2019. Crenshaw filed an omnibus
    pretrial   motion   seeking   to   dismiss   the    charges   on   the   basis   that
    § 4915.2(1)(a), which criminalizes the failure to comply with Subchapter I of
    SORNA, did not apply to him. The trial court denied the motion, Crenshaw
    elected to proceed to a trial without a jury, and the trial court found him guilty
    and sentenced him to two years of probation and eighteen months of
    electronic monitoring. This timely appeal followed, and both Crenshaw and
    the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.
    B.     McBride
    In May 2011, McBride was convicted pursuant to North Carolina’s § 14-
    202.1(a) for taking indecent liberties with children earlier that year, sentenced
    to nineteen to twenty-three months of imprisonment, and, like Crenshaw,
    required to register for a thirty-year period under the North Carolina law
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    referenced above. In August 2014, McBride moved to Pennsylvania and began
    to register as a sexual offender. He was initially registered at an address in
    Clairton, Pennsylvania, but in September 2020, deputies of the Allegheny
    County Sheriff’s Office conducted a compliance check and discovered that
    McBride    had    vacated the       property without reporting    his    change   in
    circumstances to PSP.
    At Case      No. 7367,      McBride     was charged with   a     violation of
    § 4915.2(1)(a) for failing to report his change in address. Three days later,
    McBride was arrested in connection with this charge and incarcerated at the
    Allegheny County Jail. On September 23, 2020, McBride’s registered address
    was changed to the Allegheny County Jail. He was released from confinement
    on the same day. On November 2, 2020, detectives of the Pittsburgh Police
    Department determined that McBride had not updated his residency
    information following his release from jail. At Case No. 8685, McBride was
    charged with a second violation of § 4915.2(1)(a).
    His two cases were consolidated in the trial court4 and McBride filed an
    omnibus pretrial motion asserting that the charges should be dismissed
    because he was not subject to registration under Subchapter I. The trial court
    denied this motion and the case proceeded to a non-jury trial at which McBride
    was found guilty in both cases and sentenced to an aggregate term of one
    year of probation. McBride filed a timely notice of appeal in each case, and
    ____________________________________________
    4 Both Crenshaw and McBride were tried by the same judge.
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    both he and the trial court complied with their respective obligations pursuant
    to Pa.R.A.P. 1925. This Court consolidated the appeals sua sponte.
    C.    Appellate Procedural History
    Appellants’ appeals were assigned to the instant panel on January 24,
    2023. The issue briefed by the parties was whether, applying the general
    rules of statutory construction, the North Carolina offense was similar to a
    Pennsylvania offense enumerated in Subchapter I such that Appellants were
    required to register here.    We initially concluded that sufficient similarity
    existed in a non-precedential decision filed on June 20, 2023. Appellants filed
    timely applications for panel reconsideration or en banc reargument, asserting
    for the first time that the framework for the similarity analysis adopted by our
    Supreme Court in A.L. v. Pennsylvania State Police, 
    274 A.3d 1228
     (Pa.
    2022), controlled and mandated a different result. On August 15, 2023, we
    granted panel reconsideration, withdrew our prior decision, and ordered the
    parties to submit new briefs discussing A.L. in connection with these cases.
    The parties filed their respective briefs, and these appeals are again ripe for
    adjudication.
    II.   Issue and Applicable Law
    Appellants raise the following identical issue for our consideration:
    Where Subchapter I of SORNA does not apply to [Appellants’]
    conviction[s] from North Carolina for indecent liberties with
    children because it was not “similar” under §§ 9799.55 and
    9799.56 to Pennsylvania’s indecent assault statute, was the trial
    court required to grant [their] motion[s] to dismiss?
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    Put another way, where an out-of-state statute is sufficiently
    different from Pennsylvania’s or, at the very least, is ambiguous,
    does Subchapter I not compel registration, particularly in light of
    the rule of lenity?
    McBride’s brief at 5 (cleaned up, emphasis in original); Crenshaw’s brief at 4.5
    Since this is a question of statutory interpretation, our standard of
    review is de novo and our scope of review is plenary. See Commonwealth
    v. Finnecy, 
    249 A.3d 903
    , 913 (Pa. 2021). “The object of all interpretation
    and construction of statutes is to ascertain and effectuate the intention of the
    General Assembly.” 1 Pa.C.S. § 1921(a). “The plain language of the statute
    is the best indicator of the legislature’s intent. To ascertain the plain meaning,
    we consider the operative statutory language in context and give words and
    phrases    their   common       and    approved   usage.”   Commonwealth       v.
    Chesapeake Energy Corp., 
    247 A.3d 934
    , 942 (Pa. 2021).
    Further, we must give effect and ascribe meaning to each word and
    provision chosen by our legislature, assuming none is mere surplusage. See,
    e.g., Commonwealth v. McClelland, 
    233 A.3d 717
    , 734 (Pa. 2020) (“Some
    meaning must be ascribed to every word in a statute . . . and there is a
    ____________________________________________
    5 Appellants are both represented by the Allegheny County Office of the Public
    Defender and raise the same appellate issue, resulting in briefs with nearly
    identical argument sections. We provide separate citations for each case
    where the briefs differ. A citation without designation of an Appellant indicates
    that the material is on the same page in both briefs. We also note that
    citations to the parties’ briefs submitted after we granted panel
    reconsideration are designated as such, with other citations, such as the
    above, referring to their initial briefs.
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    presumption that disfavors interpreting language as mere surplusage.”); 1
    Pa.C.S. § 1921(a) (“Every statute shall be construed, if possible, to give effect
    to all its provisions.”). Finally, “we are to assume that the General Assembly
    does not intend an absurd result to flow from the construction of any statute.”
    Commonwealth v. Shiffler, 
    879 A.2d 185
    , 194 (Pa. 2005).
    A.      Criminal Liability for Failure to Comply with Subchapter I’s
    Reporting Requirements
    Mindful of the above principles, we turn to the legislative enactments at
    issue.     The criminal statute underlying Appellants’ convictions provides as
    follows:
    An individual who is subject to registration under [§ 55](a), (a.1)
    or (b) (relating to registration) or who was subject to registration
    under former 42 Pa.C.S. § 9793 (relating to registration of certain
    offenders for ten years) commits an offense if the individual
    knowingly fails to:
    (1) register with the Pennsylvania State Police as required
    under § [56] (relating to registration procedures and
    applicability);
    (2) verify the individual’s residence or be photographed as
    required under § [60] (relating to verification of residence); or
    (3) provide accurate information when registering under § [56]
    or verifying a residence under § [60].
    18 Pa.C.S. § 4915.2(a).
    Thus, in order to convict Appellants for violating § 4915.2, the
    Commonwealth was required to prove                 three elements, namely that
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    Appellants: (1) were subject to registration under § 556 and (2) knowingly
    (3) either failed to follow a registration procedure specified in § 56 or § 60 or
    gave inaccurate information when they did follow the procedure. Appellants
    do not dispute that the Commonwealth established the second and third
    elements of § 4915.2(a). Their contention is that § 55 did not subject them
    to registration. Accordingly, we examine that provision of Subchapter I.
    B.     Subchapter I’s Requirements
    By way of background, Subchapter I of SORNA was enacted in 2018 to
    prescribe registration requirements for sexual offenders who, because they
    committed their offenses before December 20, 2012, could not be subject to
    the punitive requirements of the original version of SORNA that is now codified
    in Subchapter H.7 Within Subchapter I, § 54 (“Applicability”) indicates who
    must register, § 55 (“Registration”) sets forth the offenses that trigger a
    reporting requirement, and § 56 (“Procedures and applicability”) details the
    ____________________________________________
    6 Since the former sex-offender law, codified at 42 Pa.C.S. § 9793, was
    repealed in 2000, before either Crenshaw or McBride began residing in
    Pennsylvania, it cannot be the basis for the first element of § 4915.2 in these
    cases.
    7 See Commonwealth v. Lacombe, 
    234 A.3d 602
    , 628 (Pa. 2020) (Wecht,
    J., concurring and dissenting) (explaining that, after our High Court ruled that
    retroactive application of SORNA constituted an ex post facto violation, the
    General Assembly “bifurcated SORNA within the Sentencing Code into two
    distinct subchapters: Subchapter H and Subchapter I. Subchapter H governs
    offenders whose triggering crimes were committed on or after December 20,
    2012. Subchapter I applies retroactively to those whose offenses occurred
    before that date.” (footnote omitted)).
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    timing and length of registration. All three statutes contain provisions specific
    to individuals whose offenses were committed outside of this Commonwealth.
    In pertinent part, § 54 includes the following identification of individuals
    who must register:
    An individual who was convicted of an offense similar to an offense
    set forth in [§ 55] under the laws of . . . another state . . . and
    who, as of February 21, 2018, has not completed registration
    requirements. The period of registration shall be as set forth in
    [§ 56](b)(4) (relating to registration procedures and applicability)
    less any credit for time spent on a sexual offender registry of . . .
    another state . . . or with the Pennsylvania State Police prior to
    February 21, 2018.
    42 Pa.C.S. § 9799.54(a)(4). In turn, § 55 provides as follows in relevant part:
    (a) Ten-year registration.--Except as provided under
    subsection (a.1) . . . , the following individuals shall be required
    to register with the Pennsylvania State Police for a period of 10
    years:
    (1)(i)(A) Individuals convicted within this Commonwealth of
    any of the following offenses committed on or after April 22,
    1996, but before December 20, 2012:
    ....
    18 Pa.C.S. § 3126 (relating to indecent assault) where
    the offense is graded as a misdemeanor of the first
    degree or higher.
    ....
    (2) Individuals convicted of an attempt, conspiracy or
    solicitation to commit any of the offenses under paragraph
    (1)(i) or (ii)[.]
    (3) Individuals who currently have a residence in this
    Commonwealth who have been convicted of offenses similar to
    the crimes cited in paragraphs (1)(i) or (ii) and (2) under the
    laws of . . . another state[.] . . .
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    (a.1) Exception to 10-year registration.—[Unless a lifetime
    registrant as indicated in (b)8], an individual considered to be an
    offender under [§ 56](b) (relating to registration procedures and
    applicability) shall be required to register with the Pennsylvania
    State Police for a period less than life, the duration of which is to
    be determined under [§§ 54] (relating to applicability) and
    [56](b).
    42 Pa.C.S. § 9799.55.
    Therefore, pertinent to these appeals, § 55 stipulates that people who,
    in a different jurisdiction, committed or attempted to commit offenses similar
    to those enumerated in § 55(a) are generally subject to a ten-year registration
    requirement, but if they are classified as an offender under § 56(b), the
    duration of their registration is established by §§ 54 and 56(b).
    As reproduced above, § 54 requires individuals convicted of an offense
    similar to one enumerated in § 55 to register for the period indicated by
    § 56(b). Pursuant to § 56(b), a person who lives, works, or goes to school in
    Pennsylvania must register here if previously “convicted of or sentenced by a
    court or court martialed for a sexually violent offense or a similar offense
    under the laws of . . . another state . . . , or who was required to register
    ____________________________________________
    8 Subsection (b) of § 55 describes individuals who are subject to lifetime
    registration, such as SVPs and people convicted of rape, aggravated indecent
    assault, or incest with a victim under the age of thirteen. The Commonwealth
    did not advocate in the trial court or in this Court that Appellants are subject
    to registration pursuant to § 55(b), and we have found nothing in the certified
    record to suggest that Appellants are subject to lifetime registration pursuant
    to that subsection. Hence, we focus our analysis upon subsections (a) and
    (a.1).
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    under a sexual offender statute in the jurisdiction where convicted, sentenced,
    or court martialed[.]” 42 Pa.C.S. § 9799.56(b)(4).9 The statute goes on to
    identify different subsets of such out-of-state offenders and mandates their
    compliance with certain portions of Subchapter I as follows:
    (i) If the individual has been classified as a sexually violent
    predator as defined in [§ 53] or determined under the laws of the
    other jurisdiction or by reason of court martial to be subject to
    active notification and lifetime registration on the basis of a
    statutorily authorized administrative or judicial decision or on the
    basis of a statute or administrative rule requiring active
    notification and lifetime registration based solely on the offense
    for which the individual was convicted, sentenced or court
    martialed, the individual shall, notwithstanding [§ 5310], be
    considered a sexually violent predator and subject to lifetime
    registration under [§ 55](b). . . .
    (ii) Except as provided in subparagraphs (i) and (iv), if the
    individual has been convicted or sentenced by a court or court
    martialed for an offense listed in [§ 55](b) or an equivalent
    offense, the individual shall, notwithstanding [§ 5311], be
    ____________________________________________
    9 Subsection (4) is the only substantive provision of § 56(b), as subsections
    (1) through (3) are reserved.
    10 The definition of “sexually violent predator” in § 53 speaks to the individual
    having been determined to have a mental abnormality or personality disorder
    that makes him likely to engage in predatory sexually violent offenses.
    Subsection (i) of § 56(b)(4) expands that definition to include persons who
    were subject to active notification and lifetime registration based solely upon
    the offense.
    11 The term “offender” is defined in § 53 as follows: “Subject to [§ 75]
    (relating to construction of subchapter), an individual required to register
    under [§ 55](a), (b)(1) or (2) (relating to registration). The rules for
    construing Subchapter I contained in § 75 indicate that nothing in the
    subchapter may be understood to relieve an individual from the duty to
    register if the person committed a sexually violent offense here or elsewhere,
    regardless of whether the offense was designated as a sexually violent one,
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
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    considered an offender and be subject to lifetime registration
    under [§ 55](b). . . .
    (iii) Except as provided in subparagraphs (i), (ii), (iv) and (v), if
    the individual has been convicted or sentenced by a court or court
    martialed for an offense listed in [§ 55](a) or an equivalent
    offense, the individual shall be, notwithstanding [§ 53],
    considered an offender and subject to registration under this
    subchapter. . . .
    (iv) Except as provided in subparagraph (i) and notwithstanding
    subparagraph (v), if the individual is subject to active notification
    in the other jurisdiction or subject to active notification by reason
    of court martial, the individual shall, notwithstanding [§ 53], be
    considered an offender[.] . . .
    (v) Except as provided in subparagraphs (i), (ii), (iii) and (iv), if
    the individual is subject to passive notification in the other
    jurisdiction or subject to passive notification by reason of court
    martial, the individual shall, notwithstanding [§ 53], be considered
    an offender and subject to this section and [§ 60 (relating to
    verification of residence)12] and [§ 63](c)(2) [(regarding
    information about offenders posted on an internet website)]. The
    individual shall be subject to this subchapter for a period of time
    equal to the time for which the individual was required to register
    in the other jurisdiction or required to register by reason of court
    martial, less any credit due to the individual as a result of prior
    compliance with registration requirements.
    42 Pa.C.S. § 9799.56(b)(4).
    ____________________________________________
    or if the person was required to register under a prior version of Megan’s Law,
    or would have been so required had our Supreme Court not struck down the
    2004 version in Commonwealth v. Neiman, 
    84 A.3d 603
     (Pa. 2013). See
    42 Pa.C.S. § 9799.75(a).
    12 Relevant to the cases sub judice, §§ 56 and 60 require out-of-state
    offenders to inform PSP within three business days of a change in residence,
    employment, or enrollment as a student, and to appear annually at a PSP-
    approved registration site. See 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9799.56(a)(2), 9799.60(b).
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    The term “active notification” utilized in § 56(b)(4)(i) and (iv) is defined
    as “[n]otification in accordance with [§ 62] (relating to other notification) or
    a process whereby law enforcement, pursuant to the laws of . . . another state
    . . . notifies persons in the community in which the individual resides, including
    a person identified in [§62](b), of the residence, employment or school
    location of the individual.”   42 Pa.C.S. § 9799.53.      By contrast, “passive
    notification,” included in § 56(b)(4)(v), is defined as follows:
    Notification in accordance with [§ 63] (relating to information
    made available on Internet and electronic notification) or a
    process whereby persons, under the laws of . . . another state . . .
    are able to access information pertaining to an individual as a
    result of the individual having been convicted or sentenced
    by a court for an offense similar to an offense listed in
    [§ 55] (relating to registration).
    42 Pa.C.S. § 9799.53 (emphasis added).
    It is undisputed that Appellants’ convictions did not trigger active
    notification in North Carolina.    Rather, as detailed above, their convictions
    obligated them to register in North Carolina for thirty years upon their release
    from confinement and resulted in their registration information being made
    available for public inspection.    See N.C.G.S. §§ 14-208.6(4)(a), (5); 14-
    208.7(a); 14-208.10. Further, as we indicated above, § 55(b) is not pertinent
    to these appeals because Appellants were not determined to be SVPs or
    otherwise subject to lifetime registration.
    Therefore, the only portions of § 56(b)(4) that could apply to Appellants
    to impose a registration duty are either subsection (iii), which requires an
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    extra-jurisdictional conviction of an offense “equivalent” to one enumerated
    in § 55(a), or subsection (v), which applies if they were subject to passive
    notification in North Carolina.          Regarding the latter subsection, by the
    statutory definition of the term, Appellants were subject to passive notification
    in North Carolina only if members of the public had access to their registration
    information “as a result of . . . having been convicted or sentenced by a court
    for an offense similar to an offense listed in [§ 55.]” 42 Pa.C.S. § 9799.53.
    Thus, unless the indecent liberties offense is equivalent or similar to an offense
    listed in § 55, § 56(b)(4) did not create a registration obligation.13
    The Commonwealth, relying upon our sister Court’s decision in Rivera
    v. Pennsylvania State Police, 
    255 A.3d 677
     (Pa.Cmwlth. 2021), argues that
    all individuals who had incomplete registration requirements in other
    jurisdictions, regardless of similarity of offenses, are required to register in
    Pennsylvania because § 56(b)(4) indicates that “Pennsylvania extends full
    faith and credit to out-of-state registration schemes.” Commonwealth’s panel
    reconsideration brief at 8 (quoting Rivera, supra at 683). We disagree.
    ____________________________________________
    13  We observe that the definition of passive notification contained in the
    version of Megan’s Law enacted prior to the 2012 version of SORNA, which
    was purportedly in effect when Crenshaw first registered in Pennsylvania,
    utilized the language, including the similarity requirement, that appears in its
    definition in Subchapter I. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 9792 (expired December 20,
    2012). Hence, § 75’s rules of construction do not serve to expand § 63’s
    definition of passive notification or the reach of § 56(b)(4)(v) insofar as it
    applies to individuals subject to passive notification in the state where the
    person was convicted.
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    First, Rivera involved a New York rape conviction that subjected the
    offender to lifetime registration in that jurisdiction, and the offender claimed
    he no longer had any duty to register because he had obtained an order from
    a Pennsylvania court indicating that he no longer had a duty to register in light
    of our Supreme Court’s decision in Commonwealth v. Muniz, 
    164 A.3d 1189
    (Pa. 2017). Hence, the Rivera Court was not called upon to examine the
    similarity of the rape statutes in New York and Pennsylvania. Second, since
    we are not bound by decisions of the Commonwealth Court, it is the plain
    language of Subchapter I that dictates our interpretation of it. As detailed
    above, if our legislature intended to mandate registration for all Pennsylvania
    residents subject to passive notification in another jurisdiction regardless of
    the similarity of the offense to an enumerated Pennsylvania offense, it would
    have omitted the similarity element from the passive notification definition as
    it did with the definition of active notification. It did not. Therefore, in order
    for § 56(b)(4)(v) to impose a duty on Appellants to register, their North
    Carolina convictions that trigged notification in that jurisdiction must be
    similar to an enumerated § 55 offense.
    In sum, the import of the statutes at issue is as follows. If Appellants’
    convictions for taking indecent liberties with children are “similar to” any
    offenses enumerated in § 55(a)(1) or (2), then § 55(a)(3) required them to
    register in Pennsylvania for ten years. If the information about Appellants
    that was available to the public in North Carolina by the above-described
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    passive means resulted from those “similar” convictions, then § 55(a.1)
    extended the duration of the registration to the thirty years imposed by North
    Carolina law.14     However, if taking indecent liberties with children is not
    “similar to” or “an equivalent” of any offense included in § 55(a)(1) or (2),
    then Appellants had no duty to register in Pennsylvania under § 55, and their
    § 4915.2 criminal convictions for failing to register are invalid. Consequently,
    resolution of these appeals requires us to determine whether such similarity
    exists.
    III. Similarity of Offenses
    A.     The Categorical Approach to Comparing Statutes
    In A.L., our Supreme Court tackled the issue of whether a court martial
    should be compared with a Pennsylvania offense for purposes of registration
    under Subchapter H of SORNA. In so doing, the Court examined how this
    ____________________________________________
    14 Appellants argue that the use of “is” in § 56(b)(4)(v) means that they could
    not be deemed offenders by virtue of that provision because they were “not
    subject to passive registration in North Carolina” after they left that state and
    began residing in Pennsylvania. See Crenshaw’s brief at 30; McBride’s brief
    at 31. We first note that § 56(b)(4)(v) references passive notification, not
    passive registration. Moreover, as the Commonwealth observes, Appellants
    did not raise this as a basis for dismissal in the trial court, they do not cite on
    appeal any provision of North Carolina law that suggests that the notification
    connected with their thirty-year registration ceased when they left the state,
    and, in any event, both Appellants still have entries on the North Carolina
    passive notification website on which their information is included. See
    Commonwealth’s           brief      (Crenshaw)          at       10-12      (citing
    https://sexoffender.ncsbi.gov); Commonwealth’s brief (McBride) at 11-12
    (same). Consequently, we reject Appellants’ contention that their absence
    from North Carolina removed them from the ambit of § 56(b)(4)(v).
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    Court and the Commonwealth Court had undertaken offense comparisons in
    other contexts, such as a person’s disqualification from obtaining a
    commercial driver’s license or possessing a firearm, or the applicability of
    sentencing enhancements. A.L., supra at 1232-34. The Court explained:
    [G]auging offense similarity or equivalency has generally been
    accomplished by comparing the elements of the out-of-state
    offense with those of the in-state offense. If the elements are the
    same, or if the offense of conviction is narrower than the reference
    offense – meaning it captures a subset of the conduct of the
    reference offense – the two are comparable. If, however, the
    offense of conviction defines the crime in terms of alternative
    elements, the question becomes whether the offense of conviction
    was based on the same elements as defined under the
    Pennsylvania statute. . . . This approach to comparing offenses
    ensures that, to count as a predicate, the out-of-state conviction
    signifies the individual was found guilty in that jurisdiction of every
    element of the Pennsylvania offense.
    Id. at 1233 (cleaned up).
    The A.L. Court detailed that this categorical approach has been
    endorsed by the United States Supreme Court and is often applied in relation
    to the Armed Career Criminal Act (“ACCA”), which establishes sentencing
    enhancements for felons with certain prior, predicate convictions that usually
    occurred at the state level. Our High Court described as follows the process
    of comparing the generic ACCA reference offense with the prior state offenses:
    To evaluate whether a prior state conviction counts as an
    ACCA predicate, the Supreme Court compares the elements of the
    generic crime with the elements under state law, a method it
    refers to as the categorical approach. The sentencing court does
    not focus on the particular facts underlying the predicate
    conviction as to do so could entail an elaborate factfinding process
    that would be impractical, including where the conviction was
    based on a guilty plea. The Court has articulated three reasons
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    for choosing this approach:      Congress made the sentence
    enhancement to depend on convictions not actions; any effort at
    fact-finding for sentencing purposes would be problematic under
    the Sixth Amendment; and daunting difficulties and inequities
    would arise from a sentencing court’s effort at belated fact-finding
    based on aged documents, especially when their content is subject
    to interpretation.
    With that said, the Supreme Court has also consistently
    recognized that some state offenses are defined by a divisible
    statute, meaning the statute gives alternative elements, usually
    phrased in the disjunctive, that could make up the offense. In
    such cases, the Court has approved what it calls the modified
    categorical approach, allowing the sentencing court to consult a
    limited class of documents from the conviction record, such as
    indictments and jury instructions, to determine the alternative
    element, and thus, the alternative crime, of which the defendant
    was previously found guilty. Assuming the sentencing court can,
    in fact, determine from that limited set of documents the specific
    alternative crime of which the defendant was convicted, the court
    can then do what the categorical approach demands: compare the
    elements of the crime of conviction (including the alternative
    element used in the case) with the elements of the generic crime.
    While this was first characterized as an exception to the
    categorical approach, the Court later clarified it was not an
    exception but a tool because it retains the categorical approach’s
    central feature: a focus on the elements, rather than the facts, of
    a crime.
    Id. at 1234–35 (cleaned up).
    In order “to remove guesswork, inconsistency, and ad hoc agency
    decision-making, to promote the legislative focus on prior convictions rather
    than prior actions,” and also “to foreclose the type of daunting difficulties and
    potential unfairness [that] would arise if a reviewing entity years later were
    to sift through voluminous aged documents to ascertain exactly what the
    SORNA registrant did (as opposed to what he was convicted of),” the A.L.
    Court held that the categorial approach “is to be applied when ascertaining
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    whether a prior extra-jurisdictional offense is ‘comparable’ or ‘equivalent’
    under SORNA Subchapter H.” Id. at 137-38 (cleaned up).
    While the A.L. Court specifically resolved the issue of determining
    whether an offense is “comparable” or “equivalent” for purposes of Subchapter
    H, in examining prior Pennsylvania law, it observed that our courts have been
    called upon to compare offenses in a variety of circumstances, noting that,
    “[t]o express the concept of similarity in these arenas, the legislative body
    has used different adjectives such as ‘equivalent,’ ‘similar,’ ‘essentially
    similar,’ ‘comparable,’ and ‘substantially the same’” without defining the
    terms. Id. at 1236. As the term “similar” is likewise not defined in Subchapter
    I, the same risks of inconsistency and guesswork are plainly implicated here
    as those that compelled the A.L. Court to adopt the categorical approach in
    applying Subchapter H. Further, while the Commonwealth disputes whether
    a similarity of offenses is necessary, an issue we resolved against it supra, it
    does not contest that A.L. now dictates the nature of the similarity analysis
    for purposes of applying Subchapter I.
    Accordingly, our task is to apply the categorical approach to determine
    whether the elements of the North Carolina offense for which Appellants were
    convicted are the same as, or narrower than, an offense enumerated in § 55.
    If not, we consider whether the North Carolina offense is divisible and the
    limited class of permissible documents reveals that Appellants were convicted
    pursuant to the alternative element that is wholly subsumed within a § 55
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    offense. If either of those comparisons reveals that Appellants’ North Carolina
    convictions stemmed from an offense similar to one enumerated in § 55, then
    Appellants were required to register pursuant to Subchapter I, and they are
    entitled to no relief in these appeals.        Otherwise, their convictions and
    sentences are invalid. Therefore, we examine the offenses at issue.
    B.      Taking Indecent Liberties with Children
    The North Carolina criminal statute underlying Appellants’ convictions
    provides as follows:
    A person is guilty of taking indecent liberties with children if, being
    16 years of age or more and at least five years older than the child
    in question, he either:
    (1) Willfully takes or attempts to take any immoral, improper,
    or indecent liberties with any child of either sex under the age
    of 16 years for the purpose of arousing or gratifying sexual
    desire; or
    (2) Willfully commits or attempts to commit any lewd or
    lascivious act upon or with the body or any part or member of
    the body of any child of either sex under the age of 16 years.
    N.C.G.S. § 14-202.1(a). Hence, the elements of the crime are:
    (1) the defendant was at least 16 years of age, and more than
    five years older than the victim, (2) the victim was under 16 years
    of age at the time the alleged act or attempted act occurred, and
    (3) the defendant willfully took or attempted to take an immoral,
    improper, or indecent liberty with the victim for the purpose of
    arousing or gratifying sexual desire.
    State v. McClees, 
    424 S.E.2d 687
    , 689 (N.C.App. 1993).
    North Carolina courts have explained that “indecent liberties” are “such
    liberties as the common sense of society would regard as indecent and
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    improper.” State v. Every, 
    578 S.E.2d 642
    , 647 (N.C.App. 2003) (cleaned
    up). “Neither a completed sex act nor an offensive touching of the victim [is]
    required to violate the statute.”       State v. McClary, 
    679 S.E.2d 414
    , 418
    (N.C.App. 2009). The broader protections of children contemplated by the
    statute    criminalize   such   acts   as    having   sexually   explicit   telephone
    conversations    with    a   child   while   masturbating,   see    Every,    
    supra;
    “photographing an unclothed child in a sexually suggestive position,
    masturbating in front of a child, . . . secretly videotaping a child who was
    undressing,” 
    id. at 648
     (citations omitted, collecting cases); sitting on a log
    twenty yards away from children on the opposite side of a creek engaging in
    the lewd act of masturbation and inviting the children to imitate him, see
    State v. Strickland, 
    335 S.E.2d 74
    , 76 (N.C.App. 1985); and handing a child
    “a letter containing sexually graphic language for the purpose of soliciting
    sexual intercourse and oral sex.” McClary, 
    supra at 418
    .
    C.     Indecent Assault
    The Commonwealth and trial court proffered Pennsylvania’s indecent
    assault statute as the enumerated offense to which Appellants’ convictions
    were similar. That statute provides as follows as pertains to the issues in
    these appeals:
    A person is guilty of indecent assault if the person has indecent
    contact with the complainant, causes the complainant to have
    indecent contact with the person or intentionally causes the
    complainant to come into contact with seminal fluid, urine or feces
    for the purpose of arousing sexual desire in the person or the
    complainant and:
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    ....
    (7) the complainant is less than 13 years of age; or
    (8) the complainant is less than 16 years of age and the person
    is four or more years older than the complainant and the
    complainant and the person are not married to each other.
    18 Pa.C.S. § 3126(a).
    Indecent contact is defined as “[a]ny touching of the sexual or other
    intimate parts of the person for the purpose of arousing or gratifying sexual
    desire, in any person.”   18 Pa.C.S. § 3101.   Intimate parts are not solely
    sexual organs, but any “body part that is personal and private, and which the
    person ordinarily allows to be touched only by people with whom the person
    has a close personal relationship, and one which is commonly associated with
    sexual relations or intimacy.” Commonwealth v. Gamby, 
    283 A.3d 298
    ,
    313–14 (Pa. 2022) (holding the neck is an intimate body part).
    As indicated above, Subchapter I requires registration following
    conviction for committing an indecent assault, or attempting to do so, only if
    it is graded as a first-degree misdemeanor or higher.           See 42 Pa.C.S.
    § 9799.55(a)(1)(i)(A). The grading portion of the indecent assault statute
    states the following:
    Indecent assault shall be graded as follows:
    (1) An offense under [18 Pa.C.S. § 3126](a)(1) or (8) is a
    misdemeanor of the second degree.
    ....
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    (3) An offense under [18 Pa.C.S. § 3126](a)(7) is a
    misdemeanor of the first degree unless any of the following
    apply, in which case it is a felony of the third degree:
    (i) It is a second or subsequent offense.
    (ii) There has been a course of conduct of indecent assault
    by the person.
    (iii) The indecent assault was committed by touching the
    complainant’s sexual or intimate parts with sexual or
    intimate parts of the person.
    (iv) The indecent assault is committed by touching the
    person’s sexual or intimate parts with the complainant’s
    sexual or intimate parts.
    18 Pa.C.S. § 3126(b).
    Hence, for indecent assault to trigger Subchapter I registration, not only
    must there be physical touching of intimate parts for purposes of arousing
    sexual desire, but the complainant also had to be under the age of thirteen.
    D.     Analysis
    Upon thorough examination, it is plain that the North Carolina offense
    of taking indecent liberties with children is not similar to indecent assault
    under the categorical approach.15 First, North Carolina appellate courts have
    ____________________________________________
    15 The trial court, which issued its ruling before our Supreme Court decided
    A.L., held that it was “clear to the [court] that while the North Carolina offense
    of taking indecent liberties with a child and the Pennsylvania offense of
    indecent assault are not identical, they are sufficiently similar to require
    [Appellants] to register under SORNA Subchapter I.” Trial Court Opinion
    (McBride), 3/9/22, at 8; Trial Court Opinion (Crenshaw), 3/22/22, at 7. The
    trial court alternatively opined that, even if the offenses were not similar,
    Appellants were required to register pursuant to the reciprocity provision of
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
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    held that the disjunctive subsections of § 14-202.1(a) do not identify separate
    offenses, but rather state “two alternative means of proving one element of
    the offense of indecent liberties.”            State v. Jones, 
    616 S.E.2d 15
    , 20
    (N.C.App. 2005). In other words, it is not a particular set of acts the North
    Carolina legislature sought to criminalize with § 14-202.1, but rather the
    actor’s purpose in seeking sexual gratification by exposing a child of fifteen or
    younger to lewdness and indecency:
    [T]he evil the legislature sought to prevent in this context was the
    defendant’s performance of any immoral, improper, or indecent
    act in the presence of a child for the purpose of arousing or
    gratifying sexual desire. Defendant’s purpose for committing such
    act is the gravamen of this offense; the particular act performed
    is immaterial.
    Id. at 20 (cleaned up).
    As Appellants argue, and the Commonwealth concedes, taking indecent
    liberties is broader than indecent assault in that it does not require any
    physical contact.      See Appellant’s panel reconsideration brief at 10-11;
    Commonwealth’s panel reconsideration brief at 5.              Thus, an individual
    ____________________________________________
    § 56. See Trial Court Opinion (McBride), 3/9/22, at 8; Trial Court Opinion
    (Crenshaw), 3/22/22, at 7. Since the trial court did not apply the categorical
    approach of comparing the statutes, and as we discussed above,
    § 56(b)(4)(v)’s reference to unexpired passive notification in another
    jurisdiction incorporates a similarity requirement, the trial court’s alternative
    analyses cannot support its ruling. Instead, our task is to determine whether
    the trial court’s decision can be sustained on another basis. See, e.g.,
    Commonwealth v. Ani, 
    293 A.3d 704
    , 729 (Pa.Super. 2023) “As an
    appellate court, we may affirm on any legal basis supported by the certified
    record.” (cleaned up)).
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    convicted of taking indecent liberties in North Carolina offense was not
    necessarily found guilty of every element of the indecent assault offense
    enumerated in Subchapter I offense. Consequently, applying the categorical
    approach, the offenses are not similar.
    Second, as the Commonwealth was likewise compelled to admit, even if
    we disregarded the North Carolina court’s holding that the statute was not a
    divisible statute identifying separate offenses, none of the limited class of
    documents that are acceptably referenced indicates whether Appellants were
    specifically convicted of violating N.C.G.S. § 14-202.1(a)(2), which requires
    an act upon the body of the complainant similar to the physical contact
    required by Pennsylvania’s indecent assault statute. See Commonwealth’s
    panel reconsideration brief at 6. Rather, the certified copies of Appellants’
    convictions admitted at their respective trials did not specify a particular
    subsection of § 14-202.1(1)(a), but referenced § 14-202.1 generally. See
    Commonwealth’s Exhibit 2 (Crenshaw); Commonwealth’s Exhibit 2 (McBride).
    Furthermore, as we noted above, regardless of the conduct committed,
    the indecent liberties offense can be established if the victim is thirteen,
    fourteen, or fifteen years old while, to be an enumerated offense pursuant to
    § 55(a)(1), the complainant had to be twelve or younger. Hence, to determine
    whether Appellants’ convictions were based upon guilt of every element
    required to establish the Pennsylvania crime, we would have to ascertain what
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    Appellants did rather than of what they were convicted. Our High Court’s A.L.
    decision prohibits such a similarity analysis.
    For these reasons, we are constrained to hold that Appellants’ North
    Carolina convictions for taking indecent liberties with children were not similar
    to convictions for indecent assault for purposes of Subchapter I of SORNA.
    Accord A.L., supra at 1239-40 (holding statute which included a broader
    mens rea element than its Pennsylvania counterpart was not comparable).
    Consequently, Appellants had no obligation to register in accordance with
    §§ 56 or 60 and could not validly be convicted pursuant to 18 Pa.C.S. § 4915.2
    for failing to do so.
    IV.   Conclusion
    The North Carolina statute under which Appellants were convicted is
    broader than the § 55 offense that the Commonwealth proffered as a similar
    Pennsylvania offense. As such, the Commonwealth failed to establish that
    Appellants’ out-of-state convictions triggered a duty for them to register in
    Pennsylvania pursuant to Subchapter I. Since Appellants were not individuals
    subject to registration under § 55, they did not commit the charged crimes by
    failing to register.    As a result, their convictions in the instant cases are
    unsound. Therefore, we vacate Appellants’ judgments of sentence, reverse
    their convictions, and discharge them.
    Judgments of sentence vacated.           Convictions reversed.   Appellants
    discharged.
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    DATE: 12/1/2023
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Document Info

Docket Number: 49 WDA 2022

Judges: Bowes, J.

Filed Date: 12/1/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/1/2023