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Com. v. Goodwin - Probation Violation Appeal

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Filed March 19th, 2026
Detected March 19th, 2026
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Summary

The Superior Court of Pennsylvania issued an opinion regarding an appeal from a judgment of sentence for probation violations. The court affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded the case for resentencing.

What changed

The Superior Court of Pennsylvania, in the case of Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Secario Goodwin, issued an opinion on March 19, 2026, concerning an appeal from a judgment of sentence for multiple technical probation violations. The appeal stemmed from charges related to burglaries and subsequent sentencing, including restrictive probation and a mandatory Outmate Program. The court's decision addresses the disposition of the probation violation findings and the imposed sentence.

This ruling impacts the sentencing outcome for the appellant, Secario Goodwin, potentially requiring a resentencing hearing. Legal professionals and courts involved in probation violation cases should review the court's reasoning for guidance on affirming, vacating, or remanding sentences. The specific details of the probation violations and the court's rationale for its partial affirmation and vacation of the sentence are critical for understanding the precedent set.

What to do next

  1. Review court's opinion for precedent on probation violation sentencing
  2. Prepare for potential resentencing hearing as ordered by the court

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                  by Sullivan](https://www.courtlistener.com/opinion/10811283/com-v-goodwin-s/#o1)

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March 19, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

Com. v. Goodwin, S.

Superior Court of Pennsylvania

Lead Opinion

                        by Sullivan

J-A08035-25 2026 PA Super 54

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
:
v. :
:
:
SECARIO GOODWIN, :
:
Appellant : No. 2030 EDA 2024

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered June 25, 2024
In the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County
Criminal Division at No(s): CP-45-CR-0000066-2023

BEFORE: LAZARUS, P.J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and SULLIVAN, J.

OPINION BY SULLIVAN, J.: FILED MARCH 19, 2026

Secario Goodwin (“Goodwin”) appeals from the judgment of sentence

imposed following his violation of probation. We affirm in part, vacate in part,

and remand for resentencing.

The court which found Goodwin committed multiple, technical probation

violations (the “VOP court”) provided the following summary of the facts

relevant to this appeal:

In August of 2022, [Goodwin] was charged with [multiple
counts of burglary, criminal trespass, theft by unlawful taking and
receiving stolen property, and single counts of related offenses].
The charges arose from a series of burglaries at several auto
shops[.]

At the time of his arrest, [Goodwin] was on bail in case No.
102 Criminal 2022, for crimes committed in 2021. On September
13, 2022, after pleading guilty, [Goodwin] was sentenced in that
case to incarceration of one month to one year, followed by two
years of probation. He was paroled [in October 2022].

[In August 2023, Goodwin] pled guilty in this case to
[burglary, theft by unlawful taking, and criminal mischief]. . . .
J-A08035-25

[In November 2023, Goodwin] was sentenced to five years’
restrictive probation[,] . . . a consecutive two-year period of
probation[,] . . . and a fine . . .. The restrictive condition of
[Goodwin’s] five-year probation was the successful completion of
the two-week Outmate Program,2 when and as directed by the
Monroe County Probation Office. . ..

2 The Outmate Program entails a determinate, two-

week period of incarceration in the Monroe County
Correctional Facility (“MCCF”). Each day, the
defendant-restrictive probationer performs
community service outside the prison . . . and is
then returned to the correctional facility and the
custody and control of MCCF personnel. . ..

After sentence was imposed, [Goodwin] met with his
probation officer and was provided with the rules of probation. At
that time, [Goodwin] was on probation in both this case and case
No. 102. Subsequently, his probation was transferred to
Allegheny County.

At some point thereafter, [Goodwin] left Allegheny County
and traveled to North Carolina. Accordingly, on March 25, 2024,
Allegheny County returned supervision, reporting that [Goodwin]
no longer resided there.

[Goodwin] neither sought nor was given permission to leave
the Commonwealth and did not advise his probation officer of the
move. [Goodwin’s] probation officer did not learn that [Goodwin]
had traveled to North Carolina until three weeks later when
[Goodwin’s] mother advised him of where [Goodwin] was. Even
then, [Goodwin’s] probation officer did not jump to fil[e] a
violation petition. Instead, the officer attempted to transfer the
case to North Carolina. However, North Carolina declined to
accept the transfer because [Goodwin’s] mother – whose
residence was [Goodwin’s] home plan – said that [Goodwin] could
not reside with her.

After North Carolina denied the transfer, [Goodwin’s]
probation officer directed [Goodwin] to return to Pennsylvania and
meet with him so that a solution could be fashioned. Had
[Goodwin] returned, a violation [of probation] petition would not
have been filed. Unfortunately, [Goodwin] did not accept the
invitation and did not voluntarily return to the Commonwealth.

-2-
J-A08035-25

Accordingly, [in April] 2024, the Monroe County Probation
Department lodged a detainer.

Two days later, the Commonwealth filed the instant
probation violation petition. The petition alleged four . . .
violations:

  1. Failure to report to the Monroe County Probation
    Department on March 27, 2024, as directed by his
    Probation Officer.

  2. Failure to comply with all municipal, county, state,
    and federal criminal laws, in that on February 25,
    2024, [Goodwin] was charged with [s]imple
    [a]ssault . . . in Allegheny County.

  3. Leaving the Commonwealth without prior
    permission from his Probation Officer and failing
    to return.

  4. Failure to complete the Outmate Program by
    March 16, 2024, and therefore, failure to comply
    with the special condition imposed by this Court.

(Petition for Violation of Probation, filed April 11, 2024, ¶ 7).

A violation hearing was scheduled for and convened on May
13, 2024. [Goodwin] failed to appear. Accordingly, a bench
warrant was issued.

[In April 2024, Goodwin] was arrested and incarcerated in
North Carolina. The authorities in North Carolina informed the
Commonwealth that . . . initially . . . [Goodwin] declined to waive
extradition.

On June 11, 2024, . . . the day the Act 44 probation reform
amendments[1] became effective, [Goodwin] reversed course and
waived extradition. [Goodwin] was subsequently returned to the
Commonwealth and the jurisdiction of this [c]ourt.

[In June 2024], a probation violation hearing was convened.
During the hearing, the Commonwealth withdrew the violation


1 See 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9771, effective June 11, 2024.

-3-
J-A08035-25

based on [Goodwin’s] arrest as [to] the charges in Allegheny
County[.] [Goodwin] made a voluntary, knowing, intelligently
counseled admission to the three remaining violations. At the
conclusion of the hearing, [the court] issued an order revoking
probation and resentencing [Goodwin] to one to two years’
incarceration in a state correctional facility. . .. In addition,
[Goodwin] was deemed eligible for the three major rehabilitative
programs available in the state prison system . . ..

[In July 2024, Goodwin] filed a motion for reconsideration
of the resentence. A hearing on the motion was convened [later
that month]. Counsel presented argument, and both [Goodwin]
and [Goodwin’s] probation officer addressed the [c]ourt. At the
conclusion of the hearing, [the court] issued an order denying
[Goodwin’s] motion to reconsider the sentence. [Goodwin] then
timely filed this appeal.

See VOP Court Opinion, 10/11/24, at 2-5 (record citations and one footnote

omitted).2

On appeal, Goodwin raises three issues for this Court’s review:

  1. Whether the [VOP] court erred in revoking [Goodwin’s]
    probation solely for technical violations that did not establish
    [Goodwin’s] willful or flagrant disrespect for the terms of his
    probation but rather were consequences of [Goodwin’s]
    temporary homelessness?

  2. Whether the [VOP] court erred when it sentenced [Goodwin] to
    a period of total confinement without statutory authority to do so,
    as none of the enumerated conditions in 42 Pa.C.S.[A. §]
    9771(c)(1)(i)-(iii) ha[d] been met?

  3. Whether the [VOP] court imposed an illegal sentence and failed
    to follow the recidivist philosophy intended by the legislature's
    carefully[-]graduated sentencing sanctions in 42 Pa.C.S.[A. §]
    9771(c)(2) when it stacked three technical violations in
    [Goodwin’s] first probation violation petition and resentenced
    [Goodwin] under 42 Pa.C.S.[A. §] 9771(c)(2)(iii) instead of


2 Goodwin and the court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.

-4-
J-A08035-25

imposing the 14-day maximum period for a first technical violation
and allowing [Goodwin] an opportunity to reform?

Goodwin’s Brief at 5.

Goodwin’s first issue implicates the revocation of his probation. When

reviewing a court’s decision to revoke probation, this Court will not disturb the

decision absent an error of law or abuse of discretion. See Commonwealth

v. Gillam, 233 A.3d 863, 867 (Pa. Super. 2020).3 Accord Commonwealth

v. Antidormi, 84 A.3d 736, 756 (Pa. Super. 2014) (in a sufficiency review,

this Court may not weigh the evidence and substitute its judgment for that of

the fact-finder).4 In reviewing challenges to the revocation of probation, this

Court applies the following standard:

When assessing whether to revoke probation, the [court] must
balance the interests of society in preventing future criminal
conduct by the defendant against the possibility of rehabilitating
the defendant outside of prison. In order to uphold a revocation
of probation, the Commonwealth must show by preponderance of
the evidence that the defendant violated his probation.

Commonwealth v. Stewart, 327 A.3d 301, 304 (Pa. Super. 2024) (citation

omitted).


3 An abuse of discretion is more than a mere error of judgment and will only

be found where the court misapplies the law, exercises manifestly
unreasonable judgment, or its conclusion is the result of partiality, prejudice,
bias or ill-will. See Commonwealth v. Montalvo-Rivera, 341 A.3d 159,
168 (Pa. Super. 2025).

4 Goodwin’s assertion the evidence failed to establish a flagrant or willful
disrespect to support the revocation of probation is a sufficiency challenge.

-5-
J-A08035-25

A VOP court may impose reasonable conditions of probation. See, e.g.,

Commonwealth v. Starr, 234 A.3d 755, 761 (Pa. Super. 2020). If a

condition of probation is not followed, section 9771(b) of the Sentencing Code

“grants the court the authority to revoke an order of probation upon proof of

the violation of specified conditions of the probation.” See id. (citing 42

Pa.C.S.A. § 9771(b)). To revoke probation, a court must find by a

preponderance of the evidence the probationer violated a specific condition of

probation or committed a new crime. See Commonwealth v. Foster, 214

A.3d 1240, 1243 (Pa. 2019).

Goodwin concedes technical violations of probation can support a prison

sentence where a probationer’s conduct is flagrant and indicates an inability

to reform. See Goodwin’s Brief at 16, citing Commonwealth v. Carver, 923

A.2d 495, 498 (Pa. Super. 2007). He argues, however, that his brief period

of unemployment resulting from poverty and other technical probation

violations did not meet the standards for imposing a prison term. See

Goodwin’s Brief at 16-25, citing, inter alia, Commonwealth v. Tompkins,

2019 WL 5581541 (Pa. Super. 2019) (unpublished memorandum). 5

The VOP court found the Commonwealth showed by a preponderance of

the evidence that Goodwin committed multiple, flagrant technical violations


5 Pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 126(b), unpublished memoranda filed by this Court
after May 1, 2019, may be cited for their persuasive value.

-6-
J-A08035-25

which established his inability to reform and supported its imposition of a

prison sentence. The VOP court specifically found Goodwin did not establish

he was homeless to “the extent or for the duration that he could not comply

with the terms of his probation or follow the directives of his probation officer.”

See VOP Court Opinion, 10/11/24, at 7 (noting counsel’s admission Goodwin

had a home in Pennsylvania, and Goodwin’s probation officer’s testimony

Goodwin did not inform him he had become homeless). See id. at 11-12.6

Additionally, the VOP court relied on Goodwin’s probation officer’s testimony

to find technical violations. The VOP court specifically noted Goodwin provided

an incorrect address for his aunt’s Pennsylvania home, and Goodwin’s

deliberate choice not to return to Pennsylvania to participate in the Outmate

program, a requirement of his criminal sentence, despite his probation

officer’s equitable offer not to violate Goodwin if he returned to Pennsylvania

to begin the program. See VOP Court Opinion, 10/11/24, at 7-8, citing N.T.,

7/23/24, at 11-13.7 The VOP court also noted the absence of evidence


6 The VOP court stated its concern about Goodwin’s inconsistent statements

regarding his residence. See VOP Court Opinion, 10/11/24, at 7 (stating “[a]t
times, when it suited him to say so, [Goodwin] told his probation officer and
his attorney that he had a home, first, with his mother in North Carolina, then,
later with his aunt here in Monroe County. However, neither was true. At
other times when it suited him, [Goodwin] stated he was homeless.
[Goodwin] cannot have it both ways”).

7 We are not free to re-weigh the probation revocation court’s factual findings

on appeal. See Gillam, 233 A.3d at 867; Antidormi, 84 A.3d at 756.

-7-
J-A08035-25

Goodwin could not participate in the Outmate program. See id. at 9.8 Not

only did Goodwin not accept the offer, but when a warrant was finally issued

he initially refused to waive extradition to Pennsylvania to face the VOP

violation.

The VOP court also concluded Goodwin knowingly committed multiple

probation violations undermining the likelihood of rehabilitation:

[Goodwin’s] multiple violations were significant, not minor as he
has implied. At the time he committed the violations, [Goodwin]
had, between case No. 102 and this case, been on supervision for
almost 18 months. He was well aware of the conditions of his
sentence and of his probation as well as the rules of supervision.
Nonetheless, he failed to attend the Outmate Program, an
individualized sentencing requirement that he was specifically
court-ordered to complete. He also violated two general
conditions of his probation. By doing so he rebelled against
supervision and undermined both the Probation Department’s
ability to supervise him and his potential to rehabilitate.

See id. at 9. The VOP court concluded Goodwin’s dishonesty, “selective

statements regarding homelessness,” failure to participate in the Outmate

program, and initial failure to waive extradition demonstrated a willful and

flagrant disregard for the terms and conditions of probation and showed he

was not amendable to probationary supervision. See id. at 9.

The VOP court properly exercised its discretion in finding Goodwin

committed probation violations and rejected Goodwin’s attempt to portray the


8 Further, the court noted that participation in the Outmate Program would
have given Goodwin a residence for two weeks, and could have temporarily
alleviated his asserted homelessness. See VOP Court Opinion, 10/11/24, at
8-9.

-8-
J-A08035-25

revocation of his probation and resulting term of imprisonment as a sanction

for his status as poor and homeless. Goodwin, who knew the rules of

probation, failed to contact his probation officer before or after leaving the

Commonwealth, and failed to attend the mandated Outmate program. That

evidence established Goodwin committed flagrant probation violations

supporting probation revocation and imprisonment. Goodwin’s first claim

does not merit relief. See Foster, 214 A.3d at 1243.

Goodwin’s second and third issues assert the court lacked the statutory

authority under 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9771(c)(1)(i)-(iii) to impose a sentence of total

confinement, and it imposed an illegal term of imprisonment for Goodwin’s

first technical violation of probation. We address these related claims

together.

Section 9771 deals with revocation of probation, and in June 2024,

substantial revisions to 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9771(c), Limitations on sentence of

total confinement (“Section 9771”), became effective. The revised statute

eliminates “vindication of the court’s authority” as a ground for imposing a

prison sentence for a technical violation of probation. The revised statute also

articulates a presumption against a sentence of total confinement for a

technical violation, sets forth a list of the limited grounds upon which a

technical violation can support a sentence of imprisonment and, relevant to

Goodwin’s challenge to his sentence, limits the length of the sentence a court

can impose for first and second technical probation violations. The clear

-9-
J-A08035-25

animating principle of the revisions to Section 9771 is to limit the bases to

impose a term of total confinement for technical probation violations, thereby

culling the prison population of technical probation violators.

At the outset, we note that this Court has now held, in Commonwealth

v. Seals, 2026 Pa. Super 29 (Pa. Super., filed February 17, 2026) (en banc),

that a claim a court failed to follow the limitations imposed by Section 9771(c)

raises a challenge to the legality of sentence. See id. at 3, 29.

Relating to incarceration for technical probation violations, the amended

statute provides in pertinent part:

(c) Limitation on sentence of total confinement.--There is a
presumption against total confinement for technical violations of
probation. The following shall apply:

(1) The court may impose a sentence of total confinement upon
revocation only if:


(iii) the court finds by a preponderance of the
evidence that the defendant committed a technical
violation and any of the following apply:


(E) The defendant absconded and cannot
be safely diverted from total confinement
through less restrictive means.

(F) The technical violation involved an
intentional and unexcused failure to
adhere to recommended programming or
conditions on three or more separate
occasions and the defendant cannot be
safely diverted from total confinement
through less restrictive means. For
purposes of this clause, multiple technical
violations stemming from the same

  • 10 - J-A08035-25

episode of events shall not constitute
separate technical violations.

42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9771.

With regard to the length of sentence, an amended version of Section

9771(c), effective June 11, 2024, provides in pertinent part:

(2) If a court imposes a sentence of total confinement following a
revocation, the basis of which is for one or more technical
violations under paragraph (1)(ii) or (iii) . . . . [t]he defendant
shall be sentenced as follows:

(i) For a first technical violation, a maximum period of
14 days.

(ii) For a second technical violation, a maximum
period of 30 days.

(iii) For a third or subsequent technical violation, the
court may impose any sentencing alternatives
available at the time of initial sentencing.

42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9771(c)(2).

Goodwin asserts imprisonment should not be the default punishment for

“minor[,] technical” violations, and cites a state senator’s comments

concerning the purpose of amending the statute:

Probation is supposed to be a pathway out of the criminal
justice system. Instead, Pennsylvania is adding more and
more people to community supervision and keeping them
stuck there. The broken system has frequently become a
probation-to-prison revolving door that is in desperate need
of reform. Under the current probation system, technical
violations, which are not actual crimes -- such as
being late for an appointment, traveling out of state,
or being unable to pay fines and restitution -- can lead
to excessive extensions of probation or prison time
that far exceeded the original sentence handed down
at trial. This approach has proven both ineffective at
making our neighborhoods safer and significantly expensive
for taxpayers. If a probationer violates his or her

  • 11 - J-A08035-25

probation terms in some minor[,] technical way, the
result should not be simply to lock them away. We
need a system that better matches the punishment to the
offense and rewards good behavior.

See Goodwin’s Brief at 27-28, quoting Pennsylvania Senate Journal, 2023

Reg. Sess. No. 32 (remarks of Senator Bartolotta) (emphasis added).

Goodwin further asserts that subsections (E) and (F) of Section

9771(c)(1)(iii), that permit total confinement for technical violations, require

a finding by a preponderance of the evidence the defendant “cannot be safely

diverted from total confinement through less restrictive means,” and argues

the VOP court did not assess this portion of the statute. See Goodwin’s Brief

at 28-32.

Goodwin next asserts all his technical violations must be regarded as a

single technical violation under Section 9771(c), and the VOP court abused its

discretion by imposing a one-to-two-year sentence for “a third or subsequent

technical violation.” See Goodwin’s Brief at 32-52. Goodwin claims Section

9771 contains ambiguous and contrary provisions concerning the phrase

“technical violation.” See Goodwin’s Brief at 34 (comparing 9771(c)(2)’s

reference to the commission of “one or more technical violations under

paragraph (1)(ii) or (iii)” to the reference in (c)(1)(ii), stating a presumption

against incarceration for the commission of “a technical violation”). Goodwin

also cites the language of section 9771(c)(1)(iii)(F), which states that “[f]or

purposes of this clause, multiple technical violations stemming from the same

episode of events shall not constitute separate technical violations,” see

  • 12 - J-A08035-25

Goodwin’s Brief at 33, as evidence that all technical violations are to be

considered as a single violation.

Goodwin states Section 9771(c)(2) is ambiguous as to “sequential[ity],”

i.e., whether the statute intends a recidivist philosophy affording a defendant

the opportunity to reform his conduct before receiving an enhanced sentence

for serial violations, because it does not state whether previous violations had

to occur before the instant hearing to be regarded as separate technical

violations. See Goodwin’s Brief at 34-52. Finally, Goodwin asserts that a

contrary interpretation of the statute would be absurd and result in instances

in which a court could impose three maximum sentences in a single sentencing

order. See Goodwin’s Brief at 39-40.

The VOP court asserts it did consider the “less restrictive means”

provision of section 9771(c)(1)(iii)(E), but found Goodwin’s actions

“demonstrated a flagrant and willful disregard for[,] and a lack of amenability

to[,] probationary supervision.” See VOP Court Opinion, 10/11/24, at 20

(noting that these were not minor technical violations of probation). The court

further states it had the authority to impose a sentence of one to two years of

imprisonment because Goodwin’s three technical violations were not part of

the same “episode of events.” See VOP Court Opinion, 10/11/24, at 10, 12-

18 (tracking the language of section 9771(c)(1)(iii)(F)). The court reasons

that Section 9771.1, which Goodwin does not cite, addresses court-imposed

sanctions for violating probation, and embodies a recidivist philosophy with

  • 13 - J-A08035-25

graded short punishments for probation violations. It states the legislature

could have, but did not, “set up the same scheme” in Section 9771 it used in

Section 9771.1. See VOP Court Opinion, 10/11/24, at 18-20.

We hold the trial court did not commit legal error when it found as a

general principle that less restrictive means than imprisonment would not

deter Goodwin, and that a term of imprisonment was appropriate. Based on

the facts relied on by the VOP court, for all intents and purposes Goodwin

failed to comply with his sentence early on in his probation. Goodwin was

provided his conditions of probation, and made aware of his need to complete

the Outmate program, a condition of his sentence he never completed. His

probation was transferred to Allegheny County, and Goodwin, without asking

permission from his probation officers from either county, absconded from

Pennsylvania and went to North Carolina. His Monroe County probation officer

had to track him down, and gave him the opportunity to return to Pennsylvania

without violating him; yet Goodwin still failed to return from North Carolina of

his own volition. Further, Goodwin lied about his housing, continually failed

to contact his probation officer, refused extradition from North Carolina, and

failed to attend the Outmate program. Goodwin’s conduct showed he was not

amenable to probationary supervision and nothing short of imprisonment

would suffice to deter his illegal conduct.

As the VOP court noted, this was not the minor misconduct Senator

Bartolotta stated should not result in imprisonment: Goodwin did not merely

  • 14 - J-A08035-25

arrive late for an appointment, travel briefly outside of the Commonwealth, or

fail to pay fines and restitution. Instead, Goodwin purposefully left the

Commonwealth without permission and despite knowing his reporting

obligation, did not contact his probation officer to explain or seek help, and

elected not to participate in the mandatory Outmate program. Despite having

been granted probation which came with conditions and obligations, Goodwin

chose not to meet any of those conditions or obligations, even when given the

opportunity to return and start over without a violation. Goodwin’s repeated

conduct of non-compliance showed that nothing short of imprisonment could

compel his compliance. Thus, no relief is due on Goodwin’s second claim: i.e.,

that the court abused its discretion by imposing a term of total confinement.

However, although we agree with the VOP court’s factual findings that

Goodwin’s deliberate conduct violated his probation, we conclude the VOP

court erred as a matter of law in imposing a one-to-two year term of

imprisonment for a third technical probation violation, as the Commonwealth

itself concedes. See Commonwealth’s Brief at 27-31. We do not find Section

9771 ambiguous on its face, nor do we perceive a need to interpret the statute

in light of Section 9771.1 and its sentencing provisions. Section 9771.1

authorizes each court of common pleas to establish a program to impose

sanctions for probation violations and specifies sanctions of three days

imprisonment for a first violation, seven days for a second, fourteen days for

a third, and twenty-one days for a fourth or subsequent violation. See 42

  • 15 - J-A08035-25

Pa.C.S.A. §9771.1(a), (g)(1)(i)-(iv). There is no evidence of record Monroe

County has ever established a program pursuant to Section 9771.1. For that

reason alone, we have no recourse to use that statute to interpret Section

9771.

Additionally, although the trial court is correct that there is no logical

impediment to construing Goodwin’s actions as three separate, technical

probation violations (Goodwin absconded, failed to report to his probation

officer, and failed to attend the Outmate program), and these were not the

same “episode of events,” there may be a legal impediment to treating those

three violations independently for sentencing purposes. We recognize the

possibility of a latent ambiguity in the statute arising from Section

9771(c)(1)(iii)(F)’s authorization of incarceration if “the technical violation

involved” conduct on three or more separate occasions, raising the question

whether “a first technical violation” under 9771(c)(2)(i) similarly refers to a

finding of a technical violation rather than separate instances of conduct. See

Commonwealth v. Linton, 337 A.3d 467, 477 (Pa. 2025) (recognizing that

a seemingly unambiguous phrase can be ambiguous when placed in context);

A.S. v. Pennsylvania State Police, 143 A.3d 896, 906 (Pa. 2016) (same).

Accordingly, we examine Section 9772(c)(2) in the context of the

statute’s purpose and context, the harm to be remedied, the object to be

attained, and related laws to determine the General Assembly’s intent. See

1 Pa.C.S.A. § 1921. Multiple statutes that became effective on the same day

  • 16 - J-A08035-25

as Section 9771 manifest the Legislature’s intent to limit the conditions under

which Pennsylvanians receive terms of incarceration for technical probation

violations, and to afford probation violators the opportunity to correct their

conduct before receiving lengthy jail terms for technical violations. See e.g.,

42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9763(b) (adding language to existing statute addressing

conditions of probation that requires courts imposing probation conditions to

“attach only those conditions that the court deems necessary and the least

restrictive means available to promote the defendant’s rehabilitation and

protection of the public”); Section 9771(b.1) (adding to the statute a

subsection precluding a court from revoking probation for non-payment of

fines unless the defendant is financially able to pay the fines and has willfully

refused to do so); Section 9774.1(b) (establishing a mandatory probation

review conference following a defendant’s service of a term of probation or

50% of the probation sentence, whichever is sooner); Section 9774.1(c)(1)(i)-

(vii) (creating a statute entitled “Probation review conference” that requires

an accelerated early review conference where a defendant has completed an

educational and/or training program or any other court-approved condition

that “substantially assists the defendant in leading a law-abiding life or

furthers the rehabilitative needs of the defendant); Section 9774.1(f)(1)(i)-

(iii), (h) (adding a “termination of probation” subsection that provides a court

shall terminate probation immediately following the probation review

conference absent proof that while on probation the defendant “created an

  • 17 - J-A08035-25

identifiable threat to public safety,” failed to complete a court-ordered

treatment program, or failed to pay restitution).

Applying the relevant principles of statutory interpretation, we readily

determine Section 9771(c)(2) demonstrates a recidivist philosophy and the

intent of the legislature to curtail long terms of imprisonment based on the

conclusion that, on balance, terms of imprisonment for technical probation

violations cause undue expense without enhancing the protection of the

public.9 Recidivist provisions require a violator be given the opportunity to

reform his conduct before receiving a more severe sentence for repeated

violations. As the Supreme Court explained in discussing a different recidivist

sentencing provision, “the point of sentencing enhancement is to punish more

severely offenders who have persevered in criminal activity despite the

theoretical beneficial effects of penal discipline.” Commonwealth v.

Shiffler, 879 A.2d 185, 195 (Pa. 2005) (citation omitted, original emphasis).

As the Court further explained, “[a]ny other conception would ignore the

rationale underlying the recidivist philosophy, i.e., that the most culpable

defendant is one who, after being reproved, still hardeneth his neck.” Id.

(citations and internal quotation marks omitted).


9 We thus see no need for the review of legislative history Goodwin proposes.

Where a statute is unambiguous, there is no need to examine legislative
history to determine its meaning. See Commonwealth v. Aguilar, 340 A.3d
311, 323 (Pa. Super. 2025) (stating that our courts “must not overlabor to
detect or manufacture ambiguity where there is none”).

  • 18 - J-A08035-25

Because the legislature clearly intended the statue at issue to reflect a

recidivist philosophy, we agree with Goodwin it would be an absurd and

unintended result to allow the VOP court in effect to give Goodwin three

separate maximum sentences at the same, first hearing on his multiple,

technical probation violations. While we agree with the trial court’s holding

that Goodwin’s technical violations were flagrant and significant in nature -

and if presented to the trial court on an individual basis each would

undoubtedly have constituted an independent technical violation allowing for

graduated punishment under the latest statutory scheme - the new statutory

scheme leaves no alternative but to conclude the trial court erred in imposing

a one-to-two-year term of imprisonment at the hearing for Goodwin’s three

technical violations because those violations were presented to the court

collectively rather than individually. See also Seals, 2026 Pa Super 29 at

16-17, 29 (declaring Section 9771(c)(2) specifically delineates the maximum

sentence for first and second technical violations – a maximum of fourteen

days for a first violation and thirty days for a second violation – and any

sentence in excess of those maximums is illegal). 10


10 Although compelled to follow the latest revisions to the sentencing statute,

we note this new regimen may not have its intended effect of reducing the
incarceration of those who commit technical violations. Instead, the changes
create a disincentive for thoughtful probation officers, similar to the probation
officer in the instant matter, to exercise their discretion and afford the benefit
of the doubt to probationers who commit technical violations. Instead of
encouraging an informal out-of-court warning system, the tiered, recidivist
(Footnote Continued Next Page)

  • 19 - J-A08035-25

For these reasons, we agree with both parties that the trial court erred

in finding each of Goodwin’s three technical violations constituted separate

sentencing enhancements and imposing a sentence of one to two years of

imprisonment without affording Goodwin the opportunity to conform his

conduct to law after a first (or second) lesser sentence for a technical violation.

Accordingly, we affirm the court’s findings regarding Goodwin’s technical

violations, but vacate Goodwin’s sentence, and remand for resentencing

consistent with Section 9771(c)(2).

Jurisdiction relinquished.

Date: 3/19/2026


statute creates a pressure for probation officers to initiate court proceedings
for any technical violation, thus, potentially clogging the court dockets and
stripping the courts and probation officers of their discretion to manage
probationers. We are hard-pressed to believe technical probation violators
will be better served by the practice of the graduated system of punishment
the statutory revisions compel.

  • 20 -

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
PA Superior Court
Filed
March 19th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Document ID
2026 Pa. Super. 54 / No. 2030 EDA 2024

Who this affects

Applies to
Courts Legal professionals
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Probation Violations Sentencing
Geographic scope
Pennsylvania US-PA

Taxonomy

Primary area
Criminal Justice
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Probation Sentencing

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