Changeflow GovPing State Courts Com v Hodges - Criminal Appeal
Routine Enforcement Amended Final

Com v Hodges - Criminal Appeal

Favicon for www.courtlistener.com PA Superior Court
Filed March 3rd, 2026
Detected March 3rd, 2026
Email

Summary

The Pennsylvania Superior Court issued a non-precedential decision in the case of Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Ichywond Hodges. The court affirmed the judgment of sentence following the appellant's conviction for sexual assault.

What changed

The Pennsylvania Superior Court, in a non-precedential decision (J-S02023-26), affirmed the judgment of sentence for Ichywond Hodges, who was convicted by a jury of sexual assault. The appeal stemmed from charges related to alleged sexual abuse of two sisters, with the trial court consolidating two dockets for trial. The decision affirms the conviction and sentence.

This document represents a final appellate decision in a criminal case. For legal professionals and courts, it serves as a record of judicial review and affirmation of a conviction. There are no new compliance requirements or deadlines for regulated entities, as this is a specific case outcome rather than a regulatory rule or guidance.

Source document (simplified)

Jump To

Top Caption [Combined Opinion

                  by Murray](https://www.courtlistener.com/opinion/10803144/com-v-hodges-i/about:blank#o1)

Support FLP

CourtListener is a project of Free
Law Project
, a federally-recognized 501(c)(3) non-profit. Members help support our work and get special access to features.

Please become a member today.

Join Free.law Now

March 3, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

Com. v. Hodges, I.

Superior Court of Pennsylvania

Combined Opinion

                        by Murray

J-S02023-26

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
:
v. :
:
:
ICHYWOND HODGES :
:
Appellant : No. 2457 EDA 2024

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered August 28, 2024
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at
No(s): CP-51-CR-0007164-2022

BEFORE: NICHOLS, J., MURRAY, J., and BENDER, P.J.E.

MEMORANDUM BY MURRAY, J.: FILED MARCH 3, 2026

Ichywond Hodges (Appellant) appeals the judgment of sentence entered

following his conviction by a jury of sexual assault. 1 After careful review, we

affirm.

The trial court stated the procedural and factual history of this case as

follows:

In July of 2022, two sisters, B.M.D. and F.[], reported that
Appellant, their cousin, had molested them many times during
their childhood and early teenage years. On September 19, 2022,
Appellant was charged with two counts of the following offenses,
one with respect to each sister: Rape by Forcible Compulsion (18
Pa.C.S.A. § 3121(a)(1)), Rape of a Child (18 Pa.C.S.A. § 3121(c)),
Involuntary Deviate Sexual Intercourse by Forcible Compulsion
(18 Pa.C.S.A. § 3123(a)(1)), Involuntary Deviate Sexual
Intercourse With a Child (18 Pa.C.S.A. § 3123(b)), and Sexual
Assault. The two dockets, CP-51-CR-0007164-2022 (the charges


1 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 3124.1.
J-S02023-26

relating to B.M.D.) and CP-51-CR-7468-2022 (the charges
relating to F.[]), were consolidated for trial.

The trial began on May 14, 2024.2 B.M.D., who is now in her early
thirties, testified that she and F.[] lived in a relative’s house when
they were children and that Appellant lived there with them at
times. N.T., 5/15/24, at 109. She testified that Appellant made
her feel uncomfortable “more than once” while she was growing
up. Id. at 111. Starting when she was 7 years old, B.M.D. stated,
Appellant would come into her bedroom at night, carry her into
his room, and “touch on her,” including placing his penis in her
mouth, vagina, and anus without her consent. Id. at 110[,] 112.
She said this happened “quite often” when she was between the
ages of 7 and 14. Id. at 111, 114, 115. Her testimony included
detailed descriptions of the rooms where the alleged incidents
occurred, id. at 111-113; specifics of how an incident would begin
and progress, id. at 111, 112-14; and her thoughts and feelings
during the incidents, id. at 113, 114. B.M.D. spoke in a soft voice,
struggled to tell the jury the more graphic details of what had
happened to her, and became overwhelmed several times. Id. at
111, 113, 114. Some members of the jury were visibly moved by
her testimony.

Trial Court Opinion, 3/21/25, at 2 (footnote in original but renumbered;

citations modified).

The Commonwealth presented five other witnesses. These
included F.[], who testified about her own alleged abuse
[perpetrated by Appellant]; S.P., who was B.M.D.’s cousin and
Appellant’s sister; and C.J., the great grandmother of all the
cousins, who owned the house where the alleged incidents
occurred.

F.[], S.P., and C.J. all testified that B.M.D. and Appellant regularly
stayed in C.J.’s home at the same time during the years in
question. N.T., 5/16/24, at 60, 141-42, 148, 151, 191-92.
Appellant, who testified on his own behalf, also confirmed this.
Id. at 19. No one, other than B.M.D. herself, testified to
witnessing Appellant assault B.M.D., and the Commonwealth did
not present any physical evidence.


2 A previous jury trial, which began on March 6, 2024, ended in a mistrial.

-2-
J-S02023-26

Id. at 2-3.

On May 17, 2024, the jury convicted Appellant of sexually assaulting

B.M.D. However, the jury acquitted Appellant of all remaining charges at both

dockets. N.T., 5/17/24, at 2-3. On August 28, 2024, the trial court sentenced

Appellant to three to six years in prison, followed by three years of reporting

probation. Appellant and the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.

Appellant presents the following issue for our review:

Was the conviction of Appellant … based on insufficient evidence
to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that [Appellant]
committed the charged offense of sexual assault?

Appellant’s Brief at 3 (capitalization modified).

Appellant argues that the evidence was legally insufficient to sustain his

conviction of sexual assault. Id. at 15. Appellant asserts that the

Commonwealth relied exclusively on the uncorroborated testimony of B.M.D.

concerning the incidents that took place when B.M.D. was between seven and

fourteen years old. Id. Appellant directs our attention to the lack of forensic,

medical, physical, or contemporaneous documentary evidence supporting

B.M.D.’s account of the assaults. Id. at 15-16. Appellant acknowledges that

a victim’s testimony, if credible, may support a conviction. Id. at 16.

However, Appellant points out that “appellate courts have also recognized that

vague, contradictory, or inherently unreliable testimony cannot meet

constitutional due process standards.” Id. (citing Commonwealth v.

Karkaria, 625 A.2d 1167 (Pa. 1993)).

-3-
J-S02023-26

Appellant argues that at trial, the Commonwealth presented only

B.M.D.’s testimony to establish the crime of sexual assault. Id. Appellant

points out the inconsistencies in B.M.D.’s testimony:

[H]ere, [B.M.D.] gave varying accounts: [S]he told police on July
3, 2022[,] that assaults began when she was around twelve, but
told detectives later they began at age nine or ten, and testified
at trial that she was as young as six years old when there was
touching and groping in a car (N.T., 3/6/24, [at] 26), [and was]
eight years old when there was sexual intercourse (Id. at 26,
27)….

Id. (citation form modified). Appellant claims these contradictions render the

evidence unreliable as a matter of law. Id.

Appellant also points out that B.M.D. did not disclose the abuse until she

was nineteen years old, “more than five years after the last alleged incident.”

Id. at 17. According to Appellant, “Pennsylvania law allows delayed reporting,

but juries are instructed to consider the lack of prompt complaint in evaluating

credibility.” Id. Appellant argues that the inconsistencies in B.M.D.’s

testimony, the lack of corroborating evidence, B.M.D.’s delay in reporting, and

the jury’s verdicts acquitting Appellant of all other charges, compel the

conclusion that insufficient evidence supports the verdict. Id. at 13-14.

Initially, we observe that a challenge to the sufficiency the evidence

requires an assessment of whether the evidence, viewed in the light most

favorable to the Commonwealth, establishes each material element of the

crime charged beyond a reasonable doubt. Commonwealth v. Widmer, 744

A.2d 745, 751 (Pa. 2000). If the evidence supporting the verdict “is in

-4-
J-S02023-26

contradiction to the physical facts, in contravention to human experience and

the laws of nature, then the evidence is insufficient as a matter of

law.” Id. The sufficiency of the evidence is a question of law and may be

raised for the first time on appeal. See id.; see also Pa.R.Crim.P. 606(A)(7).

In contrast, a challenge to the weight of the evidence requires the trial

court to assess whether “certain facts are so clearly of greater weight that to

ignore them or to give them equal weight with all the facts is to deny

justice.” Widmer, 744 A.2d at 752 (citation omitted). A weight claim must

be presented to the trial court in the first instance, because “[a]ppellate review

of a weight claim is a review of the exercise of discretion, not of the underlying

question of whether the verdict is against the weight of the evidence.” Id. at

753; see also Pa.R.Crim.P. 607(A) (requiring a challenge to the weight of the

evidence to be presented to the trial judge, in the first instance). The failure

to raise a weight claim in the trial court will result in waiver of the issue on

appeal, even if the appellant raises the issue in his Rule 1925(b) statement

and the trial court addresses it in its Rule 1925(a) opinion. Commonwealth

v. Sherwood, 982 A.2d 483, 494 (Pa. 2009).

Here, Appellant argues that B.M.D.’s testimony was not credible because

it was contradictory and because of B.M.D.’s delay in reporting the assault.

The credibility of the testimony of a witness goes to the weight of

the evidence, but not to its legal sufficiency. Commonwealth v. Dunkins,

229 A.3d 622, 631-32 (Pa. Super. 2020).

-5-
J-S02023-26

Appellant does not argue that the Commonwealth failed to set forth any

evidence to establish each of the elements of the crime charged. Nor does

Appellant claim that the evidence in support of the verdict was “in

contradiction to the physical facts, in contravention to human experience and

the laws of nature[.]” Widmer, 744 A.2d at 751. His argument therefore

goes to the weight, and not the sufficiency, of the

evidence. See Commonwealth v. Juray, 275 A.3d 1037, 1043 (Pa. Super.

2022) (stating that sufficiency review “does not include an assessment of [the]

credibility of [the] testimony offered by the Commonwealth”).

Our review discloses that Appellant failed to challenge the verdict as

against the weight evidence before the trial court. Consequently, Appellant

waived this issue. See Sherwood, 982 A.2d at 494; see also Pa.R.Crim.P.

607(A).

In any event, the evidence is sufficient to sustain Appellant’s conviction

of sexual assault. On review of sufficiency claims, we must determine if the

evidence presented at trial, including all reasonable inferences derived from

that evidence, “was sufficient to enable the fact-finder to conclude that the

Commonwealth established all of the elements of the offense beyond a

reasonable doubt.” Commonwealth v. Cruz, 71 A.3d 998, 1006 (Pa. Super.

2013) (citation and brackets omitted). For review purposes, all record

evidence must be considered “in the light most favorable to the

Commonwealth as the verdict winner.” Id. “[T]he credibility of witnesses

-6-
J-S02023-26

and weight of evidence are determinations that lie solely with the trier of fact,

[which] is free to believe all, part, or none of the evidence.” Commonwealth

v. Williams, 854 A.2d 440, 445 (Pa. 2004).

The Crimes Code defines the crime of sexual assault as follows: “[A]

person commits a felony of the second degree when that person engages in

sexual intercourse or deviate sexual intercourse with a complainant without

the complainant’s consent.” 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 3124.1.

A “complainant’s testimony alone is sufficient to sustain a conviction for

a criminal offense, ‘so long as that testimony can address and, in fact,

addresses, every element of the charged crime.’” Commonwealth v.

Horlick, 296 A.3d 60, 62 (Pa. Super. 2023) (quoting Commonwealth v.

Johnson, 180 A.3d 474, 481 (Pa. Super. 2018)); see also Commonwealth

v. Charlton, 902 A.2d 554, 562 (Pa. Super. 2006) (recognizing that the

uncorroborated testimony of a sexual assault victim, if believed by the trier of

fact, is sufficient to convict a defendant).

As set forth above, B.M.D. testified that Appellant made her feel

uncomfortable “more than once” while she was growing up. N.T., 5/15/24, at

  1. B.M.D. testified that beginning when she was 7 years old, Appellant

would come into her bedroom at night, carry her into his room, and “touch on

her,” including placing his penis in her mouth, vagina, and anus without her

consent. Id. at 110, 112. She said this happened “quite often” when she was

between the ages of 7 and 14. Id. at 111, 114, 115. Our review discloses no

-7-
J-S02023-26

testimony that is “in contradiction to the physical facts, in contravention to

human experience and the laws of nature[.]” Widmer, 744 A.2d at 751.

Appellant claims that “appellate courts have [] recognized that vague,

contradictory, or inherently unreliable testimony cannot meet constitutional

due process standards.” Appellant’s Brief at 16. Appellant cites Karkaria, in

support.

In Karkaria, this Court held that the evidence was insufficient as a

matter of law to sustain the defendant’s conviction for forcible rape, because

the testimony of the victim, on which the Commonwealth solely relied for its

case-in-chief, was “so unreliable and contradictory that it was incapable of

supporting a verdict of guilty.” Karkaria, 625 A.2d at 1172. There, the

defendant was charged with raping his step-sister (the victim), who provided

the prosecution’s sole evidence. The victim testified that defendant sexually

assaulted her on a weekly basis for three years, in the same manner each

time, while he babysat her on the weekends. Id. at 1168. On appeal, the

defendant argued the evidence was “so unreliable and contradictory that their

verdict could only have been arrived at through speculation and

conjecture.” Id. at 1170.

The Supreme Court reversed the judgment of sentence, finding that the

victim’s testimony was “riddled with critical inconsistencies,” such as (1) the

lack of “untoward suspicion” raised by the victim’s initial accusations; (2) the

insufficient detail in her initial accusations and testimony; (3) the timing and

-8-
J-S02023-26

context of her initial complaints; (4) the victim’s “disturbingly” vague and

inconsistent testimony about when the alleged acts occurred; (5) the degree

of revision in her testimony when confronted with conflict; and (6) the lack of

detail supporting any revised or clarified testimony. Id. at 1171. The

Supreme Court further deemed significant “[t]he lack of evidence as to when

the alleged assaults occurred” and that the victim “offered one scenario, and

one scenario only, for each one of the 300 or more alleged incidents of sexual

assault.” Id.

[The victim] stated that the assaults always happened in the same
way. She was carried out of the room where she had been
watching TV with her brother, [the appellant] undressed her, and
lay on top of her. [The victim’s] resistance was always the same,
never verbal. She merely attempted to sit up and she was pushed
back down. No words were ever spoken. [The appellant] never
threatened or bribed [the victim] in order to force her compliance
or silence regarding the sexual assaults.

Id. at 1171.

Here, by contrast, B.M.D.’s testimony did not suffer from such egregious

deficiencies. As the trial court explained,

B.M.D. gave a detailed description of the events. [Appellant’s]
counsel attempted to argue in closing that [B.M.D.] had testified
inconsistently, but was not able to identify any significant
discrepancies. N.T., 5/16/24, at 25.

… Appellant contends that the testimony was unreliable because
there was insufficient evidence of “motive” or “opportunity.”
Motive and opportunity are not elements of the crime of sexual
assault, however, and the Commonwealth was not required to
prove them to sustain a conviction. Moreover, there was ample
evidence that Appellant and B.M.D. stayed in the same home
during the years in question, giving Appellant an opportunity to

-9-
J-S02023-26

commit the assaults, and the jury could properly infer motive from
the assaults themselves.

Trial Court Opinion, 3/21/25, at 7 (citation modified). Thus, Appellant’s

reliance on Karkaria is unavailing.

Regarding B.M.D.’s delay in reporting, the trial court instructed the

jurors that they should consider the delay in evaluating B.M.D.’s testimony.

N.T., 5/16/24, at 60-61. The jurors nevertheless credited B.M.D.’s testimony.

“[A]s an appellate court, we may not re-weigh the evidence and substitute

our judgment for that of the fact-finder.” Commonwealth v. Rosario, 307

A.3d 759, 765 (Pa. Super. 2023) (citation omitted). Based on the foregoing,

a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence merits no relief. Accordingly,

we affirm Appellant’s judgment of sentence.

Judgment of sentence affirmed.

Date: 3/3/2026

  • 10 -

Source

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

Classification

Agency
Federal and State Courts
Filed
March 3rd, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Courts Legal professionals Criminal defendants
Geographic scope
National (US)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Criminal Justice
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Sexual Assault Appeals

Get State Courts alerts

Weekly digest. AI-summarized, no noise.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

Get alerts for this source

We'll email you when PA Superior Court publishes new changes.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.