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Com. v. Mc Nair, A.
1570 EDA 2016
Pa. Super. Ct.
Nov 2, 2017
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Background

  • On November 5, 2014, victim Jason Collins was robbed at gunpoint near 55th and Girard in Philadelphia; two men took his Samsung phone (with a distinct Punisher-case) and white Soul headphones.
  • Victim chased the getaway vehicle (blue Crown Victoria) and flagged down police; officers stopped the vehicle within about one mile and found McNair and co-defendant Keon Davis in the backseat and recovered the phone case and headphones.
  • The victim immediately identified McNair and Davis at the scene and later gave a written statement and met with detectives; at trial the victim could not make an in-court identification but had identified items and given earlier identifications.
  • At trial the jury convicted McNair of armed robbery (18 Pa.C.S. § 3701(a)(1)(ii)) but acquitted him of conspiracy and possession of an instrument of crime; McNair was sentenced to 10–20 years’ imprisonment.
  • McNair appealed, arguing (1) evidence was insufficient to sustain the robbery conviction and (2) the 10–20 year sentence was excessive/abusive and amounted to cruel and unusual punishment because it triggered a consecutive parole-violation term.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument (Commonwealth) Defendant's Argument (McNair) Held
Sufficiency of the evidence to support robbery conviction The identification at scene, recovered stolen items in the car (Punisher case, white headphones), flight in vehicle, and victim’s out-of-court statements support conviction Victim could not identify in court; co-defendant testified McNair was not involved; acquittal on related charges undermines robbery verdict Affirmed: in‑court uncertainty goes to weight; immediate out‑of‑court ID plus circumstantial evidence sufficed beyond reasonable doubt
Whether sentencing court considered relevant factors Court reviewed PSI and mental health eval, heard argument, and considered guidelines, crime gravity, and defendant’s background Sentence imposed without adequate reasons or consideration of factors Affirmed: record shows court considered permissible factors and placed reasons on record
Whether sentence was manifestly excessive Sentence was within court’s discretion given crime seriousness, impact, prior record (fourth robbery), and public protection interests 10–20 years is excessive and disproportionate Affirmed: no abuse of discretion or manifest excessiveness
Cruel and unusual (consecutive parole‑violation exposure) Multiple sentences and consecutive VOP term do not make punishment cruel and unusual; defendant not entitled to a "volume discount" Triggering a consecutive VOP sentence produced cruel and unusual punishment Held: claim waived in part (not preserved below); in any event, sentence does not shock standards of decency and is not cruel and unusual

Key Cases Cited

  • Commonwealth v. Orr, 38 A.3d 868 (Pa. Super. Ct.) (out‑of‑court identifications given shortly after the crime can support conviction)
  • Commonwealth v. Costa‑Hernandez, 802 A.2d 671 (Pa. 2002) (evidentiary sufficiency review; factfinder resolves identification weight)
  • Commonwealth v. Tate, 401 A.2d 353 (Pa. 1979) (standard for sufficiency review: view evidence in light most favorable to Commonwealth)
  • Commonwealth v. Evans, 901 A.2d 528 (Pa. Super. Ct.) (procedural requirements for discretionary‑aspects‑of‑sentencing review)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: Com. v. Mc Nair, A.
Court Name: Superior Court of Pennsylvania
Date Published: Nov 2, 2017
Docket Number: 1570 EDA 2016
Court Abbreviation: Pa. Super. Ct.