Rоdney Darryl Clinton appeals the judgment of sentence imposed following his conviction on two counts of aggravated assault, one count of violating the Uniform Firearms Act and one count of reckless endangerment of another person. We affirm.
On the evening of Deсember 10, 1994, Charles Jacobs and two friends celebrated Jacobs’s sixteenth birthday by attending a party and consuming alcoholic beverages. During the course of the night, Jacobs unexpectedly met his friend Rodney Clinton on a street in the East Hills section of Pittsburgh. Clinton and Jacobs engagеd in a discussion about football teams. Their discussion grew into a heated argument which escalated into a physical altercation. N.T., dated July 31 and August 1, 1995, at 30-31. Approximately five to ten minutes after their altercation ended, Jacobs was shot in the abdomen.
Shortly after the shoоting, police officers Patrick Harlan and Chris Moran arrived at the scene of the crime. They observed Jacobs lying on the ground, repeatedly saying, “He *389 shot me, he shot me.” Id. at 68-69. Jacobs was then rushed to the hospital, where he underwent surgery.
The day after his surgery, Jacobs disclosed to his mother that Clinton had shot him. That same night, Jacobs also told Officer Elton Keady, a police officer investigating the shooting, that Clinton was his assailant. Several days later, Jacobs identified Clinton from an array of photographs shown to him by Detective George Ciganik and told Ciganik that Clinton had shot him. Jacobs also told Ciganik that Clinton had visited him in the hospital the previous day to apologize for shooting him in the stomach.
Clinton was arrested and charged with aggravated assault, violating the Uniform Firearms Act, and recklessly endangering another person. At Clinton’s preliminary hearing, Jаcobs testified that Clinton was his assailant. Id. at 34-35. Jacobs further testified that immediately before the shooting he saw Clinton hold a gun and fire it at him. Id. at 35-36.
At trial, Jacobs altered his story. He testified that Clinton did not shoot him and that he did not know the identity of his assailant. Id. at 33. He explained that his earlier statemеnts blaming Clinton stemmed from his anger at being shot and his lingering bitterness toward Clinton because of their physical altercation. Id. at 41-42.
Clinton was convicted on all four counts. He was sentenced to an aggregate penalty of seven to twenty years’ imprisonment. This appeal followеd.
Initially, we note that Clinton has failed to include in his brief a statement of the questions involved as required by Pennsylvania Rules of Appellate Procedure 2111 and 2116. Issues not presented in the statement of questions involved are generally deemed waived. Pa.R.A.P. 2116;
Harkins v. Calumet Realty Co.,
Clinton’s first argument is that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence. We conclude that Clinton has waived this argument by not filing post-sentence motions.
Commonwealth v. Holmes,
The 1994 amendments to Pa.R.Crim.P. 1410 generally give defendants the option of filing post-sentence motions or appealing directly to the Superior Court. While the purpose of these amendments was to make post-trial motions optional, our cases establish that a defendant must always file a post-sentence motion in order to preserve a claim assailing a verdict as against the weight of the evidence.
E.g., Commonwealth v. Robinson,
An appellate court may only review the trial court’s exercise of discretion in granting or denying a new trial on the grounds that the verdict was contrary to the weight of the evidence; it may not address “the underlying question whether the verdict is against the weight of the evidence.”
Commonwealth v. Hodge,
That the trial court addressed the weight of the evidence issue in its Rule 1925 opinion is not sufficient to preserve this issue for appellate review. Id. When a trial court prepares a Rule 1925 opinion, it no longer has the jurisdiction to grant or deny a defendant’s motion for a new trial. Id. Rather, the court can only explain its trial and post-trial actions in the Rule 1925 opinion. We cannot, therefore, address Clinton’s weight of the evidence claim.
Clinton next argues that the trial court based his sentence on inaрpropriate factors. We conclude that Clinton has also waived this argument by failing to challenge his sentence in the trial court.
In
Commonwealth v. Jarvis,
does not dispense with the need to preserve challenges to the discretionary aspects of a sentence by means of ... a motion [for modification of sentence]. Although the new rule chаracterizes a motion to modify a sentence as “optional,” the rule plainly states that only issues which were presented to the trial court before or during trial shall be deemed preserved for appeal in the absence of a post-trial motion. The modifications to Rule 1410 have not altered the rеquirement of Rule of Appellate Procedure 302 which states that “[i]ssues not raised in the lower court are waived and cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.”
Id.
at 298,
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In
Commonwealth v. Egan,
In this case, Clinton alleges that the sentencing court erred by taking into account: (1) various aggravating factors which do not support an aggravаted range sentence; and (2) the nature of the crime. The factors that Clinton complains of bear on the exercise of discretion by the trial court in choosing what sentence to impose and thus are unlike the challenge in
Egan.
Clinton did not raise this claim before the trial сourt, either in post-sentence motions or at the sentencing proceeding. Because Clinton did not give the court the opportunity to reconsider the imposition of this sentence, we hold that Clinton has waived this claim.
See Jarvis, supra,
at 298-99,
Clinton’s next contention is that the trial court’s jury charge misled and confused the jury. Our standard of
*393
review for challenged jury instructions is clear: “A jury charge by the trial court shall be evaluated on the basis of the entire сharge and not on separate, discrete portions----”
Commonwealth v. Saranchak,
Clinton asks us to focus on isolated portions of the court’s jury charge, that he claims misled and confused the jury. Our review of the charge in its entirety, however, leads us to conclude that the trial court accurately and clearly conveyed the applicable law. We will, however, review each of Clinton’s alleged errors.
First, Clinton claims that the court erred in giving the jury instructions on the use of Jacobs’s prior inconsistent statements. The court stated that only the inconsistent statements made under oath at a formal proceeding could be considered as substantive evidence. N.T., supra, at 107. The court then told the jury that it could consider for impeachment purposes only the inconsistent statements Jacobs made “to his mother, the statement of [sic] Officer Ciganik, [and] the statement tо the officer at the scene. ” Id. (emphasis added). Clinton claims that the phrase “officer at the scene” is ambiguous because there was more than one officer at the scene of the shooting. We find that this instruction, however, was not ambiguous. The record shows that Detective Ciganik and Officer Morаn were the only two police officers at the scene of *394 the shooting who also testified at the trial. Id. at 62, 66-69. Because the trial court referred to Detective Ciganik by name, there was no ambiguity in the reference to Officer Moran as the “officer at the scene.”
Clinton next argues that the trial court’s categorization of Jacobs’s comment that “he shot me” as a prior inconsistent statement improperly implied that Jacobs was referring to Clinton. Clinton is incorrect because Jacobs’s statement was inconsistent with his trial testimony that he did not know who his attacker was. The trial court did not err in instructing the jury to consider that statement made immediately after the shooting in deciding whether to believe Jacobs’s trial testimony that he did not know the identity of his assailant.
Next, Clinton complains that the following instruction regarding Jacobs’s credibility was confusing and erroneous:
Yоu determine whether he initially accurately identified the defendant as the man who shot him and then over a period of time decided for whatever reasons to change his testimony. He was truthful when he spoke to his mother in the hospital, to the officers and at the time of the рreliminary hearing and now for some reason is not telling the truth or whether, as he said, I was angry at the defendant and I decided to blame him for it because we were arguing. So he really doesn’t know who shot him. In evaluating those statements, consider life as you know it and have experienced it, consider his maturity____ You know that this is not a case of strangers drinking but of a kid drinking, arguing. Consider all of these things in evaluating his testimony.
Id. at 109.
Clinton argues that we should read isolated portions of this statement out of context and conclude that this instruction was confusing and misleading. When we read the identified portions in the context of the jury charge as a whole, however, we conclude that the jury was clearly and accurately instructed on what factors to consider in evaluating the two *395 conflicting statements of Jacobs regarding the identity of his attacker.
Clinton next cоntends that the court’s statement regarding conflicting evidence, “If you find conflicts in the testimony, clearly you must find conflicts in this case,” id. at 110, was confusing to the jury. Again, however, Clinton has isolated a portion of the jury charge out of context and argued that it constitutes reversible error. In the sentence immediately following the one identified by Clinton, the trial court went on to explain: “You have one statement under oath and then another statement under oath and they don’t agree. You must first try to resolve these conflicts and decide why these statements are in variance to the extent that you are able to do so. If you can’t resolve them, then you must determine which statements you do believe and which statements you don’t believe.” Id. at 110-11. Again, we find that this instruction, considered in relation to the charge as a whole, accurately and clearly guided the jury on how to resolve conflicting testimony.
Finally, Clinton argues that the court’s instruction regarding the first count of assault was in error. The court stated:
The first count of aggravated assault is defined as follows:
There are three elements.
That the defendant caused serious bodily injury to Charles Jacоbs.
Two, that the defendant acted intentionally, knowingly or recklessly under circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human life....
Once again, the first count has two elements.
Id. at 113-14 (emphasis added).
After review, we conclude that this instruction regarding aggravated assault clearly and accurately apprised the jury of the law regarding this offense. The court accurately described the two elements of the crime in language that the jury could easily understand. We will not reverse because the court initially made an erroneous statement that
*396
there were three elements to this offense.
See Prosdocimo, supra,
at 154,
Judgment of sentence AFFIRMED.
