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Commonwealth v. Peters, K., Aplt.

Docket 1 MAP 2025

Court of record · Indexed in NoticeRegistry archive · AI-enriched for research

Criminal AppealAffirmed
Filed
Jurisdiction
Pennsylvania
Court
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
Type
Lead Opinion
Disposition
Affirmed
Judge
Dougherty, Kevin M.
Citation
No. 1 MAP 2025 (Pa. May 4, 2026)
Docket
1 MAP 2025

Appeal from the Superior Court affirming the judgment of sentence of the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas in a criminal case.

Summary

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court affirmed the Superior Court's decision upholding Kevin R. Peters’s convictions for crimes including two counts each of third-degree murder and aggravated assault after he drove while heavily intoxicated and caused a fatal crash. The Court resolved a legal dispute whether DUI cases require a different malice standard and held they do not: malice exists when a defendant consciously disregards an unjustified and extremely high risk that his conduct might cause death or serious bodily injury. The Court found the evidence — extended drinking, breaking a parking gate, erratic high-speed driving, and reaching for a phone while driving 115 mph with a .151 BAC — met that standard.

Issues Decided

  • Whether Pennsylvania law requires a DUI-specific, heightened malice standard (i.e., that death or serious injury be essentially certain) for murder and aggravated assault convictions based on intoxicated driving.
  • Whether the evidence was sufficient to prove malice for third-degree murder and aggravated assault where the defendant drove while heavily intoxicated and caused a fatal collision.

Court's Reasoning

The Court held the traditional Pennsylvania malice standard applies across contexts: malice exists when a defendant consciously disregards an unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions might cause death or serious bodily injury. O’Hanlon and Packer did not create a separate DUI-only test but instead reiterated that heightened recklessness is required for aggravated assault and murder where appropriate. Applying that standard, Peters’s prolonged intoxication, destructive conduct at the garage, erratic high-speed driving, missed exits, and reaching for his phone while traveling about 115 mph with a .151 BAC established conscious disregard of an extremely high risk, so the evidence was sufficient.

Authorities Cited

  • Commonwealth v. Packer168 A.3d 161 (Pa. 2017)
  • Commonwealth v. O’Hanlon653 A.2d 616 (Pa. 1995)
  • Commonwealth v. Taylor337 A.2d 562 (Pa. 1975)

Parties

Appellant
Kevin R. Peters
Appellee
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
Judge
Justice Dougherty
Judge
Chief Justice Todd
Judge
Justice Donohue
Judge
Justice Wecht
Judge
Justice Mundy
Judge
Justice Brobson

Key Dates

Decision date
2026-05-04
Superior Court decision affirmed
2024-08-07
Judgment of sentence entered (trial court)
2021-10-15
Argument date
2025-11-18

What You Should Do Next

  1. 1

    Consult appellate counsel about rehearing

    If counsel believes there are grounds, consider filing a petition for rehearing in the Pennsylvania Supreme Court within the court's deadline to preserve issues or seek correction of any perceived errors.

  2. 2

    Evaluate federal collateral review options

    If there are potential federal constitutional claims, consult counsel about the possibility of filing a federal habeas petition; be mindful of procedural time limits and exhaustion requirements.

  3. 3

    Prepare for continued incarceration consequences

    The convictions and sentence are affirmed, so coordinate with defense counsel to review sentencing, classification, and post-conviction relief planning while incarcerated.

Frequently Asked Questions

What did the court decide about the malice standard in DUI cases?
The court decided there is no special malice rule for DUI cases; the same malice standard applies in all contexts: a defendant must have consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk that their conduct might cause death or serious bodily injury.
Why was Peters’s conduct considered malicious?
Because he drank for hours, broke a parking gate to drive out, drove erratically and at very high speed, missed exits, and reached for his phone while driving about 115 mph with a .151 blood-alcohol level, demonstrating conscious disregard of an extremely high risk of harm.
Who is affected by this ruling?
This ruling affects defendants and prosecutors in Pennsylvania criminal cases by confirming that DUI-related killings are evaluated under the same malice standard as other kinds of dangerous conduct, not a separate DUI-specific test.
What happens next for Peters?
The Supreme Court affirmed the convictions and sentence, so Peters remains convicted; any further relief would depend on other post-conviction procedures such as petitions for rehearing or collateral review if available.
Can this decision be appealed further?
No: this is the final decision of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court on state law matters; further review to the U.S. Supreme Court would be possible only on pertinent federal constitutional issues, if any are presented and accepted.

The above suggestions and answers are AI-generated for informational purposes only. They may contain errors. NoticeRegistry assumes no responsibility for their accuracy. Consult a qualified attorney before relying on them.

Full Filing Text
[J-89-2025]
                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                                 MIDDLE DISTRICT

TODD, C.J., DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, BROBSON, McCAFFERY, JJ.


  COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,                      :   No. 1 MAP 2025
                                                     :
                        Appellee                     :   Appeal from the Order of the
                                                     :   Superior Court at No. 2591 EDA
                                                     :   2021, entered on August 7, 2024,
                v.                                   :   Affirming the Judgment of Sentence
                                                     :   of the Bucks County Court of
                                                     :   Common Pleas, Criminal Division,
  KEVIN R. PETERS,                                   :   at No. CP-09-CR-0003901-2020,
                                                     :   entered on October 15, 2021.
                        Appellant                    :
                                                     :   ARGUED: November 18, 2025


                                           OPINION


 JUSTICE DOUGHERTY                                                 DECIDED: May 4, 2026
        Appellant Kevin Peters killed two people, and seriously injured two others, while

 driving under the influence of alcohol (DUI). He was convicted, inter alia, of two counts

 each of third-degree murder and aggravated assault, crimes requiring the element of

 malice. We granted discretionary review to consider the standard for malice in the context

 of DUI. Peters claims this Court’s precedent created a DUI-specific standard for malice,

 requiring proof that death or serious bodily injury is not just likely, but “essentially certain

 to occur.” See Peters’s Brief at 18-19, quoting Commonwealth v. O’Hanlon, 653 A.2d

 616, 618 (Pa. 1995), and Commonwealth v. Packer, 168 A.3d 161, 170 (Pa. 2017). We

 disagree. Regardless of the particular circumstances of the crime — whether it involved

 DUI, a shooting, or some other conduct — the standard for malice remains the same.

 Malice is present if the defendant consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely
high risk that his actions might cause death or serious bodily injury. The facts here readily

satisfied this standard. Peters drank heavily for hours, raised his blood alcohol content

to almost twice the legal limit, turned down an offer for a ride home, broke his car out of

a parking garage, drove recklessly on an actively used highway, sped at well over 100

miles per hour, looked away from the road as he searched for his phone, and crashed

into the rear of a car driving in the righthand lane with its emergency lights activated,

causing the other vehicle to collide with a concrete wall and burst into flames.

Accordingly, we affirm the order of the Superior Court, which affirmed Peters’s judgment

of sentence.

                                     I. Background

        On December 5, 2019, Peters attended an office holiday party at Ruth’s Chris

Steak House in Philadelphia. The open bar event started at 5:00 p.m. and was held in a

private room. Peters drank vodka. When the event ended, around 8:00 p.m., Peters and

his co-workers moved to the public bar at Ruth’s Chris, where Peters drank bourbon.

        Around 10:00 p.m., as the group was getting ready to leave, a co-worker,

Jacquelyn Smith, offered Peters and others a ride home. Peters declined. Instead, he

asked Smith to drop him and another co-worker at a nearby bar called Rogue’s Gallery.

Video surveillance footage from Rogue’s Gallery showed Peters drinking beer there until

midnight, when Peters chugged the rest of his beer and left the bar.

        Although Peters ordinarily took the train to work, he had driven to work that day in

his Mazda SUV. Surveillance footage from the parking garage shows it took Peters

several minutes to operate the payment kiosk. Next, Peters had trouble exiting the

garage. He approached one of the exit lanes but then reversed and drove to the other

lane.   For unknown reasons, the mechanical arm blocking the exit did not move.

Undeterred, Peters reversed again, got out of his car, and manually lifted one of the




                                      [J-89-2025] - 2
mechanical arms high enough to allow his car through, breaking the mechanical arm in

the process. He returned to his car and drove off, leaving the visibly-broken mechanical

arm dangling in his wake. When Peters reached the end of the exit ramp, the garage

door began to lift, but Peters’s car did not sit still. His car repeatedly shifted backward

and forward while he waited.

       Out of the garage, Peters rolled through a stop sign and then drove to and entered

Interstate 95 (“I-95”), the primary north-south highway on the East Coast of the United

States. Video surveillance footage from the highway showed Peters straddling the fog

line at one point and exiting in New Jersey without using a turn signal. However, Peters

immediately changed course, driving back onto the highway to return to Pennsylvania.

His driving was so erratic that two people called 911. One caller, Nicholas Hafto, reported

he was driving on I-95 when a Mazda passed by at a high rate of speed and nearly

sideswiped Hafto’s car. Hafto slowed down to keep his distance from the Mazda, but

noticed the Mazda was randomly changing speeds — shifting between speeds much

faster or much slower than the speed limit. Then the Mazda exited the highway in New

Jersey. According to Hafto, the Mazda exited so “abrupt[ly]” that its driver had to slam

the brakes, and Hafto thought for a moment that the Mazda was “going to hit the exit[.]”

N.T. Trial, 9/13/21, at 140-41.

       Scott Emrick also called 911 and reported a Mazda was “swerving left and right.”

Trial Court Op. at 1 (unpaginated), quoting Ex. C-3. According to Emrick, the Mazda’s

speed was “erratic[,] . . . [t]he headlights were turned off,”1 and the Mazda made “a very

sharp exit” off I-95. N.T. Trial, 9/14/21, at 7, 10. In addition, an ambulance driver,


1 After the crash, an expert examined the Mazda and confirmed the automatic headlight

switch in the Mazda was turned on. However, for unknown reasons, the Mazda’s taillights
were off. The police could not test the lights due to the car’s extensive damage, but
surveillance footage of the Mazda showed its headlights on and taillights off.


                                     [J-89-2025] - 3
Edmonde Sestini, Jr., was driving approximately 60 miles per hour on I-95 when a Mazda

“came flying past [him.]” N.T. Trial, 9/13/21, at 127.

       At approximately 1:00 a.m., Juan Tavarez was driving home from work on I-95 with

his co-worker, Claribel Dominguez, and sons, Charlys and Juan Jose Tavarez Santelises

(“Charlys” and “Juan Jose”). Because of a slight whistle coming from his car, Tavarez

was driving at, or just below, the 55-mile-per-hour speed limit, with his flashers on, in the

righthand lane. Peters crashed into the back of Tavarez’s car. Tavarez later said it “felt

like a bomb went [off.]” N.T. Trial, 9/14/21, at 134. Tavarez’s car crashed into a concrete

wall and was soon engulfed in flames. Tavarez and Charlys were able to escape the

burning car; Juan Jose and Dominguez were not. First responders could not get near the

car to assist the victims or retrieve their bodies until the fire was out. A medical examiner

later determined Juan Jose and Dominguez both died from thermal burns. The surviving

victims each suffered serious burns and injuries.

       Peters had to be removed from his car and dragged to safety. Testing revealed

his blood alcohol content (“BAC”) was .151, 2 nearly double the legal limit. 3

       Corporal Brianne Glad, an accident reconstruction expert, examined data from the

Mazda’s “black box,” which revealed Peters had been driving 113 miles per hour five




2 Donna Papsun, a toxicology expert, later testified at Peters’s trial that a person with a

BAC of .151 would not be capable of safe driving, as they can experience “increased
diminishment of attention, judgment, [and] control[,]” as well as “some incoordination,
delayed perception, delayed information processing, delayed decision-making, and . . .
delayed reaction time[.]” N.T. Trial, 9/15/21, at 148-49. As an example of this delayed
perception, Papsun said a person fiddling with their radio “may not realize how long [they]
are fiddling around[.]” Id. at 151.
3 “An individual may not drive, operate or be in actual physical control of the movement

of a vehicle after imbibing a sufficient amount of alcohol such that the alcohol
concentration in the individual’s blood or breath is at least 0.08%[.]” 75 Pa.C.S.
§3802(a)(2).


                                      [J-89-2025] - 4
seconds before the crash, 4 with his seatbelt unbuckled. Peters had been using 83

percent of throttle, meaning he had “pushed down [the pedal] to a decent extent to get

those speeds.” N.T. Trial, 9/15/21, at 88. Half a second before the crash, Peters

accelerated to 115 miles per hour — more than double the 55-mile-per-hour speed limit.

He pressed the brake, at most, four-tenths of a second before the crash. 5 Corporal Glad

also determined “[n]o roadway issues or deformations were located at the scene that

would have caused or contributed to this collision.” Id. at 96.

       At Peters’s jury trial, he testified he had driven to work that day because he had to

drop off his daughter at daycare. Since his wife also planned to attend an office holiday

party that night, and would be staying overnight at a friend’s house in Philadelphia after

the event, Peters had arranged for their daughter to stay overnight in New Jersey at his

mother-in-law’s house. 6 Peters confirmed he had multiple drinks over the course of the

night, but “felt fine to drive.” N.T. Trial, 9/16/21, at 78. Instead, he blamed his early

problems at the parking garage on his inexperience driving to work. See id. at 74

(explaining he had to go “back [to the payment kiosk] to get [his] actual credit card receipt

so [he] could expense it”); id. at 76 (“I had never parked in that garage before, so I was

probably a little confused on . . . which gate to go out”). When the mechanical arm

wouldn’t rise, Peters “th[ought he] tried to call for help . . . and there was no response,”

so he resorted to force because he “didn’t want to leave [his] car” in the garage. Id. Once


4 Corporal Glad testified that the industry standard leaves a four-mile-per-hour margin of

error, meaning the slowest Peters could have been driving at the five-second-mark was
109 miles per hour.
5 The Mazda’s black box records data in half-second intervals, so Corporal Glad testified

that Peters pressed the brake “between zero and .4 seconds prior to the crash[.]” N.T.
Trial, 9/15/21, at 91.
6 Peters’s wife and mother-in-law also took the stand and gave similar accounts.
Additionally, Peters presented five friends or family members as character witnesses.


                                      [J-89-2025] - 5
on the highway, he claimed he drove “the speed limit so that [he] wouldn’t attract any

attention[,]” and sped up only “to pass other cars.” Id. at 78.

       According to Peters, he had originally intended to drive to his mother-in-law’s

house in New Jersey and spend the night there. However, he called his mother-in-law

and didn’t receive a response. Only when he was exiting the highway did he decide he

did not want to risk waking his family, so he turned around and drove back towards his

home in Pennsylvania. But Peters missed his exit. 7 According to Peters, he decided to

check the GPS on his phone to find “a quick way to either turn back around or just go

home from the next exit[.]” Id. at 81. But the phone was in Peters’s backpack on the

passenger side floor. Peters testified he “thought it would be okay to reach down for a

moment[,]” so he unbuckled his seatbelt and started rummaging for his phone. Id. at 91.

When he glanced up and saw the victim’s car, Peters “tried to turn the wheel and hit the

brakes[,]” but couldn’t avoid the crash. Id. at 82.

       On September 17, 2021, the jury found Peters guilty of fourteen offenses, including

two counts each of third-degree murder and aggravated assault. 8               The trial court

separately convicted Peters of two counts of DUI and four summary offenses. 9 The court

later sentenced Peters to an aggregate term of 19 ½ to 39 years in prison. Peters

appealed.




7 Peters was not new to the area.    He had lived in Bucks County for six years.
8 The jury also found Peters guilty of two counts each of homicide by vehicle while DUI,

aggravated assault by vehicle while DUI, homicide by vehicle, aggravated assault by
vehicle, and recklessly endangering another person.
9 Specifically, driving within a single lane, following too closely, driving a vehicle at a safe

speed, and reckless driving.


                                       [J-89-2025] - 6
       A divided, en banc panel of the Superior Court affirmed the judgment of sentence

in an opinion authored by Judge Murray. 10 See Commonwealth v. Peters, 320 A.3d 1231

(Pa. Super. 2024) (en banc).        Relying heavily on Packer, the five-judge majority

concluded the evidence was sufficient to prove Peters acted with malice. According to

the majority, “the Packer Court observed that ‘an impaired driver who causes the death

of another does not typically act with the requisite malice to support convictions of third-

degree murder and aggravated assault.’” Id. at 1237, quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at 166.

Rather, the majority noted that Packer held:

       [M]alice is present under circumstances where a defendant did not have an
       intent to kill, but nevertheless displayed a conscious disregard for an
       unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions might cause death or
       serious bodily harm.
Id. at 1238, quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at 168. The majority explained that, under Packer,

malice “requires a higher degree of culpability” than “mere recklessness”; it “entails ‘an

element of deliberation or conscious disregard of danger.’” Id., quoting Packer, 168 A.3d

at 170. This means

       the offensive act must be performed under circumstances which almost
       assure that injury or death will ensue. The recklessness must, therefore,
       be such that life threatening injury is essentially certain to occur. This state
       of mind is, accordingly, equivalent to that which seeks to cause injury.
Id., quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at 170 (emphasis omitted). Thus, the majority said, “the

requisite mens rea is only met in circumstances where ‘the defendant could reasonably

anticipate that serious bodily injury or death would be the likely and logical consequence

of his actions . . . [but] the consequence was ignored.’” Id., quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at

170. The majority noted “the totality of the evidence was sufficient” to prove malice in

Packer as the defendant there “knew from warning labels that [the aerosol she huffed]


10Then-President Judge Panella and Judges Stabile, Nichols, and King joined the
majority opinion.


                                       [J-89-2025] - 7
was not intended to be ingested” and “had a known history of becoming unconscious from

huffing.” Id., quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at 171 (emphasis omitted).

       Although “[t]his case is factually distinct from Packer,” the majority concluded, “like

Packer, . . . ‘[t]his is not a typical case of ordinary recklessness that arises when someone

chooses to drive while intoxicated.’” Id. at 1241, quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at 171.

Instead, “[Peters] maliciously exhibited sustained recklessness over a considerable

period of time prior to the fatal crash, despite an obvious risk of harm to other motorists

and the general public.” Id. at 1243, citing Commonwealth v. Kling, 731 A.2d 145, 149

(Pa. Super. 1999) (some emphasis omitted). 11 The majority explained:

       [Peters], after drinking to excess over several hours, attempted to exit his
       parking garage, but could not operate the garage’s payment machine.
       [Peters] then damaged the gate when he forcibly opened it to exit. [Peters’s]
       difficulties in exiting the garage certainly alerted him that he was too
       intoxicated to drive safely. Yet he was not deterred.
       After [Peters] began driving, numerous instances alerted him that
       continuing to drive, while significantly impaired, posed an extremely high
       and unjustifiable risk to others. Indeed, [Peters] violated numerous traffic
       laws, drove recklessly for nearly an hour before the collision, and narrowly
       avoided hitting two other motorists on I-95 (prompting both motorists to call
       911 to report [Peters’s] hazardous driving). [Peters] twice missed his
       intended exit on I-95, despite having lived in the area for six
       years. Immediately before the collision, the intoxicated [Peters] admittedly
       took his eyes off the road while driving over 100 mph, and reached over to
       the passenger-side floorboard to retrieve his phone.




11 In Kling, the Superior Court held “a conviction based on malice is appropriate where

evidence demonstrates the element of sustained recklessness by a driver in the face
of an obvious risk of harm to his victims.” Kling, 731 A.2d at 149, citing Commonwealth
v. Comer, 716 A.2d 593, 597 (Pa. 1998) (emphasis in original). Like Peters, Kling was
convicted of third-degree murder and related offenses after he struck another car. Before
the crash, Kling had been racing down a curvy mountain road he had driven on before.
He “passed five cautionary signs warning him to slow down around the treacherous
curves[,]” and “nearly hit [a motorist] driving in the opposite lane of travel[,]” all of which
“warned [Kling] his conduct was nearly certain to result in a serious or fatal disaster.” Id.
at 150.

                                       [J-89-2025] - 8
Id. (citations and emphasis omitted).      “Under the totality of the circumstances,” the

majority determined “the evidence was sufficient to demonstrate [Peters] ‘displayed a

conscious disregard for an unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions might cause

death or serious bodily harm.’” Id., quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at 168. 12

       Then-Judge, now President Judge Lazarus, dissented. 13 Most notably, the dissent

disagreed with the majority’s definition of malice. The dissent concluded “[i]t is insufficient

to prove that someone’s bad decisions could have, may have, or likely would result in

death or serious bodily injury.” Id. at 1252 (Lazarus, J., dissenting), citing Packer, supra,

and O’Hanlon, supra (emphasis in original). Rather, in the dissent’s view, “malice, in the

DUI context, requires that the recklessness exhibited must involve an awareness that the

conduct is essentially certain to cause the death or serious bodily injury.” Id., citing

Packer, supra, and O’Hanlon, supra (emphasis in original).

       Turning to the present facts, the dissent concluded “the Commonwealth failed to

present sufficient evidence of the ‘warning’ requirement of malice necessary for third-

degree murder and aggravated assault in the DUI context.” Id. at 1253. In the dissent’s

view, “Peters’[s] inability to operate the parking garage kiosks is not a ‘warning’

contemplated by our case law.”        Id. The dissent also noted “the record is silent on

whether Peters had a history of drunk driving.”           Id.   See also id. (rejecting the

Commonwealth’s suggestion that “‘every adult’ knows the dangers of alcohol” as “driving


12 The majority distinguished Comer, 716 A.2d at 597 (finding insufficient evidence of

malice where Comer was driving drunk when “his car rubbed the curb of the sidewalk and
the accident ensued immediately thereafter”). “Unlike Comer,” the majority explained,
“the crash here did not ensue immediately after the driver became aware of his life-
threatening conduct. To the contrary, [Peters],” like the offender in Kling, “had adequate
time to calculate and reflect upon the consequences of his reckless conduct, thus
rendering the choice to continue it malicious.” Peters, 320 A.3d at 1241, quoting Kling,
731 A.2d at 150 (emphasis omitted).
13 Judges Dubow, Kunselman, and McLaughlin joined the dissent.




                                       [J-89-2025] - 9
while intoxicated by itself does not create the requisite malice”). The dissent dismissed

the 911 calls as “meaningless” because “[n]either of those phone calls communicated the

warning to Peters himself,” id., and deemed “Smith’s offer of a ride home” immaterial, see

id. at 1254 (“she offered a ride to every co-worker at the party” and “did not caution Peters

that he had consumed too much alcohol or warn him not to drive”) (emphasis omitted).

The dissent also opined “Peters’[s] decision to drive his vehicle instead of taking a train

or taxi, and to use a highway rather than a local road, is of no moment” as “the mere

decision to drive intoxicated does not satisfy the malice requirement.” Id. at 1252.

       On the other hand, the dissent found Peters’s application of the brakes shortly

before the crash to militate against a finding of malice. In the dissent’s view, this fact

“tends to show that he was trying to avoid a collision,” and broke any “chain of ‘sustained

recklessness.’” Id. at 1255 (citations and emphasis omitted). 14 Therefore, the dissent

insisted the Commonwealth presented insufficient evidence to prove malice.

       Four of the five judges in the majority joined a separate concurring opinion,

authored by Judge Stabile, addressing issues raised by the dissent.            To start, the

concurrence “disagree[d] that [Packer] supports the [d]issent’s position.” Id. at 1244

(Stabile, J., concurring). According to the concurrence, “Packer explained that ‘our courts

have consistently held that malice is present under circumstances where a defendant

did not have an intent to kill, but nevertheless displayed a conscious disregard for an


14 The dissent disagreed with the majority’s reliance on Kling.  Unlike Kling, the dissent
says, Peters “was reported driving at speeds both below and above the posted speed
limit; was seen exiting the highway safely; and, both Hafto and Emrick reported driving in
a way to avoid Peters.” Peters, 320 A.3d at 1256. Thus, in the dissent’s view, Peters did
not demonstrate the “sustained recklessness” at issue in Kling. Id. Rather, the dissent
believed Peters’s case was more similar to the Superior Court’s decision in
Commonwealth v. Dellavecchia, 725 A.2d 186, 188-89 (Pa. Super. 1998) (concluding the
evidence was insufficient to prove malice where Dellavecchia, with a blood-alcohol level
of .033%, “drove at an excessive rate of speed,” and “cut off other cars[,]” but applied
brakes before his car crashed “in an effort to avoid impact”).


                                      [J-89-2025] - 10
unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions might cause death or serious bodily

harm.’” Id., quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at 168 (emphasis supplied by the concurrence).

Although Packer also used the “essentially certain” language emphasized by the dissent,

the concurrence argued “this was not the final word in Packer.” Id. at 1245. Rather,

Packer “went on to describe malice as a state of mind in which ‘the defendant could

reasonably anticipate that serious bodily injury or death would be the likely and logical

consequence of his actions . . . [but] the consequence was ignored.’” Id., quoting Packer,

168 A.3d at 170. Then, “[a]t the conclusion of the opinion, when issuing its holding, the

Packer Court again repeated the malice standard as requiring a conscious disregard for

the risks of conduct that ‘might cause a death or serious personal injury.’” Id., quoting

Packer, 168 A.3d at 172. “Accordingly,” in the concurrence’s view, the Packer Court did

not have “any intention of applying a more exacting standard for malice as stated by the

[d]issent here.” Id.

       Next, the concurrence argued the dissent erred “in interpreting our precedent to

require that advance ‘warning’ or ‘notice’ must have been given to [Peters] prior to the

accident in order for a finding of malice to be made.” Id. at 1246. According to the

concurrence, “if a defendant receives a ‘warning’ about the risks of his conduct[,]” then

that evidence may certainly be probative of malice.        Id. at 1247.   However, in the

concurrence’s view, “that is far different than a judicial rule that prohibits a finding of

malice where the defendant did not receive warning from a third-party regarding the risks

of his conduct. As such a rule would depart from our established precedent and constitute

judicial fact-finding,” the concurrence opined “it was properly rejected by the [m]ajority.”

Id. (emphasis omitted). See also id. at 1249 (“Drunk driving is so inherently dangerous

that its deadly consequences cannot reasonably come as a surprise to those who




                                     [J-89-2025] - 11
knowingly expose others to that risk.”), citing O’Hanlon, 653 A.2d at 618-19 (Papadakos,

J., dissenting). 15

       Finally, the concurrence opined that the dissent had “usurped the role of the fact-

finder by drawing inferences in [Peters’s] favor[.]”     Id. at 1247.    For instance, the

concurrence argued “the jury was entitled to consider th[e] evidence [of Peters’s braking]

in a more culpable light” than the one drawn by the dissent. Id. In the concurrence’s

view, “it was just as probable that [Peters] touched the brake pedal inadvertently while

reaching for his phone on the floor of his vehicle.” Id. at 1248. Regardless, it would have

been “impossible for nearly any driver to maintain control” at Peters’s speeds, so the

concurrence concluded “[t]he jury was in no way bound to find a lack of malice simply

because [Peters] made, at most, a token effort to avert disaster.” Id.

       We granted discretionary review to consider the following questions, as stated by

Peters:

       1. This Court has expressly held that the malice standard for drunk driving
          homicides and assaults is “recklessness . . . such that life threatening
          injury is essentially certain to occur. This state of mind is, accordingly,
          equivalent to that which seeks to cause injury.” [Packer, 168 A.3d at
          170.] Did the Superior Court majority err when it rejected that holding
          and approved and applied a lesser standard, to wit “a conscious
          disregard for an unjustified and extremely high risk” of death or serious
          injury?
       2. Under the proper standard set forth in Packer, was the evidence
          insufficient to prove malice?
Commonwealth v. Peters, 332 A.3d 27 (Pa. 2025) (per curiam) (emphasis omitted).




15 The concurrence also disagreed with the dissent’s “statement that [Peters’s] life-
threatening decisions leading up to the accident were irrelevant to the issue of malice.”
Id. at 1245-46 (emphasis omitted). Although Peters’s decision to drive while intoxicated,
standing alone, could not prove malice, the concurrence believed “its contribution to the
totality of the facts in a case may lend itself to such a finding.” Id. at 1246.

                                     [J-89-2025] - 12
                                      II. Discussion

       The meaning of “malice” for purposes of the crimes of third-degree murder and

aggravated assault is a question of law. As such, our standard of review is de novo and

our scope of review is plenary with respect to this issue.          Likewise, “[e]videntiary

sufficiency is a question of law and, therefore, our standard of review is de novo and our

scope of review is plenary.” Commonwealth v. Chisebwe, 310 A.3d 262, 267 (Pa. 2024),

quoting Commonwealth v. Smith, 234 A.3d 576, 581 (Pa. 2020).

       The principles governing sufficiency review are well-established:

       In conducting sufficiency review, we consider whether the evidence
       introduced at trial and all reasonable inferences derived therefrom, viewed
       in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth as verdict winner, are
       sufficient to establish the elements of the offense beyond a reasonable
       doubt. Our review does not involve reweighing the evidence and
       substituting our judgment for that of the fact-finder. In addition, the facts
       and circumstances need not be absolutely incompatible with the
       defendant’s innocence; rather, the question of any doubt is for the fact-
       finder unless the evidence is so weak and inconclusive that as a matter of
       law no probability of fact can be drawn from the combined circumstances.
Id. at 268 (internal quotations and citations omitted).

                                         A. Malice

                                 1. Parties’ Arguments

       To start, Peters claims the majority applied the wrong standard for malice. He

contends the “historic definition” of malice “for non-DUI offenses” provides that “‘malice is

present under circumstances where a defendant did not have an intent to kill, but

nevertheless displayed a conscious disregard for an unjustified and extremely high risk

that his actions might cause death or serious bodily harm.’” Peters’s Brief at 19 n.3,

quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at 168. However, Peters claims our decision in O’Hanlon

established a different “standard for malice in the context of impaired drunk driving

assaults[.]” Id. at 18 (brackets omitted). There, by Peters’s reading, we held malice is




                                      [J-89-2025] - 13
present in a DUI-related case only if “life threatening injury is essentially certain to occur.”

Id., quoting O’Hanlon, 653 A.2d at 618.

       Peters claims this Court “reaffirmed” this “DUI-specific” standard for malice twenty

years later in Packer. Id. According to Peters, “the Packer Court expressly adopted and

applied O’Hanlon, again stating that” malice requires proof “life threatening injury is

essentially certain to occur.” Id. at 19, quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at 170. Although “the

Superior Court majority [here] . . . quot[ed] the ‘essentially certain to occur’ language”

from O’Hanlon and Packer, Peters claims the majority erred in failing to apply that

standard. Id. at 20. Instead, the majority “rel[ied] on the more general malice language

from Packer that[,]” in Peters’s view, applies only to “non-DUI” crimes. Id.

       The Commonwealth, on the other hand, argues this Court “did not establish two

separate standards of malice[.]” Commonwealth’s Brief at 14. Rather, this Court held

Packer “is one of the few [DUI] cases that meets the standard of malice.” Id. at 21,

quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at 172 (emphasis supplied by the Commonwealth).                   The

Commonwealth reads this language as describing a single standard for malice,

regardless of whether or not the crime involves DUI. See id. at 26 (“th[e] historical

discussion by the Court in Packer discussed only the single standard of malice, because

there is only one standard”) (emphasis omitted). 16 According to the Commonwealth, in

cherry-picking only “a single sentence” from Packer, Peters ignores its “ultimate holding,”

which said: “[t]he standard for malice, enunciated in [Commonwealth v. Drum, 58 Pa. 9

(1868)], reiterated in O’Hanlon and reaffirmed today requires recklessness of

consequences and the conscious disregard for an unjustified and extremely high risk that

16 The Commonwealth also argues that creating separate standards for malice would be

inconsistent with the plain text of the third-degree murder and aggravated assault
statutes, neither of which include any language specific to DUI. See Commonwealth’s
Brief at 22 (“The crimes are not named Third-Degree Murder — DUI Crash or Aggravated
Assault — DUI Crash”).


                                       [J-89-2025] - 14
a chosen course of conduct might cause a death or serious personal injury.’” Id. at 17,

quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at 172 (emphasis and footnote omitted). This Court recited that

same standard, the Commonwealth says, “in finding the defendant in Packer acted with

malice[.]” Id. at 18, quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at 171 (“Packer consciously disregarded

an unjustified and extremely high risk that her chosen course of conduct might cause a

death or serious bodily injury.”) (emphasis omitted). Thus, in the Commonwealth’s view,

Peters is arguing that “a single line of Packer . . . upended” more than a century of

“precedence to create a new and separate definition of malice for only certain

circumstances (DUI related cases),” and yet this Court ended the opinion by not applying

“this newly developed standard[.]” Id. at 27.

       Although the Commonwealth acknowledges Packer included the “‘essentially

certain’ phrasing,” the Commonwealth claims the language “that immediately follows” is

“detrimental to [Peters’s] claim[.]” Id. at 18-19, quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at 170 (“The

O’Hanlon Court found that the requisite mens rea is only met in circumstances where ‘the

defendant could reasonably anticipate that serious bodily injury or death would be the

likely and logical consequence of his actions . . . [but] the consequence was ignored.’”).

Therefore, the Commonwealth argues, the Superior Court majority properly interpreted

Packer as affirming the single, “unwavering standard of malice[.]” Id. at 19.

       In reply, Peters argues “the ‘essentially certain to occur’ threshold was core to the

holding [of Packer, so] the words are not dicta, must have meaning, and must be applied

in future cases.” Reply Brief at 2. According to Peters, “[t]he Packer Court used ‘DUI

context’” as a caption “for the entirety of its analysis, one that expressly applies [to] the

‘essentially certain to occur’ standard[.]” Id. at 5, quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at 170 (“In

the DUI context, this Court has held that the decision to drive while under the influence




                                      [J-89-2025] - 15
of alcohol and/or a controlled substance does not, standing alone, constitute malice.”)

(emphasis supplied by Peters).

                                       2. Analysis

       There are three degrees of murder under Pennsylvania law. First-degree murder

is a murder “committed by an intentional killing.” 18 Pa.C.S. §2502(a). Second-degree

murder is a murder “committed while [the] defendant was engaged as a principal or an

accomplice in the perpetration of a felony.” 18 Pa.C.S. §2502(b). 17 Third-degree murder,

the degree of murder for which Peters was convicted, is defined by exclusion as “[a]ll

other kinds of murder[.]” 18 Pa.C.S. §2502(c). This means “[t]hird-degree murder is a

killing with malice that is not intentional” or committed in perpetration of a felony.

Commonwealth v. Yard, 323 A.3d 762, 765 n.4 (Pa. 2024).              A person is guilty of

aggravated assault, the other crime at issue here, if he “attempts to cause serious bodily

injury to another, or causes such injury intentionally, knowingly or recklessly under

circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human life[.]” 18 Pa.C.S.

§2702(a)(1). 18 Crucially, “the mens rea required for a conviction of aggravated assault,

like third-degree murder, is malice; only the result of the crimes differ.” Packer, 168 A.3d

at 168, citing O’Hanlon, 653 A.2d at 618 (“Aggravated assault is, indeed, the functional

equivalent of a murder in which, for some reason, death fails to occur.”), and Kling, 731




17 “Perpetration of a felony” is defined as “[t]he act of the defendant in engaging in or

being an accomplice in the commission of, or an attempt to commit, or flight after
committing, or attempting to commit robbery, rape, or deviate sexual intercourse by force
or threat of force, arson, burglary or kidnapping.” 18 Pa.C.S. §2502(d).
18 “A person acts recklessly with respect to a material element of an offense when he

consciously disregards a substantial and unjustifiable risk that the material element exists
or will result from his conduct. The risk must be of such a nature and degree that,
considering the nature and intent of the actor’s conduct and the circumstances known to
him, its disregard involves a gross deviation from the standard of conduct that a
reasonable person would observe in the actor’s situation.” 18 Pa.C.S. §302(b)(3).

                                     [J-89-2025] - 16
A.2d at 147 (“There is no distinction between the malice essential to third[-]degree murder

and that necessary for aggravated assault.”).

      This appeal asks us to clarify the definition of malice in the context of DUI. This

Court “first provided” an “overarching definition of malice” in Drum. Packer, 168 A.3d at

168. There, this Court explained:
      [I]t is not malice in its ordinary understanding alone, a particular ill-will, a
      spite or a grudge. Malice is a legal term, implying much more. It
      comprehends not only a particular ill-will, but every case where there is
      wickedness of disposition, hardness of heart, cruelty, recklessness of
      consequences, and a mind regardless of social duty, although a particular
      person may not be intended to be injured.
Drum, 58 Pa. at 15. 19

      More recently, in Commonwealth v. Taylor, 337 A.2d 545 (Pa. 1975), this Court

explicated Drum’s broad definition of malice. In Taylor, which was also a murder case

arising from drunk driving, a four-Justice majority of the Court determined Taylor

“consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions might

cause death or serious bodily harm to another, and therefore acted maliciously.” 337

A.2d at 549 (Roberts, J., concurring, joined by Jones, C.J., and Eagen and Manderino,

JJ.), citing Wayne R. LaFave & Austin Scott, Handbook on Criminal Law, §70 (1972).

That is, a majority of the Taylor Court endorsed the view that malice is present if the

defendant consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions

might cause death or serious bodily harm. In the more than half century since Taylor, this




19 Accord, e.g., Packer, 168 A.3d at 168; Commonwealth v. Fisher, 80 A.3d 1186, 1191

(Pa. 2013); Commonwealth v. Santos, 876 A.2d 360, 363 (Pa. 2005); Commonwealth v.
Ludwig, 874 A.2d 623, 632 (Pa. 2005); Commonwealth v. Thomas, 594 A.2d 300, 301
(Pa. 1991); Commonwealth v. McGuire, 409 A.2d 313, 316 (Pa. 1979); Commonwealth
v. McLaughlin, 142 A. 213, 215 (Pa. 1928).



                                     [J-89-2025] - 17
Court has repeatedly approved this formulation of the malice standard. 20 The Superior

Court has also time and again endorsed this definition of malice. 21 Based on this ample

20 See Packer, 168 A.3d at 168 (“[O]ur courts have consistently held that malice is present

under circumstances where a defendant did not have an intent to kill, but nevertheless
displayed a conscious disregard for an unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions
might cause death or serious bodily harm.”) (quotation marks and citation omitted); id. at
172 (“The standard for malice . . . reaffirmed today requires recklessness of
consequences and the conscious disregard for an unjustified and extremely high risk that
a chosen course of conduct might cause a death or serious personal injury.”);
Commonwealth v. Roebuck, 32 A.3d 613, 615 n.4 (Pa. 2011) (“[M]alice is present under
circumstances where a defendant did not have an intent to kill, but nevertheless displayed
a conscious disregard for an unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions might
cause death or serious bodily injury.”) (quotation marks, citations, and emphasis omitted);
Santos, 876 A.2d at 364 (“Viewing this evidence in the light most favorable to the
Commonwealth as we must when reviewing a trial court’s order granting a petition for
habeas corpus, the Commonwealth clearly presented sufficient evidence to support a
prima facie finding that Santos consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely high
risk that his actions might cause death or serious bodily injury.”) (quotation marks and
citations omitted); Ludwig, 874 A.2d at 632 (“Malice . . . may be found to exist not only in
an intentional killing, but also in an unintentional homicide where the perpetrator
consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions might
cause death or serious bodily harm.”) (quotation marks, citations, and emphasis omitted);
Commonwealth v. Overby, 836 A.2d 20, 24 (Pa. 2003) (approving jury charge defining
malice as “[a] conscious disregard of an unjustified and extremely high risk that his action
might cause death or serious bodily harm”); Commonwealth v. Young, 431 A.2d 230, 232
(Pa. 1981) (“[M]alice may be found to exist not only in an intentional killing, but also in an
unintentional homicide where the perpetrator consciously disregarded an unjustified and
extremely high risk that his actions might cause death or serious bodily harm.”) (quotation
marks and citation omitted); Commonwealth v. Hare, 404 A.2d 388, 391 (Pa. 1979)
(“Malice will be found if the actor committed a killing with an intent to kill or to inflict serious
bodily harm, or consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk that his
actions might cause death or serious bodily harm.”) (citations omitted); Commonwealth
v. Garcia, 378 A.2d 1199, 1206 (Pa. 1977) (“Malice may . . . be found if, in killing another,
the defendant consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk that his
actions might cause death or serious bodily harm[.]”) (quotation marks and citations
omitted); In re Klein’s Estate, 378 A.2d 1182, 1186 n.21 (Pa. 1977) (“Malice may also be
found even if the killing was not intentional, where the perpetrator consciously
disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions might cause death or
serious bodily harm[.]”) (quotation marks and citations omitted).
21 See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Vansyckel, 341 A.3d 174, 180 (Pa. Super. 2025) (en banc)

(“Where malice is based on a reckless disregard of consequences, it must be shown that
the defendant consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk that [her]
(continued…)

                                        [J-89-2025] - 18
precedent, involving both DUI and non-DUI cases alike, the standard for malice in

Pennsylvania is clear and identical across all types of cases: malice exists if the defendant

consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions might

cause death or serious bodily harm.

       Contrary to Peters’s claims, O’Hanlon did not deviate from Taylor and its many

progeny and adopt “a distinct malice standard, one beyond that for other forms of malice

murder, in the DUI context.” Reply Brief at 4. In O’Hanlon, the appellant was “driving

while inebriated, [and] ran a red light and struck another vehicle, seriously injuring both

the other driver and himself.” 653 A.2d at 616. He was convicted of aggravated assault

and reckless endangerment. The Superior Court concluded “[O’Hanlon]’s initial act of

driving while intoxicated was . . . sufficient to render him criminally culpable, since such

behavior is a gross deviation from the standard of care a reasonable person would

observe.”   Id. at 617.   This Court “granted allocatur to determine the mens rea of

recklessness necessary to establish aggravated assault.” Id. The Court found that the

Superior Court failed to account for “the increased degree of recklessness required by

the aggravated assault statute, that is, recklessness ‘under circumstances manifesting

actions might cause death or serious bodily injury[.]”) (citation omitted); Commonwealth
v. Knox, 219 A.3d 186, 195 (Pa. Super. 2019) (“A fact-finder may find malice not only in
an intentional killing, but also in an unintentional homicide where the perpetrator
consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions might
cause death or serious bodily injury.”) (quotation marks and citation omitted);
Commonwealth v. Akhmedov, 216 A.3d 307, 322 (Pa. Super. 2019) (en banc) (“Malice
may be found where the actor consciously disregards an unjustified and extremely high
risk that the actor’s conduct might cause death or serious bodily injury.”) (quotation marks
and citation omitted); Commonwealth v. King, 990 A.2d 1172, 1177 (Pa. Super. 2010)
(same); Commonwealth v. Geiger, 944 A.2d 85, 90 (Pa. Super. 2008) (“[M]alice may be
found where the defendant has consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely high
risk that her conduct might cause death or serious injury to another.”); Commonwealth v.
Scales, 648 A.2d 1205, 1207 (Pa. Super. 1994) (“A finding of malice based on a
recklessness of consequences requires that a defendant be found to have consciously
disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions might cause death or
serious bodily injury.”) (quotation marks and citation omitted).


                                      [J-89-2025] - 19
extreme indifference to the value of human life.’” Id., citing 18 Pa.C.S. §2702(a)(1). The

O’Hanlon Court elaborated:
       [M]ere recklessness is insufficient to support a conviction for aggravated
       assault, which requires a higher degree of culpability, i.e., that which
       considers and then disregards the threat necessarily posed to human life
       by the offending conduct. There must be an element of deliberation or
       conscious disregard of danger not present to the same extent in, e.g., either
       reckless endangerment, to which [O’Hanlon] admits, or driving while
       intoxicated. Aggravated assault is a second[-]degree felony, reckless
       endangerment and driving under the influence of alcohol are second[-
       ]degree misdemeanors. The difference in grading reflects the relative
       seriousness of the crimes, and the differing levels of criminal intent involved.
       The quantum of recklessness required to prove the misdemeanors will not
       serve to support the felony. . . .

       [F]or the degree of recklessness contained in the aggravated assault statute
       to occur, the offensive act must be performed under circumstances which
       almost assure that injury or death will ensue. The recklessness must,
       therefore, be such that life threatening injury is essentially certain to occur.
       This state of mind is, accordingly, equivalent to that which seeks to cause
       injury.    Examples of such behavior make the distinction clear. In
       Commonwealth v. Daniels, . . . 354 A.2d 538 ([Pa.] 1976), appellant had
       fired a gun into a crowd; in Commonwealth v. Laing, . . . 456 A.2d 204 ([Pa.
       Super.] 1983), appellant drove his car into a crowd, after having aimed it at
       an individual; in [Commonwealth v.] Scofield, [521 A.2d 40 (Pa. Super.
       1987)], the appellant drove at a pedestrian. . . . In each of these instances,
       the defendant could reasonably anticipate that serious bodily injury or death
       would be the likely and logical consequence of his actions. In each case,
       the consequence was ignored.
Id. at 618 (emphasis in original; citations omitted). The Court concluded O’Hanlon’s

behavior, “while worthy of criminal penalty,” was “not so egregious” as to warrant a finding

of recklessness in satisfaction of the aggravated assault statute. Id.

       Thus, there is certainly nothing in O’Hanlon expressly overruling, or creating an

exception to, the Taylor line. Nor do we read O’Hanlon to have implicitly adopted a DUI-

specific malice standard sub silentio. The “distinction” addressed by O’Hanlon was not

between DUI and non-DUI cases. Peters’s Brief at 20. Rather, the distinction drawn by

the Court was between ordinary recklessness and the heightened degree of recklessness



                                      [J-89-2025] - 20
necessary to sustain a conviction of aggravated assault.         The case turned on the

language of the aggravated assault statute, not the facts of the case, and the aggravated

assault statute is, of course, not unique to DUI. That O’Hanlon happened to involve a

DUI was neither here nor there with respect to the Court’s legal elucidation of the malice

element of aggravated assault.

       Moreover, the “essentially certain to occur” language is not the meaningful

departure from the Taylor definition that Peters perceives it to be. Again, under the long

line of precedent beginning with Taylor, malice is present if the defendant consciously

disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions might cause death or

serious bodily harm. This standard is not met simply because the defendant’s actions

might cause death or serious bodily harm. The defendant’s conduct must create an

extremely high risk of such a result. In other words, his or her actions must render death

or serious injury very likely. The “essentially certain to occur” language likewise connotes

a significant likelihood of death or serious injury. If something is essentially certain to

occur, this means it is extremely likely but not guaranteed. O’Hanlon reaffirmed Taylor in

different words.

       This reading of O’Hanlon is reinforced by properly considering the “essentially

certain to occur” language in context. As Peters himself emphasizes, “[c]ontext is critical

in understanding O’Hanlon.” Peters’s Brief at 18. In the next two sentences, the O’Hanlon

Court offered examples of malicious behavior to “make the distinction [between ordinary

recklessness and recklessness sufficient to support aggravated assault] clear.”

O’Hanlon, 653 A.2d at 618. “In each of these instances,” the Court noted, “the defendant

could reasonably anticipate that serious bodily injury or death would be the likely and

logical consequence of his actions.” Id. This language too indicates malice requires a




                                     [J-89-2025] - 21
high likelihood of serious bodily injury or death, in line with the Taylor formulation. It does

not suggest a distinct and heightened malice standard particular to DUI cases.

       Indeed, just four years after O’Hanlon, this Court quoted O’Hanlon’s discussion of

the malice standard in a case that had nothing to do with DUI. See Commonwealth v.

Thompson, 739 A.2d 1023 (Pa. 1999). Thompson opened fire on a public street, killing

one victim and narrowly missing another. He was convicted, inter alia, of first-degree

murder and aggravated assault and sentenced to death. On direct appeal to this Court,

he challenged the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his aggravated assault

conviction.   This Court looked to O’Hanlon in defining the mens rea required for

aggravated assault. See id. at 1028 (“[F]or the degree of recklessness contained in the

aggravated assault statute to occur, the offensive act must be performed under

circumstances which almost assure that injury or death will ensue.”), quoting O’Hanlon,

653 A.2d at 618. Clearly, the Thompson majority, which included four members of the

majority in O’Hanlon, did not view O’Hanlon as establishing a DUI-specific standard for

malice where it quoted this case in deciding a shooting murder. 22

       Peters also misreads Packer. In Packer, the defendant huffed 23 immediately

before and while driving her car, became unresponsive as a result, and caused a fatal

collision. Packer had previously lost consciousness while huffing, and she knew huffing

could cause her to pass out. She was convicted of third-degree murder and aggravated

assault. This Court granted her request to review the issue of whether “the prosecution

22 The year prior, this Court quoted O’Hanlon in another DUI case.          See Comer, supra.
But, just like in O’Hanlon, the Court tied its description of malice to the aggravated assault
statute, not to the facts of the case. See 716 A.2d at 596 (“[F]or the degree of
recklessness contained in the aggravated assault statute to occur, the offensive act must
be performed under circumstances which almost assure that life threatening injury will
ensue.”), quoting O’Hanlon, 653 A.2d at 618.
23 “Huffing” refers to the act of inhaling noxious gas from an aerosol can to get high.   See
Packer, 168 A.3d at 162 n.1.


                                      [J-89-2025] - 22
prove[d] beyond a reasonable doubt that [she] acted with sufficient malice” to support the

convictions. Packer, 168 A.3d at 166 (quotation marks and citation omitted). As noted,

the Packer Court repeatedly endorsed the Taylor definition of malice. See id. at 168

(“[O]ur courts have consistently held that malice is present under circumstances where a

defendant did not have an intent to kill, but nevertheless displayed a conscious disregard

for an unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions might cause death or serious

bodily harm.”) (quotation marks and citation omitted); id. at 172 (“The standard for malice

. . . reaffirmed today requires recklessness of consequences and the conscious disregard

for an unjustified and extremely high risk that a chosen course of conduct might cause a

death or serious personal injury.”). Applying this standard to the facts of Packer’s case,

the Court concluded her conduct was malicious:
       This is not a typical case of ordinary recklessness that arises when
       someone chooses to drive while intoxicated. . . . Packer consciously
       disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk that her chosen course
       of conduct might cause a death or serious bodily injury. . . . Because of
       Packer’s history of losing consciousness after huffing and her knowledge of
       the immediacy of the effects of huffing on her, she could reasonably
       anticipate that serious bodily injury or death would be the likely and logical
       consequence of [her] actions . . . [but] the consequence was ignored.
Id. at 171 (quotation marks and citations omitted). Hence, Packer reaffirmed and applied

the standard, universally applicable Taylor definition of malice in a case involving DUI; it

did not adopt or endorse a distinct malice standard in the DUI context.

       In fact, while Packer quoted the “essentially certain to occur” language from

O’Hanlon in the course of summarizing that opinion, see id. at 170, this Court confirmed

O’Hanlon did not change the law or create a DUI-specific malice test. Packer summarized

the holding of O’Hanlon as providing that “the requisite mens rea is only met in

circumstances where ‘the defendant could reasonably anticipate that serious bodily injury

or death would be the likely and logical consequence of his actions . . . [but] the

consequence was ignored.’” Id. O’Hanlon “applied the longstanding definition of malice


                                     [J-89-2025] - 23
requiring a heightened level of recklessness, and applied it to the facts of th[at] case[].”

Id. at 171 (emphasis added). The longstanding definition of malice at the time of O’Hanlon

was the Taylor standard, not an entirely new, heightened DUI-only test innovated in

O’Hanlon itself. Similarly, the Packer Court noted O’Hanlon “reiterated” “[t]he standard

for malice” “requir[ing] recklessness of consequences and the conscious disregard for an

unjustified and extremely high risk that a chosen course of conduct might cause a death

or serious personal injury.” Id. at 172 (emphasis added). That is, the Packer Court

recognized O’Hanlon reaffirmed the existing Taylor definition and did not adopt a special

malice standard applicable to DUI cases only.

       We reach the same conclusion today. To put it plainly: malice is malice. The

standard for malice is the same regardless of whether the defendant drove while

intoxicated or fired a gun. Malice is present if the defendant consciously disregarded an

unjustified and extremely high risk that his chosen course of conduct might cause death

or serious bodily injury.

       The Superior Court majority applied that standard here. Relying on our decision

in Packer, the majority concluded “the evidence was sufficient to demonstrate [Peters]

‘displayed a conscious disregard for an unjustified and extremely high risk that his actions

might cause death or serious bodily harm.’” Peters, 320 A.3d at 1243, quoting Packer,

168 A.3d at 168. 24 Although the majority acknowledged “an impaired driver who causes

24 The trial court gave the jury a similar definition of malice:


       Malice is described in several ways. I have taken three separate ways as
       described from the cases in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
       The first: A killing is with malice if the defendant’s actions show his wanton
       and willful disregard of an unjustified and extremely high risk that his
       conduct would result in death or serious bodily injury to another person. In
       this form of malice, the Commonwealth need not prove that the defendant
       specifically intended to kill another person.
(continued…)

                                       [J-89-2025] - 24
the death of another does not typically act with the requisite malice to support convictions

of third-degree murder and aggravated assault[,]” the majority concluded this case, “like

Packer, . . . [‘]is not a typical case of ordinary recklessness that arises when someone

chooses to drive while intoxicated.’” Id. at 1237, 1241, quoting Packer, 168 A.3d at 166,

171. Accordingly, we hold the majority applied the correct standard for malice, and turn

below to consideration of whether the evidence was sufficient to support a finding of

malice under this proper standard.

                                      B. Application

       Peters claims the Commonwealth’s evidence was insufficient to prove malice. He

compares his case, again, to Packer, noting the defendant there “use[d] a substance that

would render her unconscious and had done so in the past.” Peters’s Brief at 25

(emphasis in original). Here, by contrast, Peters argues he had no prior history of drunk

driving, none of the videos show him “staggering or otherwise exhibiting” signs of visible

intoxication, and “[n]o one warned [him] he was too drunk to operate a car.” Id. at 23-24.

“[W]ithout horns honking, lights flashing, or other communications,” he claims his reckless

driving before the crash is inadequate “to prove . . . conscious disregard of a risk.” Id. at


       The Commonwealth must prove, however, that the defendant took action or
       engaged in conduct while consciously; that is, knowingly, disregarding the
       risk his conduct was creating and that his disregard of that risk
       demonstrated his extreme indifference to the value of human life.
       Malice has also been defined as follows: A wickedness of disposition, a
       hardness of heart, cruelty, recklessness of consequences and a mind
       regardless of social duty indicating an unjustified disregard for the
       probability of death or great bodily harm and an extreme indifference to the
       value of human life.
       The third description of malice is a conscious disregard of an unjustified and
       an extremely high risk that the defendant’s actions might cause death or
       serious bodily harm.
N.T. Trial, 9/17/21, at 72-74.


                                      [J-89-2025] - 25
28. In his view, the majority erroneously “f[ound] the amount of time [ ] Peters drove

before the accident . . . sufficient in and of itself to prove malice.” Id. at 27; see id. at 28

(“Driving drunk, whether for thirty seconds or thirty minutes, does not equate with

recklessness without more.”).

       The Commonwealth responds Peters’s “sustained recklessness” before the crash

was sufficient to prove malice. Commonwealth’s Brief at 31. The Commonwealth notes,

“after drinking for approximately seven hours,” Peters “struggl[ed] with [a] payment

machine” and broke the mechanical gate at the parking garage. Id. at 36-37. In the

Commonwealth’s view, “[t]his destruction of the arm” demonstrates “[Peters’s] utter

disregard for others” as “no average person would have made the decision to simply walk

up to the gate and destroy it[.]”       Id. at 37.    The Commonwealth argues Peters’s

recklessness continued after he exited the garage: driving through a stop sign, leaving

his taillights off, nearly striking another car, repeatedly shifting “from excessive speeding

to going well below the speed limit[,]” driving over the fog line, and “overshooting his exit

twice, once leading him into another state[.]” Id. at 38-39 (emphasis in original). Despite

those warning signs, Peters “decided it would be prudent to unbuckle his seatbelt, reach

across the car to the passenger seat floor and begin rummaging through his backpack to

find his cellphone[,]” all while driving 115 miles per hour, with a BAC nearly double the

legal limit. Id. at 39-40. To the Commonwealth, when Peters reached for his backpack,

he “might as well have been playing Russian Roulette[.]” Id. at 58. The crash, in the

Commonwealth’s eyes, was “not only foreseeable,” but an “inevitable . . . result of

[Peters’s] malicious conduct.” Id. at 43.

       We agree with the Commonwealth. Unquestionably, “the decision to drive while

under the influence of alcohol and/or a controlled substance does not, standing alone,

constitute malice.” Packer, 168 A.3d at 170. Nevertheless, there are DUI cases that




                                       [J-89-2025] - 26
meet the standard of malice. Most notably, in Packer, as discussed, the defendant huffed

“immediately prior to and while operating a vehicle on a public highway.” Id. at 171. “She

knew, from the clearly marked label” that noxious gas from the aerosol can was “not

intended to be ingested[,]” and “knew that huffing had caused her to lose consciousness

on other occasions in the past.” Id. Despite that knowledge, “she nonetheless made the

conscious and informed decision to huff . . . immediately before driving on a public

roadway and again while temporarily stopped at a red light.” Id. Unsurprisingly, she lost

consciousness and crashed her car into another vehicle, killing its driver. We concluded

Packer’s was “not a typical case of ordinary recklessness that arises when someone

chooses to drive while intoxicated[,]” and sustained her conviction for third-degree

murder. Id.

       Taylor offers another example. There, the defendant was driving drunk at a high

rate of speed when he struck two boys riding their bicycles, killing one of them. This Court

concluded:
       The intoxicated condition of the driver, the excessive rate of speed which
       he was travelling, the distance the bodies and bicycles were propelled upon
       impact, his awareness that this was an area where children were likely to
       traverse, the absence of any physical or climatic condition which could
       explain or contribute to the happening of the accident and the appellant's
       failure to stop immediately after impact, all exhibit the wickedness of
       disposition, the hardness of heart, cruelty and recklessness associated with
       [then-]murder in the second degree.
Taylor, 337 A.2d at 563-64.

       Here, the trial evidence established that Peters had multiple drinks on the night of

the crash. Although less risky means of transportation were available to him, including

an offer by a co-worker to drive him home, Peters stuck to his plan to drive home himself.

However, at the parking garage, Peters ran into trouble. Video surveillance footage

showed Peters took several minutes to operate the payment machine and, at one point,

wandered away from the kiosk. More alarming, though, is Peters’s decision to inflict


                                     [J-89-2025] - 27
property damage just to exit the garage. When the mechanical arm blocking the exit did

not move, most people would have accepted defeat and taken a train or a taxi home. But

not Peters. Instead, he got out of his car and manually lifted one of the mechanical arms

high enough to allow his car through, breaking the mechanical arm in the process.

Surveillance footage shows the visibly-broken arm dangling in Peters’s wake. “Yet he

was not deterred.” Peters, 320 A.3d at 1243. Instead, Peters left the garage, rolled

through a stop sign, and proceeded to the highway. 25

       There, Peters consciously disregarded signs “that continuing to drive, while

significantly impaired, posed an extremely high and unjustifiable risk to others.” Id. The

trial evidence established Peters drifted over the fog line, nearly sideswiped another car,

and randomly changed speeds — shifting between driving much faster or much slower

than the speed limit. Peters also missed his exit home, not once but twice, errors which

were seemingly intoxication-related given that Peters had lived in the area for six years.

Another driver said Peters had to slam on his brakes when he exited in New Jersey, a

move so abrupt that the driver thought Peters was “going to hit the exit[.]” N.T. Trial,

9/13/21, at 141.


25 The dissent below concluded “Peters’[s] decision to drive his vehicle instead of taking

a train or taxi, and to use a highway rather than a local road, is of no moment” as “the
mere decision to drive intoxicated does not satisfy the malice requirement.” Peters, 320
A.3d at 1252 (Lazarus, J., dissenting). However, the fact that drunk driving is not
dispositive of malice does not make it irrelevant. It is no secret that driving while
intoxicated is incredibly dangerous. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, “about 32 people in the United States die in drunk-driving crashes”
“[e]very day[.]”      Drunk Driving, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration,
https://www.nhtsa.gov/risky-driving/drunk-driving (last visited Apr. 29, 2026).
Accordingly, although “the decision to drive while under the influence of alcohol and/or a
controlled substance does not, standing alone, constitute malice[,]” Packer, 168 A.3d at
170, it is still a relevant factor to be considered when assessing the sufficiency of the
evidence. Moreover, the route a drunk driver chooses to take, which can impact, inter
alia, his speed, exposure to other motorists, and the difficulty of driving, is distinct from
his decision to drive intoxicated and is also properly considered in the assessment of
malice.

                                      [J-89-2025] - 28
       Most egregious, though, is Peters’s conscious decision to take his eyes off the

road. Peters was driving around 113 miles per hour in a 55-mile-per-hour zone, with a

BAC nearly double the legal limit, when he decided to check the GPS on his phone.

Unfortunately, the phone was in Peters’s backpack. There was an easy solution to this

problem. Presumably, Peters could have pulled over to the side of the highway when it

was safe to do so and then, with the car stopped, reach for his phone. But Peters did not

avail himself of this safer option.    Instead, he chose to unbuckle his seatbelt and

rummaged on the passenger-side floor for his phone while he was still driving. He did not

even bother to slow down his car. To the contrary, the black box data showed Peters

actually sped up the car half a second before the crash to 115 miles per hour. As the

Superior Court majority aptly noted, Peters’s sustained and “extremely reckless conduct

. . . ‘virtually guaranteed some manner of accident would occur[.]’” Peters, 320 A.3d at

1243, citing Packer, 168 A.3d at 171 (brackets omitted). The totality of this evidence was

sufficient to prove Peters consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk

that his drunk driving might cause death or serious bodily injury.

       Although Peters claims “[t]here was no conduct after the crash, such as

belligerence or an attempt to fight or flee, that established that he was aware of his

reckless conduct[,]” Peters’s Brief at 24, citing Scofield, supra (internal quotations

omitted), he was hardly in a condition after the crash to “fight or flee.”        As the

Commonwealth explains, “[Peters] had to be removed from his car, carried to safety, and

transported to the hospital where he remained for a week.” Commonwealth’s Brief at 51.

Accordingly, Peters’s behavior after the crash is not a mitigating factor here.

       The evidence that Peters applied the brake, at most, four-tenths of a second before

the crash also does not sway our analysis. Half a second before the crash, Peters was

driving 115 miles per hour in a 55-mile-per-hour zone. This meant Peters was traveling




                                      [J-89-2025] - 29
approximately 168 feet per second. At that point, braking was just as futile as trying to

catch a fired bullet. Accordingly, although Peters’s belated attempt to brake is relevant,

it does not outweigh the overwhelming evidence of malice before the crash. When Peters

ignored the numerous signs he was too impaired to drive, he consciously disregarded the

unjustified and extremely high risk that he might cause death or serious bodily injury. That

less than a split second before impact, he futilely attempted to avoid the all-but-inevitable

consequence of his malicious actions, does not erase his malice.

       Peters’s argument that “[n]o one warned [him] he was too drunk to operate a car[,]”

Peters’s Brief at 23, is also unconvincing. Certainly, if someone told the defendant that

he was too drunk to drive, then that evidence would be probative of whether he acted with

malice. See Commonwealth v. Urbanski, 627 A.2d 789, 793 (Pa. Super. 1993) (finding

sufficient evidence of malice where Urbanski’s “wife repeatedly reminded him of the

danger [of his erratic driving] and asked many times if she could drive the car”). However,

the lack of a verbal warning does not free a defendant to ignore the obvious signs it is

unsafe for him to drive. We would not expect bystanders to warn an adult it is unsafe to

point a loaded gun at someone’s head in order to infer malice. Here, although there may

not have been an express verbal warning, Peters received multiple signs he was too

impaired to drive safely: an offer to drive him home from a co-worker, his destruction of

the mechanical arm at the parking garage, near miss of another car, inability to keep a

consistent speed, and twice passing his exit. Viewed properly, in the light most favorable

to the Commonwealth, the evidence indicates Peters had ample notice he was too

impaired to safely drive, and consciously disregarded the unjustified and extremely high

risk that continuing to drive while impaired might cause a death or serious bodily injury.

Therefore, the evidence was sufficient to prove malice.




                                      [J-89-2025] - 30
                                      III. Conclusion

       Today, as in Packer, we reaffirm the longstanding definition of malice. Malice is

present if the defendant consciously disregarded an unjustified and extremely high risk

that his conduct might cause death or serious bodily injury. This standard is the same

regardless of the particular conduct at issue. Whether, for instance, the defendant drove

while intoxicated or fired a gun, the identical definition of malice applies. Again, malice is

malice. The Superior Court majority applied the correct standard for malice here. It also

correctly held the evidence was sufficient to satisfy this standard. Accordingly, we affirm

the order of the Superior Court.

       Chief Justice Todd and Justices Donohue, Wecht, Mundy and Brobson join the

opinion.

       Justice McCaffery did not participate in the consideration or decision of this matter.




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