The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Norristown woman admits fatal stabbing of roommate

- By Carl Hessler Jr. chessler@21st-centurymed­ia.com @montcocour­tnews on Twitter

A Norristown woman admitted to fatally stabbing a man during a “heated” argument outside the borough apartment where they resided and she faces up to three decades of court supervisio­n under a plea agreement reached in Montgomery County Court.

Jacqueline Janis Jackson, 36, formerly of the 800 block of Smith Street, was sentenced on Thursday in county court to 1530 years in a state correction­al facility after she pleaded guilty to a charge of third-degree murder

in connection with the 2:14 a.m. May 20, 2019, stabbing death of 58-year-old Charles Dewalt. Third-degree murder is a killing committed with malice under circumstan­ces that show an indifferen­ce to the value of human life.

“Using a deadly weapon on a vital part of the human body gives rise to malice,” county Judge William R. Carpenter said as he explained the elements of third-degree murder and accepted the plea agreement.

In exchange for the plea, prosecutor­s dismissed a more serious charge of firstdegre­e murder, which is an intentiona­l killing, against Jackson.

“It’s a sad case. He was trying to help her get her life together…and she stabbed him once in the chest. It is a tragedy,” said Assistant District Attorney Allison Ruth, explaining prosecutor­s reviewed the facts and informatio­n about Jackson’s mental health history. “Given everything, it was the appropriat­e outcome.”

Defense lawyer Carrie L. Allman, reading from pretrial evaluation reports, explained to the judge that Jackson was diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, bipolar and substance abuse disorders, suffered sexual abuse as a child and underwent mental health treatment and treatment for anxiety and depression in the past.

“All of these factors played into the resolution of this case,” said Allman, chief homicide lawyer for the Montgomery County Office of the Public Defender.

Jackson, wearing a face covering, was linked to the courtroom from the county jail via a teleconfer­encing network in order to comply with social distancing recommenda­tions. Five of Dewalt’s tearful relatives attended the hearing. Coprosecut­or Bridget Gallagher read to the judge a letter that was written by Dewalt’s daughter, who described her father as “funny and charming” and as a man who would go out of his way to help others.

“He was a gentleman and a supportive father… and now he’s gone, just like that. There’s a piece of us that’s gone and we’ll never get that back,” the woman wrote to the judge.

The investigat­ion began when Norristown police were dispatched to the Smith Street residence for a report of a stabbing and

found Dewalt lying in a parking lot at the rear of the residence “with a visible stab wound to his chest,” according to the criminal complaint filed by Montgomery County Detective Michael Crescitell­i and Norristown Detective William Klinger.

Dewalt was transporte­d to Mercy Suburban Hospital where he was pronounced dead. An autopsy determined Dewalt died from a stab wound to the chest and the manner of death was ruled a homicide. A forensic pathologis­t also noted a superficia­l knife wound to the left side of the victim’s face, detectives said.

A neighbor, according to court papers, called 911 at 2:12 a.m. after he heard a male and female arguing outside.

“(The neighbor) described the argument as sounding ‘heated’ so he looked out his window and observed a male and female in the parking lot,” detectives alleged, adding the neighbor went to another window to get a better look. “When (the neighbor) looked out this window he saw a person lying on the ground.”

The neighbor went outside and saw the victim lying on the ground and observed “blood and fleshy meat” in the victim’s upper chest, above his nipple, according to the arrest affidavit.

“(The neighbor) stated the victim did not speak and had labored breathing,” Crescitell­i and Klinger wrote in the criminal complaint.

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