J-A14029-17
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
PENNSYLVANIA
v.
PATRICIA LYNNE RORRER
Appellant No. 1919 EDA 2016
Appeal from the PCRA Order May 26, 2016
In the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County
Criminal Division at No(s): CP-39-CR-0002176-1997
BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., BOWES AND SHOGAN, J.
MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED OCTOBER 26, 2017
Patricia Lynne Rorrer appeals the PCRA court’s dismissal of her fourth
PCRA petition as untimely filed. We affirm.
This matter involves the 1994 murders of Joann Katrinak and her
infant son Alex. The evidence presented against Appellant at her February
1998 jury trial revealed the following. Joann’s husband Andrew Katrinak and
Appellant had been romantically involved. That aspect of their relationship
ended in May 1993, but they continued to remain in regular contact
thereafter. On December 12, 1994, Appellant telephoned the Katrinak
residence to speak with Andrew, and Joann, using profane language, told
Appellant never to call again, that she and Andrew were happily married
with a baby, and that Appellant was to leave Andrew alone.
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On December 15, 1994, Joann planned to go on a shopping trip with
her baby and her mother-in-law, but Joann and Alex never arrived. Andrew
immediately contacted police and informed them of her disappearance.
Police initially were unconcerned, but Andrew and his relatives were alarmed
and began to search for her. Joann’s empty car was discovered 100 yards
from her residence in the parking lot of a tavern. When police suggested
that Andrew move the vehicle, he refused since he feared that his wife and
child might be the victims of foul play and believed that the vehicle might
contain evidence.
After Joann’s vehicle was found, police went to the Katrinak residence.
There were signs of forced entry, and a telephone line was cut in the
basement. Evidence was taken from Joann’s undisturbed vehicle. Ten hairs
were recovered from the back of the driver’s seat headrest. Police initially
suspected Andrew was involved in the disappearance but cleared him after
investigation.
On April 9, 1995, a farmer discovered the bodies of Joann and Alex in
a wooded area in Heidelberg Township. Joann had been beaten and shot in
the face with a .22 caliber handgun, and the baby either was suffocated or
died of exposure. A cigarette butt was recovered at the scene. Since Joann
and Alex were found along a path that Appellant used to ride horses,
Appellant became a suspect in their murders.
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Sandra and Stephan Ireland testified that Appellant’s mother appeared
unexpectedly at their home shortly after the victims’ bodies were found.
Appellant’s mother showed them a small handgun, said that she did not
want police to find it, and asked the Irelands to keep it. They declined to aid
Appellant’s mother in hiding the gun from police.
After the bodies were found, the ten hairs found on the back of the
headrest of Joann’s abandoned car became a focus of police investigation.
Six of the ten hairs recovered from the back of the driver’s seat headrest did
not match any of the Katrinak family’s hairs. We will refer to these six hairs
of unknown source and found on the back of the driver’s seat headrest of
Joann’s abandoned car as the “seatback hairs.” The seatback hairs were
submitted to the Pennsylvania State Police Crime Laboratory, where
criminalist Thomas Jensen divided the collection into two groups of three
hairs. Three seatback hairs that had roots were mounted on individual
microscope slides, and the slides were sent to the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (“FBI”) for mitochondrial DNA testing on July 11, 1995. The
other three hairs remained unmounted and were sent to the FBI laboratory
later.
Appellant’s home was searched late in the summer of 1995, and she
refused to provide hair samples. On November 8, 1995, police, armed with
a warrant, obtained exemplar hairs from Appellant’s head to test them
against the six seatback hairs. N.T. Pretrial Hearing, 11/19/97, at 29-30.
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Mitochondrial DNA testing conducted on the hairs in the slides and the
exemplar hairs taken from Appellant established that Appellant was an
indicated source of the three seatback hairs sent to the FBI on slides.
Suzanne Pearson of the Davidson County Sheriff’s Office, Lexington,
North Carolina, was present at Appellant’s June 24, 1997 arrest. Sheriff
Pearson was not involved in taking Appellant into custody, but was present
pursuant to her department’s policy to have a female officer at an
interdiction that involved the arrest of a female. Sheriff Pearson testified
that, when law enforcement officials arrived to arrest Appellant, Appellant
was crying and rocking her baby daughter, Nicole, who also was crying.
Appellant started speaking to the child and told her that she was sorry.
Then, Appellant said, “[W]hy did I do this, Nicole. If I had known I would
get caught, I would have never brought you into this world.” N.T. Trial,
2/17/98, at 284. Appellant next told her daughter that she did not kill Alex
because she would never harm a child. As she was being led from her
home, Appellant blurted out, “I’m never going to see my baby again[.] I’m
going to the electric chair.” Id. at 290. These were Appellant’s exact
words; Sheriff Pearson was taking notes as Appellant uttered them. Id. at
284, 288.
On March 9, 1998, a jury found Appellant guilty of two counts each of
first-degree murder and kidnapping, and the trial court immediately imposed
a life sentence followed by a consecutive term of ten to twenty years
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imprisonment. Appellant filed a post-sentence motion, raising 105 claims of
ineffectiveness of trial counsel and numerous allegations of trial court error.
The trial court held hearings and denied the motions. It authored an
extensive opinion addressing all of Appellant’s issues. On direct appeal,
Appellant presented four ineffectiveness claims, which we rejected.
Commonwealth v. Rorrer, 748 A.2d 776 (Pa.Super. 1999) (unpublished
memorandum), appeal denied, 757 A.2d 931 (Pa. 2000).
Appellant filed a timely PCRA petition, which was denied. On appeal,
Appellant averred that direct appeal counsel was ineffective for not pursuing
all 105 claims of trial counsel’s ineffectiveness that had been litigated in the
post-trial setting. We rejected that argument and affirmed the denial of
PCRA relief. Commonwealth v. Rorrer, 844 A.2d 1288 (Pa.Super. 2003)
(unpublished memorandum).
On June 27, 2005, Appellant filed a petition under 42 Pa.C.S. §
9543.1, which was enacted in 2002 and implemented procedures for a
person convicted of a criminal offense and serving a jail term to obtain
forensic DNA testing on specific evidence. Pursuant to that petition,
Appellant successfully obtained post-conviction DNA testing of the six
seatback hairs, a fingernail fragment discovered on the victim’s body, and
the cigarette butt recovered near the victims’ bodies. The district attorney
represented to the DNA court that the three seatback hairs that were
mounted on the slides belonged to the murderer.
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Appellant’s counsel agreed that those three seatback hairs belonged to
the killer, stating that the “mounted hairs that Tom Jensen originally
mounted are the killer's and they solve the crime because they are the
killer's hairs and they have Joann Katrinak's blood on them.” N.T. Hearing,
12/1/06, at 60. Appellant’s counsel then acknowledged that there was no
question regarding the chain of custody of those three hairs. Specifically,
Appellant’s counsel said, “[T]he fact is the originally mounted hairs are not
tainted by what we believe is a questionable chain of custody. Those three
were mounted right after they were found, days after this woman and her
baby disappeared. There is no question of chain of custody[.]” Id.
Appellant’s counsel claimed that nuclear DNA testing, which is a more
advanced form of testing than mitochondrial DNA testing, would exonerate
Appellant.
The Commonwealth thereafter agreed to allow nuclear DNA testing of
the fingernail fragment, all six seatback hairs, and the cigarette butt found
near the bodies. The items in question were sent to Appellant’s selected
laboratory, Orchid Cellmark Laboratories of Dallas, Texas (“Orchid”). Orchid
was able to collect DNA evidence from all six seatback hairs and the
cigarette butt, conducted nuclear DNA testing, and concluded that all six
seatback hairs belonged to Appellant. Additionally, DNA on the cigarette
butt found near the two bodies belonged to Appellant. Orchid was unable to
recover material that could be tested from the fingernail. The court
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thereafter denied Appellant’s request for further testing of the fingernail and
rejected Appellant’s post-test proposition that there was not a valid chain of
custody with respect to the six seatback hairs sent to Orchid. Appellant
suggested that Pennsylvania State Police accidentally switched her exemplar
hairs for the three seatback hairs when the police mounted the hairs in
question and that her exemplar hairs were sent to the FBI and later to
Orchid. The DNA court rejected that proposition.
On July 24, 2006, while the § 9543.1 petition was still being litigated,
Appellant filed a second petition for PCRA relief, claiming that the
Commonwealth intentionally withheld exculpatory evidence consisting of a
statement that Walter Traupman gave to police. The PCRA court permitted
Mr. Traupman to be deposed because his statement was not available.
The record contains a report authored by the investigating officer in
this case, Pennsylvania State Trooper Robert V. Egan, III, detailing his
interactions with Mr. Traupman.1 That report explained why statements Mr.
Traupman made to police were unavailable. Trooper Egan reported the
following. Mr. Traupman appeared at the police station about fifteen times
after the bodies of Joann and Alex were discovered. State Police took a
____________________________________________
1 Trooper Egan mistakenly believed that the man’s last name was
Troutman, which he utilized in his report.
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statement from Mr. Traupman when he came to the station on the first
occasion.
At that time, Mr. Traupman told police that, at 1:00 p.m. on December
15, 1994, he saw a Hispanic male having an argument with Joann while she
was seated in her car on a public street and that the male was pounding on
the car window. The second time that Mr. Traupman arrived at the police
station, he represented that he saw Joann’s husband, Andrew, on the news
and that the Hispanic male arguing with Joann was Andrew wearing a
mustache and wig.
Mr. Traupman continued to appear at the police station “changing
versions of what he saw” at 1:00 p.m. on December 15, 1994. PCRA
Petition, 9/24/15, at Exhibit 10. On October 31, 1995, Mr. Traupman came
to the station, and he yelled at Trooper Eagan, “I’m starting to get fed up
with you.” Id. After the man “continued to scream and display disruptive
behavior,” Officer Egan “escorted him outside the building.” Id. Police
discarded Mr. Traupman’s statements based upon their conclusion that they
had no investigative value.
At his deposition, Mr. Traupman claimed that he witnessed a fight
between the victim and her husband on a public street on December 15,
1994, and that, when he went to the police barracks to tell them about this
observation, a police officer pushed him out of the door, “shoved [him] down
the steps,” and injured his neck. N.T. Deposition, 7/27/06, at 9.
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On June 25, 2009, the court denied the July 24, 2006 PCRA petition,
concluding that Mr. Traupman’s deposition did not warrant the grant of a
new trial in light of the DNA evidence against Appellant. At that time, the
PCRA court did not have the benefit of Officer Egan’s report, which
discredited Mr. Traupman as a witness. Appellant did not appeal from the
PCRA court’s denial of her 2006 PCRA petition.
Appellant filed her third PCRA petition on August 24, 2012. She
revisited her entitlement to DNA testing of the fingernail fragment,
maintaining that she had just discovered that the Commonwealth had
tampered with it. Appellant, who was thirty-three years old when she
committed the murders, also asserted that she should be accorded relief
from her sentence of life imprisonment without parole under Miller v.
Alabama, 132 S.Ct. 2455 (2012), which held that the eighth amendment
prohibits the sentencing of a juvenile homicide offender to a mandatory term
of life imprisonment without parole. Relief was denied, and, on appeal, we
affirmed.2 Commonwealth v. Rorrer, 93 A.3d 508 (Pa.Super. 2013),
appeal denied, 92 A.3d 811 (Pa. 2014). We specifically articulated in that
decision that Appellant’s judgment of sentence became final for purposes of
____________________________________________
2 Therein, we characterized that PCRA petition as Appellant’s fourth one.
However, since Appellant’s second petition for post-conviction relief sought
DNA testing under § 9543.1, it has not been treated as a PCRA petition by
the parties or the PCRA court.
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the PCRA on July 10, 2000, when the ninety–day period for her to file a
petition for writ of certiorari with the Supreme Court of the United States
expired, and that Appellant had until July 10, 2001 to file a timely PCRA
petition.
On September 24, 2015, Appellant filed the present, counseled PCRA
petition, which she titled her third PCRA petition. Simultaneously, she asked
the court to appoint Craig B. Neely, Esquire, who had prepared the
September 24, 2015 petition, as her counsel. The court granted Appellant’s
request for Mr. Neely to represent her at public expense.
Various claims were presented to the PCRA court as grounds for a new
trial. Appellant argued that, the microscopic hair analysis comparison
testimony offered at her 1998 trial was unreliable and would be inadmissible
under current professional standards. Appellant also asserted that the
Pennsylvania State Police deliberately, rather than accidentally, placed
exemplar hairs taken from Appellant on the slides that were sent them to
the FBI and Orchid for DNA testing and that the hairs on the slides were not
the three seatback hairs. To summarize, she maintained that the
Pennsylvania State Police conspired to convict her by substituting her
exemplar hairs, and mounting those hairs on the slides sent to the FBI and
later to Orchid instead of the three seatback hairs.
Appellant’s PCRA petition established that the FBI received the three
mounted hairs on the slides on July 12, 1995, which was consistent with the
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trial testimony that the hairs mounted in the slides were sent to the FBI on
July 11, 1995. Defendant’s Third Petition for PCRA Relief, 9/24/15, at
Exhibit 2, page 1 (an FBI report stating that three hairs mounted on slides
were received from the Pennsylvania State Police on July 12, 1995). The
record establishes that Appellant’s exemplar hairs were not secured until
November 9, 1995. N.T. Pretrial Hearings, 11/19/97, at 29-30. Thus,
Appellant’s conspiracy theory was discredited by the record as it was
physically impossible for the Pennsylvania State Police to send Appellant’s
exemplar hairs to the FBI on July 11, 1995, when those hairs were not in the
possession of the Pennsylvania State Police until November 9, 1995.
Appellant’s third claim in her latest PCRA petition was that she recently
discovered that Catasauqua Police Officer Joseph Kicska, who was one of the
responders to Mr. Katrinak’s home after Joann was reported missing, told
Joseph York that he lied at trial when he said that an exterior door to the
victim’s home was pried open. Finally, Appellant averred in this latest PCRA
petition that the Commonwealth withheld exculpatory evidence by failing to
provide her with statements that Walter Traupman made to police. In the
petition, Appellant relied upon the newly-discovered evidence exception to
overcome the one-year time limitation for the filing of PCRA petitions.
The PCRA court dismissed the September 24, 2015 PCRA petition as
untimely, and this appeal followed. Appellant raises these issues for our
review:
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A. Does Pennsylvania still recognize the `miscarriage of justice'
standard adopted in Commonwealth vs. Lawson, 519 Pa. 504,
549 A.2d 107 (1988) as grounds for granting a serial PCRA
petitioner a hearing?
B. Did Ms. Rorrer timely file a PCRA claim based on after
discovered evidence, consisting of an FBI report indicating that,
two years before DNA tests on hair roots the same hairs had "no
roots attached," which she received on July 27, 2015 in response
to a Freedom of Information Act request that she pursued,
because she filed the claim within 60 days of receipt of the
document, and because she could not have reasonably been
expected to learn of the information therein prior to her
receiving the document?
C. Should Ms. Rorrer be permitted to present the inadmissibility
of the Commonwealth's microscopic hair comparison evidence at
a hearing because her request to do so is not time-barred by
Commonwealth vs. Edmiston, 619 Pa. 549, 65 A.3d 333 (Pa.
2013) since Edmiston is factually distinguishable or because a
miscarriage of justice would occur if she would be prevented
from doing so?
D. Did the trial court wrongfully conclude that the statements
made in Joseph York's Affidavit would not be admissible at a
PCRA Hearing because the statements made therein would be
admissible under the Pennsylvania Rules of Evidence,
specifically, Rules 803(25) and 804(3)?
E. Did the trial court wrongfully conclude that the "Walter
Traupman Issue" was previously decided by Judge Ford in 2009,
and therefore not capable of further pursuit, when Judge Ford's
decision was based on his conclusion that the Commonwealth's
Brady violation was not material because of DNA tests that
matched Ms. Rorrer's, but the reliability of which are now in
question as a result of the newly discovered FBI records
confirming that the seatback hairs did not have roots on them
when they were initially inspected by the FBI in June 1995?
Appellant’s brief at 2-3.
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This Court reviews the “denial of PCRA relief to determine whether the
findings of the PCRA court are supported by the record and free of legal
error.” Commonwealth v. Roane, 142 A.3d 79, 86 (Pa.Super. 2016)
(quoting Commonwealth v. Treiber, 121 A.3d 435, 444 (Pa. 2015)). It is
now settled law that all PCRA petitions must be filed within one year of the
date a defendant’s judgment of sentence becomes final unless an exception
to the one-year time restriction applies. 42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(1). If a PCRA
petition is untimely, “neither this Court nor the trial court has jurisdiction
over the petition.” Commonwealth v. Miller, 102 A.3d 988, 992 (Pa.Super.
2014) (citation omitted); see also Commonwealth v. Chester, 895 A.2d
520, 522 (Pa. 2006). We have previously held that Appellant’s judgment of
sentence became final on July 10, 2000, and that she had until July 11,
2001, to file a timely petition. The present petition, filed on September 24,
2015, is therefore facially untimely.
Appellant’s first position is that the miscarriage-of-justice standard,
under which second or subsequent post-conviction petitions were analyzed
prior to the enactment of § 9545, is grounds for consideration of the merits
of her serial untimely PCRA petition. In Commonwealth v. Burton, 936
A.2d 521, 527 (Pa. 2007), our Supreme Court specifically rejected the
proposition that an allegation that a conviction is a miscarriage of justice
obviates the need for the PCRA petitioner to establish that his or her PCRA
petition is timely:
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[T]he courts of Pennsylvania will only entertain a “miscarriage of
justice” claim when the initial timeliness requirement is met. See
Commonwealth v. Fahy, 558 Pa. 313, 330–331, 737 A.2d 214,
223 (1999), cert. denied, 534 U.S. 944, 122 S.Ct. 323, 151
L.Ed.2d 241 (2001). Although the courts will review the request
in a second or subsequent collateral attack on a conviction if
there is a strong prima facie showing that a miscarriage of
justice occurred, Commonwealth v. Morales, 549 Pa. 400,
409–410, 701 A.2d 516, 520–521 (1997), there is no
“miscarriage of justice” standard exception to the time
requirements of the PCRA. Fahy, 558 Pa. at 331, 737 A.2d at
223.
Hence, we reject Appellant’s first issue.
Appellant’s second averment on appeal is that she timely asserted her
claim that there was a Commonwealth conspiracy against her and that the
police sent the exemplar hairs taken from her on November 8, 1995, rather
than three seatback hairs to the FBI for testing. In asserting her conspiracy
claim, Appellant invokes the newly-discovered evidence exception outlined in
§ 9545(b)(1)(ii). “To qualify for an exception to the PCRA's time limitations
under subsection 9545(b)(1)(ii), a petitioner need only establish that the
facts upon which the claim is based were unknown to him and could not
have been ascertained by the exercise of due diligence.” Commonwealth v.
Burton, 158 A.3d 618, 629 (Pa. 2017). “Due diligence does not require
perfect vigilance and punctilious care, but merely a showing the party has
put forth reasonable effort to obtain the information upon which a claim is
based.” Commonwealth v. Cox, 146 A.3d 221, 230 (Pa. 2016) (citation
and quotation marks omitted).
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Appellant maintains that she did not discover the switch until she
received FBI reports on July 27, 2015, which she requested pursuant to the
“Freedom of Information Act.” Appellant’s brief at 12. However, the FBI
reports attached by Appellant to her September 24, 2015 PCRA petition were
prepared between 1995 and 1997. Appellant failed to establish why she
could not have obtained them much sooner than she did through the
“Freedom of Information Act.” Appellant knew at her 1998 trial that the FBI
had conducted DNA testing on the seatback hairs and her exemplar hairs.
Thus, Appellant did not put forth reasonable efforts to obtain the FBI
reports; she readily could have accessed them any time after she was
charged in 1997, almost twenty years before she decided to do so. Her
invocation of § 9543(b)(1)(ii) therefore fails. Commonwealth v.
Edmiston, 65 A.3d 339 (Pa. 2013) (PCRA petitioner did not exercise due
diligence in obtaining newly-discovered evidence because evidence was
mentioned at trial); see also Cox, supra.
We also observe the following. Appellant represents to this Court that
an FBI report attached to her PCRA petition establishes that there were no
roots on any of the seatback hairs whereas the trial transcript indicates that
some of the seatback hairs, i.e., the ones mounted and sent to the FBI, had
roots. Appellant’s theory is that, since this FBI report that she cites
purportedly established that none of the seatback hairs had roots, the
exemplar hair, which did have roots, had to have been placed in the slides
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instead of any seatback hairs. Appellant specifically represents that an “FBI
report unambiguously states that the seatback hairs had ‘no roots attached.’
R.R. 52.” Appellant’s brief at 12.
The record categorically belies Appellant’s position. The document on
page fifty-two of the reproduced record is not part of any FBI report
attached to Appellant’s September 24, 2015 PCRA petition. It is one page of
a multi-page document, and page fifty-two of the reproduced record was
Exhibit 4 to the PCRA petition at issue herein. See PCRA Petition, 9/24/15,
at Exhibit 4. Meanwhile, Exhibit 4 has no connection to Exhibits 1, 2, and 3,
which were the FBI reports. Exhibit 4 has numbered paragraphs and starts
with paragraph ten while the FBI reports do not have numbered paragraphs.
Exhibit 4 is merely one page from the middle of an unidentified document of
unknown authorship. Hence, Appellant’s position that FBI reports
established that no seatback hair had roots is unsubstantiated and incorrect.
In addition, Appellant has already litigated her claim that her exemplar
hairs were switched for the seatback hairs. As noted, after Orchid reported
that all six seatback hairs belonged to Appellant and that the cigarette butt
contained Appellant’s DNA, Appellant immediately retracted her position that
the chain of custody for the seatback hairs in the slides was unassailable. At
that time, she premised that switch on a mistake rather than a conspiracy.
The PCRA court thereafter specifically rejected counsel’s assertion that one
of Appellant’s exemplar hairs “could mistakenly have been inserted as a hair
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collected from the seatback.” PCRA Court Opinion, 6/25/09, at 15. It
concluded that the chain of custody for the three mounted seatback hairs
was not infirm. Id.
Issues that have been finally litigated may not form the basis for
granting PCRA relief. 42 Pa.C.S. § 9543(a)(3) (a petitioner is not eligible for
relief under the PCRA unless he proves, inter alia, that the “allegation of
error has not been previously litigated”). An issue is previously litigated if “it
has been raised and decided in a proceeding collaterally attacking the
conviction or sentence.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 9544(a)(3). The “switching of hairs”
issue now presented by Appellant has been previously litigated; it was raised
and decided in a proceeding that collaterally attacked her conviction.
Appellant’s third claim is that she timely asserted her position that the
microscopic hair analysis utilized at her trial was infirm. In raising this
allegation, Appellant relied upon an April 20, 2015 press release from the
FBI indicating that microscopic hair analyses contained errors in ninety
percent of cases. It is established, “Any petition invoking an exception
provided in paragraph (1) shall be filed within 60 days of the date the claim
could have been presented.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(2). Appellant did not
present this claim until September 24, 2015, more than sixty days after the
press release was issued. In Edmiston, supra at 352, our Supreme Court
noted that there were various studies and reports published in the public
domain “as early as 1974 and as recently as 2007” about the unreliability of
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microscopic hair analysis, and it held that Edmiston did not timely assert
that he was entitled to a new trial based upon the unreliability of such
testing when he raised it in a 2005 PCRA petition. Appellant implicitly
acknowledges that Edmiston controls the issue of the timeliness of this
claim by asserting that its holding is “untenable.” Appellant’s brief at 17.
We, however, are bound by Edmiston, and reject her position on its
viability.
Appellant’s fourth contention is that the PCRA court improperly
concluded that York’s affidavit did not warrant the grant of a new trial. York
executed a document on December 12, 2015,3 wherein he claimed the
following. He was employed as a Northampton Borough police officer from
1990 to 2011, and Officer Kicska became a member of the Northampton
Borough police force in 1999. In 1999, York and Officer Kicska were
discussing this murder case when Officer Kiscka told York that Officer Kicska
had perjured himself when he said at trial that an exterior door of the
Katrinak residence was broken.
The Commonwealth responded to York’s claim by presenting a
declaration from Officer Kicska, which was executed pursuant to 18 Pa.C.S.
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3 The statement is not notarized, even though it is characterized as an
affidavit. In it, Mr. York indicates that the averments were made “in
recognition of the penalties set forth in 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 4904, relating to
Unsworn Falsifications to Authorities.” Affidavit of Joseph York, 12/21/15, at
2.
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§ 4903,4 and expressly made “under penalty of perjury.” Declaration of
Joseph Kicska, 3/30/16, at 1. Officer Kicska said that the assertions in the
document from Mr. York were “patently incorrect and blatantly false.” Id. at
2.
We conclude that York’s statement does not constitute newly-
discovered evidence. In it, Mr. York plainly stated:
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4 That statute provides:
(a) False swearing in official matters.--A person who makes
a false statement under oath or equivalent affirmation, or swears
or affirms the truth of such a statement previously made, when
he does not believe the statement to be true is guilty of a
misdemeanor of the second degree if:
(1) the falsification occurs in an official proceeding;
or
(2) the falsification is intended to mislead a public
servant in performing his official function.
(b) Other false swearing.--A person who makes a false
statement under oath or equivalent affirmation, or swears or
affirms the truth of such a statement previously made, when he
does not believe the statement to be true, is guilty of a
misdemeanor of the third degree, if the statement is one which
is required by law to be sworn or affirmed before a notary or
other person authorized to administer oaths.
(c) Perjury provisions applicable.--Section 4902(c) through
(f) of this title (relating to perjury) applies to this section.
18 Pa.C.S. § 4903.
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I thought about this information for some time and found I
was morally obligated to make this information known. I
contacted a person from the defense team and left a
message briefly outlining the above conversation. Several
months had gone by and I did not receive a response. I
next contacted the Crime Reporter for the Northampton Press
Newspaper and made her aware of the above. She appeared
interested at the time however I never heard from her again.
Believing there was nothing further I could do I
reluctantly let the incident go.
Affidavit of Joseph York, 12/21/15, at 1 (emphases added). York’s affidavit
plainly indicates that he spoke with Officer Kicska in 1999, thought about it,
actually was in contact with a person from Appellant’s then-existing defense
team, and told them about the conversation that he had with Officer Kicska.
Appellant’s lawyers thus knew about York’s statement long before 2015, and
it was not “newly discovered.” Instead, Appellant’s allegation is properly
characterized as one involving prior counsel’s ineffectiveness in not
investigating and presenting York’s proof as the basis for a new trial when
York told Appellant’s defense team about Officer Kicska’s alleged perjury.
Allegations of ineffective assistance of counsel do not fall within an exception
to the one-year time bar of the PCRA. Edmiston, supra; Commonwealth
v. Lesko, 15 A.3d 345, 367 (Pa. 2011); Commonwealth v. Crews, 863
A.2d 498 (Pa. 2004).
We are aware that the PCRA court analyzed the York document in
terms of whether it warranted the grant of a new trial on the basis of after-
discovered evidence; however, we can affirm a trial court’s decision on any
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grounds. Commonwealth v. O'Drain, 829 A.2d 316, 322, n.7 (Pa.Super.
2003) (“We note that this court may affirm the decision of the trial court if
there is any basis on the record to support the trial court's action; this is so
even if we rely on a different basis in our decision to affirm.”).
In addition, we express our complete agreement with the trial court
that York’s story does not warrant the grant of a new trial. In order to
obtain a new trial based upon after-discovered evidence, the defendant must
demonstrate, inter alia, that the evidence “would likely result in a different
verdict if a new trial were granted.” Commonwealth. v. Foreman, 55 A.3d
532, 537 (Pa.Super. 2012) (quoting Commonwealth v. Pagan, 950 A.2d
270, 292 (Pa. 2008)).
Officer Kicska denied the assertions that York made, and would testify
at any new trial consistently with that denial. There were other officers who
investigated the Katrinak residence and who would be able to verify Officer
Kicska’s report of the damaged door. In addition, nuclear DNA testing
established that Appellant was the perpetrator of these murders as her hair
was found in the victims’ car on the day of their disappearance and her DNA
was found on the cigarette butt recovered near the two bodies. Appellant’s
mother tried to hide a gun from police immediately after the bodies were
found. Finally, Appellant confessed to the crime when she was arrested.
Hence, we agree with the PCRA court that York’s statement is not evidence
that would likely result in a different verdict.
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J-A14029-17
In her final claim raised on appeal, Appellant again seeks to gain a
new trial due to the testimony of Mr. Traupman. She asserts that the 2006
finding that his testimony did not warrant a new trial was misguided as it
was premised upon a finding that the Orchid DNA evidence established that
Appellant was guilty. Appellant characterizes this finding as faulty in light of
the fact that the Pennsylvania State Police deliberately framed her by
mounting her exemplar hairs instead of the seatback hairs and sending her
exemplar hairs to the FBI for testing. As analyzed above, Appellant’s
conspiracy theory involving the “switching of the hairs” is unfounded. Thus,
we conclude that this last position raised on appeal has been finally litigated.
As the PCRA court’s findings are supported by the record and free of
legal error, we affirm the denial of PCRA relief.
Order affirmed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 10/26/2017
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