[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.]
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
EASTERN DISTRICT
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, : No. 781 CAP
:
Appellee : Appeal from the Order dated May
: 16, 2019 in the Court of Common
: Pleas, Allegheny County, Criminal
v. : Division at Nos. CP-02-CR-
: 0008705-1994, CP-02-CR-009095-
: 1994 and CP-02-CR-0009201-1994.
LEROY FEARS, :
: SUBMITTED: July 7, 2020
Appellant :
OPINION IN SUPPORT OF REVERSAL
JUSTICE WECHT ` DECIDED: May 18, 2021
The instant appeal arises from the dismissal of a serial petition filed by Leroy Fears
under the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”), 42 Pa.C.S. § 9541, et seq., on February 8,
2016. Therein, Fears asserted a claim of relief on federal due process principles based
upon the revelation in 2015 of a trove of emails containing offensive stereotypes and slurs
about homosexuals, African-Americans, and victims of domestic and sexual violence, that
were connected to the private email account of former Pennsylvania Supreme Court
Justice J. Michael Eakin. Fears alleged that the content of those emails reflected an
intolerable risk of judicial bias against groups with which Fears identifies, such that his
due process rights were violated by Justice Eakin’s participation in this Court’s 2014
dismissal of Fears’ previous collateral appeal. See Commonwealth v. Fears, 86 A.3d
795, 802 (Pa. 2014) (“Fears II”). Fears requested discovery and an evidentiary hearing,
which the PCRA court denied. The court also denied relief on Fears’ constitutional claim.
The Opinion in Support of Affirmance (“OISA”) proffers alternative grounds for
affirming the lower court’s dismissal order. First, the OISA sua sponte reviews the
timeliness of the petition, concluding that Fears failed to exercise due diligence in
presenting his allegation of judicial bias. According to the OISA’s own assessment, the
facts upon which the claim was predicated were publicly available in October 2015, two
months before Fears claimed to have discovered them, and, thus, could have (or should
have) been discovered sooner. Consequently, the OISA finds that the PCRA court lacked
jurisdiction to entertain the claim. Next, the OISA considers Fears’ assertion that Justice
Eakin’s email practices demonstrated an unconstitutional risk of bias necessitating
reconsideration of Fears’ earlier claims in a new appeal before this Court untainted by
Justice Eakin’s alleged animus. The OISA dismisses this claim as meritless.
I would not reject either claim presently. Instead, because the PCRA court did not
permit discovery or substantively address Fears’ efforts to obtain the information upon
which his claim is grounded, neither the due diligence issue nor the ultimate constitutional
question regarding Justice Eakin’s potential bias is capable of thorough resolution on the
record before us. Accordingly, I would vacate the PCRA court’s dismissal order and
remand the case to that court for additional fact-finding.
I. Procedural History
On June 18, 1994, Leroy Fears molested twelve-year-old Shawn Hagan on the
banks of the Monongahela River in Allegheny County. When Hagan threatened to tell his
parents what had happened, Fears strangled Hagan to death. He then had anal
intercourse with Hagan’s body, tied a tire rim around Hagan’s neck, and swam with the
body out into the river until it sank below the surface. When Hagan’s remains were
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 2
discovered days later, Fears confessed to the murder, took detectives to the crime scene,
and provided a videotaped confession. Commonwealth v. Fears, 836 A.2d 52, 56-57 (Pa.
2003) (“Fears I”).
After pleading guilty to first-degree murder and related charges, Fears was
sentenced to death on February 7, 1995. He did not appeal. In January 1996, Fears,
acting pro se, filed a petition for post-conviction relief, alleging that counsel had failed to
file an appeal on his behalf. The Commonwealth agreed to the reinstatement of Fears’
post-sentence motion and appellate rights, which the trial court granted in May 1999.
Thereafter, the court denied relief in July 2001. This Court affirmed the judgment of
sentence in a unanimous opinion on November 20, 2003.1 Id. at 58, 74. The Supreme
Court of the United States denied Fears’ petition for a writ of certiorari on June 27, 2005.
Fears v. Pennsylvania, 545 U.S. 1141 (2005).
Fears filed his first counseled PCRA petition in June 2006, in which he raised
numerous challenges to the effectiveness of his trial and appellate counsel. Relevant
here, Fears alleged that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to present mitigating
evidence of, among other things, the sexual abuse Fears allegedly suffered during
adolescence at the hands of his foster brothers and a male cousin, as well as a family
history of mental illness, alcohol abuse, and sexual violence on his mother’s side. He
also included a derivative claim alleging that appellate counsel was ineffective for failing
adequately to litigate the issue of trial counsel’s stewardship on direct appeal.2 As part
1 Justice Eakin joined the Court’s opinion.
2 Ordinarily, defendants must wait until collateral review to raise claims of ineffective
assistance of counsel. Commonwealth v. Grant, 813 A.2d 726, 738 (Pa. 2002). We
departed from that general rule in Fears’ direct appeal in 2003. We found consideration
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 3
of his evidentiary proffer in support of his claims, Fears presented the results of a
comprehensive psychiatric evaluation performed on him and the resultant diagnosis of
“major depressive disorder with psychotic features.” Fears II, 86 A.3d at 813 (citing Decl.
of Dr. Richard G. Dudley, 5/25/2006, at 1-2). During that evaluation, Dr. Dudley
documented that Fears “was ashamed from the sexual abuse” that he experienced while
in foster care and “also felt shame from feeling he was gay, which was exacerbated
because the family’s religious views condemned homosexuality.” Id. (citing Dudley Decl.
at 4). The PCRA court dismissed Fears’ petition without an evidentiary hearing.
On February 19, 2014, this Court affirmed the PCRA court’s denial of relief in an
opinion authored by Justice Eakin. As to the mitigation issue, we observed that Fears’
allegation “of trial counsel’s ineffectiveness for failing to explore mitigating circumstances
was developed by appellate counsel” on direct appeal and was rejected as meritless by
this Court in 2003. Id. at 816. For those reasons, we dismissed Fears’ derivative
challenge to appellate counsel’s purported “failure to properly litigate trial counsel’s
ineffectiveness.” Id. at 817.
Following our 2014 decision, an email scandal came to light as a result of
an investigation by former Attorney General Kathleen Kane into her
predecessor’s handling of an unrelated matter. This investigation
uncovered emails sent from and received by members of her office on
Commonwealth owned computers that contained racist, sexist,
misogynistic, homophobic, and religiously and ethnically insensitive
content. Their piecemeal release revealed individuals from all three
of his challenge to trial counsel’s stewardship to be “appropriate” at that time because
“trial counsel had testified at an evidentiary hearing, and the trial court had addressed
[Fears’] allegations in its opinion.” Fears II, 86 A.3d at 802. Therefore, we “reviewed
those [ineffectiveness] claims that were fully litigated below, and dismissed without
prejudice those not ripe for review.” Id. (citing Fears I, 836 A.2d at 59 & n.7, 69, 71).
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 4
branches of the Commonwealth’s government as having sent and/or
received these emails.
Commonwealth v. Robinson, 204 A.3d 326, 327 (Pa. 2018) (Opinion in Support of
Reversal (“OISR”)); see also Commonwealth v. Blakeney, 193 A.3d 350, 354-56 (Pa.
2018) (OISR).
As was thoroughly recounted in Robinson and Blakeney, the Attorney General’s
email investigation implicated two former members of this Court: Justice Seamus
McCaffery and Justice Eakin. Details of Justice Eakin’s involvement began to be released
publicly in the fall of 2015. On October 1, 2015, then-Attorney General Kane announced
that she had turned over to the Judicial Conduct Board “more than 1,500” emails in the
possession of the Attorney General’s Office that Justice Eakin had received or sent, some
of which involved “‘racial, misogynistic pornography’” and “jokes” about domestic
violence.3 The next day, the Philadelphia Daily News, a newspaper owned by the parent
company of The Philadelphia Inquirer, revealed that it had obtained some of Justice
Eakin’s emails. In describing their contents, the article noted generally that, “One mocks
gay people. Some make fun of Mexicans or African-Americans. Some are pornographic.
Some make fun of women. Some might just be considered juvenile.”4
One week later, on October 8, 2015, the Daily News printed an extensive
examination of the emails that it had obtained and reviewed. Among the graphic
3 Craig R. McCoy, Angela Couloumbis, and Laura McCrystal, Kane says Justice
Eakin Exchanged Porn Emails on State Servers, PHILA. INQUIRER (Oct. 1, 2015),
https://www.inquirer.com/philly/news/politics/20151002_Kane_says_Justice_Eakin_exc
hanged_porn_emails_on_state_servers.html.
4 William Bender, New Emails Surface in Kathleen Kane Saga, PHILA. DAILY NEWS
(Oct. 2, 2015), https://www.inquirer.com/philly/news/20151002_New_emails_surface_in
_Kathleen_Kane_saga.html.
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 5
descriptions of more than twenty individual emails, the article indicated that Justice Eakin
had sent at least one email containing a “joke” about a woman who was beaten by her
husband, and that he had received a number of emails containing “slurs about
homosexuals” and “poking fun at Muslims” and African-Americans.5 The article also
detailed that Justice “Eakin’s email address repeatedly appears within a network of law
enforcement officials who received inappropriate emails on their government accounts,”
including the district attorney of Dauphin County; two judges on the Dauphin County Court
of Common Pleas; the county’s chief public defender; four assistant United States
attorneys; a senior deputy Pennsylvania attorney general; a chief of police; a federal
judge’s deputy clerk; a top aide to former Governor Tom Corbett; a lawyer with the
Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board; and an employee of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, among others. The article was reprinted in the Reading Eagle the next day, and
the emails were covered in varying degrees in numerous publications and television news
stories throughout the Commonwealth in the ensuing weeks.6
On October 22, 2015, Attorney General Kane publicly released forty-eight emails
that Justice Eakin sent or received between January 1, 2008, and December 31, 2012,
5 William Bender, A Supreme Court Justice’s Indecent Inbox, PHILA. DAILY NEWS
(Oct. 8, 2015), https://www.inquirer.com/philly/news/20151008_A_Supreme_Court_
justice_s_indecent_inbox.html.
6 See, e.g., Karen Langley, Pa. Supreme Court Sends Review of Justice Eakin’s
Email to Conduct Board, PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE (Nov. 2, 2015), https://www.post-
gazette.com/news/state/2015/11/02/Pennsylvania-Supreme-Court-No-discipline-for-
judge-Eakin-who-exchanged-offensive-emails-kane/stories/201511020136.
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 6
four of which originated from his private email account.7 At that time, she described the
tranche, which largely consisted of “images of topless and nude women as well as sexual
jokes,” as “only a subset of pornographic, misogynistic and racist emails received and
sent by Justice Eakin on his private email address.”8
After reviewing the emails turned over by the Attorney General’s Office, the Judicial
Conduct Board filed a complaint against Justice Eakin on December 8, 2015, alleging
violations of the Code of Judicial Conduct and Article V of the Pennsylvania Constitution
arising from his email practices. The complaint included a survey of the emails sent by
Justice Eakin to employees of the Attorney General’s Office, along with those received
by him from members of that office, between 2008 and 2014. In total, the complaint
documented that Justice Eakin sent 157 emails and received 786. Compl. at 23, ¶¶56-
64. Of the 157 emails sent by Justice Eakin, according to the complaint, “a number of
these emails contained subject matter that involved nudity, gender stereotypes, and
ethnic stereotypes.” Id. at 25, ¶78. Included among the eighteen emails sent by Justice
Eakin that were described in the complaint were the previously reported “joke” about a
wife who was beaten by her husband, id. at 27-28, ¶78(h), and two “off color jokes”
7 The Attorney General’s Office selected emails from these dates because they
“corresponded to the dates of the Jerry Sandusky criminal investigation and prosecution
by” that Office. Jud. Conduct Bd. Compl. (“Compl.”), 12/8/2015, at 7 n.1.
8 Karen Langley, Attorney General Kane Releases Justice’s Emails, PITTSBURGH
POST-GAZETTE (Oct. 22, 2015); https://www.post-gazette.com/news/state/2015/10/22/
Attorney-General-Kathleen-Kane-s-office-to-release-emails-of-state-Supreme-Court-
Justice-J-Michael-Eakin/stories/201510220178. The Post-Gazette article referred to the
October 8 Daily News report. See also Staff & Wire Report, Kathleen Kane Releases
Emails from Supreme Court Justice’s Private Account, MORNING CALL (Oct. 22, 2015),
https://www.mcall.com/news/pennsylvania/mc-pa-kathleen-kane-eakin-emails-1022-
20151022-story.html.
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 7
regarding the biracial identities of professional golfer Tiger Woods and President Barack
Obama. Id. at 29-30, ¶78(m)-(n).
As for the 786 emails received by Justice Eakin, the complaint details seventy-nine
of them, which included “pictures of nude women; sexually-suggestive themes; gender
stereotypes; homophobic content; socioeconomic stereotypes; violence towards women;
racial humor; ethnically-based humor; and stereotypes of religious groups.” Id. at 31,
¶80(a); 38, ¶81(a). A number of these emails were described in the October 8, 2015
Daily News article.9
The Court of Judicial Discipline (“CJD”) issued an interim suspension of Justice
Eakin on December 22, 2015, barring him from his judicial and administrative duties until
further order.10
Within two months of the publication of the complaint, Fears filed the instant PCRA
petition, in which he asserted that this Court’s denial of relief in his previous PCRA appeal
was tainted by the involvement of Justice Eakin because he had “sent and/or received
emails that showed a bias against persons of color and gay persons and victims of sexual
9 In comparing the Daily News article to the complaint, it is apparent that the article
contains descriptions of several emails not included among those summarized by the
Board. Those include additional homophobic stereotypes “about homosexuals being
promiscuous and unable to sit through a documentary because they are too busy
performing oral sex”; “quips about . . . nuns’ breasts”; and at least two images of women
with references to alcohol. See Bender, supra note 5.
10 Justice Eakin resigned from this Court on March 15, 2016. On March 24, 2016,
the CJD issued an opinion concluding that Justice Eakin had violated the Code of Judicial
Ethics and the Pennsylvania Constitution. In re Eakin, 150 A.3d 1042 (Pa. Ct. Jud. Disc.
2016) (per curiam).
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 8
abuse, domestic abuse and incest.” PCRA Pet., 2/8/2016, at 1, ¶1.11 Fears requested
the appointment of counsel; discovery; “an evidentiary hearing on all claims involving
disputed issues of fact”; and relief in the form of vacatur of his guilty plea and death
sentence, a new trial or sentencing proceeding, the reopening of his post-conviction
proceedings, and “such other and further relief as is just and necessary.” Id. at 23.
Conceding the facial untimeliness of his petition—which he filed more than a
decade after his judgment of sentence for first-degree murder and related crimes became
final—Fears pleaded that he satisfied the newly-discovered facts exception to the PCRA’s
jurisdictional time-bar. To satisfy that exception, a petitioner must demonstrate that “the
facts upon which the claim is predicated were unknown to the petitioner and could not be
ascertained by the exercise of due diligence.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(1)(ii). In
Commonwealth v. Bennett, 930 A.2d 1264 (Pa. 2007), we clarified that the timeliness
exception for newly-discovered facts “does not require any merits analysis of the
underlying claim.” Id. at 1271. Rather, that exception has just two components that a
petitioner must establish. He must allege and prove that: (1) “the facts upon which the
claim was predicated were unknown”; and (2) that those facts “could not have been
11 In his pleadings, Fears claimed that one of the emails Justice Eakin received
“pertained directly to him.” Mot. to File 2d Amend. PCRA Pet., 7/31/2018, at 4, ¶8.
Presented in the form of a joke, the email entitled “Leroy’s Hearing Problem”
reads: “[L]eroy asks a preacher to pray for help with his hearing, the
preacher prays and asks how his hearing is, and Leroy says, ‘I don’t know,
Reverend, it ain’t till next Wednesday.’”
PCRA Pet., 2/8/2016 at 18, ¶¶59-60. Calling the email “alarming” and “shocking” to him,
Fears averred that it was intended “to make fun of an African-American man named
‘Leroy,’ who was preparing for an impending legal proceeding.” Id. at 18, ¶60.
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 9
ascertained by the exercise of due diligence.” Id. at 1272 (emphasis in original). “If the
petitioner alleges and proves these two components, then the PCRA court has jurisdiction
over the claim under” Section 9545(b)(1)(ii). Id. Additionally, at the time that Fears filed
his petition, the PCRA mandated that a petition invoking a time-bar exception be filed
“within 60 days of the date the claim could have been presented.” Id. § 9545(b)(2).12
In his petition, Fears pleaded generally that “the facts upon which the claim is
predicated were unknown to [him] and could not have been ascertained by the exercise
of due diligence until now.” PCRA Pet., 2/8/2016, at 13, ¶49. He also averred that he
filed his petition within “60 days of the Complaint being filed against Justice Eakin by the
Court of Judicial Discipline; his public apology and admission of sending and receiving
the emails and his temporary suspension pending trial.” Id. Significantly, Fears said
nothing substantive about his inability to discover the facts upon which his claim was
predicated earlier with the exercise of due diligence.13 He noted, however, that he filed
his claim “at this time in an abundance of caution, and to avoid any statute of limitations
defenses, based upon information currently available through publicly-available filings
and proceedings with the Court of Judicial Discipline.” Id. at 14, ¶51.
12 Because the sixtieth day following the publication of the Board’s complaint on
December 8, 2015, fell on a Saturday, Fears filed his petition on Monday, February 8,
2016, in accordance with 1 Pa.C.S. § 1908. The PCRA now requires that such petitions
be filed within one year of the date that the claim could have been presented.
13 Fears also suggested that he “may also meet” the governmental interference
exception to the time-bar “because neither the Attorney General, the Courts nor the
prosecutor in [Fears’] case disclosed to [him] the existence or content of the emails in
question.” PCRA Pet., 2/8/2016, at 13, ¶50. Because the Commonwealth conceded the
timeliness of Fears’ petition, the PCRA court did not address this alternative exception.
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 10
Fears subsequently filed a number of amended petitions and miscellaneous
documents purporting to supplement his initial submission, only one of which expanded
upon his initial averments with regard to his due diligence.14 In his first amended petition,
Fears suggested that the filing of the complaint on December 8, 2015, triggered the sixty-
day clock for raising his claim because the “descriptions of the various emails . . . were
introduced into the public” on that date. 1st Amend. PCRA Pet., 6/28/2018, at 17, ¶57.
Although Fears noted that “[t]he emails themselves were introduced as Exhibit 1 at the
December 21, 2015 proceeding in the Court of Judicial Discipline,” he conceded that the
complaint “was the first publicly-available and reliable document” charging Justice Eakin
with ethical violations and describing “in painstaking detail” the “racist, homophobic and
otherwise inappropriate content” contained in the emails. Id. Fears also addressed his
due diligence in slightly greater detail. He explained that, before “the substance of the
emails” was made public with the filing of the complaint, he “could not have accessed the
emails because they were on the Office of the Attorney General’s computer servers and
initially gathered as part of a confidential investigation.” Id. at 18, ¶59. He also averred
that production of the emails by the Attorney General “was selective and calculatingly
14 The remaining filings largely raised new arguments regarding Justice McCaffery
and the administration of the death penalty in Pennsylvania generally. See, e.g., Mot. for
Leave of Court to File 2d Amendment to Initial PCRA Pet., 7/6/2015; Mot. for Leave of
Court to File an Amendment – Through Incorporation by Reference – to Initial PCRA Pet.
in Conjunction with PCRA Amendments I & II, 8/2/2018; Supp. to Pet. for Writ of Habeas
Corpus and for Collateral Relief Pursuant to the PCRA, 8/17/2018; Mot. to File an
Amendment to Initial PCRA Pet. and in Conjunction to PCRA Amendments I & II,
9/21/2018; Mem. of Law: Higher Court Decisions Recent Instruction Supporting
Appellant’s Judicial Biasness [sic] Claim, 10/16/2018. I agree with the OISA that Fears
is due no relief on these belated claims because his supplemental filings were not self-
executing and he did not obtain leave of court to amend his petition in order to raise them.
OISA at 22-23.
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 11
timed.” Id. Fears did not address how he came to learn about the complaint or his
knowledge of the foregoing news reports.
The Commonwealth did not challenge the timeliness of Fears’ petition. Perhaps
in light of that concession, the PCRA court, without analysis, summarily concluded that
the petition was “timely filed within the 60-day period following the discovery of the new
facts.” PCRA Ct. Op., 10/2/2019, at unpaginated 5. Nevertheless, the court dismissed
Fears’ petition, concluding that he did not satisfy the PCRA’s substantive provision for
relief based upon after-discovered evidence. Id. at unpaginated 5-8.
II. Analysis
Presently, Fears challenges the PCRA court’s failure to permit discovery, to hold
an evidentiary hearing, and to grant relief on the substantive claim based upon the
presence of judicial bias in the disposition of his earlier appeal.
A. Timeliness
The OISA begins its review by sua sponte investigating the timeliness of Fears’
petition, concluding that the petition “fails to present a ‘fact’ that meets the jurisdictional
requirements of our PCRA statute, and fails to set forth any information regarding the
statute’s due diligence requirement.” OISA at 12. I respectfully disagree with the OISA’s
timeliness analysis. Despite acknowledging that Fears is not required to “provide a nexus
between the newly discovered fact and his conviction,” id. at 13, the OISA effectively
imposes a heightened nexus requirement by engaging in a merits-based inquiry under
the guise of a timeliness analysis. The OISA shows its hand by relying upon an apparent
distinction between email senders and recipients posited by the Commonwealth in “a
different portion [of its brief] than that addressing timeliness” in order to refute Fears’
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satisfaction of the time-bar exception. See id. at 13-14. For support, the OISA identifies
sources cited by Fears indicating that “Justice Eakin did not send any emails implicating
the topics alleged by [Fears], and received only a few emails invoking the invidious subject
matter.” Id. at 14. The OISA’s focus is misplaced.
Setting aside for the moment the question of whether a fact was unknown to the
petitioner, Bennett requires a simple series of inquiries when presented with a PCRA
petition invoking the newly-discovered fact exception: What is the fact? What is the
claim? Is the claim predicated on the fact? Here, the answer to these questions is
straightforward. The revelation of a trove of emails in the fall of 2015 indicating potential
judicial bias on Justice Eakin’s behalf against, inter alia, homosexuals, African-
Americans, and victims of domestic and sexual violence, plus the claim that said bias
violated Fears’ constitutional right to due process of law by tainting review of his previous
appeal, equals a claim predicated upon a fact. For present purposes, then, the identities
of the senders and recipients of particular emails, and whether those emails in fact
betrayed biases that could have tainted prior proceedings, are irrelevant at this stage.
Those are issues germane to the substantive merits-based claim, not to the timeliness
inquiry. What matters first is that, before October 2015, no one other than Justice Eakin
and the network of individuals with whom he exchanged emails knew of the offensive
subject matter being shared between Pennsylvania prosecutors and a member of the
Commonwealth’s highest court.
Contrary to the OISA’s view, it is not the case that “the unsavory nature of Eakin’s
email account per se establishes” Fears’ underlying claim. Id. Rather, it is the specific
content of those emails—homophobic slurs, racist tropes, and callous disregard for abuse
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 13
victims—that suggests a bias against particular groups with which Fears identifies. When
members of the judiciary hold those potential biases, the due process rights of the criminal
defendants whose convictions those jurists review are implicated. Likewise, when those
prejudices casually are shared with the very prosecutors who are charged with defending
those convictions, the public’s trust in the criminal justice system is unquestionably
shaken. See In re Glancey, 527 A.2d 997, 999 (Pa. 1987) (“Public confidence is eroded
by irresponsible or improper conduct by judges.”) (citation omitted). Again, though,
recognizing these points merely informs an analysis of the merits of Fears’ underlying
claim, rather than the timeliness of his petition. Shorn of its improper considerations, the
OISA’s inquiry can reach no other conclusion than that Fears raised a colorable
constitutional challenge of judicial bias (or the appearance thereof) predicated upon a
fact—i.e., the revelation of “offensive emails displaying cultural biases which implicate his
case,” OISA at 13 n.11—that came to light in 2015. In doing so, he has satisfied his
burden of proof as to these preliminary matters.
That leaves one important question: Was the fact of Justice Eakin’s “indecent
inbox,” upon which Fears’ claim of judicial bias was predicated, unknown to Fears within
sixty days of when he filed his petition? Fears asserted that it was, at least in the most
general of terms. See PCRA Pet., 2/8/2016, at 13, ¶49. In previous appeals raising
similar claims, members of this Court, including this author, concluded that the facts upon
which claims of judicial bias against Justice Eakin were predicated were made public as
early as October 8, 2015, when the Daily News published its detailed examination of
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 14
Justice Eakin’s email practices.15 That article, which subsequently was reprinted in other
publications throughout the Commonwealth, expressly indicated that Justice Eakin’s
emails contained homophobic slurs, racist stereotypes about African-Americans, and
commentary demeaning to victims of sexual abuse and domestic violence—the very
prejudices that Fears alleges tainted review of his previous appeal. In fact, the Daily
News article provided more specific details about emails denigrating the first of these
groups than were later contained in the disciplinary complaint filed against Justice Eakin
by the Judicial Conduct Board. See supra note 9. Given the extensive public reporting
about the emails’ alarming subject matter, the “facts” contained in the complaint were not
unknown when the complaint was filed—at least not to the public. Therein lies the rub.
At the time Fears filed his petition, this Court continued to recognize the so-called
“public records presumption,” pursuant to which PCRA petitioners were precluded from
15 See Robinson, 204 A.3d at 342 (OISR) (“[A]lthough there was some publicly
available information about Eakin’s involvement in the email scandal in 2014, those news
articles did not contain the facts upon which the claim raised in Robinson’s third PCRA
petition is predicated. Those facts were not knowable or made public until October 8,
2015, when the information concerning Eakin’s sending and receiving of offensive emails
became publicly available. . . . Not until the release of these newly disclosed emails did
the ‘fact’ of Eakin’s active participation in the transmission of offensive emails become
known.”); id. at 344 (“[T]he facts underlying Robinson’s claim could not have been
discovered through the exercise of due diligence until October 8, 2015.”); Blakeney, 193
A.3d at 361 (OISR) (“The fact upon which the claim [of judicial bias] is predicated is the
group of emails, and the bias of Justice Eakin that they suggest. With the publication of
the newspaper reports, Blakeney, an African-American and a Muslim, learned that a
member of this Court had exchanged emails denigrating African-Americans and
Muslims.”); id. at 362 (“Blakeney could not, by the exercise of due diligence, have
ascertained that Justice Eakin sent and received offensive emails. This fact was not
made public until the Inquirer and Eagle articles. . . . [T]he existence of the offensive
emails, the content of which was revealed to the public with the publication of the
newspaper reports and which serve as the factual predicate for Blakeney’s underlying
claim, satisfies the exception for newly discovered facts.”); accord Commonwealth v.
Koehler, 229 A.3d 915, 923 (Pa. 2020).
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asserting that matters of public record were unknown to them when attempting to satisfy
the newly-discovered facts exception.16 Although we narrowed the presumption’s
applicability in Commonwealth v. Burton, 158 A.3d 618 (Pa. 2017), by holding that it did
not apply to “pro se prisoner petitioners,” id. at 690-91, that decision would have afforded
no benefit to Fears, who, by his own admission, has been represented by attorneys with
the capital habeas unit of the Federal Public Defender’s Office for the Western District of
Pennsylvania since at least July 2014. See PCRA Pet., 2/8/2016, at 10, ¶40.
Accordingly, Fears wisely focused upon the time that the facts giving rise to his claim
entered the “public domain.” See 1st Amend. PCRA Pet., 6/28/2018, at 17, ¶57 (citing
Commonwealth v. Edmiston, 65 A.3d 339, 352 (Pa. 2013)). As noted, that occurred on
October 8, 2015, four months before Fears filed his petition, a fact that both the
Commonwealth and the PCRA court misapprehended in conceding its timeliness.
Although the OISA disclaims reliance upon the public records presumption, OISA
at 16 n.12, it implicitly resorts to that now-defunct presupposition when it invokes the
“publicly available” nature of the information in order to probe purported deficiencies in
Fears’ PCRA petition. See id. at 15-16. As with the unknown fact issue, the OISA
identifies a pleading gap in Fears’ filings relating to his due diligence obligations that also
turns upon the presumption. The PCRA requires petitioners who invoke the newly-
discovered facts exception to allege and prove that “the facts upon which the claim is
predicated were unknown to the petitioner and could not have been ascertained by the
exercise of due diligence.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(1)(ii) (emphasis added). The OISA
16 See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Taylor, 67 A.3d 1245, 1248 (Pa. 2013);
Commonwealth v. Chester, 895 A.2d 520, 523 (Pa. 2006); Commonwealth v. Whitney,
817 A.2d 473, 478 (Pa. 2003); Commonwealth v. Lark, 746 A.2d 585, 588 n.4 (Pa. 2000).
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 16
observes that Fears did not “explain in his petition how or when he became aware of” the
information contained in the December 8, 2015 complaint, or how he was able to discover
that obscure filing but none of the earlier public reporting on the subject. OISA at 16. In
doing so, the OISA necessarily leans heavily upon the public records presumption in
concluding that Fears could have discovered that reporting two months earlier with the
exercise of due diligence. See id. at 15-16 (“[T]he information upon which [Fears’] claims
are predicated was ascertainable upon the exercise of due diligence nearly two months
before, or when the Philadelphia Inquirer article was first published on October 8,
2015. . . . [Fears] at this point had reason to question the propriety of his case in light of
publicly available information.”) (emphasis added).17
Unlike the OISA, I would not hold the public reporting of Justice Eakin’s email
practices against Fears without first ordering additional fact-finding pertaining to his
knowledge and diligence (or lack thereof). Significantly, we abolished the public records
presumption during the pendency of Fears’ appeal to this Court. See Commonwealth v.
Small, 238 A.3d 1267 (Pa. 2020). In Small, we confronted the dichotomy left in Burton’s
wake, whereby those defendants who retained counsel while incarcerated were
presumed to be aware of facts in the public domain, while those without counsel were
not. We acknowledged that “the plain language of the newly discovered fact exception
does not call for any assessment of whether the asserted facts appear in the public
record.” Id. at 1283. Instead, the statute “plainly calls for a circumstance-dependent
analysis of the petitioner’s knowledge, not that of the public at large.” Id. (citing Burton,
158 A.3d at 632 (“In requiring that the facts be unknown to the petitioner, the statute itself
17 The OISA does not suggest how that information was ascertainable by Fears.
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 17
contains no exception, express or constructive, regarding information that is of public
record.”)). Having acknowledged and corrected our own mistaken precedent, we restored
“the primacy of the statutory language” from which we departed two decades earlier. Id.
Courts no longer can presume that incarcerated defendants could have discovered
publicly available information with the exercise of due diligence, whether or not they had
the benefit of legal representation.
It is solely within our power to ensure that the dead hand of a legal error propagated
by this Court, once corrected, no longer burdens petitioners by strangling their otherwise
viable claims from beyond the grave. See id. at 1284 (“[O]ur duty is not to streamline the
process of denying potentially meritorious claims.”). The public records presumption was
purely of extra-textual judicial provenance. We engrafted it onto the PCRA,
notwithstanding the statute’s plain language, “in a single footnote and with little
accompanying analysis.” Id. at 1290 (Dougherty, J., concurring and dissenting) (citing
Lark, 746 A.2d at 588 n.4). It applied exclusively in the context of post-conviction
collateral challenges. Even then, in its last gasps it affected only a narrow class of
incarcerated defendants who invoked the specific time-bar exception at issue here based
upon facts that came into the public domain while those defendants were represented by
counsel. Given the constrained parameters within which the presumption operated, those
petitioners whose cases were awaiting disposition when Small was decided ought to
benefit from its abolishment.
In his petition, Fears pleaded that the fact of Justice Eakin’s email practices was
unknown to him and undiscoverable with the exercise of due diligence before the Judicial
Conduct Board filed its complaint on December 8, 2015. That pleading could have been
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 18
contested by the Commonwealth or probed by the PCRA court. It was not. Although the
OISA is on firm ground in questioning the timeliness of a PCRA petition for the first time
on appeal, see Commonwealth v. Reid, 235 A.3d 1124, 1143 (Pa. 2020), this Court
should proceed cautiously before attempting to resolve fact-intensive issues left
unaddressed by the PCRA court. Here, Fears has been afforded no opportunity to
respond to the OISA’s sua sponte inquest or to supplement the record regarding his
knowledge and diligence, which were not challenged below. This Court has no inherent
insight into the degree of public information available to a given prisoner, which may vary
by prison, let alone one contending with the restrictions placed upon a capital defendant.
Absent additional fact-finding, we have no way of determining whether, or how, Fears
could have discovered the Daily News article or the reporting that followed.18 Questions
about Fears’ knowledge and capacity to ascertain information in the public domain should
be addressed in the first instance by the PCRA court sitting as fact-finder. Accordingly, I
18 The OISA would have Fears proactively deny his awareness of these news reports
in order to satisfy his burden of proving the undiscoverability of the “publicly available”
information pertinent to his claims, notwithstanding the fact that the very existence of
those reports may have been unknown to him when he filed his petition. Had the Board
cited that reporting in its complaint, those references might have sufficed to put Fears on
notice that some of the information upon which he relied was available through other
sources, thus prompting him to plead more precisely that he could not have obtained
those particular articles with the exercise of due diligence. But the complaint cites none
of the public reporting the knowledge of which the OISA now admonishes Fears for failing
to disavow. Hence, Fears pleaded that he first learned of Justice Eakin’s email practices
on or about December 8, 2015, after the Board’s complaint became public, and that he
could not have discovered the information contained therein sooner with any degree of
diligence. Based upon those assertions, it is unclear what more information “of the right
kind” Fears could have included in his petition to meet his pleading obligations. OISA at
16 n.12. The PCRA does not require petitioners to be clairvoyant. In any event, under
these circumstances, the proper venue for testing one’s due diligence, which the
Commonwealth opted not to do here, is an evidentiary hearing in the trial court.
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 19
would remand this matter to the PCRA court to consider whether Fears was duly diligent
in raising his claim in light of the information regarding Justice Eakin’s emails that was in
the public record as of October 8, 2015.19
B. Merits
Given my proposed disposition, I would not reach the merits of Fears’ underlying
claim of judicial bias. However, because the OISA ventures to resolve that question
against Fears, the deficiencies in its analysis warrant delineation. Despite the absence
of a complete record, the OISA draws sweeping conclusions based upon the descriptions
of a smattering of emails in the Judicial Conduct Board’s possession. The OISA proclaims
that “Justice Eakin’s email account and the content contained therein does not render him
a biased jurist”; that “[h]is participation in the inappropriate email activity had no bearing
on his ability to fairly apply the law to the facts of [Fears’] case”; and that “none of Justice
Eakin’s written opinions contained any bias, and certainly none that reached the levels of
constitutional interference.” OISA at 22. With these bare threads, the OISA endeavors
to weave a narrative that absolves Justice Eakin from any further examination of his
questionable email practices. The errors of this approach readily are apparent.
As a threshold matter, the PCRA’s after-discovered evidence rule is not the correct
analytical framework to address allegations of an appellate jurist’s bias. That provision
entitles a petitioner to relief upon requisite proof that his “conviction or sentence resulted
from . . . [t]he unavailability at the time of trial of exculpatory evidence that has
19 The OISA does not address Fears’ alternative ground for satisfying the PCRA’s
time-bar pursuant to Section 9545(b)(1)(i), i.e., that his failure to raise his present claim
earlier was the result of interference by government officials. See 1st Amend. PCRA Pet.,
6/28/2018, at 17, ¶58. That allegation also demands additional scrutiny by the PCRA
court.
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 20
subsequently become available and would have changed the outcome of the trial if it had
been introduced.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 9543(a)(2)(vi). Proof that an appellate jurist’s apparent
bias tainted review of a criminal appeal does not constitute evidence that would exculpate
the defendant of his guilt. Nor is it clear how such proof would change the outcome of a
trial, to say nothing of overcoming evidentiary rules governing relevance and admissibility.
The PCRA court’s analysis of Fears’ claim as one of after-discovered evidence was,
therefore, erroneous. The OISA’s determination that the lower court “was correct in
concluding that [Fears] did not demonstrate that the emails, or any alleged bias he
purports they reflect, would have altered the outcome of his proceedings,” OISA at 18,
similarly misses the mark because it conflates Fears’ burden to establish a risk of judicial
bias with the inapposite standard of proof for after-discovered evidence claims.
Claims of judicial bias implicate Section 9543(a)(2)(i) of the PCRA, which concerns
“violation[s] of the Constitution of this Commonwealth or the Constitution or laws of the
United States which, in the circumstances of the particular case, so undermined the truth-
determining process that no reliable adjudication of guilt or innocence could have taken
place.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 9543(a)(2)(i). That is so because proof of judicial bias contravenes
state and federal due process principles. Williams v. Pennsylvania, ___ U.S. ___, 136
S.Ct. 1899, 1905-06 (2016).
That said, the OISA nonetheless errs by attempting to view Fears’ claim through
the lens of the unique circumstances at issue in Williams. That decision turned upon the
participation of former Chief Justice Ronald D. Castille in this Court’s review of Terrance
Williams’ PCRA appeal. As the District Attorney of Philadelphia, former Chief Justice
Castille had authorized his subordinates to pursue the death penalty at Williams’ murder
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 21
trial. Thereafter, as a member of this Court, he declined to recuse himself from Williams’
appeals. Id. at 1903-05. Reasoning that “there is an impermissible risk of actual bias
when a judge earlier had significant, personal involvement as a prosecutor in a critical
decision regarding the defendant’s case,” the Supreme Court of the United States
concluded that former Chief Justice Castille’s recusal declination violated Williams’ rights
under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause. Id. at 1905. The Court further
clarified that, for appellate jurists, “an unconstitutional failure to recuse constitutes
structural error even if the judge in question did not cast a deciding vote.” Id. at 1909.
Williams thus offers a bright-line test for a unique category of due process claims:
A judge may not sit in review of the convictions that he had a significant, personal role in
securing as a prosecutor. To do so would constitute error per se and would necessitate
a new appeal. Fears has never claimed that Justice Eakin had a significant, personal
involvement in his case as a prosecutor. For that reason, his claim is not grounded in the
rule announced in Williams. Although the Williams Court declared that the “‘absence of
actual bias’ on the part of a judge” is a guarantee of due process, id. (quoting In re
Murchison, 349 U.S. 133, 136 (1955)), the Court also reaffirmed the notion that the test
for judicial bias in most other circumstances is an objective one. Faced with an allegation
of bias such as the one Fears presents here, a reviewing court “asks not whether a judge
harbors an actual, subjective bias, but instead whether, as an objective matter, ‘the
average judge in his position is ‘likely’ to be neutral, or whether there is an unconstitutional
‘potential for bias.’” Id. (quoting Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., 556 U.S. 868, 881
(2009)). Viewed objectively, a judge whose conduct suggests an impermissible potential
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 22
for bias for or against any party, whether due to pecuniary interests or other potential
prejudices, must recuse from any case involving that party.
Following Williams, in Commonwealth v. Koehler, 229 A.3d 915 (Pa. 2020), we
addressed whether “PCRA courts are vested with the authority to remedy appellate-level
constitutional violations in the form of a new appeal to the appellate court, if warranted by
the factual development of the case.” Id. at 929. We held that “[a]n issue challenging the
impartiality of an appellate judge . . . constitutionally relates directly to the validity of the
decision upholding the underlying conviction and sentence. It is an attack upon the truth-
determining process, a process that logically includes collateral attacks on the judgment
of sentence.” Id. at 931. “Consequently,” we concluded that “a due process challenge to
the impartiality of an appellate jurist is cognizable under Section 9543(a)(2)(i) of the
PCRA.” Id. We further held that “the remedy for demonstrating that an appellate tribunal
included a jurist with an unconstitutional likelihood of bias would be a new appeal to that
tribunal without the participation of the partial jurist.” Id. at 933-34.
Like Fears, Koehler filed a facially untimely, serial PCRA petition asserting a due
process challenge arising from Justice Eakin’s participation in Koehler’s previous
collateral appeal. “Koehler asked for the opportunity to prove his due process violation
and, if he prevailed on the merits, to obtain reinstatement of his PCRA appellate rights
nunc pro tunc.” Id. at 935. While we agreed with Koehler that the PCRA court mistakenly
believed that it lacked the authority to grant the relief he requested, we declined to
address his substantive claims in the absence of “the evidentiary and factual development
that would be needed to substantiate a claim of appellate-level judicial bias.” Id. at 937.
We explained:
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 23
This Court is not equipped to receive evidence, assess that evidence, or
make credibility determinations. A claim of judicial bias may be supported,
as it was in this instance, by requests for discovery, leave to amend the
petition as the case develops, and requests for an evidentiary hearing to
resolve disputed facts. We can expect that claims of judicial bias would
require precisely the kind of factual development best suited to the courts
of common pleas. . . .
We are an appellate court. We require for our appellate review the
development of a record as warranted and, where a hearing is appropriate,
an assessment of the facts by the trial court hearing the evidence. . . .
The proper forum to consider the allegations and evidence of judicial bias
is the PCRA court. Once factual and evidentiary development occurs in that
forum as needed, and the PCRA court makes its rulings, the appellate court
can review those rulings on appeal in due course.
Id. Those observations apply with equal force here.
The OISA suggests that we “would be hard pressed to find any connection
between the inappropriate and offensive subject matter and Justice Eakin’s execution of
his responsibilities as a member of this Court.” OISA at 19. I disagree. Even a cursory
review of the OISA’s conclusions based upon the limited record before us confirms the
need for additional fact-finding before the allegations lodged against Justice Eakin can be
resolved one way or another.
Pertinently, the OISA relies upon a finding of the Court of Judicial Discipline that
“there was no evidence that Justice Eakin ‘in his written judicial opinions, ever
demonstrated any overt bias due to the race, gender, ethnicity, or sexual orientation of a
litigant or witness.’” Id. at 18 (quoting Eakin, 150 A.3d at 1048). The CJD’s conclusion
that the evidence it reviewed demonstrated no overt bias on Justice Eakin’s part is of no
moment. A sophisticated jurist (or even an unsophisticated one) who harbors prejudices
against a particular group or individual is unlikely to air his animus openly, whether in
legal opinions or via email, no matter how private or secure. That is why it is well-settled
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 24
that proof of a judge’s actual bias is just one way to establish a due process violation.
Appearances matter, too. In that regard, a reviewing court must be satisfied that a judge’s
conduct objectively does not give rise to an unconstitutional “potential for bias.” Caperton,
556 U.S. at 881. Even the passive receipt over a period of years of homophobic and
racist emails could suggest at least a tolerance for bigotry.
Furthermore, the CJD specifically found that the Judicial Conduct Board failed to
produce evidence of overt bias. The only evidence of record reproduced in the
appendices attached to the CJD’s opinion was the descriptions of emails copied verbatim
from the summary of the emails contained in the Board’s complaint. But the Board’s
survey significantly was circumscribed. For instance, the Board limited its review to those
emails that were in the possession of the Attorney General’s Office between 2008 and
2014. Accord Robinson, 204 A.3d at 345 (OISR) (“The only emails sent or received by
Eakin that have been disclosed to date are those that were housed on the OAG’s
server.”). It also stipulated that it examined 943 emails sent or received by Justice Eakin
despite Attorney General Kane’s public pronouncement that more than 1,500 emails had
been turned over for review.20 Even then, only eighteen of the 157 emails that originated
from Justice Eakin’s account were described in the Board’s complaint, amounting to
approximately 11.5% of the total number of emails that he sent. Likewise, the complaint
summarized just seventy-nine of the 786 emails received by the justice—barely 10%.
See Compl. at 31, ¶80(a) (noting that the emails received by Justice Eakin “contain
material including, but not limited to, the following”) (emphasis added).
20 If the number of emails that the Attorney General referenced included duplicates,
it is not apparent from the complaint or the CJD’s factual findings.
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 25
While it is true that the “overwhelming majority” of emails turned over by the
Attorney General’s Office to the Judicial Conduct Board “were sent by others,” OISA at
18, it is difficult to accept general characterizations of the emails’ contents when so few
actually were summarized or entered into evidence. Yet the CJD simply relied upon the
Board’s stipulated summary of the limited sample in rendering its judgment. Fears’ efforts
to prove his unique claim of judicial bias, through targeted discovery if necessary, should
not be prejudiced by the CJD’s reliance upon the Board’s condensed review or the
stipulation agreed to by Justice Eakin in lieu of a trial—negotiations to which Fears was
not a party. Moreover, Justice Eakin’s interest in agreeing to the Board’s curated
stipulation rather than having the totality of his emails entered into the public record could
not be more apparent. As noted, a number of emails, at least one of which contained
homophobic stereotypes, were identified in the Daily News article but did not appear to
be described in the Board’s complaint. With almost 90% of the total number of emails
excluded by choice from the CJD’s review, it is not farfetched to think that similar content
so far has escaped public accounting. And it certainly is not so implausible that it justifies
precluding Fears forever from examining the entirety of the collection of emails.21
21 Notwithstanding these concerns, the OISA steadfastly defends its reliance upon
the Board’s limited descriptions by noting that the Board “still examined the full panoply
of emails and labeled them according to the invidious subject matter which each
demonstrated.” OISA at 19 n.16. Absent an independent review by the PCRA court of
the emails in the Board’s possession, how the Board chose to label the 846 emails that it
did not describe in its complaint is dehors the record and meaningless for present
purposes. The OISA effectively has taken judicial notice of Justice Eakin’s apparent lack
of bias without a single email in the Board’s possession having been turned over for
examination by a court in these proceedings. While that approach certainly makes for
“efficient review,” id., any efficiency to be gained will come at Fears’ expense.
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 26
As with the question of Fears’ diligence, the issue of Justice Eakin’s bias—or,
rather, the objective risk of his bias emanating from his emails—cannot be determined
without a more thorough examination of the messages that he sent or received.
Moreover, it is noteworthy that both Robinson and Blakeney—which we affirmed not on
their merits but as a consequence of this Court’s even divide—involved ex parte
communications between Justice Eakin and members of the Attorney General’s Office
and the Dauphin County District Attorney’s Office. Because those offices prosecuted
Robinson and Blakeney, respectively, the allegations raised in those cases suggested a
distinct appearance of bias not immediately apparent here. Given the incomplete email
summary produced by the Board, we are unable to determine whether there exist any
emails between Justice Eakin and employees of the Allegheny County District Attorney’s
Office, which prosecuted Fears. If prosecutors in that office possessed additional
evidence of communications with Justice Eakin containing homophobic slurs, racist
stereotypes, and “jokes” about victims of domestic and sexual violence, those
messages—and the threat of their revelation—could give rise to a potential risk of bias in
favor of the Commonwealth’s position in Fears’ prior appeals similar to that alleged in
Robinson and Blakeney.
In sum, Fears’ claim of bias could be satisfied in at least two ways. The first turns
on whether the sheer volume and content of emails sent or received by Justice Eakin
reflect an objective risk of bias against homosexuals, African-Americans, or victims of
abuse, the groups with which Fears identifies. That approach would require a full
accounting of the trove of emails in the Board’s possession. The second would depend
upon whether Justice Eakin exchanged similar communications with Allegheny County
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 27
prosecutors that might indicate a bias in favor of that office in criminal matters in light of
the reputational harms that could result from the public release of those messages.
Additional disclosures and rigorous fact-finding by the PCRA court is necessary for a
merits review of those claims. Cf. Koehler, 229 A.3d at 937. Where, as here, glaring
evidence of suspect email practices already has been thrust into the public sphere, a third
party’s limited evaluation of that evidence will not suffice to satisfy the demands of
discovery on collateral review. Because neither Fears nor this Court is privy to the full
breadth of the emails at issue, we cannot fairly conduct a merits review of his claims on
this record. For these reasons, I would remand for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion.
Justice Donohue joins this Opinion in Support of Reversal.
[J-61-2020] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 28