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Commonwealth v. Spotz
The Commonwealth appeals from the order of the Superior Court, which reversed the order denying Appellee's petition pursuant to the Post Conviction Relief Act (PCRA), 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-9546, vacated his judgment of sentence, and remanded for a new trial. We reverse the order of the Superior Court and remand to that court for consideration of Appellee's PCRA issues that remain in abeyance.
The facts underlying Appellee's conviction and judgment of sentence are discussed more fully in this Court's prior decision on discretionary review of Appellee's direct appeal, Commonwealth v. Spotz, 582 Pa. 207, 870 A.2d 822 (2005), cert. denied,546 U.S. 984 (2005) (Spotz I). In order to place the Commonwealth's current claims in context, some background is required.
The evidence adduced at Appellee's jury trial established that, on January 31, 1995, Appellee, who was on parole for a robbery conviction at the time, and his brother, Dustin Spotz, engaged in an argument at the home of their mother and stepfather in Clearfield County. The argument began when Dustin's fiancée's teenage son placed a pet gerbil in front of Appellee's face while he was watching television, resulting in Appellee yelling at the child and threatening to physically harm him. This angered Dustin, and the argument escalated into a physical confrontation, during which Dustin stabbed Appellee twice in the upper back with a butter knife, slightly wounding him. In response, Appellee threatened to kill Dustin, and he proceeded upstairs, returning with a handgun. Appellee fired eight shots at Dustin, two of which fatally struck Dustin in the chest. After Dustin fell to the ground, Appellee leaned over him, spit on his face, and stated, "There you go, pussy."
Dustin's fiancée tried to call the police; however, Appellee grabbed the phone and declared nobody could call anyone until he escaped the scene. Appellee put the handgun in his pants and attempted to retrieve the spent bullet shells from the kitchen floor. Appellee, along with his paramour, Christine Noland, then fled the house in a vehicle driven by Appellee's stepfather. Three days later, on February 3, 1995, the police apprehended Appellee at a motel in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.1
Following his arrest and return to Clearfield County, Appellee was charged with first degree murder, third degree murder, voluntary manslaughter, aggravated assault, recklessly endangering another person, carrying a firearm without a license, and former convict not to own a firearm.2 Appellee took the stand at trial, claiming self-defense and defense of others, seeking an outright acquittal of the non-firearms charges. In his version of events, Appellee indicated that, after Dustin said he was going to burn down the house and kill the kids, Dustin went into the kitchen where their stepfather was sitting and began throwing furniture. N.T., Trial, 9/25/1995, at 69-70, 73-74. In response, Appellee rushed into the kitchen, tried to push Dustin into a corner, and exchanged blows with him. N.T., Trial, 9/25/1995, at 75. With Appellee holding him, Dustin reached into the dish strainer, grabbed a butter knife, and stabbed Appellee. N.T., Trial, 9/25/1995, at 76. Appellee ran out of the kitchen, went upstairs to get his coat, which had a gun in the pocket, and returned to the kitchen where Dustin stood holding butter knives. N.T., Trial, 9/25/1995, at 81. Appellee admitted he told his stepfather to "get out of the way," and he fired two shots at the floor. N.T., Trial, 9/25/1995, at 83. Appellee indicated Dustinlooked at him and stated, "You don't have any fuckin' hair on your ass to shoot me, Pussy." N.T., Trial, 9/25/1995, at 83. Appellee claimed Dustin had a butter knife in each hand and was about to attack him, his stepfather, and his mother, and therefore, he shot Dustin in defensive response. N.T., Trial, 9/25/1995, at 84-85.
On cross-examination, the prosecutor questioned Appellee about his failure to assist Dustin after shooting him, his flight, and his subsequent failure to report the shooting to the police on the night in question and to tell the police he was defending himself. The primary focus of the cross-examination was upon Appellee's conduct immediately after the shooting as demonstrated in the following relevant exchange:
N.T., Trial, 9/25/1995, at 150-52.
Immediately after this exchange, the prosecutor followed up with two questions, which, although they did not specifically refer to Appellee's arrest, nevertheless were broadly phrased to encompass pre-arrest and post-arrest periods:
N.T., Trial, 9/25/1995, at 152. Appellee's trial counsel did not object to either of these questions.
Moreover, during closing argument, the prosecutor argued to the jury the evidence revealed Appellee did not act in self-defense. The prosecutor specifically made reference to Appellee's conduct after the shooting, including his flight after the shooting and his failure to inform the police he shot Dustin in self-defense. The prosecutor also made the statements:
N.T., Trial, 9/26/1995, at 45-46. Appellee's trial counsel did not object to the prosecutor's closing argument.
With regard to the trial court's instruction to the jury regarding justification, the trial court charged the jury, in relevant part, as follows:
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