Commonwealth v. Poplawski, R., Aplt. ( 2015 )


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  •                            [J-25-2014][M.O. – Stevens, J.]
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    EASTERN DISTRICT
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,                  :   No. 654 CAP
    :
    Appellee                         :   Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence
    :   entered on 9/6/11 in the Court of
    v.                               :   Common Pleas, Criminal Division of
    :   Allegheny County at No. CP-02-CR-
    RICHARD ANDREW POPLAWSKI,                      :   0005652-2009
    :
    Appellant                        :
    :   ARGUED: April 9, 2014
    CONCURRING OPINION
    MR. CHIEF JUSTICE SAYLOR                                 DECIDED: December 29, 2015
    I join Parts I and II of the majority opinion and concur in the result relative to the
    balance.
    With regard to the treatment in Part III of Appellant’s claim of trial court error
    related to the admission of his statements containing racial epithets, I have difficulty with
    the majority’s abbreviated disposition of the claim based on harmlessness, particularly
    as it relates to the penalty phase of trial. See Majority Opinion, slip op. at 27-28. In this
    regard, the epithets certainly bolstered the prosecutor’s inciting remarks during the
    penalty phase denominating Appellant as within a class of “haters and bigots and
    racists[.]” 
    Id. at 48
    (quoting N.T., June 28, 2011, at 328). Since a broader assessment
    of the impact of the overall evidence along these lines will likely be required on post-
    conviction review, I would refrain at this juncture from wider pronouncements, pertaining
    to the penalty phase, as to harmlessness.
    Concerning Part V’s treatment of the admission of evidence that Appellant visited
    a controversial website, I would not deem Appellant’s challenge to have been waived as
    does the majority. See 
    id. at 48.
    The material aspect of the salient objection, it would
    seem to me, is invocation of the requirement of Rule of Evidence 403 that evidence
    should be excluded where its probative value is outweighed by the danger of unfair
    prejudice. See Pa.R.E. 403. While certainly inartful, Appellant’s trial counsel appears
    to have been attempting to advance just such an argument, when she was interrupted
    by the trial judge’s ruling. See N.T., June 23, 2011, at 871-72 (“[B]ecause he’s on the
    Penguin website, that doesn’t make him a hockey player.             Because he was on
    StormFront –“). As I would treat this claim as preserved, at least as pertaining to the
    guilt phase of trial, I would simply deem the evidence harmless in such regard.
    As to the potential spillover effect into the penalty phase, however, I believe that
    this matter is best left for post-conviction review. In this regard, I note that penalty
    counsel did not object when the Commonwealth moved for incorporation of the guilt-
    phase evidence into the penalty phase, although the very limited purpose for which
    some of that evidence had been admitted was unrelated to penalty. Moreover, penalty
    counsel also failed to object to the prosecutor’s specific allusions to the evidence, which
    clearly transcended the basis for its admission at the guilt phase. See N.T., June 28,
    2011, at 328 (“Nazism, StormFront, haters, ladies and gentlemen . . .[;] what he learned
    on those websites, chatting with those people, those like-minded haters and bigots and
    racists, we’ll never know.”). From my point of view, in the absence of critical objections
    to a pattern of conduct on the part of the prosecutor – encompassing statements
    deemed by the majority to be “highly irregular and improper,” Majority Opinion, slip op.
    at 53 n.17, and by the trial judge to be “way over the line” and “just pandering to the
    [J-25-2014][M.O. – Stevens, J.] - 2
    emotions of the jury,” N.T., June 27, 2011, at 95-96 – I believe that a probing judicial
    assessment is properly reserved to post-conviction.
    Regarding the issue of future dangerousness (Part VI), the Court recently related
    that “a prosecutor is permitted to discuss a defendant’s future dangerousness during
    rebuttal, after a defendant places his future conduct at issue.”      Commonwealth v.
    Eichinger, ___ Pa. ___, ___, 
    108 A.3d 821
    , 835 (2014) (emphasis added). The majority
    appears to appropriately determine that mitigation evidence centered on a defendant’s
    positive influence on peers as recently as high school, see Majority Opinion, slip op. at
    60-61), is not of a type placing future conduct in issue, but it proceeds nevertheless to
    deny relief based on harmless error. See 
    id. at 58-59.
    Again, viewing this claim in
    isolation, I do not regard the difficulty with the prosecutor’s remarks implicating future
    dangerousness as sufficient, in and of itself, to warrant a new penalty hearing, but I
    would reserve an assessment of the aggregation of the prosecutorial overreaching for
    the post-conviction stage, where the broader range of it may be appropriately
    considered.
    Finally, I am concerned with the apparent abuse of the latitude afforded to the
    prosecution to introduce victim-impact evidence, see Majority Opinion, slip op. at 59-60,
    and I would suggest that this case may present an apt vehicle, on post-conviction
    review, for imposing some rational limits as a supervisory matter.
    [J-25-2014][M.O. – Stevens, J.] - 3
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 654 CAP

Judges: Stevens, Correale F.

Filed Date: 12/29/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/30/2015