Com. v. Hansen, G. ( 2018 )


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  • J-S76005-17
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF                            :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA                               :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    :
    v.                            :
    :
    :
    GLENN HANSEN                               :
    :   No. 2366 EDA 2015
    Appellant          :
    Appeal from the PCRA Order July 17, 2015
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
    Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0009484-2007
    BEFORE:     PANELLA, J., STABILE, J., and PLATT*, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY PANELLA, J.                                 FILED APRIL 24, 2018
    Glenn Hansen appeals from the order dismissing his petition pursuant
    to the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”), 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 9541-9546,
    without a hearing. Appellant alleges he was entitled to an evidentiary hearing,
    and ultimately a new trial, due to trial counsel’s ineffectiveness during his jury
    trial. We affirm.
    For a recitation of the complete factual background and procedural
    history of this case, we direct the interested reader to the memorandum
    decision written by a prior panel of this Court in response to Appellant’s direct
    appeal. See Commonwealth v. Hansen, No. 2949 EDA 2011 at 1-3 (Pa.
    Super., filed February 7, 2013) (unpublished memorandum).
    Briefly,     in   May   2005,   Appellant’s   girlfriend,   Taneke   Daniels,
    disappeared. Approximately a year later, construction workers at Brendan
    ____________________________________
    * Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-S76005-17
    Byrne State Park in Burlington County, New Jersey, discovered a decomposing
    body wrapped in a tarp and buried in a shallow grave. The authorities
    positively identified the body as Daniels. The New Jersey State Police
    contacted Appellant to set up an interview. After receiving his Miranda1
    warnings, Appellant informed New Jersey State Police Detective Bryant Hoar
    that he had not left his Philadelphia apartment the day Daniels went missing.
    Further, he denied ever having visited a New Jersey state park. When
    Detective Hoar confronted Appellant with cell phone records that disputed his
    statement, Appellant stopped responding to questions and looked down briefly
    before his attorney ended the interview.
    The police also conducted several interviews with Appellant’s sister,
    Kelly Hansen. While Ms. Hansen initially admitted to varying degrees of
    knowledge surrounding Daniels’s disappearance, she ultimately informed the
    police that Appellant had confessed to smothering Daniels and burying her in
    the park. Following Ms. Hansen’s statement, the police arrested Appellant and
    charged him with first-degree murder and abuse of corpse.2
    Appellant proceeded to jury trial. At trial, the Commonwealth presented,
    in part, the testimony of Detective Hoar, Ms. Hansen, and the medical
    examiner, Dr. Ian Hood. Dr. Hood testified that although the decomposition
    of Daniels’s body made it difficult to discern a cause of death, suffocation was
    ____________________________________________
    1   Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    (1966).
    2   18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2502(a) and 5510, respectively.
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    a potential cause of death. Appellant presented the testimony of Dr. Paul
    Hoyer, a forensic pathologist, who opined that Daniels could have died of a
    drug overdose. Appellant did not testify on his own behalf.
    Following the close of evidence, the jury convicted Appellant of first-
    degree murder and abuse of corpse. The following day, the trial court imposed
    a sentence of life imprisonment. Appellant filed an appeal to this Court, and
    we affirmed his judgment of sentence. Our Supreme Court denied Appellant’s
    petition for allowance of appeal.
    Appellant filed a timely pro se PCRA petition. The PCRA court appointed
    counsel who later filed an amended petition. The PCRA court issued notice of
    its intent to dismiss Appellant’s petition without a hearing, and ultimately
    dismissed the petition. This timely appeal follows.
    “On appeal from the denial of PCRA relief, our standard and scope of
    review is limited to determining whether the PCRA court’s findings are
    supported by the record and without legal error.” Commonwealth v.
    Edmiston, 
    65 A.3d 339
    , 345 (Pa. 2013) (citation omitted). On questions of
    law, our scope of review is de novo. See 
    id. “The right
    to an evidentiary hearing on a post-conviction petition is not
    absolute.” Commonwealth v. Walls, 
    993 A.2d 289
    , 295 (Pa. Super. 2010)
    (citations and brackets omitted). Instead, a PCRA court may decline to hold a
    hearing where it can determine, from the record, that there are no genuine
    issues of material fact. See Commonwealth v. Jones, 
    942 A.2d 903
    , 906
    (Pa. Super. 2008). “With respect to the PCRA court’s decision to deny a
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    request for an evidentiary hearing … such a decision is within the discretion of
    the PCRA court and will not be overturned absent an abuse of discretion.”
    Commonwealth v. Mason, 
    130 A.3d 601
    , 617 (Pa. 2015) (citation omitted).
    All of Appellant’s issues on appeal assert the ineffective assistance of
    trial counsel. We presume counsel provided effective assistance; Appellant has
    the burden of proving otherwise. See Commonwealth v. Pond, 
    846 A.2d 699
    , 708 (Pa. Super. 2004). “In order for [an a]ppellant to prevail on a claim
    of ineffective assistance of counsel, he must show, by a preponderance of the
    evidence, ineffective assistance of counsel which … so undermined the truth-
    determining process that no reliable adjudication of guilt or innocence could
    have taken place.” Commonwealth v. Johnson, 
    868 A.2d 1278
    , 1281 (Pa.
    Super. 2005) (citation omitted). Further,
    [an a]ppellant must plead and prove by a preponderance of the
    evidence that: (1) the underlying legal claim has arguable merit;
    (2) counsel had no reasonable basis for his action or inaction; and
    (3) [a]ppellant suffered prejudice because of counsel’s action or
    inaction.
    Commonwealth v. Spotz, 
    18 A.3d 244
    , 260 (Pa. 2011) (citations omitted).
    A failure to satisfy any prong of the test will require rejection of the entire
    claim. See Commonwealth v. Spotz, 
    84 A.3d 294
    , 311 (Pa. 2014).
    “Arguable merit exists when the factual statements are accurate and
    could establish cause for relief. Whether the facts rise to the level of arguable
    merit is a legal determination.” Commonwealth v. Barnett, 
    121 A.3d 534
    ,
    540 (Pa. Super. 2015) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    “Prejudice is established if there is a reasonable probability that, but for
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    counsel’s errors, the result of the proceedings would have been different. A
    reasonable probability is probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
    outcome.” Commonwealth v. Stewart, 
    84 A.3d 701
    , 707 (Pa. Super. 2013)
    (en banc) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    Appellant’s first issue concerns trial counsel’s failure to introduce specific
    bias evidence against the Commonwealth’s main witness, his sister, Ms.
    Hansen: that Ms. Hansen may be biased against Appellant because he had
    been convicted of raping her in 1993. As Ms. Hansen was the Commonwealth’s
    main witness, Appellant maintains it is reasonable to conclude that if she had
    been impeached with this particular bias against Appellant, the jury would
    have doubted her veracity and acquitted Appellant. As such, Appellant argues
    that trial counsel’s failure to impeach Ms. Hansen with this evidence resulted
    in prejudice.
    A criminal defendant has the right to cross-examine a witness “as to any
    matter tending to show the interest or bias of that witness.” Commonwealth
    v. Hyland, 
    875 A.2d 1175
    , 1186 (Pa. Super. 2005) (citation omitted). This
    allows a defendant to test a “witness’[s] story, to impeach credibility, and to
    establish the witness’[s] motive for testifying.” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    As
    revealing bias through cross-examination is an important duty of a defense
    attorney, “[a] failure to [] impeach a key witness is considered ineffectiveness
    in the absence of a reasonable strategic basis for not impeaching.”
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    Commonwealth v. Small, 
    980 A.2d 549
    , 565 (Pa. 2009) (citation omitted).3
    However, trial counsel will not be deemed ineffective for failing to impeach a
    witness in a particular way, where counsel has sufficiently impeached a
    witness by other means. See Commonwealth v. Solano, 
    129 A.3d 1156
    ,
    1175 (Pa. 2015); Commonwealth v. Dennis, 
    715 A.2d 404
    , 408-409 (Pa.
    1998).
    We agree with the PCRA court that Appellant is not entitled to relief on
    this claim. Defense counsel spent a significant amount of time during his
    closing argument highlighting problems with Ms. Hansen’s testimony—on
    matters ranging from the inconsistencies in her statements to her self-
    interested testimony in the face of her promise of immunity from the
    Commonwealth. See N.T., Trial, 5/23/11, at 51-60.
    Additionally, even if this proposed impeachment would have caused the
    jury to disbelieve Ms. Hansen’s testimony in its entirety, the Commonwealth
    presented significant circumstantial evidence of Appellant’s guilt including:
    Appellant’s impending trial for assaulting Daniels, see N.T., Trial, 5/18/11, at
    54, 65-71; Benita Dixon’s testimony that Appellant offered Daniels money to
    keep her from testifying against him at that trial, see N.T. Trial, 5/19/11, at
    ____________________________________________
    3 “[T]he court is not to glean, surmise, or speculate with regard to the strategy
    of counsel except in those rare instances where his strategy is clear and
    obvious from the record under review.” Commonwealth v. McGill, 
    832 A.2d 1014
    , 1023 (Pa. 2003). Perhaps that is not the case here, but it seems
    possible, as the Commonwealth posits, that “the self-immolating effect of the
    rape revelation would have made his murder conviction more likely, not less
    likely.” Commonwealth’s Brief, at 10.
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    10-11; Appellant’s cell phone records placing him at Daniels’ apartment the
    day she went missing, see iid., at 170-178; Helymah Barry’s and Kareemah
    Zyad’s testimony that Appellant was the last person seen with Daniels, see
    N.T., Trial, 5/18/11, at 84-94; Appellant’s false story to the police about a
    stranger in a white SUV, see 
    id., at 166-173;
    and Appellant’s attempts to
    convince Daniels’ family that Daniels was still alive a month after her
    disappearance by pretending to have received a voicemail message from her,
    see 
    id., at 98-104.
    See also Hansen, No. 2949 EDA 2011 at 3-5.
    In short, we find Appellant has failed to establish a “reasonable
    probability that, but for counsel’s errors, the result of the proceedings would
    have been different.” Stewart, 84 A.3d at (citations and internal quotation
    marks omitted). Appellant’s first ineffectiveness claim fails on the prejudice
    prong.
    Next, Appellant claims trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object
    to Detective Hoar’s statement that, when confronted with inconsistencies in
    his statement during a pre-arrest interview, Appellant looked down and
    stopped answering questions, causing his attorney to end the interview.
    Appellant alleges this testimony violated his right against self-incrimination
    afforded to him by both the United States and Pennsylvania Constitutions, and
    relies on this Court’s decision in Commonwealth v. Molina, 
    33 A.3d 51
    (Pa.
    Super. 2011), to support his claim. As this testimony violated his rights,
    Appellant argues he was innately prejudiced.
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    “Both the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article
    1, Section 9 of the Pennsylvania Constitution protect an individual’s right not
    to be compelled to be a witness against himself.” Commonwealth v. Adams,
    
    39 A.3d 310
    , 316 (citation omitted). Following precedent set forth by the
    United States Supreme Court, our Supreme Court has long held that this right
    precludes the government from using a post-arrest silence of a non-testifying
    defendant   as   substantive   evidence    of   consciousness   of   guilt.   See
    Commonwealth v. Clark, 
    626 A.2d 154
    , 156 (Pa. 1993).
    Subsequently, in Molina, an en banc panel of this Court extended this
    rule to pre-arrest statements, holding “the Commonwealth cannot use a non-
    testifying defendant’s pre-arrest silence to support its contention that the
    defendant is guilty of the crime charged as such use infringes on a defendant’s
    right to be free from 
    self-incrimination.” 33 A.3d at 62
    (citations omitted).
    However, the en banc panel clearly expressed that this finding “does not
    impose a prima facie bar against any mention of a defendant’s silence; rather,
    we guard against the exploitation of appellant’s right to remain silent by the
    prosecution.” 
    Id., at 63
    (citation omitted).
    Appellant’s reliance on Molina is misplaced. The Commonwealth,
    through Detective Hoar, did not offer the evidence of Appellant’s pre-arrest
    silence as substantive evidence of his guilt. Instead, Detective Hoar described
    Appellant’s behavior when confronted with inconsistencies as a way of
    explaining how his interview with Appellant ended. As Molina bars references
    to a defendant’s pre-arrest silence only where it is used to support an
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    inference of a defendant’s guilt, we do not find that Molina applies to the case
    at hand.
    Thus, we find Detective Hoar’s reference to Appellant’s pre-arrest
    silence did not violate his constitutional rights. Because Appellant cannot
    establish his underlying claim has merit, he has failed to argue successfully
    counsel’s    ineffective   assistance   with   regard    to    this   claim.     See
    Commonwealth v. Jones, 
    912 A.2d 268
    , 278 (Pa. 2006) (“Counsel will not
    be deemed ineffective for failing to raise a meritless claim.”)
    Further, we fail to see how he was prejudiced. The Commonwealth’s
    reference to Appellant’s pre-arrest silence was fleeting. After Detective Hoar
    testified   that   Appellant’s   non-compliance    ended      his   interview,   the
    Commonwealth did not refer to Appellant’s interview silence, either explicitly
    or implicitly, again. Our Supreme Court has found that “[e]ven an explicit
    reference to silence is not reversible error where it occurs in a context not
    likely to suggest to the jury that silence is the equivalent of a tacit admission
    of guilt.” Commonwealth v. DiNocola, 
    866 A.2d 329
    , 337 (Pa. 2005)
    (citation and parentheses omitted).
    Finally, Appellant claims trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object
    to the opinion testimony of Dr. Hood, the Commonwealth’s forensic
    pathologist. Appellant contends Dr. Hood exceeded the scope of his expertise,
    forensic pathology, when he testified that “in 20 years of reviewing many
    hundreds of ‘drug dumps,’ [i.e., where a drug overdose victim had been
    transported and buried after their death] he had only experienced one case
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    where an individual went to the extreme to transport a body miles away, dig
    a shallow grave and bury the body.” Appellant’s Brief, at 25. Appellant
    contends this opinion improperly exceeded the scope of his expertise and was
    innately prejudicial. “[T]he standard for qualifying an expert witness is a
    liberal one: the witness need only have a reasonable pretension to specialized
    knowledge on a subject for which expert testimony is admissible.”
    Commonwealth v. Doyen, 
    848 A.2d 1007
    , 1014 (Pa. Super. 2004) (citation
    omitted). While this specialized knowledge must be “based on training and
    experience[,] formal education on the subject matter is not necessarily
    required.” Commonwealth v. Copenhefer, 
    719 A.2d 242
    , 255 (Pa. 1998).
    Further, our courts have routinely qualified medical examiners as expert
    witnesses, and have found that as long as their testimony is based on
    experience, their testimony is not automatically limited to the medical cause
    and manner of death. See Commonwealth v. Mollett, 
    5 A.3d 291
    , 305 (Pa.
    Super. 2010) (finding medical examiner could rely on experience when opining
    about the position of the shooting victim and the timing of gunshots).
    Initially, we note Appellant has provided no authority to support his
    claim that this opinion was beyond the scope of Dr. Hood’s area of expertise.
    In any event, after reviewing the qualifications of the medical examiner,
    together with the evidence of record, we conclude this testimony was not
    outside the scope of Dr. Hood’s expertise.
    Dr. Hood, while formally qualified as a forensic pathologist, testified
    during voir dire that he served as a medical examiner in both Philadelphia and
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    New Jersey for over 20 years. See N.T., Trial. 5/20/11, at 26-29. As part of
    his duty as a medical examiner, Dr. Hood explained he was responsible for
    investigating the circumstances surrounding an unnatural death. See 
    id., at 26.
    Based upon this specialized knowledge as a medical examiner, and his
    vast experience with cases involving “drug dumps,” Dr. Hood stated he had
    never seen such a case in Philadelphia. Instead Dr. Hood opined that most
    drug overdose victims in Philadelphia are “simply left in place if it’s in a drug
    house or they are just dragged out to the next – the nearest vacant lot and
    left there.” 
    Id., at 70.
    Importantly, Dr. Hood did not rule out the possibility
    that Daniels died from a drug overdose, but simply opined that a drug
    overdose victim in Philadelphia is more likely to be found close to their place
    of death. See 
    id., at 69-71.
    Accordingly, as the evidence of record justified the limited opinion of the
    medical examiner, this claim is meritless and counsel cannot be found
    ineffective. See Commonwealth v. Blount, 
    647 A.2d 199
    , 204-205 (Pa.
    1994) (holding trial counsel cannot be held ineffective in failing to object to a
    medical examiner’s expert testimony where the testimony was fairly within
    the scope of the medical examiner’s expertise).
    The PCRA court committed no error in dismissing the petition without a
    hearing.
    Order affirmed.
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    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 4/24/18
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