Com. v. Cornish, J.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 3, 2022
Docket200 MDA 2021
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Cornish, J. (Com. v. Cornish, J.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Com. v. Cornish, J., (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

J-S30035-21

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : JONATHAN MONTE CORNISH : : Appellant : No. 200 MDA 2021

Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered January 12, 2021 In the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-22-CR-0001433-2013

BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., McCAFFERY, J., and COLINS, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY COLINS, J.: FILED: FEBRUARY 3, 2022

Appellant, Jonathan Monte Cornish, appeals, pro se, from the order of

the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County (trial court) that denied his

petition filed under the Post Conviction Relief Act (PCRA).1 After careful

review, we affirm.

On August 21, 2014, Appellant was convicted by a jury of first-degree

murder and attempted murder for beating Jose Vazquez to death with a

hammer and assaulting Jose Vazquez’s brother with a hammer on February

13, 2013 at Jose Vazquez’s house in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. N.T. Trial Vol.

3, at 38; Commonwealth v. Cornish, No. 1562 MDA 2014, unpublished

____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. 1 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541–9546. J-S30035-21

memorandum at 1-2 (Pa. Super. filed June 29, 2015). At trial, 10 witnesses

testified for the Commonwealth, Dr. Wayne Ross, a forensic pathologist;

William Vazquez, Jose Vazquez’s brother; Christopher and Sonya Kifer, friends

of William Vazquez who were with him on February 13, 2013; Jillian Crouch,

a Pennsylvania State Police DNA analyst; and five police officers, detectives

and investigators. Appellant testified in his own defense and also called one

of the police witnesses who testified for the Commonwealth to provide

additional testimony.

Dr. Ross testified as an expert in forensic pathology, which includes

determination of the cause of death and blood stain and blood stain pattern

analysis. N.T. Trial Vol. 1, at 28-34. Dr. Ross testified that he performed an

autopsy on Jose Vazquez and opined, based on this autopsy, that Jose

Vazquez was struck in the head with a hammer at least five times, that he

was struck on other parts of his body, and that the cause of Jose Vazquez’s

death was traumatic brain injury from hammer blows to his head. Id. at 34-

35, 37-52. Dr. Ross also testified that the blood stain patterns in photographs

of the scene showed that Jose Vazquez was struck at least 10 times. Id. at

56-64. Dr. Ross testified that the castoff blood pattern showed that the

assailant was in what he called a “void area” on the right or left side of Jose

Vazquez when he inflicted the hammer blows, and described the term “void

area” as an area “[w]here you just don’t see much blood.” Id. at 57, 63, 72-

-2- J-S30035-21

73. Dr. Ross did not opine as to who struck Jose Vazquez or as to any physical

characteristic of the assailant.

William Vazquez testified that he is a heroin and cocaine user and that

on February 13, 2013, he and the Kifers, who were also drug users, went from

York, Pennsylvania to his brother Jose’s house to get drugs. N.T. Trial Vol. 1,

at 82-84, 92-95, 101-02. William Vazquez testified that when he arrived at

the house and knocked on the door no one answered, and that after he banged

on the door for several minutes, Appellant let him and Christopher Kifer in and

told them that Jose Vazquez was at a methadone clinic. Id. at 106-10.

William Vazquez testified that he started to go upstairs, that Appellant told

him that he could not go upstairs and went up the stairs ahead of him and

into Jose Vazquez’s second floor bedroom, and that Appellant attacked him

with a hammer when he tried to enter the bedroom, hitting him in the face

and causing him to fall down the stairs. Id. at 112-17. He testified that

Appellant came down the stairs after him with the hammer and that he ran to

the kitchen and got a knife. Id. at 113, 117-18. William Vazquez testified

that Appellant continued swinging the hammer at him, that he stabbed

Appellant, and that Christopher Kifer got the hammer away from Appellant

and held Appellant down on the floor. Id. at 118-22. William Vazquez

testified that he then went back upstairs and found Jose Vazquez badly injured

and making gurgling sounds and that he got angry and came back downstairs

and tried to stab Appellant again, but that Christopher Kifer restrained him.

-3- J-S30035-21

Id. at 122-24, 191-92. William Vazquez testified that the police and

emergency personnel then arrived, and that the police made him drop the

knife and took him in for questioning and released him after he gave a

statement. Id. at 125-27. On cross-examination, William Vasquez testified

that he did not notice any blood on Appellant or his clothes when he went into

the house. Id. at 160.

Christopher Kifer and his wife, Sonya, testified that they went with

William Vazquez to Jose Vazquez’s house on February 13, 2013. N.T. Trial

Vol. 1, at 225-26, 277-78. Christopher Kifer testified that when they arrived,

Appellant answered the door and said that Jose Vazquez was not home, and

that William Vazquez went in and started to go upstairs and he followed. Id.

at 229-31. Christopher Kifer testified that he then heard William Vazquez say

“Oh, my brother -- killed my brother,” that William Vazquez rolled down the

stairs into him, and that Appellant came down the stairs swinging a

sledgehammer at them. Id. at 231, 239-42, 245, 262, 272-73. He testified

that he and William Vazquez fought Appellant and tried to get the

sledgehammer from him, that William Vazquez got a knife and stabbed

Appellant, and that they were then able to subdue Appellant. Id. at 231-32,

240-46. Christopher Kifer testified that after they subdued Appellant, he had

Sonya Kifer call the police and that the police took him in for questioning. Id.

at 232, 245-51. On cross-examination, Christopher Kifer testified that he did

-4- J-S30035-21

not notice any blood on Appellant or his clothes when he went into the house.

Id. at 258.

Sonya Kifer testified that she stayed in the car while William Vazquez

and her husband went in the house. N.T. Trial Vol. 1, at 278-79. She testified

that 10 to 20 minutes later, her husband ran out screaming for her to call 911

because Jose Vazquez was dead. Id. at 279-80. Sonya Kifer testified that

she went into the house and saw Appellant on the ground and her husband

trying to keep William Vazquez from beating Appellant up. Id. at 280-82.

Sonya Kifer testified that she went upstairs and saw blood all over the room

and someone lying on the bed covered with a sheet. Id. at 282. She testified

that she pulled the sheet back and saw Jose Vazquez severely injured but still

trying to breathe, and that she called 911. Id. at 282-84.

The five police witnesses testified concerning what they found at the

murder scene and identified evidence collected at the scene. Two of these

witnesses testified that there were no signs of forced entry into the house.

N.T. Trial Vol. 2, at 38, 163-64. One of the other officers, who rode in the

ambulance with Appellant when he was taken to the hospital, testified that

she read Appellant Miranda2 warnings on the way to the hospital, although

he was not in custody because the police did not yet know who had committed

2 Miranda v.

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