Com. v. Gerholt, J.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 2015
Docket1622 WDA 2014
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Gerholt, J. (Com. v. Gerholt, 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. Gerholt, J., (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

J-S52008-15

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

JOHN LEWIS GERHOLT, SR.,

Appellant No. 1622 WDA 2014

Appeal from the PCRA Order August 29, 2014 In the Court of Common Pleas of Bedford County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-05-CR-0000530-2008

BEFORE: SHOGAN, OLSON, and WECHT, JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY SHOGAN, J.: FILED SEPTEMBER 30, 2015

Appellant, John Lewis Gerholt, Sr., appeals from the August 29, 2014

order denying his petition filed pursuant to the Post Conviction Relief Act

(“PCRA”), 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541–9546. After careful review, we affirm.

On August 21, 2012, facing charges of first-degree murder for the

killing of his twenty-four-year-old wife, Karen Gerholt, along with the

Commonwealth’s intent to seek the death penalty, Appellant pleaded no

contest to first-degree murder. The Commonwealth summarized the facts of

the crime at the plea hearing, as follows:

[THE COMMONWEALTH]: Yes, Your Honor. Sunday, November 9th, 2008, Pennsylvania State Police received a dispatch to the proximity of Walmart parking lot in Snake Spring Township for the—to respond to a shooting. Trooper John Brown of the Pennsylvania State Police was the first to arrive on scene. Upon his arrival, he observed [Appellant] kneeling down over the victim in this case, Karen M. Gerholt, age 24. The victim was J-S52008-15

lying on her back in the northeast corner of the parking lot. There was a gunshot—there was a shotgun laying beside the victim, and she had what appeared to be injuries to her abdomen, her back.

[Appellant] was taken into custody and returned to the station. They also recovered three 12-gauge shotgun shells in his right front pocket. At that point, Trooper Terry Summers of the Pennsylvania State Police was assigned to conduct an investigation into what happened that day.

During his investigation, we learned that between October 31st and November 7th, prior to this incident, [Appellant] told an acquaintance, George Cramer, on at least three or four occasions that he was going to, quote, kill that bitch, end quote, referring to the victim. On the morning of the incident, on November 9th, 2008, [Appellant] asked several people who would testify at trial where he could obtain a shotgun. At approximately 3:00 p.m. on November 9th, 2008, [Appellant] arrived at the Bedford Walmart store in his pickup truck. He purchased a hacksaw from the store paying in cash and quickly took the hacksaw from the store without a bag. [Appellant] took the hacksaw to his parked truck where he stayed for approximately six minutes. He then walked to a trashcan and threw away one bag containing what appeared to be a long, thin item. Police believe that item to be the barrel to that shotgun.

[Appellant] then moved his vehicle to several different parking locations within the Walmart Plaza. After moving the vehicle around for approximately 11 minutes, he walked across the Walmart parking lot into the McDonald’s parking lot around the Tractor Supply building and back near the McDonald’s parking lot. [Appellant] then walked around this area. This walk that I just described, Your Honor, took approximately 6 minutes.

[Appellant] then walked back to the Walmart parking lot hiding behind a large storage container and peering around the container to look at the McDonald’s store. After hiding behind the storage container for approximately one minute, he returned to his vehicle. He then parked his vehicle behind the storage container in the Walmart parking lot, exited his vehicle, again peered around the container toward the McDonald’s store, and walked into the McDonald’s parking lot where he first came in contact with the victim.

-2- J-S52008-15

From the time [Appellant] first arrived in the Walmart plaza, [Appellant] spent between 30 and 40 minutes walking around the plaza, McDonald’s, and the Tractor Supply store. When [Appellant] last approached the Walmart parking lot, he was armed with a sawed-off, single-barrel, break-action shotgun and several shotgun shells. Several witnesses, who would be called to testify at trial, saw [Appellant’s] actions during the shooting. And while some witnesses saw more than others, the investigation determined that they will all testify to the same general account.

[Appellant] approached the victim, Karen M. Gerholt, in the McDonald’s parking lot. While the victim was running to her vehicle in the parking lot, [Appellant] fired the shotgun at her. [Appellant] then reloaded the shotgun and fired a second shot at the victim at very close range. The victim sustained a fatal gunshot wound which entered her back just below her left shoulder blade. The victim bled profusely from her midsection and mouth and was pronounced dead at the scene.

During the autopsy, at least 29 shotgun pellets were removed from the victim’s body. And a plastic shotgun shell was located between the victim’s heart and spine. Injuries from the shotgun blast were present on the victim’s right lung, heart, left lung, and liver. The nature of the entry wound indicated that the shotgun was fired from a distance of three feet or less, and the Commonwealth would present testimony to support that at trial.

Shortly after shooting the victim, [Appellant] called the victim’s stepmother, Bess Lemin, with the victim’s cell phone, and told Lemin that he accidentally shot the victim. Ms. Lemin responded by saying that [Appellant] better not have injured the victim to which [Appellant] replied, quote, fuck you, end quote.

When investigators from the Pennsylvania State Police arrived, they found at least six live shotgun shells and one shotgun shell wadding various places in the parking lot, one live shotgun shell in [Appellant’s] pants pocket, and one spent shotgun shell in the storm grate behind the victim’s vehicle. Investigators found the sawed-off, single-barrel shotgun lying beside [Appellant] with the action open and one spent shotgun shell still inside. The barrel of the shotgun appeared to have been recently cut. After investigators located [Appellant], he

-3- J-S52008-15

told them that he accidentally shot the victim and he was only there to scare her. The victim just—[Appellant] indicated the weapon went off while he was holding it.

A search of [Appellant’s] vehicle revealed the following: A hacksaw that appeared to be brand new but had areas on pant [sic] worn off from the use; a greeting card addressed from [Appellant] to the victim in this case, Karen Gerholt; a letter also addressed to the victim in this case from [Appellant]; sawdust, and metal shavings, and sandpaper, which appeared to have been recently used. [Appellant] was Mirandized and chose not to speak to the police. However, he did make several statements during the process including the ones I’ve already stated, Your Honor, that he said it was an accident, things of that nature. In the police presence, when he observed a news report regarding the incident shortly after being taken into custody, [Appellant] stated that the victim’s family should know what caused the incident because it was them, meaning the victim’s family, that caused the accident.

An autopsy, Your Honor, was conducted at the Memorial Medical Center in Conemaugh by Dr. Mo Zhicheng and Dr. Manjunath Heggere, would indicate, Your Honor, that the victim died from a single shotgun wound to the right inferior scapula region, also described as her right lateral mid back. It was a fatal wound causing injuries to her visceral organs including her lungs, heart, and liver. That would be evidence that the Commonwealth would present at trial, Your Honor, to which we believe would support a conviction for Murder of the First Degree.

N.T.

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Com. v. Gerholt, J., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-gerholt-j-pasuperct-2015.