Com. v. Hart, J.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 22, 2018
Docket3284 EDA 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Hart, J. (Com. v. Hart, 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. Hart, J., (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

J-A01006-18

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : JOHN HART : : Appellant : No. 3284 EDA 2016

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence May 26, 2016 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0004175-2012

BEFORE: LAZARUS, J., OTT, J., and PLATT*, J.

MEMORANDUM BY LAZARUS, J.: FILED MAY 22, 2018

John Hart appeals from his judgment of sentence, entered in the Court

of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, after a jury convicted him of stalking

and harassment. Upon careful review, we affirm.

The trial court set forth the facts of this case as follows:

[Hart] and the complainant, [E.V.T.], a local [t]elevision [n]ews personality, met on Facebook in August of 2011. After exchanging e-mails for a month, the complainant gave [Hart] her cell phone number and they arranged to meet for drinks at the Ritz Carlton in Philadelphia on Labor Day, 2011.

They began dating and went out together about five (5) times and [Hart] stayed over at [complainant’s] apartment on one occasion. Not long after [Hart] spent the night at [complainant’s] apartment, the complainant decided to end the relationship and told [Hart] she was no longer going to see him. Subsequent to the decision to end the relationship with [Hart] on October 6, 2011, the complainant received a message from Facebook stating that she was trying to change her password. Although she had not been trying to change her password, she thought nothing of it. After that[,] on October 13, 2011, the complainant began to

____________________________________ * Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-A01006-18

receive abusive text messages threatening to end her career by releasing negative gossip to the press and referencing private information she had shared with [Hart] while they were dating. Her telephone numbers were changed, and her cable was shut off three (3) times by someone calling the provider and terminating service. The complainant also began receiving multiple telephone calls from blocked numbers and when she would answer, the caller would hang up. This continued for many days and the calls were always from a blocked number.

The complainant reported the incidents to the police and a detective was assigned. Detective [Steve] Parkinson retrieved a recording from the complainant’s telephone provider. The recording was of a man attempting to disguise his voice as that of a woman and trying to have the complainant’s telephone service cancelled. The complainant immediately recognized the voice as that of [Hart].

[Hart] also had a relationship with Laura Selvage[,] who he met on Facebook in January of 2011. Ms. Selvage[,] who lived in Baltimore, Maryland, shared Facebook messages with [Hart] for a month before she gave him her telephone number and they began talking on the telephone. She subsequently agreed to a date and went out with [Hart] in late February or early March, 2011. A few weeks later, [Hart] came back to Baltimore and had dinner at Ms. Selvage’s home with her parents. The next day, he once again returned to Baltimore and took Ms. Selvage out to dinner. Upon their return to Ms. Selvage’s home, they went to the basement to watch a movie. Ms. Selvage fell asleep and when she woke up, [Hart] began speaking to her in a feminine voice. Startled, she stood up and told [Hart] to leave. They continued talking by telephone for the next week or two[,] with [Hart] wanting her to change her Facebook status to “being in a relationship.” Realizing she wasn’t interested in a relationship with [Hart], Ms. Selvage began telling him she wasn’t interested. [Hart] responded by sending threatening and abusive text messages including private information [Ms. Selvage] had shared with [him] while they were dating. When Ms. Selvage blocked [Hart] from being able to call or text her, she began to have website accounts cancelled without her permission and passwords to various accounts changed without her authorization. Her cellphone number was changed without her permission five (5) times. She received calls from numbers that were blocked or unknown and when she answered there would be silence. This occurred fifteen (15) to twenty (20) times daily for two (2) months. Ms. Selvage had her debit card

-2- J-A01006-18

cancelled without her authorization. When she inquired about it, she was told someone with a female voice had called and cancelled the card.

Michael Sander, [Hart’s] [p]arole [a]gent, testified he had listened to the recording of the man attempting to disguise his voice as that of a woman and identified it as that of [Hart].

[Hart] presented witnesses (Barry Goldstein, Esquire, a family friend; Kevin Thompson, [Hart’s] uncle[;] and Jill Pizzola, [Hart’s] former girlfriend)[,] who testified they had listened to the tape recording and could not tell if it was [Hart’s] voice or not.

Trial Court Opinion, 2/24/17, at 3-5 (citations to record omitted).

On November 16, 2011, Hart was arrested and charged with identity

theft, disruption of service, possession of instruments of crime, harassment,

unlawful use of a computer and stalking. On November 12, 2015, a jury found

him guilty of harassment and stalking and, on May 26, 2016, the trial court

sentenced him to 2½ to 5 years’ incarceration, followed by two years of

probation. Post-sentence motions were denied and Hart filed a timely notice

of appeal to this Court, followed by a court-ordered statement of errors

complained of on appeal pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b).

Hart raises the following issues for our review:

1. Whether the Commonwealth’s evidence was sufficient to find [Hart] guilty of stalking and harassment beyond a reasonable doubt, where the jury found reasonable doubt of guilt and acquitted [Hart] of all of the offenses (identity theft, disruption of service, possessing an instrument of crime, and unlawful use of computers) which would have constituted the only methods in which [Hart] would have committed the offenses of stalking and harassment, and where the same evidence was insufficient to convict [Hart] of stalking and harassment in isolation?

-3- J-A01006-18

2. Whether the guilty verdicts on the charges of stalking and harassment were contrary to the weight of the evidence so as to “shock the conscience” of the court?

3. Whether the trial court erred by admitting evidence of “other crimes”/“prior bad acts” allegedly committed by [Hart] in the form of testimony from Laura Selvage and any related physical evidence or documentary evidence (text messages) in contravention of [Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence] 404(b) where no exceptions to the [rule] apply?

4. Whether the trial court erred by admitting into . . . evidence . . . alleged text messages from [Hart] to Laura Selvage which were transcribed by Selvage[,] where the text messages could not be properly authenticated and where therefore the prejudice caused by the admission of the transcribed text messages outweighed their specious probative value?

5. Whether the trial court erred by admitting into . . . evidence . . . alleged text messages from [Hart] to Laura Selvage where the transcribed text messages failed to show alleged responses from Selvage in violation of the rule of completion, and where therefore the prejudice caused by the admission of the transcribed text messages outweighed their specious probative value?

6. Whether the trial court erred in [not] granting an evidentiary hearing where [Hart] raised issues of ineffectiveness of trial counsel within his post[-]sentence motions, in contravention of Pennsylvania appellate court holdings in Commonwealth v.

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