Com. v. Rauso, G.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 8, 2018
Docket1792 EDA 2017
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Rauso, G. (Com. v. Rauso, G.) 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. Rauso, G., (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

J-S27021-18

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : GENNARO RAUSO : : Appellant : No. 1792 EDA 2017

Appeal from the Order April 24, 2017 In the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-23-CR-0001821-2010

BEFORE: SHOGAN, J., LAZARUS, J., and DUBOW, J.

MEMORANDUM BY SHOGAN, J.: FILED NOVEMBER 08, 2018

Appellant, Gennaro Rauso, appeals from the April 24, 2017 order

denying his June 9, 2016 motion to vacate the August 10, 2011 order of

restitution. In addition, Appellant’s counsel has filed a petition to withdraw as

counsel and a brief pursuant to Anders v. California, 386 U.S. 738 (1967),

and Commonwealth v. Santiago, 978 A.2d 349 (Pa. 2009). We permit

counsel to withdraw and affirm.

The trial court summarized the extensive history of this case as follows:

A criminal complaint was filed on September 23, 2009, by Corporal Christopher Kennedy, Norwood Police Department, charging Gennaro Rauso (hereinafter referred to as “Rauso” and/or [“Appellant”]) with, inter alia, theft by deception1 and deceptive business practices.2 On this same date (September 23, 2009), the magisterial district judge issued for [Appellant] a bench warrant. . . .

1 18 Pa.C.S. § 3922. J-S27021-18

2 18 Pa.C.S. § 4107.

* * *

On August 10, 2011, [Appellant] entered a counseled, negotiated guilty plea to Information B-Theft by Deception, a felony of the third degree, and Information E-Deceptive Business Practices, also a third degree felony. N.T. 8/10/11, pp. 11-13. The prosecution consistent with the plea agreement’s terms orally motioned, of-record, to amend its past filed criminal informations to recognize [K]arla Murray[1] as an additional victimized owner of property, who incurred a financial loss, and that Information E (deceptive business practices) also be amended to reflect an amount at issue over two-thousand ($2,000.00) dollars, as well as a resultant third degree felony gradation. These

____________________________________________

1 Ms. Murray’s given name is misspelled throughout the record and appellate briefs. N.T., 3/10/10, at 4. Also, for purposes of clarity, at the guilty plea hearing, the Commonwealth stated as follows:

There is restitution owed to [Karla] Murray in this matter, Your Honor, in the amount of $6,500. So the [c]ourt’s aware, that restitution was pre-paid by [Appellant] during the course of this proceeding, as been—being held in escrow by Court Financial Services. I do have a stipulation that’s signed by [defense counsel] and myself, and I would ask the [c]ourt to enter the stipulation as an Order of the [c]ourt, releasing that $6,500 funds to Ms. [Karla] Murray, who’s present in the courtroom here, Your Honor, along with the other victim in this matter, Ms. Brandy Murray. . . .

Your Honor, I need the record to be clear, I would need to make a Motion to amend the Informations that [Appellant] is pleading to. The victim’s name was in the Information list, Ms. Brandy Murray only. Property, the money put up for the rental of the house was actually both Ms. Brandy and [Karla] Murray’s property, so I would make a Motion to amend that Information as well.

N.T. (Guilty Plea), 8/10/11, at 5–6.

-2- J-S27021-18

Commonwealth amendment applications were allowed, absent defense objection. N.T. 8/10/11, pp. 5-7. . . .

Immediately subsequent to his entering this plea of guilty and his attorney waiving such an investigation, [Appellant] was sentenced wholly consistent with the lawyers’ plea negotiations as follows: Information B (Theft by Deception)-A term of eighteen (18) through thirty-six (36) months incarceration at a state correctional facility; and Information E (Deceptive Business Practices)-A fifteen (15) through thirty-six (36) month period of imprisonment at a state correctional institution. [Appellant] . . . was not entitled to any time served credit and was deemed for recidivism risk reduction incentive consideration13 ineligible, without defense opposition. N.T. 8/10/11, pp. 8, 22. Additionally, per the plea understanding, these sentences were directed to run consecutively to each other (Informations B and E), but the entirety of [Appellant’s] sentence at bar was ordered to be served concurrently with his June 20, 2011, sentence past imposed by the District Court of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania under docket, United States v. Rauso, No. DPAE 2: 10 CR 000406-001, an aggregate period of incarceration of one hundred sixty (160) months followed by three (3) years supervised release. See Certificate of Imposition of Judgment of Sentence. N.T. 8/10/11, pp. 20-22. . . .

13 61 Pa.C.S. §§ 4501 et seq.

No timely or post-sentence motions otherwise were lodged, including any pleading advancing a challenge to the sentence’s legality and/or a request to withdraw [Appellant’s] previously entered negotiated guilty plea. No direct appeal to the Superior Court of Pennsylvania was filed.

In the course of his ongoing collateral litigation before this court,14 [Appellant] on June 9, 2016, lodged a Motion to Vacate August 10, 2011 Restitution Order [etc. and for the Return of Said Restitution], as well as a Brief in Support. . . .

14 [Appellant] on July 16, 2012, lodged a self- represented Petition for Post Conviction Collateral Relief [(“PCRA”)]. See [Appellant’s] PCRA Petition dated July 16, 2012. This petition being his first such collateral pleading [Appellant] was entitled to counsel’s assistance. . . .

-3- J-S27021-18

[Appellant] was previously court designated two (2) lawyers material to the PCRA proceedings. Following the respective breakdowns of attorney- client relations between [Appellant] and these lawyers, he per such an application was permitted to proceed pro se with . . . “standby counsel.” . . . N.T. 8/28/15; Order dated September 1, 2015. See also Commonwealth v. Grazier, 552 Pa. 9, 12-13, 713 A.2d 81, 82 (1998). See generally Pa.R.Crim.P. 121.

Following the filing of his initial collateral petition, [Appellant] lodged a plethora of various self– represented and a significantly lesser number of counseled pleadings during his PCRA litigation. . . .[2]

At the listing of June 14, 2017, inter alia, [Appellant] orally advanced, of-record, an application for the re-appointment of Post Conviction Relief Act counsel. N.T. 6/14/17.

Via an order dated June 15, 2017, this court designated William P. Wismer, Esquire as [Appellant’s] collateral attorney and directed he file [3]

an amended PCRA pleading. . . . This court through another order also of June 15, 2017, relatedly allowed that Mr. VanRensler was relieved of his past appointment as [Appellant’s] “standby counsel.” . . .

[Appellant] on July 17, 2017, lodged his Amended, Counseled Petition for Post Conviction Relief. . . .

An evidentiary hearing as then scheduled in the above-captioned matter regarding [Appellant’s]

2 The trial court listed forty-seven filings by Appellant dated from July 16, 2012, through July 17, 2017.

3 The PCRA court thus appointed three different counsel to represent Appellant during the PCRA proceedings.

-4- J-S27021-18

counseled, amended PCRA filing commenced and concluded on August 8, 2017. . . .

At the beginning of this proceeding . . . [Appellant] opted to appear and participate at this hearing (August 8, 2017) via telephone, an election consistent with his stated and preferred such practices. . . . N.T. 8/8/17, p. 5-6. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Rauso, G., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-rauso-g-pasuperct-2018.