Com. v. Sanutti-Spencer, M.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 11, 2018
Docket782 MDA 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Sanutti-Spencer, M. (Com. v. Sanutti-Spencer, M.) 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. Sanutti-Spencer, M., (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

J-A26036-17

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : MARIA I. SANUTTI-SPENCER : : Appellant : No. 782 MDA 2016

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence December 18, 2015 In the Court of Common Pleas of Columbia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-19-CR-0000754-2014

BEFORE: BOWES, J., OLSON, J., and RANSOM, J.

MEMORANDUM BY RANSOM, J.: FILED JANUARY 11, 2018

Appellant, Maria I. Sanutti-Spencer, appeals from the judgment of

sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole followed by an

aggregate of two hundred fifty months (250) to six hundred ninety-six months

(696) of incarceration, imposed December 18, 2015, following a jury trial

resulting in her conviction for criminal homicide, criminal solicitation to commit

homicide, criminal conspiracy, burglary, receiving stolen property, criminal

solicitation to commit burglary, multiple counts of arson, criminal solicitation

to commit arson, criminal attempt to commit homicide, terroristic threats, and

multiple counts of perjury.1 We affirm.

____________________________________________

1 See respectively, 18 Pa.C.S. §§ 2501; 902(a); 903(a)(1); 3502(a)(2); 3925(a); 902(a); 3301(a)(1)(ii); 902(a); 901(a); 2706(a)(1); and 4902(a). J-A26036-17

The relevant facts and procedural history are as follows. Appellant

married Frank Spencer (“the Victim”) in February 1997. Between 2006 and

2012, the Victim reported approximately twenty-five (25) to thirty-five (35)

domestic incidents to the Hemlock Township police department. See Notes

of Testimony (N.T.), 11/12/2015, at 145. Police records confirm that the

Victim reported that Appellant had threatened to kill him on “numerous

occasions.” Id. Following one such occasion, which occurred in October 2006,

the Victim filed for divorce. See id. at 159.

On May 15, 2007, the Victim reported that Appellant threatened that

her Father, Anthony Rocco Franklin (“her Father”), would kill him. Id. at 160.

Contemporaneous with this report, other testimony established that Appellant

sought help from a former coworker, Lee Mix, to secure an early parole for

her Father. N.T., 11/12/2015, at 61-62, 65.2 When Mix and Appellant were

coworkers in 2005, Appellant threatened to harm the Victim. See id. at 61-

64 (Lee Mix testified Appellant threatened to kill the Victim by injecting him

with insulin while he was asleep). Appellant also implied that her Father was

in the Mafia. Id. at 64. Mix informed Appellant that she could not help. Id.

at 65.

In March 2009, her Father submitted a home plan to the parole board,

in which he proposed to live at a residence jointly owned by Appellant and the

Victim (“Fairview Drive Residence”). Id. at 87-88. Parole agent James Curry ____________________________________________

2At the time, Mix was equal employment opportunity director for the parole board. N.T., 11/12/2015, at 65.

-2- J-A26036-17

conducted the pre-parole investigation. Id. at 85-86. When Curry

investigated the proposed home plan, the Victim told Curry that he did not

want her Father living at the Fairview Drive Residence because Appellant and

the Victim were getting a divorce. Id. at 88. Her Father’s proposed home

plan was denied. See id.

In September 2009, her Father’s home plan was resubmitted, proposing

again to live at the jointly owned residence. Appellant indicated to the parole

board investigator that she was divorced and the homeowner. Id. at 98-99,

104. Her Father’s home plan was approved. However, at the time, the divorce

was not final; Appellant and the Victim were subject to an interim divorce

order, giving each party the right to live at the Fairview Drive Residence when

it was their turn to have custody of the kids. N.T., 11/13/2015, at 52.

Between January 2010 and September 2011, police responded to and/or

investigated approximately sixteen incidents specifically involving the Victim

and Appellant at the Fairview Drive Residence. Id. at 52-53. Appellant

threatened to burn down the Victim’s new house and threatened to burn down

the house of the Victim’s girlfriend, Julie Dent. Id. at 57-58; see also N.T.,

11/12/2015, at 167-168 (the Victim’s mother heard Appellant threaten to

burn down the house “50” times and say her Father was in the Mafia and

would have the Victim killed); id. at 105-106 (the Victim’s lawyer knew the

Victim lived in fear based on threats by Appellant to burn down his house and

of being killed by her Father). In January 2010, a fire occurred at the Victim’s

-3- J-A26036-17

home. N.T., 11/12/2015, at 107. In August 2010, another fire burned the

house of the Victim’s girlfriend to the ground. See id.

The evidence presented at trial suggested that the Victim lived in

absolute fear of Appellant and her Father. The Victim was very worried that

her Father was capable of killing him and that they were threatening to kill

him. N.T., 11/13/2015, at 146; N.T., 11/10/2015, at 188. The Victim “was

absolutely in fear to the point where he was changing his habits so he wouldn’t

be going to the bank on the same day.” N.T., 11/10/2015, at 187. Appellant

expressed anger and hostility toward the Victim following divorce hearings,

often concerning custody of their children. Id. at 185. According to one

witness, “on numerous occasions, [Appellant] would fly in the driveway and

get out and there would be a screaming match that would ensue.” Id. at 186.

On June 8, 2012, a divorce decree was issued dissolving the marriage

and designating the Victim as homeowner of the Fairview Drive Residence.

N.T., 11/11/2015, at 43. A police officer helped the Victim compose a no-

trespassing letter to Appellant (dated 6/27/2012), telling Appellant to stay off

his property except when exchanging custody of their children in the driveway.

Id. at 44; see also N.T., 11/13/2015, at 61, 63.

On June 30, 2012, news of the divorce appeared in the local paper. On

the evening of June 30, 2012, Appellant called the Victim’s cousin and warned

him that if the Victim’s mother moved into the Fairview Drive Residence,

Appellant would burn it to the ground; Appellant threatened that “that house

-4- J-A26036-17

will be her last…. And she can join [the Victim].” N.T., 11/11/2015, at 135.

The Victim’s cousin immediately reported Appellant’s threats to the police. Id.

On July 3, 2012, the Victim’s body was discovered shot dead in the foyer

of the Fairview Drive Residence. N.T., 11/17/2015, 234-236, 237-238. The

evidence established that the Victim was shot from a distance as he was

entering the house and that no one heard from the Victim between July 1-2,

2012. The Victim was killed by two rapidly fatal gunshot wounds: one to the

head and one to the left arm. Id. The parties stipulated that the bullet

recovered from the Victim’s torso was from a .30 caliber class discharged rifle

and the bullet recovered from his head/neck was fired from a .38, .357 caliber,

or nine-millimeter class handgun. N.T., 11/12/2015, at 31. Blood splatter

was found on the interior of the front-door threshold, “indicative of the door

being opened when the bloodletting event occurred.” N.T., 11/11/2015, 23.

Officer Sergeant Brian J. Dropinski found two shell casings near a tree with a

Y shape in front of the house. N.T., 11/12/2015, at 36.

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