Com. v. Torner, R.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 10, 2025
Docket13 MDA 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Torner, R. (Com. v. Torner, R.) 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. Torner, R., (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-S13019-25

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : ROBERTO TORNER : : : No. 13 MDA 2024

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered August 24, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-40-CR-0002079-2020

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J.E., KUNSELMAN, J., and NICHOLS, J.

MEMORANDUM BY KUNSELMAN, J.: FILED JULY 10, 2025

Roberto Torner appeals from the judgment of sentence entered after he

was convicted of murder of the first degree, conspiracy, and solicitation.1 He

challenges the admissibility of evidence that he previously dismembered

human corpses as well as the sufficiency of the evidence to prove his intent

and identity. We affirm.

On February 10, 2020, police charged Torner with criminal homicide,

conspiracy, and solicitation. The case was scheduled for a jury trial.

Before trial, the Commonwealth moved in limine to admit evidence that

Torner had previously participated in dismembering human corpses. The

Commonwealth argued that, based on allegations that Torner dismembered

the victim in this case, his prior acts would show his “motive, opportunity, that

____________________________________________

1 18 Pa.C.S. §§ 2502(a), 903, and 902(a), respectively. J-S13019-25

he had a common plan or scheme, and modus operandi to use [tools] to

conceal incriminating evidence of prior acts of violence.” N.T., 5/8/23, at 23;

Motion, 5/1/23, at 2 (averring the “evidence tends to prove Torner’s motive,

opportunity, intent, common plan or scheme, and/or his modus operandi”).

The trial court reasoned that “dismembering a human body is pretty unique”

after a homicide, and the probative value of the evidence would outweigh any

prejudicial effect. Id. at 31. It reserved ruling on the motion in limine.

Trial proceeded from May 9, 2023, to May 18, 2023. The trial court

recounted the evidence:

Jose “Pepe” Herran disappeared in the late fall of 2015. Neither his family, nor his parole officer, Gisella Bassolino, had any idea where he was. He was born in Cuba, but his last known address was 559 Washington Street, Freeland, Pennsylvania, a boarding house, and apartment building then known as “the cottage.” The cottage was owned by [Torner].

While investigating Mr. Herran’s disappearance, investigators became aware that he last used his cellular telephone on October 21, 2015, in the area of Freeland Borough. Investigators also learned that the cottage was his last known address and that he was acquainted with [Torner]. After years without leads in the investigation, Donald Warren, a former resident of the cottage and sometime employee of [Torner], told police that he knew what had happened to Jose Herran.

Warren told police that he knew that Herran was killed by [Torner] and David Alzugaray sometime in the fall of 2015. He related that [Torner asked him at least 25 times] to participate in the killing[. The night that Herran disappeared, Torner was driving a van with Alzugaray in the passenger seat. Torner told Warren, “we are going to do this right now. It’s now or never.” Torner smiled and showed Warren a .22 caliber revolver in his waistband. Warren, who was ill, refused to join them. Mr. Herran got in the van, and Torner drove away.] Later that same night, [Torner] and Alzugaray returned to the cottage without Mr.

-2- J-S13019-25

Herran, wearing different clothes and smelling like fuel oil and smoke. That same night [Torner] and Alzugaray regaled Warren with a macabre story about the details of the killing and dismembering of Jose Herran. It was later determined that Mr. Herran’s remains were thrown into the Lehigh River.

[Torner] had also shown Warren a collection of butcher knives, cleavers and a machete which he said were used to dismember Herran. Later, [Torner] gave Warren his .45 caliber model 1911 firearm and directed him to clean it with bleach and ammonia and mutilate the gun’s serial numbers and the rifling of the barrel.

Investigators interviewed Alzugaray at the Lackawanna County Jail on May 1, 2018. Alzugaray confessed to killing Jose Herran. He told investigators that he shot Herran with a .22 caliber pistol, burned his clothes, dismembered his body, and threw the remains into the Lehigh River. Alzugaray told investigators that the killing took place at 6851 North Buck Mountain Road, a property owned by [Torner], who, he assured investigators, had nothing to do with the killing. A search of a burn pit on the Buck Mountain Road property resulted in investigators recovering fragments of human bones. The human skull fragments looked like they had been burned and that they most likely belonged to a male.

Special Agent Larry Whitehead interviewed [Torner] about Jose Herran’s disappearance in February of 2018. During that interview, [Torner] coyly spoke in hypotheticals about a missing “item” which he said he believed was chopped up into little pieces. Months later, [Torner] was again interviewed by law enforcement. At that time he related that he knew about the murder of Jose Herran. He reported that one night in the fall of 2015 he went to his North Buck Mountain Road property just after Alzugaray killed Herran. He stated that Alzugaray told him that Herran attacked him and that as he was running away from Herran shooting over his shoulder a bullet from his gun struck Herran in the head killing him. [Torner] offered the same explanation to the jury at his trial.

Alba Veras, an associate of [Torner], told police where the dismemberment tools and other weapons used in the homicide were. She took investigators to them in the attic of a former church which was owned by [Torner]. Veras reported to police that she concealed the cleavers and other dismemberment tools at the direction of [Torner]. She also led police to the location of

-3- J-S13019-25

two guns which were hidden in a hollow cavity of a railing near the altar in the church. Prior to the killing of Herran, [Torner] had, as he had with Mr. Warren, asked Veras to kill Jose Herran, insinuating that by doing so she would prevent future crimes that [Torner] said he knew Herran was preparing to commit.

Trial Court Opinion, 8/9/24, at 1–4 (record citations omitted).

During its case-in-chief, the Commonwealth called Richard DeStefano to

testify. Returning to the issue from the motion in limine, the trial court

overruled Torner’s objection to DeStefano retelling what Torner told him about

Torner’s past in New Jersey.

Q. What did [Torner] say?

A. He told me on occasion, that when he was younger, that his uncles and, I guess, other gang wars in the town or whatever happened, that he was present when they would chop up bodies and put them in a drain basically.

Q. You mean flush them down the toilet?

A. I think it was more put them down the drain. Chop them up and put them in the drain. I don’t remember -- I don’t remember a toilet being…

N.T., Trial, 5/9/23–5/18/23, at 916–17.

After having his recollection refreshed, DeStefano testified that Torner

said he was not merely present but had in fact participated:

A. He said that he used to also participate in cutting up the bodies.

Id. at 919.

No limiting instruction was requested or provided for this testimony.

DeStefano also testified that Torner asked him to build an incinerator.

“[Torner] said that they had an opportunity to make a lot of money, but they

-4- J-S13019-25

would need a way to get rid of the body and they needed an incinerator.” Id.

at 920.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Commonwealth v. Drumheller
808 A.2d 893 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2002)
Commonwealth v. Spotz
716 A.2d 580 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1998)
Commonwealth v. Smith
568 A.2d 600 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1989)
Commonwealth v. Rush
646 A.2d 557 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1994)
Commonwealth v. Reyes
681 A.2d 724 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1996)
Commonwealth v. Rhodes
510 A.2d 1217 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1986)
Commonwealth v. Haynes
116 A.3d 640 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2015)
Commonwealth v. Tyson
119 A.3d 353 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2015)
Commonwealth v. Christine, J., Aplt.
125 A.3d 394 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2015)
Commonwealth v. Brown
134 A.3d 1097 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2016)
Commonwealth v. Hicks, C., Aplt.
156 A.3d 1114 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2017)
Commonwealth v. Von Evans
163 A.3d 980 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2017)
Commonwealth v. Brown
186 A.3d 985 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Baker
201 A.3d 791 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Sanchez
36 A.3d 24 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2011)
Commonwealth v. Toritto
67 A.3d 29 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2013)
Commonwealth v. Ballard
80 A.3d 380 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2013)
Commonwealth v. Fears
86 A.3d 795 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2014)
Commonwealth v. Oliver
416 A.2d 1128 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1979)
Com. v. Carter, P.
2024 Pa. Super. 157 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Torner, R., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-torner-r-pasuperct-2025.