Commonwealth v. Garzone

993 A.2d 306, 2010 Pa. Super. 57, 2010 Pa. Super. LEXIS 315, 2010 WL 1445193
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 13, 2010
Docket695 EDA 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 993 A.2d 306 (Commonwealth v. Garzone) 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
Commonwealth v. Garzone, 993 A.2d 306, 2010 Pa. Super. 57, 2010 Pa. Super. LEXIS 315, 2010 WL 1445193 (Pa. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION BY

STEVENS, J.:

¶ 1 This is an appeal from the judgment of sentence entered on January 30, 2009 in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County following Appellant Gerald Garzone’s guilty plea to numerous charges, including corrupt organizations, criminal conspiracy, 244 counts of theft by unlawful taking (for theft of body parts), abuse of corpse, recklessly endangering another person, and fraudulently obtaining food stamps or other public assistance 1 in connection with his participation in the illegal harvesting and sale of human body parts from corpses, as well as filing false forms seeking reimbursement from the government for providing funeral services for *308 which he had already been paid. As part of Appellant’s sentence, upon the filing of a timely post-sentence motion by the Commonwealth, the trial court directed Appellant to pay $90,028, which was comprised of $84,723 for the salaries of the assistant district attorneys and county detectives assigned to the District Attorney’s Office, as well as $5,305 for the grand jury costs. On appeal, Appellant contends the trial court did not have the authority to order Appellant to pay the expenses associated with the district attorneys’ salaries, the county detectives’ salaries, or the grand jury costs. We vacate Appellant’s judgment of sentence as it relates to the costs for the assistant district attorneys’ and county detectives’ salaries but affirm in all other respects.

¶ 2 The relevant factual history has been aptly set forth by the trial court as follows:

[Appellants] Louis and Gerald Gar-zone 2 were licensed funeral home directors who operated separate funeral homes in Philadelphia. N.T. 9/2/08 at 24. [Appellants] were also co-owners of Liberty Crematorium in Philadelphia with co-defendant James McCafferty. N.T. 9/2/08 at 24. In early 2004, [Appellants] and Mr. McCafferty were approached by codefendant Michael Mas-tromarino, 3 the founder and president of a business called Biomedical Tissue Services (“BTS”) that sold human tissue harvested from cadavers to tissue banks. N.T. 9/2/08 at 24-26. Mr. Mastromarino had initially partnered with funeral home directors in New York and New Jersey. N.T. 9/2/08 at 26. These funeral home directors provided Mr. Mastro-marino with cadavers from which he and his team of “cutters” could harvest tissue without the consent of the deceased or their next of kin and then sell to tissue banks. N.T. 9/2/08 at 25-26. However, this arrangement required Mr. Mastromarino and his cutters to reconstruct the cadavers with PVC pipe after harvesting to conceal their activity and prepare the bodies for viewing and burial. N.T. 9/2/08 at 26. Therefore, Mr. Mastromarino approached [Appellants] and Mr. McCafferty, who as owners of a crematorium, had access to cadavers destined for cremation and could provide these cadavers without concern for their post-harvesting condition. N.T. 9/2/08 at 24-27.
[Appellants] and McCafferty agreed to provide bodies that had been entrusted to their funeral homes and crematorium for cremation to Mr. Mastromarino, who would then harvest bones and tissue from the cadavers to sell to tissue banks. N.T. 9/2/08 at 24-25. In exchange, Mr. Mastromarino agreed to pay [Appellants] $1,000 for each cadaver. N.T. 9/2/08 at 28. When Mr. Mastromarino and his cutters came to Philadelphia, [Appellants] would direct them to the bodies in the embalming rooms of their funeral homes. N.T. 9/2/08 at 29-30. There, Mr. Mastromarino and the cutters would remove the cadavers’ arms, legs, bones, ligaments, tendons, and skin, often leaving only a head and a bloody torso behind in a bag for cremation. N.T. 9/2/08 at 28-29.
Between visits from Mr. Mastromari-no and his cutters, cadavers destined for harvesting would sit in an alley, unrefrigerated, for days. N.T. 9/2/08 at 29, 32-33. [Appellants] never provided Mr. Mastromarino or his cutters with death *309 certificates, identification, consent forms, or the names of the bodies’ next of kin. N.T. 9/2/08 at 30-33. Although Mr. Mastromarino told [Appellants] that the tissue was destined for medical use and the cadavers had to be of individuals who were less than seventy-five years old and disease-free when they died, [Appellants] provided cadavers of individuals who were more than eighty years old and sick with cancer, H.I.V., and hepatitis at the time of their passing. N.T. 9/2/08 at 27, 31, 34. Over the course of their arrangement with Mr. Mastromarino, [Appellants] provided more than 244 cadavers and received more than $245,000 in return. N.T. 9/2/08 at 27-28.
In September 2005, Mr. Mastromari-no learned that the FDA was investigating his activities and instructed [Appellants] to burn their funeral homes to the ground to destroy the evidence of their enterprises. N.T. 9/2/08 at 34. Instead, [Appellants] incinerated their records in the crematory oven mere days before the arrival of FDA investigators, and told the investigators that their records had been destroyed by a flood. N.T. 9/2/08 at 34-35.
In addition to providing bodies to Mr. Mastromarino, [Appellants] pursued other criminal activity. N.T. 9/2/08 at 35-41. [Appellants] defrauded the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare (“PDPW”) by filing false forms seeking reimbursement for providing funeral services to the indigent when they actually already had been compensated for those services by their clients. N.T. 9/2/08 at 35-37. For each false claim, Gerald and Louis sought the maximum amount of $750 and overall received $51,750 and $25,250, respectively. N.T. 9/2/08 at 35-37.

Trial Court Opinion filed 6/1/09 at 2-4 (footnote omitted) (footnotes added).

¶ 3 The Commonwealth submitted this case to the Grand Jury in May of 2006, and after the Grand Jury recommended multiple charges be filed against Appellant Gerald Garzone, he was arrested. Trial was scheduled for September 2, 2008, and represented by counsel, Appellant informed the Commonwealth that he intended to proceed to trial with Co-Defendant Louis Garzone, despite the fact Lee Cruce-ta, who led the “cutters,” Mr. Mastromari-no, and Mr. McCafferty had advised the Commonwealth they intended to plead guilty and cooperate with the Commonwealth. Thus, the Commonwealth prepared its numerous witnesses for trial, with an estimated trial length of three months. See Trial Court Opinion filed 6/1/09 at 6 n. 5.

¶ 4 However, on September 2, 2008, Appellant pleaded guilty to the charges indicated supra. With regard to the terms of Appellant’s guilty plea, the following relevant exchange occurred:

THE COURT: With regard to you, Mr. Gerald Garzone, I understand that you also have an agreement with the Commonwealth. Pursuant to your agreement the Commonwealth will agree to drop and move to nolle prosse, which is to say they will drop, all the remaining charges against you.
In addition, there is an agreement that the aggregate amount of restitution would be $144,000 dollars.
There is also no agreement as to sentence. The Commonwealth would be free to recommend any sentence that it deems to be appropriate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
993 A.2d 306, 2010 Pa. Super. 57, 2010 Pa. Super. LEXIS 315, 2010 WL 1445193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-garzone-pasuperct-2010.