Commonwealth v. Gribble

863 A.2d 455, 580 Pa. 647
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 21, 2004
Docket336 CAP & 356 CAP
StatusPublished
Cited by160 cases

This text of 863 A.2d 455 (Commonwealth v. Gribble) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme 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. Gribble, 863 A.2d 455, 580 Pa. 647 (Pa. 2004).

Opinions

OPINION

Justice CASTILLE.

In these consolidated cross-appeals, appellant William Gribble appeals the denial, in part, of his petition for relief under the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”), 42 Pa.C.S. § 9541 et seq., while the Commonwealth, as cross-appellant, appeals that portion of the PCRA court’s order granting appellant a new sentencing hearing. For the reasons that follow, we vacate the order below and remand to the PCRA court for an evidentiary hearing consistent with this Opinion.

In November 1992, appellant and his girlfriend and co-defendant, Kelly O’Donnell, were staying in the Philadelphia apartment of Agnes McClinchey, appellant’s mother, who was out of town at the time. At approximately 10:00 p.m. on [653]*653November 11, 1992, O’Donnell went to a pizza shop owned by the victim, Eleftherios Eleftheriou, and offered to pawn her leather jacket to him for cash. Eleftheriou gave O’Donnell a handful of cash, and the two made arrangements to meet again later that evening. After closing the pizza shop, Eleftheriou met O’Donnell at a street corner and then accompanied her to the apartment. That evening, appellant and O’Donnell murdered Eleftheriou, dismembered his body, and stole from him some money and a credit card. The next day, appellant used the credit card to buy some articles of clothing for his children.

On November 13, 1992, the police were called to a dump on North Delaware Avenue in Philadelphia where they recovered several bags of dismembered body parts, later identified as the partial remains of Eleftheriou, along with a letter addressed to Ms. McClinchey. Later that day, the police responded to a report of a burning car on Delaware Avenue and recovered from the car two severed legs and a lower torso with the penis missing, later identified as further remains of Eleftheriou.

After McClinchey returned home to her apartment from out of town, the police interviewed her at a nearby gas station. McClinchey told the police that after she had returned home, O’Donnell had told her, in appellant’s presence, that O’Donnell and appellant were involved in Eleftheriou’s murder. Furthermore, McClinchey had overheard appellant and O’Donnell planning to burn the car that the police had found before they came to interview her.

Thereafter, the police arrested both appellant and O’Donnell. Following the arrests, the police searched the apartment and recovered a chisel, a claw hammer, and a serrated knife— each having traces of human tissue and blood matching that of the victim—from the apartment basement where it was determined that the victim had been dismembered. In addition, the police found a pencil case containing the victim’s severed penis. At police headquarters, both appellant and O’Donnell [654]*654confessed separately, each claiming to be the sole killer.1 Each also stated that the other had assisted only in disposing of the body.

Appellant and O’Donnell were tried jointly in a non-jury trial presided over by the Honorable Paul Ribner. At trial, the Commonwealth presented expert testimony from an assistant medical examiner that the initial blow to Eleftheriou’s head knocked him unconscious and that every blow thereafter was inflicted upon a head that was not moving. The expert further testified that red abrasions in the areas where the head and right arm were severed indicated that the victim’s heart was still beating when those body parts were severed. The expert concluded that, because the victim was a muscular man, one person acting alone could not have removed both the head and the arm in fifteen minutes, which was the amount of time it would have taken for the victim to bleed to death.

On June 30, 1993, following trial, both appellant and O’Donnell were convicted of first degree murder, criminal conspiracy, possessing instruments of a crime, robbery, theft by unlawful taking, unauthorized use of an automobile, arson, risking a catastrophe, forgery, abuse of a corpse, and credit card fraud. On that same day, both appellant and O’Donnell waived their rights to a penalty phase jury, and the trial judge conducted and concluded a joint penalty phase hearing. In appellant’s case, the trial judge found that one proven aggravating circumstance outweighed two mitigating circumstances, and accordingly, sentenced appellant to death.2 O’Donnell [655]*655was also sentenced to death. On August 11, 1994, the trial court denied appellant’s post-trial motions and sentenced him on the remaining offenses. On direct appeal, this Court affirmed the convictions and sentence of death. Commonwealth v. Gribble, 550 Pa. 62, 703 A.2d 426 (1997) (Gribble 7).3 Appellant was represented by Charles Mirarchi, III, Esq., at trial and by Mirarchi and Isla A. Fruchter, Esq., throughout his direct appeal.

On November 16, 1998, the United States Supreme Court denied certiorari. Gribble v. Pennsylvania, 525 U.S. 1005, 119 S.Ct. 519, 142 L.Ed.2d 430 (1998). On November 19, 1998, appellant timely filed a pro se petition for relief under the PCRA and requested that R. Nicholas Gimble, Esq., be appointed to represent him. On December 15, 1998, the trial court granted a motion to stay execution, filed on appellant’s behalf by Attorney Fruchter. On April 19, 1999, the court appointed Ramy I. Djerassi, Esq., to represent appellant. Appellant filed a counseled amended petition for PCRA relief on December 22, 1999, in which he claimed that he was entitled to a new penalty phase hearing due to trial counsel’s ineffective assistance in failing to object to a defective jury waiver colloquy and in failing to present additional mitigation evidence. A supplemental amended petition was filed on March 28, 2000, which claimed, inter alia, that trial counsel was ineffective for withdrawing a pre-trial severance motion and for not objecting to certain hearsay admitted at trial. Arguments were heard before the Honorable James A. Lineberger, but no evidentiary hearing was granted. On March 21, 2001, the PCRA court entered an order granting appellant a new penalty hearing based on his claim of counsel ineffec[656]*656tiveness in failing to object to the jury waiver colloquy. The PCRA court denied all of appellant’s remaining claims.

On this appeal, appellant raises three claims sounding in the ineffective assistance of trial counsel. Specifically, appellant faults counsel for: (1) withdrawing his pre-trial motion to sever appellant’s trial from O’Donnell’s; (2) failing to object to the trial court’s admission of out-of-court statements which co-defendant O’Donnell made to Agnes McClinchey; and (3) failing to perform a reasonable investigation and failing to locate available family members with evidence material to mitigating circumstances for purposes of the penalty phase. On its penalty phase cross-appeal, the Commonwealth claims that the PCRA court erred in awarding a new penalty hearing on appellant’s claim of counsel ineffectiveness for failing to object to the penalty phase jury waiver colloquy. For ease of discussion, we shall fúst address appellant’s two claims involving the guilt phase and then the parties’ cross-claims involving the penalty phase.

GUILT PHASE

All of the claims on this appeal involve allegations that appellant’s trial counsel was ineffective.

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Bluebook (online)
863 A.2d 455, 580 Pa. 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-gribble-pa-2004.