Commonwealth v. Henkel

487 A.2d 1010, 338 Pa. Super. 368, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5565
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 25, 1985
Docket393 and 394 Pittsburgh, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 487 A.2d 1010 (Commonwealth v. Henkel) 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. Henkel, 487 A.2d 1010, 338 Pa. Super. 368, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5565 (Pa. 1985).

Opinion

TAMILIA, Judge:

This is a consolidated Commonwealth appeal from two orders of March 11, 1983, granting appellee’s motions to dismiss and/or quash informations charging him and others with conspiracy to commit extortion. We reverse.

On April 15, 1981, complaints were filed against appellee, Henry Ford and Gary Small, charging conspiracy to commit extortion. After a preliminary hearing before a judge acting as committing magistrate, all those charged were held for court and informations were subsequently filed. Appellee’s pre-trial omnibus motion to suppress was granted and the Commonwealth appealed. During the pendency of this appeal the Commonwealth petitioned to amend the informations against co-conspirators Ford and Small. This was denied and the informations, identical to that lodged against appellee, were quashed. No Commonwealth appeal was then filed, but new informations were lodged and these too were quashed. 1 At this point the lower court’s order *371 granting appellee’s suppression motion was reversed by this Court and the case was remanded for trial. A Commonwealth petition requesting that the original information against appellee be amended was denied. Appellee was rearrested and after a preliminary hearing a new information was filed. On appellee’s motions that both informa-tions against him be quashed the court entered the Orders from which the Commonwealth now appeals.

The original information reads as follows:

The District Attorney of Allegheny County, by this information, charges that on (or about) the summer months of 1977 through and continuing until October 1980, in the said County of Allegheny, RICHARD HENKEL, hereinafter called actor, did commit the crime or crimes indicated herein; that is, 09031A, count 1, criminal conspiracy, felony 2. The actor, with the intent of promoting or facilitating the crime of criminal homicide of Arthur Rooney and/or Edward Ryan; and/or theft by extortion from said Arthur Rooney and Edward Ryan; and/or kidnapping of said Arthur Rooney and/or Edward Ryan, and/or robbery of said Arthur Rooney and Edward Ryan, and/or an attempt to commit said crimes, conspired and agreed with Henry Ford and/or Roy Travis, and/or Jack David Siggson, and/or Gary Edward Small, and/or Junior Krip-plebair, and/or others, that they or one or more of them would engage in conduct constituting such crime or crimes, and in furtherance thereof, to commit the overt act of procuring, receiving, building, maintaining or testing a device or devices capable of carrying out part of the illegal agreement or providing weapons to co-conspirator or soliciting one or more of the co-conspirators to select a person as an appropriate victim of the illegal agreement or conducting a surveillance upon the homes of a prospec *372 tive victim in violation of § 903(a)(1) of the Pennsylvania Crimes Code, Act of Dec. 6,1972,18 Pa.C.S.A. § 903(a)(1).

The amended information differed only in the following particulars: the deletion of all mention of the names of Arthur Rooney and Edward Ryan, and substitution of the phrase “against persons in Pennsylvania or California” (where co-conspirator Jack Siggson had relocated, maintaining continuous telephone contact with appellee).

The conspiracy was revealed by Siggson upon an offer of immunity in return for his testimony. Its basic elements involved the kidnapping and physical attachment to the victim of a bomb removable only upon payment of a large sum of money. Appellee’s ransom expectations were in the nature of three to four million dollars. Electronic devices, to control, both the movement of the victim’s car from which the abduction(s) would take place, and the explosive device, were supplied by a Canadian associate. The initial (tentative) targets of the plot were, as the original information indicated, Arthur Rooney, Sr., the owner of the Pittsburgh Steelers Football Team, and Edward Ryan, a prominent local businessman. The trial court found that the Rooney/Ryan designation was a sub-plot, abandoned in 1977, of a general conspiracy and, therefore, not actionable under the applicable two year Statute of Limitations, 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 5551, 5552. The court further found that because appel-lee’s statute of limitations defense would be defeated by refinement of the original information, the second information was improper and both were quashed consistent with the holding in Commonwealth v. Stanley, 265 Pa.Super. 194, 401 A.2d 1166 (1979).

Although the court’s conclusion is syllogistically sound, we find that the major premise from which it proceeds, that is the focus upon plots and sub-plots, is legally improper. Semantics notwithstanding, conspiracy has been held to be a continuing offense. Commonwealth v. Volk, 298 Pa.Super. 294, 444 A.2d 1182 (1982), Commonwealth v. *373 Cardonick, 444 Pa. 322, 292 A.2d 402 (1972). It requires no quantum leap in logic to conclude that if conspiracy is not severable as to diverse crimes contemplated by a single agreement, Braverman v. United States, 317 U.S. 49, 63 S.Ct. 99, 87 L.Ed. 23 (1942), it is even less so as to the proposed victims of such crimes. Although Braverman speaks to the question of punishment, the principle to be applied is yet the same for determining the application of such pre-trial matters as the statute of limitations; no incidental division is appropriate where the offense is on-going, as the dates in the preamble to both informations, and the evidence adduced at the preliminary hearing demonstrate it to have been.

There is no argument that the very definition of conspiracy demonstrates its integrity as a discrete offense:

18 Pa.C.S.A. § 903 Definition: a. A person is guilty of conspiracy with another person or persons to commit a crime if with the intent of promoting or facilitating its commission he: (1) agrees with such other person or persons they or one or more of them will engage in conduct which constitutes such crime or an attempt or solicitation to commit such crime; or (2) agrees to aid such other person or persons in the planning or commission of such crime, or of an attempt or solicitation to commit such crime.

To superimpose a delineating structure upon what is descriptive of a continuum of planned unlawful activity violates both the integrity of the definition and the requirements of legal precedent.

In the instant case the possession of the electronic and explosive devices, the overt act providing the actualization of illegal intent, continued from 1977 until appellee’s arrest in 1980 and supplies the “repetitions” which case law characterizes as regenerative in effect. Volk, supra; Commonwealth v. Dunie, 172 Pa.Super. 444, 94 A.2d 166 (1953); *374 Commonwealth v. Kirk,

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Bluebook (online)
487 A.2d 1010, 338 Pa. Super. 368, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-henkel-pa-1985.