Commonwealth v. Housman, W., Aplt.

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 26, 2020
Docket766 CAP
StatusPublished

This text of Commonwealth v. Housman, W., Aplt. (Commonwealth v. Housman, W., Aplt.) 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. Housman, W., Aplt., (Pa. 2020).

Opinion

[J-58AB-2019] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA EASTERN DISTRICT

SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, : No. 765 CAP : Appellant : Appeal from the Order entered on v. : February 2, 2018 in the Court of : Common Pleas, Cumberland County, : Criminal Division, at No CP-21-CR- WILLIAM HOWARD HOUSMAN, : 0000246-2001 granting a new penalty : phase. Appellee : : SUBMITTED: June 13, 2019 :

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, : No. 766 CAP : Appellee : Appeal from the Order entered on : February 2, 2018 in the Court of v. : Common Pleas, Cumberland County, : Criminal Division, at No CP-21-CR- : 0000246-2001 granting a new penalty WILLIAM HOWARD HOUSMAN, : phase. : Appellant : SUBMITTED: June 13, 2019 :

OPINION

JUSTICE TODD DECIDED: March 26, 2020 Before our Court in this capital case are the cross-appeals of the Commonwealth,

which has been designated as the appellant in this matter, and William H. Housman,

designated as the appellee, from the order of the Cumberland County Court of Common

Pleas granting Housman’s petition for relief under the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”), 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541 et seq., in the form of a new penalty trial, but denying him

guilt phase relief.1 After careful review, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

This case arises from the October 2000 murder of Leslie White, the facts of which

were summarized by this Court on Housman’s direct appeal:

Shortly after graduating from high school, Leslie White, the victim, met [Housman] when she began working at the Wal- Mart photo shop in Mechanicsburg, Cumberland County. They began a romantic relationship; however, [Housman] was already involved in a romantic relationship with co-defendant Beth Ann Markman, and had been living with her for nearly two years.

Markman discovered e-mails between White and [Housman], revealing their affair. Markman told [Housman] to end his relationship with White, and told several friends and co- workers she intended to “‘kick [White's] ass.’” Markman's co- workers noticed bruising around her eyes and neck, which she attributed to fights with [Housman] over the e-mails. On one occasion, Markman called Wal-Mart to speak with White, which left White scared and crying. Markman also visited the store once, looking for White, but left without incident. Markman told a friend “if she ever got her hands on [White], she was going to kill her.” She told her probation officer, Nicole Gutshall, she caught [Housman] cheating on her, and if she caught him cheating again, she would kill the girl.

[Housman] did not terminate his relationship with White. [Housman] and Markman made plans to move to Virginia for a fresh start. However, Markman became suspicious that [Housman] had not ended his relationship with White. Markman drove [Housman] in her car to a local Sheetz store, where [Housman] used a pay phone to call White at Wal-Mart. He falsely told White his father died, and asked her to come to console him. He told her Markman was out of town. Various Wal-Mart employees testified White received this call from

1 In capital cases, this Court has exclusive appellate jurisdiction over orders finally disposing of petitions for relief pursuant to the PCRA. See 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 722(4); 9546(d); Commonwealth v. Williams, 936 A.2d 12, 17 n.13 (Pa. 2007).

[J-58AB-2019] - 2 [Housman], and she told her co-workers [Housman’s] father died and she was leaving work early to console him.

When White arrived at the trailer where [Housman] and Markman lived, [Housman] talked with her in the living room, while Markman hid in the bedroom until, according to [Markman’s] subsequent confession and trial testimony, she heard a thump and White cried out because [Housman] hit her hand with a hammer. Then [Housman] and Markman subdued White and tied her hands and feet with speaker wire, shoved a large piece of red cloth in her mouth, and used another piece of cloth to tie a tight gag around her mouth. With White bound, Markman and [Housman] stepped outside to smoke cigarettes and discuss their next move. Upon reentering the trailer, Markman held White down while [Housman] strangled her with speaker wire and the crook of his arm, killing her. During the struggle, White scratched Markman's neck. White died of asphyxiation caused by strangulation and the rag stuffed into her mouth.

After White died, Markman wrapped White's body in a tent and placed it in the back of White's Jeep. The couple then fled to Virginia. Markman drove her car and [Housman] drove White's Jeep − carrying White's body. In Virginia, they drove to a remote piece of land owned by [Housman’s] mother, then placed White's body in the trunk of an abandoned car. They discarded White's personal effects, except for her camera, which they intended to sell.

[Housman] and Markman remained in Virginia for several days, staying with friends and [Housman's] father. [Housman] continued to drive White's Jeep, which he held out as his own. While staying with Larry Overstreet and Kimberly Stultz, Markman corroborated [Housman’s] story that they bought the Jeep from Markman's friend in Pennsylvania. At the Overstreet residence, Markman retrieved White's camera from the Jeep and they all took pictures of each other − Markman stated she bought the camera from the same woman who sold them the Jeep. Overstreet and Stultz recalled seeing scratches on Markman's neck, which Markman explained were from a dog. Stultz gave Markman the phone number of a pawn shop, and the shop owner testified he gave Markman $90 and a pawn ticket for the camera. Markman asked Stultz for cleaning supplies because “the Jeep smelled bad, like somebody had a dead animal in [it].” Markman also told Stultz that [Housman] had been

[J-58AB-2019] - 3 seeing another woman, and if she ever met this other woman, she would “whoop her ass.” Another friend, Nina Jo Fields, testified that during the couple's visit to her home, Markman told her [Housman] had been cheating on her, but that she “[didn't] have to worry about the damn bitch anymore, [because she] took care of it.”

After White's parents filed a missing persons report, the authorities tracked her Jeep to Housman's location in Virginia. Deputy Brian Vaughan of the Franklin County Sheriff's office in Virginia went to the house to question [Housman] and Markman about the Jeep and White's whereabouts. When he saw the Jeep in the driveway, he ran the license plate number, which traced back to the Toyota Leasing Corporation.

Markman and [Housman] came to the door to greet Deputy Vaughan. Deputy Vaughan questioned them separately in his patrol car about the Jeep. [Housman], who was questioned first, told Deputy Vaughan he called White to ask her to console him about his dog, which had just died. [Housman] said White never arrived at the trailer, and he subsequently left with Markman for Virginia. He claimed a friend loaned him the Jeep.

Subsequently, Markman voluntarily entered the patrol car and explained to Deputy Vaughan she had only seen White once, but had had several phone conversations with her. She denied knowledge of White's whereabouts, but indicated White had a bad relationship with her parents, suggesting she had run away. Markman denied knowing how [Housman] acquired the Jeep, and admitted driving separate cars to Virginia. When Deputy Vaughan asked Markman if she was afraid of [Housman], she said she was not; rather, she admitted she had a violent temper, and [Housman] often had to restrain her from attacking him.

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