Commonwealth v. LaRosa

626 A.2d 103, 533 Pa. 479, 1993 Pa. LEXIS 123
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 27, 1993
DocketNo. 154 Eastern District Appeal Docket 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 626 A.2d 103 (Commonwealth v. LaRosa) 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. LaRosa, 626 A.2d 103, 533 Pa. 479, 1993 Pa. LEXIS 123 (Pa. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

PAPADAKOS, Justice.

The facts in this case are that a Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas jury convicted Appellant, Joseph LaRosa, of murder of the third degree and criminal conspiracy and the co-defendant, Joseph Fareri, of voluntary manslaughter, criminal conspiracy, and possession of an instrument of crime. Appellant has raised six issues on appeal, three of which relate to the crucial introduction of the prior recorded testimony of one Patrick O’Brien, a witness who testified during co-defendant Fareri’s preliminary hearing but who was not available to testify at the joint trial of Appellant and Fareri.1 Appellant [482]*482claims that Mr. O’Brien’s testimony exculpates the co-defendant and implicates the Appellant; that the probative value of the testimony is outweighed by the unfair prejudice that resulted from its admission; and, that the trial judge’s cautionary instruction was not an effective substitute for the Appellant’s right of cross-examination in the face of this adverse and prejudicial result. We are hence called upon to address the following issue: whether the Appellant was deprived of his right of confrontation under the Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, Section 9, of the Pennsylvania Constitution, when the trial judge permitted the prosecutor to introduce the prior recorded testimony of Patrick O’Brien against the co-defendant, Joseph Fareri, after he instructed the jury that the evidence “... must be considered only against Mr. Fareri and not against Mr. LaRosa.”

The evidence produced at trial includes the following. On August 13, 1987, the victim, James Damiano, was shot in the left side of his chest with a .38 caliber handgun during a confrontation with Appellant and the co-defendant. A police officer, who was patrolling the area in question, stopped his police cruiser after he heard a voice yell, “Officer, Officer ... I’ve been shot.” (T.T., p. 91). The policeman entered the parking lot and found two white males standing in the parking lot and the victim bending over at his waist and grabbing his side. He helped the victim into his police car, but he did not [483]*483stop to identify either of the males, nor could he later identify them as the Appellant or the co-defendant.

Nelson DeBona, a friend of both the victim and the Appellant, testified that he was with the victim when the Appellant and the co-defendant pulled up in a pickup truck and asked the victim to meet with them across the street in the parking lot. (T.T., p. 358-59). He testified that Appellant was seated in the driver’s seat and the co-defendant was seated in the passenger’s seat. The victim walked over to the parking lot and the Appellant stepped out of the truck, but the co-defendant remained inside of the vehicle. (T.T., p. 359, 364-65). DeBona remained on the other side of the street, where he listened to their argument until he entered a pizza shop to purchase a Coke. (T.T., p. 365, 368). A very short time later, he walked out of the pizza shop and he heard a loud “crack.” (T.T., p. 368). DeBona immediately ran to the parking lot and watched as Appellant helped a policeman carry the victim to the police car. (T.T., p. 370).

After Mr. DeBona testified, the prosecutor moved to introduce the prior recorded testimony of Patrick O’Brien against the co-defendant after he had informed the court that Mr. O’Brien had moved to England and would be unavailable for the foreseeable future. The Appellant objected to the Commonwealth’s tactic but his objection was overruled essentially on the grounds that the testimony was merely cumulative.

After the trial judge overruled the objection, he informed the jury that:

... this officer [Officer Roy Pettway] is not Patrick O’Brien the so-called witness who testified at a prior proceeding. But he is going to read exactly what Patrick O’Brien said at the prior proceedings. Now, at the prior proceeding, it was only against Mr. Fareri, not against Mr. LaRosa. He was not available at that time, the prior proceeding dealt only with Mr. Fareri. So, whatever you hear must be considered only against Mr. Fareri and not against Mr. LaRosa.

(T.T., p. 666).

The following testimony was then read into evidence:

[484]*484Q. (District Attorney): When you were sitting in your car and waiting to use the phone, did something unusual occur that causes you to come to Court today?
A. (Mr. O’Brien): Yeah, I saw somebody get shot. I heard shooting. I saw somebody get shot.
Q. How far were they from you when you were sitting in your car?
A. I’m not sure. Five, 10 feet.
Q. The person that got shot, can you tell us where he came from prior to his meeting these other two people?
A. He came from across the street.
Q. Where did the two people come from that did not come from across the street?
A. They pulled in the parking lot where I was sitting.
Q. How did they pull into the parking lot, in what?
A. In a truck.
Q. Did you observe the passenger and the driver of the truck?
A. I noticed them.
Q. How did they exit their truck and what did they do upon exiting their truck? Describe what you observed?
A. I saw them get out of the truck and start talking to the guy that came from across the street.
Q. What did you then see happen by and among the three of them that were talking?
A. When they were arguing, one guy grabbed something from the guy that got shot — excuse me, from the guy that was shot.
Q. The person that grabbed something from the guy that was shot, where in the truck had that person been?
A. I think he was the passenger.
[485]*485Q. What about the other fellow, what was he doing in the truck before he got out of the truck?
A. He was driving it.
Q. Did you hear any conversation or words?
A. It sounded like they were arguing about a girl.
Q. Did you see a gun?
A. I thought I did.
Q. In whose hand was the gun, the passenger or the driver.
A. The passenger, I think.
Q. Do you see the passenger of that truck in this courtroom right now? Look carefully around the room. I see you are looking at me for the most part.
A. No, I can’t identify him.
Q. What did the man that did the shooting do after he shot the man in the stomach?
A. The man that did the shooting?
Q. Yes.
A. Lie walked away.
Q. What did the other man do?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
626 A.2d 103, 533 Pa. 479, 1993 Pa. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-larosa-pa-1993.