Commonwealth v. Montalvo, M., Aplt.

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 26, 2019
Docket750 CAP
StatusPublished

This text of Commonwealth v. Montalvo, M., Aplt. (Commonwealth v. Montalvo, M., 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. Montalvo, M., Aplt., (Pa. 2019).

Opinion

[J-84A-2018 and J-84B-2018] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA EASTERN DISTRICT

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

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, : No. 749 CAP : Appellant : Appeal from the Order entered on : May 22, 2017 in the Court of Common : Pleas, York County, Criminal Division, v. : granting PCRA relief at No. CP-67- : CR-0003183-1998. : MILTON NOEL MONTALVO, : : SUBMITTED: October 3, 2018 Appellee :

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, : No. 750 CAP : Appellee : Appeal from the Order entered on : May 22, 2017 in the Court of Common : Pleas, York County, Criminal Division, v. : granting PCRA relief at No. CP-67- : CR-0003183-1998. : MILTON NOEL MONTALVO, : : SUBMITTED: October 3, 2018 Appellant :

OPINION

JUSTICE BAER DECIDED: March 26, 2019 In this capital murder case arising under the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”),

42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-9546, both the Commonwealth and Milton Noel Montalvo have filed

cross-appeals from the order of the Court of Common Pleas of York County (“PCRA

Court”), which denied relief on Montalvo’s guilt phase claims, but granted him a new penalty hearing based on two separate claims of ineffective assistance of counsel. For

the following reasons, we affirm the PCRA court’s order.1

I. Factual and Procedural Background

While a factual recitation was set forth in the Court’s decision on direct appeal,

Commonwealth v. Montalvo, 986 A.2d 84 (Pa. 2009), we reiterate those facts relevant to

the instant PCRA matter. In April of 1998, Appellant2 was in a grocery store when he had

a telephone conversation with his wife, Miriam Ascensio. At the time, the couple had

recently separated. After the call, Esther Soto, the owner of the grocery store, heard

Appellant tell his brother, Noel Montalvo, that he would kill his wife. Later that night,

witnesses observed Ascensio and her coworker, Nelson Lugo (a/k/a Manuel Rodriguez

Santana), together at a local bar. Hours later, two neighbors from the apartment directly

below Ascensio’s apartment heard Appellant shouting outside, demanding entry into

Ascensio’s residence. The neighbors then heard a window break and Ascensio say, “Call

the police.” Two other neighbors heard some disturbance occurring on Ascensio’s porch,

and one neighbor saw a Hispanic male banging on her door. The neighbors explained

that they heard people arguing and loud banging noises coming from the apartment

throughout the night, albeit no one summoned the authorities.

The following morning, one neighbor observed broken glass on Ascensio’s porch,

knocked on the door, and received no response. After looking into the window and

observing a male lying on the floor, the neighbor instructed his wife to call the police.

Upon their arrival, the police discovered the bodies of Ascensio and Lugo inside the

residence. Ascensio’s neck was slashed several times, her skull fractured by a blunt

1The PCRA court’s final order in this capital case is directly appealable to this Court pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. § 9546(d). 2 Although both Montalvo and the Commonwealth are appellants herein, for ease of discussion we refer to Montalvo as “Appellant.”

[J-84A&B-2018] - 2 object, and her eye punctured. Ascensio’s body was naked from the waist down with a

high-heeled shoe in her genital area and panties on her face. Lugo’s body had a fatal

stab wound to the chest, and a tube of lipstick was protruding from his teeth. Crime scene

investigators collected a blood sample on a window blind hanging inside the broken pane

of glass in Ascensio’s porch door and another blood sample on a cloth bag found on a

sofa bed. Both samples were later determined to be Appellant’s blood.

Esther Soto thereafter gave a tape-recorded statement to police, relaying what she

heard at the grocery store. She further indicated that Appellant and his brother appeared

at her home the morning after the murders and that Appellant stated, “We killed my wife.”

Soto also told police that the men explained that Appellant killed Lugo and his brother

killed Ascensio, and that they intended to flee to Florida or the Dominican Republic. More

than eight months later, in January of 1999, police apprehended Appellant in Florida.3 In

a recorded statement to police, Appellant denied any involvement in the murders.

The Commonwealth subsequently charged Appellant with two counts of murder,

and trial commenced in January of 2000. The prosecution’s trial theory was that Appellant

and his brother, who was still at large at the time, committed the murders of Ascensio and

Lugo. The Commonwealth presented the testimony of Ascensio’s neighbors to establish

Appellant’s presence at the crime scene. It further presented forensic evidence

establishing that Appellant’s blood was found on the window blind and on a fabric bag in

Ascensio’s apartment. The Commonwealth additionally presented the testimony of Soto,

3 Appellant’s brother Noel remained a fugitive for several years. Federal authorities apprehended Noel in New Jersey in 2002, and the Commonwealth subsequently charged him with two counts of murder. Following trial in 2003, Noel was convicted of the first degree murder of Ascensio, the second degree murder of Lugo, conspiracy to commit homicide, and burglary. He was sentenced to death. This Court affirmed his judgment of sentence, Commonwealth v. (Noel) Montalvo, 956 A.2d 926 (Pa. 2008), and the United States Supreme Court denied his petition for certiorari. Montalvo v. Pennsylvania, 556 U.S. 1186 (2009).

[J-84A&B-2018] - 3 who stated that she remembered Appellant coming into her store on the day of the

murder, but recanted her earlier statement that she heard Appellant say that he would kill

his wife. Soto further testified that while Appellant and Noel came to her home on the day

after the murders, they did not confess to the killings. Soto explained that she had lied to

Detective Roland Camacho when she told him that Appellant and Noel had confessed

because the detective had threatened to send her to jail, close down her business, and

take away her children if she did not implicate Appellant in the murders.

Detective Camacho also testified at Appellant’s trial, disputing Soto’s claim in this

regard. The Commonwealth thereafter entered into evidence Soto’s tape-recorded

statement to police, indicating that Appellant had told her prior to the murders that he

planned to kill his wife, and confessed that he and Noel had done so after the murders

had been committed. Additionally, germane to an issue herein, the Commonwealth

presented the testimony of Detective Michael Hose of the York City Police Department

who stated that when he arrived at the crime scene, he observed “a high-heel shoe

jammed up into [Ascensio’s] crotch area that protruded through her legs that was visible.”

N.T., 1/14/2000, at 756.

The defense’s trial theory was that Appellant was not involved in the murders and

that his brother had committed the offenses. In support of this theory, Appellant presented

character witnesses attesting to his law-abiding reputation and argued to the jury that the

Commonwealth did not establish his participation in the killings beyond a reasonable

doubt. During his closing argument, the prosecutor referenced the placement of the high-

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