Commonwealth v. Shank

883 A.2d 658, 2005 Pa. Super. 317, 2005 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3437
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 12, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 883 A.2d 658 (Commonwealth v. Shank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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. Shank, 883 A.2d 658, 2005 Pa. Super. 317, 2005 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3437 (Pa. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

¶ 1 Ted Allan Shank appeals the judgment of sentence imposed following his conviction of First-Degree Murder, Kidnapping, Aggravated Assault, Robbery, and Conspiracy. See 18 Pa.C.S. §§ 2501, 2901(a), 2702(a)(1), 3701(a)(1), 903. Shank contends that the Commonwealth adduced insufficient evidence to sustain his convictions, and that the trial court erred in allowing hearsay testimony and expert testimony beyond the scope of the expert’s report. Shank argues in addition that both of his convictions for aggravated assault should have merged with the murder conviction as a matter of law. We find Shank’s contentions without merit and, accordingly, we affirm the judgment of sentence.

¶ 2 This matter concerns Shank’s brutal killing of Richard Gemmil following a disagreement over a game of pool at a bar in Punxsutawney. Both men wagered on the game and when Gemmil ultimately won, the two quarreled and Shank broke his pool stick. After Shank, along with co-conspirators Randy Shank, Doug Christ-ner, and Shannon Dobson, were ejected from the bar, they determined to avenge the loss and, accordingly, hatched a scheme to draw Gemmil and his friend outside to confront them and continue the altercation. Accordingly, the foursome agreed that Dobson, the only woman in the group, would telephone the bar posing as Shank’s wife and call Gemmil to the phone to report that Shank had beaten her and that she needed help. Dobson called the bar, apologized for Shank’s belligerent conduct, and asked Gemmil to meet her in the parking lot of the County Market. Gemmil agreed to do so and went to the parking lot with his friend. When they arrived, Dobson told them that Shank and the other two conspirators were behind the market where, unbeknownst to Gemmil, Dobson had left them to await her return. Gemmil’s friend left the scene, while Gem-mil got into Dobson’s car and rode with her into the alley behind the County Market. While in the car, he told Dobson that he had a knife and would protect her. Dobson did not stop behind the County Market, but instead drove to the rear of the B & H Tire warehouse. She then alighted from the car and told Gemmil that she was going to relieve herself. When Gemmil then exited the car, Shank and his co-conspirators assaulted him, knocking him unconscious and dragging him further into the alley, where they began to beat and kick him. As Christner struck him in the chest with a broom handle, Shank began kicking and stomping him in the head. As Gemmil lay unconscious, Shank continued uninterrupted for as long as one minute, administering kicks of such force that, as each blow was delivered, Gemmil’s head *662 flew upward and then bounced back to the ground. Christner estimated that Shank placed six or seven such kicks. When the assailants left the scene, Shank took the victim’s hat and Randy Shank took his wallet. As Dobson drove the assailants away, they removed the money from the wallet and then threw it out the car window along with the hat.

¶ 3 Sometime after their departure, Randy Shank and Doug Christner realized that the victim might be seriously injured, and suggested that the four return to the scene of the beating. When they arrived, Randy Shank approached the victim, who remained where his assailants had left him, and asked him if he was alright. Gemmil responded only inaudibly, prompting Randy to observe that he was “fucked up.” Shank then approached the victim from across the parking lot and resumed kicking him in the head, again with such force as to cause his head to bounce up and strike the brick wall of the tire warehouse. Christner reported that he delivered at least four such kicks, and as he did so denounced the victim, saying “don’t ever pull a knife on me again you fucking pussy.” Sitting in her car, Dobson heard a thud as the victim’s head struck the wall. Randy then remarked to her, “I think we need to take Ted home. He’s flipping out.”

¶ 4 After Dobson, Christner and Randy extracted the defendant from the assault and took him home, they returned again to the victim and found him dead. Frightened that the crime would be discovered if they left his body where it lay, they took him to a remote location along the roadside and threw the body over the guardrail down an embankment. After police recovered the body, an autopsy showed multiple external injuries consistent with blunt force trauma. The victim’s tongue was clenched between his teeth, his skull was fractured, and his brain herniated and bleeding. . The forensic pathologist, Dr. Vital Mittal, recorded the manner of death as homicide.

¶ 5 On August 19, 2004, the matter proceeded to jury trial before the Honorable John H. Foradora, P.J. Although Shank took the stand in his own defense, the jury returned a verdict of guilty on all charges after three days of testimony. At the subsequent sentencing hearing, Judge Fo-radora sentenced Shank to five to ten years’ incarceration for Aggravated Assault, five to ten years’ for Robbery, and four to eight years’ for Kidnapping, all consecutive to each other and to life without parole for the murder conviction. Shank filed a motion for post sentence relief, which the court denied. Shank has now filed this appeal, raising the following questions for our review:

I. Whether the evidence of record is sufficient to sustain a conviction for 1st degree homicide when the record contains no independent evidence to support a finding of intent to kill, and the defendant and all the witnesses against him testified consistently that there was never an intent to kill the victim[?]
II. Whether the Commonwealth carried its burden to prove the defendant guilty of first degree murder when the record lacks sufficient admissible evidence to establish a causal link between the conduct of the defendant and the victim’s death[?]
III. Whether the evidence adduced by the Commonwealth in this case is sufficient to establish all of the elements of the crime of robbery beyond a reasonable doubtf?]
IV. Whether the evidence adduced by the Commonwealth in this case is sufficient to establish beyond a *663 reasonable doubt that the victim was ever kidnapped[?]
V. Whether both of the convictions for aggravated assault should have merged with the homicide conviction for sentencing purposes when the support for the homicide conviction can only be found in the totality of the circumstances surrounding both encounters between the defendant and the victim[?]
VI. Whether the court erred when it admitted over objection the hearsay testimony of Shannon Dobson regarding statements made to her by others which attempted to establish the state of mind of the defendant[?]
VII. Whether the court erred when it denied all of the defendant’s post trial motions without addressing the matters raised by defendant in his supplemental post-trial motion, when the supplemental motion raised serious issues regarding the credibility and veracity of the Commonwealth and its witnesses at the defendant’s trial[?]
VIII.

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Bluebook (online)
883 A.2d 658, 2005 Pa. Super. 317, 2005 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-shank-pasuperct-2005.