Commonwealth v. Spetzer

722 A.2d 702, 1998 Pa. Super. LEXIS 4201
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 17, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 722 A.2d 702 (Commonwealth v. Spetzer) 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. Spetzer, 722 A.2d 702, 1998 Pa. Super. LEXIS 4201 (Pa. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinions

BROSKY, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of sentence imposed upon appellant after he was convicted of numerous charges relating to sexual offenses as well as criminal solicitation and intimidation of a witness/victim offenses.

Appellant raises six issues for our consideration which we restate as follows: (1) whether trial counsel was ineffective for, inter alia, failing to objéet to the admission of confidential communications between appellant and his wife, hearsay testimony and other irrelevant or inadmissible testimony; (2) whether the court erred in failing to suppress the contents of intercepted telephone conversations because admission of them violated the confidentiality privilege; (3) did the sentencing court abuse its discretion in sentencing appellant; (4) did the District Attorney commit prosecutorial misconduct in not turning over a potentially exculpatory letter to appellant’s counsel; (5) did the court err in denying appellant’s motion to sever and (6) was the evidence sufficient to sustain the conviction as to all attempt and solicitation charges? We reverse in part and remand for a new trial.

The following recitation of the facts is, for the most part, set forth in a light favorable to the Commonwealth as verdict winner. At the time of trial appellant, Jon Spetzer had been married to Kim Spetzer for four years during which Mrs. Spetzer was repeatedly subjected to physical and psychological abuse. In January of 1995, Mrs. Spetzer’s twelve year old daughter from a previous relationship, (herein B.G.), who had been living in Kentucky along with Mrs. Spetzer’s three other daughters from the prior relationship, came to Pennsylvania for an extended stay with appellant, Mrs. Spetzer and their two children. In April of 1995, B.G. awoke to find appellant fondling her, which he continued to do for several minutes despite her protests, Several days later appellant had forcible intercourse with B.G. after putting a sock in her mouth and threatening to kill her or ruin her life if she ever told anyone. The following two evenings appellant again raped B.G. at knifepoint while reiterating his threats to kill her or ruin her [705]*705life if she told anyone. Appellant facilitated the rapes by drugging Kim Spetzer so she would go to sleep at an earlier time.

In May of 1995 Mrs. Spetzer took B.G. and the other children to Kentucky to stay with their biological father. There the victim’s father discovered what appellant had done to B.G. after which he took B.G. to Children and Youth Services in Kentucky to report the incidents. Mrs. Spetzer called appellant from Kentucky and told him that she had learned about the rapes. Appellant became angry and insisted that Mrs. Spetzer return to Pennsylvania and that she should tell B.G. to keep her mouth shut.

Mrs. Spetzer remained in Kentucky for several more weeks until appellant arrived by bus and drove her and their two children back to Pennsylvania. While driving home appellant beat Mrs. Spetzer and made verbal threats towards her in addition to forcing her to perform sexual acts. Appellant was first arrested after authorities became aware of another beating of Mrs. Spetzer and was placed in Meadows Psychiatric Hospital. Mrs. Spetzer filed a petition seeking a Protection From Abuse order but did not pursue the matter due to financial pressure imposed by appellant’s parents. During visits to see her husband at the hospital appellant made several inculpatory statements to Mrs. Spet-zer including descriptions of how he had kept B.G. quiet during the rapes.

Eventually B.G. was brought to Pennsylvania by her father to report the rapes to the Pennsylvania State Police which led to the filing of a criminal complaint on July 14, 1995, charging appellant with various sexual assault charges. The above assaults on B.G. provided the factual basis for the charges leveled in information number 1995-1116.

While in jail and after his eventual release on bail appellant engaged in a course of conduct designed to get the key witnesses against him to recant their allegations. He urged Mrs. Spetzer to recant her story about the rapes and he also told her to have B.G. write a letter to the D.A.’s office saying that she lied. Mrs. Spetzer in fact recanted her statement and tried to -get B.G. to write a recantation letter while appellant continued to write to his wife and the victim from jail in order to force a recantation letter to be written. After the pre-trial hearing, appellant returned home despite a court order barring his presence and beat Mrs. Spetzer again. The victim finally wrote a letter of recantation due to continued pressure from appellant and Mrs. Spetzer.

While out on bail appellant urged Mrs. Spetzer to inquire of B.G. and Mrs. Spetzer’s oldest daughter whether they had any interest in having a sexual encounter with him and to attempt to set yip such an encounter between himself and the girls at a motel. The gist of the plan was that Mrs. Spetzer was supposed to meet the girls, who had been placed in foster care, at a local mall while they were shopping with their foster family and drive them to the appointed destination. After several attempts failed to produce a rendezvous appellant beat his wife in order to compel her to continue to try to set up the meeting.

Fearful that if the contemplated sexual encounter did not materialize appellant might attempt an abduction and rape of the two, Mrs. Spetzer eventually reported appellant’s actions to the State Police after which she consented to a tape recording intercept of her phone conversations with appellant. At this point appellant was calling Mrs. Spetzer on a daily, or more frequent, basis and much of their conversations dealt with arranging the sexual encounter. Mrs. Spetzer, now cooperating with the police, played her role as a willing participant in the scheme and suggested to appellant that her daughters might have an interest in meeting him at a hotel for a sexual encounter. Additionally, in response to inquiries from appellant she assured him on several occasions that she was not taping the conversations.

Operating under the assumption that the meeting would take place, appellant arrived at the designated hotel and was subsequently arrested by State Police. In criminal information number 1996-505 appellant was charged with numerous counts of intimidating witnesses, criminal solicitation and criminal attempt.

A jury trial was held in July of 1996 and appellant was found guilty on all counts of [706]*706both criminal informations, a total of 56 counts. Numerous post-trial motions were filed including one for appointment of new counsel, which was granted. Appellant’s new counsel filed additional post-trial motions which included assertions of ineffective assistance of counsel. After a hearing and arguments on the motions, during which trial counsel was questioned regarding the allegations of ineffectiveness, all claims for relief were denied. This appeal followed.

I. Confidential Communications

Appellant first asserts that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the testimony of his wife, Kimberly Spetzer. The testimony of Mrs. Spetzer is replete with communications between appellant and herself. They include, but are not limited to: a statement that appellant got really upset when he discovered that a report had been made to the Kentucky equivalent of CYS and that he stated “you better make sure that kid keeps her mouth shut. You better tell your sister to mind her own business_” (N.T., 7/23/96 p. 75). Mrs.

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Commonwealth v. Spetzer
722 A.2d 702 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1998)

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Bluebook (online)
722 A.2d 702, 1998 Pa. Super. LEXIS 4201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-spetzer-pasuperct-1998.