Commonwealth v. Weinstein

274 A.2d 182, 442 Pa. 70, 1971 Pa. LEXIS 979
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 26, 1971
DocketAppeal, 432
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 274 A.2d 182 (Commonwealth v. Weinstein) 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. Weinstein, 274 A.2d 182, 442 Pa. 70, 1971 Pa. LEXIS 979 (Pa. 1971).

Opinion

Opinion

Per Curiam,

The Court being equally divided, the judgment of sentence is affirmed.

Mr. Justice Cohen took no part in the decision of this case.

Opinion in Support of the Affirmance of the Judgment of Sentence by Mr. Chief Justice Bell:

Appellant Stephen Weinstein, while represented by counsel, pleaded guilty to an indictment charging him with murder. A three-Judge Court, after rejecting defendant’s offer of psychiatric testimony as to the degree of his guilt, found him guilty of murder in the first degree and sentenced him to life imprisonment. The present appeal was taken from this Judgment of Sentence.

The appellant makes numerous contentions in this appeal, but, most importantly, he asks the Court to specifically overrule the recent decisions of this Court and the long-established and recently reaffirmed law of Pennsylvania. Moreover, realistically, and no matter how camouflaged, he asks the Court to turn over, in large measure, the determination of guilt of murder in the first degree to psychiatrists. Appellant advocates that the Court adopt, as a basic test of first-degree murder, the opinions of psychiatrists which, as is well-known, almost always are based upon the self-serving and unsworn statements of the defendant and his family, which statements are almost invariably not subject to proof or even to cross-examination. If adopted, this would be one of the most regrettable decisions ever made in the history of Pennsylvania. Although *74 substantial advances have been made in the field of psychiatry, it is still (as nearly everyone knows) an inexact science and the most unstable, vacillating, fluctuating, indefinable and constantly changing “guesswork” ever yet invented. Furthermore, the adoption of appellant’s contentions would make a mockery of “Stare Decisis,” the Rock of Gibraltar of the Law. * ' And to pile Pelion upon Ossa, it is likewise obvious that the adoption of appellant’s contentions would foreshadow the elimination of the famous and countless times affirmed M’Naghten Rule and the substitution of some new, indefinite and indefinable psychiatric test.

For these reasons, I deem it important to set forth at some length both the facts and the pertinent and controlling principles of law which have been long established and recently reaffirmed by this Court.

Appellant, Stephen Z. Weinstein, while represented by two attorneys, entered a plea of guilty to an indictment charging him with murder. The case was heard beginning on May 13, 1968, by a three-judge Court. That Court, after rejecting appellant’s offer of psychiatric testimony as to the degree of guilt, found him guilty of murder in the first degree. The Court, on May 16,1968, sentenced appellant to life imprisonment. From this Judgment of Sentence, Weinstein appeals.

The most important question in this appeal is whether Ave should overrule three of the very recent decisions of this Court, as well as our long-established law, and hold that psychiatric evidence is admissible to prove that the defendant lacked the mental ability to form an intent to ldll, which is a necessary ingredient of first-degree (nonfelony) murder.

I shall first discuss the sordid details of tMs murder and the important facts which are set forth in defendant-appellant’s confession.

*75 At the time of the murder, appellant was the proprietor and operator of a tobacco shop at a pier along the Delaware River in what was known as the “Philadelphia 1700 Complex.” He was also the joint owner of a tobacco shop at 3643 Walnut Street in Philadelphia, near the campus of the University of Pennsylvania.

Appellant first met his victim, Green, on October 16, 1967, when Green came into his Walnut Street store to purchase a pipe. Attracted to Green by his tight-fitting levis, appellant engaged Green in a conversation about boats, in which they had a mutual interest. Appellant then invited Green to visit his tobacco shop in the Philadelphia 1700 Complex, where he could see the boats on the Delaware River. Green accepted and a meeting was arranged for the following Sunday, October 22.

Before the Sunday meeting, appellant emptied into a small jar the contents of some ten sleeping capsules, intending to use them on Green. When Green came to appellant’s Walnut Street shop on Sunday, appellant offered to get him a hamburger, and the unsuspecting Green accepted appellant’s hospitality. Appellant sprinkled the powder on the hamburger and gave it to Green. Appellant and Green then took a taxicab to appellant’s Philadelphia 1700 Complex shop. By the time they reached the shop, Green complained of drowsiness, and within an hour he fell to the floor unconscious.

Shortly thereafter, appellant and a young friend, James Hammell, to whom appellant had previously telephoned, attempted to revive Green, but to no avail. According to appellant’s confession, after Hammell left his shop, he was suddenly filled with a strange sexual urge. * Appellant then strangled Green, first *76 with a piece of rope and then with his bare hands, and this killed him. Shortly afterward, appellant, with the assistance of Hammell and some other boys, attempted to dispose of Green’s body. Unable to bury the body in a wooded area near Reading, Pennsylvania, appellant and Hammell eventually placed the body in a trunk, filled it with stones, and dumped it into the Delaware River near the Philadelphia 1700 Complex. Appellant subsequently fled to New York City, where he was eventually apprehended by the New York police. After his apprehension and after having been warned of all his Constitutional rights, he gave a confession to Richard A. Sprague, Assistant District Attorney of Philadelphia, which disclosed the hereinabove recited facts, and this confession was introduced at his murder hearing without objection.

This confession formed the basis for the prosecution’s case at the degree-of-guilt hearing. The prosecution also introduced (1) statements by James Hammell corroborating some parts of appellant’s confession, and (2) the testimony of Dr. Robert L. Cather-man, Assistant Medical Examiner of Philadelphia, who testified as to the cause of death.

Sprague further testified that appellant told him the following additional history of his life: He (Weinstein) had shown signs of abnormal sexual attitudes from his early teens. He had (so he said) a habit of tearing up Boy Scout uniforms, from which he derived some sexual satisfaction. As he grew older this fetish increased to the point where he derived sexual pleasure (a) from watching young men who wore tight-fitting levis, or trousers, and (b) from destroying these garments. Later, he came into contact with several teenage boys in the neighborhood of his Walnut Street *77 store. He induced these boys to steal levis for him to destroy, and occasionally to participate in sexual conduct with him.

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Bluebook (online)
274 A.2d 182, 442 Pa. 70, 1971 Pa. LEXIS 979, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-weinstein-pa-1971.