Daniel Carnevale v. Superintendent Albion SCI

654 F. App'x 542
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJuly 7, 2016
Docket14-3855
StatusUnpublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 654 F. App'x 542 (Daniel Carnevale v. Superintendent Albion SCI) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniel Carnevale v. Superintendent Albion SCI, 654 F. App'x 542 (3d Cir. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION *

JORDAN, Circuit Judge.

Daniel Thomas Carnevale appeals the order of the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Although the Commonwealth mustered scant evidence of his guilt at trial, Carnevale presents no basis under federal law to accord him habeas relief. We will therefore affirm.

I. Background

Carnevale was convicted in Pennsylvania state court in 2007 of three counts of murder, one count of aggravated assault, one count of burglary, and one count of arson. All those charges stemmed from a 1993 fire at the Columbia House Apartments in the Bloomfield neighborhood of Pittsburgh, which resulted in three deaths and severe burns and injuries to a fourth victim.

The investigation immediately following the fire did not lead to an arrest, though law enforcement officers did look into Carnevale’s potential involvement. Shane Evans, who knew Carnevale because they had both grown up in the neighborhood, told investigators that, shortly before the fire, he saw Carnevale near the door to the basement of the Columbia apartments, which is where the fire began. The police *544 interviewed Carnevale, and he admitted that he supported himself largely by stealing checks from the mailboxes in the Columbia apartments’ courtyard, but he denied involvement in the fire. After that interview, Carnevale stole a car and drove it to California, where he was arrested. He called the Pittsburgh police to tell them his whereabouts, and they told him that they would contact him if they planned to extradite him—but they did not do so in 1993, nor in the next dozen years.

In 2005, however, the cold case unit of the Pittsburgh Police Department’s Homicide Unit re-opened the case on the Columbia fire. After the police published stories about the fire in a local newspaper, Evans came forward again to provide his account of .seeing Carnevale near the apartment building on the night of the fire. Based on that account and the original case file, the police had Carnevale arrested in California in August 2006. Carnevale admitted to his drug abuse and check theft in 1993, but he continued to deny any involvement in the fire.

With just that evidence in hand—no more than the Commonwealth had in 1993 when it declined to prosecute or even arrest him—Carnevale was charged with murder, assault, burglary, and arson. Only after Carnevale’s 2006 arrest did the government’s key evidence develop, in the form of Sean Burns’s testimony. Burns was a fellow prisoner who testified that he befriended Carnevale while they were in jail together awaiting their respective trials. According to Burns, Carnevale broke down and confessed the arson in detail after learning that his wife was leaving him. That claimed confession was the first time that any motive for the arson had been suggested, namely that Carnevale had set the fire to try to destroy surveillance equipment that might have recorded him stealing checks.

At trial, Burns was the only witness who could decisively tie Carnevale to the arson. There was no physical evidence that survived the fire, nor fingerprints on the container of lacquer thinner that investigators believed to be the accelerant used to set the fire. In an attempt to undermine the Commonwealth’s star witness, defense counsel emphasized to the jury on cross-examination that Burns was facing two felony firearms charges, and that he therefore had an incentive to testify favorably for the prosecution in the hopes of receiving lenient treatment himself. The defense further suggested that Burns could have easily fabricated his account from Carne-vale’s police reports. Defense counsel also pointed out several inconsistencies between Burns’s account of the arson, as supposedly told to him by Carnevale, and the actual physical layout of the crime scene. Burns denied receiving any favorable treatment or promises from the prosecution, explaining that he was testifying out of a sense of justice for the victims.

Although the evidence against Carnevale hinged on a jailhouse informant’s essentially uncorroborated testimony, the jury convicted him of all counts. He was subsequently sentenced to life imprisonment. Carnevale filed post-trial motions requesting a new trial, all of which were denied. 1

*545 While appealing the conviction, the defense discovered two potentially suspicious instances of favorable treatment that Burns received after testifying. First, even though Burns had been denied nominal bond just days before Carnevale’s trial, he was granted nominal bond almost immediately after the trial. Second, when Burns ultimately accepted a plea deal on his own charges, the government dropped the more serious count and recommended a below-guidelines sentence with immediate parole, which Bums received.

As relevant to the case before us, one argument that Carnevale raised on direct appeal was that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. In support of that claim, Carnevale’s attorney attached documents to his brief demonstrating Burns’s favorable bond and sentencing treatment. Under Pennsylvania law, however, supporting documents must be included in the certified record, and simply attaching them to the brief is not sufficient to allow their consideration. As a result, the Superior Court deemed the argument to be waived. The failure to properly file those supporting documents, which triggered waiver of the weight of the evidence claim, is the basis for Carnevale’s present ineffective assistance of counsel claims.

Carnevale first pursued that ineffective assistance of counsel claim in Pennsylvania courts pursuant to the Pennsylvania Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”), 42 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 9541, et seq. He argued, inter alia, that his direct appeals counsel had been constitutionally ineffective in forfeiting the weight of the evidence argument. The Court of Common Pleas rejected that argument on the grounds that Carnevale suffered no prejudice. The court said that the evidence against Carnevale at trial “was strong and supportive” of the verdict, so that “the weight of the evidence claim was itself meritless.” (J.A. 628.) There was therefore no prejudice to Carnevale because he could not show that, “had counsel not caused the claim to be waived, the Superior Court would have reversed the judgment of sentence.” (J.A. 629.) The court also considered the ineffective assistance claim in a different frame—namely, that counsel had been ineffective for failing to request a new trial based on after-discovered evidence of a deal between Burns and the Commonwealth. It rejected that version of the claim because the documents did not “show any evidence of the supposed ‘deal’ between the Commonwealth and Mr. Burns,” so Carnevale would not have been “entitled to relief’ even had his counsel squarely made the argument and properly filed the documents. (J.A. 638.) The Superior Court subsequently affirmed the Court of Common Pleas’s denial of Carnevale’s PCRA petition. Commonwealth v. Carnevale, No.

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Bluebook (online)
654 F. App'x 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-carnevale-v-superintendent-albion-sci-ca3-2016.