Dellavecchia v. Secretary Pennsylvania Department of Corrections

819 F.3d 682, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 6831, 2016 WL 1533979
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 15, 2016
Docket15-1833
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 819 F.3d 682 (Dellavecchia v. Secretary Pennsylvania Department of Corrections) 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
Dellavecchia v. Secretary Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, 819 F.3d 682, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 6831, 2016 WL 1533979 (3d Cir. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

GREENBERG, Circuit Judge.

I: INTRODUCTION

On this appeal from an order denying a petition for a writ of habeas corpus we consider the Sixth Amendment right to counsel in an unusual set of circumstances. In September 2012, a state-court jury convicted appellant, James Dellavecchia, of first-degree murder, ' criminal attempt (homicide), three counts of recklessly endangering another person, and weapons-related offenses. At the trial, Lieutenant Scott Willoughby of the Ridley Township, Pennsylvania, Police Department* the lead officer investigating the crimes, gave testimony that is at the center of this opinion. In particular, Willoughby testified that Dellavecchia made an incriminating statement immediately following a bedside arraignment conducted while he was hospitalized for a self-inflicted head injury on the day following his arrest for the commission of the offenses.

It is undisputed that when Dellavecchia made his statement without counsel present and without having been given Miranda 1 warnings, he had not waived the right to counsel. Thus, as the case law we discuss below demonstrates, the dispute concerns whether Willoughby deliberately elicited Dellavecchia’s statement or was a mere “listening post” when Dellavecchia, spontaneously and without prompting, volunteered incriminating information.

We conclude, that Willoughby did not deliberately elicit Dellavecchia’s statement and consequently did not violate Dellavecc-hia’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel. We also conclude that the evidence at the trial, even disregarding Dellavecchia’s statement, overwhelmingly supported his *685 convictions and thus, even if his Sixth Amendment rights had been violated when he gave the statement, the ensuing error when Willoughby recounted the statement at trial was harmless. Therefore, we will affirm the District Court order denying Dellaveechia’s petition for habeas corpus.

II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

Because the District Court did not hold an evidentiary hearing, we draw our statement of facts from the evidence at the trial and a state-court pretrial hearing on a motion that Dellavecchia filed seeking to suppress his statement. 2 Dellavecchia committed the crimes on October 10, 2011. The events of that day started at approximately 6:00 a.m., when Scott Robins exited his house on Sylvania Avenue in Folsom in Ridley Township, Pennsylvania, - to leave for work. His colleague, Rick Wallace, was waiting for him in the front passenger seat of their work van, which was parked in Robins’s driveway. According to Wallace, who testified at the trial, Robins opened the driver’s side door and then placed his belongings in the center console of the van and started to step into the vehicle. - Then Wallace heard gun shots and looked in the direction of Robins who told him to run. Instead, Wallace exited the van and hid underneath it. From that position when he looked in the direction of the driver’s side of the vehicle, he saw the legs and feet of an individual wearing white sneakers and jeans walking toward the street. Wallace testified that when that individual turned left toward the back bumper of the van, he rolled out from under the vehicle and started to run across the street. ’ At that time, Wallace heard additional gunshots.

Robins’s stepdaughter, Kristen Snow, was in a downstairs bedroom in the Robins’s family house when Robins left for work. When she heard gunshots, she ran upstairs and went out the front door to look for Robins. Dellavecchia then shot Snow in the stomach and she féll to the ground. Snow testified that after she was shot, “somebody — Mr. Dellavecchia- came from behind the van,” walked up to her, and “held the gun to [her] head.” (Pa. App. at 98a, 136:13-15). She stated that she “stared at his face, [he] stared back [at me, and then] he just turned around and walked away.” (Pa.App. at 98a, 136:15-18).

Francis Freeman, a neighbor and longtime acquaintance of Scott Robins, awakened when he heard gunshots that morning. .He heard a second round of gunshots and then “heard a woman say,.help, call the police.” (Pa.App. at 120a, 158:17-18). Freeman called 911, reported the gunshots, and then ran over to Robins and Snow. He was with Robins when the police arrived, and his wife, who came to the scene of the shootings shortly' after he did, was with Snow when they arrived.

The first police officer to reach the scene of the shootings was Corporal Michael Bongiorno of the Ridley Township Police Department. Bongiorno knew Robins and Dellavecchia because the latter had made complaints to the Ridley Township Police Department regarding Robins. When he arrived, Bongiorno saw Snow sitting in “a crunched position” on the front lawn “writhing in pain.” ' (Pa.App. at 140a, 178:15-18). When informed that there was another victim, Bongiorno went around the van and found Robins partially underneath the front of the vehicle. Bon- *686 giorno testified at the trial that he then had the following conversation with Robins; “I said to him, you know, what. the hell happened? What happened? Who shot- you? And he said, Dellavecchia. And I said, your neighbor? And he said, yeah. And- he went like,that with his left hand..and kind of pointed towards Ninth Avenue.” (Pa.App.. at. 142a, 180:6-11). Snow and Freeman testified at the trial that they also heard Robins identify Della-vecchia as the shooter to Bongiorno.

After the above exchange, other officers arrived, and Bongiorno, along with Officer Robert Ruskowski, also of the Ridley Township Police Department, left the scene of the shootings and moved toward 'Ninth Avenue in the direction to which Robins had pointed. While going toward Ninth Avenue, Bongiorno contacted the police dispatcher via his radio communication system and provided the name “Della-vecchia” to the dispatcher whom he asked to get Delláveechia’s address and telephone number. The dispatcher did so and gave Bongiorno this information minutes later. At approximately the same time, a neighbor called out to Bongiorno from across the street, “Dellavecchia’s house is that one,” and pointed to a particular house. (Pa.App. at 145a, 183:9-17). While still outside the Dellavecchia house, Bon-giorno called the dispatcher with a direction to call the Dellavecchia telephone number and ask whoever answered to step outside. “Some seconds later,” the dispatcher informed Bongiorno that Mrs. Del-lavecchia was on the phone, and she then came to the front door where Bongiorno was standing. (Pa.App. at 146a, 184:11 to 147a, 185:2). In response to Bongiorno’s questioning about who else was in the house, Mrs. Dellavecchia stated that her husband was in the shower. Bongiorno then escorted Mrs. Dellavecchia down, the driveway and handed her off to another officer with a direction to prevent her from returning to the house.'

Bongiorno, along with Ruskowski, then entered the house and walked up the stairs in the direction of the shower. After they found Dellavecchia in an upstairs bedroom getting dressed, they instructed him to freeze. Bongiorno handcuffed Dellavecc-hia and informed him that he was being detained for an investigation involving a shooting.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
819 F.3d 682, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 6831, 2016 WL 1533979, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dellavecchia-v-secretary-pennsylvania-department-of-corrections-ca3-2016.