Walter Tormasi v. Attorney General New Jersey

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 4, 2025
Docket23-1452
StatusUnpublished

This text of Walter Tormasi v. Attorney General New Jersey (Walter Tormasi v. Attorney General New Jersey) 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
Walter Tormasi v. Attorney General New Jersey, (3d Cir. 2025).

Opinion

NOT PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ___________

No. 23-1452 __________

WALTER A. TORMASI, Appellant

v.

ATTORNEY GENERAL NEW JERSEY; BRUCE DAVIS ____________________________________

On Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey (D.C. Civil Action No. 3:18-cv-16340) District Judge: Honorable Georgette Castner ____________________________________

Submitted Pursuant to Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a) February 26, 2025 Before: BIBAS, FREEMAN, and NYGAARD, Circuit Judges

(Opinion filed: March 4, 2025) ___________

OPINION* ___________

* This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not constitute binding precedent. PER CURIAM

Walter Tormasi (Tormasi), a New Jersey state prisoner proceeding pro se, appeals

from the District Court’s order denying his habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. For

the following reasons, we will affirm.

In 1998, Tormasi was convicted of first-degree murder for the shooting death of

his mother, Frances Tormasi. Tormasi, who was 16 years old at the time of the offense,

was tried as an adult and sentenced to life imprisonment with a 30-year period of parole

ineligibility pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(b)(1).

The District Court quoted at length the New Jersey Superior Court’s opinion

setting forth the significant evidence against Tormasi at trial. Briefly, at the time of her

murder, Frances and Tormasi’s father, Attila Tormasi, Sr. (“Attila Sr.”), were separated

and in the midst of a bitter divorce. Frances was living in a boarding house that she

owned with Attila Sr.; her boyfriend also resided there. Attila Sr. lived at home with

Tormasi and his siblings. On the night of the shooting, Attila Sr. left the home around

6:00 p.m. About an hour later, Attila Jr.’s soccer coach, Lajos Ivan, and his wife, Maria,

arrived in the Tormasi driveway. Ivan saw someone near the garage and approached him,

thinking it was Attila Jr. Ivan later identified the person as Tormasi, and testified that

Tormasi was wearing gloves when he shook his hand, and that Tormasi told him that he

was waiting for his mother to pick him up. When she arrived, Tormasi stated “my

mother’s here.” See ECF No. 19 at 2. Ivan and Maria pulled out of the driveway. Maria

saw Tormasi approaching his mother’s car “smiling.” Id. As they drove away, the Ivans 2 heard a “pop-pop-pop” that sounded like a gun. Id. Frances was shot ten times as she

was in her car in the driveway.

When the police arrived at the scene, Tormasi came out of the side of the garage

with his hands up. He told police that he was waiting for his mother to take him to the

mall, but when she arrived, a masked gunman dressed in black and wearing a ski mask

came out of the bushes and shot her. He stated that he chased the gunman for a mile-and-

a half but lost him in a wooded area. The police observed that Tormasi was not

perspiring or showing any signs of running that far. He claimed that he had “his own

suspicions” about the gunman’s identity, but would not provide a name to the police. Id.

at 3.

The investigation recovered 9-millimeter bullets from the crime scene and from a

wall in the Tormasi home. At trial, a firearms expert testified that those bullets were fired

from the same gun as the bullets recovered from a shooting, months earlier, at the

Tormasi’s boarding house. The victim, retired police officer Neil Dougherty, was shot

through the window of his room at the boarding house. Tormasi’s fingerprints were

found on a chair below the window.

Various witnesses testified that Tormasi made incriminating statements about both

shootings. Tormasi’s ex-girlfriend, Andrea Hamilton, testified that, prior to Frances’

murder, Tormasi told her that his father wanted him to shoot Frances’ boyfriend. He told

Hamilton that he went to the boarding house, “stood on a chair,” and shot into the

window; but he stated that he “shot a cop instead” because his father told him the wrong 3 window.” Id. at 5. Tormasi also told her that his father wanted to pay him to shoot his

mother, but he “was not going to get involved in that.” Id. Tormasi showed Hamilton a

hole in the basement wall into which he claimed to have fired a gun. Bradford Krill,

Tormasi’s long-time schoolmate, testified that, on the day of the shooting, Tormasi told

him that he hated his mother, and that she was coming to pick him up that evening and he

was going to kill her. Tormasi also told Krill that he had obtained a 9-millimeter

handgun. Joseph Alessandra, who was with Krill at the time, testified that Tormasi asked

him how he “would shoot someone that was in a car.” Id. at 6. Another long-time

schoolmate of Tormasi, whose father was the chief of police, testified that Tormasi asked

him about how to clean gunpower residue off of hands after firing a gun, and about

whether it could be traced if cleaned off. Several other witnesses testified that Tormasi

either told them he had a gun or showed them a handgun. Finally, another schoolmate,

who was in the juvenile detention center with Tormasi, testified that Tormasi admitted

that he had shot his mother when she pulled up in her Jeep, and that he had “shot the cop”

at the boarding house. Id. at 8.

Tormasi’s conviction was upheld on direct appeal, and he unsuccessfully sought

post-conviction relief (PCR) in the state courts. In his 2002 petition, Tormasi claimed,

inter alia, that his attorney was ineffective for failing to present evidence that Tormasi’s

father, Attila Sr., hired an unknown third party to kill his wife, Frances.1 He made the

1 In 2002, Tormasi’s evidence of his father’s guilt included recorded telephone conversations and surveillance equipment allegedly demonstrating that his father was 4 same claim in a 2006 petition, presenting much the same evidence, and identifying the

third party as Michael A. Falcon, a private investigator whom his father had hired to

investigate Frances’s activities as part of the divorce.

Tormasi’s latest PCR petition, initially filed in 2011, was based on “newly

discovered evidence” in the form of a purported “affidavit” by Attila Sr., then deceased,

asserting that he had hired Falcon to kill Frances, and that his son was innocent of the

offense. Attila Sr. also stated in the document that he paid $10,000 cash to Tormasi’s

trial counsel, Lewis White, in exchange for not implicating Attila Sr. in the crime as part

of the defense.2 The 38-page document ended mid-sentence, and was missing a signatory

page. Tormasi asserted an innocence claim, and an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel

claim, alleging that White had a conflict-of-interest because of the undisclosed fee

arrangement with Attila Sr.

The PCR court held a hearing at which Tormasi’s sister, Sophia, and brother Attila

Jr. both testified that they had seen the document years earlier, including the signatory

page which they stated was signed by their father and notarized. They also testified that

they separately confronted their father, who admitted that the affidavit’s contents were

aware of France’s “activities,” including that she was scheduled to arrive at Tormasi’s home on the night of the murder, where she was killed. Tormasi also provided evidence of his parents’ marital problems, including incidents of domestic violence by Attila Sr.

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