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Shonda
Dee WALTER
By Jim Runkle - Lockhaven.com
April 1, 2010
LOCK HAVEN - Shonda Dee Walter has been granted
a stay of execution.
Originally scheduled to die by lethal injection
on April 22 for the March 2003 slaying of a Lock Haven man, Walter
was the subject of an order issued Tuesday by Clinton County
President Judge J. Michael Williamson.
Walter, now 30, was convicted on April 18,
2005, in the hatchet killing of her neighbor, 83-year-old James
Sementelli, who lived at 17 N. Summit St., Lock Haven.
On March 22, the Federal Community Defender
Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania asked the Clinton
County Court for a delay so attorney Tracy Ulstad could have time
to prepare Walter's post-conviction claims.
In his order, Judge Williamson noted that "no
stay may be issued unless a petition for post-conviction relief
... meeting all the requirements, has been filed and is pending,
and the Petitioner makes a strong showing of likelihood of success
on the merits."
Williamson said the Walter petition couldn't
meet the burden of those requirements "based upon the minimal
allegations" in her previous post-conviction efforts.
Williamson cited three specific Supreme Court
comments that should be reviewed before any penalty is applied:
1. The earlier petition to the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court "asserts one constitutional claim after the other
with no legal rationale or authority for any of them."
2. "To the extent (Walter) attempts to make
additional constitutional claims, we conclude that they are waived
for failure to develop them in any meaningful fashion capable of
review."
3. "As a result, we do not understand why
(Walter) relied on these cases ... Appellant's argument is vague
and confusing. The points she seeks to make are simply
incomprehensible."
In the same order, Judge Williamson appointed
Ulstad to represent Walter in her continuing efforts, and granted
120 days to file an amended petition.
Williamson also granted Walter the right to
proceed as a poor person without payment of costs.
Walter's conviction and sentence of death were
affirmed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court on March 20, 2009.
Walter is presently incarcerated at the State
Correctional Institution at Muncy.
Ulstad notes Walter has a pending and
unresolved petition for post-conviction relief filed March 19 and
claims consideration of that petition "cannot be done in the
shadow of an active death warrant."
"This court should not allow Ms. Walter to be
executed without a meaningful opportunity to investigate and
develop claims for relief, and for those claims to be fully and
fairly heard," the petition concludes.
The victim was a veteran of the Pearl Harbor
attack that sent the United States into World War II. He died in a
hatchet attack at his home in what police said was a theft and
murder.
Testimony at the trial suggested Walter
befriended Sementelli, then attacked him at his home before
stealing a collection of coins and making her escape in his car,
which she later tried to sell.
Rendell signs woman's death warrant for an
April 22 execution
By Jim Runkle - NBCPhiladelphia.com
Mar 22, 2010
Shonda Walter, coonvicted of killing a Lock
Haven veteran of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, is nearing
the end of a five-year legal process that could lead to her
execution.
It would be only the third time in the state's
history that a woman has been executed, and the first time a woman
has been executed by lethal injection in Pennsylvania.
On Feb. 25, Gov. Ed Rendell signed a death
warrant for her.
She is now scheduled to be executed Thursday,
April 22.
“She is still in Muncy State Correctional
Institution," said Pennsylvania Department of Corrections
spokeswoman Susan McNaughton.
Walter was convicted in 2005 of first-degree
murder and sentenced to death for a brutal 2003 hatchet attack on
her 83-year-old neighbor, James Sementelli.
When Lock Haven police discovered the body of
Sementelli inside his home, they determined Sementelli had
sustained over 60 wounds, 18 fractures and 45 bruises to various
parts of his body, many of them to his head, face and neck.
Walter has exhausted the state appeal process
for her conviction and death sentence in the slaying, and has
approached the federal court for a review of her case.
Walter's conviction and sentence of death were
affirmed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court on March 20, 2009.
For many inmates serving time on death row, the
wait for a final determination is measured in years, sometimes
decades.
But no woman has come as close as Walter in
recent times. She is in the second stage of a three-phase death
warrant process that could end at Pennsylvania's death chamber at
Rockview State Correctional Institution in Centre County.
By Jim Runkle - Lockhaven.com
PHILADELPHIA - The Pennsylvania Supreme Court
has upheld both the conviction and death penalty for convicted
murder Shonda Dee Walter.
Walter was convicted four years ago in the
hatchet killing of her neighbor 83-year-old James Sementelli, who
lived at 17 N. Summit St., Lock Haven.
The brutal slaying, six years ago today,
shocked the community and sparked a lengthy investigation by city
police and others.
In the legal document the high court offered a
simple, one-sentence conclusion - "We affirm the verdict and the
sentence of death.
Starting with its mandatory, independent review
of the sufficiency of the evidence to support the conviction for
first-degree murder, the court concluded "the evidence in this
case amply supported the jury's verdict."
The conclusion arrived at the end of a massive,
15-page single-spaced opinion in which the jurists rejected each
of the legal arguments that might have offered Walter, a new
trial, leniency or a detour from execution.
In an opinion handed down Friday and delivered
to local court officials yesterday, Madam Justice Jane Cutler
Greenspan concluded "the jury reasonably determined that all the
elements of the offenses were established beyond a reasonable
doubt ... Murder in the first-degree is an intentional killing,
one that is willful, deliberate and premeditated. The evidence in
this case amply supported the jury's verdict."
Defense attorney Steve Smith and former
District Attorney Ted McKnight, who ran the Clinton County
prosecutor's office at the time of the trial, were telephoned for
comment concerning the development Tuesday afternoon, but were
apparently unable to respond by press time today.
Justices Ronald D. Castille, Thomas G. Saylor,
J. Michael Eakin, Max Baer and Debra Todd joined with Greenspan in
the unanimous opinion of the court.
Walter was convicted of murder in the
commission of a felony on April 18, 2005.
The theft of Sementelli's auto after the murder
was used by the prosecution as an "aggravating factor" to justify
the death penalty.
Walter, formerly of 703 Bellefonte Ave.,
remains incarcerated at the State Correctional Institute at Muncy,
the only state prison in the commonwealth that houses female
death-row inmates.
In his 2007 appeal to the higher court, Smith
asked the court to overturn both the death penalty and the
conviction, claiming that special prosecutor, Joseph McGettigan,
made an argument for capital punishment that failed to meet the
legal requirements on several levels.
Smith also argued that McGettigan's fiery
closing argument went beyond the standard for normal oratory.
After the conviction and during the penalty
phase of the trial, a jury of 12 Clinton County citizens
considered the sole aggravating factor, compared them with several
factors the defense presented in a plea for leniency, and in the
end decided Walter deserved the most severe penalty available to
the state.
Smith's appeal suggested the jury was "inflamed
and impassioned" by McGettigan's closing arguments, and argued
that the jury ignored all the factors that might have led to a
lesser penalty.
"The prosecution unfairly portrayed the
defendant as a vicious killer of a nice elderly gentleman," Smith
said, "and by doing so unfairly suggested to the jury ... that
those comments carried more weight than the evidence."
Sementelli died in a hatchet attack at his home
in what police said was a theft and murder. Testimony at the trial
suggested Walter befriended Sementelli, then brutally attacked him
at his home before stealing a collection of coins and making her
escape in his car, which she later tried to sell.
The Supreme Court said Walter raised four
issues on appeal, "none of which are completely clear in their
rationale and some of which are unintelligible.'
"The physical and testimonial evidence linking
Walter to Mr. Sementelli's killing, Walter's own statements
regarding her intentions, and the brutal manner in which the
victim was murdered, all combine to establish that Walter
committed an intentional killing that was willful, deliberate and
premeditated," the court said.
Walter asserted that the trial court erred in
"failing to dismiss the aggravating circumstance ... wherein the
Commonwealth failed to demonstrate that... [she] had the intent to
commit a felony during or prior to the course of the murder."
Smith argued that evidence of the theft should have been withheld
from trial. But the Supreme Court ruled the testimony of
"co-conspirators" was an exception to the hearsay rule and turned
away that specific complaint.
"Because a jury determined that Walter killed
Mr. Sementelli while in the perpetration of a felony, Walter is
not entitled to relief on her claim that the trial court erred in
failing to order a pre-trial dismissal of the aggravating
circumstance," the opinion states.
Walter also claimed the trial court erred in
failing to sustain her multiple challenges to capital (death
penalty) proceedings based on the fact that "the death penalty is
constitutionally deficient on its face.
"The record reflects that Walter raised a
series of constitutional challenges in the trial court, all of
which were rejected. In her brief to this Court, Walter presents a
half-page of argument setting forth no fewer than six purported
constitutional violations. Despite the quantity of her claims,
Walter cites not one case in support of her argument."
Walter also claimed the Commonwealth failed, in
general, to allege the "criminal state of mind" sufficient ... to
prove Walter guilty of felony murder. The state Supreme Court said
the U.S. Supreme Court opinions Smith used to justify that claim
were "vague and confusing," and appeared to miss the facts of the
Walter trial process itself.
Walter's final claim was that the jury failed
to adequately consider the mitigating evidence presented to it.
During the penalty phase, when the jury was to determine if Walter
would spend life behind bars or the death penalty, Walter proposed
several mitigating factors to the jury including her age and her
lack of a significant criminal history and a character witness who
testified on her behalf.
Walter asserts no error but insisted the jurors
"totally failed to consider any mitigating evidence ... despite
the fact that mitigating evidence was presented."
The Supreme Court however, said the law is
clear - The task of determining the existence of mitigating
factors is for the jury alone.
"The jury here was presented with evidence and
chose, in its discretion, to reject it," The Supreme Court said.
"In light of the fact that we have found no
merit to any of the claims Walter raises in this direct appeal,"
the court concluded, "we turn to our statutorily mandated review
of the death sentence. This Court is required to affirm the
sentence of death unless we determine it was 'the product of
passion, prejudice or any other arbitrary factor' or the evidence
fails to support the finding of at least one aggravating
circumstance ... Our review of the record does not lead us to
conclude that the jury's verdict in this case was triggered by an
improper factor. Further, we conclude that the evidence presented
was sufficient to support the jury's finding of a single
aggravating circumstance, to wit, a murder committed while in the
perpetration of a felony.
"Accordingly, we affirm the verdict and the
sentence of death - Judgment of sentence affirmed".
Ejfi.org
April 15, 2005
Shonda Walter, 25, bludgeoned her neighbor,
83-year-old Pearl Harbor veteran James Sementelli, 66 times with a
10-inch hatchet and denied his pleas for help before leaving him
to die in March of 2003.
The prosecutor said Ms. Walter was raised by a
loving mother, Judy Walter, but she started getting into debt and
hanging around "bad companions" before moving back into her
mother's house in late 2002 or early 2003. He further alleged that
Walter was trying to get into a gang in Williamsport. That
affiliation could have been a reasoning behind the brutal murder.
"She said, 'I'll solve my problems and
debts...as well as getting in with the gang. I'll do that by
taking a human life.'"
Prosecution attorney McGettigan showed the jury
the hatchet that Ms. Walter used to kill James Sementelli, holding
it up twice during his opening statements. He said Sementelli was
"alive and healthy" and tried to defend himself from the blows to
his body, but succumbed to "brutal injuries, many broken bones,
skull injuries...and blood all over the place."
Evidence showed that after Ms. Walter first
struck Sementelli with the hatchet, he asked her why she was doing
that. "Because I can," the prosecutor quoted Shonda Walter. After
bludgeoning James Sementelli 66 times with the hatchet she then
used it to carve a cross in his stomach after which she watched
television and ate ice cream before driving away in Sementelli's
car, prosecutors said. Later she returned to the World War II
veteran's house and stole $510 in quarters.
During the attack James Sementelli pled for Ms.
Walter to call 911, "hoping for some mercy, but she struck him
again and again," McGettigan said. "She said, 'Just die.' and then
she took a break, smoked a cigarette while Sementelli remained
alive, and she left. We don't know if he was still alive when she
left."
Witnesses testified that Ms. Walter said she
took a break during the slaying to recite the Lord's Prayer. She
was arrested after one of her friends told police that she had
come to her house wearing gloves covered in blood and confessed.
A question posed to prospective jurors was
whether they had negative feelings on the case because Shonda
Walter, who is black, was accused of killing James Sementelli, who
was white. Only one prospective juror in each session said they
had an issue with race.
On Monday, April 18, 2005, the jury deliberated
for less than 30 minutes before finding her guilty of first-degree
murder. On Tuesday, April 19 th the same jury sentenced her to
death.
Shonda Walter
ProDeathPenalty.com
On Sunday, March 31, 2003, Lock Haven police
discovered the dead body of James Sementelli inside his home. Mr.
Sementelli, an 83 year-old veteran, had suffered a brutal attack.
He sustained over 60 wounds, 18 fractures, and 45 bruises to
various parts of his body, many of them to his head, face, and
neck. Mr. Sementelli’s left ear was nearly severed from his head.
His nasal bone and skull were fractured and his right eye
punctured. He had numerous defensive wounds on his arms and hands
and multiple gaping chop wounds all over his body. The killer used
a hatchet.
Based on a number of factors, including the
last time the victim was seen alive, as well as old newspapers
found on his porch and another paper found near his body, police
determined that Mr. Sementelli had been murdered on Tuesday, March
25, 2003. The investigation soon focused on Shonda Dee Walter, a
young woman who lived with her mother in a house across the street
from Mr. Sementelli.
A neighbor, Monica Rupert, told police that she
saw Walter pacing outside the Sementelli residence on the evening
of the 25th, talking on a cordless telephone. Walter’s mother,
Judith Walter, told police that her daughter had been out of the
house on that evening, only to return later and leave again,
taking the telephone with her. Mrs. Walter never saw her daughter
again that night, but when she awoke the next morning she noticed
that the phone had been returned and Walter had left a note
explaining that she was staying at her friend Michelle’s house.
Shanee Gaines became the Commonwealth’s primary
witness against Walter. Gaines, who lived in Williamsport, knew
Walter through Michelle Mathis, a young woman who was allegedly a
member of the Bloods street gang and lived on the same street as
Gaines. According to Gaines, she was at Mathis’s home on the night
of the murder, caring for Mathis’s child. Mathis had been involved
in an altercation on the street earlier that evening and had been
taken to the hospital for treatment. While Mathis was at the
hospital, Walter appeared at Mathis’s Williamsport residence.
Walter was driving Mr. Sementelli’s white Toyota. Gaines granted
Walter entrance to Mathis’s home and noticed that Walter had blood
on her forehead and was wearing rubber gloves that also had blood
on them. Walter promptly went upstairs to shower while Gaines
waited downstairs. At some point Mathis returned. Ultimately, the
three women left the house and traveled in Mr. Sementelli’s car to
his house in Lock Haven. While en route, Walter told Gaines and
Mathis that she had killed the victim and described how she struck
him repeatedly with the hatchet while she ignored his pleas that
she call for help.
When the trio arrived at Mr. Sementelli’s
house, Walter used a key to enter and showed the other two women
the victim’s body. According to Gaines, the purpose of the visit
was to dispose of a cigarette that Walter had left at the scene
and to remove the body from the house. Gaines refused to assist
Walter and Mathis and quickly returned to the car. Walter and
Mathis soon joined her, with Walter carrying a large plastic tub
of quarters. Before leaving, Walter ran into her mother’s house to
leave a note and get a change of clothes. The women then drove to
a grocery store and redeemed the coins, receiving a receipt for
$510.25 from a coin machine. The supermarket video camera recorded
the women’s visit. The women were unable to receive cash because
of the late hour. Gaines and Mathis returned to the market the
following morning and redeemed the receipt. The three women split
the money. During the drive back to Williamsport, Walter flung the
hatchet from the car into a wooded area.
Gaines’s involvement with Walter continued in
the hours and days after the murder. That same night, the three
women purchased some marijuana and then watched movies together at
Gaines’s house. Walter had taken a trash bag full of movies from
Mr. Sementelli’s house and brought them to Gaines’s residence. A
few days later, Gaines accompanied Walter and others, including
her good friend Aaron Jones, on a trip to Philadelphia where
Walter attempted to sell Mr. Sementelli’s car. Walter told Jones
and others that the car belonged to her father, who had died, and
she wanted to sell it because she had “bad memories” about it.
When the sale was unsuccessful, the group returned to Williamsport
and Walter permitted Jones to drive the vehicle. Police stopped
Jones while he was driving the car and Gaines feared that Jones,
who knew nothing about Mr. Sementelli’s death, would be implicated
in the crime. As a result, Gaines contacted police and told them
everything she knew.
Police recovered the hatchet, which a
Williamsport resident found on his property days after the murder
and turned over to state police. Blood on the hatchet matched that
of Mr. Sementelli. A friend of Walter’s told police that a similar
hatchet had been stolen from his parents’ house years earlier
during a party that Walter attended. The friend’s father confirmed
that the murder weapon was the one he had owned. Another
Williamsport resident told police that she had seen Walter wearing
a hatchet on her belt in the weeks before the murder. Walter’s
mother explained that when Walter moved into her house with her
young daughter in 2002, one of Walter’s possessions was a hatchet,
which she placed in a kitchen drawer. When Walter was arrested,
Mrs. Walter searched for the hatchet with police, but it was no
longer in the drawer.
Walter was charged with the murder of Mr.
Sementelli and felony theft of his automobile. The Commonwealth
gave notice of its intent to seek the death penalty, based on a
single aggravating circumstance: murder committed while in the
perpetration of a felony. Walter was bound over for trial in May
2003. Following an unsuccessful attempt to dismiss the aggravating
circumstance, Walter was convicted of first-degree murder and
felony theft on April 18, 2005.
A penalty hearing followed, at which Walter
asserted three mitigating circumstances. Walter identified the
following mitigating circumstances: the age of the defendant; the
fact that the defendant had no significant history of prior
criminal convictions and any other evidence of mitigation
concerning the character and record of the defendant and the
circumstances of the offense, (the “catchall mitigator”). The jury
found the single aggravating circumstance and no mitigating
circumstances. It returned a sentence of death, which the trial
court formally imposed on April 19, 2005.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
Commonwealth v. Walter
COMMONWEALTH of Pennsylvania, Appellee
v.
Shonda Dee WALTER, Appellant.
March 20, 2009
BEFORE: CASTILLE, C.J., and SAYLOR, EAKIN,
BAER, TODD, McCAFFERY and GREENSPAN, JJ.
Stephen C. Smith, Lock Haven, for Shonda
Walter.Christopher D. Carusone, Esq., PA Office of Attorney
General, Amy Zapp, Esq., for Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
OPINION
This is a direct capital appeal following
Appellant's conviction for first-degree murder and the trial
court's imposition of the death sentence.1
We affirm.
On Sunday, March 31, 2003, Lock Haven police
discovered the dead body of James Sementelli inside his home.
Mr. Sementelli, an 83 year-old veteran, had suffered a brutal
attack. He sustained over 60 wounds, 18 fractures, and 45
bruises to various parts of his body, many of them to his head,
face, and neck. Mr. Sementelli's left ear was nearly severed
from his head. His nasal bone and skull were fractured and his
right eye punctured. He had numerous defensive wounds on his
arms and hands and multiple gaping chop wounds all over his body.
The killer used a hatchet.
Based on a number of factors, including the
last time the victim was seen alive, as well as old newspapers
found on his porch and another paper found near his body, police
determined that Mr. Sementelli had been murdered on Tuesday, March
25, 2003. The investigation soon focused on Appellant Shonda Dee
Walter, a young woman who lived with her mother in a house across
the street from Mr. Sementelli.
A neighbor, Monica Rupert, told police that she
saw Appellant pacing outside the Sementelli residence on the
evening of the 25th, talking on a cordless telephone.
Appellant's mother, Judith Walter, told police that her daughter
had been out of the house on that evening, only to return later
and leave again, taking the telephone with her. Mrs. Walter
never saw her daughter again that night, but when she awoke the
next morning she noticed that the phone had been returned and
Appellant had left a note explaining that she was staying at her
friend Michelle's house.
Shanee Gaines became the Commonwealth's primary
witness against Appellant. Gaines, who lived in Williamsport,
knew Appellant through Michelle Mathis, a young woman who was
allegedly a member of the Bloods street gang and lived on the same
street as Gaines. According to Gaines, she was at Mathis's home
on the night of the murder, caring for Mathis's child. Mathis
had been involved in an altercation on the street earlier that
evening and had been taken to the hospital for treatment. While
Mathis was at the hospital, Appellant appeared at Mathis's
Williamsport residence. Appellant was driving Mr. Sementelli's
white Toyota. Gaines granted Appellant entrance to Mathis's home
and noticed that Appellant had blood on her forehead and was
wearing rubber gloves that also had blood on them. Appellant
promptly went upstairs to shower while Gaines waited downstairs.
At some point Mathis returned. Ultimately, the three women left
the house and traveled in Mr. Sementelli's car to his house in
Lock Haven. While en route, Appellant told Gaines and Mathis
that she had killed the victim and described how she struck him
repeatedly with the hatchet while she ignored his pleas that she
call for help.
When the trio arrived at Mr. Sementelli's
house, Appellant used a key to enter and showed the other two
women the victim's body. According to Gaines, the purpose of the
visit was to dispose of a cigarette that Appellant had left at the
scene and to remove the body from the house. Gaines refused to
assist Appellant and Mathis and quickly returned to the car.
Appellant and Mathis soon joined her, with Appellant carrying a
large plastic tub of quarters. Before leaving, Appellant ran
into her mother's house to leave a note and get a change of
clothes. The women then drove to a grocery store and redeemed
the coins, receiving a receipt for $510.25 from a coin machine.2
The supermarket video camera recorded the women's visit. During
the drive back to Williamsport, Appellant flung the hatchet from
the car into a wooded area.
Gaines's involvement with Appellant continued
in the hours and days after the murder. That same night, the
three women purchased some marijuana and then watched movies
together at Gaines's house.3
A few days later, Gaines accompanied Appellant and others,
including her good friend Aaron Jones, on a trip to Philadelphia
where Appellant attempted to sell Mr. Sementelli's car.
Appellant told Jones and others that the car belonged to her
father, who had died, and she wanted to sell it because she had
“bad memories” about it. When the sale was unsuccessful, the
group returned to Williamsport and Appellant permitted Jones to
drive the vehicle. Police stopped Jones while he was driving the
car and Gaines feared that Jones, who knew nothing about Mr.
Sementelli's death, would be implicated in the crime. As a
result, Gaines contacted police and told them everything she knew.
Police recovered the hatchet, which a
Williamsport resident found on his property days after the murder
and turned over to state police. Blood on the hatchet matched
that of Mr. Sementelli. A friend of Appellant's told police that
a similar hatchet had been stolen from his parents' house years
earlier during a party that Appellant attended. The friend's
father confirmed that the murder weapon was the one he had owned.
Another Williamsport resident told police that she had seen
Appellant wearing a hatchet on her belt in the weeks before the
murder. Appellant's mother explained that when Appellant moved
into her house with her young daughter in 2002, one of Appellant's
possessions was a hatchet, which she placed in a kitchen drawer.
When Appellant was arrested, Mrs. Walter searched for the hatchet
with police, but it was no longer in the drawer.
Appellant was charged with the murder of Mr.
Sementelli and felony theft of his automobile. The Commonwealth
gave notice of its intent to seek the death penalty, based on a
single aggravating circumstance: murder committed while in the
perpetration of a felony. 42 Pa.C.S. § 9711(d)(6). Appellant was
bound over for trial in May 2003. Following an unsuccessful
attempt to dismiss the aggravating circumstance, Appellant was
convicted of first-degree murder and felony theft on April 18,
2005. A penalty hearing followed, at which Appellant asserted
three mitigating circumstances.4
The jury found the single aggravating circumstance and no
mitigating circumstances. It returned a sentence of death, which
the trial court formally imposed on April 19, 2005. This
automatic appeal followed.
Appellant raises four issues on appeal, none of
which are completely clear in their rationale and some of which
are unintelligible. Appellant makes no claims with respect to
the guilt phase of her trial. At the conclusion of her brief,
Appellant asks that this Court “consider vacating the death
sentence imposed upon [her].” Appellant's Brief at 11. Before
we address Appellant's issues, we begin with our mandatory,
independent review of the sufficiency of the evidence to support
the conviction for first-degree murder. Commonwealth v.
Zettlemoyer, 500 Pa. 16, 454 A.2d 937 (1982), cert. denied, 461
U.S. 970, 103 S.Ct. 2444, 77 L.Ed.2d 1327, reh'g denied, 463 U.S.
1236, 104 S.Ct. 31, 77 L.Ed.2d 1452 (1983). Our task is to
determine “whether the evidence, and all the reasonable inferences
drawn therefrom, viewed in the light most favorable to the
Commonwealth as verdict winner, is sufficient to establish that
the jury could have reasonably determined that all the elements of
the offenses were established beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Commonwealth v. Walker, 540 Pa. 80, 656 A.2d 90, 94 (1995).
Murder in the first-degree is an intentional killing, one that is
willful, deliberate, and premeditated. Id. at 95 (citing
Commonwealth v. Lark, 518 Pa. 290, 543 A.2d 491, 498 (1988) and 18
Pa.C.S. § 2502).
The evidence in this case amply supported the
jury's verdict. On the night of the murder, Appellant appeared
at a friend's house in Williamsport driving the victim's car, with
blood on her hands and forehead. She returned to the scene of
the crime with witness Shanee Gaines, to whom Appellant described
in detail the murder she committed that night. Multiple
witnesses connected Appellant to the murder weapon, including her
own mother. In addition to the evidence summarized above, the
Commonwealth presented the testimony of two people Appellant
confided in while in prison. Amanda Horner testified that
Appellant admitted her guilt and described the manner in which she
had committed the murder. Appellant explained to Horner that she
had killed Mr. Sementelli because she wanted his car, which she
intended to sell for money to pay off fines that she owed.
Gaines and other witnesses testified that Appellant drove the
Toyota to Philadelphia shortly after the murder in an effort to
sell it. Both Horner and inmate/witness Coran Freeland testified
that Appellant said she also killed the victim because she wanted
to gain entry into the Bloods street gang.
The physical and testimonial evidence linking
Appellant to Mr. Sementelli's killing, Appellant's own statements
regarding her intentions, and the brutal manner in which the
victim was murdered, all combine to establish that Appellant
committed an intentional killing that was willful, deliberate, and
premeditated.
Appellant's first claim of error on appeal
concerns pretrial matters. She asserts that the trial court
erred in “failing to dismiss the aggravating circumstance ․
wherein the Commonwealth failed to demonstrate that ․ [she] had
the intent to commit a felony during or prior to the course of the
murder.” Appellant's Brief at 2. At the preliminary hearing in
this matter, the Commonwealth offered the testimony of Shanee
Gaines, who testified that on the night of the murder, Mathis told
her that Appellant intended to kill a man for his car and would be
coming to Mathis's home after the murder for help in hiding the
body. Defense counsel objected to this testimony on the basis of
hearsay. The Commonwealth responded that Mathis's statement
constituted an exception to the hearsay rule in that it was a
statement of a coconspirator. Defense counsel argued that
admission on this basis was unfair because he had no notice of an
alleged conspiracy. The trial court informed counsel that he
intended to permit the testimony at that juncture, but that
counsel was welcome to request a continuance for additional time
in which to cross-examine Gaines. Counsel did not seek a
continuance, Gaines's testimony was admitted, and Appellant was
bound over for a capital trial.
Several months after the preliminary hearing,
counsel filed a motion to dismiss the aggravating circumstance and
a petition for writ of habeas corpus with respect to the theft
charge. At the hearing on the two motions, the transcript from
the preliminary hearing was incorporated into the record. The
Commonwealth maintained that the statements made by Mathis to
Gaines (regarding Appellant's intention to kill the victim for his
car) were admissible as statements of a coconspirator and,
further, that those statements established Appellant killed the
victim so that she could steal his car. Defense counsel did not
object to the Commonwealth's use of this testimony to satisfy its
burden nor did counsel make any argument addressing the
admissibility of the evidence. Instead, counsel sought to
present the testimony of another witness, Frank Flippen. When
asked for an offer of proof, counsel asserted that Flippen would
testify that it was Mathis who killed Mr. Sementelli. The trial
court ruled that such evidence was irrelevant to the issue before
it, i.e., whether the Commonwealth had presented any evidence in
support of the aggravating circumstance. Again, counsel made no
argument on the evidence the Commonwealth presented or the
admissibility of that evidence. The trial court ultimately
denied the motion to dismiss the aggravating circumstance.
Appellant now insists that this was error under Commonwealth v.
Buck, 551 Pa. 184, 709 A.2d 892 (1998), and that such error should
prompt this Court to vacate the sentence of death.
In Buck, this Court reviewed a trial court's
order quashing the Commonwealth's notice of aggravating
circumstances. Defense counsel had filed a pre-trial motion to
quash aggravating circumstances and the trial court held a hearing
on the matter. Id. at 894. After assessing the Commonwealth's
evidence by reviewing the discovery materials, the trial court
concluded that the Commonwealth's evidence was insufficient to
establish any of the aggravating factors alleged. As a result,
the trial court dismissed the aggravating circumstances,
nullifying the case's capital status, without prejudice to the
Commonwealth's right to file an amended notice of aggravating
circumstances. Id. This Court reversed the trial court's order
and remanded the matter for capital proceedings. Id. at 897-98.
Observing that the law required the
Commonwealth to file notice of alleged aggravating circumstances
pursuant to Pa.R.Crim.P. 352, the Buck Court held that a capital
defendant is entitled to challenge the Commonwealth's Rule 352
notice based on his assertion that there is no evidence supporting
the proposed aggravating circumstances. Id. at 896. The Court
explained that “a valid claim for purposeful abuse exists when the
Commonwealth files an unwarranted notice of aggravating
circumstances.” Id. However, the court's inquiry in such a case
is a limited one and is “focused solely upon whether the case is
properly designated as capital, not whether each aggravating
factor alleged is supported by evidence.” Id. Because the trial
court is required to instruct a capital jury to consider
aggravating circumstances for which there is “some evidence,” the
Buck Court held that the trial court was prohibited from engaging
in “pre-trial factfinding or weighing of evidence of a proposed
aggravating factor.” Id. at 896-97 (emphasis in original).
Rather, the trial court's role is limited to determining “whether
the Commonwealth abused its discretion in designating the case as
capital.” Id. at 897.
Although she relies on Buck for relief on this
issue, Appellant makes no effort to conform her argument to the
standard set out in that case. As she did at the hearing on the
motion, Appellant simply asserts that there was no evidence
presented at the preliminary hearing to support the aggravating
factor; she addresses neither the law applicable to the issue nor
the facts relevant to this case.5
We need not consider whether or to what extent
the pre-trial evidence here was sufficient under the rule of Buck.
In this case, Appellant has been tried and convicted of
first-degree murder and felony theft. Further, the jury
unanimously found beyond a reasonable doubt that Appellant killed
Mr. Sementelli while in the perpetration of a felony. Any claims
of inadequacy Appellant alleges with respect to pre-trial matters
have been rendered moot by the “subsequent independent judicial
judgment” confirming the existence of the aggravating circumstance
in this case.6
Commonwealth v. Ballard, 501 Pa. 230, 460 A.2d 1091, 1092 (1983).
See also Commonwealth v. Lee, 541 Pa. 260, 662 A.2d 645, 650
(1995) (deeming moot defendant's claims that preliminary hearing
judge should have recused himself, as well as the claim that the
evidence failed to establish probable cause, where defendant
ultimately was found guilty by a jury); Commonwealth v.
McCullough, 501 Pa. 423, 461 A.2d 1229, 1231 (1983) (concluding
that Commonwealth's failure to establish prima facie case at
preliminary hearing was immaterial where Commonwealth subsequently
met its burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt at trial).
Because a jury determined that Appellant killed Mr. Sementelli
while in the perpetration of a felony, Appellant is not entitled
to relief on her claim that the trial court erred in failing to
order a pre-trial dismissal of the aggravating circumstance.7
Appellant next claims that the trial court
erred in failing to sustain her multiple challenges to capital
proceedings based on the fact that “the death penalty is
constitutionally deficient on its face and as it applies to
[her].” Appellant's Brief at 7. The record reflects that
Appellant raised a series of constitutional challenges in the
trial court, all of which were rejected. In her brief to this
Court, Appellant presents a half-page of argument setting forth no
fewer than six purported constitutional violations. Despite the
quantity of her claims, Appellant cites not one case in support of
her argument; indeed, she makes no argument at all. Appellant
simply asserts one constitutional claim after the other, with no
legal rationale or authority for any of them.8
The trial court concluded that all of Appellant's claims either
have been rejected by this Court or are incapable of review. We
agree. To the extent Appellant is raising here the claims the
trial court assumed Appellant was raising in that court, we
conclude that the trial court properly denied such claims. See
Commonwealth v. Roney, 581 Pa. 587, 866 A.2d 351, 360(2005)
(holding Constitution does not require that aggravating
circumstances outweigh mitigating circumstances beyond a
reasonable doubt), cert. denied, 546 U.S. 860, 126 S.Ct. 139, 163
L.Ed.2d 141 (2005); Commonwealth v. Moore, 534 Pa. 527, 633 A.2d
1119, 1130 (1993) (holding death penalty statute does not violate
the separation of powers doctrine), cert. denied, 513 U.S. 1114,
115 S.Ct. 908, 130 L.Ed.2d 790 (1995); Commonwealth v. Peterkin,
511 Pa. 299, 513 A.2d 373, 387-88 (1986) (holding death penalty
statute does not favor imposition of death or preclude jury from
granting mercy or leniency as it permits consideration of
mitigation evidence, including any evidence concerning the
character and record of the defendant), cert. denied, 479 U.S.
1070, 107 S.Ct. 962, 93 L.Ed.2d 1010 (1987). To the extent
Appellant attempts to make additional constitutional claims, we
conclude that they are waived for failure to develop them in any
meaningful fashion capable of review. Commonwealth v. Steele, 961
A.2d 786, 798 n. 12 (Pa.2008) (deeming inadequate appellant's
single-sentence assertions in the brief).
Appellant next argues that “the Commonwealth
failed, in general, to allege the criminal state of mind
attributable to ․ [Appellant] and, therefore, by inference failed
to present sufficient evidence to prove ․ [Appellant] guilty of
felony murder, in other words, murder committed in perpetration of
a felony rather than a general charge of murder.” Appellant's
Brief at 9. We begin by noting that there is no record evidence
that Appellant raised this claim below. Her brief does not
indicate that the claim has been preserved and the trial court
opinion does not address the issue. Further, Appellant's
argument section consists of three short paragraphs wherein she
cites, without explanation, three United States Supreme Court
opinions: Sattazahn v. Pennsylvania, 537 U.S. 101, 123 S.Ct. 732,
154 L.Ed.2d 588 (2003); Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466, 120
S.Ct. 2348, 147 L.Ed.2d 435 (2000); and Jones v. United States,
526 U.S. 227, 119 S.Ct. 1215, 143 L.Ed.2d 311 (1999). With
respect to Apprendi and Jones, Appellant argues that the “facts
that the Commonwealth needs to prove are not sufficient under the
dicta set forth under [those cases].” Appellant's Brief at 9.
Appellant offers no basis for her reference to Sattazahn. These
cases do not stand for the same proposition nor do their facts
appear to be related in any manner to the facts of Appellant's
case. See Sattazahn, supra (no double jeopardy violation where
defendant faced second capital proceeding on remand after jury
deadlocked on sentence and trial court imposed life pursuant to
statute); Apprendi, supra (any factual finding that increases the
maximum sentence must be made by a jury under a standard of beyond
a reasonable doubt); Jones, supra (provisions of carjacking
statute that set out greater penalties were not mere sentencing
considerations and must be submitted to jury). As a result, we
do not understand why Appellant relies on these cases.
Appellant's argument is vague and confusing. The points she
seeks to make are simply incomprehensible. We conclude that the
issue is waived for failure to preserve it below and failure to
develop it before this Court. Commonwealth v. Puksar, 597 Pa.
240, 951 A.2d 267, 293-94 (2008) (holding failure to make or
develop argument is fatal to claim); Steele, supra.
Appellant's final claim is that the jury failed
to adequately consider the mitigating evidence presented to it.
As noted previously, Appellant proposed three mitigating factors
to the jury: her age, her lack of a significant criminal history,
and the catchall mitigator. The jury found no mitigating
circumstances.9
In support of her mitigation claim, Appellant presented four
witnesses. First, a childhood friend described Appellant as a
good student who was the object of teasing classmates who used
racial epithets against her. This witness noted that Appellant
was a supportive friend who assisted her with her child's illness.
Second, a fellow inmate of Appellant's who knew Appellant when
the two worked together testified that Appellant was a good friend
who came to her aid while in prison. This witness suffered from
physical disabilities and described Appellant's acts of kindness
toward her while in jail. Third, one of Appellant's high school
teachers testified that Appellant was a cooperative and good
student with whom she had reconnected once she learned Appellant
was in prison. The teacher explained that she visits Appellant
and the two women often pray together. Finally, Appellant's
mother testified that Appellant was a good child, as well as a
good mother to her own daughter.10
Mrs. Walter asked the jury to spare Appellant's life.
With regard to the presentation of mitigation
evidence, Appellant asserts no error nor alleges any inadequacy.
Further, she concedes that the trial judge properly instructed the
jurors on the use of mitigation evidence. Appellant insists
however that the jurors “totally failed to consider any mitigating
evidence” and “despite the fact that mitigating evidence was
presented ․ somehow chose to ignore this.” Appellant's Brief at
10.
The law is clear that the task of determining
the existence of mitigating factors is for the jury alone.
Commonwealth v. Treiber, 582 Pa. 646, 874 A.2d 26, 30-31 (2005),
cert. denied, 547 U.S. 1076, 126 S.Ct. 1783, 164 L.Ed.2d 528
(2006). A capital jury is not required to find a mitigating
factor presented by a defendant, even if the Commonwealth fails to
present evidence rebutting the existence of that factor. Id. at
30 (citing Commonwealth v. Breakiron, 524 Pa. 282, 571 A.2d 1035,
1043 (1990)). As in Treiber, the jury here was presented with
evidence and “chose, in its discretion, to reject it.” 874 A.2d
at 31. Appellant points to no error that occurred at the penalty
hearing. Essentially, she asks us to substitute our own judgment
for that of the jury, a charge we are without authority to
undertake. Id.
In light of the fact that we have found no
merit to any of the claims Appellant raises in this direct appeal,
we turn to our statutorily mandated review of the death sentence.
This Court is required to affirm the sentence of death unless we
determine that 1) it was “the product of passion, prejudice or any
other arbitrary factor”; or 2) “the evidence fails to support the
finding of at least one aggravating circumstance.” 42 Pa.C.S.
§ 9711(h)(3). Our review of the record does not lead us to
conclude that the jury's verdict in this case was triggered by an
improper factor. Further, we conclude that the evidence
presented was sufficient to support the jury's finding of a single
aggravating circumstance, to wit, a murder committed while in the
perpetration of a felony. Accordingly, we affirm the verdict and
the sentence of death.11
Judgment of sentence affirmed.
FOOTNOTES
1. This
Court has jurisdiction of a direct appeal in which the death
penalty has been imposed. 42 Pa.C.S. § 9711(h)(1).
2. The
women were unable to receive cash because of the late hour.
Gaines and Mathis returned to the market the following morning and
redeemed the receipt. The three women split the money.
3. Appellant
had taken a trash bag full of movies from Mr. Sementelli's house
and brought them to Gaines's residence.
4. Appellant
identified the following mitigating circumstances: the age of the
defendant, 42 Pa.C.S. § 9711(e)(4); the fact that the defendant
had no significant history of prior criminal convictions, 42
Pa.C.S. § 9711(e)(1); and any other evidence of mitigation
concerning the character and record of the defendant and the
circumstances of the offense, 42 Pa.C.S. 9711(e)(8) (the “catchall
mitigator”).
5. Beyond
simply claiming there was “no evidence whatsoever to support the
aggravating circumstance,” the extent of Appellant's argument is
that “the Commonwealth unfairly distanced itself from the case of
․ Buck,” and “the Commonwealth under Buck unfairly and improperly
designated Walters [sic] as a Capital Case.” Appellant's Brief at
7.
6. At
trial, the Commonwealth again elicited from Gaines the statement
Mathis made to her about Appellant's plan to kill the victim so
that she could steal his car. The defense objected and the trial
court ordered the testimony stricken from the record. As noted
supra, the Commonwealth also presented the testimony of
Appellant's friend and fellow inmate, Amanda Horner, to whom
Appellant admitted her intention to steal Mr. Sementelli's car so
that she could sell it.
7. Appellant
makes no challenge to the jury's guilty verdict on the theft
charge or its finding of the aggravating circumstance.
8. The
entirety of Appellant's argument on these claims is as follows:
“It is suggest [sic] that Title 42 Pa.C.S. § 9711 et. seq.
violates the prohibitions against cruel and unusual punishment
because of the mandatory nature of the act. It is further argued
that Title 42 Pa.C.S. § 9711 is unconstitutional on its face in
that it precludes the jury from exercising the historical right
and function to dispense mercy. It was also argued as follows,
that Title 42 Pa.C.S. § 9711 et. seq. is unconstitutional on its
face because it does not require finding beyond a reasonable doubt
that the aggravating circumstances outweigh the mitigating
circumstances, and it places the burden of proof on the accused to
prove mitigating circumstances. It is also argued that Title 42
Pa.C.S. § 9711 et. seq. is unconstitutional as a denial of equal
protection of the law since the statute creates categories for
which the penalty may be imposed which separate and rule out
Defendants for which the penalty may not be imposed in a manner
that is not rationally related to a legitimate objective. It is
further argued that Title 42 Pa.C.S. § 9711 et. seq. is
unconstitutional as a violation of the separation of the powers
doctrine and that Title 42 Pa.C.S. § 9711 et. seq. is
unconstitutional as it applies to the facts and circumstances of
the case currently before this Court. Defendant argued that in
general, the imposition of the death penalty was
unconstitutional.” Appellant's Brief at 8.
9. Appellant
was 23 years old at the time of the murder. Her record included
convictions for theft and fraud, but revealed no prior violent
criminal activity.
10. Mrs.
Walter cares for her granddaughter and brings the child to the
prison for visitation.
11. The
Prothonotary of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania is directed to
transmit the complete record of this case to the Governor of
Pennsylvania pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. § 9711(i).
Justice GREENSPAN.
Chief Justice CASTILLE, and Justice SAYLOR,
EAKIN, BAER, Justice TODD and Justice McCAFFERY join the opinion.