IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, MONROE
COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
COMMONNWEALTH
OF PENNSYLVANIA : No. 1749 CR 2013
v : No. 2173 CR 2013
JUSTIN
CORLISS, :
Defendant : Post-verdict
Motion
______________________________________/
AMENDED BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF ORAL POST
VERDICT MOTIONS
Pursuant to Pa.R.Crim.P. No. 704(b),
Defendant, Justin Corliss, files this amended brief in support of post-verdict
motions in good faith and based on following points and authorities.
Procedural History
1. The Commonwealth charged Corliss with
the following offenses based on claims of touching, advanced by his putative
daughter, C.C. on July 10, 2013: attempt IDSI (18§901 & 18§3123); IDSI (18§3123);
Incest (18§4302); Indecent assault (18§3126); Indecent exposure (18§3127);
Endangering the welfare of children (18§4303); and Corruption of Minors (18§6301).
These crimes were alleged to have occurred between 2009-2010. [1749 CR 2013]
2. On August 13, 2013 the Commonwealth
charged Corliss in a different case involving Rachel Vales: two counts of
aggravated indecent assault (18§3125); indecent assault (18§3126); Endangering
the welfare of children (18§4304) and corruption of minors (18§6301). These
crimes were alleged to have occurred between 1995 and 1997. [2173 CR 2013]
3. Corliss was initially represented by
Robert Saurman.
4. The Commonwealth moved for joinder and
filed a bad acts notice concerning the conviction from 1998 involving Danielle
Gentile and evidence from each case.
5. Timely omnibus pretrial motions were
filed seeking, in part, severance and asserting the affirmative defense of the
statute of limitations. On January 6, 2014 Judge Williamson denied joinder and
dismissed some charges that were time-barred. In denying joinder this court
found such would unduly prejudice Corliss, that the jury would be inflamed if
it were to hear two complainants alleging indecent contact and that it was not
necessary to prove the evidence in each case by trying them together.
6. Corliss moved to waive counsel and
proceed pro se, filing an amended omnibus motion in each case, and moved to be
released on nominal bail at the expiration of 180 days pursuant to Pa.R.Crim.P.
No. 600.
7. The Court granted pro se status but
refused to comply with the mandates of Rule 600 in asserting that because Corliss
defended, by filing pre-trial responses to Commonwealth motions, that the time
it took the court to resolve the motions acts to deprive Corliss of his right
to liberty prior to trial due to the Commonwealth's conduct of filing
time-barred charges and for joinder.
8. Although the Court addressed "bad
acts" evidence in its January 6, 2014 opinion and order, the Commonwealth
again moved to pursue bad acts, on February 24, 2014, by filing a motion in
limine, in a dilatory manner, seven months after filing charges, indicating
that they were not ready to commence trial.
9. A hearing was held on March 18, 2014
wherein, absent any notice to Corliss, [N.T. 3/18/14 @11] three people were
called to testify, namely, Catherine Tsang (C.C.'s mother), Karen Vales (R.V.'s
mother) and Danielle Gentile Brink (the complainant from the 1997 case).
Karen
Vales testified that R.V. once claimed to have had a bad interaction with
Corliss while en route to State Island, N.Y. but then admitted to making up her
story. Vales conclusively establishes that no contact with R.V. could have
existed after June of 1997.
Catherine
Tsang testified that she tried to compel C.C. to spend time with Corliss and
admits that C.C. never made any claims of indecent contact until Corliss had
called her school in 2013 to verify Tsang's fraud to Judge Higgins.
Danielle
Brink makes new claims of "rape" in 1997, new claims of going to
Staten Island, N.Y. with Corliss and repeated claims from 1997 that were proven
false by a jury in 1998. Brink also makes new claims of "tickling"
while she was "11" years old, poignantly; however, she makes no
reference to the evening time frame from 1997 that Corliss was falsely
convicted of as exculpatory DNA evidence was erroneously withheld from the jury
in 1998 which is relevant to this time frame.
10. On June 17, 2014 the Court denied the
introduction of "bad acts" into either case finding that such would
be "extremely prejudicial" to Corliss, as it would inflame a jury
into declaring guilt based upon the
other allegations. The Court also stated: "[e]vidence of this (prior)
conviction, events surrounding the conviction, and the resulting sentence would
severely prejudice the jury." [6/17/14 Op. @31] Finding that a
"cautionary instruction would have little effect on a jury due to this
evidence". [Id.]
11. On July 14, 2014 Corliss filed a
motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 600 in C.C.'s case as 365 days had elapsed
with no trial being commenced. This mandatory relief was refused, although the
Commonwealth exercised no diligence to commence a trial.
12. On July 17, 2014 the Commonwealth
filed an interlocutory appeal to the Superior Court challenging the denial of
bad acts.
13. On July 14, 2015 the Superior Court
reversed as to the introduction of bad acts, so as to provide the prosecution a
better chance to convict. [Com. v. Corliss, Nos. 2091 & 2105 EDA 2014]
Specifically, the Superior Court reversed the "order denying the
Commonwealth's motion in limine to admit other bad acts evidence at Nos. 1749
and 2173 of 2013, and we remand for further proceedings." [Id. @18]
The
gist of the Superior Court's decision was to deal solely with alleged similar
acts and viewed such claims as admissible[1]; the opinion appears to authorize the
Commonwealth to introduce evidence of the "conviction, events surrounding
the conviction, and the resulting sentence" that the lower court expressly
ruled "would severely prejudice the jury," [6/17/14 Op. @31] and that
a "cautionary instruction would have little effect on a jury". [Id.]
In appealing to the Superior Court Rakaczewski deliberately misled the court by
omitting any reference to the plethora of evidence and corroborated statements
of C.C. that established no untoward conduct
by defendant in 2009-2010. In doing this the court was erroneously led to believe
that this was merely a 'he said, she said' case. This unethical conduct
resulted in a reversal of the lower court's proper ruling denying 'bad acts'.
On appeal Rakaczewski averred that absent bad acts defendant would defend by
attacking the complainant's credibility, the lack of prompt complaint and
detective Lynott's complete dearth of credibility. The Superior Court reasoned
that because defendant pled not guilty, the absence of physical evidence and
the uncorroborated claims could lead a jury to acquit. [Op. Nos. 2091 &
2105 EDA 2014 @16-17], and thus "other bad acts evidence is necessary
for the Commonwealth's prosecutions." Id. This created a new
rule of law.
The
resulting effect of this convoluted pro-prosecution opinion amounted to an
abrogation of defendant's constitutional right to defend. The prior conviction
cloaked as "bad acts" was justified to preclude potential defenses. The Superior Court's position is
clear, if the case is not prosecutable due to substantial infirmities a prior
conviction can be used to impugn defendant's character and abrogate the
constitutional presumption of innocence, to obtain a conviction at any cost,
rendering the trial process unfair and an empty promise in 'seeking the truth'.
Since
Rakaczewski omitted all pre-complaint evidence that no inappropriate conduct
occurred and the Superior Court effectively rendered defenses inoperable in
light of the extreme prejudice exacted by impugning defendant's character,
defendant's trial was an exercise in futility, premised solely on alleged
propensity evidence alone.
The
prior conviction evidence did NOT establish the common scheme or plan
exception, it acted to preclude defenses and assure an unfair playing field, in
favor of conviction: thereby, eradicating the rule and converting it to an
offensive counterstrike to offset evidentiary deficiencies to ensure a
conviction.
14. On January 27, 2016 Corliss filed his
motions in limine and other relevant pre-trial relief.
15. New counsel was hired, Robert Schwarz
and Adam Bompadre, who effectively abandoned defendant and refused to defend.
Or, they found the court's allowance of Rakaczewski's misconduct so hostile,
coupled with the coached testimony and selective loss of memory so repugnant
that any attempt to defend would be futile in light of the prior conviction
claims made on opening that went uncorrected by this court. Although this does
not excuse the refusal to defend.
16. A planned four to five day trial was
suspiciously truncated to a day and a half and on June 1, 2016 Corliss was
convicted on all counts.
17. At trial the Commonwealth introduced
the testimony of five people, C.C., R.V., Karen Vales, Danielle Brink and
Geralyn Viglione. No detectives, police, or other interviewers of either
complainant were called by the Commonwealth, and C.C.'s mother Catherine Tsang,
while available, was not called by Rakaczweski either.
MOTIONS FOR MISTRIAL
The
Commonwealth violated Defendant's right to Due Process of Law. U.S. Const.
Amends V, VI, VIII, XIV; Pa. Const. Art. I§9&10 (Pa.R.Crim.P. No. 704(B))
CONSISTENT
WITH ALL ARGUMENTS AND EVIDENCE RELATED HEREIN, DEFENDANT RELIES ON HIS MOTIONS
SEEKING JUDICIAL NOTICE OF DOCUMENTS AND
EVIDENCE
A. The knowing subornation of perjury from
Danielle Gentile Brink and C.C.
18. The principles that govern here are
well-established. The U.S. Supreme Court declared more than seventy-five years ago that
obtaining a conviction through the "deliberate deception of court and jury
by the presentation of testimony known to be perjured" is
"inconsistent with the rudimentary demands of justice". Mooney v.
Holohan, 294 U.S. 103, 112, (1935). In case after case since Mooney,
the Court has reaffirmed this bedrock principle. See, e.g. U.S. v. Agurs,
427 U.S. 97, 103, (1976); Giglio v. U.S., 405 U.S.150, 153 (1972); Napue
v. Illinois, 300 U.S. 264, 269 (1959).
Since
at least 1935, it has been the established law of the United States that a
conviction obtained through testimony the prosecutor knows to be false is
repugnant to the Constitution. This is so because, in order to reduce the
danger of false conviction, we rely on the prosecutor not to be simply a party
in litigation whose sole object is the
conviction of the defendant before him. The prosecutor is an officer of the
court whose duty is to present a forceful and truthful case to the jury, not
win at any cost.
In
Napue the Court held that when the
"reliability of a given witness may well be determinative of guilt or
innocence", nondisclosure of evidence affecting credibility falls under
the rule established in Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, (1963) that
suppression of material evidence justifies a new trial "irrespective of
the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution".
A
new trial is required if "the false testimony could ... in any likelihood
have affected the judgment of the jury ... " Napue, @271
It
is of no consequence that the falsehood bore upon the witness' credibility
rather than directly upon the defendant's guilt. A lie is a lie, no matter what
its subject, and, if it is in any way relevant to the case, the district
attorney has the responsibility and duty to correct when he knows to be false
and elicit the truth. [Even if] the district attorney's silence was not the
result of guile or desire to prejudice matters little, for its impact was the
same, preventing as it did, a trial that could in any real sense be termed
fair". Napue, 209-70.
Prior
statements of a witness that are both material and inconsistent with Danielle
Gentile Brink's anticipated testimony fall within the Brady rule. However, Michael Rakaczewski
provided no discovery relevant to Danielle Brink's anticipated
testimony, and refused to correct her perjury at trial as he actually elicited
it.
19. When the government obtains a
conviction through the knowing use of false testimony, it violates a
defendant's due process rights. To obtain a new trial, the defendant must
establish: (1) that there was false testimony; (2) that the government knew or
should have known it was false; and (3) that there is a likelihood that the
false testimony affected judgment of the jury.
B. Danielle Gentile/Brink's Perjury at
Trial
i. Rakaczewski relied repeatedly on the
content and wording of a greeting card given to Danielle Gentile in 1997 [N.T.
5/31/16 @18,46, 69, 236; N.T. 6/1/16 @46]. At trial Danielle claimed the
circumstances of the greeting card were in response to sex. The following
testimony was elicited by Rakaczewski:
"Q:What were the circumstances
that he gave you that card?
A: This was after the first time we
had sex. I had given him a card
expressing my love for him. It wasn't a sexual card, though; and then this is
what he gave me with a rose." [N.T. 5/31/16 @45] (see attached non-"sexual card")
The omitted truth:
a. At the 'bad acts' hearing Rakaczewski
elicited from Gentile/Brink the following:
"There was one incident where he
had thrown a rock at me outside the store, and accidentally hit me in the face
with it, knocked me out, made it up to me by buying me a chocolate bar and
buying me a card. And actually the card was talking about sex and how a
relationship was supposed to be." [N.T. 3/18/14 @32]
ii. Danielle claims that indecent contact
occurred during the "Monday road trips to New York" [N.T. 5/31/16
@35-36] and claims (to be consistent with Rachel Vales) that she would
"pretend to be sleeping". [2][Id.]
The omitted truth:
a. From the initiation of Danielle's
claims in July of 1997 through to trial, no claim is ever made regarding going
to New York/Staten Island, until Rakaczewski told her to make similar claims as
Rachel Vales to support his "pattern" fraud.
b. At trial in 1998 ADA Sherri Stephan
elicited the following:
"Q: Did you ever do anything with
Justin outside of work?
A: Well, we would go out like, because
a couple times I would stay later, just to hang out or whatever, and we would
go get something to eat, or like once or twice we went to the mall, or we went
to Wal-Mart a lot because he had to get stuff for the animals". [N.T.
7/9/98 @12-13]
"Q: That was you and the
defendant that went together?
A: Um hm." [Id.]
iii. Danielle claims "I was pinned
down", "he raped me", "he held me down", "his
legs were holding my legs and my arms". [N.T. 5/31/16 @37] and "he
pinned me down". [Id @38] No complainant made similar claims.
The omitted truth:
a. On July 10, 1997 Pocono Township
officer Robert Miller interviewed Danielle Gentile. His police report provides:
"Victim Reports No Force Was Used
And She Considered The Sex To Be Consensual/Voluntary On Both Parts."
[7/10/97 Police Report @2]
...
"Asked Her if Sex was Against Her
Will She Said No" [Id@5]
Officer Robert Miller verified same at trial. [N.T. 7/9/98 @111-116]
b. On July 11, 1997 Pocono Township
detective Thomas Lynott interviewed Danielle Gentile. His report provides:
"Gentile said that Corliss would
lay her on the floor and have sex with her." [Id. @9]
c. At the bad acts hearing Gentile/Brink
claimed the contact "was a game. It was fun." [N.T. 3/18/14]
"This was normal." [Id.]
iv. Danielle claimed she said "Don't.
Stop", "Why did you do that?" [N.T. 5/31/16 @38] and "I was
uncomfortable with it, and I would say, "No. Stop."" No
complainant made similar claims.
The omitted truth:
a. Please refer to parts iii(a) &(b)
above.
v. Danielle claimed "Well, it
happened (sex) twice in one day ... we went upstairs ... We were upstairs when
it happened." When asked what kind of 'sex' she stated
"Intercourse".[3] [5/31/16 N.T. @42-43] No complainant
made similar claims.
The omitted truth:
a. On July 9, 1998 defendant pursued the
uncontroverted testimony of Adam Davis, Fran Van Pelt, Harold Lesh, Michael
Gelato, Scott Secrest, George Lata, and Michael Fagan. [N.T. 7/9/98 @201-247]
establishing an alibi defense.
b. On July 10, 1998 at the recommencement
of trial defendant continued pursuing his alibi defense with the uncontroverted
testimony of Thomas Gumina, Joseph Lociento and Paul Cooke.[4] [7/10/98 N.T. @248-277]
c. On July 10, 1998 defendant pursued the
uncontroverted testimony of Michael Petock, Allison Wolf, Marsha Gulotta,
Richard Stremme, Roxanne Roth and Rudy Sagnelli who testified as traffic
witnesses who frequented defendant's pet store.
d. This uncontroverted alibi testimony
was sufficient to firmly establish Danielle Gentile's claims were false and
impossible to have occurred. The jury properly acquitted defendant of the first
two time frames alleging consensual sex. [N.T. 7/13/98]
vi. Danielle admits that the underwear she
wore, on the night she claimed to have had sex with defendant, contained
"DNA", but that defendant allegedly ejaculated on a shirt and when
asked:
"Q: So how can you explain how
his (defendant's) semen would have possibly gotten in your underwear?"
A: I have no idea." [N.T. 5/31/16
@59-62]
In reference to the "unindicted
co-ejaculator's" semen being tested she stated:
"A: I thought it was tested and
it was inconclusive." [Id. @61]
No complainant made similar claims.
The omitted truth:
a. On December 16, 1997 Gentile's
underwear was tested and found to contain "seminal matter". [Wyoming
Regional Laboratory, Incident #97-99] [attached]
b. On March 9, 1998 the Greensburg
Regional Laboratory issued report #G98-0979-G, which included results of DNA
analysis of the "seminal matter" found in Gentile's underwear, her
DNA and defendant's DNA. [attached]
c. At #3 on page 2 the report conclusively
provides that:
"Specimen K1 (Gentile's DNA)
matches the DNA from Fractions F (DNA from white blood cells or
epithelial cells as found in vaginal fluid) and M (DNA from spermatozoa)
from specimen Q1 (stained section of Gentile's underwear)."
d. A "match" is a conclusive
determination that two items are found to have identical similarities. Here,
Gentile's DNA "matches" the DNA profile of the "seminal
matter"/"spermatozoa" found in her underwear.
e. The Greensburg report, No. G98-0079-G,
does not use the vague term "inconclusive" anywhere therein,
due to the "match".
f. The Commonwealth, nearly two months
later, on April 29, 1998 fraudulently represented to the Court that the
"results of the DNA analysis" were not yet produced.
g. On May 5, 1998 an unauthorized DNA
testing was completed, at the behest of the Commonwealth, in violation of a
Court Order requiring samples to be turned over to the defense and the
remaining samples were destroyed and not preserved thereby violating
defendant's due process rights.
h. Prior to the July 1998 trial a hearing
was held wherein defense counsel properly sought independent testing, while
being misled as to the actual results, and, not being told that there was now
nothing left to test. Judge O'Brien was misled to believe the results were
"inconclusive" and O'Brien failed to recognize the DNA's relevance to
the last time frame claimed by Gentile that the DNA results are actually
relevant to. No evidence was ever produced that Lenny Corbo, William Garris, or
her father were tested.
i. At trial, counsel Germano, moved to
inform the jury about the 'unindicted co-ejaculator' evidence; however, ADA
Stephan objected, lied to the Court by misrepresenting the evidence as
"inconclusive", failed to inform the Court of the actual results of
the "match" and how the prosecution acted to destroy the evidence
thereby denying defendant of due process of law, all the while failing to point
out that no one else was tested while relying on and eliciting testimony from
Gentile that she was a "virgin". [N.T. 7/9/98 @60-62]
vii. Gentile claims she had interactions
with defendant when she "was 11" and that he would "tickle"
her and eventually "he put hand up my shorts." [5/31/16 N.T. @29-33].
This was fraudulently interposed to establish Rakaczewski's "pattern"
scheme, with R.V.
The omitted truth:
a. Since July of 1997 through to trial in
1998 Gentile has never made these claims to police, prosecutors or jury.
viii. Gentile repeats a perjurious claim of
seeing a birthmark on defendant's penis in 1998, [N.T. 5/31/16 @43] although
neither complainant makes this claim.
The omitted truth:
a. This fraud was first perpetrated on
defendant in 1998. Detective Tom Lynott interviewed defendant's girlfriend,
Karen Vales, on July 3, 1998 (just before trial) and she is coerced into
revealing this private information to him. Lynott then falsified his report
stating "This is consistent with the description given by Danielle earlier
in the investigation." Lynott then suborned perjury from Gentile to make
her claim of seeing a mark - to control the outcome of the trial.[5]
20. Items i-viii above establish eight
substantial issues of perjury suborned by Michael Rakaczewski from Danielle
Brink to control the outcome of the trial by depriving defendant of due process
of law by abrogating a fair trial.[6] The alleged justification for this
fraud was to undermine challenges to the tainted Tom Lynott's credibility;
however, Rakaczewski deliberately refused to put Lynott on.[7]
The
facts provided above were known to Rakaczewski and Brink and substantially
establish not only that she testified falsely but that challenges to her
credibility existed and were deliberately ignored by Rakaczewski.
Had
Rakaczewski properly informed the jury of this material and relevant evidence
the likely impact would be the destruction of Gentile's overall credibility as
well as the credibility of the prosecution itself, an impact beyond that of the
false testimony alone.
21. In assessing materiality, this Court
should consider the prosecution's level of culpability in the use of the false
testimony. A finding of bad faith on the part of the prosecution should
increase the likelihood of a finding of materiality. Similarly, if Rakaczewski
invoked the false testimony to persuade the jury to convict, it is more likely that
the testimony is material. Rakaczewski's awareness of the falsity increases the
likelihood that the falsity is material.
22. Rakaczewski elicited Brink's known to
be false testimony and relied on it to fabricate his "pattern" theory
to defeat severance and deprive defendant of a fair trial. Rakaczewski relied
on the false testimony as was amply demonstrated in his closing argument to the
jury. [N.T. 6/1/16 @36-63]
The
prosecution gives the falsity a larger role if the prosecution not only
presents false testimony but also invokes and emphasizes the false information
in closing argument. The prosecutor's reliance makes is more likely that the
false testimony will have an impact on the outcome.
In
Jenkins v. Artuz, 294 F.3d 234 (2nd Cir. 2002) the
Court recognized "the heightened opportunity for prejudice where the
prosecutor, by action or inaction, is complicit in the untruthful
testimony".
23. Here, Rakaczewski's awareness that
Brink's testimony was false, for he suborned it to fabricate his "bad
acts" pattern theory, makes the finding of materiality more likely and
evidences the weakness in his case that lacked probable cause.
24. Uncorrected false testimony violates
the defendant's constitutional rights even if the defense was aware that the
testimony was false. The prosecution has an obligation not to permit corruption
of the process by presenting false testimony or allowing it to go uncorrected.
Mere awareness of the falsity will not necessarily equip the defense to protect
against the corruption of the trial.
Defendant
has certain constitutional rights that he could waive or forfeit, but he could
not waive the freestanding ethical and constitutional obligation of the
prosecutor as a representative of the government to protect the integrity of
the court and the criminal justice system, as established in Mooney, supra., and Berger v. U.S.,
295 U.S. 78, 1995.
It
is the sworn duty of the prosecutor to assure that the defendant has a fair and
impartial trial.
25. "Nowhere in the Constitution or
in the Declaration of Independence, nor for that matter in the Federalist
papers or in any other writing of the Founding Fathers, can one find a single
utterance that could justify a decision by any oath-beholden servant of the law
to look the other way when confronted by the real possibility of being
complicit in the wrongful use of false evidence to secure a conviction in
court." Com. of N. Mariana Isls. v. Bowie, 243 F.3d 1109 (9th Cir.
2001)
26. Rakaczewski's duty to correct perjury
by his witness is not discharged merely because the defense counsel knows, and
the jury may figure out, that the testimony is false. Where the prosecutor
knows that his witness has lied, he has a constitutional duty to correct
the false impression of the facts. Napue, supra., @269
In
this case Rakaczewski sat silently as his witness lied, and sat silently as
Brink evaded defense counsel's ineffective cross-examination. In closing
Rakaczewski continued to do nothing to remedy the falsehoods, instead he relied
on them.[8]
27. All perjury pollutes a trial, making
it hard for jurors to see the truth. No attorney, not even Michael T.
Rakaczewski, may knowingly present lies to a jury and then sit idly by and do
nothing to correct it.
A
prosecutor has a special duty commensurate with a prosecutor's unique power, to
assure that defendants receive fair trials. "It is as much his duty to
refrain from improper methods calculated to produce a wrongful conviction as it
is to use every legitimate method to bring about one." Berger, supra., @88
The
burden to correct false testimony from prosecution witnesses lies on the
government, not on the defendant.
28. Proof of false testimony establishes
that the trial process was corrupted to some degree. Plainly, when false
testimony is introduced, it is likely that something suspicious and unfair is
going on at trial.
WHEREFORE, for the forgoing
defendant avers that he is entitled to a mistrial and concurrently to have the
convictions obtained to be vacated with prejudice.
C. C.C.'s Perjury at Trial
29. To obtain a new trial based on the
Commonwealth's failure to disclose evidence affecting a witness's credibility,
a defendant must demonstrate that the reliability of the witness may be
determinative of the defendant's guilt or innocence. Com. v. Weiss, 604
Pa. 573, 2000.
i. C.C.
claimed defendant touched her "chest and vagina", "in my mom and
his bedroom", he "stuck his hands down my pants", "he tried
to put his penis in my mouth" and did, and put his mouth on her vagina.
[N.T. 5/31/16 @93-95]
C.C. claimed this conduct occurred in
2009, 2010. [Id. @89]
a. Defendant resided with C.C. from August 2008 until June 10, 2010.
Thus, from August 2008-until July of 2013 no claim of indecent assault or
inappropriate sexual conduct is made to ANY person whatsover.
b. After separation from C.C.'s mother, Catherine, a number of
legal filings were made in support and for a protection from abuse. During this
time the following occurred:
- C.C. was interviewed by at least three (3) attorneys regarding her
concerns/interests in custody and made angst driven pleas not to live with
defendant because he "ignores" her and treats her badly. These
attorneys, Daniel Lyons, Stephen Higgins and James Butz are each mandated
reporters of suspected abuse and reported nothing. [Corliss v. Corliss, No. 596
DR 2010]
- C.C. was interviewed by psychologist
Patricia Cheslock who is also a mandated reporter and who similarly reported
nothing. [9/10/10 letter] [attached]
- C.C. did make claims of inappropriate
touching by Frank Guskiewicz who was subsequently barred from being alone with C.C.. [8/12/10 Order, Corliss v. Corliss,
No. 596 DR 2010] [attached][9]
- C.C. made consistent and reliable
statements to custody conciliators, her attorney, the courts, her mother and
the psychologist that defendant spent no time with her and that he ignored her.
- C.C. also wrote, vicariously through her
mother, to defendant, stating :
"You always ignore me and never
call me beautiful ... Every time I asked
you to sit with me or anything you said no cause (sic) you were busy."
[6/20/10 email] [attached]
"I think your (sic) mean cause
(sic) you always make fun of my weight and I hate when you do that and you
always IGNORE ME ALWAYS IGNORE ME AND IM (sic) SICK OF IT!!!" [6/20/10
email] [attached]
" ... you only worked and even
when you came home you said you had to work on your computer all night ...
" [7/8/10 email] [attached]
- C.C.'s mother Catherine Tsang corroborated
C.C. stating :
"Outside of eating, changing or
going to the bathroom, the only thing you do when you're home is sit in front
of your computer ... " [3/1/10 letter] [attached]
"I had to push her constantly ...
because she didn't want to be with you because you're so mean to her and simply
ignore her existence." [6/11/10 email] [attached]
c. When pressed at the preliminary
hearing C.C.
admitted :
"Well, he did ignore me. Like,
mostly, he ignored me in the beginning, but toward the end he just ignored
everyone." [N.T. 7/30/13 @19]
d.
C.C.'s
mother Catherine Tsang has a documented pattern of fraudulent conduct involving
her attempts to obtain spousal support, alimony, and child support which
involved dispossessing defendant's first-time home buyer tax credit check,
stealing funds from defendant's Federal Credit Union as ostensibly due her, she
filed bogus 1099 Miscellaneous forms with the IRS to control support allotments
and falsely represented her earnings for support purposes.
e.
C.C.'s
mother Catherine Tsang made numerous fraudulent claims in Protection from Abuse
petitions.
f.
C.C.'s
mother Catherine Tsang had a pattern of non-compliance with mandatory notice to
the custody court regarding her living arrangements, location and schooling of C.C. and ultimately kidnapped C.C. to Hawai'i.
g. Ultimately Catherine Tsang's fraud in
support was revealed and, now Judge, Higgins vacated a support order, when
asked why she refused to appear at support master hearings, she lied, claiming C.C. was sick those days.
h. Only when defendant moved to verify
Catherine's fraud to Judge Higgins did the lies get advanced of inappropriate
conduct by defendant, in July of 2013.
30. ALL of the facts articulated above
were known to Michael Rakaczewski, were relevant and material to C.C.'s credibility and were maliciously
and deliberately omitted from trial so that the jury was deprived of the
opportunity to fairly weigh C.C.'s
testimony.
Here,
substantial, consistent, reliable and corroborated evidence exists that no indecent contact occurred between 2009-2010. The actual
evidence is exculpatory and established an alibi defense. The truth, that
Rakaczewski deliberately omitted, was determinative of defendant's innocence.
31. Post-trial defendant filed, of record,
requests that this court take judicial note of certain filings, documents and
facts pursuant to Pa.R.Evid. No. 201. These uncontested requests were to aid
this court in determining the materiality of evidence Rakaczewski deliberately
omitted as being relevant to this filing and for sentencing issues.
In
summary, substantial evidence and consistent corroboration exists with statements
made by C.C. and her mother Catherine Tsang that no untoward conduct occurred between C.C. and defendant in
2009-2010. Rakaczewski leaves this evidence uncontested and unrefuted for to do
otherwise would be to render attorneys, custody conciliators, and a
psychologist to be incompetent boobs who actually violated the law.
Rakaczewski's unethical conduct is exampled through his refusal to ever address
this evidence nor to present it to the jury as it renders C.C.'s testimony
false.
This
deliberately omitted evidence is documentary evidence supporting innocence that
standing alone is sufficient to grant a mistrial. Defendant avers that this
omitted evidence compels a finding of actual innocence and the verdict obtained
in its absence tainted and unreliable.
32. Here, Michael T. Rakaczewski found it
tactically advantageous to turn a blind eye to the manifest for malevolent
disinformation that flowed from Rakaczewski's intent to mislead the jury and to
avoid the truth.
Rakaczewski
failed in his clear duty under our Constitution to collect potentially
exculpatory evidence, to prevent fraud upon the Court, and to elicit the truth.
Accord Northern Mariana
Islands v. Bowie, 243
F.3d 1109, 1117 (9th Cir. 2001).
33. When, as here, Michael Rakaczewski
elicited and suborned perjury - from a child - and uses testimony that is false
the conviction must be set aside if there is any reasonable likelihood that the
false testimony could have affected the judgement of the jury.
34. The materiality of Catherine Tsang's
conduct plainly goes to her motive to coerce the child C.C. to change her corroborated statements
from 2010 and C.C.'s
motive to testify falsely, since C.C.
has to live with her mother.
The
thrust of Giglio v. U.S., 405 U.S. 150, 1972 and its progeny
has been to ensure that the jury knows the facts that might motivate a witness
in giving testimony, which could in any reasonable likelihood have affected the
judgment of the jury.
35. Though plainly made aware of the
facts, and much more, Michael Rakaczewski chose to remain willfully ignorant of
the facts and deliberately made certain that the jury did also.
36. It is said that "it is the state
that tries a man, and it is the state that must insure that the trial is
fair." Moore v. Illinois, 408 U.S. 786, 1972.
37. Michael Rakaczewski's complicity in
obtaining a conviction through the use of perjured testimony violates due
process. Accord Hysler v. Florida, 315 U.S. 411, 1942; Pyle v. Kansas,
317 U.S. 213, 1942 (granting relief to defendant who established that
prosecution knowingly presented perjured testimony and suppressed favorable
evidence).
38. Michael Rakaczewski cannot avoid
responsibility for the false testimony by willfully avoiding knowledge of
facts. Accord Morris v. Ylst, 447 F.3d 735 (9th Cir. 2006). Plainly, due
process is violated if the government uses perjured testimony "knowingly,
recklessly, or negligently." U.S. v. Tierney, 947 F.2d 854 (8th
Cir. 1981)
Because
C.C.'s trial testimony was wholly
uncorroborated her prior statements were invaluable to prove her perjury -
Rakaczewski knew this. As with Danielle Brink's perjury the likely impact of
the omitted facts would have destroyed C.C.'s credibility and that of the prosecution itself.
39. To reinforce Michael Rakaczewski's fraud,
in his closing arguments he asked the jury - why would they lie? He asked:
"What motive does she have to
lie?" [N.T. 6/1/16 @57]
Why
did Michael Rakaczewski lie is the appropriate question.
WHEREFORE, for the forgoing,
defendant avers that he entitled to the grant of a mistrial due to the
malicious and deliberate prosecutorial misconduct of ADA Michael T. Rakaczewski
and to have each conviction vacated with prejudice.
D. MOTIONS FOR MISTRIAL
The Commonwealth violated Defendant's right to Due Process
of Law. U.S. Const. Amends V, VI, VIII, XIV; Pa. Const. Art. I§9&10
(Pa.R.Crim.P. No. 704(B))
40. Prosecutor Michael Rakaczewski has a
vital interest in the outcome of this trial which necessitated his withdrawal
due to conflict and a violation of the
Rules of Professional Conduct.
41. Michael Rakaczewski remains a
defendant in the civil rights action of Corliss v. Lynott, et al.,
3:15-cv-01364 filed in the U.S. District Court in Scranton, PA and is currently
on appeal in the Third Circuit Court of Appeals. Rakaczewski's fiduciary
interest in the outcome of these criminal cases is substantial and demonstrably
colored his conduct here resulting in the subornation of perjury, withholding
of substantial impeachment evidence and coaching witnesses' testimony to
conform to Rakaczewski's "pattern" scheme.
WHEREFORE, defendant avers he is
entitled to the grant of a mistrial due to Rakaczewski's financial interest,
vital interest and malicious prosecutorial misconduct as exampled further
herein.
42. Michael Rakaczewski pursued alleged "prior bad
acts" for the purported purpose of establishing a common scheme or plan to
"link" three widely disparate cases through the knowing use of
suborned perjury by the willing prevaricator - Danielle Gentile Brink. However,
in pursuit of this fraud Rakaczewski deliberately elicited claims and evidence
that was so unfairly prejudicial that its inflammatory nature made its
probative value de minimus.
43. Rakaczewski relied repeatedly on the
content and wording of a greeting card given to Danielle Gentile in 1997 [N.T.
5/31/16 @18,46, 69, 236; N.T. 6/1/16 @46] but ignored an equally inappropriate
card written by Gentile in 1997. [Attached]
44. Here, Rakaczewski's unethical design
was to mislead the jury into believing that the card inferred that
"sex" occurred between Gentile and the defendant. This was a
reasonable strategy, were it not fraudulent.
At
the 'bad acts' hearing Rakaczewski elicited from Gentile/Brink the following:
"There was one incident where he
had thrown a rock at me outside the store, and accidentally hit me in the face
with it, knocked me out, made it up to me by buying me a chocolate bar and
buying me a card. And actually the card was talking about sex and how this is
how a relationship was supposed to be." [N.T. 3/18/14 @32]
By
unethically using the card out of context and not informing the jury of facts
known to him the jury was misled to believe the card was evidence of a sexual
relationship, when, in fact, it was nothing of the sort. This court was equally
aware of Rakaczewski's fraudulent conduct but did nothing to cure its effect on
the jury. By omitting Gentile's leading and suggestive card and evidence that
Gentile was pursuing a relation with the defendant, but was spurned,
Rakaczewski lied to the jury.
45. The card and its contents met no
element of any crime nor was it material to a purported "scheme or
plan" as no evidence exists of similar cards given to Rachel or C.C.. The sole purpose of the improperly
introduced card was to impugn defendant's character - conduct that is
specifically barred by Pa.R.E. No. 404(b)(1) and was a design to deprive
defendant of a fair trial and due process of law.
No
notice was given, regarding the card, as is required by Pa.R.E. No. 404(b)(3)
and its use amounted to trial by surprise.
46. Not content with simple fraud and
suborned perjury Rakaczewski deviated from the pre-trial claims and exceeded
the scope of "bad acts" to control the outcome of the trial.
Specifically, Rakaczewski sought,
elicited and encouraged Danielle to make claims of "rape" and actual
sexual intercourse, combined with claims of being "pinned" down,
[N.T. 5/31/16 @37, 38, &43], and ejaculation of semen, [Id . @43 & 74]
and seeing a birthmark on defendant's penis.[10]
Neither
complainant, Rachel or C.C.,
have ever made similar claims and thus, to introduce such plainly exceeded the
purported purpose of a "common scheme or plan", was not relevant to
establishing the element of any crimes charged and had no probative values as
it was designed solely to prejudice the defendant.
47. The introduction of such non-germane
claims so exceeded the scope of prior bad acts as to be outrageous and designed
to goad defendant into moving for a mistrial, and to impermissibly impugn
defendant's character.
48. In a similar fact pattern a mistrial
was granted in the Northampton County case of Com. v. Giamoni, CP 48 CR
2081, 2014. The child's claims were that Giamoni touched her chest. Pursuant to
Pa.R.E. No. 404(b) Giamoni's daughter testified similarly; however, when she exceeded
the scope by claiming Giamoni went further with her - a mistrial was
granted and upheld on appeal. [Com. v. A.G., No. 476 EDA 2015]
49. The introduction of the prior claims
of Danielle Gentile produced the unconstitutional effect of allowing the jury to find guilt of
charged offenses by relying on facts found only by a preponderance of the
evidence and were offered solely as proof of the propensity to commit sexual
offenses. Pa.R.Evid. No. 403 is a trial oriented rule and sua sponte
enforcement, consistent with this court's 6/17/14 Opinion and Order, was
anticipated. The Superior Court's order did not remove from this court the
discretion, at trial, to modify rulings as circumstances develop or as the
evidence at trial diverges from that which was anticipated. Com. v. Hicks,
625 Pa. 90, 2013 (originating from Monroe County).
50. No limiting or cautionary instruction
was issued to insulate defendant from the prejudice derived from inferences of
bad character to be drawn therefrom to outweigh the prejudicial effect. This
Court deemed such would have little effect due to its extreme prejudice. [Op.
6/17/14 @31]
51. The introduction of these claims and unrelated inferences to conduct the
defendant was not on trial for were unwarranted, was prejudicial and outside
the scope and design of the prior bad acts evidentiary theory advanced which
resulted in an unfair trial, violated due process of law and resulted in undue
prejudice.
52. Upon opening statements Michael
Rakaczewski opened with the greeting card[11] [5/31/16 N.T. @18], and evidence of
the 1997 case: "the police are there and they surround him", (this
bogus claim is totally false and intentionally inflammatory) [Id. @19]
"It's Pocono Township Police" [Id.], "ultimately, is convicted",
[Id. @20], "At the time of trial" [Id.], "the Defendant ends up
getting convicted and he goes to jail" ... "he's out of the picture
for about ten years or so". [Id.]
To
reinforce this prejudicial evidence Rakaczewski elicits it - repeatedly from
each of his five witnesses.[12]
53. As referenced above, the prejudicial
impact was designed to, and did, control the outcome of the trial. These were
not mere passing references but the cornerstone of Rakaczewski's unethical
conduct designed to convict at all costs.
This
repeated reference to the prior criminal conviction violates Pa.R.E. No.
404(b), exceeds the "bad acts" fraud perpetrated by Rakaczewski to
this Court and the Superior Court, and served no legitimate purpose, the design
of which was to deprive defendant of a fair trial, by precluding defenses with
such extremely prejudicial references to the prior conviction.
The
Pennsylvania Supreme Court has recognized "the tendency of a normal juror
to accept testimony of a prior conviction as a basis for finding a
predisposition to commit crime." Com.
v. Bighum, 452 Pa. 554, 1973.
54. From the opening statement and upon
direct Michael Rakaczewski found it advantageous to not just elicit new perjury
to fraudulently support his "bad acts" scheme, but took that as
license to fully and repeatedly inform the jury of the false conviction
obtained in 1998 while knowing and having a duty to know that such testimony is
unduly prejudicial and barred. The intent was to elicit improper character
evidence for the purpose of showing a propensity or disposition to commit
crimes. The evidence of defendant's prior false conviction was immaterial to
any issue in these cases and was highly prejudicial. The arrest, conviction,
and prison time was referred to repeatedly.
This
Court barred such as "extremely prejudicial" [Op. 6/7/14 @31] which
does not appear to have been reversed by the Superior Court.
55. In Michelson v. U.S., 335 U.S.
469, 1948 Justice Jackson wrote:
"The state may not show
defendant's prior trouble with the law, specific criminal acts, or ill name
among his neighbors, even though such facts might logically be persuasive that
he is by propensity a probable perpetrator of the crime. The inquiry is not
rejected because character is irrelevant; on the contrary, it is said to weigh
too much with the jury and to so over persuade them as to prejudge one with a
bad general record and deny him a fair opportunity to defend against a
particular charge."
See
also Com. v. Spruill, 480 Pa. 601, 1978 (evidence of other
crimes is probably only equaled by a confession in its prejudicial impact on
jury).
56. While this court was manipulated by
Michael Rakaczewski to entertain a "pattern" scheme to allow Danielle
Brink to commit more perjury this "bad acts" fraud in no way
justified the expression to the jury of a prior conviction. The evidence of
some alleged similar act was deemed admissible; however, there is no
authorization for the prosecutor to state, elicit and reinforce testimony of a
'conviction' nor that defendant had spent ten years in prison.
See
U.S. v. Vallie, 284 F.3d 917 (8th Cir. 2002)
(prosecutor's question about defendant's prior offense was improper because it
was not related to charged crime); and U.S. v. Becton, 601 F.3d 588
(D.C. Cir. 2010) (prosecutor's reference to defendant's previous incarceration
improper.)
57. This Court's 'bad acts' order and the
associated Superior Court decision did not authorize Michael Rakaczewski to
state, elicit, nor refer to defendant's prior conviction nor his imprisonment,
the greeting card, claims of "rape", actual sexual intercourse,
ejaculation of semen, being "pinned down", nor mentioning the
supposed penile birthmark. In fact, no court was presented with these claims prior to being ambushed
with it at trial.
This
testimony had no relevance other than to plant the false idea that defendant
was of bad character and had a propensity to commit crime.
Our
PA Supreme Court has stated:
"The purpose of [Rule 404(b)] is
to prevent the conviction of an accused for one crime by the use of evidence
that he has committed other unrelated crimes, and to preclude the inference
that because he has committed other crimes he was more likely to commit that
crime for which he is being tried. The presumed effect of such evidence is to
predispose the minds of the jurors to believe the accused guilty, and thus
effectually strip him of the presumption of innocence." Com. v. Spruill,
391 A.2d 1048, 1978.
There are narrow exceptions;
however, these "cannot be stretched in ways that effectively eradicate the
rule." Com. v.
Ross, 57 A.3d 85, 2012.
58. Rakaczewski purported to pursue the
'common scheme or plan' exception to introduce Brink's new perjury and to defeat
severance. However, this can be done only when two or more crimes are so
related to each other that proof of one naturally tends to prove the others. Com.
v. Bronshtein, 57 Pa. 460, 1997. The existence of a common scheme is
relevant to establish any element of a crime "so long as it does not
merely indicate the defendant's propensity to commit similar crimes." Id.
There must also be a "close similarity between the assaults." Com.
v. Elliot, 700 A.2d 1243, 1997.
59. Additionally, because the defendant
was known, no "unique signature" was adduced to establish identity. Ross,
supra. Nor was any alleged conduct so unusual or distinctive as to be like
signature. Com. v. Blady, 444 A.2d 670, 1982. In toto, no 'common scheme
or plan' was actually pursued at trial as would have been anticipated.
60. In summary the following was adduced
at trial:
A. Danielle Brink - actual intercourse,
cunnilingus, tickling, rape, being 'pinned down', saying 'No', 'Stop',
ejaculation and semen. Seeing a birthmark on penis and of a conviction and DNA
evidence, and touching, ten years in prison and uncharged indecent assault at
Karen Vales' house and new claims of contact en route to N.Y.
B.
C.C. -
cunnilingus & fellatio, touching.
C. Rachel Vales - digital masturbation,
tickling, & contact en route to N.Y.
Contrary
to Rakaczewski's purported "common scheme or plan" fraud, what was
actually introduced at trial meets no such purpose under Pa.R.E. No. 404.
Additionally, because the bulk of the testimony elicited was tainted (as being
knowingly false) the materiality is further
degraded.
61. Recently, in Com. v. Bidwell,
2816 CR 2011 the Monroe County District Attorney similarly pursued an expanded
use of "bad acts" to falsely convict. On appeal the Superior Court
reversed and vacated the conviction because the trial court (Judge Higgins)
abused its discretion in allowing the Commonwealth to introduce evidence of
Bidwell's prior bad acts pursuant to Rule 404(b). The Court allowed testimony
of prior deliveries of drugs but the record was devoid of any compelling
evidence of Bidwell's intent to distribute methamphetamine. [Com. v. Bidwell,
No.50 EDA 2011]
Here,
the same logic prevails. Rakaczewski introduced a plethora of completely
unrelated claims that do not amount to a unique or signature act and tellingly
formed no coherent "pattern, scheme or plan". The actual design was
to unduly prejudice defendant.
It
was an abuse of discretion to allow Rakaczewski to introduce the unrelated and
prejudicial claims and card evidence; thereby, a mistrial is warranted.
62. Prior bad acts may not be admitted for
the purpose of inviting the jury to conclude that the defendant is a person
"of unsavory character" and thus inclined to have committed the
crimes with which he is charged. Ross, supra. Rakaczewski did violate
the principle and design of 'prior bad acts' to do exactly this - to
impugn defendant's character. What
Rakaczewski did was tell the jury 'he's a criminal, he's been convicted of
sexual crimes; therefore, ANY claim by ANY person must be deemed true'. By
doing this Rakaczewski perpetuates an infinite number of convictions as ANY
disgruntled, coerced or disillusioned person can make ANY sexual allegation and
a conviction would be automatic, proof & evidence are unneeded.
A
mistrial should be granted.
63. During trial Rakaczewski specifically
elicited from Danielle Brink her perjured claim of seeing defendant's penis,
[N.T. 5/31/16 @43] then reinforced it with Karen Vales. [Id @143]
This
highly prejudicial information had no relevance to any claims lodged against
defendant, the probative value (were there one) was not established and this
claim of a birthmark was not crimen falsi evidence and, thus, had no legitimate
purpose in this trial.
64. Evidence of Rakaczewski's ongoing
misconduct is reflected by his deliberate elicitation of this fraud by Brink
while knowing that Tom Lynott had falsified his police report in 1998 by
fraudulently claiming that Gentile had previously made a similar claim AFTER
learning of it exclusively from Karen Vales. This substantial credibility
challenge to Brink was required to be exposed to the jury - by Rakaczewski -
but he unethically refused to do so.
A
mistrial should be granted.
E. Prejudicial Comments and Undue
Prejudice From Unwarranted References
65. On January 27, 2016 defendant filed
his "Motions in Limine and other Relevant Pre-Trial Relief". At issue
'V' therein is a motion To Bar the Term "Victim".
66. On February 5, 2016 this Court
"Granted" the motion and directed "that the
victim (sic) shall, whenever possible, be referred to as the "alleged
victim" or the "complainant". It would appear that this Court's
'tounge-in-cheek' reliance on the term 'victim' in its own order was to example
the lack of seriousness and prejudgment; however, the Order was made.
67. In direct violation of this Court's
Order Michael Rakaczewski disregarded same and used the term 'victim' in his
opening [N.T. 5/31/16 @23] and repeatedly in his closing [6/1/16 @37-53].
To
example Rakaczewski's collusion with conflicted defense attorney Bompadre,
Bompadre ignores this Court's order also, twice in opening and three times in
his closing.
Not
to be left out of this prejudicial influence, this Court uses the term 'victim'
and/or 'alleged victim' interchangeably in giving instructions to the jury. [N.T.
6/1/16 @73-100]. In total, the term 'victim' appears thirty eight (38) times in
the transcript, sometimes outside of the jury's earshot, other times not. This
Court never really cared due to bias.
68. The repeated use of this erroneous
term was designed to convey to the jury that crimes were committed and
that someone other than the Commonwealth was an aggrieved party so as to convey
sympathy for the complainants. The prejudicial impact is exacerbated when used
by the Court as this conveys to the jury this Court's bias, predisposition and
directs a verdict in conformance therewith.
69. During cross-examination of defendant,
Michael Rakaczewski deliberately ignored well established testimony and facts
from defendant's 1998 trial to falsely portray the defendant as not credible.
Having great difficulty doing so, Rakaczewski stated:
"Well what I'm saying sir is
actually that you are a liar. That's what I'm saying." [N.T. 5/31/16 @258]
70. In addition to characterizing
defendant's testimony as unresponsive or misleading in closing arguments the
ultimate effect was to disparage defendant's credibility through Rakaczewski's
personal animus and biased opinions of the innocent defendant in such a way as
to impart to the jury that the Monroe County District's Attorney endorses
Rakaczewski's opinion. Since this went uncorrected by this Court it could have
been seen by the jury as a subtle endorsement.
71. Plainly, due process prohibits the
prosecutor from expressing his personal opinions about the defendant's guilt or
credibility. See U.S. v. Woods, 710 F.3d 195 (4th Cir. 2013)
(prosecutor's statement that defendant had lied under oath improper as being
inflammatory); U.S. v. Nunez, 532 F.3d 645, (7th Cir. 2008)
(prosecutor's statement that defendant's testimony was "patently
false" and "unresponsive to the question" was improper personal
opinion); and U.S. v. Wright, 625 F.3d 583 (9th Cir. 2010).
72. The trial court is vested with
discretion to grant a mistrial whenever the alleged prejudicial event may
reasonably be said to deprive the defendant of a fair and impartial trial. In
making its decision, the court must discern whether misconduct or prejudicial
error actually occurred, and if so, ... assess the degree of any resulting
prejudice. The remedy of a mistrial is an extreme remedy required only when an
incident is of such a nature that its unavoidable effect is to deprive the
appellant of a fair and impartial tribunal. Com. v. Judy, 978 A.2d 1015,
2009.
73. Of paramount concern was defendant's
right to retain primary control over these actions to be followed in the event
of prosecutorial or judicial error in order to protect his valued right to have
his trial completed in a particular tribunal. U.S. v. Dinitz, 424 U.S.
600, 1976.
Here,
defendant was faced with a "Hobson's Choice", request a mistrial or
continue with the trial tainted by prosecutorial error and misconduct. Rule
704(b) recognizes this conundrum and provides a vehicle to address same after
jeopardy has attached.
WHEREFORE, due to the cumulative,
pervasive and grossly prejudicial conduct of Michael T. Rakaczewski, a mistrial
is warranted under these extremely prejudicial circumstances as defendant's
right to a fair trial was irreconcilably violated and the verdict reached is
unreliable.
F. Motion for Judgment of Acquittal and/or
Arrest of Judgment
The Commonwealth Presented Insufficient Evidence to Prove
Beyond a Reasonable Doubt the Crimes Alleged. U.S. Const. Amends. V, VI, VIII,
XIV; Pa. Const. Art. I§9. (PA.R.Crim.P. No. 606(A)(5), 607(A)(1)&(2) &
704(B))
Case
No. 2173 CR
74. At trial, held on May 31, 2016 to June
1, 2016 the Commonwealth presented testimony by Rachel Vales that she went to
Staten Island with defendant and that during this trip defendant put his hand
down her pants and touched her vagina while she pretended to be asleep.
[5/31/2016 @118], her mother Karen referred directly to such a trip [Id. @141]
and Rakaczewski relies on these claims in his closing [N.T. @42], to support a
count of 18§3125.[13]
75. This testimony was designed to
establish one count of aggravated indecent assault; however, the locus of the
alleged crime is not established to any
degree of certainty as occurring within the territorial boundaries of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.[14]
76. No instructions were given regarding
the element of jurisdiction for this alleged crime. [18§§102 & 103][15]
77. Absent testimony establishing conduct
occurring in Pennsylvania, this count fails. Accord Com. v. Seiders, 11
A.3d 495, 2010.
78. Even crediting the testimony, based on
distances to and from Staten Island, NY (a distance of 102 miles one way), the
evidence only establishes a twenty percent (20%) chance of a crime occurring in
Pennsylvania. This is insufficient to meet the beyond a reasonable doubt
standard.
In
Com. v. Brown, 551 Pa. 465, 1998, evidence
established penetration of the anus by a penis or a broom handle. This fifty
percent (50%) chance was insufficient to establish rape which does not have an
element of a foreign object. Thus, if 50% is not sufficient to establish
reasonable doubt, 20% surely is inadequate here.
WHEREFORE, defendant is entitled to
a judgment of acquittal and/or
an arrest of judgment as the evidence was insufficient to meet jurisdiction.
79. Both counts of aggravated indecent
assault (AIA) were alleged to have occurred prior to July 1997. The statute of
limitations for this crime was five (5) years at that time; wherein, repose
attached in July of 2002.
The
limitations period was amended on August 27, 2002; however, after a term of
limitations has expired, a newly created and longer statute of limitations, or
the enactment of an extended period, can not serve to revive the prior cause. Com v. Harvey, 542 A.2d 1027, 1988. The limitations
period that expired "shall not be extended by order, rule or
otherwise". [42§5504(a)] This was an issue for the jury to determine, but
expressly waived by the Commonwealth.
80. Negation of the affirmative defense of
the statute of limitations is a duty in the Commonwealth [18§103] by the
prosecution and must be established beyond a reasonable doubt. [18§108] [FN15] [16] Defendant repeatedly argued these
charges were time-barred, as recently as January 27, 2016; thus, the statute of
limitations was clearly disputed in relation to these time-barred charges.
81. No testimony of record exists to support the Commonwealth
established that the limitations period did not expire in July of 2002 nor that
a statutory exception applies. The instructions given the jury do not direct a
finding for any exception nor was the jury given legal guidance on limitations
by the Court. As such, required determinations as to this element of the crimes
was not met. Accord Com. v. Bethlehem, 570 A.2d 563, 1989. The rule of
lenity applies in favor of defendant.
WHEREFORE, defendant is entitled to
an arrest of judgment and/or a judgment of acquittal as the requisite element
of negation of the statute of limitations was not put before the jury and no
determination was made thereon by the jury; thus, the rule of lenity applies.
82. At trial Rachel Vales solely made
claims of "touching". This claim of "touching" was the
foundation of Rakaczewski's "pattern" claims as other complainants
made identical claims. In fact "touch" was stated 10 times, [N.T.
5/31/16 @205], "touched" 8 times [Id.] and "touching" 17
times. [Id.] Rachel Vales does not use the term "insert" nor
"penetration".
83. Indecent contact is defined as:
"Any touching of the
sexual or other intimate parts of the person for the purpose of arousing or
gratifying sexual desire, in either person." [18§3101][17]
84. The crime of aggravated indecent
assault (AIA) does not contain an element of "indecent
contact". Axiomatically, this crime encompasses conduct not
intended for arousal or gratifying sexual desire. [18§3125][18] Accord Com. v. Adams, 39 A.2d
310, 2012. In Adams the complainant was bound, being assaulted and
threatened with a gun to provide information. During this ordeal one
co-defendant inserted his fingers into her vagina for the purpose of
humiliation, degradation and punishment; but, not for arousal or to gratify
sexual desire. Adams, properly
establishes the type of conduct our Legislature intended 18§3125 to meet.
85. In Com. v. Kelley, 509 Pa. 179,
2002 the court properly found that "forced digital penetration of the
vagina constitutes indecent assault", by tacitly recognizing that Kelley's
intent was to arouse or gratify sexual desire.
Other
courts have recently, post-Kelley, similarly held that digital
insertion (i.e. "touching") of the vagina constitutes indecent
assault. See Com. v. Charlton, 902 A.2d 554, 2006; Com. v. Robinson,
931 A.2d 15, 2007; and Com. v. Smith, 863 A.2d 1272, 2004. [See Footnote
16, supra.]
86. Application of the rule of lenity
(codified at 1 Pa.C.S. §1923(b)(1)) dictates that the "touching",
averred at trial, not be expanded beyond the scope of "indecent
contact" to justify crimes our Legislature did not anticipate.
The
U.S. Supreme Court, in Dunn
v. U.S., 442 U.S. 100, 1979
explained that the rule of lenity is "not merely a convenient maxim of
statutory construction" but rather, "it is rooted in fundamental
principles of due process which mandate that no individual be forced to
speculate, at peril of indictment, whether his conduct is prohibited".
The
trial testimony establishes indecent assault only as no other crime has an element
of indecent contact (i.e. touching) and indecent assault is not a lesser
included offense of AIA as the requisite elements are distinct. Com. v. Allen, 856 A.2d 1251, 2004. AIA has no
element of indecent contact.
A
defendant's due process rights are violated when his conviction is affirmed on
an offense that he was not charged with
and that was not presented to the jury." Dunn,
supra. Here Defendant was charged with indecent assault (though
dismissed as time-barred) but convicted of AIA that does not have an
element of indecent contact.
Here,
no evidence of "penetration" for the purpose other than to arouse or gratify sexual
desire exists; therefore, there exists no evidence to support a conviction for
aggravated indecent assault.
WHEREFORE, defendant is entitled to
an arrest of judgment and/or a judgment of acquittal on both counts of
aggravated indecent assault as no evidence exists to support these convictions.
Case
No. 1749 CR 2013
87.
C.C.
claimed that all conduct complained of occurred
"in my mom and his bedroom." [N.T. 5/31/2016 @93]
88. This testimony does not meet the
elements of indecent exposure [18§3127] as this crime requires a public place
where "others" would be offended, affronted or alarmed. (See jury
instruction in this matter [6/1/16 N.T. @84]) In Com v. Dewalt, 752 A.2d
915, 2000 the court found evidence insufficient to meet indecent exposure as no
'public place' was testified to. Here, no evidence that "exposure"
caused injury by way of affronting or alarming beyond that foisted by alleged
act of touching or fellatio. Accord Com. v. Whetstine, 496 A.2d 777,
1985.
WHEREFORE, defendant is entitled to
an arrest of judgment and/or a judgment of acquittal on the conviction for indecent
exposure as no evidence exists to support this crime.
89. Defendant was charged with four crimes
that have a statute of limitations period of two (2) years; indecent assault 18§3126,
indecent exposure 18§3127, endangering the welfare of children 18§4304, and
corruption of minors 18§6301 against C.C. [42§5552(a)]
90. The testimony of trial adduces that
the defendant resided with the complainant between "2009, 2010,"
[5/31/16 N.T. @39] until "June 10th of 2010", [Id@212] Therefore, the
two year limitations period within which to prosecute these crimes expired on
June 10, 2012.
91. Negation of the affirmative defense of
the statute of limitations is a duty of the Commonwealth [18§103] by the
prosecution and must be established beyond a reasonable doubt. [18§108] [FN15 & FN16] Defendant raised
this affirmative defense in his January 27, 2016 Limine motion; thus, the
statute of limitations was clearly disputed here. This was clearly a matter for
the jury as limitations periods that expired "shall not be extended by order,
rule or otherwise". [42§5504(a)]
92. No testimony of record exists to
support that the Commonwealth established that the limitations period did not
expire in 2012 nor that a statutory exception applies. The instructions given
the jury do not direct a finding for any exception nor was the jury given legal
guidance on limitations by the Court. As such, required determinations as to
this element of these crimes was not met and the rule of lenity dictates that
the charges/conviction be vacated in defendant's favor. Accord Com. v.
Bethlehem, 570 A.2d 563, 1989. The rule of lenity dictates that these facts
be construed in defendant's favor. Id.
WHEREFORE, defendant is entitled to
an arrest of judgment and/or a judgment
of acquittal on each of these crimes as
the requisite element of the statute of limitations was not put before the
jury, thus, no determination was made thereon by the jury.
93. In this case defendant was found
guilty of "attempt" involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, [18§§901,
3123], (IDSI).
94. There can be no "attempt" to
commit IDSI for the essence of a criminal attempt is Defendant's intention to
cause the prescribed result, it follows that there can be no attempt to commit
a crime which makes the causing of a certain result criminal even though wholly
unintended.
IDSI required no proof of intent to cause the
prescribed result, specifically, IDSI requires that one "engages" in
IDSI. There is no element of "intent", thus an "attempt"
fails.
95. The evidence of record, as testified
to by C.C., is that, she now claims, that
defendant's penis did go into her mouth.[19] [5/31/16 N.T. @95] Thus, there is no
evidence of record to support an "attempt", even were it cognizable. C.C. testified to a completed crime of
indecent assault (fellatio), she made no claims regarding use of a
"foreign object" or an "animal" nor is there any evidence
supporting "forcible compulsion" as anticipated by our legislature.
[18§3123] Additionally, no statute describes fellatio as "sexual
intercourse" with an animal or foreign object, and IDSI does not contain
an element of indecent contact.
96. Defendant was on notice to defend
against an "attempt" IDSI; yet, no such crime was made out at trial.
WHEREFORE, defendant is entitled to
an arrest of judgment and/or judgment of acquittal as to the
"attempt" IDSI conviction obtained as no evidence exists to support
such. The fellatio testified to is a crime defendant was not charged with;
therefore, this court is without jurisdiction to convict him of it. Accord Com. v. Serrano, 61 A.3d 279, 2013.
97. Defendant was found guilty of three
crimes that have a requisite element of "intercourse", IDSI 18§3123,
attempt IDSI 18§§901, 3123, and incest 18§4302.
98. The evidence of record adduces that C.C. claimed defendant put his penis in
her mouth [5/31/16 N.T. @95] and "put his mouth on" her
"vagina". [Id] This testimony amounts to fellatio and
cunnilingus.
Axiomatically,
IDSI requires a foreign object or an animal-which was not adduced here;
thereby, these convictions fail. Our General Assembly plainly differentiates
between "sexual intercourse", "fellatio" and
"cunnilingus". Accord 18§6312(g)
(prohibited sexual act).
99. Some outdated Superior Court panels
have erroneously construed fellatio and cunnilingus to be "sexual
intercourse" based on antiquated interpretations largely premised on Com
v. Wescott, 523 A.3d 1140, 1983, that relied on the Model Penal Code to
fashion an interpretation to fit a non-statutory design. This interpretation
was rejected by the PA Supreme Court in Com. v. Kelley, 569 Pa. 179,
2002. Evidence that our General Assembly has never adopted the Wescott
dicta is found in the repeated amendments to 18§6312. Plainly, if our
Legislature thought fellatio or cunnilingus amounted to "sexual
intercourse" a mere stroke of the pen would be sufficient enough to do so.
100. Our General Assembly has never
defined "sexual intercourse" to say "penetrates the mouth",
"or a person's tongue penetrates the sexual organ of a female"
(rendering an erroneous jury instruction here) [6/1/16 N.T. @80].[20] The definition of deviate sexual
intercourse is set forth at 18§3101, as well as "sexual intercourse".
This court is plainly expanding "animal" and "foreign
object" to mean anything. [IDSI] And, ignoring the Legislature's
definition for "sexual intercourse" by erroneously finding as
superfluous the language of "emission is not required".[21] Plainly, a tongue can not
"emit" semen. To accept the ridiculous interpretation of this Court
would be to find a "wet willie" ( a wet finger put into an ear or a
navel ) to be "sexual intercourse" and if so, French kissing would
fit the same erroneous interpretation; thereby, rendering the interpreted
definitions so vague as to violate due process, due to obvious absurdities.[22]
101. As no evidence exists that defendant's
penis penetrated C.C.'s
vagina ("os") or anus to meet the statutory definition of
"sexual intercourse" (accord Com. v. Brown, 551 Pa. 465, 1996)
and no animal or foreign object was alleged, there simply is no evidence to
support this element of either of these three crimes. [23]
102. Here, C.C. claimed that defendant's
"mouth" touched her vagina. The term touch is not limited to the hand
or finger, rather, the courts look to any part of the defendant's body or the
complainant's body to determine if there has been a "touching" as set
forth by the Legislature. Com. v. Grayson, 549 A.2d 593, 1988.
In
Com. v. Evans, 901 A.2d 528, 2008 the court found
that indecent assault occurred when Evans put his tongue into the
complainant's mouth as it amounted to "touching" of a sexual or other
intimate part of the body.
103. This court loses touch with
Legislative intent when it expands "touch" to be "sexual
intercourse". C.C.'s
claims, even if true, can be inferred as a "purpose of arousing or
gratifying sexual desire, in either person". [18§3101] Indecent contact is
not an element of IDSI nor incest. The evidence supports indecent
contact which is only an element of indecent assault.
This
presents a dichotomy of sorts. With Rachel Vales "touching" is
erroneously being pursued as "penetration". With C.C. "touching" is being
erroneously pursued as "sexual intercourse"; however, neither of
these crimes have an element of touching (indecent contact). In contrast to C.C.'s case where cunnilingus is
erroneously being prosecuted as IDSI, in Gentile's case the same conduct
was prosecuted as aggravated indecent assault.
Here,
"touching", whether by hand, finger or mouth is being erroneously
construed to mean anything. Our Legislature did not anticipate such vagueness,
and if so, the crimes alleged (IDSI, incest & AIA) are so vague as to be
unconstitutional. Plainly, a "court may not achieve an acceptable
construction of a penal statute by reading into the statute terms that broaden
its scope". Com. v.
Johnson, 26 A.3d 1078,
2011. By reading the testified to claim of "touching" into IDSI,
incest or AIA this court broadens the legislative intent and creates elements
not intended.[24]
104. There is no logic to claiming
"touching" is "sexual intercourse" as it provides for
suspect and inconsistent application. It would appear that due to this court's
imposed ambiguities sexual intercourse "means" a penis going into a
vagina for statutory sexual assault (18§3122.1) or rape of a child (18§3121(c)),
but NOT for IDSI or incest, in this case. Touching a vagina - with any part of
the body (just not the penis) is, apparently IDSI or AIA alternatively, in this
court, but anywhere else its indecent assault. These selective, inconsistent
and not-statutory interpretations render the crimes unconstitutionally
ambiguous; thereby, violating due process of law.
105. This Court's inconsistent application
of erroneous interpretations can be exampled in the following table:
Monroe
County's Non-Statutory Crimes Code
In 1997 with Danielle Gentile:
cunnilingus (touching) = aggravated
indecent assault and/or indecent assault intercourse (penis in vagina) = statutory sexual assault
[in 1997 cunnilingus is not
"intercourse' apparently]
In pre-1997 with Rachel Vales (at a
2013 "interpretation"):
digital masturbation (touching) =
aggravated indecent assault and/or indecent assault
In 2013 with C.C.:
cunnilingus (touching) = IDSI, incest,
indecent assault
fellatio (touching) = IDSI, incest,
indecent assault
[In 2013 "intercourse" means
anything!]
According
to this, digital masturbation and cunnilingus are indecent assault or
aggravated indecent assault, interchangeably, pre-1998. Yet, in 2013,
cunnilingus is now IDSI and incest which require "intercourse", but
apparently a different "intercourse" than that
required for statutory sexual assault. However, at no time relevant hereto has
our General Assembly changed ANY definition under (18§3101).
A
defendant simply has no idea what conduct comprises what crime due to erroneous
and selective interpretations that are grossly inconsistent.
Ignored
by this court is that masturbation, cunnilingus and fellatio have one thing in
common: Stimulation - for the purpose of arousal or sexual gratification in
either person. (i.e. indecent contact, 18§3101).
This is an element our General Assembly has attached to only ONE crime:
indecent assault.
WHEREFORE, defendant is entitled to
an arrest of judgment and/or judgment of acquittal on both IDSI convictions and
the incest conviction as no evidence of record exists to support the General
Assembly's definition of "sexual intercourse".
G. Rakaczewski's Conspiracy to Abrogate
The Right of Counsel
106. The Sixth Amendment provides that
"[I]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to
have the Assistance of Counsel for his defense." See Gideon v.
Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335, 342 (1963). (6th Amendment right to counsel in
criminal proceedings applies to states through 14th Amendment).
107. In this case defense counsel was fully
apprised of all challenges to credibility and of exculpatory evidence through
provision of extensive and copious volumes of documentation and, as would be
reasonably anticipated, counsel undertook his own investigations. However,
quite inexplicably, defense counsel "entirely fail[ed] to subject the
prosecution's case to meaningful adversarial testing" which rendered the
adversarial process itself presumably unreliable. U.S. v. Cronic, 466
US. 648 (2008) (presumption of prejudice exists where "likelihood that any
lawyer even a fully competent one, could provide effective assistance is so
small that a presumption of prejudice is appropriate without inquiry into the
actual conduct of the trial.) See also Bell. v. Cone, 535 U.S. 685, 2002
(counsel's failure to oppose prosecution at specific points warranted Strickland
analysis rather than prejudice presumption because counsel's representation was
not complete failure to test prosecution).
108. Due to concerns about fundamental
fairness, the court may also examine whether counsel's ineffective assistance
"deprive[d] the defendant of a substantive or procedural right to which
the law entitles him." Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, (2000) (referring
to counsel's failure to investigate and present evidence).
The
Williams court made it clear that an inquiry
into "fundamental fairness" should be rare; however, the
circumstances of this case compel such an inquiry. See Pavel v Hollins,
261 F.3d 210 (2d Cir. 2001) (counsel's failure to call important fact witnesses
and medical expert at trial was ineffective assistance because testimony of
those witnesses would have rebutted prosecution's already weak case).
109. Whether a conflict of interest or a
conspiracy to deprive defendant of his right to counsel or a fair trial exists
the result was the same. In some circumstances courts have interpreted the abrogation of counsel as a "conflict
of interest". See Blankenship v. Johnson, 118 F.3d 312 (5th Cir.
1997) (conflict of interest affected performance because counsel took no action
on behalf of defendant); Reynolds v. Chapman, 253 F.3d 1337 (11th Cir.
2001) (conflict of interest affected performance because counsel prevented from
raising reasonable defenses in defendant's favor).
Here,
substantial inferences exist that a
meeting of the minds occurred between Adam Bompadre and Michael Rakaczewski to
obtain a conviction at all costs. Based on the circumstances presented herein,
no competent attorney, licensed to practice law, would have refused to present
known exculpatory evidence, called known witnesses nor failed to have
cross-examined the complainants with known and documented challenges to
credibility, for there was nothing to lose by it and everything to gain.[25]
110. Defendant avers that there was a
government intrusion into the attorney-client relationship that violated the
Sixth Amendment. This intrusion was precipitated by Rakaczewski in reliance on
Bompadre's propensity to hide evidence in a pro-prosecution manner. Trading on
this unethical tenet of Bompadre's [see attached Wayne Independent article:
"Public Defender alleges DA withheld evidence"] Rakaczewski enlisted him to abrogate the
constitutional right to counsel. [See attached Affidavits]
WHEREFORE, for the forgoing,
defendant avers that he is entitled to the conduct of an evidentiary hearing to
make a determination of extra record facts to further develop this issue, as
its resultant effect was the denial of a fair trial.
H. Denial of The Right to An Impartial
Jurist
111. Recusal is appropriate where a judge
is personally interested in the outcome of a party's cause and is so closely
related to a party or attorney that such personal interest can be presumed.
Recusal
is appropriate where the record shows that a particular ruling or rulings which
materially prejudice the party seeking recusal resulted from expressed bias or
ill-will against the party. Reilly
v. Septa, 507 Pa. 204, 1985.
In
this case there has been a continual and pervasive breakdown in the adversarial
process that is pervasive and derives primarily from the conduct of this court.
112. At the initiation of this action this
court has supported a desire of this judicial district in toto to punish,
marginalize and silence the innocent defendant for his diligent exercise of his
constitutional rights to seek redress of grievances. The design is to suppress
challenges to the prior false conviction that required the recusal of two
judges of this Court. These judges failed to correct fraud perpetrated by
attorneys and the district attorneys that was then erroneously adopted by the
Superior Court to deny relief. These judges allowed the known perjury of Brian
Germano to go uncorrected, instead, they adopted perjury to deny relief.
This
current court continues to vindicate the prior fraud while knowing and
having a duty to know that doing so is
injustice.
113. In this case, the court's appearance
of impropriety is palpable. To subvert
the adversarial process this Court has abrogated ANY need for either party to
respond to ANY motion filed. These entire proceedings have been reduced to
ex-parte rulings absent nearly ANY response from the opposing party, resulting
in an abrogation of due process of law.
This
court has demonstrated an objectively apparent appearance of impropriety by:
-
Denying
bail in its entirety when others similarly situated have been granted bail, and
-
Intentionally
misinterpreted Pa.R.Crim.P. No. 600 in such a way as to render it meaningless;
and
-
Repeatedly
and without compunction advocated for the Commonwealth; and
-
Obstructing
defendant from obtaining discovery of material credibility challenges to the
Commonwealth's witnesses; and
-
Sua
sponte taking judicial notice of other cases to advance the position of the
Commonwealth; and
-
Repeatedly
interposing suspect interpretations of law NOT advanced by either party; and
-
Repeatedly
refusing to apply the rule of lenity; and
-
Sua
sponte interposing theory or case law that neither party has relied upon in
such a manner as to be pro-prosecution; and
-
Failing
to address discreet issues that entitle defendant to relief; and
-
Refusing
to conduct the determination of motions in open court to allow BOTH parties to
litigate relevant concerns.
114. It is well known in this judicial
district that defendant is litigious - and rightfully so - yet, it is equally
well known that the judges of this court, in near equal unanimity, will collude
with each other to obstruct the administration of justice - at all costs - to
punish the innocent defendant for doing what the law allows.
115. This court was equally exposed to the
facts and documentary evidence espoused by defendant in his January 27, 2016
Limine Motion and was predisposed toward sua sponte taking judicial notice of
facts from other cases the defendant was involved in.
The
court, unlike the prosecution, is not an adversarial party in the proceedings.
It acts neither to prove guilt nor establish innocence; but, merely to maintain
a fair trial. It is almost inconceivable that a court, possessing exculpatory
information must remain silent when the prosecution possessing identical
information would be compelled to speak. U.S.
v. Cuthberson,
511 F.Supp. 375 (D.N.J.) (1981)
In
circumstances like this case, when a miscarriage of justice is threatened that
due process requires judicial intervention through sua sponte disclosure. Com. v. Santiago, 591 A.2d 1095, 1990.
Because
this court sua sponte took notice of
items like the default finding of paternity by judge Zulich, it is reasonable
to assume the court was aware of the filings in custody that support inferences
that defendant had no access nor involvement with C.C. for purposes of indecent contact,
particularly since Stephen Higgins sits as a judge on the same bench.
WHEREFORE, defendant avers that the
appearance of impropriety is great and recusal may be required to cure such, in
the interests of justice.
Respectfully submitted,
September
9, 2016
Justin Corliss
4250 Manor Drive
Stroudsburg, PA 18360
Attachments
A. Danielle Gentile's card to defendant
B. Wayne Independent article on Bompadre
C. Affidavit of Evi Yuliana
D. Affidavit of Robert Cyphers
E. Wyoming Regional Lab Report #97-99
F. Greensburg Regional Lab Report
#G98-0979-G
G. Cheslock's 9/10/10 letter
H. 8/12/10 Order in Custody
I. Emails/letters 6/20/10, 3/1/10,
6/11/10
J. 4/25/00 Notes of testimony
K. 6/20/00 Opinion
[1]
The Superior Court decision [Nos. 2091 & 2105 EDA 2015] essentially created
a new rule of law; whereby, in order to obtain a conviction, where evidence is
wholly lacking, the defendant's prior conviction can be used to secure a conviction. This travesty of
law violates long held and bedrock principles of due process and the
presumption of innocence which forbid the introduction of a prior conviction.
Under misguided reliance on Com. v. O'Brien, 836 A.2d 966, 2003 (which
was a bench trial where it is presumed that the judge would disregard
inadmissible evidence) the Superior Court confabulated Rakaczewski's fraud to
justify a Rule 404(b) exception, to ensure a conviction, not a fair trial.
[2]
At the evidentiary hearing held on 3/18/14 defendant was confronted with this
fraud for the first time and combined it with the untried claims of contact at
Karen Vales' house, [N.T. 3/18/14 @37-39] as both claims are fictitious, and
defendant was never on notice to defend against them.
[3]
Brink's clarification here as to what type of "sex"
("intercourse") throws into contention the aggravated indecent
assault and indecent assault convictions from 1998 as the defendant has
propounded for years as it resulted in an illegal sentence and registration
under Megan's Law.
[4]
As an aside former trial counsel Brian Germano lied about the alibi [N.T.
4/25/00 @149-150 & 167] which was relied upon by the court [6/20/00 Op.
@15-16] and the Superior Court relied on this fraud to deny relief erroneously.
[attached] The issue was the lack of an alibi instruction reflecting
evidence placing defendant at Burger King in Stroudsburg during the claimed
evening time frame.
[5]
Historically, Gentile/Brink's stories expand to encompass never before made
claims after Lynott needs her to. In the first trial the prosecution
wanted to obtain a conviction for a Megan's law offense, so Lynott suborned the
cunnilingus claims and exaggerated them as aggravated indecent assault. After
realizing the semen in Gentile's underwear was arguably from someone related to
her, Lynott suborned perjury of the birthmark and conduct at Vales' house.
Here, Lynott conspired with Rakaczewski to suborn more perjury from Brink to
"link" cases, thus the expanded claims of "tickling",
"touching", cunnilingus and supposed trips to New York. Brink is a
pathological liar willing to adopt ANY lie than be outed for the fraud she has
perpetrated for years.
[6]
In sex cases, when witness credibility is of paramount importance the
prosecution reasonably should know that the issue of apparent truthfulness
could determine the outcome. Thus, witness credibility is of critical
importance, indeed, a jury's appraisal of a person's credibility can weigh
heavily in its final verdict. Com. v. Jenkins, 476 Pa. 467, 1978.
Because this is so, when the reliability of a witness may be determinative of
the outcome, evidence affecting the credibility of that witness must be
disclosed. Giglio v. U.S., 405 U.S. 150, 1972
[7]
In Rakaczewski's 3/31/14 brief in support of admitting prior bad acts he
stated: "The evidence is necessary to defeat the defendant's possible
defense that Tom Lynott is behind all of this and it is all part of some grand
conspiracy because of the claim Lynott subordinated (sic) perjury in his first
trial." This court relied on this [Op. 6/17/14 @17-19] and Rakaczewski
complained about it again on appeal [Appellant's Brief, 2091 EDA 2014 @10,
& 21-22]. Lynott did suborn perjury and Rakaczewski knows it, yet
Rakaczewski elicited it - again, and kept Lynott off the stand. Rakaczewski
believes that "bad acts" can be invoked as a talisman to any
evidentiary deficiency of the prosecution; however, this is NOT what Pa.R.Evid.
No. 404 was designed for.
[8]
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court, in Com. v. Bazemore, 531 Pa. 552, 1991
(citing Com. v. Wallace, 510 Pa. 270, 1983) has held that:
"The
prosecutor, whose duty of course is to seek justice, not merely to convict ...
has an affirmative and continuing duty to disclose exculpatory information to
the defendant and to correct false testimony of a witness." (Pa. Rules of
Proff. Conduct 3.3(a)(4), 3.3(b) and 3.3(d)). Moreover, "when the
reliability of a given witness may well be determinative of guilt or innocence,
nondisclosure [on the part of the Commonwealth] of evidence affecting
credibility" violates due process.
[9]
The omitted Child Advocacy Center video evidences that C.C. left Guskiewicz's
crying once and even after being barred by Court order for being alone with
Guskiewicz the video attests to the contrary.
[10]
Rakaczewski did not ply this court nor the Superior Court with these claims
when pursuing "bad acts". The record is completely devoid of these
claims prior to trial which amounted to trial by ambush.
[11]
At the bad acts hearing Gentile/Brink asserted the card was to "make up
for ... accidentally" hitting her with a rock - an inconvenient fact
Rakaczewski deliberately ignored. [N.T. 3/18/14 @32]
[12]
It is well established in Pennsylvania that reference to prior criminal
activity of the accused, either expressly or by reasonable implication is not
permitted. Com. v. Percell, 454 A.2d 542, 1982; Com. v. Stanley,
398 A.2d 631, 1979. There was simply no logical connection between the
incidents to show an element of a crime and resulted in evidence of a
propensity to commit crime. Com. v. Miller, 664 A.2d 1310, 1995; Com.
v. Burton, 770 A.2d 771, 2001 (evidence of distinct crimes is not
admissible against a defendant being prosecuted for another crime solely to
show his bad character or his propensity for committing criminal acts.)
[13]
ADA Rakaczewski enlisted the perjurous Danielle Brink to support this alleged
crime by falsely claiming that she too went to New York, and miraculously, she
too pretended to be asleep. [N.T. 5/31/16 @36]
[14]
Aggravated indecent assault, 18§3125, does not possess a 'course of
conduct" clause and thus dates of alleged conduct are required. Accord 42§5552(d).
Defendant was on notice to defend against two counts, one of which was a
supposed trip to New York.
[15]
The federal constitution mandates that each and every element of the crime must
be proved by the prosecution beyond a reasonable doubt. Martin v. Ohio,
480 U.S. 228, 1987.
[16]
The statute of limitations remains a basic guarantee against stale
prosecutions, and it is the duty of the court to liberally apply it in favor of
the defendant and against the Commonwealth. Com. v. Cardonic, 448 Pa.
332, (1972). No evidence was presented to the jury that an applicable exception
applied. When a statute of limitations defense is raised, as here, the trial
court must instruct the jury with sufficient clarity for the jury to know what
must be proved to meet any exception claimed by the Commonwealth. The trial
court is required in every case to elucidate the law and clarify the issues to
be decided, so that the jury may know what questions they are to resolve. See Com.
v. Fanelli, 377 Pa. 555, 1988.
[17]Touching,
even by force, any part of the body, for the purpose of arousal amounts to
indecent assault. Com. v. Grayson, 549 A.2d 593, 1988 Indecent contact
occurs when there is proscribed contact with the female or male genitals of
either party. In In re A.D., 771 A.2d 45, 2001, evidence proved that
juvenile "touched" the youthful complainant's vagina with his penis;
In Com. v. Gordon, 543 Pa. 513, 1996 defendant rubbed his penis against
"buttock/thigh/legs" of complainant. In In re J.R., 648 A.2d
28, 1994 defendant licked the vaginal area of complainant. All such conduct was
properly construed as indecent conduct. [These cases are cited with approval in
the Pennsylvania Crimes of Sexual Violence Benchbook, 2015]
[18]
AIA has a requisite element of "penetration", different from sexual
intercourse, and has an express "aggravated" factor which
distinguishes the crime from indecent assault. The title of a statute may be
considered in the construction thereof. 1 Pa.C.S. §1924 Thus, the
"aggravated" factor refers to the gratuitous use of threat, violence,
terror, cruelty or humiliation, none of which apply here.
[19]
Rakaczewski refused to introduce the video taped Child Advocacy Center
interview that shows C.C.
being asked twice whether a penis enters her mouth and she affirmatively states
"No". This contradictory evidence challenged C.C.'s credibility yet Rakaczewski
deliberately withheld it.
[20]
Under our system of jurisprudence the legislature is charged with the
responsibility of defining the elements of crime. Com. v. Graves, 401
Pa. 118, 1975
[21]
Some reviewing courts have erroneously treated the phrase "emission is not
required" as surplusage in direct contravention to the Statutory
Construction Act. The intent in doing so is to expand "sexual
intercourse" beyond that anticipated by the Pennsylvania General Assembly.
A principle of statutory construction is to give effect to all their provisions,
so that none are rendered mere surplusage. 1 Pa.C.S.§1921(a). It is presumed
"[t]hat the General Assembly does not intend a result that is absurd,
impossible of execution or unreasonable". 1 Pa.C.S. §1922(1) Thus, to
construe sexual intercourse as not requiring a penis renders the language of
"emission" mere surplusage. Stated otherwise, every provision of a
statute is presumed to be intended for some purpose and may not be reduced by
interpretation to mere surplusage. Accord Phil. Corr. Off. Assoc. v. Pa. Labor
Relations Bd., 667 A.2d 456 (Pa. Comm. 1995)
[22]
In Giles v. Maryland, 386 U.S. 66, 1967 the U.S. Supreme Court gave a
lucid and instructive recitation of facts that involved an honest and frank
discussion of the proper use of the terms "emission", "penetration",
"intercourse", "insertion" and reaching "climax".
This is relevant from a textualist perspective as former justice Scalia
pursued. Our statutes are written on the same basis that the Giles court
properly construed "intercourse". It is impossible to believe that
the U.S. Supreme Court or our General Assembly would arrive at the erroneous
extrapolations pursued by some courts to justify ANY conduct to be
"intercourse". When the General Assembly adopted the crimes code in
Pennsylvania it was with the plain understanding, at that time, as to what
"intercourse" meant. It is not for ANY court to add what our
Legislature has chosen not to for the Statutory Construction Act was written to
prevent the judiciary from encroaching on the Legislature.
[23]
This Court sua sponte interposed that a civil finding by default established
"paternity" to justify the crime of incest. However, whether this
proved paternity beyond a reasonable doubt was not submitted to the
jury. Additionally, the Commonwealth has access to defendant's DNA profile and
their failure to determine parentage is a fatal flaw to any conviction for
incest.
[24]
In writing the statute for "sexual abuse of children" (18§6312) the
Legislature provides "Definitions", as relevant here:
"Prohibited
sexual act" Sexual intercourse as defined in section 3101 (relating to
definitions), masturbation, sadism, masochism, beastiality, fellatio,
cunnilingus ... " [18§6312(g)]
Plainly, our Legislature distinguishes
cunnilingus and fellatio from sexual intercourse. See also 18§5903(b)
"sexual conduct"; distinguishing acts. This court is legislating from
the bench when deviating from Legislature's intent.
[25]
There is a reasonable probability
that Rakaczewski pursued this prosecution vindictively. Actual vindictiveness requires
objective evidence that a prosecutor acted in order to punish the defendant for
standing on his legal rights. To do so the following must be established: (1)
the prosecutor harbored a genuine animus toward the defendant, or was prevailed
upon to bring the charges by another (Lynott, Tsang) with an animus such that
the prosecutor could be a stalking horse; and (2) the defendant would not been
prosecuted except for the animus. See U.S.
v. Sanders, 211 F.3d 711 (2d Cir. 2000); U.S. v. Bout, 731 F.3d 233
(2d Cir. 2013)
Here,
Tsang used the police to transform civil proceedings into a mere stalking horse
for the investigations into false allegations of sexual misconduct for a
retaliatory purpose. Lynott utilized uncorroborated claims coerced by Tsang to
usurp prosecutorial discretion to advance her retaliatory agenda. Rakaczewski
vindictively prosecuted to advance this judicial districts design to punish
defendant for exercising his Constitutional right to seek redress of
grievances.
The
attempt to secure a false verdict by corrupt and perjured testimony is a direct
violation of the official oath administered on admission to the bar and, upon
proof of such conduct, suspension must follow. Barach's case, 123 A.
727, 1923.
The
public's interest in fair trials and the conservation of resources is poorly
served by a policy of refusing to take corrective action in response to known
prosecutorial misconduct.
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