Court Opinion

ID: 9737276
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-26 19:20:32.789154+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:23:57.784914
License: Public Domain

Justice EAKIN,
dissenting.
I must disagree with the conclusion of my colleagues, as I find the statement at issue to be corroborated by the circumstances and sufficiently reliable; finding the trial court abused its discretion by admitting it is inappropriate, in my judgment.
The Commonwealth’s reasoning arguing corroboration is logical; I find appellant’s less so. For example, the year’s time for “reflection” simply means the crime was stale or forgotten in the minds of anyone unconnected to it-only the perpetrators would still be thinking of such a burglary after that much time. Who is going to impress other prisoners with a year old offense, whether it was publicized at the time or not? The size of the take was worth bragging about, but who knew that but the perpetrators? Were one to pick a boast-worthy crime to falsely associate with, one would not be likely *289to pick this one; logically, the decision to brag about this crime suggests actual involvement, not deceitfulness.
The involvement of the police in recording the hotel conversation is a red herring. Unless Auman knew about that involvement, or was somehow coerced during the conversation, this has absolutely nothing to do with reliability or admissibility. Mantra-like finger pointing does little to show why police involvement affected the statement or its reliability. Governmental involvement may make one look at the circumstances with a watchful eye, but unless that eye sees something, police involvement in and of itself is no reason to label anything unreliable. Indeed, the recording limits the prospects of inaccurate recollections that come when authorities are not involved.
The final suggestion, Auman’s purported narcotic use, was found to be a factual non-starter, and we cannot reconsider findings of fact. Consequently, finding no reason to question the reliability of Auman’s statements, I would affirm the sentence.
NEWMAN joins this dissenting opinion.