Court Opinion

ID: 9910437
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-12-15 17:08:50.923706+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:52:56.201722
License: Public Domain

J-S39029-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

 COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA             :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                          :        PENNSYLVANIA
                                          :
              v.                          :
                                          :
                                          :
 KEN ANDREW KOVALESKI                     :
                                          :
                    Appellant             :   No. 1339 MDA 2022

          Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered August 23, 2022
 In the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County Criminal Division at
                    No(s): CP-35-CR-0002000-2012

BEFORE: DUBOW, J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and McCAFFERY, J.

MEMORANDUM BY McLAUGHLIN, J.:             FILED: DECEMBER 15, 2023

      Ken Andrew Kovaleski appeals pro se from the order dismissing his Post

Conviction Relief Act petition. See 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 9541-9546. Kovaleski

argues the PCRA court made procedural errors when dismissing his petition,

mostly based on his alleged late receipt of documents sent by the court and

by counsel. We affirm.

      In February 2014, a jury convicted Kovaleski of rape by forcible

compulsion, statutory sexual assault, incest, involuntary deviate sexual

intercourse with a person less than 16 years of age, involuntary deviate sexual

intercourse by forcible compulsion, unlawful contact with a minor, aggravated

indecent assault on a person less than 16 years of age, endangering the
J-S39029-23

welfare of children, corruption of minors, and indecent assault.1 The trial court

sentenced him to an aggregate of 21 to 42 years’ incarceration. Kovaleski filed

a notice of appeal and this Court affirmed the judgment of sentence. In

November 2015, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court denied his petition for

allowance of appeal.

       Kovaleski filed a PCRA petition in October 2016. The PCRA court granted

relief in part, regarding the imposition of mandatory minimum sentences, and

denied all other requested relief. In April 2017, the trial court resentenced

Kovaleski to 20 to 40 years’ incarceration. Kovaleski filed a post-sentence

motion and a notice of appeal. This Court quashed the appeal as to the

judgment of sentence because the trial court had not disposed of the post-

sentence motion, but we affirmed the denial of the PCRA claims. After the trial

court denied Kovaleski’s post-sentence motion, he filed a notice of appeal of

the judgment of sentence. This Court affirmed in April 2019. The Pennsylvania

Supreme Court denied the petition for allowance of appeal in October 2019.

       In March 2022, Kovaleski filed the instant PCRA petition. He alleged the

petition was timely under the newly discovered fact and government

interference exceptions to the PCRA’s time bar. The trial court appointed

counsel.

____________________________________________

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 3121(a)(1), 3122.1(a)(1), 4302(a), 3123(a)(7),
3123(a)(1), 6318(a)(1), 3125(a)(8), 4304(a)(1), 6301(a)(1), and
3126(a)(1), respectively.

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       PCRA counsel filed a Turner/Finley2 letter and petition to withdraw as

counsel. The PCRA court issued a notice of intent to dismiss the PCRA petition

without a hearing, dated July 7, 2022. The court then granted the petition to

withdraw, by order dated July 21, 2022. The court docketed both the notice

of intent to dismiss and the order granting the petition to withdraw on July

22, 2022. Kovaleski submitted pro se objections to the petition to withdraw,

postmarked July 21, 2022, i.e., the same date as the date of the order allowing

counsel to withdraw. Four days later, on July 25, 2022, the court received and

docketed Kovaleski’s objections to the petition to withdraw.3 In the objections,

Kovaleski stated that counsel had informed him that counsel was going to file

a petition to withdraw and Turner/Finley letter, but Kovaleski had not yet

received the filing.

       On August 23, 2022, the court dismissed the PCRA petition. That same

day, the court docketed Kovaleski’s pro se objections to the notice of intent to

dismiss. According to a postmark on the envelope, Kovaleski had mailed the

____________________________________________

2 Commonwealth v. Turner, 544 A.2d 927 (Pa. 1988), and
Commonwealth v. Finley, 550 A.2d 213 (Pa.Super. 1988) (en banc ).

3 The trial court did not docket the objections until July 25, 2022. The
postmark on the envelope states July 22, 2022. Under the prisoner mailbox
rule, a pro se prisoner’s document is deemed filed on the date he delivers it
to prison authorities for mailing. Commonwealth v. DiClaudio, 210 A.3d
1070, 1074 (Pa.Super. 2019). Here, the mailing was postmarked July 22,
2022, which would have been the latest date it would have been delivered to
prison authorities, and we therefore consider the objections filed on July 22,
2022.

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objections eight days beforehand, on August 15, 2022. Kovaleski filed a timely

notice of appeal.4

       Kovaleski raises the following issues:

          I. Did Lackawanna County Court of Common Pleas err by
          issuing (on July 7, 2022) a notice of intent to dismiss Mr.
          Kovaleski’s PCRA petition stating that Mr. Kovaleski had
          twenty (20) days to respond, holding said order and not
          placing it in the mail for 15 of those 20 days (when mailed
          on July 22, 2022), and then sending it to the wrong address
          resulting in Mr. Kovaleski not receiving said order until 32
          days after it was issued?

          II. Did Lackawanna County Court of Common Pleas err in
          dismissing his PCRA petition without considering his
          objections which were mailed approximately ten (10) days
          after receiving the aforementioned notice of intent to
          dismiss and deemed filed pursuant to the prisoner’s mail box
          rule?

          III. Did Lackawanna County Court of Common Pleas err [by]
          withdrawing Mr. Kovaleski’s attorney from the proceedings
          five (5) days before he received a copy of the
          Turner/Finley letter and petition to withdraw which denied
          him an opportunity to review and reply to these filings?

          IV. Did the Lackawanna County Court of Common Pleas err
          and blatantly falsify the record when it stated in its August
          23, 2022 order that [Kovaleski] has not objected to
          counsel’s petition to withdraw even though the docket sheet
          proves that Mr. Kovaleski filed a pro se objection to
          withdraw and motion to proceed pro se on July 25, 2022,
          which was before the petition and Turner/Finley letter was
          even sent to him?

          V. Did the Lackawanna County Court of Common Pleas err
          in not recusing the trial judge from the PCRA proceedings
____________________________________________

4 In February 2023, this court remanded for the filing of a Rule 1925(b)
statement and the issuance of a supplemental Rule 1925(a) opinion, reasoning
that the trial court docket did not indicate whether the Rule 1925(b) order had
properly been served on Kovaleski.

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         when legitimate questions of judicial bias exist and are
         compounded by the trial judge’s refusal to appoint a private
         investigator and playing the aforementioned games with
         filings and mailings which violate due process, fundamental
         fairness, rules of civil and criminal procedure, and rights of
         access to the courts?

Kovaleski’s Br. at 3, 5, 6, 7, and 7-8.

      The issues raised by Kovaleski in his brief challenge the procedure for

addressing his PCRA petition. He does not allege that the PCRA court erred in

dismissing the petition as untimely.

      Kovaleski alleges the trial court “falsely claimed [he] had not objected

to the petition to withdraw.” Id. at 3. He claims the trial court “deliberately

withheld” the notice of intent to dismiss the petition for 32 days, alleging the

court issued the notice on July 7, 2022, but did not place it in the mail until

July 22. Id. He claims this denied him an opportunity to respond. He further

claims the court mailed the notice to the wrong address, noting the court

mailed the document to St. Petersburg, Florida, which was his address for

non-privileged mail, rather than the state correctional institution (“SCI”)

address that he states is for legal and privileged mail. Kovaleski claims that

once he received the notice of intent to dismiss, he prepared a response, which

he mailed on August 15, 2023. He faults the PCRA court for not considering

the response before denying his petition.

      Kovaleski next claims that on June 22, 2022, PCRA counsel called him

to inform him counsel would be filing a Turner/Finley letter, and counsel

subsequently sent a letter. Kovaleski claims that before he received the letter,

he filed pro se objections and a motion to proceed pro se, but noted the

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objections were boilerplate because he had not yet received counsel’s petition

to withdraw or Turner/Finley letter. He claims he did not actually receive

counsel’s filing until July 26, 2022, after the court had granted the petition to

withdraw. He argues it was error to grant the petition before Kovaleski had

received it. He further claims that the court erred in claiming he had not filed

objections to the withdrawal, stating that the court’s statement that he had

not filed objections was “the latest in a long list of documented lies by [the]

trial court.” Id. at 8.

        Finally, Kovaleski states that “[d]ue to the trial court’s constant

manipulation of rules of procedure, withholding of mailings until the last

minute, and all the underhanded tactics shown by this court toward Mr.

Kovaleski, [he] prays that this Honorable Court order an investigation or take

other action deemed necessary and appropriate under the circumstances.” Id.

at 9.

        Kovaleski’s procedural claims lack merit. Contrary to his contention, the

trial court issued the notice of intent to dismiss on July 22, 2022, the same

date the court mailed the document to him, not on July 7, 2022. Although the

document was dated July 7, the time-stamped date on the document was July

22, 2022, and that is the date it was filed of record. Further, Kovaleski failed

to establish the trial court should have mailed the notice of intent to dismiss

to the SCI address, rather than the Florida address. See generally

Wishnefsky v. Pa. Dep’t of Corr., No. 191 M.D. 2021, 2023 Pa.Commw.

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Unpub. LEXIS, at *2 (Pa.Cmwlth. May 19, 2023) (unpublished disposition).5

Moreover, Kovaleski filed a generic response to counsel’s request to withdraw

and did not respond to the substantive basis for withdrawal. Therefore, the

court’s statement that he had not responded to the petition to withdraw was

not error.

       Further, although the court did not receive Kovaleski’s response to the

notice of intent until after it denied the petition, nothing in his response to the

notice would have altered the trial court’s conclusion that the PCRA petition

was untimely. Even if Kovaleski did receive the filings late, and any of his late

filings could be justified, he has failed to explain in this Court why he is entitled

to PCRA relief. Further, he has failed to support his allegation that the trial

court is biased and should be removed. He has also abandoned any claim that

the court erred in denying his PCRA petition as untimely by failing to present

any timeliness argument in his brief to this Court.

       Even if he had preserved a claim that the court erred in dismissing the

claim as untimely, we would conclude the court properly dismissed the

petition. On appeal from the denial or grant of relief under the PCRA, our

review is limited to determining “whether the PCRA court’s ruling is supported

by the record and free of legal error.” Commonwealth v. Presley, 193 A.3d

436, 442 (Pa.Super. 2018) (citation omitted).

____________________________________________

5 We note that PCRA counsel mailed the petition to withdraw and
Turner/Finley letter to the SCI address, not the Florida address.

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      A petitioner has one year from the date his judgment of sentence is final

to file a first or subsequent PCRA petition. See 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9545(b)(1).

“[A] judgment becomes final at the conclusion of direct review, including

discretionary review in the Supreme Court of the United States and the

Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, or at the expiration of time for seeking the

review.” Id. at § 9545(b)(3).

      A court may consider a PCRA petition filed more than one year after a

judgment of sentence has become final only if the petitioner pleads and proves

one of three statutory exceptions. The exceptions are:

         (i) the failure to raise the claim previously was the result of
         interference by government officials with the presentation
         of the claim in violation of the Constitution or laws of this
         Commonwealth or the Constitution or laws of the United
         States;

         (ii) the facts upon which the claim is predicated were
         unknown to the petitioner and could not have been
         ascertained by the exercise of due diligence; or

         (iii) the right asserted is a constitutional right that was
         recognized by the Supreme Court of the United States or
         the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania after the time period
         provided in this section and has been held by that court to
         apply retroactively.

Id. at § 9545(b)(1)(i)-(iii). Any petition attempting to invoke an exception

“shall be filed within one year of the date the claim could have been

presented.” Id. at § 9545(b)(2).

      Here, Kovaleski’s judgment became final on February 8, 2016, 90 days

after the Pennsylvania Supreme Court denied his petition for allowance of

appeal. See id. at § 9545(b)(3); U.S.Sup.Ct. R. 13(1) (stating “a petition for

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a writ of certiorari to review a judgment in any case . . . is timely when it is

filed with the Clerk of this Court within 90 days after entry of the judgment”).6

He therefore had until February 8, 2017, to file a timely PCRA petition and his

petition filed in March 2022 is untimely.

       Before the PCRA court, Kovaleski claimed that he satisfied the new fact

exception to the PCRA time bar because in March 2021 he received the file

from his first PCRA proceeding and discovered that his PCRA counsel had been

ineffective. He further claimed that he satisfied the government interference

exception to the PCRA time bar based on alleged misstatements made by the

trial court at the July 2014 sentencing hearing.

       The PCRA Court held that the discovery of PCRA counsel ineffectiveness

does not satisfy the new fact exception to the PCRA time bar. PCRA Court

Opinion, filed Mar. 22, 2023, at 5 (“1925(a) Op.”). This was not error. See

Commonwealth v. Bradley, 261 A.3d 381, 404 n.18 (Pa. 2021) (declining

to adopt an approach that would deem the discovery of initial PCRA counsel’s

ineffectiveness to constitute a “new fact” unknown to petitioner under the time

bar exception).

____________________________________________

6 Kovaleski’s claims relate to the original trial and sentencing proceedings and

therefore the judgment of sentence became final in 2016. See
Commonwealth v. McKeever, 947 A.2d 782, 786 (Pa.Super. 2008) (for
PCRA purposes, for claims related to original proceedings, the judgment
becomes final after direct review of the original judgment of sentence
concluded). Even if Kovaleski’s claims related to the re-sentencing
proceedings, they still would be untimely because the petition was filed more
than one year after that judgment became final in 2019.

                                           -9-
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      The PCRA court further held that even if it had made misstatements at

the July 2014 sentencing hearing, which it denied, Kovaleski was present at

the hearing and would have known of any false statements. He therefore he

could have presented the claim at an earlier time. 1925(a) Op. at 5. The PCRA

court did not err in finding Kovaleski failed to timely allege this claim. See 42

Pa.C.S.A. § 9545(b)(1)(i); Commonwealth v. Rizvi, 166 A.3d 344, 349

(Pa.Super.   2017)   (finding   petitioner    failed   to   establish   government

interference because, among other things, he failed to explain why he did not

ascertain the alleged interference earlier with the exercise of due diligence).

We further note that Kovaleski has not explained how any alleged

misstatement at his sentencing interfered with his ability to present any PCRA

claim.

      Order affirmed.

Judgment Entered.

Benjamin D. Kohler, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 12/15/2023

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