Com. v. Lambing, K. ( 2023 )


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  • J-S36045-22
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    KEITH LAMBING                              :
    :
    Appellant               :   No. 399 WDA 2022
    Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered March 11, 2022
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Butler County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-10-CR-0000910-2017
    BEFORE:      STABILE, J., KING, J., and COLINS, J.*
    MEMORANDUM BY COLINS, J.:                               FILED: APRIL 21, 2023
    Appellant, Keith Lambing, appeals from the dismissal of an untimely
    petition filed pursuant to the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”), 42 Pa.C.S.
    § 9541, et seq. He claims, inter alia, that the lower court erred by denying
    him an evidentiary hearing to prove that prison housing restrictions put in
    place in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic constituted governmental
    interference that would have excused the late filing of his petition for collateral
    review. Upon review, we affirm.
    On December 30, 2019, Appellant entered a negotiated guilty plea to
    murder of the third degree, aggravated assault, and endangering the welfare
    ____________________________________________
    *   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-S36045-22
    of a child.1    Written Guilty Plea Colloquy, 12/30/19, 1; Plea Agreement,
    12/30/19, 1. In exchange for the plea, the Commonwealth recommended an
    aggregate imprisonment term of thirty to sixty years’ imprisonment, including
    consecutive prison terms of twenty to forty years for murder, eight to sixteen
    years for aggravated assault, and two to four years for endangering the
    welfare of a child.2      Plea Agreement, 12/30/19, 1.     After sentencing was
    deferred for the preparation of a pre-sentence investigation report, the plea
    court imposed the agreed-upon sentence on January 6, 2020.                  Order,
    12/30/19, 1; Sentencing Order, 1/6/20, 1-2. Appellant did not file any post-
    sentence motions or an appeal.
    ____________________________________________
    1 18 Pa.C.S. §§ 2502(c), 2702(a)(9), and 4304(a)(1), respectively. We note
    that Appellant has failed to ensure that the record certified for this appeal
    contains notes of testimony for his guilty plea and sentencing hearings. We
    can glean from the notes of testimony from one of the preliminary hearings in
    this case that the victim was a four-year-old child in Appellant’s care who was
    pronounced dead after being taken to a hospital in an unresponsive state.
    N.T. 4/27/17, 5-8.       The cause of death was “exsanguination due to
    hemoperitoneum due to perforation of the rectum and mesentery,” i.e., a
    lethal loss of blood in the child’s abdominal cavity resulting from the tearing
    of the rectum and the soft tissue connecting the child’s intestines to the
    abdominal wall. Id. at 15-16.
    2 Implicit in the written plea agreement was that Commonwealth was declining
    to pursue convictions for a different degree of the murder charge and for other
    additional offenses. Here, Appellant was originally charged with criminal
    homicide, involuntary deviate sexual intercourse involving the infliction of
    serious bodily injury, rape of a child, rape of a child with serious bodily injury,
    aggravated indecent assault of a child, aggravated assault, endangering the
    welfare of a child, and recklessly endangering another person. 18 Pa.C.S. §§
    2501(a), 3123(c), 3123(d), 3125(b), 2702(a)(1), 4304(a)(1), and 2705,
    respectively; see Bills of Information, 5/31/17, 1-2.
    -2-
    J-S36045-22
    On February 5, 2021, Appellant filed a pro se PCRA petition styled as a
    petition for reconsideration of sentence nunc pro tunc.3 With respect to his
    failure to earlier seek reconsideration of his sentence, he asserted: “[B]y the
    time I have knowledge of appeal rights COVID pandemic kept me from [the]
    law library.”    Pro Se PCRA Petition, 2/5/21, attached supplemental page.
    Months later, before any responsive pleadings or orders were filed, Appellant
    filed a praecipe to discontinue that action.        Praecipe to Discontinue
    (Reconsideration Withdrawal), 7/16/21, 1.
    On August 30, 2021, Appellant filed a pro se second PCRA petition.
    Relevant to the timeliness issue presented in this appeal, Appellant asserted
    governmental interference with the presentation of his claims due to
    ____________________________________________
    3 Our Court has held that any petition filed after a petitioner’s judgment of
    sentence become final will be treated as a PCRA petition where the petition
    raises issues with respect to remedies offered under the PCRA. See, e.g.,
    Commonwealth v. Jackson, 
    30 A.3d 516
    , 521 (Pa. Super. 2011) (treating
    Jackson’s “motion to correct illegal sentence,” that was filed more than twenty
    years after sentencing, as a PCRA petition), compare with Commonwealth
    v. Wrecks, 
    934 A.2d 1287
    , 1289 (Pa. Super. 2007) (holding that any filing
    which requests relief outside the PCRA will not be treated as a PCRA petition).
    Because Appellant’s “petition for reconsideration of sentence nunc pro tunc”
    alluded to ineffective assistance of counsel as contributing to Appellant’s
    failure to seek reconsideration of his sentence, and ineffective assistance of
    counsel claims are cognizable under the PCRA, the petition filed by Appellant
    on February 5, 2021, would have to be treated as a PCRA petition. See
    Commonwealth v. Deaner, 
    779 A.2d 578
    , 580 (Pa. Super. 2001) (“[A]ny
    collateral petition raising issues with respect to remedies offered under the
    PCRA will be considered a PCRA petition.”) (citations omitted); 42 Pa.C.S. §
    9543(a)(2)(iii) (listing ineffective assistance of counsel claims as cognizable
    under the PCRA); see also Pro Se PCRA Petition, 2/5/21, 1 (“… and my
    attorneys were incompetent.”).
    -3-
    J-S36045-22
    ineffective assistance of counsel (“Attorneys did bare min. to explain anything
    to me and I was not capable to make decisions.”), and that information
    concerning “appeals and laws” were previously unknown facts to him (“Failure
    of being able to ask about the appeals & laws due to Covid lockdown, had no
    access to case laws, attorneys never explained anything to me”).        Pro Se
    Second PCRA Petition, 8/30/21, § 5(i)-(ii).
    With the assistance of present counsel, Appellant filed an amended
    PCRA petition.4     The petition raised baldly-asserted claims challenging the
    voluntariness of Appellant’s plea and the effectiveness of his plea counsel.
    Amended Second PCRA Petition, 12/8/21, ¶ 11(a)-(d). It was silent as to the
    timeliness of the petition or the applicability of exceptions to the PCRA’s
    jurisdictional time-bar.
    The PCRA court issued notice of its intent to dismiss without a hearing
    pursuant to Pa.R.Crim.P. 907 because the petition was untimely and the court
    lacked jurisdiction where Appellant “ha[d] failed to allege and prove any
    exceptions to the strict time requirements set forth in [42 Pa.C.S.] § 9545.”
    Rule 907 Notice, 12/17/21, 1. In a counseled response, Appellant asserted
    that prison restrictions in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, his mental
    ____________________________________________
    4  Appellant was appointed counsel for collateral review but that attorney
    sought and was granted leave to withdraw from representation after Appellant
    retained present counsel.    Appointment Order, 9/13/21, 1; Motion to
    Withdrawal as Counsel, 11/23/21, 1-2; Counsel Withdrawal Order, 11/24/21,
    1.
    -4-
    J-S36045-22
    state, and his lack of awareness concerning court filings and the right to
    counsel prevented him from filing a timely PCRA petition:
    Immediately after sentencing, the petitioner was transferred and
    housed at SCI Greene where is presently housed. He was not
    permitted any calls and/or visits for the first 15 days. He then
    was subsequently transferred to SCI Camp Hill where he was
    placed in the [“]hole[”] (A form of restricted housing with little, if
    any, privileges, i.e., law library, school etc.). It took several
    months for his legal mail from the Butler County Public Defender
    to catch up to him while the one-year period to file his PCRA was
    ticking away. Additionally, as a result of the Covid Pandemic, the
    petitioner’s access to information was extremely limited.
    Moreover, according to [Appellant], inmates were no[t] permitted
    out of their cells so they could not take advantage of the prison
    legal clinic, go to the prison library and/or have access to jailhouse
    lawyers to work on their cases.
    [Appellant] reports that he has, and continues to suffer, from
    mental illness, including but not limited to, ADHD-[Bi-polar]
    disease. For this condition, he has been treated at the Irene
    Staisey Health Center. He has a tenth[-]grade education, having
    dropped out of school.
    [Appellant] eventually received the PCRA form from the law
    library, but with his limited IQ, he couldn’t understand the
    directions. As a result, he sought help in filing a PCRA claim from
    jailhouse lawyers. He had no lawyer at that time, either public or
    private and the time limit kept running. He finally got his papers
    back from the jailhouse lawyer who was reviewing his case. He
    had never filed any court papers before and was not familiar with
    legal forms and paperwork. Therefore, he sent them to his
    grandmother … to file with the court, which she did. But by that
    point, time had expired.
    It should be noted that from the record, it appears that [Appellant]
    never timely requested that the court appoint counsel to
    prosecute this PCRA. It could be that [Appellant] did not possess
    the acumen to know that he had that right.
    -5-
    J-S36045-22
    Response to Rule 907 Notice, 2/24/22, 1-2. The PCRA court dismissed the
    petition. Dismissal Order, 3/11/22, 1. Appellant timely filed a notice of appeal
    and a concise statement of matters complained of on appeal pursuant to
    Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b).5        Notice of Appeal, 4/6/22, 1; Rule 1925(b) Order,
    4/19/22, 1; Rule 1925(b) Statement, 5/4/22, 1.
    Appellant presents the following question for our review: “Did the lower
    court commit reversible error when it dismissed the PCRA petition without a
    hearing where there was clear and convincing evidence of government
    interference which caused the PCRA petit[i]on to be filed out of time?”
    Appellant’s Brief at 4 (original entirely capitalized).
    Appellant claims that the PCRA court erred by denying him an
    evidentiary hearing on his claim for an exception to the PCRA’s jurisdictional
    time-bar based on prison restrictions that were put in place during the Covid-
    19 pandemic. Appellant’s Brief at 7-10. He additionally asserts that his guilty
    plea was coerced by his former counsel and that counsel provided ineffective
    assistance by failing to advise him to reject the plea offer, failing to investigate
    ____________________________________________
    5 The notice of appeal identifies the PCRA court’s dismissal order as dated
    March 9, 2022, however the date of that order should be considered March
    11, 2022, which is when it was entered on the trial court’s docket and mailed
    to counsel. See Pa.R.A.P. 108(a)(1) (“in computing any period of time under
    these rules involving the date of entry of an order by a court …, the day of
    entry shall be the day the clerk of court … mails or delivers copies of the order
    to the parties”); Commonwealth v. Shamberger, 
    788 A.2d 408
    , 410 n.2
    (Pa. Super. 2001) (en banc) (correcting caption to reflect that an appeal
    properly lies from the entry of a final order, which in that case was a judgment
    of sentence). We have corrected the caption for this appeal to properly list
    March 11, 2022, as the date of the order appealed from.
    -6-
    J-S36045-22
    the DNA evidence in this case, failing to seek a change of venue, failing to
    earlier seek a withdrawal from representation of Appellant, and failing to
    explain the sentencing exposure to Appellant. Id. at 11-12.
    As for the time-bar exception claim, Appellant asserts that the efforts of
    prison officials to enforce lockdown restrictions during the Covid-19 pandemic
    constituted governmental interference that prevented him from timely filing
    his PCRA petition. Appellant’s Brief at 12-13. He alleges that the restrictions
    prevented him and other inmates from going to their prison facility’s law clinic,
    meeting with “jail house lawyers,” and timely receiving their legal mail. Id.
    In the absence of an evidentiary hearing, Appellant argues that the PCRA court
    was required to accept his claim that governmental interference prevented
    him from timely filing a PCRA petition:
    The court is required to accept all that is in the petition as true.
    That means in this case, the filing of the petition was definitely
    [a]ffected by Covid, he did not have access to the courts and didn’t
    know he was entitled to have an appointed lawyer[.] That is the
    reason for the delay and if those facts and reasoning are accepted
    as true then he is entitled to relief.
    Id. at 17.
    Our standard of review of the denial of a PCRA petition is limited to
    examining whether the record supports the PCRA court’s determination and
    whether that determination is free of legal error.         Commonwealth v.
    Lowman, 
    278 A.3d 361
    , 363-64 (Pa. Super. 2022).             All PCRA petitions,
    “including a second or subsequent petition, shall be filed within one year of
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    the date the judgment becomes final” unless an exception to timeliness
    applies. 42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(1). “[T]he PCRA’s timeliness requirements are
    jurisdictional in nature, and where a PCRA petition is filed untimely, courts
    lack   jurisdiction   to   address   the    substantive   claims   raised   therein.”
    Commonwealth v. Cobbs, 
    256 A.3d 1192
    , 1207 (Pa. 2021).                       As the
    timeliness issue is separate and distinct from the merits of Appellant’s
    underlying plea inducement and ineffective assistance of counsel claims, we
    must first determine whether this PCRA petition is timely filed and, if it is
    untimely, whether an exception to the PCRA’s jurisdictional time-bar applies.
    Commonwealth v. Stokes, 
    959 A.2d 306
    , 310 (Pa. 2008); see also
    Commonwealth v. Gamboa-Taylor, 
    753 A.2d 780
    , 785 (Pa. 2000) (claim
    of ineffective assistance of counsel does not save an otherwise untimely
    petition for review on the merits).
    Here, Appellant concedes that the petition at issue was untimely filed.
    Appellant’s Brief at 4a (“a pro se PCRA [p]etition was untimely filed in the
    lower court”). His judgments of sentence became final on February 5, 2020,
    thirty days after the imposition of his sentence on January 6, 2020, where he
    did not file any post-sentence motions and did not seek direct review in this
    Court. 42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(3) (“For purposes of th[e PCRA], a judgment
    becomes final at the conclusion of direct review…”); Pa.R.Crim.P. 720(A)(3)
    (where a defendant does not file a post-sentence motion, a notice of appeal
    shall be filed within thirty days of the imposition of sentence). He thus had
    one year from the time his judgments of sentence became final, until February
    -8-
    J-S36045-22
    5, 2021, to file a timely PCRA petition.6 42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(1). The instant
    petition was filed on August 30, 2021.
    Given the untimeliness of the petition, it was Appellant’s “burden to
    allege     and   prove    that   one    of     the   timeliness   exceptions   applies.”
    Commonwealth v. Albrecht, 
    994 A.2d 1091
    , 1094 (Pa. 2010) (citations
    omitted and some formatting altered). Moreover, to invoke one of the three
    exceptions, which are found at 42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(1)(i)-(iii), he needed to
    file his petition “within one year of the date the claim could have been
    presented.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(2).
    Here, Appellant argues that he met his burden for pleading the
    governmental interference exception at 42 Pa.C.S. § 9545(b)(1)(i), and the
    PCRA court should have granted him an evidentiary hearing. Appellant’s Brief
    at 7-10. To plead and prove the applicability of that exception, he needed to
    show that “the failure to raise [his substantive claims] was the result of
    interference by government officials.” Id. at § 9545(b)(1)(i) (for an exception
    to the PCRA’s time-bar, a petition must allege and prove, among other things,
    ____________________________________________
    6  Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, our Supreme Court entered a series of
    administrative orders extending court filing deadlines. In particular, the
    Supreme Court filed an emergency order which specified that “legal papers or
    pleadings … which are required to be filed between March 19, 2020 and May
    8, 2020, generally SHALL BE DEEMED to have been filed timely if they are
    filed by the close of business on May 11, 2020.” In re General Statewide
    Judicial Emergency, 
    230 A.3d 1015
    , 1017 (Pa., filed Apr. 28, 2020) (per
    curiam). Those orders had no bearing on the deadline for Appellant’s PCRA
    petition as the deadline was well beyond the cessation of the statewide judicial
    emergency. In re General Statewide Judicial Emergency, 
    234 A.3d 408
    (Pa., filed May 27, 2020) (declaring a cessation of the statewide judicial
    emergency on June 1, 2020).
    -9-
    J-S36045-22
    that “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”). We have stated that to make a successful claim under this
    exception, an appellant must show a “violation of his rights under
    constitutional or state law.” Commonwealth v. Rizvi, 
    166 A.3d 344
    , 348
    (Pa. Super. 2017); see also Commonwealth v. Bankhead, 
    217 A.3d 1245
    ,
    1248 (Pa. Super. 2019) (“without an assertion of illegality on the part of
    government officers, restrictions on access to prison resources does not
    qualify a petition for the governmental interference exception”).
    Appellant made no time-bar arguments in his amended PCRA petition.
    In his earlier pro se petition, Appellant addressed the “[f]ailure being able to
    ask about the appeals [and] laws due to [the] Covid lockdown.” Pro Se Second
    PCRA Petition, 8/30/21, § 5(ii). In his counseled response to the PCRA court’s
    dismissal notice, he referred to an unspecified period of restricted housing
    while at SCI-Greene, during which he had “little, if any privileges, i.e., law
    library, school[,] etc.,” a delay of several months for his legal mail from the
    Butler County Public Defender to arrive to him during the time-period for filing
    a timely PCRA petition, and an “extremely limited” access to information
    during the Covid pandemic which did not allow him to “take advantage of the
    prison legal clinic, go to the prison library and/or have access to jailhouse
    lawyers.” Response to Rule 907 Notice, 2/24/22, 1-2. He acknowledged that
    he “eventually received the PCRA form from the law library, but with his
    - 10 -
    J-S36045-22
    limited IQ, he couldn’t understand the directions.” Id. at 2. Then, he had a
    “jailhouse lawyer” review his case, and sent a filing to his grandmother who
    did not file it until “time had expired.” Id. We find these arguments fell short
    of proving governmental interference for purposes of the PCRA’s time-bar.
    While Appellant’s claim suggests that limited access to library resources
    and his restricted housing status frustrated any efforts to understand and
    invoke his rights to pursue collateral review, he does not allege that the
    Department of Corrections administered its library or housing policies in
    violation of his rights under constitutional or state law as required to prove
    governmental interference. We previously addressed a similar claim in Rizvi.
    In that case, the defendant contended that limited library resources and a
    restricted housing status while in a Virginia correctional facility constituted
    governmental interference.    Rizvi, 
    166 A.3d at 348
    .     In denying relief on
    Rizvi’s claim, we relied on our Supreme Court’s decision in Commonwealth
    v. Albrecht, 
    994 A.2d 1091
    , 1095 (Pa. 2010), where a defendant was
    claiming that the restricted status of capital inmates constituted governmental
    interference because that status limited the ability of such inmates to prepare
    pro se PCRA petitions. Albrecht, 994 A.2d at 1095; Rizvi, 
    166 A.3d at 348
    .
    In both cases, this Court and our Supreme Court held that a successful
    governmental interference time-bar claim based on restrictive prison
    conditions required the showing that the conditions were illegal because they
    constituted a violation of rights “under constitutional or state law.” Albrecht,
    994 A.2d at 1095; Rizvi, 
    166 A.3d at 348
    .         Because Appellant, like the
    - 11 -
    J-S36045-22
    defendants in Rizvi and Albrecht, failed to show that the conditions of his
    incarceration were illegal during the Covid-19 pandemic, we must reject his
    governmental interference claim based on his limited law library access and
    restrictive housing during the pandemic.
    In any event, the notion that Appellant failed to timely file a PCRA
    petition because of prison restrictions on library access and housing
    quarantines during the Covid-19 pandemic is ultimately belied by the fact that
    Appellant filed an initial, timely PCRA petition on the last day for doing so. He
    crafted it as a post-sentence motion nunc pro tunc and withdrew it before any
    court action was taken on it, but the existence of that filing disproves
    Appellant’s general assertions that he was completely deprived of the ability
    to pursue a timely PCRA petition due to pandemic-related prison restrictions.
    Because Appellant failed to sufficiently plead his          governmental
    interference time-bar claim and it was otherwise contradicted by his earlier
    filing of a timely PCRA petition, there was no jurisdiction to proceed with
    substantive review of his claims challenging the effectiveness of his plea
    counsel and his related claims that his plea was coerced. 7
    ____________________________________________
    7 While we have not addressed a similar governmental interference claim
    concerning the pandemic-related restrictions in our published opinions, this
    merits holding aligns with multiple unpublished memorandum opinions from
    this Court that we cite below for their persuasive value pursuant to Pa.R.A.P.
    126(b)(2). Accord Commonwealth v. Miller, 
    2023 WL 2489952
    , *6 (Pa.
    Super., filed Mar. 14, 2023) (unpublished memorandum cited for persuasive
    value) (“allegations of restrictions on access to law libraries or legal resources
    which do not completely prevent an inmate from preparing legal filings, do
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
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    J-S36045-22
    Perhaps sensing our conclusion that the pleading burden for the
    governmental interference time-bar exception had not been met below,
    Appellant asks, “Would tolling not be permitted if the courts were closed due
    to natural disaster?” Appellant’s Brief at 9. He then asserts that “states of
    emergency should not count against any legal time limits, jurisdictional or
    otherwise.” Id. at 10. We are unable to entertain that argument because the
    period for filing a PCRA petition “is not subject to the doctrine of equitable
    tolling, save to the extent the doctrine is embraced by § 9545(b)(1)(i)-(iii),”
    and “a court has no authority to extend filing periods except as the [PCRA’s
    time-limitation] statute permits.” Commonwealth v. Fahy, 
    737 A.2d 214
    ,
    222 (Pa. 1999).
    To the extent that Appellant argues that the PCRA court erred by not
    granting him an evidentiary hearing to develop his governmental interference
    claim, we find, based on our review of the PCRA filings, that there was no
    ____________________________________________
    not satisfy the governmental interference exception”); Commonwealth v.
    Lee, 
    2023 WL 19249
    , *3-4 (Pa. Super., filed Jan. 3, 2023) (unpublished
    memorandum cited for persuasive value) (defendant failed to prove
    governmental interference based on pandemic-related restrictions on access
    to prison library where, inter alia, he failed to argue that the conditions of his
    incarceration were illegal); Commonwealth v. Cruz, 
    2022 WL 17687850
    , *3
    & n.7 (Pa. Super., filed Dec. 15, 2022) (unpublished memorandum cited for
    persuasive value) (“even by his own representations, any restrictions in
    accessing the law library were limited in time, and certainly did not prevent
    him from timely filing his PCRA petition”); Commonwealth v. Tierno, 
    2022 WL 1154678
    , *3 (Pa. Super., filed Apr. 19, 2022) (unpublished memorandum
    cited for persuasive value) (defendant failed to plead and prove the
    governmental interference exception based on Covid-19 pandemic prison
    restrictions where he did not establish that “any purported quarantines in
    prison or the fact that he had Covid affected his ability to file a timely brief”).
    - 13 -
    J-S36045-22
    apparent genuine issue of material fact for the time-bar claim that would have
    been resolved by an evidentiary hearing and thus the denial of a hearing was
    appropriate under Pa.R.Crim.P. 907(a)(1). On appeal, Appellant alleges that
    a hearing would have advanced his time-bar claim as follows: “If the petitioner
    was granted a hearing, he could call the prison officials to testify regarding
    the effect of the pandemic on the operation of the prison. Petitioner could
    have also called court officials to testify about the closing of the courts due to
    the pandemic.” Appellant’s Brief at 10. In his filings below, however, he made
    no proffers concerning how he would develop his governmental interference
    claim through a hearing.
    In his pro se petition, Appellant identified two possible witnesses for an
    evidentiary hearing but made no suggestion that those witnesses would
    provide any information to advance a claim for the application of a time-bar
    exception. Pro Se Second PCRA Petition, 8/30/21, § 13. He suggested that
    one witness would testify to the presence of other persons present with the
    victim on the day of the murder and that another would provide a hearsay
    statement of a now-deceased third-party who supposedly expressed a feeling
    of blame for having some type of involvement with the victim’s death. Id. at
    § 13 and attached witness statement, 9/11/20, 1.              In his amended PCRA
    petition and his response to the PCRA court’s Rule 907 dismissal notice, he
    offered no discussion of the usefulness of a hearing to advance his
    governmental    interference   claim    and     failed   to   proffer   any   witness
    certifications. In the latter filing, Appellant expressed a desire for a hearing
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    but did not address the need for a hearing as follows: “The [PCRA] court did
    not look into the legitimacy of [Appellant’s] reasons for not meeting the one-
    year deadline. If it had done so, the court might have made allowances for
    the lapse in time and awarded [him] an evidentiary hearing.” Response to
    Rule 907 Notice, 2/24/22, 5-6.
    “It is the responsibility of the reviewing court on appeal to examine each
    issue raised in the PCRA petition in light of the record certified before it in
    order to determine if the PCRA court erred in its determination that there were
    no genuine issues of material fact in controversy and in denying relief without
    conducting an evidentiary hearing.” Commonwealth v. Grayson, 
    212 A.3d 1047
    , 1054 (Pa. Super. 2019) (citation omitted). In this instance, we find no
    error with respect to the denial of an evidentiary hearing. Unless and until
    Appellant proved the applicability of time-bar exception, a hypothetical
    hearing would have been relevant only for the purposes of showing that one
    of the time-bar exceptions applied. No hearing would have been necessary
    because, as we addressed supra, Appellant’s governmental interference claim
    was insufficiently pleaded where Appellant did not allege, must less offer to
    prove, that the pandemic-related prison restrictions were illegal. See, e.g.,
    Commonwealth v. Howard, 
    285 A.3d 652
    , 672 (Pa. Super. 2022) (“Because
    we conclude that Appellant cannot possibly satisfy [a time-bar exception]
    based on the admissions and recommendations he cited …, we ascertain no
    need to remand for an evidentiary hearing.”).      Because Appellant failed to
    adequately develop his governmental interference claim and otherwise failed
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    to proffer any basis for concluding that a hearing would have been useful for
    the purpose of proving that claim, we conclude that the PCRA court properly
    dismissed Appellant’s petition without a hearing.     See Commonwealth v.
    Williams, 
    244 A.3d 1281
    , 1287 (Pa. Super. 2021) (“It is within the PCRA
    court’s discretion to decline to hold a hearing if the petitioner’s claim is
    patently frivolous and has support either in the record or other evidence.”)
    (citation omitted).
    In conclusion, Appellant failed to plead, much less prove, that his prison
    conditions during the Covid-19 pandemic were illegal and, as a result, he could
    not prove that the PCRA time-bar exception for governmental interference
    applied to permit review of his substantive claims. In any event, his argument
    for the application of that exception was contradicted by his filing of a prior
    timely PCRA petition.       The PCRA court also acted within its discretion by
    dismissing his petition without a hearing where the governmental interference
    claim was inadequately developed and Appellant made no efforts to show that
    a hearing would have advanced his time-bar exception claim. Therefore, we
    affirm the PCRA court’s dismissal of the petition.8
    ____________________________________________
    8 In its Rule 1925(a) opinion, the PCRA court advises us that it did not find
    that Appellant alleged and proved the applicability of any of PCRA’s time-bar
    exceptions. PCRA Court Opinion, 6/2/22, 2. The court then proceeds to
    remark that Appellant’s counseled petition asserted that prior counsel was
    ineffective for various reasons and that the governmental interference time-
    bar exception did not apply to the actions of defense counsel. 
    Id.
     As noted
    above, we appreciate that Appellant addressed the issue of prison restrictions
    related to the Covid-19 pandemic in his pro se petition and then developed
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
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    J-S36045-22
    Order affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 4/21/2023
    ____________________________________________
    his governmental interference argument concerning those restrictions in his
    response to the PCRA court’s dismissal notice. As we distinguish that
    Appellant’s governmental interference claim was not based on the actions of
    his plea counsel, we affirm on grounds not addressed in the PCRA court’s
    opinion. See Howard, 285 A.3d at 657 (this Court “may affirm a PCRA court’s
    order on any legal basis”).
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