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LEHIGH VALLEY WEATHER

Rorrer relief request denied

Lehigh County Court of Common Pleas Judge Anna-Kristie M. Marks was assigned the writ of habeas corpus and Post-Conviction Relief Act petition of convicted killer Patricia Rorrer, following the May 30 recusal of Judge Thomas M. McCaffrey.

McCaffrey was given the case following the denial by Judge Douglas Reichley two days earlier to recuse himself at the request of Rorrer’s attorney, Troy Crichton Esq.

In the same denial of recusal order, however, Reichley stated he and McCaffrey were scheduled to switch judicial assignments as of June 3, and proceedings would be handled by McCaffrey after that date. That was not to be, as McCaffrey recused himself four days earlier.

Rorrer was convicted of killing Joanne Katrinak and her infant son, Alex, who lived in Catasauqua before their deaths.

The pair were reported missing by husband and father, Andrew Katrinak, Dec. 15, 1994. Andrew Katrinak was also Rorrer’s former boyfriend.

The remains of the mother and son were found by a farmer on Palm Sunday 1995 in a wooded area of Heidelberg Township.

The key question in the habeas corpus hearing Nov. 6, 2023, before Reichley was: Did the original prosecution withhold exculpatory evidence from Rorrer’s then-defense team, Attorneys James Burke and James Pfeiffer?

Marks, who denied Rorrer’s request for post-conviction relief June 17, however, gave her a little wriggle room - 20 days before she issues her final order - for any claims she wants the court to consider, such as: Was Crichton ineffective in his PCRA representation?

Marks’ order states in part, “This is the Defendant’s fifth Post- Conviction Relief Act petition following finality of judgment July 10, 2000, and that the petition will [only] be entertained [if] a strong prima facie showing is offered to demonstrate that a miscarriage of justice may have occurred.

“It further appearing that the defendant has failed to establish a prima fade showing that the proceedings, which resulted in her conviction, were so unfair that a miscarriage of justice occurred, which no civilized society could tolerate, or that she was innocent of the crimes for which she was charged, and it further appearing that the defendant is attempting to relitigate the claims decided.”

PRESS FILE PHOTO Patricia Rorrer is escorted out the courtroom of former District Justice Edward Hartman by Pennsylvania State Trooper Robert Egan June 27, 1997, following her arraignment on murder charges.