People v. Adair

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 10, 2010
Docket1-09-2840 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Adair (People v. Adair) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Adair, (Ill. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

SIXTH DIVISION December 10, 2010

No. 1-09-2840

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County. ) v. ) No. 08 CR 17933 ) EMMERITT ADAIR, ) The Honorable ) Arthur F. Hill, Jr., Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge Presiding.

PRESIDING JUSTICE GARCIA delivered the opinion of the court.

Following a jury trial, the defendant was convicted of two

counts of possession of a controlled substance and sentenced to

seven years' imprisonment. The defendant contends the evidence

was insufficient to prove he possessed at least 15 but less than

200 pills of methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA or ecstacy) and

at least 5 but less than 15 grams of methamphetamine, where the

forensic chemist commingled each pill and powder before testing

for the presence of each controlled substance. The defendant

also challenges the imposition of certain fees and fines,

contending some should be offset by the daily $5 presentencing

custody credit he earned.

We reduce the defendant's convictions to the lowest class

for each offense; the State failed to prove the essential

elements of quantity of MDMA pills and weight of methamphetamine

because the testing method employed by the chemist rendered her No. 1-09-2840

quantity and weight findings speculative. We affirm the

imposition of the $200 DNA analysis fee and the $25 court

services fee, but vacate the $5 court system fee. Based on his

days in presentencing custody, the defendant is entitled to

$1,970 credit against all fines (but not fees) imposed. We

remand for a new sentencing hearing.

BACKGROUND

The defendant was arrested with a bag containing suspected

narcotics in the form of 24 pills and some loose powder according

to the arresting officer. The defendant was indicted on two

counts: one count of possession with intent to deliver more than

15 but less than 200 pills of MDMA, and one count of possession

with intent to deliver at least 5 but less than 15 grams of a

substance containing methamphetamine, based on the crime lab

results. A jury found the defendant not guilty of intent to

deliver, but guilty of possession of each controlled substance in

the quantity and weight charged in the indictment. He was

sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment.

Chicago police officer Thomas Krob testified that on August

29, 2008, at approximately 10:30 p.m., while on patrol in a

marked squad car with his partner, Officer Phil Schulter, he

observed a 1991 blue Buick Regal being driven on Roosevelt Road

in Chicago without headlights. The officers conducted a traffic

stop of the vehicle at a gas station located at Roosevelt and

Independence. Officer Krob approached the driver

2 No. 1-09-2840

Buick. The defendant was behind the steering wheel. When

Officer Krob asked the defendant for his driver

insurance, he replied he had neither. The defendant was told to

exit the vehicle. When he exited, Officer Krob observed a clear

plastic bag containing multicolored pills fall to the ground from

the defendant

it to his partner. The defendant was taken into custody for the

traffic offenses. Officer Krob testified that after being

advised of his Miranda rights, the defendant admitted he paid

$175 for 25 pills near the 5400 block of West Congress. The

defendant told Officer Krob he planned to host a house party with

the pills in Palos Heights.

Officer Schulter inventoried the bag of pills under

inventory number 11415252; the bag was sealed and sent to the

forensic services division of the Illinois State Police. Officer

Schulter testified he never took the pills out of the bag, but

manipulated the pills in the bag to count them. He testified he

counted 24 pills and observed a small amount of powder.

In a motion in limine, defense counsel challenged the

forensic evidence regarding the pills. According to the motion,

the State sought to introduce, as evidence of the controlled

substances, the weight and quantity of untested pills as well as

those tested. Defense counsel argued that to link untested pills

to tested pills, all pills had to be homogeneous. The pills,

however, were of different colors, bearing different markings.

3 No. 1-09-2840

The court denied defense counsel's motion.

Amanda Shanbaum, a forensic scientist with the Illinois

State Police, testified as an expert witness that she analyzed

the pills and powder recovered from the defendant for the

presence of a controlled substance. She received a knotted

plastic bag with inventory number 11415252. She cut the bag open

and placed the contents on a clean plastic weigh dish. She

observed 21 pills, 3 pill fragments, and some powder. Ms.

Shanbaum testified that the bag contained red and orange powder

and pills and fragments of five different colors: three yellow

pills with a "win" imprint; four lavender pills with a logo of a

dancing man; six orange pills with a "win" imprint and two orange

pills shaped like the Superman logo; four red pills with an

unclear imprint, two red pills shaped like the Superman logo and

a red pill chunk; and two chunks of green pills with a red crust.

Ms. Shanbaum testified that all of the pills were soft and

crumbled when touched. She testified that as they crumbled,

powder from all of the pills mixed together. She explained that

all of the pills were touching each other and that they were all

covered in powder. Ms. Shanbaum testified the pills, pill

fragments, and powder collectively weighed 6.3 grams. She

completed a crime lab discrepancy form because the bag contained

21 pills and 3 pill fragments, rather than 24 pills as listed on

the inventory sheet.

Ms. Shanbaum testified she performed four preliminary tests

4 No. 1-09-2840

on the contents of the bag to confirm the presence of a narcotic.

The first three tests indicated the presence of a hallucinogen

and the final test indicated the presence of methamphetamine.

Ms. Shanbaum testified that her next step was to create a

"representative sample" of the contents of the bag upon which to

perform conclusive tests. To get a representative sample, Ms.

Shanbaum poked each pill with a glass tip and added the resulting

powder to a gathering dish, along with some of the powder from

the bag. Ms. Shanbaum testified she believed she tested each

pill because a portion of each pill was crumbled into the

representative sample mix from which she took the smaller testing

sample. She testified she was not able to distinguish the powder

of one pill from the powder of any other.

Ms. Shanbaum next performed a gas chromatography flame

ionization detection test on the representative test sample,

which indicated the presence of methamphetamine and MDMA. She

then performed the gas chromatography mass spectrometry test,

which confirmed that both methamphetamine and MDMA were present

in the representative test sample. Based on the results of these

tests, Ms. Shanbaum opined that the 21 pills, 3 pill fragments,

and powder weighed 6.3 grams and contained MDMA and

methamphetamine.

Following Ms. Shanbaum

Defense counsel moved for a directed finding, contending

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People v. Adair, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-adair-illappct-2010.