People v. Adamson

2025 IL App (5th) 230040-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 18, 2025
Docket5-23-0040
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 IL App (5th) 230040-U (People v. Adamson) 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. Adamson, 2025 IL App (5th) 230040-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

NOTICE 2025 IL App (5th) 230040-U NOTICE Decision filed 08/18/25. The This order was filed under text of this decision may be NO. 5-23-0040 Supreme Court Rule 23 and is changed or corrected prior to the filing of a Petition for not precedent except in the

Rehearing or the disposition of IN THE limited circumstances allowed the same. under Rule 23(e)(1). APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIFTH DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Coles County. ) v. ) No. 16-CF-242 ) SHAWN D. ADAMSON, ) Honorable ) Mark E. Bovard, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE BARBERIS delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice McHaney ∗ and Justice Sholar concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: We affirm defendant’s first degree murder conviction and sentence where (1) Illinois’s proximate cause theory of felony murder was not unconstitutional as applied to him, (2) the trial court applied the correct version of the felony murder statute, (3) defense counsel was not ineffective, (4) the court properly denied his posttrial Brady claim, and (5) defendant’s sentence does not violate Illinois’s proportionate penalties clause as applied to him.

¶2 Following a jury trial in the Coles County circuit court, defendant, Shawn D. Adamson,

was convicted of two counts of first degree murder (720 ILCS 5/9-1(a)(3) (West 2016)), one count

of attempted armed robbery (id. §§ 8-4(a), 18-2), one count of conspiracy to commit armed

robbery (id. §§ 8-2(a), 18-2), and one count of unlawful possession of a weapon by a felon (id.

∗ Justice Welch participated in oral argument. Presiding Justice McHaney was later substituted on the panel and has read the briefs and listened to the recording of oral argument. 1 § 24-1.1(a)). Defendant appealed, and the Fourth District affirmed defendant’s conviction and

sentence for unlawful possession of a weapon by a felon but reversed and remanded the cause for

a new trial on the remaining counts. People v. Adamson, 2020 IL App (4th) 180631-U, ¶ 113.

¶3 Following a new trial on remand, defendant was convicted of two counts of first degree

murder, one count of attempted armed robbery, and one count of conspiracy to commit armed

robbery. The trial court sentenced defendant to 48 years in prison, including 28 years for first

degree murder and a 20-year firearm enhancement. Defendant appeals, arguing that (1) Illinois’s

proximate cause theory of liability is unconstitutional as applied to him, (2) the amended first

degree murder statute should have applied to abate his prosecution, (3) he received ineffective

assistance of counsel, (4) the State violated its obligation to disclose favorable defense evidence

as required by Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), and (5) his de facto life sentence violates

Illinois’s proportionate penalties clause. For the following reasons, we affirm.

¶4 I. Background

¶5 A full recitation of the facts relating to defendant’s first jury trial was set forth in the Fourth

District’s decision in Adamson, 2020 IL App (4th) 180631-U. We recite only those facts necessary

to our resolution of the instant appeal, which stems from defendant’s second jury trial in September

2021. We recite additional facts in the analysis section as necessary to address defendant’s specific

arguments on appeal.

¶6 Both of defendant’s jury trials stemmed from an incident that occurred in Mattoon, Illinois,

on or about June 18, 2016. On that date, defendant traveled with Matthew Cook and Kevin Johnson

to the apartment of Dion Dixon. James Todd Shafer was at Dixon’s apartment with his girlfriend,

Ciara Faires. Faires was on the porch area of the apartment when defendant, armed with a gun,

arrived with Cook and Johnson. Shortly after defendant arrived, defendant fired a shot and Shafer

2 fired shots from inside the apartment towards the porch area of the apartment, hitting Faires in the

chest. Faires later died from her injuries.

¶7 The second jury trial involved charges against defendant for first degree murder, attempted

robbery, and conspiracy to commit armed robbery. In support of the first degree murder charges,

the State alleged that defendant, without lawful justification, while attempting to commit the

forcible felonies of armed robbery and mob action, proximately caused the death of Faires. In

support of the attempted armed robbery charge, the State alleged that defendant, with the intent to

commit the offense of armed robbery, performed a substantial step toward the commission of that

offense, where he traveled to Dixon’s apartment with Cook and Johnson to take property by force

from another person while armed with a firearm. In support of the conspiracy to commit armed

robbery charge, the State alleged that defendant, with the intent to commit armed robbery, agreed

with Cook and Johnson to the commission of that offense, and performed an act in furtherance of

that agreement while armed with a firearm.

¶8 Prior to defendant’s second jury trial, defendant moved to dismiss the first degree murder

charges based on the legislature’s July 1, 2021, amendment to Illinois’s felony murder statute.

Defendant alleged that the felony murder statute was amended from “he or she is attempting or

committing a forcible felony other than second degree murder” to “he or she, acting alone or with

one or more participants, commits or attempts to commit a forcible felony other than second degree

murder, and in the course of or in furtherance of such crime or flight therefrom, he or another

participant causes the death of a person.” See Pub. Act 101-652 (H.B. 3653) (eff. July 1, 2021).

Defendant claimed the amended felony murder statute should operate to abate the State’s

prosecution of the first degree murder charges against him where Shafer fired the shots that killed

Faires and the State did not assert that defendant and Shafer participated together in an underlying

3 felony. The trial court denied defendant’s motion, finding that the amendment to the statute was

silent on retroactivity and that the law in effect in 2016 applied.

¶9 At trial, several individuals, including Shafer, testified regarding a failed robbery that

occurred on June 16, 2016. The testimony demonstrated that Shafer needed money to travel to

Texas. Shafer and a friend, Brett Magana, went to defendant’s house to borrow guns to rob a man

named Justin Davis. Shafer and Magana obtained two guns and attempted to commit the robbery

but failed. After the failed robbery, Shafer and Magana kept the guns with the intention of

committing additional robberies. The State introduced a statement Magana gave to police

indicating his belief that the guns belonged to defendant.

¶ 10 The testimony demonstrated that, over the course of the next two days, Shafer and Magana

planned additional robberies and avoided defendant and several other individuals who were

attempting to retrieve the guns. The State introduced two Facebook messages from defendant to

Magana, which were sent the afternoon of June 16, 2016. The first message stated:

“Bro, you must lost your mind or will to live. Give it back or there will be no turning back

and that’s on everything I love, kid.

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Bluebook (online)
2025 IL App (5th) 230040-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-adamson-illappct-2025.