People v. Alvarado-Morales

2025 IL App (1st) 240134-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 23, 2025
Docket1-24-0134
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 IL App (1st) 240134-U (People v. Alvarado-Morales) 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. Alvarado-Morales, 2025 IL App (1st) 240134-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

2025 IL App (1st) 240134-U

FIFTH DIVISION December 23, 2025

No. 1-24-0134

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County. ) v. ) No. 19 CR 017251 ) AMADO ALVARADO-MORALES, ) Honorable ) James Novy, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE MIKVA delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Mitchell and Justice Tailor concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: Defendant’s convictions for predatory criminal sexual assault of a child are affirmed. The evidence was sufficient to prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, and the pattern jury instructions used by the court did not violate his right to a unanimous verdict.

¶2 Following a jury trial, defendant Amado Alvarado-Morales was found guilty on two counts

of predatory criminal sexual assault of a child (720 ILCS 5/11-1.40(a)(1) (West 2018)) and

sentenced to 28 years in prison. On direct appeal from those convictions, Mr. Alvarado-Morales

argues that (1) the State failed to prove his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt and (2) the pattern jury

instructions used at trial violated his sixth amendment right to a unanimous verdict because they No. 1-24-0134

did not require the jurors to agree that a specific instance of alleged sexual conduct underlay each

of the charged offenses. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 The State charged Mr. Alvarado-Morales with four counts of predatory criminal sexual

assault of a child (720 ILCS 5/11-1.40(a)(1) (West 2018)) and four counts of aggravated criminal

sexual abuse (id. § 11-1.60(c)(1)(i)), for acts he was alleged to have committed with his

stepdaughter, C.R., when she was between 10 and 12 years old.

¶5 In each of the four counts of predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, the State alleged

that Mr. Alvarado-Morales, being over the age of 17, had knowingly committed an act of sexual

penetration or contact with C.R. between November 1, 2016, and October 31, 2019, when she was

under the age of 13. Count 1 alleged penetration consisting of contact between Mr. Alvarado-

Morales’s penis and C.R.’s anus, counts 2 and 3 alleged separate instances of penetration

consisting of contact between his penis and C.R.’s sex organ, and count 4 alleged contact, for

purposes of sexual gratification or arousal, between Mr. Alvarado-Morales’s penis and C.R.’s

hand. The State nol prossed the aggravated criminal sexual abuse charges just before trial.

¶6 A. Pretrial Matters

¶7 Following a hearing, the court ruled that the State could introduce the video recording of

an interview C.R. completed on October 25, 2019, with a forensic interviewer employed by the

Chicago Children’s Advocacy Center (CCAC). The State ultimately did not publish the videotaped

interview to the jury, but defense counsel played portions of it, noted below, during its cross-

examination of C.R.

¶8 B. The Evidence at Trial

¶9 1. C.R.

¶ 10 C.R., who was 17 years old at the time of the December 4, 2023, trial, testified that she

2 No. 1-24-0134

lived with her mother and three younger siblings. In November 2016, Mr. Alvarado-Morales,

whom C.R. identified in court, also lived with them and helped pay for the family’s food and rent.

He and C.R.’s mother had been in a romantic relationship since C.R. was born, he had lived with

them her whole life, and she called him “Dad.”

¶ 11 C.R. testified that she was sexually abused by Mr. Alvarado-Morales beginning when she

was approximately ten years old. This consisted, she said, of “penetration of his penis,” and

“inappropriate touching.” When asked when the penetration with his penis occurred, C.R. said,

“Since I was 11 to 12, I believe, in our house.” C.R. explained that, when her mother was either

working a night shift or was inside watching television with C.R.’s siblings, Mr. Alvarado-Morales

would take C.R. to the back porch and tell her to pull her pants down. Mr. Alvarado-Morales would

pull his pants down too and would penetrate her anus with his penis. This happened “at least 8 to

10 times.” He also penetrated her vagina with his penis, but that took place in the bedroom that

C.R. shared with her sister. Mr. Alvarado-Morales told C.R., “Don’t tell anyone or else I’ll go to

jail” and “[n]either your siblings or you won’t have me anymore.”

¶ 12 C.R. testified that the encounters on the back porch generally took place after Mr.

Alvarado-Morales took her with him to the gym: “We would go to the gym, work out. Then

afterwards he would tell me, you know what’s going to happen after this. Then we would go to the

porch. He would force me.” On one occasion she tried to escape and run from him, but Mr.

Alvarado-Morales caught her and “forcefully had sex with [her] in the porch.” C.R. testified that

each instance lasted from two to five minutes, that the penetration was painful, and that Mr.

Alvarado-Morales had once also made her touch his penis in the car before they went to the gym.

¶ 13 In October 2019, C.R. told her mother what had occurred because she thought she was

pregnant. They went to the police, where C.R. and her mother, who only speaks Spanish, were

interviewed for 8-10 minutes by a bilingual female detective. They also went to the hospital, where

3 No. 1-24-0134

they learned C.R. was not pregnant, and where she told the doctor who examined her what had

happened. On October 25, 2019, C.R. was interviewed, alone, for approximately 45 minutes by a

female forensic interviewer with the CCAC, whom she told what had happened “in more detail.”

¶ 14 Early in C.R.’s testimony, defense counsel objected, arguing that Mr. Alvarado-Morales

was charged with three specific acts of penetration and that allowing the State to elicit testimony

that “this happened countless times” improperly introduced other crimes evidence. The State

disagreed, pointing out that the indictment and discovery it had tendered made clear it was alleging

10-15 incidents occurring over a period of approximately two years. The State said it would

attempt to elicit details about when and where those acts occurred, but C.R. unlikely to be able to

say that they took place “on this date and at this time.” The trial court overruled the objection.

¶ 15 On cross-examination, C.R. acknowledged that, when she made her initial outcry, her

mother was in an advanced state of pregnancy with her little brother, who was Mr. Alvarado-

Morales’s child. Her mother and Mr. Alvarado-Morales had just broken up, and he had moved out

of the family home. She also confirmed on cross examination that the incidents of sexual contact

with Mr. Alvarado-Morales sometimes occurred on the porch when other people were inside the

house, and sometimes in her bed, while her younger sister was in another bed in the same room.

¶ 16 When asked whether she told the CCAC interviewer that the penetration did not hurt, C.R.

said she could not remember. Counsel then showed C.R.

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2025 IL App (1st) 240134-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-alvarado-morales-illappct-2025.