People v. Ayala - Corrected on 12/8/08

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 4, 2008
Docket1-07-0782 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Ayala - Corrected on 12/8/08 (People v. Ayala - Corrected on 12/8/08) 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. Ayala - Corrected on 12/8/08, (Ill. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION December 4, 2008

No. 1-07-0782

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County. ) v. ) No. 04 CR 15587 ) RAFAEL AYALA, ) Honorable ) Bertina E. Lampkin, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge Presiding.

PRESIDING JUSTICE O'BRIEN delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendant, Rafael Ayala, appeals his conviction after a bench trial of first degree murder

and his sentence of 27 years’ imprisonment. On appeal, defendant contends: (1) his trial counsel

provided ineffective assistance by failing to file a motion to suppress his statements; and (2) his

sentence of 27 years’ imprisonment is excessive. We affirm.

Defendant was charged with two counts of first degree murder in the death of victim,

Irma Cerritos (Irma). At defendant’s bench trial, Officer Louis Martinez testified that on June 14,

2004, at approximately 4:40 a.m., he and his partner were dispatched to the Patio Motel at 6220

N. Lincoln Avenue in Chicago, Illinois. When they arrived, Officer Martinez was met by

defendant, who was descending the stairs from the second floor. Officer Martinez asked

defendant, in English, whether he was the person who had called the police and defendant

responded affirmatively. When Officer Martinez asked defendant why he had called the police,

defendant stated that he had just killed his girlfriend in room 29. Officer Martinez then arrested

defendant, read him his Miranda rights and placed him in the police car. Officer Martinez’s

partner, Officer Esquivel, sat with defendant in the car as Officer Martinez and a sergeant who No. 1-07-0782

had just arrived investigated room 29.

Officer Martinez testified that when he approached the room, he saw that the door was

wide open. He entered and found Irma lying on the floor between the bed and the wall. There

was blood on the wall and on the bed. Irma was covered in the quilt from the bed and showed no

signs of life. Officer Martinez called the paramedics and returned to the police car. He again read

defendant his Miranda rights. Defendant then stated that he killed Irma because he was jealous

and that he used a knife, which he later flushed down the toilet. Defendant was transported to the

police station, where Officer Martinez turned defendant over to Detective Fanning.

Officer Martinez testified that at 6:30 a.m. on June 14, 2004, Detective Fanning

interviewed defendant with Officer Martinez serving as translator. During the interview,

defendant stated that he and Irma had been dating for two years and they had set a date to see a

movie on Saturday, June 12. However, when he called her on June 12 to confirm, she did not

answer the phone. Defendant stated that he went to the corner of Clark and Wilson Streets and

saw Irma sitting in a vehicle with another man. He then left the area. Later that evening, he

called Irma again on her cell phone and this time a man claiming to be her boyfriend answered.

Defendant informed the man that Irma was his girlfriend and he asked the man to meet him at the

corner of Clark and Wilson Streets. Irma called defendant five minutes later, telling him that the

man was going to the corner of Clark and Wilson Streets with three other people and they were

going to kill defendant. Defendant told Detective Fanning and Officer Martinez that he was

enraged and jealous.

Officer Martinez testified that they asked defendant what happened the following day,

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Sunday, June 13. Defendant stated that on June 13, he visited his children. Sometime during that

visit, defendant went into the kitchen and took a knife, which he hid in his boot. Defendant

stated that he took the knife because he was jealous and felt betrayed by Irma, and that he was

going to kill her. Defendant had already arranged to meet Irma at the Patio Motel, a place they

frequented, after his visit with his children. At the motel, defendant and Irma proceeded to room

29. Inside, defendant hid the knife in the end table by the bed when Irma was not looking, and

then the couple had sexual intercourse. Afterwards, defendant questioned Irma about the other

man, and she replied that they were just friends and although he was pursuing her, she wanted

nothing to do with him.

Officer Martinez testified that they spoke with defendant about what happened next.

Defendant stated that Irma fell asleep. While Irma slept, defendant snorted cocaine and returned

to the bed. Defendant grabbed her by the neck and held the knife in one hand. Irma awoke and

begged defendant for her life, telling him that she loved him. Defendant stabbed her in the neck.

As she tried to roll over to escape, defendant stabbed her several times in the back. Defendant

then strangled her because he wanted to make sure she was dead. After she died, defendant told

her that he loved her, took a shower, and flushed the knife down the toilet. Approximately two

hours later, defendant called Irma’s sister, Berta, and he also called the police.

Defendant agreed to give a videotaped statement, and, at 3:15 p.m. on June 14, 2004, he

gave a similar account to Detective Fanning, Assistant State's Attorney Gambino, and Officer

Munoz.

Berta Cerritos testified that she knew defendant as Ruben Malave and that her sister Irma

-3- No. 1-07-0782

had dated him for a couple of years. On June 14, 2004, at approximately 4:20 a.m., Berta

received a call from defendant in which he said he was sorry for killing Irma. She hung up the

phone and called Irma’s cell phone. Defendant answered the phone and again told Berta that he

had killed Irma. Berta told her husband of her conversation with defendant, and he called 911.

Berta then went to Irma's apartment but she was not there.

Kathleen Gahagan testified that she and her partner, Carl Brasic, forensic investigators

with the Chicago police department, processed room 29 on June 14, 2004, at approximately 5:15

a.m. Inside, Investigator Gahagan saw blood on the bedding, splattered on the wall, and on Irma,

who was covered in bedding. Investigator Gahagan saw a broken cell phone on a desk, and she

saw an ashtray containing cigarette butts, a couple of empty Sprite cans and plastic cups on an

end table. The investigators collected the physical evidence, including a nine-inch stainless steel

knife with a black plastic handle that was retrieved from the toilet. The parties stipulated that

testing on the physical evidence found that two of the cigarette filters matched the DNA profile of

defendant, with a minor profile being consistent with Irma. Swabs taken from Irma's vagina,

mouth and anus contained semen. No blood or fingerprints suitable for comparison were taken

from the knife. However, a print taken from the toilet seat matched defendant.

The parties also stipulated that the medical examiner, Claire Cunliffe, performed an

autopsy on Irma on June 15, 2004. An external examination revealed that Irma suffered a

stabbing injury to the right side of her neck at the base of the skull, and four stab wounds on the

left side of her back. Two of those wounds punctured her left lung, causing a hemorrhage into

the left chest cavity. Irma also had defensive wounds, stab marks, on her right hand. There was a

-4- No. 1-07-0782

partial ring abrasion in the 10 o'clock to 4 o'clock position around her neck, as well as abrasions

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People v. Ayala - Corrected on 12/8/08, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ayala-corrected-on-12808-illappct-2008.