People v. Bopp

120 N.E. 790, 285 Ill. 396
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1918
DocketNo. 12176
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 120 N.E. 790 (People v. Bopp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Bopp, 120 N.E. 790, 285 Ill. 396 (Ill. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error, Lloyd Bopp, was convicted in the criminal court of Cook county of the murder of Herman Malow, a motorcycle policeman of the village of Oak Park,' and was sentenced to death. He has prosecuted this writ of error to reverse the judgment and sentence of the court.

The record-evidence shows, without contradiction, that Alfred Michelini and Warren Ralston drove in a black Paige car that had been stolen and met plaintiff in error and Frank McErlane on Madison street, between Paulina street and Ashland avenue, in the city of Chicago, at about the hour of ten o’clock on the night of June 13, 1916. From there they went to plaintiff in error’s room at 1711 West Monroe street. After they spent some time at the room they all started out in the Paige car with the intention of stealing another automobile. Ralston had stolen the Paige car. All four were young men about twenty-two years old and all had served terms for various offenses in the State reformatory at Pontiac, plaintiff in error and McErlane being at that time out on parole. Ralston was driving the car, and after visiting and drinking at various saloons they decided to go over on the Lake Shore drive. About 11:3o P. M. they stopped in front of No. 1200 Lake Shore drive, where there was a hotel or rooming house. They there found a gray Chalmers car standing in front of the hotel, the same being the property of Henry B. Conover, a lieutenant in the United States army. Michelini and Ralston broke the lock on the Chalmers car and got into it and drove it away, plaintiff in error and McErlane following in the Paige car. • They again visited a number of saloons, at one of which they exchanged cars, and thereafter plaintiff in error and McErlane rode in the Chalmers car while Michelini and Ralston rode in the Paige car, McErlane and Ralston all the time doing the driving of.the cars. About twelve o’clock, or later, at the corner of Lincoln and Madison streets, Ralston and Michelini, then riding in the Paige car, hailed and induced Grace Lytle, a girl of the streets, to get in their car and ride with them. From that place they drove to two or three other places in an effort to find and pick up another girl, a friend of Grace Lytle, but they did not find her. They finally drove southward through the city, passing Garfield Park, and later on to Washington boulevard. While they were riding west on Washington boulevard plaintiff in error drew a revolver and informed the three in the Paige car, Michelini, Ralston and Grace Lytle, that they were under arrest. This was at a place about two or three blocks from Cuyler avenue, and while pointing the revolver at them he told them to drive to the Oak Park police station, but they did not follow his directions. When they got within about two hundred feet of Cuyler avenue, the Chalmers car, in which plaintiff in error and McErlane were riding, began to crowd the Paige car over to the north curb, and plaintiff in error told the occupants of the Paige car to drive to the curbing. Plaintiff in error and McErlane, after the Lytle girl was picked up, had driven behind the Paige car, keeping generally a distance of about half a block from it. Ralston drove to the curb as directed by plaintiff in error, his car facing west, and the other car drove up alongside and just south of it, the distance between the two cars when they stopped being about eighteen inches. The Chalmers car was stopped about three or four feet farther east than the other car, the wind-shield of the Paige car being about even with the front of the Chalmers car. Plaintiff in error then got out of the Chalmers car on the south side, walked around the rear of that car and between the two cars, covered the parties in the Paige car with the revolver, and told them to get out,—that they were under arrest. There was then some loud talking between the parties about Grace Lytle, and some questions were asked by plaintiff in error or McLrlane as to the ownership of the Paige car, and Ralston informed them that it was his. This was between the hours of i :3o and 2 o’clock A. M. Two motorcycle policemen of the villáge of Oak Park, Herman Malow and Thure Lindhe, dressed in their regular uniform,—blue clothes and white caps,—were at this time standing near the southwest corner of Cuyler avenue and Washington boulevard. They had seen the two automobiles drivé up to the curb on Washington boulevard, a short distance west of Cuyler avenue, and stop. They heard the loud talking of the occupants of the two cars, and,-thinking that there was probably a hold-up taking place there, proceeded at once to where the parties were. As they were approaching, the plaintiff in error was standing between the cars, and someone remarked, “Here come the police officers.” When Malow was within two or three feet of the Chalmers car and approaching it from the rear the car began to start moving west, and Malow reached for it. At that moment two or more shots were fired from the rear of the Chalmers car directly at Malow, who was struck by one of the bullets and fell to the pavement, just behind the Chalmers car. The car at once began moving rapidly west, with one man in front driving it and the other riding in the rear seat. Officer Lindhe followed it on his motorcycle. The car was driven with increasing speed west on Washington boulevard to Scovel avenue, where it turned south to Madison street and then turned east. Several shots were fired at Lindhe by the party riding in the rear seat of the Chalmers car, and Lindhe fired two or three times at that party and tried to get on the side of the car at which the driver sat so that he could fire at him, but was unable to do so. As the car approached Parkside avenue at the rate of about sixty miles an hour, and when about ten feet from the car, Lindhe was shot through the body by the party firing at him from the rear seat and was not thereafter able to follow the car farther on account of his wound. An occupant of an apartment building near where Malow was shot, on hearing the shots, ran to a window and saw two men running north past the building from the direction of the two cars. He telephoned to the police about the shooting, dressed himself, and on going out found Ma-low lying upon the pavement. The patrol wagon soon came and Malow was put into it and driven to a hospital but died before reaching there.

Plaintiff in error and Frank McErlane were arrested on the night of June 14, about eleven o’clock, as they were leaving the place where plaintiff in error was rooming, and were afterwards indicted. McErlane, when arrested, had on his person a 38-caliber revolver^ and a box of 38-caliber cartridges was found in a suit-case of the plaintiff in error that he then had with him. It was clearly proven that the revolver found on McErlane was the plaintiff in error’s revolver, and that he had purchased it and the box of cartridges at a store in Chicago on the afternoon of the day before the killing on the morning of the 14th, and that he purchased the revolver and the cartridges under the name of Phillips, under the pretense that he wanted it to protect his business,—his barber shop. This was proved by the clerk who sold him the revolver ’ and the cartridges, who positively identified him and produced the record of the sale, which he testified was signed by plaintiff in error as P. J. Phillips. The revolver found on McErlane was a Colt’s special blue army revolver, 38-caliber, No. 409,451. The sale sheet that plaintiff in error signed as P. J. Phillips showed that the revolver sold him was of that same number and description and that he paid $15.50 for it.

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Bluebook (online)
120 N.E. 790, 285 Ill. 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bopp-ill-1918.