People v. Buckhanan

2017 IL App (1st) 131097
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 10, 2017
Docket1-13-1097
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2017 IL App (1st) 131097 (People v. Buckhanan) 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. Buckhanan, 2017 IL App (1st) 131097 (Ill. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

2017 IL App (1st) 131097 SECOND DIVISION February 7, 2017

No. 1-13-1097

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County, Illinois. ) ) No. 08 CR 3237 v. ) ) Honorable Lawrence E. BRYANT BUCKHANAN, ) Flood and Honorable ) Dennis J. Porter, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judges Presiding. 1

JUSTICE MASON delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Lavin and Pucinski concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 For six years prior to 2009, Samuel E. Adam, Jr. (Junior) had represented defendant

Bryant Buckhanan on a number of criminal matters. On January 11, 2008, the State filed a

complaint (later superseded by indictment) charging Buckhanan with the August 19, 2007

murder of Omari Houston. On the same date the complaint was filed, Junior filed an appearance

on Buckhanan’s behalf.

¶2 More than a year and a half later, the State sought to disqualify Junior from representing

Buckhanan on the ground that Junior’s father, Samuel F. Adam, Sr. (Senior), represented

Gabrielle Gambrell, Buckhanan’s girlfriend and a witness the State planned to call at trial. The

conflict identified by the State in its motion was the possibility that if Gambrell’s trial testimony

varied from a statement she made to the police in September 2007, the State would call Senior—

who was present for the statement—to impeach his client. Notwithstanding the fact that (i) there

1 Judge Flood presided over the hearing on the State’s motion for disqualification. Judge Porter presided over the trial. No. 1-13-1097

were other witnesses to Gambrell’s statement, namely, a police detective and an assistant State’s

Attorney, thus clearly rendering Senior’s testimony unnecessary and (ii) the State identified no

material variance between Gambrell’s statement and her grand jury testimony, the trial court

ordered a hearing on the State’s motion.

¶3 After the hearing, during which Senior testified that he did not recall Gambrell making

one of the statements attributed to her in the summary of her statement to the police (so that he

would, therefore, not impeach Gambrell on that point), the State changed tack and argued that

Junior would be obligated to call his father as a witness in Buckhanan’s defense (presumably to

attest to his lack of recall of a portion of Gambrell’s statement) or be deemed ineffective for

failing to do so. Without articulating any actual or potential “conflict” inherent in this new

scenario, the State argued that the possibility of Junior calling Senior as a witness created the

appearance of impropriety justifying Junior’s disqualification.

¶4 The trial court agreed and granted the State’s motion. In the course of its ruling, the trial

court specifically found that there was no unethical exchange of confidential information

between Senior and Junior.

¶5 We reverse the disqualification of Buckhanan’s counsel and remand for a new trial.

Nothing in the State’s theory of disqualification, either as originally articulated or as revised after

the hearing, warranted depriving Buckhanan of his chosen counsel. And although the State’s

evidence was more than sufficient to sustain Buckhanan’s conviction, the error in disqualifying

his attorney, standing alone, mandates reversal of the circuit court’s judgment and remand for a

new trial.

¶6 BACKGROUND

-2­ No. 1-13-1097

¶7 Almost immediately after Houston’s murder, police focused on Buckhanan given that

several witnesses implicated him in the murder and identified him in a photo array. Buckhanan’s

loaner car from an automobile dealership—also identified by several witnesses as being present

at the scene of the murder—was found in a ditch the day after the murder with papers identifying

Buckhanan and the keys still in the ignition.

¶8 The police had several addresses where they searched for Buckhanan after the murder,

including an apartment in Woodridge where he resided with Gambrell and their infant child.

After Gambrell felt the police were harassing her, she eventually contacted Senior in September

2007, and he agreed to represent her. Gambrell did not witness the shooting; rather, the State

intended to call her to establish Buckhanan’s flight the day after the murder. Gambrell’s

anticipated testimony was based on a statement she gave to police on September 12, 2007, and

testimony she gave before a grand jury on February 5, 2008, after Buckhanan’s arrest.

¶9 In her 2007 statement to police, which police later summarized, Gambrell stated that on

the morning after the shooting, she received a phone call from Buckhanan informing her that

someone had run his car into a ditch on I-88. Gambrell, who was not at home when she received

Buckhanan’s call, returned to the apartment and, on the way, drove down I-88 and determined

that Buckhanan’s car was no longer in the ditch. She then met Buckhanan briefly at their

apartment. According to the summary, Buckhanan informed Gambrell that he had called the

Illinois State Police about the loaner vehicle, and they told him to contact homicide detectives.

A short time later, Buckhanan left without telling Gambrell where he was going. Gambrell met

with and spoke to Buckhanan after August 18, but he did not return to their apartment before his

arrest.

-3­ No. 1-13-1097

¶ 10 There is no indication in the record that Gambrell was shown the summary of her

statement or asked to sign or initial it. The summary concludes with the statement that after the

interview was completed, the assistant State’s Attorney who was present decided not to call

Gambrell before the grand jury.

¶ 11 Buckhanan was apprehended by police in connection with Houston’s murder on January

9, 2008. As noted, Junior filed his appearance for Buckhanan on January 11, 2008.

¶ 12 The State did ultimately summon Gambrell to testify before the grand jury and her

February 2008 testimony was substantially similar to her statement to the police, except that

when she was asked whether Buckhanan told her “he had received a call from the State Police,”

Gambrell testified that she did not recall him saying that. Further, when asked if Buckhanan told

her the Chicago police were looking for him, Gambrell responded, “I don’t remember if he told

me right then. I don’t remember. I mean I knew later, but I don’t remember if he told me at that

point.” In her grand jury testimony, Gambrell was not asked whether Buckhanan told her (1) he

had called the Illinois State Police and (2) the Illinois State Police told him to contact homicide

detectives.

¶ 13 The State hoped that Gambrell would testify consistent with her 2007 police statement.

In particular, they wanted her to say that Buckhanan had been told to contact homicide

detectives, to show that Buckhanan knew the police were looking for him in regards to a murder

investigation.

¶ 14 The State’s motion to disqualify was filed on September 30, 2009. At the time the

motion was filed, trial was scheduled to commence three weeks later on October 19, 2009. In its

motion, the State represented that in the event Gambrell denied that Buckhanan told her the

Illinois State Police advised him to contact homicide detectives, the State would “possibly” call

-4­ No. 1-13-1097

Senior to impeach her—thus opening the door for the jury to find out that defense counsel’s

father represented a witness for the State.

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2023 IL App (1st) 220322 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2023)
People v. Buckhanan
2017 IL App (1st) 131097 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2017)

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2017 IL App (1st) 131097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-buckhanan-illappct-2017.