People v. Casciaro

2015 IL App (2d) 131291, 49 N.E.3d 39
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 17, 2015
Docket2-13-1291
StatusUnpublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2015 IL App (2d) 131291 (People v. Casciaro) 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. Casciaro, 2015 IL App (2d) 131291, 49 N.E.3d 39 (Ill. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

2015 IL App (2d) 131291 No. 2-13-1291 Opinion filed September 17, 2015 ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE ) Appeal from the Circuit Court OF ILLINOIS, ) of McHenry County. ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) No. 10-CF-229 ) MARIO CASCIARO, ) Honorable ) Sharon L. Prather, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE ZENOFF delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Hutchinson and Spence concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Following a jury trial in 2013, defendant, Mario Casciaro, was convicted of felony

murder in the death of Brian Carrick. He appeals. This was defendant’s second jury trial. The

first resulted in a mistrial after the jury was unable to reach a verdict. Because the State failed to

prove defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, we reverse.

¶2 I. BACKGROUND

¶3 A. Val’s Foods

¶4 On December 20, 2002, 17-year-old Carrick disappeared. He was last seen at Val’s

Foods, a grocery store co-owned by defendant’s father in Johnsburg, Illinois, where Carrick was

employed as a stock boy. Carrick’s mother reported him missing on Saturday, December 21, 2015 IL App (2d) 131291

2002. He was listed on the missing person’s report as being five feet nine inches tall and 135

pounds. The following is taken from the evidence presented at the second trial.

¶5 On Sunday, December 22, 2002, the police determined that a crime had been committed

in the area of the produce cooler at Val’s Foods. Later that day, Sergeant Patrick Phillips, a

crime scene investigator with the Illinois State Police, processed Val’s Foods for evidence.

Before detailing Phillips’ testimony, we provide a brief description of the premises.

¶6 The main entrance was on the west side of the building, fronting Johnsburg Road. There

were exit doors at the northeast and southeast ends of the building. From the main entrance, the

produce section was located to the south. The vegetable display was along the south wall. East

of the vegetable section, on the south side of the building, was the “produce room.” That room

had a west doorway, hung with a clear plastic curtain, to the public area, and an east door leading

into a metal produce cooler. The produce cooler also led into a hallway running along the south

side of the building and extending to the southeast exit door. A “tool room” was located off that

hallway, just to the east of the produce cooler. From the southeast exit door, a long hallway ran

north and south along the east side of the building. At the north end was an overhead delivery

door and a truck dock area outside. An employee break room was located on the north side of

the building, to the left of the overhead delivery door.

¶7 Phillips photographed the interior and exterior of Val’s Foods. The photographs depict

the following: blood spatter low (beneath the level of the produce cooler’s door handle) on the

north wall of the south hallway, between the tool room and the produce cooler; a bloody

fingerprint on the produce cooler’s exterior door handle (hallway side) and blood on the exterior

of the produce cooler’s door; blood on the produce cooler’s door jamb; blood on the inside of the

produce cooler’s door, slightly above the handle and toward the center of the door; blood on the

-2- 2015 IL App (2d) 131291

bottom of the inside of the produce cooler’s door; a metal rack stacked with boxes of “New Star

Premium Celery,” inside the produce cooler; blood smears on the celery boxes; blood on a leg of

the metal rack holding the celery boxes; a pool of water on the produce cooler’s floor flowing

toward the north wall of the cooler; the inside of the southeast exit door; the exterior of the

southeast exit door; a dumpster on the north truck dock; and cardboard boxes, some bloody,

within the dumpster.

¶8 Phillips testified that the blood spatter in the hallway between the tool room and the

produce cooler, consisting of approximately 20 bloodstains, came from blood traveling through

the air and striking the wall in a downward direction, angling slightly to the right. He testified

that the blood spatter was not caused by an impact or a drip but could have been caused by a

moving person who was bleeding or by blood being cast off a swinging object. Phillips testified

that, because the blood spatter was so low on the wall, it did not come from someone who was

struck in the head while standing. Phillips admitted that, based on the blood spatter’s location,

he did not know what had happened.

¶9 Phillips explained that, in contrast to the blood spatter’s individual droplets, the smears

on the celery boxes inside the produce cooler were “transfer” patterns, caused by a bloody object

or bloody clothing rubbing against the boxes. Phillips testified that he also observed a droplet of

blood and a patch of hair on the produce cooler’s floor, between the cooler door and the metal

rack. He collected specimens, including from the southeast exit door, that he submitted to the

Illinois State Police Crime Laboratory for analysis. According to Phillips, there were dumpsters

in the area outside the southeast exit door, but they contained nothing of evidentiary value.

Phillips had the dumpster from the north truck dock towed to a facility where it could be closely

-3- 2015 IL App (2d) 131291

examined. Although Phillips did not believe that a body had been in the dumpster, he found

blood on some of the cardboard from the dumpster, which he submitted to the crime laboratory.

¶ 10 The crime laboratory established a DNA profile for Carrick. That profile matched the

blood spatter found on the north wall of the hallway between the tool room and the produce

cooler. Carrick’s blood was also on the bottom of the interior of the produce cooler’s door, on

the leg of the metal rack, on the celery boxes in the cooler, and on some of the cardboard from

the dumpster. The droplet of blood on the floor of the produce cooler was also Carrick’s.

¶ 11 There was blood from a second person on the produce cooler’s door jamb, on the

southeast exit door, and in the bloody fingerprint on the produce cooler’s door handle. The

second person was identified through DNA analysis as Robert Render, a stock boy at Val’s

Foods, whom witnesses placed at the store on the day that Carrick disappeared. The parties

stipulated that the bloody fingerprint on the cooler’s door handle was Render’s. Render quit his

job at Val’s Foods on December 22, 2002, and was reported as a runaway from home on

December 28, 2002. Johnsburg police chief Keith Von Allmen testified that he spotted Render

after the runaway report and that Render fled from him. When Von Allmen “nabbed” him,

Render had drug paraphernalia in his possession and blood on one of his shoes (later determined

to be Render’s own blood). Render’s father testified that Render died in May 2011. According

to Render’s father, Render had a habit of chewing his fingernails.

¶ 12 Defendant, who was the “unofficial” manager of the stock boys when Carrick

disappeared, was arrested for Carrick’s murder in February 2010. According to a number of

witnesses, defendant dealt small amounts of marijuana.

¶ 13 B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 IL App (2d) 131291, 49 N.E.3d 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-casciaro-illappct-2015.