People v. Cooke

236 N.E.2d 97, 93 Ill. App. 2d 376, 1968 Ill. App. LEXIS 1012
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 10, 1968
DocketGen. 66-120
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 236 N.E.2d 97 (People v. Cooke) 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. Cooke, 236 N.E.2d 97, 93 Ill. App. 2d 376, 1968 Ill. App. LEXIS 1012 (Ill. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

MORAN, J.

On the night of March 18, 1966, the defendant shot and killed Floyd Hobell, the brother-in-law, and seriously wounded Robert Hook, the brother, of one Barbara Burns, a married woman with whom defendant had been keeping company. He was convicted of the murder of Hobell and acquitted of the attempted murder of Hook in a jury trial in the Circuit Court of St. Clair County. After overruling his post-trial motion, the trial court sentenced the defendant to a minimum of fourteen years and a maximum of twenty years in the penitentiary. Defendant appeals.

The defendant contends that “the jury verdict is palpably contrary to the evidence and so unreasonable and unsatisfactory that there is justification for entertaining reasonable doubt as to defendant’s guilt.”

The defendant, Ronald Cooke, twenty-six years of age, a bread salesman who serviced the supermarket where Barbara Burns was employed as a checker, commenced going with her about December of 1965, and they eventually became so infatuated with each other that on March 16, 1966, they met and decided to divorce their respective spouses and marry each other. They met again on the 17th of March and when the defendant asked Barbara if she had changed her mind, she replied that she had not and was going to talk to her husband, “Jim,” when he returned from Carbondale where he had gone with her father to work on her father’s home. About ten o’clock on the morning of the 18th, defendant and Barbara Burns went to talk to Barbara’s mother about their plans. Barbara’s mother remonstrated with them and told them that they could never be happy doing such a thing. Barbara went to work about 12:00, noon, driving her 1964 Comet automobile. About one o’clock that afternoon, her sister, Mrs. Floyd Hobell, came to the store to see Barbara; and Mrs. Hobell, Barbara, and the defendant talked about the situation in the parking lot of the store. Around nine o’clock that evening Robert Hook, the brother, and Floyd Hobell, the brother-in-law of Barbara, met, according to Hook, for the purpose of talking to Barbara concerning her relations with the defendant. Instead of going to the store where she worked and talking to her, Hook said they decided to follow her from the store in their car and talk to her when she got home. About 9:15 that evening Barbara left the store and drove down Highway 50 to Route 159, made a right turn into 159 and headed south. Somewhere on Route 159 the defendant, Cooke, signaled her by flashing his lights behind her and followed her to a street called Bettina Drive, about three blocks from Barbara’s home. Barbara stopped her car and the defendant got out of his car and sat in the passenger’s side of Barbara’s car. After they were parked a few minutes, Hook drove up, stopped next to Barbara’s car and went around her car to the passenger side where the defendant was seated. It is undisputed that almost immediately thereafter the defendant shot and wounded Hook and shot and killed Hobell. It is undisputed that defendant knew Barbara’s husband by sight and that he knew Barbara’s husband was out of town on the night in question; that the defendant had never seen Hook or Hobell before and did not know they were related to Barbara until she told him immediately after the shooting. It was dark at the time and place in question. Barbara Burns testified on behalf of the State that she and the defendant were parked in her car when another car stopped alongside her car and two men got out. The defendant got out of her car about the same time. The next thing she remembered was hearing some shots which sounded like firecrackers and seeing some sparks out of her rear window. She then got out of her car and saw her brother getting up from where Hobell was lying. Her brother was bleeding badly and he asked her to call an ambulance. He asked the defendant if he was sick and the defendant, who had a gun in his hand, said that he was not, that he was just frightened. At another point in her testimony she stated that the first time she saw Hobell after the shots were fired, he was lying by the right front wheel of the defendant’s car; and at another point she stated she might have testified at another hearing that Hobell was leaning against the right front fender of the defendant’s car when she first saw him after the first shots were fired. She then asked a Mr. Davis, who came out of a house across the street, to call an ambulance. Defendant then laid the gun on the hood of his car and she threw the gun inside. After defendant calmed down, he went over and asked her brother if he was all right. He said, “Are you all right, Jim?”

John Davis, Jr., who lived across the street from where the incident occurred, testified on behalf of the State that he heard two shots that sounded like firecrackers, and when he went outside to see what had happened, Barbara Burns asked him to call an ambulance. He went back into the house, called an ambulance and then returned to the scene. He saw three cars facing west — a blue one on the front left and a red one on the front right. There was another red car parked about six feet behind the front red car. The headlights on the blue car were burning and the motor was running. He turned the motor of the blue car off and put the lights on park at the request of the defendant. Hobell was lying on his right side by the passenger side of defendant’s car with his face about six inches from the right front tire. He was lying with his head pointed west and his feet to the east, which would mean that he was lying parallel to defendant’s car with his head pointing to the front and his feet to the rear of defendant’s car.

Robert Hook testified that he was thirty-one years of age, six feet three inches in height and weighed 270 pounds on the night he was shot. He met his brother-in-law, Floyd Hobell, about ten minutes to nine p. m., on the 18th of March, 1966, for the purpose of talking to his sister concerning her relationship with the defendant. They followed his sister from the store and pulled alongside the place where his sister was parked in her car with the defendant. He left the lights of his car burning and the engine running. Hobell got out of the passenger side and Hook got out of the car on the driver’s side and went around to the passenger’s side of his sister’s car. By the time Hook got there, the defendant was already outside the car. The defendant said, “Let’s talk this over, Jim” and then shot him. Hook said he was unarmed and at no time threatened defendant in any way. He was shot once under his arm and once in the stomach. He said he thought he was shot three times, but was told he was shot only twice. He had powder burns on his stomach. When he was shot, he was standing at the doorway on the passenger side of his sister’s car and the next thing he remembered was leaning back over her car. He then saw Hobell coming toward him with the defendant going toward Hobell. Hobell asked the defendant if he was crazy, and “Cooke just shot him. He didn’t say anything.” The first time Hobell was shot he fell backwards over the hood of the defendant’s car and then begged Cooke not to shoot him again. He said, “Please don’t do it again,” and Cooke “reached over” and shot him again, the second time. Hobell had no gun, knife, or any weapon of any kind in his hand at the time. Hobell was not advancing on defendant, but defendant was advancing on Hobell. Hobell then dropped to the ground next to the right front tire of Cooke’s car, on the passenger side. Although Hook was shot, he tried to help his brother-in-law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 N.E.2d 97, 93 Ill. App. 2d 376, 1968 Ill. App. LEXIS 1012, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-cooke-illappct-1968.