People v. D'Amico

2020 IL App (2d) 180157-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 8, 2020
Docket2-18-0157
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2020 IL App (2d) 180157-U (People v. D'Amico) 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. D'Amico, 2020 IL App (2d) 180157-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

2018 IL App (2d) 180157-U No. 2-18-0157 Order filed July 8, 2020

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and may not be cited as precedent by any party except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). _____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE ) Appeal from the Circuit Court OF ILLINOIS, ) of Kane County. ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) No. 16-CF-83 ) PAUL E. D’AMICO ) a/k/a Paul E. Wheeler, ) Honorable ) David P. Kliment, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE BRIDGES delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Birkett and Justice Hudson concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: While the prosecution’s remarks were improper, they did not rise to the level of plain error, nor were they so prejudicial that defense counsel’s failure to object constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. Therefore, we affirm.

¶2 Following a jury trial, defendant, Paul E. D’Amico, a/k/a Paul E. Wheeler, was convicted

of one count of predatory criminal sexual assault of a child (720 ILCS 5/11-1.40(a)(1) (West

2004)) and one count of aggravated criminal sexual abuse (720 ILCS 5/12-16 (West 2004)).

Defendant appeals his convictions and maintains that the prosecution made improper comments 2018 Il App (2d) 180157-U

during closing argument which violated his fifth amendment right not to testify and improperly

shifted the burden of proof to him. We affirm.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 Defendant’s jury trial began on April 17, 2017.

¶5 P.M., the victim, testified as follows. Defendant was a friend of P.M.’s mother. As a child,

P.M. knew defendant by his nickname, “Smiley Paul.” She spent the night at his home, a single-

story white house, on two occasions. On the first occasion, her brother, defendant, and defendant’s

girlfriend spent the night with her. She remembered being put in timeout, where she fell asleep

standing up in the corner. She recalled defendant had a son who was at the home on one of those

occasions, but that he did not stay overnight.

¶6 The second occasion was sometime during the winter of 2005, when she was seven years

old. That night only the defendant and his girlfriend stayed in the house with her. During the night

defendant asked P.M. if she would like to come with him to plow snow. She agreed, and they

drove to the home of defendant’s boss to pick up a snowplow truck. While waiting for the

snowplow truck to warm up, defendant asked her if she wanted to “fake drive” the truck. She told

him yes and sat on defendant’s lap, whereupon she felt defendant rubbing his penis on her. She

felt uncomfortable and asked to sit back in the passenger seat. They then left the boss’s house, and

she fell asleep.

¶7 P.M. further testified that she woke up at the Chicago Street train station in Elgin, which

she recognized because of a nearby J.J. Peppers convenience store. As she was waking up,

defendant was hurrying to move his hand away from inside of her pants. She asked what he was

doing, and he replied, “Nothing, just go back to sleep.” P.M. said she freaked out and acted as

though she was still sleeping, eventually falling in and out of sleep. She awoke again, to find

2 2018 Il App (2d) 180157-U

defendant touching her, with his right hand in her pants, and his fingers in her vagina. P.M. testified

that it hurt and she was crying. Defendant then told her that no one would believe her, and P.M.

asked him to stop. He did and drove them back to his home, whereupon she fell asleep on the

couch. After that night P.M. did not spend any more time with the defendant.

¶8 P.M. testified that she did not immediately tell an adult about what happened because she

was scared. However, P.M. did tell her cousin about what happened when she was around 10 years

old. P.M. stated she later told her father and his wife about what happened when she was 11 years

old, and she eventually told her mother, and a house mother at the Mooseheart boarding school

named Brittany Young. P.M. stated while in high school, she told her principal about what had

happened with the defendant. She testified that the reason she told her principal was that she felt

very comfortable around her. She had not told other adults, because the people she had told before

did not believe her.

¶9 P.M.’s mother, Melissa Gibbons, testified as follows. She had known defendant since

childhood. When she was 16, she had a “friends with benefits” type relationship with the

defendant, but as they grew older, they became just friends. In addition to P.M., Gibbons had a

son, P.M.’s half-brother. Her son’s father passed when he was two months old, so she had

defendant and some of her other male friends act as male figures in his life. After defendant had

taken P.M.’s brother on a few outings, P.M. wanted to go with her brother and defendant. Gibbons

let P.M. spend time at defendant’s house on two occasions when she was around six or seven years

old, spending the night on one of those occasions. Gibbons could not recall where defendant lived

beyond that it was a white ranch style home “out west” either in De Kalb or McHenry County.

Afterward, Gibbons and P.M. saw defendant at the Sycamore Speedway. When P.M. saw

defendant, “she didn’t want to go anywhere near him.” Gibbons first learned about what had

3 2018 Il App (2d) 180157-U

happened to P.M. after P.M. told her father who then told Gibbons. P.M. would have been about

eight or nine years old. She then tried to take P.M. to the police station, but P.M. refused to get out

of the car.

¶ 10 Defendant’s mother, Barbara Skruggs, testified that her son had lived at two houses in De

Kalb, Illinois, from 2003 to 2007. The first house was a single-story home with gray siding and

maroon shutters located at Oakwood Drive. The second house was a brown two-story home with

a deck on the back located at Ninth Street. Defendant did not live in a white house. Between 2003

and 2007, defendant lived with Jennie Gensky. Defendant had two daughters, one who was born

in 1998 and another who was born in 2005. Defendant did not have a son.

¶ 11 In closing arguments, the State emphasized that P.M.’s testimony regarding what happened

to her was unrebutted and argued that inconsistencies as to “little facts” did not matter in light of

the unrebutted testimony as to the assault itself. In response, defense counsel argued that P.M. was

not credible and that the State had failed to produce any medical, physical, or forensic evidence.

Defense counsel placed particular emphasis on inconsistencies in the testimony regarding the

location and color of defendant’s home, and the fact that defendant did not have a son despite

P.M.’s testimony that defendant’s son was at his home the night the assault took place. In rebuttal

the State argued that P.M. had testified credibly as to what happened, arguing that defendant did

not have an ongoing presence in her life and that she had no motive to make false allegations

against him, and emphasizing how P.M.’s parents and teachers had failed to address her claims

when she first spoke to them.

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2020 IL App (2d) 180157-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-damico-illappct-2020.