People v. Degorski

2013 IL App (1st) 100580, 998 N.E.2d 637
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 17, 2013
Docket1-10-0580
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2013 IL App (1st) 100580 (People v. Degorski) 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. Degorski, 2013 IL App (1st) 100580, 998 N.E.2d 637 (Ill. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

2013 IL App (1st) 100580

FOURTH DIVISION October 17, 2013

No. 1-10-0580

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County ) v. ) No. 02 CR 15430 (01) ) JAMES DEGORSKI, ) Honorable ) Vincent M. Gaughan, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge Presiding. )

JUSTICE EPSTEIN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Fitzgerald Smith and Lavin concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Juan Luna and James Degorski were charged with multiple counts of first degree murder

for the 1993 shooting deaths of seven employees of a Brown's Chicken restaurant in Palatine,

Illinois. Following a severed jury trial, Degorski was convicted and sentenced to natural life

imprisonment. He argues on appeal that he was denied a fair trial where (1) former Assistant

State's Attorney Michael McHale testified that he was now a Cook County circuit court judge

and that he believed defendant's confession was reliable, and (2) the trial court allowed the State

to play a video depicting removal of several of the employees' bodies from a walk-in freezer. For

the reasons that follow, we affirm.

¶ 2 BACKGROUND

¶3 On January 8, 1993, seven Brown's Chicken employees—Michael Castro, Lynn

Ehlenfeldt, Richard Ehlenfeldt, Guadalupe Maldonado, Thomas Mennes, Marcus Nellsen, and 1-10-0580

Rico Solis—were shot to death. Defendant was charged with multiple counts of the first degree

murder. During his four-week trial, the parties presented dozens of witnesses. A jury found

defendant guilty and eligible for the death penalty, but sentenced him to natural life

imprisonment. On appeal, defendant raises several evidentiary issues. We summarize those

facts necessary to rule on the issues presented.

¶ 4 I. State's Evidence

¶5 Palatine police officer Ronald Conley testified that he was on duty in the early hours of

January 9, 1993, when he saw a car enter the Brown's Chicken parking lot. He learned that the

driver was looking for his older brother, who worked at the restaurant but had not come home

that night. Within a few hours, Conley responded to a radio call about a missing juvenile, who

also worked at Brown's Chicken. After meeting with the juvenile's family, he proceeded to the

restaurant, where he gained entry through an open employee door. Conley saw a bloody mop just

inside the doorway and called for backup.

¶6 According to Conley, Officer Saxsma arrived, and the two officers entered the restaurant

with guns drawn. Inside, Conley saw a foot and hand protruding from a walk-in freezer on the

building's east side. Upon opening the freezer door, they discovered five bodies. Officer Haas

arrived, and the three officers searched the rest of the restaurant, ultimately discovering two more

bodies in the walk-in cooler on the building's west side. All seven appeared to have suffered

fatal gunshot wounds. Assistant medical examiners later confirmed this observation.

¶7 Sergeant Robert Jacobsen testified that he helped remove the bodies from the cooler and

freezer. The only officer to enter the walk-ins, Jacobsen covered his shoes with plastic bags to

2 1-10-0580

protect them from blood and to avoid leaving shoe prints. Despite his efforts, the bags and shoes

filled with blood, and the bags adhered to the soles of his shoes. At trial, Jacobsen identified

shoe prints in the freezer as his own, but forensic comparison of the prints was not possible, as

Jacobsen threw his bloody shoes away. He admitted that he never reported or recorded that he

had left shoe prints in the freezer. On cross-examination, defendant questioned whether the shoe

prints were Jacobsen's. Consequently, on redirect, the State was allowed to play for the jury a

video depicting Jacobsen removing several of the bodies while wearing plastic bags on his shoes.

¶8 Forensic investigators discovered that the restaurant's trash cans were empty with the

exception of the remains of a four-piece chicken meal, a paper cup, and napkins. The cash

register appeared to have been closed and reopened to sell a meal at 9:08 p.m. The receipt was

consistent with the meal discovered in the trash can, leading investigators to believe that one of

the offenders may have purchased the meal. Investigators also collected extensive trace

evidence, including fibers, hairs, blood, and more than 200 fingerprints. On one of the discarded

napkins, investigators found a latent fingerprint impression, which was later found to match

codefendant's prints. None of the latent prints matched defendant's fingerprints.

¶9 Investigators also determined that two of the chicken bones recovered contained saliva.

One of these bones produced two DNA profiles: a major profile consistent with someone eating

the chicken, and a minor profile consistent with someone touching the chicken with their hands.

The major profile matched codefendant. Defendant was excluded as a contributor to the profiles.

¶ 10 Eileen Bakalla testified that she had been friends with defendant and codefendant. On

January 8, 1993, she received a telephone call from defendant, who asked her to meet him and

3 1-10-0580

codefendant in a Jewel grocery store parking lot in Carpentersville, Illinois. Defendant added

that they had "done something big." Bakalla left work at 9:30 p.m. and met defendant and

codefendant as planned. In the parking lot, she noticed green rubber gloves in the back of

codefendant's car. The friends drove to Bakalla's townhouse in her car. En route, she asked the

two men about a canvas money bag they had brought with them, and they replied that it

contained money from their Brown's Chicken robbery.

¶ 11 At Bakalla's house, defendant and codefendant split the money, and defendant gave

Bakalla $50 he owed her. The three smoked marijuana and remained at Bakalla's house for a few

hours before Bakalla dropped codefendant back off at his car. She and defendant drove past

Brown's Chicken, where they saw ambulances and squad cars in the parking lot. Defendant told

her that codefendant had gone "ballistic and started killing people," "slit the owner's throat from

ear to ear," and "put the rest of the employees in the cooler [and] in the freezer." Defendant said

codefendant had shot four people in the cooler and handed the gun to defendant, who shot two

people in the freezer. He added that they had worn gloves, mopped the floor afterward, and

thrown the gun in the Fox River. Bakalla and defendant then went to defendant's home, where

they spent the night. The following day, Bakalla accompanied defendant as he cleaned

codefendant's car at a Streamwood, Illinois, carwash.

¶ 12 Bakalla did not inform police about the murders until they approached her on May 15,

2002. She testified, however, that she informed her husband, Keith Abel, about the murders

prior to their 1998 wedding. Abel testified that, in 1998, Bakalla told her that defendant and

codefendant had done "something big" and mentioned Brown's Chicken.

4 1-10-0580

¶ 13 Anne Lockett testified that she had been friends with defendant, codefendant, and

Bakalla, and had also dated defendant. She frequently abused drugs and alcohol in 1992 and

1993 and twice attempted suicide. Following one such attempt, she was brought to a hospital,

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Bluebook (online)
2013 IL App (1st) 100580, 998 N.E.2d 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-degorski-illappct-2013.