People v. Earullo

447 N.E.2d 925, 113 Ill. App. 3d 774, 69 Ill. Dec. 490, 1983 Ill. App. LEXIS 1654
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 25, 1983
Docket82-454
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 447 N.E.2d 925 (People v. Earullo) 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. Earullo, 447 N.E.2d 925, 113 Ill. App. 3d 774, 69 Ill. Dec. 490, 1983 Ill. App. LEXIS 1654 (Ill. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

JUSTICE SULLIVAN

delivered the opinion of the court:

After a bench trial, defendants (Chicago police officers) were convicted of involuntary manslaughter and official misconduct. Klisz was sentenced to an extended term of eight years for the former and five years for the latter, the sentences to run concurrently, and Earullo was sentenced to concurrent terms of 2 1 !z years for each offense. On appeal, they contend that (1) they were not proved guilty beyond a reasonable doubt; (2) the trial court erred (a) in denying their motion for a mistrial based upon alleged prejudicial newspaper coverage and (b) in permitting the State to show that Klisz refused to make a statement; (3) the court improperly refused to consider certain evidence; and (4) their sentences were excessive.

A number of witnesses testified for the State to an occurrence on July 6, 1980, which began on an elevated train and continued to the concourse of the 35th Street CTA station.

Farris King was seated in the first car of the train when he saw a black man run to the back of the car, followed by a short white man with dark hair and a taller white man. The black man held his left hand behind his back and told them “not to come up on him,” but a third and larger white man with a red beard and moustache entered the car, dove into the black man, and held him in a headlock. The three white men wrestled the black man to the floor and, after handcuffing his hands behind his back, the two taller white men lifted him from the floor — one on each side holding his arms. The black man was hollering “No,” and King saw the man with the red beard give the black man a rabbit punch in the stomach. The man with the red beard explained to the others on the train that they were police officers and the man was under arrest. The black man was led off the train by the three men. King did not see the black man’s head go through a window, and he remembered telling detectives a week after the incident that the black man told the officers they had better have a gun if they wanted to arrest him, but he saw no one with a gun.

Beulah Phillips, a switchman on the train, testified that while the train was stopped at the station, she looked back and saw three plainclothes policemen taking a black man off the train. The black man walked off the train on his own power, and she did not see any blood on or injury to him. Phillips identified defendants Klisz, Earullo, and Christiano 1 in court as the officers who removed the man from her train.

Blenda Caldwell, who with her husband Michael entered the station at approximately 4:30 p.m., saw a black man and two white men descending the stairs toward her. Each of the white men was holding an arm of the black man, and they were jostling him back and forth. After the three men passed by, she heard a noise and saw the black man thrown up against the wall of the concourse three times by the same two persons she had just passed. The black man’s hands were handcuffed behind him, and his whole body, head, chest, and legs struck the wall. While the black man was faced up against the wall, both of the white men punched him in his back and upper ribs. At that point, a woman stopped to ask her for directions, after which she again looked toward the concourse and saw the black man being held up against a post by the man with a slight beard, and then saw the other man with red hair and a big beard bring his leg up twice, but she could not see whether his leg made contact. She then turned around to see where her husband was and, when she looked back, the black man was lying on the ground on his left side with his hands behind him, and she saw the white men kick him eight or 10 times. The black man then rolled over onto his stomach, and the white men stomped on his back while the black man hollered, “Help me, they are trying to kill me.” She never saw the black man’s hands anywhere other than behind his back, and she did not see him strike either of the white men while she was there — which was about five minutes.

Michael Caldwell testified that he was with his wife Blenda in the concourse area of the station when two white men on either side of a black man came down the stairs toward him. One of the white men was thin with dark hair and the other had long red hair, an earring in his left ear, a bushy red beard, and a moustache. After they passed, he stopped and watched the two white men throw or shove the black man against the wall several times. The man with the beard then held the black man with his back to a cement post, and the thin man kicked him above the knees and below the chest. At that point, he (Caldwell) went to the ticket agent and, after speaking with her, she made a phone call. On his way back toward his wife, he saw the black man’s head being held on the floor by the man with the red beard, and he heard the black man yell, “Murder, murder.” He did not see any other person kick or strike the black man, but he did see a pool of blood under his head and neck. He (Caldwell) identified Klisz in a lineup and in court as the man with the beard.

Willis Crew was in the station near the ticket office where he saw a black man lying on the ground with one white man standing on his feet and another near his head. The former kicked the black man in his side and the other man was hitting him. The black man, who had blood on his face and shirt, said, “Help me, get these people off, call the police.” One of the white men responded, “Don’t worry about him, he’s nuttier than a fruitcake,” and he left after two to three minutes.

Marilyn Brodsky, who was in the station returning from a White Sox game with her nephew Jerry and her son, saw a man lying on the ground being kicked by two men, but she did not see their faces because they had their backs to her. While she was on the concourse, she stopped to ask directions from a white woman.

Jerry Lubelcheck, who was with Brodsky and his cousin in the station, saw two men on either side of a black man walking toward a pole. They were punching and kicking the black man and, as he walked up the stairs, he turned around and saw the black man on the ground with the other two men stomping and kicking him.

Donnie Reynolds, also in the station, saw a black man lying on the floor with one white man standing over him and a fat white man with his right knee on the neck of the black man, who was handcuffed and was hollering, “Get him off of me, help me.” When he asked what was wrong, one of the white men said it was police business. He saw blood on the ground and blood coming from the right side of the black man’s head and, as he walked toward the stairway, he saw the man who had been kneeling strike the black man in the head four times.

Andrew Laties was walking through the concourse of the station when he heard repeated cries for help and saw a black man lying on his stomach, with a stocky-built white man with a dark moustache next to him and a larger white man with light-colored sideburns squatting on the black man’s buttocks. The larger man leaned over the black man and hit him twice with his right hand at the base of the skull and top of the neck.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
447 N.E.2d 925, 113 Ill. App. 3d 774, 69 Ill. Dec. 490, 1983 Ill. App. LEXIS 1654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-earullo-illappct-1983.