People v. Erwin

2023 IL App (1st) 200936
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 31, 2023
Docket1-20-0936
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2023 IL App (1st) 200936 (People v. Erwin) 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. Erwin, 2023 IL App (1st) 200936 (Ill. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

2023 IL App (1st) 200936

FIRST DISTRICT SECOND DIVISION March 31, 2023

No. 1-20-0936

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County. ) v. ) No. 03 CR 06617 (02) ) DEAUNTE ERWIN, ) Honorable ) William G. Gamboney, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Howse concurred in the judgment and opinion. Justice Cobbs specially concurred, with opinion.

OPINION

¶1 After he was arrested on February 17, 2003, pursuant to an investigative alert issued by

Chicago Police Department (CPD) detectives, petitioner Deaunte Erwin was convicted of the

first degree murder of Carlyle Barnhill and the armed robberies of Larry Martin and Christopher

Holmes. In his successive post-conviction petition, he alleged that his arrest violated the search

and seizure clause of the Illinois Constitution (Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 6), for the reasons first

announced in the now-vacated portions of People v. Bass, 2019 IL App (1st) 160640, aff’d in

part & vacated in part, 2021 IL 125434, and recently reiterated in People v. Smith, 2022 IL App

(1st) 190691. He appeals the circuit court’s denial of leave to file.

¶2 Petitioner does not claim that the officers, in relying on the detectives’ investigative alert,

lacked probable cause to arrest him. He lost that argument long ago, at his suppression hearing.

His only claim is that an arrest based on an investigative alert, even when supported by probable

cause, violates our state constitution’s analogue of the fourth amendment, albeit not the fourth No. 1-20-0936

amendment itself.

¶3 The facts of petitioner’s offenses and trial are set forth in our prior decisions and do not

bear repetition here. See People v. Erwin, No. 1-07-0687 (2009) (unpublished order under

Illinois Supreme Court Rule 23); People v. Erwin, 2011 IL App (1st) 101815-U. This much will

suffice: In 2003, petitioner was detained on an unrelated matter; the officers arrested him for

murder upon discovering that an investigative alert had been issued; more than enough time had

passed for the detectives to apply for an arrest warrant; petitioner confessed when questioned;

and he would now like that confession suppressed, as the product of a warrantless and thus

illegal arrest. With that said, we proceed directly to the issues at hand.

¶4 We decline to decide whether an arrest based solely on the authority of a police-issued

investigative alert, instead of a judicially issued arrest warrant, violates our state constitution. See

Bass, 2019 IL App (1st) 160640, ¶¶ 4, 31-32 (describing CPD’s investigative alert system).

Because the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule applies, petitioner would not be

entitled to the suppression of any evidence (principally, his confession), even if we now held his

arrest to be illegal. For this reason alone, petitioner cannot show prejudice, as required for leave

to file his successive petition. 725 ILCS 5/122-1(f) (West 2020).

¶5 I

¶6 A bit of recent (and local) legal history will give context to petitioner’s claim. As far as

we know, from the briefs and from our own research, the constitutionality of investigative alerts

was first called into question in 2012, some nine years after petitioner was arrested, in the special

concurrence filed in People v. Hyland, 2012 IL App (1st) 110966, ¶¶ 38-52 (Salone, J., specially

concurring, joined by Neville, J.).

¶7 Hyland was decided on the workaday issue of probable cause: the defendant was arrested

-2- No. 1-20-0936

pursuant to an investigative alert, but the evidence at the suppression hearing failed to establish

that the alert itself was based on facts that gave rise to probable cause for an arrest. Id. ¶¶ 25, 29-

31 (majority opinion). The special concurrence also took the view that any arrest pursuant to an

investigative alert is per se unconstitutional, even if the alert is later found to have been based on

probable cause. The problem, as the Hyland concurrence saw it, was that the finding of probable

cause had only been made in advance of the arrest by the police, when it should have been made

by a judge issuing an arrest warrant. Id. ¶¶ 46-47 (Salone, J., specially concurring, joined by

Neville, J.).

¶8 The Hyland concurrence thus stood as a notable objection to a longstanding and

judicially tolerated police practice. But because “the words and ideas expressed in [a] special

concurrence” “do not speak for this court,” it did not change what seemed to be settled law.

Southwestern Illinois Development Authority v. Al-Muhajirum, 318 Ill. App. 3d 1005, 1008

(2001). Nor did it provide cause for petitioner, or others like him, to raise a fresh challenge to an

old arrest in a successive petition.

¶9 Three years later, People v. Jones, 2015 IL App (1st) 142997, ¶¶ 19-21, was decided on

the same narrow and unremarkable ground as Hyland, a case on which Jones expressly relied. In

dictum, Jones took “note” of the special concurrence, echoing its view that investigative alerts

pose a “troubling” and still “unresolved” constitutional question, and one that “[h]opefully ***

will be addressed on appeal at some point.” Id. ¶ 22. But to be clear, it was not addressed in

Jones. The law had not budged; there was no precedent holding that investigative alerts were

anything other than a constitutionally permissible practice, though judicial skepticism, if not

outright disapproval on this point had no doubt emerged.

-3- No. 1-20-0936

¶ 10 The question eventually took center stage in Bass, 2019 IL App (1st) 160640. Over a

vigorous partial dissent, the Bass majority held that an arrest made solely on the authority of an

investigative alert per se violates the search-and-seizure clause of the Illinois Constitution, even

if the alert was based on probable cause (as it was in Bass). Id. ¶¶ 36-71.

¶ 11 The majority recognized that such arrests do not violate the federal constitution’s fourth

amendment, which permits public warrantless arrests that are based on probable cause, even if

the police had time to get an arrest warrant. Id. ¶ 37; United States v. Watson, 423 U.S. 411, 416-

17 (1976); Carroll v. United States, 267 U.S. 132, 156 (1925). The fourth amendment simply

requires that the arrestee is promptly brought before a judge, for a probable-cause determination,

after the warrantless arrest. County of Riverside v. McLaughlin, 500 U.S. 44, 53 (1991); Gerstein

v. Pugh, 420 U.S. 103, 113-19 (1975).

¶ 12 But in the Bass majority’s view, the search-and-seizure clause departs from the fourth

amendment in this respect, by generally prohibiting warrantless arrests, except in certain exigent

circumstances. Bass, 2019 IL App (1st) 160640, ¶¶ 39-67. The investigative alert system

bypasses this requirement and substitutes the judgment of the police for that of a neutral

magistrate, the majority reasoned; the Illinois Constitution requires the latter, not the former, to

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Bluebook (online)
2023 IL App (1st) 200936, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-erwin-illappct-2023.