People v. Fort

357 N.E.2d 1365, 44 Ill. App. 3d 62, 2 Ill. Dec. 922, 1976 Ill. App. LEXIS 3442
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 3, 1976
Docket75-30
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 357 N.E.2d 1365 (People v. Fort) 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. Fort, 357 N.E.2d 1365, 44 Ill. App. 3d 62, 2 Ill. Dec. 922, 1976 Ill. App. LEXIS 3442 (Ill. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Mr. JUSTICE RECHENMACHER

delivered the opinion of the court:

The defendants were charged with burglary, convicted by a jury and sentenced to serve not less than 1 nor more than 5 years in the penitentiary. Fricks and Nelson appeal on the grounds (1) that they were not proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt because the testimony of the State’s chief witness was vague, uncertain and rebutted by defendants’ evidence, (2) that the trial court erred in permitting the prosecutor in his closing argument to make improper and prejudicial remarks, not based on the evidence at trial.

Defendant Fort appeals only on the second ground indicated above.

The apartment of Ace Hawthorne in the Valerie Percy Apartments in Rockford was burglarized on November 15,1973. Ace Hawthorne was at work at the time but his sister, Geraldine, aged 16, testified as an eyewitness. She said that she had just left her brother’s apartment and was on the back stairs when she heard kicking at the front door of the apartment. She continued on down and hid behind a jutting brick portion of the building wall (apparently alongside the stairwell) from which point she could observe the back door of Ace’s apartment without being seen. She testified that very shordy after hearing the noise she saw the defendants coming out of the back door of the apartment with various objects in their hands, Murray with the “tape-player”, Fort with a record player and Fricks carrying two lamps and a bow and arrow set. (Two other persons were arrested in this connection but they are not involved in the appeal here but were identified by Geraldine as carrying other property, including a TV set.)

Geraldine testified that there was enough light for her to identify the burglars, and that she knew all of them by sight and by name. The testimony indicated that the persons identified by Geraldine were members of a group or gang which she referred to as “The Disciples” and that they sometimes gathered at the apartment of Linda Jordan, which was next door to that of Ace Hawthorne. Geraldine, after observing the burglary, went to her mother’s apartment nearby and told her what she had seen. When Ace returned from work and found that the apartment had been burglarized he called the police and signed a complaint.

The five suspects were arrested within a few days of the burglary, except Murray who left the Rockford area immediately following the burglary but returned and was arrested on November 30. The police interrogated the suspects after informing them of their constitutional rights in accordance with the Miranda requirements. All acknowledged being so informed and all signed a waiver of their right to remain silent and answered questions by the police, except one who is not an appellant here. According to the police reports and testimony Fort admitted he participated in the burglary and that he took a TV set from the apartment and sold it to a girl of his acquaintence by the name of Vicki Meadows. The police went to her apartment and after first denying she had the set, she produced the set and handed it over to the police. Fort refused to name anyone else who was involved. At the trial he denied he had admitted the burglary and denied that he had participated in it. He said he only told the police the address of Vicki Meadows and they already knew that she had the TV set, having been told this by some other person.

Defendant Murray denied any part in the burglary, however, he signed a statement admitting that he had gone to Ace Hawthorne’s apartment on November 17, two days after the alleged burglary, that he had found the door open and had taken a couple of “Afro” statues and two incense holders. Frick completely denied any part in the burglary and the police reports do not indicate that he signed any incriminating statements.

The defendants Murray and Fricks base their contention that the evidence was not sufficient to prove them guilty beyond a reasonable doubt on an alleged discrepancy in the testimony of Geraldine Hawthorne. Geraldine testified that she witnessed the burglary from a vantage point on the ground, near the stairs, where she was partly hidden by a brick projection of the building wall. Apparently as a result of police interrogation and after looking at a photograph, Geraldine indicated a certain spot on the photograph as the place where she had been standing when she observed the defendants coming out of the back door of the apartment with Ace’s property in their hands.

To rebut her testimony the defense called the maintenance superintendent of the Valerie Percy Apartment Complex, Willis Scott. After looking at the photographs designated as People’s exhibits 2 and 3 and defense exhibit 1, Scott testified that due to the construction of the stairways and stairwells, Geraldine Hawthorne could not have seen the back door of Ace Hawthorne’s apartment from the spot she indicated on the photographs to mark the place where she was standing when she observed the defendants. Scott said that that point would not have allowed a view of Ace’s back door. Geraldine, recalled to the stand by the prosecution in rebuttal, reiterated that she had seen the defendants “take the stuff out of Ace’s house.”

The defense contends that since Geraldine is the only person to place the defendants at the scene of the burglary and since her testimony was shown by a defense witness to be incredible, her testimony should be disregarded and in that case there is not sufficient evidence to convict the defendants beyond a reasonable doubt.

However, in our view, it is not necessary to conclude from Scott’s testimony that Geraldine was not telling the truth when she said she saw the defendants coming out of Ace’s apartment carrying certain property. The jury had the opportunity of believing either that she did not witness what she said she witnessed or that she merely designated the wrong spot on the photograph as the place where she was standing when she witnessed it. Apparently the jury, based on the prompt police report, the testimony as to the condition of the apartment and the recovery of the TV set by the police, believed that a burglary by the defendants had occurred and that Geraldine had witnessed it and they disregarded the apparent error as to where Geraldine was standing when she observed it. Inasmuch as the defendants admitted they were in the habit of gathering in the apartment next door to Ace’s and there were references in the police report as to friction between some of the defendants and Ace Hawthorne and his testimony indicated that some of the same group had burglarized or attempted to burglarize his apartment previously, and inasmuch as Detective Otwell testified that Fort had admitted he participated and divulged the name and address of the person having the stolen TV set, it was reasonable for the jury to come to the conclusion that Geraldine was honest in her testimony and that the defendants were involved in the burglary. For the jury to have disregarded the circumstances pointing to their involvement and come to the conclusion that some entirely unrelated and unknown person had been responsible would, in view of the total evidence against the defendants, be contrary to reason and experience. We believe the jury had sufficient evidence before it to have found the defendants guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
357 N.E.2d 1365, 44 Ill. App. 3d 62, 2 Ill. Dec. 922, 1976 Ill. App. LEXIS 3442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fort-illappct-1976.