People v. Freneey

2016 IL App (1st) 140328, 55 N.E.3d 88
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 24, 2016
Docket1-14-0328
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2016 IL App (1st) 140328 (People v. Freneey) 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. Freneey, 2016 IL App (1st) 140328, 55 N.E.3d 88 (Ill. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

2016 IL App (1st) 140328 No. 1-14-0328 Opinion filed May 24, 2016 Second Division

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIRST DISTRICT

) ) Appeal from the Circuit Court THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) of Cook County. ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) No.12 CR 2729 v. ) ) RONNIE FRENEEY, ) The Honorable ) Dennis J. Porter, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, presiding. )

JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Pierce and Justice Simon concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Ronnie Freneey was involved in a scuffle with a courtroom deputy at the Daley Center,

following a probate proceeding in which Freneey was a litigant. After a bench trial, he was

convicted of attempting to disarm a peace officer and aggravated battery of a peace officer, and

sentenced to a total of three years in prison.

¶2 Freneey contends that the evidence used to convict him was insufficient because (i) the

State witnesses were impeached and contradicted by the defense witnesses' testimony, and (ii)

there was insufficient evidence of his intent. We find that on the basis of all the evidence, a 1-14-0328

reasonable trier of fact could credit the State witnesses over the defense witnesses and draw

inferences of Freneey's intent to disarm and batter the deputy. Freneey also argues that the

State's evidence was not enough to defeat his affirmative defense of self-defense to excessive

force by the deputy. We reject this contention because Freneey did not raise a valid self-defense

claim.

¶3 Finally, Freneey asserts that the trial court violated his right to a fair trial by

misremembering witness testimony. We hold that, even if the trial court did so (which is unclear

from the record), the testimony lacked enough importance to affect the verdict.

¶4 BACKGROUND

¶5 On January 27, 2012, Freneey appeared as a party to a probate case in courtroom 1809 at

the Daley Center, Chicago. Freneey's mother needed a guardian, and Freneey and his niece,

Erica Freneey, both wanted the position. They proceeded without counsel, but attorney Ellen

Douglass had been appointed guardian ad litem for Freneey's mother.

¶6 According to Cook County Sheriff's Deputy Matthew Crawley and court clerk Sandrena

Bracy, who were in the courtroom that day, Freneey had been disruptive during the court hearing

and had yelled profanities at witnesses. Douglass testified that Freneey was "very emotional"

about the case, but only made grumbling noises during the hearing and called one witness a liar.

Freneey testified that he had said "she's lying" during one witness's testimony.

¶7 The hearing finished late in the afternoon, and the presiding judge left the bench.

Freneey, his niece, Douglass and other litigants and attorneys remained in the courtroom to

receive written orders from Bracy. Freneey's mother (who was in a wheelchair) started to depart

the room and Erica Freneey went to hug her.

-2- 1-14-0328

¶8 Deputy Crawley testified that when Erica Freneey tried to hug her aunt, Freneey jumped

up, yelled "get the fuck off her," and "went at [Erica Freneey] with his arm raised." Crawley

responded by grabbing Freneey's arms and pinning them behind his back, because Crawley

believed that Freneey intended to hit Erica. Crawley informed Freneey that he was under arrest

and pulled Freneey backwards towards the judge's bench. With Freneey facing the bench,

Crawley tried to handcuff Freneey but needed to release Freneey's arms to do so. Crawley put

handcuffs on one of Freneey's wrists, but Freneey swung his hands backwards and broke loose

from Crawley's grip.

¶9 Crawley tackled Freneey to the ground. Crawley recalled hearing Douglass yelling at

him to let Freneey go. As they wrestled on the ground, Freneey hit Crawley in the face.

Crawley used his radio to call for help, and then felt Freneey pulling at Crawley's gun, which he

carried in a holster on his right hip. Crawley used his right hand to pin the gun in place and his

left hand to keep Freneey on the ground. At that point, another judge came into the courtroom,

and other sheriff's deputies. The judge held Freneey's legs down while Crawley handcuffed

Freneey. The altercation resulted in Crawley receiving several cuts and bruises on his face and a

lump on the top of his head. On cross-examination, Crawley testified that he had been

interviewed by investigators later that day and told them that he noticed bleeding after the

altercation but was not sure exactly when his injuries occurred.

¶ 10 Sandrena Bracy testified that following the hearing, Freneey jumped up and yelled "you

bitch you can't have my mom" at his niece before charging towards her with his right arm raised.

While Crawley was trying to handcuff Freneey, Douglass distracted him by yelling "let [her]

client go." Freneey raised his arm and hit Crawley in the face, while unintentionally kicking

Bracy in the stomach. Crawley and Freneey then wrestled on the ground and Bracy saw Freneey

-3- 1-14-0328

touching Crawley's gun and trying to remove it from the holster. Bracy wasn't sure whether

Crawley said anything to Freneey before restraining him.

¶ 11 After Crawley radioed for assistance, a number of deputies came to the courtroom,

including Jennifer Griffith. Griffith testified that when she arrived outside the courtroom,

someone in the hallway told her that "he's trying to take the deputy's gun." Inside the courtroom,

she saw Crawley on the floor trying to restrain Freneey. Griffith did not see Freneey trying to

touch Crawley's gun. Freneey already had one handcuff on his wrist, and, with Griffith's help,

Crawley finished handcuffing Freneey.

¶ 12 Ellen Douglass testified that when Erica Freneey approached Freneey's mother, Freneey

started walking towards them and saying "get off my mother, leave my mother alone." Freneey

did not raise his arm. Crawley walked up behind Freneey and grabbed Freneey's arms, but

Douglass did not hear him say anything to Freneey. Instead, Crawley pulled Freneey backwards

across the courtroom, flung him around and pressed him against the judge's bench. Freneey then

started pushing back, Crawley knocked into a file cabinet, and both men fell to the ground.

Crawley landed on top of Freneey; they thrashed about as Freneey was "bucking" to get Crawley

off of him. Douglass told Freneey to calm down. Douglass did not see Freneey strike Crawley

or see him touch Crawley's gun, and Bracy was not close enough to the fight to be struck. A

group of deputies arrived and told Douglass and the other people in the room to leave, but

Douglass did not; there were so many officers (more than Douglass thought necessary) and "it

was just a lot of craziness," so Douglass worried that Freneey "was about to get his ass kicked."

Douglass knew of cases of police brutality and "wasn't putting up with it," so she wanted to stay

to witness what was happening.

-4- 1-14-0328

¶ 13 Freneey testified that after the hearing, he told his niece to "stay away from my mother,"

but did not curse or raise his arm. When Freneey stood up to leave, Crawley grabbed his wrist

and twisted Freneey's arm behind his back to the point that Freneey felt like his shoulder might

dislocate, and started pushing Freneey down the aisle of the courtroom.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 IL App (1st) 140328, 55 N.E.3d 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-freneey-illappct-2016.