People v. Gandy

591 N.E.2d 45, 227 Ill. App. 3d 112, 169 Ill. Dec. 165, 1992 Ill. App. LEXIS 597
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 13, 1992
Docket5-89-0869
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 591 N.E.2d 45 (People v. Gandy) 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. Gandy, 591 N.E.2d 45, 227 Ill. App. 3d 112, 169 Ill. Dec. 165, 1992 Ill. App. LEXIS 597 (Ill. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

JUSTICE WELCH

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appeal before this court is a consolidation of defendant Jackie L. Gandy’s direct appeal from the judgment of the circuit court of Marion County finding defendant guilty of the murder of Clarence Eugene Wilson and the sentence imposed therein, and defendant’s appeal of the circuit court’s order dismissing defendant’s post-conviction relief petition. For reasons stated as follows, we affirm both the November 15, 1989, judgment and the November 30, 1990, order of the circuit court.

Defendant was first indicted by the grand jury in Marion County on September 9, 1988, and charged with the first-degree murder of Clarence Eugene Wilson. Because the murder was alleged to have been committed sometime between June 26 and June 28, 1983, a date which preceded the effective date of the statute delineating the felony offense of first-degree murder, defendant was later charged by information with the offense of murder under count II of the criminal complaint. The State dismissed count I and proceeded to trial on the count II charge of murder. Following a bench trial which was held on November 13-15, 1989, defendant was found guilty of murder as charged in count II of the criminal complaint, judgment was entered on the finding of guilt on November 15, 1989, and defendant was sentenced on December 22, 1989, following a sentencing hearing, to an extended term of 50 years’ imprisonment. Because defendant raises issue, inter alia, with the sufficiency of the State’s evidence and lack of credibility of the State’s main witness, we shall first set forth a summary of the testimony and evidence admitted in this bench trial.

Ralph Unverfhert testified that in 1983 he owned farmland in Marion County just north of County Line Road. Unverfhert testified that on August 10, 1983, he discovered a skull and some dentures approximately 15 feet away from the skull. He testified that wheat had been harvested around July but that the field had been planted in beans at the time the skull was discovered. Unverfhert contacted the authorities, and thereafter he and someone from the county coroner’s office discovered a forearm located about 125 feet from the skull.

Bill Culbreth, deputy coroner of Marion County, testified that two to three days after the skull was discovered he and another investigator discovered the remains of a body in a clump of trees located at the corner of Unverfhert’s field, about 15 to 20 feet north of County Line Road. Unverfhert opined that the acre-sized plot of trees and bushes, positioned at the intersection of County Line Road and Route 350, was fairly dense and the body could not have been seen from the road. Culbreth identified photographs of the remains and the crime scene.

Daniel Fischer, Marion County coroner, testified that there was a large hole and a splitting of the skull near the midline of the forehead region of the skull. Fischer testified that in addition to the skull, a lower jaw, upper and lower dentures, hair material, two vertebrae and an arm bone were located in the field and that he had requested that Dr. Steven Nurenberger, a forensic pathologist for Marion County, examine these items along with the skeletal remains found in the clump of trees. Fischer also testified that as they were in the process of moving the body from the crime scene, a metal hip prosthesis fell from the body. It was by tracing the hip prosthesis that the authorities were later able to identify the victim as Clarence Eugene Wilson.

Dr. Nurenberger identified the remains as human and belonging to the same individual. Dr. Nurenberger opened the skull and recovered a spent slug embedded in the tissue and dried blood at the back of the skull. The hole and splitting of the skull were consistent with a contact gunshot wound in which the muzzle of a weapon is tightly pressed against the forehead of the victim, and the finding of a spent slug in the skull confirmed a gunshot wound to the head. The contact wound to the head would likely have been fatal and could have been the cause of death. Dr. Nurenberger opined that the victim was male, and although he could not fix the date of death, he stated that the victim had been dead for a period greater than weeks. Dr. Nurenberger also identified fracturing of a lower left rib and sixth or seventh thoracic vertebral body. These injuries were consistent with a gunshot wound to the back at that location, transversing the rib in a horizontal to slightly downward angle. Dr. Nurenberger opined that this wound could also have been a fatal one, without immediate surgical intervention.

Richard Caudell examined the body and the crime scene on August 12, 1983, and located a bullet lying under the body. The decedent had been wearing blue jeans and underpants but no shirt when the body was found. The blue jeans were fastened at the waist, but the pants were unzipped. It had appeared that animals had gotten to the body and could have dragged the skull and portions of the arm 70 to 80 yards from the rest of the body. The hip prosthesis was turned over to Agent Guerin.

Michael Kreiser, forensic scientist with the Illinois State Police, testified that the two slugs were both fired lead bullet, .38 caliber. This type of bullet can be found in cartridges such as .38 Special or .357 Magnum or .38 S & W, and these two slugs may have been fired from the same gun, a Colt, Eig or Miroki revolver. Defendant stipulated that the body found on or about August 10, 1983, was that of Clarence E. Wilson and that Wilson’s death was caused by gunshot.

Clifford Tony Dyer, the State’s main witness, received immunity for his testimony, to the extent that the State would not prosecute him for the murder of Clarence E. Wilson unless it obtained some evidence that it was Dyer who had actually shot the victim. Dyer testified that he, Wilson and Gandy were associated as partners in crime for a period of two to three months during 1983. The three went south to Tennessee, Arkansas, Kentucky and Missouri in June 1983 to locate places to burglarize.

Dyer testified that he and Gene Wilson had visited with Wilson’s brother Albert before they had departed on their trip and that Wilson had borrowed a .38 Colt and two other guns at that time. He also recalled that a few days before their departure he and Wilson again visited Albert and that Wilson and Albert’s wife had gotten into an argument and Albert had told them to leave.

Dyer testified that a few days prior to the trip Wilson had wielded a gun at defendant after he discovered the defendant reading a letter addressed to Wilson. Dyer also recalled that defendant owed Wilson some money for bailing him out of jail but did not know if defendant had paid Wilson back. Defendant and Dyer helped Wilson move to Effingham, Illinois, in June 1983, a few days before they left on the trip.

Dyer, Wilson and defendant left on their trip in a brown Oldsmobile owned by defendant. Dyer testified that they had been gone for two days and stayed overnight in a motel in Cooksville, Tennessee, and a motel in Missouri located about 10 miles south of Cairo, Illinois. Only defendant and Dyer stayed in the motel the second night; Wilson spent the night at his sister’s house in Charleston, Missouri. A room receipt and registration card dated June 26, 1983, from the Sands Motel in Charleston, Missouri, with the apparent signature of “Jack L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
591 N.E.2d 45, 227 Ill. App. 3d 112, 169 Ill. Dec. 165, 1992 Ill. App. LEXIS 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-gandy-illappct-1992.