People v. Garcia

2018 IL App (5th) 150363
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 25, 2019
Docket5-15-0363
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2018 IL App (5th) 150363 (People v. Garcia) 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. Garcia, 2018 IL App (5th) 150363 (Ill. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Digitally signed by Reporter of Decisions Reason: I attest to Illinois Official Reports the accuracy and integrity of this document Appellate Court Date: 2019.02.19 09:16:25 -06'00'

People v. Garcia, 2018 IL App (5th) 150363

Appellate Court THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Caption JOSEPH GARCIA, Defendant-Appellant.

District & No. Fifth District Docket No. 5-15-0363

Filed October 3, 2018

Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Monroe County, No. 14-CF-118; the Review Hon. Dennis B. Doyle, Judge, presiding.

Judgment Affirmed in part and vacated in part; cause remanded with directions.

Counsel on James E. Chadd, Ellen J. Curry, and Jennifer M. Lassy, of State Appeal Appellate Defender’s Office, of Mt. Vernon, for appellant.

Christopher Hitzemann, State’s Attorney, of Waterloo (Patrick Delfino, David J. Robinson, and Erin Wilson Laegeler, of State’s Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor’s Office, of counsel), for the People.

Panel JUSTICE OVERSTREET delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Chapman and Cates concurred in the judgment and opinion. OPINION

¶1 A jury convicted the defendant, Joseph Garcia, of attempted burglary, and the circuit court sentenced him to 10 years of imprisonment and 2 years of mandatory supervised release. This is the defendant’s direct appeal from his conviction and sentence. During his jury trial, the State presented two videotaped confessions that the parties agree contained inadmissible and prejudicial evidence of other crimes involving the defendant. Prior to trial, the circuit court granted the defendant’s motion in limine, which barred the State from presenting other crimes evidence during the trial. The defendant’s counsel, however, did not object to the State admitting unedited copies of the videotaped confessions, thus exposing the jury to the prejudicial other crimes evidence. ¶2 The defendant’s attorney raised this error in a posttrial motion, characterizing the error as plain error instead of ineffective assistance of counsel. The circuit court denied the posttrial motion. On appeal, the defendant argues that his trial counsel had either a per se or an actual conflict of interest during the posttrial hearing because counsel had to argue that his own error resulted in an unfair trial. For the following reasons, we agree with the defendant’s argument that defense counsel had an actual conflict of interest when he argued the posttrial motion. Therefore, we vacate the circuit court’s denial of the defendant’s posttrial motion and remand for the appointment of conflict-free posttrial counsel and for further posttrial proceedings.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND ¶4 The defendant was charged with attempted residential burglary involving a home owned by Mike and Carla Becherer located in Columbia, Illinois. The charges stem from events that occurred in the afternoon on Wednesday, December 17, 2014, at the Becherers’ residence. The Becherers’ daughter, Veronica, was home alone when someone began knocking on the front door and ringing the doorbell. Veronica did not answer. She watched the person at the front door walk across the street and then back to her house, where he started knocking on the door again. The person then walked to the back of her house and onto the back deck. ¶5 Veronica called her mother, Carla, and told her about the person at the house and about a car in the driveway with Missouri license plates. Carla told Veronica to hide, and she called 9-1-1. Veronica hid in a closet and heard loud banging at the back door. ¶6 Officers Josh Bayer and Ryan Doetsch with the Columbia Police Department immediately responded to the Becherers’ residence. Upon arrival, Bayer saw a gray Mazda passenger car with tinted windows parked in the driveway. Because the windows were tinted, he did not notice that there was a person in the driver’s seat of the car. At the back of the house, the officers found the defendant and another individual that they identified as Ryan Ewald, standing on the top of the back deck’s stairs. They both wore gloves and cotton stocking caps. The officers arrested them. The person in the gray Mazda drove away, but he was arrested a short time later. The officers learned that the driver was Ryan Ewald’s brother, Derek Ewald. As Bayer secured the defendant into the back of a police car, the defendant told him that he was at the house with “Cisco” because of an ad posted on Craigslist. Bayer determined that “Cisco” was Ryan Ewald. ¶7 After the arrest, the officers discovered a black knife on the back deck. The tip of the knife was broken off. They also discovered pry marks around the sliding glass door and a broken

-2- chuck of landscaping brick that was on a bench on the deck. Carla came home while the officers were still at the house. She told the officers that the broken landscaping brick sitting on a bench did not belong there and that it was not there when she left for work that morning. She also told the officers that the knife found on the back deck did not belong to them and that she had never seen the knife before. She told the officers that scratches by the back door’s handle were not there before. She noticed that the back door no longer opened properly. However, there was no evidence that the defendant or Ryan Ewald ever entered the house. ¶8 Prior to the defendant’s jury trial, the defendant’s attorney filed a motion in limine, requesting the court to, among other things, bar the State from presenting evidence of other crimes involving the defendant in its case-in-chief. At the hearing on the motion, the prosecutor stated that he did not object to the motion, except in the event that the defendant testified. If he testified, the State “would use his prior criminal convictions to impeach him as a witness.” In response, the defendant’s counsel emphasized, “I just don’t want it brought up in their case in chief.” The court granted the motion, barring the State from presenting evidence of other crimes in its case-in-chief. The defendant’s motion also requested the court to bar the State from mentioning any burglaries in Columbia, Illinois, in which the defendant had not been charged. At the pretrial hearing, the prosecutor agreed with the motion, stating, “I don’t think that would be appropriate, and we don’t intend to bring in evidence.” The court granted the motion and barred the State from presenting evidence of other burglaries. ¶9 At the defendant’s trial, the State presented two videotaped interviews of the defendant that were played for the jury in their entirety without any objection from the defendant’s attorney. These videotaped interviews showed questions the officers asked of the defendant concerning the events that occurred at the Becherer residence. However, the videotaped interviews also included evidence of other crimes involving the defendant and other burglaries in which the defendant had not been charged. ¶ 10 During the first videotaped interview, the defendant stated that he “did not break into nothing and did not touch nothing.” Shortly into the interview, the defendant volunteered to the officers that he was just released “out of the penitentiary about a month ago.” One of the officers asked, “for what?” The defendant responded, “for drugs.” The officer asked, “what kind of drugs?” The defendant stated methamphetamines. The defendant added that the prison was in Booneville, Missouri, and that he was released on November 4 or 5. ¶ 11 The videotape showed the defendant telling the officers that when he was arrested at the Becherers’ residence, he was with a person named “Cisco” and Cisco’s brother. He stated that he knew Cisco because he had been “locked up” with him. He also stated that he knew Cisco from getting high and from the “club scene.” He stated that the vehicle they used that day belonged to Cisco and his girlfriend.

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2018 IL App (5th) 150363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-garcia-illappct-2019.