People v. Gomez

2025 IL App (1st) 232443-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 21, 2025
Docket1-23-2443
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 IL App (1st) 232443-U (People v. Gomez) 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. Gomez, 2025 IL App (1st) 232443-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

2025 IL App (1st) 232443-U FIRST DISTRICT, SIXTH DIVISION February 21, 2025

No. 1-23-2443

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). _____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT _____________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County, Illinois. ) v. ) No. 23 CR 02514 ) ROGELIO GOMEZ, ) Honorable ) Pamela Stratigakis, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge Presiding. _____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE GAMRATH delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Tailor and Justice C.A. Walker concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: We reverse defendant’s conviction for aggravated unlawful use of a weapon for carrying an “uncased, loaded, and immediately accessible” firearm where the State failed to present evidence that the firearm was loaded.

¶2 Defendant Rogelio Gomez was convicted by a jury of aggravated unlawful use of a

weapon (AUUW) and sentenced to one year of imprisonment. On appeal, he argues the evidence

was insufficient to convict him of carrying a “loaded” firearm where the firearm recovered was

unloaded and no witness saw him in possession of a loaded firearm. We find the State failed to

prove the firearm was “loaded” and reverse Gomez’s conviction. No. 1-23-2443

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 At around 11:30 p.m. on February 17, 2023, Officer Bernard Hernandez, Officer Jason

Bulkley, and Officer Anthony Rosen were patrolling the Little Village neighborhood in a marked

police squad car. It was a cold February night with snow on the ground.

¶5 As Hernandez turned from 23rd Street onto Whipple Street, Bulkley saw approximately

five to eight people, including Gomez, in the middle of the street. The people turned to look at

the squad car, and then Gomez “br[oke] away from the group” and began running west into a

gangway. Bulkley observed that he was hunched over and grabbing his front waistline area as if

trying to secure a heavy object. Hernandez also testified that Gomez was leaning over and

holding his waistband area with both hands.

¶6 Hernandez stopped the car, and all three officers exited. Bulkley and Rosen chased

Gomez into the gangway while Hernandez “stood out front.” Bulkley lost sight of Gomez when

Gomez entered the gangway. As Bulkley made his way down the gangway, Gomez reemerged

from behind a house and started coming back toward the street. Bulkley said Gomez “seemed

startled, panicked, kind of wide eyed, a little surprised that we had gone back there.” Bulkley

detained Gomez and then had Rosen “hang on to him” while Bulkley went to “search the area

that [he] observed him coming out of.”

¶7 Bulkley saw footprints in the snow and followed them to a back corner with debris on the

ground, including a blue drum and cinder block. Inside the cinder block, Bulkley spotted a

firearm. There was snow in the area, but no snow on the cinder block or the firearm. Bulkley

went back toward Rosen and signaled “143” with his hands—the police code for a firearm—and

then retrieved the firearm. He did not have rubber gloves with him and picked up the gun with

his bare hands. Although it was cold outside, the firearm did not feel cold but was “pretty much

-2- No. 1-23-2443

room temp.” The firearm was not loaded, but “right next to” it was an extended capacity

magazine with live rounds inside.

¶8 After Bulkley recovered the firearm, he and Rosen walked with Gomez to their squad car.

As they walked, Gomez asked them to pick up his phone that he had dropped in the gangway so

he could call his father. Bulkley retrieved the phone for him, which was located “[a]pproximately

half to three quarters towards the rear of the gangway.”

¶9 Bulkley testified that the gangway was “in between” a two-flat house with windows in

both front and back. He observed both the front and back of the house and did not see any lights

on. Bulkley acknowledged he did not see Gomez with a gun upon first sight or when Gomez was

going down the gangway, but he saw “an actual object” on “the right side of [Gomez’s] body as

he was hunching over.”

¶ 10 Bulkley testified that he viewed the video footage from his body-worn camera and

verified its accuracy. The recording was admitted into evidence and played for the jury. The

video shows the officers stopping the squad car and exiting. It then shows Bulkley shining a

flashlight down the vacant gangway. When Bulkley is about halfway down the gangway, Gomez

is seen entering the gangway from the right and walking toward the officers. Gomez is detained,

and Bulkley proceeds down the gangway and into the adjacent backyard. In the corner of the

backyard, Bulkley shines his flashlight into a blue drum before shining it over a cinder block.

Bulkley walks back toward the gangway, makes a hand signal to Rosen, and then returns to the

cinder block, reaches down, and recovers a firearm that can be partially seen in the video. The

remainder of the footage shows Rosen walking Gomez out of the gangway and into the squad

car. No one besides Gomez and the two officers is seen in the gangway or in the backyard where

the firearm was recovered.

-3- No. 1-23-2443

¶ 11 While Bulkley and Rosen were chasing Gomez down the gangway, Hernandez “stood out

front” and “[p]rovided security.” Hernandez testified that the other people present on the scene

were standing a few house lengths south of the gangway, and he did not see any of them enter

the gangway at any point. Nor did he see anyone other than his two partners and Gomez exit the

gangway. He estimated it was “[r]oughly two minutes” from the time they exited the car to the

time they returned with Gomez.

¶ 12 At trial, the State proceeded against Gomez on a single charge, namely, that Gomez

committed the offense of AUUW by knowingly carrying on or about his person an “uncased,

loaded, and immediately accessible” firearm without a valid Firearm Owners Identification

(FOID) Card or Concealed Carry License (CCL). 1 The parties stipulated that Gomez did not

have a valid FOID Card or CCL on the date of the offense. Gomez called no witnesses in his

defense. He was found guilty and sentenced to one year in prison with credit for 285 days served.

¶ 13 II. ANALYSIS

¶ 14 Gomez argues the evidence is insufficient to find him guilty of AUUW beyond a

reasonable doubt. In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, it is not our function to retry the

defendant. People v. Beauchamp, 241 Ill. 2d 1, 8 (2011). We are not required to search out all

possible explanations consistent with the defendant’s innocence or exclude every possible doubt.

People v. Wheeler, 226 Ill. 2d 92, 117 (2007); People v. McCullough, 2015 IL App (2d) 121364,

¶ 74. Rather, we must determine “ ‘whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most

favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of

the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.’ ” (Emphasis in original.) People v. Jackson, 232 Ill. 2d

246, 280 (2009) (quoting Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979)); see also People v.

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Bluebook (online)
2025 IL App (1st) 232443-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-gomez-illappct-2025.