People v. Gore

211 N.E.2d 757, 64 Ill. App. 2d 309, 1965 Ill. App. LEXIS 1130
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 16, 1965
DocketGen. 64-72
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 211 N.E.2d 757 (People v. Gore) 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. Gore, 211 N.E.2d 757, 64 Ill. App. 2d 309, 1965 Ill. App. LEXIS 1130 (Ill. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

ALLOY, P. J.

Defendant, Charles R. Gore, was tried an,d found guilty by a verdict of a jury, of burglary, and was thereafter sentenced by the Circuit Court of Rock Island County to a term of one to seven years. On appeal in this court, Defendant sets forth a number of grounds for reversal which will be considered in the course of the opinion.

The evidence presented by the People discloses that Defendant Charles R. Gore was indicted on March 19, 1964, by the grand jury along with six other defendants for the burglary of a drug store building known as Doden’s Drug Store in Rock Island on January 1, 1964. An employee of the store had locked the doors and safe prior to closing the drug store but on January 2, 1964, it was found that the back door of the drug store had been forced open. That door had not been used previously for years and is adjacent to a neighbor’s private driveway. There were marks showing the use of tools and splintering on the door and plywood had been forced from its framework. Merchandise and other articles piled behind the door were in a state of disarray. A safe belonging to the drug store was taken from the store with its contents consisting of checks, cash, money orders, fishing and hunting licenses, and a small amount of medicine. Checks and cash totaled $2,808.21, none of which was recovered, and there were about 70 or 71 blank money orders missing.

On trial of the cause, the People introduced as an exhibit a check protector machine which was identified as having been taken from the drug store. The machine was issued by Traveler’s Express Company and had a slug number in it which was the Doden agency number. Other exhibits admitted in evidence consisted of money orders in the amount of $100 each taken from Doden’s and written in at least two cases by certain other individuals indicted for the burglary (not including the Defendant in this cause). One of the participants, Gilbert Banks, Jr., testified that he came to Rock Island on December 24, 1963, bringing with him one other participant (Goss) and that he had a conversation with certain other participants in the burglary (Bell, Huff, Crim, Goss) and the Defendant Charles R. Gore. At that conversation, at which Gore was present, it was stated that four of the participants not including Gore were to go down to the drug store, and in another conversation Defendant Gore said he would go down to the drug store and have a person move a car out of a driveway so that Banks could drive another participant’s (Haywood’s) car up the driveway in order to load the safe from Doden’s into it. The car was actually driven to the drug store as planned.

Earlier in the evening Banks drove past the drug store with Defendant Gore in the automobile, at which time Defendant Gore showed Banks the location of the drug store. Banks testified that he backed the car into the driveway and then helped three other participants (not including Gore) load the safe from the drug store into the car and then drove the car with the safe in it to Haywood’s house. Shortly after he arrived there, Defendant Gore and Bell also arrived there. They then unloaded the safe and took it into the house and proceeded to open it. Gore worked with Goss in opening the safe with a hammer, chisel and crowbar. There was money, money orders and medicines in the safe.

All of the participants including Gore were present when the money was divided and took part in the distribution of the money. After this the safe was dumped in an alley. Banks also stated that he first saw the check protector machine referred to in Defendant Gore’s house after dumping off the safe. All participants were present at that time including Defendant Gore and one of the other participants made out certain checks, which were introduced in evidence in the sum of $100 each, with the check protector. Banks testified he next saw the check protector at Rebecca Gore’s home after that date; that Defendant Gore told him it was there and how to get there and that he picked it up, washed it and threw it along a railroad track in Rock Island. About 1:00 a. m. on January 1, 1964, Defendant Gore and five other participants left for Chicago in an automobile driven by Defendant Gore.. At a motel where they registered, money orders which had been prepared were filled in by two of the other participants.

The record shows that while Gore participated in the conversations preceding the burglary and had an automobile removed from the driveway so that the car driven by one of the participants could use the driveway, Gore did not actually participate in breaking doors and did not enter the drug store. He did, however, participate in the removal of the contents of the safe. Another participant, Columbus Goss, refused to testify in the cause on the ground that it might tend to incriminate him.

Rebecca Gore, wife of Defendant’s nephew, identified the check protector which Charles Gore brought to her house in two paper bags shortly after the burglary. Around January 4 Or 5, 1964, Defendant Gore picked her up after work and told her that he had this check protector from Doden’s at her house and wanted her to get rid of it. He stated that he had brought it to her house because they didn’t know anything about her and he’d send two men to pick it up. He asked her to wash off all the fingerprints and told her how much money he could make with it. That same night, Banks, who similarly testified in the cause, came to Rebecca Gore’s house, washed the machine and took it away. There was “bad blood” between Rebecca Gore and Charles Gore which developed after the check machine incident and by reason of her being subpoenaed to testify against him.

Another witness, Arnold Barnett, who had been convicted, previously, of robbery and burglary, went to Cleveland with Defendant in December 1963. He returned to Rock Island with the Defendant and a participant in the burglary named Columbus Goss. A few weeks before the Doden burglary, he talked with Defendant Gore of having been convicted of burglary and stated he could get in the drug store if Gore wanted him to and they discussed ways of getting in. He told Defendant Gore he knew nothing about opening a safe and Gore stated that he could get someone to open the safe. A few days before the burglary, Barnett was in Doden’s with Defendant during business hours when Gore pointed to an area and told him that was where the safe was. Another witness testified that on December 30, 1963, in the presence of a number of the participants in the burglary, she heard Defendant Gore say: “We will do the job on New Year’s Day on 12th Street.” And another participant stated: “and then we’ll jet from town to town, Chicago, Cleveland, Columbus, Detroit and New York.” Another participant, George Bell, who had pleaded guilty stated essentially the same as the participant referred to although he did not help open the safe and didn’t see Gore do this either.

Each of the persons indicted for the burglary originally entered a plea of not guilty. Defendant Charles R. Gore was granted a severance from the other defendants and Tyson Haywood was granted immunity on the People’s own motion. At the first trial of Defendant Gore which was concluded on July 29, 1964, a verdict of guilty was returned.

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Related

People v. Love
204 N.W.2d 714 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1972)
People v. French
220 N.E.2d 635 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1966)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 N.E.2d 757, 64 Ill. App. 2d 309, 1965 Ill. App. LEXIS 1130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-gore-illappct-1965.