People v. Gosier

582 N.E.2d 89, 145 Ill. 2d 127, 163 Ill. Dec. 823, 1991 Ill. LEXIS 80
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 1991
Docket69277
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 582 N.E.2d 89 (People v. Gosier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Gosier, 582 N.E.2d 89, 145 Ill. 2d 127, 163 Ill. Dec. 823, 1991 Ill. LEXIS 80 (Ill. 1991).

Opinion

JUSTICE MORAN

delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendant, Harry Gosier, was charged with committing two separate murders and two separate aggravated criminal sexual assaults, in Champaign County. During his trial, the defendant pled guilty to all the charges. Following his guilty pleas, the trial court found that the defendant was eligible for the death penalty. Subsequently, the jury that had originally been impaneled to determine guilt found that there were no mitigating factors sufficient to preclude the imposition of the death sentence. The trial court then sentenced the defendant to death for the murders, and to consecutive 60-year sentences for the two counts of aggravated criminal sexual assault. The death sentence was stayed (134 Ill. 2d R. 609(a)), pending direct appeal to this court (Ill. Const. 1970, art. VI, §4(b); 134 Ill. 2d R. 603).

Concerning his guilty plea, the defendant raises as issues whether: (1) his plea violated the constitution because he was never admonished that he could plead guilty but mentally ill; (2) the trial court properly denied his request to withdraw his guilty plea, and substitute a plea of guilty but mentally ill; and (3) the trial court properly denied his post-trial motion to withdraw his guilty plea.

Concerning his sentencing hearing, the defendant raises as issues whether: (1) the death sentence was properly imposed; (2) he was denied a fair sentencing hearing when the trial judge admitted out-of-court statements made by defendant’s three-year-old daughter; (3) the trial judge’s questioning of a mitigation witness was proper; (4) he was denied a fair sentencing hearing because of the prosecutor’s improper closing argument; (5) the sentencing jury had jurisdiction to sentence him to death; (6) the trial court properly denied his motion for a continuance prior to the second stage of the death penalty hearing; (7) the jury should have been specifically instructed to consider his guilty plea as a mitigating factor at sentencing; (8) the trial court properly refused to modify the verdict form, and instruct the jury that the only alternative to death was a life sentence without possibility of parole; (9) the jury instructions, taken as a whole, precluded the jury from considering mercy within all the factors in aggravation and mitigation; (10) he was denied his right of allocution; and (11) the trial court properly refused his request to limit the State to one closing argument.

The defendant additionally claims that the Illinois death penalty statute is unconstitutional.

The defendant was charged, in a Champaign County grand jury indictment, with the murders of his mother-in-law, Mae Halcrombe (Mae), and his sister-in-law, Soynda Halcrombe (Soynda). He was also charged with sexually assaulting Soynda and his estranged wife, Lesia Halcrombe Gosier (Lesia).

Prior to trial, the defendant requested to proceed pro se, and the trial court granted his request. Defendant later made a request that counsel be reappointed, which the trial court granted. Thirteen days before the trial began, the defendant again requested that the trial court dismiss his attorney and allow him to proceed pro se. After questioning and admonishing the defendant, the trial court granted this request, but asked that the public defender, Joseph Hooker, assist the defendant as backup counsel.

A jury trial then began as scheduled. The State’s fourth witness was to be defendant’s wife, Lesia. Immediately before Lesia’s testimony was to commence, a recess was taken because the defendant appeared to be “emotionally upset seated at counsel table, visibly and audibly crying.” When trial reconvened, Lesia was also emotionally upset and unable to compose herself. While she attempted to regain her composure, the defendant informed one of the deputies that he wished to plead guilty to all the charges. The jury was removed from the courtroom and the defendant told the trial judge: “Your Honor, can’t none of us undue the past. And I still love my family and I’m guilty Your Honor. I’m guilty.” The trial court admonished the defendant concerning the consequences of a guilty plea, and then accepted his plea.

Following the entry of defendant’s guilty plea, a death sentence hearing commenced. The defendant requested, and received, counsel to represent him throughout the remainder of the proceedings. The first stage of the sentencing hearing was held before the trial judge alone. At this stage, the judge found the defendant eligible for the death penalty because of the presence of the following aggravating factors: (1) the defendant committed more than one murder; and (2) the murders were committed during the course of an aggravated criminal sexual assault.

The first witness called at the second stage of defendant’s death penalty hearing was his estranged wife, Lesia, who testified as follows: that she was the defendant’s wife, but was currently separated from him; that she had filed for a divorce because of marital problems that she and the defendant were having; that prior to, and after, the filing of the divorce papers, the defendant repeatedly contacted her and asked for a reconciliation, or alternatively, made threats against her and her family; and that she told the defendant that it was too late for a reconciliation,- and obtained a restraining order prohibiting him from contacting, or coming near, either her or their daughter, India.

Lesia also testified: that on the day of the offenses, she and India were living at her parents’ home in Champaign; that she arrived at the house in the early afternoon to have lunch with her sister, Soynda; that, after walking in the front door, she noticed that the garage door looked like it had been “broken into,” and that she called out for Soynda; that the defendant then approached her, holding a handgun (he also had a knife and a barbecue fork sticking out of his pants); that, as he approached her he was yelling “March 2nd,” the date set for their divorce proceedings; that the defendant was drinking a beer and told her that she did not “stand up for him with her family”; that there was blood on the defendant’s clothes, and he told her that he had already killed Soynda; that he also told her that he had been watching the house, and knew when the various family members should arrive home; that the defendant then took her into her bedroom, and had India leave the room, at which point he forced her, at gunpoint, to have intercourse with him; and that after the defendant finished, he got dressed and tied her up with an extension cord, and gagged her with a pillow case.

Lesia further testified: that the defendant was upset that everyone was late getting home and repeatedly told her that he would “blow her head off”; that the defendant saw a car drive up, and he left her in the bedroom; that she then heard her mother, Mae, enter the house, encounter the defendant, and talk with him as they moved around the house; that she then heard three gunshots and a fall to the ground; that the defendant then came back into the room, pointing a rifle at her; that she had loosened the cord around her hands and began to struggle with the defendant; and that, during the struggle, the defendant hit her on the head and she lost consciousness, regaining it only after the police arrived.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
582 N.E.2d 89, 145 Ill. 2d 127, 163 Ill. Dec. 823, 1991 Ill. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-gosier-ill-1991.