People v. Grinnage

2025 IL App (4th) 240841-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 15, 2025
Docket4-24-0841
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 IL App (4th) 240841-U (People v. Grinnage) 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. Grinnage, 2025 IL App (4th) 240841-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

NOTICE 2025 IL App (4th) 240841-U FILED This Order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is July 15, 2025 NO. 4-24-0841 Carla Bender not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed 4th District Appellate under Rule 23(e)(1). IN THE APPELLATE COURT Court, IL

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Circuit Court of v. ) McLean County JAROB KABEL GRINNAGE, ) No. 23CF663 Defendant-Appellant. ) ) Honorable ) J. Jason Chambers, ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE KNECHT delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Steigmann and Zenoff concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: The appellate court affirmed (1) defendant’s conviction, holding the State presented sufficient evidence and (2) defendant’s sentence, holding defendant did not show the trial court abused its discretion in imposing an 18-year extended-term sentence.

¶2 Defendant, Jarob Kabel Grinnage, appeals from his (1) conviction of possession

with intent to deliver of 1 gram or more but less than 15 grams of a substance containing cocaine

(720 ILCS 570/401(c)(2) (West 2022)) and (2) extended-term sentence of 18 years’ imprisonment.

We affirm.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 The State charged defendant with possession with intent to deliver 1 gram or more

but less than 15 grams of a substance containing cocaine (id.) and simple possession of less than

15 grams of a substance containing cocaine (id. § 402(c)). He waived his right to a jury trial. ¶5 At defendant’s bench trial, the State called as witnesses four officers from the

Bloomington Police Department (BPD) and a juvenile, K.W., who was 17 years old at the time of

trial. K.W. testified after the parties entered stipulations relating to forensic testing of the cocaine.

¶6 K.W. identified defendant as a friend of her best friend’s grandmother, whom she

knew as “Shortie.” As of July 6, 2023, she had known defendant for about a month and had

previously seen him two or three times. On July 6, she met with defendant, who had a white Tesla

he wanted her to drive for him. She had previously driven for him seven or eight times. Every time

she drove for him, he would tell her where to make stops. She was not compensated for her work

except for being allowed to drive the car, something she enjoyed because it could go fast.

¶7 K.W. agreed she had made multiple stops for defendant on July 6, but she said she

did not remember exactly how many stops she had made. She testified she did not remember telling

BPD officers she had made 11 stops. On the night of July 6, two officers of the BPD conducted a

traffic stop of the car K.W. was driving. Before the stop, defendant handed her what she agreed

was a “plastic baggie” and told her “to hide it in the best place [she] could.” She hid the bag in her

underpants. When she learned she would be searched, she handed the bag over to the officers.

¶8 After the traffic stop, Officer Logan Fosdick of the BPD gave K.W. a ride to her

home. K.W. remembered, during the ride, she told Fosdick where she had made the last stop. She

also recalled saying she had agreed to meet defendant that day “in Holton Homes.” She accepted

the State’s characterization that most of the stops were “relatively brief in duration.” Finally, she

agreed she “didn’t go grocery shopping or anything like that.”

¶9 On cross-examination, K.W. agreed to defense counsel’s suggestions she had

committed several offenses on July 6. Her own vehicle insurance had lapsed. She failed to signal

a right turn 100 feet before she made it. She gave an ambiguous response to whether a

-2- “[tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)] vape pen” was in the car’s center console, but she then admitted

she had access to the pen while driving. She further agreed the officers neither questioned her

whether she was intoxicated nor asked her to submit to any tests for drug use or intoxication.

¶ 10 K.W. also agreed she initially lied about the presence of drugs in the car. When the

officers stopped the car, they asked K.W. what was in the car. She told them, “[N]othing as far as

I know.” The officers asked her whether she “had anything on [her] that [she] shouldn’t have”—

they specifically asked about cannabis and cocaine. She said she had neither. However, when the

officers said she and the car could be searched “because of the dog alerts,” and, as the driver, she

could be considered to have control over everything in the car, she agreed defendant had handed

her something. She said she had never seen any money exchanged.

¶ 11 K.W. further agreed the officers had told her she was not going to “get in trouble.”

She initially told “the officer” she could not remember where she last stopped, but she then later

took officers to “where [she] had been.” The police had thanked her for her help and had never

suggested she would be charged with any offense. (She was ticketed for failing to properly signal

a turn.)

¶ 12 Officer Andrew Chambers identified himself as a BPD canine officer. He testified,

at about 9:20 p.m. on July 6, “Officer Elston” asked him to make a traffic stop of a white 2023

Tesla, which Elston had observed making a turn without signaling properly. Chambers caught up

to the car and pulled it over. Elston arrived and spoke to the driver while Chambers spoke to the

passenger—defendant—who was seated in front. Chambers ran defendant’s date of birth, which

he learned was in April 1971.

¶ 13 Chambers asked K.W. and defendant to exit the car so he and his dog could

“conduct a free-air sniff.” The dog “indicate[d] positive for drugs on the Tesla.” A search of the

-3- car revealed cannabis residue on the floor and a THC vape pen in the center console but no

controlled substances. Another officer searched defendant; Chambers agreed the officer found

$657 in defendant’s pocket. Defendant told the officers he was going to go grocery shopping at

Walmart and said the car belonged to his “Uncle Moses,” whose last name he did not know.

¶ 14 Chambers testified the baggie he saw field-tested for cocaine was “a large plastic

baggie with six individual baggies inside *** [containing] a hard white chunky substance that

tested positive for crack cocaine.” Chambers spoke briefly to K.W., who stated she got the baggie

from defendant, but it “was Huck’s.”

¶ 15 Officer Fosdick testified he participated in the stop of the white Tesla and spoke to

K.W. His testimony was consistent with her testimony she initially denied the presence of drugs

but then surrendered the baggie when she learned she would be searched. Fosdick added K.W. had

said defendant had given the bag to her “moments before the traffic stop was initiated.” She further

told him she thought she had made approximately 11 stops for defendant that day. She explained

defendant aways had the drugs with him when she picked him up; all she had to do was meet him

at “Holton Homes” and drive him where he asked her to go.

¶ 16 Officer Stephen Brown of the BPD testified as an expert in drug distribution. He

said the packaging of the cocaine was consistent with an intent to distribute. Nothing in the white

Tesla suggested either K.W. or defendant was using cocaine at the time of the stop, and the search

did not disclose any paraphernalia for the use of crack cocaine in the car, which also suggested the

two were distributing the cocaine, not using it.

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2025 IL App (4th) 240841-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-grinnage-illappct-2025.