People v. Hardiman

406 N.E.2d 842, 85 Ill. App. 3d 347, 40 Ill. Dec. 639, 1980 Ill. App. LEXIS 3063
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 4, 1980
Docket79-89
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 406 N.E.2d 842 (People v. Hardiman) 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. Hardiman, 406 N.E.2d 842, 85 Ill. App. 3d 347, 40 Ill. Dec. 639, 1980 Ill. App. LEXIS 3063 (Ill. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Mr. PRESIDING JUSTICE JONES

delivered the opinion of the court:

A jury found the defendant, Terry Hardiman, guilty of armed robbery for which he was sentenced to imprisonment for a term of 6 years. Defendant raises a single issue on appeal, whether it was error for the trial court to permit impeachment of defendant’s testimony by “allegedly inconsistent prior statements made in a letter written by defendant to a probation officer, where such letter represented an offer to negotiate a plea.”

The defendant and two other young men were arrested after an armed robbery of Church’s Fried Chicken in East St. Louis on July 26, 1978. The other two men subsequently pleaded guilty to the offense. At defendant’s trial on November 8 and 9, 1978, the evidence against him was substantial, not the least of which was an inculpatory two-page statement signed by him shortly after his arrest and waiver of Miranda-conferred rights. Pretrial he had moved without success to suppress the statement. According to the statement, given on July 28,1978, defendant and the other two young men had taken from Church’s Chicken money which, when divided between them, amounted to about $37 apiece. Also according to the statement, defendant, using a revolver, had told the girl who waited on them to give him “all the money” and had fired three times at a car and driver pursuing them as they fled. The girl who had waited on them testified that she had picked defendant out of a lineup and had positively identified him as the man holding a gun who had ordered her to hand over all the money from the cash register. She had observed that this person had no front teeth. Later defendant was required over objection to exhibit his teeth to the jury. Although the record does not indicate the condition of defendant’s teeth as exhibited, the context suggests that his front teeth were missing. Another of the restaurant’s employees, a 19-year-old woman, testified that defendant had held the gun during the robbery and that she lived across the street from him, had known him since she was in the sixth grade and knew the other two young men with him also as neighbors. This witness and others testified with regard to the pursuit of the three, apparently by a patron of the restaurant, and the evidence of the exchange of gunfire that ensued.

The officer who had arrested defendant testified that he had advised him of his Miranda rights orally at the time of arrest and had been present later during that part of an interview with a detective in which defendant signed the written waiver of his rights. The detective testified that he had read to defendant from a standard statement of constitutional rights and warnings used by the East St. Louis police department and then had handed it to defendant to read. He said he had instructed defendant to initial it if he understood what he had read and, if defendant wished to talk to him, to read and sign the waiver at the bottom. Having initialled and signed that statement, defendant gave the inculpatory statement. As defendant gave the inculpatory statement a second time, the detective typed what defendant said and then handed the typed statement to him to read. Defendant’s signature appears below the typed statement. On cross-examination the detective said that defendant had acted as an “informant” and that in the past he had talked to defendant about two cases, a felony and a misdemeanor. He denied having promised defendant that he would get him probation if he confessed. The arresting officer testified that defendant had worked with the arresting officer in an “undercover capacity, as a confidential source” for about a year prior to his arrest.

Defendant was the sole witness for the defense. He testified that the arresting officer had “made it known” that defendant was not under arrest and that the officer had wanted to talk to him at the police station “because I was an informant of his, and he wanted to question me about an armed robbery.” Defendant denied both that his rights had been read to him and that he had read them himself before initialling and signing the waiver. He said that the inculpatory statement was the detective’s account of the events, not his, and that, in fact, he had said nothing at all during the interview. When pressed on cross-examination, he said he had not even provided the information, which appeared above the typed statement, as to his address and telephone number as well as the date and place of his birth, explaining that the detective “knew that from the time that I first started working with him.” Defendant said that he “might” have told the detective on the day of his arrest — not during the interview — that he had been born in Chicago and that he had told his birth date to the detective in February — six months before the interview — while asking the detective if he could get defendant on the police force. Later on redirect he explained the presence of his signature on the forms:

“Well, [the detective] told me he would look out for me and that he would take care of me and that he would get me probation and he would tell the Judge that I worked with him on various cases and I trusted his word, you know, and I didn’t think that he would lie to me because he was a police [sic] but after I was locked up I found out that police do lie because I can’t get probation on armed robbery.”

Defendant denied as well participation in the robbery of Church’s Chicken. On cross-examination he remarked, “If I’m not mistaken, I was at my sister’s house at the time they said the robbery was to have occurred.”

During cross-examination the State attempted to impeach the credibility of defendant’s testimony by prior inconsistent statements from a letter written by him to a probation officer. In proceedings had outside the presence of the jury, the State established that the letter was received on August 10, 1978, by the probation officer. Defendant declared that he did not know to whom he had written the letter. He said that he had been told that the addressee was a lawyer but that he was later told that he was “a Probation officer or something.” The State had defendant read the following portion of the letter:

“I know that I did wrong and I am very sorry for my mistake. I was the only man at home and my mother and sister are very religious people and they need me and I need them very much.”

Defendant explained that by “mistake” he referred to his “signing of the statement.” The court ruled that part of the letter inadmissible because it was possibly ambiguous in its reference to the offense with which defendant was charged. The State attempted to clarify any ambiguity by another part of the letter in which defendant had written, “I will cop out in Court if you and the Judge guarantee me parole.” Because the State could show that defendant had no other charges pending to which he could “cop out,” the court ruled that the State could pursue defendant’s meaning of his use of the term “cop out.”

Later in the presence of the jury defendant stated that he did not know who the addressee, Mr. Buett, was.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
406 N.E.2d 842, 85 Ill. App. 3d 347, 40 Ill. Dec. 639, 1980 Ill. App. LEXIS 3063, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hardiman-illappct-1980.