People v. Harris

2025 IL 130351
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 2025
Docket130351
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2025 IL 130351 (People v. Harris) 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. Harris, 2025 IL 130351 (Ill. 2025).

Opinion

2025 IL 130351

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS

(Docket No. 130351)

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Appellant, v. RALPH HARRIS, Appellee.

Opinion filed April 24, 2025.

CHIEF JUSTICE THEIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.

Justices Overstreet, Holder White, Cunningham, and Rochford concurred in the judgment and opinion.

Justice O’Brien dissented, with opinion.

Justice Neville took no part in the decision.

OPINION

¶1 At issue in this case is whether the appellate court has jurisdiction to consider the merits of the State’s appeal from a Cook County circuit court order vacating Ralph Harris’s three convictions and granting new trials following the appellate court’s prior remand from proceedings under the Post-Conviction Hearing Act (Act) (725 ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West 2022)). A divided panel of the appellate court held that it lacked jurisdiction because the circuit court’s order granting new trials was not a final order or an enumerated interlocutory order that the State was authorized to appeal. 2023 IL App (1st) 221033 (Harris II). For the following reasons, we hold that the circuit court’s order was a final order resulting from postconviction proceedings, over which the appellate court has jurisdiction.

¶2 BACKGROUND

¶3 This case concerns Harris’s convictions in three separate cases: (1) the 1992 murder and attempted armed robbery of David Ford (No. 95-CR-27596) (Ford case), (2) the 1992 murder and attempted robbery of William Patterson and the attempted murder of James Patterson (No. 95-CR-27598) (Patterson case), and (3) the 1995 aggravated criminal sexual assault and armed robbery of R.T. (No. 95- CR-27600) (R.T. case).

¶4 Prior to his trials, Harris filed an omnibus motion to suppress his confessions in his three cases. In his amended motion, he contended that his confessions were involuntarily obtained because of physical and mental coercion. Specifically, he alleged that, at the time of his 1995 interrogation, Detectives Michael McDermott and James Boylan struck him with their fists in his stomach, neck, and head; placed a gun to his head and mouth; and hit him with a phonebook. He further alleged that Detective John Yucaitis told him that he would arrest and charge his girlfriend, who was present at the station, and that after her arrest he would have her children placed with the Department of Children and Family Services.

¶5 The State presented the testimony of Detectives McDermott, Boylan, Yucaitis, and Detective John Hamilton. Harris did not testify but presented the testimony of Angela Clark, his girlfriend at the time, and Patrick Blunt, who was in a lineup with him. After hearing the evidence, the circuit court denied the motion to suppress the confessions, finding that they were “freely and voluntarily made.”

¶6 Harris was convicted in all three cases, and his convictions and sentences were affirmed on direct appeal. People v. Harris, 358 Ill. App. 3d 1180 (2005) (table)

-2- (unpublished order under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 23) (Ford case); People v. Harris, 358 Ill. App. 3d 1180 (2005) (table) (unpublished order under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 23) (Patterson case); People v. Harris, 402 Ill. App. 3d 1186 (2010) (table) (unpublished order under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 23) (R.T. case).

¶7 Subsequently, Harris filed postconviction petitions under the Act (725 ILCS 5/122-1 et. seq. (West 2022)) in all three of his cases. 1 Relevant here, in his counseled amended postconviction petition, Harris realleged a fifth amendment claim that his pretrial inculpatory statements were the product of police coercion. See U.S. Const., amend. V. He asserted that his convictions should be overturned because “his police coerced involuntary confessions were used to convict him” in violation of both his federal and state due process rights. He alleged that newly discovered evidence of a pattern and practice of police torture at Area 2 of the Chicago Police Department now corroborated his claims that his confessions were obtained through coercion and should have been suppressed. He also alleged that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate and introduce evidence of McDermott’s history of coercion.

¶8 After finding that Harris failed to make a substantial showing of a constitutional violation with respect to some of his other claims that are not relevant here, the circuit court advanced the petitions to a third-stage evidentiary hearing on his coerced confession claim and his ineffective assistance claim. The court ordered a combined hearing for all three postconviction petitions.

¶9 Harris elected to present no live testimony at the evidentiary hearing. The parties presented documentary evidence including witness testimony from the earlier proceedings, petitioner’s prior pleadings, and his new documentary evidence evincing a pattern and practice of police coercion by Area 2 detectives. Postconviction counsel argued that the purpose of the evidentiary hearing was to determine whether there should be a new suppression hearing based on the new

1 We note that, in case No. 95-CR-27600, Harris’s petition was a successive postconviction petition, which the circuit court granted leave to file after a motion to reconsider.

-3- exhibits. He made no mention of the ineffective assistance claims and offered no witnesses with respect to that claim.

¶ 10 After the hearing, the circuit court found that the new documentary evidence established that there was a pattern and practice of physical abuse of persons in custody at Area 2, that McDermott was complicit in abuse conducted by John Burge on a custodial suspect, that McDermott actively participated in at least one instance of abuse on another suspect, and that he asserted his fifth amendment privilege against self-incrimination with regard to his actions in another case. However, the court found that, although this new evidence called into question McDermott’s testimony at the suppression hearing, the court had to examine his role under “the particular facts of this case.”

¶ 11 After considering the totality of the facts related to Harris’s custodial interrogation, the court found that Harris had confessed to Hamilton regarding the criminal sexual assault in the R.T. case prior to ever encountering McDermott and that Hamilton had no prior pattern and practice of abuse. With respect to Harris’s other confessions, the court found that McDermott’s testimony was corroborated by the evidentiary timeline, as well as other witnesses that the court deemed credible. Accordingly, the circuit court denied Harris’s postconviction petitions.

¶ 12 On appeal, Harris advanced several arguments to demonstrate that the circuit court erred in denying him postconviction relief. He argued that the circuit court’s findings were not supported by the evidence presented or were contradicted by the evidence and that the court applied an incorrect burden of proof. Harris argued that, “[a]t this procedural juncture, petitioner is not asking this [c]ourt for a new trial or even for this court to suppress his purported confessions.” He asked the appellate court to reverse the trial court’s ruling and remand the case for a new suppression hearing, at which all of the relevant newly discovered evidence could be considered to determine whether his confessions were coerced.

¶ 13 Additionally, Harris requested that, if the cause was remanded for a new hearing, it should be reassigned to a different judge. He argued that the circuit court judge had presided over his original suppression hearing, his trials, and the postconviction evidentiary hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
2025 IL 130351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-harris-ill-2025.