People v. Hines

267 N.E.2d 696, 131 Ill. App. 2d 638, 1971 Ill. App. LEXIS 1335
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 9, 1971
Docket69-31
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 267 N.E.2d 696 (People v. Hines) 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. Hines, 267 N.E.2d 696, 131 Ill. App. 2d 638, 1971 Ill. App. LEXIS 1335 (Ill. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

Mr. PRESIDING JUSTICE ALLOY

delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendant John Alfred Hines appeals from a conviction for attempted murder, armed robbery, and aggravated battery following a jury trial. Defendant was sentenced to from 15 to 25 years in the penitentiary.

The record in the case discloses that Edward Saltzgiver was worldng alone on the evening of July 1,1968, in a Clark service station in Kankakee. He stated that about 1:30 A.M. on July 2, he saw the defendant Hines come over a fence north of the station and that defendant caUed to him by name. Saltzgiver stated that he had known the defendant since they were in the fourth or fifth grade. After defendant went into the restroom at the station, Saltzgiver unlocked the station door and let defendant in. Saltzgiver then testified that defendant drew a pistol and asked Saltzgiver how much money he had on him. The witness stated that the defendant took aU the money Saltzgiver had on his person and when he demanded more money, Saltzgiver testified that he gave the defendant his money changer. Saltzgiver then also testified that defendant told him that he would have to come up with more money for his life and he backed Saltzgiver against the waU and began firing a pistol. Saltzgiver was struck five times, three bullets struck him in the head, one in the shoulder, and one in the hand. Saltzgiver got to his feet after the shooting and got a pistol from a drawer and went outside looking for defendant but could not find him. Saltzgiver then caHed the police. He gave the police a description of the man who shot and robbed him but did not give the name of tiie defendant at that time. He was in the hospital six days and while he was there an officer taHced to him about the robbery. Two or three times prior to July 11, Saltzgiver denied to the police that defendant was the man who shot and robbed him. On July 11, Saltzgiver told a friend, Bob Yactzac, who runs the Bradley Cab Company, that it was John Hines who shot and robbed him. Yactzac then went to the Bradley police and told them that Saltzgiver had revealed to him the name of the man who shot and robbed him on July 2.

Thereafter, the police, acting on information which Saltzgiver relayed to the police, obtained a warrant for the arrest of Hines on July 11. The police learned that defendant was staying at either 707 Francine Street or 293 N. Greenwood Street in Kankakee. An arrest team was sent to each location. An officer entered the house at 707 Francine and found defendant asleep in a bedroom. The officer arrested him. Defendant was then taken outside to the patrol car and Sergeant Reynolds, who had gone to the Greenwood location, was told of the arrest by radio. When Sergeant Reynolds arrived at 707 Francine and saw the defendant in the patrol car he got out of the car and took the defendant back into the house. Defendant had only been in the patrol car a short time. Sergeant Reynolds, upon entering the house, continued the search of defendant’s room. Defendant and his father, who owned the house, objected to the search. Sergeant Reynolds testified at the trial that prior to the arrest he had a description of the weapon which was used in the robbery, which was a .22 revolver with a 2" barrel of black steel with white grips. Sergeant Reynolds searched the bedroom while defendant was standing in the hallway, and, in a dresser drawer wrapped in clothing, the sergeant found a .22 revolver with a 2" barrel of black steel with white grips. He then brought the gun out and showed it to another patrolman and to the defendant and defendant’s father and gave defendant’s father a receipt for the gun.

The gun was admitted in evidence at the trial. At the trial, Lieutenant Rogers of the Kankakee police department testified that he investigated the robbery at the Clark station on the morning of July 2. He stated that he found two spent bullets in the northeast comer of the building. He wrapped them and put them in an envelope and they were admitted into evidence as an exhibit. Dr. Downie, who treated Saltzigiver at the hospital on the morning of July 2, testified that he removed pieces of metal from Saltzgiver in the operating room and that the metal pieces were passed to the nurses who placed them in a bottle and sent them to the pathology laboratory. The metal fragments taken from Saltzgiver were offered as an exhibit. The doctor stated he could not stop to mark them during surgery and, thus, could not say for sure that they were the same fragments which he removed. He stated that he did not know the names of the nurses who were working with him in surgery on the morning of July 2 when he treated Saltzgiver.

During the cotuse of the trial, the State called three witnesses to trace possession of the metal fragments removed from Saltzgiver on the morning of July 2. The witnesses were a nurse, a laboratory technician and a doctor who is pathologist at St. Mary’s Hospital. Defendant had requested a list of witnesses prior to trial and none of the three witnesses were listed. When the State attempted to call these three witnesses, the trial had already been in progress for three days. The State’s Attorney explained to the court that the doctor did not know the names of the muses and that is why they had not been included. The court admonished the State’s Attorney to be more careful in the future and he then permitted the defendant’s attorney to talk with the three witnesses during the noon hour and admitted the testimony of these witnesses. The pathologist testified that the metal pieces were given to him by the laboratory technician and that they were in the same container in the court as when he got them. He turned the exhibit over to Officer Chaney. The nurse stated she was in the emergency room when the doctor was working on Saltzgiver and took the metal fragments which were removed from Saltzgiver, placed them in a plastic bottle, and marked the bottle with Saltzgiver’s name and room number. The laboratory technician testified that the fragments were picked up from surgery and taken to the pathologist. A police officer stated that he picked up the fragments from the pathologist and gave them to Lieutenant Rogers.

Mr. McAlvey of the Illinois Bureau of Criminal Investigation testified as a ballistics expert. He had examined the gun, the spent bullets found at the Clark station and the metal fragments removed from Saltzgiver. He also identified as an exhibit test bullets which he fired from the gun. He stated that his examination and test showed the same markings on all the various bullets. He testified that although one of the bullets in the fragmented stage was too mutilated to examine, the other fragments checked out as to markings. The trial judge questioned Mr. McAlvey about identification of the bullets. McAlvey explained that each gun barrel marks a buUet in a manner which can be specifically identified as having come from a particular gun barrel and that the markings were such that there were no two alike and that the process of identification is similar to that used in connection with fingerprints. McAlvey testified as to the custody of the exhibits since they were delivered to him and as to markings he made on the various fragments to identify them in court.

Defendant Hines testified that he went to a tavern about 11:00 P.M. on the evening of July 1 and stayed there until around 2:00 A.M. the next morning when the tavern was ready to close. His aunt, a cousin, and his brother were with him. He stated he was drunk that evening and his aunt put him in a taxicab about 2:00 A.M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 N.E.2d 696, 131 Ill. App. 2d 638, 1971 Ill. App. LEXIS 1335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hines-illappct-1971.