People v. Hudson

2023 IL App (1st) 192519, 226 N.E.3d 36
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 30, 2023
Docket1-19-2519
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2023 IL App (1st) 192519 (People v. Hudson) 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. Hudson, 2023 IL App (1st) 192519, 226 N.E.3d 36 (Ill. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

2023 IL App (1st) 192519 No. 1-19-2519 Opinion filed January 30, 2023

First Division

___________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST DISTRICT ___________________________________________________________________________ ) THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of Cook County. Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) No. 18 CR 12339 v. ) ) The Honorable VICTOR HUDSON, ) Angela Munari Petrone, ) Judge, presiding. Defendant-Appellant. )

JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justice Pucinski concurred in the judgment and opinion. Justice Coghlan dissented, with opinion.

OPINION

¶1 A team of officers executed a warrant at the home of several members of the Hudson

family, including Victor Hudson. According to the search warrant, the officers were looking for

Tommie Williams, who they suspected of manufacturing and distributing cannabis. The officers

did not find Williams or cannabis; instead, they found Hudson and a gun. The State charged

Hudson with armed habitual criminal, and a jury found him guilty. The trial court sentenced

Hudson to nine years in prison. No. 1-19-2519

¶2 Hudson challenges his conviction on three grounds: (i) the State failed to prove him guilty

beyond a reasonable doubt, (ii) the trial court committed multiple errors when responding to

questions from the jury, and (iii) the trial court erroneously barred testimony that (a) the officers’

search warrant targeted someone other than Hudson and (b) the officers were not looking for a

gun.

¶3 We agree with Hudson that the evidence against him is weak. To prove Hudson’s guilt,

aside from an unmemorialized confession, which Hudson denied making, the State relied on two

utility bills and a bottle of pills found in the same bedroom as the gun. By contrast, Hudson

presented three witnesses and documentary evidence showing that he lived in the basement, not in

the bedroom where officers found the bottle and gun. At oral argument, the State conceded these

accounts presented “conflicting evidence” that was not “completely overwhelmingly one-sided”

and that required the jury “to make a credibility determination.” The jury had the task of deciding

between these narratives, and their decision to find Hudson guilty was not unreasonable.

¶4 The trial court also committed no error in responding to the jury’s questions about the jury

instructions. We do not assess whether the trial court could have answered the jury’s questions

better, only whether the court answered them adequately. The trial court did so.

¶5 We find error, however, in the trial court’s decision to exclude the contents of the warrant.

In the unique circumstances here, we conclude that the warrant’s contents do not implicate the

hearsay rule because its introduction would have been to provide a full explanation of the police

conduct in executing the warrant. In a similar, though distinct vein, we also are persuaded by

Hudson’s analogy to the completeness doctrine in other contexts and find that, absent a chance to

introduce evidence the warrant targeted a different person and other items, testimony about the

-2- No. 1-19-2519

existence of the warrant here casted a cloud of predetermined guilt over the remainder of the trial

evidence. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for a new trial.

¶6 Observation

¶7 Hudson’s mother was in bed, and without warning, about a dozen armed police officers

burst into her home. Several officers came to her bedroom, guns drawn, shouting profanities.

Meanwhile, officers in the living room held her 17-year-old grandson to the ground with knees in

his back. Hudson entered the living room, and an officer punched his face without warning. The

officers mostly do not dispute applying force.

¶8 The dissent believes we have engaged in fact-finding to arrive at this narrative, but this

testimony comes from the record. Dorothy Hudson testified that officers came into her room

shouting, “everybody get the F up,” and “had the light and gun in [her] face.” She describes hearing

a “boom, boom, boom,” which she learned was police coming through the front door. We learn

that when Hudson entered the living room, she told the officers, “that’s my son,” and “they said

shut the F up; and they hit him.”

¶9 Randy testified that he was sleeping and “hear[d] a big old boom” and saw what he

estimated as “15, 17” officers with “a lot of guns.” Randy adds, “the officer was yelling, like get

the F down,” and Hudson said, “please, get off my son *** and the officer hit him” with a “closed

fist” on his nose. Hudson testified that he heard a “bamming” upstairs and went into the living

room where he saw “Randy, and the police got their knee in his back.” Hudson told the officers to

“hold on” and asked, “what’s happening.” Then the officer “punched [him] in [his] nose.”

¶ 10 The officers agreed that “12 to 15” officers entered the home. They testified that Randy

raised his middle fingers and yelled at them and that Hudson ignored commands to stop walking

-3- No. 1-19-2519

into the living room. Officer Tellez agreed that he “grabbed [Randy] by the wrists” and then “rolled

to the ground and began wrestling” after Randy stiffened his arms. Thus, we reject the dissent’s

groundless assertion that we “cherry-pick[ed]” testimony. Infra ¶ 114. The officers did not dispute

applying force.

¶ 11 In any event, we do not decide between the different narratives. Instead, justice demands

we recognize this unseemly behavior, which exacerbates the climate of distrust toward both law

enforcement and the criminal justice system that prevails among many black and brown residents.

The law enforces a standard of behavior for the actors in our criminal legal system, including

enforcement personnel, prosecutors, defense attorneys, correction and probation officers, and the

courts. When those actors’ behavior offends that standard and endangers members of the public,

the judiciary must not remain silent, else our silence signifies indifference and, in a broader sense,

approval. See People v. Washington, 2021 IL App (1st) 163024, ¶ 50 (Walker, J., dissenting)

(remaining silent leads to wrongful convictions that “can devastate families, foreclose career

opportunities, and undermine the integrity of our justice system”).

¶ 12 Simply put, the behavior the Hudsons described is incompatible with the fair and equitable

administration of justice. Illinois courts have historically commented on misbehavior not an issue

in the case when the record divulges an abuse of office, mistreatment of another, or conduct

otherwise inappropriate. See, e.g., People v. Lewis, 75 Ill. App. 3d 259, 279-80 (1979) (“Although

the actions of [the officers] in inflicting the injuries upon defendant were regrettable and although

this court cannot excuse nor condone the excessive force used since it appears to have been

unnecessary to effectuate the arrest, we conclude that *** the force used *** did not result in

defendant giving a statement.”); see also, e.g., People v. Potts, 2021 IL App (1st) 161219, ¶ 165

-4- No. 1-19-2519

(finding, “we would not condone *** conduct from the police” even where “we have no authority”

to remedy it); People v. Finklea, 119 Ill. App. 3d 448, 454 (1983) (court “d[id] not mean to

condone the police conduct in [the] case” even though conduct did not result in reversible error in

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2023 IL App (1st) 192519, 226 N.E.3d 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hudson-illappct-2023.