People v. Hunley

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 1, 2000
Docket1-98-2764
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Hunley (People v. Hunley) 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. Hunley, (Ill. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION

May 1, 2000

Nos. 1-98-2764, 1-98-3021 (Cons.)

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

DEMETRICE HUNLEY and RICHARD TOWNSEND,

Defendants-Appellants.

)

Appeal from the

Circuit Court of

Cook County

Honorable

Lawrence Fox and

Preston L. Bowie,

Judges Presiding.

PRESIDING JUSTICE O'MARA FROSSARD delivered the opinion of the court:

Demetrice Hunley and Richard Townsend following a simultaneous jury trial were found guilty of possession of cannabis and cocaine with intent to deliver.  Each defendant was sentenced to a 15-year prison term.  Hunley argues: (1) the State failed to prove her guilty beyond a reasonable doubt; (2) the trial court erred in denying her motion to suppress evidence; (3) the trial court improperly admitted opinion testimony regarding obtaining fingerprints off plastic; (4) the trial court erred in permitting a police officer to testify about conversations with a citizen ; and (5) the trial court erred in not admitting the transcript of a 911 audiotape into evidence and not giving the jury the 911 audiotape and transcript during their deliberations.  Townsend only challenges the police testimony regarding fingerprints.

I. FACTS

On October 2, 1996, at approximately 10:30 p.m., Officer Hasenfang, after receiving information from a person on the street, proceeded to the apartment building at 7315 South Peoria.  Hasenfang looked through the window and saw defendants packaging narcotics.  Hasenfang radioed this information to his fellow officers.  Hasenfang  testified that he heard some pounding coming from the front of the house and saw Hunley leave the kitchen.  Hunley returned and told Townsend, "Shit, it's the police."  Townsend and Hunley filled a child's school bag with drugs.  Hasenfang acknowledged at trial that his police report only indicated that Townsend filled up the book bag.  Hasenfang saw Townsend lean out the window and try to throw the book bag onto the roof of the building next door.  The bag fell into the gangway.  Officer O'Donnell was in the gangway, observed a person dropping an object out the window and recovered the object, a child's book bag containing a large quantity of cocaine and clear plastic bags.   Hasenfang, with other officers, entered Hunley's apartment and from the kitchen area recovered cannabis, nine boxes of baggies, four boxes of baking soda, a coffee grinder, and a digital gram scale.

Officer Condreva testified that, after monitoring a radio transmission from Officer Hasenfang,  Condreva knocked on the front door of the two-flat apartment building.  Condreva saw Hunley look out a second-floor window and ask "[W]ho's there[?]"  Condreva responded "[I]t's the police" and asked her to open the door.  Hunley told him that she did not believe him, and Condreva showed Hunley his badge.  Condreva told Hunley that he was from the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) and was checking on Hunley's children because he had a complaint about child abuse.  Condreva admitted at trial that his testimony at the motion hearing that he did not tell Hunley he was from DCFS was inaccurate.  After Condreva requested Hunley to open the door, Hunley told him that she was dialing 911 and calling the "real police."  Condreva encouraged Hunley to call the police.  A marked police car arrived, Hunley opened the front door to the apartment building, Condreva and the uniformed police officer entered and Hunley was arrested.  In Hunley's apartment Condreva saw three young children and Townsend seated at the dining room table.

Hunley testified that on October 2, 1996, she arrived home around 8:30 p.m. and Jerome, David, Brian and Richard Townsend, together with her three children, were in her apartment.  Jerome Townsend was her boyfriend and his nickname was "Doc."  She denied seeing any narcotics or drug paraphernalia in the apartment that night or having any knowledge of any such contraband.  Jerome, David and Brian Townsend left the apartment, but 17-year-old Richard Townsend stayed.  Hunley stated that on October 2, 1996, her back porch window was covered with thick plastic and her back door window was covered with thick plastic, bars and blinds.  Hunley explained that she kept the plastic on her windows year round to reduce her landlord's work during the wintertime and that an individual standing on the back porch could not see through the plastic.

At 11 p.m, Hunley heard knocking at her front door and a male at the front door told her to open the door because he was "Doc."  After she told him that he was not "Doc," the male told her to let him in because he was "DCFS" and he had a complaint about child abuse.  Hunley said she was calling the police.  She heard knocking at the back door and a male voice say "This is Little Red Riding Hood.  Open the damn door."  Hunley tore some plastic off her back door window, lifted up the blinds, and saw Officer Hasenfang and another man on her porch.  Hunley ran to the front and called 911.  When Hunley saw uniformed police officers arrive, she went downstairs, opened the front door and the police arrested her.  They took her up to her apartment and woke up her children and Richard Townsend.  Hunley denied that any drugs were in her kitchen and denied that Richard Townsend tossed a book bag of drugs out the window.  She testified that the police officers damaged her furnace and ceiling to reach the attic, where they recovered the drugs and drug paraphernalia that the State was presenting in the trial.  Hunley denied knowledge of the contraband in her attic and stated that she never permitted anyone to place it there.  Hunley's landlord testified that the furnace area allowed access to the attic.  He inspected the furnace area within 48 hours after October 2, 1996, and saw recent damage to the furnace that he had not observed before October 2, 1996.  

Hunley and the State stipulated to the authenticity and the foundation for the 911 tape.  During Hunley's case in chief, the jury received a transcript of the tape while defense counsel played the 911 tape.  The 911 tape confirmed that Hunley called the police.  The tape revealed that Officer Condreva identified himself as "DCFS" and told Hunley that he had a complaint about her abusing her children.  Hunley told the dispatcher that Condreva was showing his badge and saying that he is the police.  Hunley told the dispatcher this individual initially identified himself as "Doc" and she would not come down until the police arrived.

II. ANALYSIS

A.  Sufficiency of Evidence

Hunley argues the State failed to prove her guilty beyond a reasonable doubt because the State's evidence was unbelievable since Officer Hasenfang could not have seen Hunley and Townsend in her kitchen through the heavy plastic on her back window.  Hunley further argues it is improbable that two people would bag cocaine in front of a window or that Hunley would call the police to her apartment if drugs and drug paraphernalia were in her apartment.  The standard of review for a defendant's challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence is whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Hunley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hunley-illappct-2000.