People v. Jones

2020 IL App (1st) 172096-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 27, 2020
Docket1-17-2096
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2020 IL App (1st) 172096-U (People v. Jones) 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. Jones, 2020 IL App (1st) 172096-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

2020 IL App (1st) 172096 No. 1-17-2096 Order filed January 27, 2020 First Division

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and may not be cited as precedent by any party except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

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, ) ) v. ) No. 15 CR 15402 ) STANLEY JONES, ) ) The Honorable Defendant-Appellant. ) Neera Lall Walsh, ) Judge, presiding.

JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Griffin and Justice Walker concurred in the judgment and opinion.

ORDER

¶1 Held: The State produced enough evidence to support defendant’s attempted aggravated robbery conviction; defendant’s argument that he should have been charged with vehicular hijacking fails as a matter of law and under the facts.

¶2 An apparent “road rage” incident ended with Stanley Jones’ arrest for attempting to rob

Jonathan Casaccio in a parking lot. After a bench trial, the judge convicted Jones of attempted

aggravated robbery with a firearm and sentenced him to six and one-half years imprisonment. 1-17-2096

¶3 Jones seeks outright reversal, arguing (i) the State did not present sufficient evidence to

prove he used a weapon when demanding Casaccio’s car keys, and (ii) at most, he was guilty of

violating the vehicular hijacking statute by attempting to take Casaccio’s car.

¶4 We affirm. A surveillance video from the parking lot showed that the entire attempt robbery

lasted about three minutes and corroborated the testimony of two witnesses. Both witnesses

testified that the entire time Jones argued with Casaccio, Jones had a heavy object in his pocket

and continually demanded Casaccio’s car keys. Both witnesses assumed that the object was a gun.

Minor inconsistencies in the evidence did not negate the reasonable inference that Jones took a

substantial step toward aggravated robbery, as defined by statute. We find a rational trier of fact

could find Jones guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

¶5 Next, Jones argues the robbery statute specifically excludes a motor vehicle from the

definition of “property,” and, at most, he attempted to take Casaccio’s car in violation of the

vehicular hijacking statute. Under that statute, the State must prove the defendant took the victim’s

car from the victim’s person or immediate presence (Jones was never charged with vehicular

hijacking). His argument fails because the State proved that while armed with what the victim

thought was a gun, Jones attempted to rob him.

¶6 Background

¶7 Casaccio worked at his father’s grocery store near the intersection of Madison Street and

Central Avenue, Chicago. About 9:00 a.m. on September 8, 2015, Casaccio was driving to work

on the Eisenhower Expressway in a black Audi sedan. Casaccio testified that he noticed a maroon

Lincoln tailing him in his rear-view mirror. The Lincoln was inches away from Casaccio’s car.

The Lincoln pulled alongside on Casaccio’s side. Both cars had their windows down and Casaccio

could see Jones driving alone. Jones was screaming loudly at him. Casaccio realized Jones wanted

-2- 1-17-2096

him to pull over so Casaccio pretended to exit at Harlem, but instead continued driving to the

Central exit. When Casaccio stopped behind another car at a red light, Jones blocked Casaccio’s

car from behind, got out, and approached Casaccio on the passenger side. Jones began punching

the windows and trying to open the door, which Casaccio had locked. When the light changed,

Casaccio drove off. He then heard a loud bang and saw that his rear window was broken. Jones

was standing directly behind his car.

¶8 Casaccio stopped at Madison and Central for a red light. Jones pulled up, again got out,

and began banging with his fist on Casaccio’s driver’s side window. Casaccio turned the corner

and pulled into the parking lot of the grocery store where he worked. There, Casaccio met Lonnie

Reaves, the store manager, whom he had called when he was a few minutes away from the store.

Casaccio called the police. He and Reaves were standing in the receiving area looking outside,

when they saw Jones walking toward them from the barber shop across the parking lot. Jones’s

right hand was in his sweatpants pocket. A heavy bulge appeared in his pocket, weighing down

his pants, and he was “fidgeting the whole time with his right hand.” When asked why he described

the bulge as “heavy,” Casaccio said, “Because when he wasn’t holding it, it was obviously, weight

hanging from it; and he was–-his whole tone, and his whole attitude when he was talking to us,

was directed with using his right hand.”

¶9 Jones went up to Casaccio’s car and tried to open the door; it was locked. Jones approached

Casaccio, demanding his keys. Casaccio refused. Jones pulled his right hand out of his pocket and

punched Casaccio in the face. Reaves tried to separate them.

¶ 10 Jones and Casaccio continued to argue, with Jones telling Casaccio he wanted to take the

fight into the alley. Jones took off his sweatshirt and draped it over his shoulder, then took

something out of his right pocket and “aimed” at Casaccio. Jones stood as though he was going to

-3- 1-17-2096

shoot a gun, but Casaccio never saw a gun. Jones had his right hand in his right pocket most of the

time, except when he punched Casaccio.

¶ 11 Jones ran out of the parking lot before the police arrived. Two days later, a detective

returned to the store with a photo array of six men. Casaccio picked out Jones.

¶ 12 The court viewed a video from the parking lot camera showing Jones walking in the

parking lot with his right hand in his pocket, approaching Casaccio’s car on the driver’s side, and

trying to open the car door. Reaves and Casaccio immediately walk up and Jones and Casaccio

begin arguing and gesturing. Jones takes his hand out of his pocket and hits Casaccio in the face.

Casaccio reacts and moves toward Jones, with Reaves beside them. The three men then quickly

move out of camera view. After several seconds, they appear but farther away. Jones takes his

sweatshirt off while facing Casaccio and Reaves, who continue to move away from the camera.

Jones too is backing away, but twice he comes toward the two men with his jacket over his arm.

Reaves appears to be intervening, then for several seconds all the men are out of view. Suddenly

Casaccio is visible, running back toward the store with his phone. He said he was calling the police

and his father. Jones runs in the other direction. The entire video is 4 minutes, 10 seconds. Jones

appears about 10 seconds after the video begins and leaves the parking lot about three minutes

later.

¶ 13 Lonnie Reaves testified that he had known Casaccio, one of the owner’s sons, for about 15

years. That morning about 10 a.m., Reaves received a phone call from Casaccio, who was talking

fast. Reaves went outside the store and waited in the parking lot of a laundromat next to the

grocery. He saw Casaccio’s car turn off Central onto Madison, then speed down the street and pull

through the gate into the grocery parking lot. A maroon Lincoln was following him. Casaccio

parked near the receiving entrance and got out of his car. The Lincoln parked on the street. Reaves

-4- 1-17-2096

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2020 IL App (1st) 172096-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-jones-illappct-2020.