People v. Kokoraleis

547 N.E.2d 202, 132 Ill. 2d 235, 138 Ill. Dec. 233, 1989 Ill. LEXIS 139, 1989 WL 126178
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1989
Docket65229
StatusPublished
Cited by145 cases

This text of 547 N.E.2d 202 (People v. Kokoraleis) 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. Kokoraleis, 547 N.E.2d 202, 132 Ill. 2d 235, 138 Ill. Dec. 233, 1989 Ill. LEXIS 139, 1989 WL 126178 (Ill. 1989).

Opinion

JUSTICE MILLER

delivered the opinion of the court:

Following a jury trial in the circuit court of Du Page County, the defendant, Andrew Kokoraleis, was convicted of the murder and aggravated kidnapping of Lorraine Borowski. At a capital sentencing hearing requested by the State, the same jury determined that the defendant was eligible for the death penalty and that there were no mitigating circumstances sufficient to preclude imposition of that sentence. The trial judge accordingly sentenced the defendant to death for the murder conviction; the judge later sentenced the defendant to an extended term of 30 years’ imprisonment for the conviction for aggravated kidnapping. The defendant’s execution was stayed pending direct review by this court (Ill. Const. 1970, art. VI, §4(b); 107 Ill. 2d Rules 603, 609(a)).

At trial the State presented evidence of the victim’s disappearance, the discovery and identification of her remains, and the defendant’s oral and written confessions to her abduction and murder. Over objection, the State was also allowed to introduce evidence of the defendant’s participation in two similar murders. The defendant testified in his own behalf at trial; he recanted his confessions, and he denied having had any part in the offenses charged here and in the other crimes in which the State attempted to implicate him.

The victim in this case, 21-year-old Lori Borowski, disappeared on Saturday, May 15, 1982. Lori was employed as a secretary in a real estate office in Elmhurst, and a neighbor saw her leave for work around 8:15 that morning. Lori’s office was located about three blocks from her apartment, and she would walk to work. Lori’s employer, Don Stibbe, arrived at the office between 8:45 and 9 o’clock on the morning of her disappearance. The office had not yet been opened, though Lori normally would have arrived by 8:30. Mr. Stibbe found some objects on the pavement in front of the office — shoes, keys, cosmetics, coins, and a hand tool, a nutdriver. Later that morning Mr. Stibbe reported Lori’s disappearance to Elmhurst police. The shoes and keys found in front of the office were subsequently identified as Lori’s.

Fredrick Moberley, who owned a store located in the same shopping plaza as the office where Lori was employed, arrived at work around 10 minutes to eight on the morning of Lori’s disappearance. At that timé Moberley saw a reddish-orange van parked in an area of the lot that normally was empty; he did not notice any shoes or other items in front of the real estate office, which was located about 50 feet from his own store. Shown a photograph of the van allegedly used in Lori’s abduction, Moberley testified that the vehicle depicted was similar to the one he had seen in the parking lot on May 15, 1982.

The victim’s skeletal remains were discovered on October 10, 1982, in a cemetery in Darien. The remains were found in an unused portion of the cemetery and were about 120 to 130 feet from a gravel road. The victim’s neighbor identified the blouse and slacks present on the body as the same clothing the victim was wearing on the morning of her disappearance. The victim’s blouse had been raised to armpit level, and her bra had been lowered. A purse was found some 30 feet away, and items of jewelry were found on or near the remains. At trial the victim’s mother, Mrs. Lorraine Mae Borowski, identified the purse and jewelry as Lori’s.

Identification of the remains was made through the aid of dental records and X-rays, and a post-mortem examination was conducted by Frank Orlosky, professor of physical anthropology at Northern Illinois University. At trial, Professor Orlosky testified that when the remains were discovered skin covered the front surface of the victim’s body, including the lower thoracic region, part of the abdominal region, and the right leg and part of the left leg. The navel and right nipple were present, but the left nipple was not; the skin ended about two inches below where the left nipple would have been. Professor Orlosky did not find any signs of trauma or evidence of animal tooth marks on any part of the skin, including the portion from the victim’s chest area. He believed that there were several possible explanations for the absence of the left nipple, including decomposition, insect or other animal activity, and amputation. The post-mortem examination disclosed a number of bone injuries. Professor Orlosky found three frontal sites of trauma in the upper chest region. All three wounds were small and circular, and he believed that they were consistent with stab wounds from a sharp instrument, such as an ice pick. There were also frontal wounds on two lower vertebrae, but Professor Orlosky was unable to determine whether or not they had been caused by the same stabs that had produced the wounds in the victim’s upper chest. Professor Orlosky found three separate wounds to the victim’s back, which he believed could have been caused by either a knife or an ice-pick type of instrument. In addition to the injuries already described, Professor Orlosky found that the victim’s nasal bone had been fractured.

The defendant was eventually arrested in connection with the abduction and murder of Lori Borowski. On October 20, 1982, Chicago police officers stopped a reddish-orange van that matched a description given to the police by a crime victim. The van was being driven by Edward Spreitzer and belonged to Robin Gecht. In a subsequent search, three knives were found in the back of the van. The inside handle on the back door was missing; according to the trial testimony, the door could be opened only by inserting a tool where the lock should have been, and the nutdriver found with Lori Borowski’s keys and other effects in front of her office could have been used for that purpose.

Spreitzer and Gecht were arrested sometime later, and during the evening of November 7, 1982, Spreitzer led police officers to the defendant’s home in Villa Park. The defendant returned that night with the officers to Area 5 headquarters in Chicago. The defendant was questioned that evening and the following two days. During that period the defendant confessed to the murder of Lori Borowski and to the murders of several other women.

The defendant gave law enforcement officers both oral and written statements concerning his role in the murder of Lori Borowski, and the defendant’s confessions were introduced into evidence at his trial. Detectives Warren Wilkosz and John Sam of the Du Page County sheriff’s office questioned the defendant about the Borowski murder two days after his arrest, on November 9. Detective Sam placed three photographs of Lori Borowski before the defendant and asked the defendant whether he could identify the person depicted in the photographs. At trial Wilkosz testified that the defendant responded, “That is the girl that Eddie Spreitzer and I killed in the cemetery.” The defendant went on to say that one morning during the spring of 1982 he and Spreitzer were driving in Gecht’s van on Route 83 in Elmhurst. They entered a parking lot, and they saw Lori Borowski and forced her into the van. The defendant said that they then drove to a cemetery, where both he and Spreitzer beat and stabbed the victim. When Lori was dead, they dragged her body into some weeds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
547 N.E.2d 202, 132 Ill. 2d 235, 138 Ill. Dec. 233, 1989 Ill. LEXIS 139, 1989 WL 126178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kokoraleis-ill-1989.