People v. Lagrone

2025 IL App (2d) 230543
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 12, 2025
Docket2-23-0543
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 IL App (2d) 230543 (People v. Lagrone) 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. Lagrone, 2025 IL App (2d) 230543 (Ill. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

2025 IL App (2d) 230543 No. 2-23-0543 Opinion filed November 12, 2025 ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE ) Appeal from the Circuit Court OF ILLINOIS, ) of Kane County. ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) No. 20-CF-931 ) ANGEL A. LAGRONE, ) Honorable ) Alice C. Tracy, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE McLAREN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Jorgensen and Mullen concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 After a bench trial, defendant, Angel A. Lagrone, was found guilty but mentally ill of six

counts of home invasion (720 ILCS 5/19-6(a)(1), (2), (3) (West 2018)), one count of armed

violence (id. § 33A-2(a)), three counts of attempted aggravated kidnapping (id. §§ 8-4(a), 10-

2(a)(2), (5), (6)), one count of aggravated domestic battery (id. § 12-3.3(a)), six counts of

aggravated battery (id. § 12-3.05(a)(1), (d)(1), (f)(1)), and two counts of aggravated unlawful use

of a weapon (id. § 24-1.6(a)(1), (a)(3)(A-5), (a)(3)(C)). Defendant was sentenced to concurrent

terms of imprisonment. Defendant now appeals, contending that (1) the trial court’s findings of

guilty but mentally ill were against the manifest weight of the evidence; (2) she was denied

effective assistance of counsel; (3) her convictions of attempted aggravated kidnapping must be 2025 IL App (2d) 230543

reversed because a parent cannot be convicted of kidnapping her own child; and (4) her conviction

of aggravated domestic battery must be vacated pursuant to the doctrine of one act/one crime. We

affirm in part, affirm as modified in part, reverse in part, and remand.

¶2 I. BACKGROUND

¶3 The 10-year marriage of defendant and her husband, Charles Guyton, was dissolved in

2019. Defendant then moved to California, while Guyton, who was awarded custody of their son,

N.G., moved to Aurora, Illinois, where they lived with Guyton’s mother (Maria Phillips), and

grandmother.

¶4 Starting in early 2020, defendant began almost daily calling Aurora police to perform

wellness checks on N.G. because, as she later explained, Guyton told her that he was molesting

N.G. and was going to start raping him. When the police told her that they would no longer perform

the wellness checks, defendant decided to drive to Illinois to take N.G. to a hospital.

¶5 Upon arriving in Aurora, defendant stayed at a local motel. She practiced driving to the

hospital nearest her motel. She drove past Guyton’s house multiple times “trying to figure out how

I was gonna get my son out of there.” On May 24, 2020, defendant drove through Guyton’s

neighborhood and walked onto Guyton’s property and that of a neighbor. Defendant taped a cell

phone to her baseball cap to record her surveillance, which included looking into Guyton’s

enclosed porch and examining the home’s windows.

¶6 The following morning, May 25, 2020, defendant returned to Guyton’s home with a knife,

a baseball bat, a gun, and duct tape. She again taped the cell phone to her cap and recorded the

ensuing events. After walking through a neighbor’s yard, defendant climbed a fence, entered

Guyton’s enclosed porch by cutting through a screen window, then opened a door and entered the

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house. All the while, Phillips was yelling at defendant to get off her property. Phillips went up the

stairs to the second floor and called for Guyton as she continued to demand that defendant leave.

¶7 The cellphone taped to defendant’s hat was pointed upward and did not capture any faces,

but the voices of defendant, Guyton, Phillips, and N.G. can be heard. Defendant struck Phillips on

the head with the baseball bat and injured Phillips’s arm. When Guyton rushed her to disarm her,

defendant repeatedly slashed his scalp with the box cutter. Guyton was able to knock the gun away

from defendant and wrestled her to the ground. Phillips called 911, and both she and N.G. fled to

a neighbor’s house. The police arrived and defendant, Guyton, and Phillips were taken to the

hospital.

¶8 The State charged defendant with 19 felonies. At trial, the parties informed the court that

both sides would be presented largely by stipulation. We turn first to videos entered into evidence

to provide a more complete background to the incident. These include recorded interviews with

defendant, Guyton, and Phillips. The videos defendant recorded from the day of the incident, and

her surveilling the neighborhood the day before, were also entered into evidence.

¶9 A. Video Interviews

¶ 10 Kane County Sheriff deputies conducted a series of interviews in the days following the

incident. Each was video recorded and entered into evidence without objection.

¶ 11 1. Defendant Interview

¶ 12 Kane County Sheriff’s Deputies Andrew Biddle and Edward Catich interviewed defendant

on the day of the incident, after she had been released from the hospital. The video-recorded

interview lasted approximately two hours. The first quarter-hour of the video is primarily of

defendant, with a white sheet covering her head and upper body, resting her head on a table. When

the officers entered the room, Biddle reintroduced himself and referred to conversations that he

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had with defendant at the hospital. Biddle administered a Miranda warning (Miranda v. Arizona,

384 U.S. 436 (1966)), and defendant waived her right to remain silent. She clarified that she wanted

to speak to the police before speaking to a lawyer in case the lawyer advised her not to speak.

Defendant was adamant that she wanted to tell the officers “everything.”

¶ 13 During the interview, defendant returned repeatedly to her request that N.G. be examined

for proof of sexual assault. She insisted that it was vital that doctors perform a blood test for “date-

rape drugs” and administer a “rape kit.” Defendant also requested that both she and Guyton be

subjected to a lie detector test to show who was telling the truth. She wanted police to ask Guyton

“about the child pornography he is recording of my son.” Defendant also seemed concerned about

how long it would take for Guyton to be brought to justice because she had just recently started a

new job in California.

¶ 14 Defendant claimed that Guyton had told her in February 2020 that he was molesting N.G.

and planned to rape him. She called the police daily to conduct wellness checks until police told

her that they would no longer conduct wellness checks. “After I realized [Guyton] was drugging

[N.G.] and after they told me they would no longer do any more well-being checks, I realized I

would have to do it myself.”

¶ 15 Defendant explained that she planned to drive from California to Illinois to take N.G. to a

hospital. She claimed to not have a plan beyond having her son examined for signs of abuse. “The

only thing I knew I needed to do was to get him to the hospital as soon as possible. Get some blood

drawn and get a rape kit.” Defendant left California on May 21, 2020. She could not remember the

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Related

People v. Grimmitt
2025 IL App (2d) 240268-U (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2025)

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