People v. Landa

2020 IL App (1st) 170851
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 31, 2020
Docket1-17-0851
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 2020 IL App (1st) 170851 (People v. Landa) 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. Landa, 2020 IL App (1st) 170851 (Ill. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

2020 IL App (1st) 170851

SIXTH DIVISION December 31, 2020

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST DISTRICT

No. 1-17-0851

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County. ) v. ) No. 00 CR 13454 (01) ) CARLOS LANDA, ) Honorable ) Brian Flaherty, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge Presiding.

PRESIDING JUSTICE MIKVA delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Harris and Oden Johnson concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Defendant Carlos Landa appeals from the second-stage dismissal of his petition for relief

pursuant to the Post-Conviction Hearing Act (Act) (735 ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West 2016)). On

appeal, Mr. Landa argues that his case should be remanded for further second-stage proceedings.

We find that Mr. Landa presented a credible sixth amendment claim in his pro se petition based

on his trial counsel’s failure to prepare and present his alibi defense, and that Mr. Landa’s

postconviction counsel failed to provide reasonable assistance in adequately presenting this claim.

We therefore reverse the dismissal of his petition and remand for further second-stage proceedings. No. 1-17-0851

¶2 I. BACKGROUND

¶3 A. The Trial and Direct Appeal

¶4 Mr. Landa was charged with first degree murder and vehicular hijacking in connection with

the shooting death of King Mayes on April 21, 2000. The evidence showed that, between 8 and

8:30 p.m. on that day, Mr. Mayes bought keys and key identifiers from Menards. At approximately

8:45 p.m., he drove his dark-colored Lexus from Menards to a Clark gas station in Calumet City

and went into the station to purchase some items. Two witnesses, Antuan Colvin and Akbar

Hendricks, testified that as Mr. Mayes walked back to his car at the gas station, he was approached

by a man who was approximately 5ʹ 5ʺ or 5ʹ 6ʺ and wearing dark-colored clothing, including a

hoodie. The two men exchanged words, two gunshots were fired, and the two witnesses saw Mr.

Mayes fall to the ground. Neither witness saw the face of the man who fired the gun but they both

saw him get into Mr. Mayes’s car and drive away. Mr. Mayes later died at the hospital from a

single gunshot wound to the chest.

¶5 Floyd Newell was charged as a codefendant in the case and testified against Mr. Landa.

Mr. Newell had previously been convicted of a felony, and, at the time of trial, he had two felony

cases and one misdemeanor case pending against him. Mr. Newell testified that, at approximately

8:30 p.m. on April 21, 2000, he was driving his girlfriend’s turquoise Grand Am with Nigel Barnes

and Mr. Landa in the car. The three men stopped near the Clark gas station. All three men were in

dark clothing, and both Mr. Newell and Mr. Landa were carrying guns; Mr. Newell had a black

.45-caliber handgun, and Mr. Landa had a chrome nine-millimeter handgun.

¶6 According to Mr. Newell, the three men exited the car. While Mr. Newell remained by the

car, Mr. Barnes and Mr. Landa went into the gas station. Mr. Newell saw Mr. Mayes exit the gas

station and walk to the Lexus, then saw Mr. Mayes and Mr. Landa “exchange” words. Mr. Mayes

-2- No. 1-17-0851

attempted to grab Mr. Landa, and Mr. Landa shot Mr. Mayes, then fired his gun a second time as

Mr. Mayes fell to the ground. Mr. Newell testified that Mr. Landa then got into the Lexus, while

Mr. Newell and Mr. Barnes returned to the Grand Am, and both cars drove away from the gas

station.

¶7 Mr. Newell testified that later that evening, he, Mr. Barnes, and Mr. Landa parked the

Lexus behind the house of Mr. Newell’s uncle’s girlfriend in Kankakee, Illinois, and joined three

women—Laneashia Barnes, Donita Pendleton, and Mallory Burns—at the Avis Motel in

Kankakee. Mr. Newell introduced the women to Mr. Landa, whom Ms. Barnes and Ms. Pendleton

testified they had never met before, and, according to the women, the men told the women that

they had a Lexus. According to Mr. Newell and both women, Mr. Newell and Mr. Landa were

each in possession of a gun at that time. Approximately 30 minutes later, the police arrived at the

motel to investigate a report of drugs being sold from one of the rooms.

¶8 Mr. Landa and Mr. Newell left the motel room before the police entered. Upon entering

the motel room, the police flipped the mattress over and recovered a chrome, nine-millimeter

handgun. Because the motel room was under her name, Ms. Pendleton was arrested for unlawful

possession of a weapon. At trial, Mr. Newell, Ms. Pendleton, and Ms. Barnes all testified that they

had seen Mr. Landa with the gun that the police found under the mattress in the hotel room.

¶9 Charles Dortch also testified for the State. He testified that he lived near the Clark gas

station and heard the gunshots from his kitchen but did not see the shooting. He went to his

backyard to look over the fence, which looks into the alley and separates the gas station from Mr.

Dortch’s house, but could not see anything and started walking down his driveway to the front of

his house. As he was walking, Mr. Dortch saw two cars turn at a high rate of speed from the alley

onto the street in front of his house. Approximately two or three minutes had passed since he heard

-3- No. 1-17-0851

the gunshots. The first car, a dark-colored Lexus with only the driver in it, was followed by a light-

colored car with two people. On direct examination by the State, Mr. Dortch testified that he was

unable to clearly see the faces of any of the cars’ occupants.

¶ 10 After Mr. Dortch testified for the State, he contacted the State’s Attorney’s Office and

reported that, after he took another look at Mr. Landa when he was leaving the witness stand, he

realized that Mr. Landa was clearly not the person that he saw driving the Lexus. Mr. Dortch was

then recalled, in the middle of the State’s case, as a defense witness. He testified that the person

he saw driving the Lexus was young, small in stature, and dark-skinned; it was “[a]bsolutely not”

Mr. Landa. He said that when he had previously testified, he “thought all the individuals that were

involved [in the offense] were dark-skinned African-Americans,” but when he looked at Mr.

Landa, he realized “that was not true, he was not the driver.”

¶ 11 On April 23, 2000, Mr. Mayes’s Lexus was recovered from the backyard of Mr. Newell’s

uncle’s girlfriend’s house. On May 5, 2000, the police were given consent to search the Grand Am

and recovered from inside the trunk of the vehicle keys and key identifiers, along with a bag and

a receipt from Menards. No fingerprints matching Mr. Newell, Mr. Landa, or Mr. Barnes were

found on the recovered shell casings, handgun, or Mr. Mayes’s Lexus. The shell casings were,

however, tested by a forensic firearms examiner, who concluded that they had been fired from the

nine-millimeter handgun recovered from the motel.

¶ 12 After the State rested, defense counsel informed the court that Mr. Landa did not wish to

testify, and Mr. Landa confirmed that this was correct. The defense then rested without calling any

additional witnesses. The trial court found Mr. Landa guilty of two counts of first degree murder.

¶ 13 At the sentencing hearing, Mr. Landa’s mother, Sharon Walker, testified in mitigation. In

part, she said:

-4- No. 1-17-0851

“I sleep and breathe this whole thing every night and every day.

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2020 IL App (1st) 170851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-landa-illappct-2020.