People v. Lara

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 31, 2011
Docket1-09-1326 NRel
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Lara (People v. Lara) 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. Lara, (Ill. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Third Division March 31, 2011

1-09-1326

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County. ) v. ) 05 CR 6444 ) JASON LARA, ) Honorable ) Kenneth J. Wadas, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE NEVILLE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justice Steele concurred in the judgment and opinion. Justice Murphy specially concurred, with opinion.

OPINION

A jury found the defendant, Jason Lara, guilty of two counts of predatory criminal sexual

assault (PCSA) for inserting his finger into the vagina of an eight-year-old girl, J.O. On appeal, Jason

argues that the State failed to prove the corpus delicti of the offense, because the State failed to

present any evidence corroborating Jason’s confession that he put his finger inside J.O. We agree.

The State’s evidence, apart from the confession, supported a finding of only the lesser-included

offense of aggravated criminal sexual abuse (ACSA). Accordingly, we vacate Jason’s convictions

for PCSA, reduce Jason’s convictions for PCSA to convictions for ACSA, and remand for sentencing

on the ACSA convictions.

BACKGROUND

Augustina P. had two children, J.O. and C.A. Augustina, who worked many evenings, often 1-09-1326

asked her friend, Shelley Lara, to look after her two children. Sometimes J.O. and C.A. slept at

Shelley’s home, where Shelley’s son, Jason, also slept. Augustina began dating John Cordero after

she separated from her husband, Phillip A., who was C.A.’s father.

On February 11, 2005, Jason told Cordero that once, when Phillip A. came to visit, Jason

heard sounds of licking and sucking coming from a room where Phillip A. and J.O. were alone

together. On February 17, 2005, Cordero and Augustina went out for a few drinks after Augustina

got off work. Cordero told Augustina what Jason had said.

The following morning, Augustina asked Cordero to talk to J.O. about the matter.

Augustina’s sister brought J.O. and C.A. to Cordero’s home, before school. Cordero took J.O. into

a bedroom and asked her if Phillip had ever touched her in a way that made her uncomfortable. J.O.

said, “Yes, he has but it wasn’t Phillip.” Instead, J.O. said Jason had touched her inappropriately.

Augustina came into the bedroom to talk to J.O., and again J.O. said Jason, not Phillip, had

touched her “private part.” Augustina called Shelley and the police. Shelley and Jason came to

Cordero’s home. Police officers arrested Jason.

Carey Kato, a forensic interviewer working for the Children’s Advocacy Center, interviewed

J.O. later that day. J.O. said that on two occasions about a month earlier, Jason had touched her

“private part.” She pointed to her vagina. J.O. explained that when she and her sister slept at

Shelley’s home, they would sleep on the floor next to the bed in the living room where Jason slept.

One night she woke up to find her pants and underpants pulled down to her knees, and Jason’s hand

resting on her “private part.” A few days later, when she came back to lie on the floor after going

to the bathroom late at night, Jason put his hand inside her panties and on her vagina. Kato

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specifically asked whether Jason put his hand inside her, and J.O. said it was outside her vagina on

both occasions.

Jason signed a statement about the incident later that day. He admitted that in January 2005,

on two separate occasions, he put his hand in J.O.’s pants and touched her vagina. According to the

written statement, he said that on the first occasion, while J.O. slept, he put his finger into her vagina

as far as his fingernail, and then J.O. woke up. The second time J.O. was already awake when he put

his finger into her vagina, with the finger again entering as far as the fingernail.

A grand jury indicted Jason on 11 separate counts for sex crimes against J.O., and prosecutors

chose to try him on 2 counts of PCSA (720 ILCS 5/12-14.1(a)(1) (West 2004)).

Before trial, the prosecution filed a motion seeking to admit at trial testimony about the

statements J.O. made to Augustina, Cordero and Kato. Augustina and Cordero testified at the

hearing on the motion about the circumstances in which they elicited J.O.’s disclosures. Detective

Linda Paraday, who watched Kato interview J.O., testified about that questioning and J.O.’s answers.

The trial court found that the questions did not effectively coach J.O. to give the answers she gave,

and therefore, the statements were sufficiently reliable for admission into evidence under section 115-

10 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 (Code)(725 ILCS 5/115-10(a), (b) (West 2008)).

Jason asked for a jury trial. The judge admonished the venire about the principles that the

jurors must presume the defendant’s innocence, the State must prove the defendant’s guilt beyond

a reasonable doubt, the defendant has no duty to present any evidence, and the jurors must not hold

against the defendant his exercise of his right not to testify. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 431(b) (eff. May 1,

2007). The judge also asked the jurors, in panels of four, whether they agreed with the presumption

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of innocence and the burden of proof. The judge did not ask the jurors about the defendant’s lack

of a duty to present evidence or the right not to testify.

At the trial, J.O. testified that for the first incident, while she slept, she felt Jason’s hand inside

her pants, touching her vagina. She woke up and took her sister with her as she went to spend the

rest of the night in Shelley’s room. About three days later, when she again slept on the floor next to

Jason’s bed, she got up during the night to use the bathroom. When she came back, Jason again put

his hand on her vagina. She pushed his hand away and went back to sleep. She did not tell her

mother or Shelley about either incident because she thought she would get in trouble.

Augustina, Cordero and Paraday repeated the testimony they gave at the pretrial hearing.

Paraday admitted that when Kato interviewed J.O., J.O. specified that Jason’s hand stayed outside

her vagina in each incident. An assistant State’s Attorney read to the jury the handwritten statement

Jason signed. The parties stipulated that in January 2005 Jason was 19 years old.

Jason testified that he never touched J.O. inappropriately, and he never put his hand in her

pants. Partly because of a conversation he had with J.O., he told Cordero about the sucking sounds

he heard coming from a room where J.O. was alone with Phillip. After the arrest, Jason spent some

hours locked in a cell. He fell asleep. When he awoke, he could not stand straight. He also

experienced some twitches he could not control. He testified that he might have had an epileptic

seizure in the cell without realizing it. He did not recall much about the statement he signed at the

station. He could not make much sense of what the officers had tried to say to him.

A doctor testified that Jason suffered from epilepsy, and at the time of the arrest, medications

did not adequately control his condition. The doctor had no opinion as to whether Jason suffered a

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seizure on the day of the arrest. The doctor testified that epileptics often remain confused for hours

after a seizure.

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