People v. Lee Replaces opinion filed July 20, 2001, and withdrawn

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 26, 2001
Docket5-99-0166 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Lee Replaces opinion filed July 20, 2001, and withdrawn (People v. Lee Replaces opinion filed July 20, 2001, and withdrawn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law.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People v. Lee Replaces opinion filed July 20, 2001, and withdrawn, (Ill. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

(text box: 1) NO. 5-99-0166

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIFTH DISTRICT

____________________________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the

) Circuit Court of

Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Williamson County.

)

  1. ) No. 98-CF-370

GARY DEAN LEE, ) Honorable

) Donald Lowery,

Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, presiding.

__________________________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE KUEHN delivered the opinion of the court:

Ellen Drake was a petite woman who lived in a small home located on Pleasant Hill Road in Carbondale, Illinois.  She and her pet German shepherd shared a pleasant existence together.  However, there was nothing pleasant in how that life came to an end.  On January 16, 1998, Ellen Drake perished in her home, succumbing to nine massive stab wounds sustained by her diminutive chest.  In all, she suffered 14 wounds.  A lacerated lung and heart bled until her chest cavity filled.  Without the blood flow needed to sustain life, Ellen died.   

It appeared that Ellen could offer little if any resistance to her savage assailant, an attacker who had no stomach for a match with the home's other inhabitant.  Ellen's dog was found locked inside the bathroom.   

On January 18, 1998, the defendant, Gary Dean Lee, was arrested in Memphis, Tennessee, driving Ellen's brand-new car.  A bloody-bladed butcher knife was found inside the car just to the left of where the defendant was sitting.  The defendant had blood on his clothing.  The blood found on the knife and on the clothing proved to be consistent with the type of blood that Ellen had lost.  

The defendant volunteered a statement, which was taped.  He readily admitted that he broke into Ellen's home, ravaged her belongings, and took what he pleased.  However, Ellen's death mystified him.  He denied any role in producing it.  His denial could not account for how Ellen's blood came to rest upon his clothing.  

The defendant left his fingerprints in places consistent with his admissions.  They were found near Ellen's emptied purse and on the cabinet that once housed her stereo equipment.  The fingerprints were also found in close proximity to blood splatter found in certain areas of the home.  

The defendant had pilfered numerous items, including a microwave oven, two television sets, a computer, a stereo, a boom box, a CD player, and a cellular phone.  There were several witnesses who saw him with these items on the night of the murder.  In fact, the defendant spent most of that evening trying to find buyers for sundry things that once entertained and enhanced life's enjoyment on Pleasant Hill Road.  It was obvious from his activity that he made several trips back to the residence to obtain further loot.

The main buyer of these items was a cocaine merchant.  At the trial, he revealed the reason behind the defendant's enterprising endeavors that night.  The defendant was binging on cocaine.  For the most part, Ellen's property was bartered, piece by piece, for pieces of crack cocaine.  Her life's possessions maintained the defendant's drug-induced euphoria into the late evening hours.  The fruit of the defendant's felonious undertaking went up in smoke before the night's end.    

The defendant stood trial for capital murder, residential burglary, robbery, and theft over $10,000.  The jury found him guilty.  After a death penalty sentencing hearing, the jury spared the defendant's life.  The determination of the appropriate punishment passed to the trial judge.  

The trial judge determined that the killing of Ellen Drake was particularly brutal and heinous indicative of wanton cruelty.  Based upon this finding, he sentenced the defendant to a life of imprisonment.  In addition, he sentenced the defendant to seven-year prison terms for robbery and theft but allowed him to serve those sentences at the same time that he fulfilled his life sentence.  The trial judge also determined that after the defendant served his life sentence, he would need to serve an additional 15 years of imprisonment for the residential burglary.  By imposing a 15-year consecutive prison sentence for the residential burglary, the trial judge assured that the defendant could neither satisfy the punishment imposed nor expiate his misdeeds, at least not in this lifetime.  

 On appeal, the defendant complains that several errors occurred during the proceedings to verdict, depriving him of a fair trial.  He also challenges the constitutional validity of his sentences.  

I.  TRIAL ERROR

A.   Batson Challenge

The defendant is an African-American.  Of the 71 prospective jurors drawn to determine the defendant's fate, only one shared this status.  The State exercised a peremptory challenge to remove that single African-American juror from the jury panel.  The defendant objected and asserted that her removal was racially motivated.  Before the trial judge could find the presence or absence of a prima facie case of discriminatory intent, the prosecutor disavowed racial motivation and tendered several race-neutral reasons that shaped his decision to exercise one of his peremptory challenges.  The trial judge ruled that the challenge would stand and excused the prospective juror.  He found that the challenge had not been used to systematically exclude a given race from the jury.  The trial judge added that if he had "any inclination" that the prospective juror was being excluded because of race, he would not have removed her from the panel.  

On appeal, the defendant maintains that the exclusion of the sole African-American jury panel member deprived him of equal protection under the law as guaranteed by the United States and Illinois Constitutions (U.S. Const., amend. XIV; Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, §2).

It is well-settled that the State may not use its peremptory challenges to purposefully exclude members of a jury venire based upon their race.   Batson v. Kentucky , 476 U.S. 79, 90 L. Ed. 2d 69, 106 S. Ct. 1712 (1986).  

This constitutional rule operates through a four-step process employed when any party raises the claim that peremptory challenges are being exercised in a discriminatory manner.  First, the party making the claim must establish a prima facie case of purposeful discrimination.  If a prima facie case is made, the burden then shifts to the other party to articulate a race-neutral reason for striking the prospective jurors in question.  The trial court must then determine whether the party making the claim has met the burden of establishing purposeful discrimination.   Batson , 476 U.S. at 93-94, 90 L. Ed. 2d at 85-86, 106 S. Ct. at 1721.  Even if the party establishes purposeful discrimination, even in cases where the State concedes a discriminatory motive, the claim fails if the State can prove that the prospective juror would have been struck anyway for other reasons.  See People v. Hudson , 195 Ill. 2d 117, 745 N.E.2d 1246 (2001).

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People v. Lee Replaces opinion filed July 20, 2001, and withdrawn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lee-replaces-opinion-filed-july-20-2001-a-illappct-2001.