People v. Lind

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 24, 1999
Docket4-98-0612
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Lind (People v. Lind) 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. Lind, (Ill. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

24 September 1999

NO. 4-98-0612

IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

MICHAEL E. LIND,

Defendant-Appellant.

)

Appeal from

Circuit Court of

Sangamon County

No. 96CF624

Honorable

Leo J. Zappa,

Judge Presiding.

_________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE STEIGMANN delivered the opinion of the court:

In May 1998, a jury convicted defendant, Michael E. Lind, of aggravated battery of a child (720 ILCS 5/12-4.3(a) (West 1996)), and the trial court later sentenced him­ to 18 years in prison.  Defendant appeals, arguing that (1) the State failed to prove him guilty beyond a reason­able doubt; and (2) the court made certain evidentiary errors.  We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

In July 1996, the State charged defendant with four counts of first degree murder (720 ILCS 5/9-1(a)(1), (a)(2), (a)(3) (West 1996)) and one count of aggravated battery of a child.  The jury acquitted defendant of first degree murder and convicted him of aggravated battery of a child and involuntary manslaughter (720 ILCS 5/9-3 (West 1996)).  The trial court subsequently set aside those convictions, and the case proceeded to a second trial on the charge of aggravated battery of a child, where the evidence presented showed the following.

Roy Mayfield, a paramedic, testified that around 12:30 p.m. on June 28, 1996, he responded to an emergency call at defendant’s trailer.  Once inside the trailer, Mayfield saw a woman, Jessie Hayes, performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) on A.L., the four-month-old daughter of defendant and defendant’s then-wife, Erin Lind.  While Jessie continued performing CPR, Mayfield spoke with defendant to obtain medical information about A.L.  Defendant told Mayfield that he was feeding A.L. when she suddenly went limp and stopped breathing.  Defendant did not tell Mayfield that A.L. had fallen nor did he mention “any type of shaking.”  Mayfield described defendant’s demeanor as “very calm, cool[,] and collected.”  After gathering A.L.’s medical informa

tion, Mayfield performed CPR on A.L. until the ambulance arrived.  Once A.L. was placed inside the ambulance, paramedics continued resuscitation efforts.

Jessie, who was defendant’s neighbor, testified that on the day of the incident, she saw defendant walk across the street to her trailer and knock on the door.  Jessie yelled to defendant to tell him that she and her husband, Brian Hayes, were not inside.  Defendant then walked back to the edge of the driveway and told Jessie that A.L. was not breathing and needed help.  Jessie went inside defendant’s trailer while Brian called an ambulance.  A.L. was lying on a stack of blankets fully dressed, including socks on both feet, and she appeared “grayish-blue.”  Jessie, a certified nursing assistant, “kind of shook” A.L. to get her attention.  She then undressed A.L. and began performing CPR.  She continued performing CPR until a paramedic arrived and took over.  While the paramedic performed CPR, Jessie held A.L.’s head because it was “bobbing back and forth.”  

Jessie was aware that A.L. suffered from central apnea, a condition in which an individual temporarily stops breathing.  She had once heard a nurse explain to defendant and Erin that when A.L. experienced apnea, they should call A.L. by name and “kind of shake her a little bit so you could get her attention.”

Paul Haley, A.L.’s maternal grandfather, testified that around 10:05 a.m. on June 28, 1996, he went to defendant’s trailer and knocked several times during a 30-minute period.  No one responded.  Later that day, Haley asked defendant why he had not answered the door earlier that morning, and defendant told Haley that he had been doing laundry at his mother’s house.  (Defendant’s mother testified that defendant could not have been at her home on that morning because he did not have a key to her house.)  Haley then asked defendant what had happened to A.L., and defendant initially responded that he had been feeding her when she went limp.  Haley then told defendant he “better be straight if something happened” to A.L., and defendant told Haley that he “gave [A.L.] a bath and put lotion on her getting ready to put her socks on her and dropped her and picked her up and dropped her again.”  Defendant never told Haley that he had shaken A.L.

Lana Schmidt, an emergency room physician, testified that she examined A.L. after the paramedics brought her to the hospital.  A.L. was not breathing, and she showed signs of serious brain damage.  Schmidt observed “a lot of bleeding” in A.L.’s eyes; such retinal hemorrhage is a sign of "shaken baby syndrome," a term used to describe infants who have experienced a vigorous and violent movement of their heads in a backward and forward motion.  Emer­

gency room physicians stabilized A.L., and she was placed in the pediatric intensive care unit, where she later died.  

Defendant told Schmidt that he had taken A.L. off the apnea monitor prior to feeding her.  After he fed A.L., he noticed that she had “some milk spewing from her mouth and her nose,” and defendant picked her up and took her to a neighbor’s house to get help.  Defendant did not tell Schmidt that A.L. had fallen or that he had shaken A.L., and he specifically denied that A.L. had suffered any impact to her head.  

Marilyn Kincaid, an ocular pathologist, testified that shaken baby syndrome results in retinal hemorrhage.  Kincaid stated that some physicians and researchers believe that shaking an infant, by itself, will result in retinal hemorrhage, while others believe that an impact injury is also necessary to produce such bleeding.  Kincaid examined tissue samples taken from A.L.’s eyes and detected hemorrhage throughout several layers of the retinas, extending to the ora serrata (the anterior edge of the sensory portion of the retina).  Kincaid opined that “in this case[,] I felt that the degree of hemorrhage and its extent was absolutely classic for the so-called shaken baby syndrome.”  She also opined that only a “[v]ery substantial force” could have caused the extent of retinal hemorrhage detected in A.L.’s eyes.  Kincaid further stated that the extent of hemorrhage she detected in A.L.’s eyes could occur only in cases of shaken baby syndrome, in older persons suffering from vein occlusion, or in persons involved in very severe motor vehicle accidents.  In addition, she opined that an impact injury resulting from a five-foot fall would not cause such retinal hemorrhage.    

On cross-examination, Kincaid testified that improperly performed CPR can cause retinal hemorrhaging.  She acknowledged that head trauma, followed by vigorous shaking, and then a lengthy period of CPR could combine to create a relatively severe amount of retinal hemorrhaging.

On redirect examination, Kincaid opined that shaking and failed attempts at resuscitation could not have caused the extensive injuries A.L.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Lind, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lind-illappct-1999.