People v. Lockwood

608 N.E.2d 132, 240 Ill. App. 3d 137, 181 Ill. Dec. 59, 1992 Ill. App. LEXIS 2002
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 10, 1992
Docket1-90-3522
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 608 N.E.2d 132 (People v. Lockwood) 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. Lockwood, 608 N.E.2d 132, 240 Ill. App. 3d 137, 181 Ill. Dec. 59, 1992 Ill. App. LEXIS 2002 (Ill. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

JUSTICE McMORROW *

delivered the opinion of the court:

Following a jury trial, defendant was convicted of aggravated arson and sentenced to 12 years’ imprisonment. On appeal, he contends that the State failed to prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt; that he was prevented from eliciting evidence supporting his theory of defense; that the trial court committed reversible error in refusing to instruct the jury on lesser offenses; and that the aggravated arson statute is unconstitutional.

The evidence adduced at trial is as follows. Gloria Snow testified that she lived in the first-floor apartment of a building on North Harding Avenue in Chicago with her two daughters, Robresta and Aurelius; and that her granddaughter was visiting on the night of January 12, 1990. Shortly after 10 p.m., defendant, who had been dating Robresta, came to the apartment and told her that he wanted to retrieve some clothes he had left there and to speak with Robresta. Gloria informed him that Robresta was not at home, but allowed him entrance and walked back to Robresta’s room with him. After gathering his clothes, defendant told Gloria that he was going to wait there for Robresta. Gloria responded that he could not stay and noted that he smelled of beer. He assured her that he was “fine,” but she repeated that she wanted him to leave. As defendant was leaving, Robresta arrived. They went into Robresta’s room to talk, but within a short time they began fighting. When Gloria went to the room, she saw defendant “hitting [Robresta], shoving her around.” After a struggle, Gloria came between him and Robresta and finally pressured defendant to leave. She then locked both the outer door to the building and the apartment door.

When the doorbell rang, Gloria looked out her living room windows, from which the street and outer door to the vestibule of the building are visible, and saw defendant at the front door “laying” on the bell. Gloria knocked on the window and told him to stop ringing the bell and to leave. Defendant responded that he was going to stay there all night if necessary. While continuing to ring the bell, he said that if she did not allow Robresta to come out and talk to him, “I’m gonna take all of you out. I will get you out,” and then he left. Approximately 30 minutes later, defendant returned and began ringing the bell again. He told Gloria to send Robresta out, but Gloria refused. Defendant then went to his car and took out a brown bag. He came to the front of the house and began shaking liquid on the sidewalk in front of the door and under the front windows. He also shook some liquid into the vestibule through the mail slot. He then gathered some leaves and paper and put them in a pile near the corner of the door, removed a lighter from the glovebox of his car, walked back to the house and set the papers and leaves on fire. Gloria saw flames from the pile of debris and smelled strong gasoline fumes. She hollered to Robresta to call the police. Defendant went to his car and started it, but a police car drove up, preventing him from leaving. One of the officers ran to the house and stomped out the fire.

At the time of these events, Katie Buckhalter, the owner of the building, and her daughter, Kimberly, were in their second-floor apartment. After the police arrived, Gloria and the Buckhalters went down the stairs to the vestibule. The hallway and the rug were flooded with gasoline and the door and floor were “black and burnt [sic].” Gloria and Katie brought down cleaning supplies and mopped up the gasoline and scrubbed the floor and door. Gloria identified photographs of the front of the house, the outside of the front door and the floor just inside the front door which were taken by a police photographer a few hours after the incident.

On cross-examination, Gloria stated that Robresta went down to the vestibule with a pot of water which she splashed on the fire in the hallway as the police officer was stomping on the fire outside. When she opened the door, the fire in the hallway “poofed up.” The fire department was never called. After the police had interviewed everyone in the building, they left. Gloria believed at that time that “everything was over” and did not learn until later that they should not have cleaned the hallway. The linoleum in the hallway was not replaced after the incident. Gloria acknowledged that she did not approve of defendant because he hit Robresta. In speaking to the police, she told them that defendant had been “clowning” with Robresta when he was in the apartment.

Kimberly Buckhalter, aged 22, testified that she was awakened in the early morning hours by her mother screaming that there was a fire. When they ran downstairs she smelled gas fumes and saw that the door was burned. The only thing she saw in the hallway was gas on the floor and that the tile was blackened. After the police left, she helped clean up the floor and scrub the door. She did not recall whether the police told them not to touch anything on the scene. The testimony of Katie Buckhalter, Kimberly’s mother, was essentially the same as Kimberly’s. She added that a portion of a rug in the hallway had also been burned.

Robresta McSwain testified that upon arriving home shortly after 11 p.m. on January 12, her mother informed her that defendant was there and wanted to talk to her. She went into her room and told defendant to leave because her mother did not want any arguing or fighting. He told her that he wanted to talk, but she said they had nothing to talk about, whereupon they began physically fighting. Her mother came in and stood between them, and ordered defendant to leave. At first he refused, but eventually he left the apartment. He went downstairs and began ringing the doorbell, and then stopped. A short time later, he returned and “laid on the doorbell again” and began arguing with her mother who was talking to him through the window. Shortly before 2 a.m., she heard her mother talking to defendant again. She smelled gasoline and then went to the window and saw defendant reach into the glove compartment of his car. She realized that he had removed a lighter when he flicked it. At that point, she called the police. Following her call, her mother told her that defendant had set the building on fire. By the time she returned to the window, defendant was trying to leave in his car. The police arrived and blocked his departure.

When Robresta opened the apartment door, the fire in the hallway “went up,” and she almost fell into it because the hallway was filled with gasoline. She ran back into the apartment and filled a pan with water to pour on the fire. She also ran upstairs to alert the Buckhalters that there was a fire. After the police left, they cleaned up the gasoline and scrubbed the door. She did not awaken her younger sister or niece, nor did anyone leave the building because of the fire.

Officer Kostecki testified that he and his partner arrived at the scene within minutes of receiving a radio call. Another police car had also just arrived from the opposite direction. When he saw that the front door of the building was on fire, he quickly exited his vehicle, went up to the door and stomped and beat out the fire. He was met in the vestibule area by a young woman carrying a pot. She accompanied Kostecki to where the officers from the other police car had stopped defendant's vehicle and identified defendant as the man who set the fire.

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Bluebook (online)
608 N.E.2d 132, 240 Ill. App. 3d 137, 181 Ill. Dec. 59, 1992 Ill. App. LEXIS 2002, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lockwood-illappct-1992.