People v. Loggins

2019 IL App (1st) 160482, 130 N.E.3d 432, 432 Ill. Dec. 890
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 29, 2019
Docket1-16-0482
StatusUnpublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2019 IL App (1st) 160482 (People v. Loggins) 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. Loggins, 2019 IL App (1st) 160482, 130 N.E.3d 432, 432 Ill. Dec. 890 (Ill. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.

*896 ¶ 1 The police entered a house in Harvey to execute a search warrant and found defendant Danny Loggins, along with three other people, sitting around the table in the dining room. Defendant sprang up and ran out the back door, leaving behind a handgun that had been within arm's reach on a nearby chair. He was arrested, unarmed, in the yard. The police found cocaine in a drawer in the dining room and assorted paraphernalia nearby. A jury convicted defendant of armed violence and the predicate offense of possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver. (At a simultaneous bench trial, the judge found him guilty of unlawful possession of a weapon by a felon, but neither that conviction nor the bench trial is at issue in this appeal.)

¶ 2 Defendant raises several issues on appeal. He challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain either of the jury's verdicts. He says he was prejudiced when an officer was allowed to testify about the uses of the paraphernalia found in the house without being accepted as an expert on drug distribution. He argues that the trial court erred in requiring him to serve (at least) 85%, rather than 50%, of his sentence, pursuant to the truth-in-sentencing law. And he challenges various aspects of the fines-and-fees order.

¶ 3 Because there was no finding, and indeed no evidence, that defendant caused anyone great bodily harm, we agree that he is eligible to receive day-for-day credit on his sentence for armed violence. We otherwise affirm his convictions and sentence. We also remand to the circuit court, *897 *439 pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 472, for defendant to file a motion challenging certain monetary assessments and per diem credits.

¶ 4 BACKGROUND

¶ 5 On the evening of December 21, 2012, the police arrested defendant while executing a search warrant at 15307 Turlington Avenue in Harvey. Detectives Ostrowski and McCalpine of the Harvey Police Department, both of whom testified for the State, were among the half-dozen or so officers who entered the three-bedroom house at that address.

¶ 6 The officers knocked and announced their presence. There was no response, and they did not hear any voices or other noises inside. After waiting somewhere between 30 and 60 seconds, the officers shattered the glass on the screen door and broke down the front door of the house with a battering ram. They continued to announce their presence as they entered the house and walked through the living room, into the adjoining dining room. There, they found four people, including defendant, sitting around the table. Defendant immediately got up, ran into the kitchen, and fled out the back door.

¶ 7 Ostrowski followed defendant outside. Defendant initially hopped a fence, but then came back, walked toward Ostrowski, and was arrested, unarmed, in the yard. Ostrowski never saw defendant with a gun.

¶ 8 Meanwhile, McCalpine found a handgun on the seat of a chair in the dining room. On direct examination, he testified that it was the chair next to defendant, about one foot away from where defendant had been sitting. On cross-examination, McCalpine acknowledged that in his police report, and again in his grand-jury testimony, he had said that the gun was on defendant's chair, not the chair next to him. In any event, a photo taken by McCalpine, and published to the jury, depicts a chair in the dining room with a White Sox cap, a coat underneath the cap, and a handgun underneath the coat. The handle of the gun is sticking out from underneath the coat. McCalpine never saw defendant with that (or any other) gun, and he did not know who put the handgun on the chair. A fingerprint expert from the Illinois State Police testified that no latent prints suitable for comparison were found on the handgun or the magazine. The handgun was loaded with 15 live rounds.

¶ 9 After the occupants were secured, the police searched the entire house. In a drawer in the dining room, about three feet away from where defendant was sitting, they found a plastic bag containing a white, rock-like substance. Testing later confirmed that it was 8.2 grams of cocaine.

¶ 10 On the floor in the dining room, also about three feet away from defendant, the police found a box full of paraphernalia, including measuring spoons, a measuring cup, two strainers, two digital scales, a box with a large quantity of small plastic bags (upwards of a thousand, McCalpine estimated), a bottle of "instatal," and another bottle of an unspecified dietary supplement. They also found more plastic bags and two blenders elsewhere in the dining room, and a 12-gauge shotgun in the corner of the living room.

¶ 11 Without objection, McCalpine testified that small plastic bags are commonly used to package narcotics; that blenders are commonly used to blend and cut heroin; and that "instatal" is a dietary supplement commonly used to "multiply," or cut, cocaine. (Based on this testimony, we surmise that the term "instatal," as it occurs in the report of proceedings and the parties' briefs, is a misspelling of "inositol," a common cutting agent for cocaine. See, *898 *440 e.g. , People v. Adams , 388 Ill. App. 3d 762 , 765, 328 Ill.Dec. 232 , 903 N.E.2d 892 (2009) ; People v. Caro , 381 Ill. App. 3d 1056 , 1064, 321 Ill.Dec. 804 , 890 N.E.2d 526 (2008).)

¶ 12 McCalpine based his testimony about the plastic bags, blenders, and inositol on his "training and experience" as a narcotics officer. At the time of the search, he had served on the narcotics-investigation unit of the Harvey Police Department for 5 years, and he had been an officer for a total of 12 years. He had completed 40 hours of narcotics training at the Chicago Police Academy; and he completed ongoing, annual narcotics training from an organization referred to in the transcript as the "Illinois Department of Drug Enforcement Association." The State did not tender McCalpine as an expert, and the trial court did not qualify him as one.

¶ 13 During the search, the officers found defendant's state identification card, which listed 15307 Turlington Avenue as his residence.

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Bluebook (online)
2019 IL App (1st) 160482, 130 N.E.3d 432, 432 Ill. Dec. 890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-loggins-illappct-2019.