People v. Lopez

2012 IL App (1st) 101395, 974 N.E.2d 291
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 22, 2012
Docket1-10-1395
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 2012 IL App (1st) 101395 (People v. Lopez) 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. Lopez, 2012 IL App (1st) 101395, 974 N.E.2d 291 (Ill. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

ILLINOIS OFFICIAL REPORTS Appellate Court

People v. Lopez, 2012 IL App (1st) 101395

Appellate Court THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Caption ALEX LOPEZ, Defendant-Appellant.

District & No. First District, Fifth Division Docket No. 1-10-1395

Filed June 22, 2012

Held Defendant’s convictions for criminal sexual abuse and unlawful restraint (Note: This syllabus were upheld on appeal where he failed to show that he was deprived of constitutes no part of a fair trial by the trial judge’s comments suggesting that defense counsel the opinion of the court was incompetent and that his defense was a waste of time, his right to but has been prepared present a defense was not violated by the trial judge’s decision to allow by the Reporter of the State more time for closing argument than defendant, and he failed to Decisions for the show that the prosecutor improperly vouched for the credibility of the convenience of the victim during closing argument. reader.)

Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 08-CR-21389; the Review Hon. Lawrence P. Fox, Judge, presiding.

Judgment Affirmed. Counsel on Michael J. Pelletier, Alan D. Goldberg, and Benjamin Wimmer, all of Appeal State Appellate Defender’s Office, of Chicago, for appellant.

Anita M. Alvarez, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Alan J. Spellberg and Peter D. Fischer, Assistant State’s Attorneys, of counsel), for the People.

Panel PRESIDING JUSTICE EPSTEIN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices J. Gordon and McBride concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 After a jury trial, defendant Alex Lopez was convicted of criminal sexual abuse and unlawful restraint. He was sentenced to four years in prison. Defendant argues on appeal that: (1) the trial court denied his right to a trial by an impartial jury by making numerous comments before the jury conveying the impression that his “defense counsel was incompetent and his defense a waste of time”; (2) the trial court violated his right to due process of law by indicating, prior to closing argument, that it might impose unequal time limits on defense and State closing arguments; and (3) the State improperly vouched for the credibility of the complaining witness and suggested irrelevant considerations during closing. We affirm.

¶2 BACKGROUND ¶3 On November 12, 2008, defendant was charged with attempted criminal sexual assault, criminal sexual abuse, and unlawful restraint. Defendant pleaded not guilty and his jury trial commenced on March 8, 2010.

¶4 I. State’s Case in Chief ¶5 A. MS ¶6 The State first called the complaining witness, MS, who testified to the following version of events. In October 2008, MS was a 17-year-old junior in high school and lived at home with her mother and her brother. Her uncle, Jose Avalos, and his family lived in the same building. Another uncle, Nicholas Hurtado, lived across the street with MS’s aunt, Rosa. On October 16, 2008, at approximately 6 p.m., Uncle Nicholas called MS and asked her to come over to help him set up his iPod. MS went out the front door. It was still sunny outside. While standing on her front porch, she saw defendant across the street, masturbating in the gangway by her aunt and uncle’s house. She had never seen him before. He was wearing a

-2- black spaghetti strap undershirt and black basketball shorts that were pulled down to his mid- thigh. She could not remember what color shoes defendant wore or whether defendant had facial hair or tattoos. MS also saw a girl walking in front of her uncle’s house across the street. MS had never seen the girl before. The “suspicious” girl kept walking, looking back at defendant, and looked worried. MS focused her attention on the girl. When MS looked back to where defendant had been, he was gone. MS did not call out to her uncle or call the police. She waited a few minutes on her porch, “in shock.” ¶7 MS then went across the street to her Uncle Nicholas’s house. She walked to the rear door because her aunt did not like people to use the front door. The rear entrance to her uncle’s house had two small stairwells. One led up to the rear door, and the other went down to the basement. MS went up the stairs and, as she knocked on the rear door, she saw defendant hidden at the bottom of the steps to the basement. She was approximately five feet away from defendant, who was still masturbating. In a “calm voice,” she told defendant he was not supposed to be there and he nodded his head with a smirk. MS knocked harder on the door but did not scream for help because she was in shock. She did not run because she would have had to run past him. Defendant then came up the stairs and grabbed MS’s left wrist; his grip was hard and painful. MS kept pushing him away, but was unsuccessful. She was unable to pull herself away from defendant. As defendant held her by the wrist, he pushed MS against the wall and, with his right hand, pulled down her sweat pants and underwear “[r]ight beneath the pubic hair.” MS testified “I felt his hand on my vagina.” She stated that “[b]asically everything” was exposed. ¶8 As defendant was restraining her, MS stated she was scared and panicking. She may or may not have screamed. MS heard the locks unlocking on the rear door. Defendant then ran out of the stairwell toward the front of the house. When Uncle Nicholas opened the door, defendant was gone. MS pointed toward where he had run. Uncle Nicholas ran, and MS followed him, to the end of the gangway. MS then saw her Uncle Jose get in his van and chase defendant down the street. Uncle Nicholas ran back down the gangway and MS went inside the house. Family members called the police and they arrived in a few minutes. ¶9 The police and MS went into the alley behind Uncle Nicholas’s house, where there was an unfamiliar car parked. MS testified that she told the police that she saw defendant masturbating and that he had rubbed her vagina with his hand. At trial, she testified that he did not insert his fingers in her vagina. ¶ 10 MS went to the police station with her mother and identified defendant in a lineup. She testified that the shirt defendant was wearing during the attack was different than the one he was wearing during the lineup. MS denied telling the police that defendant had been wearing white shoes.

¶ 11 B. Nicholas Hurtado ¶ 12 MS’s uncle, Nicholas Hurtado testified that he lived with his wife, Rosa, and their baby daughter, across the street from MS. MS came to visit them almost every day and would always use the back door, where there was one stairwell going up to the back door and another going down to the basement.

-3- ¶ 13 On October 16, 2008, at approximately 6 p.m., Nicholas was home. Rosa had just had foot surgery and was unable to move around easily. Nicholas had called MS and asked her to come over to his house to help him with his iPod. After a few minutes, he heard a “pretty loud” knock at the back door. He heard a series of knocks. It took him a few seconds to get to the back door and unlock the top and bottom locks. He did not hear voices or screams. As he opened the back door, he found MS crying loudly and pointing down the stairs into the gangway. He tried to calm her down. After 10 to 15 seconds, she was still crying loudly but told him that a man tried to grab her and that she did not know who the man was. Nicholas ran to the front of the house and MS followed. He saw a man, wearing black, running a half block down the street but he was unable to see the man’s face. Nicholas also saw his brother- in-law, Jose Avalos, run and jump into his van and follow in the same direction the man in black was running. Nicholas went back to get his shoes and went into the alley but did not find the man. He did see an unfamiliar car parked by the neighbor’s garage.

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Bluebook (online)
2012 IL App (1st) 101395, 974 N.E.2d 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lopez-illappct-2012.