People v. Madrid

916 N.E.2d 1273, 334 Ill. Dec. 385, 395 Ill. App. 3d 38, 2009 Ill. App. LEXIS 982
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 8, 2009
Docket1-08-0324
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 916 N.E.2d 1273 (People v. Madrid) 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. Madrid, 916 N.E.2d 1273, 334 Ill. Dec. 385, 395 Ill. App. 3d 38, 2009 Ill. App. LEXIS 982 (Ill. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

JUSTICE O’BRIEN

delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendant, Gerardo Madrid, appeals his conviction for attempted first-degree murder and aggravated domestic battery and his sentence of 30 years’ imprisonment for attempted first-degree murder and a concurrent 14 years’ imprisonment for aggravated domestic battery. Defendant contends that the circuit court violated Illinois Supreme Court Rule 431(b) (eff. May 1, 2007) by failing to ask the potential jurors during voir dire whether they understood and accepted the principles set forth in People v. Zehr, 103 Ill. 2d 472 (1984). We reverse and remand for a new trial.

We adopt the State’s statement of facts verbatim:

“On May 17, 2004, Patricia Hernandez lived with her daughter Alejandra and her husband (defendant). They stayed in the attic at 2703 S. Keeler in Chicago. The home was owned by Patricia’s sister Bertha and her brother-in-law Javier Vargas. Bertha and Javier stayed on the second floor of the home with their two children Fabian and Vanessa. An unrelated tenant, Henry Weber, rented the first floor. In addition to being a two-flat, 2703 S. Keeler consists of an unattached garage in back towards the alley. There is a yard between the house and garage.
Patricia Hernandez moved to Chicago from Los Angeles in April 2004 with Alejandra. She was trying to get away from defendant, so she never told him she was moving. Defendant followed her a couple of days later and, when he arrived in Chicago, Patricia agreed to give him another chance.
On May 17, 2004, defendant, Patricia, and Alejandra drove around all day looking for a job for defendant. When they stopped for lunch, defendant ate but refused to allow Patricia to eat. All day they argued. Later that afternoon they returned to 2703 S. Keeler, and defendant and Patricia sat in the garage. During this time, defendant sat in the van drinking beer and Patricia sat in a chair not drinking. They continued to argue. While in the garage, defendant pulled out the knife he always carried and held the blade in his hand. Patricia told him to calm down, and he put the knife away. At approximately 6 p.m., defendant left 2703 S. Keeler in his van.
Patricia next heard from defendant at 11 p.m. that night when he called her to open the downstairs door to let him into the apartment. At the time, Patricia, Alejandra, Javier, Fabian, and Vanessa were home. When Patricia went downstairs she saw defendant in the garage. Defendant told Patricia to get inside the van. Patricia refused because she knew he wanted to harm her, and she started to run back towards the house from the garage. Defendant ran after her and grabbed at her shoulder, hair, clothing, and necklace. He managed to break her necklace. When Patricia approached the house door, the first floor tenant, Henry Weber, stepped outside and called Javier. While this was going on, Alejandra went into Javier’s bedroom and told Javier that her parents were arguing in the yard. Javier went out on the back porch to verify that Patricia and defendant were arguing. Javier then went downstairs and told Patricia to go upstairs, and defendant tried to prevent her from doing so by grabbing her shoulder. Javier told defendant to close the garage door, and defendant complied. Patricia was then able to go upstairs. Javier followed.
When Patricia headed upstairs, she went to the attic to protect her daughter. Patricia took Alejandra to the living room on the second floor. Defendant then entered the living room, grabbed six-year-old Alejandra’s hands, bent down to her level, and told her to behave herself because she is not going to have a mother anymore. Alejandra then went into her cousin Vanessa’s bedroom, and Javier Vargas, not having heard what defendant said to Alejandra, went back into his bedroom.
Defendant and Patricia went into the kitchen, and defendant spoke with a raised voice. At this point, Javier went into the kitchen and told defendant two or three times to go to sleep and to speak to Patricia in the morning. Javier told defendant that if he failed to comply Javier would call the police. Javier woke up his son, Fabian, and told him to call the police. Defendant laughed at Javier and mocked, ‘Javier, when are you calling the police?’ At that point, Javier turned to leave the kitchen. As he turned, defendant grabbed Patricia by her hair, put his arm around her neck and simultaneously pulled his knife from his pocket. Defendant took the knife and cut Patricia across her face on her left lower cheek and lower jaw going towards her neck. Defendant then threw Patricia to the ground so that she was lying on her back. Defendant pinned Patricia down by pressing his knee on her right shoulder. Defendant then stabbed her with the knife in the face, chest, mid-stomach, and arm. During this time Patricia shouted for help. She also tried to defend herself by covering herself with her hands. As a result, Patricia’s hands received multiple cuts. As Patricia unsuccessfully tried to push defendant off her, she also tried to protect her neck by hunching her shoulders and putting her chin down to her chest. While Patricia was pinned down, Javier shouted at defendant to let Patricia loose. In response, defendant stabbed Patricia one or two more times. Javier then took a kitchen chair and hit defendant one time in the back. The force was not hard enough for the chair to break, but it allowed Patricia to get loose, run into the bathroom, and lock the door.
Defendant told Javier to stay out of his relationship or he would kill Javier and Javier’s son. Javier then used the chair as a shield to keep defendant away from Javier and his son. Defendant then turned the knife towards himself and stabbed himself two times. Javier used the chair to edge defendant out of the apartment. Defendant left the apartment through the back door and ran towards the alley. Javier told Fabian to call 911, and Javier went downstairs to lock the door and flag down a police car for help.
While in the bathroom, Patricia noticed that her face was cut, her shoulder hurt, and her stomach burned. Patricia stayed in the bathroom for approximately two minutes and, after briefly talking to her daughter, she sat on the living room couch. Chicago Police Officer Robert Munoz responded after receiving a dispatch call. When he arrived he was met by Javier Vargas. Officer Munoz, who is fluent in Spanish, spoke with Javier [and] then proceeded through the alley to the garage to look for defendant. Defendant was not in the garage, so Officer Munoz searched the alley and radioed for extra cars to look for defendant. Officer Munoz then entered the apartment and saw Patricia Hernandez on the couch holding a towel to her face and covered in blood. Officer Munoz also noticed the kitchen in disarray and blood in the kitchen and bathroom. He did not see a broken chair. Officer Munoz waited with Patricia until the paramedics arrived.
The paramedics took Patricia Hernandez to Mt. Sinai Hospital where she had surgery for her stab wounds: one in [the] abdomen, one to the back of her left arm, one to her center chest area, two facial wounds to [the] left side of [her] face with one extending from the left side of her nose to her ear and the other extending from the mid cheek down to the lower left jaw.

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Bluebook (online)
916 N.E.2d 1273, 334 Ill. Dec. 385, 395 Ill. App. 3d 38, 2009 Ill. App. LEXIS 982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-madrid-illappct-2009.