People v. Magana-Ortiz

2019 IL App (3d) 170123
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 26, 2019
Docket3-17-0123
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2019 IL App (3d) 170123 (People v. Magana-Ortiz) 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. Magana-Ortiz, 2019 IL App (3d) 170123 (Ill. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

2019 IL App (3d) 170123

Opinion filed July 26, 2019 _____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

THIRD DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ILLINOIS, ) of the 12th Judicial Circuit, ) Will County, Illinois, Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) Appeal No. 3-17-0123 v. ) Circuit No. 14-CF-2504 ) SANDRA P. MAGANA-ORTIZ, ) Honorable ) Carla Alessio-Policandriotes, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, Presiding. _____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE McDADE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices O’Brien and Wright concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Defendant, Sandra P. Magana-Ortiz, appeals from her convictions for aggravated battery

and child abduction. In this appeal she argues (1) the State failed to prove her guilty of child

abduction beyond a reasonable doubt, (2) the State failed to prove her guilt of aggravated battery

beyond a reasonable doubt, and (3) one of her aggravated battery convictions must be vacated

because the convictions both derive from a single physical act. We affirm in part, reverse in part,

and vacate in part.

¶2 I. BACKGROUND ¶3 The State charged defendant by indictment with two counts of aggravated battery (720

ILCS 5/12-3.05(c), (d)(2) (West 2014)) and one count of child abduction (id. § 10-5(b)(1)).

Count I of the indictment charged defendant with aggravated battery and stated that defendant

“without legal justification, knowingly made physical contact of an insulting or

provoking nature with Mariela Melendez, while Mariela Melendez was on or

about a public way, public property or public place of accommodation or

amusement, namely: the roadway at 320 Wheeler, Joliet, *** in that said

defendant dragged Mariela Melendez from a motor vehicle.” (Emphasis added.)

Count II also charged defendant with aggravated battery and stated that defendant

“without legal justification, knowingly made physical contact of an insulting or

provoking nature with Mariela Melendez, in that said defendant dragged Mariela

Melendez from a motor vehicle, knowing Mariela Melendez to be pregnant.”

(Emphasis added.)

Count III charged defendant with child abduction and stated that defendant

“intentionally violated the terms of a valid court order, dated September 17, 2014,

issued by the Circuit Court of Will County, granting sole custody of L.M., a child,

to Juan Melendez, by concealing L.M. in a motor vehicle.”

The case proceeded to a bench trial. This recitation of facts is drawn from the trial testimony.

¶4 Mariela Melendez testified that she and Juan Melendez had been married since June 23,

2013. In December 2014, Mariela, Juan, and their four children lived at 320 Wheeler Avenue in

Joliet. Mariela explained that she was the biological mother of three of the children and

defendant’s son, L.M., also resided in the home. L.M. had lived with Mariela and Juan since he

-2- was four or five months old. He was two years old on the date of this incident. In 2014, Juan

initiated legal proceedings to obtain sole custody of L.M.

¶5 Around 11 a.m. on December 23, 2014, defendant knocked on the door of 320 Wheeler

Avenue. Mariela’s daughter, K.G., answered the door. Defendant asked to speak with Juan and

explained that she was L.M.’s mother. At that time, Mariela approached the door and was

surprised that defendant had found her house because Juan had not given defendant the address.

Mariela shut the door and made a telephone call to Juan, who told her to let defendant into the

house for five minutes. Mariela let defendant in, and defendant picked L.M. up. Mariela went to

the kitchen to attend to her youngest child. While Mariela was away, defendant carried L.M. out

the door and ran toward a silver Jeep. K.G. and Mariela, who was seven months pregnant, ran

after defendant. Mariela saw defendant put L.M. into the front passenger seat of the Jeep. She

leaned into the open driver’s side door and tried to remove the key from the ignition. While

Mariela was still leaning into the car, defendant put the Jeep in drive and pulled away. Mariela

held on to the Jeep as defendant drove for one or two minutes. At that point, Mariela let go of the

Jeep. Mariela went to the emergency room, where she received treatment for an injury to her

knee and bruising. Mariela’s baby was subsequently born healthy.

¶6 On cross-examination, Mariela testified that defendant had run over her leg but the

medical personnel had not diagnosed her with any bone fractures. Mariela also denied telling a

police officer at the hospital that defendant had not run her over.

¶7 Ten-year-old K.G. testified that she was Mariela’s daughter. On the morning of

December 23, 2014, K.G. heard a knock on the door, opened it, and saw defendant. Defendant

asked to speak with K.G.’s stepfather, Juan. Mariela asked defendant “[w]ho are you?” When

defendant responded that she was L.M.’s mother, Mariela closed the door, but she eventually let

-3- defendant into the house. Defendant hugged L.M., and when Mariela left the room, defendant

ran out of the house with L.M. K.G. screamed that defendant was taking L.M. and ran after

defendant. When K.G. tried to block defendant from getting into her Jeep, defendant pushed her

out of the way and put L.M. in the front passenger seat. When Mariela caught up to K.G., she

tried to take the keys out of the Jeep. A woman seated in the backseat grabbed the steering

wheel, and the Jeep started moving. According to K.G., Mariela’s hand slipped off the side of the

Jeep, and the Jeep drove over Mariela’s stomach and knee.

¶8 Officer Terry Higgins testified that he responded to a child abduction dispatch. He saw

the silver Jeep described in the dispatch stop near 602 Summit Street. There, defendant got out of

the driver’s seat of the Jeep and walked toward Higgins’s police vehicle. Defendant told Higgins

that she had picked up her child in Joliet. Higgins saw another adult and several children in the

Jeep. Higgins identified the other adult as Margarita Saavedra.

¶9 Officer Eric Moyes testified that he also responded to the child abduction dispatch.

Moyes drove to 602 Summit Street, where he saw defendant speaking with Higgins. Moyes also

saw three children and an adult sitting in a Jeep. Moyes identified the adult as Saavedra and

noted that she was sitting in the backseat.

¶ 10 Officer Fernando Urquidi testified that he interviewed defendant at the Joliet Police

Department. Defendant made an unrecorded oral statement and a written statement. Defendant

told Urquidi that she knocked on the door of the Summit Street address where her ex-boyfriend,

Juan, had previously lived. Saavedra answered the door, and defendant convinced Saavedra to

tell her where Juan currently lived. Saavedra got into defendant’s Jeep and directed her to

Wheeler Street. There, Mariela told defendant that she would have to call Juan. Juan told Mariela

to let defendant visit with L.M. Defendant then told Mariela that she was taking L.M. Mariela

-4- told defendant that she could not take L.M. because Mariela and Juan had custody of L.M.

Defendant responded “That is okay. I’m taking my son.” Urquidi clarified that defendant told

him that Mariela had said that she “had full custody of the child.” Mariela told defendant that she

was going to call the police.

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2019 IL App (3d) 170123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-magana-ortiz-illappct-2019.