People v. Martin

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 11, 2005
Docket1-03-3224, 1-03-3225 Cons Rel
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Martin (People v. Martin) 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. Martin, (Ill. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION

May 11, 2005

Nos. 1-03-3224 and 1-03-3225 (Consolidated)

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the

) Circuit Court of

Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County.

)

v. )

HERSHEY MARTIN and REGINALD CROSS, ) Honorable

) Marjorie C. Laws,

Defendants-Appellants. ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE SOUTH delivered the opinion of the court:

Following a bench trial, defendant Reginald Cross (Cross) was convicted of possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver and unlawful use of a weapon by a felon.  Defendant Hershey Martin (Martin) was convicted of possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver and possession of cannabis with intent to deliver.  Both defendants were sentenced to concurrent prison terms of five years.  Defendants contend on appeal that the evidence was insufficient to prove their guilt beyond a reasonable doubt because the testimony of the State's sole witness was inherently unbelievable.  Defendant Cross also argues he is entitled to sentencing credit for time he spent participating in the Cook County Day Reporting Program.  We affirm.

At trial, Chicago police officer Michael Campbell testified that around 1:41 p.m. on October 5, 2001, he was part of a tactical team of approximately 20 officers executing a search warrant at 6929 South Justine, a single-family home.  Officer Campbell knocked on the basement door and announced his office.  Using a battering ram, a pry bar and bolt cutters, Campbell gained entry into the basement.  Campbell discovered in the basement a scale, a clear plastic knotted bag containing suspected crack cocaine and numerous "ziplock" and sandwich plastic bags.  Nobody was present in the basement.  Campbell testified he kept the scale, plastic bags and suspected crack cocaine in his custody and control, meaning that he put them in a blue plastic inventory bag, until he inventoried them.  Campbell inventoried the suspected crack cocaine under number 2597014 and the scale and bags under number 2597015.

After he recovered the items from the basement, Campbell went to the first floor of the home with approximately five other officers, where he saw two or three women and one or two small children toward the front of the house.  Campbell discovered defendant Cross in a rear bedroom, lying on the only bed in the room.  Cross was alone.  Campbell asked Cross to stand up and conducted a pat-down search.

Defendant Martin was discovered in another bedroom to the left of the kitchen containing two beds.  Martin was lying on the only bed that had sheets.  Campbell asked Martin to stand up and conducted a pat-down search.

Campbell asked both defendants to go into the living room.  After a second pat-down search was conducted, defendants were placed in a police van outside.  The women in the house were also searched and taken outside.  A canine search of the house, including the two bedrooms, was then conducted.  Neither of the bedrooms had locks on the door.

Campbell recovered $3,647, "numerous amounts of cannabis," and a loaded 9-millimeter semiautomatic handgun from a clothes basket in the rear bedroom where defendant Cross was discovered.  Campbell testified he kept the suspected cannabis, which consisted of 63 or 64 bags, in his custody and control until he inventoried them under number 2597018.  Campbell also discovered Cross's state identification card listing 6929 South Justine as his address, and men's shoes, jeans and clothing in that bedroom.

From the bed that Martin was sleeping on, Campbell recovered either $647 or $673 as well as nine "ziplock" and four knotted bags containing suspected cannabis.  The suspected cannabis was inventoried under number 2597016 and the money was inventoried under number 2597017.  Campbell also recovered from that bedroom two items, including a canine rabies certificate, listing Martin's address as 6929 South Justine, as well as men's clothing and shoes.

After the above evidence was recovered, Campbell took defendants into custody and read them their Miranda rights.  Campbell testified that at the station, in the presence of Sergeant Leibas, defendant Cross "stated that the weapon was his and that he had it for protection and that the narcotics that we found in the house were both his and [Martin's] *** and that they were just trying to make some money."  Campbell also testified that defendant Martin, also in the presence of Leibas, separately told him "that the narcotics were his and Cross's and that they were also selling it just to make a little money."  

The State entered into evidence a certified copy of Cross's prior felony conviction.  The parties also stipulated to a forensic chemist's testimony indicating that the items under inventory number 2597014 weighed 4.4 grams and tested positive for cocaine, that the item under inventory number 2597018 consisted of 59 bags, 1 of which tested positive for 0.6 of a gram of cannabis, and that the items under inventory number 2597016 consisted of 13 bags, 4 of which weighed 38.7 grams and tested positive for cannabis.

Defense counsel, contending that the State failed to show constructive possession of the narcotics, moved for a directed finding.  Counsel argued defendants' alleged statements were unwritten, and therefore unsigned, and did not identify the narcotics.  Further, counsel argued that Campbell's testimony indicating that defendants slept through the police prying open the basement door, that Campbell recovered all of the evidence even though there were 20 officers present, that Campbell was able to conduct pat-down searches of defendants while he held the blue plastic evidence bag, and that both defendants happened to be alone in separate bedrooms where the evidence was recovered "just strain[ed] any type of credibility or credulity."  The trial court denied defendants' motion.

Defendants presented testimony from Cross's mother, Carrie Cross (Carrie), Cross's sister, Cheryl Cross (Cheryl), and Cross's girlfriend, Cassandra Drayton (Cassandra).  Both defendants also testified.  This testimony established that several adults, including Carrie, Cheryl, Sheila Cross (Sheila), Shontae Cross (Shontae), and Cassandra, in addition to defendants, lived at 6929 South Justine.  Several children, including Cheryl's son Joshua, Sheila's daughter Tanisha, Cross's daughter Arianna, and Shontae's son Mikiel also lived there.  Other individuals, including a friend of Cross's brother named "Chubby" or "Chub," and Martin's son, "little Joshua," were also at the house on October 5, 2001, when the police arrived.  Defense evidence additionally established that neither bedroom from which Campbell testified he recovered evidence had locks on the door.

Defense witnesses established that defendant Cross stayed in the rear bedroom with Cassandra and Arianna, while the bedroom to the left of the kitchen was shared by Carrie, Cheryl and Joshua.  Defendant Martin slept in the basement and did not nap or keep any of his belongings in the bedroom Campbell testified he was found in.  Neither Carrie, Cheryl nor Cassandra saw any drugs in either the bedrooms or the basement before the police arrived.

Cheryl testified that she was in the bedroom to the left of the kitchen, which she shared with Carrie and her son Joshua, when the police arrived.  Defendant Martin was in the kitchen by the refrigerator.  Cheryl did not see defendant Cross.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Martin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-martin-illappct-2005.