People v. McKown

2022 IL 127683, 215 N.E.3d 831, 465 Ill. Dec. 626
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 2022
Docket127683
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 2022 IL 127683 (People v. McKown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. McKown, 2022 IL 127683, 215 N.E.3d 831, 465 Ill. Dec. 626 (Ill. 2022).

Opinion

2022 IL 127683

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS

(Docket No. 127683)

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Appellee, v. JOHN T. McKOWN, Appellant.

Opinion filed November 28, 2022.

CHIEF JUSTICE THEIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.

Justices Anne M. Burke, Neville, Michael J. Burke, Overstreet, and Carter concurred in the judgment and opinion.

Justice Holder White took no part in the decision.

OPINION

¶1 The questions presented in this appeal are (1) whether pictures of young children that defendant modified to depict sexual conduct constitute child pornography under section 11-20.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012 (Code) (720 ILCS 5/11-20.1 (West 2016)), (2) if so, whether section 11-20.1 of the Code is consistent with the first amendment to the United States Constitution (U.S. Const., amend. I), and (3) whether sufficient corroboration existed to satisfy the corpus delicti rule as to defendant’s convictions for various sexual offenses. Answering all questions in the affirmative, we affirm the appellate court’s judgment. 2021 IL App (4th) 190660.

¶2 BACKGROUND

¶3 Based on allegations that he sexually abused his grandson, J.M., the State charged defendant John T. McKown with three counts of predatory criminal sexual assault of a child (720 ILCS 5/11-1.40(a)(1) (West 2016)) and three counts of aggravated criminal sexual abuse (id. § 11-1.60(c)(1)(i)).

¶4 In count I, defendant was charged with predatory criminal sexual assault of a child for placing his penis in J.M.’s anus. In count II, defendant was charged with predatory criminal sexual assault of a child for placing his penis in J.M.’s mouth. In count III, defendant was charged with predatory criminal sexual assault of a child for placing an object in J.M.’s anus. In count IV, defendant was charged with aggravated criminal sexual abuse for placing J.M.’s hand on defendant’s penis. In count V, defendant was charged with aggravated criminal sexual abuse for transferring his semen onto J.M.’s buttocks. In count VI, defendant was charged with aggravated criminal sexual abuse for placing his hand on J.M.’s penis.

¶5 The State also charged defendant with one count of child pornography (id. § 11- 20.1(a)(1)(ii)) for depicting or portraying a child whom he knew to be under the age of 13 where the child was actually or by simulation engaged in an act of sexual conduct that involved the child’s mouth and the sex organs of another person (count VII).

¶6 In April 2019, defendant’s bench trial began. J.M. was then 12 years old. He testified that, for several years up to 2017, he would regularly visit his father, his grandfather (defendant), and his grandmother at their home in Decatur, Illinois. According to J.M., defendant started sexually abusing him when he was roughly six years old. J.M. testified that defendant anally penetrated him on numerous occasions in the bathroom of defendant’s home. When defendant finished, he left a “sticky” substance on J.M.’s buttocks. J.M. also testified that defendant forced him

-2- to perform oral sex and that defendant touched J.M.’s penis with his hand several times. J.M. denied having ever touched defendant’s penis.

¶7 J.M. testified that defendant told him not to tell anyone about the abuse or he would “beat [him] up” and otherwise harm J.M.’s family. According to J.M., the abuse last occurred in the summer of 2017, which was the last time that J.M. stayed at defendant’s home. He testified that he finally told family members about the abuse because he “was just tired of it.”

¶8 J.M. further testified that he kept his toys in the basement of defendant’s home. He reported that defendant had a “little area” in the basement. Once, when J.M. went into that area, he saw “pictures of *** cut out little girls with pictures of cutout penises in their mouths.”

¶9 J.M. acknowledged having been interviewed by someone at the Child Advocacy Center in December 2017 and in October 2018. On cross-examination, defense counsel elicited certain inconsistencies between J.M.’s testimony at trial and his statements during the two interviews. For instance, during the first interview in December 2017, J.M. stated that defendant had abused him in three different houses, whereas at trial, he testified that the abuse happened exclusively in one home. During the interview from October 2018, J.M. stated that his grandmother sexually assaulted him with defendant’s assistance. At trial, J.M. testified that only defendant abused him.

¶ 10 Detective Eric Matthews of the Decatur Police Department also testified. On January 15, 2018, Matthews went to defendant’s home to speak with him about J.M.’s allegations of abuse. According to Matthews, defendant initially denied them. Matthews testified that defendant gave him permission to search the home and directed him to an area of the basement that defendant referred to as his man cave. Defendant told Matthews that he watched pornography there.

¶ 11 When Matthews entered that part of the basement, he saw a “makeshift desk” with stacks of DVDs, magazines, and a mostly empty jar of Vaseline. Matthews testified that he also saw “multiple cutout pictures of young female children’s faces that had slits cut into the mouths and cutout images of male penises inserted into those slits.” According to Matthews, defendant informed him that he had been cutting out images of young girls’ faces and inserting penises into their mouths for

-3- years. Defendant further told Matthews that he had been sexually abused as a child and that he believed he needed counseling.

¶ 12 Matthews testified that, when he asked defendant how J.M. would have the information needed to make such allegations, defendant stated that J.M. had walked in on him a few times while he was masturbating. Upon Matthews’s request, defendant agreed to speak with him at the police station. Matthews drove defendant to the police station; he was neither handcuffed nor placed under arrest at that time.

¶ 13 The recording of defendant’s interview at the police station on January 15, 2018, was played at trial. During the interview, defendant eventually told an officer that J.M. had walked into the basement while defendant was masturbating and grabbed defendant’s penis. According to defendant, J.M. may have gotten defendant’s semen on his hand. Defendant later admitted that he did not try to stop J.M. from touching him. Defendant claimed that, on another occasion, he taught J.M. how to masturbate. Additionally, defendant stated that he masturbated to the images of young girls—whose faces he cut from parenting magazines—roughly every two weeks.

¶ 14 Matthews testified that on January 24, 2018, defendant was arrested and brought back to the police station. Matthews interviewed defendant again, and a recording of the interview from January 24, 2018, was played at trial. At the outset, Matthews informed defendant of the charges against him and read him the Miranda warnings. See Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966). Matthews then encouraged defendant to make a full disclosure of what happened. Defendant told him that the sexual contact with J.M. occurred in the basement of his home, not in the bathroom. Defendant stated that he placed his hand on J.M.’s penis to show him how to masturbate. Defendant also asserted that J.M. asked him about anal sex and then pulled his pants down and bent over. Defendant stated that he ran his penis “up and down” J.M.’s buttocks, and he acknowledged that his penis may have gone into J.M.’s anus.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2022 IL 127683, 215 N.E.3d 831, 465 Ill. Dec. 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mckown-ill-2022.