People v. Morales

2019 IL App (1st) 160225
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 12, 2019
Docket1-16-0225 1-16-0323 cons.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2019 IL App (1st) 160225 (People v. Morales) 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. Morales, 2019 IL App (1st) 160225 (Ill. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

2019 IL App (1st) 160225 Nos. 1-16-0225 & 1-16-0323 (cons.) Opinion filed June 11, 2019

Second Division ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________ THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County. ) v. ) No. 08 CR 3180 ) ISMAEL MORALES, ) Honorable ) James B. Linn, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, presiding.

JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Mason and Justice Pierce concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Ismael Morales was convicted, along with five codefendants, of the 2007 murder and

robbery of Francisco Reyes. We have decided a number of appeals involving this offense. See

People v. Roman, 2016 IL App (1st) 141740 (affirming first-stage dismissal of Daniel Roman’s

postconviction petition); In re Omar M., 2014 IL App (1st) 100866-B (direct appeal of minor

codefendant, affirming adjudication and disposition); People v. Lopez, 2014 IL App (1st)

102938-B (direct appeal of codefendant Carlos Lopez, remanding for a new trial); People v.

Roman, 2013 IL App (1st) 102853 (direct appeal of codefendant Daniel Roman, affirming

conviction and sentence); People v. Roman, 2013 IL App (1st) 110882 (direct appeal of Nos. 1-16-0225 & 1-16-0323 (cons.)

codefendant Martin Roman, remanding for a new trial); People v. Morales, 2012 IL App (1st)

101911 (Morales’s direct appeal, affirming conviction and sentence). Here, we are concerned

with Morales’s appeal from the circuit court’s first-stage dismissal of his postconviction petition.

¶2 In that petition, Morales claimed that the State violated Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83

(1963), by failing to disclose the existence of an agreement between the State and its main

witness, Francisco Garcia, for the State’s assistance in Garcia’s immigration matters in exchange

for his trial testimony. The petition also raises a claim of actual innocence based on the affidavit

of Victor Redding, who claimed to have witnessed the attack on Reyes and claimed to know that

Morales was not one of the participants.

¶3 We find the petition makes an arguable claim of a Brady violation. We reverse the first-

stage dismissal of Morales’s postconviction petition and remand for second-stage proceedings

consistent with the Post-Conviction Hearing Act (Act) (725 ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West 2016)).

¶4 Background

¶5 Our decision in Morales’s direct appeal (and the appeals in his codefendants’ cases) sets

out the details of the offense and the case history in detail. Morales, 2012 IL App (1st) 101911,

¶¶ 3-15. We reiterate only the facts necessary to understand the claims in Morales’s

postconviction petition.

¶6 At trial, Garcia and his wife, Sylvia Ortiz, testified that, in the early morning hours of

December 23, 2007, they saw Morales, Daniel Roman, Martin Roman, Omar M., and Carlos

Lopez congregate beneath their second-story apartment window. They watched as the group

went across the street to the parking lot of a tortilla factory where the victim was driving a

forklift.

-2- Nos. 1-16-0225 & 1-16-0323 (cons.)

¶7 Garcia and Ortiz saw several members of the group pull the victim off the forklift. All

five of the assailants started to kick and punch the victim. During the attack, a sixth person,

known to Garcia only as “Menace,” arrived and joined the group. Eventually, they took the

victim’s billfold from his pocket.

¶8 Garcia testified that Martin Roman then went across the street and picked up a concrete

rock and brought it back to the parking lot of the tortilla factory. He saw Martin Roman drop the

rock on the victim the first time, but could not tell who did it the second time “because there are

three who have [a] similar slim build.” On cross-examination, Garcia described a prior statement

he had given to an assistant state’s attorney, asserting that Carlos dropped the rock on the victim

one time and Morales dropped it another time. He also explained his involvement in Omar M.’s

trial where he had testified that “[i]t was Carlos and another one [who hit the victim with the

rock] which I can’t indentify because they were all skinny.”

¶9 In November 2015, Morales filed this postconviction petition, claiming a violation of

Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), for the State’s failure to disclose an agreement with

Garcia that the state’s attorney’s office would assist him in his immigration matters if he testified

in the prosecutions against Morales and his codefendants. In support of his claim, Morales

attached two documents: a letter from the state’s attorney’s office to the Immigration and

Nationality Service (INS) and a transcribed voicemail from Garcia to the state’s attorney’s

office.

¶ 10 The letter from the State to the INS reads, in its entirety:

“Immigration and Nationality Service

Re: Fernando Garcia

-3- Nos. 1-16-0225 & 1-16-0323 (cons.)

To Whom It May Concern:

I am writing to you in connection with Mr. Garcia’s citizenship

application.

I have become acquainted with Mr. Garcia in connection with my

prosecution of five men for First Degree Murder in a case entitled People of the

State of Illinois vs. Ismael Morales, et al., No. 08 CR 3180 before the Honorable

James Linn in the Circuit Court of Cook County. A sixth person, a juvenile

offender was also charged in connection with the crime. I did not, however,

handle the juvenile prosecution.

Mr. Garcia was an eyewitness to the murder, which occurred outside his

house on Christmas Eve, 2007. Mr. Garcia’s cooperation with the Chicago Police

Department and Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office personnel investigating

the case was instrumental in the arrest and eventual charging of the offenders.

Subsequently, Mr. Garcia testified in the jury trials of the juvenile offender, two

of the adult offenders and in the bench trial of a third adult offender. All four were

convicted of First Degree Murder. It is anticipated that Mr. Garcia will be called

to testify at the trial of the remaining two adult offenders. It is our expectation that

those offenders will go to trial by early 2011.

Please feel free to contact me about Mr. Garcia or if I can be of any

assistance to you.”

The letter is signed by Assistant State’s Attorney Andrew Varga and dated July 22, 2010.

-4- Nos. 1-16-0225 & 1-16-0323 (cons.)

¶ 11 The State had included the transcription of Garcia’s voicemail in a January 31, 2011,

supplemental answer to discovery in codefendants Martin Roman’s and Adolfo Zuniga’s cases.

After brief prefatory language, it reads:

“On January 31, 2011 at 8:20 am, via voicemail message of Patricia

Gonzalez, Cook County State’s Attorney’s Victim Witness, the following

message was left by Louis Fernando Garcia in Spanish: ‘Look Patty Patty. I don’t

know if you’re going to hear this message. But I’ve very mad. When is the …

Supposedly it’s Monday, the courtdate [sic], you know what? If you don’t help

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Bluebook (online)
2019 IL App (1st) 160225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-morales-illappct-2019.