People v. Myers

2022 IL App (4th) 200592-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 12, 2022
Docket4-20-0592
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2022 IL App (4th) 200592-U (People v. Myers) 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. Myers, 2022 IL App (4th) 200592-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

NOTICE 2022 IL App (4th) 200592-U FILED This Order was filed under April 12, 2022 Supreme Court Rule 23 and is NO. 4-20-0592 Carla Bender not precedent except in the 4th District Appellate limited circumstances allowed IN THE APPELLATE COURT Court, IL under Rule 23(e)(1). OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Circuit Court of v. ) Macon County ANTHONY MYERS, ) No. 19CF321 Defendant-Appellant. ) ) Honorable ) Thomas E. Griffith Jr., ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE CAVANAGH delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Harris and Holder White concurred in the judgment.

ORDER ¶1 Held: When all of the evidence is viewed in a light most favorable to the prosecution, a rational trier of fact could find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant had the state of mind necessary for the commission of knowing first-degree murder (720 ILCS 5/9-1(a)(2) (West 2018)), namely, knowledge that his acts created a strong probability that the victim would suffer death or great bodily harm.

¶2 In the circuit court of Macon County, a jury found the defendant, Anthony Myers,

guilty of the knowing first degree murder of a two-year-old child, Ta’naja Barnes. See 720 ILCS

5/9-1(a)(2) (West 2018). The court sentenced Myers to imprisonment for 30 years. He appeals.

¶3 Myers argues that the evidence was insufficient to prove he had the guilty

knowledge required for the commission of knowing first degree murder. He requests, accordingly,

that we reduce his conviction of knowing first degree murder (id.) to the lesser offense of

endangering the life or health of a child (id. § 12C-5(a)(1), (d)). ¶4 We decline his request. Viewing all of the evidence in a light most favorable to the

prosecution, we conclude that a rational trier of fact could find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that

Myers had the state of mind required for knowing first degree murder, namely, knowledge that his

acts created a strong probability of death or great bodily harm to Ta’naja. See id. § 9-1(a)(2).

Therefore, we affirm the judgment.

¶5 I. BACKGROUND

¶6 A. The Information

¶7 The information had two counts. Count I alleged that on February 11, 2019, Myers

committed knowing first degree murder (id. § 9-1(a)(2), (b)(7)) in that, without lawful justification,

he “killed [Ta’naja],” born on March 14, 2016, “by removing the heat source from [her] bedroom

[and] [by] failing to provide proper nourishment and hydration to [her], resulting in

malnourishment, dehydration[,] [and] cold exposure.” In performing those acts, count I continued,

Myers “knew that such acts created a strong probability of death or great bodily harm to [Ta’naja].”

Further, according to count I, her death “resulted from exceptionally brutal or heinous behavior

indicative of wanton cruelty.” Count II alleged that by the same conduct—by “failing to provide

proper nourishment [and] hydration to [Ta’naja]” and by “removing the heat source from [her]

bedroom”—Myers committed the offense of endangering the life or health of a child (id.

§ 12C-5(a)(1), (d)).

¶8 B. Evidence in the Jury Trial, Which Took Place in July 2020

¶9 Ta’naja was the biological daughter of Twanka Davis and Dartavius Barnes

(hereinafter Barnes). Davis and Barnes used to reside together in Springfield, Illinois. They broke

up, and when Ta’naja was about a year old, Davis began having a romantic relationship with

Myers.

-2- ¶ 10 In 2017, Davis and Myers moved to Decatur, Illinois, where they took up residence

together. Two children were in their household: Ta’naja and the biological son of Davis and Myers,

who is referred to in the record and in the briefs as “Anthony Jr.” (Later, at some point in time,

Davis had a daughter by Myers. Their daughter’s name appears to be unspecified in the record. It

seems she was not yet born when Ta’naja died.)

¶ 11 On December 22, 2017, Barnes had Ta’naja over to his residence in Springfield for

visitation, and he noticed some wounds on her arms, face, and back. The next day, he telephoned

the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS), which began an investigation.

In the course of its investigation, DCFS visited Myers and Davis’s house in Decatur. DCFS found

the house to be strewn with trash and dog feces and infested with ticks and cockroaches. Ta’naja

had a rash on her arm that looked like bites by bedbugs. In her bedroom was a mattress without

sheets. The downstairs lacked heat. DCFS removed Ta’naja and Anthony Jr. from the residence.

¶ 12 At first, DCFS placed Ta’naja in Barnes’s custody since Barnes was her

acknowledged biological father. Subsequently, however, after finding that Barnes, too, had

parental deficiencies, DCFS removed Ta’naja from his custody and placed her in foster care.

¶ 13 DCFS hired Webster-Cantrell Hall (Webster-Cantrell) in Decatur to prepare and

administer a family service plan for Davis and Myers, to help them remedy their parental

shortcomings and become fit to regain custody of the children. The family service plan included a

parenting course. According to the testimony of Cynthia Cherry, a parenting instructor at Webster-

Cantrell, Myers volunteered answers in class and was, by all appearances, intelligent. In the final

class, he correctly identified hunger as a factor that caused a child to suffer stress. He successfully

completed the parenting course, receiving a score of 96% on the final examination.

-3- ¶ 14 In addition to the parenting course, the family service plan included supervised

visitation. IeMonei Bradford, a Webster-Cantrell caseworker, testified that she supervised visits

between Myers, Davis, and Ta’naja in the spring and summer of 2018, when Ta’naja was in foster

care. According to Bradford, Myers “interacted with [Ta’naja] as like [sic] a father figure in the

household,” and he made statements that he viewed Ta’naja “[l]ike a daughter.” Another

caseworker, Shawna Spence, testified that, except for an unwillingness to change Ta’naja’s

diapers, Myers treated Ta’naja no differently than he treated his biological son, Anthony Jr. The

staff at Webster-Cantrell “considered [Myers] a parental figure to Ta’naja,” and Myers never

intimated that if Ta’naja were returned home, he would refuse to take care of her. Indeed, if Myers

had so suggested, Spence further testified, Ta’naja may well have not been returned home. Myers’s

paternal behavior in supervised visitations was understood to be the treatment that Ta’naja would

receive from him at home after DCFS closed the case.

¶ 15 Amanda Beasley-Ricks, the director of foster care at Webster-Cantrell, supervised

some of the visitations. She testified that whenever she was present in the Decatur residence, there

was always food in the house. She remembered seeing Ta’naja in the kitchen eating noodles and

potato chips. She did not recall Ta’naja’s ever refusing food. Myers and Davis’s home had been

brought up to par. The home now met minimal parenting standards in that it had food and running

water, was clean, and was free of environmental hazards. With funding from a local governmental

program, a new furnace had been installed. Therefore, in August 2018, Ta’naja was returned to the

custody of Davis and Myers, and on October 24, 2018, the child-neglect case was officially closed.

In October 2018, when Beasley-Ricks last saw Ta’naja, she did not appear to be malnourished. No

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2022 IL App (4th) 200592-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-myers-illappct-2022.