People v. Nelson

2017 IL 120198, 89 N.E.3d 725, 2017 Ill. LEXIS 643
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 2017
DocketDocket 120198
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2017 IL 120198 (People v. Nelson) 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. Nelson, 2017 IL 120198, 89 N.E.3d 725, 2017 Ill. LEXIS 643 (Ill. 2017).

Opinion

JUSTICE BURKE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.

¶ 1 Defendant, Miesha Nelson, and her three codefendants, Carmelita Hall, Tiffany Cox, and Rosalinda Ball, were tried jointly but in severed bench trials for the armed robbery and stabbing death of Morris Wilson. All four defendants were found guilty. On appeal, defendant contended that she was denied her sixth amendment right to conflict-free counsel where attorneys from the same law firm represented defendant and codefendant Hall and defendant's attorneys, in making their choice of defenses, decided to forgo asserting an innocence defense in favor of pursuing a joint defense of self-defense. The appellate court rejected this contention and affirmed defendant's convictions. 2015 IL App (1st) 132157-U , 2015 WL 5139289 . For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the appellate court, but on different grounds.

¶ 2 BACKGROUND

¶ 3 In February 2009, Morris Wilson was found beaten and stabbed to death in the courtyard of an apartment building located at 8147 South Drexel Avenue in Chicago. Defendant, Miesha Nelson, Tiffany Cox, Rosalind Ball, and Carmelita Hall, were charged with five counts of first degree murder and one count of armed robbery in connection with Wilson's death. Defendant was represented by Richard Kling and Susana Ortiz, both from the Law Offices of Chicago-Kent College of Law. Hall was represented by Daniel Coyne, also from the Law Offices of Chicago-Kent. 1

¶ 4 The Cook County circuit court conducted severed but simultaneous bench trials. The following evidence was adduced at defendant's trial. The State first presented the testimony of five eyewitnesses, three of whom lived in the building at 8147 South Drexel Avenue. Their testimony was generally consistent and relayed that on February 1, 2009, at approximately 2 a.m., a young African-American man was repeatedly beaten by four African-American women in the courtyard. While the man lay on the ground, one of the women stabbed him as the others continued to beat him. At some point, one of the women removed the man's jacket and searched it.

*728 Thereafter, the four women left the courtyard.

¶ 5 Chicago police officer Michael Dearborn was the first to arrive at the scene. At trial, he testified that he observed blood on the sidewalk leading to the courtyard and in the snow. After entering the courtyard, he saw a man, later identified as Wilson, lying on the ground. Wilson was not responsive, was not breathing, and had blood on his face. Dearborn called for emergency personnel and secured the scene. On cross-examination, Dearborn stated he found a cell phone charger lying near Wilson's head and a "shiny object" on the ground near Wilson's body. A piece of a glass liquor bottle was also recovered from the scene.

¶ 6 Chicago police officer Cleveland Jones testified that he was en route to a domestic dispute call when he saw four women, whom he identified in court as the four defendants, walking in a single file from the 8100 block to the 8200 block on Drexel Avenue. The women drew his attention because they were underdressed for the weather. While dealing with the domestic dispute, Jones monitored a radio call about a man down at 8147 South Drexel Avenue. Jones then drove to that address.

¶ 7 Upon arrival, Jones observed Wilson's body on the ground and saw he was unresponsive and had blood on his face and clothing. Jones saw a trail of blood from Wilson's body to the sidewalk. Jones followed the blood trail to the sidewalk out of the courtyard and south on Drexel Avenue. At the northeast corner of 82nd Street and Drexel Avenue, where he had previously seen the four women, he observed a pile of clothing and a knife sticking out of the snow. He continued to follow the trail of blood, crossed 82nd Street, and ended up in front of an apartment building at 8207 South Drexel Avenue. Jones then observed the same four females he had seen earlier standing in a second-floor window, looking down at him. Jones returned to the courtyard complex to inform Chicago police officers West, Gaines, and Pickens that he might know where the suspects were.

¶ 8 The four officers returned to 8207 South Drexel Avenue, where Jones again observed the four women still standing in the window. At trial, Jones identified these four women as the defendants. Officers Gaines and Pickens went to the rear of the apartment building while Jones and West remained at the front. Jones and West went through a gate in front of the building, and Jones noticed a trail of blood continued to the front door. Upon entering the building, they went to the second floor and observed broken glass in front of the door. The glass appeared to match the glass found near Wilson's body. Jones knocked, and when Cox opened the door, he arrested her.

¶ 9 Officer Pickens testified at trial. He confirmed that he went with the other officers from the courtyard complex to 8207 South Drexel Avenue, that he observed four women looking out the window, and that he and Officer Gaines went to the rear of the apartment. Pickens testified when they got there, they observed three females and a male with a young child going from the second floor to the third floor. The three women were the same women he observed in the window earlier. Pickens identified all four defendants in court as the four women he saw in the window and defendant, Hall, and Ball as the three women he observed in the rear of the building. Pickens and Gaines arrested the three women and returned them to the second-floor apartment. Cox was in the apartment under arrest. The officers then returned to 82nd Street and Drexel Avenue with the women and turned *729 them over to other officers, who transported them to the police station.

¶ 10 Evidence technician William Jackson collected and preserved evidence from the two scenes. He took photographs and videotapes of both scenes, which he identified in court and described. He recovered blood evidence and broken glass from 8147 South Drexel Avenue. He recovered blood evidence, a jacket, and a knife at the corner of 82nd Street and Drexel Avenue. Lastly, he recovered blood in the stairway leading to the second floor at 8207 South Drexel Avenue, broken glass in front of the apartment door, blood near the couch, and blood from the kitchen garbage container.

¶ 11 The parties then stipulated: (1) Wilson's and Hall's DNA were recovered from the knife, (2) Wilson's DNA was on a pair of green pants recovered from Cox, (3) Wilson's and Ball's DNA were on a pair of jeans recovered from Ball, (4) Cox's DNA was on Wilson's jacket, (5) Wilson's and Hall's DNA were on defendant's hand, and (6) blood recovered from the sidewalk and Cox's apartment belonged to Hall. The parties also stipulated that the medical examiner's report found the cause of Wilson's death was multiple stab and incision wounds.

¶ 12 The State's next witness was emergency room physician Dr. Melissa Urides, who treated Hall for injuries to her hand on February 1, 2009.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 IL 120198, 89 N.E.3d 725, 2017 Ill. LEXIS 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-nelson-ill-2017.