People v. Nettles

2022 IL App (3d) 190195-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 10, 2022
Docket3-19-0195
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2022 IL App (3d) 190195-U (People v. Nettles) 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. Nettles, 2022 IL App (3d) 190195-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

2022 IL App (3d) 190195-U

Order filed February 10, 2022 ____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

THIRD DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ILLINOIS, ) of the 14th Judicial Circuit, ) Rock Island County, Illinois, Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) Appeal No. 3-19-0195 v. ) Circuit No. 18-CF-8 ) RICKY J. NETTLES, ) Honorable ) Norma Kauzlarich, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, Presiding. ____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE HAUPTMAN delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Holdridge and Lytton concurred in the judgment. ____________________________________________________________________________

ORDER

¶1 Held: The evidence was sufficient to prove defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Defendant was not denied a fair trial as a result of prosecutorial misconduct.

¶2 Defendant, Ricky J. Nettles, appeals his six predatory criminal sexual assault of a child

convictions. Defendant argues that the State failed to prove him guilty beyond a reasonable

doubt on three counts. Additionally, he argues that the State made improper comments during

closing arguments which denied him a fair trial. We affirm. ¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 The State charged defendant with six counts of predatory criminal sexual assault of a

child (720 ILCS 5/11-1.40(a)(1) (West 2012)). In three counts, the State alleged that between

June 2012 and November 2015, defendant, who was over 17 years of age, placed his penis in the

mouth of C.A.M., who was born in 2006. In the other three counts, the State alleged that between

June 2012 and November 2015 defendant placed his tongue in the vagina of C.A.M. The matter

proceeded to a jury trial.

¶5 At trial, C.A.M. testified that she was 12 years old. C.A.M. understood she was there to

talk about defendant touching her. She told her mother about what happened but did not tell her

everything because she was embarrassed and did not know what her parents would think of her.

Defendant was her grandmother’s boyfriend. Defendant first began touching C.A.M.’s “private

part” with his hand over her clothes at her great grandmother’s house. Then, at her

grandmother’s house, defendant “would touch [her] in [her] private parts” and her breasts with

his hand.

¶6 C.A.M. saw defendant’s private part in her grandmother’s living room. Defendant

“pulled his pants down, but not all the way off, and he would have [C.A.M.] put it in [her]

mouth.” When defendant put his private part in C.A.M.’s mouth “[i]t would get like a little bit

harder.” C.A.M. described defendant’s private part as being straight and having little hairs. After

defendant’s private part was removed from her mouth, it was redder and defendant “would like

put his hand around it and he would move it up and down.” C.A.M. testified to a second time

that defendant put his private part in her mouth and that it was the same as the first incident she

described. She also stated that while in a bedroom, defendant touched her private part and her

breasts with his hand. C.A.M. was asked “[w]as there anything else that he touched you with?”

2 She replied “[n]o.” The State asked “[w]as there any other part of his body that came into contact

with your body?” C.A.M. responded “[n]o.” She stated that defendant touched her on her private

part, and “that’s really all I remember.”

¶7 C.A.M. could not remember how many times defendant’s private part was in her mouth

and she stated she was unable to remember “[b]ecause I don’t really want to remember it, so it’s

hard to remember.” She then stated it happened “[t]wo or three times” total. There was never a

night that she stayed at her grandmother’s house that defendant did not touch her with his hand

but there were times that he did not put his private part in her mouth. She spent the night at her

grandmother’s house at least once or twice a year. C.A.M. did not remember anything else about

how defendant touched her body. She was 9 or 10 years old when defendant stopped touching

her because she threatened to tell her parents.

¶8 C.A.M. remembered meeting with Hector Vasquez at the Child Advocacy Center. She

remembered charts with a boy’s body and a girl’s body and that she wrote on those charts.

C.A.M. provided testimony as to the sleeping arrangements when she spent the night at her great

grandmother’s and grandmother’s houses.

¶9 Vasquez testified that he was employed with the Illinois Department of Children and

Family Services. In June 2017, he interviewed C.A.M. at the Child Advocacy Center. The

interview was recorded. Vasquez reviewed the recording and it accurately represented what

occurred during his interview with C.A.M. The recording was admitted into evidence and

published.

¶ 10 On the recording, C.A.M. told Vasquez that defendant made her suck his private part and

that defendant licked her private part. Vasquez had C.A.M. identify various body parts on

diagrams of a male and female body. On the diagrams, C.A.M. identified the male and female

3 genitals as private parts. When Vasquez asked C.A.M. to put a box where defendant licked her,

she put a box around what she identified as the female private part. Vasquez asked C.A.M. how

many times defendant made her suck his private part and she responded that it happened every

time she stayed at her grandmother’s house. Vasquez then asked “How bout when uh he touched

you and he licked you there [pointing to what C.A.M. had identified as the female private part on

the diagram]? Um, do you remember uh how many times that happened?” C.A.M. responded

“the same times” (having previously answered how many times defendant put his private part in

her mouth), and too many times to count.

¶ 11 The defense presented witnesses who contradicted some of C.A.M.’s testimony regarding

sleeping arrangements when C.A.M. would spend the night at her grandmother’s and great

grandmother’s houses. Defendant did not testify.

¶ 12 At the outset of its closing argument, the State pointed out to the jury that although

C.A.M was 12 years of age at the time of trial, she was only 5 years old when the abuse by the

defendant began. The State suggested that in judging the credibility of C.A.M., the jury should

use their “common sense and life experience” as instructed. The State admonished the jury to

“[t]ransplant yourself back to that age.” Defense counsel immediately requested a sidebar, and

the record indicates a discussion was held off the record. When the proceedings resumed, the

State again discussed credibility, and in so doing, instructed the jurors to look to a witness’s

ability to observe something, to consider their age, and to consider their ability to attach a

memory to something. The State told the jury that they want witnesses to be able to give details

and remember what happened. Then the State said, “I challenged you at the beginning of that

grooming process, the beginning of [defendant] grooming this 12-year old,” at which point

defense counsel stated, “Your Honor, may I be heard again.” At that time there was another

4 discussion that was held off the record at the bench. The State continued “When [defendant] first

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2022 IL App (3d) 190195-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-nettles-illappct-2022.