People v. Nettnin

576 N.E.2d 417, 216 Ill. App. 3d 794, 159 Ill. Dec. 748, 1991 Ill. App. LEXIS 1217
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 17, 1991
DocketNo. 2—89—0890
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 576 N.E.2d 417 (People v. Nettnin) 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. Nettnin, 576 N.E.2d 417, 216 Ill. App. 3d 794, 159 Ill. Dec. 748, 1991 Ill. App. LEXIS 1217 (Ill. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

JUSTICE UNVERZAGT

delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendant, Joseph A. Nettnin, was charged by indictment with unlawful possession of a stolen motor vehicle (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 95½, par. 4 — 103(a)(1)), and, on April 19, 1989, he was found guilty of the charge. On June 16, 1989, defendant’s post-trial motion was denied, and, on August 25, 1989, he was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment.

Defendant timely appeals, raising the sole issue whether the inadvertent failure of the prosecution to tender to defendant two pages of a five-page police report during discovery constitutes reversible error requiring a remand for a new trial. Defendant has not demonstrated prejudicial error, and we therefore affirm.

On August 24, 1988, the State made its disclosure to defendant which, among other things, consisted of the names of four potential witnesses and the written or recorded statements of those witnesses and of the defendant which were contained on pages labelled “KAM 1-5.”

At the jury trial held on April 19, 1989, Officer Stephen Weatherford of the Elmhurst police department testified that he stopped defendant for speeding at 11:30 a.m. in the vicinity of Willow Street and North Avenue in Elmhurst, Illinois. Defendant was driving a silver Mercedes Benz with license plate number RR112. Weatherford obtained information from his dispatcher indicating that a car with this license plate number had been reported stolen and that the keys were with the car at the time it was stolen.

Weatherford stated that, when he approached defendant, Weatherford “asked him who the car belonged to.” Defendant replied that the car belonged to a friend named Reinhold. Defendant did not know Reinhold’s last name. Defendant said that Reinhold lived in Crystal Lake, but he did not know Reinhold’s address. After this brief interview (defendant’s first statement), Officer Weatherford placed defendant under arrest for unlawful possession of a stolen vehicle. After placing defendant in the police car, Weatherford looked into the Mercedes to find further owner information and to see whether there were any personal belongings or any contraband in the car. He found a handicap decal issued by the Secretary of State to Reinhold Reinicke which indicated an address on Nish Road in Crystal Lake.

During the five-minute ride to the police station, defendant volunteered (second statement) that he had purchased the car from his friend Reinhold for $2,800 and that he was making payments of $100 per week on the car. After Weatherford took defendant to the interview room at the police station, defendant asked if he could have “the other keys” and added, “They are mine.”

Weatherford contacted the Prairie Grove police department where the car had been reported stolen to verify that the car had, in fact, been stolen. He then asked Detective Michael Lullo of the Elmhurst police department to interview defendant.

Detective Lullo interviewed defendant in Weatherford’s presence, after defendant was given his Miranda warnings. According to Weatherford, defendant (in his third statement) related that he had bought the car for $2,800 from Reinhold, a friend of his. Defendant did not know Reinhold’s last name. He had met Reinhold approximately a month before in the Wrightway Tap, a bar in Chicago, and Reinhold had approached defendant to see if defendant wanted to buy the car. On July 16, two Saturdays before the traffic stop, defendant purchased the car from Reinhold and was to pay Reinhold $100 a week for the car. Defendant said he did not have a title or a bill of sale.

After this interview ended, Weatherford took defendant to be fingerprinted and booked. In the booking room, another conversation took place after Weatherford reread the Miranda warnings to defendant. Defendant again stated (fourth statement) that he bought the car from Reinhold for $2,800 and, in response to a query from Weatherford, described Reinhold as a 50-year-old gentleman who was 6 feet tall, weighed 160 pounds and had blond hair.

Detective Lullo’s testimony essentially corroborated Weather-ford’s version of the interview (third statement) wherein defendant stated that he bought the car from Reinhold, whom he had met at the Wrightway Tap in Chicago. Defendant said he made an initial payment of $100 to Reinhold. Defendant had seen Reinhold in the bar occasionally, but he had no way of getting ahold of Reinhold to make further payments since he did not know where Reinhold lived and did not know his telephone number. Although defendant knew the procedure for registering a car in Illinois, this deal was too good to pass up, and he purchased the car with the license plates that were on it and made no attempt to register the car.

During cross-examination, defense counsel attempted to impeach Weatherford with the (presumed) omission in his police report of any reference to defendant’s first statement when he was stopped for speeding. Counsel asked Weatherford if he had prepared a three-page police report, and the officer replied that he had done so. Counsel then asked whether Weatherford had included this initial conversation with defendant in the report. The officer replied affirmatively and showed where in the report he had noted defendant’s statement that the car belonged to a friend. At this point, defense counsel requested and obtained a side-bar conference in which he brought to the court’s attention that he only received a three-page report from the officer during discovery which did not include the substance of the first conversation between Weatherford and defendant at the site of the traffic stop. Although the pages were labelled “KAM-1 through KAM-5,” the sheets were also apparently marked “page 1,” “page 2 of 3” and “page 3 of 3.” The prosecutor explained that, through a clerical error in photocopying, the defense did not receive the reverse sides of the three sheets so that pages two and four of the text were missing from the report. The trial court was critical of this numbering system which resulted in the confusion; the court noted, as had the prosecution, that the omitted pages created a lack of continuity in the text.

The defense argued that the omissions created surprise and prejudice to defendant so that he had no opportunity, for example, to file a prior motion to suppress defendant’s first statement that the car belonged to a friend, a statement which defendant claimed contradicted other statements he had made. The defense moved for a mistrial.

The trial court directed the prosecutor to tender the missing pages to the defense and gave the defense an opportunity to review them. Defense counsel again asked that a mistrial be declared. The court responded that the discovery violation was not of a calculated nature and was merely a mistake. The court recognized that defendant’s strategy of impeachment by omission would have to change, but defendant was now in possession of the missing information. The court, although aware that the State could be faulted for not copying the report correctly, observed that the defense should have “picked [] up” on the incompleteness of the report. The court denied defendant’s motion for a mistrial, and the defense completed its cross-examination of Weatherford.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
576 N.E.2d 417, 216 Ill. App. 3d 794, 159 Ill. Dec. 748, 1991 Ill. App. LEXIS 1217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-nettnin-illappct-1991.