People v. Page

614 N.E.2d 1160, 155 Ill. 2d 232, 185 Ill. Dec. 475, 1993 Ill. LEXIS 31
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1993
Docket70887
StatusPublished
Cited by113 cases

This text of 614 N.E.2d 1160 (People v. Page) 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. Page, 614 N.E.2d 1160, 155 Ill. 2d 232, 185 Ill. Dec. 475, 1993 Ill. LEXIS 31 (Ill. 1993).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE MILLER

delivered the opinion of the court:

The defendant, Patrick Page, was convicted of murder, armed robbery, and home invasion in a jury trial in the circuit court of Cook County. At a separate sentencing hearing, the same jury found the defendant eligible for the death penalty and concluded that were no mitigating circumstances sufficient to preclude its imposition. The trial judge therefore sentenced the defendant to death for the murder conviction; the judge imposed concurrent 60-year terms of imprisonment for the defendant’s remaining convictions. The defendant’s death sentence has been stayed pending direct review by this court. (Ill. Const. 1970, art. VI, §4(b); 134 Ill. 2d Rules 603, 609(a).) For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.

Page and a codéfendant, Gerald Feinberg, were jointly indicted for the present offenses. Their cases were severed, and Feinberg later pleaded guilty to murder and was sentenced to a term of natural life imprisonment for the offense. The present appeal involves only defendant Page’s convictions and sentences.

The victim in this case, John Goodman, was an attorney employed by a large corporation. Goodman lived alone in Olympia Fields and was acquainted with the defendant and Feinberg. At the defendant’s trial, James Reveliotis, manager of a Toyota dealership where Goodman had purchased cars, testified that on Thursday, May 7, 1987, he went to Goodman’s house in Olympia Fields around 5:30 p.m. to pick up one of Goodman’s cars. Reveliotis, who had known Goodman since 1984, was going to take the car to a shop for some paint work. When Reveliotis arrived at the house, he found two other men with Goodman; Reveliotis identified the defendant as one of the men. When Reveliotis requested the keys to the car, Goodman asked Reveliotis why he was not dressed for dinner. Reveliotis did not understand the question— apparently they had no dinner plans — but said that he would be back in an hour. Reveliotis then took the keys from Goodman and left. According to Reveliotis, Goodman seemed nervous and uneasy.

Reveliotis returned to Goodman’s house shortly. At that time, the man who had been with the defendant came out of the house and said that Goodman did not want to go to dinner; the man also asked for the keys to Goodman’s car. Reveliotis replied that he wanted to give the keys to Goodman in person. The man then said that Goodman was not home and invited Reveliotis inside. Reveliotis left without entering the house. Reveliotis drove to a friend’s house in Chicago Heights and told the friend, Glen Rogers, about what he had observed. Reveliotis asked Rogers to call Goodman. After making the call, Rogers told Reveliotis that he knew the two men at Goodman’s house and that everything was all right.

Glen Rogers also testified at trial. Rogers had known John Goodman since 1981 and also knew both the defendant and Feinberg. Rogers testified that when he called Goodman’s house during the evening of May 7, the call was answered by Gerald Feinberg, whose voice Rogers recognized. Feinberg said that Goodman and the defendant had gone out to buy some beer. Rogers testified that Feinberg called him later that night and told him that the defendant and Goodman had gone downtown. Rogers called Goodman’s house several times that weekend, but no one answered. Rogers and a friend went over to Goodman’s house the following Monday, May 11. They looked in the windows of the house and noticed that a television set and stereo equipment were missing. They then called the Olympia Fields police department.

Police officers entered Goodman’s house later that day. A number of rooms were in disarray, and several things apparently had been removed from the premises. Investigators called to the scene discovered what appeared to be spatters of blood in a bathroom and in several other areas of the house. Latent fingerprints were lifted from various items in the house; it was subsequently determined that the defendant’s fingerprints matched latent prints left on a beer can and a glass. Several days later, officers located Goodman’s Toyota at the University Park commuter station. A pool of blood was found in the trunk of the car.

The defendant was arrested at his home in Park Forest on May 16, 1987. Over the next several days, the defendant gave law enforcement authorities a number of statements admitting his involvement in the present offenses. On two occasions during that time, the defendant led Olympia Fields police officers on unsuccessful searches of the area in southeastern Wisconsin where the defendant said Goodman’s body had been buried. In his formal statement, the defendant explained that on May 6, 1987, he and Jerry Feinberg discussed robbing and killing John Goodman. The defendant said that he originated the plan because he held a grudge against Goodman. The defendant and Feinberg went to Goodman’s house late the next afternoon. After a friend of Goodman left, the defendant displayed a knife to Feinberg. The defendant then approached Goodman, ° who was in a bathroom at the time. The defendant asked Goodman about some photographs that Goodman had taken of the defendant. According to the defendant, Goodman began to laugh, and the defendant then stabbed him in the chest four times. The defendant said that the victim had not touched him prior to that.

The defendant stated that he and Feinberg then put Goodman’s body in the bathtub and left it there for half an hour to an hour. After taking credit cards and money from Goodman’s wallet, they wrapped the body in a sheet and a rug and placed it in the trunk of Goodman’s Toyota. The defendant and Feinberg left in Goodman’s car an hour later, taking with them a shovel and a can of gasoline. After stopping to eat and shoot pool in a tavern in southeastern Wisconsin, they drove to a rural area and buried the victim’s body. They then burned the sheet and rug on top of the gravesite.

In his confession, the defendant also stated that on Saturday, May 9, he and a friend, Michael Naszkiewicz, transported some pieces of electronic equipment from Goodman’s house to the defendant’s father’s home in Chicago. In addition, the defendant described his and his friends’ use of Goodman’s credit cards during that weekend. The defendant said that he and Feinberg abandoned Goodman’s car at the University Park commuter station the following Tuesday or Wednesday.

Michael Naszkiewicz and Michelle Kury, the defendant’s former girlfriend, also testified at trial. Naszkiewicz corroborated the defendant’s account of the trip to Chicago, when the electronic equipment was taken to the defendant’s father’s home. Naszkiewicz also stated that during the afternoon of Tuesday, May 12, he followed the defendant and Feinberg to the train station in University Park, where they left the Toyota.

Kury, in her testimony, stated that the defendant and Jerry” Feinberg appeared at her house on Friday evening, May 8, 1987, in a maroon Toyota she had never seen before. They were also wearing clothing she had not previously seen. The defendant and Feinberg gave various explanations of how they had obtained the car. They eventually said that John Goodman was on vacation and that they were watching his house; they also explained that they had found a number of credit cards in Goodman’s car.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
614 N.E.2d 1160, 155 Ill. 2d 232, 185 Ill. Dec. 475, 1993 Ill. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-page-ill-1993.