People v. Rojas

834 N.E.2d 513, 359 Ill. App. 3d 392, 295 Ill. Dec. 932, 2005 Ill. App. LEXIS 799
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 15, 2005
Docket1-03-3196
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 834 N.E.2d 513 (People v. Rojas) 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. Rojas, 834 N.E.2d 513, 359 Ill. App. 3d 392, 295 Ill. Dec. 932, 2005 Ill. App. LEXIS 799 (Ill. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

JUSTICE GORDON

delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendant, Jose Rojas, appeals from his convictions for first degree murder by personally discharging a firearm and first degree murder while armed with a firearm after a jury trial. He was tried with his codefendant Erik Ramirez before separate juries that were excused at those points necessary to protect them from duplicative or inadmissible testimony. He contends that the State failed to prove his identity as the shooter of Alberto Villagomez beyond a reasonable doubt. Defendant further contends that the circuit court erred in admitting testimony surrounding his alleged intimidation of a witness, and argues that his trial counsel was incompetent for failing to preserve the issue of the erroneous admission of his statements for review. Alternatively, he argues that if trial counsel opened the door for the introduction of the witness-intimidation testimony through his cross-examination of the witness, then counsel was incompetent for opening the door. Finally, defendant contends that trial counsel was incompetent in failing to move to suppress his arrest and the evidence obtained in the search of his car. We affirm.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

At defendant’s trial, Rodolfo Guzman testified that he and his friend, the victim, Alberto Villagomez, spent time together starting around 6:30 p.m. on April 20, 2001. Guzman testified that both he and Villagomez were former members of the Two Six street gang. While together, the two drank beer. Later that night, they attended a party where they continued to drink as well as ingest “key shots” of cocaine, the amount that could be held on the end of a key. Guzman denied any intoxication from the cocaine, however.

Guzman explained that he and Villagomez left the party after midnight to get food. As they drove to a restaurant on Pulaski Street, a gray van pulled up alongside them. The side door of the van opened, and while the occupants of the van flashed gang symbols and screamed at them, someone threw a bottle at Villagomez’ car, breaking one of its windows.

According to Guzman, Villagomez then drove his car into a gas station at 28th Street and Pulaski to clean up the broken glass inside the car. Once stopped, Guzman went to the gas station clerk to get change for the station’s coin-operated vacuum. Guzman then went behind the gas station, to an alley, to urinate.

While in the alley, Guzman saw a white Suburban sport utility vehicle (SUV) approach. The front passenger made a Two Six gang sign with his hands. Guzman testified that, in order to avoid any trouble, he made the same sign back. At that point, the passenger exited the SUV and he and Guzman exchanged words. When he saw a gun in the passenger’s hand, Guzman started to run back across the gas station and shouted to Villagomez to flee as well. Guzman heard shots, turned around, and saw the SUV passenger shoot Villagomez. The gas station clerk testified to hearing a series of shots and, shortly thereafter, observing Villagomez enter the shop, clutching his stomach and asking for help, and then collapsing. According to a Cook County medical examiner, Villagomez was shot five times in the back, each shot subsequently exiting his body, and died from his wounds.

William Wright and Luis Cerritos testified that they were members of the Latin Kings street gang, like defendant. Both testified that the Latin Kings and Two Sixers were rivals. Wright and Cerritos were drinking with others in a garage in the late evening of April 20 and early morning of April 21 when defendant arrived in his white Suburban SUV which had a broken window. Codefendant Ramirez, who was already at the garage, approached the SUV and had a conversation with defendant. Ramirez then got in the passenger side of the SUV and told Wright and Cerritos to get into the backseat, which they did.

Both Wright and Cerritos testified that defendant related that Two Sixers broke his window and that he wanted revenge. Defendant drove to the border of Latin King and Two Six territory. At that point, defendant and Ramirez changed seats and Ramirez drove the group into Two Six territory. As Ramirez drove the Suburban into an alley behind a gas station, they observed a young man standing behind the station. According to both Wright and Cerritos, defendant, though a Latin King, then flashed a Two Six hand symbol. When the man reciprocated with the same symbol, defendant chased after him with a gun he had retrieved from inside the Suburban’s dashboard. Wright and Cerritos heard shots fired, and when defendant returned, they drove away. In the process of fleeing the area, Wright and Cerritos explained, a dark Cadillac chased them until defendant shot at that car.

Defendant’s trial counsel attempted to discredit both Wright’s and Cerritos’ testimony by eliciting that both originally denied knowledge of the murder and only implicated defendant after the police informed them that they had been identified as being involved in the shooting. On redirect examination, to explain its witnesses’ changing accounts of events, the State elicited from Cerritos that Latin Kings were instructed that they would be killed if they ever aided the prosecution of a fellow gang member, and elicited from Wright that defendant repeatedly told him not to “trick on him,” meaning not to implicate him in the offense. This testimony on redirect was admitted over defendant’s trial counsel’s objection that it exceeded the scope of his cross-examination.

Chicago police sergeant Lance Becvar testified about the events surrounding defendant’s arrest. Becvar was on patrol on the morning of April 21, 2001, and heard a shot fired in the vicinity of 30th Street and Lawndale. Approximately five seconds later, a white Suburban SUV sped past his patrol car going between 10 to 20 miles over the speed limit. Becvar pulled his car behind the SUV and radioed that he was following a vehicle he believed to be involved in a shooting. Around 30th Street and Central Park Avenue, Becvar activated his police lights and pulled the SUV over. He identified defendant in court as the front-seat passenger and Ramirez as the driver.

Once backup arrived, all four occupants of the SUV were ordered out of the vehicle. Becvar searched the SUV and discovered a gun hidden behind the center air-conditioning duct in the dashboard. Later, police brought Guzman to the scene, where he identified defendant as the person who shot Villagomez.

Police evidence technicians recovered a bullet lodged in a van parked across the street from the gas station. Testing of the bullet revealed that it had been fired from the gun Becvar recovered from defendant’s SUV However, testing did not reveal defendant’s fingerprints on the gun. Likewise, tests performed on defendant’s hands were negative for the presence of gunshot residue, though a forensic scientist testified that his hands also failed to test positive for gunshot residue after he fired the gun once and explained that environmental factors, including wind, could produce negative results.

ANALYSIS

I. Sufficiency of the Evidence

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Bluebook (online)
834 N.E.2d 513, 359 Ill. App. 3d 392, 295 Ill. Dec. 932, 2005 Ill. App. LEXIS 799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rojas-illappct-2005.