People v. Roseboom

2024 IL App (4th) 230334-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 6, 2024
Docket4-23-0334
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2024 IL App (4th) 230334-U (People v. Roseboom) 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. Roseboom, 2024 IL App (4th) 230334-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

NOTICE 2024 IL App (4th) 230334-U This Order was filed under FILED Supreme Court Rule 23 and is May 6, 2024 NO. 4-23-0334 not precedent except in the Carla Bender limited circumstances allowed 4th District Appellate under Rule 23(e)(1). IN THE APPELLATE COURT Court, IL

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Circuit Court of v. ) Woodford County REBECCA J. ROSEBOOM, ) No. 22CF220 Defendant-Appellant. ) ) Honorable ) Charles M. Feeney III, ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE LANNERD delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Steigmann and Zenoff concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: The appellate court affirmed the trial court’s judgment, finding the court’s consideration of defendant’s Facebook post at sentencing was not plain error.

¶2 In April 2023, the trial court sentenced defendant, Rebecca J. Roseboom, to 180

days in jail for domestic battery (720 ILCS 5/12-3.2(a)(1) (West 2022)). She did not file a posttrial

motion. On appeal, defendant argues the court erred in considering her Facebook post as

demonstrating a lack of remorse, resulting in an excessive sentence. We affirm.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 A. The Charges

¶5 In November 2022, the State charged defendant with aggravated battery (720 ILCS

5/12-3.05(f)(1) (West 2022)), a Class 3 felony, and domestic battery (720 ILCS 5/12-3.2(a)(1)

(West 2022)), a Class A misdemeanor. The State alleged defendant knowingly inflicted bodily harm on B.W.G., her 15-year-old son, by striking him with a hammer, causing injury to his back.

A grand jury later indicted defendant on the same aggravated battery charge.

¶6 Prior to trial, defendant was represented by appointed counsel, but she decided to

proceed pro se the day before her jury trial. The trial court accepted defendant’s waiver of counsel

after admonishing her in accordance with Illinois Supreme Court Rule 401(a) (eff. July 1, 1984).

Before jury selection, the State, over defendant’s objection, amended the domestic battery charge

by removing the phrase “by striking B.W.G. with a hammer.”

¶7 B. The Trial

¶8 Although the sufficiency of the evidence is not at issue on appeal, we provide a

summary of the evidence necessary to understand the mitigating and aggravating factors discussed

at sentencing.

¶9 In November 2022, defendant lived in a home with her four children: B.W.G.; his

brother, 14-year-old B.J.G.; and their two younger half-siblings, 9-year-old B.R. and 7-year-old

A.R. On the day of the incident, November 2, 2022, all four children were home. An argument

started between B.W.G. and defendant when she informed him she quit her job. B.W.G. explained

he “felt, like, a lot of pressure on me because I was the only one with a job.” B.W.G. left the home

to stay with his father. However, his father brought him back to the home when defendant asked.

¶ 10 Defendant and B.W.G. continued to argue. Defendant asked B.W.G. to get into her

vehicle, and B.W.G. complied. After a brief conversation, defendant again began yelling at B.W.G.

When he attempted to exit the vehicle, defendant reversed out of the driveway. B.W.G. jumped

out of the moving vehicle. He then ran into the yard because he “thought she was going to hit me”

with her vehicle when “she started speeding up towards me.” Defendant then exited her vehicle

-2- and chased B.W.G. around the house two times. She eventually got back into her vehicle and left

the home. B.W.G. went to his bedroom in the basement and locked the door.

¶ 11 When defendant returned home, she continued yelling at B.W.G. through his locked

bedroom door. Defendant demanded B.W.G. give her his cell phone so he would not call his father.

After defendant started banging on the door, B.W.G. put his back against the door to prevent her

from pushing it open. B.W.G. did not open the door or turn his phone over to defendant because

he “didn’t feel safe” and “didn’t want to be able to not contact [his father] or someone to get help.”

¶ 12 While barricading his bedroom door, B.W.G. called his guidance counselor, who

in turn called the police. Defendant’s behavior escalated while B.W.G. was on the phone, as she

cursed at B.W.G. and became “louder and angrier.” At this point, defendant retrieved a metal rod

and a hammer. She began smashing a hole in the door with the metal rod, and then with the

hammer. B.W.G. remembered defendant swinging the hammer 10 to 15 times. While breaking

open the door, B.W.G. testified he felt defendant strike him in the back with the hammer, as he

still had his body pressed up against the door.

¶ 13 Once defendant broke open a hole in the door, she reached the top half of her body

through the hole. B.J.G. arrived home at this time and began video recording the incident with his

cell phone. B.W.G. recalled that defendant grabbed him through the door, bit him three times on

his right shoulder, and scratched him along his chest and back. B.W.G. eventually retreated from

blocking the door so defendant would stop biting and scratching him.

¶ 14 Defendant then forced the door open and wrestled with B.W.G. for his cell phone.

When she was unsuccessful, defendant picked up the hammer and held it above her head. B.W.G.

blocked her hand holding the hammer. B.J.G. intervened to try to take the hammer from defendant.

-3- Both B.W.G. and B.J.G. testified that defendant did not try to swing the hammer while in the

bedroom. Shortly thereafter, the police arrived.

¶ 15 Officers Kaleb Merritt and Dakota Park of the Woodford County Sheriff’s Office

arrived at the home in response to the 911 call made by the guidance counselor. Upon their arrival,

both officers observed B.J.G. sitting on the front porch in distress and crying. Merritt spoke with

B.W.G. in the garage and examined his injuries, which he described as bite marks, nail scratches,

and “a strike of a side part of a hammer” on B.W.G.’s lower back. Merritt observed B.W.G. was

in distress and he began crying when describing the incident. Park testified to seeing similar

injuries on B.W.G.

¶ 16 Immediately following the incident, B.J.G. observed B.W.G. appeared scared and

was hyperventilating. B.J.G. recalled seeing bite marks and red marks on his brother, but he did

not remember seeing a bruise on his brother’s back. B.J.G. later sent the video he recorded on his

cell phone to the police.

¶ 17 The jury found defendant guilty of domestic battery and acquitted her of aggravated

battery.

¶ 18 C. Sentencing

¶ 19 1. The State’s Evidence

¶ 20 At the April 2023 sentencing hearing, the State called Bryon Roseboom,

defendant’s estranged husband and the father of B.R. and A.R. Over defendant’s objection, the

trial court admitted a photograph of a Facebook post made by defendant. Bryon testified that he

took a screenshot of the post sometime in March 2023, after defendant’s trial. The post, in its

entirety, read:

-4- “Anyone else remember that time the States attorney and a detective from

the sheriff’s department had to lie—under oath, before a grand jury—to indict me

for a felony I didn’t commit, after which the public defender told me I didn’t stand

much of a chance of beating the charges and I better prepare myself for prison

time—EVEN THOUGH I was innocent—so I fired the public defender,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 IL App (4th) 230334-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-roseboom-illappct-2024.