People v. Sceri

95 N.E.2d 80, 407 Ill. 90, 1950 Ill. LEXIS 420
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 1950
DocketNo. 31515
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 95 N.E.2d 80 (People v. Sceri) 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. Sceri, 95 N.E.2d 80, 407 Ill. 90, 1950 Ill. LEXIS 420 (Ill. 1950).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the court:

The defendant, Peter Sceri, was indicted in the criminal court of Cook County for obtaining $250 in money from the Broadway Currency Exchange, Incorporated, by means of the confidence game. A jury found defendant guilty, as charged, and he was sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of not less than one year nor more than three years. Defendant prosecutes this writ of error.

There is but little, if any, dispute as to the essential facts. On July 12, 1949, at 9:00 P.M., the defendant, together with Joseph Masteretti, and a third man referred to only as Erank, arrived in Chicago by airplane from New York City. The three visitors registered at the Midland Hotel. Shortly thereafter, Masteretti exhibited a large number of blank money orders of the American Express Company, said that they would need money, and that he was going to issue a few. The money orders in blank form had been stolen from the American Express Company in a burglary committed in Philadelphia. When stolen, there were no names on them, no payee, no address and no written sums. Either upon repairing to their room at the Midland Hotel, or before leaving New York, defendant was given an identification card with the name “Frank Greco” on it. Upon leaving New York City, the defendant had passport and chauffeur’s license photographs taken. Masteretti supplied defendant with a chauffeur’s license, to which he attached his photograph from his own license, an army registration card and an automobile registration card, the license and the two cards being made out in the name of Frank Greco. From police officer Joseph Goldberg’s testimony it appears that all the money orders were signed by defendant when he first went to the room at the Midland Hotel.

Early in the morning of July 13, defendant, with the “credentials” described, accompanied by Masteretti, registered under the name of Frank Greco at the Stevens Hotel in Chicago. He also registered at the Belmont Hotel, again using the name of Frank Greco. The purpose of this triple hotel registration, it appears, was to use two hotels in each instance against the third for the purpose of identification, so that defendant and his companions could readily cash the money orders in their possession. To facilitate their objective, they rented an automobile and, some time during the day of July 13, tore a page from the classified telephone directory containing the names and addresses of various currency exchanges. Defendant would go to one currency exchange and one of his two companions to another exchange, the third remaining in the automobile which they had rented.

Between 5:00 and 5:30 in the afternoon of July 13, defendant presented five American Express money orders for $50 each to Aaron Danielson, president of the Broadway Currency Exchange, to be cashed. To Danielson’s request for proper identification, defendant answered that he was registered at the Stevens Hotel, occupying room 817, presented a New York automobile driver’s license made out in the name of Frank Greco, and, when asked for further identification, exhibited a New York automobile registration or title card, which had the name of Frank Greco on it, and, also a United States Army registration card issued in the same name. Defendant affixed his signature to the orders in Danielson’s presence, his second signatures matching his first signatures. Danielson placed upon the reverse side of the money orders memoranda, including the army registration and New York chauffeur’s license registration numbers given him and, also, the New York City address of Frank Greco, namely, 303 Fifth Avenue, which he copied from the registration cards. Danielson, who had never seen defendant prior to July 13, testified that, upon being satisfied of his identity as Frank Greco, he cashed the five orders, giving defendant $250, less the currency exchange fee of $1.50. Specifically, Danielson testified he was confident that defendant was Frank Greco and, hence, the proper person to whom to pay the proceeds of these orders. Two or three minutes after defendant’s departure, Danielson telephoned the Stevens Hotel for confirmation of his registration as one of its guests. The Broadway Currency Exchange never received any money for the orders cashed by defendant.

On the same day, July 13, defendant cashed another American Express money order for $50 at the Stevens Hotel. The assistant manager asked for identification. Here, as in the first transaction described, defendant presented the automobile driver’s license bearing the name Frank Greco, 303 Fifth Avenue, New York City, and stated that he (Greco) was listed in the New York telephone directory. The assistant manager of the Stevens Hotel checked the New York Manhattan directory and found a Frank Greco listed at the address given by defendant and thereupon “o.k.’d” the money order. His identity established as Greco, defendant cashed the check.

Defendant cashed a money order for $50 at the Belmont Hotel, then went to a fourth hotel, the Sheraton, where he attempted to cash more money orders, requesting that the Stevens Hotel be called to verify his identification. Although the record is not clear as to whether he succeeded in his attempt to cash additional money orders at the Sheraton Hotel, he was successful elsewhere. He cashed four money orders at the Clark-W rightwood Currency Exchange and two at the Northwestern Terminal Exchange, each order being for $50. It thus appears that, on July 13, defendant cashed five American Express Company money orders at the Broadway Currency Exchange; one at the Stevens Hotel, one at the Belmont Hotel, four at the Clark-W rightwood Currency Exchange, and two at the Northwestern Terminal Currency Exchange, all of the thirteen money orders mentioned being spurious.

The money orders cashed by defendant were identified as the orders bearing the same serial numbers as those in the original report of loss in the burglary at Philadelphia. The company refused to pay the money orders and stopped payment on them.

When apprehended on July 14, defendant talked quite freely to the arresting officers, recounting the circumstances previously described. His testimony does not differ in any material respect from that of the witnesses for the prosecution. Illustrative is his testimony that, upon arriving at the Belmont Hotel, Masteretti directed him to register as Frank Greco again; that he asked, “What do you want to do that for? I just registered [at the Stevens Hotel] as Frank Greco;” that Masteretti was so persistent he went in and registered; that “When I got back to the car this fellow Frank had a yellow piece of paper, looked like it was taken out of the classified directory;” that Masteretti and Frank were talking about money exchanges; that, to his protestation, “Look, I don’t like the idea, I don’t like to do that,” Masteretti answered, “What are you worrying about ? They are easy to change; * * * you need money. I will give you $30 for every $100 you change,” and that he agreed to do as requested, and, as he says, “From there we started hitting the money exchange places until I was arrested on Clark Street.” When officer Goldberg told defendant the money orders had been stolen in Philadelphia, he denied participating in the burglary, adding, “All I know is I was asked to come to Chicago and make a little money and I needed it and the first I saw of these money orders was when they were unpacked from the suitcase.”

Defendant makes two principal contentions.

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Related

People v. Jackson
122 N.E.2d 813 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
95 N.E.2d 80, 407 Ill. 90, 1950 Ill. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sceri-ill-1950.