People v. Spencer

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 24, 2011
Docket1-08-0973 NRel
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Spencer (People v. Spencer) 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. Spencer, (Ill. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION Filed: 3-24-11

No. 1-08-0973

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the Circuit ) Court of Cook County Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) No. 06 CR 3036 v. ) ) MICHAEL SPENCER, ) Honorable ) John J. Scotillo, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge Presiding. )

PRESIDING JUSTICE GALLAGHER delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Lavin and Pucinski concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

Following a jury trial, defendant Michael Spencer was found guilty of possession of a

controlled substance with intent to deliver and sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment. On appeal,

defendant contends that the search of his car violated his fourth amendment right to be free from

unreasonable searches and seizures and that the trial court failed to question prospective jurors in

compliance with Supreme Court Rule 431(b) (Ill. S. Ct. R. 431(b) (eff. May 1, 2007)). We

reverse.

BACKGROUND

Prior to trial, defendant filed a motion to quash his arrest and suppress illegally obtained

evidence. At the hearing on defendant’s motion, Rolling Meadows police detective Joe Pistorius

testified that he and Investigator Mark Hinds went to defendant’s residence on January 4, 2006,

to place him under arrest for pandering in connection with an investigation he had conducted regarding a missing person. About 9 p.m. that evening, Detective Pistorius observed a tan BMW

exit from defendant’s garage, and the officers followed that vehicle for two minutes as Detective

Pistorius determined that the vehicle was registered to defendant and that the driver looked like

defendant. Detective Pistorius activated his vehicle’s emergency lights, and defendant exited the

roadway and pulled into a “private property parking lot.” The officers exited their vehicle, and

Detective Pistorius informed defendant, who had already exited his vehicle, that he was under

arrest for pandering. A marked squad car arrived about five minutes later, and defendant was

subjected to a pat down search, which revealed that he was in possession of $8,000, and he was

then transported to the police station by Officer Ryan McMahon.

After defendant had been removed from the scene, Detective Pistorius, Investigator Hinds,

and Investigator Cook conducted a custodial inventory search of defendant’s vehicle. During the

search, the officers discovered a metal lock box in the trunk of the car, and Detective Pistorius

opened it with a key from defendant’s key chain. The lock box contained several bundles of $100

bills and a clear, plastic bag holding a white, powdery substance that was later determined to be

cocaine.

Detective Pistorius explained that he had been trained to consider whether an inventory

search was necessary to log the owner’s personal property, to make sure that there are no claims

against the police department regarding stolen property, and to make sure that there are not any

dangerous or hazardous materials in the vehicle when deciding whether to conduct such a search

and that he believed all three elements were present in this case. Detective Pistorius explained

that at the time the search was conducted, defendant’s car was not impeding traffic and defendant

had not been given the opportunity to have someone take his vehicle home.

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On cross-examination, Detective Pistorius stated that defendant had pulled into the

parking lot at Fremd High School, which was private property, and that police procedure required

that the vehicle be towed. He also stated that it was the policy of the Rolling Meadows police

department (RMPD) to tow a vehicle when the lone occupant had been arrested or taken from the

scene and to conduct a custodial inventory of the vehicle before it was towed. The inventory was

to include the inspection of closed containers that might contain valuable items, which would then

be placed into storage. Valuables were defined as any loose items that could be easily removed

from the vehicle and posed a high risk of loss through damage or theft. Since defendant had been

found to have been in possession of $8,000, Detective Pistorius wanted to verify whether there

were other items of value in his vehicle and opened the lock box that had been recovered from the

trunk and inventoried the items found therein.

Detective Pistorius further stated that the RMPD field training manual directed that an

officer was to list inventoried property and note the condition of the vehicle on a tow slip and to

place any valuable items in storage with a receipt. The manual also provided that closed

containers were to be inspected in an attempt to save perishable items and to notify the proper

authorities of dangerous materials. Detective Pistorius prepared a tow slip for defendant’s

vehicle, which indicated that tools, a speaker box, gloves, a scarf, and an inflatable mattress had

been recovered from his car and listed other items, including a cell phone, a computer, and a lock

box containing money and cocaine, on a separate sheet because they had been inventoried

separately.

On redirect examination, Detective Pistorius testified that defendant’s car was towed

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because he had been arrested and that anytime an individual was arrested, that person’s vehicle

was to be towed. The trial court then asked Detective Pistorius what the police department’s

policy was regarding when to tow a vehicle, and he responded that “[a]fter an individual has been

arrested we tow the vehicle to an impound.” Detective Pistorius subsequently stated on re-cross-

examination that the towing procedure differed depending on the crime for which the individual

had been arrested and on whether there was another person in the vehicle at the time of arrest.

He explained that if another occupant of the vehicle at the time of the arrest is determined to have

a valid driver’s license and the vehicle is not part of a crime scene or a stolen vehicle, then the car

is to be turned over to that person, and it will not be towed. The tow-in report Detective

Pistorius prepared of defendant’s vehicle and a portion of the RMPD procedural manual

pertaining to the towing of vehicles were subsequently entered into evidence.

Following argument, the trial court denied defendant’s motion, finding that the search of

his vehicle was a proper inventory search conducted pursuant to RMPD procedures. In doing so,

the court stated that it was necessary to tow defendant’s vehicle because he was alone when he

was arrested, his car was parked in a high school parking lot, and he was being transported away

from the vehicle. The court also stated that Detective Pistorius was required by department

procedures to conduct an inventory search of defendant’s vehicle to safeguard his property and

that Detective Pistorius’s decision to open the lock box to search for valuables made sense.

Defendant subsequently elected to proceed pro se and filed a motion to suppress illegally

obtained evidence and a motion to reconsider the denial of his previous motion to quash his arrest

and suppress illegally obtained evidence. In those motions, defendant alleged that the police

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illegally seized and searched his lawfully parked vehicle without a warrant and asserted that the

impoundment of his car was not lawful because it was not conducted in accordance with the

procedures set forth in the police department procedural manual.

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People v. Spencer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-spencer-illappct-2011.