People v. Stozek

2024 IL App (1st) 240517-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 23, 2024
Docket1-24-0517
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2024 IL App (1st) 240517-U (People v. Stozek) 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. Stozek, 2024 IL App (1st) 240517-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 IL App (1st) 240517-U

No. 1-24-0517B

Order filed May 23, 2024 Second Division

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County ) v. ) No. 24 CR 00687 ) JOHNATHAN STOZEK, ) Honorable ) Joseph Cataldo, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge Presiding _____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Howse and Justice Cobbs concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: Affirmed. State proved by clear and convincing evidence that no set of conditions could mitigate the threat defendant posed to an identifiable individual, his mother, following defendant’s second arrest for domestic battery.

¶2 Defendant Johnathan Stozek was arrested and charged with vehicular hijacking, robbery,

and felony domestic battery. See, respectively, 720 ILCS 5/18-3(a) (West 2022); id. § 18-1(a);

id. § 12-3.2(a)(1). The trial court detained defendant, finding him to be a threat to the

complainant—his mother—and determining that no set of conditions could prevent the threat

posed to his mother. Defendant appeals under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 604(h) (eff. April 15,

2024), providing for appeals of pretrial detention orders. We find no error and affirm. No. 1-24-0517B

¶3 The charges stem from an incident on November 21, 2023, when defendant allegedly

struck his mother multiple times, took the lanyard containing her house keys and car keys, and

stole her vehicle. Defendant has a previous conviction for domestic battery that also involved his

mother.

¶4 Defendant was indicted on January 17, 2024. The court issued a no-bail warrant for

defendant’s arrest on February 5. Defendant was arrested on February 29 and first appeared

before the court on March 2. On March 6, the State petitioned for pretrial detention and an order

of protection. The court held a hearing that same day. The State proffered the following facts.

¶5 The complainant is defendant’s 47-year-old mother. On November 21, 2023, around 6:00

a.m., she was in the lobby of her residential building in Schaumburg, Illinois, about to walk her

dog, when she saw defendant standing there. Defendant did not live at that address, and she

knew of no reason why he would be there. Defendant asked her if he could stay at her residence;

she said no and asked him to leave. She left the building to walk her dog.

¶6 Defendant approached his mother as she returned to the building after walking her dog.

She told him again to leave. Defendant struck her about the head and face multiple times with his

fists and then struck her several more times as she lay on the ground. Defendant pulled his

mother’s jacket over her head, making it difficult for her to defend herself or even breathe.

Defendant removed the lanyard from around his mother’s neck; the lanyard contained her car

and house keys. When the complainant got to her feet, defendant slammed her head against a

parked car. He then got into her nearby vehicle and drove it away. The complainant was treated

on the scene by paramedics for bruising, lacerations, and bleeding to her face and head.

¶7 The next day, officers with the Glendale Heights Police Department found defendant in

the driver’s seat of his mother’s vehicle. They ordered defendant out of the vehicle, but he said

-2- No. 1-24-0517B

“No” and drove away. The officers pursued defendant and tried to stop the vehicle. Ultimately,

defendant fled on foot; he was taken into custody after a brief foot pursuit.

¶8 Defendant was charged in DuPage County with aggravated possession of a stolen motor

vehicle, fleeing and eluding, and driving on a suspended or revoked license. Defendant was

currently on second-chance probation for a conviction for possession of a stolen motor vehicle,

also involving his mother’s vehicle, out of DuPage County. (The DuPage case is not before us

directly, though it obviously forms part of defendant’s history.)

¶9 Defendant has three prior misdemeanor convictions: possession of a fictitious license in

2023; domestic battery in 2023 (likewise involving his mother as the victim); and a DUI from

DuPage County in 2020.

¶ 10 In the earlier domestic-battery case, defendant’s mother refused to let defendant use her

vehicle, and defendant struck her in the face to the point of unconsciousness. The mother

suffered a concussion and broken nose.

¶ 11 The State concluded by seeking a protective order as well as pretrial detention. We are

concerned here only with the detention order.

¶ 12 In response, defense counsel first argued that defendant was not a threat to his mother, as

the incident occurred back in November 2023, and he had not committed any further acts of

violence against his mother or anyone else between that time and late February 2024, when he

was taken into custody. Defense counsel also claimed that G.P.S. or electronic monitoring would

be sufficient remedies to mitigate any potential threat defendant might pose.

¶ 13 The circuit court ordered defendant detained. As this appeal is limited to the circuit

court’s findings regarding the adequacy of potential pretrial conditions, we limit our discussion

accordingly. In its written order, the court found that pretrial conditions of release were

-3- No. 1-24-0517B

insufficient because “[d]efendant has multiple violent incidents involving the same victim,

showing up at her home without permission.” In its oral ruling, the court elaborated on the

question of conditions:

“This [victim] was his mother who[m] he obviously knows where she resides,

went to the place where she resides. He was told to leave and that he was not welcome.

When she returned from walking her dog he struck her multiple times with fists,

knocking her down, continued to hit her when she was on the ground, her coat over her

head making it difficult to breathe, pulled her keys off her neck, shoved her head into a

car, stole that car. This was not the first time. There was a prior, also in ’23, domestic

battery with the same victim. There’s a history there. I find him to be a threat – or for him

to be a threat to her. Certainly the argument about since November, well, there’s been an

arrest warrant in the matter, so the argument could be counteracted with the fact that he

was trying to avoid any arrest for the matter. Obviously, he knew what he did, and then

when he was caught in the car he told the police, no, he’s not getting out of the car and

took off in the vehicle and also fled on foot. I don’t believe there’s conditions or

combination of conditions that can mitigate the real and present threat posed by the

defendant. Electronic home monitoring, G.P.S., may be some kind of proof at a later date

that he went to that location or there may be some kind of signal, but it may be too late in

these circumstances, again, when he knows exactly where to find the complaining

witness. I don’t believe there’s any less restrictive conditions to avoid the real and present

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 IL App (1st) 240517-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-stozek-illappct-2024.